July 14, 2011. In the current issue, Shannon Jackson quotes Tenderloin Economic Development Project director Elvin Padilla expressing her desired goal that individual artists “invite someone else along.” Jackson uses that phrase to evaluate the social dynamics underlying aesthetic decisions in storefront art, but it could also be understood as a litmus test that other writers apply in assessing the push and pull of the mostly digitally produced work reviewed here. For example, Brady Welch notes that the Whitney’s exhibition of Cory Arcangel’s software-hacked work can make for “an oddly emotionless interaction,” and similarly, the overall effect of David Claerbout’s video installations is one of alienation. In contrast, Genevieve Quick notes that Desirée Holman’s Heterotopias grants access to the private fantasy lives of individuals through their costume-wearing avatars. And Elyse Mallouk illuminates how Brindalyn Webster brings viewers literally into the belly of a whale as a place from which to speak. As Mallouk and Jackson both note, the invitation arises from locating the symbols that are at once expansive and tangible enough for others to find their voice in. Enjoy—PM