Showing posts with label Contemporary Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contemporary Photography. Show all posts

22 July 2011

Roma edizione

I was on vacation with my family in late June and discovered some really exceptional places in Rome to look at Contemporary art.  Yeah, I know, I was on the wrong coast and should have been at the Biennale, but as I said, I was on a family vacation and the kids have been anxious to see the Roman ruins and all the splendor that is in Rome and we decided to forgo all the crowds and craziness in Venice.  I never thought of Rome as having a thriving contemporary art scene, but I think that has changed with the recent addition of two new exhibitions spaces, the MAXXI and MACRO.

I don't think that these museums have a large or even nominal permanent collection per se, but they have a feel that is more in the European tradition of the "Kunsthalle", or a space dedicated solely to exhibiting, not actively acquiring and showing, art to the public.  The closest thing that we have to this in NYC is P.S. 1 in Long Island City.  (And now that is not completely independent anymore since its merger with MOMA a little over a decade ago.)




The MAXXI (which stands for Museo Nazionale Delle Arti del XXI Secolo) is devoted to art, design and architecture.  Walking around the building, inside and out, is an artistic experience in itself.  The building is quintessential Zaha Hadid, who designed the museum.  The light, flow and futuristic design is very conducive to seeing contemporary art.  The twists and turns that the exhibition rooms and halls take is surprising - small nooks opening to expansive spaces, artificial light quickly turning into natural light and spaceship, Escher-like stair cases.  The lobby and furniture as well as the piazza harmoniously meld with the entire structure.  There are a few exhibitions on right now, but the most impressive is a exhibition dedicated to Michelangelo Pistoletto and his works from 1956-1974.

Pistoletto started painting self-portraits in his early career, but his breakthrough came when he started creating "Mirror Paintings"in the early sixties.  These paintings, and there are numerous early examples in this exhibition (and he still creates these types of works today - Luhring Augustine showed some in late 2008), were ground-breaking and part of anti-conventional, radical art movement/group in Italy dubbed Arte Povera.  Arte Povera wasn't a stylistic movement by any means but a reflection of anti-establishment thinking that was going on in Italy and throughout Europe at the time.  Pistoletto's painting and later silk-screen images of contemporary people in their life - waiting for public transport, at a party, shopping, demonstrating, in various states of undress, etc - were on highly reflective surfaces where you can see yourself in the work.  These were unique, innovative and highly conceptual.  Here the artist was breaking down the barrier as the canvas as a "window" and the beholder was not just a bystander but now could be an active participant as he or she saw himself within the work of art.  Some examples are below (these were from the same exhibition in that was at the Philadelphia Museum of Art earlier this year - the MAXXI is not so generous with their installation views).





However, my favorite works in the show are the Venus of the Rags and Mappamondo.  Venus of the Rags is part of a larger body of work (stracci) where Pistoletto used discarded pieces of fabric and clothing to wrap individual bricks to make a wall as well as placing them in strategic piles and integrating other materials such as glass to form sculptural pieces.  Venus of the Rags is a small mountain of clothing that is piled as high as a life size neoclassical Venus sculpture that is faced backwards.  Simply, I love the stark plaster white of the sculpture against the highly-textured, multi-colored fabric.  More importantly, this work epitomizes the zeitgeist at the time - the injection of the common, everyday objects into art (see Rauschenberg's "Combine" pieces and Pop Art in the US at the time).  The traditional Venus is literally turning her back on us, a metaphor for the artist turning his back on traditional art making processes.  I love this work.  Its an abandonment of classical sculptural practices for something new and exciting.

Pistoletto has influenced many artists, but what really comes to mind is Christian Boltanski installation that was shown in the Park Avenue Armory in the Spring of 2010.  Boltanski filled the hall with piles and piles of clothing.  Although I believe that the Boltanski's intended message of the work is different than that Pistoletto's, I really think it couldn't have existed without Pistoletto's ground-breaking rag pieces coming first.




