• Two more Miami items from Pulse

    At Pulse we saw two things I forgot to mention. First, an artist from Conner Contemporary (Washington, DC) named Zach Storm — no, really. The work we saw consisted of clever drawings of posters for fictional blockbuster movies. If you’re a fan of William Powhida, I think you’ll like Storm’s work.

    Here are two images from the gallery website of an earlier work:

    zach-storm-1.jpg

    Zach Storm
    Untitled (from The Cardinal Has Returned) (7), 2004
    watercolor and graphite on paper
    11 × 14 inches

    zach-storm-1-detail.jpg

    [detail]

    Second, we saw some “mandalas” created from shopping bags by Virginia Fleck at Finesilver (San Antonio/Houston). I love the mix of shopping and devotion. The images below are from the gallery’s website.

    Virgina-Fleck-Buy-More.jpg

    Virginia Fleck
    Buymore Mandala, 2005
    plastic bags, tape
    104 inches diameter

    Virgina-Fleck-Smiley-Mandala.jpg

    Virginia Fleck
    Smiley Mandala, 2005
    plastic bags, tape
    64 inches diameter

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  • The Civilians: Nobody’s Lunch

    IamNobodysLunch.gif

    Illustration by illustration by Josh Neufeld (www.joshcomix.com)

    We’re headed to the new incarnation of Nobody’s Lunch by The Civilians in a few days. I wrote about one of the versions of the show in October 2004 if you want to read more.

    For the culture bloggers out there, there is a discount if you know the secret password. E-mail me with a link to your blog if you’re interested.

    The Civilians Announces Off-Broadway Transfer
    (I AM) NOBODY’S LUNCH
    Limited Engagement! Jan. 19 – Feb 5 at 59 East 59th Street Theatre

    Obie Award-winning theatre company The Civilians will present a limited-run Off-Broadway engagement of its newest show, (I AM) NOBODY’S LUNCH, beginning January 19th at 59 East 59th Street Theatre. Written and directed by Steven Cosson, the show features eight original songs by Michael Friedman (“25 New Yorkers who will make their mark in 2005” Time Out NY). The four-year old company— having established a national and international reputation on tour— will follow this New York engagement with seven weeks of touring to prominent performing arts centers including Philadelphia’s Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts and Cambridge’s American Repertory Theatre. Presented on an Off-Broadway contract, opening night is scheduled for January 21st.

    (I AM) NOBODY’S LUNCH is an eccentric evening of cabaret-theater combining original music and text from interviews. This lively show about the politics of information attempts to answer the slippery question, “How do we know what we know?” Set in the frame of post 9/11 anxiety, misleading intelligence, government secrecy and embedded media, this question leads the company through the murky present state of American culture. The resulting show exploits The CiviliansÂ’ singular signature style, taking material from interviews with actual persons and transforming these conversations into a theatrical, musical event.

    (I AM) NOBODY’S LUNCH is a dramatically revised version of the show presented at PS122 in September 2004. Reviews from that production heralded the show, saying that “the characters are brought to life by the protean cast, who expose both cultural difference and real lunacy without making judgments.” (The New Yorker) and calling The Civilians “downtown’s peerless purveyors of comic docu-theater” (Time Out New York). The company has extensively revised the piece to respond to recent changes in the American political landscape. Work on the new version culminated in a 2-week workshop with the Sundance Theatre Lab at White Oak in December 2005. The new show, whose full title is (I am) Nobody’s Lunch (A cabaret about how we know what we know when nobody knows if everyone else is lying and when someone or something wants to have you for lunch), contains mostly new text and two entirely new songs.

    Interview subjects range from a policymaker at Homeland Security on the verge of a nervous breakdown to a plucky extraterrestrial (channeled by an equally funny human); from every Jessica Lynch in the phone book (who was willing to talk) to soldiers guarding the New York subway with unloaded weapons. Turning these interviews into a mercurial cabaret-play, a versatile cast inhabits an eclectic cast of characters, all taken from real life. Some subjects who provided source material for the original version have been re-interviewed and are joined by new characters ranging from a 10 year old girl (asked how one knows what is real and what is imaginary) to a 90 year old former librarian (who provides a unique viewpoint on the modern media).

    The new cast includes Quincy Tyler Bernstine, Matt Dellapina, Brad Heberlee, Daoud Heidami, Caitlin Miller and Jennifer R. Morris with Andy Boroson accompanying on piano. Set designer Andromache Chalfant, costumes Sarah Beers, lighting Marcus Doshi, sound Shane Rettig. Choreography by Karinne Keithley.

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  • The Studio Visit at Exit Art

    I think the highlight of The Studio Visit is the artists with studios in the windows of the space, rather than the videos. However, I did enjoy the videos I saw by j. morrison and Joyce Pensato. It was difficult to take photos, but here are a few:

    jmorrison-exit-art.jpg

    j. morrison

    joyce-pensato-exit-art.jpg

    Joyce Pensato

    aaron-krach-exit-art.jpg

    Aaron Krach

    Dennis Christie has a post about Aaron’s “studio.”

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  • West 27th Street preview

    We were fans of the people now relocated to 27th Street before Time Out New York did its big spread this week.

    A lot of the galleries had “previews” tonight before the joint openings tomorrow. Tomorrow should be busy, with at least 20 Chelsea openings listed on ArtCal for tomorrow night.

    We dropped by Foxy Production, Wallspace, and the “annex” of ATM tonight. Some highlights:

    wallspace-foxy-hallway.jpg

    Hallway connecting Wallspace and Foxy

    kirsten-stoltmann.jpg

    Kirsten Stoltmann work at Wallspace

    jacob-ciocci-trolls.jpg

    Jacob Ciocci at Foxy Production, installation detail

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  • Spotted on the ‘net

    studio-of-ashes.jpg

    I noticed the blog Studio of Ashes after someone from there commented on an earlier post. It has some great drawings, such as the one above. Check it out.

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  • A reason to move to Brooklyn – Parrots!

    flickr-parrots-brooklyn.jpg

    Via the indispensable Brooklyn Parrots, I found this Flickr photo stream of wild parrots in a Brooklyn backyard.

    It would certainly cheer me up after the loss of Sweet Pea to see those out my window!

    [photo from their Flickr images]

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  • Miami highlights – one more post

    No, really, I did mean to do another post when I wrote “to be continued” at the end of the last one.

    In no particular order, all from the NADA fair:

    Kim Hiorthøy drawings and collages at Standard (Oslo). He also does street art and album covers. An example from their web site:

    SOKH-2004-Momentum-02.jpg

    Kim Hiorthøy
    Alt du trodde kom til å skje kommer aldri til å skje, 2004
    Acrylic paint on wall
    500 × 2000 cm
    Installation view, “MOMENTUM – The Nordic Art Festival”, Moss, 2004

    At David Kordanksy, there was great work by Mark Flores and David Noonan. Flores had a wall installation, partially based on old images (tintypes I think?) from an archive in LA. This image from the gallery website of his show in 2005 gives some idea:

    flores03.jpg

    I don’t see a page for David Noonan on the gallery site, but James wrote about a show at Foxy Production. Visit their site to see his artist page.

    Kavi Gupta had some great sculpture by Jeff Carter, including this mechanical sculpture:

    jeff_carter_platform.jpg

    Jeff Carter
    Untitled (Platform + Shoreline), 2005
    metal, wood, motor, paint
    88” × 48” × 20”

    Kavi Gupta also had some great work by Melanie Schiff, whom I first saw in a group show at Foxy Production.

    scott-hunt.jpg

    Goff + Rosenthal had some brilliant charcoal on paper pieces by Scott Hunt. This is one example from their web site. The gallery will give him his first solo show early this year.

    Hamish McKay gallery had some sculpture by Mikala Dwyer that I enjoyed. Here is a sample image from their website:

    mikala-dwyer.jpg

    Mikala Dwyer
    Ra Ra Rasputin, 2005
    plastic, earth, plant, fimo

    I enjoyed a lot of the work I saw at the General Store, the Milwaukee artist-run space, including wild drawings of battles by a self-taught artist and Viet Nam vet named Ronald Baker and sculpture by Donald Morgan.

    Wallspace was showing a new artist named Dave Miko. He will have a show at their space in February. Here is an image from their website:

    dave-miko.jpg

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  • A Christmas quote

    The vision of Mary we’ve been given sounds like no Jewish woman I’ve ever known.

    Bruce Cockburn

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  • My favorite blog for commentary on the MTA strike

    [Disclaimer: this post is a bit of a mess and I keep revising it to try to say what I really think.]

    It’s Steve and Jen’s news blog, especially since Steve and Jen disagree on the strike and are both writing about it.

    I started reading this blog again after Tom Moody wrote about the strike and linked to it.

    I will say I think the union is managing its PR and strategy rather badly. We should be reminded constantly of how incompetent/devious the MTA executives are, including their ability to “find” an extra $1 billion in the budget once in a while, or the fact that in a time of supposed terrorist threats, they are closing token booths and forcing us to rely on turnstile exits that will cause a huge number of deaths in an emergency. See more by Ray Sanchez on MTA security. Now would be an excellent time for Bloomberg to start pushing to have the MTA become a city-controlled agency, rather than a state one, but he’s busy acting more like a billionaire than a mayor at the moment.

    I will say I’m troubled by the actual strike. I don’t think it had gotten to the point where a strike was necessary. I don’t know what leverage a union has in this age, but a strike by transit workers hurts so many working people in the city.

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  • Sweet Pea – the home movie

    sweet pea video still

    I realized this morning that we have one Quicktime video of Sweet Pea from soon after he arrived. It’s big, since I don’t know how to optimize QT movies, and about 30 seconds long. Yes, the mirror looks a bit smudged. He liked to lick it. You’ll hear our voices in the background, trying to encourage him to bob or dance.

    Sweet Pea 10MB Quicktime

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