Blur
of the Otherworldly: Contemporary Art, Technology, and the Paranormal
will be accompanied by a 200 page fully illustrated catalogue
with essays on the significance of paranormal and the supernatural
in contemporary culture by Lynne Tillman, associate professor
and writer-in-residence at the University at Albany, and Marina
Warner, novelist and former scholar at the Getty Center for History
of Art and Humanities. Mark Alice Durant and Jane D. Marsching,
co-curators of the exhibition, will contribute extensive essays
on the interplay between science, art, and the occult as it relates
to the artworks in the exhibition.
The publication will contain over eighty illustrations in color and black and white as well as a checklist for the exhibition, illustrated timeline, and a bibliography. Published by the Center for Art and Visual Culture, as the ninth title of its Issues in Cultural Theory series, Blur of the Otherworldly: Contemporary Art, Technology, and the Paranormal will be distributed internationally by Distributed Art Publishers (DAP), in New York.







