Friday, December 26, 2008
Jess
Another one of my favorite shows of the year...Jess @ Tibor de Nagy.
...I first learned of Jess on Anaba.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Mr. Please Please
One of my faves of the year...The James Brown Collection at Christie's.
Banner, A yellow and red silk banner embroidered Mr. Please Please. 24½x50in.
Jesus Statue, A painted stone statue of Jesus. 26in.
Miniature Keyboard, A Casiotone Miniature Keyboard, canvas carrying case. 16in.
Peacock Wall Plaque, A cedar wood wall plaque, 33x60in.
Cigarette Case, A green and gold-plated cigarette case with James engraved on the front, and Brown on the back. 5in.
GFOS Pendant, A gold GFOS pendant. 2in.
Owl Pendant, A carved stone owl pendant attached to a leather necklace.
Muslin Sculpture, A muslin soft sculpture formed as a palm tree. 84in.
Leather Vest, A red leather vest with yellow pockets and rainbow colored wool on the collar, sleeves and bottom.
Painting, A hand-painted canvas, signed RCM. 14x18in.
© Christie's Images Limited [2008]
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Sue Havens
More Sue Havens here.
Blue Wrap, 2003, acrylic on canvas, 30” x 36” x 3 1/2”
Before (Green), 2008, acrylic on panel, 12 “ x 16 “ x 1”
Live Ladies, 1995, drawing, collage, xerox, and plate lithography, 15" x 20"
Untitled, 2001, acrylic on wood panel
Coney Island Lagoon, 2005, acrylic on canvas, 54" x 62" x 2"
Monday, December 8, 2008
board at work
Back in 2001, I was working as an art handler at an American art gallery. These three pictures are of the group doodles that we used to do on the table in the back room. I’m not sure that these are the best examples of what we did, but they are the only pictures that still exist, as far as I know (hence the bad quality). The contributors to these works are Matthew Fisher, Bill Fiddler, Stephen Thornhill, and Garth Freeman.
I’d love to show more works done by people at work. If you have something you’d like to submit along those lines, send me an email...
I’d love to show more works done by people at work. If you have something you’d like to submit along those lines, send me an email...
Labels:
cardboard,
collaboration,
collage,
drawing,
matthew fisher,
work
Thursday, December 4, 2008
up now
Unbreak My Heart at Pluto Gallery in Brooklyn, curated by Brent Burket, with artists Rosanna Bruno, Beth Gilfilen, Kate Gilmore, EJ Hauser, Robert Schatz, and Luke Whitlatch.
See my past post about EJ Hauser here.
See my past post about EJ Hauser here.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Mike Hein
I first saw Mike Hein's work a little while back when looking at artists for The Longest Day. I'm really into what he's doing now with molded plastic, making random associations between realism and abstraction. Check out some of these nice older works to see how he got there. He currently has a work in The Object Direct at Heskin Contemporary, curated by Matthew Fisher, which closes January 3. Also see his new website here and the interview below:
JL: Throughout your progression, there are almost no examples where you have simply replicated/copied something. You made a move from assembling found objects in your early works (Jag in the Cemetery and Demon Child ) and to altered constructions (Slim Door), but they have never been straight-forward. Can you describe your initial approach to materials and how it has evolved?
MH: I never really thought that I was assembling found objects. I had thought of an object or material as a catalyst. Material and found objects seem the same to me they have the potential to do the same thing. Take for instance the desk and the Formica on the gravestone in Jag in the Cemetery. The desk sets up a context and experience shares by most people in North America of being in grade school. The Formica takes you to the kitchen of a middle class home. I think the desk was an anomaly though it still did what the other pieces did that did not have found objects.
I was very interested at the time at the relationship between the subject/form and the material it was depicted from. Attaching a precarious topographic form to a school desk and attaching Formica to a mdf form of a gravestone. Both transcend the sum of their parts. I think coincidentally these two examples entered into a supernatural realm via banal forms and materials.
JL: In many of your works, this approach sets up a kind of conflicts between thing easily recognized and something less palpable. Can you explain how this emerges?
