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Some News Links

  • Back: Ming Wong
    Source: Frieze Magazine Issues
    May 14

    REDCAT
  • You'll (N)ever Watch Alone
    Source: The Rhizome Frontpage RSS
    May 17

    Still from Art21 Telethon, May 2012 There's performance: immediate, rehearsed and present; then there's television: distant, canned, and broadcast. On. […]
  • Exhibition of masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris opens in Hong Kong
    Source: Recent News on Artdaily.org

    HONG KONG.- The Hong Kong Heritage Museum of the Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) will stage the "PICASSO - Masterpieces from Musée Na. […]
  • Delusions of Revolt: notes on the limits of aesthetic praxis
    Source: Mute
    May 14

        Anton Vidokle likes to think of himself as an artist and his various projects, which primarily fall under the umbrella of the e-flux enterprise,. […]
  • New Barnes Building Opens, Why People are Upset
    Source: Art Fag City
    May 16

    After years of controversy and legal battles, the Philadelphia-based Barnes Collection has moved. Its initiator, pharmaceuticals mogul Albert C. Barne. […]
  • Fresno
    Source: n+1
    May 18

    My parents moved us into an apartment complex in northwest Fresno called Cobblestone Village. This was the scaffolded edge of the city, only half a mi. […]
  • Social Networking: The New Workplace Smoke Break
    Source: Slashdot
    May 18

    snydeq writes "J. Peter Bruzzese sees a solution for organizations seeking to cut down employee time spent on social networks at work: treat social n. […]
  • Nicole Eisenman: Woodcuts, Etchings, Lithographs and Monotypes
    Source: ArtCat: Picks
    May 17

    PICKLeo Koenig, Inc.545 West 23rd Street, 212-334-9255ChelseaMay 24 - June 30, 2012Opening: Thursday, May 24, 6 - 9 PMWeb SiteIt is our great pleasure. […]
  • AO On Site Photoset and Video Tour – New York: Tom Sachs ‘SPACE PROGRAM: MARS’ at the Park Avenue Armory through June 17, 2012
    Source: AO Art Observed™
    May 17

    Tom Sachs and Kanye West at the opening of SPACE PROGRAM: MARS. All photos on site for Art Observed by Elene Damenia. Tom Sachs takes New York City to. […]

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  • Artists From The Gallery

    Eric Shaw, Untitled
    Eric Shaw, Untitled
    Dan Colen.jpg
    Dan Colen.jpg
    Jack Siegel - Standard
    Jack Siegel - Standard
    Jack Siegel - Library
    Jack Siegel - Library
    Jack Siegel - Casshole
    Jack Siegel - Casshole
    Jack Siegel - Nate Lowman
    Jack Siegel - Nate Lowman
    Jack Siegel - Gay Bar
    Jack Siegel - Gay Bar

  • The Incidental Person @ apexart – Jan 6

    January 3rd, 2010
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Exhibitions/Openings, PDFs

    The Incidental Person
    Curated by Antony Hudek

    January 6 to February 20, 2010

    291 Church Street
    New York, NY 10013 USA

    Opening reception: January 6, 6-8 pm

    With projects by: Ron Bernstein, Raphaële Bidault-Waddington, Luca Frei, Will Holder, Marysia Lewandowska, Gianni Motti, Brian O’Doherty, Joachim Pfeufer, Keiko Sei, Barbara Steveni, Megan Francis Sullivan, Neal White, and faculty and students from Portland State University MFA Art and Social Practice Concentration: Katy Asher, Katherine Ball with Alec Neal and Matthew Warren, Jennifer Delos Reyes, Harrell Fletcher, Constance Hockaday, Ariana Jacob, Hannah Jickling & Helen Reed, Laurel Kurtz & Sandy Sampson, The Print Factory, Eric Steen, Michelle Swinehart, Lexa Walsh, Jason Zimmerman

    Press release from: http://www.apexart.org/exhibitions/hudek.htm

    The late British artist John Latham (1921-2006) coined the expression “the Incidental Person” in the context of Artist Placement Group, known as APG, which he co-founded in 1966 with Barbara Steveni, Jeffrey Shaw and Barry Flanagan. Contrary to most artist placement schemes, APG emphasized process, interaction and the artist’s independence in relation to the host institution, rather than any short-term tangible outcome. Like an unbiased observer or a third-party mediator, the Incidental Person placed through APG in industry, government, education or the non-profit sector would negotiate the terms of the invitation from the institution in question and adapt the nature of her or his intervention accordingly. This incidental function, as Latham explained, “is more to watch the doings and listen to the noises, and to eliminate from the output the signs of a received idea as being of the work.” Latham stresses the incidental person’s approach, that is, a certain position or attitude vis-à-vis the context in which she or he is placed. In other words, the identity of the incidental person is secondary to the effect she or he has on a given situation, for the aim of the incidental person is not to be anything in particular but instead “to generate maximum public involvement, and maximum enthusiasm which goes with the involvement.”

    It is high time to pay renewed attention to incidentality as an effective approach to pressing societal issues. Away from the rudimentary right/left or liberal/conservative labels that paralyze governments and polarize communities, the incidental attitude is one of self-reflexiveness and acute, humble awareness of the complex networks of local pressures that inform a specific time and place. We like to assign tags to artists who engage with problematics that exceed the confines of the so-called “art world”, such as socially- or politically-engaged, relational, performative, etc. But these qualifiers only serve to quarantine the curious thinker-doer further from society at large, reinforcing the myth of the artist as exempt from participating in the “real world.” The incidental person, by contrast, sees no alternative between “art” and the activities that regulate social coexistence, such as talking, playing, eating, reading, teaching and listening. Indeed, “art” itself — as a word corresponding to a distinct class of objects or actions — dissolves, becoming just another term for the disposition of someone whose incidental relation to the context in which she or he intervenes is simultaneously internal and external: internal to the context’s unique dynamics, but sufficiently external to it to be able to see its relevance to broader questions of “life-practice” or “the everyday” (but such phrases, too, are merely expedient equivalents for something even more incidental).

    In recounting the origins of APG, Barbara Steveni has said that the initial incident occurred when Robert Filliou and Daniel Spoerri, who were staying with her and John Latham to prepare an exhibition in London, needed some found material. Despite the late hour, Steveni offered to collect whatever she could find at an industrial site beyond the city limits. Sifting through debris while the factory was in full activity, she experienced a “eureka” moment, as she put it: “Why aren’t we here? Not to pick up buckets of plastic, but because there’s a whole life that we don’t touch. This is what people go on about — academics, artists, politicians — but they go nowhere near it.” This exhibition includes projects by people who attempt precisely to “touch” what is “out there”, who, while meticulously attentive to the context at hand, refuse to hew to such distinctions as art/non-art, art/life or art/politics.

    Antony Hudek
    © 2009

    Comments

    List of 2010 Whitney Biennial Artists

    December 11th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Art in General

    This is shamelessly re-blogged from The New York Times:

    David Adamo
    Born 1979 in Rochester, New York; lives in Berlin, Germany

    Richard Aldrich
    Born 1975 in Hampton, Virginia; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Michael Asher
    Born 1943 in Los Angeles, California; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Tauba Auerbach
    Born 1981 in San Francisco, California; lives in New York, New York

    Nina Berman
    Born 1960 in New York, New York; lives in New York, New York

    Huma Bhabha
    JoshuaBorn 1962 in Karachi, Pakistan; lives in Poughkeepsie, New York

    Josh Brand
    Born 1980 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Bruce High Quality Foundation
    Founded 2001 in Brooklyn, New York

    James Casebere
    Born 1953 in East Lansing, Michigan; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Edgar Cleijne and Ellen Gallagher

    George Condo
    Born 1963 in Eindovern, The Netherlands/Born 1965 in Providence, Rhode Island

