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14 October 2010 by nathaniel

Chelsea Highlights, October 2010

Whirlwind visit to Chelsea On Tuesday for a quick tour of great art before the Nurture Art Benefit. Some highlights include:

Yoan Capote (Cuba) at Jack Shainman. This show is not open yet, but we got a preview and chatted to Yoan for quite a while about the work. It’s fantastically smart and funny, and very well-made (a change from many object-based works in Chelsea as of late). 2D and 3D sculpture and object-based images. Do not miss it.

Alejandro Almanza Pereda at Magnan Metz. Wonderful sculpture and plant and light and image works all around. One or two duds, but mostly very exciting.

Alejandro Almanza Pereda @ MagnanMetz

Eric Fertman at Susan Inglett Gallery. Again, well-made and funny objects, this time all in wood. Good and old friend Christopher Ulivo, a fantastic painter, is also with this gallery, and so I’ve been trying to go every time I’ve been in NYC over the last while; and I am never disappointed. Get this: Chris and I were in a Ska-Punk band together in 1995 (spelling and grammar on that MySpace page aside, “Stinky Pete” now works in the communications industry).

Airan Kang at Bryce Wolkowitz. Very smart and fun objects and sculptures about mediation, new and traditional, as well as an homage to and citation of many artists and art forms. We stayed and talked about the show for some time: lightning books!

There were a few other good shows (like Yael Kanarek at Bitforms), and some not so great (the much talked about Gagosian show; the sad thing is, it’s not horrible, but rather, not even worth talking about. Why are people doing so? Note: I did not mention the artist or link to the site….), but those above are the four I’d say are not to be missed in Chelsea, if you have some time….

Posted in art, art and tech, exhibition, reviews, stimulus ·

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12 July 2010 by nathaniel

compressionism site updated

compressionism.net

Just finished an overhaul of compressionism.net, and uploaded content, including works, press, documentaiton, etc. Look out for upcoming books and shows that feature the new work!

In this ongoing series of prints, I strap a desktop scanner, laptop and custom battery pack to my body, and perform images into existence. I might scan in straight, long lines across tables, tie the scanner around my neck and swing over flowers, do pogo-like gestures over bricks, or just follow the wind over water lilies in a pond.

Read more…

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, exhibition, Links, me, milwaukee art, printmaking, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, youtube ·

Archives

30 June 2010 by nathaniel

New Media, New Modes: On “Rethinking Curating: Art after New Media”

My review of Sarah Cook and Beryl Graham’s book (both of CRUMB – the Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss), “Rethinking Curating: Art after New Media” (Leonardo books / The MIT Press) is the Rhizome News feature today. Teaser:

rethinkingcurating.jpg

Humorous and surprising, smart and provocative, Rethinking Curating: Art after New Media (MIT Press, 2010) jumps from opposing viewpoints to opposing personalities, from one arts trajectory to another. The entire book is a dialectic exercise: none of its problems or theories are solved or concluded, but are rather complicated through revelations around their origins, arguments and appropriations. Overall, the book adopts the collaborative style and hyperlinked approach of the media and practice it purports to rethink. In other words, it is not just the content of the book that asks us to rethink curating, but the reading itself; by the end, we are forced to digest and internalize the consistently problematized behaviors of the “media formerly known as new.”

Sarah Cook and Beryl Graham, co-editors of the CRUMB site and list (the Curatorial Resource for Upstart Media Bliss), have co-authored the book via email and on a Wiki, and assert outright that it is not a “theory book”; its structure instead “reflects the CRUMB approach to research, which discusses and analyzes the process of how things are done” (12). The sheer number of examples, citations, and first-person accounts in this nearly 350-page volume make it so that every time the trajectory coheres into a singular point or argument, it is then broken up again, into a constellation of ideas that make us rethink, again. We are issued challenge after challenge to our assumptions about media, our understandings of curatorial practice, and our opinions about the spaces in which we exhibit art. It is only after an exhaustive study of seemingly irreconcilable philosophies, practices and venues, the book implicitly argues, that we can begin to engage with what needs to be rethought, and how to do so.

Rethinking Curating makes three basic arguments. First, that one must approach a broad set of histories in trying to understand any given artwork, and “for new media art this set includes technological histories, which are essentially interdisciplinary and patchily documented” (283). Second, that such broad histories have led to the unique development of “critical vocabularies for the fluid and overlapping characteristics of new media art” (283). Cook and Graham reason that new media are best understood not as materials but as “behaviors” – participatory, performative or generative, for example. And third, that these behaviors demand a rethinking of curating, new modes of “looking at the production, exhibition, interpretation, and wider dissemination (including collection and conservation) of new media art” (1).

Read the whole article

Posted in art, art and tech, me, re-blog tidbits, reviews, stimulus ·

Archives

24 June 2010 by nathaniel

Furtherfield seeking writers

Become a reviewer at Futherfield. From Marc Garrett:

We receive regular submissions from artists and art-groups from all over the world. Inviting us to feature and review their projects, whether they exist as works on the Internet, physical pieces in spaces and projects outdoors, or cultural events, workshops, conferences and publications.

We have an excellent and varied team of reviewers working with us. Yet, because we are receiving so many innovative and high quality projects to review, we are finding it hard to keep up. So, now we need even more reviewers.

We are interested exploring and promoting art engaged with aspects of ‘social change’ and its cultural contexts, as well as art using technology as part of its medium.

We welcome contributions from all kinds of writers – but would especially value bi-lingual reviewers who are able to introduce work created by artists in non-English-speaking cultures.

We are also interested in people who understand and know software art, social networks, live net art, live Internet tv, open source, tactical media, art blogs, net films, media art connected- self institutions, psychogeography, critical games, media art related exhibitions online and in spaces, and related conferences.

As a reviewer you will be asked to select from these works and contribute to the context of what is being created and write about its relevance. You will also have the option of seeking out and writing about other works that you personally think should be seen on Furtherfield.

If you possess knowledge and enthusiasm for any of these subjects, are able to write and communicate clearly;-) and are interested in being part of a explorative group, that is growing daily as an adventurous, networked and mult-platformed community in its own right, consisting of over 26,000 subscribers. And like us, are passionately and critically engaged in investigating the constant shifts and reinvention of art and its social contexts, and digitally related vista as we know it; we welcome you aboard…

contact – marc garrett: marc.garrett@furtherfield.org

Posted in art, art and tech, re-blog tidbits, reviews ·

Archives

20 June 2010 by nathaniel

Chelsea Highlights

Wonderful day yesterday, slowly moseying around Chelsea and surrounds from gallery to gallery, afternoon drinks with good friend and great artist Sean Slemon, dinner with brilliant writer/thinker/academic and all-around fabulous lady Rebecca Schneider (and our respective partners – can’t get enough of that Nicole Ridgway, so it’s a good thing I convinced her to spend her life with me).

Some highlights in Chelsea:

  • Monet at Gagosian – absolutely stunning. I wish the catalog was less than $100! Me wants.
  • The New Grand Tour at Bryce Wolkowitz – works by “Suitman” – especially the one not on their site – were witty and fun.
  • A brief tour of the LES printshop with Dusica Kirjakovic, a real sweetie. Saw some fun work by William Powhida and Steve Lambert (recent and/or current residents; dude, Lambert’s web site is nice – awesome wordpress hack!).
Hany Armanious at Foxy Productions

Hany Armanious at Foxy Productions

  • Hany Armanious at Foxy productions – all diligently casted works to look like an “unfinished” show – clever, surprising, well-made.
  • Two shows at Winkleman: Yevgeniy Fiks (his drawings are smart and meticulous) and Reflective Reflexion (curated by Joy Garnett). Also had a light catch up with the man himself, which reminded me both how great his book is and also how lucky I am in my current job and life.
  • Jim Kempner Fine Art – some nice work, but I admit the highlight was that they were editing a new episode of The Madness of Art in the basement; I giggled, and told the two folks working in Final Cut that I was a fan.
  • Ben Govker at PPOW made me laugh.
  • Carsten Nicolai – if you don’t know his work, you really really should, especially the sound sculptures – at Pace.
  • The show and a catch-up chat with the ladies at David Krut – I miss Johannesburg!
  • MagnanMetz’s new space is AMAZING! Not a huge fan of the current show, but I commend them for doing it – it’s a bit risky and it’s really well curated. The aforementioned Sean Slemon is with them, as well as a few others I am a fan of. Watch these guys, for real.
Et Cetera 2009 - Hany Armanious at Foxy Productions

Et Cetera 2009 - Gudjon Ketilsson and Gudrun Kristjansdottir at Luise Ross

  • Gudjon Ketilsson and Gudrun Kristjansdottir at Luise Ross. I also chatted briefly with the lady herself, and she is a force to be reckoned with, I must say… This is a really solid show, and I highly recommend it. I was tempted to purchase one of the small drawings (and LOVED the installation of sand, above), but a family of three on an art professor’s salary, ah, you know how it is…

There were a few other works that made me happy throughout the day, especially some at The Drawing Center (though that’s not in Chelsea), but above are the ones that stand out to me most a day later. Lemme know if you hit any up and have any other thoughts on them.

PS Upcoming show at Bitforms looks AWESOME. Curated by Emily Bates and Laura Blereau (don’t know the former, think very highly of the latter), with brochure essay by Sarah Cook (of Rethinking Curating: Art after New Media, which I am currently reviewing for Rhizome). It opens on Thursday; I will be there and so will T.Whid of MTAA – come say hi and see great work!

Posted in art, art and tech, exhibition, reviews ·

Archives

02 June 2010 by nathaniel

Screening Screens

I penned a book review for Rhizome.org, and another is coming soon. Teaser:

screens.jpg
Cover of Screens: Viewing Media Installation Art by Kate Mondloch

Kate Mondloch’s first book, Screens: Viewing Media Installation Art, is a welcome study of the cathode ray tubes, liquid crystal and plasma displays, and film, video and data projections that “pervade contemporary life” (xi). The author reminds us that screens are not just “illusionist windows” into other spaces or worlds, but also “physical, material entities [that] beckon, provoke, separate, and seduce” (xii). Most importantly, however, Mondloch’s approach is that of an art historian. She does not merely use art as a case study for media theory, but rather makes the contributions of artists her central focus in this, the first in-depth study of the space between bodies and screens in contemporary art.

Like Nicolas Bourriaud in his Relational Aesthetics, Mondloch begins in the gallery space, and is interested in creating a “discrete critical framework” (63) for a specific genre: what she calls “screen-reliant” art. Mondloch recognizes the import of “viewing subjects” engaging with “actual art objects” (xii – xiii) and attempts to apply a combination of post-structural theory and phenomenology to her study. Here she describes the relationships between virtual and actual, sign and material, involving the theories and philosophies of Lacan and Deleuze on the mirror stage and cinema, for example, but always including the screen’s inherent materiality in how art is experienced.

Chapter 1, “Interface Matters,” describes in detail Mondloch’s category of screen-reliant installation art, looking to the work of Paul Sharits and Michael Snow as examples of how artists of the 1960s were, for the first time, investigating the interface of the screen itself: “the multifarious physical and conceptual points at which the observing subject meets the media object” (2). Here she goes to great lengths to remember the differences between screenings of film, and screens in film and video installation. The latter are hybridized as spatial and temporal, akin to Minimalism in their approach to the body, but with the potential for entwined and confused narratives as the timeline of its materials unfold. Mondloch’s reading of Snow’s Two Sides to Every Story is especially poignant.

Read more…

Posted in art, art and tech, me, re-blog tidbits, reviews, stimulus, technology, theory ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
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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