Archive for the ‘San Francisco’ Category

* Totam Culture: October 15th

Posted on October 15th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Alternative Spaces, Art, Contemporary Art, Galleries, Museums, New York, Photography, San Francisco, Talks and Panels, Weekly Picks.


Michael McConnell, Slings 1, courtesy of the artist.

Tonight: Group opening at Jancar Jones Gallery in SF- Justin Beal, Lena Daly & Kate Owens. 6-9pm.

Artist Mark Dion presents a lecture about his work around scientific presentation and methodologies. Timken Hall at CCA, SF campus. 7-9pm. Free.

Friday, October 16th: Michael McConnell’s Slings and Arrows opens at Gallery BellJar in SF. 6-9pm. 

HYPERSPACES group opening at Park Life in SF: new works by Sean Mcfarland, Paul Wackers, David Kasprzak, Orion Shepherd, and James Sterling Pitt. 7-10pm

Cutters, an exhibition of international collage curated by James Gallagher, opens at Cinders Gallery in Brooklyn. 7-10pm

Saturday October 17th: The newly renovated El Museo del Barrio celebrates its grand reopening with free admission and a day of music and activities. 11am-9pm.

The grand opening of SF’s contemporary art space Southern Exposure in its new location, with an inaugural exhibition, Bellwether. 4-10pm

Sunday, October 18th: artist Tamar Hirschl will hold an open studio event as part of Chelsea’s High Line Open Studios event, featuring tours of more than 100 artists’ workspaces in the center of New York’s gallery district.

Monday, October 19th: The Berkeley Center for New Media and SFMOMA  presents From A to B and Back Again, a photo and video presentation by artist Candice Breitz. 160 Kroeber Hall, UC Berkeley, 7:30-9pm. Free.

Wednesday, October 21st: International curators Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, Jens Hoffmann, Hou Hanru, and Dominic Willsdon participate in a panel discussion at the SF Art Institute on Global Art in the Downturn. 7:30pm. Free.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: August 20th

Posted on August 20th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Alternative Spaces, Art, Contemporary Art, Film, Galleries, New York, Performance, Photography, San Francisco, Weekly Picks.


TONIGHT, August 20th: Artists’ reception for Trains and Trips from Cement to Cemetery at Heist Gallery, featuring Peter Feigenbaum’s model-railroad-scale depiction of outer-borough NYC in the 1980s, and eerie woodland paintings by Marissa Bluestone.

Friday, August 21st: EAI Project Space at X-Initiative presents a video tribute to the late Merce Cunningham, featuring works by Charles Atlas, Nam June Paik and Shigeto Kubota. Noon-8pm, free.

San Francisco artists Lisa Rybovich Cralle and Jessalyn Aaland’s Good News opens at Painted Bird, with music by Jealousy. 8-10pm. Thru Sept. 11th.

Saturday, August 22nd: The 8th annual San Francisco Zine Fest celebrates small-press and DIY publications from the Bay Area and beyond this weekend. At the SF County Fair Building in Golden Gate Park thru Sunday, August 23rd, 11am-6pm, free.

Sunday, August 23rd:  One of our favorite storytellers, Juliet Wayne, is spinning a 40-minute tale, “The Moron Years,” about her life which is already the stuff of legend. If you haven’t seen her at various performance events around NYC or Philadelphia, don’t miss your chance this weekend. 6pm, Cornelia Street Cafe, $10. (via Jeff Simmermon)

Monday, August 24th: Your last week to catch I Don’t Believe in Miracles, a group exhibition focusing on the natural elements curated by Alana Celii at Space Womb gallery in Long Island City. Open Thursday-Monday.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Chris Lux: Give Me Some Peppermint Freedom

Posted on July 17th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Art, Contemporary Art, Galleries, San Francisco.


Closing tomorrow, Saturday, July 18th: Chris Lux’s exhibition, Give Me Some Peppermint Freedom at Jancar Jones Gallery.

Chris Lux, Give Me Some Peppermint Freedom, 2009, oil on panel, faux mistletoe, 43 x 12 inches. Image courtesy Jancar Jones Gallery
Chris Lux, Give Me Some Peppermint Freedom, 2009, oil on panel, faux mistletoe, 43 x 12 inches. Image courtesy Jancar Jones Gallery

Unlike the artist’s earlier works which teem with bright, faceless figures (think Jonathan Borofsky’s sculptures invading a Hieronymous Bosch landscape) Lux’s new paintings seem to have distilled the color punctuation and movement of his previous works into more contemplative canvases with a kinetic, modernist bent.

