• Culture Pundits – official launch

    culture pundits logo

    We first put up the website, and had a few sites in addition to ArtCal, in August of last year. We’ve now reached over 40 sites with over 400,000 unique visitors and 1 million page views each month. Here is the official launch press release.

    ·

    Categories: , , ,
  • Foxy Production moving to old Clementine Space

    foxy production logo

    Foxy Production is moving to a larger space on their same block on West 27th Street: the old Clementine space. Their next show (Jimmy Baker) opens there on October 17.

    ·

    Categories:
  • A modest proposal

    Mary_Heilmann_First_Vent.jpg

    Mary Heilmann
    The First Vent, 1972
    acrylic with bronze powder on canvas
    20” × 32”

    I love Elizabeth Peyton and Mary Heilmann as much as anyone, but don’t those seem rather un-new-ish choices for big shows at an institution called The New Museum? Perhaps some arrangement could be made to send those to MoMA in place of their upcoming Miró and Van Gogh shows?

    Meanwhile, a 20-year survey of the work of Lyle Ashton Harris is only going to appear in Scottsdale, AZ, and Buffalo, NY. Is there really no room at any New York area institution for such an exhibition?

    And why does Lyle’s website just have a flash slide show and no other information on the artist?

    [photo by James Wagner

    ·

    Categories:
  • Crackdowns on protestors and press in Denver and Twin Cities

    Following up on James’s post on the subject, here are some links to recent news about police raids in the Twin Cities of activist houses. They are knocking down doors and coming in with semi-automatic weapons to arrest people and confiscate belongings, including computers, journals, and political pamphlets. They have also arrested National Lawyer Guild lawyers trying to find out more information.

    Here is one video from a visit by Glenn Greenwald to a house after it was raided:

    At one time we pretended to have a constitutional republic (see previous post) but now we’re not even pretending. Check out this paragraph from an AP story on the raids:

    Protester Michelle Gross said a fourth home, this one in St. Paul, was being raided Saturday afternoon. Two people were outside the home in handcuffs while police awaited a search warrant, she said. St. Paul police spokesman Tom Walsh said a search warrant was being executed but could not confirm whether anyone had been arrested.

    Meanwhile, I don’t even see this story on the home page of Daily Kos. Boing Boing, which normally covers such things, and did so regarding Tibet protests in Beijing, is ignoring this and giving us crap like moon-cake USB sticks. Shameful.

    It’s not only the Twin Cities where the police are out of control. Check out this video and story of an ABC reporter in Denver being shoved and arrested by a uniformed, cigar-smoking cop.

    Police in Denver arrested an ABC News producer today as he and a camera crew were attempting to take pictures on a public sidewalk of Democratic senators and VIP donors leaving a private meeting at the Brown Palace Hotel.

    OK, I’m done. Enjoy your election, people. This is disgusting, and I hear nothing from any of our elected officials. They like things this way. Keeps everything tidy.

    ·

    Categories:
  • It’s all ultimately one big (political) party

    Remember when Nancy Pelosi said, even though the Democratic Party was set to have a majority in both houses of Congress, that “impeachment is off the table”? As Lewis Lapham said at the time,

    Democracy is born in dirt, nourished by the digging up and turning over of as much of it as can be brought within reach of a television camera or a subpoena. We can’t “lay out a new agenda for America” unless we know which America we’re talking about, the one that embodies the freedoms of a sovereign people or the one made to fit the requirements of a totalitarian state….

    Like it or not, and no matter how unpleasant or impolitic the proceedings, the spirit of the law doesn’t allow the luxury of fastidious silence or discreet abstention….

    The Constitution doesn’t serve at the pleasure of Representative Pelosi any more than it answers to the whim of President Bush, and by taking “off the table” the mess of an impeachment proceeding, the lady from California joins the president in his distaste for such an unclean thing as a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

    Rightly understood, democracy is an uproar, the argument meant to be blunt, vigilant, and fierce, not, as the purveyors of our respectable opinion would have it, a matter of liveried civil servants passing one another polite synonyms on silver trays.

    Meanwhile, the Democrats are unilaterally disarming against the GOP, which has no qualms about using nasty tactics. The Obama campaign told Dennis Kucinich to remove this line from his speech:

    They’re asking for another four years — in a just world, they’d get 10 to 20.

    Related: Glenn Greenwald on what’s missing from this convention:

    First, there is almost no mention of, let alone focus on, the sheer radicalism and extremism of the last eight years. During that time, our Government has systematically tortured people using sadistic techniques ordered by the White House; illegally and secretly spied on its own citizens; broken more laws than can be counted based on the twisted theory that the President has that power; asserted the authority to arrest and detain even U.S. citizens on U.S. soil and hold them for years without charges; abolished habeas corpus; created secret prisons in Eastern Europe and a black hole of lawlessness in Guantanamo; and explicitly abandoned and destroyed virtually every political value the U.S. has long claimed to embrace.

    Other than a fleeting reference to such matters by John Kerry in a (surprisingly effective) speech which most networks did not broadcast, one would not know, listening to the Democratic Convention, that any of those things have happened. Even our unprovoked and indescribably destructive attack on Iraq, based on purely false pretenses, has received little attention. Those things simply don’t exist, even as part of the itemized laundry list of Democratic grievances about the Bush administration. The overriding impression one has is that the only things really wrong during the last eight years in this country are that gas prices are high and not everyone has health insurance. Those are obviously very significant problems, but they are garden-variety political issues which don’t begin to capture the extremism that has predominated in this country under GOP rule, and don’t remotely approach conveying the crises on numerous fronts the country faces.

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • Art e-mail deluge

    The art season is about to start up, and I know people want their shows listed on ArtCal, but sending info to ArtCal, James, me, and Paddy asking to be listed is counterproductive. Very counterproductive. Extra demerits if I receive the email at more than one of my personal addresses. Please just sent it to ArtCal to the proper address with the information we request.

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • William Powhida at Platform Gallery (Seattle)

    powhida_platform.jpg

    artwork by Tom Sanford

    If you find yourself in Seattle in early September, don’t miss William Powhida’s opening at Platform, our favorite gallery in that city. I hear there will be music, record swapping, and more. To get prepared, check out Bad At Sports’s interview with him on their podcast. He starts about 8 or 9 minutes in. You can hear his side of the story on Zach Feuer getting his NYC gallery (Schroeder Romero) kicked out of the NADA Art Fair because of an artwork by William in which he put a hex on Zach.

    ·

    Categories:
  • Linkage – Republican National Convention hasn’t even started edition

    birk-soldiers-billboard.png

    CBS Outdoor decides billboards such as this one by Suzanne Opton as part of her billboard project cannot be run during the Republican National Convention.

    [Click here if you don’t see the video]

    Minneapolis police confiscate equipment, notes, and computers from the Glass Bead Collective without their consent. The collective are the people who released the video of an NYPD officer assaulting a bicyclist. The Minneapolis police officer told them they were confiscating their belongings for “Homeland Security” reasons.

    ·

    Categories: , ,
  • monochrom’s “Kiki and Bubu and The Good Plan”

    Kiki and Bubu discuss the problems of the unfettered market and the possibility of planned economies. Go here if you don’t see the video above.

    Created by monochrom.

    ·

    Categories: ,
  • Linkage

    ·

    Categories: