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We Went to the Independent: A Fair With Sturdy Walls

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The Independent, March 6th – 9th
548 West 22nd Street

What’s on view: A mix of the best non-profits and sexy mid-level galleries from New York, Europe, and Mexico.

Whitney Kimball: This year I’ll save the disses and the praise and just give you the boring truth: The Independent is not a unique or beautiful snowflake. In terms of the ongoing fair season drill, it’s honed a smarter brand (no booths, open space, zig zag partitions) but the format has about the same retail function as the funky doorway to Comme des Garçons. It’s a nice change of pace. But to invest hopes that fairs like the Independent might take the industry to new places—especially when art fairs now take up so much time in the public life of an artwork—is a dangerous line to toe. Hipness is not a concept.

Paddy Johnson: The Independent’s press release doesn’t even make the claim that they’re going to take the industry to “new places.” In fact, I read their pr as an interest in returning the fair to a more familiar retail model, “the gallery.” (They say they want the fair to reflect the “spatial and curatorial concerns of the galleries and institutions.) I think they succeed in that respect. And let’s face it, this fair was a million times better than the Armory. At least some work stood out.

That said, I feel the fair’s branding as the “Independent,” is slightly disingenuous. The name evokes the popular notion that art is a free voice, but their model doesn’t make a space with those who are actually ‘independent.” Where are the artists representing themselves? Where are the independent curators? Where are the independent publishers? They’ve got one indi mag in the whole fair—Mousse—and they’re sequestered to the fourth floor behind the bar. It’s ridiculous.

WK: The Independent never made those claims, but like many writers I made the mistake of getting too excited about how boundary-breaking the Independent at first seemed to be; as Jillian Steinhauer pointed out this morning on Hyperallergic, it was at first not to even be branded as an “art fair” but a “grassroots” collaborative exhibition that happens to have a lot of onsite sales. It ultimately mimes the look and feel of serious academic institutions (something Will Brand and I complained about last year) but is still, inescapably, a salesroom. The idea of trying to package a market-free, academic, liberated vibe scares me, since I can easily envision a future where the market consumes all alternatives.

At the fair, Rodrigo Garcia from the Mexico City gallery Labor mentioned to me that he knows galleries that are closing up their storefronts and simply showing at fairs altogether; apparently this prompted Art Basel to make a policy where you can only participate if you have a physical space. That’s consistent with Clare McAndrew’s predictions cited by Ben Davis in “9.5 Theses on Art and Class” (p 84) of a more event-driven marketplace, which could drive mid-level galleries to drop the expenses of running a physical space. This seems even more possible with Ed Winkleman’s claims to the rising instability for mid-level galleries. So I agree, the brand of “independence” is disingenuous. Let’s call it what it is.

PJ: I’m inclined to see Art Basel’s policy requiring galleries to have physical spaces as a means of streamlining their application process. It discourages galleries that can’t afford to purchase a booth at Basel from applying and ensures that the participating galleries put forth a sufficient image of wealth. This is about branding and resource management.  A commercial gallery is just another showroom; do we really think art’s better able to serve a higher purpose just because it’s landed on a sturdier set of walls? (This is what the Independent is clearly hoping, with their thick, museum-like walls.)

WK: Yes!!!!! It’s the space to present one person’s work without having to compete with 5,000 other objects—packed in like sardines with the collectors—to look at for five seconds in a three-day clearance sale event. Do you really want to live in a world where you consume most emerging art through fairs? And where most art is made for fairs? It’s a world without videos or books or foresight.

PJ: Look, if art is really meant to serve a public good, maybe it would be better if these fairs didn’t all charge admission. My feeling is that art fairs will continue to improve the way they showcase art—Moving Image, a video fair, is a great example of that—but the problem is that this art is on view for three days or four days and then disappears into a private collection never to be seen again. Commercial galleries by necessity have longer viewing periods and are free to the public. Accessibility to art, not the quality of the art itself will prove to be the real issue with fairs.

WK: I was surprised to hear the Independent charges now ($20); that it used to be free was one of its really strong points. Josh Baer reported this morning that it’s one of the cheaper fairs for exhibitors, though, so maybe the price helps keep the booth rental costs down? (All speculation.) UPDATE 3/11: The Independent’s Communication Advisor Justin Conner reports that admission went to “subsidize costs we can have a great group of participants who can present artist-focused, experimental presentations,” as well as support the upcoming Independent Projects, which “will not be just a second edition, but different in character”.

I know the fair model will get better as it continues, and the Independent does attempt to improve the landscape. But even Independent founder Elizabeth Dee talks about the importance of distinguishing the roles of “gallerist” and “dealer,” and I think that’s a critical distinction to make; a gallerist is somebody who manages artists, helps them get better opportunities (rather than commodify their work), and to co-produce work. Somebody who’s selling exclusively at fairs, as they are now, doesn’t necessarily have those stewardship responsibilities.

PJ: Well, a dealer makes his or her reputation by placing work in great museums and collections, so I’d say it’s not quite so cut and dry but yeah, you make a good point. (I do find it hard to imagine an art scene in which no physical spaces remain though).

Text by Dan Graham, illustrations by Antoine Catala. "A Dolphin's Smile," 2013

Text by Dan Graham, illustrations by Antoine Catala. “A Dolphin’s Smile,” 2013.

All this aside, though, let’s be honest; there’s been some good work on display this year. That Martha Wilson solo booth at the ADAA was fucking incredible and dealt with identity, stereotypes and rage. They had Wilson’s staged suicide photo and note meant to get back at a lover, and a suite of goddess photos that put Cindy Sherman’s self portraits to shame. The text under each photo is so biting. “The Lesbian. She hates the goddess, because actually the goddess was actually invented by the men on Madison Avenue. She alone sees through goddessdom, but unluckily, her sexuality is so misplaced that the rest of society ignores her.”

At the Independent, we saw two booths with strong, difficult work. That may not sound like a lot, but if we take that much home from a walk through the Lower East Side and Chelsea than we’ve had a fine day. 47 Canal was selling dolphin-intercourse drawings, and upstairs we saw explicit drawings made by an unknown artist who may have been a prisoner. When I asked Oliver at 47 Canal how the fair was going he conceded that he was dealing with difficult work. “Dolphin sex has a niche audience,” he said. So true.

WK: Yeah, the dolphin-sex comics and weirdo unknown artists will probably make my 2014 highlights (the stoner scarves and abundance of modernist-looking food packaging won’t). What makes the Independent a better art fair than usual is its dedicated exhibitors, who typically bring a handful of under-known artists, more video than normal. That kind of integrity isn’t something you can streamline.


Independent Art Fair Slideshow and Commentary 2014

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Gaudel de stampa

Gaudel de Stampa

Earlier in the day we debated whether the Independent was anything other than a fair (it’s not). Now we discuss the art in the fair. We had a lot more to say about the Independent than we did the Armory Show, so that’s at least one good sign for its future.

Paddy:

Paddy: Just how smart are dolphins? According to this comic scripted by Dan Graham and illustrated by Antoine Catala they’re just as clever as the average dude. When a dolphin named Eddie meets the sexy and voluptuous Cindy he quickly proceeds to seduce her. The relationship progresses quickly, but when he moves into a pool in Cindy’s backyard the relationship simmers. “I don’t connect with Eddie the same way I used to,” Cindy tells her partner Kerry.  Kerry then decides that perhaps all Eddie needs is a bit of spice in his life and introduces him to a toothy humpback whale. Eddie thinks she looks like a brown lump.  It’s hard to imagine this piece being more dudely, but that’s fine. I like the absurdity that a female fish isn’t good enough for the dolphin, but Cindy is.

Whitney: Once a picture of everyday life, Michel Auder's "Chelsea, Manhattan" (1989) is a historical nugget from Chelsea's not-so-ancient past. It's incredible; you've got hookers and pimps walking around on Derek Eller's doorstep (just blocks away from the Independent), and the doorway looks exactly the same. It makes me think of today's art hipsters as just another flock of colorful, migratory birds, passing through for a few decades.

