Immaterial Dispersal
September 7th, 2010
This looks like it could be an engaging panel discussion and it's happening tonight.
Organized and moderated by Nik Pence, Immaterial Dispersal will examine the critical function of immaterial art. This discussion will bring together artists and writers who use the internet to produce and distribute information. Exceeding locality, the following panelists use the internet as a tool, building communities that share converging interests and goals. By examining the contrasting practices, the panelists will discuss their projects and their approach to the immaterial.
The panel will feature Kari Altmann, Ethan Greenbaum, Gene McHugh, Luke Stettner, Brad Troemel and Lance Wakeling.
September 7th
7:00pm at The Guild Art Gallery 45 W 21st Street
2nd floor, buzzer #39
Free
The Fall Season
September 1st, 2010
Sara VanDerBeek, Departing Sun, 2010
Lee Friedlander: America By Car at The Whitney Museum
September 4 - November 28, 2010
Phillip Toledano: A New Kind of Beauty at Klompching Gallery
September 8 - October 29, 2010
Jessica Backhaus: I Wanted to See the World at Laurence Miller Gallery
September 9 - October 30, 2010
Adam Fuss: Home and the World at Cheim & Read
September 9 – October 23, 2010
Lee Friedlander: Recent Western Landscape at Mary Boone Gallery
September 9 - October 23, 2010
William Lamson: A Line Describing the Sun at The Boiler, Pierogi
September 10 – October 10, 2010
Chris Verene: Family at Postmasters
September 10 – October 16, 2010
Polly Apfelbaum: Off Color at D'Amelio Terras
September 10 - October 23, 2010
Pipilotti Rist: Heroes of Birth at Luhring Augustine
September 11 – October 23, 2010
Bing Wright: Silver at Paula Cooper Gallery
September 14 – October 23, 2010
Chris Killip: 4 & 20 Photographs at Amador Gallery
September 15 - November 13, 2010
Laura Letinsky: After All at Yancey Richardson Gallery
September 16 - October 30, 2010
An-My Lê at Murray Guy
September 16 – October 30, 2010
Sarah Sze at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery
September 16 – October 23, 2010
Ricci Albenda: Paintings at Andrew Kreps
September 16 October 23, 2010
Sara VanDerBeek: To Think of Time at The Whitney Museum
September 17 – December 5, 2010
Sue Williams: Al-Qaeda Is The CIA at 303 Gallery
September 18 - October 23 2010
Gregory Crewdson: Sanctuary at Gagosian Gallery
September 23 – October 30, 2010
The Students of Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind at the Institute of Design at Higher Pictures
September 23 - October 30, 2010
New Photography 2010: Roe Ethridge, Elad Lassry, Alex Prager, Amanda Ross-Ho at MoMA
September 29 - January 10, 2011
Taryn Simon: Contraband at Lever House
September 30 - December 31, 2010
Abelardo Morell: Groundwork at Bonni Benrubi
October 7 - December 18, 2010
Abelardo Morell: The Universe Next Door at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery
October 29 - December 11, 2010
Collier Schorr: Here The World Held Its Breath at 303 Gallery
October 30 - December 4, 2010
Elad Lassry at Luhring Augustine
October 30 - December 18, 2010
James Casebere at Sean Kelly Gallery
October - November 2010 Film-less Photography
August 27th, 2010
Kodak's Vintage 1975 portable all electronic still camera
"It took 23 seconds to record the digitized image to the cassette. The image was viewed by removing the cassette from the camera and placing it in a custom playback device."
The above camera, built in 1975, looks like something right out of a Christopher Williams photograph.
Side-by-side comparison – Hardcopy vs. Film-less Photography
A few questions that followed the presentation of this Film-less camera:
"Why would anyone ever want to view his or her pictures on a TV? How would you store these images? What does an electronic photo album look like? When would this type of approach be available to the consumer?"
(via)
Scorsese + Chanel
August 25th, 2010C/O Berlin – Talents 2011
August 25th, 2010
C/O Berlin is seeking young photographers and art critics for their 2011 Talents series of exhibitions. The theme this year is Cinematic Thinking and applications will be accepted until December 31, 2010.
The Talents series of exhibitions is really a fantastic opportunity for an artist just getting started. If chosen, the artist will be featured in a solo exhibition at one of Europe's premiere photography institutions as well as have an accompanying catalogue published which includes an essay written by an art critic.
