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Archive for August, 2009

“Quarterlife” a disingenuous drama

In TV, media on August 31, 2009 at 4:15 pm

Technology is changing the media industry in dramatic ways. From print to broadcast, the portability of technology has brought a huge shift to the way information and entertainment reach their respective audiences. Consider the popular American television and film directors Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick. During the 1990s they were known for popular shows like “thirtysomething” and “My So Called Life.” But in the 21st Century Herskovitz and Zwick’s production firm The Bedford Falls Company decided to try something new: launch a show about twenty-something Americans, featuring the first original programming for the Internet with a social networking component. Producer Josh Gummersall partnered with MySpace to bring “quarterlife” to a new generation of technologically savvy viewers.

The Bedford Falls Company is known for incisive portrayals of relationship and experience during life’s key passages. The term quarterlife refers to 20 to 30-year-olds who have lived an estimated one-fourth of their life. It is a time when many of life’s important decisions are made: careers are started, marriage is considered, lifestyle is chosen. In the series “quarterlife,” Herskovitz and Zwick enlisted directors, writers and producers from Bedford Falls to help tell the ongoing stories of six creative people in their twenties—a young journalist and writer, Dylan Krieger, played by Bitsie Tulloch videoblogs about her life and the life of her friends and is then surprised and excited to learn that she actually has an audience, which she learns after commenting on the life of her roommate Lisa, the aspiring actress. The show claims to feature a commitment to realism and the recognition of universal human themes through the truthful depiction of the way American young people speak, work, think, love, argue, and just have fun. And considering that the MySpace “quarterlife” page has nearly 13,000 friends who seem to relate to these characters, they must have done something right.

The first season featured 36 episodes, ranging in length from 7 to 13 minutes. After debuting on MySpace, NBC picked up the show and ran one episode as an hour-long drama series on Tuesday, February 26, 2008. It was the first time a major American TV network broadcast an Internet series. But after disappointing ratings the show was moved to the BRAVO network, which aired a marathon of “quarterlife” on Sunday, March 9, 2008.

The short, quippy Internet episodes did not translate to traditional television. Strung together, the episodes couldn’t hold the attention of viewers for the hour-long time slot. What had captured my attention for the novelty of it all and kept me coming back online didn’t have the same impact on network television. Maybe because expectations on the Internet are lower and “quarterlife” exceeded the quality of anything before offered, but expectations for prime time American television have to live up to the standards of show like “Friends” a sitcom that had already successfully explored the same subject matter.

The failure of the show to succeed on television is also because “quarterlife,” a drama not a sitcom, seemed overly dramatized, because those who watch television are actually older and not interested in the high drama of being twenty-something. The heavy weightiness through which the young creative characters and their young, creative followers view life is just so yesterday. The characters were far too into themselves, thinking they were geniuses that the rest of the world had failed to notice. The characters claimed to be surprised that people watched what they posted on the web. But that is exactly what they want—people to watch, to discover them. Their drama was disingenuous.

“Quarterlife” was a pioneer. The website and social networking component are still up and running and rumors of new episodes never came to fruition this past November. Advertisers continue to buy space and not only twenty-somethings, but also everyone who dreams of creative success as a writer, filmmaker, poet, actor, musician seems to be flocking to the site to share and perhaps be discovered.

The genius of “quarterlife” isn’t so much its original Internet programming. The genius of “quarterlife” is that it captures a slice of American culture—the narcissistic nascent adults gathering to lament how the rest of us just don’t get how smart, talented and brilliant they are.

And likely never will.

First English speaking film made in Pakistan in 30 years directed by a woman

In Film, Santa Fe on August 31, 2009 at 3:52 pm

Kashf Kashf (Lifting of the Veil) premiered at the Santa Fe Film Festival    on Dec. 5, 2008. Unlike the violent and extremist images of Pakistan that play in the American media, Kashf provides a journey into the mystical side of Islam. Told in English, Kashf is the story of Armaghan, born to his childless mother because of a promise she makes to a Pir (Holy Man) she meets at a Sufi shrine. Born in Pakistan and raised in the United States, Armaghan returns to Pakistan 25 years later, unaware of the family secret that is about to change his life.

Directed by Ayesha Khan, the film provides a lush view of the mystical and dangerous city of Lahore said to be guarded by Sufi saints. For Armaghan and the viewer the physical and material worlds uneasily blur as he pursues a mysterious woman through the streets of Lahore. Her changing form makes her impossible to find. Armaghan’s spiritual quest is deftly woven with the humorous tale of his cousin Ali who is on his own quest to become an actor, even if he has to resort to the disrespected world of Lollywood.

Both men experience fantastical hallucinations and eventually join forces to solve the mystery.

Khan, herself a Pakistani American, tells a story of Pakistan that is multilayered and complicated. Filmed on location, Kashf provides a view into a world of mystery and beauty, of humor and violence, and song and dance. The story is universal. Armaghan is on the hero’s quest, meeting along the way messengers, guides and the master who is waiting for him to awaken his calling. The film explores the human question of who we are and why we are here.

The film is Khan’s attempt to bring the stories of Pakistan to English speaking audiences and to work with Pakistani people to make her movie. There is only one professional actor in Kashf, the rest of the performers are working for their first time on a production. In fact, reality and fiction blur in the role of Ali, the actor never told his mother that he was making a film; instead he told her he was working at a call center. This tidbit is woven into the story. Director Khan told the audience post premiere that the anecdotes in the story are real. The mystical experience of Armaghan actually happened to people she interviewed.

Shot in a mere 28-days, the film features the city of Lahore, filled with Sufi shrines, mosques.

“There is a saying that if you haven’t seen Lahore, you haven’t seen anything,” Khan said.

Confronted for being a woman, for her scarf not fully covering her hair, Khan had to deal with unique struggles to make her film. But eventually, her entirely male crew came to respect her and according to Khan, went from being sloppy, unshaven and dragging their feet to clean cut, shaven, professionals ready to make their next film with the “boss lady.”

One gets the sense that another line in the film, also written by Khan, is more truth than fiction:

“Filming this is going to be easy, but living it is going to be the real test,” the mysterious woman says to Armaghan.

“Living what?” Armaghan asks.

“The life you chose when you decided to come back.”

Khan left Lahore in 2007 to finish editing the film because the city was often without electricity. Her furniture is still in storage in Lahore. She was hoping to purchase the home where she shot some of the film. She was hoping to be able to remain part-time in Pakistan.

“The country is really experiencing some crisis,” Khan told the audience.
Kashf tells a different story. One of the mysticism and beauty involved in the human journey.

Creating a global community: One Story at a time

In Art Museum, Biennial, New Media, Santa Fe, contemporary art on August 31, 2009 at 8:37 am

“There’s a constant concept of A, I’m a human being who walks on two legs; B, I eat, drink and sleep; C, I’m a creative person. I’m an artist. Down the line you may be from Cairo, you may be from Bulgaria, you may be from Santa Clara Pueblo, but your story is your story. I think when we begin to put those stories into boxes and have expectations of what you believe those stories will be and it’s based on sort of what the consumer wants, then that is very, very frustrating and I think that for a long time [American] Indian arts has been kept in sort of this box and it hasn’t been able to evolve . . .. I really feel like creating these relationships mostly with the other artists from the different countries and realizing our incredible similarities, our incredible understandings are building this family, this real family. It begins to thread. The string begins to thread to all different places in the world and I think our line becomes much more metaphorical than just this clay thing we made. It became so much bigger than that.”

Rose B. Simpson, American Indian Artist from Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico (click on this link to watch a video of Rose at Vernissage TV)

Rose B. Simpson is the niece of Nora Naranjo Morse and the cousin of Eliza Naranjo Morse. The three women are the first American Indian artists to be included in a contemporary art biennial at SITE Santa Fe since its inception in 1995.  Their work ”Story Line” is a clay, nylon, rice and waddle rope that drapes around the city, coming up from the ground, dangling down from the trees and winding its way into the museum to shatter and splinter across the white walls. It was created for “Lucky Number Seven” the seventh international biennial. Their clay thread interacted with other artist’s installations and wove in an out of the community of emerging artists from 16 countries who came to Santa Fe to create work for this exhibit.

But the idea of creating a community became a radical experiment in the world of contemporary art. Community undermines independent power, control, and authority. Community is antithetical to individualism.

“It’s amazing and I’m still reeling from the realization that the idea of community is radical.” Lance Fung, curator of the “Lucky Number Seven” said.

Fung wanted an exhibition that was about process and experimentation, about collaboration and in the end, an exhibition that was ephemeral, temporary, and non-product oriented. The artists came from around the world and had to create their work in situ, reacting to the place in which they found themselves—Santa Fe, New Mexico, one of the oldest cities in America with a bloody history of Colonialism and the intersection of Anglo, Hispano and native populations all beneath a seemingly beautiful facade.

The notion of recycling film or video, which captures something transitory and fleeting in a form to be kept for a longer period of time, was difficult for some artists.

“I think this is very naïve,” Egyptian filmmaker Wael Shawky said. “I’m not going to destroy these videos. There is no meaning for this. I cannot accept destruction of work for this fashionable process.”

Fung did not intend for the films to be destroyed. “What I did not want to happen in this biennial was for works of art from this utopian process to then be pimped out and sold into the marketplace.”

Shawky uses film, performance and installation to “criticize the dominant systems that transfer the sacred into a consumer product.” His focus is often on religion, his own Muslim faith and Christianity. But transferring the sacred and making it a consumer product is not only something that happens with religion, it is what happens with art, with film, with these words I am writing. At some point, the sacred process of creating is transformed into a product for a marketplace—even in Fung’s utopian biennial. Since their works cannot be for sale, the artist themselves becomes the product sought after for more exhibits, more performances, more installations and yes, more films. Whether they sell to the marketplace or are part of government-funded system or have a patron, someone is paying them to create.

This global focus of the art world, the film world, the creative world on the demand of the market has eroded a sense of community.

New media, online magazines and blogs such as this one are becoming virtual gathering places, central points of intersection, and we are creating a community for culturally engaged, socially active, conscious explorers. A global community created one story at a time.

I am human. I eat, drink and sleep. I am a creative person. I am a woman. I happen to be from America. But my story is your story. It matters not what the market wants or needs. My words are my story.

Artist Bart Walker from Cowboys & Indians

In ART, Western on August 28, 2009 at 10:41 am

Equine mural from Cowboys & Indians

In ART on August 27, 2009 at 4:40 pm

Painter Larry Fanning from Cowboys & Indians

In ART, Western on August 27, 2009 at 10:33 am

Painter John Banovich from Cowboys & Indians

In ART, Wildlife on August 26, 2009 at 4:31 pm

Louisa McElwain from Cowboys & Indians

In ART, Western on August 26, 2009 at 10:27 am

G. Harvey from Cowboys & Indians

In ART, Western on August 25, 2009 at 10:26 am

Adam Lerner, MCA Denver’s Chief Animator dishes about his new job on adobeairstream

In Art Museum, Denver, contemporary art on August 21, 2009 at 10:24 am

The board set me up in a really great way,” Adam Lerner told me by telephone from Denver the first week of June.


He was referring to the MCA‘s decision, when they invited Lerner to be director, to effect a merger between the downtown contemporary museum, and Lerner’s last squeeze, the LAB at Belmar.


(The LAB, no longer a physical locale, had been a contemporary art center in a new-urbanist development in Denver’s western exurbs. The developer fit the LAB into the mix alongside bowling alley. movie theater, and upscale shopping, hoping it would make Belmar a destination. But that didn’t happen.)


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One of the immediate effects of MCA’s hiring Lerner and incorporating the Lab’s programs under their shingle was that the popular Mixed Taste lecture series, of which Lerner was instigant and emcee, now take place at MCA. In early June, Lerner was getting his feet under him at a museum that bills itself as “a museum without a front door-a place for public engagement.” His impression was that things were going great.


Still, to backtrack a few paces, many in the community have found MCA sterile and inaccessible. Over at Belmar, Lerner’s Mixed Taste was famous for yucking it up during evenings in which unlikely duos gathered to talk meat sausage and T.S. Eliot, tattoo art and Ibsen, followed by shuffleboard, darts and dinner for the 20- and 30-somethings in the crowd.  It might be that constituency who believe Lerner is just the impresario needed to lead Denver’s contemporary art museum, which shows work both by international and regional contemporary artists, into a populist future. But he has his detractors.

Westword art critic Michael Paglia has written he’s afraid Lerner’s going to dumb down programming. (Below: Andrew Novick show at Belmar.)


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Still, in the period since  Lerner’s been the brains of the museum, the first Mixed Taste series at MCA sold out, with more than 330 people attending. The chief animator explained he is looking to capitalize on that success by exploring options to expand program capacity.


