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Review: Ryan Lauderdale and Jessica Sanders at Kansas

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Ryan Lauderdale and Jessica Sanders, the two Brooklyn artists on view at Kansas (through August 2) in New York this summer, pair their recent works and reach the ends of the instant-gratification aesthetics spectrum. While Lauderdale’s tongue-in-cheek nouveau-riche design opposes Sanders’s muted monochromes and elemental mediums, both artists approach materiality with timeliness in mind. 

Lauderdale presents sculptures that are all high-contrast spiked angles and glaring lights. Created in the of-the-moment visual style reminiscent of mid 1980s interior décor, works such as Jog Lamp (unless otherwise noted, all works 2014) are pre-recession severe, recalling ostentatious trends of monochrome, metal, and sharply cut glass; diagonal details provide extra intensity. Hall Monitor and Black Lamp, both 2013, are two other sleek, glossy highlights, their polished bite slyly tempered by the conspicuous matte black power cords feeding the unsubtle fluorescent tubes illuminating them. By aggregating aspirational images from an endless Internet feed, Lauderdale’s reprise of “dead objects”—designs quickly deteriorating in relevance—stack amusing styles destined for the time capsule on top of each other, resulting in non-utilitarian objects that call to mind mall architecture or car detailing, consumer designs that rely on rapid disposal for growth.

Hung close enough to bathe in these sculptures’ artificial glow, Sanders presents two united groups of paintings whose material intelligence radiates. “Crumple” and “Saturation,” serial studies in materiality and tonal gradation, literally display wrinkles of time and stress. Stretching high-quality, lightweight gray linen normally reserved for suiting over wooden frames, Sanders covers each canvas in hot beeswax, then crumples the fabric haphazardly. Once cooled, the wax is roughly carved away, and the entire process is repeated. Works such as Crumple A38Crumple A39, and Crumple A40 show how the artist’s process can give depth to seemingly two-dimensional works. Her “Saturation” paintings resemble Helen Frankenthaler’s canvases—here, the wax settles over the sand-colored fabric smoothly, easy elegant pours spreading over each square. Warm, rounded, tactile, this body of work more clearly demonstrates the organic abstraction of her processes. 

A version of this article appears in the October 2014 issue of Modern Painters magazine. 

Review: Ryan Lauderdale and Jessica Sanders at Kansas
Lauderdale & Sanders at KANSAS

June

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Art + Auction
Magazine Year: 
2014
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COLUMNS
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On the block
Description: 

Fears of a drop-off in Russian bidding at the Impressionist/modern and contemporary auctions in London this summer could be offset by participation from other countries.

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Judd Tully
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53
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COLUMNS
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Conversation With…
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Laura Murphy, a fine art specialist at the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies.

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Deborah Wilk
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59
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COLUMNS
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Reporter
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The Milwaukee Art Museum experiences growing pains.
 
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Mary Louise Schumacher
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61
Column Name: 
COLUMNS
Story Title: 
The Assessment
Description: 

Works by artists from postwar Japan’s Gutai movement are gaining traction in the marketplace.

Author name: 
Angela M.H Schuster
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65
Story Title: 
Obsessions
Description: 

Susan Grant Lewin scours the globe to satisfy her endless desire for artist jewelry.

Author name: 
Deborah Wilk
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73
Column Name: 
MARKET WATCH
Story Title: 
Artist Dossier
Description: 

Reexamining the bronze animalia of the reclusive sculptor Rembrandt Bugatti.

Author name: 
Judd Tully
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103
Column Name: 
MARKET WATCH
Story Title: 
Auctions in brief
Description: 

Sales results for photographs in New York, Old Masters in Vienna, and modern and contemporary Arab art in Dubai.

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109
Column Name: 
MARKET WATCH
Story Title: 
Exhibitions in Brief
Description: 

Reports on recent offerings from Beijing, Brussels, Cologne, and Los Angeles.

Author name: 
Doug McClemont
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112
Column Name: 
MARKET WATCH
Story Title: 
Databank
Description: 

Prices for paintings by Jean-Michel Basquiat have ballooned since 2008.

Author name: 
Roman Kraeussl
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114
Column Name: 
MARKET WATCH
Story Title: 
Dealer’s Notebook
Description: 

Parisian stalwart Daniel Templon tends a garden of international contemporary

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120

Back to Basics: "A Master Builder" at Film Forum

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Back to Basics: "A Master Builder" at Film Forum

Henrik Ibsen’s “The Master Builder,” written in 1892, will be presented in a new adaptation, directed by Jonathan Demme and making its theatrical premiere at Film Forum in a two-week engagement running July 23 through August 5. The film is itself the second layer of an adaptation, using as its source material Andre Gregory and Wallace Shawn’s version of Ibsen’s ghostly tragedy, developed over a 14-year period in relative secrecy and translated by Shawn from the original Norwegian text.

The group’s staging, now titled “A Master Builder,” was not done in complete secrecy. Glimpses of the rehearsals were viewed in “Before and After Dinner,” a documentary about Gregory made by his wife, the filmmaker Cindy Kleine. Aside from the living room read-throughs, the film also shows a performance staged for a select group of friends. Demme was one of those invited, and after seeing this production of Ibsen’s doomed tale of oversized hubris, agreed to direct the film version.