Whitney: Once a picture of everyday life, Michel Auder’s “Chelsea, Manhattan” (1989) is a historical nugget from Chelsea’s not-so-ancient past. It’s incredible; you’ve got hookers and pimps walking around on Derek Eller’s doorstep (just blocks away from the Independent), and the doorway looks exactly the same. It makes me think of today’s art hipsters as just another flock of colorful, migratory birds, passing through for a few decades.

Whitney: Holy shit. You can probably guess that this series of private self-portraits by unknown artist Martina Kubelk from 1988-95 was never meant to see the light of day...EVER. So there might be some ethical issues with Galerie Susanne Zander's selling them at an art fair; like the other artists in her booth, these images were discovered after a person's death (these in a flea market) and sold to her. These images are so supercharged and human though, that I think it would do people a disservice not to show and preserve them. I think Kubek's trying to express some action movie glamour poses here but often has the look of a little kid caught with his dick out. These and others in this booth are the only works in the fair which I would describe as "moving"

Whitney: Holy shit. You can probably guess that this series of private self-portraits by unknown artist Martina Kubelk from 1988-95 was never meant to see the light of day…EVER. So there might be some ethical issues with Galerie Susanne Zander’s selling them at an art fair; like the other artists in her booth, these images were discovered after a person’s death (these in a flea market) and sold to her. These images are so supercharged and human, though, that I think it would do people a disservice not to show and preserve them. I think Kubek’s trying to express some action movie glamour poses here but often has the look of a little kid caught with his dick out. These and others in this booth are the only works in the fair which I would describe as “moving.”

Whitney: If I could buy one thing, it would be William Crawford's untitled drawings. Found in an abandoned house in Oakland, Zander believes that the series might have been made from prison; some of these were made on prison papers, and they were made in the nineties, but a lot of them look like they're from the seventies. That would explain the need to illustrate hundreds of sexual fantasies. Crawford's style also looks like it's in a time capsule, giving himself a kind of cropped fro and sleek disco interiors. He also has a tendency to place the butt in the center and focal point of every frame.

Whitney: If I could buy one thing, it would be William Crawford’s untitled drawings. Found in an abandoned house in Oakland, Zander believes that the series might have been made from prison; some of these were made on prison papers, and they were made in the nineties, but a lot of them look like they’re from the seventies. That would explain the need to illustrate hundreds of sexual fantasies. Crawford’s style also looks like it’s in a time capsule, giving himself a kind of cropped fro and sleek disco interiors. He also has a tendency to place the butt in the center and focal point of every frame. Paddy: Best in Show? It was for me, too.

Whitney: Like an official passing of the torch, Gavin Brown's space is split diagonally with Ramiken Crucible.

Whitney: Like an official passing of the torch, Gavin Brown’s space is split diagonally with Ramiken Crucible.

Whitney: Roman Signer had a piano crane-lifted onto the third floor of a building and then ran opposing fans so that ping pong balls will roll lightly back and forth, over the strings. This would be one of the better pieces at Art Basel because of its sensitivity, but next to the few great works at Independent here, it's an art fair meh

Whitney: Roman Signer had a piano crane-lifted onto the third floor of a building and then ran opposing fans so that ping pong balls will roll lightly back and forth, over the strings. This would be one of the better pieces at Art Basel because of its sensitivity, but next to the few great works at Independent here, it’s an art fair meh.

Elizabeth Dee

Paddy: This Julia Wachtel installation at Elizabeth Dee is a good example of how the Independent makes art look better than it is. “Champaign life” depicts a life where dreams and realities are the same. On one wall you have Mickey Mouse, Kim Kardashian, and Kanye West next to each other, on another you have a black-and-white image of a beaten figure surrounded by men next to a sad drawn clown in red. The trouble with this piece isn’t that it doesn’t have a lot of range, but rather that the artist does very little to expose just how absurd reality is. The piece looks like a subway advertisement.

Alice Mackler Kerry Schuss

Paddy: Clara Olshansky wrote glowingly of Alice Mackler’s ceramics at Kerry Schuss this summer while her work in a group show at James Fuentes got a less than positive review from everyone at AFC but for me. The main criticism was that these works were little more than blobs with smiley faces, but I still don’t know  why that’s a bad thing. The ceramics and the paintings both resemble lumpy Barbapapas, a cartoon I also found charming. Blobbiness isn’t a bad thing when it’s got a good face. These images often have oversized lips, which tend to be the more expressive part of the ceramic figure, though granted most look sort of shell shocked on those pedestals.

Karma

Paddy: As far as I knew Karma dealt mostly with books, but this booth shows they have greater breadth to their program than I realized. These truck flaps and wall mounted panels by Amy O’Neill looked pretty great to me, though I suppose part of that was the simple thrill of seeing a yet-untouched working-class material touched by art. That the display device resembled a set of hurdles didn’t hurt either. I doubt there’s too much to be read into gesture, I just found the transformation pleasing.

Real Fine Arts

The Real Fine Arts booth includes Nicolas Ceccaldi, Nicolas Ceccaldi / Mathieu Malouf, Manuel Gnam, Bill Hayden, Morag Keil, Alissa McKendrick, Dave Miko, Jon Pestoni and probably photographs better than any other in the fair. This is, however, all relatively safe abstract work that looks better at the fair than anywhere else.

Wednesday Links: Unicorn and Wine Class

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Hello readers: today, Paddy Johnson has launched her new biweekly column at Artnet News. Those of you who read her regularly at The L Magazine can now find her essays and reviews at news.artnet.com.

  • Artist Andrew Benson has launched an amazing new tumblr for his wolf and unicorn GIFs. A warning though. This site is occasionally marked by Watership Down levels of gore. [Wolf + Unicorn]
  • What happens to conceptual art online? Artist Brad Troemel has a few answers, off and online. I reviewed Brad Troemel’s exhibition at Zach Feuer. The verdict? Thumbs down. [artnet]
  • It’s never too early in the morning to start thinking about wine. I’m taking wine classes (but the Bordeaux is going to break my bank)! [The New York Times]
  • Elmgreen & Dragsets famous sculpture Prada Marfa in Texas has been hit by a vandal calling himself the ‘TOMS. [The Internet]
  • We’re big fans of Rhizome’s community campaign, which on March 19th will feature a 24 hour telethon over google hangouts. Artist and famed Rhizome commentor Tom Moody tells us Rhizome invited him to read aloud his comments at 12 pm EST for an hour. We’re looking forward to reliving the Holy Fire thread! Summary here. Donate in bitcoin here.  [Rhizome]
  • #WithSyria: Hands Across America for twitter? [#WithSyria]
  • Bitcoin may not replace dollars as soon as we thought (according to people who write about money). A study by Goldman voices its doubts about the stability of a currency that’s not backed by any standard other than comparison with other currencies. Says professor Eric Posner, whom Goldman interviewed: “The people who maintain the Bitcoin network can change the money supply through a majoritarian process. And that means that the supply of bitcoin is a function of what the majority of these people think at any given time.” [Business Insider]
  • The new TEFAF art market report is out, and according to Alexander Forbes’ summary on artnet news, it spells good news for the continued health of physical and online galleries. Fairs, he says, have lost a little steam as exhibitor costs are becoming too expensive. [Artnet News]

Thursday Links: What Makes a Good Picture?

