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Kehinde Wiley.


New York-based artist Kehinde Wiley Kehinde Wiley is a New York based painter from Los Angeles who has situated himself firmly within art history's tradition of portrait painting. Wiley, as the contemporary descendent of a long line of portraitists including Reynolds, Gainsborough, Titian, Ingres, and others,  is currently preparing for solo shows this year at Connor Contemporary Art in Washington, DC, and Deitch Projects Deitch Projects is a contemporary art gallery in New York City founded by Jeffrey Deitch.

Since opening with a performance by Vanessa Beecroft in February 1996, the gallery has presented nearly one hundred and eighteen solo exhibitions and projects, ten thematic exhibitions,
 in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. His exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum The Brooklyn Museum, located at 200 Eastern Parkway, in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, is the second largest art museum in New York City, and one of the largest in the United States. Arnold L. Lehman is the museum's Director. , "Passing/Posing: The Paintings of Kehinde Wiley," closed February 5.

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1 BRADLEY MCCALLUM AND JACQUELINE TARRY tarry /tar·ry/ (tahr´e)
1. filled with or covered by tar.

2. thick, dark; resembling tar.


tarry

said of feces that are black and glutinous. See also melena.
 There seem to be a lot of artist collaborative teams lately. My favorite is married, Brooklyn-based duo Bradley McCallum and Jacqueline Tarry, whose installations confront issues of social justice. Their first effort, Witness: Perspectives on Police Violence, 1998-2000, displayed testimony from victims and perpetrators of police brutality. In their latest project they wrestle each other, continuing to engage questions of race and equality with their particular method of performative per·for·ma·tive  
adj.
Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering
 sculpture: husband versus wife, white man versus black woman, artist versus artist.

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2 CHI CHIZ New York gay bars can be scary, but a jewel glitters in their midst. Chi Chiz is a cave-like little space on Christopher Street with great music, food, and drink. It's also one of the only black gay bars in the West Village. Buffalo wings and mac 'n' cheese every night, drag acts and homo-thug strippers on Saturdays.

3 SUNTEK CHUNG Chung's photographs are graced with a candor and longing informed by the absence of viable images of Asian-American men. In one picture, Chung dresses up like a cricket player and strikes a martial-arts pose in front of a wallpapered Shinto arch (Kung Fu Cricket, 2002). In another, he's good ol' boy holding a beer and sitting on a porch decorated with a combo South Korean-Confederate flag. (The South/the South, 2002). Constructed on radiant stage sets reminiscent of the white cube, Chung's dreamlike works (to be included in an exhibition this summer at the Wilhelm Lehmbruck Museum in Duisburg, Germany) succeed in merging signifiers of taste, race, class, and masculinity--an improvement over the usual "just add water" postmodern recipe.

4 ELAINE STRITCH AT LIBERTY (HBO Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO)
A form of oxygen therapy in which the patient breathes oxygen in a pressurized chamber.

Mentioned in: Ozone Therapy
) Stritch's 2004 Emmywinning, one-woman musical memoir is at once painful reenactment re·en·act also re-en·act  
tr.v. re·en·act·ed, re·en·act·ing, re·en·acts
1. To enact again: reenact a law.

2.
 and self-deprecating iteration of Broadway standards. In a performance that covers her sensational private life--the booze, the men, the stage fright--and dishes the Hollywood dirt, Stritch personalizes the artist's struggle and gives form to the invisible structures of stardom, all without taking herself too seriously. Stritch turned eighty on February 2. A standing ovation for this trouper.

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5 WOLE SOYINKA, THE INTERPRETERS (1965) A 1986 Nobel laureate, Soyinka was a political prisoner for 22 months during Nigeria's civil war in the '60s. In this novel, his first, he tells the story of six Nigerian intellectuals in Lagos who discuss and "interpret" their experiences in a time of ethnic and social upheaval. Often compared to Joyce and Faulkner for its complex narrative, The Interpreters examines the interplay between national and personal identity--a topic of particular relevance in political and creative circles today.

6 MARC SWANSON After following this guy's work for a few years, I realize its rhetorical strength comes from its ability to code-switch. Swanson's sculptures (featured in the 2004 Whitney Biennial) look like taxidermic tax·i·der·my  
n.
The art or operation of preparing, stuffing, and mounting the skins of dead animals for exhibition in a lifelike state.



tax
 deer-hunter trophies, but his antlered bucks are fabricated from foam and encrusted en·crust   also in·crust
tr.v. en·crust·ed, en·crust·ing, en·crusts
1. To cover or coat with or as if with a crust:
 with dazzling crystals. He calls the deer his "surrogates."

7 DAVID ALTMEJD Like Swanson, Altmejd uses the dazzle, flicker, and play of light to allude to the promise of glamour. The difference: Altmejd's far-more-pointed focus on the grotesque. His sculptures usually depict the rotting heads or body parts of monsters and werewolves; even the fur seems to be in a state of decay State of Decay is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from November 22 to 13 December, 1980. The serial was the second of three loosely connected serials known as the E-Space Trilogy. . It's as though these creatures are so grotesque they fold beneath their own weight, emerging on the other side as something delicate, crystalline, heroic yet pathetic. Adding to the magic is Altmejd's use of mirrored glass display cases that give his work a high-end-luxury-goods feeling, like retail at Gucci.

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8 MICKALENE THOMAS This Brooklyn-based artist makes glittery paintings and large-scale photographs of black women that cancel out any hope of an essentialist view of "type." She might depict her mother in a crocheted bikini, or Grace Jones in a tiger suit, or herself as Mary J. Blige, wearing a tattered, nappy blonde wig like some Caribbean prostitute off to turn a trick. What excites me most about these works is their ability to convey the sadness that surrounds failed glamour, as though her images exist in contrast to an artist's desire for success, recognition, and visibility. Look for Thomas's work in "Greater New York," which opened in March at P.S. 1.

9 JOHAN GRIMONPREZ, DIAL H-I-S-T-O-R-Y, 1997. Though it's been around for awhile, this video work offers a fresh index to current psychosocial realities. Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y gives a chronology of airplane hijackings in what amounts to an eerie foreshadowing fore·shad·ow  
tr.v. fore·shad·owed, fore·shad·ow·ing, fore·shad·ows
To present an indication or a suggestion of beforehand; presage.



fore·shad
 of 9/11. We meet the terrorists of the '60s and '70s, characters who by the '90s are replaced by nameless suitcase bombs. Grimonprez examines the politics that motivated this change and, at the same time, reveals our own complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 appetite for disaster.

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10 RON & RON DELICE On a recent trip to London I took a break from gallery hopping to check out Savile Row, a thrilling and educational detour. Back in the States, I decided to find a real tailor and, through a friend, met Ronald and Rony, Haitian twins known for their impeccable detailing, innovative use of color and texture, and dapper Dapper

lawyer’s clerk; swindled into believing himself perfect gambler. [Br. Lit.: The Alchemist]

See : Dupery
 clientele (Justin Timberlake, Andre 3000). They made me a fabulous suit.
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Title Annotation:TOP TEN
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:904
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