Citing diverse influences, from Pieter Bruegel the Elder to Tal R, these paintings have a confidence and naive energy associated with the latter artist’s work, but seem executed with a less-studied, looser hand. Lux’s inventive use of repurposed materials in his compositions is evident in the incorporation of elements like plastic branches and layered glass panels in his paintings, or in the use of fake-marble busts as a pedestal.

Some of my favorites:

The paintings were accompanied by a selection of Lux’s found-object sculptures in a glass vitrine that at first glance recalled Josephine Meckseper’s retail displays. While the sculptures held some interest as possible referents to the artist’s working process, the case, neither large enough to compete with the paintings nor small enough to be supplementary ultimately seemed tangential to the dominance of the 2-D work in the gallery space.

Chris Lux’s Flickr

Jancar Jones Gallery

(photos c/o Aileen Tat unless noted)

Tags: , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: June 19th

Posted on June 19th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Alternative Spaces, Art, Contemporary Art, Film, Galleries, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Talks and Panels, Weekly Picks.


TONIGHT: San Francisco-based artist Chris Lux’s solo exhibition Give Me Some Peppermint Freedom opens at Jancar Jones Gallery. Lux’s work was accorded this week’s SFBG Pick for his “new rave sensibility.” 6-9pm, free. Through July 18th.

OMG Gallery Aferro Benefit preview, see below for additional details. 6-8pm

Saturday, June 20th: OMG Aferro Art Party Benefit. Gallery Aferro founders Evonne Davis and Emma Wilcox have been consistently supporting and producing some of the strongest emerging artists’ projects that The Totam has come across in recent years. Funds from the sale of artist-donated artworks and crafts at this inaugural benefit event will be used to cover the costs of finalizing Aferro’s status as a non-profit organization. We strongly urge tri-state residents to enjoy an entertaining evening and buy some fantastic work to support an organization promoting a thriving community of artists in and beyond the Newark area.

Everything is Terrible: The Movie premieres at The Silent Movie Theater in Los Angeles. This full-length feature by the group of friends responsible for the popular Everything is Terrible website and YouTube channel promises to be a comic videoclip mashup of weird and epic proportions. One night only. Accompanied by a screening of the 1994 softcore classic, Dinosaur Island. 10:30pm, $10. Tickets here.

Monday, June 22nd: catch Afternoon, the solo project of singer-songwriter Krista Warden at the new Williamsburg music venue Bruar Falls, with Drew Victor. Warden’s accordion, guitar, and bittersweet honky-tonk-tinged vocal sensibility has graced collaborations with fellow Brooklyn notables Drew VictorBeastheart and Sharon van Etten. 9pm, free.

Tuesday, June 23rd: The opening of X-Initiative’s No Soul For Sale: A Festival of Independents. X has invited more than 30 international nonprofit art spaces to travel to New York City to present themselves, their programs and the artists they support. 1-9pm, RSVP here. Through June 28th.

In conjunction with No Soul For Sale, Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI) will be unveiling a temporary video project space on X’s ground floor which will be open to the public, bringing new works by emerging artists into dialogue with rarely seen historical treasures from the EAI archives for the summer. Character Witness, the launch program for EAI’s project space, includes works by Kalup Linzy, Alex Bag, Michael Smith, MICA-TV, Harry Dodge and Stanya Kahn, and Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson. 6pm, free. Through September 2009.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: Biennale Week at Home

Posted on June 4th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Alternative Spaces, Art, Contemporary Art, Galleries, Modern Art, Museums, New York, Performance, Photography, San Francisco, Talks and Panels, Weekly Picks.


Daniel Salemi, Ikea vs. Beuer, 2009, c-print. Courtesy of Kris Graves Projects.

Not able to see Swoon’s Swimming Cities, or Bruce Nauman’s pavilion at the Venice Biennale in person this year? Well, you could opt to visit what is being touted as the Biennale’s “largest pavilionhere, or just take advantage of an abundance of homegrown activities this weekend and beyond:

TONIGHT: Honey Space hosts a benefit and celebration for Swoon’s Swimming Cities of Serenissima, with a silent auction that includes works by many of the artists on the boats’ crew, and a raffle for original artwork by Swoon and Thomas Beale. 7-9pm, $10 admission.

Artists Daniel Salemi and Austin Thomas have concurrent openings of their work tonight in the main and project spaces of Kris Graves Projects. Salemi’s photographs and Thomas’ drawings and collages share an affinity for architectural forms. 6-9pm

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in SF presents Big Idea Night, featuring the delicious stylings of Mission Street Food. 9pm-3am. FREE, RSVP recommended.

Friday June 5th: Varnish Gallery hosts a party to raise awareness about eminent domain issues with guests Jello Biafra, Matt Gonzalez, etc. The gallery is one of over 30 local businesses and residences being evicted by a San Francisco city agency under the property law. 7-Midnight, 21+. Free.

Saturday June 6th: As part of Michael Cataldi and Nils Norman’s The University of Trash at Sculpture Center in Long Island City, guest artists McKendree Key and the neuroTransmitter collective have been invited to give public courses at the museum. Key will teach a family workshop on making recycled paper and paper-pulp sculptures, and neuroTransmitter will lead a radio transmitter building workshop. 1pm. Courses available with $5 admission to museum. ($25 materials fee and a reservation for the transmitter class is recommended.)

Your last chance to see Sophie Calle (and 107 other women)’s collaborative breakdown of a breakup, Take Care of Yourself at Paula Cooper Gallery.

Saturday & Sunday, June 6th & 7th: Oakland’s Pro Arts Gallery presents the 2009 East Bay Open Studios. Over 400 artists exhibit their work this weekend and the weekend of June 14th-15th. Visit site for more info.

Sunday June 7: The Exploratorium hosts a talk, reception and book signing by scholar Edward Shanken, author of the new book Art and Electronic Media, interviewed by arts commentator Dorka Keehn. Innovative Bay Area electronics artists Lynn Hershman Leeson, Paul DeMarinis, Ken Goldberg, Jim Campbell, Survival Research Labs, and Alan Rath are among the over 200 artists featured in Shanken’s book. 3pm. Free with Exploratorium admission.

Monday June 8th: David Byrne will perform a selection of music created with Brian Eno at the Prospect Park Bandshell as part of BRIC Art’s Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival. Other performers this summer include Femi Kuti, Blonde Redhead, Big Daddy Kane and They Might Be Giants. 8pm, gates open at 6:30pm. FREE, first come first served.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: Photo-Video Edition, May 28

Posted on May 28th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Art, Contemporary Art, Galleries, New York, Photography, San Francisco, Weekly Picks.


 

Brian Ulrich, Circuit, Ponderosa. Image via www.notifbutwhen.com

Brian Ulrich, Circuit, Ponderosa. Image via www.notifbutwhen.com

Interesting work by artists working with photography and video opening in NYC this weekend:

TONIGHT: Brian Ulrich at Julie Saul Gallery, 6-8pm. Ulrich photographs consumer culture, from the boom of post-9/11 spending to the shuttered storefronts and interiors of recent years.

Friday, May 29th: William Lamson at Pierogi 2000, 7-9pm. Lamson documents three interventions within urban, natural and gallery contexts, including the exchange of his shoes for ones shot down from Brooklyn power lines with a bow and arrow. 

Saturday, May 30th: Leo Fitzpatrick at Fuse Gallery, 7-10pm. The snapshot quality of Fitzpatrick’s photos of “the deterioration of America at the turn of the century,” taken on a series of cross-country road trips, are an interesting complement to Ulrich’s deliberately observed images of suburban decline.

ALSOWilliam Kentridge closes at the SFMOMA this Sunday May 31st; last chance to catch Kentridge’s masterful films, drawings and mechanical theater works.

Tags: , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: Apr. 24

Posted on April 24th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Alternative Spaces, Art, Connecticut, Contemporary Art, Film, Galleries, Museums, New York, Photography, San Francisco, Talks and Panels, Weekly Picks.


 

Emma Wilcox, Eminent Domain No. 5, 2006, silver gelatin print, 20x24. Courtesy of the artist and Gallery Aferro

Emma Wilcox, Eminent Domain No. 5, 2006, silver gelatin print, 20x24". Courtesy of the artist and Gallery Aferro

TONIGHT Friday, April 24th: The Secret of the Ninth Planet opens concurrently at at Queens Nails Projects and Photo Epicenter in San Francisco. The group exhibit of sixteen artists whose works deal with space, time or travel is presented by graduate students in the Curatorial Practice program at California College of the Arts. 7-11pm, thru May 24, 2009

Saturday, April 25th: Symposium on the Super-8 films of Derek Jarman at the new nonprofit X Initiative (the former Dia space) in Chelsea, with Ed Halter, Chrissie Iles, Gerald Incandela and James Mackay. Moderated by Stuart Comer. 5pm, free, RSVP required.