MH: I find the only way work evolves is if I’m in the studio. I have to be messing around with the tools and materials. When I don’t have an idea I just go and experiment. Whether it be trying to depict something I haven’t before or creating a new texture in the plastic.
JL: How did you end up working with Plexiglas?
MH: I tired of using pre-fab materials. All of my references were seemingly tied to middle America. I wanted to move away from that and have broader, maybe more abstract concepts. Plastic is a raw material like a sheet of plywood or metal, but its properties are amazing. It is very workable with basic tools and is pre-colored. I’m also very attracted to the glossy finish. Concentrating on one material seems to expedite some facets of the decisions I have to make as well which, for now, are important.
JL: Some of these are like visual malapropisms that have a humorous bent…why might you choose, say a banana peel to lie on top of a snow bank or taped pieces of paper to a rock?
MH: The snow bank and banana peels was something I saw four years ago on a snowy day in Nova Scotia and I liked it a lot. But it took along time before I figured out how I wanted to make it. I still think I could do it better. Actually that piece was destroyed in a shipping mishap. So I'll probably make it again. The meteor and rock with paper taped to it came about more like what I was talking about earlier: objects as a catalyst. I made the Icosahedrons and the idea came out of that.
JL: How important is humor in your work?
MH: I guess it is important. I don’t really think about them being funny and I never try to make them funny. It just seems to happen. I think over time common threads have lasted throughout everything I've made in my life. It's weird but a couple weeks ago I was thinking about how I was making work and how it probably exercises only some neural pathways in my brain. Now, those pathways must be wider or easier to travel and the result is that I am not totally in control of the choices I make in the work. Some things just happen.
detail of Sunset Village, 2008, plexiglas
MH: Many of the "little touches" are a result of technique (i.e. tool marks and limitations of the material) like the roughness in the brim of Paper Witch Hat or the text and image inlays in the series of bags I did. Not that I just let them be without caring but I liked them formally, Sometimes a roughness happens in the work that I try very hard to get rid of, and bring back the slickness of the plastic.
This is a very good question because its something I struggle with. Keeping the plastic slick is sort of a limitation. I would love to add another dichotomy to the work- a nice clean surface vs. bubbly melted stringy plastic. I've tried to do it but it just looks like shit. Slowly, it’s coming into the work though. In Sunset Village, I embedded teeth marks into the crushed representation of the Styrofoam cup.
JL: Throughout your progression, there are almost no examples where you have simply replicated/copied something. You made a move from assembling found objects in your early works (Jag in the Cemetery and Demon Child ) and to altered constructions (Slim Door), but they have never been straight-forward. Can you describe your initial approach to materials and how it has evolved?
MH: I never really thought that I was assembling found objects. I had thought of an object or material as a catalyst. Material and found objects seem the same to me they have the potential to do the same thing. Take for instance the desk and the Formica on the gravestone in Jag in the Cemetery. The desk sets up a context and experience shares by most people in North America of being in grade school. The Formica takes you to the kitchen of a middle class home. I think the desk was an anomaly though it still did what the other pieces did that did not have found objects.
I was very interested at the time at the relationship between the subject/form and the material it was depicted from. Attaching a precarious topographic form to a school desk and attaching Formica to a mdf form of a gravestone. Both transcend the sum of their parts. I think coincidentally these two examples entered into a supernatural realm via banal forms and materials.
Jag in the Cemetery, 2003, dimensions variable
JL: In many of your works, this approach sets up a kind of conflicts between thing easily recognized and something less palpable. Can you explain how this emerges?
MH: I find the only way work evolves is if I’m in the studio. I have to be messing around with the tools and materials. When I don’t have an idea I just go and experiment. Whether it be trying to depict something I haven’t before or creating a new texture in the plastic.
JL: How did you end up working with Plexiglas?
MH: I tired of using pre-fab materials. All of my references were seemingly tied to middle America. I wanted to move away from that and have broader, maybe more abstract concepts. Plastic is a raw material like a sheet of plywood or metal, but its properties are amazing. It is very workable with basic tools and is pre-colored. I’m also very attracted to the glossy finish. Concentrating on one material seems to expedite some facets of the decisions I have to make as well which, for now, are important.
