Postcards from the Edge
Why doesn't somebody in Washington do this?
Postcards from the Edge is an annual Visual AIDS benefit and this year it is being hosted and held at Brent Sikkema in New York City. I have participated for several years and encourage all artists to join us next year.
The Preview Party is tonight Saturday, December 4, from 6-9 PM. $50 cover at the door (Participating artists get in free) Door cover includes one free raffle ticket. Additional raffle tickets are $20 each. Special Host: Alan Cumming. There's also an open wine bar sponsored by Wine & Spirits Magazine.
This is the only opportunity to get a sneak peek at the entire Postcards From the Edge exhibition. No work will be for sale on the Preview Night. One lucky raffle winner will be able to select any artwork that evening before anyone else!
Postcard artwork is hung anonymously, so come to the preview party and scout your favorites early!
Benefit Sale: Sunday, December 5, 2-6 PM
First-come, first-served - No entrance fee
Postcards sales only $50 each.
Cash and checks only – ID needed for checks
Over 1400 original postcard-sized works. This exhibition is famous within the art world as the most exciting and affordable way to build a collection of work by internationally renowned artists as well as young and emerging artists. Postcards are displayed anonymously and the artists' names are only revealed upon purchase. A collector might end up with a work by a famous artist or someone they don't yet know. Either way, they walk away with a great piece of art while supporting the programs of Visual AIDS.
Postcards from the Edge exhibiting artists include: Karen Abato, Samira Abbassy, David Abbott, Joshua Abelow, Rachel B. Abrams, Vito Acconci, Diyan Achjadi, Irina Adam, Faith Adams, Raymond Adams, Suzanne Adams, Chuck Agro, Ruben Ahumada, Tatiana Akoeva, Yasmin Al-Mutawa, Norman Alcantara, Susan Alden, Meredith Allen, Antonio Allotta, Jacie Lee Almira, Carol Alonge, Alonys, Barbara Alper, Cristina Alvarez, Jose Alvarez, David Ambrose, Blanka Amezkua, Shannon Amidon, Mohammed Aminyar, Emma Amos, Marie Anakee, Joseph Anastasi, Chad Andrews, Stephen Andrews, Jonn Angelbeck, Larry Angelo, Victor Angelo, William Anthony, Tijana Antonic, Polly Apfelbaum, Tomie Arai, Joan Arena-Mastropaolo, Goil Arm, Karen Arm, Bill Armstrong, John Felix Arnold III, Yelena Aronson, Andrea Arroyo, Mike Asente, Dotty Attie, Dominick Avellino, Patricia Ayala, Alice Aycock, Nancy Azara, Aziz + Cucher, Franny B, Adam Baer, Ralph Baginski, Kayode Bahard-Adowa, Sung Baik, Allison Bailey, Bradford Bailey, Patrick Michael Baird, Francis Baker, Paul Baker, John Baldessari, Ranjan Banerjee, C. Bangs, Gerard Barbot, Perry Bard, Sarah Barker, Burt Barr, Byron Barrett, Frank Barrett, Katie Barrie, Megan Barron, Rita Barros, Mark Barry, Michael Barry, Beth Bartholomew, Hugo Xavier Bastidas, Larissa Bates, Virginia Batson, Hilary Batzel, Amy Bay, Kristin Beal-Degrandmont, Robert Beck, Michael Bedlin, Guy Beining, Adam Bell, Andrew Bell, Caroline Bell, Tom Belloff, Stuart Bender, Barton Lidice Benes, Garry Benet, Robert A. Benevenga, Brian Benfer, Lynda Benglis, Andrew Sumner Benson, Stefany Benson, Kermit Berg, Katherine Bernhardt, B. Berrner, Adriana Bertini, Victoria Bevan, Stephen Beveridge, Rebecca Bird, JoAnn Bishop, Darla Bjork, Jill Blagsvedt, George Blaha, Nayland Blake, Julie Blattberg, Ross Bleckner, Meryl Blinder, Theresa Bloise, Deborah Boardman, Marcelle "Malka" Bock, Marion Boddy-Evans, Daniel Bodner, Sarah Jane Boecher, L. Webb Boles, Debby Boman-Lawrence, Helen Bonham Short, Jerome W. Bono, Chakaia Booker, David Borawski, Dane Borda, Frank Boros, Michael Boroskey, Desiree Borrero, Filip Bosevski, Matthew Bourbon, Louise Bourgeois, Jacqueline Bovaird, Susan Bowen, Astrid M. Bowlby, Aaron Bowles, George Box, Mark Bradford, S. Kendall Bradford, Meghan Brady, Maea Brandt, Dana Brauckmann, Mai Braun, Susan Breen, John Breiner, Corey R. Breneisen, Nancy Brett, Val Britton, Ann Brody, Mona Brody, Nancy Brooks Brody, Candyce Brokaw, Molly Brooks, Alana Brown, Miriam Brumer, Matthew Buckingham, Trang Bui, Amy J. Bullano, Ann F. Bunn, Christopher Burke, Kathe Burkhart, Tim Burns, Nancy Burson, Scott Burton, Dietmar Busse, Preot Buxton, Kit Callahan, Michael J. Cambre, Mary Campbell, F. Lennox Campello, Maria Capolongo, Rene Capone, Suzanne Caporael, Marina Cappelletto, Karlos Carcamo, Claudette Carino, Luis Carle, Arnold Carlson, Joel Carlson, Victor Carnuccio, Kate Carr, Mary Ellen Carroll, Mark Carter, Rob Carter, Amelia Caruso, Diane G. Casey, Janice Caswell, Andrew Catanzariti, Corliss Cavalieri, BJ Cavnor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt Cawley II, Celso, Bindu Chadaga, Mark Chamberlain, Anthony Champa, Richard Lang Chandler, Wade Chandler, Jennifer Chapek, Christiane Chaponniere, Alejandro Chavez, Amy Cheng, Julia Chiang, Michael Chiarello, Kim Chivers-D’Amato, Soyeon Cho, Cecile Chong, Alice Jee Chung, Amanda Church, Diane Churchill, Vincent Cianni, Kate Clark, Stephen Taro Clark, Nuala Clarke, Rob Clarke, Robert Clarke-Davis, Christopher Clary, Veronica Jay Clay, Judy Clifford, Aaron Cobbett, Colin Cochran, Jon Coffett, Orly Cogan, Susan Colgan, Cecy Colichon, Chris Collicott, Sarah Colligan, C.J. Collins, Greg Colson, Matthew Liam Conboy, Ernest Concepcion, Elisabeth Condon, Rhys Conlon, Graham Connell, Emily Conover, Lauren Cook, Monica Cook, CB Cooke, Cyndi Coon, Marcia Cooper, Pam Cooper, Stuart A. Copans, David Correa Muñoz, Margarida Correia, Jose Luis Cortes, David Corwin, Geraldine Cosentino, Eileen Costa, Fiona Couldridge, Erika Cramer, Peter Cramer, Fred Cray, Brian Crede, Kathleen Creighton, Elizabeth Crisman, Judith Croce, Jerstin Crosby, Ave Maria Cross, Sarah Crowner, Albert Crudo, Pedro Cruz-Castro, Janet Culbertson, Alan Cumming, Daphne Cummings, Megan Cump, Amie Cunningham, Doris Currier, Anne Cypcar, Peggy Cyphers, Brita d’Agostino, David Dalessandro, Amanda Dalmat, Harriet F. Damianakes, Priyanka Dasgupta, Edgerton Y. Davis, Eric Davis, Reginald Davis, Xiomara De Oliver, A. De Shong, Blase DeCelestino, Elisa Decker, Gloria DeFilipps Brush, Cezar Del Valle, Brent Delf, Tom DeLooza, Jason Deneault, Dustin Dennis, Priscilla Derven, Susan Deseyn, Anjali Deshmukh, Yoko Devereaux, Denise DeVone, Uday Dhar, Max Diel, Erica Dietrich, James Diffin, Denise Segreti DiGiovanna, Simone DiLaura, Danielle Dimston, George Dinhaupt, Scott Dolan, Rory Donaldson, Todd Doney, William Donovan, Elissa Dorfman, Jessica Doyle, Jeffrey du Vallier d’Aragon Aranita, Melanie Ducharme, Daniel Dueck, Beth Duerr, Jeffrey Dugan, Lauren Dunkle, Heather Dunn, Jeanne Dunning, Chad Durgan, Julie Durkin, Matthias Duwel, Annie Dwyer Internicola, Marcel Dzama, Michael Eade, Brent Nicholson Earle, Janae Easton, Jonathan Easton, Mat Eaton, Brad Eberhard, Marlene Eckhardt, Adam S. Eckstrom, Melissa Eder, Allison Edge, Cynthis Edorh, Frank Egloff, Per Eidspjeld, Eric Elias, Fredrick Elms, Elise Engler, Donna Jean Engstrom, Joy Episalla, Mitch Epstein, Patricia Erbelding, Christa Erickson, Yvonne Estrada, Dore Everett, Branden Ezell, Joan Fabian, James Fackrell, Lisa Fain, Chris Fang, Neil Farber, Adriana Farmiga, David Faulk, Nicholas Fedak II, Tony Feher, Josh Feldman, Wynn Fermin, Ramon Fernandez-Bofill, Eliza Fernbach, Brad Fesmire, Suzanna Fields, Angelo Filomeno, Janet Filomeno, Hannah Fink, Michael A. Fink, Brian Finke, Lisbeth Firmin, Christina B. Fischer, Joseph Fisher, Louise Fishman, Jacques Flechemuller, Mark Fleming, Sean-Michael Fleming, Robert Flynt, April Fontaine, Roy Foo, Jean Foos, Tom Foral, Juliana Forero, Taylor Forrest, Alison Foshee, Johnston Foster, Nicole Fournier, Bradley Fox, Mark Fox