Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djumaliev at Plus Ultra

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Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djumaliev Into the Future 2005 video [still from installation]

Plus Ultra’s current show may be introducing many New Yorkers to the contemporary art of Central Asia for the first time, but the quality of the work of Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djumaliev should ensure the door will never be closed again. From the press release:

Collaborating for many years, the husband-wife artists are renowned for their documentary-style video installations and photography exploring the ramifications of political upheaval and modernization.
Working in their hometown of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, which has been the center of change and protest since the collapse of the Soviet Union and recent overthrow of the widely criticized administration of former Kyrgyz president, Askar Akayev, Kasmalieva and Djumaliev exhibit here their 2005 dual-channel video installation “Into the Future.” Filmed in Siberia, “Into the Future” offers a direct and thoughtful verification of the effects of change and transformation. Through the juxtaposition of slowly changing images of industrial wastelands and the matter-of-fact recording of people boarding a ferry, they offer a complex, non-ironic look into that ambiguous point at which the future becomes the present and how we cope with that.
In addition, Kasmalieva and Djumaliev present a selection of photographs from their “New Menhirs” series. Referencing the giant stone structures (or “menhirs”) that jut out of the ground, marking prehistoric burial grounds, throughout Central Asia, this series catalogs desolate, often destroyed landscapes of factories and their surroundings. Standing, like menhirs, as monuments to a lost epoch, the ghostly structures in these images symbolize the contemporary stagnation that has replaced the brighter future they once promised.

For a broader sample and an exciting look at the sophistication of what is being done in this part of the world page through the catalog lying on the counter, “In the Shadow of ‘Heroes'”. Djumaliev edited it for Art East and the 2nd Bishkek International in 1905.

Chad Silver at Boreas in the Affordable Art Fair

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Chad Silver Milkshake 2006 video [stills from installation]

My apologies to anyone who ran into me last night at the Affordable Art Fair reception: I was feeling a bit indisposed and I suspect I came off distracted at best.
I don’t remember much but there are at least a few images I would have retained even if I hadn’t been able to get my camera to capture them digitally. One of the works I would like to engage under better circumstances is this 4-minute sound video by Chad Silver shown by Gallery Boreas. The anxious young man pictured is listening to a disembodied voice whose aberrant yet harmless suggestion he eventually adopts shortly before the credits roll.
The Fair continues through Sunday.

Leslie Hewitt and Matt Keegan

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[detail of gallery installation, including a portion of Hewitt and Keegan’s shared “Desk Reflection”, Hewitt’s “Make it Plain (4 of 5)” and a portion of Keegan’s “Skypocket”]

Wallspace has installed an inspired, minimal show of extraordinary elegance. In the gallery’s two spaces, which together mount only nine works, the walls and floors are shared by Leslie Hewitt and Matt Keegan, and at least two or three of the pieces are likely to totally escape the notice of visitors not clued into their conceits.
I found that a cold call had its own rewards, but following it up with a look at the press release provided some enlightenment – and additional provocation. The first lines of the text:

“From You to Me and Back Again” is a project proposed to Wallspace by Leslie Hewitt and Matt Keegan that explores the “nature” of the photographic medium.
Incorporating the floors, walls, and the corners where they meet, Hewitt and Keegan use the gallery space as a site to continue a five-yearlong conversation about photography, its abstractions, politics and subjectivities.

Exit at Magnan Emrich

This is the kind of show in the kind of space which just might save Chelsea from SOHOification. A lot of us want to be surprised and excited in between too many sessions nodding at the almost predictable and the pretty slick – even when much of the predictable and the slick is also very good.
Exit is an exciting and very young and very shy, skateboarding and bike-culture-centered, Chicago-graduate-art-school-dropout, Brooklyn artist interested in fashion and birds, with a particular and very fashionable obsession with bird flu. All of the beautiful drawings in the current show at Magnan Emrich Contemporary on 28th Street deal with the impact of the long-predicted epidemic upon a world dominated by Miuccia Prada, Anna Wintour and their peers.
Very cool stuff, and totally infectious.

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[installation view of a portion of the gallery’s East Wall]

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[installation view of a portion of the gallery’s East Wall]

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[detail]

Yasser Aggour in “Paradise Lost” at Frederieke Taylor

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Yasser Aggour George and Abe 2003 C-print 30″ x 38″

It’s a wonderful riff. Frederieke Taylor Gallery has mounted a [is it ever going to be possible to write, “strangely compelling” again?] show with the title, “Paradise Lost”. The press release explains that the installation was:

Curated by artist Dan Tague, one of many artists forced from their homes by Hurricane Katrina. Temporarily relocated to New York, Tague has put together a show in an attempt to process this disaster. Combining artists from the Gulf Coast with artists from New York, this exhibition seeks to establish a dialogue about the loss and recreation of a paradise. Artists include: Yasser Aggour, Christine Catsifas and Kyle Reidel, Michelle Elmore, Sarah Emerson, Amy Finkbeiner, Rebecca Fuchs, Daphne Loney, Mike Peter Smith, Dan Tague, and Letha Wilson.

The above image by Yasser Aggour appears on the announcements for the show, and it managed to mesmerize me in a smaller format even before I realized the conceit involved. Somehow I had missed the title and the clearly plastic heads. I had taken the picture literally, believeing that it recorded the affection sustained by an elderly couple, a bit eccentric to be sure, but obviously proud of their public nudity.
Barry and I acquired a magnificent piece by Aggour shortly after September 11. A brilliantly-transparent, chartreuse resin frame molded from a baroque form encloses a photograph of a Jewish Virgin and child in a creche found in officially-atheist Cuba; the artist’s family is from Egypt. I would worry that I’m making too much of these things except for the fact that the piece was included in a shamefully under-subscribed benefit for the Palestine Ambulance Society at White Box. Apparently even the art world thought it was the “wrong” cause, but Aggour’s work immediately became and remains one of our great treasures.

