More congrats!
To DC area artists Inga Frick, Ian Jehle, J.T. Kirkland, Gabriel Martinez, W.C. Richardson, and Jason Zimmerman, all of whom have been chosen for the seminfinalist list for the The Janet & Walter Sondheim Prize, a one-time $25,000 art prize that will be awarded in conjunction with the annual Artscape juried exhibition.
Up to ten finalists from the below (very Baltimore-heavy) list (which includes quite a few Trawick Prize finalists and one winner) will be selected for the exhibition that will be on display in the Decker and Meyerhoff galleries of the Maryland Institute College of Art. From this group the winner of the prize will be selected:
Lauren Audet - Baltimore, MD
Lillian Bayley - Baltimore, MD
Michael Benevento - Baltimore, MD
Heather Boaz - Towson, MD
Nancy A. Breslin - Newark, DE
Camp Baltimore - Baltimore, MD
R.L. Croft - Manassas, VA
Jarrett Min Davis - Baltimore, MD
Laure Drogoul - Baltimore, MD
Eric Dyer - Baltimore , MD
Inga Frick - Washington, DC
Leslie Furlong - Baltimore, MD
Dawn Gavin - Baltimore, MD
Lesser Gonzalez - Baltimore, MD
Geoff Grace - Baltimore, MD
Kristofer Harzinski - Lancaster, PA
Maren Hassinger - Baltimore, MD
Bernhard Hildebrandt - Baltimore, MD
Karin Horlbeck - Baltimore, MD
Jason Hughes - Baltimore, MD
Julie Jankowski - Baltimore, MD
Ian Jehle - Washington, DC
Brian Kain - Emmitsburg, MD
J.T. Kirkland - Arlington, VA
Osamu Kobayashi - Baltimore, MD
Gabriel Martinez - Washington, DC
Lesley McTague - Cockeysville , MD
David Page - Baltimore, MD
Hugh Pocock - Baltimore, MD
Carly Ptak - Baltimore, MD
W.C. Richardson - University Park, MD
Chuck Sehman - Baltimore, MD
Julia Kim Smith - Baltimore, MD
Denise Tassin - Baltimore, MD
Rene Trevino - Baltimore, MD
P. Daniel Witmer - Baltimore, MD
Karen Yasinsky - Baltimore, MD
Jason Zimmerman - Washington, DC
The jurors are Kathy Grayson, Gallery Director of Deitch Projects in New York, Matthew Higgs, currently the director and chief curator of White Columns in New York, and artist William Pope, faculty of Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Congrats!
To Ben Tolman, who will be exhibiting this coming June at the "Flights of Imagination" exhibition in Switzerland at the Giger Museum curated by H.R. Giger himself.
Monday, May 29, 2006
Cristin Millett at Arlington Arts Center
Considering that Jessica Dawson wrote that "I regret to report that almost all of the six solo shows filling Arlington Arts Center are underwhelming" when she visited the Arlington Arts Center recently, I wasn't really expecting an artistic epiphany during my recent visit to see Nestor Hernandez's portraits of Cuban-Americans currently on exhibition on the lower level of the center.
Wrong!
The visit to the Arlington Arts Center unexpectedly revealed one of the most memorable art installations that I have ever seen, and even though critics often have different opinions, I am honestly puzzled that Dawson didn't mention the amazing installation in the main floor gallery.
I am referring to Cristin Millett’s astounding solo show at the Center.
Not being familiar with Millett’s work, I asked the Center’s hardworking director Claire Huschle, to tell me a bit about both the artist and the installation. I then stepped back and listened as Claire smartly dissected and explained the installation and commented on it (and then I realized why Jessica missed it completely! -- "listening" being the operative word here).
"She grew in a medical household," explained Huschle, as we walked into the installation. This revelation (I believe) is the key to understanding (and appreciating) Millett's work; forgive my using the critic's crutch and let me describe it for you.
The installation consists of a maze like circular corridor titled "Teatro Anatomico" which uses Andre Levret’s 18th century schematic representations of the female reproductive system at the time of conception.
Millett has reproduced them into chiffon sheets that hang from aluminum tubing that form the maze and deliver a very convincing impression of both a hospital setting and a surgical theater, set-up in uterine forms that lead to a central point.
