.
If you're looking for something to do during your lunch hour this week, please consider a virtual visit to Violet Strays to view Pacific Standard Magazine's contribution (with creative direction by yours truly) to the online gallery's exhibition series, coinciding with the Frye Art Museum's current show, "Chamber Music."
The final product was pieced together with video footage gathered over a 24-hour period in three Northwest locations. It was also my first foray into video, and to say that I encountered problems along the way would be an understatement. But it was a fantastically absorbing project and interesting - or at least a good exercise in Zen - to let the piece's final form determine itself to a certain extent. (And, possibly more importantly, a great excuse for a couple of Northwest weekend road trips.)
If you miss Pacific Standard's contribution please return to Violet Strays between now and May 5 to see the other pieces in the series; a schedule of contributors can be found here. I love the premise behind the gallery, which was founded by artists Serrah Russell (also a contributor to "Chamber Music") and Alyssa Volpigno in 2011. The online space forgoes archiving its artists' work, thus requiring viewers to see a piece while it is up, or miss it forever. This emphasis on the transitory feels so fresh to me, in a time when it seems like everything can be found or discovered and nothing is ever truly gone for good. At the same time, the fleeting nature of the work the space presents seems perfectly in keeping with the time we live in, where staying very long in the present moment is increasingly hard to do.
"Chamber Music," curated by Frye Deputy Director Scott Lawrimore, features the work of thirty-six Seattle artists, each of whom created new work in response to musical compositions based on James Joyce's poetry collection by the same name. The exhibit runs through May 5.
For more information on Violet Strays, read Amanda Manitach's piece for City Arts magazine.
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Monday, March 25, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Image of the Day
Posted by
Emily
.
Alex Bierk, Tobey C. Anderson
On view this Friday through March 16 at Lyons Wier Gallery, NYC as part of the group show "Retuning Reality." More info here.
Click for more:
alex bierk,
art,
image of the day
Friday, January 11, 2013
We Insist on Being Fresh
Posted by
Emily
.
Sister Mary Corita Kent (1918 – 1986).
The first major career survey of Kent's work will be on view from January 19 through July 28, 2013 at Skidmore's Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery in Saratoga Springs, NY.
Click for more:
art,
design,
Sister Corita Kent
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Friday, December 21, 2012
Monday, December 17, 2012
Reading Ed Ruscha
Posted by
Emily
.
I saw a portion of this aforementioned show (which traveled from the Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria) at Gagosian Gallery last weekend.
"Reading Ed Ruscha" (installation view)
While we're at it:
Ed Ruscha in 1968 (photograph by Jerry McMillan)
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Image of the Day
Posted by
Emily
.
Glenn Ligon at Luhring Augustine NYC,
through Jan. 19, 2013. More here.
Second only to Ed Ruscha at Gagosian
on my Chelsea walk last weekend.
Second only to Ed Ruscha at Gagosian
on my Chelsea walk last weekend.
Click for more:
art,
galleries,
glenn ligon,
image of the day
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Image of the Day
Posted by
Emily
.
The New York Times reported below the fold this morning that – after beating out the Met – the Museum of Modern Art has permanently acquired Rauschenberg's combine (at the top of director Glenn Lowry's 10-most-wanted list when he took over the position 17 years ago – way to stick to a plan, dude).
If you like to nerd out over museums and the art market the Times' article is an interesting read.
Robert Rauschenberg, Canyon, 1959
The New York Times reported below the fold this morning that – after beating out the Met – the Museum of Modern Art has permanently acquired Rauschenberg's combine (at the top of director Glenn Lowry's 10-most-wanted list when he took over the position 17 years ago – way to stick to a plan, dude).
If you like to nerd out over museums and the art market the Times' article is an interesting read.
Click for more:
art,
robert rauschenberg
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Image of the Day
Posted by
Emily
.
Gregory Blackstock, The Great Americas Jays, 2012
(graphite, colored pencil and permanent marker
on paper, 31 x 41 in.)
A show of the self-taught, Northwest artist's recent works on paper opens November 15 at Greg Kucera Gallery, Seattle (with a booksigning for his 2006 monograph, Blackstock's Collections, from 6 to 8 p.m.).
The artist, who is autistic, has a prodigious memory for visual objects, musical tone and compositions, and foreign languages. . . . For Blackstock, the world is made up of countless things which need to be identified, ordered, and arranged. One thing or another is seemingly of no greater weight but, once he decides to draw the chosen subject, he seeks to record all of the specific variations within that group.
Click for more:
art,
gregory blackstock
Thursday, October 18, 2012
A Word is Worth A Thousand Pictures
Posted by
Emily
Click for more:
art,
glenn ligon,
lawrence weiner,
mark rippon
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