Back then it was a voguish noun, borrowed from French, that described the unconscious structure of an ideology or a text.
Soon, though, like so many other efforts to think critically, “the problematic” got left behind in this century’s great shift from reading to scrolling.
These days we encounter “problematic” exclusively as an adjective: an offhand judgment of moral disapproval, from a speaker who can’t be bothered by precision.
A whole cast of professional art workers — conservators, designers, guards, technicians — has been roped in to produce “It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby,” a small exhibition opening Friday at the Brooklyn Museum.
Like the noun-turned-adjective “problematic,” this new exhibition backs away from close looking for the affirmative comforts of social-justice-themed pop culture.
Persons:
Hannah Gadsby, ”, —, It’s Pablo, “ Nanette, riffed, “, Picasso, Gadsby, “ Nanette ”
Organizations:
Brooklyn Museum, Netflix, TED
Locations:
Spanish