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03 April 2006 by nathaniel

The Daily Chronicles

OK, so it’s about day 6 of no phone or internet (re: telkom sucks… Given my lifestyle, I feel like my legs have been cut off), and the Gods of Good Fortune have decided that to make up for those losses, they should also cut off my electricity.

I sh!t you not.

Sigh.

The life of a mediocre blogger can sometimes be Oh So Difficult. I’m taking an hour (or so) out of my morning now to do a bit of blog n’ surf catch-up from Colleen Alborough’s house (she’s away, but I can steal her wireless bandwidth). Thanks, Coll.

Jeff Koons and The New Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons and The New Jeff Koons

Like most of the Joburg art scene, I hit up the Jeff Koons talk last Thursday (tho I had to leave early to see the OBGYN about the B-A-B-Y – 7 more weeks til my life changes forever!). A very inspired talk, with its high and low points and tidbits that made us all laugh or feel uncomfortable or just want to pick the artist’s brain. I think the most amazing part was just how calculated everything he said and did was. Here’s this super sweet ex-pornstar-art King of Kitsch wavering between being about acceptance and tolerance and asking the world for change, and talking about Golden Showers and Ass Pimples. His presentation was more like subversive performance art on a platter for a jaded art world that thinks it "knows him." Very clever chap, that Jeff.

Me and Jill Ross working on a Compressionist engraving and lithograph, respectively, at David Krut
Me and Jill Ross working on a Compressionist engraving and lithograph, respectively, at David Krut

I spent most of Saturday morning, afternoon and night at David Krut, working with Richard Kilpert and Jill Ross on the next iteration of Compressionism. We’re taking some of the works I had printed as lambdas from the series, and turning them into more traditional prints. We started with a polyester plate to make line drawing versions of one of the works (Wet Calla Leaves, drawing here), and ‘that’s me in the corner’ working on a hand engraving of a detail from Emmarentia Lilies (part of a triptych). I’ll be sure to post some stuff to flickr and Rhizome when I have more than one edition done…

Bronwyn Lace in front of about 4000 origami for her Outlet exhibition in Pretoria
Bronwyn Lace in front of about 4000 origami for her Outlet exhibition in Pretoria

Took a break from Krut in the late afternoon / early evening and head out to Pretoria to see Bronwyn Lace’s work at Outlet. A simple and beautiful exhibition that makes you feel small, I recommend hitting up that link there for some info on her work; we still await a guest blog from Bron on her show at KZNSA last month. Hint, Bron.

James Webb, Marcus Neustetter, Mikhael Subotzky
James Webb, Marcus Neustetter, Mikhael Subotzky

I took most of Sunday off (worked on a proposal for Rhizome for a bit), but did hang out with Marcus Neustetter for an ice cream at Zoo Lake (plus ran a few art errands with him), so got to see James Webb and meet Mikhael Subotzky briefly, while they’re here. It made me feel like a super cool uber artist for about a minute. Mikhael agreed that his prints need frames.

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, flickr, me, pop culture, reviews, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

Archives

28 March 2006 by nathaniel

the Jill Ross @ David Krut hook-up


jill ross in front of a colbert mashile print @ david krut

Been chillin’ wit JR and RK (Richard Kilpert) at David Krut’s studio as of late, working on translating some of the Compressionist images into more traditional prints – looking towards using things like silk screen, lithography, engraving and etching. You can check out one preliminary experiment over at the kagablog (I just started the occasional art post over there – thanks, Kags!). Am very excited about this work – RK and JR are inspired!

Gotta mention there’s some nice work by Colbert Mashile o’er thar (Krut) – and that his painting also sold for a ‘nice price’ at the Beeldspraak benefit auction. Worth a shout out or three. The pic is Jill in front of an unintentionally reflective (no pun intended) Mashile print….

Posted in art, Compressionism, flickr, kaganof, me, reviews, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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27 March 2006 by nathaniel

interview with Michael Szpakowski and feature on Doung Anwar Jahangeer

There’s a nice interview with Michael Szpakowski on the front page of Rhizome today, conducted by yours truly. It starts:

Michael Szpakowski has spent the last 30 years collaborating across varying theatrical, visual, sonic, and digital media. His vlog, "Scenes of Provincial Life," was recently featured on Rhizome’s Net Art News. Rhizome is our shared community that he claims literally changed his life. We had an e-conversation about his work, philosophies, and interests. read on…

While I’m kicking it to other artists, I forgot to mention the new SAartsEmerging feature on Doung Anwar Jahangeer. A very interesting cat, he’s got a show he co-curated on at the JAG right now. The piece is written by me, Simon Gush and Bronwyn Lace – altogether now ;) Begins something like:

A kind of cultural chameleon of difficult-to-place origins, Doung’s ‘art-work’ is more like a long-term social project that asks us to look again at our preconceptions, stereo-types, and interpersonal relations.  Obviously idealistic, a walk through Doung’s efforts is an invitation to believe; it may sound overly-sentimental, seem futile, or even appear condescending at points, but his optimism and faith in humanity are utterly infectious, and his project is more than a gesture towards empowerment: it works. read on…

W00+

Posted in art, art and tech, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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20 March 2006 by nathaniel

Andre SC’s take on Compressionism

Andre SC: Search our Family PhotosThere’s been a cross-blogging comment buzz between myself and Andre SC (fellow Jo’burger Andre Clemens – that link is to his prints in discussion) as of late, since he picked up on my Compressionist movement.  Trained in information theory and design, Andre has been crossing over into the fine art realm as of late – beginning with his PornAgain and NetPorn series (some featured at GordArt), and now working with ‘Search Engine Compressionism‘. Beautiful and interesting stuff, created using experimental, generative, iterative and sometimes performative algorithms (mixed with aesthetic decision-making here and there).

We’re talking about a live-ish generative net.art collaboration, potentially. Watch this space….

Left: Andre SC: Search our Family Photos

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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17 March 2006 by nathaniel

ABSA and Gordart


Stephan Erasmus – tree of sorrows (detail)

My flickr has some nice photos of Vusi Beauchamp and Eric Rintisi at gordart (who promise a new website soon), as well as two of my fave works from the ABSA L’Atelier (joburg entries). I think a good compromise between both spaces was to show an image of this clever piece by Stephan Erasmus, who works at the former and is a finalist in the latter.

I was not too excited by what I saw of the L’Atelier when I first dropped off my work for the competition, but once hung and selected, I can see that it really is an interesting and impressive show of young artists, and await seeing it  when we bring the rest of the country’s finalists to Jozi.

I just hope this year’s winner is more impressive and surprising than last year’s (meow!)….

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

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14 March 2006 by nathaniel

norman catherine: now and then @ the JAG

norman catherine at JAGYeh, I totally forgot that I had these images on my camera; I had gone down to help Khwezi Gule out with some computer trouble at the Johannesburg Art Museum (yes, I am the default art-geek for all Macs in the fine art scene of Jozi), and then did a quick run down to see the Norman Catherine exhibition.

My feelings on NC are always different, depending on my mood. Sometimes I find him frightening, other times, hilarious, and on more than one occasion, boring. Those first two I think would make him happy, but I’m not so sure about the last issue. Still, it was nice to see so much of his work, which is always well-executed, in one place, especially when that place is his home country. Below are some quotes I found online, then a pic of some stuff from the front wall of the gallery show I took these shots at. Good run of solos at JAG this year, for those who have not yet noticed – my faves so far are/were Kentridge and Goldblatt….

From the-artists.org:

In 1969 he held his first solo exhibition consisting of oil paintings on wood, bone, wire and an assortment of found objects. His art has since undergone several metamorphoses, from the pristine airbrush paintings of the 70s to the frenzied, ritualistic mixed media works of the early and mid 80s; the wire sculptures and tin can works of the late 80s, and the primitive-futuristic paintings of the early 90s which provided the seeds for his pre-millennial menagerie of anthropomorphic beasts. In the thirty years spanning his past and present output, Catherine’s visual trademarks have included rough-edged comical and nightmarish forms, rendered in brash cartoon colours. His idiosyncratic vision – a combination of dark cynicism and exuberant humour, as well as his innovative use of everyday materials, has secured his place at the forefront of South African contemporary art.

From cama.org.za:

For Norman Catherine, the crudity and sophistication of an artwork stem from ‘the mixture of the primitive and the futuristic’. Through these imagined timeframes, Catherine accesses his wild dystopian vision of the present. His paintings and figures are darkly comic, bold and lurid in execution. ‘There’s an angst in my work that will never go away,’ says Catherine. ‘It was there before I knew anything about politics, really.’

Catherine’s qualification is critical. The fact that South Africa has changed has done little to soften his ‘black side’, but a mutation has occurred. Gone are the ‘raw expressions of fear and fury that allow no catharsis’: John Howell’s observation made in Art Forum (Dec. 1986) was a response to Catherine’s searing earlier mixed-media works with titles like Suicide, House Arrest and Intensive Care. For Catherine, the dulled sense of crisis and despair, spawned by the States of Emergency imposed on the country by the apartheid government in the ’80s, has fallen away. What has surfaced in its place is a growing awareness of inner-city psychosis caused by escalating violence, the burgeoning underworld of gangsterism and crime, and the spread of corporate corruption and subterfuge. This urban rot Catherine sees as being not limited to Johannesburg, but part of a national and international pathology.

and the show:
norman catherine text @ JAG

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