“Haroun and the Sea of Stories”

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Wednesday, the stage at the New York State Theater, before the lights darkened

We went to New York City Opera Wednesday night to see Charles Wuorinen’s new opera based on a short novel by Salmon Rushdie, “Haroun and the Sea of Stories.”
Almost totally bummed because of the national disasters reported over the previous 24 hours, we really weren’t expecting to be greatly amused. According to the reviews we had read we would find a delightful story seriously handicapped by its dependence upon the composer’s complex 12-tone techniques.
We both loved it on every level, for each of its elements.
We knew the story and it really is delightful. It’s definitely not simply a children’s story, although there were plenty of smart New York kids there with their parents. It was written while Rushdie was forced to hide from the mortal threat of the fatwa directed against him because of his writings. The book is a fable about free expression. It’s as fresh as tomorrow morning’s bread. In Act II the evil Khattam-Shud complains about the limits of his dark authority, singing,

Inside every single story
There lies a world, a story world,
That I cannot rule ar all.
It is beyond my control . . .
It spoils everything!

The libretto by the poet James Fenton, necessarily more condensed than the book, did so with great success, tightly playing with the pleasure of words both real and imagined, in delightful groups strung together and wound around or threaded through each other.
I admit that serial music holds no terrors for me and under normal circumstances I would have been delighted to be looking forward to a live performance of an entire opera using its forms. We have a large wall cabinet stacked with the sadness of 12-tone opera sound-only recordings, their visuals unfulfilled. I was surprised and delighted to find that Wuorinen’s score was a perfect foil for the story, the singers and the glorious sights unfolding on the stage.
And what sights they were! In their totally uninhibited color and movement, and with imagination not bound to any reality or even to the usual conventions of fantasy, the sets and costumes fulfilled the promise of the story. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything more delightful on a stage, opera or otherwise. I’m not normally sighted shrieking in glee from a seat in Linclon Center.
Election? What election?
There are still three more performances, one tomorrow afternoon and one in the evening on Tuesday and on Thursday.

Yuh-Shioh Wong

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Yuh-Shioh Wong Despite the Sun (2004) pigment, oil, styrofoam, concrete, MDF 14″ x 12″
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Yuh-Shioh Wong Being Invisible (2004) oil, styrofoam, concrete, MDF 36″ x 27″

I told myself while at the opening on October 23rd that I really had to stop reporting on so many Foxy Production shows (they’re very, very good), since it looks like I’m virtually living on the sixth floor above 27th Street.
But that same evening, just before my almost-resolution, I had asked for some JPEG images of Yuh-Shioh Wong’s work (one of three artists included in the current show), and they just arrived today. Now there was just no way I wasn’t going to share these wonderful sculptural paintings with others.
Barry and I had first seen her work as drawings at *sixtyseven when that gallery (now simply sixtyseven) was still in Williamsburg and we thought they were terrific, but we had missed what photographs document must have been an extraordinary installation at the excellent ATM Gallery in the East Village.
The prominent three-dimensional physicality, the robust surface textures, and the lusty colors describe what are totally winsome shapes, but there are hints that something just a little more disturbing is working itself out here.

Joe Ovelman, scattered about Chelsea

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UPDATE: Barry has just set up a website for Joe and got him featured on Wooster Collective. Both developments will make his work more visible all around the world.

Joe Ovelman’s art zap.
Joe had left seven images, bills really, on boards scattered around Chelsea when he was through wheatpasting this morning. I saw only six when I went looking for them in the middle of the afternoon. I have no idea how long the rest will be dominating their busy walls, but four of those are documented here.
For still more, see Bloggy.

