Friday, July 15, 2016
Thursday, July 14, 2016
City Paper review and other thoughts...
CP art critic John Anderson pops in with a nice review of the current show at American University's Katzen Museum... read it here.
And also just home from a packed, sold out lecture on the show at the Katzen... moderated by the amazing Jack Rasmussen and some excellent questions by AU Prof Adrienne Pine who wrote the very left-wingy but interesting essay for the exhibition's catalog.
There were also some interesting questions to my Colombian peeps Carolina Mayorga, whose performance at the openings, which you can also see on the video at the exhibition, raised a lot of interesting points.
Third use of the word "interesting" in the last two paragraphs.
Muriel Hasbun brought live heart beats from El Salvador, delivered dynamically across cyberspace and played in the background of the discussion... all part of her ever evolving mixed medias presentations.
Third use of the word "interesting" in the last two paragraphs.
Muriel Hasbun brought live heart beats from El Salvador, delivered dynamically across cyberspace and played in the background of the discussion... all part of her ever evolving mixed medias presentations.
I discussed what I call "Cuban privilege", which I define (since I invented the term), as the superior attitude that us Cubans have towards all other immigrants to the US.
Notice that I said "all", not just Latin American immigrants (legal or otherwise).
Cuban privilege: Immediate welcome, quick green card status, middle class entry (thanks to a well established and wealthy Cuban-American community infrastructure), educational/cultural inprints, solid familial and clannish unity, and a lack of "victimism" as an attitude.
Of course, that attitude is defined by a set of singularly unique characteristics that defined the Cuban mass migration the the US in the 1960s: a migration of the upper and middle classes, rather than the impoverished poor strata of most historical migrations to the US, a racial welcome of a mostly white immigrant wave, and the fact that most Cubans identify as Republicans certainly didn't hurt.
A far cry from the daily stresses and legal issues that most illegal immigrants face around our region, mostly very poor Central Americans looking North for a better life away from violence and poverty.
The audience gasped when I told them that my father didn't identify as a "Hispanic" or as a "Latino."
"I am a Cuban," he'd say proudly. And when he became a US citizen he changed that to "En mi corazon siempre sere Cubano, pero desde hoy, en mi alma soy Americano."
Cubans are archaic immigrants... we love this great nation with a passionate, sometimes dangerous love that often clouds our perspectives and opinions.
Nuff said!
Nuff said!
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Racist things Donald Trump could have said (but didn't)
A compendium of racist statements that orange windbag Donald Trump could have said... but didn't:
"...this guy would have been carrying our bags"
- Bill Clinton (referring to Barack Obama) to Ted Kennedy in 2008
Barack Obama could win the presidency because he is “light-skinned” and speaks “with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.”
- Senator Harry Reid, 2008
On the House floor, then Representative Harry Reid insisted that “no sane country” would decree that a child of illegal immigrants was a citizen just because he was conveniently born on its soil.
- Harry Reid, 1993
Barack Obama is the “first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.”
- Joe Biden, 2008
“... you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking.”
- Joe Biden, 2006
“If Obama was a white man... he would not be in this position.”
- Geraldine Ferraro, 2008
"The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations."
- Che Guevara, 1960s
"Negro de mierda" (means "shitty N-word" in Cuban Spanish)
- Fidel Castro referring to Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista
“White folks was in the caves while we [blacks] was building empires … We built pyramids before Donald Trump ever knew what architecture was … we taught philosophy and astrology and mathematics before Socrates and them Greek homos ever got around to it.”
- Al Sharpton
“I give interracial couples a look. Daggers. They get uncomfortable when they see me on the street.”
- Spike Lee
“We got to do something about these Asians coming in and opening up businesses and dirty shops. They ought to go.”
- Marion Berry
"The white man is our mortal enemy, and we cannot accept him."
- Louis Farrakhan
“Hymies” and “Hymietown..."
- Jesse Jackson’s describing New York City while a 1984 presidential campaigner
“He’s married to a white woman. He wants to be white. He wants a colorless society. He has no ethnic pride. He doesn’t want to be black.” [About Ward Connerly's interracial marriage]
- California State Senator Diane Watson
“[Ted Cruz]... No, I don’t think he should be defined as a Hispanic." (Cruz's father was born in Cuba)
- Bill Richardson
“I don’t know what kind of a [N-word] wouldn’t vote with a black man running..."
