Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2008

Museum Mile Festival on June 3rd


Taken from the official Museum Mile Festival website:

One day a year, for the past 29 years, nine of the country's finest museums, all ones that call Fifth Avenue home, collectively open their doors for free to New Yorkers and visitors for a mile-long block party and visual art celebration. This traffic-free, music- and art-filled celebration fills the street and sidewalks of Fifth Avenue from 82nd to 105th street, the mile now officially designated as Museum Mile. Over 50,000 visitors attend the festival annually.

This year's 30th annual festival kicks off at Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum with an opening ceremony, at 5:45pm, on the steps of its landmark building on Fifth Avenue @ 91st Street.

Plus, follow the mile with street muralist De La Vega – grab a piece of chalk and make your mark!

I think the chalk-drawing is meant for children, but screw that - I fully intend to get my chalkin' on!

Tuesday, June 3rd from 6:00-9:00pm
Fifth Avenue from 82nd to 105th street

Walton Ford


Press Release from Paul Kasmin Gallery:
With meticulous detail, Ford's work depicts animals embodying degrees of personification in the context of isolated historical events. Transient moments recalled in Ford's work comment on, in his words, "the cultural history of our relationship with animals." Ford is especially interested in the perceptions of animals by humans as evidenced by documentation. After researching specific stories, Ford offers his interpretation—sometimes exaggerating the animal's supposed humanness and in other instances, stripping the animal of imposed metaphors, and thereby restoring the candor of the animal's bestial state. The anthropomorphic nature of Ford's animals is often compared to the work of artist, John J. Audubon, one of Ford's many influences.
At Paul Kasmin Gallery (293 Tenth Ave.) until July 3rd

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

And so did Heidi's.

Heidi knows what this girl likes!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Heidi Vanderlee '**************@gmail.com'
Date: Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 10:39 PM
Subject: please tell me you love both of these things
To: Arminda Klier '************@gmail.com'


http://nymag.com/nyxny
--
Heidi Vanderlee(/slice)
Tiny Mix Tapes
www.tinymixtapes.com

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here is the gist of the link Heidi sent, if you are too lazy to hover your mouse and click:
New York mag brings to you this summer,
  • Indie Rock Trivia Night (with host Zach Galifianakis and musical guest Les Savy Fav, Highline Ballroom on May 21st @ 8pm, tix on sale now)
  • Best Rooftop Party Ever (tix on sale June 2008)
  • Highbrow Backyard Barbeque (tix on sale July 2008)
  • Bad Art Auction (tix on sale November 2008)
  • Indie Rock Karaoke Returns Again (tix on sale January 2009)

Chrissy's email made my day.

They all sound lovely, Christine. Now we just need to plan a time to go to all of these!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Christine Huhn '***********@gmail.com'
Date: Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 7:28 PM
Subject: exhibits
To: Mindy Klier '**********@gmail.com'


1. http://www.icp.org/site/c.dnJGKJNsFqG/b.3639335/
(this one, you'd have to pay.. 8$ I think it is. so I can go it alone
if you're not interested)
-there's also the MFA show at ICP which is free

2. http://www.teamgal.com/exhibitions/131
of course! duh!

3. http://www.nrgallery.com/index1.php
pretty excited about this one.

4. http://www.bellwethergallery.com/current_01.cfm?fid=495
Tableau's! Yessss.

5. http://www.phhfineart.com/main.html
Jeff Olsen, North Woods
makes me feel like home, in PA.

6. http://www.luhringaugustine.com/index.php?mode=current#
OMG OMG!!! I LOVE Gregory Crewdson.
his lighting is unbelievable
4/5 - 5/3

7. http://www.jenkinsjohnsongallery.com/exhibitions/08yoon/yoon_thumbs.htm
Finally, this will be over, so I don't think we'll get to see it.. but
it sure is awesome!!

AND, I love the ones you wanna see. Especially the horizon one.
I thought that was a good amount, otherwise I would look into some
painting exhibits.

Lastly...
NEED TO SEEEEE
http://www.blackandwhiteartgallery.com/exhibition-w.html
dioramas!!!

--
Christine Huhn
Brooklyn, NY

Monday, April 21, 2008

Mark, come back.

There is a gallery exhibit just especially for you!



