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Tag Archives: Death of Remy Charlip

Yelena Zhelezov: “Ghost Development” at The Fowler Museum at UCLA, Los Angeles

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

 

Ghost Development”  was an intimate, participatory lecture/performance by Yelena Zhelezov recently performed this month at The Fowler Museum at UCLA in Los Angeles. The performance uses sugar cubes, utopian architecture, gif animation, miniature objects, and interpretive cooking to negotiate Zhelezov’s personal relationship—as an artist who lives in Los Angeles but was born in the former Soviet Union—to the symbolic values of the former Yugoslavia’s socialist monuments. The multimedia presentation will also explore Moscow and Los Angeles as centers of image production.

 

 

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

"Ghost Development".  Courtesy of the artist.

“Ghost Development”. Courtesy of the artist.

 

Here is post-experience thoughts and note to the artist:

 

it began with a roar of laughter, you offered me broccoli. if life could just be a roll of jokes and roars of laughter i think that might be suffice. but then you bring it song, sweet delicate songs your voice sings. you never speak to us. you hold your powers from the audience. letting them come out in other ways, perhaps more subconscious of means. you write your messages on the projector, as if teaching us lessons we could never learn, things that you don’t quite make sense to you through memory but align somehow in fact. you dive us into past, into culture, through the miniaturization and enlargement of scales. how quickly we traverse through things today, and how to truly make sense of it all always baffles me. the poetics always make the most sense. the vignettes to tell us pieces of the puzzle and somehow leads us to the whole. the model. the new. moscow. your voice transcended into this varying modes of gestures as you brought us back into the present, took us into los angeles, into our heads, back into the awareness of the room we were sitting in, the chairs we were present in. all that happens in room A126 or what is it A129 or was it any of that at all? Perhaps I dreamed the whole thing up as I was sitting on that hovering concrete bench embedded in between the might pines, which as noted with the engraving on the bench as ‘The Tress of 1930′. The fine lines of dreams and reality and when we mince them into a concoction speaking eloquence and truth and when the art sends us to dream, then isnt that one of the highest accomplishes in itself? to simply let others dream, to help them dream, to present them with new dreams. i dont think a dream here can be synonymous for story. there is something unattainable, uncontrolling about the dream, that reaches us and grips on to us deep beyond our control that screams of powers unknown.

 

dream on,

 

-Brigitte Nicole Grice

 

For more information visit here.

 

 

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Bill Viola: “Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures” at Blain|Southern, London

‘Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’ (Detail), 2013

‘Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’ (Detail), 2013

 

Blain|Southern gallery located just off Regent Street on Hanover Square, presents internationally renowned American artist Bill Viola’s exhibition entitled ‘Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’ comprising nine works from 2012 -2013. The exhibition is divided into three distinctive bodies of work; ‘Frustrated Action’, ‘Mirage’ and ‘Water Portraits’. All the works in the show focus on his usual theme of fundamental human experiences, specifically focusing on how people use their time, the human state of monotony and the inevitable end.

 

Viola has been working for over 40 years and at the age of 62 he is still questioning and pushing the potential of video art. This show clearly demonstrates that he’s not démodé. Throughout most of the show the works are projected on HD video screens, these don’t shout that he’s pushing the potential display of video art.  The actual aesthetic of the curation and the atmosphere this simplicity creates in the room feels relaxed, a place of contemplation, and the works thrive on this lack of fuss so that the viewer is left simply with the work and their innermost thoughts reflecting their relation to it.

 

 

‘Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’ Exhibition Installation image, 2013

‘Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’ Exhibition Installation image, 2013

 

The work ‘Chapel of Frustrated Actions and Futile Gestures’, from which the show takes its name, consists of nine horizontal screens each displaying repeated and questionably pointless tasks such as a man digging a hole and filling it in, a lady moving what looks like the contents of a room from one side of a room to the other. The screen that stands out is of a man pulling a cart up a slope – on reaching the summit he lets it roll back down again. The man pulling the cart has clear connotations with The Myth of Sisyphus and his eternal condemnation – this gives the over-riding theme for all 9 videos. These satisfying videos are all on a loop so no sooner are you judging these characters for their monotonous actions than you are sitting there joining the circle by watching the same events over and over again.

