Posts Tagged ‘Site’

At the Guggenheim ~ Museums and Art Alienation

Guggenheim Rotunda. Photo by Robert C, c-monster.net

I have often found myself in front of a museum canvas – a Titian, an Ingres, a Pollock, what have you – deadly thumbing the vibrant band of beads around my neck, which only moments before had given pure delight.  All senses vanquished. Just numb.

Or dumb?

Why can’t I be moved?  Why doesn’t this priceless work captivate me? Where has the damn luster in my necklace escaped?

This art is better than I am.  It knows more than I.  Other people feel it, get it. I know it’s worth more than I could ever amount.  The auction records say so! It’s in a museum.

And here I say this, hailing from an educational and professional background that would assume otherwise.

Today, at the Guggenheim Museum, I learned just why I don’t get it.  Why sometimes others may not get it, though don’t propose to confess.

On participation (not view) is a conceptual work by Tino Sehgal.  The entire Frank Lloyd Wright-designed rotunda has been stripped bare of all material works.  In its place, Sehgal has hired and trained area youth and adults to interact with museum visitors on a purely verbal plain.  There is nothing concrete to have, nothing one can buy.

You become the work.  You create.  You matter.  You become the matter.

This is how art moved – moved me ~

Mise en scene: I enter museum rotunda and begin the slow, spiral journey upward.  Enter Eric, an 8-year old boy. He is abrupt and stuns me.

Eric: What is progress?

Me: What? Ummmm. Hmmm. Well, okay, to me our view of progress is troubled.  Is progress always moving away from something, assuming that the next thing is better? What’s the proof?  What if it were progress to go back in history and live like farmers?  But that’s not how I’ve been trained to think of progress.

Eric: (He’s been listening intently).  Let me see if I understand?  (He repeats what I said, seeming to process its meaning).

(Eric is approached by a young girl named Fatima.  She’s in middle school.  Eric tells Fatima what I said.  Eric leaves and Fatima continues to walk with me around the rotunda.)

Fatima:  I’ve not heard that view of progress before.  I get it! I really do! Is progress what Government is doing today by bringing back Roosevelt’s New Deal tactics?  Is it good to reissue methods used during the Great Depression today?

(Fatima is met by Mark.  Mark is tall and skinny, probably in his early-30s).

Mark:  Is it bad when preferences become rules?

Me: Oh my God, that’s a great question.  I guess preferences quickly become defense mechanisms, shutting you down?

The dialogue continued onward to the rotunda dome.  I was exhilarated, moved, scared, alive!  As I made my way slowly down the rotunda ramp, I shouted to Mark, “This is progress!”

I didn’t feel art-alienated anymore.  I mattered.  I made “matter.”  I feel the same way when I craft.

I’m ready to go back to the museum canvas.

Similar art ailment? I could be alone.

A Studio, the Aperture of Aspiration

Desk left, a tapestried wall reminiscent of art mounted in the salon style (I should note that this was sewed together all by my lonesome!). One day, a carefully curated collection will hang in its place. Desk front, a salvaged punched tin magnetic board. Desk right, the early stages of fabric bombing.

Had I known that carving out a creative nook in my New York apartment would be a feat of physical and emotional proportions, I may have outsourced the event.

I waffled. I pouted. I wailed.  I hit my head and teared to my husband.

I endured design distress.

What was this Blank Canvas?  It was doubt. For days I sat in paralysis, angered and frustrated by its sterile presence.  How would I summon the self understanding to make a space that reflected me – not only in this moment but through time?

The beauty and the beast of design is that it forces one to make decisions that most likely will not represent the future self.  It’s an exercise in value.  What object is worthy of wall space now?  How does one know?

You see, in the magazines the process and the product of designing a space happen at once.  At the end of the spread, there’s always a tidy, soul-fulfilling environment that speaks volumes about the person inside.  Within a single afternoon, meaning is ascribed to material.

But I can’t take the pressure, which is why I call my humble zone an “aperture of aspiration,” a place that I cannot yet attribute meaning (though, I’m sensing an inkling) but has all aspiration of evolving into one – over time.

