Adam Milner
Meanwhile
March 7–April 5, 2025
Meanwhile, Adam Milner’s first New York solo exhibition, explores the transformation of personal objects as they
shift from private to public space. Rooted in a practice of recontextualizing personal and found materials, Milner’s
works examine how objects hold meaning and how those meanings evolve and mutate through presentation.
The exhibition brings together several of the artist’s ongoing projects:156 red ink drawings on various food
wrappers, two large paintings embedded with intimate found materials, two pink pantsuits on vintage Rootstein
mannequins, and an assemblage of small sculptures alongside other personal items.
For Milner, the exhibition is a moment of pause, a situation where things are held still and considered complete. By
pausing the constant flux of things, Meanwhile allows viewers to absorb otherwise marginal materials, ultimately
challenging notions of intimacy, value, and perception.
***
Adam Milner (b.1988, Denver, CO) is an artist living in Brooklyn, New York. Rooted in the slow accumulation and
preservation of quotidian ephemera, Milner’s practice blurs boundaries between private and public, work and
leisure, and relishes in complications around how we identify or merge with the things we make and consume.
Milner has previously created site-specific interventions into the archives of the Warhol, the Clyfford Still Museum,
and the Greer Lankton Collection at the Mattress Factory. The artist’s work can be found in galleries, museums,
publications, public spaces, domestic settings, and online. Milner received a BFA from the University of
Colorado, an MFA from Carnegie Mellon University, and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and
Sculpture. Recently, Art21 highlighted the artist’s practice in the film Adam Milner Takes Care of the Details.
***
Exhibition Text
by Colleen Kelsey (Feb 2025)
Everything begins with an egg. And the egg is a void. I think of the Clarice Lispector short story, “The Egg and
The Chicken,” and the lucid yet madcap succession of these lines: “In the morning in the kitchen on the table I
see the egg…Immediately I perceive that one cannot be seeing an egg. Seeing an egg never remains in the
present.” Invisibility with infinite capacity.
I don’t know if Adam has thought of capacity as one of the materials in this work. The artist’s idiosyncratic
collecting, reconfiguring, and contextualizing of found objects questions how we live and engage with the items
around us. Time, order, and subject are mutable. A cigarette contains a world. I can see it lit, between lips, alone
with another in the pack, and ground under a heel, part of a narrative where the action unfolds through
immeasurable duration. Tangible fragments and accumulated detritus become physical expressions of intimacy,
perhaps even transgression.
A red rose buds and blooms; cigarettes and eggs split. The environment created by the artist is one of asides
and interludes. The power—and emotional sleight of hand—comes from the peripheral. These things exist, even
in rooms you cannot see, living on tabletops or forgotten under furniture. The studio is transient and
preconceived assumptions of display are revocable. Dust (mostly) prevents itself from settling.
There is something so alien about an egg and its ability to obscure itself, that looping and overlapping of
absence and presence. Milner plays with appearances, of being in the thing and outside of the thing. Desire is
there too, a scrim of residue asking us if we want to become whole.