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Showing posts with label Art World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art World. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Tim Bavington @ Mark Moore Gallery

Last week, Mark Moore Gallery opened its fifth solo exhibition of new work by painter, Tim Bavington. Decade celebrates Bavington's tenth year of representation by the gallery, and will feature new works alongside his iconic striped paintings. The show will be on display at the Los Angeles gallery April 29 - May 29.

The Museum featured Step (In) Out, 2007 in our 2008 exhibtion, Las Vegas Diaspora: Emergence of Contemporary Art from the Neon Homeland, which exhibited works of twenty-six artists who received their degrees from the University of Las Vegas, Nevada.

Also, Mark and Hilarie Moore (of Mark Moore Gallery) have made two to three significant gifts of art to museums each year for the last sixteen years and plan on continuing. Through their family trust they have made other contributions to the Orange County Museum of Art; Downey Art Museum; Portland Art Museum; Madison Museum of Contemporary Art; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego; Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles; Brooklyn Art Museum; Las Vegas Art Museum; Santa Barbara Art Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego; and The Contemporary Museum Honolulu.

Decade celebrates the 10 years that Las Vegas-based painter Tim Bavington has been exhibiting in Los Angeles. The 15-work show, at Mark Moore Gallery, reveals that the London-born artist is in it for the long haul and capable of taking viewers on rides filled with more twists and turns than can be imagined.

Bavington's new spray-painted stripe paintings are as gorgeous as any of the delectable abstractions he has made in the past, but far more complex in their emotional resonance. Alongside the joy and playfulness that seemed to be Bavington's specialty come slower, more savory sensations: rich mixes of sentiments seasoned by sorrow, suffering and loss but still thrilled by the rhythms and textures of life's little pleasures... read the rest of the article on Culture Monster.


What do you think of Bavington's new work??

Monday, May 3, 2010

Art Shack Spotlight: Mark Ryden and Marion Peck

Last Thursday night, Art Shack artist, Mark Ryden, had an amazing Victorian-themed opening night at Paul Kasim in New York. His loyal fan base flocked to to see Ryden's new work in his Gay '90s Old Tyme show.

Fans showed up at Paul Kasmin in New York looking like Victorian ladies or gents, in keeping with the theme of his new show. The standout was a woman on stilts, wearing a corseted red dress decorated with plastic pieces of meat.

Her costume was a nod to a painting in the show: "Incarnation," 2009, above, featuring a porcelain-doll-like girl-woman who wears a dress made of sausage links, ham shanks and other raw meat... read the rest of the article on Culture Monster.

Although the show is in New York, West Coast fans can come see the piece that Ryden and his wife, Marion Peck, will be showing in Laguna Art Museum's upcoming exhibition, Art Shack (June 13-October 3).

Here's a sneak peak video for the doll-theater "shack" that Peck and Ryden sent us!

For more information on these two artists or Laguna Art Museum's Art Shack, visit the Museum's website!

What do you think of the video????

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Art and Food: A Love Story

Yesterday, a friend of mine exposed me to a fascinating website that combines two great loves shared by everyone here at the Museum: Art and Food.

Eat Me Daily is a website / blog that focuses on experiencing politics, pop culture, history, and art through food. Browsing the site, I was memorized by videos of World Pizza Championship Dough Throwing contest and the history of my beloved snack: popcorn, but, what really caught my eye was the section on FOOD ART.

One recent article featured food interpretations of iconic pop art pieces that were on display (for the satisfaction of both the imagination and taste buds) at the Brooklyn Museum last week. Eight works, including artists Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol, and Paul McCarthy, served at the inspiration for the Brooklyn Ball meal, created by Jennifer Rubell. Abstract expressionism, minimalism, post modern and performance art were all made palatable in an interactive meal that transformed galleries to banquet halls and diners to players as guests indulged in nearly every genre of 20th Century art... read the rest of the article.

Art and Food will come together again at the Museum's annual Palette to Palete event on May 22nd. This event has become one of the most anticipated art and dining experiences in Orange County. This year's Palette to Palate will feature cuisine by Executive Chef Craig Strong from Studio, Montage Laguna Beach and wines by HALL Napa Valley and will include artists Kim Abeles, Stephanie Bachiero, Linda Christensen, Ron Dier, Alison Foshee, Tony Marsh, Donnie Molls, Burton Morris, Gifford Meyers, and Randall Sexton.

Photograph: Mario Batali catching on his cracker melting cheese from molded heads hanging from the ceiling. Photograph: Adam Robb / Eat Me Daily

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Art News -- Celebrity Art Collectors

Don't you wish you could COLLECT like a celebrity!?!

© Patrick McMullan Company

Beyoncé and Jay-Z are among the many celebrities that have picked up on the art collecting habit.

James Franco and Lady Gaga have been the talk of the art world ever since the two began dabbling in performance art, but they're hardly the only prominent pop-culture stars to have a glittering foot in the art world. Recently, in fact, a rising tide of interest in contemporary art has led more and more celebrities to enter the gallery and museum sphere, oftentimes as collectors, patrons, or producers — a fact that has brought no end of satisfaction to Los Angeles dealers, who have long sought to tap into Hollywood money (and the celebrity endorsements that come with it) in earnest. While there's no mistaking these stars for the Steve Cohens or David Geffens of the world who spend millions on attention-grabbing historic works, these actors, designers, musicians, and sports gods have been throwing their support behind a number of rising (and established) talents in the art world. ARTINFO has assembled a list of 12 celebrity collectors, some of whom you may not have suspected. Read the full article on ArtInfo...

For more on what's happening in the art world, come and check out Laguna Art Museum website and be sure to come see our current exhibition, OsCene 2010, up until May 16th!

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Art Shack's Jeff Gillette @ CorpGallery

The artist, Jeff Gillette, who is exhibiting in the Museum's upcoming Summer exhibition, Art Shack, has a show that opened this past Saturday at the CorpGallery in Santa Monica. Gillette's Dismayland will be on display until May 1st.

Jeff Gillette's shack is inspired by his trips to the slums of India.

