Research

Missing Colors at Annet Gelink Gallery

I like the curious images for David Maljkovic’s solo show at Annet Gelink Gallery in Amsterdam.

David Maljkovic

David Maljkovic, Missing Colours, 2010, Installation with 5 framed b/w photographs, 1 framed photo collage, 1 collage on canvas, 1 tl light, coloured cellophane, slideshow of 80 slides. Image Source: Annet Gelink Gallery

I think the above use of slides that are removed from the viewer’s natural sightline is brilliant.

The other works use photographs, colored gels, historical bits of typography, site interventions, a little bit of painting and an oppressive grey collage material, it appeals to me visually with its open-endedness, while emotionally conveys longing for pleasure.

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Sights

The Laundromat Project Fall Auction is on Wednesday

SOAPBOX II – 2nd Annual Art Auction
Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 6-9 PM
Collette Blanchard Gallery, 26 Clinton Street, NYC

I’m helping out with this auction to benefit an awesome community art initiative that brings contemporary artists into laudromats to lead free workshops in diverse neighborhoods across NYC. The cause is good, and so is the selection of art. Have a look!

Join the Laundromat Project and its many friends on Wednesday, October 27th for a silent auction and celebration to support its programs in New York City’s most vibrant communities. Tickets begin at $25 online($30 at the doors) and include drinks, nibbles, and music by DJ Khary! This year, artist and LP Create Change alumni Shinique Smith and artist Jayson Keeling are donating special edition prints to $1000 and $250 ticket buyers, respectively.

Donating Artists:
Derrick Adams • Golnar Adili • Joell Baxter • Petrushka Bazin • Aisha Bell • Karlos Carcamo • Brendan Carroll • Talia Chetrit • Sandra Chi • Samantha Contis • Pradeep Dalal • Hope Dector • Matthew Deleget • Stephanie Diamond • Erin Diebboll • Sarah Eichner • Rico Gatson • Deborah Grant • Christopher K. Ho • Wayne Hodge • Sheree Hovsepian • Kathleena Howie-Garcia aka LadyKFever • Joseph Laurro • Shaun El C. Leonardo • Yeni Mao • Dean Monogenis • Erika Neola • Glexis Novoa • Kambui Olujimi • Dawit Petros • Rob Pruitt • Ronny Quevedo • Kenya (Robinson) • Bayeté Ross SmithDread Scott • Paul Mpagi Sepuya • Rudy Shepherd • Shinique Smith • Yasmin Spiro • Anna Stein • Hank Willis Thomas • Mickalene Thomas • Zefrey Throwell • Cody Trepte • Jiny Ung • Mary Valverde • Kim Venable • Saya Woolfalk • and more!

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Art & Development

Friends who rule

I’ll bend my posting-about-art-mostly rule to express gratitude (which is not entirely unrelated to my art practice, since positive psychologists advise the maintenance of gratitude journals.)

Like in a past stint in New York, I’m again surprised to find myself among many transplanted and visiting Californians. If it seems odd to be among Californians in New York—maybe it’s cheesy and inauthentic, like hanging out at an ex-pat internet café in Bali—I am unapologetic about enjoying it. Sure, I have been meeting new people and cultivating a community here, but I am also very thankful for the old friends and acquaintances that I’ve been able to rely upon—who I know, and with whom I am known. In a new environment with emergent reflections, it’s comforting to share a rapport and background with friends.

Kinship is invaluable to me. I’m so thankful to have or have had:

Fellow Bay Area artists to relate to about navigating New York.

• Grad school classmates who are mutually supportive, and who I can rely upon for no-B.S. responses to art projects. As grad school fades further in the past, relationships with esteemed peers become more precious. I would trade no amount of money or power for the certainty of some of my cohorts’ opinions. To know and trust someone enough to ask them “Does this suck?” about my latest work in progress, and to be confident in the rigor of their critique and their knowledge of my history are truly priceless.

Longtime friends—and new friends—of deep integrity, who live life with enthusiasm, curiosity, adventure, courage, vision, insight, and conviction; who are unapologetic intellectuals; who talk and listen with warmth and generosity. I’ve been inspired by their dynamism—to learn more about cognitive science, to enact my principles more often, and to buttress my values. As ET put it, “Being nice matters.” New York is filled with ambitious people; I hope that I won’t get inured to the sight of boorish self-promotion and transparent displays of power-hunger.

• A steady stream of visitors. When I left the Bay Area, I knew I would miss everyone. But having friends, family, and art community members come to NY has eased the transition.

Colleagues. It’s neat to know that so many people—especially CCA alum—are operating in so many parts of the NY art world. The implication is that I’ll find a place soon enough; and with their help and generosity, I feel like I’ve already started down a path.