The appearance of “A Master Builder” also makes this something of a banner year for Ibsen in New York, following the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s productions of “Builder” last summer, starring John Turturro, and “A Doll’s House” just a few months ago. But of all the recent reimaginings of Ibsen’s work, this new film is the only one to fully capture the dreamlike quality floating through the text.

Shawn and Gregory, unheralded for their contributions to the American stage, are no strangers to their work appearing on screen. The duo became famous after starring in “My Dinner With Andre,” a scripted-and-filmed conversation between Shawn and Gregory, directed by Louis Malle, that blended fact and fiction and became a succinct image of New York City tweed-jacket intellectualism. More than a decade later, the three would collaborate once again on “Vanya on 42nd Street,” a behind-the-scenes documentary of a staging of Chekhov’s play that subtly shifts in a contemporary remake. Demme’s collaboration with the duo can be viewed as the continuation of what Malle started more than three decades ago.

“A Master Builder,” which features Shawn in the title role, sticks pretty close to the original narrative, with one simple change: as the story opens, the Demme-Shawn-Gregory version sees Halvard Solness confined to a hospital bed, surrounded by friends and family. What happens throughout the play, including the appearance of Hilde (played with wild-eyed intensity by Lisa Joyce), emerges in a dreamlike state. Are these memories being revived? Or are they just the hallucinations of a man inches from death?

Demme softly inserts himself into the middle of the action, refusing to stand back and simply capture the actors from a distance. The camera, constantly moving, often frames the actors in close up, moving back and forth calmly throughout long scenes, which heightens the tension and creates a sense of intimacy not characteristic to Ibsen’s chilly work.  

But it’s ultimately the performances that keep the viewer invested in the film. As much as Demme wants to make the film something different from the stage, most of what he does here is never too complex. The film unfolds with ease, keeping the focus squarely on the actors themselves. And that’s a good thing. What makes “A Master Builder” powerful — the text — will only be damaged if the focus is shifted, and Demme’s understated presentation enlightens our understanding of a classic work of drama.  

Jonathan Demme's "A Master Builder" (2013)

July/August

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Modern Painters
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2014
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COMMENT
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Books: Richard House’s The Kills
Author name: 
Scott Indrisek
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43
Column Name: 
COMMENT
Story Title: 
Film: Remembering the Artist: Robert De Niro, Sr.
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Bruce W. Ferguson
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45
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COMMENT
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Reviews
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Istanbul’s Protocinema hosts an erotically charged dinner, surveillance state dystopia at the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, solo shows from Heidi Bucher and Mel Bochner, and more

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71
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PORTFOLIO
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Newsmaker: José Lerma
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PORTFOLIO
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Curator’s Choice: Amanda Coulson
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Private Views
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September

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Blouinartinfo Asia
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2014
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THE ART OF LIVING
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ART ON THE WRIST
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The attraction of antique clocks.

Author name: 
Michelle Tay
Page no: 
41
Column Name: 
THE ART OF LIVING
Story Title: 
A RENAISSANCE JEWELER
Description: 

Giampiero Bodino, on a new journey.

Author name: 
Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop
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46
Column Name: 
THE ART OF LIVING
Story Title: 
FORM AND FUNCTION
Description: 

The menagerie of Rembrandt Bugatti.

Author name: 
Judd Tully
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51
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ART ON THE ROAD
Description: 

Bentley and the sheer drive of beauty.

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57

Caught Between East and West: Kasimir Malevich at Tate Modern

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LONDON — There are many aspects to the art and career of Kasimir Malevich (1878-1935). But, especially right now, the most poignant fact about this great pioneer of abstract art is that he came from Ukraine. The son of Polish émigré parents, he was born near Kiev, sometimes signed his name in its Polish form — Kazimierz Malewicz — and did not move to Moscow until he was 25, in 1905. In other words, he was caught between east and west, and that perhaps more than any other factor explains the strange trajectory of his career.

A remarkable exhibition at Tate Modern (through October 26) charts his brilliant but erratic course. First, the young Malevich took an almost delirious plunge into the avant-garde movements of the early 20th century. In the early rooms you see him working his way through the most advanced styles of the day at warp speed: Seurat’s pointillism, Gauguin’s symbolism, Matisse’s fauvism.

Sometimes these idioms appear in odd combinations. “Church,” c. 1908, presents an Eastern Orthodox building, painted in an almost monochrome combination of greys, beiges, and whites — but executed in Van Gogh’s fervent brush-strokes. The effect is odd: Vincent’s Provence transposed into a northern, Slavic key. It was a move he was inclined to make in the years immediately before the First World War. By this time, Malevich had — briefly — settled into an idiom he dubbed “Cubo-Futurism.”

This consisted of liberal borrowings from the almost contemporary works of Picasso, Braque, Léger, and the Italian Futurists, but, again, with an Eastern European twist. “Desk and Room,” 1913, is pure Parisian cubism, except for insistent patches of a very Russian — and very unCubist — red.

“The Woodcutter,” 1912, and “The Mower,” 1911-12, both have a good deal in common with Ferdinand Léger’s personal variant of Cubism — dubbed “Tubism” because of Léger’s reliance on reducing all forms to cylinders. But Malevich’s subjects — in both cases traditional bearded and smocked Russian peasants — have a directness and pared down simplicity that recalls Eastern Orthodox images of saints.

