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Posted: December 2.2009
Kristen Baker
at Deitch Projects
By A.STORER

     
     
 

Kristen Baker
Splitting Twilight
Deitch Projects
18 Wooster Street, New York
November 05 — December 19, 2009

Kristen Baker presents a bold group of large-scale paintings, which channel the same cataclysmic energy seen in her earlier paintings of car crashes. Colors pulsate and bold shapes haphazardly overlap each other creating dramatic spaces and compositional shifts. The paintings are mostly built up as collages. Working with acrylic, Baker paints on a number of surfaces in an aggressive scraping motion. Afterwards, she cuts up these surfaces into large, sharp shapes to create the source material for the larger compositions.

Although her work is generally abstract, Somewhere Hush Hush and Bush Bish Rubicorn introduce references to beach-like landscapes. Bush Bish Rubicorn utilizes the landscape format most explicitly, with its imagery of a sunset where deep reds and oranges seem to glow. Along with this painting, much of her work reminds me of the luminous quality of stained glass. Like stained glass, her paintings are a composite of shapes and the color relationships evoke the sense of light penetrating glass. Tabloid Slipstream and New Dawn Fades explore this idea most fully. These two paintings are extended about one foot from the wall, allowing the white of the wall to permeate through the semi-transparent surfaces of the painting. This luminescence provides an element of grace and delicacy in an otherwise aggressive painting show.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted:November 31.2009
Eli Broad: Significant Contributor and Collector
By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Broad Contemporary Art Center: The Inaugural Installation

It was at the Broad Contemporary Art Center: The Inaugural Installation that I saw my first Jeff Koons painting. In fact, BCAM comes from the collection of Eli and Edythe Broad, who own 20 Jeff Koons pieces and collect famous works from a selective group of artists for the last forty years, including Andy Warhol, Mike Kelley, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Cindy Sherman. The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation is a private collection of 2,000 works of modern and contemporary art that makes loans to museums rather than giving it away. The Edythe Broad Foundation gave $56 million to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to create the 60,000-square-foot Broad Contemporary Art Museum.

Eli Broad is a 76 years old Californian billionaire financier and philanthropist real estate investor known for his large art collection, his charitable funding for educational institutions across the country and his activity in the Los Angeles art scene. His charities include the talked about November 1994 purchase of Roy Lichtenstein’s "I...I'm Sorry" painting for $2.5 million at a Sotheby's auction, paid with his American Express credit card that earned him 2.5 million frequent flyer miles which he later donated to charity. Eli Broad is a significant contributor and collector making headlines for his generous support.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 27.2009
Altered Land, Photography in the 1970s
By I.FABRIKANT

     
     
 

Altered Land, Photography in the 1970s
Sheldon Museum of Art
Lincoln, NE
August 7th-January 3rd 2009

The Sheldon Museum of Art has some spunky landscapes. Altered Land, Photography in the 1970s (through January 3d) surveys celebrations of human development complementing natural vistas, and a budding trend of artists pushing past documentary photography to engage with their subjects.

This vibrant group of photos from the Sheldon’s permanent collection includes studies of complex linear structures against vast and voluptuous lands, like Joe Deal’s Magic Mountain, Valencia, California , its criss-crossing lines singing white against dark hills. Photos like Bagel Pile show John Pfahl’s playful reaction to a gravel mound in an industrial park, placing bagels in the forefront of the picture to mimic the tires lined out on top of the pile. In a companion photo, he places oranges in the middle of a forest path to appreciate its green foliage, and flatten the scene into a procession of colors. Color is especially delicious in Thomas Barrow’s Pink Stuff (Interstate Span), which shows a rosy peach sky over a highway with bleached towers and silhouetted brush, the result of printing the photo onto a pink background. Road and Rainbow , by Betty Hahn, extravagantly imposes fancy onto a literally recorded scene; the photo is printed on brown linen and embroidered with string that colors a house by the road, and attaches a rainbow to an otherwise subdued sky. Altered Land flows between documents of expansion into wide, awesome lands and energetic experiments by artists manipulating their subjects, reflecting on the way their own environment is affected by this expansion. Together these photos create a zestful presentation sizzling with color and imagination.

