Archive for July, 2007

7.9.07: Venice Biennial

July 27th, 2007

Oh yeah, one more Berlin thing. CS and I saw a piece in Berlin by a Polish artist we’d never heard of, Katarzyna Kozyra, and it was terrific. It was a group of videos of retired folks, naked, except they all wore opposite sexual prostheses (men with merkins, women with penises) doing, via stop-motion animation, moves from Nijinski’s choreography for Rite Of Spring — naturally. It was both disturbing and funny.

[Link to video]

Spent a little over 2 days here in Venice. One mostly allotted to viewing the Arsenale, the ¼ mile long former ship facility, now a massive exhibition space, and one day mostly at the Giardini, a park with national pavilions, each mostly featuring an artist from that country. An American, Robert Storr, curated the Arsenale and the Italian pavilion, which is always given over to being a group show. There’s always grumbling about these things, but there are always some wonderful surprises too.

The first half of the slog through the Arsenale featured a lot of fairly didactic political art. Some of this was pretty good, but it also seemed out of context. Not that we just want to be entertained, but some of it seemed educational, journalistic. Large-scale photos of crumbling Beirut buildings and a moving and elaborate memory piece about a Palestinian intellectual living in Rome assassinated by Israel both deserve to be photo essays in a glossy magazine or in a newspaper’s Sunday supplement. Sadly, there aren’t many magazine formats dedicated to this kind of work. For a while Doubletake tried to do this — to mix arty journalistic photos with writing — but it’s a tough sell, I guess. Online versions of quite a few magazines offer expanded versions of the photos they run.

Here is one from a series by Brendan Corr that was in Foreign Policy magazine (of all places!)

07_09_07_a_corr

And one by Brian Ulrich that is in Mother Jones — online.

07_09_07_b_ulrich

What is odd is that these often adhere a little too tightly to the photojournalism/Magnum model to be thrown into the rarefied arty context of this show. The memory piece on Wael Zwaiter, Kara Walker’s silhouettes, Ed Burtynsky’s Chinese photos and another artist’s drawings of U.S. war dead could all be combined with writing, and not necessarily didactic writing, to tell us about ourselves in ways that include history and current events and that go beyond aesthetics. They don’t have to be relegated to the weird insular art world — in fact they may have more power outside of that world.

What they collectively do, maybe what makes them seem odd here, is they point to something else — they ask us to look through the work at something else — a situation, a person, a place. It’s a fuzzy line, and maybe who am I to try and draw it? Even Andreas Gursky’s stuff sometimes (moreso in the past) could almost be viewed as journalism — but now it’s so heavily photoshopped that it represents a mental impression of a place more than the actual place.

(The tiny drawings on one wall of U.S. war dead, are, in my opinion, in poor taste. The Iraqi war dead — most of them civilians — so vastly outnumber the American casualties that in an international art forum this commemoration of only the U.S. deaths seems symptomatic of the current U.S. xenophobia)

Anyway, for a while it felt like we were being lectured at a bit, but there were lots of other pieces that, while not merely existing in a imaginary dreamworld unrelated to our harsh reality, were much less obvious in their intent. While some of the more didactic pieces would be lovely and poetic in another context here they seemed swamped and overpowered by the poetic ambiguity surrounding them.

And then there is encroachment from the other side. Journalistic snaps these days are looking more and more like performance art or elaborately staged film stills — how can an artist compete with this image below? All matching outfits — with the occasional Disney touches!

07_09_07_c_raincoats
Photo — John Raoux/AP
About 1,000 people from 75 countries took their oaths together under the turrets of Cinderella’s Castle at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., as Gloria Estefan sang “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Or this one by James A. Rodriguez (via BoingBoing) of a demonstration in Guatemala. These simple sheets with faces of the disappeared — they don’t need text to speak volumes.

07_09_07_d_guatemala

In another section Joshua Mosley did these odd claymation films of famous philosophers mouthing off as they stroll through a forest — eventually one of them gets viciously attacked by a huge (clay) dog.

[Link to video]

A Chinese artist/filmmaker Yang Fudong had a whole series of boxes spaced throughout the Arsenale: each featured another chapter of his film Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest. The title sounds like a classic story, and it is, but the film was of young hipsters full of ennui and intellectual angst wandering aimlessly, sometimes among rivers and streams, sometimes by modern apartments. It was shot in 35mm (!) and made to look like it was made in the 30s with scratches, flicker and all. Nice to see such high production value in an art context. Why this film had to be shown fragmented into 5 separate booths wasn’t clear — this extravagant presentation did however encourage one to spend a little time in each room, watching for 5 minutes or so. If one were expected to stand or sit on a bench (as is the art installation style) for 25 minutes one might balk — but in smaller doses, little by little we got a substantial taste.

07_09_07_e_fudong

I wouldn’t mind watching the whole thing on DVD, but I imagine if he’s showing it as an art piece and not as a film then only collectors get the DVDs.

In the Russian pavilion crowds lingered over a 3-screen video by AES+F, "Last Riot", that inserted young models having a ritualized battle into a super elaborate computer-game-like landscape, all set to Wagner. It struck a nerve — shirtless models, swords, missiles and explosions — pretty apocalyptic shit. The Wagner didn’t hurt either.

[Link to video]

Another Russian artist, Alex Ponomarev, made a shower stall that rained TV feeds — here it was raining news programs, but apparently if you turned the nozzle you got porn, sports or financial news. It was an homage to Nam Jun Paik, but seemed equally informed by the Matrix.

[Link to video]

In the Korean pavilion Hyungkoo Lee had made a fake natural history museum exhibit of bones and skeletons — which, when you looked closely, turned out to be super realistic bones of cartoon characters! Here are the fossilized remains of Tom and Jerry.

07_09_07_f_hyungkoolee

In the Spanish pavilion two artists called Los Torreznos made hilarious videos of themselves. For some reason their stuff reminded me of conceptual comedy — Andy Kaufman or others whose comedy borders on weird theater.

[Link to video]

In a separate building Francesco Vezzoli made two short fake political ads that were completely believable. The style was dead on and the sound bites and graphics were perfect. Of course, the fact that one featured the French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy as a U.S. presidential candidate and the other Sharon Stone sort of gave it away. Stone’s campaign ad was produced by Mark McKinnon, Bush’s top advertising strategist in 2004, who is senior adviser to Senator John McCain’s presidential campaign. Meanwhile, the "BHL" ad was managed and directed by Bill Clinton’s advertising gurus from 1996.

[Link to video]

Francis Alÿs did a lovely little animated film of a shoe being shined. The way it works with the song is perfect. I guess someone thought that wasn’t enough, for the adjoining room was filled with the animation cells, which seemed completely unnecessary.

[Link to video]

A Belgian artist, Sophie Whettnall, made a video ("Shadowboxing") of a professional boxer coming really really close to hitting her.

[Link to video]

Originally by David Byrne from David Byrne Journal on July 9, 2007, 2:59pm

Posted by v on July 27th, 2007

html decorum for blog entries

July 27th, 2007
 from the very popular french blog platform skyblog.
 
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Originally from cpb::softinfo : Weblog on July 4, 2007, 12:26pm

Posted by v on July 27th, 2007

Now that’s what I call an alternative process

July 27th, 2007

The German physiologist Wilhelm Friedrich Kühne (1837–1900) coined the term rhodopsin for the pigment that is responsible for both the formation of the photoreceptor cells and the first events in the perception of light.

In 1878 he did a fascinating experiment. He covered a rabbit’s head to allow the rhodopsin to accumulate in the rods. Then it was uncovered and positioned toward a barred window. After a three-minute exposure, the animal was decapitated and the eyeball removed. He then ‘fixed’ the retina with a solution to prevent it from being resynthesized. The next day, Kühne was able to see a picture of the window and bars printed upon the retina:

kuhne.jpg
Retinal Photograph, drawn by Willy Kühne, 1878

Originally by Alec Soth from alec soth - blog on July 23, 2007, 7:57pm

Posted by v on July 27th, 2007

The Wit of the Staircase

July 27th, 2007

Last summer, BLDGBLOG interviewed author Erik Davis about Davis’s new book The Visionary State – a book that was originally sent to me on the advice of a woman named Theresa Duncan.
Theresa was the author of an often disarmingly sharp blog called The Wit of the Staircase.

