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Showing posts with label cardboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cardboard. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Guy Goodwin


he said this was the best light for it.

Guy Goodwin, at Brennan & Griffin. Closes 4/8.


Tania's Day

Guy Davenport



Guy Davenport
cardboard


Guy Goodwin and Stanley Whitney having a laugh.

Stanley Whitney is showing at Team.


they are like those upholstery chair things people sit up in bed with...

The small ones especially, none of which I photographed because they are under glass and too reflective, reminded me of the GREAT and way-underknown RVA artist Don Crow... simple bold colorful shapes collaged together with all the staples showing... I cant find any images on his website it is all more recent but I wrote about them in 2004.

Guy Goodwin
Guy Goodwin

Reviewed in the NYTimes by Roberta Smith.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Margo Mensing


Elizabeth Bishop Project

Margo Mensing, It's Not Unusual, at The Art Center Gallery, through March 27th.

Each year - since her 63rd year - Margo studies the work and life of an individual who died at her current age... and spends the year creating artwork responding to and inspired by that person.

This year is her Elizabeth Bishop year, for which Margo has been writing and sending letters... written mostly on the inside of cardboard packaging... quoting Bishop's poems and own letters, connecting Bishop's words to the lives of friends and family to whom the letters are sent. The 'letters' pictured above have been borrowed back for the exhibition, some are color photo-copies, and a few are letters to Margo in return, also written on recycled packaging.


NA 708210 EFT 41875, from the Donald Judd Project.

NA 708210 EFT 41875 is the name of the color, selected from over three hundred red paint chips, which best matched the red in a photo of Donald Judd's untitled 1962/1987. Originally constructed of painted Douglas Fir and plywood, copied here in willow by John McQueen.

Judd Project objects were all fabricated by others, to Margo's specifications.


Donal Judd Project - machine embroidered t-shirts, contracted out to a shop in Tibet.


Specific Object

Margo found the perfect mug on a 2001 residency in Australia, a Bundanoon Pottery mug... so six years later it was an ideal specific object to re-fabricate for the Judd Project. Student potter Teddy Kunhardt was commissioned and together they made twelve, but in the end only six were decided to be close enough. Now Margo is safe if she ever breaks or loses her Bundanoon Mug.


Margo Mensing


Joan Mitchell Project, for which Margo spent last year knitting Joan Mitchell paintings into socks, which were then distributed to friends and family... and she can't stop, she is still knitting Joan Mitchell paintings into socks.


Really cool. Margo is welcoming people into the gallery to make work or develop a collaborative project.

On the back wall are Ian and Monica Berry's photographs of Ian's pair of Joan Mitchell socks, all taken in Miami during Art Basel. On the floor behind Margo you can glimpse part of a sculpture made by Victoria Palermo. Anyone can come... e-mail the gallery for info.

Margo and Barbara
Margo and Barbara Garro studying Barbara's portrait of Jacqueline Kennedy.

Judd fabricator John McQueen is collaging a Joan Mitchell painting, from recyclable packaging only, color-matching and shape-cutting piece by piece... it's gonna take FOREVER.


Walt Disney Project - Walt Disney as a cute stuffed character... primary technicolor, Dumbo ears and Mickey hands, filming.

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Walter Robinson


Walter Robinson - an early 80's pulp piece - looks good in shadows, with blinds and plant.

Walter Robinson, in Nincompatibles, with Richard Hell and Brigitte Engler, at Bowman/Bloom Gallery... closes December 14th.


Walter Robinson, 2009

GalleryBeat at the opening. Watch it to see Paul H-O get in Peter Schjeldhal's face about Paul's movie Guest of Cindy Sherman.


Walter Robinson, painted on cardboard, 2009.

Richard Hell
Voidoid Richard Hell

RELATED: Peter Schjeldahl trashes the Urs Fischer show - "If you spend more than twenty minutes with the three-floor extravaganza, you’re loitering".

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Tony Feher + Jason Middlebrook


Tony Feher and Jason Middlebrook at Usdan Gallery, Bennington College.

Dan Cameron curated a three-artist installation for Bennington College... the show was assembled over the first three weeks of its four-week run, with each artist working independently... the first artist had an empty gallery, the second artist worked with the first artist's work, the third artist finished the installation. None of the artists were informed of what the others were presenting.

My visit was at the end of the second week... Tony Feher and Jason Middlebrook had each finished, Ted Riederer was yet to install. Here are some photos of Riederer's subsequent performance/installation.

Tony Feher + Jason Middlebrook
Tony Feher's red and blue buckets + Jason Middlebrook's black cardboard-box city.

I visited some studios and saw a possible Josh Blackwell painting class still-life setup. Pink argyle sweater. Josh teaches at Bennington.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Kenji Fujita + Nancy Shaver


Kenji Fujita and Nancy Shaver, untitled collaboration, 2008, at John Davis Gallery, in Hudson, NY.

This piece is included in the Nancy Shaver-curated group show in the top-floor space of the rear "carriage house" (it feels more like an old grain elevator/silo). Perfect piece for this space... all of the angles, the palette, the possibilities of function and purpose, the materials and treatment. Too good.


