Posts Tagged ‘contemporary arT’
Sunday, September 27th, 2009
When is a door not a door? When it’s ajar … or perhaps when it is shattered like glass. This piece is all the more surreal for being situated in a minimalist modern white room in what could well be the interior of a conventional contemporary house. Though artists might recognize this unusual frame job as artwork, this is doubtless not what carpenters mean when they refer to rough framing a wooden door.
Puns and plays on words aside (or perhaps inside), artist Leandro Elrich has quite an elegant way of shattering our expectations (so to speak) in works like this one, where the properties of one material are experimentally applied to a familiar object made from another substance. The last thing a viewer expects is for an almost boringly ordinary door to crack and crumble like a sheet of glass.
Knobs away! What appears to be a large door knob rests on the floor in front of the broken shards (still sitting loosely in their frame). Other works by Elrich likewise take typical settings, household furnishings and home fixtures like windows, ladders and curtains and add twists that turn these common situations and objects into visually and conceptually challenging works of art.
Source: dornob.com
Tags: arT, arT projects, arThou, arTwork, contemporary arT, elegant arT, wood arT, wooden arT Posted in arT | No Comments »
Friday, September 25th, 2009
 A public-art experiment is taking London’s art scene by storm. The project? Giving 2,400 people each an hour to do whatever they like in the city’s most bustling square.
Twenty-three feet above London’s Trafalgar Square, a girl with long blonde hair stands on a platform, dressed as a mermaid. It’s 4:30 a.m. on a chilly Tuesday, and the square is still mostly empty aside from a few stragglers. The mermaid holds up a series of cardboard signs promoting a campaign for vegetarianism by the animal rights organization PETA.
At 5 a.m., a cherry-picker rises from the square, and she steps onto it. A lady from Yorkshire, less scantily clad, steps out with a wooden frame taller than she is. She spends the next hour gluing brightly colored bits of cellophane onto the frame to create a massive piece of art.
An hour later, her time is up, and as the first commuters start to make their way across the square, the cherry-picker makes its trip again. It’s sunny now, and the cellophane artist is replaced by a man in his early thirties, who demonstrates fencing moves with a heavy-looking sword.
All day and night for 100 days this summer and through October 14, the cherry-picker makes its hourly round trip, each time placing someone new onto the platform in London’s busiest square, where they are free to do almost anything they like. This experiment in public art, called One and Other, is the brainchild of sculptor Antony Gormley. Launched on July 6, the project aims to turn everyday people into art, putting them at eye-level with the long-dead generals who look sternly on from their own platforms, at Trafalgar Square’s other three corners. And so far, it’s a huge hit.
Over the course of the project, 2,400 randomly selected volunteers—selected from over 32,000 applicants—will scale what Gormley refers to as “the plinth.” Once they’re up there, they hula-hoop, play guitar, unfurl banners, release balloons, sing, paint, chat to the crowd—basically doing whatever they like. Inevitably, this means a handful of people have publicly stripped (one was politely asked to dress again by police). For others, this has meant dressing as a ninja to spend an hour knitting in the dead of night. Together, they form a sort of living portrait of a city at a time when the world could use a little more art in its life—and a little perspective.
 Future or future? Present, but subtly discuised beneath.
Antony Gormley made his name with large-scale public artworks: his Angel of the North—a 66-foot steel sculpture modeled on his own body Event Horizon, — is possibly Britain’s best-known sculpture. His pieces, Another Place and Event Horizon, place eerie, multiple life-size casts of his body along stretches of windswept northern beach, and over 31 London rooftops respectively (Event Horizon was a temporary piece). In its repetition of human forms, One and Other is very much a continuation of his ideas.
Even by his standards, though, it’s ambitious. Launching the project, Gormley said he was aiming to create a “portrait of the U.K. now” that offers “the chance for you and I to have a look at the world from the point of view of art.” (He won’t actually perform, however; he hasn’t been randomly selected.)
Londoners have become addicted to the spectacle, with anywhere from two to 200 passersby gawking at any given time. The project is also streamed live and saved online, where a vocal community of plinth-watchers discuss each person on the site, on Twitter, and on Facebook, coining phrases such as “plichés” (for clichéd plinth behavior) as they go.