Wednesday, April 29th: The Guggenheim presents a reception with artist Julieta Aranda in conjunction with her new camera obscura installation, part of the museum’s new Intervals emerging artists series. 6:30-8pm, $5 tickets or free for students/members with RSVP

Thursday, April 30th: DON’T MISS: Artist talk with Emma Wilcox as part of her solo exhibition Salvage Rights at Real Art Ways in Hartford, CT. Long shadows in Wilcox’s carefully considered, desolate aerial photographs of rooftops and vacant lots seem a literal manifestation of the dark, gray area surrounding land rights issues. Mysterious text-marks upon her landscapes add to a general feeling that the artist is an archaeologist who has discovered evidence of the death-rite of a fallen civilization. Catalog available. 6pm, $3 suggested donation.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Our City Dreams and Our Women Want It All

Posted on April 8th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Art, Contemporary Art, Film, Modern Art, New York, San Francisco, Weekly Picks.


DON’T MISS: Our City Dreams, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, April 9-12, 2009

(This review is from the New York theatrical premiere at the Film Forum, February 4-27:)

Chiara Clemente’s film opens with grainy, 16mm establishing shots of New York as we see it for the first time, driving into it with our chins tilted up to the sun, looking at the sky rush between the skeleton cables of the Brooklyn Bridge as we’re pumped along the vein, toward the corporeal city. The sun shimmers pink and red along the length of the bridge and the camera turns to the streets, tracking city buses, milling crowds, Columbus Circle, uniformed schoolchildren along the Museum Mile, and the evening lights on the water as night falls. These are the people and places of today’s Manhattan, but through Clemente’s lens, they could just as well have been filmed thirty or fifty years ago, previous generations performing seemingly eternal New York City rituals to the mournful woodwinds and piano of Thomas Lauderdale’s score.

It is in the context of the perpetual metropolis that the filmmaker introduces us to the subjects of her documentary Our City Dreams, a portrait of five iconic female artists representative of the five most recent generations of contemporary women artists, whose creative lives and aspirations have been nurtured and sometimes subsumed by the place they call home.

While following Nancy Spero, Marina Abramovic, Kiki Smith, Ghada Amer, and Swoon in New York and abroad, Clemente was fortunate enough to have made her documentary over a period of time (2005-07) that coincided with a number of important milestones in each woman’s career. During these two years, Swoon had her first solo exhibition, with works commissioned by MoMA and the Brooklyn Museum, and traveled along the Mississippi River with the Miss Rockaway Armada project. Amer began a new body of artwork in Egypt, in addition to becoming a Harlem homeowner for the first time. The Turin Winter Olympics commissioned an installation by Smith, as her retrospective traveled across the country. Abramovic reprised seven seminal performance pieces of the 1970s at the Guggenheim Museum and created a site-specific work during the aftermath of the tsunami in Southeast Asia. Eighty year-old Spero’s installation Kill Commies/Maypole is included in the Venice Biennale for the first time, and she returns to Paris after a thirty-year absence.

We often assume that younger people are more open-minded about the choices they make in life than their forebears, yet the most remarkable element of these artists’ stories as they unfolded was the increasing willingness of each successive, older generation to embrace disparate aspects of their personal and artistic lives. Our City Dreams begins by documenting the immediacy of Swoon’s nascent post-college years, told without much autobiographical background, and concludes with a segment on Spero that encompasses the whole of her family life, artistic background, and career.

The interviews are fluid, not confrontational or staged- it’s as if we are getting to see and hear the best parts of long, ongoing conversations between friends. Clemente seems to have chosen her subjects not only for what their works add to the historical evolution of contemporary or feminist art, but with the awareness that these women’s stories are simply compelling to watch. Her interviews are personal and lovingly conducted, not academic in tone, and she uses different, deliberate visual and musical cues when introducing each artist into the film. For example, at the start of Kiki Smith’s segment, the camera moves around slowly in an impressionistic, close-up study of the colors in Smith’s doorways, and returns to stills of the delicate and contemplative textures in her work throughout- wax casts, closeups of feathers, ‘Eve’ sculptures, crystal stars and delicate chalk drawings on black paper.