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An example of an excellent Barack Obama portrait by Pete Souza

An example of an excellent Barack Obama portrait by Pete Souza

  • Blake Gopnik thinks that this photo of Barack Obama is the best piece of art in the Whitney Biennial. We were immediately applied The Philosophers’ Mail criteria for what makes a good photo, and decided Gopnik is wrong.  [Blake Gopnik]
  • Howard Halle’s review of the Whitney Biennial is the best we’ve read yet. [Timeout]
  • If the Whitney Biennial is the art world’s Oscars, an attention-demanding spectacle that never messes with its safe brand, then its product is star-making power. Another Biennial profile, this of ceramicist Shio Kusaka. [Architectural Digest]
  • The biennial has also led the New York Times to discover a trend, “The Growing Transgender Presence in Pop Culture”. A piece on transgender artists Rhys Ernst and Zackary Drucker is used to launch into a profile of three totally unrelated transgender people who have recently gotten famous. [New York Times]
  • Those of you who can’t wait for the new Lars von Trier film should read David Edelstein’s satisfying review of Nymphomaniac: Volume I. [Vulture]
  • President Obama has apologized University of Texas Professor Ann Collins Johns, who was offended when he told workers at at GE plant, “folks can make a lot more potentially with skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might with an art history degree.” [Politico]
  • OnBuzzfeed, sharing increases as people spend more time “reading”. [@peretti]
  • Production studio Fiction has made light paintings with drones and photoshop. Why not just use photoshop? Because then you can’t use the word drone in a headline.  [Huffington Post]
  • More crap: Here’s what paint pigment in water looks like! [Mashable]
  • Hip hop influencers like Afrika Bambaataa plan to open The Universal Hip Hop Museum in the Bronx’s Kingsbridge Armory. They’ll have to compete with the National Museum of Hip Hop, who say they’re in talks with developers in Harlem. [New York Times]

This Week’s Must-See Art Events: FREE CHILI

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Image courtesy of Nick Sethi  on tumblr http://nicksethi.com/tumblr

Image courtesy of Nick Sethi on tumblr http://nicksethi.com/tumblr

This week’s events include Audubon, purveyors of good taste, bad taste, chili, and a lot of emerging talent.

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Mon

Baby's All Right

146 Broadway
Brooklyn
6-9Website

Chili Cook-Off

“FREE CHILI AND DOLLAR BEERS” might be the most foolproof press release we’ve ever read. In honor of the traditional St. Paddy’s Day feast, the Lower East Side gallery Boo-Hooray hosts a chili cookoff in Williamsburg with live music by Endless Boogie and “celebrity judges”.

Microscope Gallery

4 Charles Place
Bushwick
7 PM. $6 - artist is presentWebsite

SHELF LIVES

Microscope has been building a lot of momentum in its video and film program lately. It’s been presenting emerging local artists alongside avant-garde filmmakers like Amos Poe and Stephen Dwoskin, and in strong creatively-minded fairs like UNTITLED and Moving Image. We’re not always fans of what comes out, but that’s bound to happen when you support experimental art. Tonight, Microscope shows over a decade of videos by Eileen Maxson, who works with the language of 90s video, stock imagery, press conferences, and the Internet.

 

Wed

The Camera Club of New York (CCNY)

336 West 37th Street, Suite 206
6:00 PM to 8:00 PMWebsite

Pierre Le Hors, "Period Act"

Readers of MATTE Magazine and Dashwood Books will know Pierre Le Hors, a Whistler-esque master of luscious surfaces. And if his work calls back to a few different periods in art history, that may not be accidental; in his new show “Period Act”, Le Hors describes the experience of capturing images from the museum. “Moving past period rooms, visible storage, and galleries closed for installation,” he writes, “time collapses and the museum becomes a forest of fragments in which I gladly lose myself and find rhythm.” Spoken like a true postmodernist.

Thu

6-8pm Website

Scaredy Cat City

If the fairs have gotten you down, then go look at the deeply-felt assemblage of Ben Gocker. Just at a glance, you can tell that Gocker thoroughly enjoys what he does, which– in a studio art system that often values dry concept and raw toil– makes it really refreshing. If B. Wurtz has a rightful heir, it would be Gocker.

DC Moore

535 W 22nd St #2
Website

Romare Bearden: Insight & Innovation

“Innovation” is not a platitude when it comes to collagist and painter Romare Bearden. In addition to being totally involved with community work, Bearden played a huge role in influencing younger artists like Carrie Mae Weems. Weems has an ongoing show up at the Studio Museum right now, which Bearden helped to found.

Anyway, according to the press release, this new show should give us an insight into a turning point in the artist’s work, in which Bearden began to explore Southern culture.

Fri

Mitchell-Innes & Nash

534 West 26th Street
Website

Leigh Ledare

Leigh Ledare is a lightning rod for what constitutes good taste. I don’t know if it’s possible to like “Pretend You’re Actually Alive,” Ledare’s erotic photo series of his mom, but vag shots of your birth-giver are pretty daring. Controversy aside, Ledare is skilled at crafting work that makes it difficult to tell what’s fact and what’s fiction. At Mitchell-Innes & Nash he’s showing “Double Bind” (2010/2012), a series that’s similarly hard-to-believe. It’s a portrait series that uses photographs of his ex-wife Megan Ledare- Fedderly taken by her current husband Adam Fedderly as well as Ledare’s own photos of Ledare-Fedderly.  Worth checking out.

New-York Historical Society

170 Central Park West at Richard Gilder Way (77th Street)
10 AM - 6 PMWebsite

Audubon’s Aviary: Parts Unknown (Part II of The Complete Flock)

Bird people, if you ever plan on seeing Audubon paintings up close, then this could well be your best chance. As part of its popular three-part series of Audubon shows, the New York Historical Society presents part II: “Audubon’s Aviary”. You’ll see watercolors at the height of his career, from  southeastern explorations and on his Labrador Expedition. The show also comes with the book Audubon’s Aviary: The Original Watercolors for “The Birds of America”, which comes with rave reviews on Amazon.

 

Auxiliary Projects

2 St. Nicholas Avenue, space 25
7-9 PMWebsite

MIDDLE ASS BAD AGE

Can obsessive self portraiture lead to a deeper understanding of ourselves? According to artist Sue McNally, who has been drawing herself since she was a teenager, that answer is, “yes”. Now in her middle age, McNally’s unsparing drawings are all but dashed off. She never cracks a smile, and depicts herself as if in a constant state of misery.

618 E. 9th Street

6-9 pm

Nick Sethi at Ed. Varie

If you can only go to one event this week, make it photographer Nick Sethi’s opening this Friday at Ed. Varie. We’re told the show will drawing from the body of work produced for his self published zine, FOR YOUR EYES ONLY, and will include selfies in UV tanning salons. Having not seen the zine, our knowledge of Sethi’s work is limited to his selfie-laden tumblr, which is filled with washed out images of dudes posing, a drag queen with a shoe on her head, and the above picture in which Sethi has positioned himself, startled, in front of this model’s crotch. Needless to say, we’d like to see more.

Sat

Residency Unlimited

360 Court St. Unit #4
Brooklyn
12 - 6 PMWebsite

Rituals of the Reflective Self

Residency Unlimited is a great way of getting to know artists who are working in other countries, but visiting New York for short periods of time. This group exhibition showcases the work of artists who reflect on daily rituals and structures and includes work by Meng-Hsuan Wu, Nora Silva and ja ja. Look forward to seeing an installation of vases and a pile of text by Danish duo ja ja, along with the melodies by Taiwanese artist Meng-Hsuan Wu and a confessionary eat-n stand by Chilean artist Nora Silva. This exhibition was curated by Ayelet Danielle Aldouby.