Back when the LAB was operational, the idea was that the developed community of Belmar itself would feed in audiences. But actually the audiences were driving out from the city: Some 60 percent came from Denver, with the rest coming from nearby. Lerner allowed that the LAB, “in a more conventional setting” (than downtown Denver), was experimental, and laid the foundation for now.


“I learned a lot, but I’m not going to continue what I did there, whole quaff.”  Lerner allowed, “The LAB provided me a venue to try and fail.”


“The Astounding Problem of Andrew Novick” was one example Lerner gave of his being his own biggest critic. The exhibit showed the collections of a Denver object- obsessive whose mania for multiples in everything from Barbie dolls to gumball prize made up the show. While that exhibition at the LAB received the most media attention of any Lerner-generated exhibit,  Lerner says it taught him a lot about how an institution represents non-art objects. Because Mr. T. figures and flea-market paintings of cat faces weren’t fine art,  Lerner  sidelined the exhibit into a gallery outside the main space, something he said he wouldn’t likely do again.


“I’d like to invest more and make a truly artful and elevated presentation of these ideas. It pulled my punch a little.”


Echoing the “museum without door” PR of MCA, Lerner said, “Often, institutions divide the front door experience — and call it marketing– and the gallery experience — and call it curating. It’s all woven together. The MCA building is really a theatrical experiment that doesn’t distinguish what’s inside from what’s outside. It incorporates it all into the whole aesthetic experience.”
Lerner wants to incorporate the museum’s passageways, halls and the library to create a more holistic creative experience of contemporary art-going. Still, he reiterates that the core backbone of the institution are shows of work by important contemporary artists–but he won’t be directly organizing these.


So, while his role is to breathe new life into the institution, he doesn’t want to play dual roles of curator and director that his MCA predecessor Cydney Payton filled. Lerner is looking to hire a curator, “I’m putting together a creative team. I’m the artistic director. My role is not to make sure the art goes on the wall, my role is to create a vibrant experience for the visitor.”
In the meantime he is working with independent curators like Paul Andersen, design critic at the Harvard Graduate School of Design who will produce a show on the history of pattern and design.


He also confessed that MCA will play a key role in the upcoming Denver Biennial by hosting a large-scale exhibition as well as coordinating several satellite projects. Lerner wouldn’t confirm that Tim Noble, Sue Webster and David Adjaye will be involved, but their recent presence in Denver for the Logan lecture series, with Suzanne Geiss of Deitch Projects, suggest that is possible.


Lerner has stepped up into national lanes already. He participated at a May 15 panel discussion in New York at MOMA. And he is taking Mixed Taste to Deitch Projects in July, while Mark Allen, director of Machine Project, is coming to Denver to study the integration of creative programming into MCA.

Dam passes on critically acclaimed design exhibition

In ART, Art Museum, Denver, Design, Museum on August 20, 2009 at 10:23 am

European design or the yardbirds?

Read the article on adobeairstream

Which do you prefer? This?

or This?

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Yardbirds, Doors, Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco, 1967, Bonnie MacLean.

Moby Grape, Chambers Brothers, Winterland/Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco, 1967, Wes Wilson.

Judith H. Dobrzynski takes the Denver Art Museum to task on her blog Real Clear Arts. She questions why the museum did not agree to host their former curator R. Craig Miller’s show “European Design Since 1985: Shaping the New Century.” An expansive exhibit she reviewed in the Wall Street Journal calling it “exactly the kind of show serious museums should be doing. It’s ambitious, it’s rooted in scholarship, it’s aesthetically interesting, and it’s displayed well.”

Read her full post by clicking on the hyperlink below:

http://www.artsjournal.com/realcleararts/2009/04/denver-and-design.html

The exhibit is currently on display at the Indianapolis Museum of Art and will travel the High Museum in Atlanta and perhaps a venue in Europe. The Denver Art Museum claims to be a partner in presenting this show, but according to Miller: “The Denver museum did not view his show as a big draw.”

So what does the museum consider a big draw? Well, Instead of a 250 item design exhibit that looks forward to where design is going, Denver Art Museum’s new design curator Darrin Alfred has put together a show currently on display that looks backward:”The Psychedelic Experience, Rock Posters from the San Francisco Bay Area, 1965-71.”

Other temporary exhibits at DAM this year? Charles M. Russell through September 2009 and a show called “New and Noteworthy: The Hopkins Family Quilt in Context,” through December 31, 2009. Wow! How exciting! I’m sure both of those will be “a big draw!”

Bud Shark’s Inkers published on adobeairstream

In Art Criticism, Art Museum, Denver, Print making, contemporary art on August 19, 2009 at 10:21 am

An exhibition of master prints made at a legendary Lyons, Colorado shop, frolics at MCA Denver through June 28.

SharksInk3-Ontheedgeofhope

Printmaking is a very fine art. Whether lithography, monoprints, woodcuts, or chine collé, the act of making a print is often painstaking, detailed and precise. To get the results an artist is looking for often requires intense collaboration with a master printmaker.

Artists from around the world venture to a small printmaking studio in Lyons, Colorado to work with just such a master-Bud Shark-a printer unafraid to challenge the assumptions and limitations of printmaking. And because Shark is not only the master printer but the director of the studio, he is able to collaborate with artists and make on-the-spot decisions, from how the plate can be made to the appropriate paper.

“Shark’s Ink: The Legend of Bud Shark” was designed by former director and curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art /Denver, Cydney Payton for the Paper Works Gallery. Payton selected 82 prints by 10 artists John Buck (MT/HI), Enrique Chagoya (CA), Bernard Cohen (UK), Red Grooms (NY), Don Ed Hardy (CA/HI), Jane Hammond (NY), Robert Kushner (NY), Hung Liu (CA/China), Hollis Sigler (deceased, formerly IL), and Betty Woodman (NY/Italy). The collection on view represents a survey of works produced by these renowned artists who have worked with Shark for many years, some since the studio inception in 1976.

In the hallways outside the gallery are technically and visually innovative works by Red Grooms, the painter, sculptor, printmaker, filmmaker, and showman par excellence, including several four-color, 3D lithographs engineered and constructed at Shark’s Ink. These masterful constructions are pure brilliance. Grooms’s witty work captures elements of New York and the dominance of the hero myth in 20th-century modernism, as in lithographs showing Jackson Pollock (“Jackson in Action”, Pablo Picasso and Bill De Kooning (“De Kooning Breaks Through”) making their legendary art. Art history and its gestures and feints never looked so good. (The complex works are all put together by Shark’s longtime studio assistant Roseanne Colachis.)

