Saturday, August 25, 2012

Neil Armstrong (1930 - 2012)


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Neil Armstrong, the first human being to walk on the moon, has died at age 82, according to NBC News. Earlier this month the former astronaut underwent heart surgery. Armstrong made the historic walk on the moon on July 20, 1969.  When he touched his foot on the moon he said, "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."  

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Underground: Brooklyn - FRIDAY AUGUST 10, 2012


Brooklyn, NY (August 10, 2012) - Converge Gallery and OfficeOps are pleased to announce their latest show Underground, a series of works by Matthew Rose, New York artists Rick Prol, Mike Cockrill and Jeffrey Allen Price, Kansas City, MO artist Tyler Coey, Vancouver, Canada artist Chris Brett, Chicago, IL artist Matthew Ryan Sharp, Oakland, CA artist Yosiell Lorenzo, Williamsport, PA artists Seth Goodman, Liz Parrish, Jeremiah Johnson, and Tim Miller, Northampton, MA artist Rick Beaupre and Dean Landry.

“As artists, we’re all constantly struggling to remain relevant, grow and evolve aesthetically. This is a process that is ongoing… the ‘cup’ will never be full. We will continue to do this and strive for growth until the day we are no more. There is always a ‘NEXT BIG THING’ and many of us do not fit this mold.   – Matthew Ryan Sharp

The show, ‘Underground,’ is located in the Office Ops building, 57 Thames Street, Second Floor, Brooklyn, NY on August 10, 2012 from 5-9pm.

About the Artists
Matthew Rose is an American artist living and working in Paris, France.  Known for his collage work and large scale installations of his work, as well as the global art project A Book About Death, he graduated Brown University with a degree in semiotics and linguistics (1981).  His works are widely collected Europe and the US and are in both public and private collections.

Rick Prol is an ‘80s East Village icon whose work features cartoonish mayhem, death and suicide in dilapidated and decaying settings. He dabbles in a variety of media including – installations, paintings, sculpture and drawings.  Much of the inspiration for Prol’s work stems from general childhood trauma. Cartoon expressionism was the language he wanted to use to convey his organic, personal experiences about life. He pulls from the urban realities of city life; brutality, authoritarian relationships, decay and destruction of the world around him, and more recently the Occupy Wall Street movement.

Mike Cockrill is a figurative painter who recently announced that he was having a “Modern Breakdown” and began posted a series of photos of himself in his studio working in a radically new direction. Girls and women with fragmented faces and 1950’s hairdos, and other almost tribal works in which the female is merged with the clown and stacked like totems. Story telling was gone. So were the shades of Norman Rockwell.

Jeffrey Allen Price is a multi-media and interdisciplinary installation artist. His work often alludes to natural processes such as growth and decay and ultimately comments on consumerism and materialistic culture. His work is often process-based and accumulative, humorous and playful. His works have been shown internationally and have been features in The New York Times and on the Food Network.

Tyler Coey is a Kansas City artist whose pieces combine the brush work and technique of traditional painting with contemporary subjects and icons. Attention was quickly directed to the local gallery scene, which in turn lead to national and international exhibitions.

Chris Brett is an artist from Vancouver, Canada who utilizes mixed media to create his works. His work is influenced by graffiti, children’s books, and cartoons. He uses rich colors and dark tones to express themes of love, lust, nature and heartbreak.

Matthew Ryan Sharp is a Chicago-based artist whose work is loaded with people we all know to some degree, sharing a colorful and lighthearted view into the American soul. His images can exist in opposition between the subject and statement, the irony painted on found object canvases. He offers truth in these images, a reflection of our own humanity laced with sarcasm and humor. He does it in brutal cartoonish fervor.

Yosiell Lorenzo is a California-based artist whose work appears to be whimsical and free-spirited but when you look deeper at his work you see sadness and longing. He utilizes many different mediums in his works including: sculpture, ink, graphite, digital vector art, and paints.  Recently he was a featured artist in Pixar Times and has shown his work in Gallery1988.

Rick Beaupre is a Massachusetts surrealist artist whose pieces utilize acrylic and oil paints as well as pencil sketches, charcoals, casein (which is a quick drying, aqueous medium which uses a milk-based binding agent), and watercolors. 

