Walk through MIA 2010
A quick walk through the Miami International Art Fair (MIA) held this last January at the Miami Beach Convention Center.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Touchstone Gallery moving
After a long intensive search, Touchstone Gallery is putting the finishing touches on plans for a new and modern gallery at 901 NY Avenue NW, an attractive street-level location between the National Museum of Women in the Arts and the new DC convention center, and around the corner from the new Longview Gallery.
Wanna go to a DC opening later this week?
Project 4 presents a solo exhibition of paintings by San Francisco based artist, Adam “5100” Feibelman. Drawing from historical influences in photography, printmaking and painting and combining them with the contemporary process of graffiti, Adam “5100” Feibelman creates photorealistic, monochromatic scenes reminiscent of the grit of industrial cities.
Art Shanghai
Dr. Milagros Bello, the curator of the Latin American Pavillion at the Shanghai Art Fair 2010 has invited me to exhibit my work at Art Shanghai 2010.
I'm buzzed about that - now if only the logistics cooperate.
Alan Feltus and Lani Irwin at the KatzenI missed the opening this last weekend The opening is this Saturday, Jan. 30th, but I'm already hearing great things about the Alan Feltus and Lani Irwin exhibition at the Katzen Museum at American University.
Alan Feltus. 2004 Summer.
This traveling exhibition started at the University of Tulsa. After American University Museum it will proceed to George Mason University in Fairfax, VA, April 5 - May 7, then to Space 301 in Mobile, AL, May 14 - July 4, and on to the SoFA Gallery, Indiana University, Bloomington, September 3 - October 9.
There is a Gallery talk with Alan Feltus and Lani Irwin on Saturday, Jan. 30, 5 p.m. Free and open to the public.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Angry
Greg Allen reports on the Running for cover(age) panel discussion that took place a couple of weeks ago.
As I said last night, the Washington )#$%ing Post has absolutely no critical credibility with anyone in the art world outside of DMV. And it should be obvious from last night, too, that many people in DC feel the same way.138 people showed up on a freezing night! DMV stands for DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Read his report here.
Pink Line also reported on the panel and her report also is a good read.
Many people who attended the panel discussion were upset that the Dawson article wasn't thinky enough for them. It wasn't meant to be thinky! In fact, I'm not so sure any of the writing in a newspaper is meant to be thinky. Several suggested that we need a publication dedicated to art reviews in DC. Not a bad idea! It would fill the gap that a paper like the Washington Post can't fill. Wish there were a way to make such a print publication financially viable. Perhaps an online forum would do the trick?Read the Pink Line report here.
Some were upset that the article was too negative and didn't uplift our art community. Kriston [Capps] said newspaper writers do not have a responsibility to uplift an art scene and build community. Their job is to write stories that people want to read. When writers pitch stories to their editors, the stories must have an angle or a hook that will compel people to read the paper. This is the nature of journalism.
Benefactor Strikes Again
Remember the "Benefactor" and his DC artworld antics? Well... he's back.
Check his latest antic here.