 

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 18.2009
Frank Lloyd Wright: From Within Outwards
at Guggenheim

By J.DESENSE

     
     
 

Daniel Wolf and Mathew Wolf in memory of Diane R. Wolf, the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation

Last summer I was lucky enough to see the Guggenheim’s 50th Anniversary exhibit with my dear architect friend, Heather. Neither of us had been to the New York Guggenheim before, and an exhibit by the master himself in his own museum was sure to be a treat. We arrived in the middle of the day; the museum’s newly painted exterior gleaming in the sunlight. After marveling at the restoration work on the outside of the building, we headed through the entrance vestibule. Entering the Guggenheim is somewhat like stepping into the Pantheon: after coming through a crowded entryway into a circular space, your breath is taken away as your eyes are drawn irresistibly upwards towards the light. The sense of space is both palpable and wonderful; the lobby is filled with people staring in awe at the glass skylight with their mouths hanging open or their cell phone cameras in front of their faces as if the lobby might vanish like a dream unless they took a picture of it.

Heather and I headed to the elevator: we were going to see the museum as Wright had intended us to: starting at the top and spiraling down towards the bottom. To our dismay, the exhibit was arranged in the opposite manner, with Wright’s early work at the lower levels and his later works at the top. In retrospect, I can see how that made sense: the exhibit culminated with his drawings and models of the Guggenheim itself located at the very top of the museum (How metaphorical…or just meta.) However, it still seemed odd to go against the architect’s original intentions in a building of his own design for an exhibit of his own work. At any rate, Heather and I rode the elevator to the top and felt bad for the thousands of people who would spend hours climbing uphill in the exhibit, rather than descending gently, like us.

The works in the exhibit were unique and magnificent: they varied from meticulous hand drawings and perspectives to intricate models to artifacts from his buildings. There was a huge collection of Wright’s unbuilt work from the Middle East. Both of us were surprised to see his Plan for the City of Baghdad and his proposal for Baghdad University; with the exception of the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, we were only familiar with Wright’s American work. (Perhaps because he is always emphasized as an American architect.) One of the most stunning pieces in the exhibit was an exploded model of the Jacobs House, with its walls, floors, roof, plumbing, and electrical systems all pulled apart and suspended in the air. It was an architectural drawing come to life. In the same room was a particularly impressive model of his design for the Living City, a utopian community populated by Wright’s own buildings.

Perhaps the most interesting pieces were the buildings that once were, or might have been. Drawings of destroyed or demolished structures like the Imperial Hotel or Midway Gardens evoke pathos for the transient nature of existence or anger at the shortsightedness of developers. Particularly fascinating was a series of drawings that showed all the variations the Guggenheim went through before it was built. There were pink Guggenheims, mirror-image Guggenheims, hexagonal Guggenheims, even a reverse-spiral Guggenheim. One could only imagine the alternate universes filled with such fanciful creations, if only a client had said a different word, or if Wright had got to his office a little later than usual.
By the time we reached the lower level of the ramp, our legs were aching and the museum was starting to close. We still got to look at his earliest residential works, including some Victorian-style (gasp!) houses. After an obligatory visit to the gift shop, we headed outside, giving the museum one last look as we crossed the street into the cool shade of Central Park. Ultimately, it was one of the most informative, interesting, and beautiful exhibits I have ever been to, and the most perfect way to see a masterpiece.

     
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 16.2009
David Hockney and Tom Uttech
By A. STORER

     
     
 

David Hockney
Paintings 2006 – 2009
Pace Wildenstein
32 East 57th St. and 534 West 25th St.
Oct. 29 – Dec. 24

If you’re in New York and want a foray into the forest, midtown Manhattan may be the place to go. Painters Tom Uttech and David Hockney present shows across the street from each other and both provide spirited expressions of wooded landscapes. These painters find inspiration from a landscape with personal ties: Uttech focuses his eye toward his native Wisconsin while David Hockney returns to the Yorkshire landscape of his youth. Uttech’s work depicts the forest at twilight, where glowing sunsets provide a meditative and transcendent experience. At times the paintings verge toward kitsch but overall they reflect the magic of the woods and recall Native American views of nature as an animated being. The paintings initially appear as straight-forward realism, however upon closer analysis Uttech leaves certain areas loose and washy, revealing an earthiness both in application and color that reflects his subject matter. The standout piece is the massive painting with an equally massive title - Enassamishhinjijweian. Its wooden frame provides a physical reflection of the represented imagery and flocks of birds interrupt the picture plane, disrupting the predictability of the realist language.