    Dawn Clements
    Born 1958 in Woburn, Massachusetts; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    George Condo
    Born 1957 in Concord, New Hampshire; lives in New York, New York

    Sarah Crowner
    Born 1974 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Verne Dawson
    Born 1961 in Meridianville, Alabama; lives in Saluda, North Carolina, and New York, New York

    Julia Fish
    Born 1950 in Toledo, Oregon; lives in Chicago, Illinois

    Roland Flexner
    Born 1944 in Nice, France; lives in New York, New York

    Suzan Frecon
    Born 1941 in Mexico, Pennsylvania; lives in New York, New York

    Maureen Gallace
    Born 1960 in Stamford, Connecticut; lives in New York, New York

    Theaster Gates
    Born 1973 in Chicago, Illinois; lives in Chicago, Illinois

    Kate Gilmore
    Born 1975 in Washington, DC; lives in New York, New York

    Hannah Greely
    Born 1979 in Los Angeles, California; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Jesse Aron Green
    Born 1979 in Boston, Massachusetts; lives in Boston, Massachusetts, and Los Angeles, California

    Robert Grosvenor
    Born 1937 in New York, New York; lives in Long Island, New York

    Sharon Hayes
    Born 1970 in Baltimore, Maryland; lives in New York, New York

    Thomas Houseago
    Born 1972, Leeds, England; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Alex Hubbard
    Born 1975 in Toledo, Oregon; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Jessica Jackson Hutchins
    Born 1971 in Chicago, Illinois; lives in Portland, Oregon

    Jeffrey Inaba
    Born 1962 in Los Angeles, California; lives in New York, New York

    Martin Kersels
    Born 1960 in Los Angeles, California; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Jim Lutes
    Born 1955 in Fort Lewis, Washington; lives in Chicago, Illinois

    Babette Mangolte
    Born 1941 in Montmorot (Jura), France; lives in New York, New York

    Curtis Mann
    Born 1979 in Dayton, Ohio; lives in Chicago, Illinois

    Ari Marcopoulos
    Born 1957 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands; lives in Sonoma, California

    Daniel McDonald
    Born 1971 in Los Angeles, California; lives in New York, New York

    Josephine Meckseper
    Born 1964 in Lilienthal, Germany; lives in New York, New York

    Rashaad Newsome
    Born 1979 in New Orleans, Louisiana; lives in New York, New York

    Kelly Nipper
    Born 1971 in Edina, Minnesota; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Lorraine O’Grady
    Born 1934 in Boston, Massachusetts; lives in New York, New York

    R. H. Quaytman
    Born 1961 in Boston, Massachusetts; lives in New York, New York

    Charles Ray
    Born 1953 in Chicago, Illinois; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Emily Roysdon
    Born 1977 in Easton, Maryland; lives in New York, New York, and Stockholm, Sweden

    Aki Sasamoto
    Born 1980 in Yokohama, Japan; lives in Brooklyn, New York

    Aurel Schmidt
    Born 1982 in Kamloops, British Columbia; lives in New York, New York

    Scott Short
    Born 1964 in Marion, Ohio; lives in Chicago, Illinois

    Stephanie Sinclair
    Born 1973 in Miami, Florida; lives in New York, New York, and Beirut, Lebanon

    Ania Soliman
    Born 1970 in Warsaw, Poland; lives in Basel, Switzerland, and New York, New York

    Storm Tharp
    Born 1970 in Ontario, Oregon; lives in Portland, Oregon

    Tam Tran
    Born 1986 in Hue, Vietnam; lives in Memphis, Tennessee

    Kerry Tribe
    Born 1973 in Boston, Massachusetts; lives in Los Angeles, California, and Berlin, Germany

    Piotr Uklański
    Born 1968 in Warsaw, Poland; lives in New York, New York, and Warsaw, Poland

    Lesley Vance
    Born 1977 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Mariane Vitale
    Born 1973 in New York, New York; lives in New York, New York

