Archive for July, 2009

Shady Cove ArtWalk expects 100 artists at Aug. 8-9 event

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

The 5th annual Shady Cove River ArtWalk will take place on Saturday, Aug. 8, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, Aug. 9, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.  The River ArtWalk follows the banks of the Rogue River, at Edgewater Inn and Rogue River RV Park (corner Hwy 62 and Rogue River Drive, next to the Shady Cove Bridge).

In addition, with limited space available at the River ArtWalk, a number of businesses, including Shady Kate’s Boutique, Books ‘N More, and others will welcome both visual and performing artists to set up in front of their businesses, along Highway 62.

On Saturday, from 10 a.m to 3 p.m. a “Kid’s ArtZone” will be held at Aunt Caroline’s Park, (Hwy 62 at Indian Creek Rd).  In addition to an interactive art environment, a featured Native American “stick game” is set for 1 p.m.  (Limited parking)

On Sunday, Aug. 9, kids of all ages can celebrate Smokey Bear’s 65th birthday at the Jackson  County  #4 Fire Station, in Shady Cove.  Help Smokey Bear blow out all his candles.  The celebration runs from noon to 3 p.m.
Call Erin at 878-2666 for further details.

This year’s artwalk features 100 fine artists from throughout Oregon.  Out of state artists include Liz Rosier, Lake in  the Hills (Chicago), Ill., with others representing Washington, Arizona, Nevada and a recently relocated artist from Hawaii.

The main entrance is at the Edgewater Inn Conference Room and includes several award winning artists, including, western artist Carl Seyboldt and Gail O’Dell, of Eagle Point; Karen Cain-Smith, Shady Cove; Kim Ragsdale, Trail; and, David Irwin “Images in Nature”, Butte Falls.  Alice Zelina Berger (EP) will display and welcome guests to the Breezeway and “on the Green” Shauna Engbrecht, Marybeth Hines (EP), and Janet Rawlings (EP) will be featured.

Gates #2 & #3 located at the Rogue River RV Park includes artistic local talent, including Judi Steadman (Manzanita Mania), Scott Lang, Jim Kanitz, Debby Elder, Dorothy L. Dierks, Leona Haiker, Laureen Bong, Material Girls, and Christy Allwardt, of Shady Cove.  Linda Steen, Linda’s Unique Creations; Cathy Spires, Braunda Gilchrist, Connie Drane & Idabelle Andrews, Lorie Easlick, and Dianna Clark “Sky Creations” from Eagle Point; Lori Paxton and Ruthanne Bray, will share a booth from Butte Falls.    Guests may enter at any of the three gates for a unique artwalk experience.  Stroll the 700′ scenic pathway paralleling the Rogue River; the art venue continues under the Shady Cove Bridge connecting the two River front properties.  Free admission (donations accepted).  Be sure to sign guest book for opportunity to win a special gift of art.

Music is featured throughout the River ArtWalk during the two-day event.  “The Relief” Band, Eagle Point,
will play vintage blues on Saturday ( 2:30 p.m. to closing at 5:00 p.m.), on deck at the RV Park.    While music continues throughout the art venue, Sunday morning will feature  “Accordionist Uncommon” by Richard Gyuro, of Eagle Point.    At 1pm, “The Diamonds & Denim” Band, is set to close out the weekend event. Julie Millard Griffith (Sam’s Valley), lead guitar and singer, describes her band:  “Whether you’re rollin with the flow, or just wanna be country down to your soul – come enjoy”  Umbrella tables are set up for guests enjoyment – and pavement is available to spring into 50’s or country dance . . .

Courtesy shuttles, including the nostalgic Molly Trolley and Upper Rogue Community Center van, will pick up guests throughout Shady Cove.  Look for FREE “Park & Shuttle” signs.