Thursday Links: We’re All Getting Older

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Sarah Lucas

Sarah Lucas at Gladstone

  • Blake Gopnik has some nice things to say about William Powhida’s new show at Postmasters. [Artinfo]
  • For those of you who have been following the missing Malaysian aircraft story: Australia may have found some debris from the plane in the southern Indian Ocean. [The New York Times]
  • The Hauser & Wirth expansion continues. The gallery is opening another location in July – this time in Somerset England. [Baer Faxt]
  • Looking for more art news from the southern states? Welcome Mississippi Modern! [Mississippi Modern via: Nathan Mullins]
  • Adam Lindemann loves the new art rating website for collectors, Sell You Later. Sure, people make believe they are looking at the work, they make believe they are interested in art and what it says about the world, but let’s face it, real art-talk sounds archaic in the world of the now, where most conversations quickly circle back to last week’s auction prices. SellYouLater.com is the epitome of where we are at. [Gallerist]
  • What does lesbian supremacy look like today? Hyperallergic interviews Ridykeulous, the artist group founded by Nicole Eisenman and A. L. Steiner in 2005 and loosely organized around the theme of lesbian supremacy. Their new show “Readykeulous by Ridykeulous: This is What Liberation Feels Like™” is up now in St. Lewis. [Hyperallergic]
  • Howard Halle on Gladstone’s Sarah Lucas, a YBA (Young British Artists) who is now in her 50’s. Her show includes a lot of stuffed dicks and car crushers, which Halle seems to like. The rest, not so much. “Somewhat distracting and totally unnecessary, however, are the photomurals reprising early works, like the 1990 image of the artist eating a banana. Like low-rise jeans, being cocky doesn’t wear well with age.” [Time Out]
  • Christian Viveros-Faune has decided to give the Whitney Biennial a little extra tenderness because it represents the community that might lead the way out of “Manhattan’s grossly blinged-up, tin-eared echo chamber.” He’s still critical, and shares the consensus that Michelle Grabner’s fourth floor show is the best. [Village Voice]

Friday Links: Hitting Your Head Against A Wall

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  • Perry Rubenstein has filed for bankruptcy. [Art in America]
  • How does somebody get “bumped up” in pay from from 200k to $1 million a year? At museums, the perks seem to pile on exponentially. According to this piece, not only do prominent museum directors like MoMA’s Glenn Lowry and the Met’s Thomas Campbell get salaries of over a million dollars, they also get free apartments because they “entertain for work”. [Artnet News]
  • If that pisses you off, then maybe you’ll want to look into worker co-ops, a business model with no boss and no investors to skim off the fattest profits. Apparently people make double the average wage and work less. [New York Times, Boing Boing]
  • If you missed the hackathon for women in art at Eyebeam, there’s another one this weekend in Washington, DC. [Women in the Arts, h/t @rcembalest].
  • A feminist burlesque routine by Nadia Kamil. [Feminist Philosophers]
  • Karen Rosenberg seems to like Maria Lassnig’s show, but it’s unclear exactly why. The most we get is that “they’re inventive”. [The New York Times]
  • Unbound, an exhibition in tribute to the late programmer Aaron Schwartz opens tonight at Thoughtworks. You have to RSVP to attend. [Latino Social Innovation]
  • New York City is experiencing significant population growth. Will this effect your rent? [The New York Times]
  • In tough times, the AAMD (American Association of Museum Directors) has been acting as a watchdog, imposing sanctions and criticizing museums that are trying to sell off works. The latest culprit is the Delaware Art Museum, which has decided to de-accession four valuable artworks to bail itself out of debt. [Los Angeles Times]

Monday Links: Basically, We’re Fucked

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Phyllida Barlow at the Tate Britain. Image via: The Guardian

Phyllida Barlow at the Tate Britain. Image via: The Guardian

  • The LA Times’s Deborah Vankin got into James Turrell’s Perceptual Cell at LACMA, which has a year-long waiting list and a $45 ticket. I think it was worth it. [The LA Times]
  • Making the rounds: An interview with collector Stefan Simchowitz, in which he discusses what makes art different now, (“it’s not just the artist who produces the work but the spectator and audience that essentially refines it”), and why he’s such a good collector, (he has “Sterling Ruby, Joe Bradley, Tauba Auerbach, Oscar Murillo. I have one of the great collections of my generation, of emerging contemporary art.”) LOL. [Artspace Magazine]
  • As a result of poor fiscal management, Robin Forman, Dean of Emory College of Arts and Sciences, released a letter to the Emory College community stating that Emory University would close their Visual Arts Program, as well as the Department of Educational Studies, the Department of Physical Education, and the Department of Journalism. They also suspended admissions to graduate programs in Spanish, Economics, and the Institute of Liberal Arts (I.L.A.)––Emory’s flagship interdisciplinary Ph.D. program. They did all of this back in September, without consulting the students or faculty. [art&education]
  • Is the Internet dead? How does its size and lack of coherence affect users? Jason Farago explores. (Readers who aren’t fluent in Spanish will need to use Google translate for this link.) [BBC]
  • Phyllida Barlow’s commission for the Tate Britian opens today. It’s about time. This artist only started receiving her fair dues in her 60’s. She is now 70. Here’s a profile. [The Guardian]
  • Another UN report on how climate change is going to lead to mass slaughter. In the wise words of Gawker, “Basically, we’re fucked.”[Gawker]
  • Not sure that health insurance will save you from the mass starvation predicted by the UN, but it will certainly help should you get injured in a flood. Better  sign up today; it’s your last chance day to do it. New Yorkers, sign up here. [New York State of Health]
  • 445 photobooth images taken over decades by an anonymous man from the midwest are now on view of a man at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers. This reminds us there is a smaller, but significant, collection of photobooth images taken over the decades by Brian O’Doherty at P! [Rutgers News]

This Week’s Must See Events: No Rest for the Weary

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Barney Furnas at Sargent's Daughters

Barney Furnas at Sargent’s Daughters

Any art nerd who’s dreaming of taking this week off needs to take another look at their calendar. Galleries across the city are opening new shows, and there are plenty of talks too.  Between art star Matthew Barney’s tell-all talk with Sir Norman Rosenthal at The 92nd Y this and upcoming talent Sara Cwynar’s show opening at Foxy Production this Friday, you’ll not lack art to see and discuss.

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Mon

MoMA

11 West 53rd Street
7:00 PMWebsite

Museum Hours (with introduction by writer and director Jem Cohen)

A quiet movie about a friendship between an American woman who learns a distant relative is in the hospital and a museum guard. No grand revelations occur while looking at art, which generally speaking mimics the role of the museum in the lives of most of us.

AVA

34 East 1st Street
7:00 PM to 9:00 PMWebsite

Ephemera: A synesthetic installation combining scent, sound and visual elements.

An exhibition that would please author of Perfume, Patrick Suskind; Ehemera: A synesthetic installation combining scent, sound and visual elements. The nose behind this project is Berlin-based Geza Schoen, who is known, according to the press release, for “various avant-garde/conceptual scents.” We’re a little confused about what defines a conceptual scent, but we’re told that musicians Ben Frost, Tim Hecker, and Steve Goodman (aka Kode9) have created sonic raw material which Schoen then reinterpreted to create three different scents: Noise, Drone, and Bass, respectively. These scents, named after sounds, are then used to develop more sounds.

Different days will feature the various sounds and scents, as follows:

Tuesday April 1st – Bass

Wednesday April 2nd – Drone

Thursday April 3rd – Noise

Friday April 4th – Bass

Saturday April 5th – Drone

Sunday April 6th – Noise

Ephemera is curated by Małgorzata Płysa and Mat Schulz from Unsound.
Artists include: Geza Schoen, Ben Frost, Tim Hecker, Steve Goodman, Manuel Sepulveda, Marcel Weber

Tue

92nd Street Y

Kaufmann Concert Hall Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street
8:00 PM, Tickets start at $29.00 eachWebsite

Matthew Barney and Sir Norman Rosenthal

29 bucks should be worth hearing Matthew Barney explain his work a little. Known for work that combines sculptural installation, performance art and video, Barney looks at the physical limits of the body and the mutability of sexuality. His films typically work with little to no narrative. Former Secretary of Exhibitions 
at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, Sir Norman Rosenthal will be interviewing Barney. Rosenthal was the curator behind the controversal traveling exhibition of 1997.

Wed

80WSE Gallery at NYU Steinhardt

80 Washington Square East
5-8 PM Website

NYU MFA 2014 Thesis Exhibition in Three Parts

Take a gander at some untested talent. NYU’s MFA Thesis exhibition (in three parts) begins this Wednesday. The schedule below:

Part I: Cheryl Bentley, Don Edler, Yi Xin Tong

4/2/14 – 4/12/14

Opening Reception 4/2/14 5-8pm

 

Part II: Azi Amiri, Sofi Brazzeal, Samantha Fretwell, Tyson Robertson

4/23/14 – 5/3/14

Opening Reception 4/26/14 5-8pm

 

Part III: Jordan Albaugh, Nathaniel Axel, Lauren Klenow, Megha Mattoo

5/14/14 – 5/24/14

Opening Reception 5/14/14 5-8pm

Thu

Gagosian Gallery

821 Park Avenue
6:00 PM to 7:30 PMWebsite

Urs Fischer, Last Supper

If you like Pawel Althamer’s Draftsmen’s Congress, where visitors are drawing on the walls in the New Museum, then you’ll probably want to head to Urs Fischer’s two-part show Last Supper. The show will take fired sculptures from his MOCA show, “YES,” an open house where 1,500 volunteers made clay sculptures.