    Erika Vogt
    Born 1973 in East Newark, New Jersey; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Pae White
    Born 1963 in Pasadena, California; lives in Los Angeles, California

    Robert Williams
    Born 1943 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, lives in Chatsworth, California

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/10/arts/design/10whitney_list.html?_r=1

    Comments

    art vocab 12/09

    December 4th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Art in General, Featured Article, Non Art, PDFs

    Here is a small list of vocab words we came across and looked up — either for the first time or for refreshment — this past month in our art readings.1

    revanchist: (Date – 1926) one who advocates a policy of revanche, a usually political policy designed to recover lost territory or status

    tannoy: Tannoy Ltd is an English manufacturer of loudspeakers and public-address (PA) systems. The company was founded as Tulsemere Manufacturing Company in London in 1926. The name Tannoy is a syllabic abbreviation of tantalum alloy, which was the material used in a type of electrolytic rectifier developed by the company. The brand had been trademarked by 10 March 1932, on which date the Tulsemere Manufacturing Company was formally registered as Guy R. Fountain Limited.

    portacabin:

    Now and again you come across the word ‘Portakabin’ in a variety of different, but wrong, spellings. And regularly we are asked questions about this. As the only experts on this topic we would like to clarify the origin of the name and how it should be used correctly.  Portakabin is not an ordinary word but, in fact, a trade mark. Donald Shepherd, the founder of the company Portakabin, had the idea of a stand-alone, relocatable building way back in the Forties. He thought of a fitting name for his business – Portakabin, which he registered as a trade mark. Since that day, only buildings produced by Portakabin can be called a Portakabin building.

    As a pioneer in the development of relocatable and modular accommodation and as an international market leader in the industry, sometimes people use our company name wrongly. We always work hard to prevent this.

    In short – Portakabin is a protected, exclusive trade mark that can only be used to describe the products of the company Portakabin.

    Other mispellings we came across:

    portacabin, portacabins, portakabins, porta cabins, porta cabin, portocabin, portocabins, portkabin, porta kabin, porto cabins,potakabin, potacabins, port a cabin, port a cabins, potacabin, porta kabins, portokabin, porto cabin2

    secateurs: Chiefly Brit a small pair of shears for pruning, having a pair of pivoted handles, sprung so that they are normally open, and usually a single cutting blade that closes against a flat surface

    antiphrasis: The use of a word or phrase in a sense contrary to its normal meaning for ironic or humorous effect, as in a mere babe of 40 years.

    cater-corner: (Date – 1838) in a diagonal or oblique position

    Sources
    1. Sources include: Artforum, Frieze, e-flux, Afterall, Artlies, October, OEI, Artvehicle, cms.mit.edu, edge.org, The Next Layer, Mute Mag, aaaarg.org, NeMe, IDC [↩]
    2. http://www.portakabin.co.uk/news/newstwo/ [↩]
    Comments

    what actor would play what art world personality?

    November 16th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Art in General, Featured Article, JPEG, Non Art

    There is no critical preface necessary here.  This is for fun.  We (think we) are going for accuracy, not mockery.  This post will be open to comments indefinitely, and will be updated frequently and edited capriciously, but all revisions will be noted.  Eventually, the list will be indexed and used devilishly in an upcoming collaboration with Club Samantha, an media collective from Bucharest.

    We will start with ten a day.  This list will get obscure fast, don’t worry.

    Simon de Pury – Ralph Fiennes

    Larry Gagosian – Jeff Bridges

    Julian Schnabel – Mickey Rourke

    Andy Warhol – David Bowie

    Dennis Hopper – Dennis Hopper

    Marina Abramovic – Meryl Streep

    Catherine Opie – Kathy Bates

    Liam Gillick – Stephen Dorf

    Nicolas Bourriaud – Vincent Cassel

    Matthew Barney – Christian Bale

    Additions #1:

    Hans Ulrich Obrist – Peter Sarsgaard

    Maurizio Cattelan – Adrian Brody

    Adrian Piper – Halle Berry

    Comments

    11/12 — Post-Feminist: Do We Need To Go There? at P.P.O.W. Gallery

    November 9th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Events

    post-feminist

    Comments

    TONIGHT 10/26 – Marina Abramovic at Location One

    October 26th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Events

    Here’s the press release. Coverage tomorrow.

    Marina Abramović
    Performing the Gallery/Performing the Museum
    Tuesday, October 27, 2009,
    doors at 6pm, talk begins promptly at 7pm
    Public Discussion with MARINA ABRAMOVIĆ
    Inauguration of ABRAMOVIC STUDIO AT LOCATION ONE
    presented by Jovana Stokić

    The discussion will focus on Abramovic’s investigations of transformative quality of time in context of a gallery exhibition. The exclusive video material from Abramovic’s innovative group exhibition in Manchester Whitworth Art Gallery, held July 3 – 19 2009, will be shown. For this groundbreaking event, the Whitworth emptied every gallery space in order to create room for this unique work to develop and breathe. The show began with an hour-long performance initiation with Marina Abramović, leading up to a series of extraordinary encounters between artists and audience. Quite unlike anything staged before in a museum or a gallery, it provided a transformative gallery-going experience.
    The evening inaugurates Abramović Studio at LOCATION ONE. Beginning October 2009 the studio, curated by Jovana Stokić, involves artists from Location One residency program in engaging with performance art. The ABRAMOVIĆ STUDIO within Location One is dedicated to exploring long-durational performance works through open-ended forms of workshops, panels and discussions. Marina Abramović, will be the subject of a major retrospective exhibition at MoMA in the spring of 2010 titled “Artist is Present” in which she will be performing continuously throughout the whole duration of the exhibition.

    Comments

    TV Break: Laurie Anderson – O Superman

    October 22nd, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: TV Break

    In Jerry Saltz’s retrospective essay on the last 40 years of art in New York, he mentions Laurie Anderson’s ‘O Superman’, which rose to number 2 on the British charts, as a watershed moment when New York artists realized exposure beyond the art world was possible.

    Comments

    PDF of the Day: Sadie Plant’s Zeros and Ones

    October 20th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: PDFs

    William Gibson called Sadie Plant’s 1998 book Zeros and Ones a “cyber-feminist rant”.  Granted, there are lots of provocations and wafting suggestions here, but unlike much feminist theory, victimization is not the theme; rather, this book focuses on eight millennia of technological empowerment in the hands of women.  This is an alternative history of technological and cultural progress, from the Neolithic period to the online BBS’s of the early 1990s.

    Fun things you will learn:

    1) weaving was the first kind of multimedia art, an activity consisting of not just the textile making process, but also singing, dancing, and storytelling

    2) belts were the first form of clothing; soon after, they began to be studded with diamond lozenges as a sign of fertility!

    3) the number zero was of the most subversive concepts to the Church, moreso even than 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 and 9, each of which offered a unique affront to deism… one of the central ways in which the West first experienced ‘zero’, not in the quantitative sense of ‘none’, but the ontological sense of ‘holes’, was in the punched card system of proto-Industrial weaving machines, and then again with Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage’s Analytic Engine.

    Analytical Engine built to speculation in 2002

    Analytical Engine built to speculation in 2002

    Here is the .pdf excerpt of Zeros and Ones, from a.aaaarg.org (login required)

    Comments

    Yeni Mao part of SYSTEM:SYSTEM

    October 19th, 2009
    By: Selfportrait
    Topics: Art in General, Exhibitions/Openings
    Yeni Mao - The Bust

    Yeni Mao - The Bust (photo via NYARTS website)

    Yeni Mao was in last month’s selfportrait.net organized show, Mapping The Body.

    Yeni Mao was recently interviewed for NYARTS Magazine.