For general information and a list of participating artists visit: http://www.upperrogue.org “click” on River ArtWalk information, call: 541-821-4700, or email: chamber@upperrogue.org

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Widely acclaimed as one of the most important progenitors of avant-garde rock music, Lou Reed has also long maintained a serious, though less celebrated, engagement with the visual arts dating back to his interactions with Andy Warhol and other luminaries of the 1960s NYC artworld. In more recent years, the former Velvet Underground frontman has developed a strong interest in photography, and DC art enthusiasts were given a glimpse of Reed’s camera work on Saturday evening as a solo exhibition entitled “Romanticism” opened at the Adamson Gallery. A large and diverse crowd was on hand, with many fans hoping to see the artist himself, who apparently had already left town having attended a private, invite-only opening reception the previous night. Still, most who stopped by the gallery on Saturday seemed to genuinely enjoy the opportunity to view a new, perhaps unexpected aspect of Reed’s protean cultural output.

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

“Romanticism” includes twenty-six untitled photographs made by Reed using a digital camera modified to capture infrared light, a part of the spectrum normally invisible to the human eye. The modestly-scaled landscapes and architectural images possess a strange, surreal beauty, as infrared rendering creates uncanny spatial and coloristic relationships amongst pictorial elements, with details of trees, clouds, and water seeming to “pop” in unusual ways. The title of the exhibition refers to a prominent 18th and 19th century European art movement in which painters, poets, and musicians reacted to the social, cultural, and ecological turmoil of the industrial revolution by celebrating the beauty and mystery of the natural world and the primacy of emotion, spirituality, and wonder as counterbalances to modernity’s pervasive rationalization. Reed’s photographs argue for the renewed relevance of the Romantic ethos in the contemporary, post-industrial world, as one image depicts a solitary figures taking refuge from hyper-urbanity on an eerily deserted riverbed, while another picture is dominated by a ruined castle that testifies to the frailty and impermanence of humanity in the face of time and nature.

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Unfortunately, the works on display at Adamson adhere so closely to the conventions of Romantic art that they fail to seem consistently fresh and interesting on an aesthetic level. In particular, the thematic and compositional tropes of Romantic painters such as Caspar David Friedrich are trotted out in a degree and manner that approaches pastiche. Conceptually, however, a productive (perhaps even provocative) irony is generated by Reed’s use of cutting-edge imaging equipment as the means by which to revisit an artistic movement that was resolute in its atavistic skepticism towards technology. With a gearhead’s fervor, Reed has declared that “I love digital. It’s what I’d always wished for. Being in the camera and experiencing the astonishing accomplishment of the creations of life sparked through the beauty of the detailed startling power of the glass lens. A new German lens brings a mist to me…A love that lasts forever is the love of the lens of sharpness.” This statement crystallizes the contrasts and contradictions at the heart of Reed’s current exhibition, wherein an homage to a pre-modern past is achieved with implements of postmodernity, while a Romantic yearning for the mystical coexists with late-capitalist commodity fetishism.

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

Lou Reed’s “Romanticism” Opens @ Adamson

all words and photos: Francis Chung
Source: www.brightestyoungthings.com

The arT of Nude: Travel Picks: World’s top 5 nude events

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
The arT of Nude: Travel Picks: Worlds top 5 nude events

The arT of Nude: Travel Picks: World's top 5 nude events

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) – If biking or swimming in the nude is your thing, apparently you are not alone with Nude Recreation Week this month celebrating its 32nd year — but participants advise not to forget the sunscreen.

To celebrate Nude Recreation week, travel website TripAdvisor has come up with a list of the top five nude events enjoyed by naturists internationally. Reuters has not endorsed this lists:

1. World Naked Bike Ride, Worldwide – June and July

Each year since 2004, bike riders have joined to celebrate cycling and protest a culture where cars are king. This year, in 20 countries around the world, participants advocated freedom from oil and fabric. Nude cyclists bared their bodies with messages painted on their backs, fronts and rears. One TripAdvisor traveler advises: “Remember the sunscreen … and those saddles will be hot, hot, hot, so cover them up before alighting, people!”

2. AANR World Record Skinny Dip, Across North America – July

Put more than 12,000 people shoulder deep in pools across North America without a stitch of clothing in sight, and what do you get? The “largest number of people skinny dipping at once,” now a category in the Guinness Book of World Records due to the American Association for Nude Recreation.