And if you think the show’s “unprecedented directness” smells like bs, then you can at least check out Gagosian’s latest plunder, a brand new uptown space.

Pace Gallery

534 West 25th Street
6:00 PM to 8:00 PMWebsite

Adam Pendleton

Adam Pendleton attempts to shed some light on a gun battle that happened almost fifty years ago, between the Black Panther Party and the police. In a recent video, the artist shadows David Hilliard, a founding member and former Chief of Staff of the Black Panther Party, through Oakland. The show was sponsored by SF MoMA; Pendleton presents the video along with silkscreens and painting.

Fri

EFA Project Space

323 West 39th Street, 2nd floor
6 PM - 8 PMWebsite

Several Circles

“The circle is simultaneously loud and soft” Kandinsky wrote once in a letter to a friend. He had some authority on the subject; Kandinsky had what’s known as “synesthesia”, a condition often described as “color hearing”. This exhibition takes things a step further by working with a concept of “ideaesthesia; a phenomenon in which concepts evoke perception-like experiences. The explanation of what this means is a little murky in the press release, which offers the scenario of understanding that “mu5ic” actually means “music” as one example but that’s fine. We expect the artists’ work—Joe Brittain, John Cage, Mia Goyette, Vladimir Havrilla, Rachel Higgins, Music Animation Machine (Stephen Malinowski), Mamiko Otsubo, Irgin Sena, Slobodan Stošić, Alina Tenser—will demonstrate show’s thesis.

Curated by Marco Antonini.

Foxy Production

623 West 27th Street
6 PM to 8 PMWebsite

Flat Death, Sara Cwynar

“Kitsch is the means through which complex human experience is distilled down to simple, sentimental motifs and ideas,” Sara Cwynar observes in her ad for Kitsch Encyclopedia. This might explain why, though Cwynar’s photos embody the “fading glamour” of old tchotchkes, their fruity essence still makes us drool. (Disclaimer: we know from our benefit auction).

Theodore Art

56 Bogart Street
6:00 PM to 9:00 PMWebsite

Oliver Wasow, Studio Projects

This event gets a write up even though there’s no press release to speak of, because we like the portraits we’ve seen. There’s two in total, but both photographs capture people in front of painted landscapes that appear to be hundreds of years old. It’s a simple juxtaposition of old and new, but it makes the work feel eerie at times.

Signal

260 Johnson Avenue
7:00 PM to 10:00 PMWebsite

Hayden Dunham, Meriem Bennani; Paste

Together, Hayden Dunham and Meriem Bennani have kickstarted their quest to communicate with a parallel world. Now, they will transform Signal Gallery into a site-specific quasi-liquid state.  We suspect this may involve seran wrap and plastic, but we can’t be sure until we go; stay tuned.

Sat

Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI)

535 West 22nd Street
5th floor, New York
12:00 PM to 7:00 PMWebsite

Nancy Holt: Daylong Tribute Screening

Land art pioneer Nancy Holt, who passed away in February, is probably best known now for her “Sun Tunnels”: 9-foot-wide tunnels aligned with the sun on the winter and summer solstices, and with holes lining up to constellations. So EAI is paying tribute to her video and film work with a marathon screening of her films and videos. Despite the mega fame of her husband Robert Smithson, Holt is still not known to mainstream audiences. EAI will be showing, among others, “Underscan” (1976), “Revolve” (1977), “Pine Barrens” (1975), and collaborations with Robert Smithson, including “Swamp” (1971) and “East Coast, West Coast” (1969).

The Suzanne Geiss Company

76 Grand Street
6:00 PM to 8:00 PM Website

Particular Pictures

What is it about weird specificity, that makes the surreal humor of David Lynch so appealing? “Particular Pictures” might have some answers to that question, with its title lifted from Twin Peaks’ Agent Cooper: “Acetylcholine neurons fire high, voltage impulses into the fore-brain. The impulses become pictures, the pictures become your dream. But no one knows why we choose these particular pictures”.

Curators Joshua Abelow and Emily Ludwig Shaffer have combined works spanning four decades by both emerging and established artists.

Artists include: Gene Beery, Brian Belott, Robert Belott, Anna-Sophie Berger, Jonathan Borofsky, Mira Dancy, Cheryl Donegan, Lukas Geronimas, Laeh Glenn, Daniel Gordon, Peter Harkawik, MacGregor Harp, Chris Johanson, Gregory Kalliche, Liegh Ruple, Rose Wylie

Good Work Gallery

1100 Broadway
Brooklyn, NY
7 - 10 PMWebsite

First Responders

It’s good to great to see emerging artists like Kyle Petreycik paired with more established names like Ariel Dill and Michael Bell-Smith.  According the gallery and curator Zach Smith, “First Responders” brings together work by a group of artists that demonstrates the “primary urge to draw”. Basically, it’s a bunch of work that evolved from sketches and gestures.

Artists include: Ariel Dill, Michael Bell-Smith, Marley Freeman, Deanna Havas, Ben Horns, Katie Loselle, Orion Martin, Sam McKinniss, Kyle Petreycik, Eric Shaw

Sun

Sargent's Daughters

179 East Broadway
New York, NY
6 PM - 8 PMWebsite

Dee Ferris, Barnaby Furnas and Annie Lapin

Sargent’s Daughters seems to be living up to its name, with a show of historically-grounded paintings by Dee Ferris, Barnaby Furnas and Annie Lapin. If that means more like Furnas’s epic Moby Dick squeegie paintings last year, then we’ll be happy.

247365 Manhattan

131 Eldridge Street
https://www.facebook.com/events/1407399709529745/?notif_t=plan_user_invited

And since it’s in the neighborhood, check out the new show at 247365 Manhattan. Our brains are too puny to understand this press release, but it has something to do with secret messages, rumors about the moon, and a movie scene taking place in “a downloaded 99¢ store on the moon”. Readers might have more luck deciphering this.

Thursday Links: Fuck Room Tips!

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Mayor Michael Bloomberg revealing the Living Small NYC project back in 2012, image courtesy of Business Insider

Mayor Michael Bloomberg revealing the Living Small NYC project back in 2012, image courtesy of Business Insider

  • If you’re heading to the Mike Kelley show in LA, Carolina Miranda has some tips on where to locate the hidden “fuck room”. Wish we’d known about this when the show was at PS1 :( [C-Monstah]
  • Speaking of fuck rooms, the micro apartments are getting financed. Welcome to a new standard of living, people.  [Commercial Observer, h/t Curbed]
  • Immigrants are barely a factor on this map of people who now make up NYC. [ANIMAL NY]
  • An international group of artists has come out in support of Ukraine, in a campaign #SupportUkraine. [Artists Support Ukraine, h/t The Art Newspaper]
  • After over twenty years in the works, a non-European art museum designed by David Chipperfield will open in Milan this October. [The Art Newspaper]
  • Why is everybody rounding up lists of hot redheads? [theCHIVE, Paper Mag]
  • It’s National Tweed Day. [Twitter]
  • Sotheby’s has a new logo. It looks a lot like the old one, except now it doesn’t have serifs and looks a little clunky. Naturally, the internet has produced a slideshow comparison. [Fastcompany]
  • And in Knoedler story updates, Swiss art historian Oliver Wick has been accused of helping the gallery to sell forgeries. [New York Times]
  • Cool! Kevin Buist just tweeted a Calder painting that you can only see from Google Maps. [Twitter]
  • Architects have come up with designs to help New York prepare for the next Sandy. We could be getting barrier islands, dunes, absorbent parks and suburban water channels. [New York Magazine]
  • Bad news for democracy. The supreme court voted to eliminate long-established contribution limits to federal political campaigns. May the circus grow. [The New York Times]
  • Protests are happening near you. [Citizen.org]

Tuesday Links: A Sober Review

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WESTPAC 2002-2003

Image from Wikipedia

  • Bar none, the best response we’ve seen to George W. Bush’s paintings:

Why do they exist? Why are they being exhibited? How are they being used and discussed? Why do they matter?