And if you like the style and theme of Jeff Gillette's Dismayland, be sure to check out his piece in Art Shack, opening June 13th at Laguna Art Museum!!

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Fairey sighting in LA

"If you've driven along Melrose Avenue in the past couple of weeks, you probably have noticed a new outdoor mural on the north side of the street near Ogden Avenue, across from Fairfax High School.

The recognizable mash-up of pop-psychedelic images -- including an elephant, a lotus flower and "Obey" logos -- point to only one source: Shepard Fairey, the popular and controversial L.A. street artist..."
Read the rest of the LA Times article...

Sherpard Fairey DJ-ing at the opening of Laguna Art Museum's Summer 2008 exhibition In the Land of Retinal Delights: The Juxtapoz Factor.
Like the art of Shepard Fairey? Check out other contemporary artists now showing in Laguna Art Museum's OsCene 2010!

Thursday, December 31, 2009

2009: A Year in Photos from Laguna Art Museum

Happy New Year!



Monday, October 26, 2009

Good news for some CA arts organizations

This is great news for some lucky arts organizations, as well as for those people who are looking for employment in the arts. via California Arts Council

Have an interest in California art and culture? Be sure to catch the Museum's permanent collection exhibition, Collecting California: Selections from Laguna Art Museum.

The California Arts Council announces agency's American Recovery & Reinvestment Act grants
Twenty-eight arts organizations statewide slated to receive funding for jobs


Published: 10-15-2009

The California Arts Council announces that twenty-eight organizations throughout the state are approved to receive funding for jobs through the agency's American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds. The Council approved the spending of $487,900 in job stimulus funds earlier this month. Other California arts organizations are approved to receive funding directly from the National Endowment for the Arts, regional, or local arts re-granting organizations.

The following organizations have been approved to receive ARRA funding from the California Arts Council -- given that the organization does not receive another ARRA-NEA grant from another source, and is able to fulfill the requirements of the grant agreement.

Community Works West, Inc. (Berkeley), $19,600
Japanese American National Museum (Los Angeles), $20,000
Kulintang Arts, Inc. (San Francisco), $20,000
California Musical Theatre (Sacramento), $20,000
Center for LGBT Art and Culture (San Francisco), $18,000
Los Angeles Chamber Singers, Inc. (Los Angeles), $14,000
P.S. ARTS (Los Angeles), $16,640
Sierra Repertory Theatre (Sonora), $20,000
Venice Arts: In Neighborhoods (Venice), $20,000
About Productions, Inc. (Pasadena), $20,000
AXIS Dance Company (Oakland), $14,880
Eveoke Dance Theatre (San Diego), $20,000
Kearny Street Workshop (San Francisco), $18,720
LA Commons (Los Angeles), $15,000
Madera County Arts (Madera), $20,000
Oakland East Bay Symphony (Oakland), $10,000
Teatro Vision de San Jose (San Jose), $19,078
Arts Council for Monterey County (Carmel), $15,000
Media Arts Center San Diego (San Diego), $20,000
Mateel Community Center (Redway), $16,000
Merced County Arts Council, Inc. (Merced), $20,000
Plumas County Arts Commission (Quincy), $9,500
The Woodland Opera House (Woodland), $10,000
San Jose Multicultural Artists Guild (San Jose), $20,000
Robert Moses' Kin (San Francisco), $15,000
First Night Monterey, Inc (Monterey), $20,000
Galeria Studio 24 (San Francisco), $20,000

Kitka, Inc. (Oakland), $16,482

Friday, October 23, 2009

Holloween Happenings



Lord Help Us

On Saturday, October 31st, of the year two thousand and nine,

Ace Hotel & Swim Club

INVITE you to a fabulous evening of Ribald Revelry, DEVILISH Dancing & Blood-feasting, as So-Cal & Desert Area Vampire Covens convene for the first official Vampires-Only Feast of the Supersensualists…

Start the evening’s feasting with a special intimate interview with a vampire....

Udo Kier

...who will be leading the oral fray after a special screening of...

Andy Warhol’s Dracula

all the while enjoying the dark melodies of DJ Fangbanger and Victor Rodriguez

Room rates starting at $119.
Use the code HLLW31 and receive a free upgrade (depending on availability). Book online at acehotel.com or call 760 325 9900.

Doors at 8pm - Show at 9pm - no cover charge
the best Vampire drag wins a night on us

Blood Sacks welcome, only if accompanied by one’s Master or Mistress.

701 e palm canyon dr. palm springs, ca I 760.325.9900

Ace Hotel is a sponsor for Laguna Art Museum's upcoming exhibition Jeremy Fish: Weathering the Storm.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

New sculptures create a lot of buzz


What do you think of the new sculptures outside of the police headquarters in LA? Post your thoughts below!

via www.latimes.com

Police Chief Bratton doesn't care for the cast-bronze pieces, which consist of six large black blobs and two tall, skinny structures. Others have mixed reactions.

Monday, October 19, 2009

An interesting article about American contemporary artist Shepard Fairey. He participated in Laguna Art Museum's exhibition, In the Land of Retinal Delights: The Juxtapoz Factor, in 2008.

Poster artist admits to lying

AP to continue copyright suit

By Liz Robbins New York Times / October 18, 2009 NEW YORK - Shepard Fairey, the artist whose “Hope’’ poster of Barack Obama became an iconic emblem of the presidential campaign, has admitted that he lied about which photograph from the Associated Press he used as his source, and that he then covered up evidence to conceal his lie.

Fairey’s admission, which he made public Friday, threw his legal battle with the news agency into disarray.

The AP claimed in January that Fairey owed it credit and compensation for using the photograph. But in February Fairey sued the AP, seeking a declaratory judgment that the poster did not infringe on the agency’s copyrights and that he was entitled to the image under the “fair use’’ exception of the copyright law. The AP countersued in March, saying Fairey had misappropriated the photograph.

Fairey told the agency - and his own lawyers - that he had used a photograph from an April 27, 2006, event about Darfur at the National Press Club in Washington, where Obama was seated next to the actor George Clooney. Instead, the photograph he used was from the same event, but was a solo image of Obama’s head, tilted in intense concentration.

