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03 May 2010 by nathaniel

Nathaniel Stern Bad At Sports interview now live

Bad at Sports interview with Nathaniel SternBad at Sports Episode 244:
Nathaniel Stern

by Duncan MacKenzie

“Bad at Sports is a weekly podcast produced in Chicago that features artists talking about art and the community that makes, reviews and critiques it. Shows are usually posted each weekend and can be listened to on any computer with an internet connection and speakers or headphones.”

This audio interview (available streaming from the site, or as a download to your computer or mp3 player) begins with Nathaniel Stern rapping a bit of Beastie Boys / Q-Tip, and quickly degrades to him lovingly poking fun at his dad. It’s actually a great interview, where you can hear some off the cuff chatting with Duncan MacKenzie about hektor.net, Distill Life, Compressionism, Wikipedia Art, Given Time, Doin’ my part to lighten the load, and more. It’s good fun, with lots of tangential stories and jokes, and many mentions of good friends and colleagues. Enjoy!

listen to interview on B@S

Posted in art, art and tech, carine zaayman, Compressionism, me, milwaukee art, poetry, pop culture, printmaking, re-blog tidbits, research, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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29 September 2009 by nathaniel

Colin Richards @ Gallery AOP (Johannesburg)

One of my favorite South African artists at one of my favorite South African galleries (disclosure: the latter is MY South African gallery):

8 – 31 October 2009
Opening on Thursday 10 October at 18:00
Preview by appointment
Walkabout with the artist on Saturday 10 October at 12:00
Colin Richards  Parrot (African Grey) I (detail)  2009   Watercolour  580X760mm
Colin Richards
For more information, please call 082 808 9971
www.galleryaop.com

Posted in art, exhibition, inbox, poetry, south african art ·

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20 May 2008 by nathaniel

art definitions etc

awesome.

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDo_vs3Aip4 500 395]

hat tip: Ivan Durt (Frans Masereel Centrum, Belgium)

Posted in art, inbox, Links, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, theory, uncategorical, youtube ·

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17 April 2008 by nathaniel

Till Joseph flies to hide the biting tears, by Doron Golan

I had to post this beautifully understated new video work by Doron Golan.

joseph
Till Joseph flies to hide the biting tears (2008, 48MB, 5.20 min.)

Michael Szpakowski, also of DVblog, says (via rhizome):

…this is great & quite the strangest thing you’ve ever made. The tone is quite disturbing, made me quite nervous, but it’s also beautiful. In particular there’s one moment near to the end with lots of effects when there’s just some of the most beautiful shades of green *ever* on the screen.

Also I had an epiphany whilst watching – I realised one particular move I love in your editing ( and it lends it so much of its personal quality and power) -it’s like a sort of “half-jump-cut” – we move from one position of a person to another, sometimes with a slight zoom in or out or a slight change of angle but the continuity is both manifestly broken and somehow retained. It *is* a jump cut but in your hands it
doesn’t have the brashness that one might associate with that term. It’s amazingly potent.

Do you shoot with that sort of thing in mind, zooming in and out with a mind to removing some of the intervening footage?

I like the performance too, understated but effective…

The effects are the thing I find strangest – they are so in-your-face and contrast so markedly with that lovely B&W look you achieve. The little buzzing objects ( for want of a better description) put me in mind of the helicopter in the Tell Aviv portraits..

The symbolism (again for want of a better word) is so intensely personal, or at least hermetic that at this end of your work there’s a flavour of Blake. I couldn’t exactly logically justify that assertion but it *feels* true to me…

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, poetry, re-blog tidbits, reviews, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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07 February 2008 by nathaniel

Ingrid Michaelson chat

I wrote this post on a long lost high school friend and current rock star a while back, and so it seems some Ingrid Michaelson fans (good taste ladies and gents) are winding up on my blog. If you are one of them, you should be aware of a live chat with Ingrid this weekend. (I won’t be able to make it, unfortunately.)

Chat Live with…
Ingrid Michaelson
Sat, February 9
@ 7PM EST

– Ingrid will be answering questions from her webcam
– Visit Ingrid’s myspace page and look for the embedded meebo chat room to join.