PRESS RELEASE:

"Caren Golden Fine Art is pleased to present Mirror Universe, the first solo exhibition by Devorah Sperber with the gallery. Mirror Universe will feature an entirely new body of work by Sperber based on images from the television series Star Trek. The title, Mirror Universe, alludes to the 1967 Star Trek episode Mirror, Mirror in which a transporter mishap swaps the crew of the Enterprise with evil counterparts, trapping them in a “savage parallel universe.” The concept of a mirror or parallel universe is a dominant theme in the show, and, in keeping with this metaphor, many of the works incorporate mirrors to view the work. For Sperber the exhibition is an opportunity to look at the relationship between popular science and art, and how they relate to larger metaphysical issues. In particular, she is interested in how consciousness and the act of seeing create the illusion of a stable, predictable, singular world."

Word.

Mirror Universe: March 20 - April 26, 2008
539 West 23rd Street

Simply want.


Stephan Floyd's work isn't on display right now, but can I just say that I really love these Hurricane Portraits? I emailed him asking the price and he said they were $250 a pop for the originals. It was tempting...

Gary Panter: Pictures from the Psychedelic Swamp: 1972 – 2001


Cool Hunting did it, yet again. This time, it's trippy. Here is what Cool Hunting had to say:
Fans of Pee Wee’s Playhouse, RAW and SLASH magazines and the comic character Jimbo know and love the work of Gary Panter. You probably know it too, having seen his “jagged lines and surreal cartoons” in magazines, on TV and on the internet too. “Pictures from the Psychedelic Swamp: 1972 – 2001” a micro-mini retrospective of thirty years of drawings, sculptures, painting and installations opening at Clementine Gallery tonight. The show was inspired by the imminent release of the “Gary Panter: the Book” a two volume, 686-page, full-color monograph published by PictureBox. You can also catch Panther's work at the Aldrich through 31 August 2008. See below for details.
4 April-10 May 2008
Clementine Gallery
623 West 27th Street

Sze Tsung Leong: Horizons


Cool Hunting occasionally brings things to me I decide I need (like Bananagrams, which I just purchased today). Thanks to their RSS feed, this exhibit is now on my to-do list:
Over the past seven years, Sze Tsung Leong has produced a series of photographs called "Horizons," which provide an expansive view of different environments from across the globe. On view at the Yossi Milo Gallery in New York through 17 May 2008, "Horizons" consists of over sixty works each measuring 14x 24 inches.
Born in Mexico City in 1970, Sze Tsung Leong spent his childhood between Mexico, Britain, and the United States and this conglomerate of cultures is evident in his photographs. Regardless of their geography (including Mexico City, Cairo, Tokyo, or Inner Mongolia), Leong manages to connect rivers, cityscapes and industrial zones into a consistently beautiful accumulation of textures and colors.
"Horizons" - 3 April through 17 May 2008
Yossi Milo Gallery: 525 West 25th Street

Free: 'Wordless Music' at the Whitney

My oh my, I really dropped the ball this month. My email inbox is to the brim with my daily newsletters that I have left unopened and I have bookmarked a few things that I wanted to do, but never posted. Let's catch up, shall we?

Fridays in June are looking pretty good, thanks to the Wordless Music series being put on at the Whitney.

This is what Brooklyn Vegan told me:

At the Whitney's invitation, we asked four of our favorite groups-The Berg Sans Nipple, A Sunny Day in Glasgow, Prefuse 73, and Times New Viking -to do one Friday-night set apiece at the museum's indoor/outdoor Lower Gallery space. We then invited another of our favorite groups-ACME, the American Contemporary Music Ensemble-to choose music from a broad and representative range of contemporary composers, and to come up with four complementary "classical" programs. What did they end up choosing? Chamber music, ranging from solo percussion to seven strings, by Ingram Marshall, Kevin Volans, John Adams, Chen Yi, and Jefferson Friedman.

Total cost to you, the consumer? $0.00.

About getting into these: museum admission is pay-what-you-wish during Whitney After Hours, Fridays 6-9 pm. Shows begin promptly at 7.
Space is *extremely* limited. Seating and admission for Whitney Live is on a first-come, first-served basis; reservations are not accepted.

June 06 - The berg sans nipple
June 13 - A sunny Day in Glasgow
June 20 - Prefuse 73
June 27 - Times New Viking
July 18 - Deerhoof (@ Prospect Park)

The Whitney Museum
Madison Avenue
& East 75th Street

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Muzi Quawsom photo exhibit


Press Release on Yossi Milo Gallery website:
Focusing on “outsiders”, Ms. Quawson explores the various social, financial, and political structures that define American society. With photographs that possess a cinematic style, Ms. Quawson investigates the identity of Amanda Jo Williams, a young musician and mother in Woodstock, New York. After a chance meeting in Manhattan in 2002, Ms. Quawson created Pull Back the Shade over the course of the following four years while staying with Amanda in Woodstock and traveling with her around the country. By photographing Amanda’s relationships with her partner and young twin daughters, Ms. Quawson’s photographs comment on the frustrations of young motherhood, domesticity and social alienation.

