Tag Archive for 'art'

HAPPY ALMOST BDAY CALLIE & GRINGOLANDIA PARTY FRIDAY!

gringolandia

Gringolandia Closing Party

One final night in the silver saloon. With performances by Mickey Western, New Orleans brass sensation Why Are We Building Such a Big Ship, and Why Are We Building Such A Big Ship side project Hurray for the Riff Raff. Cheap tequila, hot cider, and beer bar.  Silver ceremony at midnight.

Gringolandia at Honey Space
148 11th Avenue between 21st and 22nd streets, Manhattan
8p-late, performances start at 9p; $free
honey-space.com

Also it’s Callie’s going away, almost birthday booty-shake-off. So come wish her well.

SATURDAY NIGHT: KEITH HARING AT DEITCH STUDIOS


KEITH HARING
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS

NOVEMBER 8 - DECEMBER 21, 2008
OPENING SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 6 - 9 PM

DIRECTIONS:
Deitch Studios can be reached by taking either the E or V Train to the 23rd Street/Ely,
the G train to LIC/Court Square or the 7 train to 45 Road/Court House Square.
Walk down 44th drive to the water’s edge.
Deitch Studios is located on the left hand side.
We are open Thurs. – Saturday 2-8pm.

DEITCH STUDIOS
4-40 44TH DRIVE (ON THE EAST RIVER)
LONG ISLAND CITY, NY, 11101

212 343 7300
WWW.DEITCH.COM

MONICA CANILAO SHOW THIS THURSDAY

reblogged from overspray.com/blog: CONTAIN YOURSELF!

October 21st, 2008

containers

ανωνυμία

A N O N Y M O U S G A L L E R Y

“CONTAIN”
A project and exhibition featuring the works of
Anthony Lister, Greg Lamarche, Maya Hayuk, Monica Canilao

WHERE Anonymous Gallery 329 Broome St. Lower Level (BSMT), between Bowery and Chrystie, N.Y.C.

WHEN GALLERY EXHIBITION: October 23rd – November 24th - OPENING RECEPTION: Thursday October 23rd from 6:00- 9:00PM - Completed Project and Opening reception at Anonymous Gallery – 329 Broome Street – Lower Level – NYC www.anonymousgallery.com

PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Beginning Thursday October 16, 2008 and ending on Sunday, October 19, 2008, Anonymous Gallery had four 20ft shipping containers placed curbside near two separate major art institutions. Artists Monica Canilao, Maya Hayuk, Greg Lamarche and Anthony Lister each created and constructed installations inside the four containers. The artists created installations that explored the idea of containment, but their work ranged conceptually - discussing everything from the US political climate to sensory depravation. Two containers were placed in Chelsea on 22nd St and 11th Ave, near the Chelsea Art Museum and featured work from Anthony Lister and Greg Lamarche. The two containers in the Lower East Side on Chrystie St. and Rivington St., near the New Museum, featured work from Maya Hayuk and Monica Canilao. The project was a huge success and the public response was overwhelming

EXHIBITION DESCRIPTION
The gallery exhibition will open on October 23rd from 6 - 9pm and will be available to the public through November 22nd at 329 Broome Street – lower level - NYC

The project will be followed by a gallery exhibition featuring the participating artists – Monica Canilao, Maya Hayuk, Greg Lamarche, and Anthony Lister. The exhibition will feature collage, painting, sculpture, and installation to explore the complexity of exhibiting within a limited environment. It will serve as a tool to document the project and support the artist work. The title of the exhibition: Contain, is an examination into the perspective of how public art / street art is translated indoors. Conceptually the artwork inside of the containers was creatively free, limitless and available to the public, although its confines were restrictive. Similarly, the limitations of a gallery space translate differently than the freedom and spontaneity of the artists’ outdoor work.

Each artist will explore definitions for the word, contain:
1. To have within; hold. 2.. To be capable of holding. 3. To have as component parts; include or comprise 4. To hold or keep within limits; restrain 5. To halt the spread or development of 6. To check the expansion or influence of a hostile power or ideology by containment


Anthony Lister
uses comic book imagery for his own means, redirecting popular culture for personal expression. Lister graduated from Queensland College of Art in 2001 and mentored New Zealand painter, Max Gimblett. He undertook a research residency in Berlin and his travels have extended him to take part in solo and group exhibitions around the world. Lister has been a finalist in a number of prestigious awards including: The Prometheus Art Award, the Metro 5 Art Award, and he was invited to speak at the Semi-Permanent 2008 in Sydney.