- Joseph Lowery
"...this guy would have been carrying our bags"
- Bill Clinton (referring to Barack Obama) to Ted Kennedy in 2008
Barack Obama could win the presidency because he is “light-skinned” and speaks “with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.”
- Senator Harry Reid, 2008
On the House floor, then Representative Harry Reid insisted that “no sane country” would decree that a child of illegal immigrants was a citizen just because he was conveniently born on its soil.
- Harry Reid, 1993
Barack Obama is the “first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.”
- Joe Biden, 2008
“... you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking.”
- Joe Biden, 2006
“If Obama was a white man... he would not be in this position.”
- Geraldine Ferraro, 2008
"The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations."
- Che Guevara, 1960s
"Negro de mierda" (means "shitty N-word" in Cuban Spanish)
- Fidel Castro referring to Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista
“White folks was in the caves while we [blacks] was building empires … We built pyramids before Donald Trump ever knew what architecture was … we taught philosophy and astrology and mathematics before Socrates and them Greek homos ever got around to it.”
- Al Sharpton
“I give interracial couples a look. Daggers. They get uncomfortable when they see me on the street.”
- Spike Lee
“We got to do something about these Asians coming in and opening up businesses and dirty shops. They ought to go.”
- Marion Berry
"The white man is our mortal enemy, and we cannot accept him."
- Louis Farrakhan
“Hymies” and “Hymietown..."
- Jesse Jackson’s describing New York City while a 1984 presidential campaigner
“He’s married to a white woman. He wants to be white. He wants a colorless society. He has no ethnic pride. He doesn’t want to be black.” [About Ward Connerly's interracial marriage]
- California State Senator Diane Watson
“[Ted Cruz]... No, I don’t think he should be defined as a Hispanic." (Cruz's father was born in Cuba)
- Bill Richardson
“I don’t know what kind of a [N-word] wouldn’t vote with a black man running..."
- Joseph Lowery
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Sam Gilliam, David Kordansky and the gem...
The WaPo's Geoff Edgers checked in over the weekend with a really good (and exceptionally rare) WaPo article on a DMV artist, although as the most causal observer of the planet's visual arts scene would note, Sam Gilliam in not a "local" artist in the pejorative way that some (not me) like to apply that label.
People in the arts love labels!
Sam Gilliam never did, and will never do... and that's a major reason why I admire the DMV's most famous artist.
Sam previous descent into "oblivion" may have been grossly exaggerated, and he certainly never traded art for detergent -- as once claimed in this article (On the other hand, I once traded art for clams when I used to sell my art school assignments at the Pike Place Market in Seattle), but Sam did, apparently trade artwork for dental work.
I currently trade artwork for my laundry services and my laundry guy (who happens to be one of the biggest DMV art collectors, if not the biggest, in the region), has a lot of my work.
But Sam Gilliam's work certainly never rose to the commodity price level that an artist of his stature should command.
If you doubt that, then check what his work goes for in the secondary market, where as late as 2016 you can pick up a signed and numbered litho for $350 (this one went for $140! and this "photoprint" sold for $20 bucks six years ago!), or a bit earlier an original double sided painting for $1,400!
Check out recent past secondary market sales here.
But enough about these small things... there's another gem in this article about Gilliam.
That gem of information is something that I have been hollering about for years... here it is:
Read the whole article here, and pay homage to this great master.
PS - My own secondary market record at the same auction house makes Sam's look great... cough, cough... and they misspelled my name!
People in the arts love labels!
Sam Gilliam never did, and will never do... and that's a major reason why I admire the DMV's most famous artist.
Sam previous descent into "oblivion" may have been grossly exaggerated, and he certainly never traded art for detergent -- as once claimed in this article (On the other hand, I once traded art for clams when I used to sell my art school assignments at the Pike Place Market in Seattle), but Sam did, apparently trade artwork for dental work.
I currently trade artwork for my laundry services and my laundry guy (who happens to be one of the biggest DMV art collectors, if not the biggest, in the region), has a lot of my work.
But Sam Gilliam's work certainly never rose to the commodity price level that an artist of his stature should command.
If you doubt that, then check what his work goes for in the secondary market, where as late as 2016 you can pick up a signed and numbered litho for $350 (this one went for $140! and this "photoprint" sold for $20 bucks six years ago!), or a bit earlier an original double sided painting for $1,400!
Check out recent past secondary market sales here.
But enough about these small things... there's another gem in this article about Gilliam.
That gem of information is something that I have been hollering about for years... here it is:
Then David Kordansky called. The Los Angeles gallerist was one more person who felt that Gilliam needed more attention.
When they met in 2012, Kordansky found Gilliam’s work being shown in the District, New Mexico and what he calls “decentralized markets outside the art market essentially.”
“It needed to be brought to the curators. It needed to be seen at the international art fairs..." Kordansky says.The bolded words are the gem... bolding is mine, and Kordansky hit the nail right on the head.
Read the whole article here, and pay homage to this great master.
PS - My own secondary market record at the same auction house makes Sam's look great... cough, cough... and they misspelled my name!
Monday, July 11, 2016
Gen-Y 3.0
VisArts presents a juried exhibition of artists ages 17 – 27 in the Kaplan Gallery from July 22 – August 28, 2016. The annual Gen-Y exhibition offers young artists an opportunity to bring their artwork to the public and to experience the process of exhibiting in a professional gallery. Though there are many labels aimed at describing the current generation of 17 to 27 year olds, such as Screenagers, Millennials, and Echo Boomers, VisArts is maintaining the Gen-Y name for its annual juried group exhibition of aspiring artists in this age group.
Drawing, photography, fiber, ceramics, painting, video, sculpture, and interactivity fill the Kaplan Gallery reflecting a variety of approaches to a wide range of content within the context of the digital age.
Drawing, photography, fiber, ceramics, painting, video, sculpture, and interactivity fill the Kaplan Gallery reflecting a variety of approaches to a wide range of content within the context of the digital age.
The 2016 Gen-Y 3.0 artists include: Sobia Ahmad, Katherine Akey, Susie Bae, Amy Berbert, Abbie Fundling, Jared Green, Ashley Ja’nae, Kern Lee, Emmanuel Mones, Richard Munaba, Angelique Nagovskaya, Raheel Raad, Yoon Sun Shin, Qin Tan, and Vivien Wise.
The annual Gen-Y exhibition offers young artists an opportunity to bring their artwork to the public and to experience the process of exhibiting in a gallery. The exhibition was developed to address this demographic of artists who are seriously making art and have little to no experience exhibiting their work in a professional gallery. Many are uncertain about how to proceed with a career in art or what it takes to be an artist. Many are under financial, social and educational pressures that might preclude further study in art. Others are committed to a non-art career track yet are passionate about making art. Most are working under the art world radar of the region.
A dedicated team of gallery interns and volunteers plan and realize the annual juried exhibition with guidance from the VisArts gallery staff. “From the call for entry to the preparation and installation of the artwork, the entire process is a learning experience- for the first time exhibitors as well as the organizers of the exhibition,” says Main. “Watching this exhibition take shape is inspiring. The interns embrace the vision to seek out the undiscovered young artists in our community. They are passionate about bringing their peers’ artwork into the public light.”
An opening reception for the exhibition will be held on Friday, July 22 from 7 to 9 PM in the Kaplan Gallery. The reception and exhibition are free to the public.
Gen-Y 3.0
July 22 – August 28
Opening Reception: Friday, July 22, 7 – 9 PM
Sunday, July 10, 2016
Art Scam Alert
Beware of this rip off artist:
Roslyn Hensworth (roslynhswth@outlook.com)
From: Roslyn Hensworth (roslynhswth@outlook.com) Good Day,
How is everything with you? I picked interest in your artwork and decided to write you. I will like to know if your artwork can be purchased and shipped internationally?. I can email the artwork of
interest and payment will be completed in full once you confirm my purchase order with a quotation.
Kindly let me know when you are in office and ready to take my artwork order also let me know if you accept either Visa Card or Master Card for payment furthermore you can email me your recently updated website
or art price list in your response.
Best Regards
Mrs Hensworth
My Seattle roommate
No idea why all these early pieces of mine are showing up all of a
sudden in bunches, but here's a 1977 watercolor (done as an Art School
Assignment) of my then Seattle house roommate, who was a female body builder
(and in the crew at the UW rowing gang)... bid for it at this auction at
the link.
Note the very early "emoji"... which back then was just the smiley face button... cough, cough.... invented in the 1960s by the legendary Robert Crumb, who never got a penny for it...
Check out all the images and bid here.
Note the very early "emoji"... which back then was just the smiley face button... cough, cough.... invented in the 1960s by the legendary Robert Crumb, who never got a penny for it...
