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ppp: Jason Lazarus > Michael Schmelling > Gregory Halpern > Ahndraya Parlato > Annika von Hausswolff
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Chelsea Art Walk 2011: A Guide for Photo-philes
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and circle: Jos De Gruyter Harald Tys, Charles Negre, Nicholas Alen Cope
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Late Summer Blues: Salvatore Arancio, Anthony Goicolea, Pablo Helguera, Mary Mattingly, Francesco Simeti, and Letha Wilson.
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Ai Weiwei: New York Photographs 1983-1993 (by Patricia Silva)
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ppp: Jason Lazarus > Michael Schmelling > Gregory Halpern > Ahndraya Parlato > Annika von Hausswolff
Posted by Daylight Books on
This blog series is created by choosing a photograph by a photographer who's work I greatly appreciate, that photographer picks a photograph by another photographer, that photographer picks a photograph by another photographer, and so on until a chain of five photographs have been created.
The structure is based on the book Poets Picking Poets published by McSweeney's (2007). Applying this technique to photography and photographers, allowing them to choose their own tablemates, will surely spark some interesting visual conversations that will be diverse and surprising.
Jason Lazarus, "Eric Becklin, first human to see the center of our galaxy", 2010. Courtesy and copyright the artist.
Michael Schmelling, Shawty Lo, 2008, from the series "Atlanta". Courtesy and copyright the artist.
Gregory Halpern, Untitled, 2010, from the series "A". Courtesy and copyright the artist.
Ahndraya Parlato, Untitled from the series "Inscape", 2003 - Present. Courtesy and copyright the artist.
Annika von Hausswolff, It Takes a Long Time to Die, 2002. Copyright the artist.
Next / PPP2
Chelsea Art Walk 2011: A Guide for Photo-philes
Posted by Daylight Books on
Tomorrow evening, more than 125 Chelsea galleries will host extended hours, artist talks, musical performances, and an assortment of other special events for the second annual Chelsea Art Walk. Fitting for the contemporary art industry, the events and special attractions include such rare opportunities as getting one’s dollar bills cut in half for souvenirs (courtesy of the artist Mark Wagner, at Pavel Zoubok Gallery); playing ping pong on a table made by Rikrit Tiravanija (at Nicholas Robinson Gallery); and shopping a collection of custom skateboards and furniture at a “pop-up skate shop” (at I-20).
The more traditional events should not be ignored, however, and there will be a number of worthwhile attractions for those interested in photography:
At 1500, gallery co-founder and curator Andrew S. Klug will deliver the talk “An Overview of Contemporary Brazilian Photography.” 1500 was the first gallery in the world to specialize exclusively in Brazilian photography, and Klug’s talk will focus on artists whom he calls the “fathers” of an emerging school of Brazilian photography: Miguel Rio Branco and Mario Cravo Neto. Klug will also integrate work by Julio Bittencourt, João Castilho, and Gustavo Pellizzon—all of whom are artists represented by 1500—into the discussion. (511 West 25th Street, 7pm.)
The photographer Sasha Maslov will speak at Sputnik Gallery about Eastern European photography and his own work, Forgotten Village, which is currently on view in the space. The series is a collection of large-scale photographs documenting the lives of coal miners in a rural Ukrainian town. (547 W 27th Street, 6:30pm.)
In conjunction with its show A Portrait Apart, Porter Contemporary is hosting “A Polaroid Portrait Moment,” during which visitors to the gallery can get their pictures taken by the photographer Jeff Ballinger, who snaps spontaneous, black and white portraits using a vintage Polaroid camera. (548 W. 28th Street, 6-8pm.)
Noteworthy photography exhibitions to catch include Miroslav Tichy: Sun Screen at Horton Gallery, featuring Tichy’s unabashedly voyeuristic, hazy portraits of nude women, both dated in their concept and timeless in their appearance; Hail Traveler: The Photographer as Tourist, and the Tourist as Subject at Rick Wester Fine Art, a robust show containing the work of a number of canonical photographers, including Richard Avedon, Robert Adams, Gary Winogrand, among others; and Satomi Shirai’s perfectly juxtaposed photographs of “scenes” within her apartment and in a dollhouse, in the show Interior at Miyaho Yoshinaga Art Prospects. (Shirai will also deliver a short talk, at 6pm).
Visit Chelsea Art Walk's website for a full list of events, performances, food and cocktail locations, and participating galleries. See you there!
and circle: Jos De Gruyter Harald Tys, Charles Negre, Nicholas Alen Cope
Posted by Daylight Books on
"I seek images that don't exist."
Adam Zagajewski
Jos De Gruyter Harald Tys, Untitled (#4), 2009. Charles Negre, from "Abc", 2009. Nicholas Alen Cope, from "Paper", 2010. Copyright the artists.
Late Summer Blues: Salvatore Arancio, Anthony Goicolea, Pablo Helguera, Mary Mattingly, Francesco Simeti, and Letha Wilson.
Posted by Daylight Books on
If you are in NYC Friday (and you haven't died from the heat) you must make your way to Bushwick to see Storefront's exhibition of "Late Summer Blues". Seriously. 6-9 pm.
Forecast says 100 degrees by 10 am. Careful out there.
Curated by Ian Daniel and Sara Reisman
STOREFRONT
16 Wilson Ave, Brooklyn NY
http://www.storefrontbk.com/exhibitions.html
Image: Mary Mattingly, First Light, 2001 (ongoing). Copyright the artist.
Ai Weiwei: New York Photographs 1983-1993 (by Patricia Silva)
Posted by Daylight Books on
Preparations for his exhibition at The Asia Society in New York were well underway when Ai Weiwei was detained earlier this year at Beijing Airport on April 3, 2011. En route to Hong Kong, he was detained for nearly three months before his release on June 22. Other artists critical of Chinese government practices remain imprisoned and/or detained. Shortly before his release, The Asia Society announced Ai Weiwei: New York Photographs 1983-1993, on view until August 14, 2011.
New York Photographs 1983-1993 exposes Ai Weiwei as an active and central member of the Chinese expatriate community: artists and intellectuals settled in the emerging avant-garde scene of the 1980s East Village. From his New York decade, the artist selected 227 photographs from a personal archive of 10,000 negatives. This exhibition is the first time these photographs are exhibited outside of China. Although the show is centered in New York, two images are from an assignment in Haiti for a media outlet.
Resisting the entrapments of documentary tradition, Ai Weiwei’s casual photography captured the evolution of his conceptual art practice, his emerging political consciousness, and an engaged record of the East Village 80s culture—New York’s prominent hub of influential activity. Poetry readings, drag queens at Wigstock, Thompkins Square Park riots, ACT UP AIDS demonstrations—Ai Weiwei’s archive chronicles the most pressing issues of that time: gender and racial politics, AIDS, homelessness, gentrification.
"Becoming more conscious of my life activities and that attitude was more important than producing some work."1 — Ai Weiwei
Unlike Jacob Riis’ photographs of New York slums one hundred years earlier, Ai Weiwei’s habitual immediacy wasn’t mission driven. Photographing was his way of note-taking or sketching. Without investment in photography as an art form, the eye was liberated. There is a paradoxical human relationship with a camera: the eye that looks for something might only see what it seeks, but the eye that seeks nothing might just see all. Casually but attentively, the daily life of a Chinese émigré in New York expanded beyond a diasporic circle and into broader contemplation. His lens wasn’t fogged by myths of American ascension. Instead, his lens sharpened focus on the inherent potential of American ideals, as exemplified by the East Village ethos of independence.
Political participation is an evident theme, as is mutual support for fellow artists. Less than three years ago, Ai Weiwei was scheduled to defend Chinese artist Tan Zuoren, accused of “undermining the authority of the state” for demanding thorough investigations of collapsed buildings destroyed by the 2008 earthquake in Sichuan. But Ai Weiwei didn’t testify. Policemen stormed his Chengdu hotel room and arrested him, preventing his presence in court. Twenty years earlier, his unwavering support for the individual voice was already formed. Video artist Clayton Patterson was arrested for contempt of court for refusing to turn in a tape showing police brutality in the 1988 Tompkins Square Park riots. Since Ai Weiwei had been at the riot and photographed Clayton and the police officers, he turned the rolls of film over to the American Civil Liberties Union. His film served as evidence against police officers.
The act of photography already emphasizes the photograph as evidence, but with Ai Weiwei, evidence is treated without formality, evidence is the result of personal accountability. The DIY ethos of East Villagers in the 80s wasn’t lost on the artist. As one of the first to return to China from the New York community of Chinese intellectuals, he transported his experiences in the East Village with him, influencing creative communities in China to probe deeper. This exhibition shows the full range of influences and first-hand experiences shaping the outlook of an artist for whom social engagement is responsibility. Ai Weiwei witnessed in New York the same tension between the controlled and the oppressor. In my view, this space of opposition is magnified by the selected photographs, enabling a deeper understanding of Ai Weiwei’s work.
"In China, I felt there were crises so I left, but New York was the same and I was bored."2 — Ai Weiwei
It was an exploratory time for the artist. His photographs document a transition away from painting and drawing into conceptual sculpture. Self-portraits with Warhol and Duchamp works indicate what impelled Ai Weiwei at the time. In one of Ai Weiwei’s photographs, the profile of Duchamp was shaped out of a wire clothes hanger, half filled with sunflower seeds (a popular Chinese snack). This piece anticipates Sunflower Seeds, 2010, created with 100 million porcelain sunflower seeds, each hand painted by hundreds of Jingdezhen potters (Jingdezhen is famed for imperial court porcelain). I’ve read that Sunflower Seeds references both nourishment and revolution, consumption and commercialization. The work was meant to symbolize collectivity and individuality, in theory and practice, but in my view there’s an obvious undercurrent of political caché to Sunflower Seeds. A sense recorded in his New York photographs. Sunflower Seeds was immersive and interactive: individuals could walk over them. The mass of individuals (seeds) are either stagnant or under the oppressor’s step. The scale of the human-to-seed ratio is staggering. With this piece, the artist explores oppositional space through weight distribution, while commenting on Chinese culture, and its trajectory of consumption and value.
The double tension between collectivity and individuality vis-à-vis consumerism and identity is explored in other Ai Weiwei works, which feature traditional Chinese materials such as pearls, stones, compressed tea, marble, and lacquered wood. The New York photographs explore similar tensions in different contexts, working with subject matter relative to its time and place. The most pervasive theme I noticed in his NY photographs also runs throughout most of Ai Weiwei’s work: a critical awareness of the power of one in relation to opposition. A concept also documented with his Study in Perspective—Tianamen Square. Commercialization of heritage is a constant issue for both New York City and Beijing; in as much as pressures of national pride and shame are central to China and the United States. An artist with an eye on China and another on the West, Ai Weiwei found parallel struggles in both systems. Without aim, but projecting much clarity, Ai Weiwei’s photographs attest to a strength of conviction in dynamic formation.
(1) (2) Interview by Stephanie H. Tung with Alison Klayman
Photograph: Ai Weiwei, Washington Square Park Protest. 1988. Inkjet on Fantac Innova Ultra Smooth Gloss. Printed on
20 x 24-inch paper. Courtesy of Three Shadows Photography Art Centre and Chambers Fine Art.
Published July 2011.