Mappmondo (Globe) envelopes everything that I love about Arte Povera.   I knew about this piece in a long time ago, but got to see it in an amazing Arte Povera exhibition in the Summer of 2002 at MOCA LA.  I was so happy to see it here again - like an old friend.  The work was made from from a ball of discarded newspapers that is in an iron cage.  When this ball was made and I believe covered with wax (and not yet in its cage), Pistoletto rolled it around the streets of Turin where it gathered dust and detritus from the sidewalks and roads and permanent marking and sticking to the surface.  There is a very playful and performative element to the work.  I mean, its a ball that one would want to play with and roll around like a child.  But on the other hand, it seriously and consciously is breaking with all art historical hierarchy of subject, materials and practices.  I also like that the dimension that it was rolled around the streets.  Is that the work of art - the action of rolling the ball?  And what we see is this just the result of this act? Or is this the work of art itself?  I like that you don't really know.

There is this lovely brown patina of grime and age shown on the surface and, at the end of the day, there is something simple and primal about it, at the same time being defiant in terms of the process of art making.  Arte Povera literally means "poor art" and here is art made from everyday trash - but now its sitting here in a museum as a priceless object in its cage - untouchable.  Its hard to resolve this and I like that the work has taken on layers of meaning through time.  As Pistoletto took to the street to make this work, I can see it give birth to works such as Vito Acconci's "Following Piece" as well as many others.



Jumping to the MACRO (Museo d'Arte Contemporanea Roma), which is a completely different neighborhood but reachable from MAXXI by a short trolley and subway ride, is an entirely different experience.  MACRO is a series of neoclassical buildings that used to be slaughter houses and as you walk around, you can see the stalls that held the animals, the troughs where the blood used to flow and the hooks to hold the meat.  The spaces are pulled together with consistent lighting fixtures, steel beams, glass and bleached wood doors and ceilings.  (There is also a space that looks like an al fresco after hours club where the museum stays open late and attracts a young crowd.  The MAXXI also has a fantastic restaurant next door in repurposed building which shares the piazza and is also a big draw to that area.)








As soon as my husband walked in he said he could smell the blood from the slaughter house.  These buildings have not been used for that purpose for quite a long time and are strikingly clean.  I said he was crazy and there was no way that he could smell it, but he asked the guard about it and the guard said there are a few people that come into the buildings and are overwhelmed by the smell.  I guess he's special - but I already knew that....

Unfortunately, there were many new exhibitions that were opening the week after we were visiting, but the space itself was very interesting.  They were having quite a large exhibition of Italian design, which included household appliances, furniture, lighting, etc, which were displayed in very cool vitrines.  Now I know how I am going to decorate my Italian home when I retire...

In an area devoted to design innovation, the exhibits were interactive and great for the kids.  Also, there was also a whole display of Italian advertisements and movie posters which were fabulous.  It was actually nice to have the opportunity to focus on these instead of a show by a particular artist.  You can see over the decades through the posters how the interest in style and innovative design are not just important to promote items or offer the feeling of novelty in this country but really ingrained in the Italian culture and an essential part of life.  Everything they make, even a poster for Nutella, proves fun and beautiful, thoughtful and striking and the colors are totally unique.
Its worth mentioning that Italy is celebrating its 150th anniversary of unification, so there are a lot of events and exhibitions dedicated to this right now.  Focus on Italian history, innovation, design and art are the focus right now - so its a very exciting time to visit if you can.  I didn't have a lot of time to look at individual galleries, but I will say that I popped my head into Gagosian, who has a prime location around the corner from the Spanish Steps.  Not a surprise that the neoclassical facade of the gallery and the contemporary-designed space are very special.

He has devoted the group show "Made in Italy" to the anniversary of unification and this is expressed by works of artists either inspired by or that have worked in Italy.  Heavy-hitters included in the show are  Warhol, Basquiat, Baselitz, Damien Hirst, Giacommetti, Koons,  Andreas Gursky, Cindy Sherman and Richard Prince as well as the all-important, Cy Twombly, who recently died and lived and worked most of his latter life in and around Rome.

The exhibition seems a little like a chance to exhibit some very expensive, well-known artists  to someone that might have some deep pockets that would be shopping at the luxury stores in the area. In this setting and in this theme of the exhibitions, Warhol's Vesuvius, the Last Supper and the Mona Lisa seem a little schlocky and less inspired than the canvases of someone like Twombly, which seems truly influenced by Italian history, art, architecture and culture on many different levels.   I understand that Warhol was playing into the iconic imagery and speaking to the kind of commodification of these images in contemporary culture, but I think after walking around and enjoying Rome for a while, when you look at these works, they come off almost cynical and not really celebratory as the exhibition claims.

Furthermore,  I was shocked to see the omission of photographs from Gregory Crewdson's recent project that was shown at Gagosian in NYC in the early fall and in Rome in the late winter.  The photographer took black and white photos of the deserted Cinecitta, the movie sets and studios outside of Rome.  Although they were just exhibited a few months prior, I think one of these photographs included in this exhibition would have been exceptional.  On their own and altogether, they looked a bit dry and lifeless (which, I think, is very different than his entire body of work), but its my opinion, that in this context, this group show would have added some life to them and one or two of them would have looked quite stunning and been more interesting.







Link to exhibition

Make sure you take the time to take in the new, MACRO and MAXXI, than just the old when in Rome!

30 May 2011

Group Show - Greater L.A.

I don't know if it was just the humidity that was getting to me or the very unpleasant moment of Time-Square crowdedness that had descended upon Soho on a holiday weekend, but by the time I reached the "Greater L.A." group exhibition, my expectations were sky-high.  I was hoping that it had been worth the battle to get to see a spectacular show.  I was disappointed.

I was really excited to see this show which had taken over the 2nd floor of 483 Broadway (at Broome).  This is the first survey I know of in the last ten years in New York that was supposed to represent Contemporary art in Los Angeles.  The survey had both a good mix of established and emerging artists.  The title, "Greater  L.A.", is probably based on the "Greater New York" show that is held at the P.S.1 on a five year basis which basically gives a snapshot or takes the pulse of contemporary art at that moment in and around NYC.

If this is the state of Contemporary art in L.A. - well, then it looks a bit lackluster to me.  However, I think I know enough that's really not the case.  There are very exciting things going on it L.A. and I love that there is completely different set of cultural perspectives, a whole different "American" experience there, and the ideas of individual, isolation, industry, growth, history, art practice and process and Conceptualism is completely separate than our East Coast mind-set.  And I think this was not really successfully presented in this exhibition and I think there was a lack of "craftsmanship" overall.

I read somewhere that the exhibition was planned and executed within a couple of months and it certainly has that feel to it.

But if you know me, you know that I don't like to focus too much on the negative, and there were certainly works that were worth seeing (or worth seeing again).  These were the real highlights for me in the show.....


Alex Prager





I have been drinking the Alex Prager Kool-Aid for a while now and I am not going to stop anytime soon.  She is hot, hot, hot right now - which in my book, is not always a good thing, but she is one of my favorite photographers at the moment and I will continually sing her praises.  These works are from the "Week-end" series of 2009 that I am very familiar with and I think it would have been a huge catastrophe had they not included her work in this show.

Prager is a self-taught photographer whose influences are obvious - you can see the stylings of Hitchcock, Crewdson and Sherman for sure - but the combination of their techniques with her own style, enigmatic narrative, tension of retro with the contemporary against the Los Angeles backdrop makes these works intriguing, sexy and magnetic.  Prager photographs young attractive women, primarily actresses, who are wearing wigs and vintage clothes against a contemporary backdrop. She then manipulates the images.  There is a wonderful cinematic quality to the work with added mystery in terms of what the women are wearing (clothes from the 60s and 70s) juxtaposed to contemporary objects (cars, signs, items).  She also has appropriated and set forth her own visual language that continues through her pictures.  These highly stylized scenarios with high-keyed colors (see other works in this series - link below) are melodramatic, sinister and striking.

In these particular photos, which are the nocturnal scenes of the series, the "bad girl" is played up next to the "forlorn ingenue" in a separate photograph - is this the land of broken dreams?   There is a sense of isolation in an urban environment - something I think that we New Yorkers can relate to.  I love the primordial fire in the last photograph against the manipulated layered parking lots.  What is going on here?  We can keep guessing and making up our own story about it - but we will never know for sure.

I believe her work keeps getting more interesting - especially with her new foray into film.  I can't wait to see what comes next.

Link to more Alex Prager photographs


Melanie Schiff



These are a few examples of photographs that I saw at this exhibition by this artist.  This is the second time that I see them because I also saw them in 2009 at Horton Gallery in Chelsea.   I am not entirely crazy about this photographer's entire body of work, but I absolutely love this series of "contemporary landscapes" that the artist has done.  I love this idea of the lost areas in our cities and the intense graffiti covering these tunnels, ramps and manmade ditches.

The photographs of these "found spaces" are not only photographed quite well, but are layered in meaning.  They can be thought about in terms of a graffiti culture - there is a sort of immortality of one illegally laying his mark or "tag" on the concrete - however this is quickly covered by someone else and there is a sort of tribute to the passage of time.  We can talk in terms of man vs. nature as these manmade areas that we have carved into the land seem to be defunct and abandoned and not even being used anymore.  You can also compare these to the important American landscape photographers and painters that have been capturing our country's beauty over the last two centuries.

I would love to see the photographer explore this series further and see them in a larger scale.

Link to more Melanie Schiff photographs

Karl Haendel





Here are a few examples from graphite drawings from the series "All the Clocks in My House" dated 2010 that were show in this exhibition.  How can you not love these?!  They are more stunning in person for sure.  I believe the artist literally took photographs of the clocks in his house and drew from the photographs.  There is an incredible precision to the drawings that only when you are up close to them can you distinguish them from actual black and white photographs.  I love his use of cropping and perspective here.  More importantly, I enjoy the concept of capturing time or the idea of the passage of time or how we spend time in our personal life.  Would love to see more work by this artist - I believe there is a show planned for his work in the fall of 2011 at Harris Lieberman.

Mark Grotjahn



There are three small, jewel-like colored pencil drawings by established artist, Mark Grotjahn.  As you know, I am not a huge fan of abstract art, but I have always loved all the works by Grotjahn.  Unfortunately, I cannot find the exact images that were in the show, but this is very, very similar to the works that are there.  He is a true colorist and although over the years he has built upon and developed the same visual model and system, its hard not to continue to be intrigued by his work.  I am crazy about the color and the cold, straight-forward formalism.

Currently, there is an exhibition at Anton Kern in Chelsea of new work by Grotjahn.
Link



Also there are also some works by Carter Mull, Jonas Wood and Sterling Ruby that you shouldn't miss if you go.

Its worth stopping by if you are in the neighborhood to see the works that I mentioned above.  I do hope that they continue this exhibition on a regular basis, because its great to break out of our East coast mentality and see a different perspective (just with better execution).

Link to exhibition - wish the site was a little bit better in terms of showing the actual works in the exhibition (be sure to check the days and hours they are open before you go  - not normal gallery hours)

Photographs by Rinko Kawauchi









I have issues with art exhibitions in stores, especially high-end ones on Madison Avenue.  I really do not like the blurring of lines between art and luxury item - it really bothers me and I think it does a disservice to the artist and his or her career.  Yeah, yeah - I know - I live in NYC - who am I kidding?  Hello - Warhols at Christie's - that's the ultimate in luxury items, right there.

But again - I am a bit of a purist when it comes to art venue and I probably need to get over it.

However, I saw this photographer, Rinko Kawauchi, for the first time at AIPAD in March (I am not sure why I hadn't discovered her work before - she is very popular in Japan and has published a multitude of books of her photography, but I think this is her first solo show in the US - so that may be why) and I had heard that her new body of work was going to be shown at the Hermes Gallery, which is on the 4th floor of the store on Madison and 62nd street in late spring.

First about the space - I hate to say it, but its really nice.  Natural light pours in like a waterfall through the enormous skylight just above the  4th floor.  There is nothing there except for the gallery and actually hardly anyone was there and it was practically silent - a perfect setting to see this work.

Kawauchi captures the sort of magic that happens at a moment in the everyday.  There is a focus on the chance beauty of things - whether it is a minute frog taking a short rest on a gargantuan hand, the over exposure of a rose, a dead bird or an eclipse.  I had only seen her work in the small scale, but here the works are a bit larger (40x40), but do not lose the kind of reserve and simplicity seen in her earlier photographs.  I love how light becomes ultimately as important as the subject in her pictures.  At first glance, the images seem to be sort of haphazard - a focusing in on the small and then with the next image, a larger landscape of light breaking through trees or an imposing rocky crag.  But after a while, you begin to see that they all relate to life, death and the eternal.

These works are uncomplicated and there is a silence that pervades her work - a welcome respite in our loud and crazy times and the antidote to the constant bombardment of images in our everyday life.  Here we can take a moment and see our own mortality - that there is a life cycle and that the natural world will continue without us, but there is joy in that because we learn a lesson here.  The small, precious moments in life that we miss - that Kawauchi has captured here for us to behold and in her past photographs (please look up her earlier work - its fantastic!!), we should slow down and take the time to see, understand and celebrate the beauty.  At least, that's how I feel when I look at these and her body of work.   As she exercises restraint in the way she approaches the image, I find my emotions in looking at them a bit overwhelming.

Please don't miss this show.  (Sorry - there is no link to the exhibition)

(I have also just heard that there is a dual exhibition with her and another Japanese photographer downtown at Mountain Fold gallery of recent photographs from the devastation of the March 2011 earthquake in Japan.  I haven't seen it yet but anxious to go.)

09 April 2011

Photographs by Paolo Ventura









I thought this would be a fun counterpoint to the Venetian photographs by Mona Kuhn which I discussed in a blog a few weeks ago.  Paolo Ventura, an Italian artist living and working in Brooklyn, is about to exhibit his own Venetian series of photographs at the upcoming Venice Biennale beginning this June (and most likely you will get a chance to see the series in its entirety at Hasted Kraeutler in Chelsea in the early fall).  I recently became acquainted with his photographs in late 2009 and absolutely fell in love with his aesthetic from his last show, "Winter Stories", in NYC. 

"Winter Stories" was focused primarily on circus and carnival vignettes that seem to be located in the years between the World Wars.  The jugglers, clowns and fire eaters fluctuate between joy and isolation. The bright colors are juxtaposed against drab and grey backgrounds.  There is something both mirthful and sinister happening at the same time, and this is what makes these works intriguing.

But what really blows you away is that after closer inspection, you realize that these are not living people or real scenes at all but highly detailed, artfully depicted table-top dioramas that have been created and built by Ventura.  The maquettes are so skillfully rendered that the mind flip-flops on the fact if they are real or fake.  

The Venetian Series (a few which are shown in the images above), called L'Antoma (The Automaton), are also made from his own dioramas, not unlike the photographer, James Casebere, who also famously creates and photographs his own maquettes.  Also, like Casebere, Ventura also floods his maquettes to create his Venetian canals.  However, where he greatly departs from Casebere, who boils down his depopulated architectural interiors to essential clean lines and forms, Ventura painstakingly takes care adding every minute detail to his scenes.  You can see the dust on the doors, the tears in the clothing, the folds in the fabric, the scratches on the windows and the waterline on the walls.

Here he still seems obsessed with Italy between the wars.  There is something haunting and eerily nostalgic about the scenes.  This is heightened by the atmospheric quality of the work.  There is a pervasive fog in the scenes which adds to the alienation between the people in the photographs and an immense sense of foreboding.  They are not interacting, but seem to be going around in their own small worlds.  There is added surreal quality to those photographs that have no people - a messy or abandoned studio with a half-built mannequin or a dilapidated storefront piled with mismatched objects - a bust, wooden wings, antique chair and uniform hanging on the door - which reminds me of the quietly strange and haunting Eugene Atget images of Paris in the early 20th century.

