var generalSettings = { onSuccess(); I want a person with AIDS for president and I want a fag for vice president and I want someone with no health insurance and I want someone who grew up in a place where the earth is so saturated with toxic waste that they didn’t have a choice about getting leukemia. script.src = "https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.1.1.min.js"; if (getCookie(cookieNames[i]).length) { o[this.name] = this.value || ''; $modal[0], { $.each(a, function () { $('#ouibounce-modal') } o[this.name] = [o[this.name]]; break; // ------------------------------------------------------------------- } This is a structural question. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Ross Perot, the text remains an important reminder of the role art and … } Zoe Leonard‘s beloved 1992 text work I Want a President was revived in the lead-up to the election of Donald Trump in 2016 and now, just after the midterms, it’s getting new life again—this time as a series of 100 prints, half of which are reserved for museums only. expiration_days: 5 (function defernl() { $('body').append(ouibounceScript); } if (c.indexOf(name) == 0) { if (generalSettings.loadFontAwesome) { The prints were unveiled at the Treatment Action Group’s Research in Action Awards last week, with sales to benefit the organization. * There is probably no need to call this directly - use setNewsletterCookie(). } Who has it. ... New York / MOCA, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2018); I want a president, High Line Art, New York ... Gelatin silver print. One of MACBA’s latest acquisitions is Zoe Leonard’s most famous work, a poem that is a cry for social justice. // Add animation css Stay in-the-know about happenings at the Museum! }); } // Signup submission ©2020 Artnet Worldwide Corporation. expiration_days: 14 Courtesy: The High Line. var initOuibounce = setInterval(function() { } else { New York–based artist Zoe Leonard (b. for(var i = 0; i ' function checkCookies() { setTimeout(function() { } + '
' } } else { Zoe Leonard, “I want a president …” (1992) These days, it seems that nothing could be further from such “like feelings” (as Walt Whitman once put it 9 ), this impulse to be with and feel somehow similar to others, than the practices and policies of my government. + '