 

 

‘Angel at the Door” Colour High-Definition video large projection on wall, 2013

‘Angel at the Door” Colour High-Definition video large projection on wall, 2013

 

Other works on display upstairs include ‘Angel at the Door’, a piece exploring the fear and understanding of the self-image and the inner self, comprising a video projection filled with tension and anticipation.

 

 

'Man Searching for Immortality/ Woman Searching for Eternity' Exhibition Installation Image, 2013

‘Man Searching for Immortality/ Woman Searching for Eternity’ Exhibition Installation Image, 2013

 

The next room has the work ‘Man Searching for Immortality/ Woman Searching for Eternity’ consisting of an elderly man and woman, naked, projected separately on to 2-meter high granite slabs, they are theatrically checking their bodies with touches, both searching for their respective goals suggested by the title.  And I regret to inform you but as far as I’m aware neither achieved their objective.

 

 

‘The Dreamers’ Exhibition Installation image, 2013

‘The Dreamers’ Exhibition Installation image, 2013

 

In the room downstairs, containing ‘The Dreamers’, seven vertically mounted HD screens each showing an individual person, ranging all ages, submerged in water, one of the artist’s life-long explorations. Each person appears in an almost euphoric state. The room itself is relatively small for all these works and the constant soft sound of running water makes you feel very comfortable until you contemplate maybe the euphoric state for these beings is the last moment before the end, from joy to doom.

 

The show is engaging and though maybe not addressing the most original of subject matter it leaves you with a thought provoking stirring and slightly depressing ‘carpe diem’ feeling. Unlike watching Jurassic Park and wanting to become an archaeologist or watching Rocky and thinking you could be the next boxing champion of the world, I know my ‘seize the day’ attitude will fade and I’ll be watching YouTube videos of Frank Sidebottom within the hour. Hello predictability my old friend.

 

For more information visit here.

 

Contributed by Robert Strang

 

 

 

 

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“The Three Prophets: Stanley Fisher, Sam Goodman and Boris Lurie” from NO ART! at the BOX Gallery, Los Angeles

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

 

Is it a steady string of contradictions, or a defiance that coats and cuts the air shouting for ideals while playing the game and accepting the winnings that may come of it?  Such might be the case for the artist Boris Lurie whose work rebelled against the art market while simultaneously placing his hand in the stock market, which left him with 80 million dollars in investments at time of his death. Or perhaps these markets are different matters entirely, and how are we to compare the oranges of the Art Market to the apples of the Stock Market? Though one thing is certain that today these two markets operate on similar planes as the upper tiers of wealth and people controlling the wealth in both markets are overlapping and continuously disproportionate to the majority, and such brings up a grave problem that still needs to be seriously and closely speculated.  It is such speculations, such questions that became the role of the artists in the NO! art movement (http://www.no-art.info/index.html) as they transformed their defiant message into words and politically poignant art forms.

 

 

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

 

Who is running the art market today and is anyone saying no any more to such markets?  Can we say no anymore or are we at the wits of complacency where are all secretly waiting to place our hold in the game and bring back our winnings so we too can take part in the American Dream. The one with a home, financial security, and a family. The one that might shift our unconventional stabs of being an artist into a convention we still desire or, rather, hold a right to. As artists do we have to forfeit these rights and dreams and can we still hold such a defiant stance against the art market, the world, while permitting our own hands to the luxuries of success?

 

 

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

 

It is these questions and problematic of the current art world and our continued American obsession of consumerism that arise with the violent and prolific gestures of the past in the current exhibition at The Box, The Three Prophets: Stanley Fisher, Sam Goodman and Boris Lurie, who together are the three founders of the NO!art movement. The associated work, on display in Los Angeles for the first time, uses self-expression and personal tribulations to explore and respond to the political situations at hand, probing the personal and political as one. With Boris Lurie acting as ringleader, himself, Stanley Fisher and Sam Goodman founded the movement in 1959 in New York City, exploring pain and pitfalls of American consumerism in reaction to the commercialization occurring towards Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art at the time.