SharksInk2-AdventuresofRomanticCannibals

“Bud is not only a masterful printer but a very knowledgeable and dedicated DJ. He has a vast collection of Rock and Roll Oldies to the newest thing. It makes time in his studio fly by in the best way,” Grooms said in the press materials for the show.

The earliest prints in the exhibition are from 1976–the year the studio opened–and were created by British painter Bernard Cohen and Shark. The two men met at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque where Cohen was a visiting artist during the 1969/70 academic year; the same year Shark earned his MFA.

Cohen’s abstract paintings use pictorial and schematic images of jet planes, animal tracks, dinner place settings and billboards to create an exhilarating dance of form and texture across the picture plane. Cohen’s work evokes the chaos, playfulness and expansiveness of our times.

Enrique Chagoya makes paintings and prints about the changing nature of culture.

“My artwork is a conceptual fusion of opposite cultural realities that I have experienced in my lifetime. I integrate diverse elements: from pre-Columbian mythology, western religious iconography and American popular culture.” Chagoya credits Shark with helping bring to light the creation prints and lithographs.

“When Bud first approached me about making a Codex I thought it would not be possible due to the difficult kind of handmade paper I use-Amate-which is very uneven in thickness and unstable. I was amazed by the ways in which he was able to do it,” Chagoya is quoted in press materials. He goes on: “Many of my paintings and drawings are born first as a print with Bud.

Chagoya’s newest prints, “Historie Naturelle des Espécies”, and “La Portentosa Vida de la Muerte II” continue his examination of cultural realities with satire and humor. With a historical lexicon of ideas, beliefs, and myths, Chagoya’s imagery combines disparate and incongruent elements. Cartoon balloons filled with bewildering and wry “artspeak” hover above character’s heads, uniting his actors in conversation. The quotes in this context become a surreal and satirical self-criticism.

In her final print project at Shark’s Ink, Hollis Sigler created a suite of four lithographs with woodcut and chine colle borders titled “Suite for the Gods.” Sigler used metaphoric images from nature and the spiritual life to confront her own mortality. The artist died of breast cancer in 2001. Using a faux naïve style, Sigler created narrative works that are intensely personal and emotionally complex featuring unpeopled rooms and landscapes filled with scattered object left behind by an unseen heroine.

And like the entire exhibit, the works created by Bud Shark and his artist friends remain with the viewer long after leaving them behind.

Top Image: Hollis Sigler, On the Edge of Hope
Bottom Images: Enrique Chagoya, The Misadventure of the Romantic Cannibals. Both courtesy of MCA Denver.

Taking stock of the art market published by Saatchi Online Magazine

In ART, art market, contemporary art on August 18, 2009 at 1:35 pm

Leanne Goebel takes stock of the current art market was published yesterday on the Saatchi Online Magazine.

Over The River, Land Art Disputes in Salida, Colorado from adobeairstream

In contemporary art, public art on August 18, 2009 at 10:19 am

The naysayers of Colorado’s Arkansas River valley surely do not mark the first time in the career of Christo and Jeanne-Claude that public opposition has stalled or even threatened to completely derail a project.  The artists famous  for wrapping Berlin’s Reichstag, for bringing the undulating orange “Gates” to Central Park, for installing yellow umbrellas and a “running fence” along coastal California, even for wrapping an island, are not shy when it comes to doing battle for the phenomenal and temporal qualities of art. Fabric, Christo has said, marks the element of temporality in their work.

The artists’ newest formidable opponents are citizens of Salida, Colorado, some of whom are vocal in opposition to the artists’ plan to suspend in 2013, for the duration of two-weeks (a time period typical of their works),  5.9 miles of luminous silvery fabric panels along a 40-mile stretch of the Arkansas River between Salida and Canyon City.

“I don’t call this project art,” said Linda Golden, from Howard, Colorado, at an open house in Salida, CO July 8 about the proposed “Over the River” art installation. “I’m absolutely ill that it might happen,” she told the Salida Mountain Mail.

Christo and Jeanne-Claude conceived of Over the River while working on the “Wrapped Reichstag” in Berlin, a project that ensued in wrapping the entire German Parliament in white fabric. For Over the River, the artists investigated 89 possible project sites, including the Rio Grande and Cache La Poudre rivers, in Colorado. “We chose the Arkansas River because of the highway on one side, the railroad on the other, and because it’s the most rafted river in the country,” Christo said at one of last week’s meetings.

“Over the River” is designed to be viewed from below, by rafters and other river-rats, as well as from above, along the river banks.

The Howard meeting, along with others in Canyon City and Salida, constituted a public forum over the frequently postponed project during the week of July 7th. The Bureau Land Management is overseeing an environmental impact study, begun this year and slated to finish up bureaucratic wrangling by 2011.

Like many of Christo and Jeanne Claude’s projects, Over the River has generated a lion’s share of controversy for an artwork, after all, slated to last precisely 14 days. “What a slow machine,” Christo said of the process. Yet he and Jeanne-Claude have won powerful allies as well. In a letter mailed in June to US Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, Colorado Senators Mark Udall and Michael Bennet, and Colorado Representatives Diana DeGette, John Salazar, Ed Perlmutter, Betsy Markey, Jared Polis and Mike Coffman stated: “Over The River will leave Colorado with a lasting artistic legacy and will help enhance our state’s growing reputation as a place of cultural excellence.”

Patience is a characteristic often associated with the artist known, like his wife and artistic partner, by his first name only, and an advocate since he first got the idea to wrap something, back in 1961, for art’s potential to evoke experiences of beauty and joy. “If we would never have the process, we would never realize the object,” Christo has said.

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Drawings for Over the River reflect that the project is meant to be seen from underneath, by rafters and other river-rats, as well as from above on the river banks.

The wrapping of the Reichstag – no less an edifice than the German Parliament in Berlin– was refused in 1977, 1981, and 1987. Said Christo in an Artsjournal interview, “It was refused by the governmental bodies of Germany, and this is why we kept the project alive for so long… The extraordinary part of those projects is that they really build their own energy, their own relation to a great number of people. They involve the community — politicians and the people who help us realize these projects. That’s why it is not one person, like myself or Jeanne-Claude, screaming, “We want to wrap the Reichstag.” On the contrary, there is huge support by many German friends. For example, one of the greatest supporters of the project, who died before we got the permission, was Willy Brandt.”

Calling each project a “unique proposition,” Christo has noted that once completed, a project like “The Umbrellas,” “Surrounded Islands,” or “Running Fence” reflects a synergy of art, urban planning, and democracy. A constant making-new is embedded in how each of these projects surmounts the technical challenges of its site and engineering. “We don’t know how to do it in advance,” Christo has said. “Technically, we don’t know how to do it, that’s why these projects give us this marvelous experience of being unique, because they are not routine, they are not repetitious.