Part of the project’s appeal is the unpredictability of what might unfold. Shortly before 11 p.m. on a Monday night, while a lady on the plinth holds up placards giving thanks for her kidney transplant, a white-haired man named Tom tells me he makes the trip to Trafalgar Square from north London a couple of times a week, just to see what’s happening. “I just like it. It’s something different, isn’t it?
Standing nearby, a talkative, compact man called John looks wistfully up at the plinth and relives his moment of glory to anyone who will listen: The previous Saturday afternoon, he dressed in a Union Jack and threw 200 roses to the crowd in memory of Princess Diana.
People get hooked on plinth-watching, even from further afield. Anthony, a neuropsychologist, tells me by e-mail that he hasn’t visited the plinth, but, “I try to watch the 2 a.m., 3 a.m., 4 a.m., and 5 a.m. slots online each night,” he says, “with a particular affinity for the 5 a.m. dawn slot.” He explains that he became a regular viewer after watching one lady, who hummed to the square at 3 a.m. “It was without a doubt the best piece of performance art I have ever seen… I got ‘it’—what Gormley was wanting this to be.”
So what does Gromley’s portrait of the U.K. show? Person by person, it picks out a picture of a nation that’s by turns earnest and eccentric, attention-seeking and contemplative. Hundreds of people use their hour to raise money and awareness for good causes, while others take the chance to show the world their singing or juggling, or to spread a little sunshine with bubbles and balloons.
Perhaps inevitably, as the project has gone on, the bar has been raised as people realize that others really are watching. Plinthers from outside London have found they’re the talk of their towns, appearing on local news and in the papers. Particular performances have been keenly discussed in letters pages of London papers and on Twitter, while highlights from each week make it onto a weekly TV show about the project. And over time, the banners have gotten bigger, the weird has gotten wackier, and the plinth has become a platform.
While at first many got up just to be there, now plinthers aim to be seen. These figures are nothing like Gormley’s other sculptures, silent and faceless: They’re noisy, whether for a cause or just for the feeling of an hour in the spotlight.
One and Other is a product of its age. It takes place both live and online; on the one hand it’s intimate — living, breathing and made up of people like you and me — while on the other hand it’s curiously anonymous, scrutinized and commented on through the internet, every hour recorded and watched by people from all over the world. It aims to celebrate ordinary people, but gives them an opportunity to show themselves as anything but ordinary.
As a contemporary art project, it’s been fantastically successful: More than 400,000 people logged onto the site in its first three weeks, while countless more have found themselves stopping to watch as they head through the square.
In some ways, it’s the perfect public monument to our short-attention–span society: if you’re bored or disappointed by a particular performance, not to worry. At the end of each hour of the day and night, the cherry-picker makes its way back up from the square to the edge of the 23-foot platform, a person steps off the plinth, and another steps on, ready to begin their hour as a living work of art.

Photos by (in order) flickr users paulsimpson1976, mittfh, and pikerslanefarm.
From the blogger : Isn’t that unbelievably arThou!
Tags: Anthony Gormley, arT, arT project, arThou, contemporary arT, London arT, Trafalgar Square arT Posted in arT | No Comments »
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.
Tags: arT, arT exhibition, arThou, Cardwell Jimmerson, contemporary arT, masterpiece, paintings Posted in arT | No Comments »
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
Tags: Albany arT, arT event, arT gallery, arT installations, arT museum, arT show, arThou, arTists, contemporary arT, new york arT, NY arT, painings Posted in arT Events | No Comments »
Thursday, July 16th, 2009
 Bradley “Carney,” terra cotta clay, glaze, wire and ceramic decals by Kansas artist Ben Ahlvers.
Currently showing at Shy Rabbit Contemporary Arts in Pagosa Springs is an exhibit not to be missed. Paper & Clay 2 presents work by 15 artists from nearby and faraway, assembled together in an exhibition spotlighting contrasting materials and varying artistic approaches. As unusual as it is to find a contemporary art space nestled in the tall pines of a light industrial district in Pagosa Springs, so too is it surprising to find this quality of art on display in our geographically isolated region. Leave it to Shy Rabbit to bring fresh and innovative ceramic and print works together for a captivating display.
