• selfportrait.net home
  • Blog
  • The Gallery
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Shop
  • About

Communications


Subscribe to antARTica by e-mail

RSS Feed RSS Feed

Gut reactions at Twitter

Secret club at Facebook


Regular Contributors

  • Alex Vadukul
  • Dylan Reid Pancer
  • Eddie Ubell
  • Gemma Hedegaard
  • Jonny Sutak
  • Mitch Swenson
  • Neel Senhauser
  • Paris Ionescu
  • Samson White
  • Selby Drummond
  • Selfportrait



Some News Links

  • Front: Books
    Source: Frieze Magazine Issues
    January 1

    Experimental magazines, absurdist writing and new fiction, the publishing highlights of 2011
  • Rhizome Presents Renowned Digital Artist Rafael Rozendaal in web-based VIP Art Fair
    Source: The Rhizome Frontpage RSS
    February 2

    Rhizome is pleased to present a solo exhibition of work by outstanding artist Rafaël Rozendaal, who is known for his trailblazing explorations of th. […]
  • Largest show ever of Claes Oldenburg’s path-breaking and emblematic early work opens
    Source: Recent News on Artdaily.org

    VIENNA.- With his humorous and profound depictions of everyday objects, Claes Oldenburg is one of the most important and popular artists since the lat. […]
  • Philosophical Doomcore
    Source: Mute
    January 24

      Objectively pessimistic or just plain grouchy? Schopenhauer’s ethics, which threw out positive conceptions of freedom and the human will, might p. […]
  • VIP Art Fair 2.0, Impressions 1.0
    Source: Art Fag City
    February 3

    First things first: it works! After a first year badly marred by technical problems, VIP Art Fair 2.0 has had a clean launch in 2012 and elicited only. […]
  • ***
    Source: n+1
    February 3

    The wife of an activist who died under strange circumstances,/ though more likely than not it was an accident,/ says to me that she literally finds he. […]
  • New Mobile Plan Pools Data On Unlimited Devices
    Source: Slashdot
    February 4

    Hugh Pickens writes "PC Magazine reports that Ting, a new reseller of Sprint's voice, 3G and WiMax services, has a new approach to mobile pricing tha. […]
  • London: Grayson Perry ‘The Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman’ at the British Museum extended through February 26, 2012
    Source: AO Art Observed™
    February 4

      Grayson Perry, The Frivolous Now (2011). Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro Gallery, London. Copyright Grayson Perry. Photo: Stephen White In. […]

New Critical Calendar
Coming Soon

  • More events coming soon…
  • View all upcoming events





  • Artists From The Gallery

    Jack Siegel - Make Out
    Jack Siegel - Make Out
    Jack Siegel - Casshole
    Jack Siegel - Casshole
    Jack Siegel - Standard
    Jack Siegel - Standard
    Jack Siegel - Buttons
    Jack Siegel - Buttons
    Eric Shaw, Untitled
    Eric Shaw, Untitled
    Eric Shaw, Room with De Kooning
    Eric Shaw, Room with De Kooning
    Jack Siegel - Library
    Jack Siegel - Library

  • Looking at Music

    December 25th, 2008
    By: Alex Vadukul
    Topics: Art in General

    This small, three room exhibit at the Moma is probably one of the most overlooked in the museum, especially with artists like Joan Miro and Van Gough currently on display. This is unfortunate because it is also one of the most interesting.

    Looking at Music chronicles some of the art that emerged as a result of the 60’s/70’s experimental sound revolution, a time when musicians were starting to use digital effects, dissonance, and minimalism in their work. Painters, composers, filmmakers, and writers began to take notice and were eager to implement these same elements into their own work.

    The first thing you see when you enter the exhibit is a haunting projection of John Lennon on the wall. He’s looking at you from under a dark mop of hair while he stands in the center of a courtyard. You can hear the crisp sound of cars and birds in the background. Slowly, he starts to open his mouth. “Hi,” he says, in a long drawn out growl. And you just feel like you spoke with John Lennon.

    It’s a piece by Yoko Ono, which is surprising of course, because her name is associated with the breakup of The Beatles and not interesting thought-provoking art.

    Also besides the entrance are a series of compositions by composer John Cage. At the time he was greatly influenced by eastern music, so he tried experimenting with obscure forms of musical notation. One “piece” is notated with a series of dots and circles spread across a graph paper. Two music students staring at it were able to make some sense of the thing, “well, that dot must be a staff, and that speck has to be a quarter note,” they observed.

    A contemporary of Cage’s, composer Nam Jan Paik, turned a mini television set into an abstract musical instrument. A bright white line is projected running diagonally across the TV screen. It stays this way, shining through the black. According to Paik the bright line is akin to what a single note of music would be like if it was sounded forever.

    There is a clipping from a 1965 issue of The Village Voice. A dark chalked drawing of a woman walks across the page, obscuring the article. The paper was printed that way, with a portion of the story almost impossible to read. This piece signifies how widespread the energy and excitement for experimentation was at the time. Even publications were willing to try something new.

    The last portion of the show examines the emergence of experimental music videos. In the “Penny Lane” video, by the Beatles, the band is shown roaming around London, traveling through gardens by horse, and finally having tea in the middle of a park. Strange stuff. In another music video, “Secret Agent Man,” by Devo, the band is shown wearing disturbing Ken Barbie-like masks as they rock out in a dingy factory basement.

    The best part of the exhibit however, is watching peoples’ reactions. A pleasant old lady, for example, put on headphones to listen to Steve Riech’s piece, “Come out,” from 1966. The piece consists of a looped voice, which is then slowly sped up to produce a blurring warbling trance. The lady started off with a smile, which then slowly turned into a bemused grin, with then turned into helpless confusion, and she was forced to take the headphones off.

    Comments     1 views
    blog comments powered by Disqus

      Categories

      • Art in General
      • Exhibitions/Openings
      • Interviews/Studio Visits
      • Non Art
      • PDFs
      • Science, Technology and Art
      • The Art Market
      • Theory and Criticism



      Poll

      Who's the intellectual heavyweight?

      View Results

      Loading ... Loading ...



      Sites of Note

      • aaaarg.org
      • air de paris
      • Art in the Age of Global Weirding
      • Art Observed
      • artbabble
      • Bidoun
      • Brian Holmes
      • ByStory
      • cms.MIT.edu
      • diarch.net
      • Edge.org
      • Farimani
      • Frieze Magazine
      • greylodge
      • How’s My Dealing?
      • hyperallergic
      • Independent Collectors
      • indexhibit
      • installationart.net
      • Lev Manovich
      • Medien Kunst Netz
      • mute magazine
      • nettime
      • parisionescu.tumblr.com
      • radicalart.info
      • Seth Godin
      • Slashdot
      • Texte Zur Kunst
      • The Independent Gaming Source
      • The Next Layer
      • Third Text
      • UbuWeb
      • VVORK





    Copyright © 2008, selfportrait.net