The style of the photographs recalls the cinematography of New American Cinema of the 1970s and its aggrandizement of the anti-hero. Pull Back the Shade was first shown at the Tate Britain in London where the works were displayed as a slideshow, bringing their collective effect closer to that of a film. For this exhibition, the color negatives have been developed as Duratran prints and placed in light boxes; the result is a series of illuminated photographs that resemble stills from a color film.


Yossi Milo Gallery
(525 W. 25th Street)
February 21, 2008–March 29, 2008

*** *** *** RECAP *** *** ***
I saw this exhibit last weekend and just had to say that I thought it was really great. Having the photographs illuminated in light boxes was the perfect touch and really did lend to the idea of film stills. I highly recommend checking it out while it is still at Yossi Milo.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Absolut Quartet



Pretty neat, huh?

This week's Urban Daddy Weekender newsletter made a very vague reference to this Absolut Quartet that is on display at 186 Orchard Street. I investigated further and found an article on CoolHunting that gave a bit more info. It is on display starting tonight until the end of April.

"Absolut Machines is Absolut's promotional initiative that explores where technology meets design in the form of two "machines." Last night we got to check out one, the Absolut Quartet, an interactive multi-instrumental robotic machine. It consists of a marimba played by rubber balls precisely shot from a robotic cannon, a series of spinning wineglasses dampened by robotic fingers and an array of percussive instruments."
-- CoolHunting.com

You can check out Absolut's microsite on the machines, but surfer's beware - the site kept crashing my browser.

Surely someone will be interested in checking this out, if not merely for curiosity's sake.

186 Orchard Street and Stanton Street
February 28th - April 30th

Monday, February 25, 2008

Flight Attendants


"Flying the friendly skies, Brian Finke began photographing flight attendants as he crisscrossed the country on Delta, JetBlue, Hawaiian, Hooters Air, Southwest, and Song airlines, before going abroad on Air France, Qantas, and British Airways. In London, he visited a flight attendant school, complete with emergency rafts and billowing smoke. Continuing east, Finke traveled Air Asia, Thai, Tiger, ANA, Japan, and Cathay Pacific. For the grand finale of his two-year trip, Finke traveled the illustrious Icelandair."
- Artcal

Flight Attendants, PowerHouse Books, on display at ClampArt through March 29th, 525 W. 25th St (between 10th and West Side Highway)

Thursday, February 21, 2008

John Chiara: Land's End


I will be M.I.A. from the city this weekend as I journey to the midwest for some much needed SIU-Crew time with Mark, Pat, & Amanda (and apparently Tommy boy, too) in Chi-town. BUT, upon my return, I have yet another gallery exhibit that I would like to attend.

Enter John Chiara, a San-Fran based photog who has a rather unique approach to landscape photography. According to the Von Lintel Gallery website:
Chiara takes stunning landscape photographs that involve much more than what is in front of the camera. They are, in essence, images of photography itself. Chiara operates a hand-built, room-sized camera that is mounted on a flatbed trailer. He works inside the camera, physically becoming a part of the process. During the long exposures, he dodges and burns by passing his hands in front of the camera’s lens. The one-of-a-kind, positive images are then developed utilizing an adapted sewer pipe that he fills with photo chemicals.
Sewage pipes and flatbed trailers? I gotta see this.

VON LINTEL GALLERY
555 W 25th St (bet. 10th and 11th ave)

Monday, February 18, 2008

Matthew Rogriguez; an unexpected delight


This past Saturday, Chrissy and I went to more galleries then I can count on one hand (though I think two hands would suffice). We stuck to the exhibits we had predetermined, with the exception of one that was in the same building as Scott Schuman's. I was struck by the window display of a giant, plastic lobster with a huge ashing cigarette in it's pincher, so I decided to explore further. What I found inside won me over. Descriptions written in pencil (sometimes erased and re-written) next to the art work displayed on the walls. "Monsters" that were more endearing than scary. A Christmas tree laid out in the middle of the floor with an angry, cartoonish face at the tip, and a bloody stump at the other end. Colorfully painted 8x8 baking pans. Every piece on display made me smile and laugh, all for different reasons.

Who was behind this feel-good scene? Urban-artist-turned-multi-medium-dabbler Matthew Rodriguez; that's who. Check out more of his art here on Flickr. Even better, check out his exhibit, Scruffy Kitty, at the Rare gallery until March 8th. I hope it makes you smile/laugh, too.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

I almost forgot about Coney Island


Brooklyn Museum is holding an exhibit entitled "Goodbye Coney Island?" through April 6th.
"An exhibition of more than fifty photographs from the Brooklyn Museum’s holdings, Goodbye Coney Island? traces the evolution of this fabled part of New York over the past 125 years. Coney Island has undergone many transformations since it first became a popular resort in the nineteenth century, and in the near future a prospective redevelopment plan may yet again change this section of Brooklyn."
- BROOKLYN MUSEUM WEBSITE
Hopefully I do not forget about this exhibit.

Study Center, 5th Floor
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn

A Plethora of Photo Exhibits

Thank you, Christine, for the long list of photo exhibits!

John O'Reilly
| Echo: Recurrent Themes 1965-2007
Julie Saul Gallery (535 W. 22nd St.), Closes February 16, 2008



Ken Heyman
| Humanity
Sundarm Tagore Gallery (547 W. 27th St.), Closes February 23, 2008



Nicholas Nixon
| Patients
Yossi Milo (525 W. 25th St.), Closes February 16, 2008



Sarah Pickering
| Fire Scene
Daniel Cooney (511 W. 25th St.), Closes March 15, 2008



It shall be a busy, busy weekend!


*** *** *** RECAP *** *** ***
Saw them all; probably enjoyed Ken Heyman's the best even though it was very overwhelming with the amount of photographs on display!

Monday, February 11, 2008

Let's Get Gussied Up


I was looking for something to blog about and, lo and behold, I needed look no further than Mark Sperry's blog for just the information I desired. Of course, Mark's post is much more inspiring than this post will be, so I suggest reading his first, in order to get the appropriate emotional and attitudinal tone.

Gus Powell (a photographer I don't know) is on exhibit at the Musuem of the City of New York (a museum I have never set foot in) through March 16th (a day never to be forgotten in history).

Descriptive Phrases Concerning This Exhibit:
Color. Street Photography. NYC. Spontaneous.

Museum of the City of New York
1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd St.
Tuesday - Sunday: 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Friday, February 8, 2008

Juergen Teller


The Lehmann Maupin gallery started an exhibit yesterday on prints by German photographer, Juergen Teller, who has gained fame through his photography for Marc Jacob ads. It is too early in the morning for me to think for myself, so I will let Daily Candy do the talking:
"Teller, who was commissioned to interpret the Ukraine for the 2007 Venice Biennale show, infuses fashion, luxury, and youth into his fantastical stills and portraits. Shots from a recent Vivienne Westwood campaign are also in the mix (along with celeb photos of Gisele, Posh Spice, and Harmony Korine)."
-- Daily Candy Newsletter

Lehmann Maupin, 540 West 26th Street (212-255-2923).

Thursday, January 31, 2008

The Sartorialist

Yet another exhibit I want to go see (they are really starting to add up).

Scott Schuman, The blogger-turned-digital photographer, is exhibiting his pictures of street fashion. He has gained fame through his blog, where approximately fifty thousand people visit each day. This "blogenomenon" (totally trademarking that) has caused Schuman to be listed as one of TIME Magazine's top 100 design influencers, and now does photo shoots for style.com, the official VOGUE website.

Plus he originally hails from Indiana, my neighbor-state. Let's give two Hoorays for blogs, photos, and Hoosiers*.

When: thru February 23rd, Wed-Fri 11am-6pm; Sat noon-6pm
Where: Danziger Projects, 521 W. 26th St., between Tenth & Eleventh Aves


*Interesting sidenote, Anna, a native of STL, uses this term in a different way as I have seen witnessed before. Courtesy of Wikipedia, "In St. Louis, the word is used in a derogatory fashion in similar context to "white trash".[6]"

Friday, January 18, 2008

Horst P. Horst Exhibit


Horst P. Horst
What:
An exhibition of fashion-shoot perfection from the avant Vogue photographer.
Why: A Horst is a Horst, of course, of course.
When: Thru Mar. 15. Opens Fri., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Regular hours, Tues. & Wed., Fri. & Sat., 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Where: The Forbes Galleries, 60 Fifth Ave., at 12th St. (212-206-5548).
--- taken from Daily Candy Newsletter


I know Chrissy is down for this.