Kenji Fujita's debris of life and mind #2, 2008, leaning against wall in background... house paint, sculptamold, aqua-resin, fiberglass, felt, found objects, cardboard, wood and 3/4" plywood square (24 x 24").


pile of freely stacked gray boxes... they're light, just painted cardboard, or maybe empty soap boxes.


clumpy protest sign - this was in the box, i pulled it out to see if those sticks were anything.

Kenji Fujita and Nancy Shaver
sails. it's on casters.


tilt.

Eric Gelber on Nancy Shaver, for Artcritical.com (i found this when i googled her).

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Pissed-Off Douche L., Ry Rocklen, John Waters... plus


Ry Rocklen, Folding Chair (2), 2008, cardboard, metal, glue, epoxy putty, at Black Dragon Society.

Ry Rocklen, Wickervision, mixed media, 2006, at Baronian_Francey. They were really nice and had some good stuff, including Steve Canaday.

John Waters
John Waters, six altered snapshots, wrote down the title and info but can't find it. Click on the photo to see it bigger.


Christoph Buchel, Mickey Mouse, 2007, animated speaking Mickey Mouse puppet, i-pod, edition 1 0f 5 + 2 AP, at Hauser and Wirth.

Swiss(?) children reading the transcript from the motion hearing... different children reading each role... recorded on i-pod stuffed in talking Mickey Mouse. I made a video of it.

ALSO LIKED: i think i have two more armory posts, but can't get to all the stuff i saw and liked, so here is a partial listing with links to some photos -

Ellen Birkenblitt (no photo)
Varda Caivano - two nice paintings, one so Redon-ish, at Victoria Miro.
Steve Canaday, at Baronian-Francey
Charlie Hammond, at Sorcha Dallas - they had a booth full of his stuff, but my photos are not so good. i really liked his show in the back room at Anton Kern last year as well.
Fawn Krieger, at Art in General - i'm a fan of fawn and faan.
Alessandro Pessoli - he had good work in two different booths.
Shirley Tse, at Murray Guy. Don't know the title or date.


with Richard Prince!!!

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Paris


Going through my old papers I found this clipping from what is probably the Philadelphia City Paper, I think 1993.

"He may wear Jiffy Pop packaging as a headdress and mutter incomprehensible sermons. But the colored chalk creations of street personality Paris are the real deal, aesthetically impressive and rich in biblical allegory. Paris knows he's good, too - he'll charge a pretty penny if you want to buy a piece of his work. The Sun Ra of Philly art. - J.G."

Good, another piece of Paris documentation! Go to this 8/11/05 post, if you need to get the background on Paris.

Who is J.G.? Maybe J.G. has some photos of Paris, or of his work? I've been into this occasional trackdown of Paris for about eight years, and have found only one photo... and no other extant examples of his work, although I remember seeing pieces in people's apartments long ago... and was told that John Ollman had bought some.

Roberta discovered this other piece of documentation, after I wrote to her and Libby early in 2004, hoping they would post something on their Philadelphia artblog, a listing for a 1991 show that Paris was included in at the Moore College of Art -

"Found Ground - Paintings and drawings on readymade surfaces by sixteen Philadelphia artists including Alfred Bendiner, Rachel Bliss, Salvador Casco, Charles Crumb, Linh Dinh, Rafael Ferrer, Thomas Gartside, Todd Gilens, Anthony—Petr Gorny, Kate Javens, Virgil Marti, Beth McHenry, Quentin Morris, Gerald Nichols, and Paris/Holy Joseph. January 11–February 16, 1991"

Maybe I can write to Moore, or the curator of the show, and ask if they have any photo documentation?

Last time I posted on Paris I hadn't yet figured out how to post more than one image to the blog. It's nice to be able to post these images now. This is a selection of some of my Paris pieces -


Two peacocks and flowers. LArGeR.


Jesus walking on water, and maybe praying in the boat at the same time. The bottom reads "God Bless America".

The back has a similar drawing.


Sweet piece. Very hard - impossible - to see in this image, but there is a second tiny saint sitting atop his staff.


This one is too good, and it is the BACK of that first peacock piece above. They are on a thick-ish kind of cardboard... when I win the mega-millions they will be separated and framed.

Is this a picture of a dreadlocked Jesus in peace talks with Mohammed, moderated by Mary?


This is the only known photo of Paris, at least, known to me and the guy that gave it to me. I put an ad in a Philadelphia newspaper in 1999(?) asking for any info or remembrances of Paris, from which I received a single response. That person remembered Paris, and told me of a shelter that Paris sometimes visited.

A couple years after that I was able to get to Philadelphia and visit the shelter, meeting a staffperson who remembered Paris very well, with great fondness... and who even had a photo of Paris near his desk.

I like that in this photo you can see some crayons or drawing tools on top of that shelf, next to what is, I BET, a ring of foil headgear. It also appears that he is covering himself with one of his drawings, which is what he did on the streets. He slept on and under them.

Read the old post to fill in any gaps to this Paris story, and LOOK here to see my full Paris set.