Seth Goodman began thinking about class and wealth disparities at an early age growing up in Ballston Spa, New York, the blue-collar ugly stepchild to the next town over, high-rolling Saratoga Springs. His works are reflective of what he witness while growing up and as shocking as they may seem to some, to others they are the people living in the trailer next door.

Liz Parrish is a Pennsylvania native who draws inspiration from her surroundings, the people she cares about, ill-tempered animals, and abandoned places. She utilizes acrylics, pen and ink on wood. Her works are whimsically grotesque and feature distorted yet almost adorable creatures of her own creation.

Jeremiah Johnson is a Pennsylvania native whose pieces include works on paper inspired by dreams, visions, experimentations, and life, handmade, original decorative prints and paintings, drawings, and works inspired by the current state of healthcare in America.  His work is part of several public and private collections including The State Museum of Pennsylvania, Lock Haven University, Susquehanna Health, University of Chicago, Syracuse University, and Temple University.

Tim Miller is a Pennsylvania native whose pieces include 3-D works, which include ideas of love, life, loss, and luck permeate the work and in its finished state will form a seamless timeline where each piece holds its individual space in time while still being a part of an integrated whole. The 88 is an ongoing project that will consist of 88 different works with a common background and each piece measuring 8"x 8".

About OfficeOps
OfficeOps is an arts performance and production center. The second floor is the primary space for events, rehearsals, classes, and management of OfficeOps. It is laid out over a 15,000 square foot converted factory floor with space for any number of arts and culture related activities. Based on Brooklyn, NY, Office Ops is located at 57 Thames Street, Second Floor, Brooklyn, NY. For more information, please call: 718-418-2509, or visit: http://www.officeops.org/.

About Converge Gallery
Converge Gallery exhibits a variety of fine contemporary art (photography, paintings, mixed media, sculpture, installations and drawings). The gallery represents the talents of many artists local and non-native, emerging and established.  Based in historic downtown Williamsport, PA, Converge Gallery is located at 140 West Fourth Street. Gallery hours are Wednesday-Friday 11am-7pm and Saturday 11am-5pm.   For more information, please call: 570-435-7080, or visit: www.convergegallery.com or email:  john@convergegallery.com.


More information here:  http://convergegallery.

Monday, August 6, 2012

The Casualties of War: The Dorothy Collective



Brilliant new art toy from The Dorothy Collective ("We Are Dorothy"), Casualties of War.  Four action figures: £2,000.  But there are also God and Satan desk signs, £100 each, Yankee Doodle Dollar silkscreen prints, £50, Periodic Table of Social issues for £35  among other mind blowers you must see: More here: http://www.wearedorothy.com/shop/

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Ben Evans: Thrift Store Paintings































These works take found paintings and add a certain je ne sais quoi to them, giving these pieces a new exciting narrative.  Evans takes his cue from thrift store genius Jim Shaw (who installed hundreds of his thrift store finds at Metro Pictures in New York City in the 1980s) and makes these works his own. See more paintings and artworks by Ben Evans: Thrift Store Paintings.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Cambridge Design in Cambridge, New York

Nancy Krauss owns and runs Cambridge Design and Lantern Works and the Trout Copper Gallery.  The handcrafted copper lighting fixtures, primarily lanterns are produced in its facility in Washington County, Town of Jackson, New York. The workshops are located in a renovated pre-Civil war English style barn.

"We fabricate our products from raw materials entirely by hand," she says. "We fashion our lanterns from solid sheet copper and then electrify them with U. L. approved components.  Factory seconds and limited selection of first quality lanterns at the Factory Store. Our outlet selection is constantly changing."  Visit them on the web:  http://www.cambridgelanternworks.com/

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Power & Beauty at Rove London
































Jasper Joffee: Adolf Hitler. Oil on canvas, 100 x 80 cm.

These are the last days to see Jasper Joffe's "Power & Beauty" at Kenny Schachter/ Rove Gallery 33/34 Hoxton Square, London.  Open 10am to 6pm every day until this Saturday June 23th. 