3. Nude Beach Olympics, Maslin Beach, Australia – January

Taking place on Australia’s sunny Maslin Beach in South Australia, the games are a celebration of Maslin’s status as first official nude beach in the country.

4. Running of the Nudes, Pamplona, Spain – July

PETA’s “Running of the Nudes” protests the cruelty of bullfighting with participants choosing to show a little skin in hopes that one day Pamplona’s bulls won’t have to. The runners don plastic bull horns, red scarves, and little else, to run the half-mile Pamplona course.

5. Black Rock Desert, Nevada, August – September

The annual Burning Man project is a self-proclaimed haven of self-expression, creativity and community. Drawing 50,000 people to the Black Rock Desert in 2008, huge works of art are generated at the event, namely the “Man,” which is burned on the final night as part of the process of restoring the area to its natural state, with no trace of the revelers. Participants often take advantage of the free-spirited attitude by getting nude.

(Editing by Patricia Reaney)
Source: www.reuters.com

It’s Not Easy Being Green

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

It’s Not Easy Being Green is actually a collection of four sharply-drawn short plays and a dance piece by Washington-area artists, all about relationships in an era of ecological consciousness. An understanding that our present environmental challenges can be resolved only at significant risk or sacrifice (or both) underlies most of the plays, and sweetens the conflict among the characters.

Of the four plays – all of which had their merits – the best is clearly Driving Green, a two-hander by Theater J Founding Artistic Director Martin Blank. It is a drive through heavy traffic, taken by a conventionally liberal employee of an environmental nonprofit (Jill Levin) and her disgruntled husband (Matt “Slice” Hicks), an employee of Big Oil. Starting with his desire to turn on the air conditioning and counter the effects of the sweltering day, they needle each other in ways both personal and political, neatly managing to lay out most of elements of our national debate over the environment. There is a happy ending, for them, if not for us. It’s not exactly George and Martha, but it’s sharper dialogue than you’ll see in most short plays, or on TV. The writing is full of clever observations and unexpected developments, and Levin and Hicks give it full justice. A good play, well performed.

Hicks – whose work is one of the great pleasures of It’s Not Easy Being Green – also appears in another funny piece, Catherine O’Connor’s Manifesto. This is the story of a conceptual artist (Q. Terah Jackson) who intends to destroy all of his possessions and live a life totally divorced from material belongings – while being filmed by someone from the local art gallery (Jenny Donovan). Hicks plays a man newly made homeless by the sinking economy who wouldn’t mind some of those material belongings for himself, thank you very much. It is easy and fun to ridicule the pretensions of abstract “art statements”, and O’Connor has at it with great verve. Jackson’s performance, though, is a little over the top. When doing bombast, I recommend application of the Ralph Kramden Rule of Limitation: Unless you’re a better actor than Jackie Gleason – and you’re not – don’t make your character more bombastic than Ralph Kramden was in The Honeymooners.

The other two short plays are Ali Walton’s Use Unknown and Trash Talk by Ben Kingsland. The latter play is a dialogue between a garbage can (Carolyn Sagatov) and a recycling bin (Mary C. Davis, a little shrill for my taste). The play is better than I am making it sound in this brief description: Kingsland captures the holier-than-thou attitude of some environmentalists and puts it in the recycling bin. The garbage can, on the other hand, is earthy and winsome, thanks in large part to Sagatov’s performance and some excellent, uncredited costuming and makeup.

Use Unknown is a journey to the future, where Azania Dungee is an employee of a museum whose subject is – us. She and Matt Dewberry play an enormously appealing couple who explore their feelings about twenty-first century homo sapiens while also exploring their feelings about each other. The verdict on us: we were self-destructive schmoes, but at least we had passion. On each other? Stay tuned. The play is a little longer than it has to be, and its assumption that the future will be less passionate than the present – a common one in science fiction – is without evidentiary basis, but Walton gets us into the story without a whole lot of expositionary blather, and out of it with a minimum of fuss.

The four plays are bracketed by a brief ballet choreographed by Heather Anne Floyd and featuring Dewberry and Donovan, and some speechifying by a City bureaucrat and a guy who runs an environmental nonprofit. The ballet, which features a janitor, a garbage can, a broom, and trash, is funny and delightful. The speechifying, not so much so. The speechifiers may have noble purposes, and even do noble things, but the rules for them are the same as they are for all artists at the Fringe, whether they be writers, choreographers, directors or performers: speak to a purpose, acknowledge complexity, bring your work to a conclusion, and get off the stage.

Pairing Two Passions, Brunello di Montalcino and Oil on Canvas

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
Brunello di Montalcino, Castello Romitorio

Brunello di Montalcino, Castello Romitorio

Wine can be paired with many things other than food. For example, wine is paired fantastically with friends, ambiance, and art. For Sandro Chia, wine pairs with art like peanut butter with jelly. If you were in the art scene in New York city in the 1980’s, then you know Sandro Chia. Born in Florence, Italy, Sandro Chia studied art through-out Europe and turned things around in New York City during the retro-era. When youngsters were running around with pigtails and mismatched converse, Sandro Chia lead the movement to bust the art scene out of cubism and made real life figures cool again. After a hugely successful art project, Sandro Chia purchased a castle in Montalcino, Tuscany and started his affair with wine. Montalcino is a medieval town that sits on the top of a hill with vineyards grown all around the slopes. These days, Sandro is responsible for creating one of the top Brunello di Montalcino houses in Italy, Castello Romitorio. When asked about combining his two passions, Chia says, “they’re one in the same, both are alchemy from soil; wine is created from soil and so is paint.”

Brunello di Montalcino is a world-renowned wine made with a clone of Italy’s native Sangiovese grape, commonly known in Chianti. Because of the unique terroir and microclimate of Montalcino, the Sangiovese grape grew smaller, darker, and more intense. They called this little dark version of the Sangiovese grape, Sangiovese Grosso, a.k.a. Brunello. Brunello di Montalcino has specific rules, it must be made of 100% Sangiovese Grosso and aged 4 years prior to being released. Brunello di Montalcino tends to be an extracted, intense, bold, and complex wine. Not all Brunello’s are created equal. Style, complexity and characteristics differ with Brunello depending on the side of the slopes they come from and the wine making philosophy.

Castello Romitorio Brunello di Montalcino is an elegant and robust Brunello. The wine philosophy of Castello Romitorio is to create a Brunello that is true to its terroir and origin, but made with the advanced winemaking technology to create the best of both worlds, old and new. With many years of high scores and cult-like followings, Castello Romitorio never fails with their award winning Brunello di Montalcino. Not only is the juice amazing, the paintings are Sandro Chia’s prints made specifically for the wine. Brunello di Montalcino should be aged 20 years before it’s consumed, but if you can’t wait, buy a few bottles and save one, at least one, you’ll thank me 20 years from now. If you pair your wine with ambiance, you can always enjoy Castello Romitorio Brunello di Montalcino at Casa Tua, Fratelli Lyon, or Vita.

Art review: ’60’s’ at Cardwell Jimmerson Contemporary Art

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

A 14-artist exhibition at Cardwell Jimmerson Contemporary Art is a fantastic time capsule that travels back to the 1960s to remind visitors that thinking about art exclusively in terms of masterpieces and superstars ignores lots of good stuff, including messy experimentation, struggle, self-discovery and goofiness. Simply titled “60’s,” the fascinating, often wonderfully funky show is also a good bit of revisionist history. It reveals the depth and complexity of an emerging art scene that has still not made it into the history books.

Well-known artists are represented by eye-opening early works. An untitled abstract painting from 1960 by John Coplans shows the artist, writer and editor as a capable colorist whose interest in stiff, interlocked geometry would soften, but never disappear, over his long career. “Power Plant,” a nearly 6-foot-square canvas by Barry Le Va, evokes Philip Guston and H.C. Westermann and filters both through Le Va’s lifelong focus on the power of line and its capacity for drama.