The Materials~

* A punched tin tile salvaged from a demo in the Lower East Side.  Perfectly so, these tiles are a fun magnetic surface for savory images, this or even that.

* Ghost Salon Tapestry, a nod to our collecting dreams. Comprised of black swatches that hang in lieu of the artworks that will one day hang, salon style, in our home.  I picked the succulent oriental motif fabrics, traced shapes using our favorite gratin dishes and bread plates, and finally sewed them onto the backdrop.

Tapestry detail

* Fabric bombing has begun.  Discarded seam binding, gift ribbons, scraps and swatches that I have used will be the only materials to wrap the unsightly poles.

* A miscellany of my own darkroom exposures, brads, pushpins, cards, ephemera, inspirations are welcome on all walls, tapestry and magnetic surfaces –  through time.

How have you shaped your studio?  How has your studio shaped you?

Oh, and a strapping hug goes out to each of you for helping me through this.  I brought all of you with me into the streets of New York and this inward journey!

Textured Time

What a week! As I sit from my perch at the side of a quiet, yet dignified old brownstone fireplace amongst the personal effects that make my life meaningful: husband, heavy tomes + light novellas alike, a sundry of objets trouves from our travels,and one special piece I made called Textured Time, I sense an approaching serenity.

Quelle surprise. This is the sentiment of a woman who usually finds herself in a flurry of activity on Sunday.  Always. Wanting. More. Until sidelined with a physically debilitating and emotionally crushing flu that threw me into a serious bout of self reflection.

Last night when my husband buried me under the covers, willing my fever to break, a slew of images swirled about. In the onset of visual vertigo and a deafening – literally – ear infection, I relived the week’s monumental happenings.

The private event at the Museum of Art & Design, the culmination of a month-long sprint of politicking and art prattling, turned out to be one of the most rewarding art events I’ve planned to date.

This photo reminds me of the days I used to coordinate luncheons in the arts for prominent art collectors. This one, though, had the Clueless Crafter branded all over it: lighthearted exchange amongst a bevy of beautiful and intriguing decorative objects.

The article Don’t Do It Yourself, born out of a year’s rumination on the rewards and risks of the handmade life.

The handmade clock Textured Time (which I truly adore and therefore named!) is the result of the Bauhaus Lab I attended at The Museum of Modern Art.

My interpretation of a day recorded in the material world. Feathers mark daybreak; creams punctuated by black velour signify the struggle to wake; soft blues and silkyviolet show the daily humdrum; and, heavy orange plaids are the day's seconds woven together, fiery with hope and the prospect of another day richly lived.

And now last week’s excitement is screeching to a halt and another week is on the brink.  I am left with sights, sounds, and feelings of a time that will never have the same texture.  There is a profound sense of loss as I grapple with the past and the will to go forward.  What next?

The hard part about life is loss.  Sometimes all we can do is cling longingly to a relic.  I’m glad that this evening I have Textured Time with me.  Thank god I made it.

What textures of time gone by do you cherish most?

Who Your Duppy?

Millie making her fabled curried mutton while Oswald models the proverb plate.

Millie making her fabled curried mutton while Oswald models the proverb plate.

Fresh from a Jamaican holiday where I spent an entire week doing nothing myself – Yah mon, meals, beds, and laundry were all done by dear Millie, Oswald and Angela, the villa’s staff – I had all opportunity in the world to become an arrogant, mindless, tourist-jerk.  And, quite frankly, I came close.  Fortuitously, I was saved by a decorative plate and its intriguing description, “Ebery cave-hole hab him own duppy.”

Now, I have been confused by Jamaican patois many a time.  This dialect comes straight from the slaves who cleverly devised a method of  communication to befuddle their masters.

But, as we bridge the New Year, I want to talk about our duppies.  A duppy in Caribbean folklore is a malevolent spirit.  In the inscription “Ebery cave-hole hab him own duppy,” the duppy stands for “troubles.”  As we walk, crawl reluctantly or sprint toward a new year, we must acknowledge what troubles us.

In 2010, what will will your duppy look like? Will it create or destroy?

Who your duppy?

