• Congratulations to Julian Montague

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    Julian Montague is the winner of the Diagram Prize for the Oddest Title of 2006, for his book The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America. It is a book documenting his art project of the same name. Other books in the competition included How Green Were the Nazis? and Spoon Boxes of Daghestan.

    There are a huge number of news articles on him winning the prize, including ones from The Guardian and the CBC.

    I first wrote about this project in “ July 2004 and again in October 2004.

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  • Chelsea highlights

    My MacBook is still in the shop, so here is a quick post of my favorite things from last Saturday. The first two are now “top picks” on ArtCal.

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    Christopher Lowry Johnson at Winkleman Gallery. Hard to show via JPEGs, these are beautiful subtle paintings. We’ve been fans for a long time, having bought a painting by Christopher from the very first show at Plus Ultra. This is the final week, so run over there!

     

    Donna Huanca

    Donna Huanca, Che Guevara’s Family, 2006, fabric, 82 × 57.5 inches

    Donna Huanca at Susan Inglett Gallery. We first saw her work at the “Manic and Wasted” show curated by at LMCC’s Swing Space. I will probably add some photos to my Flickr feed once I have my MacBook back, as there are some great sculptures/installations too. The show also includes a sound installation.

     

    Julie Evans

    Julie Evans, Perch, 2006

    Julie Evans at Julie Saul Gallery. Gorgeous paintings influenced by Indian miniature painting. I met her via Edward Winkleman, who has a big post on her work.

     

    Lisa Sanditz

    Lisa Sanditz, Pearl Farm II, 2007, acrylic on canvas, 70 × 90 inches

    “Endangered Wasteland” at CRG Gallery. Lots of big paintings hovering between abstraction and landscapes. I especially liked the paintings of Lisa Sanditz.

     

    Jae Hi Ahn

    Jae Hi Ahn at Phoenix Gallery. Jae Hi is pushing the limits of what one can do with found plastic objects. We have one lovely example hanging on wall here at the Hoggard/Wagner Collection.

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  • Benefits – support art, music, and theater

    Here is a reminder to buy tickets to the benefit events of Rhizome (April 16) and The Civilians (April 18). While you’re at it, the playwright organization 13P is having a cabaret benefit at Joe’s Pub on April 29th. More details are on their website.

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  • dzhDzh

    That’s the description of the sound my MacBook Pro was making on the Tekserve check-in ticket. I was trying to be ergonomic, setting the computer on a riser so its screen is at the same height as my LCD. Then it slid off, landing on the (carpeted floor). I’m also behind on a couple of client deadlines, so if you email me and I don’t get back to you quickly, that’s why. I’m doing my work on a — shudder — PC right now.

    Coincidence: I know the artist who did the check-in at Tekserve. I didn’t even know he worked there.

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  • Wendy Heldmann at sixspace

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    I don’t know more now than you did then, 2007
    acrylic on paper
    18” × 24”

    ArtCat artist Wendy Heldmann has a solo show at sixspace in LA opening on Saturday. Check out Wendy’s site and the gallery website for more information.

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  • As NASCAR fans run screaming from their computers…

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    I’m starting to get some silly comments on my blog post from 2003 about the artist Jeff Burton‘s photographs of a young hustler named Kevin in New Orleans. At the moment, the top result on Google Images for Jeff Burton links to an image from the post, rather than a photo of the NASCAR driver.

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  • Madrid / Barcelona

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    Olive tree in Juan Carlos I Park, in Madrid, photo by R. Duran found on flickr

    James and I are going to spend some time in Madrid and Barcelona, plus some wine areas such as Rioja or Navarra, in May. Feel free to email any tips or leave comments.

    Update: How funny. We didn’t plan it that way, but we’re going to be in Barcelona during the last day of SWAB (art fair), so we’ll have to stop by. Our friends at DCKT Contemporary, Leo Koenig, Mixed Greens, and Samson Projects will be there.

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  • Mirandy July website

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    I love the website for Miranda July’s new book of short stories.

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  • Linkage

    The Progressive has an interview with “social satirist” Lewis Black. Excerpt:

    Q: You describe yourself as a socialist.

    Black: From the time I was kid, I saw the broader context of how we live here in the U.S. When I was twelve, I saw Edward R. Murrow’s Harvest of Shame and that was it. It led me to uncover the image versus the reality of how people live. I then learned to pronounce “apartheid” and saw the treatment of blacks here in this country as they struggled for civil rights. It made me question deeply and ask myself: How can people like migrant workers who are helping us eat not have a pot to piss in? I started learning about countries that have a “share-the-wealth” system and I said to myself, “There is nothing wrong with that. This makes sense.”

    CapitalismÂ’s problem is that it has nothing to say about how to combat greed. For all the moralizing this country does, people donÂ’t get it: TheyÂ’re greedy. And itÂ’s gotten worse in my lifetime. You donÂ’t even have to have socialism. I am talking about minimal things. Put money aside to fund playgrounds and high school football teams. Are you kidding me? The Grammy Awards has to make a plea to keep music in schools? I mean, what planet are we on? I guess I am asking another question in my work as well: What happened?

     

    The latest online essay by Paul Graham, author of Hackers and Painters, is titled “Microsoft is Dead.” A couple of excerpts:

    A few days ago I suddenly realized Microsoft was dead. I was talking to a young startup founder about how Google was different from Yahoo. I said that Yahoo had been warped from the start by their fear of Microsoft. That was why they’d positioned themselves as a “media company” instead of a technology company. Then I looked at his face and realized he didn’t understand. It was as if I’d told him how much girls liked Barry Manilow in the mid 80s. Barry who?

    Microsoft? He didn’t say anything, but I could tell he didn’t quite believe anyone would be frightened of them.

    The last nail in the coffin came, of all places, from Apple. Thanks to OS X, Apple has come back from the dead in a way that is extremely rare in technology. [2] Their victory is so complete that I’m now surprised when I come across a computer running Windows. Nearly all the people we fund at Y Combinator use Apple laptops. It was the same in the audience at startup school. All the computer people use Macs or Linux now. Windows is for grandmas, like Macs used to be in the 90s. So not only does the desktop no longer matter, no one who cares about computers uses Microsoft’s anyway.

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  • The Civilians benefit – Resurrection Vaudeville

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    I see today that The Civilians are listed in Time Out New York as one of eight Off-Off Broadway companies to watch. This reminds me to write about their benefit coming up on April 18, titled Resurrection Vaudeville. James and I are big supporters, and have seen nearly everything they’ve done in the last four years in NYC. Join us for some drinks and entertainment!

    Wednesday, April 18, 2007
    Arena Nightclub
    135 West 41st Street
    Between 6th Avenue & Broadway
    New York, NY 10036
    8pm to 1am, Performance at 9pm

    Enjoy drinks and dancing in this new Midtown club, surrounded by The Civilians’ artists, friends, and supporters. Includes complimentary drinks from event sponsors Tequila Corazón, Smithwick’s Ale, and Red Stripe Beer; full cash bar; silent auction; and raffle.

    Members of The Civilians will perform songs from the company’s new show about Evangelical Christianity—along with a few favorites by Michael Friedman.

    In a lucky bit of timing, they were in Colorado Springs visiting Ted Haggard’s church as part of their research when all the excitement broke.

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