Thursday, March 26, 2009

Surface Tension

Notes Na 6 Tygodni No. 51

Some works of mine are featured in the most recent issue of the Polish Arts Magazine: Notes Na Tygodni (Notes For 6 Weeks).
The images accompany an interview with Mark Fisher, author of the blog K-Punk and his relation to the concept of Hauntology.

The article starts on page 94. It's all in Polish, but you can always pull some Googlese. At the least it will be amusing and perhaps a bit skewed and ghostly.

Notes Na 6 Tygodni No. 51 PDF

K-Punk

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Music in the way I've been thinking..#1

I've been really into what is deemed as "Post-Minimalist" and "Contemporary Classical" composers as of late... Something I sort of delved into back in undergrad for a bit. Now seems to be coming back in a personal resurgence. I nice breath of musical fresh air in the world of instant downloads. Something slower, conceptual and inherently linked to the past and present musical and artistic environments.

Here is one:

Ingram Marshall

And an interview with him:

Ingram Marshall interview

To me this music has a direct link to my bread and butter of electronic artists such as Aphex Twin, et al..

I may make this an ongoing series of linkages.

On the street..



Sorry.. Maybe next time...

Monday, March 16, 2009

China 1983

Fascinating Images



Shenzhen circa now



Shenzhen circa 1983

Thursday, March 12, 2009

iphone/ipod shuffle backlash

Buttons and knobs


Give me knobs and buttons any day over the virtual

I've been saying this for a while and this is why I will not use an iphone... I feel like Apple is making the same mistake that music/audio companies made in the late 80's/early 90's with hardware and interfaces. All based on menus and a lack of the tactile.. Nowadays, you can see the trend in music devices has shifted away from all of that and back to a more analog sensibility and sometimes even going back to pure analog...

This gallery on one of the most read tech blogs is a good example of this slow building backlash.

Monday, March 02, 2009

builder vor boatin











Builder Vor Boatin

Drawings, sketches, models and samples
Nine Hamburg art students (Martin Jaekel, Jamis Marwitz, Johannes Erik Oldendorf, Egle Otto, Christian Rothmaler, Phillip Schwalb, Anna Steinert, Johanna Tiedtke) and three artists working in New York (Davide Balula, Sean Dack, Rachel Garrard)
Curated by Dirk Skreber

March 7th - April 18th
Opening March 7th, 7-9pm
Hours Thursday - Saturday 12-6pm

Silvershed
119 West 25th Street, PH, New York, NY 10001
(Between 6 & 7th Avenues) Tel: 1-646-322-3324
www.thesilvershed.org http://www.thesilvershed.org/bvb.htm

With special thanks to Ditze-Stiftung, Ingo Offermanns, Radeberger Pils, and TheTheyCo.com


Press Release:

Silvershed opens its second season of artist-curated shows with an exhibition organized by Dirk Skreber. The artists gathered for the show are nine art students of Skreber's from Hamburg, and three artists working in New York: Davide Balula, Sean Dack, and Rachel Garrard (from Paris, LA, and London, respectively.) The show is playfully titled 'Builder Vor Boatin' as a German-English wordplay that sounds like 'Pictures are forbidden' in German (bilder verbotten!) The show presents sketches, photos, proposals and plans for visualizing future artworks free of practical or physical limitations...

Eight of the German students partake in a project combining their proposals into one concept. Their stated plan is to build a future model of a utopic universe based on the potato as an idea for a structure, a material, as well as a symbol. Their project, entitled "2020 - The Beginning of Überding" references art-historic links from Mario Merz to Jörg Immendorf: "The picture must assume the funktion of the potato".

Sean Dack describes a tour - a plan for an installation - replete with a ticking heartbeat in an anechoic acoustical foam-lined hallway. A cacophony of stretched audio, a projection of failed filmed project as well as a sculptural totem related to an earlier work, is conveyed in text and model.

Balula's project is for Mexico City, where everything has been built on lakes. Now that so much of the local water is being drawn from the ground, many of the buildings in Mexico City are hollowing into the ground. Balula’s project converts the forces of the attraction in the ground into elevation dedicated to the famous Latin American Tower.

Garrard's entry for the show describes a proposal for an exhibition called ‘The space in between’. In her extensive proposal, "representing a non-solid state referring to the energy and light between the physical, mental and spiritual bodies. The work deals with the portrayal of life showing the sensitivities that often go unnoticed, the anxiety pain and beauty of the world and the struggle to exist." Accompanying video stills and drawings show the placement of an oblique screen (distorting or undistorting a distorted image?) of projection of her body rendered in a time-altering slowed down and stretched out plasticized space.

Egle Otto’s drawings of a wearable sculpture of a dress festooned with sculptural hands projecting in space from extended rods speaks to issues of autonomy and proxemics, evocative of Rebecca Horn's early sartorial artworks, but multiplied in a Post-Modern Baroque style.

While known primarily for his paintings, Skreber, a leading contemporary German artist working in New York, has also widely shown installation interventions and model-based sculpture. Many of these sculptures are pieces that are completed by the viewer imagining inhabiting or traversing the suggested space, - which often takes a humorously terrifying form and scale.


Builder Vor Boatin will be on view Thursday-Saturday 12-6pm from March 7th-April 18th
Reception Saturday March 7th from 7-9pm. Opening Remarks by Martin Köttering (President, HFBK)

Special thanks to Ditze-Stiftung, Ingo Offermanns, Radeberger Pils, and TheTheyCo.com

For further information contact Ambre Kelly, Ambre@thetheyco.com


Silvershed is an artist-run not-for-profit contemporary art space. Organized as an opportunity for artist led discussion amongst artists, curators, critics and the public, Silvershed explores issues of 21st century consciousness through exhibitions, moderated artist talks, and film screenings. The 2009 season is curated by invited artists to organize conceptually rigorous exhibitions that would be difficult to realize in commercial venues. Silvershed is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization.