Tuesday, July 31, 2007

cars at ice cream stand

shelby
Shelby

studebaker
Studebaker

opel
Opel

Orange cars are best... and green... and baby blue.

ice cream

BONUS:
07-01-07_2014.jpg
Barracuda in parking lot. Yes, it is THAT parking lot.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Clancco Cranks it Up

Sergio Munoz-Sarmiento, from the CLANCCO site I mentioned and linked to in the previous post, has posted a Buchel argument which refers to both anaba and JL of Modern Kicks, and he's re-posted it on both of our blogs in our comments sections (Modern Kicks here, me here).

Sergio doesn't link to our blogs so that his readers can decide how well (or not) he is representing us, and his blog only allows approved comments, so...

Sergio –

I was thinking that the installation, and the experience of it, was to be the artwork… but you are saying that the individual objects which were to comprise the installation are each artworks, independent of each other, and that their individual artistic autonomy is not conditional upon realization of the proposed installation.

Andre Breton defined the ready-made as “manufactured objects promoted to the dignity of objects of art through the choice of the artist”, and Marcel Duchamp never clearly defined the term.

I’m curious about how your claim applies to objects such as the house, one of the objects that Buchel has clearly expressed his rejection of… including in his statement released to the Boston Globe - “firstly, this is not the house that Christoph selected”. Two paragraphs later Buchel says “the museum ended up saving a few hundred dollars on purchasing a cheaper option of mobile home that was not approved by the artist”.

Your rape analogy is not clear to me... if, as you state in the rape comparison, “the intent of either party is irrelevant”, than couldn’t it be argued that whatever intent those objects may have initially signified became irrelevant once Buchel abandoned the project? Wouldn’t they revert back to non-art? Again, I’m not clear on what your point was there.

“To continue to argue that Büchel was not physically present when the art objects were obtained and installed is to continue the romanticized and worn our argument of authenticity, aura, and the hand-made art object—a theory eviscerated by Duchamp and which any first-year art student from any two-year institution quickly learns. As Emma Bloomfield rightly points out, “I have never heard of a ready-made be called ‘a material.’”

Ugh, Clannco, maybe I gave you to much credit when I asked those questions on your blog.

To continue arguing? Who is arguing that, or who are you saying is arguing what? I’m not getting what you’re trying to say. My belief is that the art is whatever Buchel says it is, and if he isn’t saying the unfinished installation is art, and isn’t claiming the individual objects to be art, than none of it is art, and the museum can do whatever it wants with it. I’m so into ideas of replication, reproduction, and approximation in absentia that I’d be thrilled if the museum would take the tarps off the disavowed house, clear everything else completely out of the gallery, and open the exhibition as Christoph Buchel Approximately.

Who is Emma Bloomfield? You lost me.

“The fact that the museum executed his commands to obtain and purchase the objects based on his drawings and model solidify the fact that the objects at this point were no longer materials but evidently art objects.”

I read Buchel’s statement as evidence that the museum in fact failed to execute his commands to obtain the desired materials.

“follow Skadden Arps’ wounded lead…”

Wrong. My first post on this was May 16, after visiting the museum and after reading the Geoff Edgers article, but before the museum had announced it’s decision to cancel the Buchel show and open Made at Mass Moca. I did eventually notice the Skadden ISP showing up and checking out those Buchel posts, but had no idea who they might be working for or if they were even involved, including when I posted a June 18 shout-out to them. I am not aware of any efforts by Skadden to make contact with or influence any media.

“is what any first year law student learns during the first week of law school”
+
“also known to any first year law student under contract law”
+
“which any first-year art student from any two-year institution quickly learns”

=
Super Annoying. Assuming the voice of authority is NOT working.

PLUS: here is JL's response

Friday, July 27, 2007

Tool of Master... MAJORLY UPDATED!!!!

oh no... more B. -

Edward Winkleman made a post which starts off stating that he has learned, "via Christoph Buchel's lawyer, Donn Zaretsky, that Sergio Munoz Sarmiento has weighed in on the Büchel vs. Mass MoCA court battle".

What is most funny about this post is that when I saw it this (Thursday) afternoon around 3pm, there was nothing new on Zaretsky's blog about Buchel. A mysterious and concerned someone immediately left Winkleman a comment asking "via donn zaretsky means zaretsky contacted you about this? i didn't see anything new on the blog"... and then, VOILA!, less than half an hour later Zaretsky updates his blog with the information. Ed never replied.

So, why is Donn Zaretsky apparently contacting sympathetic cut-and-pasters? I mean, if the Buchel position is so strong? Why try so hard to court and shape public opinion? It seems pretty obvious, with that quick posting, that he is paying close attention to the comments.

Too funny.

UPDATE 7/28/07:

If you are interested in all this Buchel stuff, make sure to click the Buchel label, which will give you ALL the posts, in reverse chronological order. Here is the post, with pictures, on my visit to the Made at Mass Moca show.

AFC has a short list of links to some of the more recent Buchel stuff, the most generally informative of which is probably this ArtInfo feature by William Hanley, which also talks about the different approaches the opposing lawyers are taking in the public relations battle. The problem with this article is that it makes no mention of Buchel's history of pranks and chain-yanking... which seems so relevant, right?

The CLANCCO site is pretty good also, lots of the legal stuff, and he's arguing for the artist... but I'm not buying/getting the premise of his argument, that they are arguing over an artwork. It's misleading, and the reaction of anyone sympathetic to artists (including myself) would be to get worked up that the museum is out of line.

But is Buchel calling this an artwork? Is the museum calling this an artwork? My understanding is that neither party is claiming this to be an artwork. Buchel's statements have claimed that the museum purchased many of the wrong items, not the items he requested or would have chosen... Buchel has also stated that the abandoned installation is less than half completed.

If it isn't the stuff he would have chosen, gathered in different piles than he would have liked, less than half finished, and the museum isn't claiming it to be a work by Buchel... how does the VARA stuff apply?

How would it be any different from - or any "worse" than - the Triple Candie show of Cady Noland, "Cady Noland Approximately"? Read these two reviews to know what the Triple Candie show was about: Joe Fyfe liked it, Jerry Saltz didn't like it. Actually, Jerry didn't like it so much he was still talking about it, at this lecture, six months later.

Could the museum throw all of that stuff in a field for a year, bring it back next summer, and have a mock Christoph Buchel exhibition? Could someone buy, or probably offer to haul away for free, all of the abandoned Buchel junk from Mass Moca, bring it down to Harlem and have a "Christoph Buchel Approximately" show at Triple Candie?

How does VARA apply to stuff like Henry Darger, who - in a hospital and knowing he would never be able to return to his apartment - instructed his landlord to destroy any drawings or journals he might find? How come a museum can have a Darger exhibit?

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Linh Dinh

Linh Dinh, an artist and poet friend from way back when, in Philadelphia, is on youtube - I discovered him amongst James Kalm's subscribers - making videos with his (mostly published) poetry.

This one is called Losers, it's almost four minutes long... worth your time FOR SURE. Spend four minutes and watch some video poetry. It's kind of funny. You need to turn the sound on to hear Linh's recital. If you can't handle four minutes and need something shorter look at No Biggies (1:24), or Pick-Up Lines (1:25).

These are great...

PLUS: searched my blog to see if Linh has been mentioned here before, and he was! Linh Dinh is listed as one of the artist included in the 1991 Found Ground show, with Paris.

NOTE: i've edited this post since first posting it last night with an embedded video... just didn't like the way it looked, and i wanted to be able to add links (but couldn't figure out how to do that without losing the video).

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

more in group shows


Larry Bamburg, in Stubborn Materials, at Peter Blum - his sculpture is made of silvery detritus attached to fishing line, spinning from a ceiling fan... really beautiful in the sunlight. I don't think there was any sound, but I'm remembering it like soft wind chimes.

I made a bad video, it's on youtube.

This show also had soft yellow foam sculpture... I think I saw three soft yellow foam sculptures in three different shows this visit, including the John Chamberlain at Zwirner. Plus, this is the gallery that recently had a yellow foam piece by John Beech. Some yellow foam pieces are better than others, for sure.... I liked the John Beech, but not the one in this show (can't remember who did it).

Philip Akkerman, at Goff + Rosenthal - he's in a three person show with Francis Alys and Stephen Bush. Akkerman is really good (again), Alys is interesting, and Bush is a snooze/yuk.

Here is a shot of Bruce and Ryan, studying Akkerman. Bruce is up to something... be careful, Akkerman!

Pierre Manzoni, in Substance and Surface, at Bortolami - Achrome, 1959 - stones on small canvas, painted white.

There is disappointingly little, in English, about Pierre Manzoni on the internet. It's funny to see what artists are on Wikipedia, and who is missing. Kind of a joke. Some galleries are really on top of all that, maybe? I think any artist that is bought by Saatchi, his people put on Wikipedia... but it's amazing who isn't listed... no Joe Overstreet, for example, no Rosalyn Drexler.

Not saying there is anything at all wrong about Saatchi, or whomever, putting his artists on Wikipedia... just that being included, or not, on Wikipedia doesn't seem to be much of a measure of artistic relevance or significance.

Elliott Green
Elliott Green, in By Invitation Only, at Kinz, Tillou + Feigen - Saw this show, enjoyed seeing the Elliott Green, and then happened to see the same painting on the cover of a literary magazine a few days later; he has a small spread of more work in the center. I think the magazine was called Fence.

He sometimes works with Amy Sillman and David Humphrey, as a collaborative called Team Shag; I also relate his stuff to Ellen Birkenblitt's.

barely related: the Elliott Green was at Kinz, Tillou + Feigen, the gallery that JB shows at. I can't believe it... and it wasn't long ago, late in the fairly depressing comments here, that I brought up Ader and Johnson, and the lure of suicide at sea. Too sad, maybe it isn't true.. nothing's confirmed.

Richard Artschwager, in Shadow, at Galerie Lelong - Speaking Woman - made of rubberized hair? So weird, rainbow afro.

Catherine Lee, also in Shadow, at Galerie Lelong - two flat hanging pieces of canvas, covered with a tiny grid, each little square filled with the same teeny tiny calligraphic element. I think it's from the seventies.

Didn't at all care for the dull Angelo Filomeno in this show. A big piece of silver embroidery, with skull. Covers all the bases I guess, except, no yellow foam.

Patrick Smith
Patrick Smith, in New Mutants, at Canada. Oh. He's on Wikipedia... that's funny.

The Ahmed Alsoudani drawings at Thierry Goldberg were good... bigger than I expected, after first seeing them on James Wagner.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Steven Parrino, Niki de Saint Phalle


Steven Parrino, Skeletal Implosion #3, 2001, in A Point in Space Is a Place for an Argument, at Zwirner.

Fontana.


Niki de Saint Phalle, My Shoes ou Memory of a Shoot (fragment de Dracula I), 1961, in A Point in Space Is a Place for an Argument, at Zwirner.

A crucifix, a meatgrinder, and a pair of shoes, splattered in red and purple.

Related: Roberta Smith reviews A Point in Space.. for the NYTimes.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Michael Hakimi, PLUS!


Michael Hakimi, at Andrew Kreps. This is a two-person show - with Ellen Gronemeyer, also good - but I want to post the Hakimi alone first.

The piece above is paper, the black is spray-paint, and I wasn't thinking of it as representing anything, but it's actually a stencil of a city-scape. Knowing that, I still read it first as form. I'm reading the positive space (which i guess is actually the negative space)... just liking the colors and hanging. If anything... I see it as a hanging robe, or maybe a bat form.

Interesting because it is a painting, a sculptural element, as well as the thing left-over from the making of another painting, possibly part of a performance... without the performance-relicness taking away from the individual objectness, the way that sometimes can.

He's got some other pieces - large, free-hanging, purply digital prints - that read as abstract (and could be paintings), but which also reference buildings and skylines... although not so much that once you realize it you lose the abstract reading.


Two small floor pieces are separate individual works, but placed under the wall hangings.

Twelve small coins on a small sheet of square paper, which you can see in the first picture posted, and six belts on a German newspaper. Maybe the coins and belts and newspaper are more city references? Something male? This show looks almost too good... too handsome, too well-designed.

Michael Hakimi shows at the Glasgow gallery Sorcha Dallas, as does Charlie Hammond and a number of other interesting artists.


That's my belt. I couldn't resist.

ALFRED JENSEN FIFTY YEARS AGO TODAY


Alfred Jensen, My Oneness, A Universe of Colours, 1957

This Alfred Jensen is one of four included in A Point in Space Is a Place for an Argument , at Zwirner, along with the Overstreet posted below. It's signed and dated on the front, Alfred Jensen July 20 1957... fifty years ago today. If I was in NYC today I would go to Zwirner and stare hard at the center of that painting... try to jump through space and time... until I self-integrate.

"So we'll live and pray and sing and tell old tales and laugh of gilded butterflies" - W.S.

"No repeated group of words would fit their rythm and no scale could give them meaning" - Nathaniel West"

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Joe Overstreet


Joe Overstreet, The Basketweavers, 2003

This Joe Overstreet is in the show at Zwirner... A Point in Space Is a Place for an Argument. So much good stuff in that show. TOO MUCH. I want to go back.

I'm posting this Overstreet now because it is one of my favorites in the show, but also because I just posted the 2007 Harriet Korman below, and they were two of many favorites from High Times, Hard Times, both represented by pieces from 1971. So, here they both are now with excellent work more than thirty years later. Wow.

Joe Overstreet has a website, with lots of images of work from 2003, and an almost fifty year listing of exhibitions; from 1955-2003. How old is he? Maybe he was already almost forty when he made the 1971 piece?

Joe Overstreet
Joe Overstreet, detail of The Basketweavers, 2003 - it's big, painted on a metal screen.


Joe Overstreet, Purple Flight, 1971
Joe Overstreet, Purple Flight, 1971 - this is the piece he had in High Times, Hard Times.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

an interview, a panel... TODAY!

TODAY'S INTERVIEW:

Richard Polsky will be interviewed by Eva Lake today at 3pm. You can listen LIVE, on your computer - and call in - or you can listen to the archived mp3 later.

Richard Polsky really hates Marlene Dumas. HEY, man vs. women people new to anaba, here is my Artnet gender breakdown from a year-and-a-half ago... has it changed? I haven't checked.

TONIGHT'S PANEL:

Ad Hoc Vox, organized by Colleen Asper and Jennifer Dudley, is sponsoring in-depth conversation about the representation of women in the arts.... TONIGHT... 7pm, at Brooklyn Fire Proof.

The discussion's participants are Phong Bui, Colby Chamberlain, Dana Frankfort, Maureen Gallace, Elizabeth Huey, Paddy Johnson, Deborah Kass, Wendy Olsoff, Danica Phelps, Katy Siegel, Lisa Sigal, and Becky Smith. Colleen Asper will moderate the discussion, which will be followed by a Q&A with the audience.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Shirley Jaffe


Shirley Jaffe, Horizons, 2006

This group show at Lennon Weinberg was good to walk into... so much color. I had just been to maybe three or four restrained, bare-bones, Japanese-y group shows in a row with exactly the same tatami/straw/white/stone subdued palette... what was up with all of that? There was some good work, but it was like an editor from Elle Decor curated all of them.


Shirley Jaffe, The Chinese Mountain, 2004-05

Harriet Korman
Harriet Korman, Untitled, 2007 - the Harriet Korman was another favorite... and she was also a favorite from High Times, Hard Times.

Monday, July 16, 2007

hobnobbing!


This recent NYC visit was a crazy social whirl...

I saw so many people... it was nuts, kind of non-stop. Old friends, planned meetings and unexpected encounters, and artblog friends, and art people I had never met before.

a partial listing:

Gabriel Bennett - unexpected, on the street in Chelsea. we BOTH did the classic double-take thing. Gabe was at the 31 Grand opening later that night... it was packed.
Max-Carlos Martinez - at Sarah Peters' show, and later he was at the 31 Grand opening. Okay... I should stop saying "was at the 31 Grand opening", because pretty much everybody was at the 31 Grand opening. It doesn't need to be stated.
Eric Sall - we went to a bunch of galleries in the Lower East Side - I think that's what that area is called - before heading over to the pre-party.
James Wagner and Barry Hoggard - at Tom's party, and at the opening.
Tom Sanford (and Alex) - super gracious... it was cool to see his work in progress, how things are blocked out first, after seeing these amazing details on his Danish friend's blog. Oh... and here's an interview, with a bunch more images.
Barnaby Whitfield (and Byrd, and Byrd's mother and sister) - Barnaby is too funny, and his work is EXCELLENT.
Daniel Heidkamp
Carol Riot Kane - Barry took our picture at Tom's party, and put it on bloggy.
Erik Benson
Cougarfuck - crazy kids.
Ryan McLennan - first saw at the opening (he's in the show), then went to a bunch of Chelsea galleries with him and Bruce the next day.
Meridith Pingree - Meridith! VERY happy to see Meridith. Meridith has a show opening at The Soap Factory, in Minneapolis, i think September 8th. Missed seeing Kai, but we talked on the telephone.
Jon Elliott - he's also in the show... I liked his piece. It was hard to pay any attention to the art at this PARTY/opening, but I'm remembering studying and talking to someone about this one.
Bruce Wilhelm - Bruce was at 31 Grand to support Ryan... that was a nice surprise.
Jen Bandini and Hooper Turner - they've posted some photos from the opening on their blog...
Michael Anderson
Langdon Graves - my memory is hazy at this point, but i think i met Langdon briefly... right? or was it Virginia? i have mixed it up....
Claudine Anrather
Maureen Cavanaugh
Lauren Gibbes and Jason Weatherspoon
Donny George - complete shocker! I hadn't seen Donny since Richmond, a couple years ago, and didn't know he is now in New York
James Kalm - YAY! James Kalm is awesome... he videotaped most of the show, and much of the crowd. I am on there for waaay to long, drunkenly dorking out.
Deborah Hampton - okay, this was at the bar... AFTER the pre-party and AFTER the 31 Grand opening... but I know I talked to her.
Sarah Peters
with Kim Keever
and Kim Keever! You can see Michelle Tillou reflected in Kim's photograph.

The photo at the top of the post is of Barnaby Whitfield talking with James Wagner, at Tom Sanford's studio... I can't believe I didn't take more photos.

WHERE was Michael Cambre? I would have liked to have met him. Also missed Kelli.

Okay... I am ALL NEW YORKED OUT. Saw a bunch of art that I'll post on, but don't think I'll go back for a while.

Roger White


Roger White paintings, at D'Amelio Terras. That baja painting, on the right, is the one currently being talked about on PaintersNYC.

Roger White has two paintings in this small show. The one on the right is called Baja, and the other one is called something like "sheet", or maybe "towel"... can't remember... but, it is evidently a painting of a sheet or a towel. Neither of these I guess are really abstraction... but the sheet one is not so obviously a picture of something, like the baja. Both are painted well, thin and loose. The "sheet" is full of a triangle pattern... and within each triangle the brushwork is unfussy and spontaneous. Very much liked that one.

Liked the Chris Martin also, with some of the collaged elements stapled directly to the canvas. Here's an article by Chris Martin about abstract painting.

HEY! There is an article about artblogs in the Brooklyn Rail, by James Kalm, and he talks to Painter (of PainterNYC), Barry Hoggard, and James Wagner!

Saturday, July 14, 2007

happy friday the 13th


Bruce is happy because someone has made sculptures of Mars. Bruce likes Mars.

Bruce Wilhelm
One of Bruce's Mars paintings... maybe from 2005.

UPDATE: it's from 2004, n0t 2005.

Mildred also liked Mars... scroll down here to see Mars the Red Planet.


Sarah is happy because she got a good review in the NYTimes today!!!

Sarah and I had not seen each other in almost four years... and then I ran into her on the street, the same day she gets that review, in the middle of having a conversation about her, and previous freaky Sarah coincidences. Sarah is maybe magic?

UPDATE: she also got a good review in Chelsea Now, written by poet Jeffrey Cyphers Wright; Winkleman excerpts both on his blog.

PLUS: my picture is on bloggy!!! i am staring straight ahead very hard, trying not to look down her dress, and trying not to look too drunk. james has the truer likeness that i will maybe post later.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Thomas Gainsborough


Went to the Clark on Sunday and saw a selection of work from the recently donated Manton Collection; a nice collection of British work for this mostly French museum. The museum is exhibiting drawings and paintings by Constable (a bunch), Turner, Samuel Palmer (only one, but nice to see), Gainsborough, and others - only a part of the entire donation.

I've been into Gainsborough ever since reading Chris Ashley's EXCELLENT post on Gainsborough's brushtrokes... it was so good to see that, and think about that painting in relation to the Katherine Bernhardt painting posted on PaintersNYC, at about the same time.

These frames are fantastic... I was really enjoying the frames on this visit, because I was just talking about frames the other day (after seeing Zach Harris' show).


Thomas Gainsborough, Viscount Hampden, 1780 - This portrait is not in the Manton exhibition, it was already at the Clark, on display upstairs along with one other (an earlier one). This painting, if you ever get to the Clark, needs to be seen.

PLUS: for Barnaby. This is the giant Bouguereau that, for years and years, hung in the lobby... and is now moved upstairs, hanging near another Bouguereau.

I miss it in the lobby, which now has an expanded bookstore, with a pretty good (and welcome) selection, but looks horrible. Like a Barnes & Noble remainder table, plus coffee shop, times twenty. What happened? Is this temporary? That lobby looks like crap, it used to be so nice.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

american tree

american tree
i'm comin to your town, i'll help you party down, i'm an american tree!

Monday, July 09, 2007

Skadden, Arp, Mcfadden, Ayers, Slipek & Kalm


Hey, I got a thumbs-up from starmaker SIMON WATSON... now my career is ready to GO. I will never have to promote myself, after this, again. Simon is giving the thumbs-up to one of my paintings in the Building Picturing show, at The Painting Center.

Okay. I am lying. That is not Simon Watson. That is Ed Slipek. I have never met this Simon Watson person....

James Kalm WENT! Look at his video! Unfortunately, he came and left before I had arrived, so I didn't get to say thanks. James Kalm says on that video that I am one of his first subscribers, but that is wrong. I'm not one of the first, I was the FIRST.

SHOCKER - Building Picturing, the show I'm in (!), is an Art Info pick for Best of New York Summer Shows??? WOW... that is weird! Thanks, Robert Ayers, of Art Info!

Assume Vivid Astro Focus


Stop Wars.

Assume Vivid Astro Focus, at John Connelly Presents - Everything, including objects, is covered and wrapped with sheets of 3-D paper, spelling out four-letter words like BUSH, VOTE, CRAP, PIGS, HOPE, LIES, HOLY MOLY, LIFE... all of them piled like the Robert Indiana LOVE sculpture.

The 3-D glasses include half a face, so everyone is walking around with the same half-face, reaching out to touch 3-D things. This was fun, with people. Barry has a great picture.

So, is AVAF one person, Eli Sudbrack, or is it sometimes a collaborative? Maybe it is always Eli, but collaborating with different artists along the way, for different installations? I thought the 2004 Whitney Biennial room, with the spiral staircase, was a super-snooze... but this John Connelly installation was electra-engaging. Downstairs was more, a long corridor, music and neon... I can't describe... but it was hypnotic, threatening, intense, really good.

assume vivid astro focus
there is a room you can stick your head in and see a bunch of party trash.

assume vivid astro focus
These are the same balloons that were being given away at his Art Basel: Miami container, in 2005.

ABMB: Basel souvenir
i got a couple.


Hello hello, Police Headquarters, can I help you?

apartment 3-D
My apartment was 3-D!!!

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Zach Harris... plus

Zach Harris, at RARE (in the back). A little bit these landscapes make me think of Gregory Amenoff.

James Wagner posted on Zach after seeing his stuff at his grad show, two plus years ago... James was really into it. Right now I want to see these shows at Canada and Sunday that they are excited about. Jacques-Louis Vidal's website is crazy.

I like frames. Timothy Sean Johnston's excellent paintings are always framed... Tom Sanford... Randy Wray had some nice lumpy frames... Alison Fox is experimenting with frames and edges.

Horace Pippin is the man, that's who I thought of when I saw the Randy Wray piece.

PLUS: Pat Berran and Kate Horne, artists who have shown at Nonesuch, are included in the show in the front space (at RARE), and Pat Berran, henceforth referred to as Patrick, is featured on PaintersNYC today.

chelsea, june 2007 - group shows


Jon Kessler, in The Line of Time, and The Plane of Now, at Wallspace -

The front room has a flat-screen tv showing Edward Hopper's famous painting, with video stuff happening where the background street-scene should be - movement, light, shininess, kinetic stuff, maybe computer stuff, looks random.

This sculpture (pictured above) is in the back room... the same Hopper painting, but with the street-scene painted out, and things moving around, back and forth. Tiny video cameras are mounted on some of the moving parts. The light and movement filmed by the tiny cameras mounted on the sculpture is blue-screened into the background of the Hopper painting... that is what is shown on the video monitor in the front room, filmed by a camera mounted across from the sculpture, focused directly on the painting (not showing any of the sculpture).

If someone walks between the sculpture and the video camera across from it, that person blocks out the painting for a moment...

it's hard to explain.

It looks like a robot, a relative or descendant of one of those Nam June Paik's.


Two (or three?) of the video cameras; the little black things, one trained on the piece of tinfoil as it is pulled up and down, the other swings back and forth in front of that concave mirror.

Man Ray
Man Ray, in Concrete Works, at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, through July 27th.

Here is another one.

Jessica Stockholder
Jessica Stockholder, in Concrete Works, at Mitchell-Innes & Nash.

The Albert Oehlen in this show is for sale at $425,000, but for that much money you could buy TWO cars in that unbelievable Chelsea car showroom.
green lotus
Green Lotus. Does Albert Oehlen get half, or is that like a re-sale? Do his paintings generally sell for that much? If I were an artist like that I would have a lot of nice cars.


Stefan Saffer, in In Context, at Pavel Zoubok, through August 10th - I had seen his work on Barry's flickr site and really liked it, so I was happy to see this. James and Barry have been following his work for a while...

Also liked seeing Tony Berlant, John Evans, Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt, Simon Neville, and Jack Tworkov. It's a huge show, almost sixty artists included.

There is a small Al Souza which I initially mistook for a possible Arturo Herrera, then circled through the show and came upon a Herrera. The Souza is the better Herrera.

06-23-07_1621.jpg
i forget, in Rare Birds, at Luise Ross, through July 27th - the premise is maybe a little corny - everything has birds in it! - but the work is good. Way too many charming pieces to name all their names.... but it was especially nice to see a second John Evans that day (the first was in the Pavel Zoubak collage show).

The snake in the piece above is a twisted piece of tinfoil; the red sun and star I think are sawdust, or sand.

Last time I was here they had the John Dilg show, he is included in this show as well.

06-22-07_1327.jpg
Jakub Julian Ziolkowski, in Three for Society, at 303 Gallery, through July 27th - something creepy, like a leather mask or something...both his paintings are cartoony but creepy like that. I like the way he lets these tiny controlled drips happen, and then works them into the composition... for example, in the piece above you can maybe see that little drip of blue in the shoulder, and in this piece you can see the oily ass-crack sweat.

There is so much tension in that drip of blue in the shoulder.

I also liked the Mary Heilmann.

Josh Smith
Josh Smith, in Irreversible, at Stellan Holm - good abstract painting show... they wouldn't let me take pictures, this Josh Smith one was snapped as the guy said "No Pictures", so it sucks, sorry.

This Josh Smith so clearly has the name spelled out, so I asked if it was made before or after the work included in his recent solo at Lehmann Maupinn, in which none of the (possible) text is legible. They said this piece was made after those pieces...

Unfortunately, I did not get a chance to focus on this show as much as I'd have liked, because I ran into someone and got distracted. There was a nice stripe/stain glittery piece by John Armleder.

Curated by Niandra LaDes.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Marlene Mocquet

Marlene Mocquet
Marlene Mocquet, at Freight + Volume - These were nice, and tied into the stuff written about in my long post that got deleted.

What is it called when you make stains, or drips, or find a splotch... and then make a picture from that? Is there a word? I know that there are/were specific surrealist techniques - like frottage, fumage, soufflage - that an artist can use as a basis for further refinement... but is there just a more general word?

Anyways, whatever the word is, that is what she seems to be doing here. Lots of play with paint, followed by more careful, but still playful, delineation... finding faces and animals and fantastical landscapes.

Marlene Mocquet
They are cute, and have the little girl thing going on... some of them could be illustrating fairy-tales... but the painting inventiveness, the embrace of chance and possible sloppy endings, keeps the saccharine from completely taking over.

Marlene Mocquet

Monday, July 02, 2007

chelsea, june 2007 - some interesting solo shows


Tom Meacham, at Oliver Kamm, through July 13th - these paintings are not really paintings....... the one on the left is some kind of print, maybe an inkjet print, directly onto canvas, and the one one the right is black tape on canvas. There is a table of knives, like a street stand, I'm not sure what that is about. Oliver Kamm is consistently interesting.

Oh, surprise, I just did a search of this blog to find any previous Oliver Kamm mentions here, and it turns out I talked about Tom Meacham's O. Kamm show back in 11/2005. Weird. Looking at those pictures of the 2005 show, on the gallery's website, makes me think that maybe if the 2007 me could travel back in time and see that 2005 show I might like it even more than I did at the time. Maybe I am not getting Tom Meacham fully. Maybe the 2009 me would like this 2007 show more than the 2007 me. I need to spend more time at the next Tom Meacham show, really try to get it, and catch up with myself. If nothing else, this blog is maybe good for me to try to keep track of and figure out what I'm interested in, and why.

Earlier this year I enjoyed the Michael Rodriguez show at Oliver Kamm.

Liz Markus
Liz Markus, at ZieherSmith, through July 27th - they're sort of ominous, apocalyptic, tie-dye-ish, rohrshachs... of hippies. Stain painting, poured painting, folded painting (it must be folded at some point, right?)... I see in these rorschachs lots of 50's/60's painting references together with the 60's/70's cultural references, all of which are included together within this Cold War/Vietnam time-frame. Seeing the same hippie face in every rohrshach is too much though.

Alison Fox
Alison Fox, at ATM, through July 6th - lots of nice small abstract paintings, hung salon style throughout the space, with some of the gallery walls covered by sheets of cork (not really cork, a cork wallpaper). It seemed like they were full of nods and references, like little tributes to technique, but maybe that is my imagination. I think the cork thing contributed to that.. the idea of putting up postcards of your favorite paintings.


David Noonan, at Foxy Production, through July 6th - The floor was covered with a big mat, not tatami, but something like tatami... smelled good. The subdued palette, smell, and central "screen" sculpture all made me think of Japan stuff... plus one of the images was vaguely like something from a Mifune samurai movie (even thought it wasn't at all). The images are all black and white screenprinted photographs, or maybe film-stills... there was definitely a cinematic feel.

That screen sculpture mentioned above consists of a group of flat cut-out screenprinted figures - like the Clockwork Orange gang, but they also could be mimes, or clowns, or street performers.