+Cinthia Marcelle is a BIG Winner

Cinthia Marcelle just won $!00,000 from the Future Generation Art Prize. Due to the portability of her medium, you can see a compilation of her works below, embedded from her vimeo page. In a monoculture of hyper distribution, portability is everything. I suspect it’s only a matter of time before Ms. Marcelle’s methods are assimilated by some viral advertising campaign. In the mean time, enjoy them in their beautifully pure infancy stage of your relationship with her work (mentioned as though she hasn’t been included in major exhibitions such as, Biennal de la Habana, Cuba, in 2006).

CRUZADA from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.

475 VOLVER from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.

FONTE 193 from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.

CONFRONTO from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.

VOLTA AO MUNDO from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.

+If You Can’t Make It Fake It

A hilarious bit of discursive theatrics. My favorite part is undeniably the correlation between modernism and the father. Jesus… I think we’re distant cousins.

A little search helps turn up additional Jayson Musson, or Hennessy Youngman, productions. For instance, he has an album available here, and additional humorous paintings and drawings on his site.

Dear Jayson, I hope you make it.


YouTube video originally seen on ArtFagCity.

+Color Field Paintings [Enabled Popups]

These color field paintings, by Michael Demers, are perhaps one of my favorite works of art I’ve seen and shared in the last five years. There’s definitely something to say for portability. Additional works touching on time and programmatic behavior can be found on his site.

+Just Links

With a number of new projects being produced [with several collaborators] these entries have been few and far between lately. However, I’d like to offer a listing of extremely interesting productions and projects to help occupy your never ending search for reflective interest.

The Charley Wooley Radio Show on ArtReview.com

Episode 1: He talks with Kathy Grayson of Deitch Projects and artist, critic and art historian Svetlana Alpers. I specifically enjoy Grayson’s chic-slacker performance of revealing the Deitch underworld and proposing the millionaire as mystic-misfit-support-unit [or "public servant"... otherwise known as subversive "advertising"] and the pathetic realization that she should have been “hanging out with collectors.” Perhaps this pathetic scenario is a charming little model of an imaginary class that was doomed to collapse. I do appreciate her “street art” correlation to “Green Day.”

[wpaudio url="http://tobeyalbrightandfriends.com/morewriting/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Radio_Show_Interview.mp3"]

Listen to additional episodes here.

http://unknownjournal.wordpress.com/

This art news source has been given previous attention real estate in a previous post, but the consistent coverage demands a return visit. I’ll say no more.

A Fly Artist Statement

Artist statements always seem to embody a sense of hopelessness as those that craft them absolve their responsibility in communicating with language by claiming that what they do can only be done with the only medium they feel comfortable using [i.e. the excuse 'the work speaks for itself']. In a short interview on the brilliant Best Made Projects blog, Shawn Davis explains his work to Peter Buchanan-Smith in a poetically practical way that will hopefully inspire similar approaches to the statement craft of visual artists. I’d also like to propose the following interview as a charming little explicatory metaphor [through fishing] to that complicated relationship between the pursuit of a personalized passionate activity and the abstracting process of representing it as a consumable product. Additionally, the following might make a nice little user’s manual to confronting and coping with the anxieties of producing new patterns in an over-produced and over-hyped ‘art world.’

Read the entire interview here, please.

PBS: People will spend upwards of four figures for your flies. What draws someone to spend that type of money?
SD: While it may be hard for most people to appreciate the particulars in my craftsmanship, I hope the artistry of my pieces is something anyone can appreciate.  An artistic salmon fly couples beauty with danger, a poisoned apple to a fish.  I try to stretch that tension to the extreme in a vision elegantly simple.  It is my hope that, even if people have no idea /how/ I do what I do, one look at my flies will convince them of /why/ I do what I do.