In the case of Over the River, governmental officials took several months to agree to conduct the environmental impact study.  A draft statement is slated for completion by the end of this year and then it will take another year for the Bureau of Land Management to conduct its review. Christo has been sanguine about the time involved in these projects, which he and Jeanne Claude fund independently. “To do a painting or a sculpture takes 2 or 3 months, or 6 months, but not years. But if you talk to an architect or an urban planner, to do an airport or a skyscraper — it is quite normal that it would take several years to build a skyscraper or a bridge or extend a highway or to do an airport. I would like to point out that the projects are what they are; they have very strong elements of architecture and urban planning.”

Concern in Colorado over what will be left when the temporal installation is over has cited the “Valley Curtain,” 142,000 square feet of orange nylon fabric that stretched across the Grand Hogback Mountain Range near Rifle, CO, which was completed on August 10, 1972. Under construction for 28 months, the work was on display for 28 hours only when 60 mph gale force winds threatened to destroy the piece, and it was dismantled.Yet some of the 792 tons of concrete foundations, which secured the fabric remain at the site.

Truth is, that Colorado’s mountains are littered with the construction remains from mining and railroads, track is left rusting and overgrown, mine shafts are often open and dangerous, leaching toxic chemicals into the ground and water supply. Yet, opponents to Over the River point out that the project will require 8,992 anchors, each a minimum of 9 feet in length. A portion of most of these anchors will be left in place once the fabric is removed and grout will be used to fill the anchor holes. In all, it is estimated that there will be over 2,500 cubic yards of ground disturbed to install the anchors and frames–2,500 cubic yards along a 40-mile stretch of the Arkansas River. Not much.

“Through the magnitude and dimension of the project, opponents are engaged in creating the art,” Christo said during the open house in Salida. “Opponents create dynamics which shape the project and how it looks.”

This dialogue is very much part of the artistic process which invites people not just to comment but to become involved in the actual creation. The artists become engaged with the community, and they hope to have a long-term positive impact on the Arkansas Valley. Dan Ogden, the Volunteer Fire Department chief from Howard, CO said his department needs emergency medical training, which  Christo and Jeanne-Claude have agreed to pay for, according to the Salida Mountain Mail.  Not to mention, that given the current economic situation, employing engineers and constructions companies and paying people to build Over the River will be economically beneficial to the state and the communities. The tourists that will come to view “Over the River” will provide dollars that many small towns could use in the coming years. While Republican Representative Doug Lamborn did not sign the letter of support from the Congressional Delegation, he has acknowledged, “A recent study by an independent research group, BBC Research & Consulting, indicates the project may generate close to $200 million in additional spending in Colorado.”

Art Week Colorado from adobeairstream

In ART, Art Criticism, Denver, contemporary art on August 14, 2009 at 10:18 am

“Confluence” at William Havu Gallery in Denver is the first of two group shows the gallery will host featuring regional and national artists involved with abstraction and landscape on differing levels, all deeply rooted in modernism. The first artist group, through July 11, includes: Tracy Felix, Monroe Hodder, Joanne Kerrihard, Amy Metier, Sam Scott, and Richard Thompson (below). The gallery mezzanine features small works by Susan Cooper, “Downsize/upscale.”

_Thompson_Prairie7_SMThe works in the show, mostly painting, owe to schools and influences as diverse as post-Impressionism, and cartoon clouds, so prevalent in the West and Southwest. Tracy Felix’s stylized modern mountain landscapes are  jovial and playful.  Some of his paintings remind me of Thomas Hart Benton, the  Depression era  regionalist who elongated landscapes in which equally tall fellers frequented courthouses of rural America (and whose painting style briefly intimidated Jackson Pollock).

Tracy Felix was put with this crew of more abstract artists and not in the upcoming part two of “Confluence,” subtitled, “Realism,” although one might ask why, given Felix’s representational bent. This second group exhibition will focus on realism and hyper-realism featuring the work of Jeff Aeling, Michael Burrows, Rick Dula, Robert Ecker, Jeanette Pasin Sloan and Laurel Swab.

That landscape realism can’t do without Industrial Age modernism remains true in the work of Rick Dula, whose style echoes that of Charles Sheeler. Sheeler painted industrial plants and machines in a flat and precisionist style.  Dula says that Sheeler’s paintings “were like proud birth announcements for modern industry. My work is more … the obituary… I paint what seems to be vanishing from the modern urban landscape.”

He also paints what is rising  — an entire series of paintings of the Denver Art Museum Hamilton building follows the angular construction in Denver’s Golden Triangle. The building was completed 2006. Right: Dula’s Cathedral, DAM in progress.


Where William Havu Gallery goes to confluence, Robin Rule Gallery takes a minimal approach to convergence. Two exhibitions opening tomorrow deal with photography and landscape. The first is “Utopic” digital
DulaCathedralDAMSMprints by Jason DeMarte. The second is “Landscapes-Studies in Light & Shadow” by  art student Ronnie B. Johnson.


DeMarte combines large-scale color photographs of nature fabricated with commercially produced products and graphic elements to illustrate the connection between a consumer experience and a “natural” one. The work is playful and striking. Johnson on the other hand is hybridizing film and digital photography. He captures the images on both film and digitally then scans the film negatives and produces a digital negative. The work like the tracks below (“Omen”) is then produced using the lush platinum printing process favored by Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Steichen and Edward Weston (we sure hope he’s got backers).

RJ_omendium

One can pass the time quietly at the Aspen Art Museum, if you don’t factor the clickclick of heels. Through July 19, “No Sound” is an exhibition that includes silent moving-image work by three generations of artists, working in both Europe and the US. Featuring an eclectic mix of avant-garde film, rarely exhibited early video works, and recent film and video by artists: Doug Aitken, Bas Jan Ader, Marcel Broodthaers, Guy Ben-Ner, Nancy Graves, Henrik Hakansson, David Noonan, Paul Pfeiffer, and Diana Thater, the exhibit creates a space unmoored. The removal of sound pushes the viewer towards an almost hypnotic focus on the work. Exploring the ideas of time and experience is an emerging artist from Colorado, an emerging artist living partly in Boston.

