Monday, January 26, 2015

Caught in a Blizzard

I am just now in 2015 writing again. I have moved my actual physical home and studio address a few times and am trying to restart this blog. My misadventures in updating the info in my account matches the velocity of the winds outside my studio window this blustery blizzardy day. I have posted an old sculpture of mine I call "The Portuguese."  Her glance over her shoulder captures my own wariness as I try to move forward. If all goes well, I shall continue with a new energy and approach. Wish me well.

The Empress of Outer Bloggonia

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Text, Characters, and Fonts of Wisdom

 
440 Gallery is currently hosting their annual juried theme show this month. The theme this year is "Text" and there was a lively opening reception on the evening of June 30.  Dan McDonald was the roving photographer and caught some of the artists in front of their work.  
The juror this year is Susan Fleminger, artist, educator, curator and Deputy Director for Visual Arts and Arts-in-Education at the Abrons Arts Center ofHenry Street Settlement.
Dan M. caught Susan, Gallery member Gail Flanery (in summer polka dots) and Aleksander Betko in a lighthearted moment.  
Betko is the artist whose painting of a guitarist against a wall of backstage graffiti hangs in the center of the exhibition.
 

Na'eem Douglas stands before his monolithic triptych "Brooklyn Love" with stenciled text that includes iconic Brooklyn neighborhoods.  440 is a small gallery and this piece fills the back wall with a dramatic grid of black, white and red. 

Minjoo Lee  smiles before her video from 2008, Untitled II
Untitled II from Minjoo Lee on Vimeo.


John Kesling's drawing "Mickey's Wish" made me laugh out loud.  A pig-like elephanty creature with the smiling head of Mickey Mouse prances through a landscape with plaid grass and a smiley face sun.  The speech balloon (it is a text show after all ) proclaims "I will murder you if you grow up" which  I find to be a profound discourse regarding all that is Disney: from the bloated expansion of the copyright laws to protect the corporate elephantine mouse to the whole infantile fetish thing suggested by a Disney Honeymoon 
 
Miriam Schaer's hand embroidered baby dress was arresting. It is the childless woman who is considered cold and odd From the Series Baby (not) on board: the final Prejudice. Using  traditional womanly skills to mark this batiste gown in scarlet letters, the artist quietly levels an accusation that strikes home in this stroller clogged neighborhood.
 I will close with an image of a new little black and white quilt that signifies 440 Gallery.  This remarkable digital text is our name and place in the magical universe of surf and fun.  Click with your appy little Calderish mobile device and it opens the door to home:



 


Saturday, July 2, 2011

Memory of Memoir

Took down my show yesterday at 440 Gallery. Bittersweet exhaustion. For over a year (many years actually) have been downsizing and attempting various forms of retrieving and distilling the past while simultaneously living in the present and planning a future. Distilling is a good word: creating some intoxicating elixir from harvested acres of grain and fat fruit.  The exhibit was a revelation even to me.  Seeing 20 years of transformation in one room.  A few highlights: A wonderful review in Pintamanuel . Having my sisters Tomi and Teresa here harmonizing on songs we used to sing. My daughter Frances and a talented new friend, Alex Sheets reading from journals. A slide show featuring the history of art according to my life. A grand benefit party with Spoke the Hub for the Consolation Center in Haiti.   An evening of short films curated by Sarah Greenleaf. A full month of wonders and lots of wine and hummus.

I will now indulge my reminiscing ego and post images from the show.
First my slide curtain.  Boxes and boxes and boxes of these square wafers of old documentation.  I had to explain to some young visitors not only what exactly slides mean to an artist of a certain age but also what slides are in general.

So these, I explained, are small photographic transparencies that you put in a machine called a "projector" that projects them with light onto a screen. They can become huge with this projection.  This is the way we used to document our work. We used to have to make several copies, some for our own records and others to send out to galleries and schools or to apply for grants and residencies.  There are over a thousand in this curtain and all of them relate to my art.  They are mostly photographs of work I have done but there are also a few images of my influences and some photos of people whose portraits I painted or sketched.  There are images of studies that have never been exhibited and there are images from residencies: studio scenes, scenery or gatherings at lunch.  I provided a few magnifying glasses so people could see the work up close. I also had a slide show, using my vintage Kodak Carousel slide projector, showing early work and influences.  The Carousel projector was a big part of my professional and personal life.  Every family reunion featured "The Slide Show" of past reunions.  It was a communal album viewing.  More recently it was featured in an episode of Mad Men.  The large transparencies are cells from a shadow theater piece I created and performed with a fantastic crew in Ankara Turkey for SanArt '92: "Golgeli Oyunu" This is the image we printed on the t-shirts we sold and also on the cassettes with the soundtrack (remember cassettes?).

One side of the gallery was installed with early work, some from the 90's,  exhibited in Turkey where I lived at the time. This painting is one of a triptych and was sold during the show to an old friend who I hadn't seen in several years... an appropriate exchange for a show called "memoir".  It was painted at a time when I poured my guts on a canvas.  I wanted the words in red to signal blood or lipstick.

I placed a large antique desk in the middle of the gallery with the intention of working everyday on my actual memoir.  I had begun a graphic novel a few years back and realized the drawings were taking so much longer than the words.  I just wanted to write down a lot of things before I forgot the details, and so that is what I am doing now, trying to finish this accounting of my first 25 years.  Here is an image of the desk with the bust of "The Portuguese" one of my early ventures in sculpture about 10 years ago.  I had a small crystal ball on the desk, an orb of real quartz crystal that held reflections of past, present and future.
And so, finally, from the more recent past, I included some small masks and a terracotta tile wall hanging that I did last year in Vallauris. This residency was for ceramic artists and an opportunity for me to explore the medium.  I had never done glazes before and so made something of a sampler, trying out various glazing techniques. The seven small masks "Homage to Vallauris"  were portraits of people I saw in the village there.

My most recent piece was a circular painting I began a few years ago and worked on, off and on.  It is a lot of detailed painting and drawing and I become a bit daffy if I work too long a stretch on all the gnarly little details.  I call it "Face Time" and it is in the tumbling block quilt pattern with each diamond shaped facet filled with an eye or a mouth or some detail of a face.  The faces are of people who have come into the gallery or pictures of friends and family, some from old sepia photographs of ancestors.    I took advantage of the circle canvas and painted the images at various angles so there is no "right way" to hang it.  I shifted it's orientation throughout the run of the show.  I originally wanted to mount it on a clock mechanism to rotate slowly, one cycle over 24 hours.  It would be a very subtle clock.  Since it didn't sell at the show, I may still do that. It was very interesting for me to see the change in my work from a voluptuous expressive style to the more recent (the last five years or so) geometric order.  It is the tight wire tension between order and chaos that that I have been balancing on for most of my life. Order seems to be ascending but it's funny, like the old yin yang gang at the ok corral, there is absolute chaos at the heart of order and a kind of calm order in the center of chaos.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

An Evening in Chelsea


The gallery at Mixed Greens  is currently showing Joan Linder's phenomenal drawings in "Cost of Living".  These meticulously rendered images of weeds, a corpse, an old mattress, and documents are both powerful and sensitive in their execution.  Linder restricts herself to the traditional tools of pen and ink on paper, and uses a restrained technique of building mass with repeated short linear strokes.  The graceful contours of leaf and blossom belie the compulsive control  in their execution. Table 8 (cadaver) is, ironically, one of the more lush images.  It is a dissected body,  recorded from visits to a gross anatomy lab in a medical school. Drawn in a warm floral palette of reds, oranges and yellows, it conveys life more viscerally (literally) than her massive flowers limned in monochrome blues and green. 

The artist's obsessively drawn resume of Louise Bourgeois consists of four large pages, with two columns each, listing Bourgois' CV in tiny hand lettered script.  In her painstaking chronicle of the creative life of this icon of contemporary art, Linder's homage is  both wondrous, humbling and rather uncomfortably masochistic.   The few ink stains splattering the work might as well be blood. A table strewn with mundane paper clutter is actually precisely copied replicas of lists, receipts,  bank statements, school reports and junk mail.  Looking a bit too much like my own unattended desk, the trope l'oeil effect is almost playful.  But Linder's excruciating mimicry subverts the seemingly innocuous detritus of financial bondage and family responsibilities.  Each scrap of paper signifies a decision, a bond or a distraction that together constitute the artist's, or anyone's, "cost of living".  The show closes May 28.  Mixed Greens is located at 531 W. 26th St. 1st fl.




Party Time!
Ella Yang took Karen Flatow and me to the City Arts  first year anniversary party last night.  If you haven't checked out this publication yet, it is a newspaper listing theater, music and art gallery/museum exhibitions and events in Manhattan.  There are reviews and articles and advertising at a reasonable rate.  Ella was impressed with the response she got from an ad for one of her recent shows.  Held at the Chelsea Art Museum in a grand upper gallery hung with the monumental painted gestures of Jean Miotte, the affair was festive and chic.  Flashbulbs were discretely popping, we spotted Matthew Modine chatting with the art crowd.  There was a grand piano playing, then strings; a group called The Audubon Ensemble was  barely heard above the convivial din of the crowd.  Violinist Corinne Ramey
laughed and said they could barely hear themselves.


 Ella, Karen and I held court at  one of the small cocktail tables, We sipped Pinot Noir and Karen had the City Arts cocktail (vodka infused with culture).

We talked the art talk: Sizing up studio real estate, flirting with galleries, escaping to residencies and the pros and cons of sacrificing children on the alters of art. There were no name tags but we met a man who called himself "The Wallet".  Says he buys art.  He copied our contact info onto his Blackberry.  We'll see.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Exhibition



March 27
Exhibition today.  My piece with tiles still not hung. To meet Andre this morning at 8 am to hang by the reception at 11 am.  The tiles just came out of the kiln yesterday at 5pm.  I hadn't yet assembled them into a "quilt" and Nancy helped me with the tedious tying on of ties and a trip to the hardware store to get more supplies, including hanging rods..  Also, took Dawn's suggestion to heart and separated the two colors into white porcelain and red terracotta.  They had shrunk at different rates and the look wasn't coming together with the pattern I had envisioned. My clothes for the reception will be the same things I've worn all month, but clean.  Glad I remembered to pick up my laundry last night.


Finally hung and the crowd arrives



Jason Walker's blue alter ego embodies Vallauris




Dawn Whitehand's work included sculptures of the chimneys on the roofs of Vallauris

Nancy Aleo displayed a series of paintings on traditional Mexican bark paper.  The shape of the offering bowls beneath the paintings were based on a seashell.



My wall of 17 little masks reflecting the diversity of the area

An exercise in techniques: underglaze paints and pencils, china paint, scraffito on a colored slip, decals, building up the clay surface, cutting through the clay...

Dawn Whitehand also made a series of nesting forms based on a life form found on the beach at Golfe Juan. 




Across a Tender Ocean, my porcelain quilt with paint and paper collage.

Nancy Aleo's work touched on her vision quest and the spiritual path she continued in the foothills of the Maritime Alps.  This was drawn in white ink over black gesso.

Jason's cicadas and owl



Master Class


March 22
Took Jason's 2 day master class.  His focus was primarily painting on slabs.  The clay was porcelain and all the participants worked alongside after he demonstarted his process.  He did the entire workshop in French, which was a relief for Dale who usually has to translate everything.  Jason studied French in college but has been working with software before his arrival to sharpen his language skills.  The participants seemed happy to help him out with any language glitches.  Most spoke a litte english.  There were a few Australians in the mix as well.  I made a few small plates.  We also did a scratch technique on a painted black surface.  



Of Porcelain and Perfection


March 20
Last night we loaded the kiln for a high firing.  Dawn did some calculations and we are behind scheduling for kiln firings in order to have all our work done by the show.  Both Dawn and Nancy directed the placement and loading.  Jason's two large pieces went in last. He was a bit bummed because his penguin had a fine hairline crack at the wing and showed ridges at the back where he had joined the slab.   The penguin was from porcelain, a notoriously difficult clay to start with. All clays are unique to their source: one can get to know and master the porcelain of one area yet have to learn all over again the idiosyncrasies of a porcelain from another geographic region.   He trashed the penguin, breaking it up in pieces.  He had put a lot of work into a drawing on the surface of the penguin, with the face like the nose of the Concord and airplane wings.  He had drawn with underglaze pencils  a portrait of Strobe, Dawn's friend who is staying in Vallauris. Jason had drawn him with a slightly manic expression brandishing a gun shooting CO2 molecules out of the air.     


One of the first things I did was a portrait head of Dale and after it was fired I shaped wire glasses for it.  I did it just to get the feel of the clay and to jump start my process. It didn't make it into the show.

Jason's Penguin that never made it out of the studio.
The master at work on a blue self portrait