Morgan, Tara Fracalossi, Audrey Frank Anastasi, Travis Frazelle, Christopher Frederick, Sharon J. Frey, Sabra Friendman, Steven Frim, Gina Fuentes Walker, Adam Fuss, Felipe Galindo, Kristen Galvin, Asha Ganpat, Arturo Garcia, Laurel Garcia Colvin, Milton Garcia Latex, J.J. Garfinkel, Joy Garnett, Yvonne Gaspar, Alexandra Gates, Bob Gates, Jeff Gauntt, Paul Leroy Gehres, Asya Geisberg, Madeline Gekiere, Terri Gelenian-Wood, Amy Geller, Mike Geno, Timothy W. Gerken, Elena Mercedes Getto, Cris Gianakos, Eric Gibbons, Sam Gibbons, Byron Gibbs, Haya Gil-Lubin, Stacy Gilinson, Eric Ginsberg, Frances Giron, Luis Gispert, Christopher Glancy, Judy Glantzman, Milton Glaser, Marilyn Glass, Robin Glassman, Sybil Gleaton, Angela Glennon, Virginia Glessner, Godforbid, Michele Godwin, Monika Goetz, Anthony Goicolea, Jo Going, Kenneth Sean Golden, Keren Golden, Michael Golden, Ellen Goldin, Ben Goldman, Lance Goldsmith, David Goldstein, Ana Laura Gonzalez, Maria Elena Gonzalez, Kathy Goodell, Alicia Goodfarb, Johnny L. Goodwin, Kay Gordon, Lee Gordon, Kalika Gorski, Alyce Gottesman, Meira Gottlieb, Shaun Gough, Michelle Grabner, Leor Grady, Deborah Grant, Garry Grant, Robin Graubard, Joanne Greenbaum, Holly Greenberg, Rodney Alan Greenblat, Meryl Greenblatt, Kira Greene, Sarah Greer Mecklem, Stan Gregory, Peter Griffin, Michela Griffo, Samantha Grimm Hallenus, Ellen Grossman, Katrin Grotepass, Sabrina Gschwandtner, Edgard Guanipa, Patricia Guardiola, Lynn Gufeld, Carl Gunhouse, Sophia Guntherz, Juan Pablo Gutierrez, Hans Haacke, Theresa Hackett, Patricia Haemmerle, Bill Hall, Lavonne Hall, Katy Hamer, Harmony Hammond, Jane Hammond, John Hampshire, Victoria Hanks, Kim Hanson, John Hardy, Allison Harkavy, Joann M. Harrah, Dike Harris, Pamela Harris, Mary Beth Harry, Keira Hart, Dominic Harvey, Ellen Harvey, Peter Harvey, Michael Harwood, Naj Hasani, Ava Hassinger, Skowmon Hastanan, Sarah Hauser, Stuart Hawkins, Tom Hawkins, Joseph Hayes, Karen Heagle, Valerie Hegarty, Mary Heilmann, Mara Held, Amy Helfand, Neddi Heller, Miranda Hellman, Thomas Hellstrom, Doug Henders, Sarah Henderson, Geoffrey Hendricks, Jon Hendricks, John Hendriks, Ed Herman, Molly Heron, Matthias Herrmann, Valerie Herteen, Alex Hetherington, Corin Hewitt, Laura Heyman, Amy Hill, Jan Hilmer, Juan Hinojosa, Bryan Hiott, Annamarie Ho, Sarah Hoddy, Jim Hodges, E. Featherstone Hoff, Chet Holcomb, Anamika Holke, Kim Holleman, Frank Holliday, Andrea Holt, Joel Holub, Gregg Hoover, Rinaldo Hopf, Brooke Horne, Jarrod Houghton, Joel Hoyer, Mary Hrbacek, Amanda Huang, Arthur Huang, Heather Hudson, Robert Huff, Kat Hughes, Morgan Hughes, David Humphrey, Sheryl Humphrey, Jennifer Hunter, Yolanda Hunter, Adam Hurwitz, Nancy Hwang, James Hyde, Nash Hyon, Jessica Iapino, Shigeno Ichimura, Ijeoma D. Iheanacho, Jasmine Imperial, Ketta Ioannidou, Shaun Irons, Carmen Isasi, Junichiro Ishida, Anna Jaap, Alfredo Jaar, Tim Jablonski, Sandra Jackman, Clarke Jackson, Derek Jackson, Georgia Jackson, Jackson Photografix, Brooke Jacobs, Bill Jacobson, Jimmie James, Matthew Jankowski, Benjamin T. Jarosch, Allison Jarvela, Janusz Jaworski, James Jaxxa, Jim Jeffers, Bill Jensen, Gerry Jensen, Tom Jezek, Jiro, Lennon Jno-Baptiste, Jessika Joe, Simen Johan, Laura Johansen, Chris Johanson, Christine Johnson, Eric Anthony Johnson, Erick Johnson, Hasan Johnson, Holly Johnson, Liz Johnson, Paddy Johnson, Bill Jones, Darrell Jones, Darren Jones, Rula Jones, Ken Jones Jr., Michael Joo, Saskia Jorda, Jovani, Michael Joyal, Emily Joyce, Jenny Jozwiak, Roberto Juarez, Miranda July, Paul Justice, Patricia Kaegi W., Ellen Kahn, Kai, Indra Karpaviciute, Elaine Karton, Marie Christine Katz, Andrew Kaufman, Betsy Kaufman, Jessica M. Kaufman, Pat Kaufman, Dionisios Kavvadias, Eleni Kavvadias, Takeshi Kawashima, Ameer Kazmi, Judy Kazmi, Marya Kazoun, Darra Keeton, Betsy Kelleher, Marthe Keller, Jamie Kelty, Sebron Kendrick, Michael "Misha" Kennedy, Shirin Khaki, Swati Khurana, Hee Sook Kim, Heige Kim, Jaesung Kim, Jingyung Kim, Jullian S. Kim, So Jung Kim, David King, Kelly King, Marcy King, Matt King, Susan Kirby, Michael Kirwan, Barbara Klein, Rosanne Kleinerman, Elisabeth Kley, Lucretia Knapp, Barbara Knight, Elizabeth Knowles, Woon Won Ko, Viktor Koen, Philip Kogan, Carol Kohn, Francine Kohn, Kathy Koller, Thomas Koole, Fran Kornfeld, Aaron Krach, Kara Kramer, Michael Krasowitz, Andre North Krauss, Fawn Krieger, Larry Krone, Liliana Krynska, Louis Kunsch, Melissa Kuntz, Michelle Kurlan, Allison Kurtz, Anita Kushner, Michael Kwiecinski, Ben La Placa and Mary Klie, Eliot Lable, Jaclyn Labozzetta, David Lachman, Stephen Lack, Miles Ladin, Thomas Lail, Emily Noelle Lambert, Lehni Lamide Davies, Lisa LaMonica, Marc Landes, Klara Landrat, Eve Andree Laramee, Erin Lareau, Larian, Kristin Larson, Catherine LaSota, Heidi Lau, Ayala Laufer-Cahana, Louis Laurita, Shelley Lavell, Glenda Lavin, Louise Lawler, Beatrice S. Lebreton, Roberto Lebron, Amanda Lechner, Charlie Ledbetter, Marjeta Lederman, Cal Lee, Deanna C. Lee, Margaret Lee, Brian Lemond, Taliah Lempert, Zoe Leonard, Barbara Leven, Les Levine, Barbara Ann Levy, James Levy, Georgina Lewis, Sol LeWitt, Julia Lichtblau, Daniel Licul, Michael Liddy, Edward Lightner, Glenn Ligon, Yuki Lim, Alexandra Limpert, Conner Limpert, Nicole Limpert, Tai Hung Lin, Nikki Lindt, Martha Link, Megan Lipke, Marcia Lippman, Lump Lipshitz, Jackie Lipton, Frank Liu, David Livingston, Luis A. Locarno, Patricia Lofgren, Amy Lombardo, Tim Lonergan, Jason Longchamps, Aimee Louchart, Chris Louchart, Whitfield Lovell, Gina Lovoi, Michael Lownie, Robert Ludwig, Cecilia Lueza, Vera Lutter, Annica Lydenberg, Holly Lynton, Noah Lyon, MacDermott and MacGough, Mary Macey, Marci MacGuffie, Megan Maguire, Charles Werner Mahal, Jr., Jennifer Mahlman, Rebecca Major, Sakura Maku, Luis Mallo, Linda Mangan, Craig Manister, Ed Manner, Erica Mapp, Philomena Marano, Mitchell Marco, Harriet Regina Marion, Thom Markee, China Marks, Sandy Marostica, Adria Marquez, Norma Marquez Orozco, Christopher Marquis, Kathleen S. A. Marquis, Charlotte Marra, Mary V. Marsh, Kerry James Marshall, Katy Martin, Trevor Martin, Max Carlos Martinez, Magdalina Martinez Franco, Bob Marty, Amy Mascena, Scott Massarsky, Christina Massey, Thomas Matsuda, Amy Matthews, Kegera Matthews-Lawrence, Mary Mattingly, Meghan Matuza, Brooke Maxwell, Esperanza Mayobre, Michael Mazzeo, Xanda Mc Cagg, Emma McCagg, Maureen McCarron, Melissa McCarthy, Paula McCartney, Mark D. McComb, Peter McCoubrey, Janice McDonnell, Tim McDonnell, Sarah McEneany, Dominic McGill, Alison McGoran, Thomas McGovern, Conor Mcgrady, Paul McHale, John Mckaig, Craig McKenzie, Anne Q. McKeown, Chuck McKinney, John McLachlin, Mark McLoughlin, Meridith McNeal, Sarah McNulty, Jamie McPartland, Beverley McQuillan, Bill Mcright, Justin McSimov, Lisanne McTernan, Michael Meads, Roberto Medina, Russel Mehlman, Julie Mehretu, Linda Meisenhelder, Brad Melamed, Derick Melander, Margery Mellman, John Melof, Ann Messner, Lucia Alba Mettler, Chris Metze, Michael Nathaniel Meyer, Mica, Maggie Michael, Ellen Miffitt, Holly Miller, Judith S. Miller, William H. (Billy) Miller, Shizuka Minami, Marilyn Minter, Elizabeth Miseo, Kenneth Mitchell, Michael Mitchell, Tadashi Mitsui, Joseph Modica, Sharon Molloy, Jorge Luis Moncayo, Sean Monesson, Sarah Monroe, Gregory Montreuil, Cindy Moore, James Moore, Jessica Moore, Nik Moore, Randy Moore, Paul Moran, Tom Morbitzer and Gail Amornvivat, Janet Morgan, Andrea Morganstern, Lora Morgenstern, Ricardo Morin, Juri Morioka, Amy Morken, James Morrison, Leo Morrissey, Arezoo Moseni, Adrienne Moumin, Carrie Moyer, K-- Mroczek, Roger Mudre, Fred Mugford, K. Muldoon, Matt Mullican, Vik