Of course, I would be adrift without those in California who continue to reach out, and put in the extra effort to maintain long distance friendships.

(With apologies to MW for lifting the post title.)

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Community, Research

Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Open Studios

Open Studios is a chance to talk to artists, peek at studios and works in progress, and think about methods and materials. I enjoyed this very much in my visit to the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Open Studios last night. The EFA Open Studios continues today and Saturday.

The EFA has a building in midtown Manhattan with six floors of studios rented by established and emerging artists. There’s also a project space, as well as a print shop. The whole building was a hive of activity for Open Studios; it reminded me of being an Affiliate Artist at the Headlands Center for the Arts in Sausalito, CA, where I opened my studio to the public many times (Visit the Headlands’ Fall Open House this Sunday, October 17). EFA had a similar cross-section: a few big names; many interesting, under-recognized artists; and a cadre of East Asian artists with crafty or pop/anime sensibilities. There were lots of painters and few video artists; meticulous, feminine papercuts (by Amina Amed and Jaq Belcher); and a few very commercial enterprises balanced by a few wacky conceptualists and performance artists. I was surprised to see that some artists had large etching presses or Vandercook letterpresses in their studios. (You see how important elevators become when your studio is 5 or 6 or 9 floors up.) I was most excited about these artists:

Saya Woolfalk, Cartography of No Place, Gouache on paper, 30" x 40", 2008

Saya Woolfalk, 2008, Cartography of No Place, Gouache on paper, 30" x 40". Image source: Artist’s website.

Saya Wookfalk makes paintings, installations, performances and videos in Hello Kitty hues. She works with cognitive scientists and dancers, and teaches herself theater lighting. Need I say more?

Kristian Kozul makes kinda bad-ass sculpture. In his studio, he’s working on fantastic militaristic busts dripping in rosettes and covered in a glossly black resin.

David Greg Harth[/caption]

David Greg Harth, World News Tonight, 2010. Image source: davidgregharth.com.

David Greg Harth’s immensity can’t be captured here, but I’ll try: weird, painful, simple, public interventions, like collecting autographs in a Bible, tumbling down public steps, and opening a kiosk that only sells newspapers with horrible, 300-pt. headlines. Provocative, hilarious and wince-worthy. I liked that the artist was complicit in his projects about human folly: his willingness to humiliate and hurt himself was in plentiful evidence.

Dane Patterson, The Wedding, Graphite on Paper, 22 x 30 in, 2009

Dane Patterson, 2009, The Wedding, Graphite on Paper, 22 x 30". Image source: danepatterson.com

Dane Patterson can draw like crazy; but many steps—performance, sculpture, and photography—lead up to it.

Of the painters, I was attracted to Patty Catuera’s and Gary Petersen‘s work. Both make hard-edge, brightly colored, super flat abstractions. If you said that these paintings appeal to my design sensibilities, you’d probably be right, and I see nothing wrong with that. Patty’s work seems especially vibrant and sweet in its simplicity. The imagery originates in landscapes, and with the large expanses of flat, abstract space, there is room to push and pull the volumes and imagine a narrative unfolding.

I also liked David Storey’s mildly figurative mid-mod abstractions. They’re cheeky. They make me think of Mad Men interiors and knowing smiles.

Hong Seon Jang, Forest, tape on black chalkboard, 2010, 25x19 inches

Hong Seon Jang, 2010, Forest, tape on black chalkboard, 25×19 inches. Image source: hongseonjang.com.

Hong Seon Jang, Geographic wave (in process) National Geographic magazines, binder clips, push pins, 2009, 140x80 inches (variable)

Hong Seon Jang, 2009, Geographic wave (in process) National Geographic magazines, binder clips, push pins, 140×80 inches (variable). Image source: hongseonjang.com.

Hong Seon Jang had some terrific lichens cut from National Geographics, and forest scenes made out of cellophane tape. Nice!

Noah Kersfield

Still from a video by Noah Kersfield. Image source: http://www.noahklersfeld.com.

Noah Klersfeld’s videos were weirdly mesmerizing, partly from the sheer technical prowess, like stained glass come to life from pedestrian, single-camera shots.

Jihyun Park‘s large punched-paper and burned-paper works are really beautiful. I’m not especially compelled by the imagery, but the craftsmanship and perceptual experience are fantastic.

I admired Yuken Teruya’s paper sculptures in graduate school. I also love the graphic quality of batik, so it was a special treat to visit Teruya’s studio and see his most recent dye-resist paintings.