There is a satisfying joy in watching long, uninterrupted takes of each artist preparing for and making work in their homes and studios. The camera lingers just as much on the technical aspects of pieces being created as it does upon the presentation of completed works; the repositioning of a collaged mouth, a maquette for a carpet, bodies training in harsh weather, the repetition of a printmaking roller across linoleum or wood, and the carving and cutting of paper, clay and metal. The artists’ familiarity with Clemente, combined with the filmmaker’s intuitive understanding of the creative process, goes beyond what is normally seen in documentaries on artists, providing us with a heightened sense of communion with her subjects.

Smith speaks about not having the confidence to become an artist until after her father passes away, and the experience of casting her mother’s fingers at her funeral. Amer discusses her mother’s legacy of oppression, Abramovic belittles the physical weakness of the women students who had come to Thailand to participate in a performance, and Swoon freely admits that being represented by an art dealer has changed the course of her work “quite a bit”.

However, despite the frank nature of these conversations, the idea of companionship for the women Clemente follows is not directly addressed until she reaches Spero’s story. This choice may have been made in order to more clearly delineate their artistic achievements, but in constructing intimate portraits of their lives, leaving out their thoughts about finding or not finding meaningful partnerships is somewhat puzzling.

With the exception of Leon Golub’s major role in Spero’s life as fellow artist, activist, husband and father (and to a lesser extent, the inclusion of clips featuring the performer Ulay in Abramovic’s story,) none of the other women elaborate on the idea of companionship, instead choosing to make statements about the sacrifice of personal relationships that seem to promulgate the singularity of their vision:

“I need to be alone- I’m a strange person- I feel that a family becomes your life…. I’m too consumed, I’m too in love with making things.” - Swoon

“Then I realized that… art was my priority. And my mom was telling me, you’ll never get married! You are too involved in art.” - Ghada Amer

Perhaps by growing up the daughter of a successful male artist with access to the kind of support network that few women receive, and that many men take for granted, Chiara Clemente has been able to see alternatives to forfeiting companionship and family for one’s work. There is subtle, yet notable evidence of a wistfulness for a more comprehensive resolution to this dilemma when we see her camera pan over the images of happy neighborhood children featured in Swoon’s work, and follow a small child playing in the empty gallery at Amer’s show while the artists rebuff the notion of having families of their own in voiceover.

There are additional autobiographical details incorporated as we move from Amer’s to Smith’s to Abramovic’s segments; we hear Smith’s receptiveness to making changes in her life when she says, ”I’m much more comfortable with myself now, than I was when I was twenty-something…you don’t want to stay the same- you don’t want to be attached to your past in a way that you try to stay there…life is moving along and you’re kind of moving along with it.” But because Spero was the only artist to expound upon the realities of supporting a family, making work that was independent of her husband’s, and being a feminist activist against the war, each artist whose story led up to Spero’s seemed to lack a similar consummation of what it might mean to fully realize the possibility, as Spero has, of achieving a balance between art and life. In the narrative arc of Clemente’s gorgeous film, Nancy Spero’s story reads as an ideal resolution of the challenges and choices that younger generations of women continue to face while attempting to stay true to their creative vision.

Our City Dreams trailer and website

Tickets online or at Yerba Buena Center box office

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture: Mar. 4

Posted on March 4th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Art, Art Fairs, Contemporary Art, Film, Galleries, Modern Art, Museums, New York, Performance, Photography, San Francisco, Talks and Panels, Theater, Weekly Picks.


 

Trevor Paglen, Four Geostationary Satellites Above the Sierra Nevada, C-Print, 48 x 60 inches. Courtesy Bellwether.

Trevor Paglen, Four Geostationary Satellites Above the Sierra Nevada, C-Print, 48 x 60 inches. Courtesy Bellwether.

Though the focus is on the art fairs this week, The Totam has still found plenty of concurrent happenings to provide balance to the collector frenzy that usually descends upon the west side of Manhattan:

TODAY, March 4th: The New Museum and Creative Time present It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq, a new commission by British artist Jeremy Deller. A revolving cast of participants including veterans, journalists, scholars and Iraqi nationals have been invited to take up residence in the New Museum’s gallery space with the express purpose of encouraging discussion with visitors to the Museum. Through March 22nd.