Fairey admitted that in the initial months after the suit and countersuit were filed, he destroyed evidence and created false documents to cover up the real source. He said he had initially believed that the AP was wrong about which photo he used, but later realized the agency was right.

“In an attempt to conceal my mistake, I submitted false images and deleted other images,’’ Fairey said in a statement, released on his website. “I sincerely apologize for my lapse in judgment, and I take full responsibility for my actions, which were mine alone.’’

Fairey’s lawyers said they intended to withdraw when he could find new counsel.

Srinandan R. Kasi, the AP’s general counsel, released a statement Friday night that said: “Fairey’s lies about which photo was the source image were discovered after the AP had spent months asking Fairey’s counsel for documents regarding the creation of the posters, including copies of any source images that Fairey used.’’

Kasi said: “The AP intends to vigorously pursue its countersuit alleging that Fairey willfully infringed the AP’s copyright in the close-up photo of then-Senator Obama by using it without permission to create the Hope and Progress posters and related products, including T-shirts and sweatshirts that have led to substantial revenue.’’

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Support the arts in your community

This is a great way to get involved with the arts in your community and to spread the word about your own art initiatives.
Love American art, especially that of California? Check out Laguna Art Museum's Collecting California: Selections from Laguna Art Museum, on view from November 8, 2009 - January 17, 2010.

via California Arts Council

Tell Americans for the Arts about arts service in your community


Americans for the Arts invites Americans to post arts volunteer stories on their new website serve.artsusa.org, dedicated to promoting community service opportunities for arts groups, arts volunteers, activists, and artists nationwide. Inspired by President Obama's United We Serve initiative, serve.artsusa.org provides a forum for volunteers and arts organizations to share volunteer stories and to upload related photos and videos. "[We] know that the arts have the power to engage and strengthen communities, and that volunteerism in the arts deserves more attention and support," notes an email invitation from Americans for the Arts to its members. "The personal and professional arts volunteer stories you share will be compiled with related videos and pictures and then shared with the White House, Congress, and the media."

Monday, October 5, 2009

California scores high on Creative Vitality Index

via California Art Council

"Creative California" scores near the top in study examining arts-related economy
California scores third highest in Creative Vitality Index, a report examining creative for-profit and non-profit economy


Published: 09-17-2009

California has the third highest Creative Vitality Index (CVI) score in the nation for both 2006 and 2007, according to a study that measures the annual changes in the economic health of an area's creative sector and includes both for-profit and nonprofit activities. Only New York and Massachusetts scored higher than the Golden State. The results of the CVI study were released at a meeting of the California Arts Council on Thursday, September 17, 2009, at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego.

"The Creative Vitality Index study clearly demonstrates the importance of the creative economy and arts-related businesses and nonprofits to California," said Muriel Johnson, Director of the California Arts Council.

In the CVI study, researchers analyzed how California's creative-sector indicators compare to the nation's. Within the CVI, the figure "1.00" acts as a national baseline which localities can be measured against. Thus, an Index value of "1.00" means a locality is essentially "on par" with the nation. California's CVI score was 1.43 for 2006 and 1.44 for 2007.

California CVI Study Highlights

  • Over 4,500 nonprofit arts and arts-active organizations are included in the database for California in 2007;
  • Arts-related nonprofits earned over $3.5 billion in revenues from programming, investments, special events, contributions and membership dues (strictly revenue numbers indicative of revenue stream health, not impact);
  • The Occupational Index shows over 680,000 full and part-time creative occupations within California;
  • Workers such as actors, producers, directors, camera operators and film and video editors are all represented within California at twice the level of the nation on a per capita basis;
  • Job categories with the highest percentages of growth statewide included multimedia artists and animators, fine artists, sound engineering technicians, and agents.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

6 volumes of Van Gogh's letters

Wow! How fascinating it would be to read, in chronological order, Van Gogh's letters. He was such an interesting and mysterious character. Anyone going to the Netherlands anytime soon? What do you think of this exhibition and the volumes that are resultant of 15 years of research? Post your comments below!

via theartnewspaper.com


Van Gogh’s letters: the definitive edition

The publication next week of the complete letters of the artist is a distinguished scholarly achievement

By Martin Bailey From issue 206, October 2009
Published online 30 Sep 09 (Books)

A letter from August 1882 from Vincent van Gogh to his brother Theo, featuring a pen and ink sketch of a pollarded willow

A letter from August 1882 from Vincent van Gogh to his brother Theo, featuring a pen and ink sketch of a pollarded willow

The new edition of Van Gogh’s letters represents a magnificent achievement. To be published in six volumes, on 7 October, the text runs to nearly 1 million words, with over 4,000 illustrations. It is the culmination of a 15-year project at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

Vincent van Gogh: The Letters transforms our understanding of the artist. Although there have been earlier editions of the correspondence (notably in 1958), this one presents all the surviving letters in the proper chronological sequence (many are redated and there have been some newly discovered items), and is based on a revised and unexpurgated transcription of the texts, with more accurate translations and detailed annotations.

It will act as an antidote to the Lust for Life-perception of Van Gogh that has become so deeply engrained, as a result of Irving Stone’s novel (1934) and Kirk Douglas’s film (1956). Although Stone’s main source was the letters, he used an early edition published in the 1920s, and admitted that he had added “an occasional stretch of pure fiction”.

In Lust for Life, Van Gogh is presented as writing his letters as a highly-strung personality, slapping his words onto paper in great emotion. This did happen, but only occasionally, usually when it involved a family row. In contrast, reading through the 2,180 pages of the new edition of the letters shows that the artist was highly focused. True, he was an obsessive in one sense, in his dedication to developing as an artist, but the letters are usually carefully (and sometimes beautifully) written, normally with a clear purpose in mind.

The Letters also reminds us that Van Gogh approached his painting in a similar fashion. He did not throw his paint on the canvas in a burst of emotion, but considered carefully the effects he was striving to achieve. This comes through clearly in the stream of comments that he made to his brother Theo and his artist friends, in describing the pictures he was completing.

