The Best Of The Web

July 3rd, 2008

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Recently I’ve noticed a huge change in my art-going habits. I’m much more likely to spend time looking at/thinking about art online than I am to step foot inside traditional exhibition spaces like museums or galleries. I blame this entirely on a handful of amazing art websites that have cropped up in recent years. When I’m not busy posting to my own blog I’m likely poking around these sites; they’re what I consider the best of the best of the web:

VVORK is a contemporary art blog run by artists Aleksandra Domanovic, Oliver Laric, Christoph Priglinger, and Georg Schnitzer. They are thoughtful curators, known for their conceptual leanings and ability to unearth notable and little-known artists from all corners of the world. The breadth of work covered and pace at which the blog is updated makes it always an amazing visit.

RHIZOME is the place to engage with everything interesting at the intersection of art and technology. Their blog is staffed by a handful of incisive writers whose viewpoints and taste I have really come to admire.

UBUWEB is an exhaustive archive of visual, auditory, and textual delight founded by poet Kenneth Goldsmith. It’s an art historical avalanche of the avant-garde (and beyond) with highlights including their film + video collection, anthology of conceptual writing, and archive of aspen magazine. Warning: you’ll lose hours of your life here.

WE MAKE MONEY NOT ART features interviews and reviews focused on contemporary art, design, and technology with just the right combination of smart and sass.

WORDS WITHOUT PICTURES has done wonders for the discourse of contemporary photography. It’s a year-long project started by LACMA photo curator Charlotte Cotton with a simple but effective idea. Each month a new essay is posted on the site, sparking discussion (both online and offline), and leaving you with the satisfying feeling that there are always fresh ways to think about a medium that’s been kicking around since 1839.

Spaceship Earth

June 27th, 2008

NASA Earthrise

Buckminster Fuller was one of the most inventive and prolific visionaries of 20th century who was keenly intuitive. Much of the work in the new Whitney exhibition, Buckminster Fuller: Starting with Universe, is on display for the first time. “We are not going to be able to operate our Spaceship Earth successfully for much longer unless we see it as a whole spaceship and our fate as common. It has to be everybody or nobody.”

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), the science fiction classic, was created at the pinnacle of the Apollo space exploration project beginning with manned Earth orbiting missions and reaching its plateau with landing on the moon on July 20, 1969. The Hal 9000 computer gave us a preview into how computers would one day dominate our lives.

In Is Google Making Us Stupid? Nicolas Carr makes several references to Hal: “… the implacable astronaut Dave Bowman, in a famous and weirdly poignant scene toward the end of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001, is calmly and coldly disconnecting the memory circuits that control its artificial brain. ‘Dave, my mind is going,’ HAL says forlornly. ‘I can feel it. I can feel it.’” Reading about Carr’s experience and how Internet searching and surfing has affected his thinking process and focus level, I realize that I am not the only one.

Are we becoming more aware of the hybridization of human and machine even though our minds are numbing by the plethora of information? As Internet has shifted our reading habits, how is it influencing the way we perceive art? Do we spend as much time contemplating works of art as we did in the past?

Depth and form are perceived in the visionary light creations of James Turrell (Season 1). His Roden Crater Project acts as a giant naked eye enabling viewers to see the sky as a dome and to feel the roundness of Earth. This is an experience similar to what Fuller experiences, “The earth is revolving to obscure the sun. The sun is not going down. I want you to really feel this with me. We’re rolling around to obscure the sun. We’re about to have a sunclipse: the earth is revolving around rapidly to obscure the sun. It’s perfectly easy to feel it, particularly if you face north and look over your left shoulder. Just watch! and you suddenly begin to feel this enormous earth revolving on its axis.”

Another visionary artist who is acutely aware of the environment is Roni Horn (Season 3). Her Vatnasafn/Library of Water replaces the solid with liquid as it engages the community to participate and to interact through a variety of activities. It is the epitome of relational art. An extensive collection of books on Fuller, Horn and Turrell are available for on site and take home use at the Art Collection of Mid-Manhattan Library.

At the 2005 Art Basel Miami Conversation, Hans Ulrich Obrist asked Robert Rauschenberg what advice he had for young artists and he replied, “Just nurture your curiosity and have respect for change. And I think the curiosity part will make life very exciting. It will also fight back habits like repeating oneself.”

Earthrise. NASA AS11-44-6548

Sound & Language

June 26th, 2008

Chess Set. Photo by Alan Light

The human voice is the most specific expression of an individual. With its infinite potential for sound effects and imitation along with its prime role in communication, it is clearly the most versatile and valuable instrument.

