Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Scope NY Fair 2010

Scope NY 2010

As you approach there is a man pouring chalk, interpreting the tibetan mandala tradition.

Joe Mangrum
Joe Mangrum
Joe Mangrum
Jared Lindsay Clark
Here we see Jared's porcelain knick-knacks glued together, and painted . . .

Jared Lindsay Clark
Paper cut outs from magazine ads.   
in maybe the same realm, but more street:  graffiti artist EVOL does these carefully masked spray paintings on found cardboard.  the brown from the material is left unpainted, for the most part
EVOL
Really great paintings, at first I thought it was a photograph, then a painting, then i saw the cardboard last.
It seems like it could easily become a gimmick, but these still feel fresh.  there were four or five of them hung in a row.  
Yep, I just couldn't get enough.  Gotta love when old crappy cardboard sits in a nice white frame, and it holds its own.  
had enough yet?
Madeline Stillwell
Kind of a new cyber take on Carolee Schneeman's 1967 Body Collage.  and by Cyber i mean using old clunky office computers and keyboards, kind of like the Japanese cult  Tetsuo: The Iron Man meets 3rd wave feminism?


Caralee Schneeman Body Collage 



from Tetsuo: The Iron Man

This piece was nice.  A Lebanese artist currently working in Germany.  


Alex Rodriguez

The paintings resembles books, or magazines, about art.  You could do a group show just using this trope.  
who else?
This piece is called "9 Rings of Saturn".  Spot On
A small guy I found in a niche somewhere, didn't have a label.  



Andrea Salvatori 
The moon made out of porcelain.  
Soviet Georgian born painter. 
Although at first arresting, (and of course I love the reference to a "too cool for school" rock band) it lost its appeal to me rather quickly.  It is large, maybe 7 x 10 feet.  

detail of the painting above.  the canvas is wallpapered with paintings of invoices, records, and statements.  
Kim Dorland again
she had a large presence at Scope also.  This painting was large.  The paint comes out at least a few inches from the canvas in certain parts.  Sasqatch sitting for a portrait, for an infrared camera . . . 

Ivan Puig
This one (which I love) is part of a Public Sculpture Intervention series.  I'm nominating it for best in show . . .



Diego Benavente
I couldn't find much on this young Chilean artist.   
These are digital print/painting hybrids, as explained by the accommodating Turkish gallerist.  A problem with waiting so long to write is that I forget some of the details of these works.  nevertheless they were sweet, I do remember that.   
This was a play on the paranoid idea that some Americans have that Obama is secretely a muslim infiltrator in the White House.  here the artist depicts him removing his shoes for prayer, as if it were true.  The image is perspectivally skewed, the floor is flattened down to form a surreal stylized dreamy effect.  I want to thank the folks at X-ist gallery for spending some time talking with us.

The A.M.F. Project presented DIY fashion of Krel2go, a project by Daria Brit Shapiro and Karelle Levy, involving custom fit knit garments made on the fly.  

Ok ok, I know what you're thinking (maybe), " another crocheted yarn artist?"  Well this one combines a strange mix of video work with yarn.  You have to go to his website to see what I mean,  the video work is absent here.
A close up of a fire extinguisher. 
Builds sets out of paper and other simple materials, for photos.  Sort of a more magical, theatrical Thomas Demand.  This picture, which was quite large, was from a series entitled Udongo.  

Peppe Perone
Its a wood sculpture with sand glued to the surface.

A Brooklyn sculptor interested in horror and B-movies with a Paul McCarthy feel. 

Pierre St Jacques
A film maker who makes exquisite, quiet shorts.  In the ones on display here there was always this tension between two people, with large amount of focus given to cues of an individuals' presence :  footsteps in a stairwell, unrequited stares into a void, hesitation as someone is mulling over or deciding.  There is a narrative, but it is buried under a dense language of filmic ontology.  The piece pictured above, Traveling between Spring and Fall, has a man get fitted for a suit, lose his briefcase, arrange items on a dinner table with his mirror image twin staring at him, and tight rope walk between two buildings.  
In this 2 channel piece, "and/or",   the man plays the character "and", while the woman plays the part of "or".  He is restless, constantly jabbering, busying himself to no avail.   She is pensive, waiting, quiet - both seem lonely as they brush by each other on the street.  
Back at ADA gallery on the way out, I found this pinball machine getting some attention from some kids.  John at ADA says it's not quite done, and he had to fix a knob that kept falling off.   other than that, the thing worked like a charm.  
What kind of style of decor would you call that?  Arts and Crafts meets Neo-Rococo?


Okay, y'all
Thanks for reading.  I will soon post on more up to date shows.  Until then, keep on truckin!