*For more on the etymology of duppy, amuse here.

When the Art Market Is a Big Bully, You Got to Get Arthletic

A stroll through a high caliber, “blue chip” art fair as seen from this clueless collector.  I know my art, but sure can’t play the collector part.

The Basel Bully - the collectors, the blue chip galleries, the aspirational affluent - take on the art uninitiated.

The Basel Bully - the collectors, the blue chip galleries, the aspirational-affluent - takes on the art market uninitiated.

Art Basel Miami was a bully to my senses. The fair, the 15 satellite exhibitions, the whole production from pre- to after-party was a twitching muscle demanding the submission of all assets  - spiritual to financial – to its needy desire.  It wanted to perform for me; I to perform for it.

You wouldn't happen to be VIP?  Oh, you're notttt?!  As I've been hearing, John, (taking a quarter turn to his left) the blogs have been saying that you have had the most active backroom of all at the fair.  What's the champagne for?  Everything is sold.  (cork pops, both smile).

Overheard: "You wouldn't happen to be VIP? OH, you're not?! As I've been hearing, John, (taking a quarter turn to his left away from Non-VIP Person) the blogs have been saying that you have had the most active backroom at the fair. . . What's the champagne for?" "Everything sold, of course." (cork pops, both smile).

From my 5′4″ shortstuff standpoint, the fair’s muscularity was palpable. For the moneyed and the art afficonado who frequent this premier event, politesse was remarkably passee.  A push here a body check there?  Yeah rah!  A  point on the score board. . . .

The Basel Labrynth where clans of collectors lurk, waiting to strike a move.

The Basel Labyrinth where clans of collectors lurk, waiting to strike a move. (photo credit Artnet.com)

I’m a feisty woman who works assiduously to achieve the utopia of perfected self esteem (HEY, we all got dreams), yet the labyrinthine passageways that cut in and out of the exhibition booths threw me right off that path.  I could not contend with the pulsing, ornery crowds.   At every corner, I was knocked into, clearly  sized up by teems of fellow fair goers, gallerinas, collectors, and would-be elite.  It’s all so performative, theatrical, which seemed unusual until I realized I had gone from the sidelines (art historian) to a main participant in the art market game.

The Basel Blood Clot at fair's entrance.  In just moments, toes will be stepped on, glares will be shared, and an aggressive nudge will strike the unsuspecting

The Basel Blood Clot at fair's entrance. In just moments, toes will be stepped on, glares will be shared, and an aggressive nudge will strike the unsuspecting

In one weekend, I leapt from art appreciator to art speculator.  And so I became arthletic.  I confronted the Basel Bully head on.  I pushed back, got sassy with the gallery assistant who wouldn’t share a work’s price with me, and best of all, I remained positive, knowing that the market can only destroy the artist’s intention, the aura of the work, if I let it.

How would you carry yourself in the art market environment I described?  Would you be disenchanted by the money, the affluence, the art-as-object for purchase mentality?

**As a side note – and I’m ashamed to admit this, though not really –  I dropkicked some art.  That’s right, there was a work installed on the floor and when I walked across the exhibition space, I heard the sickening crunch of art under foot.  Crunchy, cracky, shattery, art explosion!  My quick reply to the jaws on the floor, “Sorrrry.  But it’s probably not safe for the art to be there.”  Classy, uber classee.

Basel Miami 2: Critique My Art Aesthetic

Within the week, I will pen my thoughts on what it was like to go to Art Basel, to be at the most exclusive happening of the contemporary art world.

Until then, peek at the last few works I captured from Pulse Miami, one of Basel’s 15 satellite fairs.  Imagine what it would be like to own an original, a piece of art that made you think or feel something you had never experienced before.  What would that work look like?

If you’re not into the art, then check out a blog I frequent to keep up with my dose of art market news and gossip.  I know this journalist-blogger and respect her insight.

Click here for Basel and Scope artworks part 1.

Pulse Miami

Not afraid of the Kindle, this work captures the essence of book as art as decor.  They speak volumes.

Not afraid of the Kindle, this work captures the essence of book as art as decor. They speak volumes.

Baroque beauty.  Jewelry as art.  Again, a bit more of my design side.

Baroque beauty. Jewelry as art. Again, a bit more of my design side.

Sun, water, zizzle zazzle.  Miami.  Looks like by the end of Basel, I became a design hound.

Sun, water, zizzle zazzle. Miami. Looks like by the end of Basel, I became a design hound.

Bureaucratic beauty.  This will be placed next to the Baroque beauty.  Good bye Miami, back to the office.

Bureaucratic beauty. This will be placed next to the Baroque beauty. Good bye Miami, back to the office.

Basel Miami 1: Critique My Art Aesthetic

Alex Katz, complementary colors, bright palette & simplified form

Alex Katz, complementary colors, bright palette & simplified form.

Rhinestoned animal is always an art plus

Rhinestoned animal is always an art plus.

Three oil paintings of old masters

Two oil painting replicas of old masters who, cleverly, appear to have been photographed.

IMG_1345

T. J. Wilcox mixed media of Austrian princess who was stabbed, but corseted so heavily that she didn't know until she took them off.  She bled to death.

T. J. Wilcox mixed media of Austrian princess (artist uses one of only a few extant photographs) who was stabbed, but corseted so heavily that she didn't know until she took it off & bled to death. Satisfies my taste for the Victorian macabre.

T.J. Wilcox

T.J. Wilcox

Louise Lawler The dark glow takes me to the inner sanctum of an Egyptian chamber

Louise Lawler The dark glow takes me to the inner sanctum of an Egyptian chamber.

Kehinde Wiley After Rubens, A piece of Michael Jackson that kept the art blogs buzzing.

Kehinde Wiley After Rubens, A monumental painting of Michael Jackson that kept the art blogs buzzing. Eeeeew, okay just noticed where my head lands in this painting. No wonder I look shell shocked and a bit like the King himself.

Kehinde Wiley Modeled after a deceased St. Cecilia.  Striking reworking of academic styles to fit modern subject matter.

Kehinde Wiley Modeled work after a deceased St. Cecilia. Striking reworking of academic styles to fit modern subject matter.

Presented by Fontana Gallery, Italy, the reflective surface of "Desire" offers a playful interplay between art and viewer.  Satisfying to see myself inside desire.

Exhibited by Fontana Gallery, Italy, the reflective surface of Desire offers a playful interplay between art and viewer. Satisfying to see myself inside desire.

Circle of food, a witty, dark take on our relationship with food?  I find it funny because my hubby says I have a symphony of food, dishes, linens dancing around in my head.

Circle of food, a witty, dark take on our relationship with food? I find it funny because my hubby says I have a symphony of food, dishes, linens dancing around in my head.

Detail of food

Food in grotesque detail.

Yinka Shonibare melds my penchant for the Victorian while exploring meaty topics of class, gender, race

Yinka Shonibare melds my penchant for the Victorian (fashioned out of African fabrics) while exploring meaty topics of class, gender, race.

Hannah Wilke takes on feminist issues.  Panders to my intellect,  not visual desires

Hannah Wilke takes on feminist issues. Captivates my intellect, not visual desire.

Luxury escalade as big marketing pimp.  Intrigued by the blank billboards, blank screen in car.  A comment on advertising and consumption?

Luxury Escalade as big marketing pimp. Intrigued by the blank billboards beyond, blank screen in car. A comment on advertising and consumerism?

Scope Miami

Completely flat yet appears 3-D, this art chair panders to my design side

Completely flat yet appears 3-D, this art chair panders to my design side.

A scrupulously knit wedding banquet with the a melancholy twist "Great Expectations" Miss Havisham

A scrupulously knit wedding banquet with the melancholic twist of Miss Havisham's "Great Expectations"

A painting that comes to life through the camera lens. Hauntingly Elizabethan

A painting that comes to life through the camera lens. Hauntingly Elizabethan.

A fairytale gone wrong.  Innocence lost.  Adulthood never actualized

A fairytale gone wrong with art-words to spur the intellect. Innocence lost? Adulthood never actualized? Whose fault?

Krel being interviewed by European video journal

Krel being interviewed by European video journal.

Krel, a fashion designer, made dresses on site & tailored to your body within the hour

Art fashion interlude: Krel, a fashion designer, made dresses on site & tailored to your body within the hour.

In this post and the next, I have intentionally made little comment.  What I’d love to know is how would you craft your own art collection?  What pieces would you  include and why?

If you have questions about artist or medium, do ask.  For Krel’s fashion, click Krelwear.

Art Basel Miami Scene

Miami was on fire Thursday with record temps = a visit to the beach

Miami was on fire Thursday with record temps so I made a pit stop shoreside

So happy to be back in the holiday land! While Art Basel still has my head spinning, I wanted to immediately throw some photos your way to help contextualize what the week-long art extravaganza is about.  In addition to Art Basel, we also ventured to Scope and Pulse. In the next post, I’ll share all the artworks I liked and thought you may find interesting too. Finally, when our eyes are exhausted, I will put a few words about what it is like to experience this high-powered, see-and-be-seen fair.

If anything surprises you off the top of your head do share.  Most importantly though, draw your own conclusions before I put mine out there!

If you’re into the gossipy art thing, click  here.

Awaiting my friends, I dove into the ocean solo

Awaiting my friends, I dove into the ocean solo

Storm clouds brewing

Storm clouds brewing

Keeping it real, I crawl under a stack of chairs for shade

Keeping it real, I crawl under a stack of chairs for shade

Palm shadows on Deco

Palm shadows on Deco

Sunset on South Beach

Sunset on South Beach

Haddon Hall Hotel, the ultimate in Euro Essence luxury accomodations.

Haddon Hall Hotel, the ultimate in Euro Essence luxury accomodations.

Night descends; Miami becomes a Deco jewel box

Night descends; Miami becomes a Deco jewel box

Wynwood Walls, outdoor exhibition with stunning murals by lauded street artists

Wynwood Walls, outdoor exhibition with stunning murals by lauded street artists

Shepard Fairey at Wynwood Walls

Shepard Fairey at Wynwood Walls

Captivating formal qualities similar to those found in medieval illuminated manuscripts and Byzantine icons

Captivating formal qualities similar to those found in medieval illuminated manuscripts and Byzantine icons

mondrian mural

Haunting image of solitude. It will engulf you.

Lance Armstrong's Benefit

Stages Lance Armstrong's Benefit

Final pic before leaving Lance's benefit

Final pic before leaving Lance's benefit. Hmmm how long have we been up now??

Inside the fete

Inside the fete

On our way in to Basel

On our way in to Basel

Entrance to Art Basel

Entrance to Art Basel

Art Basel, the largest fair, abuzz with sales and art world gossip

Art Basel, the largest fair, abuzz with sales and art world gossip

Free-spirited hat guy flustred the serenity of these gallery owners

Free-spirited hat guy flustered the serenity of these gallery owners

Men's fashion memo for Basel 2009:  Everyone wear gingham.  Never seen so much of it.  These two gallery guys got another trend straight with greeen cords and washed denim over shirts, capped off with a lowbrow orange cravate

Men's fashion memo for Basel 2009: Everyone wear gingham. Never seen so much of it. These two gallery guys got another trend straight with greeen cords and washed denim overshirts, capped off with a lowbrow orange cravate

La Sandwicherie is a famous spot for French Street food on South Beach

La Sandwicherie is a famous spot for French Street food on South Beach

Scope, a much smaller, less-established fair

Scope, a much smaller, less-established fair

Scope's courtyard before a massive front came in dumping inches of water on us and dropping the temp by 30 degrees!

Scope's courtyard before a massive front came in dumping inches of water on us and dropping the temp by 30 degrees!

Entrance to Pulse Fair

Entrance to Pulse Fair

Clueless Goes to Miami

art basel

This turkey is off to baste in the Miami sunshine.  That’s right, ladies and lads, tomorrow I’ll be  up with the roosters and on my way to Art Basel Miami Beach, an international contemporary art fair with more than 250 premier galleries in attendance.