The theme that weds Paper & Clay 2 is perhaps the reason for the show’s excellence. Gallery owners Denise and D. Michael Coffee set out to acknowledge “the role that art educators and mentors play in the shaping of generations of artists.” To this end, the exhibit showcases the work by ceramic artists who have studied at Ohio University in Athens with internationally known ceramic artist Brad Schwieger. That’s the “clay” part of the exhibit – and it’s thought-provoking and fun.
“Paper” refers to the reductive ink prints (on paper) created by three artists who have studyied this unique printmaking method with D. Michael, a printmaker (and ceramicist) who developed the process. This is the second year that the Coffees have focused their efforts on bringing high-quality ceramic art and prints together for this event, showing emerging artists chosen by influential teachers in each medium.
The inherent material differences between paper and clay set the tone for the viewing experience. Paper is fragile. The decision to hang the prints bare, without frames, was a practical one and serves to amplify the delicate nature of the paper as well as the directness of the monoprint process. Fired clay, on the other hand, is durable. The glazes and surface textures on many of the works, however, offer a different impression.
Joe Davis has applied textures to his ceramic sculptures that are so fragile that it’s hard to believe that they are, well, hard. His amorphously shaped forms, crafted through a slip-casting process, reinforce this softness. Their fetish finishes in designer colors, like Pepto Bismol pink, lemon yellow and avocado, add another layer of oddness to them. Davis’ sculptures allude to physiology and anatomy with their bulbous, phallic and lobed forms, titled “Pumper,” “Bulb Boll” and “Blue Sqwyrt.” They seem to be equally informed by the unconscious mind, sourced purely from the imagination. They are strange, curious and playful objects.
At the other end of the aesthetic spectrum is the ceramic sculpture of Steve Schaeffer. His minimalist work is inspired by the landscape and simply titled “Warm Fire” and “Cold.” These elemental forms combine round and smooth with rough and earthy. This juxtaposition of form and surface implies a harmony of opposing forces. The elegant, elongated orbs that nest within their heavy bases seem to simultaneously ascend and rest, reinforcing the balancing of opposites. In his artist statement Schaeffer offers some insight into his choices: “The forms define space, and their weight is connected to the landscape they are inspired by. My work is about the spatial relationships I’ve experienced in nature and, in turn, the work has become a voice for those landscapes.”
While Schaeffer’s interest lies in the natural world, Ben Ahlvers is preoccupied with human nature. The sculptures are odd portraits, or heads, which is an appropriate choice for his psychological expressions. “Carney” is a funk art-inspired ceramic bust of a cigarette-smokin,’ beer-drinkin,’ hot-rod-lovin,’ 5-o’clock-shadow-wearin’ guy who is surrounded by a ring of missile-like darts. Ahlvers is interested in a sort of twisted whimsy. He writes of his work, “The good, the bad and the ugly … get exposed. Sarcasm, humor, fear, honesty, dishonesty, nostalgia are layered in the pieces.” As a father of three boys, he finds family life to be the major source of inspiration for his art.
Children and family relationships are the inspiration, too, for Juanita Ainsley’s vibrantly colored reductive-ink and mixed-media prints. A child psychologist by profession, Ainsley creates images that are sophisticatedly naïve and possess an aesthetic ease that is grounded in a child-like perspective. The compositions are busy with layers of images of animals, pottery, people and patterns that are compartmentalized into their separate areas on the paper. Ainsley continues her stream of consciousness process by drawing with ink, chalk, oil pastel, charcoal, pencil and, of course, crayon, adding more imagery and color to the print.
Underneath the playful elements of her work, discomfort can be sensed. Perhaps Ainsley is pointing to a world in which children feel boxed in and overwhelmed, a place not of their making. Perhaps she is addressing the powerless and innocent aspect in each of us. Either way, her solution to use creativity and the power of personal expression to create a world she wants to live in is admirable and inspiring.
Take the drive to Pagosa to see this show – I’m bettin’ it’ll be worth the trip!
Written by Jules Masterjohn
Source: www.durangotelegraph.com
Tags: arT, arT gallery, arThou, arTist, clay arT, contemporary arT, paper arT, Shy Rabbit Posted in arT | No Comments »
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