Hank Willis Thomas’ work is clean and super provocative; if, like me, you were most familiar with his advertisement-based work, he’s been busy with lots of text-based signs and lenticulars as well. I’ll leave it at that, since I’ve been helping out my fellow CCA alum.

Brian Whitney set up four mirrors to successfully merge two images into a 3D image; he’s also figured out a way to print photographic images on mylar. Jealous!

I also really enjoyed talking to Jimbo Blachy and his guest, who I assume to be his collaborator, Lytle Shaw. They had the skeleton of a boat set up in their studio, a whole lot of boating and Brit-ish ephemera, and they were wearing matching striped sailor shirts. That is, until you looked closer and realized that one of the shirts was actually a white t-shirt with stripes painted on it. That kind of geniality and jokiness immediately appealed to me. Later, I passed by their studio again, and saw the two of them alone, busy cracking each other up.

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Art & Development

Freebies

Found these old schematics recently. I made them while developing Dark into Light, an installation of 100 night lights. These schematics made me laugh, and I thought you might like them too.

Dark into Light light box construction schematic

Dark into Light light box construction schematic, 2008

Dark into Light installation hardware schematic

Dark into Light installation hardware schematic, 2008

There is a lot of invisible labor that goes into making art and exhibitions. You come up with projects, solve problems, and learn about materials—and that’s before you even make the work, finish it, pack it, transport it, and figure out how to install it. These sketches are not art; they’re byproducts, but after not seeing them for a while, I found them surprisingly fun and funny to look at and think about, if partly for the absurdity of all the work it takes to make even minimal, quiet installations.

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Art & Development

videos now on vimeo

I just posted videos documenting past installations on Vimeo. Now, the Vimeo videos replace the Quicktime .mov files previously used on my website. When I built my site a few years ago, fast load times and clean design were paramount. I wanted an exhaustive but clean site, with minimal coding. Now that Vimeo’s around, and it provides crisp quality and attractive controls, it warranted an upgrade.

Now if only WordPress would support Vimeo…

In the meantime, here are links to the videos:

Documentation of Unbounded/Unfounded, 2010, light and text installation

Documentation of Binary Pair, 2008/2009, light and text installation

Documentation of Unlimited Promise, 2009/2010, light and text installation

Documentation of Dark into Light, 2008, light installation and lightbox

Documentation of Dark into Light, 2008, artist’s book

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Community

this/these

Like these works from these nice bros (the name of their collective is BroLab; they just finished a project for Art in Odd Places, a public art festival which continues through tomorrow, Sunday, October 10).

Ryan Roa, Interactions with Public Sculpture


Shaving in Anish Kapoor’s Sky Mirror = Brilliant!
(Source: RyanRoa.com; Image by Kfir Ziv.)

Adam Brent, I'm OK with It, 2010

Adam Brent, I'm OK with It, 2010


Houseplants and doilies making domestic references in architectural sculptures.
(Source: AdamBrent.com)

Detouched series, Study for an Aggregate, Travis LeRoy Southworth

detail: Detouched series, Study for an Aggregate, Travis LeRoy Southworth


Digital photo re-touch-er’s “de-touched” photographs, with only re-touching marks visible.

Southworth’s weird, entrancing Wrestle Nebula and Body of Work, Tears are worth checking out too.

More photos at InTheNameOfBrolab.com’s Studio Survey.

Pipolotti Rist’s show at Luhring Augustine Gallery is as good as Peter Schjeldahl says. Gorgeous photos here.

This looks neat!
Ellen Harvey’s Nudist Museum project at Bass Museum of Art in Florida.

Lots of worthy events to look forward to. Maybe too many….

David Mamet speaks, 10/13. No way!

Hiroshi Sugimoto in conversation with Melissa Chiu at the Asia Society, 10/14.

Open Studios at Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts. Artists include Hank Willis Thomas and Dan Levenson… 10/14-16.

Oliver Herring at Meulensteen Gallery, Chelsea*
Herring and volunteers enact daily performances in the gallery, then post photos and videos nightly. It’s really neat! Stop in.
[*Disclaimer: I’m helping out.]

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Art & Development

City Reader is here!

I contributed artwork to an artist’s publication curated and designed by Julie Clothier, a really interesting artist and designer. Featuring writing and art projects, City Reader is “a publication for the pedestrian intending to expand the frame we live within.”

The first issue of City Reader will be distributed for free on Friday, October 15th on public streets in San Francisco.

You can also view it in the Art Publishing Now, the summit happening this weekend, October 9-10 at Southern Exposure. The Art Publishing Now library will also be on view October 9 to December 2010 at Southern Exposure.

For more info about City Reader, visit Reading Conventions.

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