My descent on Miami symbolizes the culmination of my graduate studies, a chance to see the art market in action.  But I come from two camps:  one that views art outside the realm of commerce – the art historian side; the other that knows that art and artists need the market to survive. Before the credit crash, Basel (marketers) and others glorified art as commodity, promoting fairs as playgrounds for the wealthiest – often with precarious egos; some without apprehension of art and its history –  to mental masturbate en masse (“hobnob,” I believe is the appropriate term).  Art, so it seemed, was not the primary reason to be there.  Hmmm.

elle decor miami

art basel cartier

Has economic  hardship changed the face of the art world?  The meaning of art?  Respect, appreciation and knowledge of art and artists?  These are the thoughts that frequently mill through my mind, and will be when I meander through the booths at Miami.

art booth

Now, if you’ll excuse me I have to pack, preen, slap on a fake tan, grow some breasts, and craft a few art-conversation topics to hobnob with those who may be more clueless than I.  Wink and a nod.  Oh yeah.

What say you about art and the market?  Blurt out the first word that comes to mind.

See New York Magazine’s Holiday in the Sun, a good read for the uninitiated.

Crafting Coupledom

View of Manhattan from Brooklyn's Fulton Ferry Park

View of Manhattan from Brooklyn Flea Market

When Friday dawns, we are both so glad to wipe the week’s sweat off our brow and settle into the expanse of the weekend.  It’s a time of endless opportunity.  A time to stroll to our favorite neighborhood brunch spot and refill the larder with Manhattan’s abundant, unique delicacies.  Life seems so rich, unstructured and open for adventure.

It’s also a time to fight.  Oh yeah.

Because, despite it all, we are still individuals who have slightly different concepts of what an ideal Saturday should be.

My Ideal Saturday

Pop up at 7:30am to the magical sound of the sleeping city.  Put on a pot of coffee and venture to the front door to gather the weekend edition of the New York Times.  Hubby wakes up a bit later and meets me in the living room for side-by-side reading and talk of the day ahead.  New York’s news, neighborhood doings (any gossip? Love it!), and deep musing into the future of career, family, and any fantasy punctuate the crisp black and white perfection of my ideal Saturday morning.

His Ideal Saturday

Wake up whenever his body is healed and rejuvenated from the arduous week.  6am or 11am, what does it matter?  Roll around, yawn, lull in and out of sleep, stretch, sigh, move one leg, find glasses, find me.  He’s up and a happy camper! The day ahead?  Whatever we want!

What do we want? Do we want to kick around on our own, thinking and doing things in proximity yet separately?  Or do we want to walk the city in sync, enmeshed within the other? Neither one knows exactly what the other wants or needs at that very moment.

It changes.  We change.

Ah yes, we’ve changed since day one of our marriage, we changed yesterday and we will be changing tomorrow.

I now let him sleep in (sometimes) and, well, he refills my cup of coffee while I read the paper.  I know – he’s a great guy. He also makes the best oatmeal pancakes and that is one thing we both adore!

Some weekend ways we crafted coupledom.

Saturday ~ Ventured to the preview of an auction of works on paper at Swann Galleries.  Together we studied the prints and read the catalogs, trying to listen to and learn what the other finds meaningful and visually pleasing.  If we were to one day start an art collection, what would it look like?  Could we compromise, come to an agreement on aesthetic values?

Sunday ~ Hopped over to DUMBO’s waterfront for the Brooklyn Flea, a small market with an array of vintage clothing, ceramics, furniture, and other delightful odds and ends.  It also boasts the sweetest, melt-in-your-mouth Connecticut Lobster roll (brushed with drawn butter, not mayo) that both of us have ever laid claws on.  And, get a load of those pizza margheritas handcrafted on the spot in that elegant pizza oven!

Moto Pizza's ornate, mobile wood burning oven

Moto Pizza's ornate, mobile wood burning oven

Succulent lobster roll from Red Hook Lobster Pound

Succulent lobster roll from Red Hook Lobster Pound

Sitting next to each other, lobster roll and warm slices in hand, we knew we had come to one understanding of what blissful coupledom could look, smell, and taste like.

What do you do?