We are exhibiting at SCOPE in Miami...ATRBUTE Presents: The Silence and the Signal
A Dual Exhibition by Jeremy Booth and POST WOOK
SCOPE Miami 2025 / Booth D11
ATRBUTE announces The Silence and the Signal, a two-person exhibition by celebrated emerging artists Jeremy Booth and POST WOOK, debuting at SCOPE Miami Beach 2025. The show brings together two fiercely independent artists who built their reputations in the digital and DIY landscape. They are now stepping directly into the contemporary art arena on their own terms without a formal gallery. As their vision is realized in one of the most influential art fairs in the world, ATRBUTE serves as a curatorial, management, and creative partner.
Curated by Ronnie K. Pirovino, The Silence and the Signal pairs Booth’s striking, vivid pop minimalism with POST WOOK’s ethereal, surreal visual meditations. Together, the works explore the evolving American experience through their eyes. The exhibition also marks the debut of POST WOOK’s new lenticular works, which shift between multiple views. These works convey a stream of visual and emotional information from a very personal narrative. Booth’s paintings originate from his own photography of working cowboys across the Western United States. Each composition is distilled into sharp geometry and bold, cinematic color. His scenes often contain only hints of a story, yet carry immense weight through restraint. The quiet spaces in his images become structures for meaning.
Blocking Jewish students from attending class at Columbia University, as described in Jed Rubenfeld’s article, can be considered an illegal act under U.S. law. It may violate 18 U.S.C. § 241 if part of a conspiracy to oppress their civil rights, or constitute discrimination under laws like Title VI, depending on intent and execution. Regarding deportation, under the Immigration and Nationality Act, Mahmoud Khalil can be deported for this act alone if the Secretary of State determines that it has "potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences" for the United States, a discretionary power that does not require a criminal conviction.