Those modernist peasant icons were to recur in Malevich’s art a decade later. The Cubo-Futurist work that best predicted his own immediate future, however, was “Lady at the Advertising Column,” 1914. This consists of colored rectangles in pink, yellow, and purples, superimposed over Cubist filigree of Cyrillic letters and fractured planes.

Next, it seems, Malevich realized he could do away with the detail, and just make a picture out of those rectangles. The result was one of the most startling and powerful works in the Modernist canon: “Black Square.” This extraordinary painting is like a punctuation mark in the history of art. It is just there, looming in front of you with a force that exceeds any earlier abstract pictures. To find an abstraction of comparable punch, you have to look decades later — at Richard Serra’s work of the 1960s and ’70s, for example.

It is one of the few mistakes in an otherwise well-chorographed exhibition that the biggest and most forceful “Black Square” — Malevich produced several versions starting in 1915 — is hung in the same room as a filmed recreation of an avant-garde theatrical production from 1913, “Victory Over the Sun.” The latter, though no doubt of historical importance, comes across like a rather weird production for children’s television. But because it is noisy, and moves, everyone looks at the film, not the painting.

Actually, what to do with “Black Square” posed a problem for Malevich himself. How do you follow that? His initial response was to retreat a little into more complicated geometric abstract, in a style he called “Suprematism.” But it is obvious from the rooms in which these hang at the Tate, that the simpler — that is, the closest to “Black Square”the better these are. The more colors and forms he introduced, the less forceful and memorable the results. Better are the pared down works of 1917-18, such as the wedge-shaped “Yellow Plane in Dissolution,” and the audacious white on white paintings of the same period. But none are quite as stunning as “Black Square.”

Malevich tried several directions, including architectural models which should perhaps be classified as Suprematist sculpture, since he doesn’t seem to have devoted much thought to the function of these structures, or what rooms might be made inside them. By the late ’20s and early ’30s, he found himself living inside a totalitarian country — with Stalin firmly in control — where there was no room for a radical artistic avant-garde. That was, after all, an alien idea imported from Paris.

Eventually Malevich returned to painting modernist icons of peasants. This cannot be seen as an attempt to conform to the new state-imposed style of “Socialist Realism.” As the catalogue points out, in the era of forcible collectivization, peasants were not a politically-acceptable subject. It looks more as though Malevich lost his way as the world around him lurched into dictatorship. Even so, his last works do not show a straightforward decline. Admittedly, a few of the late figurative portraits are dire, but others showing Malevich and his friends in Italian Renaissance costume are much stronger: the effect is weirdly retro, but this was also a covert way of flaunting strong, Suprematist color. These are bizarre, but perhaps true images of Russia’s avant-garde, disguised and lost in the era of Stalin’s purges.

Caught Between East and West: Kasimir Malevich at Tate Modern
Kasimir Malevich at Tate Modern

Turrell Awarded National Medal, Winklevii Invest in Paddle8, and More

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Turrell Awarded National Medal, Winklevii Invest in Paddle8, and More

— Turrell Nabs National Medal: James Turrell is set to receive the National Medal of the Arts from President Obama next week at the White House. Turrell is being honored for “capturing the powers of light and space” in a way that “builds experiences that force us to question reality, challenging our perceptions not only of art, but… of the world around us.” Other honorees include Linda RonstadtBill T. Jones, and Maxine Hong Kingston. [LAT]

— Winklevii Invest in Paddle8: Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the twins famous for their very public fight with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, have announced their investment in online auction house Paddle8. The twins are also well known for their support of the burgeoning digital currency bitcoin, which Paddle8 hasn’t committed to as an accepted form of currency yet, but has considered as an idea for future sales. Tyler said in an email to Fast Company, “The art market is global and like many global markets it currently feels the pain, inefficiencies, and high-costs of our current payment systems. Bitcoin rethinks the way we transfer value. It is borderless, frictionless, and instant and should be able to bring these qualities to art transactions just like any other transaction.” [FastCo]

— Met Head Becomes US Citizen: British-born Metropolitan Museum of Art director Thomas P. Campbell was among those who became US citizens in a naturalization ceremony hosted at the museum yesterday. Campbell and 74 others pledged allegiance in the American Wing’s Charles Englehard Court. “I am humbled and proud to be sharing this day with my fellow new citizens and delighted to be in this magnificent space for this occasion,” Campbell said. [GalleristWSJ]

— Museum for African Art Cuts Budget: The budget for the still-under-construction Museum for African Art has been cut by $40 million from its previous $135 million estimate, due to difficulty raising the funds. [NYT]

— Is Art Theft Really the Third Biggest Criminal Trade? A June 2014 conference at NYU’s School of Law named art theft the third highest-grossing criminal trade in the world over the past 40 years, according to Newsweek, but Art Market Monitor’s Marion Maneker points out that “grossing” doesn’t acknowledge that most art thieves actually don’t make big bucks off their loot since it’s hard to sell stolen goods. [NewsweekArt Market Monitor]

— Celebs Ban Together Against Venice Ships: Celebrities Cate BlanchettSusan Sarandon, and Calvin Klein have penned a letter to Italy’s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and Ministry of Culture Dario Franceschini calling for a ban against cruise ships in Venice. [Speakeasy]

— Gallerist has an interesting look at artist assistant jobs. [Gallerist]

—  The DC Commission for the Arts and Humanities has cancelled Mia Feuer’s climate change art installation, which was set to be installed in the Anacostia River. [Grist]

— The Albany Museum of Art’s director Karen Kemp has resigned. [Albany Herald]

ALSO ON ARTINFO

Luxembourg Picks Filip Markiewicz for Venice Biennale

Christopher Williams Goes Label-Free at MoMA

Review: Ryan Lauderdale and Jessica Sanders at Kansas

Check our blog IN THE AIR for breaking news throughout the day.