I think the simplest answer for why George W. Bush started painting is because he has nothing else to do. Bush is toxic and unemployable as a political figure. He can’t campaign for Republicans, can’t talk on television about anything important, can’t give speeches for money, can’t write memoirs, can’t travel to certain countries where he runs the hypothetical risk of getting arrested for war crimes. Painting is a harmless and respectable pursuit that offers an aura of cultured acceptability….

This is as good a time as any to point out that Bush painted his portraits, not just from photographs–a common enough practice as well as a long-established contemporary, conceptual strategy, though I think only the former pertains here–but from the top search result on Google Images. Many photos were taken from the subject’s Wikipedia entry. Bush based his paintings on the literally first-to-surface, easiest-to-find photos of his subjects.

Is this meaningful in any way? If he had one, it would mean Bush’s studio assistant is very, very lazy. [Greg.org]

  • Maybe we would talk more about Bush’s record if we called that art, too. Allen continues:

Ironically, there is even more important art buried within the Senate’s trove of classified CIA documents. And as Bush was being interviewed by his daughter on NBC, these other artworks were still being actively suppressed. Jason Leopold and Al Jazeera reported that the Senate report contains detailed sketches of waterboarding by Abu Zubaydah, a senior Al Qaeda leader imprisoned at Guantanamo….Since the CIA illegally destroyed its own waterboarding videotapes in 2005, these drawings may be the most powerful visual evidence of the torture regime we have left. [Greg.org]

  • The Broads buy Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Room. [The New York Times]
  • MoMA sets the wheels in motion to demolish the Folk Art Museum. [Commercial Observer]
  • This is New York winter porn: Moby’s new music video shows a Lower East Side rat crawling into a guy’s luggage and traveling to a warm, sunny beach. A metaphor? [Bowery Boogie]
  • The Damien Hirst autobiography is coming. [The Art Newspaper]
  • Peter Matthiessen, a founding editor of The Paris Review, died last weekend. The Paris Review has published his Art of Fiction interview. [The Paris Review]
  • Actor Mickey Rooney has died. [AP]
  • Koch Industries may hold the most net acreage in leases of the Canadian oil sands, which means they’d have the most to gain from the Keystone Pipeline. Time to stop buying Angel Soft toilet paper, I guess. [Washington Post]

Wednesday Links: Diversity Doesn’t Look Like This.

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Screenshot courtesy of Hyperallergic

Screenshot courtesy of Hyperallergic

  • Eunsong Kim and Maya Isabella Mackrandilal call out the Whitney Biennial’s whiteness and political grey areas. They’re particularly pissed about Donelle Woolford, the fake black female persona created by Joe Scanlan, who went as far as trying to get his avatar into the Studio Museum. They’ve written a manifesto, which opens:

1. Diversity is not the inclusion of those not from New York. Diversity isn’t more white women. Diversity isn’t safe art. Diversity isn’t black bodies put on display by white artists. [The New Inquiry, h/t @PDRVelez]

  • If you use the Internet, beware. A bug has made it easy for people to hack sites which use OpenSSL. Here’s a list. [github.com]
  • Five reasons not to raise venture capital. (Artsy, are you listening?) [Model View Culture]
  • Jean Georges: Still four stars. A glowing review, but I like Pete Wells’s tiny acknowledgement near the end of the piece, that as good as any restaurant is, “the game can always be played at a higher level”. True, for all fields. [The New York Times]
  • A trove of Nazi-looted art has been released back to its current owner, the now very suspicious-looking Cornelius Gurlitt. The collection’s provenance remains under scrutiny. Oh, art news. [The New York Times]
  • Basically, the best Animated GIF Site ever. [Qil.me]
  • Anyone else remember Kate Mulgrew, the only female starfleet captain in the Star Trek TV series franchise? This enlightened actor is now narrating a documentary called “The Principle”, which claims that the sun revolves around the earth. The film is in part bankrolled by ultra-conservative and anti-Semitic Robert Sungenis. Mulgrew has already released a statement saying she’s not a geocentrist and was misled by the filmmakers. [The Superficial]
  • Sounds like art gyms are sweeping the nation; there’s one now in Houston with memberships starting at $150/month. [Glasstire]
  • United States Artists, a major arts funding group, is relocating from L.A. to Chicago. It’s unclear how much of a coup this is for the city of Los Angeles—do their 50 artist awards of 50K slant towards artists in the city? Whatever the case, Hyperallergic seems to think  the loss is significant. [Hyperallergic]

This Week’s Must See Events: A Room Full of Petroleum Gel

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Jaimie Warren

Jaimie Warren

Thank god we’re (mostly) giving ourselves a break from political coverage this week with an art bingefest: art which is concerned primarily with cat food art, food’lberities, a room full of petroleum gel, and dicks. Back to the good ol’ classic dick blogging.

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Tue

33 West 14th Street, NYC (Basement)
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Arts & Labor General Meeting: Frieze NY Report Back

The Frieze Art Fair finally broke down and agreed to hire union workers, rather than outsourcing cheaper labor, to construct their humongous tent. Those results can be partially ascribed to Arts & Labor, who have protested and stood in solidarity with Teamsters Joint Council 16 and IATSE over the past few years. They’ll report back on their progress on Tuesday.

Wed

Brooklyn Museum

200 Eastern Parkway
6:30Website

Brooklyn Artists Ball

Remember that time Jennifer Rubell made guests carve their own rabbits, turkeys, pigs, and beef and beat down a 20-foot Andy Warhol head piñata filled with balloons and Hostess products including Snowballs and Twinkies? That was four years ago at the Brooklyn Artist Ball, and ever since then we’ve expected crazy galas from the Brooklyn Museum. This year Brooklyn artists transform tables in works of art. The museum is honoring art patrons Jane and David Walentas, and recognizing acclaimed artists Jenny Holzer, Kehinde Wiley, and Ai Weiwei. There will be an after party.

David Lewis Gallery

88 Eldridge Street, 5th Floor
8:30 pm Website

Habite de Tabletier: Viola Yeşiltaç, Oli Input

There’s no press release offering details on Viola Yeşiltac’s performance slated for this Wednesday, so we’ve got only a video from Yeşiltaç’s performance at Cooper Union two years ago as a possible guide. In it she describes performance as a “life event”, while backed by an electronic beat. Maybe this performance will have a similar structure?

Thu

Eyebeam

540 West 21st Street
12:00 PM to 6:00 PMWebsite

The New Romantics

Is 19th Century Romanticism relevant to art makers today? That’s the theory Nicholas O’Brien, Claudia Hart and Katie Torn stakes out in The New Romantics, an exhibition focusing on 22 digital art makers. Incidentally, it’s not the first time this theory has been tabled. Karen Archey curated “Haute Romantics”, an exhibition for Art F City at Verge Gallery in Sacremento back in 2010. That exhibition dealt more specifically with the idea of untamed landscape, aesthetic beauty, escapism, and youth; This one lays claim to representations of nature, poetic irony, and expressions of individuality as laid bare in the tech revolution.

Artists include: Mark Beasley, Tim Berrensheim, Alexandra Gorczynski, Ryan Whittier Hale, Claudia Hart, Jeremiah Johnson, Brookhart Jonquil, Sophie Kahn, Alex M. Lee, Sara Ludy, Shane Mechklenburger, Jonathan Monaghan, Mikey McParlane and Michael Mallis, Brenna Murphy, Nicholas O’Brien, Jaakko Pallasvuo, Jon Rafman, Nicolas Sassoon, Jasper Spicero, Kate Steciw, Katie Torn, Krist Wood

Performances by:

ATOM-r (Mark Jeffrey and Judd Morrissey), Zach Blas, Ann Hirsch, Miao Jiaxin, Mikey McParlane, and Vincent Tiley.