The new edition of the letters is annotated, recording the literary sources Van Gogh cites. Although his formal education was brief (with just 18 months at secondary school), he became remarkably well read. Some 800 literary sources (by 150 authors) are either cited in his letters or quotations are given from them. To take an example, there are 54 letters that refer to Dickens, although some of these are unattributed quotations that few readers today would spot without the annotations.

Van Gogh was also talented at languages. His French became as good as his Dutch (and from 1887, he wrote to Theo in French), he spoke reasonable English (The Letters includes correspondence with the British artist Horace Livens and the Australian John Russell), as well as some German.

Illustrations

The Letters reproduces the pictures that Van Gogh mentions—usually with admiration—in his correspondence. Until now, many of the less well-known works had not been identified, but most of them have now been found and all these are illustrated. Altogether The Letters has 4,300 illustrations (2,300 individual works, with a further 2,000 small images reproduced again when they are referred to in subsequent letters). Seeing the illustrations provides a vivid musée imaginaire of Van Gogh’s mind. What will come as a shock to many readers is quite how conventional his artistic tastes were, particularly up until his arrival in Paris in 1886.

The new edition of The Letters is fully annotated with footnoted references. These add up to 160,000 words, equivalent in wordage to a very substantial book. Along with the identification of literary sources and works of art, other important details are explained, such as topography, customs, historical context, etc.

In addition, even more material is available (free of charge) on the web, with 700,000 words of detailed annotations (www.vangoghletters.org, from 7 October). The website also reproduces the letters in facsimile (with technical data on the paper, etc), provides a transcript in the original language with line breaks, gives newly translated reading texts in three languages (English, French and Dutch) and the dating of each letter is explained.

With such an extensive body of words, all in three languages, occasional errors are inevitable, but the standard of accuracy is admirable, which is testimony to the dedication of the research team. Material on the web will be updated.

Revelations

So, what is new in The Letters? Although most letters were published in earlier editions, some lines were left out for a variety of reasons. For instance, one delightful and telling phrase was omitted simply because it had been crossed out by Van Gogh. On 7 December 1883, while living with his parents in Nuenen, he had written: “People are like brushes—the ones that look the best do not work the best.” This very much reflected his philosophy, and his family often criticised his scruffy clothes.

Sometimes details were withheld, even as late as in the 1958 edition, because they were still sensitive to the family. For instance, in Van Gogh’s unsent letter to Theo and his wife Jo of 7 July 1890, in the last month of his life, the words “while there are disagreements between you” were omitted.

Occasionally material was worded obliquely on taste grounds. When Van Gogh wrote to Theo on 25 September 1888 about his soldier friend Paul Milliet, the 1958 edition of the letters recorded (using dashes) that Milliet had had to “return to his f------ garrison”. The new edition spells out what was really written, which is rather wittier. This was that after Milliet had said his farewells to the tarts of Arles, “his prick has gone back to the garrison”.

Some new letters have been discovered. Twenty-one were found earlier, but had only been published in Dutch, in a 1990 edition of the letters, so these are almost unknown to English readers. These include three telegrams Vincent sent to Theo after the death of their father in Nuenen. The first baldly states “Sudden death, come, Van Gogh”, which must have come as a terrible shock for Theo, since it was unclear who had died.

One of the most important letters to emerge after the 1958 English edition was from Van Gogh to Gauguin, sent on 21 January 1889, just a month after Van Gogh mutilated his ear, and the two artists had parted company. An acquaintance told me recently that in the early 1980s he had been visiting friends, and had casually taken a book on Van Gogh from their shelf. Out fell a folded piece of paper, which turned out to be that letter. His friends had bought the book from a bouquiniste in Paris for a few francs, and had not got round to reading it and thus hadn’t spotted the enclosure. When it was auctioned in 1983 it was bought by the Musée Réattu in Arles—the only Van Gogh letter to return to the town.

The most important completely new discovery is a letter from Van Gogh to his former boss at Goupil’s gallery in The Hague, where he had his first job. Van Gogh is said to have eventually written up to 300 letters to Hermanus Tersteeg, but all were apparently thrown into the fire late in his life when he wanted to warm his room. Recently, one letter surfaced, which had been given by Mrs Tersteeg to an autograph collector in around 1900 (it remains with the collector’s descendants). Sent on 3 August 1877, after the death of Tersteeg’s infant daughter Marie, it is a rambling condolence letter, peppered with Biblical quotations, and written at a time when Van Gogh had a deep religious fervour.

England

In terms of content, The Letters is replete with new details about Van Gogh’s life, and we can give some examples from his period in England, where he was an art dealer and later a teacher. Van Gogh visited Dulwich Picture Gallery on 2 August 1873, a bank holiday Monday. Since it is mentioned in a letter, the Van Gogh Museum researchers followed this up and discovered his name in the gallery’s visitors’ book (giving his address as The Hague, he signed in for another visitor, a German who was lodging with him).

On his arrival in Ramsgate in April 1876, where he taught for two months, he posted Theo two pieces of “seaweed” that he picked up on his first walk along the beach. Astonishingly, they have been preserved with the letter (they have now been analysed, and are not actually seaweed, but plant-like animals—a bryozoan and a hydroid).

While in England, Van Gogh wanted to become a missionary, and in June 1876 he wrote to an unnamed clergyman, explaining his qualifications and humbly asking for assistance.

An annotation in The Letters provisionally identifies him as Edmund Fisher, vicar of St Mark’s in Kennington, close to where Van Gogh had lodged the previous year.

Moving on to later years, The Letters will hold surprises even for those who think they know their Van Gogh. In August 1879 his sister Anna suggested that he should earn his living as a baker (this seems an astonishing idea, since he was a terrible cook—after concocting an inedible soup in Arles, Gauguin complained that he mixed the ingredients “the way he mixed the colours in his paintings”).

