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First Impressions of the fall art season

A quick jaunt around Geary Street galleries today resulted in some decent impressions:

Andrew Schoultz at Marz and Zavaterro
A reluctant but resounding WOW. Reluctant, because I’d like to chalk up this dude as a one-trick pony (OK, the tree, the brush strokes, the symbols of capitalism recurrent in graf culture—I get it), but resounding, because he’s intensely prolific, evolving, and confident, and he pulled off a spectacular installation. There are a ton of students in the Mission School, but Schoultz is one of the deans. A lot of people enjoy art where they can discover new things every time they look at it, which tends to favor complex, layered, representational/figurative work. I’m not necessarily of that camp. Still, Schoultz’ paintings have gotten so layered they resist reading, but the density of brush strokes and mixed media (like dollar bills and glitzy stickers slashed like daggers) creates a manic, paranoid hurricane. Combined with a ridiculous, oversized sculpture of a scale on pyramids that spans the gallery, his critical position moves beyond mere painting subject to a convincing investigation.

Chuck Fahlen at Steven Wolf Fine Arts
I’m completely beguiled by Darkside, Fahlen’s wire and wood-bead sculpture that hangs from small hooks at a disconcertingly subtle downward angle on the wall. In the gallery, the yellow and black beads become doubled with shadows, and it looked to me like a messed-up, collapsed molecular model. Actually, I was off, by magnitudes—the sculpture is essentially a ball pressing down on a net, like a physics model of the universe. Of course! Endearing.

Mysteries at Stephen Wirtz
Despite a strong history of conceptual art in SF, most commercial galleries seem bent on showing paintings or photos. So this show, which features 12 “conceptually-oriented” artists curated by Melissa E. Feldman, is welcome. Thanks to Feldman for bringing the work of Jamie Isenstein to the area. I also really liked Janice Kerbel‘s contribution—an oversized playbill for a mysterious sideshow attraction. Just reading the text gave me such a strong visual impression, it was a wholly effective art experience.

Xuchi Naungayan Eggleton at Togonon Gallery
Since I first encountered Xuchi’s strange graphite- and crystal-like sculptures at the Oakland Art Gallery, I’ve been really impressed with her formal approach and execution. To me, her work is especially about materials, tactility and luminosity, hence the contrast in material properties, and the use of semi-transparent resins. Unfortunately, the space and lighting didn’t display the work to its best. (Side note: she’s exhibiting a pyramid of bricks painted pitch-black, an unexpected synchronism with Anti-Campfire, my sculpture of charcoal bricks in Galleon Trade at YBCA.)

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Text-based art + Light-based art = Yum Yum!

I’ve been underground (metaphorically and literally, sort of: my studio’s in a basement), preparing for Galleon Trade at Bay Area Now/YBCA. So I’m emerging to view other shows, just in time for the fall art season! (As Anu pointed out on her blog, Why do we all still live by the semester cycle?)

The exhibitions at the Wattis can be theatrical and unconventional, but I was pleasantly surprised with rewarding experiences at the new evolution of Passengers and the brand-new The Wizard of Oz exhibition.

Carsten Holler installation at the Wattis Institute's The Wizard of Oz exhibition

Carsten Holler installation at the Wattis Institutes' The Wizard of Oz exhibition

Really, even if I weren’t a light bulb freak (I dreamed of blue LED displays and reflector bulbs this morning), who wouldn’t love Carsten Höller‘s Wonderful signage, with a timed light-show sequence? Cans in the shape of letters with crystal clear incandescents. It’s nostalgic for the 20th century, which is only eight years ago when you think about it…

Glenn Ligon's installation at the Wattis Institute's The Wizard of Oz exhibition

Glenn Ligon's installation at the Wattis Institutes' The Wizard of Oz exhibition

I was delighted to stumble into this in a far room of the Wattis. I am a huge (yooouj!) Ligon fan, and came to appreciate his black-ed out neon work more after reading a great critical and phenomenological response to “Negro Sunshine,” (Richard Meyer’s “Light it Up, or How Glenn Ligon Got Over,” Artforum, May 2006). Blacked-out neon America: Brilliant! I like the outlined typewriter typeface, it’s somehow appropriately spook-y.

One of my favorite quotes is about oscillating between the container and the contained (from the Fluxus artist Daniel Spöerri), so of course I also was thrilled to come across this neon piece on Regen Project’s website too.