Greg Lamarche
finds inspiration from fonts, letters, graffiti, text and NYC. His collages incorporate found materials and a variety of commercially printed papers. The work plays with a profusion of font styles, word fragments and multiple layers and employs characteristics from graffiti such as repetition, bold colors, multiple perspectives and movement. Born and raised in New York City, he began writing graffiti in 1981 and published Skills magazine during the early 90s. He has worked both as a designer and artist since 2000. His work has been featured in numerous magazines including Print, Juxtapoz, Arkitip, Swindle, Art New England, Mass Appeal, Vapors, Serie B and Garage among others.




Maya Hayuk
is a Ukrainian-American artist with a diverse skill set and creative repertoire. Her work combines intricate patterning, bright colors, and free association as she pieces together her paintings, prints, designs, drawings, videos, and photographs. Along with her solo work, Hayuk frequently collaborates with other artists. She has painted large-scale murals with the group, Barnstormers. Whatever form her work takes, it is inspired by her interest and collection of Ukrainian folk art and traditional crafts.

Monica Canilao attended the California College of Arts and Crafts, where she received her BFA in illustration. Monica Canilao interst in the ideas of home, community, and the passage of time are sewn delicately together in her large paper and fabric structures, installations and sculptures. She uses found objects, paper, printing, and fiber to juxtapose the profundity of simply having home with the ephemeral nature of spaces, community, and life itself. Most recently she participated in a group exhibition at Roebling Hall. She also created a mural with artist, David Ellis outside of Deitch Projects in Long Island City, and helped build boats and performances for Swoon’s “Swimming Cities of the Switchback Sea.”

Press relations: contact press@anonymousgallery.com or anonymous@heirapparentny.com

A NICE VIDEO ABOUT SWIMMING CITIES OF SWITCHBACK SEA

CAN YOU HELP US TOW THE RAFTS TO SAFE HARBOR?

Will you tow our art boats? - $1 (Long Island City, Queens)


Reply to: sale-881827243@craigslist.org [?]
Date: 2008-10-16, 3:48PM EDT

We’re looking for someone willing to tow three art boats from the southern tip of Roosevelt Island in Queens about ten miles up the East River toward Long Island this coming Monday October 20. We can’t afford Sea Tow, but are willing to pay for your time and gas. You don’t need a tug, just a recreational powerboat with at least a 75hp engine. Can you help?

The boats’ dimensions are as follows: Alice 23′ x 22′ | Maria 28′ x 12′ | Althea 46′ x 8′| The boats were designed by artist SWOON and journeyed from Troy, NY around the Battery and up the East River this summer. You can read about it here: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/18/arts/design/18flot.html |

our website is here: http://www.switchbacksea.org

  • Location: Long Island City, Queens
  • it’s NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests

PostingID: 881827243

ART MAKES EYE CONTACT! TONIGHT!

Art Makes Eye Contact Benefit Show

OPENS SATURDAY OCTOBER 11TH 4 UNTIL 9

HELP US REBUILD A COMMUNITY THROUGH ART WITH ART!!!

The art sale will feature artworks by Swoon, Barry Mcgee, Daphne Fitzpatrick, Paper Rad, Maya Hayuk, Faile, Kiki Smith, Steve Powers, Martha Cooper, Bill Daniel, and many more.

Events begin at 4pm on October 11th with Braddock, PA in Context, film screenings exploring the post-industrial city, followed by a barbeque/food transformation at 5pm and sale and raffles from 6pm-10pm.

A closing dance party will be held on October 18th from 9pm-2am.  Lectures and events examining the intersection of art and community in the post-industrial city will take place throughout the week.

Transformazium (www.transformazium.org) is an emerging arts organization whose mission is to use the creative process and locally identified resources to transform ideas into tangible social and economic benefits.

OH MY GOD MASSMOCA

whoa! [this is rad]

i participated in making an installation at massmoca in north adams earlier this year with the miss rockaway armada called being here is better than wishing we had stayed. i made something with todd and porter called the story mill:

where folks would come and type their wishes and memories into two old typewriters and then post them. the stories have gone totally wild and taken over the space!

phil visited last week and posted photos of the crazy transformation. the children have gone amuck! it’s awesome.

it used to look like this:

Here’s my flickr set from the build and completion of the show.

Here’s Phil’s flickr set from the transformation.

ON THE RIVER! AWESOME ARTICLE IN THE TIMES!

So I’m out floating on the Hudson River and am currently writing from the Ravena-Coeyman’s Yacht Club. Yesterday’s article by Julie Bloom in the NY times was awesome. The fleet is currently underway and arriving Wednesday in Saugerties for an amazing show at the lighthouse.

Check it out:

Nathaniel Brooks
photo by Nathaniel Brooks for the NY Times

Read article here

PORTRAIT OF SILVIA ELENA - SWOON OPENING THIS FRIDAY

So for the last while I’ve been working on this and that for the amazing artist Swoon. This Friday is an opening for a massive piece called A Portrait of Sylvia Elena. Sylvia Elena was a young woman who was killed in Juarez, Mexico. In this piece Swoon collaborates with Tennessee Jane Watson to tell her story and remember her. It’s amazing and the largest Swoon piece I have ever seen. I got to work on it a bit and it was quite an honor.

When I was in college I interned at VDAY for Eve Ensler. We went to Juarez to lead a massive protest against the feminicides in Juarez and bring international attention to the issue. While I was there I met some of the mothers who had lost their daughters. I guess that’s part of why helping with this piece was so amazing. Here’s some info on the situation in Juarez

Here are the details for the opening, please come!

Portrait of Sylvia Elena, a collaborative installation by Swoon & Tennessee Jane Watson at Honey Space, 148 11th Ave, betw 21st & 22nd, 6-8

More info form nonsensenyc.com :

Honey Space presents:

Portrait of Sylvia Elena

Honey Space is honored to present Portrait of Silvia Elena, a collaborative installation by Swoon and Tennessee Jane Watson. The exhibition — a memorial to Silvia Elena, a 17-year old girl who was murdered in Juarez, Mexico, in 1995 — combines text, sound, excavation, shrine elements, and one of Swoon’s most intricate paper cut-out/block prints to date. A different version of the installation is currently on view at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.

Portrait of Silvia Elena is a somber, emotional work that, beyond functioning as a powerful memorial, provides a window into the tragic and ongoing issue of femicide. Defined as a pattern of murder targeting women, to which authorities have often systematically turned a blind eye, femicide has haunted communities throughout the Americas. In Juarez, located just across the border from El Paso, the issue became pronounced in the 1990s when, following the passage of NAFTA, maquiladoras sprang up there as they did elsewhere along the Mexican-American border, to take advantage of cheap Mexican labor. Young women who worked long hours in the factories often disappeared as they walked home at night along dark and dangerous roads. To date, over 500 women and girls have been confirmed killed in Juarez, with at least as many more reported disappeared. Human rights organizations put the number of murders much higher- estimating they could surpass 4,000. Most of the victims are young, po
or, and have been sexually assaulted prior to their deaths.

Swoon and Tennessee Jane Watson traveled together to Juarez in 2008 to learn about this issue first-hand. There they met Ramona Morales Huerta, whose daughter was one of those killed. They went with Ramona to visit her daughter Silvia’s grave. They recorded interviews with Ramona, captured the sounds of the desert winds and streets of Juarez, and pored over pictures of Ramona’s lost daughter. From this experience, came this exhibition.

For their installation in Honey Space, Swoon and Tennessee have made use of a long-sealed sub-basement that has been revealed by a hole in the gallery floor. Entering the gallery, visitors encounter a near-empty ground floor space, with a shrine located near the back wall, dedicated to Silvia’s memory. From the hole in the floor, sounds of Ramona speaking about her daughter, clearing dirt from Silvia’s grave, and the desert winds emerge. Viewers are able to enter the hole, and descend rubble to this catacomb-like space, where Swoon’s piece- extending over the back wall, ceiling and floor- is pasted, and candle-lit.

Honey Space
148 11th Avenue, between 21st and 22nd streets, Manhattan
6-8p; $free
honey-space.com

ANGELA TOOK THIS PIC OF THE STORY MILL AT MASS MOCA

and i like it a lot. this was the first guy to type in it i think and he’s a trustee-looking trustee.

Angela Trustee Story shot

Angela is a talented photographer and filmmaker. Her flickr page is here.

ERIK RUIN PUPPET SHOW SATURDAY!

flight-poster-blog.jpg

4/26- NEW YORK CITY- more acts TBA- Space Space- 390 Seneca Ave -(L train to dekalb ave exit front of train at stanhope st walk against traffic on stanhope 3 blocks last door on left before seneca ave)-Ridgewood! - 8 pm

Details here!

MassMoCA TIME! COMING HOME!

MassMoCA Flier

Come on up to MassMoCA if you’re free. It’s Miss Rockaway’s first art project in a museum!

Here are some pictures Tod Seelie took of the build going on there

It feels funny to say it, but it’s true, I’m really glad to come home after traveling for so long. I can’t wait to help build the massmoca show and I’m excited not to be scared for my safety. In the DR it’s impossible to walk down the street or be in public anywhere for that matter without someone mean-mugging you like crazy. you get an exorbitant number of nasty looks from local men. i hear this is called “guapa” which actually means handsome but refers to an angry girl here. i dunno. this may be something that happens to everyone, or specifically to us as tourists/foreigners. also women are fair game for sexual harassment and cat-calling and people are totally shocked if you get mad about it. there are lots of things about latino machismo which i find hard to stomach, though i find machismo repulsive in all its locations. of course getting shot at and robbed while already struggling with money, with impunity, has a way of disrupting one’s sense of safety as well.

THE SALAD DAYS OF STREET ART

puppy on a wire

this photo has nothing to do with street art except that i took it during the ‘05 wooster street art walking tour. i think that was the year they let me help them tell people about street art history. they’re pretty great.

GIGGLES ASKS ABOUT ANTLERED ART

Michael McConnell

This kid named “giggles” asked about the piece here thinking i might know something about it because i like art and antlers. He said:

i’m working on an english paper to evaluate a piece of art. The painting is from Michael McConnell, and it has a woman with antlers on her head. I wanted to know what that meant in the art world. When I typed in antlers art this website came up twice. When I found antler girls artist statement for this site, she said she love a lot of the nice things in NY and her antlers. I was hoping antlers in art expression meant the same to you all as it does to this painter. Most of my evaluation so far as been wrong about the painting. The painting is called What I’m Capable Of. I thought it was a playful fun picture because the woman has on the antlers. One of our writing center people said it was anything but a fun picture. Please help me figure it out. Thanks Giggles

Interesting question. I don’t think there’s much continuity between people who use antlers in their art, and I have my own explanation which almost certainly differs from that of the painting.

I think on face value that the woman in the painting is bleeding the drippy bloody green mess from her heart and her feet are ground into the place where they stand indicating that she is stuck. I wonder if the title tells us soemthing about the restraint shown in the picture as well. Just a thought. Good luck Giggles!

TONIGHT!!! BIGGEST CHIEF MAG PARTY/ART AUCTION/SCREENING EVER!!!

Chief party!

Maggie Chief!

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY PRINT-A-FUCKING-GANZA

dENNIS mCnETT SHOW

Cannonball Press and Supreme Trading proudly present:

PRINTS GONE WILD 2!!

The second ever annual vernacular printacular mega-hairy

brooklyn affordable print fair.

Supreme Trading

213 n 8th St. Williamsburg, Brooklyn 11211

718-599-4224

www.supremetradingny.com

Fri., Nov. 2nd                          6pm-12am     Opening reception/party
Sat., Nov. 3rd                         12-6pm                Fair is open all day

TONIGHT! TOM BEALE & WHY ARE WE BUILDING SUCH A BIG SHIP?

Honey Space An independently produced solo New York debut, in a formerly abandoned warehouse in the heart of Chelsea. Thomas Beale has culled the products of years of concentrated effort and woven them into a single, thick installation environment. Opening party features performance by Mickey Western, Mary Go Round, and New Orleans brass sensation Why Are We Building Such a Big Ship. Homemade intoxicants served by Miss Elixer. Exhibition continues until Independence Day with Thomas and Mickey greeting the public as their own gallery sitters. You can view images to Thomas’ work on his website.
11th Avenue, between 21st and 22nd streets, Manhattan 6-9p; $free http://www.tbeale.com

NOTE: This is going to be really good. The space is super cool, the art is really good, and you can’t beat the live performers.

BIKE FILM FEST ART PARTY OPENING. WAS FUN. BLOODY. ROUGH. SOFT. LOVELY REALLY. SCROLL DOWN FOR WHERE I TALK SOME SHIT.