After seeing Uttech’s work, the much-better-known David Hockney seemed to lack a compelling connection with his landscape. Unlike Uttech, it’s unclear what he’s saying through his landscapes. Rather than offering a view on nature, it seems that for him, the woods serve as a vehicle to explore formal issues of color and mark. Hockney’s influences are apparent in his Fauvist-inspired color and van Gogh-esque marks. Some of the work felt too quickly produced and it’s clear that he’s a progenitor of the casually inclined Elizabeth Peytons of the world. The mammoth paintings at Pace’s Chelsea gallery worked best, where groves of trees loom over the viewer and roads lead us inward, physically enveloping us in the picture. Although a fan of David Hockney, this show made me take Roberta Smith more seriously when she wrote “His work is often as hard to resist as it is to take seriously . . . It skims across the surface of art, borrowing liberally from earlier masters.”

 

     
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 13.2009
15th Anniversary Inaugural Exhibition
at Blum and Poe

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Matt Johnson
Matt Johnson
The Shape of Time, 2009
Bronze, 56 x 52 x 40 inches
Edition of 3


Ending tomorrow is the 15th Anniversary Inaugural Exhibition at Blum and Poe. The owners of this revolutionary gallery are Timothy Blum and Jeff Poe and are responsible for nurturing more museum caliber artists in their gallery since 1994 in Santa Monica, California, more than any other partnership on the West Coast. On October 2nd the gallery opened its new venue at 2727 S. La Cienega Blvd., a 21,000 square foot complex, renovated by Los Angeles based architects Frank Escher and Ravi GuneWardena. The newly renovated, museum-like, elegant 1958 werehouse displays the work of 23 artists.

Artists:
Chiho Aoshima
Jennifer Bornstein
Slater Bradley
Nigel Cooke
Carroll Dunham
Sam Durant
Anya Gallaccio
Mark Grotjahn
Tim Hawkinson
Julian Hoebe
Matt Johnson
Friedrich Kunath
Sharon Lockhart
Florian Maier-Aichen
Victor Man
Dave Muller
Takashi Murakami
Yoshitomo Nara
Hirsch Perlman
Dirk Skreber
Keith Tyson
Lee Ufan
Chris Vasell

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 10. 2009
Sister Corita
at Zach Feuer Gallery
By A.STORER

     
     
 

Sister Corita Kent
Zach Feuer Gallery
530 W. 24th Street
Oct. 23 – Dec. 5

Zach Feuer Gallery is known for its roster of young artists, who typically epitomize our current cultural fixation with irony and irreverence. So it came as a refreshing surprise to walk into their current exhibit and see a fervent display of graphic work by Sister Corita, a Pop artist, teacher and nun who died in the mid 80s.
The work in the show consists primarily of text-based prints. Typically, a large word dominates the picture, featuring bold, fresh colors and often including fragments of text from sources as diverse as the Bible and pop songs. Her subjects reveal an engagement with social justice and faith. In one piece she scrawls Love in her lively handwriting beneath a crudely drawn, bright-red heart. This directness and joy permeates throughout all her work, even when addressing the weighty issues of war and hunger. This sincerity and urgency belongs to the era of the 60s and serves as a compelling counterpoint to current attitudes in art making.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 9. 2009
Abstract America
at Saatchi Gallery

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s
Old Persons Home
photo: Saatchi

I was simply disappointed with the Saatchi Gallery “Abstract America” show. Someone told me “they choose these works to make American art look bad”. Among the 32 artist pieces the two that attracted my attention were: “Spiral Staircase” by Peter Coffin and Sun Yuan and Peng Yu’s “Old Persons Home”. Peter Coffin reconstructed the steps to form a circle, twisting them to portray infinity, eliminating a beginning and an end. The artists stripped the ordinary, everyday object of its function to form a humorous construction. Equally humorous is China’s most controversial artists, Sun and Peung’s work. It depicts world leaders bound to wheelchairs, satirically looking withered, toothless, senile, crippled, and clearly impotent. I stood watching as couple of school girls mingled with the geriatric sculptures that rolled in a snail’s pace, crashing into each other and rubbing into walls and columns while tearing holes in their pants.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 07.2009
Papunya Tula Artists group
at Grey Art Gallery

By. Christina Lipinski

     
     
 

Mystery Sand Mosaic 1974
by Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi
All images © the estate of the artists

"We Are Here Sharing Our Dreaming "

The Grey Art Gallery gets all the glory, but the 80 Washington Square East Galleries contain the hidden gems of the NYU campus area. The past month, the galleries have featured 45 pieces by the Papunya Tula Artists group from the Western Desert of Central Australia. The show interrupted my usual hurried dash from subway to class and made me take pause. The bold geometric patterns in deep earth tones and splashes of orange practically command the gaze, but without overpowering. In a few pieces, the lines take unexpected turns and create a pleasing, oddly soothing optical-illusion effect. I particularly enjoyed the recurring concentric circles—they serve as portals through which the viewer is pulled into the collectively shared dream.


