MA Student Curates “After Precarity” Exhibition at 21c Museum Hotel

January 26, 2026
"Sidewalk" - still life by Lori Larusso

"Sidewalk" - still life by Lori Larusso

MA students in the Hite Institute of Art + Design’s Critical & Curatorial Studies program don’t just study exhibitions—they create them.  

Kathryn Brooks, a student in the MA Program in Critical & Curatorial Studies at the Hite Institute of Art + Design, curated After Precarity as part of the program’s culminating MA Thesis Project, gaining hands-on experience organizing a professional exhibition at a major contemporary art venue. The show details are as follows:

After Precarity 

January 2026-June 2026 

21c Museum Hotel, 700 W Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky 40202 (top floors, 4 & 5)

Opening Reception: Thursday, February 05, 2026, 6-8pm 

After Precarity features work that has rewritten the narrative of discardable consumer goods, finding beauty in what was disposed of. 

Louisville-based artists including UofL Professor Mitch Eckert, Albertus Gorman, Lori Larusso, and Tom Pfannerstill each find their muse, and often their material of choice, to be the discarded articles of consumer goods found in trash receptacles, along riverbanks, and on roadsides. These artists engage the refuse they encounter as both a readymade and something in need of being remade. Whether crafting reproductions (Larusso and Pfannerstill) or working with found objects (Gorman and Eckert), all four artists reimagine the abandoned commodities they confront. 

The work of these contemporary creators harkens back to the 1960s when Assemblage and Pop artists began displaying commercial goods in galleries, placing an importance on image over use value. Whether reassigning the product or recreating it, this art highlighted the increasing precarity ushered in by the 20th century’s competitive manufacturing and race for technological advancements. Pfannerstill, Larusso, Gorman, and Eckert all reimagine the practice their predecessors in the ’60s formalized. If Pop and Assemblage artists sought to display precarity in their reproduction of a commercial object’s initial state, the artists in After Precarity are, as the title insinuates, representing these objects’ final state—after they have been used, tossed out, flattened, forgotten, rusted, and fallen. 

Precarity is a state of being. It is also something to be observed. It is balancing, it is toppling, it indicates a future action all while it is continuously occurring. Like boulders that balance on the edge of hilltops, individuals for whom the circumstances of their lives leave them susceptible to interference live in a state of precarity, their security constantly under threat from forces outside their control. Discussing environmental change, irreversible human interference, and nuclear disaster, anthropologist Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing writes, “Precarity once seemed the fate of the less fortunate. Now it seems that all our lives are precarious.” 

For more information on University of Louisville’s MA in Art History and Curatorial Studies, visit: https://artsandsciences.louisville.edu/art-design/graduate/degrees-programs