Meteor (front view and side view), 2008, plexiglas
JL: Some of these are like visual malapropisms that have a humorous bent…why might you choose, say a banana peel to lie on top of a snow bank or taped pieces of paper to a rock?
MH: The snow bank and banana peels was something I saw four years ago on a snowy day in Nova Scotia and I liked it a lot. But it took along time before I figured out how I wanted to make it. I still think I could do it better. Actually that piece was destroyed in a shipping mishap. So I'll probably make it again. The meteor and rock with paper taped to it came about more like what I was talking about earlier: objects as a catalyst. I made the Icosahedrons and the idea came out of that.
JL: How important is humor in your work?
MH: I guess it is important. I don’t really think about them being funny and I never try to make them funny. It just seems to happen. I think over time common threads have lasted throughout everything I've made in my life. It's weird but a couple weeks ago I was thinking about how I was making work and how it probably exercises only some neural pathways in my brain. Now, those pathways must be wider or easier to travel and the result is that I am not totally in control of the choices I make in the work. Some things just happen.
detail of Sunset Village, 2008, plexiglas
Snow Bank with Banana Peels, 2008, plexiglas
JL: Can you talk about the other little touches and details...like the banana peels, the colors behind the meter, or the slime on the door...Where do these come from in the scheme of things just happening?
MH: Many of the "little touches" are a result of technique (i.e. tool marks and limitations of the material) like the roughness in the brim of Paper Witch Hat or the text and image inlays in the series of bags I did. Not that I just let them be without caring but I liked them formally, Sometimes a roughness happens in the work that I try very hard to get rid of, and bring back the slickness of the plastic.
This is a very good question because its something I struggle with. Keeping the plastic slick is sort of a limitation. I would love to add another dichotomy to the work- a nice clean surface vs. bubbly melted stringy plastic. I've tried to do it but it just looks like shit. Slowly, it’s coming into the work though. In Sunset Village, I embedded teeth marks into the crushed representation of the Styrofoam cup.
Slime Door, 2003, fiber glass, latex paint, ball point pen, mdf, 83 x 49 x 45
Friday, November 21, 2008
Sam Gibbons, in print
Mike Hein's post will be up soon...in the meantime, pick up the Fall '08 issue of Hi-Fructose. It has a lengthy interview with Sam Gibbons, whose work also appears on the cover. He has appeared here before. Also see his website here.
Monday, November 17, 2008
The Object Direct
Mike Hein, rock in the woods, 2008, plexiglas, 35” x 24” x 7”
The Object Direct, curated by Matthew Fisher, opens this Thursday the 2oth at Heskin Contemporary. It includes a few artists who have appeared here in the past. In the next post, I'll have an interview and more work from one of them, Mike Hein (above). For now, see the artist list and press release for The Object Direct below:
Pat Brennan, Stacy Fisher, J.J. Garfinkel, Dan Gluibizzi, Mike Hein, Jim Lee, Dustin London, Saira McLaren, John O’Connor, Meridith Pingree, Rudy Shepherd, Mark Stockton, Cindy Stockton-Moore, Charlotta Westergren, Mitchell Wright
For the artists in this show, it's both who shot J.R. and who shot Mister Burns. Equal parts the Pepsi Generation and New Coke, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Regan, the Challenger explosion, the first Gulf War and President Bush. Art today cannot be reduced to an "ism" or single movement. Books entitled Painting People and group surveys such as USA Today remind us that art has gotten so large that what binds it together are simple comparisons and geographic groupings. These artists are apart of a single generation whose works features a strong presence of the hand.