Fri

MAD Museum

2 Columbus Circle
6:00 PM
http://madmuseum.org/events/new-waveWebsite

New Wave

Take a walk down memory lane with this screening on New Wave. Promised, is a focus on 1980s bands such as Ballistic Kisses, Bush Tetras, the Go-Go’s, Human Sexual Response, Kid Creole and the Coconuts, Offs, Our Daughters Wedding, Plastics, Pylon, Raybeats, Strange Party, and Suburbs.

Jack Hanley

327 Broome Street
6:00 PM to 8:00 PMWebsite

Marie Lorenz: The Valley of Dry Bon

Jack Hanley Gallery will be transformed into a collapsed pier and screening room this month. Marie Lorenz premiers Ezekia, a 5­channel video set in an imaginary future, that tells the story of a group of women exploring the shore of a lost city. What makes this piece are the extreme camera angles that Lorenz uses to intensify the feeling of floating.

We’ve been hearing lots of positive murmurs floating around about this piece. Recommended.

Storefront Ten Eyck

324 Ten Eyck Street
6:00 PM to 9:00 PMWebsite

René Smith, "Nude Dudes"

Get a load of some more dicks. “Nude dudes” is a show of paintings of naked guys, by René Smith, who wants to represent the female gaze.

The space will also contain a show of Yale MFA sculptors.

The Hole

312 Bowery Street
6:00 PM to 9:00 PMWebsite

Jaimie Warren: That's What Friends Are For

Warren, who recently build a giant butt for her performance at Art F City’s Roast, has a treasure trove of video memes transformed into GIFs waiting for your eyeballs. Also on view—totally looks like and food’lberities series and he show’s centerpiece, a five-channel remake of Fra Angelico’s High Altarpiece of San Domenico in Fiesole, here recreated panel by panel featuring 200 of her friends. Warren invited members of her family going back three generations to chose cultural influences for these panels, which include Betty Boop, Pink Floyd and Missy Elliot.  It looks amazing.

The Studio Museum in Harlem

144 West 125th Street
7:00 PM to 8:30 PMWebsite

When the Stars Begin to Fall Gallery Tour Led by Assistant Curator Thomas J. Lax with artist Lauren Kelley

Nobody’s happy with the “outsider” artist label, probably because of how it lumps together the majority of art. The show “When the Stars Begin to Fall” will question the category, in relation to black life and art. The show includes full insiders like David Hammons, Carrie Mae Weems, and Kara Walker and influential others who work on the periphery, like Theaster Gates and Noah Purifoy. On Friday, ten bucks gets you a tour with assistant curator Thomas J. Lax and artist Lauren Kelley.

Sat

MoMA

11 West 53rd Street
10:30 AM to 5:30 PMWebsite

Alibis: Sigmar Polke 1963–2010

Even though German artist Sigmar Polke made work that constantly avoided any one signature style, the art most readily available at art fairs over the last couple of years seems to be anything with a dot. Prepare to see a little more from Mr. Polke than that at this retrospective, which spans nearly fifty years of work. On view will be more than 250 pieces, in a diverse array of mediums; painting, photography film, drawing, prints and sculpture. Polke is known for his irreverent wit and virtuoso handling of materials.

Retrospective

727 Warren Street
Hudson , NY 12534
5:00 PM to 7:00 PMWebsite

Brian Belott, Joe Bradley: Cat Food

We can’t figure out what’s even going to be in this exhibition, let alone what it’s about. Based on the press release we think it has something to do with cat food, holding hands and how the New York Yankees were miniaturized and put into the drinking water? Whatever the case, we’ve been following the prolific careers of Belott and Bradley for many years. We recommend the show, admittedly knowing nothing about it. To quote the artists, “Big up to Water, Cat food Out”.

New Galerie

630 9th Avenue, Suite 308
6:00 PM to 8:00 PMWebsite

Sean Raspet: Untitled (Registration/PIN: G0009296/78GY76DM; G0009297/99ER43TB; G0009298/39ZL54SJ)

For years, Sean Raspet has been making art and filling plexiglass boxes with hair gel. Now, he will cover the surfaces of a gallery with synthetic DNA in a fluorescent petroleum gel, which is used in the security industry to track chemical data. This is different from traditional, passive viewership, because you’re tracking the gel around with you.

He’s going to cover a whole gallery with gel, and that’s gonna be cool. Curated by A.E. Benenson

Art in General

79 Walker Street
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM Website

Lisi Raskin: Recuperative Tactics

Lisi Raskin went to Afghanistan on a Creative Time grant, and she will piece together the memory of that experience through objects at Art in General. I’ve grumbled about Creative Time’s international initiatives in the past (a lot), and maybe it’s time to revise those complaints. The show aims to present an unmitigated perspective, through an artist’s ability to express emotional complexity.  That’s not a perspective we’re typically presented of Afghanistan.

In addition to Raskin’s installation at Art in General, she will have a show of paintings at Churner and Churner.

Light Industry

155 Freeman Street
7:00 PMWebsite

Jean Vigo's Zero for Conduct + Abbas Kiarostami's Homework

Is an easygoing neoliberal education as off-base as a militant boarding school? Sam Lewitt wonders this in his press release for Saturday night’s double-feature: first of Jean Vigo’s 1933 anarchist film Zero for Conduct, about boarding school students revolting against their teachers; and the other, Homework, a 1989 film about Iranian children in the midst of the Iran-Iraq war.

Transfer Gallery

1030 Metropolitan Avenue
7:00 PM to 11:00 PMWebsite

Clement Valla: Surface Survey

Is there even a such thing as “images not meant for human consumption?” They’re promised at Transfer Gallery in Clement Valla’s “Surface Survey”, where he’ll be showing some of his recent work using images from the Metropolitan Museum’s art collection to print 3D fragments of artworks.

Best of the Motion Photography Prize

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JUMP

Thanks to the new “Motion Photography” prize– or, what happens when Saatchi Gallery teams up with Google Plus– Paddy Johnson spent some time today looking through user-submitted GIFs. This submission, “Jump“, by Cosimo Nesca, was a standout.

GIFS Are Like Melodies


The ArtTable Luncheon: Not The Usual Bullshit

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photo

The average benefit is filled with a particular kind of emphatic speech. “So nice to see you!”, “How are you?”, “Tell me about what you’re up to!” I actually enjoy this kind of small talk networking, but when that’s all there is, you can leave feeling a little empty. Ideally, a benefit facilitates the introduction of few new contacts and has you feeling inspired about the cause.

That happened this afternoon at the annual benefit luncheon for ArtTable, a nonprofit with the mission of advancing professional women’s leadership in the visual arts. The event brings together some of the city’s most powerful women in the arts. Whereas some galas simply screen a short video of their honorees, this one invites their honorees to give speeches. This year’s were significant.

The first winner was Amy Sadao, who worked as the executive director of Visual AIDS for ten years before taking the helm of Philadelphia’s Institute of Contemporary Art in 2012. Sadao began on a challenging note for a room full of arts lovers, recalling the activist sentiment that art doesn’t have the power to change anything. She was referring to policy, but from there she went on to give a moving speech describing how art uniquely challenged the ways people think.  As the 2014 recipient of the New Leadership Award, Sadao closed by saying she considered the award an “encouragement” to continue.

Karen Brooks Hopkins, president of BAM, was the afternoon’s Keynote speaker and delivered a surprisingly pointed speech outrage about the arts having been underfunded and undervalued by Republican policies. This, despite the fact that it’s the single largest driver of tourism to New York City. “And New Yorkers are hungry for culture”, she told us before launching into a series of examples of thirst. “People will sit in a theater for six hours watching Macbeth in Japanese, sometimes with subtitles sometimes without subtitles,” she said, prompting much laughter. Brooks marshalled everybody in the audience to stand up to developers and preserve arts neighborhoods from turning into “Anywhere, USA”. “Every person in this room needs to be an advocate for the arts.” Although her examples of New York’s great cultural assets didn’t exactly line up with ours (she cited the Alice Aycock sculptures on Park Avenue, and the new Brooklyn Cultural District as a thriving arts neighborhood) political sentiments don’t usually surface at benefit events.

