Friday, March 30, 2012
New York Times Article about teaching art
I read this on the train this morning and thought it was really interesting!
Monday, March 26, 2012
how to get an art review...really!
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Review of "Wow-House" at Johalla Projects and Laura Letinsky at the MCA
Johalla Projects – “Wow-house”
Johalla’s “Woo-house” was a refreshing gallery show. It did not take itself to seriously, yet it was dealing with a complex and very now topic: the intersection of furniture, décor and art.
The collection of pieces in the show blurred the line between art and edifice in a way that made the viewer consider the possible implications “living with art.” Most interesting perhaps was the paper circle rug. It was decorative and constructed like a rug would have been. Yet it was not a functioning object, you could not walk on it, instead I found myself walking around it. By referencing the nature of the decorative object but then completely altering its function, this piece addresses the complicated relationship between function and décor.
For a gallery to mount this show was surprising to me, in a way the show is questioning their very purpose. Galleries sell work to clients who then choose how to display the work, sometimes using it as décor. The space between the production of art and the act of selling it to private collector has always been a fascinating disconnect in the art world. This show is very frank in the way that it explores this disconnect through a body of work presented in a gallery.
Laura Letinsky at the MCA
Letinsky’s past still lives have always had a contemplative stillness, and a very formal esthetic. While the objects in her earlier work felt “off” in a certain way (used, or rotten, or askew), her new subject matter feels both playful and contemplative. By using manipulated images Letinsky is playing with the very nature of representation and perhaps decay.
These still lives have the same quietness as her earlier work, yet the play with images on paper, becomes a surprising punctum. Letinsky is using both the positive and negative space of her cut outs, implying the significance of form as well as subject matter. Her play with both presence and absence is also reflected in the very way that she photographs, her images are very flat and evenly lit. This creates a flattening effect between the background and the various forms present on the picture plane. The manipulated three-dimensional nature of the prints within the image become flatted again through the way Letinsky photographs.
This work seems to be a natural departure from Letinky’s earlier work, yet a more playful examination of the same theme, producing compelling results.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Review of Three Vertices at LVL3
Showcasing five artists, there is a modest amount of work on display in LVL3. Even with such a humble quantity of art to see, the curatorial direction of the show is clear to see. The audience is confronted with a playful adaptation of the utopian icons of high modernism with the materials of a postmodern era. Of particular noteworthiness is Austin-based artist Nathan Green's work Inlay that utilizes various pieces of corrugated cardboard and paper to construct what is essentially a modernist grid. Subtle variations in fragmented green and blue allude to the work of Bauhaus artist Josef Alber's infamous color studies. Green indeed notes in his statement that his work is a combination of "art history [meeting] Home Depot".
The only downside to Three Vertices (and it is a minute grievance to be sure) is the inclusion of Clay Hickson's graphite drawings. These pieces amalgamate absurd postmodern subject matter with the hyper-formalist geometric abstractions of modernism. While they certainly deserve merit in and of themselves, they differ greatly from the rest of the works by combining art history with the contemporary in purely subject matter rather than the combination of material and image.
Three Vertices runs at LVL3 until March 25th with viewings arranged by appointment with the gallery's staff. Email them soon for this exhibition is well worth going out of your way to see.
Review of Carl Baratta's Sweet Water at Lloyd Dobler
The paintings in Sweet Water are almost all relatively small-scale works of egg tempera, gouache, and watercolor on boards. The exception of course is the 5' x 10' leviathan entitled You're never Going to Make It, & No One's Gonna Help You that dominates an entire wall of Lloyd Dobler's modestly sized space. Baratta looks to landscape for subject matter and depicts hellish looking forests with hidden figures and withered trees in a style reminiscent of both childish naivety and art brut. Already we have a perplexing contradiction as the aesthetic inclinations of a kindergardener collide with this Ballardian atrocity exhibition, a collision that synthesizes little more than a quick shock that is soon made predictable by repetition. One might hazard a guess that the use of egg tempera, an ennobled medium, juxtaposed with puerile application of the paint leads to interest. But again, the disturbing and subtly anthropomorphic landscapes of Baratta's paintings prevent the egg tempera-rendered childishness from forming a dialectical unity. It is in fact this nearly dialectical relationship that annulled my last hope of finding a concrete message of ecological activism in the artist's decapitated trees; how could one possibly incite a political implication in a painting that looks as if it were made by a 5-year old schizophrenic obsessed with the materiality of non-secular Byzantine art?
