Olav Westphalen.1 STEPHAN VON HUENE Von Huene's work plays language, speaks music, and sings volumes. Staking out an area between sculpture, poetry, and science, it draws from source material ranging from Kurt Schwitters's sound poems, to the Lorelei myth, to research in phonetics phonetics (fōnĕt`ĭks, fə–), study of the sounds of languages from three basic points of view. Phonetics studies speech sounds according to their production in the vocal organs (articulatory phonetics), their physical properties . Von Huene was my teacher and remained a friend until his unexpected death in 2000. I saw his recent retrospective at the Haus der Kunst The Haus der Kunst (literally House of Art) is an art museum in Munich, Germany. It is located at Prinzregentenstrasse 1 at the southern edge of the Englischer Garten, Munich's largest park. in Munich and was stunned anew by the daring strangeness of his sound sculptures and installations, by their humor, intelligence, and complete resistance to categorization. A deep bow of respect to him. 2 DRAWING I love drawings. I like the graffiti someone keyed onto our building's elevator door (looks like a yam poking at an almond); my heart beats Discography Track listing # Title 1. I'll Be Over You 3:46 2. Tokyo 3:14 3. Hey (I've Been Feeling Kind Of Lonely) 3:06 4. Only Wanna Be With You 3:54 5. Play It For The Girls 3:30 6. Blue 3:12 7. Purest Delight 3:02 8. faster when I see that the new blender came with an illustrated manual; and I nearly faint from Bada Shanren's seventeenth-century drawing of a melon in front of the moon. And so I am pleased that drawing is taking over pop culture: The majority of new TV comedies are cartoons, and Hollywood is producing animated features for adults left and right. These examples are proof not only of drawing's beauty but of its singular ability to approximate how the mind creates reality: through perception and conception, which--like drawing--are linear affairs. 3 ROBERT WALSER There are two noteworthy figures bearing the name Robert Walser:
4 VENEDIKT EROFEEV, MOSCOW-PETUSHKI A different kind of flaneur's story: Protagonist Venichka spends his life traversing Moscow on foot without ever finding the Kremlin. Hovering between grotesque comedy and depressing realism, Erofeev recounts Venichka's sophisticated drinking practice (what to drink when in order to not throw up, when to throw up so as to continue drinking, and when to eat to throw up on cue). Written in 1970, Moscow-Petushki was passed around Russia's underground for nearly two decades before being published in the author's own country. This is folk humor in the best, Bakhtinian sense. 5 FELIX GMELIN Felix Gmelin (born 1962, Heidelberg, Germany) is an artist based in Stockholm. He has shown work internationally in exhibitions including Always Already Passé at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in New York, Storm From Paradise at Arnolfini in Bristol, , FARBTEST, DIE ROTE FAHNE The German newspaper Die Rote Fahne ("The Red Flag") was created on 9 November 1918 by Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg in Berlin, first as organ of the left wing revolutionary Spartakusbund. II, 2002 Gmelin is best known for his beautifully painted homages to vandalized artworks by modern masters. The Swedish artist's double-edged reverence for the elders continues apace in Farbtest, Die Rote Fahne II (Color test, the red flag II), his video installation for this year's Venice Biennale Venice Biennale International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of . The work comprises two projections: one showing a 1968 experimental film in which Gmelin's father appears as one of several runners relaying a red flag across Berlin, the other showing Gmelin's shot-by-shot restaging of this footage, thirty-odd years later, in Stockholm. The differences between the films are glaring when it comes to car design and architecture but minor in other respects. For instance, the jeans-and-parka combo has cycled back into fashion, and, more surprisingly, the remake matches the original for pathos. Farbtest elegantly questions the authenticity of political gestures and the aestheticization of politics (both of which, like it or not, seem to be among the lasting legacies of the student rebellion). 6 JESSICA HUTCHINS, WAVE, 2003 When I first saw this strange, cumbersome object in Hutchins's studio, it looked casual: a handmade wave, not the surf-magazine type, more the kind that sloshes around rocks and tide pools. But the longer I looked at it, the less casual it appeared. Wave gives the impression that every bump and dent on it matters. And it manages to produce moments when this glob of papier-mache seems to be the best possible way to do a wave: not according to pictorial or sculptural logic but to some other, hidden set of rules. 7 RODNEY GRAHAM'S BROTHERS GRIMM DRAWINGS Graham gets it right almost every time. I saw Jacob Grimm's Study in Berlin--Wilhelm Grimm's Study in Berlin 1860, 1993, a pair of modest pen-and-ink drawings, at 303 Gallery's recent summer show. While much of the work on view looked like pocket-size knockoffs of the gallery artists' own bigger works, Graham proved that scale has nothing to do with whether a piece is complex, smart, or beautiful. 8 ALI G IN AMERICA I used to argue that satire depends on censorship, that artful hints at criticism make little sense if you have the freedom to say it straight. When I first saw the British Ali G Show, I thought the premise--exploit the elite's desire to look groovy groov·y adj. groov·i·er, groov·i·est Slang Very pleasing; wonderful. groov i·ness n. in order to expose them as bigots--was a nice prank but nothing more. Now Ali G does the same shtick shtick also schtick or shtik n. Slang 1. A characteristic attribute, talent, or trait that is helpful in securing recognition or attention: on HBO Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) A form of oxygen therapy in which the patient breathes oxygen in a pressurized chamber. Mentioned in: Ozone Therapy , and, oddly enough, in its American incarnation I enjoy it tremendously. Watching him talk circles around a clueless clue·less adj. Lacking understanding or knowledge. clueless Adjective Slang helpless or stupid Adj. 1. James Baker feels sacrilegious sac·ri·le·gious adj. 1. Grossly irreverent toward what is or is held to be sacred. 2. Having committed sacrilege. sac , which only goes to show how unaccustomed we've grown to media that's hostile to the establishment. Somewhere between Watergate and "embedding" with the military, the notion of the fourth estate was chucked. It turns out satire doesn't need censorship for full effect; it needs what censorship produces: subservient media. 9 E-FLUX In print media, art writing passes through editorial filters. On the Net, all that stands between you and your globally published curatorial statement is a check made out to e-flux. As annoying as the constant flow of (mostly received) ideas can get, in the end e-flux serves to expose a strange new breed--the hyperprolific independent curator--to healthy criticism and joyous ridicule. 10 NEGATIVE SPACE: MANNY Manny may refer to: In nobility:
Any investment that nobody wants because it is unprofitable. Notes: The term 'White Elephant' is derived from Thailand, where an Albino (white) elephant was given to unfavored people by the ruler. Art vs. Termite termite or white ant, common name for a soft-bodied social insect of the order Isoptera. Termites are easily distinguished from ants by comparison of the base of the abdomen, which is broadly joined to the thorax in termites; in ants, there is Art" (1962); replace the notion of "great painting" with "relational aesthetics," and you see that artists like Allan Sekula follow the termite path while the Hirschhorns and Gillicks of the world are our own white elephants. Olay Westphalen is a New York-based artist whose "First Long Island City Blimp Derby" debuted in June at Sculpture Center, 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 . |
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