Colorado artist Monica Goldsmith has said she sometimes feels she might have to leave the West to find an audience for her painting. Goldsmith has been painting for eight years and she is halfway through her MFA at the Art Institute of Boston, where she’s been nominated for a Dedalus MFA fellowship. A prominent Denver dealer reportedly commented her work was too intellectual or difficult for regional art buyers. It is definitely technically rigorous.

This month she is featured in the Boston Young Contemporaries exhibit at 808 Gallery. Seventy emerging artists from 11 Master of Fine Arts and Post-Baccalaureate programs throughout New England are in the show. Goldsmith is also in Abridged/Abstraction a national juried exhibition of small works selected by Sarah Walker for Good Question Gallery in Milford, PA. Juror Walker said she felt the work represented “a random yet compelling snapshot of people thinking and working abstractly in the early years of this new century.”

Bringing forth strands from Hard edge painting, Goldsmith explores the transitory nature of seen and unseen states, rooted in physics and time. She uses the abacus to explore variables while capturing a flickering moment and suspending it in stasis. Below, detail of Precursor.

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Betty Woodman revisted on adobeairstream

In Art Criticism, contemporary art on August 13, 2009 at 10:14 am

Clay is an impulsive medium. It begs to be touched, formed, and shaped.

woodmansummaryAt the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, curator Ingrid Schaffner and associate curator Jenelle Porter have brought together 22 artists spanning 4 generations of “significant” works. One of those artists is Betty Woodman, a former ceramics teacher at the University of Colorado. Woodman’s ceramic sculptures are in the collection of the Denver Art Museum and on display at Denver International Airport, and Woodman, who now splits time between New York and Italy, was featured in a retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2006.


She draws no boundaries between art and craft and considers her work to be fine art. Her exuberant and colorful objects frequently contain, or are built around, a vessel, creating a dialogue between subject and form. They are beautiful works, which are decorative, but also represent a hybrid between painting and sculpture. The objects are made of glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer and paint.

Impulsive and conversational are two words that describe Woodman’s four-object “Winged Figure.” Soaring, organic leaf or wing shapes surround a vessel. The colorful patterns glazed and painted onto the clay provide clues to Woodman’s intellectual process. The markings are gestural and the colors bring to mind Matisse, Cezanne, or, in the case of “Cubist,” one of the four, Georges Braque.

Woodman’s objects stand on their own. The rest of the exhibit needs some propping.

Most of the artists in the show are living and working today, but their inclusion inspired the curators to look back to who influenced them: Woodman, Beatrice Wood, Robert Arneson, George Ohr. — artists who managed to elevate the formlessness of clay, the delight of ornamentation, and the process of turning material associated with functional “craft” into fine art.

Schaffner said that she and co-curator Porter “didn’t want the exhibition to be an arts/craft paradigm.” Yet the wall text accompanying the exhibit says that the show is examining not only clay’s appeal, but craft in general. How can you fill a gallery at a contemporary art museum with ceramics and not implicate the tricky semantic and meaningful divide? I am left with questions.

Contemporary art continues to be enthralled with the idea of sloppy craft, of creating art from garbage. But placing much of the actual sloppy craft in this show next to a Betty Woodman does not take the craft paradigm out of the exhibition. It might be that the display is at fault. All the work is shown near table-height, on the same level, giving the show a garage-sale feel.


Woodman’s objects, however, stand out as complete in thought and form. Her work divorces surface from shape and then puts it all back together. The dialogue Woodman chooses to explore is a re-exploration of modernism, retold. Many others in this exhibit are merely being impulsive.

Bruce Mau to curate Denver Biennial from adobeairstream

In Biennial, Culture, Denver, contemporary art on August 12, 2009 at 10:12 am

Originally conceived of as a survey of contemporary art “from the tip of Tierra del Fuego to the Northern Hudson Bay,” Denver’s Biennial of the Americas continues to morph into something entirely different and unexpected. When Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper announced plans for Denver to premiere the Biennial of the Americas in the summer of 2010, an “ideas pavilion” that would explore such themes as science, education and urban planning was to be a secondary component.


A year later, the “ideas pavilion”  has become the primary focus and Vancouver design guru Bruce Mau has been chosen to direct the Biennial, named and themed “In Good We Trust.”At a town hall meeting on February 3, Mau said that the intent of the Biennial was to promote Denver and its assets, which include business innovation, research, environment, education and healthcare. He described Denver as a place with a “can-do spirit.”


“What is a biennial in the 21st century?” Mau said. “There are 200 biennials around the world and we didn’t want to be just another one, biennial 201.”

Well, that’s good, because the initial idea was fully poised to be just that biennial 201. Now, it’s unclear what’s on the agenda. Requests for interviews were declined until an official launch announcement coming sometime later this summer.

Mau promises that the Biennial of the Americas will break down old categories and boundaries and explore what is going on in the world relevant to Denver and the cultural and geopolitical climate. What can Denver offer the world? But there was little mention of the reverse question, what can the world offer Denver? For Mau it’s no longer this for that. It is something more.

“To inspire people we need points of entry. We have to get rid of the audience as a separate thing and build a platform off of which we will launch action and create a new kind of dialogue and engagement,” Mau said.

The Biennial will be organized around seven themes: health, energy, environment, habitat, economy, education and technology. The design team will create one international research lab and seven immersion experiences activated by seven weeks of events that launch seven possibilities for the future. Lucky number? Go ask SITE Santa Fe.


But there’s a method to this sensibility of seven. In 2010, seven Latin American countries will celebrate the bicentennials of their independence from Spain: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Columbia, Ecuador, Mexico and Venezuela. All these countries will be invited to participate in In Good We Trust.


Yet, it is unclear what role the visual arts will play. Erin Trapp, director of the Denver Office of Cultural Affairs said at a press conference: “This isn’t a biennial of contemporary art in the traditional sense. Our goal is to reinvent the notion of a biennial and take it a step further.”

Some of her opening comments: “…While the Denver biennial will be infused with art our goal is to connect artistic expression with the most salient issues of our tim, creating an event that is truly of the Americas and one that will resonate throughout the world. . . .This really is about action.”


The Biennial of the Americas took a sharp turn to its new picture during the Democratic National Convention when Mau was invited to participate in Dialog:City. He mediated The Green Constitutional Congress and presented a talk called In Good We Trust that posed the question, “Can we create a sustainable America?”

The panel featured Charlie Cannon, Jonathan Greenblatt, Majora Carter, David Orr, Bill Becker and Paul Miller (aka DJ Spooky). Mau referenced this event as inspiring him and opening his eyes to what Denver has to offer. He also referred to his Massive Change project in Vancouver and Guate Amala! as the most informative projects to prepare viewers for what the Biennial of the Americas will look like.