In January 1881 Van Gogh wrote from Brussels to say that he hoped “to see Mr Horta one of these days”. Research has confirmed that this was indeed Victor Horta, who was starting to train as an architect. All these points may be tiny details, but added together they help build up the picture of Van Gogh’s life.

Death

Reading The Letters may even bring us closer to understanding the tragic end to Van Gogh’s life. On 10 July 1890 he wrote about his latest picture (possibly Wheatfield with Crows), saying he was painting “immense stretches of wheatfields under turbulent skies, and I made a point of trying to express sadness”. Before posting it, he added to the letter the phrase “extreme loneliness”. Since it was in the wheatfields above Auvers-sur-Oise that he shot himself just 17 days later, these additional two words could well have had a deep significance.

Most poignant of all is a detail that is not explicitly referred to in The Letters, but which can be viewed on the facsimiles on the web. One letter to Theo was never posted, and it was found with Vincent after his suicide. On it, Theo later wrote in pencil: “The letter he had on him on 27 July, that horrible day.” On the bottom of the folded page are several dark stains, presumably blood.

Leo Jansen, Hans Luijten and Nienke Bakker (eds), Vincent van Gogh: the Letters. The Complete Illustrated and Annotated Edition (Thames & Hudson), six volumes and a CD with complete text versions in French and Dutch, 2,180 pp, £325 until 31 December; thereafter £395 (hb) ISBN 9780500238653

The exhibition: “Van Gogh’s Letters: the Artist Speaks”, Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (9 October-3 January 2010).www.vangoghmuseum.nl. Another selection of his letters will be shown in “The Real Van Gogh: the Artist and his Letters”, Royal Academy, London (23 January 2010-18 April 2010).

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Performance art at MoMA




via artdaily.org


MoMA Anounces First U.S. Retrospective of Marina Abramovic's Work




Marina Abramovic. Luminosity. 1997. Originally performed for 2 hours. Sean Kelly Gallery, New York. Courtesy Marina Abramovic Archive and Sean Kelly Gallery, New York. © 2009 Marina Abramovic.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art presents Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present, the first U.S. large-scale museum retrospective of the artist’s groundbreaking performance work, from March 14 to May 31, 2010. Internationally recognized as a pioneer and key figure in performance art, Marina Abramović (Serbian, b. 1946) uses her own body as subject, object, and medium, exploring the physical and mental limits of her being by creating pieces that require her to withstand pain, exhaustion, and discomfort in the quest for artistic, intellectual, emotional, and spiritual transformation. The exhibition traces Abramović’s prolific career with approximately 50 works spanning over four decades of early interventions and sound pieces, video works, installations, photography, solo performances, and collaborative performances. Also included are the world premiere of a new work to be performed by Abramović herself and "reperformances" of influential historical pieces by performers selected especially for this exhibition. The live reperformances complement and amplify a chronological installation of the artist’s work that shows the different modes of representing, documenting, and exhibiting her ephemeral, time- and media-based works. Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present is organized by Klaus Biesenbach, Chief Curator, Department of Media and Performance Art, The Museum of Modern Art.

Abramović, best known for her durational works, has created a new work for this retrospective—The Artist Is Present (2010)—that she will perform daily throughout the run of the exhibition. For her longest solo piece to date, Abramović will sit in silence at a table in the Museum’s Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium during public hours, passively inviting visitors to take the seat across from her for as long as they choose within the timeframe of the Museum’s hours of operation. Although she will not respond verbally, participation by Museum visitors completes the piece and allows them to have a personal experience with the artist and the artwork.

The historical exhibition in the Museum’s sixth-floor galleries will feature the first live reperformances of five landmark Abramović performance pieces, alongside video and photographic documentation of the original performances, incorporated within the chronological presentation of the artist’s career. They are Imponderabilia (1977), in which a nude man and woman stand opposite each other in a doorway, so that visitors who wish to pass must move through the gap between the two, deciding to face him or her; Relation in Time (1977), in which two performers sit quietly, connected to each other by their long hair, which is tied together; Point of Contact (1980), in which two performers stand face to face with arms bent, maintaining contact only by nearly touching the tip of each other’s index finger; Nude with Skeleton (2002–05), in which a nude performer lies beneath a skeleton, animating it with the motions of his or her breathing; and Luminosity (1997), in which a nude female performer, suspended high upon a wall and immersed in a square of light, gives the appearance of floating before the wall. Imponderabilia, Relation in Time, and Point of Contact were originally created and performed by Abramović and the performance artist Ulay (German, b. 1943), her partner from 1977 to 1988. A group of approximately 35 performers chosen by Abramović will reperform these pieces continuously throughout public hours in the sixth floor galleries.

Van Gogh and iPhones

via artdaily.org

Van Gogh Museum First Museum on the Continent to Launch iPhone Application




Van Gogh Museum shop. Photo: Luuk Kramer.

AMSTERDAM.- The Van Gogh Museum is the first museum on the European Continent to have developed, in collaboration with Antenna Audio, an iPhone application. The application Yours, Vincent was developed to accompany the exhibition Van Gogh’s letters: The artist speaks. The application offers people with an iPhone or an iPod touch the unique opportunity to get acquainted with Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) also at home and even while travelling.

Van Gogh takes the users of the application on a tour through his life and his art on the basis of his letters. The facilities offered by iPhone, such as audio, video and zooming in on paintings and letters, will be exploited. That way an iPhone allows the user to get closer to the works of art than would ever be possible in a museum. Yours, Vincent can be downloaded free of charge after 6 October 2009 via the App Store in iTunes and is available in English and in Dutch.

Multimedia tour and blog
Apart from the iPhone application, the museum is developing a multimedia tour for use inside the museum in English, Dutch and French. Visitors of the museum are guided through the exhibition Van Gogh’s letters: The artist speaks by Van Gogh himself by means of quotations from his letters, illustrative audio features and films by experts on the letters, as well as interactive media. After 6 October 2009 it will be possible to follow how Van Gogh describes his own life, the places he visits, and his opinions on art and literature on www.vangoghsblog.com. The reader can thus share Van Gogh’s life as he lived it, more than 120 years ago.

Van Gogh Letters Project
From 9 October 2009 to 3 January 2010 the Van Gogh Museum’s Rietveld building will be devoted to the letters of Vincent van Gogh. In the exhibition Van Gogh's letters: The artist speaks, some 120 original letters will be exhibited alongside the works that Van Gogh was writing about. The combination of more than 340 works, from the rich collection of the Van Gogh Museum, including paintings, drawings, letters and letter sketches offers a multifaceted and penetrating view of Van Gogh as letter writer and as artist. The exhibition is being staged by the Van Gogh Museum to mark the launch of the new international edition of the complete correspondence of Vincent van Gogh. This scholarly edition, which will be published both in book form and digitally (http://www.vangoghletters.org/), is the culmination of 15 years of research into the letters by the Van Gogh Museum and the Huygens Institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Art and Sciences (KNAW).

Antenna Audio
For more than twenty years, Antenna Audio has been active in the field of audio and audiovisual presentations for museums, exhibitions and tourist attractions. Yours, Vincent is the second iPhone application for art education Antenna Audio developed. The first application, LoveArt, was realized in collaboration with the National Gallery in London and was recently downloaded for the 250,000th time. For more information see www.discoverpentimento.com.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Michelle Obama talks art

Woohoo! Support the arts!

via the Los Angeles Times


Michelle Obama tells international audience why the arts matter

September 25, 2009 5:10 pm

US-G20-ECONOMY-FINANCE-#F53

Michelle Obama hosted a concert this morning at the Pittsburgh Creative & Performing Arts School for its students and the spouses of international leaders deliberating at the G-20 economic summit. She gave an 11-minute address about the arts as a prelude to performances by guests Sara Bareilles, Yo-Yo Ma and Trisha Yearwood. Here are excerpts from her speech, from a transcript issued by the White House:

“We believe strongly that the arts aren't somehow an 'extra’ part of our national life, but instead we feel that the arts are at the heart of our national life. It is through our music, our literature, our art, drama and dance that we tell the story of our past and we express our hopes for the future. Our artists challenge our assumptions in ways that many cannot and do not. They expand our understandings, and push us to view our world in new and very unexpected ways…..

"It's through this constant exchange -- this process of taking and giving, this process of borrowing and creating -- that we learn from each other and we inspire each other. It is a form of diplomacy in which we can all take part….

“[T]oday ... we're presenting the gifts of these wonderful American artists to our friends from all around the world. And these artists are passing on the gift of their magnificent example to these young people who are here today, studying in this school -- showing them that if they dream big enough, and work hard enough, and believe in themselves, that they can do and achieve some uncommon things in their lifetime….

"That is the core of my mission as first lady -- to share the gifts that come with life in the White House with as many of our young people as I possibly can find. That's why I've worked to make the White House a showcase of America's rich cultural life….

ObamasKennedyCenter

"[T]he truth is, is that even though many….kids are living in Washington, D.C. and in cities across the country, just minutes away from the centers of culture and power and prestige, many of them feel like these resources are really miles away, very far beyond their reach. That's something that I felt growing up.

"And my husband and I are determined to help to bridge that distance. It is critical that we begin to bridge that distance.


"We want to show these young people that they have a place in our world, in our museums, our theaters, our concert halls.... We want them to experience the richness of our nation's cultural heritage, one on one, up close and personal, not on TV. We want to show them that they can have a future in the arts community -- whether it's a hobby, or a profession, or simply as an appreciative observer….

"In the end, those efforts, and the performances we're enjoying today, and the work these artists do every day here in America and around the world -- all of that reminds us of a simple truth: that both individually and collectively, we all have a stake in the arts, every single one of us.

"And you don't need to be rich or powerful to lift your voice in song or get out of your seat and shake your groove thing. [Laughter.] You don't need to be a Van Gogh to paint a picture, or a Maya Angelou to write a poem. You don't need a Grammy or an Oscar or an Emmy to make your work on the cultural life of your community or your country a valuable one.

"And ... people who might not speak a single word of the same language, who might not have a single shared experience, might still be drawn together when their hearts are lifted by the notes of a song, or their souls are stirred by a vision on a canvas.

"That is the power of the arts -- to remind us of what we each have to offer, and what we all have in common; to help us understand our history and imagine our future; to give us hope in the moments of struggle; and to bring us together when nothing else will. That is what we celebrate here today.”

-- Mike Boehm

Related:Photo: Michelle Obama hosting concert in Pittsburgh (top); Obamas at Kennedy Center in February, to see Alvin Ailey Dance Theatre performance. Credit: Eric Feferberg / AP/AFP/Getty Images; Joshua Roberts / Pool/EPA

Icons from the Byzantine era and the 20th Century

It's so interesting how Warhol drew inspiration from Byzantine icons in his creation of images of iconic celebrities. This exhibition is surely a must-see!
via artdaily.org


Double-Header of Warhol Exhibitions Opening this Fall in Athens




Andy Warhol, Alexander the Great, 1982,

ATHENS.- Potnia Thiron and Haunch of Venison will present a double-header of Warhol exhibitions in Athens this autumn. Opening simultaneously, Warhol/Icon: The Creation of Image at the Byzantine and Christian Museum and Warhol: Screen Tests at Potnia Thiron Gallery, will explore Warhol’s obsession with fame through his work as a painter and filmmaker of ‘icons’. The emphasis across both exhibitions will be on the relationship between his Byzantine religious beliefs, Slavic background and devotion to his mystical mother, and his apparently unfettered celebration of an American celebrity culture.

Warhol/Icon: the Creation of Image
Set against the backdrop of the world’s greatest collection of Byzantine icons, Warhol/Icon: The Creation of Image brings together a selection of the works which helped Warhol reinvent portraiture in the second half of the twentieth century. Curated by the distinguished Warhol scholar Paul Moorhouse, the exhibition probes the enduring significance and value of the icon, connecting historic sacred antecedents with Warhol’s modern icons: images of the famous created in a celebrity-obsessed secular era.

