Contrary to this post and possibly contrary to reality, unless she has a trust fund or a sugar daddy,a friend of Laura Castellanos (bunny artist) has a message of good cheer taped to her refrigerator:
Archives for 2010
Amy Greenfield dropped by YouTube
Volume, volume volume. I feel for YouTube. Its empire is massive and hard to police. Should it take an anything-goes attitude, the government will step in. On the other hand, over-control incites outrage from the suppressed.
Cast in point. Fabulous video artist Amy Greenfield was kicked off the site for “violating community standards.” Whoa. Protest letter from the National Coalition Against Censorship and the Electronic Frontier Foundation here.
Money quote:
For all of their pronouncements in favor of free speech, Google and other Internet intermediaries are fast becoming the new arbiters of morality – and setting the tone of what is acceptable and what is not. There is no First Amendment to protect our speech in such communities, but that is why it is much more important to get involved and express our outrage when artistic expression using a female body is booted off the site – or put in a special X-rated section – as pornographic and offensive.
Matt Sheridan Smith – flotsam and jetsam
Matt Sheridan Smith had one of those 3-minute Shakespeare installations that Western Bridge now features. Besides a central exhibit, Western Bridge has taken to offering now-you-see-them, now-you’ve-missed them exhibits upstairs. They last two weeks. Considering that Western Bridge is open Thursday to Saturday, that means the audience has six days to hop to it or regret its choices at its leisure.
I saw Matt Sheridan Smith’s Flotsam and Jetsam late Saturday afternoon, the last day. It was riveting, but fortunately for those who failed to stop by, his is the kind of riveting that can be appreciated online through images. One of Sol LeWitt’s better gambits was to bury a drawing, refuse to say where but offer a certificate of ownership to whoever was smart enough to snap it up. Of all his drawings, this is one I think of most, the one I never saw.
Flotsam and Jetsam is a remake of a sculpture Smith presented at Lisa Cooley in 2009,
Self-portrait (golden sections). Reviewing that show, the astute Marie-Adele Moniot is worth quoting:
Self-portrait (golden sections), the “heart of the show” according to
the gallery’s press materials, is a series of pedestals arranged in a
sort of postmodern Stonehenge in the center of the room. Smith made each
pedestal according to the “golden ratio,” measuring the proportions of
his own body and transferring them to plywood. Though he literally puts
himself on display, the various shapes and sizes still seem to conceal
something essential about the artist, his process and the works’ import
as stand-ins for the body. (more)
At Western Bridge were the same arrangement of pedestals:
This time out, however, they’re going down. In the corner of the room was a sack of cement.
At the end of the day on Saturday, as the exhibit drew to a close, Smith mixed the cement, opened the pedestals and poured it in. Two he dumped in the Sound, as jetsam. One might have been rescued, to serve as a bench in front of Western Bridge. (Flotsam.) Whether he’d dispose of the final pedestal or recycle it had not, late Saturday afternoon, been determined.
As with his exhibit in New York, the pedestals served as stand-ins for his body.
The shift in meaning, from last year to the present, when the recession grinds on and opportunities for artists to make any sort of living recede before us, is haunting.
F. Scott Fitzgerald:
(via)
Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter – tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther … And one fine morning –
So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.
Unlike Gatsby, artists are rapidly losing faith in that future. They see losses – what they can no longer afford, what they’ll never have, what they’ll have to do to survive and continue to be artists. Will they jetsam their work or park it to be retrieved later, like flotsam left after a wreck?
D.W. W.D. Snodgrass wrote in a similar vein about his child, following a bitter divorce:
Heart’s Needle, Part 5
Winter again and it is snowing;
Although you are still three,
You are already growing
Strange to me.You chatter about new playmates, sing
Strange songs; you do not know
Hey ding-a-ding-a-ding
Or where I goOr when I sang for bedtime,
Fox
Went out on a chilly night,
Before I went for walks
And did not write;You never mind the squalls and storms
That are renewed long since;
Outside, the thick snow swarms
Into my printsAnd swirls out by warehouses, sealed,
Dark cowbarns, huddled, still,
Beyond to the blank field,
The fox’s hillWhere he backtracks and sees the paw,
Gnawed off, he cannot feel;
Conceded to the jaw
Of toothed, blue steel
And while on the subject of the melancholy passage of time, the invaluable, essential Western Bridge is six years old. When launched by Bill and Ruth True, they said they saw it as a 10-year project. Recently, they speculated that it might conclude at eight. That leaves two years. Tick, tick.
Mike Simi – get a grip
Artist teams – rare in Seattle but gaining ground
In the West, even artists are rugged individuals who tend to go it alone. Although those who find strength in numbers are especially rare in Seattle, they’re gaining ground.
Here’s a history of who stands out.
1. Buster Simpson: In the late 1970s, he was key to coming up with the public art concept of the design team. Now that the concept is ubiquitous, it generates more than its share of timid art, but Simpson’s version continues to stand out. He changes partners with nearly every job and makes the process of collaboration part of his performance.
Vertical Planters. (Image via)
2. The studio glass movement is nothing but teamwork, yet a single star almost always tops the credit line. Not in Flora Mace/ Joey Kirkpatrick‘s studio. Life and art mates, they have made it work for more than 30 years.
After the debut of Mace and Kirkpatrick, years went by. Not a peep from anything close to a successful team. Then, in 2002, a couple appeared who named themselves after a tool known for its usefulness in first drafts.
3. Lead Pencil. (Annie Han and Daniel Mihalyo) Skating on the line edge of art & architecture and claiming both. Like Mace and Kirkpatrick, life partners.
Under the Surface, 2008, charcoal/paper, 72 x 60 inches
Since 2005, more good collaborators have been making their mark than at any time in the city’s art history. Aside from two artists who joined forces briefly, these new group thinkers are all male. Not a female in the bunch, or even a female on a team.
4. Sutton/Beres/Culler: (John Sutton, Ben Beres and Zac Culler) Comedy from the heart, formalism from the brain: Their performances, documentary photos and installations are moving them onto the national stage.
Dumanish 1 2009 – rowing on a local river that makes non-musical use of the term, heavy metal.
5. Eli Hansen. Because Hansen made his Seattle debut working with his already famous brother, Oscar Tuazon, many felt he was little more than Tuazon’s assistant. Two Seattle galleries (Howard House and Ambach & Rice), offered to represent him, but only if he brought his brother along.
Here is where Scott Lawrimore (Lawrimore Projects) shines. He is not distracted by resume. He could see right past Tuazon’s glow to Hansen’s gold. Lawrimore offered Hansen representation by himself and with any partners he wants to take on. So far, these partners have included childhood
friends Joey Piecuch and Herman Beans.
Notes Hansen on the LP Web site:
We are
brothers and friends first, artists second…We know each other’s
weaknesses, sadness, and confusion…We work in the same way we have
always worked together–as a community and as a family.
Hansen and Piecuch, I’m not paranoid because I’m high, 2009
6. Fred Muram and Mike Simi: They want to be art partners, but it’s hard when they each do their best work alone. Unlike its members, this team has yet to prove itself. If they do, it will have to be by long distance, as Muram has moved to Chicago.
(Muram left, Simi on ladder. Image via)
7. Sol Hashemi and Jason Hirata: Brilliant both alone and together. The James Harris Gallery recently picked both up, but as individuals. Harris said he isn’t interested in collaborations, which leaves the pair free to work together wherever else they choose.
Hirata & Hashemi, The Dirty Shed Project.
Know others I’ve forgotten and/or missed? Please note them in the comments.
Thanks!
He who digs newspapers…
Can use them as a personal shield. (They work even when read upside down.)
Fred Muram, from his series, Kissing the Ceiling.