PBS: Your flies have tremendous character. They are almost like actual living creatures. Do you improvise this as you make each fly, or have you a “character sketch” in mind before you start?
SD: Many artistic tiers crank out hundreds of different patterns per year, often in my eyes merely slight variations of each other.  I try to make each fly a reinvention of the art, completely different from the last.  That takes time.  Often a pattern will gestate in my mind for years.  Occasionally I’ll jot down some notes when I think of a unique technique, just so I don’t forget it, without any idea if or how it will eventually make it into a finished pattern.  My /Fire/ fly is a great example of my creative process, which is one of constant revision.  I wanted to make a fly that looked like it was on fire, but all I had was a color scheme.  After tying several unsuccessful patterns based on somewhat traditional methods, I finally developed something quite new and yet refreshingly simple, forming pheasant crests and tinsel into flames that enveloped the body of the fly in strikingly flame-like fashion.  One day, when I have time (that which is so elusive), I will compose a photo essay of my creative process for a piece from start to finish.

PBS: This might be a stupid question but most flies are designed to catch fish. Are yours?
Artistic salmon flies arose from early tiers’ attempts to mimic the beautiful colors in baitfish.  While the art has drifted significantly from those roots, and a few of the most daring tiers have even suggested that artistic flies need no longer be functional as fishing implements, I think functionality is essential to the character of a fly.  If it doesn’t catch fish, then what does it do?  Now, my finished flies are permanently mounted in domes and on necklace chains and will never touch water, but I’m confident that they would meet that challenge were they put to it.

PBS: When you fish, what type of fly do you use?
Ironically, I typically use extremely simple patterns when I fish.  My favorite flies are those of my own invention, and I have a few fishing patterns that have been more successful for me than the old standbys in their class.  While they are infinitely simpler than my artistic creations, I’m every bit as proud of them as I am of my presentation flies.  I apply my creativity every bit as tenaciously to tying practical flies as I do to tying artistics.

Popular Unrest Episodic Drama

Popular Unrest is a brilliant film narrative underscoring popular notions of community through the failings of capital exchange and cultural over saturation. The episodic film was created by Melanie Gilligan and will be shown at Chisenhale Gallery in London, Kölnischer Kunstverein in Cologne, Walter Phillips Gallery at The Banff Centre in Alberta, and the Presentation House Gallery in North Vancouver. You can watch each episode of the film here, as this is a highly recommended exercise in exchange potentialities.

+Art and Work

I like to imagine that collapsing the economy is extremely important for establishing additional relational value structures and ultimately encouraging more sustainable ways to survive together in the 21st Century. [If you're a return-reader, you are well aware of this and are probably tired of hearing me say it.]

Cue the presciently [somewhat] well supported efforts of Temporary Services, who are comprised of Brett Bloom, Marc Fischer and Salem Collo-Julin, and have been producing exhibitions, events, projects, and publications since 1998. Their latest project is Art Work : A National Conversation About Art, Labor, and Economics, and is directly concerned with the livelihood of artists in the Untited States of America.

Their efforts to establish a professional knowledge base and platform for concrete career sustainability is an incredibly transgressive action for the fine art industry [including the aspects of it that don't involve class theatrics: Jeffrey Deitch/Biennales/Art Fairs].

Finally, an organization that helps artists do what they’re not inherently good at, because they’re mostly arrested by their own intuitive organizations.

On the projects download page, you can download the publication in various formats, making the consumption of the support-oriented information extremely easy to access.

If you are an art educator, please make this publication project part of your curriculum, IMMEDIATELY.

Additionally, you can learn more about Temporary Services and the Art Work publication at Rhizome.org.

[ratings]

+BEFORE CGI

The Vision of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, also known as The Miracle of the Lactation

The theatrical intentions of the realistic have been in place for quite some time, and the masterful craftsmanship of Spanish artists during the golden age are a superior model for this understanding. The exhibition The Sacred Made Real:
Spanish Painting and Sculpture 1600 – 1700
, closes this coming Sunday, so if you happen to be in London, please go for me.

[A video of the exhibition's curator, Xavier Bray, is embedded below or here.]

[ratings]

+ Nudes

I prefer to not say anything about this one… [too good to talk about].

[ratings]

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