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+Uh Yeah

-It’s All Over

+Progressive Programming

Programming [a host of activities] itself is a medium that should be discursively reconsidered within the field of shifting organizational responsibility and transnominal embodiment. For the past few weeks I’ve been noting several new programming initiatives, both institutional and non-institutional, that make a strong case for being as progressive as the art and/or artists they typically champion. Below is a small compilation of a few of these programs.

-KOW ISSUE 8: GENERAL STRIKE

One of my favorite galleries [and gallery spaces] in Berlin is the relatively new KOW Berlin. The gallery’s conceptual agenda is rooted in their conviction that the social dimension of artistic practices is what makes them helpful in understanding the conditions, and in influencing the modes, of our individual and collective lives.

More specifically, GENERAL STRIKE is published as the eighth contribution to KOW ISSUES, a sequence of projects in varying formats that explore the social and political implications of artistic practices. Conception, texts, and graphic design: Alexander Koch.

From the excerpt:
“Artists are positively expected to criticize the society in which they live. Criticizing art—the market, the institutions, the role of the creative outsider in which many people like to cast them—is likewise a conventional part of what they do; in Institutional Critique, it has even become the central feature of a distinct art movement. But what happens when artists go so far as to criticize not just individual features of the art world but art as a whole?”

This is the transcendent beauty of criticality as ouroboros. I’d love to see more blogs dedicated to this theme alone.

More ✔

-REGIONALISM IN THE 21ST CENTURY

On Saturday, May 7th, 2011, Glasstire and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presented a panel in celebration of their 10th anniversary. The issues being discussed are apropos to many of the issues being [mostly unconsciously] projected by the artist and art collective behavior of mimetic institutionalization.

“Regionalism in the 21st Century” featured Robert Storr, dean of the Yale University School of Art and curator of the 2007 Venice Biennale; David Pagel, Los Angeles Times art critic and associate professor of art at Claremont Graduate University; Toby Kamps, curator of modern and contemporary art at The Menil Collection in Houston; and Michael Galbreth, one of the artist duo known as The Art Guys. The panel was moderated by Christina Rees, a Glasstire correspondent and director of Fort Worth Contemporary Arts.

-INSTANT CINEMA

Instant Cinema is a comprehensive platform for experimental film, video and computer art, making the best audio-visual work of artists of all generations available to a worldwide audience.

The fact that they’re presenting several Bas Jan Ader works alone should be enough reason to inquire further. The interface itself is rather beautiful and lends itself well to the question of whether or not the portability of video art will lead the way in the technological hyper-weaving of art and everyday life. Also, please read the about page.

preview.instantcinema.org ✔

-FREE PROPOSALS FOR ART SCHOOL CRITIQUE

artschoolartcritiques.tumblr.com ✔

-KURATOR

KURATOR is a combined curatorial agency and research platform at the intersection of art, technology and society. It has a particular interest in the emerging discourse and practice that links curating with programming, software and networks.

KURATOR’s core activities include projects, research and publications. 
A repository of all contents in the database can be found in the Archive section.

kurator.org ✔

-A Conversation on Useful Art #1

“It’s time to put Duchamp’s urinal back into the restroom” —Tania Bruguera

On Saturday, April 23 Immigrant Movement International hosted A Conversation on Useful Art #1, an event organized by artist Tania Bruguera as part of Immigrant Movement International, a year-long, socio-political movement initiated by the artist in Corona, Queens and presented by Creative Time and the Queens Museum of Art.

Tania Bruguera’s Immigrant Movement International, presented in partnership with the Queens Museum of Art, is a long-term art project in the form of an artist-initiated socio-political movement. Bruguera will spend an entire year operating a flexible community space in the multinational and transnational neighborhood of Corona, Queens, which will serve as the movement’s headquarters. Engaging both local and international communities, as well as working with social service organizations, elected officials, and artists focused on immigration reform, Bruguera will examine growing concerns about the political representation and conditions facing immigrants.

immigrant-movement.us ✔

+Kinematic Zine


Exceptionally proud to be collaborating with Nicole Mauser on a hybrid essay, in the form of an online zine, found at www.kinematiczine.com. Content is being updated throughout the month of April. The paintings themselves are simply some of the best I’ve seen lately.