 

 

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

"Three Prophets" installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

“Three Prophets” installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

 

This work, despite its being a calling from the past, brings up pressing and relevant questions around the art world today and the artists voice. My hope is that such work opens up questions, a simple reminder from the past that propels us into new terrain and places out of complacency and into demands, demands of idealism and equality.  And if all else fails a demanding pursuit into the realm of trials as even if the objects collect dust, as they might possibly will, the words, the fragments of the past, can string us into a present reminder and move towards a different version of the future than what appears to be our current direction of decline. The objects, the art, in such cases become irrelevant to the strings they are hitting. As noted in the words of the late Boris Lurie the NO!art movement lives on as “The ‘cutting-off’ date 1964” of the NO!Art movement “as espoused by the art historian is entirely artificial.”

 

This exhibition closed tomorrow June 15, 2013.  If your in the Los Angeles area, find time to see this exhibition before it’s too late.

 

For more information visit here.

 

-Contributed by Brigitte Nicole Grice

 

 

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“Compound Vision” at Mills College, Oakland and Kate Short “Oculus: Interpretations” Sound Art Series Performance

A few weeks ago I went to a performance at Mills College as part of the Sound Art Series in conjunction with the MFA Exhibition “Compound Vision”. The exhibition closed on May 26, and the sound piece was on a single afternoon on May 22, but I waited to release this piece for a couple of reasons: the significantly short-lived introduction of a group of artists as emblematic of a two-year process [MFA exhibition model] and I was curious about the lasting impression that sound art can achieve. In the context of an MFA exhibition, it might be relevant to note that these are a celebration of intellectual achievement and rigor; a ritualistic nod toward an academic milestone; and perhaps a small survey of who to watch in the future. Post experience, the impetus is memory. What stays with us and what evades or fades?

 

An overarching narrative with the work in the MFA exhibition points toward mortality and phenomenology. Within that realm, representation of landscape and dwellings locate the body in a liminal space that blurs the lines between reality and fiction. Featuring a range of genre, from sculpture to video installation, photography to collage, the work satisfies the varietal ways in which many related themes can be interpreted and that they are not contingent upon the materials, but rather the process and the ideas behind them. Overall, the objects made and the stories told are a concise and eloquent sampling of the caliber of work being generated in the program, and are very well-made and aesthetically pleasing. With that, it is also clear that there are no trouble-makers here, that the work is neither obviously or subliminally radical and the ideas are easily relatable to many viewers – simply put, this exhibition is safe. I can’t help but maybe stipulate that this is a metaphorical post-mortem as a result of the educational process. Full disclosure: I recently participated in the CCA MFA exhibition and a review of that exhibition in another local news source remarked upon an apocalyptic overarching theme.

 

Having gone through the process, and seen many MFA exhibitions over the years, it is difficult to discern whether any new movements or important narratives are being made, because of the “sampling” of art that MFA shows display. And, as a writer I am compelled to connect the dots, find the links and connections – but within that process there needs to be gratifying stand-outs – something that keeps me thinking, not just something that is visually lasting. To that end, sound work tends to have a lasting impression and resonates with me when the visuals inundate or become diluted by dispersion or repetition. Describing sound work has its own limitations and challenges because its inherent nature captures or translates that which cannot be seen, but which does not always align itself with actual or audible words. The ephemerality and the intangibility of sound works by its inherent nature creates an embedded language prone to interpretations through cerebral imaginary as well as corporeal permutations taken in through the ear, and in many cases resonating throughout the body. “Oculus” by Kate Short is a compelling example. Her collaborative project, “Interpretations” was part of the Sound Art Series that took place while the Mills College MFA exhibition was on view and is testimony to the importance of collaboration and questions the use and purpose of art objects.

 

 

Meri Page, "Sphere I-V", pigment from salt chrome alum and ammonia crystals, 2013.

Meri Page, “Sphere I-V”, pigment from salt chrome alum and ammonia crystals, 2013.

Simon Pyle, "The Cave", cameras, rca cables, microcontrollers and oil lamp, 2013.

Simon Pyle, “The Cave”, cameras, rca cables, microcontrollers and oil lamp, 2013.

Lauren Douglas, "Eureka (1-28)" series, c-prints, video, 2013.

Lauren Douglas, “Eureka (1-28)” series, c-prints, video, 2013.

Claire Colette, foreground: "no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end", gold and silverleaf on stone, 2013; background: (L) "Staring into the Void (day)", (R) "Staring into the Void (night)", graphite on paper, 2012.

Claire Colette, foreground: “no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end”, gold and silverleaf on stone, 2013; background: (L) “Staring into the Void (day)”, (R) “Staring into the Void (night)”, graphite on paper, 2012.

Nadja Eulee Miller, "Untitled (Arch Project)", porcelain, concrete, wood, 2012-2013.

Nadja Eulee Miller, “Untitled (Arch Project)”, porcelain, concrete, wood, 2012-2013.

Evan Barbour

Evan Barbour

Katy Warner, "Written and Illustrated by Maxine Heeding", installation, 2013.

Katy Warner, “Written and Illustrated by Maxine Heeding”, installation, 2013.

Jenny Sharaf, "The Blonde Experience", installation, 2013.

Jenny Sharaf, “The Blonde Experience”, installation, 2013.

Barbara Obata, " Various Sculptures and Pedestals", mixed media, 2013.

Barbara Obata, ” Various Sculptures and Pedestals”, mixed media, 2013.

Keegan Luttrell, "103,000 ft.", still from video, 2013.

Keegan Luttrell, “103,000 ft.”, still from video, 2013.

 

Visitors ascended a staircase tucked to the side of the museum entrance and entered the tower of the building where “Oculus” was installed. It is comprised of 275 speakers of differing design and eras which are installed one on top of the other to create a semi-circular room. In the center of the room was a small, vintage record player on a comfortable wall-to-wall carpet that visitors could sit on if desired. For the series, Short invited four artists to create sound works that were to be performed as audio works utilizing the technological features of the installation – some generative and some aesthetically in response to the sculpture itself. I arrived to hear Ryan Page’s “Etude #7 for Oculus”.

 

Moody and abstract, the composition is constant, and subdued. The sounds are buttery, with soft clicks and flicks of contrast that speed up at moments and then stretch. Crackles come in and mingle with raindrops, lending to a vision of a futuristic forest. Flutters that are reminiscent of winged insects are endearing until they seem to swarm, creating terror in their large quantity like an infestation of locust. Complicating matters, the noises crescendo and then spew down to silence. In stark contrast to the enveloping and roaming effects previously heard in Page’s piece, Chris Duncan puts a 45 rpm record on the vintage turntable in the center of the room and white noise fills the space.

 

Duncan’s piece, “EVERYTHING ALL AT ONCE” is the only analog contribution to the performance. The recording is pressed on only one side of a clear vinyl record. Remarking upon nostalgia and obsolete technology, it maintains aesthetic conversation with the small, almost toy-like player. The piece was made by layering 500 songs simultaneously selected from Duncan’s private record collection. Knowing this, one would assume that the result would be more cacophonous, but it isn’t – it’s very singular and invasive. Slowly the 500 songs trickle to an end, a few lingering notes are heard that hint at the hardcore or melodic content, but are still unrecognizable. This work is a continuation of Duncan’s practice as an artist and sound musician, utilizing processes of accumulation, repetition and balance. On a conceptual level, the work reiterates the futility of obsession and collapses onto itself into a realm of negation and minimalism despite the excessive piling on of information embedded in it. Following Duncan was an equally minimal, yet longer and much quieter piece by Shanna Sordahl entitled “Humming.”

 

A dark and foreboding chord hums in with tiny chimes interjected. Long strains of monotone are pushed through by undulations that sound like one of the speakers is warbling. More tones and sequences begin to meld into the room, coming from different speakers and jump around the room from one place to the next. Muffled clicks like that of a clock or metronome keep pace and slowly accelerate before it ends. In the pause when you think it was over, a small sound similar to a fog horn suddenly comes in and then sparkles away. The piece is a collection of tuned sine and saw waves, which makes me think of the weft and warp of weavings, moving in and out, up and down, and creating various ebbs and flows, necessary but also inconsequential in the bigger scheme of things – the process merely explaining the phenomenology of the piece and its ability to create drama and tension despite its overall relaxing, orchestral composition. In contrast, Michael Mersereau’s “No One is Safe From Their Wishes” creates a concise yet cinematic drama.

 

 

Kate Short, "Oculus: Interpretations", performance installation with Chris Duncan record player, 2013.

Kate Short, “Oculus: Interpretations”, performance installation with Chris Duncan record player, 2013.

 

Beginning softly, cars driving on wet asphalt, planes flying overhead and footsteps on wooden floors start the mysterious narrative. Fragments of voices, adjustments of furniture, shuffling, and more footsteps lead us into eerie and sharp industrial noises with creepy whispering and inaudible mumbles. It feels like night, like darkness, like the quiet for only two hours between 3 am and 5 am, after all the late shifts are over and just before the early commuters begin again. In this moment, a hush like the rumble from underneath BART slowly streams by. The piece is the most immersive and loudest of the four performances, imparting a theatrical feel that compliments the content of the piece. Using audio samples from Douglas Sirk films in conjunction with environmental field recordings, Mersereau has created his own scene of a short film that is without literal visuals, but in which visuals can readily be imagined. By using the sense of hearing, the four performances in “Oculus: Interactions” do something in compelling ways that the coinciding MFA exhibition just simply cannot achieve with visual art: the ability for the listener to be left with sensations that are only felt when sound enters and moves the body. While the visual art exhibition reminds us that we are to look for these artists again in the future and watch how their practice changes or grows over time, the sound work is a different kind of hunger, one which prompts desire for more.

 

For more information visit here.

 

-Contributed by Leora Lutz

 

 

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ON THE BLEACHED SUN (A TURBINE) at SIGNAL Gallery in Brooklyn, NY

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery.  Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery. Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery.  Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

Schlesinger’s press release is comprised of mostly this quote: “…It is not surprising that it is among solitary ‘travellers’ of the last c e n t u r y – not among professional travellers or scientists, but travellers on impulse or for unexpected reasons – that we are most likely to find prophetic evocations of space in which neither identity, nor relations, nor history really makes any sense; spaces in which solitude is experienced as an overburdening or emptying of individuality, in which only the movement of fleeting images enables the observer to hypothesize the existence of a past and glimpse the possibility of a future.”
- Marc Augé, from Non-Places

 

 

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery.  Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery. Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery.  Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

When asked about the connection between his previous solo show,”Atlas” and the title of a small black latex painting, “geographic tongue” in his most recent show “On The Bleached Sun (A Turbine)”, Schlesinger had this to say: “Geographic tongue is an allergic reaction to acidic foods, its a kind of topographical effect, you can look up images, I like the body/ environment connection. The way I make art, its always about getting out of my head, into where I am, the transit between the two is important.”

 

 

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery.  Courtesy of the gallery.

BENNET SCHLESINGER at SIGNAL Gallery. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

Schlesinger texts this response to me as I drive through Winslow Arizona on my way to New Mexico. Physically in transit, I’m forced to consider geography; I think about the quote from Marc Auge and try to apply it to the text message I’ve just received and then to the rest of the exhibition, and then to art. I think about the way an art work becomes a navigational device, a snap shot of space traveled, in real life, translated in the mind, then deposited back into life. The “transit” Schlesinger refers to is the evidence, the tangible product, it is also a method for travel without having to leave ones geographical location, in this case, a studio in green point. Schlesinger’s work, latex paintings on board and larger bus shelter like steel structures, serve as a document of continuous navigation of space or transit, a state of mental transience, in which art ideas can occupy.

 

ON THE BLEACHED SUN (A TURBINE) is on view until June 28th, 2013.  If your in Brooklyn, NY find time to see this exhibition.

 

For more information visit here.

 

- Contributed by Alberto Cuadros

 

 

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Openings tomorrow night June 14th at Interface Gallery, Oakland and Southern Exposure, San Francisco

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Tomorrow night, June 14th in Oakland is an exhibition curated by Colpa Press, San Francisco at Interface Gallery.  “Just Make Something”, features works by Et Al (Aaron Harbour, Jackie Im and Facundo Argañaraz), Stairwell’s (Carey Lin and Sarah Hotchkiss) and The Popular Workshop (Andy Hawgood and Nate Hooper). These curatorial teams have been asked to work together as artists by creating one limited edition object. Each team will present their object at Interface Gallery from June 5th to 30th with an opening reception on the 14th from 6-10pm. The resulting work will be featured in a publication by Colpa.  This exhibition is an interesting project asking gallerists to collaborate and create works as a product of the spaces they run.  It will be exciting to see what they have made and listen to the concepts that inspired the work.

 

Interface Gallery is located in the Temescal District of North Oakland in Temescal Alley @ 486 49th Street (between Telegraph Avenue and Clarke Street).  For more information visit here.