Jasper's large oil canvases career around the celebrity sphere and then detour to a grim bunch of dictators in living color.  You can also see the complete images from the exhibition here: http://www.rovetv.net/powerandbeauty.html

Jasper advises: "You could go on Saturday and see some other shows too at Ibid Projects, White Cube, and perhaps wander up to Victoria Miro. Why not get a Vietnamese Baguette, I recommend the classic at Keu on Old Street. But it will make me happy if you see my show."

Jasper's web site: http://www.jasperjoffe.com
Jasper's FB: http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.jasperjoffe.com
Jasper's Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/jasperjoffe
 

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Books



Apparently there was a flood somewhere and all the books got wet. And destroyed. I have no idea where this is.  Anyone?

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Gary Baseman in The Ukraine



Artist Gary Baseman writes from The Ukraine, his ancestral home: "Toby & I loved the Color Explosion when we entered this little Ukrainian Market in Kostopol, which used to be the hometown of my mother."  (Toby is the artist's creation and in the arms of the shopkeeper in this photo).

 
Gary Baseman website: http://www.garybaseman.com

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Mister Rogers Remixed | Garden of Your Mind | PBS Digital Studios


You might want to plant this in the garden of a friend's mind.


Mister Rogers remixed by Symphony of Science's John Boswell for PBS Digital Studios. **If you like this video, please support your local PBS station.** http://www.pbs.org/donate

Friday, June 8, 2012

SECOND NATURE @ PROJECTIVE CITY PARIS 75013


Image: Géraud Soulhiol, La Battaile (detail), 240 x 42 cm, graphite on paper, 2011

Second Nature
Curated by Benjamin Evans, Audrey Mattio et Fabienne Saque

June 14th -- July 1st 2012
Vernissage: Thursday, June 14th, 6-9 pm.


Gallery Hours: 12-6 pm, Wed - Sunday
34 Rue Hélène Brion, Paris 75013
Métro: Bibliotheque Francois Mitterand


Featuring the work of Benoît Pype, Marc Gourmelon, Nesta Mayo, Géraud Soulhiol, Matthew Rose and Adaem 

Image: (left): Matthew Rose, Breathless, 50 x 50 cm, collage on canvas, 2009.

"Second Nature" suggests those things that have become so habitual to us that they seem innate. Habits of thought, action, or sensibility become so ingrained that we no longer notice that they are not in fact natural but instead conditioned and developed. Theodore Adorno famously developed this concept in his writing about the culture industry, describing it as the pre-constructed social and material space into which the individual must fit and conform. Contemporary residents of the West grow up in a world of IKEA furniture, concrete, television, cars and the 40-hour work week, and inevitably take such things as totally natural. Perhaps more importantly, built into this cultural environment are ideological constructions like race, gender, class and sexual identity -- this is the reason why the seemingly innocuous culture industry is so crucial to investigate. Adorno's key point was not simply that we have become alienated from the natural world of rocks, trees, animals and lightning storms inhabited by our ancient ancestors, but that this world has largely been replaced by a second, constructed world that we cannot help but accept as "natural".

One consequence of this replacement is that our perception of the original natural world is forever to be viewed through the lens of second nature. Boundaries between the natural and cultural are no longer coherent. Yet the artists in this exhibition take this convoluted borderland as a generative space. The show brings together work in photography, drawing, collage, sculpture and mixed media, and presents a variety of aesthetic approaches. From quiet images of natural spaces interacting with human artifacts, to careful compositions that express deeply human issues by using imagery from the natural world, to complex, fragmentary collages portraying the ubiquity of second nature itself, these artists collectively explore the complexity of issues that exists at the intersection of these two worlds.

See the Projective City website and directions: http://projectivecity.com/?page_id=2042
See the FaceBook Page: http://www.facebook.com/events/231112360325695/


14 juin – 1er juillet
Vernissage – 14 juin – 19h

Ouverture: Mercredi – Dimanche / 12h – 18h
34 Rue Hélène Brion, Paris 13ème
Métro: Ligne 14 – Bibliothèque (click for directions)


La notion de “Seconde Nature” suggère que les choses qui nous sont -devenues- si familières nous semblent innées. Nos habitudes -de penser, d’agir, de ressentir- sont désormais si ancrées que nous ne remarquons même plus qu’elles ne sont pas aussi naturelles qu’elles pourraient le sembler. Elles sont, bien au contraire, tout à fait conditionnées et formatées par un environnement “culturel”. Théodore Adorno, à l’origine de ce concept -qui fait son apparition dans ses écrits sur “l’industrie de la culture”-, le décrit comme “l’espace social et matériel pré-construit dans lequel l’individu doit s’intégrer et se conformer”.