Common to the historic and modern concepts of an icon, the idea of worship is central. Warhol’s work endorses, dissects – and employs – those processes by which a real person’s identity becomes progressively obscured by their glamorized, iconic representation in the mass-media. Seen in the context of the Byzantine and Christian Museum’s historic icons, Warhol’s modern ‘icons’ are presented as the outcome of a complex metamorphosis in which the real has been transformed into a complex but glorious abstraction.

Highlights of the exhibition include a poignant medley of paintings of the bereaving Jackie Kennedy, and several exceptional images of Marilyn Monroe, Mao and Warhol himself. Each of these figures are idealized to the point where their ‘image’ transcends their private, personal identity.

Warhol: Screen Tests
The exhibition at Potnia Thiron, a few hundred meters from the museum, will present the largest ever assembly of Warhol’s classic Screen Tests. The gallery will screen 100 of the short film portraits in a fascinating counter-point to the Warhol/Icon exhibition. While in his paintings, his declared ambition ‘to make everybody look great’ is perceived unequivocally, the Screen Tests suggest a more ambiguous position.

From 1964-66, 189 individuals came to his Manhattan studio (the silver painted loft known as ‘the Factory’) to sit for portraits; the sittings involved each participant remaining immobile for around three minutes while being filmed. There was no sound, no action, no narrative and no script. Each film was a record of the sitter’s response to the situation Warhol had created.

The range of sitters is diverse – including early Warhol superstar ‘Baby’ Jane Holzer, actor Dennis Hopper, filmmaker and Warhol’s chief assistant Gerard Malanga, actress and socialite Edie Sedgwick, singer Lou Reed and artist Salvador Dali. As with the paintings, the films are underpinned by themes of sequence, repetition and series, but whereas the portraits on canvas focus on the transformation of a media-derived image, the films engage with changes produced by the sitter over time. Projected at a slightly slower speed than the three minutes they took to record, the films reveal the sitter with a dispassionate but ruthless objectivity. Rather than making ‘everybody look great’, the Screen Tests promote an entirely different quality – not fame, but humanity at its most vulnerable.

This pair of exhibitions, which are supported by the Warhol family, the Andy Warhol Foundation and the Andy Warhol Museum, present the twentieth century’s quintessential artist in a new light. Warhol/Icon: The Creation of Image and Warhol: Screen Tests provide an unprecedented and unrepeatable illumination of Warhol’s Byzantine sensibility and his interest in the religious roots of celebrity adulation.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

New bronze statue in Senegal

via artdaily.org




In this photo taken Monday, Sept. 21, 2009, women walk past rubbish heaps and unfinished homes in a neighborhood at the base of the nearly-completed 50-meter-high (328-foot-high) bronze statue dubbed the Monument of the African Renaissance in Dakar, Senegal. The statue is supposed to symbolize Africa's rebirth, its liberation from what octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade has called "centuries of ignorance, intolerance and racism." Instead, the monument has fueled outrage among a poverty-stricken population struggling to survive in an expensive city slammed by electricity blackouts, flooding and water shortages. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

By: Todd Pitman, Associated Press Writer


DAKAR, SENEGAL.- Towering on a hilltop overlooking the Atlantic, the 160-foot-high bronze statue depicting a family rising triumphantly from a volcano is supposed to symbolize Africa's renaissance.

But on a rutted trash-strewn path below, the old Africa is still in view: one where a poverty-stricken population endures incessant power blackouts and flooding — and considers the $27 million monument just another outrageous example of wasteful government spending.

"Senegal is going through a profound crisis," said Djiby Diakhate, a sociologist at Dakar's Cheikh Anta Diop University. "Our economy is dying. People are struggling to eat. We should be spending money helping people survive."

Perched on the westernmost tip of the continent, Senegal has gained notoriety as a launch pad for migrants who risk their lives crossing the high seas on flimsy wooden boats bound for Europe, hoping for a better life — or at least illegal employment. Countless numbers have died attempting the voyage.

They have left behind a capital filled with jobless university graduates, half-day power outages and rains that wreak havoc on the city's outdated infrastructure, flooding homes with stinking, shin-high sewage that has to be scooped out by hand.

The mammoth statue, atop a 330-foot hill, shows a muscular man in a heroic posture, outstretched arms wrapped around his wife and child, who is balanced on one of his biceps. It is to be completed in December.

Octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade has compared the work to France's Eiffel Tower and America's Statue of Liberty; it is 13 feet taller than the latter.

And he has sparked outrage by maintaining he is entitled to 35 percent of any tourist revenues it generates because he owns "intellectual rights" for conceiving the idea, with the rest to go to the government.

Local media have lampooned the monument. One cartoon depicted its figures as a ragged, dripping family climbing onto a tin roof surrounded by flood waters. Another replaced them with Wade's own family, alluding to allegations it was his way of leaving a mark on the nation before he dies.

Presidential spokesman Sitor Ndour defended the project, saying unoccupied government land was sold to fund the endeavor and no state funds were used.

Critics say the money from the sale could have been put to better use — like purchasing badly needed medicine for public hospitals, assisting families who eat only one meal a day or helping combat rising crime.

"Before we spend money on prestige, or tourism, we have to deal with local emergencies," Diakhate said. "Why not use that money where we need it more?"

Ndour countered that the government already spends money helping Senegalese and "we believe culture is also a factor of development."

Wade's administration has plans for a series of major projects, of which the monument is but one. He has called for a new airport and a cultural center that will house a national theater and a museum of African culture.

Last year, the government completed other ambitious infrastructure, including a highway that cuts through the traffic-clogged heart of the city. It has also sold public land to developers building the country's first mall and international hotels.

Only the wealthy, however, can enjoy the $15 pinacoladas overlooking the seaside Radisson SAS's Olympic-sized pool, and rains have flooded the tunnels of the new palm-tree-lined seaside artery, engulfing cars up to their windows.

Nearly 50 North Korean workers from the state-run Mansudae Art Studio in Pyongyang were brought in to build the statue because of their expertise with bronze art, and some Senegalese have complained of its communist-era design.