These fifteen artists know the 1970s. They know the 1980s. These years formed their foundation for understanding both the real world and the art world. They are also not afraid to allow for the inaccuracies of their hand be apparent. For them, the concept of object exists in the artworks finial state, not in the process in which it was made. These younger artists differ from the idea of object-ness that was apart of the definition of 1970's LA Finish Fetish. Then, artists like John McCracken, Ken Price and Ed Ruscha allowed for 'object' to manifest its self in the form of perfect fabrication and machine surfaces. This removal overshadowed their presence in the creation of their art works. The artists in The Object Direct, permit the trace of their hand to be apart of the final piece. Reminding the viewer of the process in which an idea went from mental to physical, creating a directness and accessibility between artist and viewer that was shunned before.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Call & Response: J.D. Walsh
(Untitled) Imposing Entrance from JD Walsh on Vimeo.
2008, video projector, tripod, wood armature, 11" x 14"
The last, but not least, artist from Call & Response is J.D. Walsh. The Jaime Keiter stills are great, but the above video documentation gives a better sense of how amazing these look exhibited. Since my interview with him, these are dealing more directly with a delicate play between rhythm, video-as-painting, programming, and sensory experience. Also see his two works in this pic from the last post for a sense of scale.
Related: his website, the new album by his band Nights, Solomon Projects, Perfect Strangers..., and The Longest Day.
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Previous posts on Call & Response: Carrie Pollack, Patrick Brennan, Suzanne Silver, Mary Lum.
Labels:
call response,
film,
found,
j.d. walsh,
longest day,
psdo,
shows
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Call & Response: Mary Lum
Mary Lum, Genial, 2007, silkscreen, acrylic, ink, found wrappers, glacine, 17' x 25'
Gianna Commito recently did an interview with an Ohio newspaper about Call & Response. About Lum's Genial, which is based on a collection of French orange wrappers, she states, ''Mary's a collector, and sometimes the things she collects make their way into her art work and sometimes they don't. She eventually realized that there was something inherent in the quality of the wrappings that couldn't be improved upon, so they are as she found them.'' More of that article here.
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Photos by Jaime Keiter.
Labels:
abs,
call response,
collage,
graph
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Call & Response: Suzanne Silver
Drawing a Blank, 2008, neon, 30" X 40"
Red (names), 2005-6, embossing labels, marley, metal, wood, 4" x 5.5" x 1.5"
Call & Response intends to highlight the flexibility of language and meaning in art. Of all of the artists in the show, Suzanne Silver takes perhaps the most direct angle, using the Talmud as primary source. According to the press release, Silver "models her drawings, paintings, and sculptures on the system of cross references, commentaries, embellishments, and amplifications found there."
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Photos by Jaime Keiter.
Red (names), 2005-6, embossing labels, marley, metal, wood, 4" x 5.5" x 1.5"
Call & Response intends to highlight the flexibility of language and meaning in art. Of all of the artists in the show, Suzanne Silver takes perhaps the most direct angle, using the Talmud as primary source. According to the press release, Silver "models her drawings, paintings, and sculptures on the system of cross references, commentaries, embellishments, and amplifications found there."
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Photos by Jaime Keiter.
Labels:
call response,
collage,
found,
word
Friday, November 7, 2008
Call & Response: Patrick Brennan
Untitled (debris), 2008, acrylic, oil, paper, pure pigment, fabric, and craft sticks on canvas, 72" X 48"
Untitled (fashion shirt), 2008, acrylic, oil, paper, pure pigment, fabric, and craft sticks on canvas, 72" X 48"
detail of Untitled (fashion shirt), 2008, acrylic, oil, paper, pure pigment, fabric, and craft sticks on canvas, 72" X 48"
One of my faves, Patrick Brennan, has two large works in Call & Response. He seems to be experimenting more with the limits of the black as outlining/covering element and expanding his manipulations of surface and material. Check out his past posts where we talked about these black works and showed some of his older works. Also see his website here.
Update: Patrick will be in The Object Direct, curated by Matthew Fisher at Heskin Contemporary, opening Nov. 20.
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Photos by Jaime Keiter.
Untitled (fashion shirt), 2008, acrylic, oil, paper, pure pigment, fabric, and craft sticks on canvas, 72" X 48"
detail of Untitled (fashion shirt), 2008, acrylic, oil, paper, pure pigment, fabric, and craft sticks on canvas, 72" X 48"
One of my faves, Patrick Brennan, has two large works in Call & Response. He seems to be experimenting more with the limits of the black as outlining/covering element and expanding his manipulations of surface and material. Check out his past posts where we talked about these black works and showed some of his older works. Also see his website here.