Lesser-known artists are represented by a high percentage of first-rate works. These include Roger Kuntz’s point-blank painting of the lines painted in the intersections of busy city streets; Ynez Johnston’s raw canvas that recalls ancient cave paintings; Ron Miyashiro’s three frighteningly sexual sculptures; and John Barbour’s six hard-edged abstractions, each snazzier than its neighbor.

Worthy if not utterly original pieces by such often-overlooked artists as Tom Eatherton, Michael Olodort, Jim Eller and Stan Bitters add depth and a sense of interconnectedness to a scene defined by great inventiveness and even more back-and-forth, up-and-down dialogue.

Two Blocks Festival Party: Melbourne

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
An arTwork by GhostControl

An arTwork by GhostControl

On Thursday July 16th, Melbourne central was overtaken by urban stylers to celebrate the street fashion and artwork of the iconic Melbourne shopping centre. Urban style has always had a place in the Melbourne fashion scene, however like any city, urban and street brands are often not given the recognition they deserve. Two Blocks party was invented to combat this, creating heightened awareness of street brands and stores such as 5cm, General Pants, Diesel and new Jeanswear store THAT. Brands such as Cheap Monday, Nobody, Superfine and Bassike were browsed in the shops that kept their doors open for party goers to investigate while sipping Tiger Beer or Skyy Vodkas. The attendees of the party combined media, retailers and fashionistas all with their own street edge. Black was the staple colour of the event, while military jackets (reminiscent of Michael Jackson?) shorts teamed with stockings and skinny jeans were the common outfits of both the guys and girls at the event.

An arTwork by GhostControl

An arTwork by GhostControl

Street artist GhostPatrol was creating artwork throughout the party, using felt tip markers to create a street graffiti piece. The live creativity process highlighted the intricacy and detail involved in street art which should not be underestimated purely due to it being labelled as “street.” DJ Peril spun RnB beats which are not commonly featured in Melbourne’s mainstream music scene, creating a novel urban atmosphere.

Overall, Two Blocks is part of an initiative to create awareness of Melbourne’s urban fashion, music and art scene. Street style, music and artwork have always been regarded as alternative however in a fashionable and modern progressive city like Melbourne, urban styling is highly regarded and sought-after. Two Blocks and the people who attended are lovers of all that is modern and street chic, a scene and aesthetic that will hopefully become even more recognised in the next few years.

This year’s regional a refreshing look at local art scene

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Petcha Kucha is an informal Japanese lecture format that allows one presenter 20 images and 20 seconds to discuss each. With as many as dozen lecturers, the idea is to bring myriad ideas and subject matter together without getting bogged down.

The “2009 Artists of the Mohawk Hudson Region” is much the same way: condensed and diverse. In the 76th annual survey of recent art made within a 100-mile radius of Albany, no single artwork dominates the two-floor gallery at the University Art Museum. A sparseness envelopes the 35-artist exhibit that’s usually jammed with well-known artists whose works tend to muscle out others. Though Petcha Kucha is roughly translated as chatter, the exhibit is quiet and understated.

That can be attributed to juror Mathew Higgs’ keen sense of tone, texture and form. Director of White Columns, an alternative arts space in Manhattan, Higgs chose “idiosyncratic” examples from 1,200 images submitted that display a strong identity on their own terms.

He’s included more new faces than in recent memory, a refreshing development for a show that has become predictable.

The weathered paintings of Marje Derrick, the quirky paper-mache snow globe of Gail Kort, the South Park-like drawings by Brian Cirmo, the whimsical fabric of Barbara Todd and the suspended burlap sachet by Georgia Wohnsen join sculptures, drawings and photographs by more established artists such as Sharon Bates, Harold Lohner and Jim Florsdorf.

For the most part, absent is hard-edged social realism, the heavily conceptual art so common today, and, except for Abe Ferrarro’s massive light switch in “One Morning I Woke Up with a Bright Idea,” there are not any elaborate multimedia installations.

What’s left is an exhibit that blurs the line between fine arts and traditional crafts in a homespun kind of way. More than a quarter of them take fabric, string, thread, construction paper — things more associated with home than a studio — and turn them into quirky objects with humor. It’s a lighthearted exhibit that revels in design for design’s sake.