Check out all the images and bid here.
Saturday, July 09, 2016
Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award applications
Don't miss your chance to apply! The deadline for 2017 Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award applications is rapidly approaching. The Individual Artist Awards are grants awarded to practicing Maryland artists through an anonymous, competitive application process to encourage and sustain their pursuit of artistic excellence.
Categories offered for the 2017 Awards are:
The deadline for 2017 applications is 4:30 PM on Friday, July 22, 2016.
Questions about Fellowships? Please review the program guidelines and contact Kimberly Steinle-Super at kimberly@midatlanticarts.org.
Categories offered for the 2017 Awards are:
- Classical Music: Composition
- Classical Music: Solo Performance
- Dance: Choreography
- Dance: Solo Performance
- Poetry
- Visual Arts: Sculpture
- World Music: Composition
- World Music: Solo Performance
The deadline for 2017 applications is 4:30 PM on Friday, July 22, 2016.
Questions about Fellowships? Please review the program guidelines and contact Kimberly Steinle-Super at kimberly@midatlanticarts.org.
Friday, July 08, 2016
Artist Journalists Panel
Artist Journalists
July 17, 1:30pm-3:30pm
Mt. Pleasant Public Library, Large Meeting Room
The evolving forms of news media have created a new kind of journalist: an expert in the field whose journalistic objectivity is sometimes suspect. What does it mean when artists are also arts journalists?
Visit with four practitioners and share your thoughts about the role of expert opinion, independent opinion, and self-promotion in arts journalism.
Moderated by DC Arts Writing Fellow Jonelle Walker, this panel will feature:
- Lenny Campello – Artist, Art Critic, Art Dealer & Blogger, Daily Campello Art News
- JT Kirkland - Artist & Former Critic
- Jenn Larsen - Ringleader, Connectivity, dog & pony dc & Co-Founder, WeLoveDC.com
- John Stoltenberg - Senior Reviewer and Columnist, DC Metro Theatre Arts & Director of Communications, WSC Avant Bard
Thursday, July 07, 2016
Large 2001 Campello at auction (super low starting bid)
This one is practically being given away! It's a rather large drawing too...
Bid for it here (starting bid $100)!
Adam and Eve c. 2001 F. Lennox Campello Charcoal on Paper |
Wednesday, July 06, 2016
What It's Really Like to Let People Finger You in Public
Tess Koman interviews artist Milo Moire:
Her work reminds me of some of the early conceptual works (done over a decade ago) by our own Alessandra Torres, specifically the one where she lay naked in an incubator and let people touch her naked body.
Milo Moiré, a Swiss artist and psychologist, has been performing controversial nude public art for years. In 2014, she rode a bus naked (painted with names of clothing items where they are supposed to go on a body) during Art Basel in Switzerland and stood naked outside an art museum in Cologne, Germany painting a white sheet red with paint-filled eggs stashed inside her vagina.
Read the interview in Cosmopolitan here.Most recently, she paid homage to Valie Export's 1960s nudist work and asked people in London, Düsseldorf, and Amsterdam to touch her breasts and vagina, which were concealed in a large mirrored box with a hole in the middle. She recorded the interactions, and released a highly censored (yet still pretty NSFW) video of her being touched. Moiré spoke to Cosmopolitan.com about what it was like to have strangers finger her, the ground rules she laid for those who did, and why she'd rather not have the performance labeled as a feminist piece of art.
Her work reminds me of some of the early conceptual works (done over a decade ago) by our own Alessandra Torres, specifically the one where she lay naked in an incubator and let people touch her naked body.
Tuesday, July 05, 2016
First Show for Newly Juried Torpedo Factory Artist
One
of the Torpedo Factory's newest artists, Richard Greenway, exhibits his
paintings at The Associates Gallery (TAG) in his first solo show. The show runs
from July 19 through August 14 in studio 311.
Decathect: a verb
105 N. Union Street, Alexandria, VA
Studio 311
July 19 – August 14
Open 7 days a weekFacebook censorship
As we have all read all over, Facebook was recently busted for censoring conservative views... but:
But conservatives are far from being the only people who feel wronged by Facebook. They’re simply the loudest. As someone who has followed the issue of online censorship by corporations for more than half a decade, I can say with certainty that this incident has received more attention than nearly any other. For years, activists of many stripes (including conservatives) have complained about the social media platform’s censorious ways. This year, we’ve seen complaints from groups from groups across nearly every walk of life. Here are ten recent examples.Read the whole article by Jillian C. York here.