“This is a cross disciplinary practice,” Mau said. “How do we foster an open dialogue and collaboration? It’s not what would normally be considered an art biennial, but it does embrace a holistic creative cultural practice.”


Then perhaps we shouldn’t call it a biennial? Maybe what is being proposed is so different that a completely new title is necessary? The language here is different. There isn’t talk of testing the limits of what art can be or how spreading art out into a city puts it in a unique context to create perhaps even a new world.

Mau and the City of Denver are asking questions about where we are going and what is happening, but the answers may not come from visual artists. The answers may come from the thinkers and the doers, those who will take action and create something other than art.

Nauman in Venice on adobeairstream

In Art Criticism, Biennial, contemporary art on August 11, 2009 at 12:58 pm

venice-biennale-2009-veni-015Bruce Nauman’s Fifteen Pairs of Hands, photo by Christian Sinibaldi
Bruce Nauman’s installation “Topological Gardens,”  has won the Golden Lion for Best National Participation. In its award citation, the Biennale stated that Nauman’s work “reveals the magic of meaning as it emerges through relentless repetition of language and form.”

Examining the continuity of space amid changing conditions is one way the Philadelphia Museum of Art curators responsible for the Bruce Nauman retrospective in Venice define topology. The spatial relationships between the gardens of Bruce Nauman’s art, at three separate locations in Venice, characterize the U.S. Pavilion. (This is only the third time in 90 years that the American contribution has spread out like this.)

Curators Carlos Basualdo and Michael R. Taylor of the Philadelphia Museum of Art proposed the Nauman retrospective to represent the United States, and said the citywide aspect was pertinent at all times.

“The viewers experience in the context of the city will be very prescient,” Basualdo said by phone from Italy days before the show opened. “This is not like any other shows (of Nauman’s work). Somehow, the experience of the work will tell you something about your relationship to the city and your relationship to the city will tell you something about the work.”

The blurring of the public and the private is an idea Nauman has explored in his art. Basualdo told Artforum that Nauman frequently talked about the experience of how one can feel isolated yet exposed as in a phonebooth on a public street.

Basualdo said choosing Nauman to represent the United States was simple.

“He is an artist’s artist,” Basualdo said. Nauman was also forefront in the minds of the Philadelphia curators, because they were in the process of acquiring Nauman’s 1967 neon, The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths.

“Bruce believes it to be taken as an affirmation. He always found it interesting, but he never said he believed in or didn’t believe in it,” Basualdo said.

Basualdo said he believes that the Biennale will be “a lightning bolt for an audience.”

Thirty Nauman works in a full array of media will be planted and performed around the city, including Untitled 1970/2009 a performance-based work that was supposedly done in Japan, but was never seen.

The show is being organized around three formal categories “Fountains and Neon,” “Heads and Hands,” and “Sounds and Space.” Nauman is premiering a new sound installation Days/Giorni that features four male and three female voices intoning the days of the week in Italian, skipping or adding days in varying sequences. An English-speaking version will be installed in a separate location in Venice. Vices and Virtues 1983-88 seven of each, seven feet high, flashing neon letters will intertwine and encircle the cornice of the U.S. Pavilion at the Giardini.

Multiple critics agree that Nauman is the most influential living artist, credited with leading artists out of minimal art’s austerity and doing so in near total isolation from artworld politics and promotions. Nauman has lived in New Mexico since 1979, a few years after his first retrospective in 1972 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art was panned critically, creating artist’s block and causing Nauman such anxiety he considered finding a different career. His second retrospective in 1994 organized by the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis had a similar effect.

“He’s not somebody who loves to spend a lot of time in work he’s already done,” Basualdo admitted. “So we are installing and showing new work. Bruce is very involved. It’s amazing to have him and I hope it will be stimulating for him to be here.”

In accepting the Golden Lion Nauman publicly thanked the woman who had tipped him to the best pistachio gelato in Venice.

“A work of art is more than an object, more than a commodity,” Daniel Birnbaum, curator of the 53rd International Venice Bienniale, said to a group of art journalists at the Italian Cultural Center in New York on March 30.

“It represents a vision of the world, and if taken seriously must be seen as a way of making a world,” he continued. Hence, the title or theme of this year’s Venice Biennale exhibition, Fare Mondi/Making Worlds.

The oldest and premiere visual art biennial opened June 7 in Venice, Italy and will remain on display until November 22, 2009.

In order to understand the Venice Biennale one must understand the structure of Venice itself. Just as the city is a series of islands connected by canals, the biennial is an archipelago of visual art initiatives. The Biennale, which first took place in 1895, is now claiming the city of Venice itself is a venue–not just the Giardini and the Arsenale sections.

nauman3This year’s Biennale spans the survey of art curated by Birnbaum, which features more than 90 artists from around the world, and then the individual pavilions from the 77 countries. There are an additional 38 collateral and collaborative events for smaller nations and groups. The world literally comes to Venice every two even-numbered years.

Galisteo, New Mexico artist Bruce Nauman, an international art star, is representing the United States at the Venice Biennale. Of the 200 international biennials, Venice is probably most venerable of the flashy events that put curators and artists in high demand with collectors and dealers as well as with institutions. But Daniel Birnbaum’s rhetoric spells the ideal of art in democracy.

“The role of the biennale is not what is to be bought or to launch new artists, the role is to listen to artists and let them speak,” Birnbaum said.

In Venice this year, at the Biennale’s permanent home of the Palazzo delle Esposizioni,

Birnbaum asked Massimo Bartolini to redesign the educational space, Tobias Rehberger the bar-cafeteria, and Rirkrit Tiravanija the bookshop. “They are three of the main protagonists in today’s exploration of the realm between art, design and architecture,” Birnbaum said. By asking the artists to create functional public spaces, Birnbaum has sought to program permanent activities that move contemporary art’s utopian aspirations into the realm of the real.

But in marked homage to conceptual art the Biennale honors two artists of the conceptual avant-garde as this year’s Golden Lions for Lifetime Achievement: Yoko Ono and John Baldessari.

Birnbaum said: “Their work has revolutionized the language of art and will remain a source of inspiration for generations to come.” The Philadelphia Museum of Art U.S. pavilion, featuring Nauman, won the Golden Lion this year, the first time the U.S. has taken the prize since 1990.

New York’s New MexicoTrifecta originally published on adobeairstream

In Art Criticism on August 6, 2009 at 12:05 pm
Susan Rothenberg, Bruce Nauman and Richard Tuttle make up the New Mexico trifecta in New York.

