Commercials?
It's halftime at the Super Bowl and... am I the only one noticing that 80% of the commercials so far are CBS commercials?
What happened to all those usually fun and artsy Super Bowl commercials?
I think that advertisers said to CBS: "Too expensive" and they passed and CBS got stuck with a game without commercials other than their own.
Sunday, February 04, 2007
For 17 years?
From the Philly Inquirer:
The Independence Seaport Museum accused its former president yesterday of defrauding it of $2.4 million to pay for a "lavish lifestyle" that included trips to France and New Zealand and freewheeling spending on paintings, high-end furniture and expensive boats.Apparently this guy was really trying to hide the alleged rip-off, as he had "the museum pay more than $500,000 to buy and maintain boats that were solely 'for his personal use and enjoyment.' It said the vessels included a 38-foot sailboat, a sport-fishing boat, and a power boat - which alone cost $446,000.
The ex-director, John S. Carter, is under FBI investigation, Carter's lawyer confirmed last night.
Despite being paid $301,000 a year - more than the head of the Philadelphia Museum of Art - Carter systematically ripped off the seaport museum, the museum contends in a lawsuit.
Spent massively on three museum credit cards, racking up $594,000 in charges between 2003 and his departure in early 2006. He did not furnish supporting documents for most of the spending, the suit says.
Collected more than $200,000 in improper expense reimbursements over five years, including billing for museum landscaping that was never done."
Amazing, uh? There's a ton more allegations, and apparently the guy worked for the museum for 17 years! Read the whole story here.
Saturday, February 03, 2007
Wanna see some sculptures around DC?
The Washington Sculptors Group's new show is Sculpture Now 2007 at Washington Square (1050 Connecticut Avenue NW (at L St.)), Washington, DC 20036. Juried by the other Cuban gallery owner, Ramon Osuna, of Osuna Gallery in Bethesda, MD. Show dates: February 5th to May 4th,2007 and Opening Reception: Thursday, February 15th at 6-8:30 pm. Featuring works by Constance Bergfors, Jackie Braitman, Teresa Camacho-Hull, Jordan Cohen, Adam Cook, Frederic Crist, Joel D’Orazio, Christopher Edmunds, Pattie Porter Firestone, Mary Frank, Judith Goodman, Michael A. Guadagno, Len Harris, Cynthia Hutnyan, James Kessler, Shirley Koller, Craig Kraft, Carol Gellner Levin, Philippe Mougne, Sharon Murray, Minna Nathanson, Tom Rooney, Mike Shafter, Bo Simeon, George Tkabladze, and Novie Trump.
The Washington Sculptors Group's current show is "intervene/activate," and that one is at the Union Gallery of the University of Maryland. Juried by Donald Russell, Director of Provisions Library. Through Feb. 22, 2007.
Brookside Gardens – 2007 Sculpture Show and Sale through April 15, 2007 – Includes work by Jeff Andrews, Frances Aubrey, Jordan Cohen, Phelan Meek, Barry Perlis, Ann Ruppert, Rima Schulkind, Ronald Spadin, Peter Wood and others. For information and directions, call 301.962.1438 or www.brooksidegardens.org. By the way, if you haven't visited Brookside Gardens, you are missing one of the most beautiful spots in the Greater DC area.
McClean Project for the Arts - Natural Inclinations: Works by Margaret Boozer, Elizabeth Burger, Marc Robarge and Laura Thorne through February 24, 2007. Tea and Tour of the Exhibitions February 15, 10:30 am, free, but please call 703-790-1953 for reservations. For information and directions, call 703-790-1953 or go to their website.
Katzen Center, American University Museum has five sculpture shows coming up: Contemporary Glass: Beauty and Innovation – January 30 to April 8, 2007, Richard Cleaver (from Baltimore) and Robert Brady - February 6 to April 15, 2007 and Dennis Oppenheim and Duane Hansen – February 13 to April 15. Reception – Saturday, February 17, 2007 from 6 to 9 pm. Gallery Talks – various dates. Check their website for details or call 202.885.1300.
Smithsonian American Art Museum - Joseph Cornell: Navigating the Imagination - Now through Feb. 19, 2007.
Go see some art!
Friday, February 02, 2007
First Friday Gallery Openings
Both DC and Philly hold First Friday joint gallery openings and/or extended hours.