 

 

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The 2013 MONSTER DRAWING RALLY is tomorrow night, June 14th at THE NWBLK in San Francisco 6-11pm. THE NWBLK is located at 1999 Bryant Street (at 18th), San Francisco. Tickets: $15 & up donation at the door

 

Southern Exposure’s Annual Monster Drawing Rally is a live drawing and fundraising event with 120 artists working side by side. The event lets spectators to observe artists in the act of creation, providing the opportunity to watch a drawing come to life, and to purchase a work of art minutes after its completion. Drawings are available for purchase immediately for just $60 each, and all proceeds provide direct support to Southern Exposure’s programs and mission of supporting visual artists. The Monster Drawing Rally sets the stage for extraordinary interaction. The evening will consist of four one-hour shifts that each feature 30 artists drawing simultaneously, bringing their private, rarely-seen studio practices to life for your viewing pleasure! You can read more about the Monster Drawing Rally online, and see images of last year’s drawings here.  There will be drinks supplied by New Belgium Brewing Company and curbside food from local food trucks including Kasa Indian Truck.

 

For more information visit here.

 

 

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20th Anniversary Conversation series at Gallery 16, San Francisco today June 12th

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As part of Gallery 16′s 20th Anniversary Conversation series, G16 will present a rare opportunity to hear about events that led to the turbulent period called the Culture Wars from those at the center of the debate. This is a unique opportunity to learn about the political, legislative and cultural maneuvering that led to the battle over Federal arts funding and the removal of Richard Serra’s Tiltled Arc. As well as the ongoing argument over of Federal support of the Arts.  The discussion panel will be tonight June 12th, 6pm at Gallery 16, San Francisco.

 

The panel will include former US Congressman Pat Williams, artist and former Director of the NEA Visual Arts program Jim Melchert and Renny Pritikin, Former Director of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Lovers of the arts today may not recall the perilous future the National Endowment For The Arts faced back in the late 80’s and early 90’s, but it was close to extinction. Today we are reminded that the forces that sought to dismantle the NEA in the 90’s are still at work. This past November, a condensed version of David Wojanrowitz film “A Fire in My Belly” was removed from the exhibit “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture” at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in response to complaints from Representative John Boehner, who had neither seen the video or the exhibition.

 

For more information visit here.

 

 

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JEFF LADOUCEUR: “AMEN” at ZieherSmith, New York

For my first official SFAQ post, I’m happy to report on Jeff Ladouceur’s exhibition AMEN, recently opened at ZieherSmith in New York. Ladouceur, a Canadian-born artist dividing his time between Vancouver and Brooklyn, is a delightful individual with successful solo shows in New York, Los Angeles, Brussels and elsewhere. The artist has a long-running relationship with ZieherSmith, and this is his fourth solo endeavor with the gallery since first showing with them in 2004. AMEN, composed of 24 drawings and three sculptures, is a leading title, as the fragmented narrative evidenced throughout the exhibition seems overwhelmingly concerned with humanity’s problematic, confused and often turbulent quest for enlightenment.

 

 

INSTALLATION VIEW.  Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

INSTALLATION VIEW. Courtesy of gallery

INSTALLATION VIEW, WITH “BOBA (SPIRIT MONUMENT PROPOSAL #2)” IN THE FOREGROUND. Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

INSTALLATION VIEW, WITH “BOBA (SPIRIT MONUMENT PROPOSAL #2)” IN THE FOREGROUND. Courtesy of gallery

 

Ladouceur is a “draw-er of the first order”, as AMEN reflects, yet the exhibition also includes several small sculptures- outshone (or perhaps simply outnumbered) by the drawings, these delightfully crude little totems break up the open floor plan of the exhibition space and tease out a recurring image from the two-dimensional work.

 

 

“BURROW”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 11” X 14”, 2013.

“BURROW”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 11” X 14”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery.

Ladouceur’s drawings truly revel in the hand-surface relationship, and this valuation of the mark making is something I always appreciate. Precisely rendered images exist atop paper left dirty from the labor of the drawing. Graphite smudges and visible erasure point to the ideas at work, being sketched out then taken away, built up then torn down. In several drawings, one can clearly see what remains of ideas deselected; all this providing viewers with frequent “meta” moments, allowing us a glance into the artist’s progress from start to finish.