    Yeni Mao is contributing a big installation to SYSTEM:SYSTEM, an ambitious group show opening this Friday at 21 Monitor Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.

    Here, then, is the press release for that show, minus the handsome graphic design of Random Number’s website:

    system:system

    A failing economy has decided the recent fate of 21 Monitor Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. Formerly a nun’s convent, the grand three-story house now stands uninhabited due to the declining membership of St. Cecilia parish and its sister school. Rather than let the building fall into disrepair the parish has found ways to breathe new life into it through a rotating schedule of film shoots, screenings, dance performances, and art exhibitions.

    Taking its cue from the friends-of-friends network that has allowed access to 21 Monitor Street, system:system is a three-day event that reflects on the nature of associations between parts of a whole. The title is a play on the term “complex systems,” which are characterized by their connections and tendencies toward unpredictable behavior. The organizing of this event evokes these qualities and embraces the small world phenomenon of strangers being linked through minimal degrees of separation to form a dynamic structure.

    The unoccupied nun’s living quarters will now showcase work that experiments with the building up and/or breaking down of systems: mathematical, scientific, social, economic, and otherwise. Much like the social and economic factors responsible for this event, the behavior between the separate elements—artistic interventions and performances—will result in an atmosphere of emergent interconnectedness. The act of creating artistic content in a temporary context will feature prominently, remaining true to the fluid way in which these works were executed.

    Curated by Adam Henry and Christina Vassallo

    Participating Artists

    Abby Manock, Adam Henry, Anya Kielar, Arthur Ou, Chris Dorland, Curver Thoroddsen, David Brooks, Derick Melander, [dNASAb], Emily Mae Smith, eTeam, Ethan Breckenridge, Francesca DiMattio, Gandalf Gavan, Garth Weiser, Ian Davis, Inna Babaeva, Jeff Konigsberg, Johannes VanDerBeek, Kai Vierstra, Lisha Bai, Maria João Salema & Lee Wells, Marius Watz, Matthew Monteith, Matthew Schenning, Melissa Brown, Meridith Pingree, Mike Hein, MiYoung Sohn, Nika Sarabi, Peter Kirn, Phil Vanderhyden, Saira McLaren, Skyler Brickley, SOFTlab, Studio Mode, Suzanne Song, Tom Brauer, Yeni Mao

    This show also has Lee Wells in it, who is da man.

    Get thee to a nunnery!

    In other news:

    A major study has just been published documenting 21 years of studying adaptive changes in E. Coli bacteria.  In E. Coli time that’s 400,000 generations.  I’m thinking somewhat loosely right at this moment, about generations — as they occur for bacteria, humans, and on a geologic, and finally a cosmic timescale — and it is reminding me of a few artworks:

    Adrian Piper - Everything #10

    Adrian Piper - Everything #10 (2007)

    Ben Fry - On The Origin of Species: The Preservation Of Favoured Traces (2009) (Click to launch)

    Ben Fry - On The Origin of Species: The Preservation Of Favoured Traces (2009) (Click to launch)

    Liz Glynn - 24 Hour Roman Reconstruction Project

    Liz Glynn - 24 Hour Roman Reconstruction Project (2009) (Liz Glynn, please fix your website or join selfportrait so I can study your good art)

    Alexandra Mir - First Woman on the Moon (1999)

    Alexandra Mir - First Woman on the Moon (1999)

    Antti Laitinen - Stones

    Antti Laitinen - Stones

    Chris Ho - Lesbian Mountains in Love (2008)

    Chris Ho - Lesbian Mountains in Love (2008)

    Christian Philip Muller - Passe Immediate (2006)

    Christian Philip Muller - Passe Immediate (2006)

    Gordon Terry - A Refusal of the Materialist Insistence on Surface and Plane

    Gordon Terry - A Refusal of the Materialist Insistence on Surface and Plane

    Valery Grancher - It Has Been

    Valery Grancher - It Has Been

    Lara Favaretto

    Lara Favaretto

    Comments
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