Joseph Kosuth
American, born 1945
For Joseph Kosuth, the work of art is the idea behind it—the physical manifestation of the idea is of secondary importance. The ideas most interesting to Kosuth are often terms that relate to art itself, ranging from “image” to “red” and “value.” These two works are from a set of six panels that each feature the dictionary definition of the word “nothing” in a different language. Here, the dramatic variation between the Danish, English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish panels may prompt consideration of how different cultures wrestle with the difficult task of defining nothingness, a concept that is revealed to be socially constructed rather than universal. They also provocatively suggest the logical trap into which language so often falls. For example, if “nothing” is defined, does “nothing” actually become something?
Label from The Swindle: Art Between Seeing and Believing, May 26–October 28, 2018