Archive for the 'art' Category

25
Oct

Lumen from “Sonor et Visio” by Kell Black and Barry Jones


Lumen from “Sonor et Visio” by Barry Jones and Kell Black from Barry Jones on Vimeo.

24
Oct

Gas Zappers by Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung


GAS ZAPPERS is a series of interactive online art game that tackles climate change. The game’s protagonist is the polar bear—that victimized, yet cuddly symbol of global warming. Players embody the polar bear as it progresses through different climate change scenarios: Venice under water, a forest threatened by bulldozers, and an altercation with vicious oil derricks.

visit Gas Zappers

26
Aug

Deep Philosophical Questions by Alan Bigelow

Alan Bigelow recently completed a new digital story call “Deep Philosophical Questions”. Here is a link.

31
Jul

Jenny Holzer Projections at Mass MoCA

MASS MoCA - Jenny Holzer - Projections - Live stream

There is a live web cam feed of the installations here.

08
Jun

$150,000 will get you a Cindy Sherman print

Art Basel - The New York Times > Arts > Slide Show > Slide 7 of 8-1

The other day, I read an article in the NY Times about the Art Basel festival ( I like to keep my finger on the pulse of the art market) and stumbled on the recent sale of two Cindy Sherman prints.  Each went for $150,000, that’s $300,000 total.  I’m just saying …

03
Jun

being a vj

Last friday night, Robb (my partner in [ fladry + jones ] ) and I had a very successful night at Studio 1403 in Nashville.  We worked with various dj’s, the most famous of which was Justin Long from Chicago. I had an incredibly good time and have spent some time thinking about being a vj and what it means for my “art” practice.

There has been quite a bit of discussion / murmuring amongst artist as to whether or not vjing in a dance club counts as “art”.  I have wondered quite a bit about that myself.  After my experiences friday, I am convinced that being a vj (even a club vj) is an important and valid part of my artistic production.  I am even much more comfortable with the title vj now.  

The on the fly aesthetic decisions, the process, and the immediate audience response of being a vj is unlike anything else I have experienced as an artist.  It’s process art for the new century; Pollock as he should have been.  It is easily more pertinent and certainly more entertaining than performance art, and it comes with a beat you can dance to.  The non-art venue and the non-art audience does not stop the work from being art. It probably makes it more important.

I believe that live video performance is the perfect medium for our times and the vj is the perfect artist.  We process, manipulate, comment, and conceptualize the world we live in in real time. Our response to a world full of image and sound may be the only logical one

04
May

“whose utopia”

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I stumbled upon this video still from “Whose Utopia” by Cao Fei at the current Carnegie International website.   I have not seen the video myself, but I am extremely taken by this image.  Here is what the Carnegie site says about the piece:

“Set in a lightbulb factory in Foshan (and originally commissioned by electronics giant Siemens), the film Whose Utopia (2006-2007) might be read as a eulogy to China’s recent economic and manufacturing boom. Amid scenes dominated by almost hypnotic “mechanical ballets” of assembly-line processes and movements—neon tubes being soldered or tested, for example—there are sequences in which individual workers from the facility perform literal dances of their own. Dressed in decidedly non-company-issue clothing, these men and women are seen moving gracefully between the machines, like sprites consumed by an entirely personal, whimsical, and perhaps defiant choreography. Their escapist “purposeless” performances effect a stark contrast with seemingly relentless progress as the production of consumer goods continues unabated around them. The dances seem to bring a more spiritual dimension into the regular and no doubt less emotionally illuminating activities in the bulb factory.”

What a beautiful concept.  If anyone finds the video on-line, please let me know. 

02
May

dj olive at the whitney biennial

djolive.jpg

I’ve been going over the works and artists in this year’s whitney biennial and I was pleased to discover that one of my favorite djs, DJ Olive, is included (this is his second biennial).

“Using a room sized white tent furnished with cots, DJ Olive (Gregor Asch) creates an environment of deep ambient sounds with his most recent composition from the Sleeping Pill series, Triage.  The artist encourages visitors to quietly listen to his work, providing a respite from the external chaos of the city. “(taken  from the Whitney Biennial Site)

I’m really intrigued by the importance that sound now has in contemporary art.  It would have been hard to imagine the whitney biennial including the work of a “dj” with only a minimal art background just a few years ago (DJ Olive has collaborated with sound art pioneer Christian Marclay in the past).   I own DJ Olive’s ambient cd releases, buoy and sleep, so I have a sense of what Triage might sound like.  

I can’t help but wonder about the “installation” aspect of the piece.  I have a hard time imagining the average visitor to the whitney actually laying down and enjoying the sound.  The tent and the cots become more about the idea of rest and healing than to be actually used for such.  DJ Olive’s sleeping pill events seem to more effective in achieving his goals.

30
Apr

video podcasts from the 2008 whitney biennial

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The Whitney Biennial is always an incredibly controversial exhibition.  One of the goals of the show is to showcase the most important American art being made now.  There is no way to put together an exhibition with this mission without rubbing a lot of people the wrong way.  I know that my feelings are hurt every two years when I am not included.

This year’s installment comes with video podcasts available through iTunes. (subscribe here).  I’ve watched a couple of them so far and they seem to be interesting.  I wish I could go to NYC this year and see the show, but since I can’t, these podcast help.

11
Apr

Paul Chan at the New Museum – Remix Opportunity

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The New Museum of Contemporary Art is currently presenting an exhibition by Paul Chan called “The 7 Lights”.  On the exhibition’s site, Chan has made the source files for his animations available for download.

02
Apr

drinkpeedrinkpeedrinkpee

drinkpee.jpgdrinkpeedrinkpeedrinkpee is a project by Britta Riley and Rebecca Bray about the role our bodies play in larger ecosystems.The project includes an installation and a DIY kit for turning your pee into fertilizer. The installation will be on view and the DIY kits will be available at the exhibition at EyeBeam in NYC.  

I have to admit that I am more than a little grossed out by this project.  However, I think I am supposed to be.  I admire the goal of Riley and Bray in their work, but I wonder how effective it is in the end.  It seems that the DIY fertilizer kit is more effective and useful than the installation,  but I can’t help but wonder if the fertilizer kit is art. ( I’m not sure it matters to Riley and Bray).

Tackling big social and scientific issues is certainly not an easy thing to do with art.  Politically engaged art works tend to be overly didactic or scientific and end up alienating the viewer (I know from experience).

Still, its nice to see an artwork that is about drinking pee. 




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