Claire Fontaine installation at the Wattis Institute's Passengers exhibition

Claire Fontaine installation at the Wattis Institute's Passengers exhibition

Brick-books of theory. The Wattis, of course, is housed on the campus of my alma mater, so for purely personal reasons, critical theory book wraparounds on cinder blocks are a riot. Of course, with all good conceptual art, the more you know, the better it gets. Fontaine is not an individual, but a French collective, and the installation is a meditation on the Paris 1968 riots, where a brick was more than a building material, but a weapon, a symbol of revolutionary actions. While anarchist communities are still active today (you will know them by their bicycle bumper stickers), it’s nice to be reminded of the once-obvious connection between critical theory and direct action.

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Art & Development, Community

they’re prepared

This is my first time working with an institution as large as YBCA, and it’s been really neat.

Over the past few days, I’ve been installing my work for Galleon Trade: Bay Area Now 5 Edition (which opens Thursday, Sept. 4) with help from the lead preparators, Justin Limoges and Justin Wyckoff. They’ve been friendly, calm, helpful and meticulous. YBCA’s also got a on-call, kick-ass installation team, which includes the fabulous Tammy Kim, who have transformed the Terrace Gallery in no time at all.

I often exhibit at spaces with fewer resources, and I am happy to bring my own tools and install my own work, but working with YBCA has been a welcome change of pace. For example, my kinetic sculpture needed to be mounted on YBCA’s 14-feet-high ceiling and I’m not really a fan of heights, so I was looking forward to handing that off to a professional! It was nice enough that someone would go up on a ladder to hang my heavy, unwieldy sculpture of moving parts, but I wasn’t prepared for the moment when Justin took out a tape measure to get the baseboard just 1/8″ over, making it parallel to the lighting track. That kind of obsessive attention to detail is usually exhibited by artists installing their own art, so to have it automatically extended to my work, even as a zillion other installation details need to be attended to, made me feel extremely grateful for this exhibition opportunity.

Thanks to the hard work of the installation team (and their sacrificed holiday weekends!), the opening is three days away but the gallery is already looking great. Megan’s site-specific installation is looking great, and works by the paired photographers (MM Yu and Gina Osterloh) and painters (Johanna Poethig and Norberto Roldan) are looking really cohesive.

Hope you can come see Galleon Trade!
Opening: Thursday, Sept 4, 5-8 pm, YBCA

Cheers to the unsung heroes of the art world.

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Community

Blasts from the Pasts

Ryan Furtado shoots incredible photos. Because he’s gonzo. I was lucky to know this dude at YO! Magazine, ages ago. Go see ’em, and you will feel lucky to see a little of what this guy’s seen.

Thursday, August 14
Opening: Photos by Ryan Furtado

BEYOND THE OCEAN OF ANXIETY
Ryan Furtado presents a collection of over 30 photographs taken between 2002 and 2008. These pictures explore a variety of contrasting people, places and situations through out the United States and abroad. Edited from years of various assignments, trips, and journeys down the rabbit hole, it is subjective glimpse into the kaleidoscope of humanity.
Opening Reception: August 14, 2008, 5-9pm
[Hamburger Eyes’] Photo Epicenter, 26 Lilac St. SF

Plus,
More Zach Scholz…

Wednesday, August 13
Opening: Zachary Royer Scholz at The Lab

Yet To Be Determined
August 13 – September 6, 2008
Opening reception: Wednesday, August 13, 6-9 PM
Closing reception: Friday, September 5, 6-9 PM
Gallery Hours: Wednesdays – Saturdays, 1-6 PM
Zachary Royer Scholz’s site-specific installation directly engages the physicality of the Lab’s main gallery space. Deviating from the typical installation-exhibition-deinstallation cycle, Scholz’s show opens shortly after he arrives in the space and closes just as the work reaches completion. Allowing the site to act as a collaborator, the artist will produce objects and situations using the Lab’s unique architecture and objects found there as a starting point. The audience can view the work in a static state when the artist is absent or come while he is there and witness the work in a state of flux. Viewers are encouraged to visit and revisit the space as this collaboration evolves.
The Lab, 2948 16th Street, San Francisco

And,
taking it way, way back,
to CCA circa 1998…

Saturday, August 16, 6:30pm – 10:00pm
Opening: Group show with 5 CCA mofos at Giant Robot SF

You Only Excist Because of Us
Exhibition: August 16, 2008 – September 17, 2008
Opening: Saturday, August 16, 6:30pm – 10:00pm
You Only Excist [sic] Because of Us a group show featuring the work of Ryohei Tanaka, Ako Castuera, Sean Boyles, Joe To, and Rob Sato.
GRSF
618 Shrader Street
San Francisco, CA 94117

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Art & Development, Community

Problems and solutions

You could think of art as a series of problems and solutions. There are visual or formal problems, of course. But it’s a month away from the Galleon Trade exhibition at YBCA (opens September 4), and I need to solve technical problems.

