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13 June 2006 by nathaniel

PJ geek a-go-go

From Paddy Johnson (via email):

Dear friends and colleagues,
This email is sent to announce Geeks in the Gallery, an Interview series between artists Michael Bell-Smith, Tom Moody, and myself which runs on Art Fag City <http://www.artfagcity.blogspot.com>  from Monday June 12 (today [er, yesterday]) through Wednesday, June 14.  I am particularly pleased with the results of this discussion as I think the artists do a excellent job at explaining some of tech concerns their art brings to the surface, as well as providing some very lively debate about these subjects and more.  Tom Moody will be hosting comments <http://www.digitalmediatree.com/tommoody/comment/36471/>  during this time on his site, so I encourage you to join us there for further discussion.

Best regards,

Paddy Johnson  

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

Archives

12 June 2006 by nathaniel

V / A & P (various art and press) updated below

The closing party this weekend at Outlet went well – aside from the aforementioned NY Arts and MacFormat features on the series, also check out these glowing reviews in Die Beeld (English translation) and Pretoria News; there’s not a bad one on LQF, either. Abrie has decided to let the show run an extra week, so get out to TUT campus if you haven’t yet!

Finally, take a look at my flickr to see pix from the closing on Saturday, from the Memento performance yesterday, and new images of Sidonie – now 20 days old!

update – beeld article translation now live (rumor has it that the original Afrikaans is way more poetic, but you get the idea)

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

Archives

09 June 2006 by nathaniel

Art Fag City + turbulence: thanks for the linkage

Art Fag City: Make Up Plan for the Worst. Week. Ever.

Thanks for the linkage, Paddy – and no worries; I understand those kinds of weeks :)  Glad you liked the article and are sending peops over… Hope next week is better.

And in case you hadn’t heard, y’all, AFC is  "simply the best and bitchiest blog on the contemporary and digital art-based galleries in chelsea." 

I have that on good sources.

update: also linked from networked_performance along with memento – thanks, jo!

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

Archives

06 June 2006 by nathaniel

NY Arts Magazine Feature: Between Text and Flesh

Nathaniel Stern, step inside, 2004. Interactive/immersive environment, inside 3x3x3 meters; outside variable.Well, that much delayed bio / feature on my work in NY Arts Magazine is finally out! It’s a great piece, and I’m really pleased with how it looks and reads on their site… It will appear in the July / August print edtiion of the magazine, and my folks will be bringing me a hard copy when they come to visit their granddaughter in July. Here’s a li’l snippet from what they have to say about my work:

Staged via various media, Nathaniel Stern’s work enacts the interstices of body, language and technology. It seeks to force us to look again at the relationships between the three, and invites us to experiment with their relation. His body of work can, perhaps, be described as an exploration of the interstitial itself–revisiting between technology and text the dangerous spaces of enfleshment, incipience, and process.

Read more…

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

Archives

04 June 2006 by nathaniel

latest ArtThrob

The latest issue of ArtThrob is live ("South Africa’s leading contemporary visual arts publication"), and I have to say how impressed I’ve been with the new Johannesburg editor, Michael Smith, over the last few months. We’ve never met, but his reviews are thoughtful, thorough, descriptive and critically engaged – what more could you ask for (especially when nathaniel can’t even provide snap judgments for a while, due to his daughter’s arrival)? Check out his reviews of Kentridge at JAG and Murray at Goodman this month to see what I mean (big apologies to Brett for missing that latter show! Forgive?). nathaniel also recommends the Johann van der Schijff review and Malcolm Payne’s picking a cat fight with Khwezi Gule – MEOW!

I picked up the new Art SA yesterday at Krut. Haven’t had a chance to read any of it yet, but rumour has it that our guest blogging Franci Cronje is named as having one of the KKNK’s most successful solo shows. Congrats Cronje!

Posted in art, art and tech, reviews, south african art, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

08 May 2006 by sean slemon

Whitney -part one

My first Biennial
What to say. Simply being in New York and keeping an eye on the process of first, the selection of curators, then general banter in bars over what will happen, subsequently leading to the artist selections being released and now finally the show, predictably leading to all sorts of bitchiness, boredom and disinterest along with a review here and there by both artists and critics, things seem to be just about on track.
Now to wait while the mistakes slowly disseminate themselves into the market, burning themselves out to leave the strongest surviving. It’s beginning to sound like a battle ground is’nt it. Well in some ways it is. The good work really does stand out. Further research into the bad work simply makes it even worse. A closer look, should you wish to depress yourself, will reveal frequent use of the naive, the abject and the complete lack of skill, concept or even thought.
Come on Chrisi! What made you think when you saw that work by Miles Davis that it would really fit in or look good in the Whitney, hung at its low low level that you had to stoop to see some of the Basquiatian scrawl at the bottom. Not to mention the adolescent drawings of a simple badly told depressing fairy tale by Taylor Meade. Daniel Johnston had a go too- with a group of A4 drawings in felt tip pens, supposedly reminiscent not only of himself but also our time.
The work that stuck in my mind the most was 1st Light by Paul Chan: intelligent use of a projector with an animation that was gentle, subtle and well coordinated with the installation, the medium and its subject matter, well installed and stunningly made. Robert Gober has a series of photographs, which were the quiet from the storm. Parts of the installation made you feel like you were in a shopping mall. The substantial doses of teenage angst here and there with bad drawing and lack of skill didn’t really serve to impress me over all. Many went for the shock factors of sex and death. The Wrong gallery produced a show that was intelligent and straightforward getting its message across and its political opinions with skill.
Richard Serra’s drawing simply stating, “stop b sh”. A clear message that really here I am sure was speaking to the converted, and if they weren’t already did they really look – or even dare to go inside the Whitney. Some were offended by the overt political tones, but I cant speak to that.
I got the catalogue too. So far so good-some good essays on contemporary work, with the book designed to be pulled apart, to reveal fold out posters, one by each artist on the show.
Is’nt it ironic that now we need to design the catalogues so that they fall apart- lasting only a short time. Makes sense-this way we’ll have enough mental and physical space for the next Show.
More later on this.

Posted in art, art and tech, flickr, news and politics, pop culture, reviews, sean slemon, theory ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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

from Amazon.com

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