 

 

“GROWTH OF THE SOIL (FLOOD NOTE COMPOSITION)”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 30” X 44”, 2013. Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

“GROWTH OF THE SOIL (FLOOD NOTE COMPOSITION)”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 30” X 44”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery

“JOY TO THE WORLD”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013.  Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

“JOY TO THE WORLD”, INK, PENCIL AND ACRYLIC ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery

 

Particularly intriguing are two works in which Ladouceur employs geometric abstraction as a means of spiritual vision or message. Joy to the World, the drawing that occupies the postcard, seems a poignantly ambiguous announcement of the exhibition’s motives, directing viewers down a polyvalent rabbit hole through which we might infer that varying religious/spiritual cues and signifiers have fallen upon a handful of absurd characters to make sense of. If you can imagine Robert Crumb’s “Mr. Natural” delivering a “state of the world” address on our collective spiritual well-being, but doing so through visions of Philip Guston and Piet Mondrian, you may begin to appreciate the complicated task one has of deciphering Ladouceur’s particular oeuvre.

 

 

“TOTEM HOLDER”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND COLLAGE ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013.  Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

“TOTEM HOLDER”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND COLLAGE ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery

 

Ladouceur utilizes a language that will be blurrily familiar to many of us, subconsciously quoting comic/cartoon characters we faintly remember from childhood, as his characters guide our boggled understanding of the world’s belief systems across visions of totem poles, lotus blossoms and piles of elephant heads; all the while new age gurus, goofy mystics and Biblical actors flex and fumble through their roles as spiritual advisors, leaving us to sort it out for ourselves.

 

 

INSTALLATION VIEW. Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

INSTALLATION VIEW. Courtesy of gallery

“INFINITY BASKET”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND WATERCOLOR ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013.  Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

“INFINITY BASKET”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND WATERCOLOR ON PAPER, 14” X 11”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery

 

The artist was kind enough to provide a dose of clarity: “I am not a religious person… but I am a living, breathing creature in this weird and wonderful universe and everything is connected in ways no matter what people try to package things as. I think from birth folks should develop their own language and alter and evolve via their individual perceptions. Time and space can squeeze new things out of us.”

 

 

“COZY SHACK”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND COLLAGE ON PAPER, 25” X 21.5”, 2013.  Courtesy of Louis M Schmidt

“COZY SHACK”, INK, PENCIL, ACRYLIC AND COLLAGE ON PAPER, 25” X 21.5”, 2013. Courtesy of artist and gallery

 

That’s certainly a perspective I can appreciate!

 

Jeff Ladouceur’s show AMEN runs through July 12, 2013. If you’re unable to make it to the exhibition, the excellent Zurich-based publisher Nieves released little book to mark the occasion. Check it out!

 

-Contibuted by Louis M Schmidt

 

 

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William Powhida’s “Bill by Bill” at Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles

Installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

Installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

The recent William Powhida show “Bill by Bill” at Charlie James Gallery in LA acts as both survey and critique of certain neo-formalist trends observed by the artist as the token objects of the proliferating art fair. Once a rare special event, art fairs have come to dominate the art market to an unprecedented extent, wherein a sort of new Académie has emerged dictating certain trends and aesthetics over others. It’s unsurprising that in the art fair context, where passers by must be enticed to purchase on the spot, formalism has won out over the conceptual. At the fair, context be damned, to see had better be enough to buy.

 

 

Mirror/steel sculpture: Mirror, nickel-plated drywall studs 48 x 48 x 30 inches 2013. Courtesy of the gallery.

Mirror/steel sculpture: Mirror, nickel-plated drywall studs
48 x 48 x 30 inches
2013. Courtesy of the gallery.

Crate and Coyote: Wood crate, coyote, pink packing peanuts 19 x 65 x 27.5 inches 2013.  Courtesy of the gallery.