Working in different media is challenging, but it’s great because I’m constantly dipping into new fields of knowledge. Right now, I’m learning about DC (direct current, as opposed to AC, alternating current), and solar power and batteries (both of which are 12 volt DC).

Mostly, I get by with some how-to books, videos and reading Wikipedia. But some problems are too complicated or unique. I wish I had a go-to tinkerer, a mad scientist who lives in a crappy Victorian surrounded by guard dogs in West Oakland, like in Ang Lee’s Hulk. But in real life, I turn to artist-friends like Erik Scollon and Chris Bell. In addition to their technical knowledge, they have experience and, critically, access to resources.

This is about as far away from the artist-genius myth as you can get, but it’s true: sometimes problem-solving hinges on procurement — sourcing the bits and pieces that add up to make installations. One of my biggest challenges is the extreme segmentation of our late capitalist markets. There’s only so much the average shopper needs from an art store, hobby shop, fabric store or hardware store. Then there are artists. I have to source materials in quantities large and small from random outlets. My installation will be comprised of materials from solar companies, battery distributors, Urban Ore (a recycled goods shop in Berkeley), a specialty industrial electrical connector manufacturer, a marine supplier. In my research, I’ve also purchased goods from a train hobby shop. Art takes you to some funny places!

I shared a moment about this with Jessica Tully. She is using a special aerosol chalk in her Syndicate spray stencils. When she called local hardware stores to get more chalk, staffers often suggested spray paint. Sometimes they’d say that spray chalk doesn’t exist. I get similar responses too, and they’re not helpful. Nobody likes to be told we’re making stuff up. We’re not yahoos, we’re just artists. Trust us!

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Artists working together

As I mentioned before, Bay Area Now (ongoing at YBCA til November) is facilitating a lot of artists working and having conversations with other artists. And not only am I working with other artists, I’m working with BAN artists, like Erik Scollon, whose ceramics know-how is proving to be instrumental in my charcoal-based sculpture.

I paid a visit to Erik’s studio, and though BAN has opened, he’s still plugging away at the studio. It turns out that Erik’s project, Take Me Home and Use Me, involves the distribution of his utilitarian ceramic objects. Audience members can take an object at no cost — the only restriction is that users should report back with a photograph of the object in action. Erik makes really wonderful objects, and this is a really interesting social project, and I hope you get to participate. Don’t forget to register — Erik’s been busting his butt on at the throwing wheel, making every piece by hand!

Erik Scollon\'s Studio, in preparation for Take Me Home and Use Me

Erik Scollon's Studio, in preparation for Take Me Home and Use Me

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Bay Area Now

I am involved and excited about YBCA‘s triennial exhibition, Bay Area Now 5, which opened this last weekend.

This year’s show involves a lot of installation works, and not so much drawing/painting/photography. It also includes special guest-curated projects, like:

Which all adds up to a show with far-ranging connections. It’s really nice to feel like part of a community, not just a scene. For example, next to the Syndicate installation (a project led by Jessica Tully, who I met during my early-20s Activist Years), is the Uberto Eco-inspired library/book project by Michael Swaine (who also recently collaborated on the garden at the Headlands, where I’m an Affiliate); next to Michael is the installation by Jonn Herschend (whose work I admired at Intersection) who was in the same MFA program with Jenifer Wofford (the Galleon Trade mastermind). Then there’s CCA folk like David Buuck (my writing instructor), Leslie Shows (a classmate from a theory class by) Brian Conley (faculty), and Erik Skollon (my OAK-SF bus buddy), among others.

The highlights on my list, if you’re wondering, (besides Galleon Trade, which opens Sept 4!) is Joshua Churchill’s potent psychic site-specific installation, Donald Fortescue’s and Lawrence Labianca’s audio sculpture, Misako Inaoka’s tilted moss ceiling with audio and kinetics nestled in domes about the size of salon hair dryers (see participants crawling around in the windows on Mission Street), and Ian McDonald‘s ceramic/mineral/enamel black-on-black amphoras and geode sculptures.

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Open House: sweet!

I had a great time at the Headlands Open House yesterday — thanks to everyone who came out to the Marin Headlands. It was nice to see familiar faces and meet new friends… Highlights included a Galleon Trade-ish reunion with Stephanie Syjuco and Gina Osterloh, and a surprise visit from Trisha L-G and David. Whoa!

I’ll get to see more of art by my neighbors Wednesday… In the meantime, I’m really excited about the work of my across-the-elevator-shaft neighbor, Eric Hongisto, who is currently making text-based paintings and is similarly keen on graphic design. Nice site!

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