Saturday, March 13, 2010

Independent Fair 2010

Independent Art Fair 2010.

For those of you maybe not aware of the scene here, the Independent Art fair was put on as extension of a year long project spearheaded by gallerist Elizabeth Dee entitled X Initiative. For the past year, this space has been used for shows, lectures, and events in a cooperative spirit with artists.   A lot of it had a stick it on the wall kind of feel, the final show was an open BYOA (bring-your-own-art) event.

The space they have taken over is the old Dia building in Chelsea, which was one of the first Chelsea art pioneers. Robert Irwin's 98 installation 'Homage to the Square3' at the Dia was 0ne of the most moving, life-changing works of art my then young eyes had seen.

So, now we have Dia sadly gone, and the Independent carrying on the tradition in a brave new economically shook world. Much of the work was less immediately marketable - scatter art, large installations, performance, and collaborations replaced paintings. And very few of the paintings were pretty or effusively polished like you would see at any of the other fairs.

As you enter, a neon sign, of desperation or hope?:


Bruce High Quality Foundation
The rat, usually reserved for union strikes and set up on the sidewalk. Here it took a break from the street, but not from complaints.  BHQF provided a soundtrack of complaints and snarky comments for the visitor on the first floor.  The arms moved mechanically, and he occasionally deflated, during which time the abusive soundtrack stopped. A lot of the work of "Bruce ..." I don't have a problem with.  Some of it I really like, like the recent Off-Broadway (but Broadway, Brooklyn) production of 'Cats, Bed-Stuy Do or Die'. The video of a slacker, dopey theatrical perfomance is interspersed with interviews of the players - residents of the neighborhood talking about the changes effected by gentrification. Like much of their work, it is smart and doesn't try too hard to make its point.


Rirkrit Tiravanija

The first floor only has a few pieces. There is also a coffee bar, fingerfood, and books for sale. You can play ping pong on this table, which happens to be a piece by Rirkrit Tiravanija
Its surface is mirrored.


Much of the work was hung in a way that made it difficult to tell when one piece ended, and another began.  This seemed to change floor by floor, with the top floor being the most traditional.  Here on the second floor I found this piece of yarn suspended tightly in the air, somehow creating tension among the loosely gathered items all over the floors and walls. It was held tight by a near invisible piece of fishing line, a metaphor for how the show itself was held together by the gossamer of just enough effort and time.

I liked how it referenced Fred Sandback's yarn pieces, but changed them a little. Here is a music staff of 5 strands, nearby an artist sat with a laptop tweaking knobs and making some live noise music. Sorry, I couldn't figure out who was responsible for any of this.


The thread hung in the air...
I'll call these the lava paintings, because that's what they looked like. I'm not sure I liked them, but they stood out as paintings in a fair of other things.
Lava paintings, there were four, they all looked like this.

If you walked through this corridor, the dude leaning against the wall would tell you the floor is the piece, rip a page from a book he had and give it to you. It turned out all the pages from the book were the same.

Neon Sculpture

Lisa Anne Auerbach
These were nice. The artist knit these outfits, subtly changing the words in commonly worn slogans.

the one on the left has Metallica lyrics.


Ryan Trecartin
There was all of this stuff nicely placed in the environment where his video played. It was not crowded like in the Younger than Jesus show. It was relatively spare, and the items he chose were nice to look at. That foot is cast plastic around seashells. It sits in a sand box with some chairs.

Ryan Trecartin
Actually I didn't even watch the video, the sculptures were good enough for me. Also, I find his videos give me a wierd feeling.  When I watch his work, I get tired and strung out, like I actually become one of his generation Y characters who needs a Red Bull.


Ryan Trecartin
Sorry my iphone made this photo blurry, I will take a real camera next time, promise!  The glass is shattered from this cabinet, and is arranged underneath it like its being hidden or contained by the case itself. Liked that.

Strange sculpture that I found interesting. Wood and hinges.

Stuff cut up and propping up sheets of glass.

Eva Rothschild
Okay now we're getting into identifiable objects with some space around them. That means I can (successfully?) take pictures of them. Here's Eva Rothschild with an upside down tree looking thing.

Eva Rothschild
First thought, its a paper sculpture. a closer look reveals its carved wood. OK, got it.
A side view reveals the sculpture represents a skull in the paper bag (that's actually wood). The gallerist didn't seem to acknowlege that this form was a skull, but it was obviously clear to me.

Eve Sussman and Rufus Corporation
Basically, the artists made a recreation of famed russian astronaut Yuri Gagarin's office. The real office is preserved as a museum. Yuri was the first person in Earth's orbit. Eve Sussman and Rufus Corporation have developed a travelogue and video in an attempt to address the artists' desire for space travel. Go Here to read about other projects, like their failed attempt to gain access to the Baikonur Cosmodrome.