In 1939, Marian Anderson captivated an audience of 75,000 and millions of radio listeners during her Lincoln Memorial recital. Her response to weeks of debate fueled by the refusal of the Daughters of American Revolution to grant her a permit to perform at Constitution Hall was, “Music to me means so much, such beautiful things, and it seemed impossible that you could find people who would curb you, stop you, from doing a thing which is beautiful. I wasn’t trying to sway anybody into any movements… I just wanted to sing and share.”

Four years earlier in 1935, Melvin Tolson an English professor and poet inspired his students to organize Wiley College’s first debate team that moved on to face off Harvard University’s national champions. The Great Debaters is a dramatic depiction of the true story of Tolson, his life at Wiley, the people of Marshall and the four brilliant aspiring team members. The debate scenes are a testament to their consuming passion for language, education, and freedom.

The acclaimed writer, painter, and educator N. Scott Momaday said, “If I do not speak with care, my words are wasted. If I do not listen with care, words are lost.” Care for language, its look, meaning and sound is what we experience in the work of Jenny Holzer (Season 4). Also Laurie Anderson (Season 1) gives a multimedia spin to the use of language in her spectacular storytelling performances. In Writing on the Wall: Word and Image in Modern Art, Simon Morley has compiled the first comprehensive survey of the use of word in art from the past 140 years.

A completely different approach to sound is encountered in the sculptures of Martin Puryear (Season 2). We imagine and hear silent sound, especially in his Ladder for Booker T. Washington as it reaches the sky. On the other hand as Barack Obama is reaching closer to becoming the next president, we look forward to hearing his upcoming debates.

Chess Pieces. Photo by Alan Light

Museum

June 20th, 2008

Boys’ dormitory, Bennett Colle... Digital ID: 1218280. New York Public Library

The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum was established eighteen years ago in Kansas City, Missouri on 18th and Vine Streets, just around the corner from the Paseo YMCA building where the Negro National League was founded in 1920 by Andrew “Rube” Foster. The founding of the eight-team league was the direct result of a silent agreement to segregate African-American players from baseball. Jonathan Earle, Associate Professor of History at the University of Kansas, presents an extensive review of NLBM in a feature article titled In a League of Its Own: The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in May/June 2008 issue of Museum. Several pictures and illustrations accompanying the article make the hard copy more informative and visually appealing than the electronic version. The expansion plans for NLBM will create a five-level structure complete with a gymnasium and an addition of 40,000 square feet, making the museum emerge as one of the most remarkable sport museums in the world.

The other interesting article in the same issue, titled Meet the New Boss: Opening the Door for Emerging Professionals, is a brief survey of the formation of new leadership in the museum field, and it introduces five new leaders who speak about their careers. Given the freedom and team support, this is an enormously fertile time for new leaders to grow and to make dramatic changes and improvements. Kathy Halbreich, Associate Director of MoMA, is a great advocate for open thinking and a huge source of inspiration to new museum professionals and artists. In her Museum interview, Making the Modern More Contemporary, by Robert Ayers, she reflects back on her experience as the director of the Walker Art Center and mentions the positive ripple effects of the close camaraderie and teamwork between the staff. During the April 14th “Artforum at The New School - Art and Money” panel discussion she expressed some of her thoughts on institutional traditions and the necessity for in-depth research to discover new approaches in art.

Another seasoned leader who also took up her new position in February 2008 is Sabine Folie, the Artistic and Managing Director of the Generali Foundation in Vienna, Austria. In her statement she also makes a reference to teamwork: “The time has now come for me and a highly committed team to resume work under the new premises and to continue to build a collection that constitutes a commitment to collecting far away from all criteria oriented by speculation or conforming to the market.”

Exemplary teamwork and nurturing leadership is what I also encountered during my recent collaboration with the staff of Art21. Witnessing the tremendous dedication and knowledge of contemporary art among the Art21 staff was an unprecedented experience for me. The extraordinary results of harmonious teamwork can also be seen in the work of the Art:21 Season 4 artists Mark Dion, Judy Pfaff, Catherine Sullivan and Ursula von Rydingsvard. It is apropos to conclude with an interview, featuring Art:21 Season 2 artist Raymond Pettibon, titled Gumby, Vavoom, & Baseball Players.

Jörg Heiser at Austrian Cultural Forum

June 16th, 2008

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On Wednesday June 25th at 7:00 p.m., the Goethe-Institut New York and the Austrian Cultural Forum will co-host a conversation between Jörg Heiser and Brian Sholis, editor at Artforum.com. The event will begin with the presentation of Heiser’s new publication titled All of a Sudden Things that Matter in Contemporary Art. Earlier this year Heiser’s writing also appeared in another book, Romantic Conceptualism, featuring the work of Collier Schorr (Art:21 Season 2, Loss & Desire). The photographs of Schorr are also included in the exhibition, History Will Repeat Itself Strategies of Re-enactment in Contemporary Art, originally opening at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin and now traveling to Goethe-Institut Hong Kong. For those who might not have visited the ACF building on 11 East 52nd Street, take the virtual tour on the menu to see the intriguing double-height theater located on the 2nd and 3rd floors. This narrow and dynamic building, designed by the Austrian born architect Raimund Abraham, is a poignant reflection of romantic conceptualism. The seating is limited to 80 and reservations for this free event can be made at 212-439-8691.