What I love most is the mysterious narrative going on in the photographs.  After spending time with these works, you have a strong desire to make sense of what is going on the scenes. But you are torn - is the man on the roof a worker taking a break to take in the view or is he a man taking one last moment before he plunges to his death?  Is the couple in the scene waiting for a gondola to arrive to take them to another place in the floating city or is there a violent act about to occur?  The unknown creates a tension that keeps us looking and guessing.

To paraphrase, someone said that great art does not answer questions, but instead, keeps you asking more  - and I think this is really the case in Paolo Ventura's beautiful photographs.  

Link to Winter Stories (previous exhibition)

Link to new series, L'Automa, on artist's website 

19 March 2011

Photographs by Mona Kuhn



from "Venezia"



from "Venezia"




from "Venezia"




from "Venezia"





from "Venezia"




from "Venezia"



from her previous "Brazil" series


from her previous "Brazil series"


from her earlier "France" series



from her earlier "France" series



from her earlier "France" series



The AIPAD photography fair is taking place this weekend at the Park Avenue Armory and one of the highlights for me was seeing the new Mona Kuhn Venetian Series at the M+B booth.  Not unlike her past series, they are photographs of beautiful landscapes, with model-gorgeous young people in a stunning palette.  What I love most is her play of foreground and background - the tension between depth and the picture plane and blurred and focused images.  I also love her art historical references as well. In the earlier series, the subject matter of her outdoor scenes reminded me of the carefree zeal of the bohemian colonies that the early German expressionists used to depict, while the nudes of the dark indoor nighttime scenes play in and out of the shadows like a Caravaggio.  In one, a woman reclines like les grandes odalisques of Ingres and Matisse.  Her last project was in Brazil and the jungle greens are reminiscent of the colors in Rousseau's paintings, I think.

In this series from Venice, there is a much lighter palette and water dominates most of the landscape photos - which is a departure.  The well-known Venetian architecture is cropped by the water and waves. Droplets of water on the lens are playful while the undulating waves of the water create an immense amount of movement as opposed to the solidity of the buildings in the background.  The point of view of these photographs are taken as if coming up from underneath the water which makes them even more dynamic,  as opposed to her nudes that are still, quiet and reflective.

The women (no men in this series) are unique in their beauty and have elongated, mannerist like limbs.  My favorite is of a copper red haired young woman sitting primly on a bed in a lush interior.  The paleness of her skin contradicts the deep, colors of the fabrics and the flowers in the background.  The scene is timeless except for a remarkable little still life in the bottom right hand corner of the photograph with a very contemporary Financial Times.  These works can be seen locally in Chelsea at Flowers, on the West Coast at M + B and in Atlanta at Jackson Fine Art.

Link to more of Mona Kuhn's phots

06 March 2011

Photographs by Christopher Williams




Christopher Williams, a mid-career artist, has an exhibition of photographs up for only a few more weeks at David Zwirner Gallery in Chelsea. Although he does not have the "household name" like status of his contemporaries, he has a cult following - in terms of those that loyally continue to collect his work and the younger artists and photographers that are influenced by him. He studied in the early 1980s with other conceptual artists at the California Institute of the Arts under John Baldessari (who just had a spectacular survey at the Metropolitan Museum). His photographs seem to straddle between art, commercial and industrial photography happily defying any categorization. In this show, the works are self-reflective, in a way, especially the photo of the bisected camera, the light gauge and model and the picture of the dark room chemicals and equipment which are, on the surface, direct and documentary, but have layers of meaning after further observation. In my opinion, I see them as a possible reaction against digital photography both in subject matter and medium. In this time of the popularity of C-print (Chromogenic color prints), which most digital photographers are using these days, and whose conservation over long periods of time has been called into question, Williams uses archival pigment prints on cotton rag paper and gelatin silver prints in small editions which make them very unique in this age of digital photography. The color, texture and crispness of the images are quite stunning in person, and despite all meaning, they are beautiful to behold.