I should add that I have been regularly listening to “The Way I Am” and “Breakable” since putting them on my iPod (“Keep Breathing” too), and they seem to have more impact on me with each listen.

Ingrid on iTunes:
Ingrid Michaelson

Posted in inbox, Links, music, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

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17 January 2008 by nathaniel

ingrid michaelson

ingrid_michaelson.jpg

I rarely look up a song I’ve heard on television. Maybe on a late night show now and again (I think I found Corinne Bailey Ray thanks to a meta-late night show, Studio 60), or something in a movie, but on TV, not so much. But after the third time I had turned to my wife and said, “This is actually quite a beautiful song; and I think it may be the same artist as the last time I said this,” while watching Grey’s Anatomy, I caved and looked it up on the internet. I was shocked when I found Ingrid Michaelson’s name. Via Wikipedia:

Michaelson was born to artistic parents — composer Carl Michaelson and sculptor Elizabeth Egbert, who is the Executive Director & President of the Staten Island Museum. She took up piano at age 5. She had trained until age 7 at Manhattan’s Third Street Music School and continued for many more years at the Jewish Community Center of S.I.’s Dorothy Delson Kuhn Music Institute. There she met vocal coach Elizabeth McCullough, who worked with her through high school. She is a graduate of Staten Island Technical High School and Binghamton University, where she received a degree in theatre.

“Hey, Nathaniel,” you might ask, “didn’t you go to SI Tech?” Yes, I did, and Ingrid and I were pretty friendly for a short while. In fact, next time I’m at my folks’ place (though that may be a year or so in the making), I’ll go and dig up some photos of us (real photos? not on flickr? Yeh, we’re talking old school disposable camera photos circa 1994/1995).

This isn’t, of course, to take any ownership of Ingrid, her talents or her success. Probably more accurately, I knew the girl who would some day grow to be the woman pictured above (though she doesn’t look as if she has aged a bit. Of course, her lyrics reveal a maturity that says otherwise….). I’m sure neither one of us is the same person. But despite that recognition, I can’t help but feel a sense of – not pride, as that would indicate I played even a small role, which I did not – satisfaction.

I think this satisfaction comes from bearing witness. Ingrid has the same ‘humble beginnings to myspace find to nearly a rock star’ bio on her web site, in the NY Times, and various other places (that last link is a nice interview). But I know it not as a press release – it’s all true. I’ve been to her house on Van Duzer Street on Staten Island; I’ve met her parents; I’m pretty sure I was even in a school show with her (yes, I used to sing and play music in a past life…). Even back then (she was 14 or 15 when we met), Ingrid was generous, quirky, did her own thing, down to earth (see aforementioned interview), and had a similar style to the one she has now: I liked her immediately.

We haven’t been friends since I graduated in 1995, but I do remember running into her, must’ve been around 2001, when I was at NYU; I don’t remember much about the conversation (other than the standard, Staten Island / high school friend thing of poking a bit of fun at each other), but I recall that she was content doing a bit of acting, playing music, figuring things out. I looked her up a few years later (around the time Friendster was popular and I also was feeling minor nostalgia/homesickness living in Johannesburg, so looking up high school buddies), and found her web site and downloaded a few MP3s. Still doing her thing. I had meant to email her and say how I liked the tracks, but never got around to it, and my guess is that she’s pretty aware of the fact that lots of people like them by now :)

It’s just nice to see, you know? It’s a real story of someone who did not claw or suffer or change to get some success. She was content to do her thing before she was a rock star, and from what I can tell, she’s continuing on that track now, as she says, “taking it slow.”

Congratulations, Ingrid. I’m a different kind of fan to the one I was in our former incarnations, but you can add me as one for sure. I wish you more and more success.

Sidenote: also check out Ingrid’s “dutch pop” (ha) side project, Ingrid&Andrew

Sidenote 2: and if you like that, and speaking of talented musicians I went to high school with, also check out João Orecchia (that’s his site; here’s his myspace) – who I do still know very well; he is my daughter’s god father – and his Johannesburg-based band 5 Men 3 Missing (again, their site. myspace). Awesome stuff.

Posted in flickr, Links, me, music, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, stimulus, uncategorical ·
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nathaniel stern is an awkward artist, writer, and teacher, who likes awkward art, writing, and students.

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