Muniz, Margaret Murphy, Elizabeth Murray, Kevin Muth, Pieter Myers, Jeremy Nadel, Stefanie Nagorka, Andrew Nance, Chuck Nanney, James Nares, Antonella Natale, Marcia Neblett, Joseph Nechvatal, John W.M. Neely, Rodrigo M. Negreira, Heidi Neilson, David Nelson, Laura Nelson, Diogo Neto, Brandon Neubauer, Chyna Ng, Christian Nguyen, Sophia Nilsson, Martha Nilsson Edeheit, Michelle Nixon, Liz Nofziger, Nick Normal, Scott Norris, Emily North, Mardi Nowak, Paul Nudd, Robert O’Donnell, Elin O’Hara Slavick, Veronica O’Hern, Carrie O’Neil, Leah Oates, Angelo Ocasio, Dustin Odgin, Sun-Duck Oh, Eri Oishi, Nancy Olivier, Ron Omlin, Soner On, Tomomi Ono, Yoko Ono, Patricia Onorato, Christian Oppel, Richard Orjis, Dianne Orkin Footlick, Novella Osuorah, Tom Otterness, Michael Ottersen, Vivian Outlaw, Joe Ovelman, Rachel Owens, Tori Pace, Carol Padberg, Enrique Padilla Jr., James Paladino, Kelsey Palmer, Marcy Palmer, Ruby Palmer, Wilna Panagos, Nicole Parcher, Eung Ho Park, Jung Eun Park, Jennifer Parker, Margo Parker, Robert Miles Parker, Suellen Parker, Charles Parker Boggs, Sam Parks, Avani Patel, Laura Paulini, Sarah H. Paulson, Jim Pavlicovic, Manuela Paz, Junanne Peck, Carol Peligian, Elisabeth Pellathy, Claudia Pena, Sheila Pepe, Keith Perkins, Quimetta Perle, Jules Perlmutter, Perry, Daniel Perry, Gilda Pervin, Lamar Peterson, Kyriakos Petropoulos, Christina Pettersson, George Pfau, Laura Sue Phillips, Sisavanh Phouthavona, Doug Piccione, Tracee Pickett-Armoni, Pietrapiana, Mary Pinto, Kim Piotrowski, Drew Pisarra, Joe Piscopia, Jesus Polanco, Anne Polashenski, Bekky Pollack, Ben Polsky, Nuno Pontes, Sabrina Pooler, Dayna Poon, William Pope L., Tara Popick, Amy Jean Porter, Chuck Potter, Maggie Prendergast, Lily Prentice, Jennifer Presant, Mel Prest, Rhiannon Price, Rick Prol, Amy Pryor, Susan Prytherch, Dianne Purdy, Antonio Puri, Matthew Pych, Wayne Pyle, Michael Raaum, Svetlana Rabey, Magdolena Rachwel, Dean Radinorsky, Carol Radsprecher, Helaine Rainier, Christina Ramirez, Paul Henry Ramirez, Debra Ramsay, Lisa Ramsay, Fernando Rangel, Jessica Rankin, Meryl Lynn Ranzer, Rappel, Kaylyn Raschke, Moriah Ray, Lisa Reddig, Erwin Redl, Catherine Renae, Richard Renaldi, Andreas Rentsch, Reto, Cynthia Rettig, Barbara Jo Revelle, Paolo Reverbel de Souza, Miguel Angel Reyes, Reynolds, Eric Rhein, Alice Rice, Barbara Richards, Robert W. Richards, Brian Riley, Joyce Riley, Brooke Ripley, Meg Ripley, Barbara Ritz Jenny, Greg Rivera, Daniele Robbiani, Dale Roberts, Daniel H. Roberts, Marie Roberts, Sandy Lee Robertson, Andrew Robinson, Steven Robinson, Roberta Rocca, Gabriel Rocha Z., T.M. Roche-Kelly, Dorothea Rockburne, Debbie Rodenhauser, Anthony Rodriguez, Tim Rollins & K.O.S., Dan V. Romer, Roncallo, Yarminiah Rosa, Francisco Rosado, Matthew Rose, Kay Rosen, Michael Rosen, Rob Hugh Rosen, Robin Ross, Phyllis Rosser, Alfredo Rossi, Arnold Roth, Ryan Roth, Andrew Roy, Lisa Rubin, Christina Sitja Rubio, Donna Ruff, Mayda Rumberg, Lisa Rundstrom, Thomas Rupich, Arlene Rush, Dan Rushton, Craig Russell, Ellen Ryan, Betye Saar, Ken Sahr, G. Sampson (Bieberich), Joel Sanders, Toni-Lee Sangastiano, Edward Santalone, Carmine Santaniello, Santiago, Katia Santibanez, Nelson Santos, Jennifer Sarkilahti, Gordon Sasaki, Anthony Satori, Amelia Saul, Richard Sawdon Smith, Joe Saxe, Denise Schatz, Sebastian Schaub, Dimitri Scheblanov, Irys Schenker, Carolee Schneeman, Kenny Schneider, Mira Schor, Collier Schorr, Susan Schwalb, Molly Schwartz, Sandra Scicchitani, Chris Scroggins, Greg Seagrave, Christinea Seely, Anson Seeno, Analia Segal, Jessica Segall, Joan Semmel, Luciano Senger, Gregory Sengletary, Christina Serchia, Jennifer Serchia, Emily Severance, Paul Kent Sewell, Grant Shaffer, Don Shanley, Amy Edith Shapiro, Norman Shapiro, Denise Shaw, Dr. Gerald Shaw, Emma Shaw, Herb Shaw, Marc Shaw, Nancy Shaw, Patrick Shaw, Renee Shaw, Erica Shearer, Frank Sheehan, Mark Sheinkman, Kate Shepherd, Rudy Shepherd, Etienne Latour Genore Hughes Sheppard, Kayo Shido, Taki Shimura, Heesun Shin, Jean Shin, Sangah Shin, Ellen Shire, Peter O. Shire, Kiriko Shirobayashi, Shmuel, Allison Shockley, Alyson Shotz, Joyce Siegel, Amy Sillman, Tawnie Silva, Kelly Simbirdi, Ellen Singletary, Sonita Singwi, Carri Skoczek, Jennifer Skoda, Tom Slaughter, Susannah Slocum, Aminah Slor, Oren Slor, Wendy Small, Michael Smit, Clifford D. Smith, Lory Smith, Louise Smith, Michael Smith, Eleni Smolen, Bambilee Snyder, Dorothy Snyder, Christopher T. Sojka, Deanne Sokolin, Lori Solondz, Hector Solorio, Thomas R. Somerville, Mario Sostre, Jeff Soto, Lisa C. Soto, Beverley Southcott, Teddy Spath Jr., Maria Spector, Nancy Spero, Gary Speziale, Margot Spindelman, Jered Sprecher, Francis Stallings, David Staniunas, Tamara Staples, Jessica Steele, Barry Steely, Pat Steir, Joshua Stern, Lindsay Stern, John Michael Stevison, Michael Still, Rae Stimsom, Mark Stockton, Steve Stone, Claire K. Stringer, Michelle Stuart, Bobbi Studstill, Christine Stuht, Kelly Anne Sturhahn, Pablo Sue-Pat, Kunie Sugiura, Ilene Sunshine, Rachel Sussman, Ferenc Suto, Rilette Swanepoel, Jane Swidzinski, Edward Swift, Liam Swon, Betty Sword, Paul Szabo, Radek Szczesny, Don Tabler, Barbara Takenaga, JD Talasek, Herb Tam, Jeff Tambussi, Sam Tan, Joey Tang, Kim Rae Taylor, Morgan Taylor, Steed Taylor, Sonia Tedsen, LaVerne Telles, Mary Temple, Austin Thomas, Gwenn Thomas, Sharon Thomas, Emily Thompson, Lex Thompson, Mark Thompson, Chrissy Thomsen, Brenda Thour, Michael Tice, Elizabeth Tillotson, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Zdravko Toic, Jutka Tolcser, Mette Tommerup, James Tomon, Anne Marie Torrez, Jennifer Toth, George Towne, Bill Travis, Richard J. Treitner, Becky Trotter, Daniel Trout, Janaina Tschape, Marina Tsesarskaya, Arlene Tucker, Colleen Tully, Spencer Tunick, Chris Twomey, Type A, Kako Ueda, Christopher R. Ulivo, Penelope Umbrico, Alex Umen, Peter Urban, Urbanthropologie (Carol-Anne-Ryce-Paul), Maria M. Valez, Teressa Valla, Marc Van Cauwenbergh, Kathryn Van Steenhuyse, Chris Vander Schans, Maura Vanderpoorten, Sharon VanStarkenburg, Marsha Vaughn, Tony Michael Vecchio, Alberto Velasco, Jayastree Venkatadurai, Guido Vermeulen, Alejandra Villasmil, Grazia Vita, Don Voisine, Bruce Volpone, Anna Von Gwinner, Natasha von Rosenchilde, Leonard Von Webb, Whitney Vosburgh, Elysa Voshell, Melanie Wadsworth, Lori Wakefield, Robert Walden, Glen Walls, Shelton Walsmith, Lucia Warck-Meister, Jeff "Jeffu" Warmouth, Tom Warren, Rebecca Wasserman, Jack Waters, John Waters, Rose Watts, Mary Weatherford, Hannal Weaver, Patrick Webb, Tenesh Webber, Joan Weber, William Wegman, Theres Wegmann, Ellen Weider, Louise Weinberg, Dan Weiner, Lawrence Weiner, Ejay Weiss, Barbara Weissberger, Alan Wells, Carolyn Weltman, Kimmy Wentling, Frederick Weston, Dirk Westphal, Charmaine Wheatley, Stuart Wheeler, Jojo Whilden, Ken Whitbeck, Lili White, Mark Wiener, Veronica Wilkinson, Darrell Wilks, David M. Williams, Diane Williams, Shane Williamson, Emily Piah Wilson, Fred Wilson, June Wilson, Kate Wilson, Letha Wilson, Albert Winn, Edie Winograde, Sue Winton Parrish, James Wodarek, Ann F. Wong, Colby Wong, Virgil Wong, Thomas Woodruff, Aicha Woods, Cindy Workman, Suzanne Wright, Jennifer Wroblenski, Brooke Wyatt, Tamara Wyndham, Noel Wynn, Rob Wynne, Cathy Wysocki, Junko Yamada, Lynne Yamamoto, Carrie Yamaoka, Chin Chih Yang, Bernard Yenelouis, Maria Yerman, Leyla Yildiz, Bo Sung Yoom, Sunhee Yoon, Irene Young, Laurence Young, Penn Young, Candice Yu, Kosuke Yuki, Carlo Zanni, Patricia Zarate, Valerie Zars, John Zaso, Richard D. Zauner Jr., Jody Zellen, Emna Zghal, Chuck Zimmer, Alice Zinnes, Anthony Zito, Katherine Zuckerman, Nina Zurier, and Gary Zyra.
All Postcards from the Edge proceeds support the programs of Visual AIDS. Founded in 1988, Visual AIDS strives to increase public awareness of AIDS through the visual arts and supports artists living with HIV/AIDS.
Why doesn't somebody in Washington do this? In fact I'm going to contact the organizers and see if there's interest in staging one of these here next year!
Saturday, December 04, 2004
Adrienne Mills Top 10 AOM List
Adrienne Mills is not only a woman of mystery, but she's also a very talented photographer, a participating AOM artist and body painter extraordinaire. She told me that she has "walked AOM at least 50 times," and thus her list (and her comments) comes after miles of re-visitng these works (the links lead to Mills' photos of the AOM artists' works):
Christopher Edmunds (I came to the realization that I have a head fixation).
Kathryn Cornelius then and now (I luuuuv you! ...I guess you had to be there before it was shut down.)
Sherill Anne Gross
Rob Vander Zee (The heads behind Bryan T)
Erwin Timmers (I like his stuff way better than Tim's but Tim gets all the press and play).
Thomas Edwards (I want to lick you! ... you can't imagine how many times I've thought that about different people. It's good to know I'm not the only one).
Lisa Schumaier (I like cats. Maybe that's why I want to lick people).
Jared Davis (even better when he has the music going).
Video guy (I don't remember his name).
Joyce Zipperer
*Amy Marx* (Amy gets the "close, but no cigar" award. The black fabric stretched on the frames was a bit ragged but I still like the overall effect. I would bump Sherill if the black fabric was in better shape).
More AOM Lists coming...
Artists are finally sending me their Top 10 AOM Lists. I'll be posting Marilyn Banner's and Adrienne Mills' later today.
For the next two weeks I'll be on the road; traveling to Miami and to San Diego. Nonetheless I will still be posting from the road, including my final mathematical compilation (from all lists) of the Top 10 AOM artists, whom will then be offered a group show at a DC area gallery in 2005. I am working the details with that gallery and will announce it all next week.
By the way, four other galleries that I know of (both Fraser Galleries, the Anne C. Fisher Gallery and Gallery Neptune) are also offering shows to AOM artists based on some of the DC Art News AOM lists. Is that great or what!
Whole Foods and art
I love shopping for food at Whole Foods, and how there's always all kinds of foods, cheeses, dips, etc. around to taste and eat as you shop. If the grubs knew about this, I am sure they may stop attending art gallery openings and start hanging out at Whole Foods.
But I digress... Every Whole Foods store has a resident artist, and several of them (such as Kelly Towles) are also exhibiting artists at this year's Artomatic.
And the Whole Foods area management sent all their employees the below email, encouraging them to attend the final weekend of Artomatic.
Bravo Whole Foods!
Friday, December 03, 2004
Time to Vote!
My good colleage J.T. Kirkland, over at Thinking About Art has been nominated for a WebLog Award for his terrific Thinking About Art BLOG.
Let's help him out by pretending we're Chicago Democrats or any and all Louisiana voters and by voting as often and as many times as possible here.
JS Adams' AOM Top 10 List
Artist JS (Jim) Adams sends in his AOM list of his favorite artists and makes the point that he "respectfully excludes several long-time favorites and peers whom are well documented on other's lists (Brooks, Tattelman, Tate, Seesow, and Miner)" and adds that he is also purchasing one of James Calder's photographs and a piece from Louise Kennelly.
James Calder, photography
Alan Callander, video
Kathryn Cornelius, installation
Linda Hesh, mixed media + photography
Louise Kennelly, painting
Syl Mathis, glass
Nicholas Syracuse, photography
Bridget Vath, phobic fashion
Jeff Wilson, painting
Dennis Yankow, mixed media + photography
Tonight is the first Friday of December and thus the extended hours for the Dupont Circle area galleries. Meet the artists, see new shows, have a glass of wine and buy some art.
Openings from 6-8 PM generally. If you make the gallery rounds, do not miss Erik Sandberg's current show at Conner Contemporary. Sandberg is one of the best painters in our area and this show is my top pick for the month. Read the Michael O'Sullivan review of the show here.
And this weekend is the last two days for Artomatic. Most of the artists will be there tomorrow, and if you want a great tour, the Triangle Artists Group (Metro DC's gay artists collective) will be hosting a site tour of its members "along with other LGBT and queer artists who are participating in Artomatic 2004" on Saturday.
Meet the TAG tour guides tomorrow (Saturday, Dec. 4) in the AOM Lobby for guided tours at 2:00 and 3:00 p.m.
Also on Saturday is the Funky Furniture Auction. On Saturday, December 4th, 2004 at 9pm, all of the Funky Furniture works will be auctioned in a must-attend party/auction to be staged at the Funky Furniture display area at AOM. Admission to the cocktail pre-auction reception is $20 per couple, which also gets you a bidding badge.
Thursday, December 02, 2004
ANABA makes a good point!
Sometimes it takes someone far from the eye of the hurricane to see clearly that there's calm in the center (that almost sounded like something Dan Rather would say... yuk!).
Martin Bromirski makes an excellent point about AOM, lists and me in his excellent ANABA art BLOG.
So, more artists should email me their AOM lists!
When I started the AOM Top 10 List thing, I invited anyone and everyone to send me their list; so far that has caused a significant (and astounding) response from gallery owners, art critics, art collectors, art curators, etc., but only a few artists have sent in their list.
Only a few days left... the offer is still open!
Artomatic 2004 Review
A slightly different version of the below review will be published by the Crier Media newspapers, which also syndicates it. If it follows the usual pattern, it will also be then picked up by a few Latin American newspapers, translated and published in Spanish.
Artomatic Energymatic Daggermatic
Art critics, like most writers, usually get paid by the word, sometimes by the article, and occasionally by an infinitesimal percentage of whatever profits their writing generates. And most art critics and writers visit a gallery show or museum exhibition, get a few handouts and spend about half an hour studying the works on the wall before heading home or to the office to pound the word processor’s keys and earn their buck-a-word for the review.
You can’t do that with Art-O-Matic, the huge, almost every two years, open visual arts extravaganza that this year hosted over 600 visual artists and another 400 performance artists at the laberynthic former convent building that last housed the Children’s Museum on 3rd and H Street, NE.
The idea behind Art-O-Matic is simple: find a large, empty building somewhere in the city; work with the building owners, and then allow any artist who wants to show their work help with staging the show and with some of the financial needs. This year, AOM artists paid a $60 entry fee plus worked a few hours assisting with the show.
And this year around 600 visual artists brought their art to the public.
In order to write a proper, ethical review of AOM, a writer must spend hours walking five floors of art, jam-packed into hundreds of rooms, bathrooms, closets and stairs. And I think that this is one of the main reasons that most art critics love to hate this show. It overwhelms them with visual offerings and forces them to develop a "glance and judge" attitude towards the artwork. It’s a lot easier to carpet bomb a huge show like this than to do a surgical strike.
Add on top of that an outdated, but "alive and kicking" elitist attitude towards an open show, where anyone and everyone who calls him or herself an artist can exhibit, sans the sanitizing and all-knowing eye of the latest trendy curator, and you have a perfect formula for dismissing a show, without really looking at it.
This quaint and elitist attitude towards art is not new or even modern. It was the same attitude that caused the emergence of the salons of the 19th century, where only artists that the academic intelligentsia deemed good enough were exhibited. As every art student who almost flunked art history knows, towards the latter half of that century, the artists who had been rejected from the salons (because they didn’t fit the formula of good art) organized their own Salon Des Refuses, sort of a 19th century Parisian Art-O-Matic.
And a lot, in fact, most of the work in the Salon Des Refuses was quite bad, but amongst the dreck were also pearls like Manet's Le Dejeuner sur 'Herbe (Luncheon in the Grass), Monet's Impression: Sunrise, (and we all know what art "ism" that title gave birth to) and an odd and memorable looking portrait of a young lady in white (The White Girl, Symphony in White, No. 1) by an American upstart by the name of James McNeill Whistler.
Everyone who was anyone in the art world hated and dismissed this anti-salon exhibition; except for the only "anyone" who actually counted: art history.
But then somewhere in the next century, the salons and their formulas returned. Only their name and their display styles had changed. They were now called Biennials, Biennales, Bienales, Documentas and their settings were in museums, entire cities or pristine white cubes around the world.
Only their reasoning and misguided logic remained constant: "Only we know what is good art."
And that is why these modern salonists and their acolytes will never respect, like, or understand Art-O-Matic: they recall that the Salons des Refuses almost broke their control over art; it won’t happen again.
And like the poet Marti wrote: "I know the monster well, for I have lived in its entrails." You see, over the last two decades I have been the juror, curator, decision-maker for hundreds of shows. And as a freelance art critic I have written and evaluated hundreds of artists and shows. I have been a minute gear in the world-wide machinations to keep control of what is art and never let a new Salons des Refuses wrest control again.
OK, OK, I know that am going overboard here; but... do you get the point?
But I am also an artist, and I like the concept of Art-O-Matic.
And not just because of the miles of artwork on display, much of which is mind numbing bad art; in fact, so bad that it is sometimes almost good in its exorbitant mediocrity. The main reason that I like Art-O-Matic is the palpable amount of artistic energy that it delivers to Washington, DC every couple of years. It is as if some invisible visual art battery in this ignored art scene comes to the forefront and gets recharged with brilliant white light (made as we all know, of all colors in the spectrum), and 50,000 people who generally would not set foot in a gallery or museum come and see art and artists and absorb the positive energy that only creative minds can generously give away.
So I enter my fourth Art-O-Matic with several preconceived ideas in my very subjective agenda:
(a) It’s going to take several visits and many hours to write my fourth review of Art-O-Matic in as many shows.
(b) There’s going to be a lot of dreck in the show. But art is in the eyes of the beholder; my dreck could be your pearl.
(c) I’m going to find several pearls in the show
(d) I’m going to re-charge my visual arts battery
(e) Our gallery will pick up some new artists from this show
On visit one, during the press preview, glass sculptor Tim Tate (Disclaimer: whom we represent and whom we "discovered" at a past Art-O-Matic) whizzes a group of us through the five floors of the show. It still takes three hours or so, but I have taken notes. Five visits and more than twenty hours later, I feel comfortable to start writing about the show.
A lot of the artists in the show are well known to me, and so I begin to discover "new" ones – at least new to me. Judy Jashinsky, who is one of the firebrand organizers who keeps this (and past) Art-O-Matics running, grabs me and asks me if I’ve seen Mark Jenkins’s pubic hair tapestries.
And Jenkins is one of the first memorable discoveries in this show. Tucked away in a corner space, Jenkins has created two noteworthy entries into the show. First in everyone’s lips are his photographic explorations of close-ups of pubic hair (loupe included in the installation) that through the magic of digital manipulation become interesting designs of elegant abstracted qualities. A second Jenkins emerges from his crowded little room: the tape sculptures.
Jenkins uses common transparent packing tape (yards and yards of it) to create superbly crafted and visually attractive figurative sculptures, as well as the odd, unusual organic shaped one. Through documentary photography, we see what happens when Jenkins places these plastic figures in a public venue. A passing man stares incredulously at a plastic man inside a dumpster; or a beach jogger is surprised by an alien looking tape creature that the sea has washed ashore.
Iver Olson is another talented discovery for me. He gets the award for the best porn in the show, although his display is also peppered with some otherwise just plain sensual photo-collages. It is almost as if there were two Olsons in the show: a really torrid, sensual photographer, and a brilliantly inventive pornographer.
In one of his photos, Olson has a woman with her hand buried inside the vagina of a second woman, who is sitting on a couch, seemingly bored, while her friend is searching inside her vagina, with (as an artist friend of mine put it) a "did a leave my keys in there?" sort of look. Somehow Olson has transformed the hardcore act of lesbian fisting into an almost funny scene of lustless abandon. Other good porn in the show is offered by Eduardo Rodriguez, Alexis Bine and Rudy K.
Another discovery is Ira Tattelman’s installation titled "They taught me to wash away my desires." I don’t know if it is because the building was once a convent, but there is certainly a strange, palpable energy in some parts of the building; people like Stephen King feed on this sort of energy and produce brilliant books; it is clear that Ira Tattelman also absorbed and channeled this energy into his installation.
"They taught me to wash away my desires" is inside a smallish bathroom furnished with a shower, a tub and some archaic 19th-century type bathroom stations (such as an enema station). Tattelman has installed a small pump in one of the stations that keeps re-circulating brownish, brackish water and add a watery sound to the room. To the right, inside and around the dirty tub is what at first sight appears to be a dismembered human body (they're actually some sort of artificial legs).
Put together the Stephen Kingesque feel of the room, the moist sound effects, the outdated chrome and dirty tile bath stations, and the human parts, and you have an installation that would give Hannibal Lechter a nightmare. It’s brilliant and somebody better put police ankle trackers on Tattelman now.
A couple more artists who deserve to be mentioned in the Hannibal Lechter art list are the very good and macabre sculptures by Stephon Senegal: this is a young artist to keep an eye on; in my opinion possibly the best sculpture in the entire show. Some other pieces by very good artists in this new trend of Lechterism are "Joroko" and also the installation "Sun Ray" by retro-recycling master Ray Jacobs.
M. Rion Hoffman really impressed me with her photography negative boxes installed along one of the main hallways. Hoffman’s boxes are delicate and have that ability to bring the viewer in for an intimate, close-up exploration of whatever story this talented artist wants to deliver. However, her large photo-collages, displayed next to her boxes, appear brutish and heavy handed by comparison, although part of me kept being re-directed from them to her brilliant boxes.
Matt Dunn is a mother load of photographic talent with a built-in magnet to attract, discover, capture on silver gelatin film, and then show us, the really interesting, throat-clearing substrata of human society that makes Diane Arbus’ photographs look like Sears portraits. This is a master portraitist in his element.
In the glass room, Washington Glass School directors Tim Tate and Erwin Timmers have created the most professional looking set of rooms in the entire building and provided the means to discover a couple of new talents in that beautiful genre. Another fact that surfaces very quickly is that the Washington Glass School is certainly stamping its own imprimatur, its own "school brand" in a sense, upon many of our area’s young glass artists. I particularly liked the figurative "man" vessels of Michael Janis, where Janis takes Tate’s seminal idea of narrative biographical wall panels and marries it with Tate’s apothecaries (nine of which were acquired by the Renwick Alliance) to deliver a fresh, new set of ideas in glass.
In these rooms I also liked Syl Mathis, who reminds us that the true beauty of glass lies mainly in its simplicity. Mathis delivers a series of pieces exploring the "boat" theme in glass. I preferred the simpler, more elegant forms by Mathis over some of the more elaborate pieces, perhaps made a bit distracting by their complex support stands and crafty materials.
Allison B. Miner is a very talented painter, and at the last Art-O-Matic, where I first discovered her small, in-your-face paintings, I singled her out as one of the best painters in that show. Miner is still one of the best painters in this show, and her talent with the brush and composition is clearly evident to the most casual observer. I do however, think that it is time for Miner to move on and push her enviable painting skills beyond the tight, close-up routine that she has come dangerously close to boxing herself in. This is a very good painter at the beginning of her career and I am sure that we are but seeing but a tiny bit of what Miner can and will deliver.
Joseph Barbaccia is another artist whom I have been observing for the last few years and this year his crayon self-portrait – literally made out of hundreds and hundreds of crayons in a postmodern pointillist style – easily qualifies as one of the best pieces of art in the whole AOM.
Barbaccia is hard to pin down as a painter, sculptor, uh... crayonist? He explores and pushes art in all dimensions.
Staying within two dimensions, and doing a magnificent job of it are three enviably talented painters: Margaret Dowell, Michal Hunter and Jeffry Cudlin. All of these artists have that spectacular technical mastery of the brush that it is so easily dismissed by people who have never tried to mix cerulean blue with Payne’s gray and ended up with mud. Dowell’s paintings show not only extraordinary technical skills, but also a hungry sense of desire and intelligent understanding of her subjects – who are often transgender and cross dressing personages around our area.
Michal Hunter is also a technical virtuoso of the brush, with only one painting in the entire show; tucked away so far and so difficult to find, that had I not run into Hunter while she was on hallway monitor duty, I would have missed it completely. I am glad that I didn’t, as it is a very powerful work by a woman who is slowly re-affirming her once solid place in the Washington, DC art scene.
Jeffry Cudlin surprised me by delivering some very strong compositional works that are really excuses for Cudlin to use a representational subject to offer works such as "Author, Author," that are really more about the intelligent employment of color and shapes and composition. I write that he surprised me because I am not usually a big fan of these sorts of "interior" works. However, because the paintings are all about shape, color and composition, I found myself admiring them for those points, rather than for their subject matter.
Creating a new place for himself is an illustrator named Scott Brooks, who in this new Art-O-Matic incarnation is like a strange, macabre John Currin, but can paint and draw a lot better than Currin ever learned to. A lot of people were talking about Brooks' disturbing images; this is usually a sign of success for any visual artist. Both the police and art collectors need to keep an eye on this talented artist.
But quite possibly the most talked about (well, at least the most listened to) pieces in the show are the two robotic installations by Thomas Edwards.
Located on the main hallway of the fourth floor, Edwards first greets the passerby with an installation of several of those mechanical talking fish that move their heads and sing songs. He has changed the original recordings and instead of a Christmas carol, the fish now beg you to stop eating their eggs or complain that they’re dying, etc. It is funny and inventive. Edwards’ second piece is a motion sensing robotic head that follows you along a wall track and peppers you with irritating questions like "where did you get your hair done?"
Edwards’ installations are intelligent creative and they fit well right into the Hollywoodism tradition of past Art-O-Matics.
There is a lot of channeling of well-known artists in this AOM. Two artists stand out: Mark Stark channels Dan Flavin and Erin Hunter continues to somewhat channel Erik Sandberg.
I also enjoyed Bridget Vath’s very inventive use of Kevlar to design and construct dresses and other clothing apparel; I suspect that Vath could start a very successful line of Kevlar clothing with good markets in Baghdad, Beirut, Bogotá, Atlanta and most of the Balkans.
The funniest piece in the show, other than Thomas Edwards’ annoying talking fish is also one of the most famous paintings in the world.
I am referring to Kayti Didriksen’s now infamous portrait of Bush and Chaney titled "Man of Leisure: King George," where Didriksen has regurgitated Manet’s famous painting Olympia and has Vice President Chaney serving an oil well to a nude Dubya.
This image, a few weeks ago, at the height of the Funky Furniture controversy with the City Museum, was the most downloaded Internet image in the world.
It is a terribly funny, badly painted and highly successful work. Didriksen not only captures Bush’s likeness perfectly but also delivers an interesting expression (that’s perfect for the subject) in the much abused President (abused by a lot of AOM artists that is) and also offers a hilarious VP Chaney with a neck that seems inflamed by gout.
As with past AOM’s, a lot of artists explore the nude human figure in both paintings and photographs. This is a subject not usually seen in Washington area galleries, and I can't recall the last time that I saw an exhibition of nudes in any of our area’s museums. I noted Peggy McNutt, Shannon Chester (especially well done is "No. 10, Chair 2"), Adrienne Mills, Chris Keely, Dana Ellyn Kaufman and Candace Keegan.
Of these, Kaufman and Keegan both use their own bodies to deliver interesting ideas and suggestions. In Kaufman’s case, extremely acidic, caustic and pointed commentaries with provocative titles married to insane figurative paintings. In Keegan’s case, she pushes a lot of moist buttons in our psyche by playing with stereotypical Hustlerian depictions of women: See Keegan suggestively sucking on her necklace; see Keegan in pigtails offer her breasts to the viewer. However, in the end what we do see are two strong women who use their art intelligently and use the taboo nude to converse elegantly with the viewer.
There is a lot of forgettable abstraction at AOM. Two artists who stand out from the masses (and happen to be sisters) are Andrea Cybik and Jan Sherfy. Their work explores colors and action and also stands out by their very professional presentation.
In summary, I’ve been to every single Art-O-Matic ever staged, and I am in the minority opinion that they’ve improved each time, and each time they give us a most precious gift: the energy that only several hundred creative minds working together can deliver. I hope Art-O-Matic grows to become a national level open show and then grow some more and become a worldwide showcase for the world’s largest open international art exhibition and a new dagger to the heart of the 21st century salons.
Thursday WaPo reviews
Jessica Dawson reviews Hemphill Fine Arts' new floorplan in George's new beautiful space on 14th Street and is also disturbed by Chan Chao's nude photographs currently on at Numark.
I wasn't too surprised that when Jessica first stepped into Chao's exhibition, she "wanted to step right back out" [because]... "Twenty just-over-life-size portraits of naked women ring the gallery's walls. Yet the mood isn't sexy. Or playful. It's utterly vulnerable and uncomfortable. For you and me, for sure, and even more so for Chao's subjects."
I write that I wasn't too surprised because both Dawson and her predecessor in the "Galleries" column appear to me to be rather uncomfortable with nudity. I could be wrong, I guess, but it is something that I've noticed in their demeanor and their writing over the years.
I was also surprised that Jessica writes that Chao "has applied the same clinical, pseudo-journalistic approach he used on the pro-democracy guerrillas of Burma -- those pictures were a hit at the 2002 Whitney Biennial -- to naked women, many of whom are the artist's friends or associates. Despite Chao's attempts at evenhandedness, or perhaps because of them, the results feel exploitative and manipulative."
This is in fact backwards! Those familiar with Chao's photographs before he turned his camera to the pro-democracy guerrillas of Burma, know that prior to that he used to focus on the nude figure, and in fact applied the "same clinical, pseudo-journalistic approach" that he used with his earlier nudes to the pro-democracy guerrillas of Burma, not the other way around.
Chao abandoned the nude for a few years, returned to his native Burma and photographed the pro-democracy guerrillas of Burma. It was a big hit with curators all over the nation, landed him a spot on the 2002 Whitney Biennial and national acclaim. I personally thought those photographs were boring and repetitive; I have, on the other hand, always liked and admired his nude portraits and I think that his current Numark show is spectacular!
Chao has just returned to the nude now; that's all. And I think that Dawson is just uncomfortable around nudes.
I could be wrong. For a different (male) perspective on this show, read Louis Jacobson at the WCP.
P.S. Blake Gopnik also reviews Iraq and China: Ceramics, Trade and Innovation at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art.
Why none of ours?
The December/Jan issue of Budget Living magazine has a nice spread on artist Mark Bennett's LA pad. The article mentions his hardworking DC art dealer Conner Contemporary and highlights how his Damien Hirst silk screen just coincidently happens to match his raw-silk sofa that he got for $200 in a Long Beach thrift store. Also shows outsider artist John Patrick MacKenzie's word-play piece that goes nicely with Bennett's sitcom-centric surroundings.
It would be nice if the WaPo (either Style or the Post's Magazine) or Washingtonian magazine, could run more feature articles like this about our area artists and collectors living with their art. Furthermore, it would be nice if the Post would identify the artwork (they never seem to do that in the captions) in any of their glossy features about other locals in their pages.
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Charles Saatchi takes on Blake Gopnik
The father of YBA art and one of the world's best-known art collectors is Charles Saatchi.
And the Art Newspaper has recently interviewed Saatchi with questions submitted via email by people from all over the world.
From what DC Art News readers info'd me as they sent emails to the Art Newspaper a few weeks ago through the announcement in this posting, at least two of the questions that Saatchi chose to answer came from DC Art News readers. They are:
Question: Did you personally burn, or did you contract with a professional arsonist to burn, your warehouse filled with your art?Ouch! Read all of the questions and answers here.
Saatchi: It wasn’t terrifically amusing the first time dull people came up with this. Now it’s the 100th time.
Question: Blake Gopnik, the Chief Art Critic for the Washington Post has stated that "painting is dead and has been dead for 40 years. If you want to be considered a serious contemporary artist, the only thing that you should be doing is video or manipulated photography." Do you agree or disagree and why?
Saatchi: It’s true that contemporary painting responds to the work of video makers and photographers. But it's also true that contemporary painting is influenced by music, writing, MTV, Picasso, Hollywood, newspapers, Old Masters.
But, unlike many of the art world heavy hitters and deep thinkers, I don’t believe painting is middle-class and bourgeois, incapable of saying anything meaningful anymore, too impotent to hold much sway. For me, and for people with good eyes who actually enjoy looking at art, nothing is as uplifting as standing before a great painting whether it was painted in 1505 or last Tuesday.
The Thursday Art Review Starts Tomorrow
Since the Washington Post has decided to reduce its gallery coverage by 50%, starting tomorrow DC Art News will start a weekly Thursday review, in an BLOGish attempt to fill part of the void left by the Post's [we hope] temporary decision to publish the "Galleries" column only twice a month (instead of weekly, as it has been for years).
Thus, I am opening DC Art News to anyone who'd like to email me a review of a visual art show in our area. I reserve full editorial rights.
Art critics, opinionated art fans and art-critic-wannabes: Email me your review!
Tomorrow I will have my review (at last!) of Artomartic 2004.
Philip Barlow's Top 10 Artomatic List
Philip Barlow is a well-known DC art collector, arts activist, a great supporter of our area artists and art scene, and nearly a curator. He is one of the most vocal supporters of Art-O-Matic and after many trips to AOM, he sends in his top 10 list. Barlow passes that he did not consider artists whose work he has collected and most of the artists on his list are artist who are unfamiliar to him (prior to AOM)
1. Elizabeth Lundberg Morrisette
2. Kathryn Cornelius
3. Dylan Scholinski
4. Mary Beth Ramsey
5. Mona El Bayoumi
6. Nader Hadjebi
7. Robert Redding
8. Megan Rains
9. Jeff Wolfram
10. Darren Smith
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
J. W. Mahoney is well-known to anyone in the DMV who knows anything about Washington art and artists. James recently retired from the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and is a widely respected and published art critic, teacher and artist.
Mahoney is also the regional arts editor for Art in America magazine. He is also a well-known artist, arts juror, curator, art professor, and one of the most influential visual arts voices in our area; his installation at the current Artomatic has already been the subject of tremendous (and violent) viewer reaction (go see it).
And James sends the following Open Letter to Blake Gopnik:
Aw Blake, why not a little amateur dentistry every once in a while? Someone might drill a hole in your head and a little light might shine in. Yeah, violently spiteful language, but "five floors of mediocrity jammed into shabby rooms in an indiscriminate show that does nothing to advance the cause of serious art?" What's the "cause of serious art," Blake? You've never been a real artist, so that would have to be a guess on your part. Unless you're a "failed" artist, which I'm not - nor is any artist here. I'm an art critic, too, and I know what "untrained" art looks like, and Art-o-matic is loaded with all kinds of such madness, openness, and awfulness. And sometimes, if you look, real grace.Bravo Mr. Mahoney! Bravo, Bravo, Bravo!!!
In 1978, Walter Hopps, then adjunct curator at the National Collection of Fine Arts, "curated" a show at Washington's now-defunct Museum of Temporary Art entitled "36 Hours," during which artists could bring in anything (of a certain size) during a 36-hour period and Walter would find a place to hang it. Good, bad, or ugly. I was proud to have been in that show, as I am to be in this one. Why? Look at how "indiscriminate" it all is, how generally free of the kinds of comfortably gifted, commercially sensitive, critically "savvy" (your word, never mine) art that most galleries and museums necessarily have to exhibit in order to maintain their identities - work I often respect and write about, as you do. Alternative spaces, as creatively as they operate, can show only a few dozen artists a year. Art-o-matic circumvents every aesthetic filter, respects no critical power, and opens its doors anyway.
What final virtue exists in a circus like Art-o-matic? Art is made in order to make concrete the deep abstraction that is the self. Each artist here, regardless of the depths of their relation to the discourse of art history, has a story and a unique identity that emerges on these walls. In enormous vulnerability. To be able to stand alongside the occasionally talentless courage, manic generosity, and raw eccentricity of my fellow artists is a real honor. Because what art is about isn't safe.
What you write is journalism, Blake, not art criticism. Your writing is quite often toxic, and maybe Washington’s just not your town. Think about it. You say Ter Borch is better than Vermeer? Don't make me laugh.
J. W. Mahoney
Monday, November 29, 2004
Teaser for tomorrow's DCARTNEWS
Tomorrow I will publish an open letter from a nationally published and respected art critic in response to Blake Gopnik's rootcanalization of Artomatic.
Y'all come back now...
Elyse Harrison's Top 10 Artomatic List
Elyse Harrison is the owner of Gallery Neptune in Bethesda and one of the area's hardest working artists and arts activists. Harrison not only walked Artomatic and sends in her top 10 list, but she has further decided to offer three of the artists (and possibly a fourth) in her list a show at her gallery. She will feature Jean Sheckler Beebe and Joyce Zipperer during October of next year and Scott Brooks will also be showing at Neptune in September 2005.
Scott Brooks
Joyce Zipperer
Jean Sheckler Beebe
Mat Sesow
Linda Hesh
Bridget Vath
Christopher Edmunds
Robert Weiner
Kirk Waldroff
Michael Ross
New Style editor at the WaPo
The "Galleries" column that is being reduced to twice a month is published in the Style section of the Washington Post. The Assistant Managing Editor for the Style section is Gene Robinson (who by the way is also the author of this terrific book).
Today it was announced by the Post that Deborah Heard will become Assistant Managing Editor for Style, succeeding Gene Robinson, on January 1, 2005. She has been with the Post for twenty years and a Deputy Assistant Managing Editor at Style since 1995.
DC Art News sends our congratulations to Ms. Heard.
I suspect that once John Pancake, the Post's Arts Editor returns in mid-January 2005, it will be Heard and Pancake making the decision as to what will happen to the "Galleries" column.
We should all immediately let Heard hear our voices (nice pun uh?) demanding that "Galleries" return to a weekly column status and that the Post further expand its anemic gallery coverage. Email her here.
Want an art job at Art Basel Miami Beach?
One of the Cuban artists whom we represent and hope to bring to a Washington, DC area audience in the near future is Cuban artist Tania Bruguera.
And the coming Art Basel Miami Beach brings a performance opportunity to work with Tania.
Eight to ten individuals are needed to perform during Art Basel for a performance piece by this renowned Cuban artist. The role involves walking around Art Basel in Miami Beach selling a Cuban newspaper. Individuals should speak Spanish. There will be an informational meeting held on Tuesday, November 30th at 6pm by the Miami Beach Convention Center, Entrance C. A small honorarium will be offered per day. If you are interested, call 773-230-7263 to get more details. If you cannot attend the meeting, please call for more information.
Dates
Wednesday, December 1st – 5pm-10pm
Thursday, December 2nd – 5pm-10pm
Friday, December 3rd –5pm-10pm
Saturday, December 4th – 5pm-10pm
You do not have to be available for each session, but for a minimum of two sessions.
As a pioneer installation and performance artist, Tania Bruguera exemplifies the alternative voices in Cuba who work from the artistic edge. Born in 1968, she earned her undergraduate degree at the Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana and her MFA at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1998, Bruguera was selected as a Guggenheim fellow and in 2000, she received the Prince Claus Award.
Bruguera has participated in numerous international exhibitions and biennials. Her work has been exhibited in several museums and collections around the world. Recently, she founded the Arte de Conducta (behavior art) department at the Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana, the first performance art program at the university level in Latin America.
The book that saved my [art] life
Tom Wolfe, author, man-in-white, and social observer, as DCist points out, is in town to lecture and sign copies of his latest book.
It is however, Wolfe's 1975 book The Painted Word, the one that I consider the most influential book on art, nepotism, networking, manipulation and 20th century art history (OK, OK art observations), that I have ever read.
If you want to understand the true beginnings of what we now call "contemporary art" and the seminal birth of the elitist attitudes of many intelligent members of the high art apparatnik, then read this book.
"The painter," Wolfe writes, "had to dedicate himself to the quirky god Avant-Garde. He had to keep one devout eye peeled for the new edge on the blade of the wedge of the head on the latest pick thrust of the newest exploratory probe of this fall's avant-garde Breakthrough of the Century.... At the same time he had to keep his other eye cocked to see if anyone in le monde was watching."I read it when I first started Art School and it saved my Art Life and it cemented the foundations of what has become my opinions, judgements and attitudes towards art.
Learn a lesson from NY Times readers
A while back I reported that the WaPo has decided to cut its galleries coverage by half - at least until January 2005, when a final decision will be made. I also suggested that readers write letters to the paper's editor asking Downie to cancel that decision (if he is even aware of it).
A while back, the New York Times decided to end its cultural listings section; not end or reduce their arts coverage, but just their cultural listings.
Daniel Okrent writes in the NY Times:
It landed on my desk a few weeks ago with an echoing thump that could have awakened Brooks Atkinson. On the cover it said "Save the Listings: Restore the 'Arts & Leisure Guide' to the Sunday New York Times." Inside, 615 pages carried 5,000 Internet-gathered signatures, many of them accompanied by bits of testimony variously beseeching, enraged or tearful.Okrent then admits that:
Just a few weeks earlier, The Times had tossed the venerable columns of agate type that had filled so many pages of the Arts & Leisure section for so long, with as many as 300 cultural events acknowledged, however briefly, in a single edition.
Editors reacted to the petition, I soon learned, the way editors almost always react when readers rise against a long-planned, well-intended innovation: a little dumbfounded, a little defensive, a little dismissive.And Okrent discusses editorial surprise at how upset readers were:
In this case, the editors had helped more than enough to earn the readers' disapproval. At a time when most American newspapers are slashing arts coverage (according to a study conducted by the National Arts Journalism Project at Columbia, from 1998 to 2003 the space given to cultural coverage in major American papers dropped by roughly 25 percent), The Times had gone in the opposite direction. The revamped cultural report now included more than seven additional pages per week. Twenty staff positions were created to produce the new content and improve the old. Full-time reporters had been put on the architecture, classical music and theater beats, and additional reporters will soon supplement the art, movie and television groups. Critics have been newly assigned to experimental arts, the Internet, and "nonart museums and exhibitions" (there must be a better phrase than that), and some lustrous new hires - notably Manohla Dargis on movies and Charles Isherwood on theater - have brought an added gleam to existing positions.But he notes that still "all that the readers seemed to notice was what was gone." He adds:
There's an unfortunate tendency in the newspaper business to disparage a petition like this one as an "organized" effort, as if only random, disconnected cries of pain from despairing readers should be heeded. I've also heard this particular protest dismissed as "commercially inspired" by self-interested arts presenters and promoters who are worried that the box office will suffer, and have disingenuously conspired to rouse the masses.I guess that would be me...
Result of the complaints:
Here's the good news, Listings Protesters of America: uncharacteristically for an institution that is slow to change and usually inflexible once it has done so, the editors are prepared to alter their course.Read the whole NYT article here, and then read this and write the WaPo a letter.
Gopnik, Smith, Chelsea and Artomatic
How can all these issues be related you ask? Read and absorb:
My most recent walk through AOM, triggered by Chris Shott's article on the after effects and ripples of Blake Gopnik's rootcanalization of AOM, revealed a whole set of new works, comments and anti-Gopnik energy in the building. I still maintain that AOM artists should send Gopnik thank you notes, as his brutal review is the best gift that Gopnik could have delivered to AOM: it united a lot of voices, created a lot of interest in the show, and I am sure that it translated into a lot more people visiting AOM.
Roberta Smith, writing in the New York Times this Sunday has a very interesting piece on the Chelsification of art. Smith discusses that the 230 plus galleries now crammed into Chelsea "for art-world professionals, it is the place they love to loathe."
Degrees of separation: When John Pancake, the Washington Post's Arts Editor was hunting for a Chief Art Critic a while back, he first offered the job to Smith. She declined, but recommended Blake Gopnik, who at the time was writing for a Canadian newspaper.
Back to Smith's article. She writes:
"As a result of this explosion, the inevitable anti-Chelsea backlash has been on the rise, too. The rap against Chelsea is that it is too big, too commercial, too slick, too conservative and too homogenous, a monolith of art commerce tricked out in look-alike white boxes and shot through with kitsch. This litany is recited by visitors from Los Angeles and Europe, by dealers with galleries in other parts of Manhattan or in Brooklyn and often by Chelsea dealers themselves. As the Lower East Side gallerist Michele Maccarone put it recently in an interview: 'The Chelseafication of the art world has created a consensus of mediocrity and frivolousness.'"Degrees of separation, part two: But is Gopnik advocating more towards the Chelsification of DC art when he writes?
"As things stand, too many local artists, as well as a few of our dealers, get attention they wouldn't get in any city where they faced some decent, savvy competition."And as we know, Blake has also written eloquently and positively about Chelsea galleries (he has never written about DC area galleries) and submits that:
"This year the [Chelsea] scene seems to have grown, if that's possible. It now takes two full days, morning to night, to visit just the best-known Chelsea galleries. But for the first time that I can remember, doing the autumn rounds felt mostly worthwhile. There was real variety on view -- of medium, subject matter, approach, scale. More important, there were a few artists and works that didn't fit into convenient pigeonholes. There were shows that left questions hanging in the air."Degrees of separation, part three: I know I'm stretching this, but isn't that same challenge (time required to visit 230 galleries, diversity and quality of artwork offered, etc.) some of the same issues Gopnik denigrates in his AOM piece. If one takes the time, then at AOM you will find "real variety on view -- of medium, subject matter, approach, scale. More important, there were a few artists and works that didn't fit into convenient pigeonholes."
One big, insurmountable problem with AOM in Blake's mindset: It is located in Washington, DC; not New York.
I for one, would love some "decent, savvy competition" (whatever "savvy" means). I still think that the best thing for art galleries is more art galleries. And although the Greater Washington area is one of the wealthiest areas in the world, it is incredibly hard for an art gallery to establish a foothold, develop a collector base and survive in our area.
Part of the blame is the fact that (unlike New York), galleries get very little coverage in our local press. I am still astounded as to how many Washingtonians come into Canal Square every day and say "I didn't know there were any galleries here."
And the link between decent media coverage and growth and recognition has been established and proven. The Washington Post has exceptional coverage of our area's many theatres; even theatres in Olney get great coverage! As a result, our area has now one of the most vibrant theatre scenes in the nation, probably second only to New York's and challenging Chicago's.
Meanwhile, the Post plans to cut their gallery coverage in half.