 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: November 3.2009
Anselm Reyle
at Gagosian Gallery

By. B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

ANSELM REYLE
Untitled, 2009
Aluminum, chrome optics and patina
53 x 45 inches (135 x 114 cm)

The sculptures of Anselm Reyle in his first solo show “Monochrome Age” at Gagosian Gallery may be referred to as lobby art and out of step with contemporary art. He makes references to historical movements, Pop and Arte Povera, by coating found objects from a flea market with chrome and enamel varnish, and with use of monochrome colors and reflective surfaces. His work looks dated due to the restricted use of image and objects yet they set to embody the artist’s preoccupations with monumentality, economy of means, seduction and desire. His artistic means, style and execution are much over used in the 19 piece “Monochrome Age” show.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 29.2009
The 16th International Sculpture Triennial
in Poznan

By. A.Jaskowska

     
     
 

Anne Marie KLENES
Ardoises, 2002
The Crisis of the Genre
16th International Sculpture Triennial in Poznan, Poland
Centrum Kultury Zamek 10.3.09-11.11

The International Triennial of Sculpture in Poznan is the biggest and the most important exhibition of sculpture in Poland, and is one of the most significant shows in Europe.  The Triennial of Sculpture in Poznan has a 30 years old tradition. One of the first organizers was the father of Robert Sobocinski- this years main curator and a sculptor participating in this event. He was also the inventor of the title of the exhibition- The Crisis of the Genre, to which work by curators and artists has been done to.

In this years edition there are four group exhibitions and one solo- Francisco Marino di Teana. The show surely presents a variety of contemporary art. You can find the sculptures of Marino di Teana, which are regarded as "the poems of space”, because he combines his passions for sculpture, architecture and his knowledge of urbanism. He models his work according to „small futuristic architecture” that may function as organisms in a given public space. You may also find variety of works coming from young artists (40 in total) in the juried group show.

In my opinion, the most interesting works are presented in „The exhibition in memory of Oliver Billard”, and sculptures of Andre Sadko, a French artist that depicts a „traveler”, a small person traveling the globe with a baggage of dreams, reflections, memories, lost in the infinity of the world. View Andre Sadko's work at www.sadko.info.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 28.2009
Sarah Thorton
By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Sarah Thorton
Seven Days in The Art World

I just might read it again. Seven Days in the Art World by Sarah Thornton is an inside scoop to the contemporary art culture. Thornton, an art historian and sociologist, portrays the ethnography of art, exploring the art and business behind it in her travelogue. Each of the seven chapters stages seven different venues -an auction, a school crit, an art fair, the art prize judging, the bureau of art magazine, a studio visit, and a curated exhibition. Thornton clearly builds the personalities of people and the profiles of the world’s finest art institutions. The author spent five years (2002-07) writing and researching, and interviewed over two hundred artists, curators, critics, dealers, collectors and auction house people for this book. But for the amount of information that you get out from it, it hardly reads like a textbook.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 25.2009
Anish Kapoor
at Royal Academy

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Anish Kapoor
Shooting into the Corner
The Royal Academy in London
26 September - 11 December 2009
Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

The Anish Kapoor exhibit at the Royal Academy greeted us with a loud bang, literally. It wasn’t until I moved to Weston Room that I encountered a crowd of people in front of a piece titled Shooting into the Corner (2009). By the pile of red mass in the following room, I came to a conclusion that the loud bang was a result of a fired shot from a canon. The security guard told me to come back in twenty minutes for the next explosion. I wandered off to see the next big attraction, Svayambh, a 30 ton block of red wax that moved along slowly on sunken rails. As the structure, which measured 3 meters wide and 2 meters tall, made its way through the three gallery rooms in an hour and a half journey, the building’s arched doorways that it squeezed through gradually molded it. I inspected the imperceptible movement and the residue that was left behind and walked back by Kapoor’s cement works, stainless steel reflective sculptures, some early iconic pigment pieces just in time for the firing of the canon. The room of people was quiet. All eyes were on the man loading the canon with a bucket of red wax and finally – BANG. The shot red wax created a growing self-made sculpture, splattering everywhere and breaking the wall. The silence broke with a gasp of shock, a pause and then laughter and commentary.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 22.2009
Miroslaw Balka
at Tate Modern

By A. Caputa

     
     
 

Miroslaw Balka
How It Is
Tate Modern
13 October 2009  –  5 April 2010

The artist encourages us, out of our own desire to enter a gigantic metal box, in which there is only darkness…or more?