Crate and Coyote: Wood crate, coyote, pink packing peanuts
19 x 65 x 27.5 inches
2013. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

Powhida displays the work as a catalog, with hand-painted accompanying “authenticity cards” that speak to the formalist dogma represented by each piece. Imagine a sort of contemporary art roast, where the resounding tropes of neo-formalism are called on their naked ambition and coy branding. All the familiar faces are here; from “A Post Minimalism” (“Three Colums on base”), and “A Neo Modernism” (“Sculpture”), to “Some Shiny Objects” (“Mirror/Steel sculpture”) and “A Taxidermied Animal” (“Crate and Coyote”), the show does a superb job in identifying enough art world trends that it could serve as the primer for a lower division art history course—Art 103: Survey of Contemporary Consumer Driven Trends. The whole thing comes off farcical, an almost “Colbert Report” on the art market and this tongue in cheek approach is crucial to Pwhida being able to pull it off, as is his skilled and attentive execution in each piece—it may be a joke, but it doesn’t look like one.

 

 

Installation view.  Courtesy of the gallery.

Installation view. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

After several decades of the dominance of the conceptual in contemporary art, where formal and medium-specific concerns were secondary to the loftier ambitions of “dialogue”, contemporary artists have begun to re-embrace formalist concerns again. Whether these are purely commercially motivations, or “pure” artistic pursuits, is ultimately inconsequential. Art has always been an industry available to the highest bidder, the difference today being we’re all allowed in the market, we are all kings. If art fairs have democratized the art buying experience, we can see these emergent trends as the will of the people. While there’s no guarantee that a populist approach will make better art, just look at Hollywood’s current state of 80s remakes and comic book franchises’ for an example of how it can go wrong, it does offer artists unprecedented access to an audience, as well as the opportunity to make something that will be good enough even without the lengthy didactics we have come to associate with the contemporary art experience.

 

For more information visit here.

 

-Contributed by Kathryn McKinney

 

 

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“THE THRILL OF THE IDEAL Richard Tuttle: The Reinhart Project” at Pocket Utopia, NYC

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Richard Tuttle. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

 

On the “lower most” frontier of the LES galleries is Pocket Utopia, on Henry street, where you can unexpectedly face late 18th century visions of Arcadia tucked inside a scrappy storefront—a pocket utopia if there ever were. “The Thrill of the Ideal,” subtitled, “Richard Tuttle: The Reinhart Project,” is a collaboration between the uptown print dealer C.G. Boener, Pocket Utopia, and Richard Tuttle.

 

 

Richard Tuttle. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

Richard Tuttle. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

 

I believe Tuttle is our most intelligent living artist; his work is always pushing me to think harder, more sensitively, differently. I didn’t fully understand how dazzling his mind was until I started corresponding with him for a long alphabetic interview in The Brooklyn Rail several months ago, and I’m still reflecting on the complexity of his responses. In the course of our conversation on symbolic versus non-symbolic form, the proto-romantic artist Johann Christian Reinhart came up as someone he sees as creating solutions between the two modes in a single image. This of course made me all the more excited to spend time looking at a group of Reinhart prints Tuttle selected.

 

 

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Because they are prints made for a portfolio they want you to be close, to hold them. The framing reinforces their physical presence: irregular and aged sheets floating against black mats in black frames. If I had one, I’d hang it on the wall against my bed, at pillow level, so I could really look at it in the morning light when the paper would be the most creamy bright against velvet black ink. They are all leafy landscapes witnessing nature overtake some form of crumbling ruin, with a strolling shepherd or artist somewhere in the scene. The vegetation is astonishingly carved out of light and darkness—your eyes move over individual leaves in a shimmering glissando up piano keys, discrete marks making surfaces melting into masses.

 

 

Richard Tuttle detail. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

Richard Tuttle detail. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

 

My favorite has a lone figure laying with arm over his face near the opening of two caverns, remnants of some collapsed building. To be sleeping in the sun, or dreaming, or thinking, near those yawning darknesses strikes a strange chord, permeating the idyllic setting with a sense of emotional or psychological vastness. The animals frolic mostly unaware, going on with their doggy lives as Auden once said, and so do the people—citadels crumble and become host to peasant picnics, while the sky moves overhead with its own concerns.

 

 

Richard Tuttle detail. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

Richard Tuttle detail. Courtesy of Jarrett Earnest.

 

The image is a balance of subtle diagonals and the registration of the print on the page is itself tilted. The upper edge of the paper is cut at an opposing angle so it all rocks back and forth. It is serene and violent.

 

For more information visit here.

 

-Contributed by Jarrett Earnest

 

 

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