Go look see!

+Digital Dramaturgy

“Dear Eric and Patricia.
You took my car. I am happy for you on so many levels, but don’t disguise it as anything other than a half-assed gesture. I’m sure the act probably had some stale thrill of transgression. but please believe me, without your self- promoting twittering and FBing to the Saltz page no one would have given a flying f**k about it. Please, you are human beings – express yourselves through yourselves. You will be dead soon. Drive my car – drive it back – then leave it at that.
Is this sad excuse for self promotion and self-definition what you wish to leave for future generations? I quote you as you exited the car: “We thought it was part of the interactivity.” Is this Disney? And as for the rest of the digi-witterers – no more mentions of “Relational Aesthetics” or ‘RA’ or whatever you need to call it… Leave that to the librarians, accountants, and score keepers. Its art. It has no name – just like the void, no name. Do you think that Donald Judd had ‘Minimalist’ on his drivers-license? Your incessant babble is deafening, fearful, and boring. Please cease.”

- Clipped from Art Fag City [where you'll find all the appropriate links to this operatic composition; it's as charming as the letter above] -Clipped from NYMagazine [Jerry Saltz's Thing]

+Liam Gillick Coffee Cups

Minimalism Now

Feb 27, 2011

Rachel Harrison, sculptor
Miwon Kwon, Professor of Art History, UCLA
James Meyer, Associate Professor of Art History, Emory University
David Raskin, Professor of Art History, Theory, and Criticism, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

This panel puts the issue of Minimalism’s morphology and relevance to a noteworthy cast of scholars and artists. Harrison has exhibited internationally in leading venues. Kwon is the author of One Place After Another: Site-Specific Art and Locational Identity (MIT Press, 2002). Meyer is the author of Minimalism: Art and Polemics in the 1960s (Yale University Press, 2001). Raskin is the author of Donald Judd (Yale University Press, 2010).

+Conceptual Participation

“As a cultural theorist, I cannot over-emphasize the importance of concepts. They imprint our very cells—or at least mediate our understanding of them. Because of this conceptual emphasis, this kind of art has a more overtly democratic quality, an exploration and a possible merging of the consciousness of viewer and artist, or probably more appropriately, participant. Also, a great deal of complex verbiage arises with respect to these pieces and their justifications.”
- Clipped from Michael Crumb’s, “The Viewer As Participant

+Cynthia Mason’s “f**k yes”

  • You Can Touch Them

    You Can Touch Them

    Cindy Mason. 2010, latex paint and string, dimensions variable

  • Surface Entry (detail)

    Surface Entry (detail)

    Cindy Mason. 2009-2011, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Surface Entry

    Surface Entry

    Cindy Mason. 2009-2011, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Specimens (detail)

    Specimens (detail)

    Cindy Mason. 2009-2011, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Point (detail)

    Point (detail)

    Cindy Mason. 2010-11, porcelain, string, hot glue and pins, dimensions variable

  • Living Room

    Living Room

    Cindy Mason. 2010, gouache and ink on paper, 18 x 16 inches

  • I will give you what you do (n’t) want

    I will give you what you do (n’t) want

    Cindy Mason. 2011, gouache, ink, 23.75k gold, latex paint, hot glue, graphite and glitter on paper, 52 x 48 inches

  • Grotto VII_VIII

    Grotto VII_VIII

    Cindy Mason. 2009, ink, chalk, graphite, pencil shavings, gouache and oil on canvas, 2 panels 80 x 30 inches

  • Fake Breasts Look Painful

    Fake Breasts Look Painful

    Cindy Mason. 2010, latex paint and rope on wire mesh, 26 x 26 inches

  • Existence is Meaningful

    Existence is Meaningful

    Cindy Mason. 2010-11, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Existence is Meaningful (detail)

    Existence is Meaningful (detail)

    Cindy Mason. 2010-11, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Existence is Meaningful (detail)