This show is essentially a series of near encounters and non-sequiturs, brushes with cohesion that never quite resolve themselves. A patron going to see Sweet Water will likely come away from the exhibition pondering on a plethora of eclectic (and admittedly interesting) topics that nonetheless Baratta has unfortunately failed to address with more than a brief and infinitely vague allusion.
tomorrow!
start midterm crits
go over to bfa show at 10am
do bfa crits
then
back to room
finish other midterm crits
i put a christian marclay article on the portal but we won't discuss
it until after spring break....
bring your game face tomorrow, jason!
Monday, March 12, 2012
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Saturday, March 3, 2012
focusing out
the tony wight gallery show is great,
in the back there's a video that is a great example of 'focusing out' as we discussed in class (lucy/kathy/dana ahem!)
highly recommended!
Focus Out / Out Focus
out focus: 1.) from a path of inquiry that encourages extreme focus on a minute detail of a problem, question or theory. 2.) the shifting out of detailed inquiry on a specific subject back into the world from which the idea originated. 3.) fu**(^) blurry.
According to Google, the term means / could derive from:
http://api.jquery.com/focusout/
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&cts=1330790979149&ved=0CEoQFjAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fshinzen.org%2FRetreat%2520Reading%2FFocus%2520Out-Summary.pdf&ei=VkBST7-OLcnZgQfXqLzdDQ&usg=AFQjCNGkwCBnCFsVQxcitWThcFsk54T8Sg
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Out-of-Focus-Out-of-Imagination/170652019642716
http://forum.dhtmlx.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=19938
http://www.juxtapoz.com/Graffiti/focus-in-focus-out
http://www.123rf.com/photo_349096_naked-woman-model--focus-out-of-model.html
(stock photo version of...)
https://www.google.com/search?q=%22out+focus%22&hl=en&client=firefox-a&hs=KMD&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&prmd=imvns&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=_UJST_yyLYqygwfR4aTXDQ&ved=0CC8QsAQ&biw=1436&bih=775
http://focusleadership.org/Display.asp?Page=AboutUs
for Dana / Lucy (mostly)
http://oikost.com/projects-2/exit-43/
from UBU Web
Aspen Magazine: http://www.ubu.com/aspen/
(This is just a great magazine of conceptual art / craziness... kind of reminded me of an older version of the .gif format.)
from the UBU Web Papers Section, which can be found near the top of the page here: http://www.ubu.com/papers/
(These really just give a different sort of background for the use of text in visual or otherwise non-linear, but narrative work... e.g. cultivating a familial history for a personal reason through the display or use of images.)
William S. Burroughs -- "The Cut-Up Method of Brion Gysin"
John Robert Colombo -- "On Found Poetry (A FOUND INTRODUCTION)"
Friday, March 2, 2012
Thursday, March 1, 2012
tomorrow
there's a great moment when Irwin moves to site-specificity, which seems so obvious of a notion that it's funny to see him have moved there so slowly and carefully, but also surgically methodical and inspiring.
here's the reason i'm missing class:
The main exhibition at BIP2012 "ONLY YOU ONLY ME" will occupy the whole of Mamac – the city’s Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art – including the basement areas that were originally intended and used for preserving paintings and sculptures and now totally given over to art-themed installations and videos. Nan Goldin will have pride of place at Mamac with a monumental projection of her major work, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, surrounded by Erwin Olaf, Sylvie Blocher, Jason Lazarus, J.H. Engström, Eric Rondepierre, Elina Brotherus, Thomas Chable and very many others.
pretty excited and a bit nervous--the best feelings to have in both pockets.
start picking out a reading and bringing it in to plop on the calendar...i'm excited to receive your submissions.
i will be assigning a reading on jean-francois lyotard--i just got his book so i need a couple weeks to find the highlights and get them digitized...
i think i will bring in an adrian piper pdf tomorrow
and also hakim bey's TAZ!
i think kathy was going to bring in a selection from on longing? please confirm this with me kathy
here's my artist statement i promised, this gets edited all the time per context:
also, can everyone review two exhibitions between now and our next meeting (after tomorrow) on March 16th? there are two i'm going to friday night, one at aron's space document 6-8pm, and the other at johalla projects 7-10pm. post short reviews (200 words) on each to the class blog by 3/16/12...
see you tomorrow, bring energizing snacks...