 James Turrell poses for a photo beside his work "Skyspace Third Breath (2005)"

Slideshow: Sean Landers's Tartan Animals


Tom Friedman at Luhring Augustine Bushwick

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Luhring Augustine gallery’s Bushwick location is a destination. An artistic mansion in the realm of the neighborhood’s many creative shacks, it provides a site for contemplation, which is why the exhibitions on view at this outpost do not usually invite a quick read. Tom Friedman’s second solo show (through August 9) with the gallery is no exception. A sublime display of mostly monochromatic works made with paint and Styrofoam that simulate paintings in a variety of genres and styles, along with a selection of everyday objects rendered downright realistically, the 15 works here have the power to capture the spectator’s eye, imagination, and sustained attention.

The first work on view, Mountain (all works 2014), depicts an all-white landscape with a rocky terrain below and snow-filled sky above. The frame, dimensional peaks, and larger-than-life snowflakes have all been convincingly carved from blue Styrofoam and flatly painted white. Blue Styrofoam Seascape is a faux-framed view of an evenly split horizon of sea and sky rendered in the deadpan manner of a black-and-white Hiroshi Sugimoto photograph, while the canvas-like Night slyly mimics the elevated brushwork and scene of Van Gogh’s Starry Night in nocturnal black.

Toxic Green Luscious Green and Blue ape Pop Art paintings with found objects attached to the surface, but in Friedman’s mock canvases, everything from locks and guns to pretzels and puzzle pieces are cut and shaped in Styrofoam and painted in matching colors. Even though the artist refers to the wall works as “sculptures of paintings,” other pieces in the show are fully three-dimensional. The elongated Purple Balloon, suspended from the ceiling by clear fishing line, enchantingly floats in space not far from a corner installation entitled Moot—a fake guitar, microphone, and stool that await a performer. Echoing the silence that permeates the show, Moot lies directly across from See, an ersatz eyeball placed in the opposite corner to smartly remind viewers that there’s more to this show than what meets the eye. 

A version of this article appears in the October 2014 issue of Modern Painters magazine.

Tom Friedman at Luhring Augustine Bushwick
An installation view of Tom Friedman's "Paint and Styrofoam" at Luhring Augustin

Slideshow: BAN 7 Exhibition at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

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BAN 7 Exhibition at Yerba Buena Center for the Art

“Bay Area Now” Proposes a Refreshing Biennial Model

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For the past few months, the swirl of controversy around the Whitney Biennial has stirred dialogue and debate about exclusion and invisibility in the art world. Catalyzed by the withdrawal of the “mostly black and mostly queer” Yams Collective, much of the conversation has centered on the ways in which curatorial processes can perpetuate institutional racism and sexism.

With these considerations still fresh in my mind, seeing the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts’s “Bay Area Now” triennial felt invigorating in its proposal of one kind of solution to the exclusionary problems inherent in such bi(or tri)ennial surveys. For the museum’s seventh such regional show, co-curators Betti-Sue Hertz and Ceci Moss relied not on their own subjective choices, but turned the show over to 15 local art spaces and non-profits that were chosen through an application process. From the San Quentin Prison Arts Project (which has been providing art workshops to inmates since 1977) to n/a (an exhibition space for queer art located in an Oakland apartment that opened in May 2013), each organization curated a specific space or series of spaces within the museum.

Among the diverse presentations, three San Francisco-based organizations stand out for their boundary-pushing, thought-provoking shows-within-the-show.

Creativity Explored, an organization that works with developmentally disabled artists, put together the three-artist presentation “Next Big Thing,” curated by Vanesa Gingold and Grace Rosario Perkins. As much as I loved Christina Marie Fong’s bright paintings and works on paper and Anthony “Tony” Gomez’s hanging mixed media sculptures, the standout was Marilyn Wong’s mixed media installation “Sexy Diva’s in the House.” The life-size work is a warped, handmade recreation of her bedroom with nearly every inch covered in her distinctive drawing style, including walls plastered with dozens of reimaginings of classic horror movie posters — like a frenetic update on Tracey Emin’s “My Bed.” While so-called Outsider artists (a fraught term that often encompasses those with disabilities) have been popular exhibition fodder lately, this display proves that the problematic label isn’t necessary. The work stands on its own.

The For-Site Foundation, which supports “art about place” through residencies and other programming, is one of the few participants that chose to show work from just one artist. “Dead Reckoning,” curated by Jackie von Treskow, is a presentation of three towering buoy-inspired sculptures (ranging from 8.4 to 16 feet tall) created by Nathan Lynch. Composed of donut-shaped, roughly hewn redwood bases that support playful ceramic tops in different oozing and plant-like organic shapes, the sculptures’ unexpected pairings of materials make for delightful, otherworldly Willy Wonka-like objects. The wall text explains that the title names “the process of calculating one’s position at sea by estimating the direction and distance traveled rather than by using landmarks, astronomical observations, or electronic navigation methods. Dead reckoning is subject to cumulative errors.” A quasi-poetic text painted on the wall about drifting at sea drives that point home further, but the sculptures would have been even stronger without so much thematic guidance.