Eve Sussman and Rufus Corporation


His web site is www.slottttttt.net (with 7 t's, easy right?) So Christian was very nice to talk to. He explained the three works he had on view, in a manner that left a lot open to interpretation. His sculptures adapted themselves to word games; he titled the piece above before he made it: "Two Images, TwoBalls", and then used the title as the parameter of the piece.




Christian Frosi


Christian Frossi
Against the wall two slides support each other, with the remaining light shining on them. I couldn't make out what the images were.


Christian Frossi
He made this tube out of fabric and stuffed both of it's ends with umbrellas.


This wasn't actually at the Independent Fair, but across the street at Friedrich Petzel Gallery. As I was talking with Christian Frossi, this work came up. Is called Strip the Auctioneer. The piece itself is being sold at Christies , whereby the man selling the work has to take off articles of his clothing, and put them up for bid, piece by piece. 
"These are a my favorite shoes"
Some of the most traditional sculpture at the Independent.



Miriam Cahn
This really reminded me of Izumi Kato, who was in the Takashi Murakami curated Little Boy Exhibit at the Japan Society.


Christoph Weber
Aluminum scatter art.

I'm not sure if this was the same person, but it was nearby the aluminum.
Much of the work at this fair is so close to the line of being bad, that I'm not sure if I like it. Maybe that wasn't the point. Maybe the point was more about the open-ness in general, to accept more kinds of work. (Editor's note:  I went back and looked at more of the artist's work, and she is fantastic.  This piece is quite subdued by her standards, and maybe that fit the transitory nature and aim of this art fair better).

A notch in the rock holds the plywood.

Foam bust, reminds me of a Michelangelo face of Poseidon.

Virginia Overton
Here's a 'simple' idea, prints wrapped around flourescent lights. This piece was a nice surprise, the combination of light and texture of hair was mysterious.  The artist has been recently displayed at the Sculpture Center.



Koji Enokura
McCaffrey Fine Arts presented a trio of little known Japanese artists working in non-traditional photography in the 70's. This was gem of a presentation, and I will do more investigation into these artists. Here's Koji Enokura's image of a knife flying through the air.

Jiro Takamatsu
This was from a series of images depicting the artist (I assume) numbering each rock in the terrain.
Jiro Takamatsu
As if they were being catalogued for a museum.

I didn't get the artist's name, but its a combine of spraypaint, wall, canvas, newspaper.

-

Felt and silk flags.

This show had lots of installations with little information posted around them.

Duncan Campbell
This was an advertisement for a film, not an actual piece. A complete DeLorean, with flyers for Campbell's film on the trunk. The film is about the rise and fall of John DeLorean, Irish manufacturer of the automobile.


Duncan Campbell
Duncan Campbell
Boxes and bags deftly put in the passenger seat, as if it were in a parking lot doing some errands.
Jeppe Hein

This piece was also on display at the Sculpture center a few months before Olafur Elliason's mirror piece was placed in PS1 for his big MOMA/PS1 survey. It is very similar, as it is reflective milar stretched on a frame. Both pieces also spin slowly, turning and reflecting at the same time. I was glad to see this piece (in my mind the original) getting some more attention. I don't know who actually did which first, or even if it matters.
http://sculpture-center.org/exhibitionsExhibition.htm?id=10091
The back of the device

Manfred Kuttner
This German artist was born in 1937. I say thumbs up to this painting.

This artist is also on display just down the street at Andrew Kreps. Among the work there are pedestals that are bare, except for a 'out to lunch' sign. She gives an video interview where her face is continually and cleverly hidden from the camera. Its on YouTube.



Annette Kelm
When one picture of sunflowers doesn't do it, maybe four will. All of a sudden you have a field!
Annette Kelm


This is all graphite on paper

Here is a detail of the same drawing

So, in the last room, of the last floor, the best piece of the fair. A video, titled Con Leche, by Jordan Wolfson.
Digitally reproduced marching coke bottles with white liquid spilling out of their tops. The cokes walked though quiet streets and alleys, with the camera panning slowly.
the soundtrack was comprised of two voices, a woman's winding narrative on reincarnation, and an observer who occasional intervenes, commanding the talker to use more or less volume. The combinations of coke with milk, with crisp video and animation, with narrative and dream are unsettling and absorbing. The room was populated with a lingering audience, speechless and smiling.
Jordan Wolfson

Duncan Campbell
another shot, this one dedicated to Jesse Robinson

Dan Flavin
In the stairwells, a leftover piece from the Dia days.


Scope Art Fair coming next. Also updates on the Marina Abramovic and William Kentridge shows at MoMA.
Cheerio!