Then we heard from Marguerite Steed Hoffman, a former gallery director, museum worker and philanthropist, who won an award for distinguished service to the visual arts. She’s a (very generous) trustee of the Dallas Museum of art, a collector, and widow of Robert Hoffman, a founder of National Lampoon magazine. Hoffman also battled for Planned Parenthood in a red state, and works to provide better AIDS treatment in South Africa. She also has a sense of humor. “Leadership is like pornography. It’s hard to define, but when you are in its powerful and alluring presence, you know it”.

For Hoffman, being a leader isn’t about how many boards you’re on, or how much you give to a cause; there are all too many “sweet, well-intentioned” people who give without a clear idea of what they care about. Leadership, she said, is about identifying what matters most to you and putting whatever you can at stake. “How can I tip the needle on that issue, and what would I give to do that?”

For all the galas which honor celebrity guests, the glittering world of New York museums, and the usual BS press line which so often chucks out the mission come fundraising time, it was an acceptance speech which, for once, sounded like it meant something.

Daniel Temkin’s Dither Studies

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Glitch art purists will insist on a distinction between art that uses actual malfunctions and art that imitates malfunctions. Daniel Temkin’s 2011 “Dither Studies” falls squarely in the former category, even though the program he’s created results in some fairly controlled experimentation. While we’re used to seeing dithering in GIFs resemble soft visual pixelation noise, here, Temkin runs two opposing colors through a dithering algorithm that creates harsh, grid-like forms.

Since the tool only employs three variables—two colors and a slider—the results are always the same. This stands in contrast to his ”Glitchometry” project– in which Temkin sonifies a square or circle (runs it through a audio editor)– the results are wildly unpredictable.

Anyway, you can try the dithering algorithms here. You can even save the images for your own GIFs.

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Wednesday Links: Frieze Adopts Normcore as Official 2014 Partner

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Art Club 2000's "Untitled (Conran's I)", 8x10”, C-print,1992-93. (Image courtesy of http://www.betweenbridges.net)

Art Club 2000′s “Untitled (Conran’s I)”, 8×10”, C-print,1992-93. (Image courtesy of http://www.betweenbridges.net)

  • Somebody thinks collectors buy Gap (or should want to buy Gap). [Gallerist]
  • Karen Rosenberg is really excited about the fact that the Met’s rooftop garden just got a new Dan Graham pavillion– which, as far as we can tell, is an S-shaped piece of glass flanked by two hedges. Comparisons are drawn to the Gothic Temple at Stowe. Even the catalogue is “small but excellent”. We gotta see this. [The New York Times]
  • Worst curatorial idea ever? The Rijksmuseum recently invited an “intervention” by the authors of “Art is Therapy”, by writer/TV presenter Alain de Botton, and art historian/philosopher John Armstrong. As Adrian Searle describes it, the result is giant yellow post-it notes telling you how to feel next to the work of Vermeer, Rembrandt, and Jan Steen. [Guardian]
  • Gavin Brown has a new website. It’s even harder to navigate than their tumblr was. [Gavinbrown.bz]
  • China’s “museum boom” has churned out 4,000 museums. Or, at least, large impressive museum buildings; “…setting up quality exhibition programs and finding an audience is dealt with later.” [CNN]
  • If you got accepted to Cooper Union this year and turned it down, @freecooperunion wants to know about it. [twitter]
  • Great discussion on Paddy Johnson’s Facebook page on the celebrity art phenomenon. [Facebook]
  • The nitty gritty from Jayne Johnson, an associate director at Lehmann Maupin, on how to prepare for the Frieze art fair. [Artnet]
  • Kyle Chayka, once a wee art blogger, has been covering technology all over the web lately, even with a recent cover story for Newsweek. In his latest, he writes for the Guardian about a Minority Report-like program called Creepshield, facial recognition software which identifies sex offenders on online dating sites. [Guardian]
  • Oliana Lialina’s “Notes on Being a Net Artist” harkens back to the Guerilla Girls’ “The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist”. [Rhizome]
  • We’re not the only ones who are tired of museums and galleries putting the bottom line before the art. Henry Stewart reminds us that Ai Weiwei still stands for something to some people, and putting his work on refrigerator magnets does not help. [The L Magazine]
  • The Brooklyn Botanic Garden plant sale starts today. Brave the rain! [The Brooklyn Botanic Garden]

Eilis McDonald, Divider Tumblr

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If there’s a beach where the goop from Geocities and nineties marketing campaigns can wash ashore, it might be the tumblr of Dublin-based artist Eilis McDonald. It has a sort of fringe-realm screensaver quality; all that stuff that was always on the peripheral, for whatever reason, fascinates us now as visual motifs. So it would make sense that she keeps a divider collection– all those bizarre GIF text-separators which have become obsolete on newer platforms. And the collection in full view looks like a work of art in and of itself. We’ve reproduced a little of it below, with chunks arranged in the same order the artist has placed them in but you can view Eilis’ full divider collection here.

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Monday Links: Social Media Loses; Wet Dog Wins

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Sophie Gamand, from "Wet Dog" portraits

Sophie Gamand, from “Wet Dog” portraits

  • A “Wet Dog” portrait by Sophie Gamand has won the BBC’s portraiture award. More wet dogs on her site. [Sophie Gamand]
  • The New Museum has announced that Google Glass will sponsor the 2015 Triennial, and the technology will be used with a custom “visitor engagement” app, which is hooked up to social media. No word yet as to how this might affect the art. [The New Museum]
  • Modern Art Notes is on hiatus. No big surprise there—BlouinArtInfo has been hemorrhaging writers—but a bummer nonetheless. [Modern Art Notes]
  • Further proof that the Knoedler scandal was not the work of a single painter, but was a pervasive industry problem. According to the Times, scholars were threatened with lawsuits, others were paid off, and not enough people asked questions. “In an industry whose transactions cry out for verification of both title to and authenticity of subject matter, it is deemed poor practice to probe into either,” wrote New York Supreme Court Judge J. Shorter. [New York Times]
  • The New York Times uses Jack Flam, the president of the Dedalus Foundation (the foundation for Robert Motherwell’s estate), as their art historian source for the Knoedler story. Flam has been accused by Motherwell’s friend and art historian Dore Ashton of overstepping his executive role to take liberties with the catalogue raisonée, overpaying himself, and ousting the dissenters. [Bloomberg]
  • One day, a poor engineer named Rob Rhinehart decided he could save money on food by heading to the internet, buying a bunch of amino acids, lipids, carbohydrates, sticking them in a blender, and using that concoction as a replacement for food. He named his magic mix, “Soylent” after the 1973 sci-fi film “Soylent Green” and after a Kickstarter that raised more $100k in two hours, he’s started a company. Is this the end of food? Rhinehart claims he’s never felt better. [The New Yorker]
  • Lots of talk these days about Twitter’s problems, and they aren’t or are insurmountable. They announced last week that their active users increased by only 5.8 percent from the previous quarter. This particular take sees the bulk of their problems as marketing (and stagnation due to board infighting). [Stratechery]
  • More evidence of widespread social media fatigue: this video about putting away your phone has gone viral. Since we watched it an hour ago, it’s already accumulated a million more views. [YouTube]
  • Activist shareholder Daniel Loeb has landed himself a position on Sotheby’s board in a compromise deal. [Art Market Monitor]
  • Apparently a lot of items going up for auction this week already have bidders. [The New York Times]
  • Designer Matt Daniels has measured the number of unique words in rappers’ lyrics, and found that Outkast, Blackalicious, Ghostface Killah, and Wu Tang have all beaten Shakespeare in their invention of  new words. [Matt Daniels]

 

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