Artist-run space [2nd floor projects] showed nine 5-foot-wide photos by Daniel Case and intriguing inner tube sculptures by Nicolaus Chaffin in “Eros/On,” a presentation about queer visibility and “the erasure of queer lineage,” curated by Margaret Tedesco. Context is key in Case’s quiet, depopulated beach landscapes, which picture Northern California’s “coastal cruising trails and sex spots.” The titles — “Circle,” “Nest,” “Spiral” — refer to the shapes of outcroppings of wood and stones that have been arranged by successive visitors. This carving out of queer space, however, is temporary — the wall text explains that these areas are usually cleared or washed away. The photographs seem unassuming, but, in a single image, radically invoke the specifically queer historical narratives of these sites.

This queer narrative and the many others encompassed in the show all find a place within the museum. The multi-pronged structure of the triennial felt fresh for many reasons: it shifted the attention from artists to organizations, it celebrated things happening outside of the mainstream gallery and museum world, and it emphasized process and the processes by which art is, or is not, exhibited. The dissonance of voices is what makes this show great.

“Bay Area Now” Proposes a Refreshing Biennial Model
An installation view of Christina Marie Fong's "Sexy Diva's in the House," 2014

June

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VIDEO: Bentley Meeker Puts the “H” in Harlem

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VIDEO: Bentley Meeker Puts the “H” in Harlem

West Harlem gets its own artistic landmark with Bentley Meeker’s massive light installation,“The ‘H’ In Harlem.”

Meeker, known for his large-scale lighting rigs and temples at Burning Man, creates a bold statement with this illuminating sculpture of a giant letter "H" surrounded by an aluminum oval truss, suspended from the viaduct at 12th Avenue and 125th Street.

“I really wanted to do something that was extraordinary for the community,” said Meeker about the city-wide beacon that can be viewed from Morningside to 12th Avenue on 125th street.

The project is a collaboration between the Manhattan Community Board 9 (MCB9), the 125th Street Business Improvement District, West Harlem Art Fund and the New York City Department of Transportation. Meeker, who is also a Harlem resident, hopes the installation will bring attention to the community and its eagerness to embrace economic growth and positive social change, while celebrating the rich cultural heritage and diversity that defines the area.

Erecting the white LED light sculpture and full-spectrum plasma lighting fixtures was an overnight process, but it took Meeker almost a year of planning to make it weather and hurricane proof, an engineering feat never attempted before in his previous works.

“It is unbelievable at night,” said Meeker. “It’s just a bright beacon and symbol in Harlem.”

The installation is on view now through September 25 in West Harlem at the viaduct on the corner of 12th Avenue and W125th Street.

Bentley Meeker's The "H" In Harlem

LA Street Artist Slams Obama, Ovation Gets Art Talk Show, and More

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LA Street Artist Slams Obama, Ovation Gets Art Talk Show, and More

— LA Street Artist Slams Obama: An anonymous LA street artist has plastered bus benches outside the ABC studios where Shonda Rhimes’s hit show “Scandal” is filmed with posters slamming President Obama for his own “scandals.” The artworks prominently feature the commander in chief’s face along with words like “Benghazi,” “NSA,” “Fast & Furious,” and “Solyndra,” which greeted him when he arrived at the studios for a fundraising dinner on Wednesday night. It was initially thought to be the work of Sabo, but the artist refused to take credit — he didn’t, however, deny involvement with the artists who were responsible. “I literally trained them how to do it,” he said. “They showed me the art a couple of weeks ago and I thought the branding was weak and told them so.” [The Blaze]

— Ovation Launches Art Talk Show: Ovation TV has just launched its first original web series and it takes the form of an art talk show. “Touching the Art,” hosted by artist Casey Jane Ellison, will interview three art world women at a time on current art events. The first episode features LA ladies Catherine OpieBettina Korek, and Jori Finkel. [Hyperallergic]

— De Blasio Asks for Museum Support of ID Card: If Mayor de Blasio has his way, the city’s new municipal identification card may also come with membership to some of the city’s best museums. As a way to encourage people to sign up for the card, the city is hoping the MetLincoln Center, the Brooklyn Museum, and other institutions will offer discounts or memberships. “The city’s coming to us and saying, ‘Will you help solve this?’” said Susan Lacerte, executive director of the Queens Botanical Garden. “It recognizes that we have great constituencies, we have reach in the communities.” [NYT]

— Lincoln Center’s Massive Modern Art Collection: Visitors may not be aware that Lincoln Center’s public art collection includes works by modern art greats like Alexander CalderHenry MooreDavid SmithJasper Johns, and Lee Bontecou. [WSJ]

— Gallery Draws Anger Over Nude Display: Nolita’s Rivington Design House has drawn public complaints for its large photographic display of an artwork depicting a very nude man in the front window by artist Bek Anderson. [NY Daily News]

— Rachel Lehmann Dishes on Traveling: Art dealer Rachel Lehmann told the Wall Street Journal that in her travels, the most interesting art scene she has come across is Cluj-Napoca, Romania. “It has a very rich cultural history, but everything stopped in the 1970s and ’80s with the Ceausescu dictatorship,” she said. “Now there is a big hunger to re-establish the importance of the area as a cultural center.” [WSJ]

— Here’s an NPR chat with the directors of the National Museum of African Art and the National Museum of the American Indian. [NPR]

— New York dealer Richard Feigen has been denied a $215,625 tax refund for a forged Max Ernst painting because he filed the request too late. [New York Law Journal]

— Vanja Malloy has been named the new curator of American art at Amherst College’s Mead Art Museum. [Artforum

ALSO ON ARTINFO

“Bay Area Now” Proposes a Refreshing Biennial Model

Tom Friedman at Luhring Augustine Bushwick

Applebroog, Ruscha, and a Bunch of Architects Elected to National Academy

Check our blog IN THE AIR for breaking news throughout the day.