[Image: Artist/photographer unknown. From an old post on The Wit of the Staircase].

When I announced that BLDGBLOG was moving to Los Angeles last September, Theresa and I got in touch, and we began emailing here and there, maybe once a month. Soon, I saw her at the first BLDGBLOG event, back in January; she and her boyfriend, artist Jeremy Blake, tried to meet up with me and my wife at David Maisel’s L.A. opening gala (but our timing was off); and then, after she and Jeremy moved back to NYC, to live in the attic of a church in Manhattan’s East Village, they stopped by the closing party for Postopolis!
She also sent me links here and there, and her emails were incredibly encouraging – in fact, she’s one of the people I thanked when announcing the BLDGBLOG Book back in May.
So I was stunned, saddened, and horrified to learn, in the context of an otherwise casual email exchange, that Theresa committed suicide two weeks ago. Somehow I missed the news.
A few days later, her boyfriend, Jeremy Blake, left behind a note in a pile of clothes on the beach and then “walked into” the Atlantic – and his body has yet to be found.
The story’s been all over The New York Times, The L.A. Times, Modern Art Notes – basically everywhere – even as author Ron Rosenbaum has been using their deaths, somewhat irresponsibly, to speculate about what he wants to believe was a murder.
Of course, Theresa was well-known for her “paranoiac” writings about Scientology, the art world, CIA black ops, secret FBI files, and the like – this post, in particular, has received a huge amount of attention this past week (and it’s a crazy thing to read) – but to throw her entire blog away as mere political ravings overlooks the vast majority of the site’s actual content: short observations – often limited to single quotations and photographs – with an articulate precision and interpretive confidence other writers would only dream of achieving. She could be writing about supermodels, the occult, music, 9/11, Percy Bysshe Shelley, perfume, Los Angeles, or the films of Quentin Tarantino.
Not everyone will agree with the political views espoused in this essay, for instance, but Theresa wrote one of the best and most energetic reviews of Grindhouse I’ve ever read; and she posted a long interview with Father Frank Morales, an Episcopal priest, in which they talk about everything from Philip K. Dick and Jerry Falwell to the Moonies, Freud, Marx, science fiction, and Disneyland – all by way of a discussion about Jesus Christ.
Here’s an excerpt:

    Wit of the Staircase: You know, Philip K. Dick is really interesting on this, too, because he had a conversion experience in California – he famously lived next door to Disneyland – and a woman came to the door. She was wearing a fish sign, a Pisces sign that the early Christians used. And he claims he had this sort of mystical experience that was across dimensions of time. And he actually suddenly felt that time was an illusion. So he said ever after he had the feeling time was essentially created by Satan to prolong and delay the return of Jesus Christ, the Second Coming. So, under all of the supposed progress and all of the change, he says it’s just an overlay over the same unchanging reality. It’s still like the day that Christ died, and he felt the anticipation of resurrection, the thrill, he says, constantly.

    Frank Morales: I totally agree with that.

    Wit: So other than the hucksters, the Falwells and the L. Ron Hubbards of the world, there are these startlingly generous and original religious thinkers. P. K. Dick – obviously, he’s a little wiggy, but he’s an original thinker, and this old narrative was just completely alive for him. And Slavoj Žižek is great on the continuing radicality of Christian love and forgiveness, particularly in his book The Puppet and The Dwarf, which is also thankfully very good on Freud and Marx.

    Morales: As a matter of fact, to use that metaphor again, without sounding preachy, reminds me of Buckminster Fuller’s comments, why do you think they call the basic element of time “the second”? Because it’s not the first.

    Wit: Well, because P.K. Dick lived next to Disney World, he talked about the animatronics there – the servo operated puppets and the moving pirates and the fake birds – a place everything was artificial. And he said that that’s like the second reality. But he said, someday a real bird was going to sing at Disneyland and uncover the first reality.

    Morales: Ah, beautiful.

In any case, this is personal news creeping onto an architecture website – but I’m stunned. And I don’t mean to imply that we were close friends – we weren’t – in fact, we only communicated through email. But sometimes you look away and things just disappear.

Originally by Geoff Manaugh from BLDGBLOG

Posted by v on July 27th, 2007