Update: Patrick will be in The Object Direct, curated by Matthew Fisher at Heskin Contemporary, opening Nov. 20.
Call & Response, curated by Gianna Commito, is up now at Kent State University and closes Nov. 21. Photos by Jaime Keiter.
Labels:
abs,
call response,
collage,
fabric,
found,
paint,
patrick brennan,
psdo
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Call & Response: Carrie Pollack
Fracture, 2008, digital print on canvas, 18" x 24", Betwixt, 2008, oil on canvas, 16" x 20"
Over the next week, I'm going to post a few images from each of the artist's in Call & Response, an exhibition curated by Gianna Commito at Kent State University. Unfortunately, I won't get a chance to see the show, but Jaime Keiter, of The Light Archive, took some pics. In case you're in or around Ohio, the show closes Nov. 21.
I started with Carrie Pollack because, as this is the first time I'm seeing her work, I'm really curious about what's she's doing. The press release says that she "photographs quiet, often 'accidental' occurrences in her Brooklyn neighborhood." These photos are then are printed or reproduced in paint on canvas. You can see more of her works here.
Labels:
abs,
call response,
carrie pollack,
found,
paint,
photo,
print,
screen,
shows
Monday, November 3, 2008
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Martin Bromirski
Humberto, God of Knowledge and Rapture, 1991
Two Potatoes Two Worlds, 1989
Celestial Potato, 1989
from Circus on Mars, 2008
Texas Potatoes, 1989
Untitled, 2006
Martin Bromirski's show, Circus on Mars is up now at John Davis Gallery in Hudson, NY. The works are hung in an old carriage house and it closes on Nov. 2. See a discussion with Martin about the show and his work in the comments...
Two Potatoes Two Worlds, 1989
Celestial Potato, 1989
from Circus on Mars, 2008
Texas Potatoes, 1989
Untitled, 2006
Martin Bromirski's show, Circus on Mars is up now at John Davis Gallery in Hudson, NY. The works are hung in an old carriage house and it closes on Nov. 2. See a discussion with Martin about the show and his work in the comments...
Monday, October 20, 2008
Jonathan Horowitz
Rainbow American Flag on Pink Field of Jasper in the Style of Artist's Boyfriend, 2007, acrylic and glitter on linen, 66” x 49”
Three Rainbow American Flags for Jasper in the Style of the Artist's Boyfriend, 2005, glitter and oil on linen, 31” x 45¾” x 5”
images courtesy the artist and Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York
Because Modern Art Notes is currently doing a series on the flag in contemporary art, I thought I would post what I think are two of the great examples by Jonathan Horowitz. I also posted on the BuzzFeed page specific to this project, saying "Jonathan Horowitz's take on the Johns flag turns a sign-of-a-sign into a sign of the times. Looking like a glittered birthday cake or a flea market t-shirt, his America is alive with ambivalence. It's garish but personal, tasteless, but honest."
His current show, Obama '08 is up now at Gavin Brown's enterprise, complete with an over-sized Hillary Clinton figurine, celebratory balloons, and an homage to the Hall of Presidents.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Jaime Gecker
I will do a typically Old Gold post and interview soon with Jaime Gecker. In the meantime, check out these fresh new works and her new website for many more. Also see her sculpture from The Longest Day and work in Perfect Strangers.
Renoir Times Two, 2008, ink jet photo,collage and spray paint on paper
12 ¼” x 8 7/8”
Geode, 2007, ink jet photo,collage and spray paint on paper, 4” x 6”
3 Steps, 2007, photo transfer and latex paint on canvas, 10" x 12"
Generation, 2007, polaroid film and collage, 4” x 4”
Ernestine, 2007, polaroid film and collage, 4” x 4”
Safari, 2008, photo transfer and latex paint on canvas, 12” x 16”
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