Monday, July 04, 2016
Sunday, July 03, 2016
Campello at auction
Check out this vintage 1995 framed drawing at auction... Click here to see details.
This 1995 drawing was done from a photo on an old vintage postcard (as I recall).
Bid here.
This 1995 drawing was done from a photo on an old vintage postcard (as I recall).
Bid here.
Women in Love I c. 1995 F. Lennox Campello 6x6.5 inches framed to 19x23 inches. |
Saturday, July 02, 2016
Friday, July 01, 2016
Alma Selimovic
Feeling Kinky? Come and check out Alma Selimovic's work at her studio in the Otis Street Art Project.
She's there through Sunday or by appointment. Thank you #MetroWeekly for a great exposure.
Check out her work at www.almaselimovic.com
She's there through Sunday or by appointment. Thank you #MetroWeekly for a great exposure.
Check out her work at www.almaselimovic.com
Thursday, June 30, 2016
Book Review: Artists of Sedona
I was introduced to the spectacular beauty of Sedona,
Arizona by my wife about a decade ago. Over the years we've visited that
spectacular area many times, and I've often written about it, focusing on its
artists and many galleries.
Artists of Sedona(1930-1999), published in 2014 by Gene K. Garrison, is a warmly crafted homage to the many artists who helped to give that Red Rocks city a reputation in the fine arts.
Artists of Sedona(1930-1999), published in 2014 by Gene K. Garrison, is a warmly crafted homage to the many artists who helped to give that Red Rocks city a reputation in the fine arts.
The book is essentially a history book of the seeding,
fertilization, and growth of the Sedona artistic community.
It starts with two
brothers, a gibbon, and a baby coyote roaring into the valley on a Harley
motorcycle.
It also pays
homage to Egyptian immigrant Nassan Gobran, who can be said to be the father of
the Sedona fine arts footprint, as he was the leading voice for the energy
which re-focused Sedona as a fine arts town.
We learn how an
apple-packing barn became the Sedona Arts Center, and eventually the magnet for
all of the city's art galleries. The first exhibition in that building (April
1961) was by none other than the respected and very famous impressionist Max
Ernst and his wife Dorothy Tanning.
We also learn about the formation of the Cowboy Artists
of America, and through Garrison's superbly delivered talkative style of
writing, we are further educated into the lives, anecdotes, stories,
achievements, failures of a variety of the key artists who flowed into the Red
Rocks area, attracted not by New Age vortexes, but by the spectacular beauty of
the area, and by the growing magnetism of a growing artistic community.
You can feel Garrison's love for the artists, for Sedona,
and for its history, in each word lovingly delivered in this book. It is a
perfect example of how an art history book can be crafted so that it not only
cements the art history of a city, but also honors the artists who created it.
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Things not to do
If you're an artist:
- Do not hand out your own personal business cards at your opening and/or an art fair where your work is being exhibited. What you should do is work it out with the gallery, and if agreed, make your own personal business cards that list the gallery (and not you) as the contact point.
- Do not start a relationship with a gallery without a contract or written agreement.
- Do not vary your prices from dealer to dealer, or city to city, etc. What you should do is to have an established process (via contract/written agreement) where it details what discounts (if any) are offered in cases of multiple buys, museum sales, etc.
- Do not have "art sales." This hurts your established price points.
- Do not have prices in your website, instead force interested collectors into communicating with you or your gallery. Make sure that you note your gallery representation in your website.
- Do not operate on a handshake; always have a contract or written agreement.
- Do not hide the names/address of buyers. All that accomplishes is that it tells the artist: "I don't trust you."
- Don't work out price issues on the fly. Work out pricing issues ahead of time to ensure that you and your artists are all clear on all possible scenarios.
- Don't skip on art insurance.
- Don't take too long to pay your artists (period should be specified in your written agreement/contract (such as "Artist will be paid within ___ days from the time that the artwork payment clears").
- Don't undercut the gallery by "skipping" them and going directly to the artist.
- Don't trust art dealers/artists who offer prodigious discounts on the artwork - nearly always that means that the prices were inflated to start with.
- Don't be afraid to ask if the artwork is done to conservation standards.
- Don't call a painting a "picture."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)