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19 April 2006 by sean slemon

Gladstone Hotel, Toronto

This weekend my girlfriend and I went to Toronto for her bosses birthday. It was a chance to get out of town and have a bit of a break too.

We were directed to stay at the Gladstone-one of the longest continuously running hotels in Toronto. Its recently been redone and the owner-an artist herself, decided to curate a group of artists to design and decorate the rooms. We stayed in the Map room, which was easy on the eye and very simple but there are 37 to choose from. We looked in on a few others just to check them out. And its cheap too.
Thought I should just mention that they do leave earplugs on the counter in each room. At first I thought Amy had brought them, but later found out that we actually needed them. The room we stayed in was nicely done but not that user-friendly. A word of advice to any artist doing room in a hotel- Live in it first-with your girlfriend. This guy didn’t.
I know that artist decorated hotel rooms are catching on, with them being commissioned in Nelspruit at Harry’s and also more recently at Spier in Cape Town. Does anyone know whats up with that by the way? Who’s on the list and what are they doing? And when can we stay there? Lang and Baumann also did some fantastic rooms as well and they have a great site.

Posted in art, news and politics, pop culture, reviews, sean slemon, stimulus ·

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18 April 2006 by sean slemon

MOBA

Yes
The Museum of Bad Art
Its real
It was only a matter of time. Its everywhere. I think they may need to expand their storage rather soon.

Posted in news and politics, pop culture, reviews, sean slemon, theory ·

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15 April 2006 by nathaniel

Sanell Aggenbach @ art on paper

Sanell Aggenbach @ art on paper, Johannesburg:
"North by Northwest"

Not sure how many of you read the minimal text I wrote on Sanell Aggenbach from KKNK last year (see more on her here), but even then I was a bit gushy about what I saw. At Art on Paper, in Johannesburg, she’s exhibiting about four times the amount of work: expanded, refined and utterly remarkable. She cleverly and beautifully gifts us fantasies between text, sky, sea and laughter. Walking into AOP gallery is like swimming through the gut of a ship, with peep-holes out onto never-never land. A total must see….

Posted in art, flickr, reviews, south african art, uncategorical ·

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13 April 2006 by nathaniel

SAartsEmerging is Artthrob website of the month

Carine Zaayman says, on A R T T H R O B _ W E B S I T E S:

 ‘Providing a free South African alternative to the gallery-driven, Cape Town-based, and mainstream media, SAartsEmerging.org is dedicated to featuring emerging South African artists, curators and arts personalities who are not generally, or have not yet been, written about – but who should be.’ (http://saartsemerging.org/about-saartsemerging/). Even though ArtThrob might be one of the media entities against which they position themselves, I believe that they are doing good work and provide an important alternative platform that many young artists could and should be making use of.

Go us. Thanks, Zaayman!

Posted in art, art and tech, bronwyn lace, me, re-blog tidbits, reviews, simon gush, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

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13 April 2006 by sean slemon

David Smith at the Guggenheim


David Smith, Hudson River Landscape, 1951. Welded steel,
49 1/2 x 75 x 16 3/4 inches.
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Purchase.

Thought this was worth a quick mention. This show being done when the man should have turned a 100 years old.
The work was generally smaller than I expected, but this realization really did only dawn on me halfway through the show, given that the sculpture works so well in the space. The galleries really show the work off well and allow you to see it on a very uncompromising scale. The building – subtle and powerful at the same time, much like the work of David Smith. The surprise was some of the drawing which became more and more abstract as time went by (what was edited out in between I don’t know but something is missing). Well worth a visit. Nothing wrong with a history lesson now and then. You might learn something.

Posted in art, reviews, sean slemon ·

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12 April 2006 by sean slemon

Tara Donavan at PaceWildenstein

       37919_DONOVAN.jpg

 
So this last weekend I finally made it out to Chelsea, with a list of shows to see. This being the preferred method as opposed to busking it which usually tends to result in anger and disillusionment. My experience was more satisfying. I’m learning to filter through the rooms and rooms of junk and get to the important work.
Tara Donovan is a Brooklyn based artist who has risen to notoriety surprisingly fast over the last five years. She has built up an impressive resume of awards, exhibition and invitations.
She works mainly in pre-existing materials such as plastic cups, straws, paper plates as well as toothpicks and nails. She arranges these objects into evocative installations, often using the entire space, to communicate landscapes and nature, making use of low-brow manufactured products. Her materials are transcended by the concept and installation. Space and scale are effectively brought into the work and the results are very subtle and beautiful. Eva Hesse is clearly an influence and it is hard to get away from this in her cube pieces, where she has stacked toothpicks into a self-containing pile (not in this show). Though this work is fantastic, I feel the danger lies in its repetition of a single idea, as well as its reliance to some extent on scale and the material being transcended by the subject matter. Another area which has been brought to question, is her use of teams of female assistants, who produce her laborious sculptures for her. On this one I am not sure. We cant do everything ourselves these days and I use assistants myself from time to time, as the project requires it as do many other artists. Some people really take her to task on this. Im not sure where I stand on this but see the show. I think in this case its justified. It doesnt take away from the work.

Posted in art, reviews, sean slemon ·
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Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

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