Only on the surface…

That, which is generalized to darkness, has a different face: whispering of people, velvety walls, a crack of light, just like hope. (experts say that it’s a faulty construction-but is it that for sure?) Everywhere passing silhouettes of unknown people, everywhere flashes of cameras (they interrupt or intensify the effect… When you reach the end and you turn around, you see a large rectangle of blurry light… you can move towards it or stay in the darkness forever…

 

     
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 17.2009
Jeff Koons
at Tate Modern

By CyrylZ

     
     
 

Jeff Koons
Made in Heaven 1989
Lithograph on paper on canvas
3180 x 6910 mm
Number 2 in an edition of 3
Photo courtesy Anthony d'Offay Ltd
© Jeff Koons
October 1, 2009 - January 17, 2010
Tate Modern (Pop Life: Art in a Material World )

While entering Room 9 in the recently opened Tate Modern group exhibition "Pop Life: Art in a Material World" most people would say that its just pornography. Even if I had to agree, I am not surprised, sexuality is apart of our culture just as children's toys are, that’s is what Jeff Koons knows well and was not afraid to use. The magnified image of the sexual act in a public space is not what an average person can endure emotionlessly, but it’s the vulgarity that differs it from Baroque tradition and marks Pop culture. This is what Koons said about 1989 group of works Made in Heaven: "It pays respect to everything I ever learned about the Baroque and the Rococo in the tradition of Fragonard and Boucher. For me it has a great connection to life, a great connection to transcendence, and a great connection to love."

 

     
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 16.2009
Damien Hirst
at Tate Modern

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Damien Hirst
Ingo, Torsten, a recreation of a 1992 installation
Gloss household paint on wall, chairs and twins
October 1, 2009 - January 17, 2010
Tate Modern (Pop Life: Art in a Material World )

One of the pieces that I had an opportunity to interact with at Pop Life: Art in a Material World was Damian Hirst’s spot painting with chairs and twins, Rosie and Sarah. I casually came up to the twin girls and asked “Did Tate hire you to sit here?” and one of them said “yup” and the other “Dimian Hirst hired us himself”. They saw an advertisement looking for identical twins and when they applied they got the job along with other sets of twins to rotate throughtout the duration of the exhibit. It was most fascinating to learn from them that although the spot paintings looked identical from faraway at a closer glance they differed “just like we do” they said. The twins were a good sport and just as fun and vibrant as the paintings.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 15.2009
Pop Life: Art in a Material World
Tate Modern

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Pop Life: Art in a Material World
Tate Modern
October 1, 2009 - January 17, 2010

There are many exciting things happening at Tate Modern starting this month, one of which is Pop Life: Art in a Material World featuring artists Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Takashi Murakami and more. The exhibition focuses on artists that are legacies of Pop Art since 1980s, engaged with mass media and created their own signature ‘brands’ or influenced publicity and marketing. At Pop Life: Art in a Material World some of the things you can view are: Warhol’s diamond dust paintings, Koon’s Made in Heaven self-advertisement billboards, Marukami music video "Turning Japanese" featuring Kristen Dunst and Damien Hirst two spot paintings with identical twins sitting underneath each one. The exhibition does not fail to entertain and educate.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 8.2009
Chris Burden
at LACMA

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Chris Burden
Urban Light
LACMA

In the 1920s American cities designed their own streetlamps as a form of public art and civic identity. Just about 80 years later Chris Burden brought 202 lampposts weighing one-and-a-half ton from around the Los Angeles area to his Topanga Canyon compound. Over the next seven years the artist collected, restored, repainted and electrified the antique cast iron lampposts to form the Urban Light installation now on display at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Chris Burden described the lampposts as “a statement about what constitutes a civilized and sophisticated society: safe after dark and beautiful to behold.”

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: October 7.2009
Brent Owens
at English Kills Art Gallery

By Abraham Storer

     
     
 

Brent Owens
The Gnastic Pursuit
Sept. 12 – Oct. 11
English Kills Art Gallery
Image: Derby Tims, 2009, boots, plywood, hemlock, steel, enamel, paint

Brent Owens’ current show at English Kills serves up heaps of shit-kicking, Southern raunch in the form of sculptures that pay homage to the great tradition of chainsaw carvings.  The work is humorous and visceral.  In Golden Brown Femme Fatale, Owens salvages a tree trunk, transforming it into a woman’s torso – complete with a peg leg, bikini-bottom and dangling navel ring.  He also has a knack for mixing incongruent materials.  In Derby Tims, Owens attaches plywood wheels to a pair of Timberland boots in a manner that’s resourceful and creative in a redneck sort of way. 
It’s refreshing to see work that proudly inserts “regional” and “tasteless” aesthetics into a New York art world context.  Brent Owens stands apart from other young artists in New York who forsake their “suburban” or “redneck” pasts for the homogeny of art school conventions.  Rather, this South Carolina native mines those roots, resulting in work that’s inventive and funky.

   
     
       
       

 

Posted: September 30.2009
Pat de Groot
at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum

By Abraham Storer

     
     
 

Pat de Groot
Window to the Sea: Birds, Light and Water
June 19-Aug. 2, 2009
Provincetown Art Association and Museum
Image: April-Pink Moon, 2004, oil on panel, 12” x 11”

Although the art season here in New York is just heating up, I want reflect on a standout show from the summer.  Unfortunately, painter Pat de Groot is not as well known as her work merits - but this diminutive stature is what may be most charming about her work.  Her work doesn’t clamor for attention; rather, it’s the byproduct of a reflective life and an intimate relationship with a subject.  
In the statement for her show at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, the 79 year-old artist, writes “for the past twenty years I have involved myself exclusively with the visual goings on outside my window facing Provincetown Harbor.”  The most compelling work in this show, are a series of small paintings on panel – all the same size and all depicting the bay, the horizon and the sky.  Despite the minimal format, de Groot captures a range of weather from languid summer nights to winter’s icy assault.  The surfaces are caressed, scrapped down, layered and respond to an ocean that is alive and changing.  All of the work is quiet and reflects an artist graciously submitted to her subject.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 28.2009
Harold Reddicliffe
at Hirschl & Adler Modern Gallery

By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Harold Reddicliffe
Two Slide Projectors, 2005
Oil on canvas, 18 x 32 in.

Projectors, engines, lenses, cameras, and microscopes are just some of the objects painted by Harold Reddicliffe, on show at Hirschl & Adler Modern Gallery in New York. Each of these devices is exceptionally investigated, well-rendered and virtually perfect, but far from boring. The brilliant compositions, lighting, and colors provide a whimsical, eccentric, eye catching presence. And you might wonder how long it takes him to paint such perfect images, and where he gets these outdated devices from. “A long time,” is his answer, and most of the pieces he either owns or has on loan from people that might have such items sitting in their attic and normally collecting dust. One thing is for sure, Harold Reddicliffe’s work won’t ever collect dust, because it never gets old.

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 24.2009
Dale Chihuly
at Bellagio Resort, Las Vegas, Nevada
By Christina Lipinski

     
     
 

Dale Chihuly
Fiori Di Como, 1998
70 x 30 x 12'
Bellagio Resort, Las Vegas, Nevada

The Lobby at the Bellagio 2007
I did not expect to encounter any high forms of art on my impulsive trip to Las Vegas for New Year’s. America’s Playground, of course, is known for its chapels and casinos, not museums. Indeed, the degree of decadence and extravagance (of the gaudy nature) was impossibly escalated with each hotel we visited. But our favorite casino, by far, was the Bellagio. Although the hotel is famous for its choreographed water fountain shows (as featured in Ocean’s 11), the building itself is certainly beautiful enough to warrant special attention. But the scene that most caught my eye was the stunning installation of blown glass in the main hall. The rounded shapes and overwhelming colors invited images of undersea adventures in an Octopus’s Garden; or perhaps a room full of delightfully colorful candies in Willy Wonka’s factory. A marvelous combination of whimsy and wonder, and a welcome departure from the glitz and glam of the rest of the city. I knew we’d stumbled upon something fantastic, but it was only later that I learned that such glass sculpture displays could only be the work of Dale Chihuly.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 23.2009
Aleksandra Mir
at Fare Mondi from 53rd Art Exhibition- La Biennale di Venezia
By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Aleksandra Mir
VENEZIA (all places contain all others)
1 million postcards for free distribution
2009
Photography: Medioimages, Photodisc Getty Images

Everyone’s got that funky postcard from a family or friend in the mail portraying a beautiful landscape or a sunset with palm trees and the name of a place printed in bold letters, for example FLORIDA.

I try to be that person that sends them out. The number of postcards I have purchased exceeds my ability to count them since I have been trading postcards with my dearest friend Christina for over six years.

You must imagine then, how happy I was when I found boxes stacked with free postcards at Arsenale of Venice Biennale. By boxes I mean 1 million postcards, more or less, because everyone was helping themselves to them. All of the postcards were a work of one artist, Alexandra Mir and they were a work of art because the artist presented Venice’s water with substitute of 100 alternative places while printing “Venice” on the new landscapes. Such combinations were baffling and amusing. “The artist appropriated and redefined the means and strategies of the tourist industry, freeing the city of its stereotypical images to create new geographical entity” and encourages our participation.

Alexandra Mir was born in Lubin, Poland. She lives and works in Palermo, Italy.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 22.2009
Robert Rauschenberg: Gluts
at Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice
By CyrylZ

     
     
 

Robert Rauschenberg
Mercury Zero Summer Glut, 1987
Metal assemblage
27 x 44,5 x 21,6 cm
Private collection
© Estate of Robert Rauschenberg / licensed by VAGA, New York, NY / SIAE 2009

"A year after the death of Robert Rauschenberg, May 12, 2008, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, celebrates the memory of this great artist with the exhibition Robert Rauschenberg: Gluts. Comprised of approximately forty works, this exhibition, on view May 30 through September 20, 2009, presents a little known body of Rauschenberg’s work in metal drawn from the holdings of the Rauschenberg Estate, with additional loans from institutions and private collections in the United States and abroad. Always one to recycle, Rauschenberg found new uses for what others tossed aside, reinvigorating detritus with a revealing second life. Faced with disparate objects littering his studio, he applied a direct approach to the Gluts (1986–89 and 1991–95), his final series of sculpture. For nearly a decade, Rauschenberg frequented the Gulf Iron and Metal Junkyard outside Fort Myers, Florida, near his home, gathering metal parts from traffic signs, exhaust pipes, radiator grills, metal awnings, and so on, which he incorporated into these poetic, humorous assemblages, where the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts."

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 19.2009
William Forsythe
at Fare Mondi from 53rd Art Exhibition- La Biennale di Venezia
By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

William Forsythe
The Fact of Matter / Choreographic object
2009

What do you get when you suspend 200 gymnastic rings in varying height, in a small room?

The answer is The Fact of Matter/ Choreographic object by William Forsythe at the Arsenale venue of Venice Biennale. You also get some very eager people, just like me, wanting to try them out. I must say they were not easy to use in order to transverse myself through the room. They also made me VERY aware of my own body, weight and it’s movement, indeed “The Fact of Matter”. The easiest way to move from ring to ring was to stabilize myself and wait for the right moment to place my foot and hand. It’s all easier said than done, but there were moments were I nearly made a split. 

William Forsythe was born in New York in 1949. He lives and works in Germany. As an American choreographer and dancer he is known for testing means of expression and movement in film, video and installation art especially through his Forsythe Company.

 

   
     
       
       
 

Posted: September 17.2009
Krzysztof Wodiczko
at Fare Mondi from 53rd Art Exhibition- La Biennale di Venezia
By B.DROZDZIK

     
     
 

Krzysztof Wodiczko
Visitors
2008/2009
Video projection
Courtesy: Profile Foundation
Curator: Bozena Czubak

I walked into the darkened Polish Pavilion at the Giardini finding large-scale, milky windows and silhouetted figures behind them. I watched the shadowy people as they held conversations, washed windows, vacuumed the floor, sold umbrellas or just went about with their lives. The obvious barrier of the windows was reminiscent of the social and political immigrant barrier that Krzysztof Wodiczko had in mind while creating the piece. The video projection set off a very realistic illusion of people’s lives struggling to be accepted while living day to day as visitors in Poland and Italy but coming from different countries.

Krzysztof Wodiczko was born in 1943 and earned his MFA from the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw in 1968. He is a multi-media artist, art theoretician and university professor. He lives and works in New York City, Cambridge, Massachusetts and Warsaw.