Bike Film Fest Art Show was rad, mostly. See pics below, or skip straight to the wackest thing in the room. I am giving it the wackest thing in the room prize.

Amazing Crank/Chainring

Whoa.

Me & Bloody Doyle

Doyle, Conrad, Porkchop & co showed up all super bloody. Was awesome.
The Fray

The Fray.

The Antlerbike Craze that's sweeping the nation has led to poaching

The Antlerbike Craze that’s sweeping the nation has led to poaching.

Wild dude.

Wild dude.

Hangy sculpture thing.

Hangy sculpture thing.

>The wackest thing in the room.

And now I talk I talk some shit about the wackest thing in the room. This girls on bikes project has been featured at the last 2 BFF’s. Can we talk about how dumb this shit is? I really like the fellow who did this project. He’s a nice guy. Still, would you look at this crap? Someone had the brilliant idea of putting up a sign next to this which said ‘bikes are objects, women are not,’ though you wouldn’t know it from the confusion this project produces. With its sultry subjects, the women pictured in most of these images could be in any crap women’s magazine. Way to push the status quo. I think this project ought to be scrapped. It reminds me of the last onion that came out with the brilliant article “Women now empowered by everything a woman does” I know that SOMEONE who will go unmentioned claimed, insultingly, that this project was a way to include women in the festival. That’s like saying the oiled up babes at car shows are a way to include women in the fun of the car show. Rad. Go feminist car shows!

HAPPY SATURDAY!

DAY:

1) STREET PARTY May 19 | 1pm-7pm
2nd St at 2nd Ave
Fun bike games other fun events presented by TRACKSTAR.
Footdown, trackstands, and skids for all.
FBM hosts BUNNYHOP CHALLENGE w/ cash prizes. Performance by Ines Brunn.

and BIKE PARADE May 19 | 1pm
Meet at 33 W 17th St. near 5th Ave
Calling all tall bikes, short bikes, long bikes, regular bikes to the streets of New York. Show your colors! Ride your most fun bike: with your team, club or your biker friends. Dress yourself up and your bike.

Go see some films about bikes! Schedule/Tix here also bicyclefilmfestival.com
2) Dance Parade NYC

NYC will finally see, hear, and feel a massive mobile celebration of
dance music and culture in all its forms, from electronic beats to
drum and dance troupes. With 50-plus sound systems, 100s of crews,
over 6,000 registered dancers so far, from Herald Square all the way
to Washington Square Park — followed by a huge getdown in the park
with Kool Herc, Danny Tenaglia, and many many more — all making a
big noise to free the beat and the feet in New York already

Full listings online.

6th Avenue and 32nd Street, Manhattan
1p; $free
team@danceparade.org
http://www.danceparade.org

NOTE: Seems like a great idea — a protest that doesn’t look anything
like a protest.

NIGHT:

J & FLETCHER

ART + BIKES PARTY TONIGHT

May 17:: JOY RIDE - An Art Show Inspired by the Bicycle
Curated by Brendt Barbur / Hosted by Fountainhead Films
OPENING PARTY on MAY 17: 6pm-12am
Regular Gallery Hours: 12pm-7pm (May 17-21)
33 West 17th St. near 5th Ave.
Participating Artists:
Swoon / Phil Frost / Amy Franceschini / ESPO / Michel Gondry / Steve MacDonald / David Namaiki / Shepard Fairey / DAZE / Kareem Black / Peter Sutherland / Julia Chiang / Ryuta Nakajima / Massan / Brian Vernor / Benny Zenga / Fast Eddie Williams / Cheryl Dunn / Takuya Sakamoto / Madsaki / Erik Zo / Ko Masuda / Gina Marie Scardino / Erin Nicole Brown / Taliah Lempert / Amy Bolger / Steve Crandall / Tod Seelie / Daniel Leeb / Goods / Joseph Becker / Conrad Carlson / Erik Foss / Greg Ugalde / Yohei Hanazawa / Loren Purcel / Natascha Unkart / Ellis Gallagher AKA © Ellis G. / Jason Chaste / Dr. JPL / Ryan Doyle (BLBC) / Wolfgang Paperchase / Chris McNally / Mike Martin / Bradley Baker and Patty Bowman / Andrew McClintock / David Mashburn

After Party:
HOME SWEET HOME
131 Chrystie Street (Between Delancey and Broome)