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Oliver Herring

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Oliver Herring Patrick (2004)
digital C-print photographs, museum board, foam core and polystrene, 51″ x 37″ x 37″ with vitrine
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Oliver Herring Gloria (2004)
digital C-print photographs, museum board, foam core and polystyrene, 72″ x 40″ x 40″ with vitrine

Oliver Herring continues his fascination with play and the figure in a terrific installation at Max Protetch. There’s an amusing video which turns large earthmoving machinery into dancing Tonka toys, a wall-size installation composed of the intersecting lines of two separate photo narratives, a couple of large, luscious male portrait photographs, a topographically-described photo representsation of a languorous youth (and his snake), a limited-edition newspaper documenting the mud-wrestling performance of two brothers and, the show’s centerpiece, both figuratively and creatively, two life-size portrait sculptures sheathed in bits cut from thousands of separate photographs.
Instant personal favorites: Gloria’s beautiful hips and Patrick’s underarm hair.

something a little less personal this time

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Alex Barry I Wish I Was Sean Landers (2003-2004) ink on paper 4.25″ x 5.5″

No, really, I’m fine. In fact, the radiation side effects have nearly disappeared. I just decided I could now share this wonderful little Alex Barry drawing, one of several my partner Barry and I picked up late in June at the TAG Projects show in DUMBO.
The image and its text wouldn’t have made much sense on this site before a few weeks ago, when I first wrote about what I did on my summer vacation. I liked the drawing and its wisdom then and I like it even more now, after what we call the recent unpleasantness. I have no idea what inspired the piece. Although it almost surely references some personal experience of the artist, I think its humor will register with most people.
Unfortunately I can’t find any links to Barry’s other work, but I’m going to try to record and post the really beautiful, much larger drawing he sent to us as a gift, more or less out of the blue. We still haven’t even met him, but surely will, and we want to visit the studio where these drawings begin.

Virgil Marti

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Virgil Marti Landscape Wallpaper with Star Border and Shrooms and Flame Dado (2001) screenprinted flourescent ink and rayon flock on paper, dimensions variable, detail of room installation

Dunno what to say. Virgil Marti just keeps exploding in magnificent excess, and always in excellently outrageous taste.
I suppose this will surprise anyone who has seen the environments with which I’ve always surrounded myself, but I really wish I had the means to live somewhere in the midst of the wonderful stuff of his current show at Elizabeth Dee.
[Unfortunately the gallery website hasn’t been updated since the spring.]

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Virgil Marti Sconce (Electric Blue Apogee) (2004) vacuform plastic, urethane foam, Plexiglas mirror, chrome automotive paint, Luminore, Swarski crystals, epoxy resin, electrical wiring, 1/2 chrome 25-watt bulbs 46″ x 45″ x 15″ installation view, with related sculptures visible to the right

Type A

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Type A AA <-> AB / 200 (NL) (C) 9.30.04 [yes, that is the title] (2004) crayon on paper 60″ x 140″

They’re back. Type A, the collaborative team of Adam Ames and Andrew Bordwin, has returned to Sara Meltzer Gallery with “Push.” Known for video and still imagery exploring how contemporary American males relate to each other almost exclusively through aggression or competition, the team introduces drawing into their work for the first time in this show.
Barry and I were the first to collect their work, a number of years back, and we were thrilled to be able to do so. The excitement hasn’t diminished.
I’m happy to report that the intelligence and humor which has marked everything they have done survives in this grand and gorgeous, three-part installation.
There are large drawings in the first room, video in the gallery’s “neck” and photographic diptychs in the third space.

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Type A AA <-> AB / 3-1 [again, yes that is the title] (2004) digital c-prints, diptych, each panel 20″ x 24″

[diptych image from Sara Meltzer Gallery]

Julianne Swartz

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Julianne Swartz Excavation (2004) plexiglas, fiber optic cable, LED, wire, prism 25′ x 14′ x 8′ very small detail

Julianne Swartz‘s show at Josee Bienvenu Gallery closed on Saturday, so for now all that’s left is the recorded evidence, including the image shown above of part of a room-size piece and the gallery’s description of it: “Excavation is a spindly tube system (a fiber optic ‘telephone’ line) that winds through the entire gallery in order to transmit a miniscule miracle.” The press release describes Swartz as “known for her sculptural installations that subvert traditional social conceptions of space.” The “miniscule miracle” was a secret rainbow barely visible inside a hole in the wallboard at the end of the line.
Very cool.