From the newsletter I received this morning:
"In 2011, the Talents series will focus on the theme of Cinematic Thinking. Engagement with the medium of film has become ever more central to photography in recent years. This can be seen in the increasing exploration of film production processes, experimentation with narrative structures, and references to film aesthetics and film myths. How can photography adapt film structures and simulaneously break them open? What strengths do still images have over moving pictures? Photography in the classical sense, with its conventional wall presentation, can be expanded through the utilization of projection and installation strategies, thereby creating new possibilities for reflecting on the medium of photography itself.
How do you apply? Photographers under the age of 35 can submit up to 15 samples of their work in print form – maximal size DIN A4, no originals. A short project description should accompany the photographs, as well as the application form that van be completed online on the C/O Berlin homepage. A fee of 20 Euros will be raised. Please note that art critics are welcome to submit samples of their work at any time."
You can find further information here.
Tessellations
August 15th, 2010
From:
Tessellations: creating narrative through visual conversation. A two-person dialogue by Wm M Harvey and Leah Beeferman. Summer Pop-Up Bookstore
August 9th, 2010Kenneth Anger + Missoni
August 6th, 2010
Talk about strange collaborations, Kenneth Anger shot the Missoni Fall/Winter 2010 advertising campaign.
Watch the tripped out video here. Help
August 5th, 2010
Some of you reading this might have noticed the spam-like titles on some of my posts lately, especially if you use a blog reader of some sort. I have been trying to deal with the issue and sort this thing out but I can't seem to solve the problem.
One moment it seems fixed and the next it is back again.
I'm wondering if there is anyone out there reading this who would be willing to tackle this with me and help me out.
I can offer up something in return for your help and services.
Please get in touch by sending me an email to horses [at] horsesthink.com.
Summer Shows
August 5th, 2010
We all know that summer shows in New York City can be a real downer but this summer there are three ambitious artist curated exhibitions on view in three different locations around the country.
Closest to home but not in the city, there is Matthew Porter's Seven Summits exhibition on view through August 15th at Mount Tremper Arts in the Catskills.
Arthur Ou, Test Screen (Rincon I), 2010
From the press release:
"Seven Summits is a group photography exhibition featuring fourteen pieces by seven artists. Recalling the mountaineering challenge of climbing the highest peak on each of the seven continents, Seven Summits highlights the practice of artists whose adventuresome spirit leads them straight to the source of their subject matter, whether it be found inside the studio or across the country. Each artist is represented by two pieces—separated by wide geographical margins—that reframe the tradition of expedition photography within their independent creative visions."
Further away from the city, there is Bill Sullivan's New Genre Pictures on view at the Flanders Gallery in Raleigh, North Carolina through August 28th. The exhibition features the work of Lucas Blalock, Sam Falls, Thomas Hauser and Bill Sullivan.
Bill Sullivan, Courts #21 & 22 (Wimbeldon 1994), 2007
From an essay by Lauren Turner:
"In the ubiquity of the nefariously popular mixed media designation, how can disparate artworks currently be categorized? In what ways can one judge technological manipulation in a work as a marker of an artist’s skill? And are the genres of old still relevant to contemporary society? New Genre Pictures presents the works of four artists and their variations of the art world’s current medium darling, photography, to start the process of untangling some of these questions’ answers."
There is also a good write up of the show and some installation shots here.
For those of you in Los Angeles, Walead Beshty has curated what is probably the most ambitious summer group exhibition, Picture Industry (Goodbye To All That) at Regen Projects which is on view through August 21st.
The exhibition features a long list of people working with and/or around photography today: Tauba Auerbach, Thomas Barrow, Carol Bove, Troy Brauntuch, Tony Conrad, Abraham Cruzvillegas, De Rijke / De Rooij, Liz Deschenes, Isa Genzken, Wade Guyton, Robert Heinecken, Charline Von Heyl, Karen Kilimnik, Imi Knoebel, Michael Krebber, Glenn Ligon, Erlea Maneros-Zabala, Albert Oehlen, Manfred Pernice, Seth Price, Richard Prince, Josephine Pryde, R.H. Quaytman, Eileen Quinlan, Miljohn Ruperto, Michael Snow, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Kelley Walker, James Welling, Christopher Williams and Christopher Wool.
Eileen Quinlan, Everything moves, Everything Shimmers, 2010
From the press release written by Walead Beshty:
"In most Los Angeles social circles, when one speaks of the "industry" they are referring to the Entertainment Industry (a.k.a. the "Picture Industry"). Pictures have a knack for supplanting the concrete, sliding as though self-lubricating around the globe, like poltergeists, they haunt the world they represent like vague recollections, inhabiting concrete forms briefly until slipping off to another host, a billboard here, a magazine page there, creating momentary associations, and chance resonances. And what to make of the application of the term industry, with the heaviness of factories and smoke stacks encircling it, to the production of ephemeral pictures whose power is synonymous with their lightness? It could be said that it is the seemingly invisible and ephemeral aspects--the means of distribution, the contextual frame, the vicissitudes of taste, and an object's ability to "pass"--which serve as the most robust material of the contemporary work, an embrace of convention that produces an endless sequence of provisional "meanings." Perhaps the only solution available to us is to allow pictures to be concrete, to reclaim their moments of heaviness, instead of pretending that they are endlessly able to float listlessly in the breeze."
Closest to home but not in the city, there is Matthew Porter's Seven Summits exhibition on view through August 15th at Mount Tremper Arts in the Catskills.
Arthur Ou, Test Screen (Rincon I), 2010
From the press release:
"Seven Summits is a group photography exhibition featuring fourteen pieces by seven artists. Recalling the mountaineering challenge of climbing the highest peak on each of the seven continents, Seven Summits highlights the practice of artists whose adventuresome spirit leads them straight to the source of their subject matter, whether it be found inside the studio or across the country. Each artist is represented by two pieces—separated by wide geographical margins—that reframe the tradition of expedition photography within their independent creative visions."
Further away from the city, there is Bill Sullivan's New Genre Pictures on view at the Flanders Gallery in Raleigh, North Carolina through August 28th. The exhibition features the work of Lucas Blalock, Sam Falls, Thomas Hauser and Bill Sullivan.
Bill Sullivan, Courts #21 & 22 (Wimbeldon 1994), 2007
From an essay by Lauren Turner:
"In the ubiquity of the nefariously popular mixed media designation, how can disparate artworks currently be categorized? In what ways can one judge technological manipulation in a work as a marker of an artist’s skill? And are the genres of old still relevant to contemporary society? New Genre Pictures presents the works of four artists and their variations of the art world’s current medium darling, photography, to start the process of untangling some of these questions’ answers."
There is also a good write up of the show and some installation shots here.
For those of you in Los Angeles, Walead Beshty has curated what is probably the most ambitious summer group exhibition, Picture Industry (Goodbye To All That) at Regen Projects which is on view through August 21st.
The exhibition features a long list of people working with and/or around photography today: Tauba Auerbach, Thomas Barrow, Carol Bove, Troy Brauntuch, Tony Conrad, Abraham Cruzvillegas, De Rijke / De Rooij, Liz Deschenes, Isa Genzken, Wade Guyton, Robert Heinecken, Charline Von Heyl, Karen Kilimnik, Imi Knoebel, Michael Krebber, Glenn Ligon, Erlea Maneros-Zabala, Albert Oehlen, Manfred Pernice, Seth Price, Richard Prince, Josephine Pryde, R.H. Quaytman, Eileen Quinlan, Miljohn Ruperto, Michael Snow, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Kelley Walker, James Welling, Christopher Williams and Christopher Wool.
Eileen Quinlan, Everything moves, Everything Shimmers, 2010
From the press release written by Walead Beshty:
"In most Los Angeles social circles, when one speaks of the "industry" they are referring to the Entertainment Industry (a.k.a. the "Picture Industry"). Pictures have a knack for supplanting the concrete, sliding as though self-lubricating around the globe, like poltergeists, they haunt the world they represent like vague recollections, inhabiting concrete forms briefly until slipping off to another host, a billboard here, a magazine page there, creating momentary associations, and chance resonances. And what to make of the application of the term industry, with the heaviness of factories and smoke stacks encircling it, to the production of ephemeral pictures whose power is synonymous with their lightness? It could be said that it is the seemingly invisible and ephemeral aspects--the means of distribution, the contextual frame, the vicissitudes of taste, and an object's ability to "pass"--which serve as the most robust material of the contemporary work, an embrace of convention that produces an endless sequence of provisional "meanings." Perhaps the only solution available to us is to allow pictures to be concrete, to reclaim their moments of heaviness, instead of pretending that they are endlessly able to float listlessly in the breeze."