Thursday, March 5th: Armory Arts Week opens to the public at Pier 94 in New York. In addition to special projects like Kenny Scharf’s customized, donut-delivering golf-cart being mounted onsite, sister fair VOLTA NY will present curated invitational projects and a launch event for Humble Arts Foundation’s Collector’s Guide to Emerging Art Photography. Public events include tours of arts districts in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. Contemporary art fairs exhibiting during the same week include Pulse, SCOPE, Fountain, Bridge, and PooL. Through March 8th.

The discards of industry and technology found in Sergio A. Fernandez‘ photos form a unique counterpoint to Dana Gentile’s collages, which focus on modern agriculture. Opening at Kris Graves Projects, 6-9pm.

Friday, March 6th: Bay Area artist Trevor Paglen’s spacescapes and other astronomy-themed works open in New York at Bellwether Gallery, in conjunction with his SECA Award exhibit at the SF MoMA.

Saturday, March 7th: Past, Present, Future of Food at the Bushwick Library. As part of the Arts in Bushwick Festival, librarian Nate Hill and cook Gabe McMackin will engage in an open public discussion exploring how Brooklyn and Bushwick in particular went from being a rich agricultural community to the desert it is today, and talk about what people can and ARE doing to grow food locally. 1-4pm. Free.

The Yerba Buena Center for Contemporary Art’s Screening Room in San Francisco presents a double bill of films by Chinese directors, distributed by Strand Releasing: Wayward Cloud by Tsai Ming-Liang, and Help Me Eros, by Lee Kang-Sheng. 7pm. Advance tickets available, or with gallery admission.

Sunday, March 8th: The last day to catch the adaptation of Adam Mansbach’s novel Angry Black White Boy at Intersection for the Arts in San Francisco, a satire about race, Hip-Hop pop culture, identity and violence in the 21st century. 8pm, $15-25.

Monday, March 9th: As part of its recent project/exhibition, Branding Democracy, The Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School presents The Rogue State- a panel lecture on fundamental (in)divisibility of sovereignty using philosophy, history, and art as a framework. 6:30-8:30pm. $8

 

still from The Wayward Cloud, 2005

still from The Wayward Cloud, 2005

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .



* Totam Culture Feb. 25

Posted on February 25th, 2009 by Aileen Tat. Filed under Art, Contemporary Art, Galleries, Modern Art, Museums, New York, Performance, San Francisco, Weekly Picks.


 

Martin Kippenberger, detail from The Happy End of Franz Kafka's "Amerika," 1994/2008, installation of tables and chairs and mixed media on Astroturf. (courtesy Tate Modern))

Martin Kippenberger, detail from The Happy End of Franz Kafka's "Amerika," 1994/1999, installation of tables and chairs and mixed media on Astroturf

 

This week’s Totam choices are all about fun; fun with monsters, technology and science. Possibly even more fun than finding a rare Francis Bacon rug in your storage closet, but I doubt it. (C-Monster)

Thursday, February 26th: Shepard Fairey, Lawrence Lessig, and Steven Johnson discuss “remixed” culture at the New York Public Library’s LIVE series. This event is sold out but there may be standby tickets at the door. 7pm

Friday, February 27th: During Southern Exposure’s 9th Annual Monster Drawing Rally at the Verdi Club in San Francisco, a rotating cast of thirty from over 100 of the Bay Area’s most prominent emerging artists, including Paul Madonna, Amy Franceschini and Andrew Schoultz, will be making $60 original monster drawings for purchase before your very eyes. Proceeds from the event provide direct support for Southern Exposure’s exhibitions and Artists in Education Programs. 6-11pm, $5.

Saturday, February 28th: The Future Is Not What It Used To Be opens at Postmasters Gallery. Ten artists making work that addresses internet culture, including Marc Horowitz‘ Twitter drawings. 11am-6pm

On a related note, catch the last day of Ben Jones‘ psychedelic new-media installation The New Dark Age at Deitch Projects‘ Grand Street location. 12-6pm

Sunday, March 1st: Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective opens at the MoMA. A must-see for anyone who still believes in iconoclasts. And brilliant minds full of humor. Is there anyone out there who wants to buy me the catalogue? 10:30am-5:30pm

Tuesday, March 3rd: The Rock-It Science Festival at the Highline Ballroom. Billed as an event “celebrating the interface between music and science”; where else are you going to mingle with esteemed neuroscientists, musicians, and Dee Snider at the SAME TIME? 6:30pm, $25

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .