Wanna go to a Russian opening in DC this week?
"Inspired by Russia" is a show that features both paintings and sculpture by eight Russian artists from around the world - Natalia Vetrova (Canada), Serguei Zlenko (Finland), Vladimir Popov (France), Galina Lopatina (Russia), Vladimir Fomichev (Russia), Evgeny Vereshchagin (Russia), Olga Karpeisky (USA), Luba Sterlikova (USA). The exhibit official opening for registered guests is on November 12,2008 at 6 p.m at the Embassy of Russia.
The reception to meet the artists is on Saturday, November 15, 2008, 4-7 p.m. at the Russian Cultural Centre at 1825 Phelps Place NW, Washington, D.C. 20008.
You must RSVP to (202) 265-3840 or rcc@rccusa.org. The show runs at the Russian Cultural Centre through November 22, 2008.
Sunday, November 09, 2008
Saturday, November 08, 2008
DC area debut
As far as I know, two of the Cuban artists that I have included in the "Aqui Estamos" (Here We Are) exhibition at H&F Fine Arts are making their Greater DC area debut, even though they are both rather important artists in the rarified upper artmosphere.
Alexis Leyva Machado, known to the art world as Kcho, was born in Nueva Gerona, Isla de la Juventud (nee Isla de Pinos), Cuba in 1970. He studied at the National Art School in Havana from which he graduated in 1990. Five years later Kcho won the Grand Prize at the Kwang-Ju Biennial in South Korea and began attracting international attention.
A year later, at age 26, he became the youngest Latin American artist ever to be included in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
His work has been exhibited worldwide in dozens of solo shows in galleries and museums in Europe, the Americas, and Asia. His work is often associated, because of its recurring use of boats and rafts, as referencing the plight of the Cuban Diaspora, which has seen the largest per capita migration of any nation in modern history since the Castro takeover in 1959. Kcho lives and works in Havana, Cuba.
Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons was born in Matanzas province in Cuba in 1959. Her work has been described as bearing a powerful familial history that is intermingled and mixed with the sugar industry’s omnipresence in her hometown of La Vega. The focus and roots of her work can be traced from the US, where she has resided since 1992, to a Cuban homeland, to the enslaved Africans who were brought to Cuba by white Spanish colonists and finally back to what is today Nigeria.
She has also been described as "one of the most significant artists to emerge from post-Revolutionary Cuba. Her evocative works probe questions of race, class, cultural hybridism, and national identities in African diasporic communities."
Campos-Pons has been exhibited internationally since 1984 when she won the Honorable Mention at the XVIII Cagnes-sur-Mer Painting Competition in France, and the Bunting Fellowship in Visual Arts at Harvard 1993.
At the age of 29 she had a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and subsequently at the Venice Biennale 2001, Johannesburg Biennial, the First Liverpool Biennial, and the Dak’ART Biennial in Senegal.
Most recently the Guangzhou Triennial in China hosted her work. A 20-year retrospective of Campos-Pons’s work, Everything is Separated by Water: Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, opened at the Indianapolis Museum of Art in 2006 and traveled to the Bass Museum in Miami. A new museum show will open in Nashville in 2010.
Campos-Pons has been celebrated as one of the upcoming young leaders of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts by the Women’s Chapter, is usually included among the 100 Most Influential Latinos, and was honored in 2008 as Harvard launched its campaign to build the new Harvard Art Museum, as well as the Indianapolis Museum of Art’s 125th Anniversary Gala in 2008.
Last year, Campos-Pons was selected to receive the Rappaport Prize. She has lectured in many museums worldwide, including MoMA, the Tate Modern, the Brooklyn Museum and the School of Art in Dakar. She works and lives in Boston.
The opening is tonight, Saturday Nov. 8 from 5-8PM at H&F Fine Arts, located at 3311 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, Maryland and their gallery phone is 301/887-0080.
See ya there!
Come join me tonight
Tonight H&F Fine Arts proudly and elegantly hosts artwork by some of the best known Cuban artists from Cuba and from the Cuban Diaspora. I called the show "Aqui Estamos" or "Here We Are," as sort of a footprint statement for these important artists making an exclamation point to the Greater DC area.
On the walls are drawings, photographs, paintings and etchings by Magdalena Campos-Pons, Kcho, Sandra Ramos, Cirenaica Moreira, Marta Maria Perez Bravo, Aimee Garcia Marrero and Roberto Acosta Wong.
Read this about Magda Campos-Pons and then come see the gorgeous triptych titled "Island Treasure" that I selected for the show.
María Magdalena Campos-Pons. Island Treasures. Large Format Polaroids
The opening is tonight, Saturday Nov. 8 from 5-8PM at H&F Fine Arts, located at 3311 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, Maryland and their gallery phone is 301/887-0080.
See ya there!
Friday, November 07, 2008
Podcasting
My good friend Sharon Burton interviewed me recently for "New ArtCast: Art Collecting 101 - Navigating the Art Fair".
Listen to it here.
El Mejor Arte Cubano
The work is hung and looks beautiful, and the usual hiccups are mostly out of the way, and the really cool spaces of H&F Fine Arts look great full of work by some of the best known Cuban artists from Cuba and from the Cuban Diaspora.
On the walls are drawings, photographs, paintings and etchings by Magdalena Campos-Pons, Kcho, Sandra Ramos, Cirenaica Moreira, Marta Maria Perez Bravo, Aimee Garcia Marrero and Roberto Acosta Wong.
"Isla" Mixed media collage by Sandra Ramos
As far as I know, these will be the first time that both Kcho (Alexis Leyva Machado) and Magda Campos-Pons have exhibited in the Greater DC area, although they are both in the permanent collection of MoMA and other major museums around the world.
The opening is tomorrow night, Saturday Nov. 8 from 5-8PM at H&F Fine Arts, located at 3311 Rhode Island Avenue, Mount Rainier, Maryland and their gallery phone is 301/887-0080.
See ya there!
Wanna go to an opening tonight in Baltimore
Recent artworks by Dan May, Jason Limon, Michael Page, Benji Williams, Martin Wittfooth, Andy Kehoe, Benjamin Lacombe, Chris Ryniak and Colin Johnson will be on view at Baltimore's Definition Gallery's "Dreamscapes", an exhibition featuring nine national artists that explore surreal landscapes and the creatures that inhabit them. Opens Friday, November 7th from 7-11pm.
Thursday, November 06, 2008
This Saturday in DC
While we hold our breath for the photographic orgy coming to DC in Fotoweek, you can get a good vision of what the medium can deliver as Heather Goss' Ten Miles Square opens their second show with Looking Sideways by Cesar Lujan at Big Bear Cafe. Saturday, opening reception 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Opportunity for artists
New deadline: Saturday, November 15, 2008
Details The Arlington Arts Center has extended the deadline for their "Unlimited Edition" juried show. This "is a juried show about the relationship of the art world to reproduction and marketing. They are looking for artists who produce lots of unnumbered multiples of an image or an object...or who incorporate mass-produced products into their work...or who simply explore the commodification and mass-reproduction of art through various means."
Eligibility: Artists living or working in Virginia, DC, Maryland, West Virginia, Delaware, and Pennsylvania may submit up to 5 jpegs, along with a statement-max length: 300 words-explaining what they propose to exhibit, and how it addresses the show's theme. Existing works must have been completed after 2005. Proposals for new work that take into account the AAC's exhibition spaces are encouraged.
Details here.
Friday opening in DC
"Visions of Paradise: National Geographic Contemporary Masters" at the Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery, Nov 5 - Jan 2 at Smith Farm Center,, 1632 U St NW, DC
Opening Reception with National Geographic Photographer David Doubilet on Friday, Nov 7, 5:30-8:00pm.
This collaboration between Smith Farm Center and National Geographic brings the work of nine photographers to the Healing Arts Gallery in participation with FotoWeek DC.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Asterism at Gallery Four in B'more
Gallery Four's newly renovated 4,000 sq.ft. gallery in Baltimore will feature work by five artists from Chicago, New York, Washington D.C., and Baltimore. The show will include site specific painting and recent sculpture by Maggie Michael, new sculpture and installation by Bryan Savitz, Jan Razauskas, Nikki Romanello, and photography by Steve Nyktas.
Opening Reception: November 8th, from 5 - 10 pm.
New DC gallery
Caos on F is a new artist owned, artist operated collective at 923 F St. NW in DC launched last September as part of F St|arts, the suite of art studio spaces in the newly developed Carroll Square building.
On exhibit at Caos on F for its inaugural show will be the work of painters Michael Berman and Quint Marshall, ceramic artist Joe Hicks and furniture by Matthew Falls. The show continues until January 5 and is open to the public every Friday 2-8 pm and by special appointment.
Starting Friday November 7 and continuing every first Friday, Caos on F will host an open studio event featuring Fine Art, Fine Furniture and Fine Friends. Lively and provocative discussions are sure to abound and will feature wine and treats from our neighbors: gourmet cheeses from Cowgirl Creamery and delectible chocolates from CoCo Sala.
Frieze Report
"Two weeks ago, the Death Star that has hovered over the art world for the last two years finally fired its lasers. It was October 15, the day the stock market fell more than 700 points—again—and a month after Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch collapsed and Damien Hirst pawned off $200 million worth of crapola on clueless rubes at Sotheby’s. Against this backdrop, at 11 a.m., the gates of London’s Frieze Art Fair opened, and in streamed the international traveling circus of bigwigs, collectors, curators, advisers, museum directors, trustees, models, movie stars, and critics like moi.Read Saltz on Frieze here.
Talk of financial doom filled the air. Karl Schweizer, UBS’s head of art banking, told one reporter, “We are in a liquidity crisis.” Money manager Randy Slifka added, “There is blood on the streets on Wall Street.” Collectors talked about “sewing up our pockets.” Yet much of the art world was playing on as if nothing had happened. A German dealer told Artforum.com, “This economic mess will all be over by January.” Christie’s Amy Cappellazzo spun her house’s recent sales: “If you bought something, you bought something real.” In truth, most of the speculators are buying something real bad or badly overpriced.
In fact, though, things were different. Those of us who have frequented Frieze could see that something was off. Dealers and assistants who in recent years were always busy with clients now stood or sat quietly. Sales were happening, but slowly, one at a time. The claim of “It’s sold” was replaced by “I have it on several holds.” Although the megagalleries like Gagosian and White Cube teemed with moneyed types and very tall women in very high heels, many younger dealers looked perplexed. A gallerist who entered the field in the go-go aughts and who had sold only two pieces by 5 p.m. that first day asked, 'What’s going on?'"
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Congrats A few minutes ago CNN projected that Obama wins Pennsylvania, and so let me be the first visual arts blog on the planet to congratulate President-elect Obama. Are CNN holograms cool or what? I predicted this a few years ago, but I bet that a whole new wave or ism or genre in art will be art holograms, and some poor, unknown artist somewhere in the world is toiling away right now building them from scratch, but some rich artist will be the one that pops out as the innovator once he/she buys the technology and starts showing them in a NYC gallery.
Senator Barack Obama 2007 by F. Lennox Campello |
Monday, November 03, 2008
Opening at Loyola in Baltimore
Julio Fine Arts Gallery at Loyola College will have "Amanda Burnham: Denominator" starting on November 3 – December 10, 2008 with an Opening Reception on Thursday, November 6, 5 – 7 pm.
The new exhibition features the artist’s newest work on paper as well as an installation drawing on site at the Gallery.
Julio Fine Arts Gallery is located on the Loyola College campus at 4501 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21210.
Vote Tomorrow
By Tuesday night, you should have voted; if you didn't vote, then until 2012, shut the fuck up.
By Wednesday morning when we wake up, regardless of who wins, history will have been made.
By Wednesday, one of two good Americans will be President-elect of this great nation.
Vote tomorrow... or you could be the guy being discussed below...
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Airborne
Airborne today and heading home after a wonderful visit to Beantown and a quick studio visit to Magdalena Campos-Pons.
Move that fucking umbrella!
Remember that I told you that Obama came to Widener University a few days ago?
My wife teaches there and is a hardcore Obamista and she braved the cold rain and went to the rally and she video'd Obama.
Problem is that there were a couple of rows of people in front of her, and because it was raining, they had umbrellas. But the people behind her couldn't see Obama and so they kept asking for the umbrellas to be moved, politely at first, and then finally the F-bomb is shouted.
Saturday, November 01, 2008
Tim Taunton Opening in C'ville
Migration: A Gallery will be opening an exhibit of Tim Taunton’s new oil paintings. The exhibit, Through the Looking Glass, will open with a reception on Friday, November 7th from 5:30 – 8pm and will continue through November 26th.
Migration is really setting a new course for Charlottesville's galleries with their super exhibition program and aggressive art fairs presence. They are located at 119 5th St., SE, Charlottesville. More information is available at 434-293-2200 and info@migrationgallery.com.