There’s a certain and strange Victorian parlor elegance to this first part of the installation, and the technical skill is admirable, both in the hand stitching of the lady-like chiffon and the construction of the aluminum tubing.
Millett has realistically constructed a convincing anatomical theatre with a subtle nuance of the female reproductive system (even the Victorian lighting seems like a female vagina when viewed from the outside); we are entering a medical theatre, where anatomy students, erotica voyeurs, and art observers all meld into one.
Inside the maze, a cleverly constructed medical exam table depicts the living digital image of a young woman's body, except its face which is replaced by a living digital plasm.
Titled "Abdominal Mystery: Dissection of the Observer," this is a living, breathing video, where we see the anonymous body breathing, being dissected, wrapped in plastic (I think), explored and manipulated.
Here the voyeur is fascinated, titillated and sometimes repulsed. The Eros of the nude body is coupled with the grossness of the exploration of its insides and the magic of its fragility. The body has become a bridge of sorts between the interior and exterior spaces of architectural entryway provided by the uterine maze: are we entering the theatre, or penetrating it?
The metaphorical relationship can be overwhelmingly sexual, or perhaps an intelligent attempt to place the female body as a comment on its visual power in a Sexual Personae Camille Paglia sort of way?
And therein lies the unexpected success of this piece, which belongs in a museum where it can be admired, explored and discussed: It brings the viewer into a silent interaction with a work of art that employs the most powerful of human icons: our body.
Millett is a young artist on the faculty at Penn State, and if this installation is a sign of things to come, then keep an eye on this promising artist.
And were our museum curators like their counterparts in New York or LA or Seattle or SF, this piece would find a champion (and a home) in one of our area's great museums.
This is my call for Anne Ellegood or Kerry Brougher from the Hirshhorn or Jonathan Binstock from the Corcoran to pay a visit to Arlington and see the newborn that this young brilliant artist has delivered for us.
The exhibition goes through June 10, 2006.
Update: The Washington Post's Express has a little blurb on this review in the Tuesday, May 30, 2006 issue.
Sunday, May 28, 2006
Last week, a reader asked the Weekend staff to consider this really good suggestion/question:
McLean, Va.: How can the Weekend section give out a little more info on gallery shows, etc.? It seems like a lot of space is used to list page after page of museum shows (a lot of which are static and never change) on every issue ...I thought that this was a good suggestion and I wish that I had thought of the idea, which is a good workable suggestion to "free up" static space in the section for more art coverage.
How about a once a month museum listing like you do now, and the other three weeks only list those museum shows that are new or opening (like you do with galleries).
That would free up additional space to discuss (maybe mini reviews) more art gallery shows ...
Bottom line is that the static museum listing, issue after issue ... seems a little "dusty" and that whole part of Weekend may need to re "re-freshed" -- We're starving for more art reviews out here ...
Aficionado de Arte
But then witness how the suggestion itself is ignored in the response:
Curt Fields: More art reviews would be nice. We also hear from people who want more on Classical music, theater events, etc. And we'd love to write more on all those topics. Unfortunately the amount of space we have is not unlimited. It's a tricky juggling act.With all due respect, did Mr. Fields read the question/suggestion?
We know that the "amount of space" is not unlimited! But the suggestion offered a way to "free up" space. And yet he ignored that part and gave the canned "we have limited space and everyone wants us to cover their pet interests" answer.
So: How's the suggestion itself (as far as an idea to "free up" more space?
By the way there's a LOT more print space devoted each Weekend to music and theatre than to the visual arts: a LOT more!
Girlz Cook-Out
Candy Keegan and the other artists from the group known as the Girlz Club are having a Happy Hour and cookout this coming Friday, June 2 at Wolfarth Galleries from 4-8PM. They are currently all exhibiting at Wolfarth in a group show called Mixology which runs through the 6th.
Wohlfarth Galleries is located at 3418 9th Street, NE in Washington, DC, 1/2 block from Brookland/CUA red line metro and across 9th Street from Colonel Brook's Tavern. Details and info at 202-526-8022.
Bring something!
Mathematics
Today I am in the process of jurying artwork submitted via CD ROMS for the art competition.
Here's a bit of mathematics for 98% of the artists who sent in a CD ROM and a business-sized stamped and self-addressed envelope for the return of the CD ROM: A CD ROM does NOT fit in a business sized envelope!