Abdoulaye Elimane Kane, a former culture minister and spokesman for the main opposition Socialist Party, said it reminds him of statues in North Korea — which he visited while a Cabinet member — and not of African art.

The statue has also drawn complaints from Muslims — who make up 94 percent of Senegal's population — because of Islamic prohibitions on works that represent the human form.

Wade insists any money he makes from the project will go back to the people, channeled through a foundation to help children's schools and education.

And he says he hopes the monument will show the world that Africans are rebounding from a history of enslavement, subjugation and neglect, that "after six centuries of darkness, we are headed toward the light."

To critics like Kane, it smacks of "unlimited presidential power, an absence of consultation, state privilege" — the autocratic tendencies Africa is trying to shed.



Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.



And the nominees are...

This is such an awesome idea; I hope they actually do the event annually. I love that the announcer is referred to as "The Voice of God" and that celebrities and Calvin Klein, Inc. are participating.
via artdaily.org


Guggenheim Museum Announces Nominees for New Artist-Conceived Awards Event




Rob Pruitt. Photographed by Adrian Gaut, styling by Akari Endo. Commissioned by Dominic Sidhu for V Magazine.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum today announced with event partner Calvin Klein Collection a new art event premiering in 2009: Rob Pruitt’s The First Annual Art Awards at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in Association with White Columns, to be held on Thursday, October 29, 2009.

Artist Rob Pruitt, whose conceptual practice is rooted in a pop sensibility and a playful critique of art world structures, has conceived the event as a performance-based artwork which follows the format of a Hollywood awards ceremony. The Art Awards will be an annual celebration of select individuals, exhibitions, and projects that have made a significant impact on the field of contemporary art during the previous year, specifically, for this year’s ceremony, from January 2008 to June 2009.

According to Mr. Pruitt, “This annual gesture will function as a community-building and philanthropic event for the Guggenheim Museum, White Columns and, in 2009, Studio in a School, while simultaneously mobilizing the wide ranging talents and energies of the international arts community, focusing on our mutual admiration and support for one another's unique endeavors.” Mr. Pruitt continued, “With one eye on supporting our great institutions, and the other on injecting our community with a renewed sense of energy, spirit, and a dash of showbiz glamour, we are pleased to announce this very unique event.”

Richard Armstrong, Director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and Museum, stated, “As the impresario behind the First Annual Art Awards, Rob Pruitt presents a daring new event model injected with the humor that underscores his work. Pruitt’s orchestration of this performative piece—with the rotunda as center stage—is aligned with the Guggenheim’s mission to continue to engage and present contemporary artists.”

"The First Annual Art Awards, held at the Guggenheim Museum, will celebrate today's most interesting and respected artists, in an entirely innovative way," said Malcolm Carfrae, EVP Global Communications, Calvin Klein, Inc. "Calvin Klein, Inc. has always been a huge supporter of the arts and we are thrilled to be a part of such a groundbreaking event that celebrates the arts community and gives it the recognition it deserves."

Pruitt has invited the Delusional Downtown Divas to preside over the event as Masters of Ceremonies, and Glenn O’Brien will step in as the Announcer, or, as Pruitt describes his role, as “the Voice of God.” An additional distinguished list of presenters will participate in distributing the awards, created by Pruitt to resemble a celebratory bucket of champagne that also serves as a fully functional lamp. The presenters will include Cecily Brown, Sofia Coppola, James Franco, Knight Landesman, Nate Lowman, and Mary-Kate Olsen, among others. Original music has been composed by Matthew Friedberger of the Fiery Furnaces, who will perform at the event. Christine Muhlke, food editor of the New York Times Magazine, is curating the cuisine for the seated dinner.

Lifetime Achievement Awards, determined by Rob Pruitt along with organizing partners the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and White Columns, will be awarded to Joan Jonas and Kasper König. In addition, a group of more than four hundred art world professionals has been invited to form a Nominating Council that will select four nominees in nine categories that focus primarily on exhibitions and projects that took place over the preceding eighteen months (January 2008 to June 2009), in the United States, as well as one category recognizing an international exhibition. The Rob Pruitt Award is being decided solely by the artist. Of the following list of nominees, a larger group (including the Nominating Council) will establish the eventual winners, who will be announced at the live awards ceremony on October 29. The ten categories—in addition to the Lifetime Achievement Award—and the nominees for each category are:

Artist of the Year
• Louise Bourgeois
• Urs Fischer
• Dan Graham
• Mary Heilmann

Curator of the Year
• Klaus Biesenbach
• Daniel Birnbaum
• Connie Butler
• Massimiliano Gioni

Exhibitions Outside the United States
• Francis Bacon, Tate Britain, London
• Jeff Koons, Versailles, Château de Versailles, France
• Mike Kelley: Educational Complex Onwards: 1995–2008, Wiels Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels
• Wolfgang Tillmans: Lighter, Hamburger Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin

Group Show of the Year, Gallery
• A Twilight Art, Harris Lieberman, New York
• Who’s Afraid of Jasper Johns? Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York
• Your Gold Teeth II, Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
• ZERO in New York, Sperone Westwater, New York

Group Show of the Year, Museum
• After Nature, New Museum, New York
• The Pictures Generation, 1974–1984, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
• The Quick and the Dead, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis
• WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution, P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, New York

New Artist of the Year
• Elad Lassry
• Daniel McDonald
• Marlo Pascual
• Ryan Trecartin

The Rob Pruitt Award
• To be announced the evening of October 29, 2009

Solo Show of the Year, Gallery
• Cindy Sherman, Metro Pictures, New York
• Manzoni: A Retrospective, Gagosian Gallery, New York
• Paul Sharits, Greene Naftali Gallery, New York
• Picasso: Mosqueteros, Gagosian Gallery, New York

Solo Show of the Year, Museum
• Dan Graham: Beyond, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
• Lawrence Weiner: As Far as the Eye Can See, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
• Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton, New Museum, New York
• Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Museum of Modern Art, New York

Writer of the Year
• Tim Griffin
• John Kelsey
• Walter Robinson
• Jerry Saltz
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