Catherine Sullivan in BOMB Magazine

May 9th, 2008

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In a BOMB Magazine web exclusive, Season 4 artist Catherine Sullivan (pictured top right) and choreographer Meg Stuart discuss mining the history of the avant-garde tradition and emotional overflow in ensemble-based work. BOMB’s Summer 2008 print issue will include the full-length conversation.

The magazine’s online art section, which currently archives 1,206 articles and interviews, features numerous Art21 artists such as Kerry James Marshall, Andrea Zittel (both Season 1), Gabriel Orozco, Paul Pfeiffer, Kara Walker (all Season 2), Arturo Herrera (Season 3), and Pierre Huyghe (Season 4).

Nancy Spero at de Appel

April 18th, 2008

Nancy Spero, “Codex Spero.” 2008. Courtesy de Appel.

From April 19 through June 22, to mark the release of Codex Spero. Nancy Spero Selected Writings and Interviews 1950-2008 compiled by curator Roel Arkesteijn, de Appel in Amsterdam is hosting a solo exhibition by the Season 4 artist.

At once an ‘artistic testament’ and ‘radical manifest,’ the monograph contains a selection of the artist’s texts, personal statements, notes and interviews. The exhibition Spero Speaks includes exemplary works from different phases of Nancy Spero’s distinguished career as artist, activist, feminist and mentor.

Codex Spero. Nancy Spero Selected Writings and Interviews 1950-2008 is published by de Appel in collaboration with Roma Publications. Since 1975, de Appel has functioned as a site for the research and presentation of contemporary visual art through exhibitions, publications and discursive events. De Appel also functions as a platform for performances by visual artists, choreographers and theatre makers.

Anderson and Walker Among 85 Weirdest

April 8th, 2008

“Weird Tales” March/April issure. Courtesy Weird Tales.

The March/April 85th anniversary issue of Weird Tales magazine is featuring “The 85 Weirdest Storytellers of the Past 85 Years.” Each day since March 26th the Weird Tales website is posting an honoree, in no particular order.

The big list from “the original magazine of the unique, fantastic, and bizarre” was compiled from magazine advisors and readers, who were asked to not limit their suggestions to just fiction writers, but also filmmakers, songwriters, cartoonists, and more. The 85 include among them David Bowie, William S. Burroughs, Salvador Dali, Franz Kafka, Wim Wenders, and Art21 artists Laurie Anderson (Season 1) and Kara Walker (Season 2).

For the entire list, pick up an issue or visit the Weird Tales website.

Walker and Bourgeois in Flaunt Magazine

March 21st, 2008

Flaunt Magazine, Issue #92Flaunt Magazine, Issue #92

The Spring 2008 fashion issue of the arts and entertainment glossy, Flaunt Magazine, features Art21 artists Kara Walker (Season 2) and Louise Bourgeois (Season 1). While Walker’s work is currently on view at the Hammer Museum in the traveling and award-winning survey, My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love, a Bourgeois retrospective of nearly 200 objects made between 1940-2007 is on view at the Centre Pompidou in Paris through June 2.

This issue of Flaunt, titled “Reap What You Sew,” also features Marc Jacobs, Louis Vuitton’s artistic director and a passionate collector of contemporary art; and Prada “Vomit” wallpaper, a floral collage of cropped and pixelated imagery culled from videos, created by the New York design studio 2×4.

Gordon Matta-Clark at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago

March 12th, 2008

Film stills from Gordon Matta-Clark’s Clockshower

“You Are the Measure,” the first retrospective in twenty years of work by Gordon Matta-Clark (1943 - 1978) curated by Whitney Museum of American Art’s Elizabeth Sussman has come to Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art. It seems fitting that exactly 30 years ago to the month the exhibition opened, Matta-Clark cut into a townhouse near the MCA’s original building and created Circus or the Carribean Orange.

Conversations at the Edge , which is sponsored by the School of the Art Institute’s Film, Video and New Media Department, in association with the Video Data Bank and the Gene Siskel Film Center (Chicago’s most incredible resources for viewing film and video work), has been hosting a series of Thursday night screenings and lectures. This Thursday, the Edge presents several of Matta-Clark’s films including Office Baroque (1977) and City Slivers (1976). Jane Crawford, documentary filmmaker and Matta-Clark’s widow, will be speaking. The screening begins at 8pm at the Siskel Center.