The paper relief “Direction” by Laura Cannamela finds an eloquent depth of field through indentions in its plaster like substance, while the Persian wool “Fugue #19″ by Mark Olshansky uses stitches to illustrate geometric abstractions like rings on a tree.

Mocking the German tradition of figurines, Joan McKeon’s series of four clay statuettes add looks of exasperation, consternation, and downright suffering. All of them are achingly trapped in their bodies and roles, crying to get on with something different.

Lori Lupe Pellish’s “”Boy Dreams II” captures innocent’s lost in a decorative tapestry. Made with intricate weaves of fiber and dark, rich colors, it hangs like a canvass with deeply etched brushstrokes sensually conveying the coming of age. “Portable Forest Floor” by Dorene Quinn employs leaves, muslin, cotton and thread to contrast nicely with the spotted concrete floor at the entrance. Lying flat on the ground, it blends in so well; don’t be surprised if you find yourself sidestepping it.

Like “Portable Forest Floor,” the exhibit pleasantly catches you off guard through its hushed tones, subtle humor and homey designs. It is a gentle challenge to the notion that contemporary art has to be pushy and bombastic to succeed.

Tim Kane is a freelance writer from Albany and a frequent contributor to the Times Union.

Fast Talk

What: Slide show and lecture with artists from the Mohawk Hudson regional: Sharon Bates, Brian Cirmo, Richard Garrison, Kelly Jones, Harold Lohner and Dorene Quinn.
Where: University Art Museum, University at Albany. 1400 Washington Ave., Albany
When: 7-9 tonight
Cost: Free
Exhibit hours: 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, through Aug. 8
Contact: 442-4035; www.albany.edu/museum

It’s a New York Art ‘Renaissance,’ Argues Upcoming Show

Friday, July 24th, 2009
Curator Kathy Grayson

Curator Kathy Grayson

A sweeping art show opening in Rome this fall argues that right now is a glamorous and golden age of art in New York City, one of those moments that will be remembered someday as a turning point in art history. Really?

While Italian technology magnate Paolo Barzan certainly has his skeptics of this theory, the collector, well known on the Chelsea scene, will open a new contemporary art foundation outside of Rome in September with “New York Minute: Sixty Artists on the New York Scene.” The exhibition “isn’t a survey, it’s a show about a lifestyle, an art community,” about a glamorous group of artists who collaborate to turn their lives into their art, he says. His foundation, dubbed Depart, (for discuss, exhibit, and produce art) will team with Rome’s Museum of Contemporary Art for the exhibition and several related events in other cities.

The New York art scene is in the midst of “a renaissance,” says Kathy Grayson, curator of the show and director of Deitch Projects Gallery, where she met Barzan. The city is headquarters now to not one but three historically important art trends, says Grayson: “Street Punk” (Dash Snow, Kembra Pfahler, Terence Koh), “Wild Figuration” (Jules de Balincourt, Takashi Murata), and the “New Abstraction” (Dan Colen, Sterling Ruby). (Perhaps not incidentally, a spate of the artists in the show have shown at Deitch.) Prominent pieces will include a large work by Barry McGee, and the cop car that Spencer Sweeney suspended from the ceiling at Gavin Brown’s. The shop of “Downtown Don” Aaron Bondaroff will also be re-created, and Snow had been slated to be the D.J. at the opening party.

Not everyone’s signing on to the zeitgeist. “I don’t know if it’s a renaissance … it’s a crew,” says Todd Levin, director of art-advisory firm Levin Art Group and curator of a show currently up at Marianne Boesky Gallery. “The show will be au courant, but some of these artists are selling for six- or seven-figure prices with one or two gallery shows under their belt.”

Whether this is a key moment in art history, we’ll find out later — but in the meantime, Barzan invites artists to debate it with him, and will be sponsoring a residency program in Rome this fall.
nymag.com

Chinese art – not a bust

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Beijing artists and gallery owners say the economic downturn will improve quality.