U.S. President Barack Obama.

Sean Landers and the Seriousness of Adorable Animals

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“Is it possible to do a porcupine?” pondered Sean Landers, enumerating the North American mammals that he has yet to immortalize in a painting. “Beaver. Raccoon. Possum. Elk. Wooly mammoth — that would be great.” So far he’s assembled a veritable menagerie of mostly four-legged subjects, including several deer, a bison, and two violent rams. But, this being Sean Landers we’re talking about, they’re not straight-forward depictions of wild beasts in their natural environments; all of them sport tartan-patterned fur or skin, their natural camouflage replaced by lovingly rendered Scottish designs. In his West Village studio there’s a seal, happily cavorting beneath the waves, as well as a half-finished fox. Landers is surprisingly earnest about the works which, while absurd and funny, are much more than visual puns. “I generally want to paint cute animals, I guess,” he said. “And this helps me be able to do it. It’s just weird enough to get me a little purchase on this tenuous slope.”

These tartan animals — the subject of a forthcoming November exhibition at Petzel in New York — have their genesis in a stew of inspirations, from 1940s paintings by Rene Magritte to Landers’s own ruminations on mortality and artistic legacy. The Magrittes in question are a series of works known as the “Vache” paintings, completed in 1948 for a show in France; tartan and tartan-like patterns played a significant part in many of the compositions. “Magritte was invited to do a show in Paris,” Landers explained. “He’d been ignored there his whole career, yet he was the world’s leading Surrealist. He had an ax to grind — he wanted to do a ‘fuck you’ show to Paris, so he made purposefully ‘bad’ paintings. They weren’t valued at all, until people of my generation — me and a couple others — started to champion them.” His tartan animals, Landers said, are “an homage to what I admire about that series, but also a way to remind myself that to be free, to discover new things, is the best way to make work that will last and be interesting for a long time.”

Landers is quite conscious of artistic longevity — about how paintings can become “arrows across time,” striking future generations long after their creator is dead. He sounded borderline doleful when imagining the existence his tartan creatures could have, discovered by curious humans several hundred years from now. He’s equally sincere when talking about certain inclusions of text in the paintings — like “Some Choose To Believe It,” a lyric from “The Rainbow Connection,” performed by Kermit, which Landers has adopted as a sort of anthem about how artists forge connections with audiences. This gives a certain pathos to the tartan series itself, especially when Landers explains that he incorporated his own irises into the painting of a polar bear, adrift on a chunk of iceberg. (That polar bear refers back to a similarly lonely clown in a rowboat that was included in Landers’s last, clown-centric exhibition at Petzel.) Another autobiographical reference is embedded in a portrait of a howler monkey holding a bottle that contains a furled sheet of yellow legal paper, a nod to the “shockingly honest things” that Landers would write down and then exhibit in the 1990s.

Several of the tartan animal paintings have partner versions: Canvases depicting rows of books, with a small version of the animal itself captured in a crystal ball on the shelf. The spines of those books are covered with words spelling out a sort of exegesis of the original painting it refers to. “As paintings age and artists die off, their stories about why they made things disappear,” Landers said, perhaps suggesting that the bookshelves are a way to carry those origin-story narratives into posterity.

One of the biggest mammals Landers has completed — and the subject of the largest painting he’s ever made, some 30-feet long — is a massive version of Moby Dick, his skin battle-scarred beneath its tartan ornamentation. That painting will most likely reside on one wall in the back room of Petzel (which has a nice resonance with another very American picture — Robert Longo’s huge charcoal drawing of the Capitol Building — which hung in the same place). Moby Dick might be paired with some underwater scenes of shipwrecks — one of Landers’s unofficial maxims is, “Whenever you’re given the opportunity to paint a sunken ship, you should take it” — moody, murky scenes featuring rocks etched with slogans like, “Is art humanity’s best answer to death?” At one point he had painted in an octopus with a chisel, a character that he erased from the composition, but who might well resurface on his own canvas at a later date. “You can’t do all your ideas all at one time,” Landers said, sounding perhaps a bit disappointed that this is not the case.

When you get down to it, are these tartan-clad animals — from the lithe, pinkish lynx to the horse galloping across a beach — just different versions of Sean? “Are they all me? In a sense, yeah,” he said. “If you think of a painting as a time capsule — they’re wrapping a bit of myself into the medium. It’s a little piece of myself, going forward.”

Sean Landers and the Seriousness of Adorable Animals
Sean Landers at his West Village studio.

Autumn Year Round: Anton Corbijn On “A Most Wanted Man”

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Autumn Year Round: Anton Corbijn On “A Most Wanted Man”

“I want to learn,” the photographer and filmmaker Anton Corbijn told me, humbly. “It’s an adventure for me making films.”