The Master, 2008
The Master, 2008 (c) 2009 Susan Rothenberg / Artist’s Rights Society (ARS), New York

oil on canvas, 63 x 82 ¾ inches (160 x 210,2 cm), Courtesy Sperone Westwater, New York

Reproduction, including downloading of Rothenberg work is prohibited by copyright laws and international conventions without the express written permission of the Artist’s Rights Society (ARS), New York.

On a recent trip to New York I hit the trifecta. The New Mexico trifecta of three artists who live and work either full or part time in New Mexico: Susan Rothenberg, Richard Tuttle and Bruce Nauman.

Rothenberg’s paintings at Sperone Westwater are marvels of color, texture and mark making. Her use of pictorial space and exploration of movement tend to haunt the viewer long after walking away from the images. The disembodied legs, arms and heads of marrionettes seem to swing across heavily textured putty backgrounds. Titles are all that hint at a narrative, and one of emotional and psychological tumult.

Tuttle’s fabric pieces at Pace Wildenstein are lofty and cloudlike and feature his signature use of line. Each of the twelve works on display are 1′ x 10′ made up of two parallel strips of dyed canvas secured to the wall via grommets and nails. Some include rope woven horizontally through the work. An amalgamation of abstract and real. For Tuttle, Walking on Air represents an “expression of elation for the potential for a new beginning, the possibility to rebuild and discover a harmony for existing in the world today.”

An iconic Tuttle paper octagon was also featured in the “The Third Mind” at the Guggenheim.

Speaking of iconic, Carlos Basualdo, curator of Contemporary Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and co-curator for the Pavilion of the United States at the 53rd La Biennale di Venezia seems to think Bruce Nauman is himself an icon. “Nauman is one of the most influential artists alive–American or non American.” Basualdo said during the Biennale press conference at the Italian Cultural Institute.

Bruce Nauman: Topological Gardens is the official United States represenation at the Biennale and will offer a thematic view of the work that Nauman has produced over the past four decades, including video, installation, performance, sculpture and neon. The presentation will include seminal works by Nauman and will premiere a new sound installation by the artist. Nauman’s work will be spread across three locations: The US Pavilion at the Giardini dell Biennale, Universita luav di Venezia at Tolentini and the Exhibition Spaces at Universita Ca Foscari.

As a teaser, this Untitled work from 1965 and this sculpture from 1966 are currently on display at MOMA.

Best new gallery space in Denver features urban ambler Jean Arnold, originally published on adobeairstream.com

In ART, Denver, contemporary art, painting on August 6, 2009 at 12:01 pm

The best new gallery space in Denver is Plus Gallery at 2501 Larimer Street in the ballpark neighborhood. Owned by Ivar Zeile, the gallery has been operating since 2001, but moved into their new space (pictured below) in March.

Plus Gallery, DenverOn April 24, the gallery opened a solo exhibition of urban ambler Jean Arnold’s movement paintings.

“Onrush” is a series of oil paintings taken from Arnold’s sketchbook. When she travels, whether by bus or train, drawing allows her to gather visual information that is in a state of flux, contextualizing urban clutter. Arnold re-interprets her journeys on canvas, distilling specific portions of her sketchbooks into segments with cultural and compositional value. Her gestural techniques promote a broad, dynamic color range, converting her notes into forms that balance between the recognizable and the purely abstract. Several of the works on display were taken from sketches done during a previous visit to Denver. The work addresses issues of urban sprawl that are prevalent in cities like Denver and, as Arnold says, “essentially define our lives at this time.”

arnold_colfaxwestcasabonitaarnold_sbroadway_alamedaarnold_broadway_littletont1

The geometric and colorful abstract paintings convey a dense layering of geography and complexity. Through her work Arnold breaks down barriers of time and space.

Arnold is currently in residence at RedLine an urban contemporary art laboratory in Denver. A talk with Jean in her studio at RedLine is tentaviely set for Thursday, May 7. She’ll present an artist talk in conjunction with her Residency at Redline next Friday, May 8th starting at 5:30pm, followed by a stroll over to Plus Gallery to hear her thoughts relating to the work on view here.

UPDATE: Jean Arnold will be in attendance Friday, May 1 at Plus Gallery. Plus Gallery will be open late till 8pm for First Friday.

‘Overhead’ a glimpse into Kate Petley’s wonderland

In Houston, Mixed media, contemporary art on August 5, 2009 at 11:47 am

Kate Petley at Rudolph Projects in Houston, Texas.

Since moving from Houston to Colorado twelve years ago, Kate Petley has explored the searing white light of the high elevation Rocky Mountains and how it influences our perception of the landscape. Using a complicated method of film and collage with resin on acrylic panels she created juicy, flat screens that played with light reflecting and casting images of images of images, somewhat like a house of mirrors.

However, Petley found that people were more interested in her technique than in exploring the meaning of the work. In a significant departure in method from previous work, Petley is now creating images on opaque panel surfaces. But there is little departure from practice. Petley is still exploring light, landscape, reflection only this time she’s added a human element. Graffiti.

These new panels are not paintings and Petley is not a painter. They are collage-based constructions and she continues to use film as a primary medium of expression. In much the way that collage artists like Robert Rauschenberg began using prints of magazine images, Petley is using photographs of graffiti from around the world in isolated fragments and sources. The fragmentation of these sources speaks to how we read the visually oriented world. The graffiti is stripped of its original meaning and negative associations.

There is a consciousness to the appropriation beyond color, outline, graphic quality, and dynamic composition. Petley cuts, traces, and scales up the isolated elements and in this work the viewer is aware of each decision that goes into the work as each move is made visible. Each layer is evidenced. Read the rest of this entry »

The world needs more spontaneous art

In Culture, Music, public art, theatre on August 4, 2009 at 4:09 pm

Maybe all of the out of work performers in America could perform for those in unemployment lines, play music, make art. At least everyone would be happy for a moment! And who knows where that might lead….

Check this video out at adobeairstream.com

Softcore porn on the Travel Channel

In Culture, TV on August 4, 2009 at 4:07 pm

I was shocked the first time I saw Playboy Bunny and former Heff girlfriend Bridget Marquardt in Bridget’s Sexiest Beaches on the Travel Channel.

So shocked I had to write about if for adobeairstream.com

Dreaming New Mexico runner up for Bucky Prize

In Albuquerque, Culture, Design on August 4, 2009 at 4:06 pm

Read about the Bucky Prize and the runner up on adobeairstream.com