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Yasser Aggour Untitled (Cuban Virgin) 2002 digital print with polyester resin frame [collectors’ installation image]

[image at the top from Frederieke Taylor]

an opera for our time, from good old Wedekind again

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I know I’m supposed to call it a musical, but I hate musicals, and so at least for now, I’ll call it opera. We were there because we have a subscription. This thing is at the Atlantic Theater (we never, ever miss one of their productions).
“Spring Awakening” is a wonderful new piece of musical theatre, a rich collaboration between Steven Sater, Duncan Sheik, Bill T. Jones, Michael Mayer, a briliant production team and an absolutely superb young cast. It opens, what, tomorrow? Okay, any day now.
I don’t know; it may already be sold out, but if you can get a ticket you won’t be sorry. Most of us will never be able to spring for the price they’ll be charging once it gets to Broadway.
“Awakening” makes the plot of “Rent” look like a bourgeois distraction from the proper agenda of a progressive society, and yet the Benjamin Franklin Wedekind play on which it is based is 115 years old. The villains are the tyranny of the state, family, schools, religion and any authority which represents its establishment as the primary argument for its legitimacy.
Notes: The title of both the original play and the Atlantic’s production is a euphemism for puberty, and Wedekind himself was only in his mid-twenties when he wrote it, his first major work. The notorious German playwright was also responsible for the story on which Alban Berg’s magnificent, iconoclastic and very sexy opera “Lulu” was based.
The music of this new work is of an entirely different order from that of Berg, but it’s dynamite, and that’s both an emotional and a considered response from someone with no patience for the conventional banalities of a form which strangely persists in its rejection of real innovation – and life.

[image from the Atlantic Theater]

Brooklyn College MFA works resurrected, with scars

I wrote a little while back that I would show some of the damage the school had done to work created by Brooklyn College Masters degree students. While this small post can’t show the full extent of the physical and psychological assault, it may help to show what New York really thinks about art where it’s not attached to big money or some kind of celebrity.

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Susan C. Dessel Texas Barrier 2006 cement, styrofoam, cheesecloth, rocks (barrier structure: 5’6″ H x 10′ W x 4’D, rocks 8’ D around structure) [installation view of photograph in re-assembled show documenting the original site-specific installation; the photograph itself is by Robert Puglisi]

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Susan C. Dessel Texas Barrier Post Mortem 2006 (elements of Texas Barrier) [large detail of installation in re-assembled show]

Even in photo reproduction, for me Dessel’s original installation stood as a brutal monument to exclusion or “security”; in its damaged form, its shattered pieces reconfigured and squeezed into an alcove in something less than ideal lighting, the work sadly suggested something more like a wounded, defeated animal. I don’t know how to sort out an irony through which an evil process can transfom a scary, inanimate object into a creature less the object of scorn than of pity, but I want to watch where Dessel goes from here.

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jun Yejin’s damaged sculpture (large sections broken off and removed, and large remaining areas of straight pins completely flattened)

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Carrie Fucile’s large wooden house sculpture, as totally flattened by workers sent by Brooklyn College, including her video documentation of men loading pickup trucks

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Megan Piontkowski’s Brooklyn College parrots were re-configured after their initial outing in the show’s original venue: While these little guys suffered damage when they were taken from the War Memorial, the artist herself has altered their appearance further herself. Tiny dark hoods now cover their heads, in a reference to the violence of New York City’s summary act of art censorship and the College’s ready cooperation in it.

There are more photographs on the “PlanB Prevails” website, along with an open letter from Vito Acconci, one of the few artists to be heard from on this assault on the arts and on civil rights which exploded five weeks ago.

nature, Johnson, Kelly, Bertoia

Last week while visiting the garden Philip Johnson designed in 1953 for the Museum of Modern Art I was charmed by the anthopomorphic postures of the Bertoia chairs, also just over fifty years old, which are found strewn (rather mysteriously drifting) about the elegant grounds.

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untitled (Bertoia) 2006

Sometimes alone.
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And, oh yeah, it is after all a sculpture garden, so I shouldn’t, and couldn’t, ignore the more formal installations.

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Ellsworth Kelly Green Blue (1968) painted aluminum [view of installation]

the penis art which threatens New York families

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Augusto Marin’s notorious provocation

This is just one of five sculptures by Augusto Marin which is included in the Brooklyn College MFA thesis show shut down three weeks ago by the Brooklyn Parks Commissioner. This self-appointed guardian of New York’s public morals was outraged by the small image of a hand holding a penis and declared it not appropriate for families.
The show has finally been re-assembled elsewhere by the artists, and last night visitors at the opening reception, including members of families representing all ages and genders, were clearly at a loss at locating any provocation in a beautiful piece of molded resin lighted behind a beautiful stretched blue scrim. The work is one of four mixed media pieces in which the artist gently references traditional devotional objects both sacred and profane.
The damage done to much of the work when it was carted out of the War Memorial gallery was clearly evident however even in Marin’s own piece, which had suffered a tear when it was pulled from the wall. More here later about other, more serious damage and about some works in the current show which specifically address New York City government censorship and its destructive handmaiden Brooklyn College. We’re hosting Barry’s Mother this week so posting will have to be minimal for the next few days.
Oh, and as for all those editorials and letters referring to these graduate students as spoiled “kids”, maybe some people should do some fact checking. I know that several artists within this MFA group are old enough to have college-age kids themselves, and last night I spoke to one of them who had been absolutely shocked to hear the school’s own lawyer describe her class as “young kids”. Susan C. Dessel let the attorney know she herself was 60.