We were sitting in an office in Midtown Manhattan discussing his new film, “A Most Wanted Man,” which arrives in theaters on July 25. Based on the book of the same name by master spy novelist John le Carre, the ensemble thriller — headed by Philip Seymour Hoffman in the last complete role he filmed before his death, and featuring Willem Dafoe, Rachel McAdams, Robin Wright, and the German actress Nina Hoss — represents a departure for Corbijn, best known for his stark black-and-white photographs of musicians and accompanying music videos, and whose previous two films — “Control” (2007) and “The American” (2010) — were internal portraits of isolated men increasingly shut off from the world.

“I don’t want my films to look like a photographer made a movie,” Corbijn said, referencing a common criticism of his first film, “Control,” a biopic about the final days of Joy Division signer Ian Curtis. “A Most Wanted Man” posed a challenge and offered an opportunity to try something different. He was conscious of moving away from the meticulous compositions of his previous films and made an effort to use more handheld cameras to loosen the film up and give it a sense of urgency. He understands that, as a photographer, there are compositional modes that are easy to fall back on, and he sees his films as offering a way to break those habits.

“I’m very much trying to have the visual part of it play a more secondary role,” he admitted, noting that John le Carre’s story is told through a twisting structure and relies on dialogue to push the narrative. “After ‘The American,’ which was fiction, I wanted to do something based on facts,” he said. Le Carre’s book was of interest to the filmmaker in that it deals with the intertwined interests of international spy agencies in the post-9/11 landscape of Hamburg, Germany, presents a critique of American foreign policy, and asks questions about how far governments are willing to go in the name of fighting international terrorism.

Corbijn’s shift in style also represents his desire to scale down. “I’ve photographed a lot of painters in the last 10 years and it’s always just me,” he said. “I like to visit somebody and take a picture without being hindered by other people around. Photography’s a very simple thing. I don’t need much.” Corbijn is interested in documentary as a genre and as a way of working, he said, for these same reasons, even though he is beginning to find comfort in collaborating with a large group of people who you can trust to take care of their specific roles in a production. 

One of those collaborators is Benoit Delhomme, the director of photography. Like John le Carre’s more famous narratives of Cold War disillusionment — most notably the George Smiley trilogy of books — “A Most Wanted Man” requires a melancholy tone, and Delhomme casts the film with muted colors and the glow of streetlights and desk lamps. The film was supposed to shoot over the summer, Corbijn said, but he convinced the producers to push it to the fall to capture some of the natural seasonal colors.

“I felt that it was an optimal tale to tell in that time of year,” he said. “For mankind, it’s definitely autumn year round.”

A bleak view, but one that is fitting for the film at hand. The closest we get to heroes in le Carre’s work are disheveled, chain-smoking spies, broken down by years of bureaucratic pressure and institutional deception with little prospects of any kind of domestic life. And Corbijn, in his film and photographic work, displays an attraction to loner figures. Instead of outcasts, he sees this type of character as something more relatable.

His next, already completed film, “Life,” is about the Magnum Photos photographer Dennis Stock’s relationship with the screen icon James Dean, one of popular culture’s most celebrated loners. In person, Corbijn is soft-spoken, almost shy, and mentions his familiarity, especially at a young age, with spending time alone. Does he see a connection between his characters and the role of an artist?

“I get the sense we’re all loners in the end,” he replied quietly. “We quite often pretend not to be because it makes it more comfortable, mentally.”

As our conversation came to a close, I asked Corbijn if the film is somehow different now, altered in some way that is out of his control, due to Philip Seymour Hoffman’s tragic death. He paused for a moment, staring at the ground. “I don’t know how to respond to that yet,” he said. “I myself find it much harder to watch it.”

“I’m very happy that we finished the film before Philip died so we didn’t have any awkward choices to make,” he added. “We only now have to deal with the effect of how people watch the film. But you know, his performance is everything. You can just look at the film and look at the performance, that’s reason enough to see the film.”

Anton Corbijn's "A Most Wanted Man"

BLOUIN Lifestyle Pick: Vintage Watches at Christie's

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BLOUIN Lifestyle Pick: Vintage Watches at Christie

Studio Tracks: Scott Daniel Ellison's Playlist

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Studio Tracks: Scott Daniel Ellison's Playlist

“I spent a lot of time in the woods growing up,” said painter Scott Daniel Ellison, whose exhibition “Iowa, Ohio” opened last night at ClampArt in New York. “I spent an equal amount of time watching late night horror films and reading ‘Fangoria.’ I sort of tap into this part of my life from time to time, especially for these new paintings.” Those works are raw and loaded with an enigmatic symbolism: images of bats, claw-like hands, and green-skinned forest bogeymen. Ellison shared his current studio playlist, from Black Sabbath to the Delta Blues.

“Loom of the Land,” Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds

“Just a sad, beautiful song from a great album. As a teenager I would collect magazine photos of and articles about Nick Cave and keep them in a scrapbook of sorts. There was one clipping in particular that I was really fond of, a photo of him and his shadow against a barn wall. The shadow, all hunched over and grumpy, seems to have taken on a creepy, comical life of its own; it may have found a way into one of my paintings, in spirit, at least.”