Image: (right): Marc Gourmelon, Citerne, silver geletin print, 18 x 24 cm, 2008.
 
Le monde occidental est aujourd’hui régi par du mobilier suédois, des murs de béton préfabriqué, des centaines de chaînes de télévision et des semaines de 35 heures, toutes ces données qui sont aujourd’hui considérées comme tout à fait “naturelles”… Et, qui, plus important encore, s’imposent dans cet environnement déjà biaisé de conceptions idéologiques telles que race, genre, classe,  identité sexuelle, etc – faisant de l’industrie culturelle un élément fondamental à explorer. Selon Adorno, l’être humain est aliéné par cet environnement fait de pierres, d’arbres, d’animaux, de tonnerre… d’éléments habités par les fantômes de ses ancêtres. Mais surtout, que cet environnement premier, primal, a largement été remplacé par un second : un monde construit qui est depuis, à son tour, assimilé comme étant de l’ordre du “naturel”.

Conséquence directe de ce remplacement, de cet amalgame : notre perception du monde naturel et originel est à jamais accessible depuis le filtre de l’objectif de cette “seconde nature”. Les frontières entre naturel et culturel ne sont désormais plus définies. Les artistes présentés abordent cette délimitation instable et nébuleuse comme un espace générateur de créativité. L’exposition rassemble une variété d’approches esthétiques de cette notion de “Seconde nature” : photographies, dessins, collages, sculptures et techniques mixtes. Des images paisibles d’espaces naturels en interaction avec des artefacts de l’homme, aux compositions soignées en opposition/en réponse à des problématiques profondément humaines en passant par une illustration du monde naturel, ou encore par, de complexes collages dépeignant l’omniprésence de la seconde nature elle-même… L’ensemble des artistes explore la complexité des questions qui résultent de la confrontation de ces deux mondes : nature et culture.
 

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Natasha Lythgoe: "Opening" in Paris 13 June























































"My work focuses primarily on investigating perception," says Natasha Lythgoe, the British photographer who will open her first exhibition in Paris on Wednesday 13 June, 2012 at the Centre Iris, 238 Rue St Martin 75003.

Current projects focus around the question of whether it is possible to retain a sense of subject matter in abstract/non-representational photography.  "I continue to explore ways in which disparate images from different places, time and apparent subject matter can be bought together to create a coherent whole."

See Natasha's web site and additional images: http://www.natashalythgoe.com/

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Superman Typing Contest































Please caption this photograph with a single line in the comment section below. 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Peter Schuyff's Nothing

Directed by Maarten Schuth 2012. The Woodwards are Peter Schuyff and Stevie Guy. Peter is both artist and musician. Here in an artblog.org interview with Peter from 2009: 10 Questions for Peter Schuyff.  Some new music here: http://thewoodwards.bandcamp.com/track/the-wood-2

Friday, May 25, 2012

Antoine Poncet: French Voodoos Living It Up At The Metz




























French artist Antoine Poncet presents his French anti-gothas Fetisches at the Centre Pompidou-Metz.

He will also present his book, the captions of the MAGINOT LINE.  See the details below.  Check out Antoine's web site here:  http://antoineponcet.fr/Actualites.html

 



Prison Map





















Prison Map is not a map -- it's a snapshot of the earth's surface, taken at various points throughout the United States. It was made by Josh Begley, a graduate student studying Interactive Telecommunications at New York University.

* * *

The United States is the prison capital of the world. This is not news to most people. When discussing the idea of mass incarceration, we often trot out numbers and dates and charts to explain the growth of imprisonment as both a historical phenomenon and a present-day reality.

But what does the geography of incarceration in the US actually look like? In a literal sense, Prison Map is an attempt to answer that question.  See: Prison Map.