Bartholomew Ryan first joined the Walker Art Center in 2009 as a curatorial fellow, Visual Arts. In 2010, he was promoted to assistant curator and continued to work at the Walker until 2015. At the Walker, Ryan curated International Pop (with Darsie Alexander), Scaffold Room by Ralph Lemon (co-curated with Philip Bither and Doug Benidt), 9 Artists and Painter Painter (co-curated with Eric Crosby). He holds a Master of Arts degree from the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Drama and Theatre studies from Trinity College Dublin.
Bartholomew Ryan
9 Artists: Epilogue
These are artists who are unafraid to engage the world in broad and ambitious ways, and who deploy their identity, or at least a conscious acknowledgment of its existence, within the work.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Yael Bartana
Yael Bartana has woven from the tortured strands of identity a trilogy that takes language out of the mouths of the eloquent and passes it into a cavernous realm of complexity and possibility.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Renzo Martens
Renzo Martens insists on his work’s lack of social effectiveness, while also constructing an ethics of self-reflexivity that is a pedagogical tool to lay bare the hierarchies that govern and direct representation of the visible.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Danh Vo
“If I am working with identity, then it should be a bit more fucked up,” says Danh Vo, “because identities aren’t stable nowadays, they are complex and schizophrenic.”
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Natascha Sadr Haghighian
Natascha Sadr Haghighian’s desire to study the “mechanisms of representation” is also a desire to evade them, or at least to disjoint the easy flow of prescribed information.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Liam Gillick
Liam Gillick’s practice is complex, and for many frustrating, in its refusal to decide upon a definitive site in which the “art” exists; rather, he insists on multiple points of engagement.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Bjarne Melgaard
Bjarne Melgaard’s work displays a keen politics that deliberately opposes representation that simplifies, essentializes, purifies, or sublimates the messy factitude of human experience.
9 Artists Bartholomew Ryan on Nástio Mosquito
Like many of the eight artists, all of whom will hate this sentence, Nástio Mosquito is (within reason) his own institution and plays a part in constructing the vision of what that might mean.
9 Artists: Bartholomew Ryan on Hito Steyerl
Not so much an early adopter as an eager adapter, Hito Steyerl’s work has an eerie sense of timeliness, of being able to read the tea leaves of historical materialism within the present.
9 Artists: Essay Introduction
The title refers to a time when art could still be discussed as a chain of progress from one breakthrough to another. Today no such sense of progress exists. 9 Artists celebrates this confusion.