BEIJING — Fabien Fryns, who runs the F2 gallery in Caochangdi village on the outskirts of Beijing, does not look like a man who is worried about the financial crisis.

“The middle has dropped out of the market,” said Fryns, discretely smoking a cigar in the gallery’s voluminous interior garden, “but the top and the bottom are both strong.”

What is “the middle”? Pieces from $30,000 to $500,000, according to Fryns.

Compared to the stock market, or nearly any other place one can put one’s money these days, Chinese contemporary art still looks like a very good investment. Recent art auctions in Hong Kong have registered sales at the high end of their estimates, even though the targets the auction houses are setting for themselves are less ambitious today than previous years.

The owners of some of the best Beijing galleries said the shakeout promises to be a positive development for dealers, but also for artists. No one likes a bubble and there was growing concern that easy riches were destroying creativity by encouraging Chinese artists to go after major sales, rather than the real thing.

Li Xianting, the former editor of the magazine China Fine Arts who is considered the spiritual father of the contemporary art movement, said media hype transformed many artists into “money celebrities” and produced a twisted form of art.

Pan Xing Lei, a sculptor and painter who recently returned to Beijing from New York, said the financial crisis would weed out less serious artists.

“The artists who are serious can take this time to reflect and to develop their ideas,” he said. “The others will go back to their villages, or do something else.”

The craze over contemporary Chinese art began to trigger serious waves on the international art scene in 2005, after the auction house Sotheby’s established an Asian contemporary art department and began buying up works. Many of the artists were reacting to the Tiananmen Square massacre and grappling with the wrenching changes in Chinese society, a fact that made them especially interesting as an emerging China began to make its influence felt in other domains.

“The relationship was becoming difficult because many of the artists were spoiled,” Fryns said. “The scene in the last few years was crazy. You were given an hour to decide if you wanted to buy a piece.”

In March 2006, an auction that was expected to bring in $6 million raised $13 million. In 2007, a single painting, “Executioner,” by Yue Minjun, famous for his cynical-realist political pop caricatures of himself with a frozen smile, went for $5.9 million, up from the $32,200 the original owner had paid a decade earlier.

With results like that, China’s own millionaires, many of them newly minted, began buying art mostly as investment.

“None of them had time to study what it was that was making contemporary art so successful,” Fryns said, “so they bought the pieces that were going for the highest prices.”

A sprawling gallery complex known as 798, which occupies a former military factory complex, became the third most popular tourist destination in Beijing. By the time it had succeeded, however, the more exclusive galleries and many of the more serious artists had already moved to more remote art villages, including Songzhuan and Caochangdi, where F2 is located.

Brian Wallace, who runs the Red Gate Gallery in an ancient guard tower on a remnant of the city’s original Ming wall, noted that 798 seems to be evolving from gallery space to retail space. But Wallace had no doubt that China will continue to inject enormous creativity and professionalism into the contemporary art scene.

“Art is a career path in China,” Wallace said. “It is like being a doctor or a lawyer.”

The recession’s impact on real estate speculation connected to art may be a different story. Beijing’s dazzling Today Art Museum, the city’s first independent museum focusing on contemporary art, will probably succeed. But a flashy nearby gallery complex known as 22 Art Plaza International, which had intended to capitalize on the museum’s attraction, stands largely empty.

Fryns said F2 and other leading galleries prefer the more remote location at Caochangdi, because the space is reasonable, and there is a lot of it. A collector who has flown to Beijing, ready to spend a million dollars or more on a painting, has no difficulty finding the location.

“We don’t get the drop-in crowd, the casual passers-by, the young couple with cameras, but that is not what we’re looking for,” Fryns said.

And Fryns is convinced that in the long term, the best art will continue to hold its value. “There is very little quality material coming on the market today,” he said. “People are holding on to what they have. There are a lot of newly wealthy Chinese billionaires. Once they have bought everything else, a certain number will turn to contemporary art. They will want to collect the best work that is Chinese, and there is a limited supply of that.”

By William Dowell – GlobalPost
Source: www.globalpost.com

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