In Philly, the Old City area galleries (around forty galleries and art venues) are open from 5 till 9 p.m. Details here.
In DC, the Dupont Circle area galleries (around 15 venues or so) are usually open from 6-8PM. Details here.
Also in DC, Project 4 has an opening tonight from 6-8:30PM for Ivanny Pagan, who is a Philadelphia-based painter (and whose work I think that I would like a lot) and Rich MacDonald, a Baltimore-based photographer.
In Philly, Nexus has completed the move to a new home in the Crane Arts Building in Fishtown.
They will we reopen Nexus in their new home and at the same time inaugurate "Second Thursdays," a new monthly event of openings by galleries that are north of Northern Liberties.
Second Thursdays will be held February 8th from 6 to 9 PM. However, they will also be open on First Fridays from 6 to 9 PM.
Thursday, February 01, 2007
Madder now...
Jessica Gould over at the WCP scoops all the art bloggers in town and writes about the artistic and ownership of words controversy caused by the current exhibit at Bethesda's Fraser Gallery, which as most of you know, I used to co-own, and to which (since last year), I have no relationship with, and which is now solely owned, run and directed by Catriona Fraser.
Clear?
Anyway...The controversial exhibit is part of Mini-Matic, and the article specifically discusses the work of DC area photographer Doug Sanford.
According to the article, Sanford broke up with his girlfriend because he was screwing around on her, so she then wrote him some nasty emails, and then he later made fine art photographs from some of the words in the emails.
According to Gould, "Some of the words are in larger type, inky iterations of hate. The rest are blurred—streaked with light, smudged, or shadowed."
The ex-girlfriend's name or identity is never revealed in any of the works.
“It was a pretty angry breakup,” he says.However...
And it’s gotten angrier.
On Jan. 12, the opening day of the exhibit, Sanford’s ex-girlfriend contacted both him and the gallery’s owner, accusing them of copyright infringement and demanding that the photographs be taken down. If they didn’t comply with her wishes, they say, she threatened to take legal action.
According to Torsten Kracht, an attorney with Akin Gump Strauss Hauer Feld, although Sanford “may not be able to claim authorship rights in the underlying text of the e-mail, he may have a copyright in the unique photographic image he created because of the way he has put it together.” Kracht, who is not involved in the controversy, writes in an e-mail that Sanford “has selected only certain words, chosen to blur some of the text at the bottom and brought out the texture of the paper on which the e-mail is printed. That’s all his artistic expression and interpretation.”Read Gould's excellent piece here.
I am not a lawyer (although it seems like everyone else in my immediate family is) and thus here's my question: I was under the impression that once you hit the send button and send an email to someone... a regular email and not an email containing the full text to your next novel... anyway - as soon as that email hits cyberspace and it's received by the intended recepient(s), then that's all she wrote and the recipient(s) can do anything they want with that email, including photographing it, posting it on a blog, printing it and stapling it to a telephone pole, etc.
So for the copyright lawyers who read this blog: Is that correct? Or does the copyright of an email always belong to the originator?
Although I think that when one writes a letter, the author always owns the copyright to the text of the letter, although the recipient of the letter has actual ownership of the letter itself, and can sell it on Ebay if he or she so desires.
Not that "email copyright" it would strictly apply to this case, as it appears to me that Sanford did not "publish" her emails, but rather took some words here and there (sort of a "visual sampling") and re-presented them in a "new" work of art that is not immediately visually recognizable as the original email.
Update: Bailey offers some advice.
Opportunity for Artists
Deadline: Unclear
Open Call for Web Based Art for the Web Biennial 2007. Submissions and exhibition Start: February 1st and end December 31 2007. The Web Biennial is a project produced by the Istanbul Contemporary Art Museum, in Turkey and artists can participate through the portal located at webbienial.org.
One project per artist. No Portfolio sites, No Commercial Projects. This project is totally free and open for all. This year all languages welcome except, in the head tags.
The Web Biennial is a NO concept, NO curator, NO location, NO sponsor event.
Send them the URL of your Web Based Art project. Put inside the head tags of your index page:
"Web Biennial 2007 - Name of the Artist - Name of Your Project." The index page and the web site needs to be on the same domain. No attachments.
You can e-mail submissions to: webbiennial@yahoo.com
Please also put in the subject line of your email: "Web Biennial 2007 - Name of the Artist - Name of Your Project."
First come first served; collaboration proposals from institutions welcome.