
Beatriz Monteavaro, from the series, “Picasso visits the Planet of the Apes”
A very subjective and definitely only partial list of some of the good stuff in Williamsburg galleries this week:
Manit Sriwanichpoom‘s ghostly pink photographic provocations at Momenta
72 Berry
Andrew Jeffrey Wright‘s delightful and very smart conscience drawings at Champion
281 N. 7th
Jackie Gendel‘s gorgeous waxy oils at Jessica Murray, esp, Kablasto!
210 N. 6th
Meighan Gale‘s breathtakingly intimate effortlessly majestic self-portraits at Black & White
483 Driggs
Everest Hall‘s shameless sourced brush and pencil images at Bellwether
335 Grand
Andrea Loefke‘s enigmatic sculptures and tiny drawing constructions at S1
242 S. 1st
Beatriz Monteavaro‘s beautiful Picasso/Planet of the Apes obsessions at Monya Rowe
242 S. 1st
Joe Fig‘s sculptural reconfigurations of painters’ studios at Plus Ultra
235 S. 1st
Joe Amrhein‘s affectionate reading of the detritus of art criticism at Roebling Hall
390 Wythe
[image from Times Stereo]
Joe Ovelman moves indoors

Joe Ovelman, Two Walls 2003, guerilla installation
If you missed Joe Ovelman’s walls in Chelsea last month, and if you want to see more of the work I’ve talked about in the past on this site, stop by Oliver Kamm’s 5BE Gallery by November 15, when the current small group show closes.
Ovelman has covered most of one wall of the gallery with many of the arresting images with which he had earlier wheatpasted the plywood on either 25th Street or 10th Avenue, and I don’t think anyone has torn them off the plaster yet.
5BE Gallery is located on the second floor at 504 West 22nd Street, just west of 10th Avenue.
[image from Oliver Kamm 5BE Gallery]
greenmarket (bartlett pears)

Looks like this may be the last of the greenmarket images. The season’s moving on and there should be a freeze tonight, even in Chelsea.
save 2 Coumbus Circle from the philistines!

2 Columbus Circle
Maybe there’s a chance for a last-minute reprieve.
Three preservation groups filed suit yesterday to stop the city from selling the vacant [Edward Durell Stone] city-owned building at 2 Columbus Circle to a museum that wants to strip off the building’s modernist facade.
Taking issue with an environmental review that cleared the way for the building to be transferred to a quasi-public agency that would handle the sale, the preservationists demanded a new environmental impact statement on the proposed alterations. They also accused the city of moving to dispose of a building worthy of landmark status “without adequately considering the consequences of its loss.”
The lawsuit alleged that because the city wanted to sell the building, the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission was reluctant to hold a public hearing on designating it a landmark. “The city’s economic objectives infected the process for considering the potential landmark status of the building and subsequently tainted the environmental analysis that it performed in order to gain legal authorization for the sale,” the lawsuit said.
By Vitruvius, it’s the only building worth looking at in the entire plaza, er, circle. For more on both the modernist building and the political-economic and aesthetic battle, see the LANDMARK WEST, Recent Past preservation and City Review sites.
[image is historical photograph, courtesy Ezra Stoller, 1964 ©ESTO, on Recent Past Preservation site]
greenmarket (lemongrass)

throw Bush out of Britain!

Buckingham Palace Throne Room
He doesn’t belong there either.
Bush and his wife are planning to be in Britain this month on a very rare “state visit“.
There are a lot of Americans who would be very very happy to see him thrown out. The Brits have our best wishes for every success in accomplishing that, but I expect they’ll do very well indeed without any help from us (even if that were possible, protests already having been effectively proscribed here in the U.S., where they are not totally ignored).
Forgive us the presumption, but, Like Lord Nelson, we expect every Englishman and Englishwoman to do his or her duty. The urgency arises from the fact that we ourselves cannot.
It’s interesting that most of the peaks and perks that actually define such a glamorous visit seem to have already been ruled out, because of the British and American authorities’ fears that the people will in fact be doing exactly that when the Bushes arrive.
President Bush, visiting London in November for three days, was looking forward to meeting the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
This was to have entailed a grand procession along the Mall with all the pomp and ceremony of a state visit, but it has been cancelled over fears that antiwar campaigners would stage a colourful and angry protest to overshadow the event.
The President was also due to address the British Parliament on his three day visit. However, that too has been cancelled.
I mean, Harold Pinter is on the barricades! How much more respectable can a movement be? See the Stop the War Coalition site for details and helpful hints..
[image from ExploreLondon]
greenmarket (late radishes)

they didn’t see what was going on
Sound familiar? The English-born Christabel Bielenberg and her German husband Peter were eventually to become part of the German resistance, but although both were intelligent, priviledged, educated and hailed from politically-involved families with international contacts, like so many others in all societies who hope to ignore “politics” they did not see what was happening until too late.
“But it’s true that we didn’t protest soon enough about Hitler,” she told an interviewer during the filming of “Christabel.” “We just didn’t know what had hit us. You read about horrors in the newspapers, but you don’t really wake up to them until they touch you personally.”
The Guardian places the couple within the larger context of a sophisticated but fatally-flawed society which might have prevented disaster.
They shared upper-class manipulative skills and assumptions of privilege, as well as a “distaste” (her word) for the excesses of the Nazis, especially their petty-bourgeois obsession with “respectability”.
Inevitably, they joined the small minority of aristocratic, professional and intellectual dissidents whose opposition to Nazism was aesthetic and moral rather than political and practical – until Germany’s impending defeat was obvious.
Peter Bielenberg’s disastrous early take on Hitler makes me think of my own original dismissal, in a succession sometimes blessedly interrupted, of Nixon, Reagan, and both George Bushes.
Neither Bielenberg nor his girlfriend had much interest in politics, and when they attended an open-air Nazi rally, he led her away as Hitler rose to speak. “You may think that Germans are political idiots,” he confided, “but I can assure you that they won’t be so stupid as to fall for that clown.”
The rest is history, for Germany. Today the consequences of an overestimation of a people’s intelligence are still in the future, for the U.S. In both cases, the mistake would be paid for by the entire world.
oh, Canada!
How could you? Down here there are a lot of us who look to your good sense these days, since we have nothing of that stuff left ourselves.
Maybe we can now understand why the Canadian government hardly complained when the U.S. deported one of its citiizens to Syria last year. While returning home to Ottowa from a vacation abroad with his family that September, computer consultant Maher Arar had stopped in New York to change planes. Instead, he was detained and deported by the U.S. government.
He subsequently spent over a year in Syrian prisons, enduring beatings and tortures, and he has just returned home to Canada after being suddenly released last month. Arar and his family are accusing the Canadian security agencies, particularly the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, of providing information to U.S. authorities that led to his deportation.
After a virtual blackout of information for the last year, Canadian officials are now scrambling around trying to make just the right kind of fuss about the impropriety of the actions of the U.S. authorities and loudly denying that they themselves had anything to do with the outrage to one of their own.
I don’t think it’s going to work out well for them, even if they aren’t likely to suffer the consequences that awaited Maher Arar.
greenmarket (buckwheat sprouts)