“Triangle Walks,” Fever Ray

“Karin Dreijer Andersson seems to tap into a Nordic shamanism that pre-dates modern history. Since I was a child I have always been interested in paganism and witchcraft, mostly because it scared me. I hear a lot of that same curiosity in her music, and her stage costumes and make-up. Although her music is mostly electronic it comes off in tone as being both acoustic and ancient. I’m also a big fan of the Knife, her band with her brother. I was living in Sweden when I first became aware of her and her music and I was hooked instantly.”

“Crying,” Roy Orbison

“My parents listened to a lot of great music when I was growing up. I really took to Roy Orbison. He’s often on in the background while I’m painting or driving. For me, he’s someone you want to listen to when you’re all alone. He seemed quite vulnerable and unapologetically self-conscious when he sang, his voice sweet and childlike with its nasal tone.”

“Changes,” Black Sabbath

“I grew up listening to a lot of heavy metal just by being in earshot of it much of the time. My brother Vincent’s room was covered in Metallica and Iron Maiden posters. He was in there a lot with his friends blasting AC/DC, Megadeth, and Slayer all summer long. There was, of course, a lot of frightening imagery associated with these bands that I was drawn to — much more than the music itself — and that imagery pops up in my paintings from time to time. Later in life I came back to the music with a new appreciation.”

“Dust My Broom,” James Son Thomas

“I’m on a Delta Blues kick right now. James Son Thomas also created small clay heads and skulls — with real human teeth — that blend seamlessly with his music. It’s all just one piece. He was also a gravedigger. Although I’m a northern soul I have an outsider’s fascination with the folklore of the south. I lived in North Carolina for a couple years and my parents live there now. I get to New Orleans when I can and usually don’t want to leave. You hear a lot of stories about swamp beasts and ghosts when you’re down there.”

Scott Daniel Ellison's "Pines" from his "Iowa, Ohio" show at ClampArt.

More Gurlitt Works Found, di Cosimo Gets First Retrospective, and More

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More Gurlitt Works Found, di Cosimo Gets First Retrospective, and More

— More Gurlitt Works Found: Despite the fact that in 2012 authorities confiscated more than 1,000 works from the Munich apartment of recently deceased recluse Cornelius Gurlitt, the government-appointed group tasked with investigating the trove’s provenance said that more works were recently found in his home. Among those uncovered were sculptures believed to be made by Rodin and Degas. The task force will review the works to determine if they were Nazi-looted and they will be posted on the German government’s looted art databank. [NYT]

— Piero di Cosimo Gets First Retrospective: The National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. has announced plans to mount the first retrospective of Piero di Cosimo, a contemporary of da Vinci and Raphael. Known for a quirky personality and an interest in the Northern European style, di Cosimo has long been overlooked. “This first-ever retrospective on Piero allows us finally to bring together examples from all the genres in which he painted and from all time periods to better understand the chronology of his life and the progression of his career,” said Gretchen Hirschauer, the gallery’s associate curator for Italian and Spanish paintings. [WP]

— Italian Culture Minister Grants Museums Autonomy: Dario Franceschini,the Italian minister for culture and tourism, has announced reforms that will increase the autonomy of the country’s museums and lower costs. The proposals could make 20 museums and archaeological sites self-governing institutions no longer run by the ministry itself. “The chronic lack of autonomy of Italian museums... greatly limits their potential,” said Franceschini. [TAN]

— National Portrait Gallery Shows Important Suffragette Painting: Ethel Wright’s painting of militant suffragette leader Christabel Pankhurst went on display at the National Portrait Gallery on Thursday for the first time in 80 years. [Guardian]

— Yale Center for British Art to Close for Conservation: The Yale Center for British Art is set to close in January 2015 for a year in order to complete the second part of conservation of its Louis I. Kahn-designed building. [Art Daily]

— Artists Brew Schnapps From Beuys Sculpture: Three artists have used a piece of fat from a 32-year-old work by Joseph Beuys to brew schnapps as part of a performance, outraging Beuys’s surviving family members. [Independent]

— Lydia Yee is the Whitechapel Gallery’s new senior curator. [Artforum]

— Marianne Boesky Gallery now represents South African, New York-based artist Dean Levin. [Press Release]

— Lord Jacob Rothschild is the recipient of the J. Paul Getty annual medal. [LAT]

ALSO ON ARTINFO

Sean Landers and the Seriousness of Adorable Animals

Studio Tracks: Scott Daniel Ellison’s Playlist

Art World Drinks: A Garry Winogrand Negroni

VIDEO: Bentley Meeker Puts the “H” in Harlem

Check our blog IN THE AIR for breaking news throughout the day.

Piero di Cosimo at National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

VIDEO: Artists, Collectors and Dealers Head East for Art Southampton 2014

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VIDEO: Artists, Collectors and Dealers Head East for Art Southampton 2014

SOUTHAMPTON, NY — The tony village of Southampton on Long Island's east end is once again this weekend showcasing artists and welcoming collectors from all over the world for Art Southampton 2014. The fair, presented by the 24-year-old Art Miami, is in its third edition and is featuring a familiar roster of galleries—75 in total. The fair welcomed thousands to its VIP night Thursday. Many artists were also in attendance. Blouin ARTINFO spoke with JD Miller from the Dallas-based Samuel Lynne Galleries, Andrew Erdos at Claire Oliver Gallery and Jeff Muhs from Southampton's McNeill Art Group. Art Southampton runs through Monday, June 28th off Route 27A in Southampton.

Art Southampton 2014
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