    Existence is Meaningful (detail)

    Cindy Mason. 2010-11, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • Specimens

    Specimens

    Cindy Mason. 2009-2011, mixed media, dimensions variable

  • 47hr-12m-36.4s

    47hr-12m-36.4s

    Cindy Mason. 2011, pen and wire on canvas, 53 x 96 inches

In the exhibition “f**k yes,” the work of Cynthia Mason allows us to grasp an abundance of data by giving us methodical tools. Like those that we have used before, these tools are also for sorting memories, recomposing stories and merging parts and pieces from dissonant relationships. In our everyday lives, we call these tools maps, models, analytics and theories. Regardless of how familiar using Mason’s tools may seem, they constitute a communal means for working with an invented world. If this world were to convincingly exist, between us, we would need to be able to see evidence, with a chronology of events familiar enough that it could develop conversational exposure.

We can. It’s there.

Mason’s tools help us see patterns in her work that correspond to our own world. There are material gestures that hold similar formal qualities to the body, such as intestines, brains, skin and hair. And with the iteration and repetition of these forms comes a sense of cyclical clustering, migration, crumbling and regeneration. Shifting from macro to micro causes kinematic associations, as constellations of marks become the periphery of a galaxy and/or the intersections of urban planning. But in the case of this invented world, the patterns in Mason’s work describe not only its construction but the audience’s relationship to it. We are able to see that our relationship to Mason’s content is governed by our [access] devices: the tools themselves.

Yet, as often as Mason’s work attempts to fix its audience on the co-generation of a virtual landscape, via material experimentation, a critical undercurrent remains prescient. She questions her own methods: what is the value of an emulative tool? For instance, a computer is not a paintbrush but it can emulate one. Its gestures are programmable. Its user’s scope of cultural production seams nearly limitless. Through the conceptual alchemy of its use, the tools of a computer turn that which is real into that which is virtual. Furthermore, through the lens of computer technology, our own human behaviors become that much more unreal, our own histories that much more fictional.

It’s possible that Mason’s tools both acknowledge and challenge the virtual dominance of history infiltrating our daily lives, simply by suggesting their use wields results that will never become fully scriptable. Because in a world like Mason’s, the sciences can only be as empirical as the potential of the imagination, and our own intuitive organizations are powerfully reformative and compassionate.

We just have to see the potential.

F**k yes!

+Still a Favorite: Jonathan Meese Performing

I’ve posted this video before, back in the year 2009, to discuss the way “ideologies can assimilate and replicate almost any form and/or behavioral performance of another ideology in order to convert its user.” Regardless, I find myself constantly returning to this video in order to reconnect with the playful faculty of making things. Thank you, Mr. Meese. And thank you, Vernissage.TV.

+ART/IST SITES – ONGOING

EXHIBITION SITE

The New Museum has a wonderful online exhibition titled Free. The exhibition focuses on the fundamental changes that have occurred because of the Internet. The exhibition’s intention of exploring our changing notions of public space, via the apparatus of a “landscape of information,” is appropriately distributed and contained within the expansive medium that it’s reporting on and through. Regarding traditional modes of conceptual and discursive situating, the site/exhibition/catalog is well crafted/coded and the project runs October 20, 2010 ~ January 23, 2011. There are a number of prescient essays on the often heroic gestural qualities of those working on/with the Internet. Below, are a few images of a photo essay I’m particularly fond of by DIS, listed in the “blog” section. DIS documents the work and the art-going experience while borrowing conventions from stock photography.

Site designed by John Michael Boling and developed with Jonathan Vingiano.

Additionally, the following video was included discussing the shift of the curatorial from the museum world to the rhetoric of the media.

ARTIST SITE

There’s about as much sex appeal wrapped up in the design and implementation of this site as there is in Nick Cave’s bodily work. As well, SoundSuitShop has a particularly charming greeting paragraph that, in short, states: “This site and its product line were created to share the art of Nick Cave with a wider audience than his exhibitions can possibly reach.” Um, yeah.

Site designed by Faust and developed by Cartel Blanche.

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