Criticism can be so embedded in analysis that when other forces make their way in, they feel disruptive. In two very different conversations, artists Dean Smith and Ginger Wolfe-Suarez shift associations with their work away from minimalism and toward more ineffable sensibilities, treading into unpopular territory by evoking the notion of spirituality. But are the two concepts—minimalism and spirituality—so opposed? Certainly minimalism’s calculations don’t align with spirituality’s lack of articulation, its embrace of the unknowable and unsayable. But sensoria can tip the balance in either direction, so that, as both Tess Thackara and Zachary Royer Scholz note in this issue, there are forms and content that we create that remain mysterious to us. Maybe it is time we reconsidered the absence of the phenomenological and why it suddenly feels so pressing. Enjoy. - PM/VG