{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/6343e727296bae0011599843/64c1246c0e1a7c0011fc7561?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"(EN) - part 1 - Agnes Martin: Surrender & Solitude - Jill Johnston","description":"<p>\"There's very few verticals in nature. And there she was as vertical as I remembered her, which was only a week ago at the Pasadena Museum, sitting on a chair in the middle of the stage, surrounded by an overflow audience, her hair short to the ears and still brown and wearing a sort of tangerine velveteen skirt to the floor with a white starched blouse slightly femme flared at the elbows and twisting a white handkerchief in her lap as though it was worry beads and my friend with me said she looked a dead ringer for Gertrude Stein.\"</p><p>Wilder reading the first half of \"Agnes Martin: Surrender &amp; Solitude\" by Jill Johnston</p><p>Jill Johnston (1929-2010) was a British-born American writer, cultural critic, and lesbian separatist activist. This piece was published in Lesbian Nation, a collection of essays she wrote as a long-time contributor to The Village Voice.</p><p>This is the first item of a selection of texts sent to us by Wilder Alison. Wilder Alison (b. 1986, Burlington, VT) is an interdisciplinary artist whose recent work includes painting and works on paper.</p><p>\"The work of Agnes Martin has had a significant influence on me and I am delighted by this collision of two quite disparate queer/lesbian cultural figures of the 20th century (US).\"</p><p>*</p><p>Our work is done in the spirit of accessible literature, and thanks to the voluntary commitment of the readers. Dæyke Reader is a freely accessible library of recordings, open to all. If you too have texts or audio recordings you'd like to share, you can send them here: https://linktr.ee/daeykereader</p>","author_name":"Dæyke Reader"}