Sunday, November 28, 2004
Tim Tate's Top 10 Artomatic List
Tim Tate (represented by us) is the Director and co-founder of the Washington Glass School, the 2003 Mayor's Arts Awards Outstanding Emerging Artist of the Year, and is one of this year's Out Magazine 100 Most Remarkable People of the Year. Tate has also been a fixture at Art-O-Matic for many years (in fact, we "discovered" him a couple of Art-O-Matics ago), and has walked this current version of AOM at least 20 times. Here's his top 10 non-glass artists list:
Thomas Edwards
Ira Tattleman
Dylan Scholinski
Mark Stark
Sondra Arkin
Sheep Jones
Philip Kohn
John Bata
Scott Brooks
Chris Edmunds
Krystyna Wasserman's Top AOM Artists' List
Krystyna Wasserman is the Director of the Library and Research Center at the National Museum of Women In The Arts. Her abbreviated list (she was unable to walk through the whole five floors of AOM):
Ruth Bolduan
Mansoora Hassan
Bonnie Lee Holland
Judy Jashinsky
Mark Jenkins
Joyce Zipperer
Milena Kalinovska Top 10 Artomatic List
Milena Kalinovska is the Programs Manager for the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and she made a concentrated effort to try to pick artists who were not in other people's "Top 10 Lists." In the end, some did cross over from her colleage's list mostly!
Art Enables
Anne Benolken
Greg Minah
Linda Hesh and Ami Wilber
Dale Hunt
Mark Jenkins
"Poets Room"
Ming-Yi Sung
Kelly Towles
The Washington Glass School
Kristen Hileman's Top 10 Artomatic List
Kristen Hileman is the Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. She sends in her Top 10 AOM list:
Artomatic “Poster-A-Day” Designers
Scott Brooks
Richard Dana
Linda Hesh and Ami Wilbur
Mark Jenkins
Mudishi Maternity Project
Pat McGeehan
Ming-Yi Sung
Kelly Towles
Denise Wolff
Saturday, November 27, 2004
Donna Robusto's Top 10 AOM artists
Donna Robusto is the owner and director of the Ozmosis Gallery in Bethesda and she recently walked Artomatic and sends in her top ten picks:
Kelly Towles
Tiik Pollet
Jackie Greeves
John M. Adams
Rosana Azar
Aaron Quinn Brophy
Anna Shakeeva
John N. Grunwell
Matt W. Sesow
Matt R. Hollis
Friday, November 26, 2004
DC BLOGs on AOM
City Desk: The Progressive Review on Artomatic. Read it here and here.
Conspiracy of Sound on Artomatic. Read it here.
Art of the Possible on Artomatic. Read it here.
DC Musica Viva on Artomatic. Read it here.
Photo Net on Artomatic. Read it here.
And... the Art-O-Matic artists on Artomatic. Read it here.
Dealing with the WaPo
Today is the day that the Post is supposed to cover our area galleries in the Style section. And yet there's nothing. You better get used to it.
As reported here, the Style section has decided to cut its "Galleries" column to twice a month, rather than every Thursday.
And yet (and these are the kind of things that make no sense to me), there's a pretty good piece by a freelancer named Andy Grundberg on Six Centuries of Prints and Drawings: Recent Acquisitions at the National Gallery of Art. Grundberg is the Chairman of the Photo Department at the Corcoran and certainly quite qualified to augment either the museum or gallery review scene at the Post.
So the Post has decided to reduce their already measly gallery coverage in half because one of its two gallery art critic freelancers has quit; rather than just seek the services of another freelancer or give the assignment to people already in their freelance art stables, such as Grundberg apparently is!
Oh yeah... there's also piece in Arts Beat about art by prisoners on exhibit at a Lutheran Church somewhere.
Makes my head hurt.
What can our visual arts community do? It is so obvious that we're dealing with a mindset at the newspaper that is not very concerned with our area's galleries, artists and other visual art spaces that do not happen to be large museums. At least not in the same coverage proportions to what the Post already does for theater, music, books, TV, etc.
Their cultural apathy seems strictly dedicated to our area's galleries and artists.
I am told that the WaPo takes every letter received on an issue and multiplies it by 1500 readers who feel the same way, but who do not take the time and effort to write an old-fashioned letter.
So if you feel (like I do) that it is completely unacceptable for the Washington Post to only publish the "Galleries" column twice a month, even on a temporary basis (can you imagine the uproar if they decided to review only two movies a month? Or two restaurants? Or two theatre plays? Or two concerts? Or two books? D'ya get the point!!!)... then write the paper's editor a letter (a proper letter, not an email; and please be respectful, intelligent and civil) and let him know:
Leonard Downie
Editor
Washington Post
1150 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20071
Here is an example of a letter that I wrote to the Post's editor in 1999 bitching about their galleries' measly coverage and making some suggestions (one of them - the mini reviews - was eventually implemented and O'Sullivan has drastically improved gallery coverage in his Weekend On Exhibit column) to improve their coverage. Sad to think that the coverage back then was twice of what it is now (both the "Galleries" and the "Arts Beat" columns used to be published every Thursday back then)!
Chris Shott in the current issue of the WCP on Blake Gopnik:
MUSEFUL CRITIQUEArticle copyright Washington City Paper.
For all his ranting about "bad" art projects in the District this past year, Washington Post critic Blake Gopnik hasn’t actually done much to stop them. In fact, the Oxford University–educated art historian has done just the opposite.
To wit: Last spring, Gopnik ripped the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities’ "exciting public art project," PandaMania. In fact, he likened the task of painting blank panda statues to filling in a coloring book. "It would take a really skilled contemporary artist to turn a coloring book into something worth an art lover’s time," Gopnik wrote in a May 30 Post critique. "There probably aren’t more than a half-dozen artists in this city who could do it."
Oh, but Bethesda, Md., painter Marsha Stein thought she could find a few. So she formally challenged Gopnik to hand-pick a team of artists to compete against hers. Each team would paint a blank two-foot cube, with the public voting on the best one.
Gopnik politely declined the challenge. But that didn’t stop Stein: Her project has since evolved into a multiteam competition—albeit sans cubes—that D.C. filmmaker Nigel Parkinson is shooting for a documentary. Or maybe a reality-TV show.
"He just pushes people’s buttons," Stein says of Gopnik. "He does my job for me. He couldn’t have fueled this competition any better than by writing that article."
More recently, Gopnik issued a scathing critique of Artomatic 2004, the exhibition of works by some 600 area artists now showing in the former Capital Children’s Museum. In a Nov. 11 Post piece, he called the show "the second-worst display of art I’ve ever seen. The only one to beat it out, by the thinnest of split hairs, was the 2002 Artomatic, which was worse only by virtue of being even bigger and in an even more atrocious space."
"Artomatic isn’t only good for nothing," Gopnik concluded. "It’s bad for art that matters."
Again, artists responded. For starters, there’s The Official Artomatic 2004 Boo Blake Wall, an installation papered with angry letters from Artomatic exhibitors and dotted with Travis Miller– designed stickers that read: "Blake isn’t only good for nothing. He’s bad for art that matters." And sculptor Mark Jenkins has posted a phony news story reporting Gopnik’s kidnapping by "human figures made of packaging tape."
The wall is also splashed with red paint, some of which drips down into a plastic bag taped to the ground. "Somebody said it looks like bullet holes and blood," notes Artomatic executive-committee member Jim Tretick.
A less ominous homage to Gopnik appears at Artomatic’s Overlook Bar: A case of warm beer wrapped in white paper and labeled "One vintage case of Icehouse from Artomatic 2002: The worst beer from the worst show."
"That case of beer has been sitting in my basement for two years," says Tretick. "We were saving it for a special occasion."
Right beside the beer is a brand-new Clue game wrapped in a plastic bag for Gopnik. And the artists aren’t done yet. McLean, Va.–based graphic designer Jesse Thomas is now putting the finishes touches on a new collage inspired by Gopnik.
The tributes to Gopnik come as news to the critic. "I didn’t know about any of the Artomatic responses," he writes via e-mail. Gopnik’s own response? Something in Latin about judges and matters of taste: "De gustibus non...I guess."
Thursday, November 25, 2004
The other day I walked into a Whole Foods supermarket to buy some olives and some Manchego cheese. As I strolled by Whole Foods' fantastic deli, I noticed that in this store they had signs in both English and Spanish.
I almost died laughing when I saw how the Thanksgiving turkey special had been translated! In English, the word "turkey" is the same for the country that spans Europe and the Middle East and for the Thanksgiving bird.
But in Spanish, the word for the country Turkey is Turquia, and the word for the bird is "pavo."
Guess what this store was selling as their Thanksgiving bird? Turquia! What a bunch of turkeys...
Happy Thanksgiving!
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
Corcoran Screws Up (Again): Twice in One Go
As I mentioned last night, there's another mess at the Corcoran, this time dealing with their ill advised (and now cancelled) decision to host "An Evening at the Cuban Interests Section."
Both sides of this issue astonish me: (a) that the Corcoran decided to host this event in the first place and then (b) that they bowed to indirect governmental pressure to cancel it.
Today's Post article by Jacqueline Trescott discusses that the Corcoran decided to postpone the event under some indirect pressure from the State Department.
I hope that they postpone it until that brutal, racist, and homophobic bastard who oppresses that poor island with a bloody boot is six feet underground.
This is a dictatorship that sends librarians to jail for twenty years for the crime of having Orwell's 1984 in their possession.
A homophobic regime that sends gay Cubans to jail for four years for the crime of being gay.
A merciless regime where anyone who tests positive for AIDS is immediately locked away in Los Cocos.
Jails that have been off limits to the International Red Cross since 1989.
No doubt that the Corcoran really blew it in even thinking about this idea as an event in the first place. According to Trescott's article, Margaret Bergen, chief communications officer for the Corcoran says that the Corcoran sponsors 130 public programs a year and about a dozen are of them held at embassies. She adds that the discussions don't discount politics, but politics aren't the primary focus, Bergen adds that "We are trying to have a dialogue about art."
You don't "dialogue about art" with dictators who crush and destroy artists in their own homeland. If anything, you try to reach the artists and dialogue with them directly. I can guarantee to the Corcoran that the Cuban Interests Section will not assist them with that.
Now that I got that off my chest...
Now I am disturbed by the fact that they blinked when the State Department put a little pressure on them.
Sorry guys: Now you're damned if you do and damned if you don't. That's what happens when you make stupid decisions in the first place and then lack the cojones to stand up to pressure.