Dr. Lakra at the Drawing Center

 
 

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via 16 Miles of String - Andrew Russeth by Andrew Russeth on 2/27/11


Installation views of "Dr. Lakra" at the Drawing Center, New York, February 24, 2011. Photos: 16 Miles [more]





How is it possible that Dr. Lakra has never had a one-person show in New York? The Mexico City–based artist is one of contemporary art's most reliable, unrelenting showmen, and his work has been rampaging around the international circuit for more than a decade. Moreover, his drawings — which are often vintage pinups precisely détourned with elaborate tattoos — have a tendency to eviscerate neighboring works in group shows. It rarely seems to be a fair fight.

Regardless of the reason, that long-overdue Lakra exhibition arrived on Thursday, thanks to the Drawing Center, which also happens to have been the first institution to show his work in New York, back in 1995. Currently at the start of an admirably ambitious expansion project, the museum has handed over to the artist the Spencer Brownstone Gallery, at 3 Wooster Street, and he has responded with a tantalizing, trippy site-specific stunner that makes his wild 2010 outing at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, look comparatively restrained.

Black and brown blobs ooze around the gallery's walls and billow up into large clouds in some places, serving as frames for drawings on paper that present various indulgences: a glass of liquor and a hulking tribal artifact, for instance, or nineteen (I counted) naked young women staring out of a swirling chocolate fog. Elsewhere, Lakra's black and brown smoke morphs into subtle and supple portraits of androgynous figures or monochromatic silhouette cartoons of naked women or masses of unidentifiable organs that almost pulse and undulate on the walls.





Under the previous New York City mayor, Lakra's drawings may have provoked at least a moment of political grandstanding. They show a naked woman bending over and urinating, a topless woman smoking a long cigarette, and various women kissing. Admittedly, the taboos and private fantasies they deal in are largely those of straight males, but they can never be quite reduced to those interests. Lakra's work literally represents not only art's inherent erotic potential but also its use as a guard again death. There are plenty of pornographic elements, sure, but long shadows, snakes, and skulls are always just a drawing away.






 
 

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Ken Gonzales-Day/Dorit Cypis

 
 

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via LCP by lascienegasprojects on 2/28/11

March 5-April 2, 2011
Opening Reception Saturday, March 5, 7-10 pm

Las Cienegas Projects is pleased to present 2 new solo exhibitions including Ken Gonzales-Day: PROFILED and Dorit Cypis: A Symmetry.

Main Gallery
KEN GONZALES-DAY
PROFILED

Ken Gonzales-Day, Untitled, (Pierre-Jean David d'Angers, Bust of Ann Buchan Robinson, Museum of the City of New York; Joseph Nollekens, Venus, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; Malvina Hoffman, Japanese Woman [337087], The Field Museum, Chicago; Malvina Hoffman, Eskimo Woman [337060], The Field Museum, Chicago), 2010. Lightjet print,  43 x 120 in.


A professor is arrested for breaking into his own home in Cambridge, MA. He is black. A traveller in a turban is detained and searched by airport security. A man is pulled over and questioned by police on suspicion that he may be undocumented. A 13-year-old boy kills himself after years of anti-gay bullying.  Gleaned from recent events, of which we can find countless similar examples daily, this is the backdrop against which PROFILED, a solo exhibition by Ken Gonzales-Day, emerged.

While each of these cases appears to have been directly influenced by the appearance, dress, or behavior of the victims, their acts of violence, mistreatment, injustice, and cruelty are reminiscent of the positivist claims of eighteenth century authors like Petrus Camper, Kaspar Lavater, and George-Louis Leclerc, who argued that inner qualities determine outward appearances. In the decade since 9/11, "profiling" is once again at the center of political debates on everything from sexual orientation to terrorism and immigration reform, at a time when scholars and scientists have increasingly come to believe that sexual orientation is more than a "choice" and that race has more to do with culture than biology.

For this exhibition, Gonzales-Day clusters and combines large photographs of historical sculptural works that reflect the idealization of whiteness, the emergence of racial typologies, and the latent sensuality found in so many museum collections. The intermingling of collected 19th and early 20th century photographs of same-same sex couples with his own large-scale photographs of historic sculptures of satyrs, hermaphrodites, an Apollo, or a Venus, offers a timely response to debates about same-sex unions; the placement of a satyr with a wooly chapped cowboy helps to playfully reframe such obvious displays of masculinity, while an ancient hermaphrodite is set along side 19th century images of cross-dressing men and women.  Using works he photographed from The J. Paul Getty Museum, The Getty Villa, École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and the Field museum in Chicago (where he photographed the Malvina Hoffman Collection of sculptures from her 1933 exhibition, The Races of Mankind, in which Hoffman was commissioned to sculpt 104 distinct racial types as a permanent display), Gonzales-Day reconsiders the complex history of racial formation and gender normativity, providing a new perspective on what it means to be profiled in our own time.

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art will be publishing Gonzales-Day's monograph Profiled in June of 2011, as its second artist's book in the PAC Prize Series.

Ken Gonzales-Day lives and works in Los Angeles. His interdisciplinary and conceptually grounded projects consider the history of photography, the construction of race, and the history of representational systems ranging from the lynching photograph to museum display. He received an MFA from UC Irvine, MA from Hunter College (C.U.N.Y), and was a fellow at the Whitney Museum's ISP program.  He has shown extensively both nationally and internationally.

Select solo exhibitions include UCSD Art Gallery, San Diego; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles; LAXART, Los Angeles; CUE Art Foundation, NYC; Susanne Vielmetter Projects, Los Angeles; Deep River, Los Angeles; and White Columns White Room, NYC.  Select group exhibitions include How Many Billboards, MAK Center, West Hollywood; Phantom Sightings, LACMA, Los Angeles; Encuentro Hemispherico, Bogota; Under Erasure, Temple Bar Gallery and Studios, Dublin; Under Pain of Death, Austrian Cultural Forum, NYC; ArtMediaPolitique, DIX291, Paris; Crimes of Omission, ICA Philadelphia; Exile of the Imaginary: Aesthetics, Politics, Love, Generali Foundation, Vienna; Civil Restitutions, Thomas Dane Gallery, London; Log Cabin, Artists Space, NYC; Made in California, LACMA, Los Angeles, among others.

Project Space
DORIT CYPIS
A Symmetry
Dorit Cypis, A Symmetry (Europe), 2011

 

What do a letter by Lord Byron, a letter from King George V, a Weeping Beech tree in Hyde Park, London, a silver box engraved with Arabic text, pre-biblical urns and vessels, post enlightenment European porcelain, and a tree in Yosemite National Park have in common?  Each item plays a part in the asymmetrical time-line narrative of A Symmetry, a philosophic exercise on making sense, or non-sense, of unfathomable collective cultural-political histories via personal objects that confound as they illustrate.

A Symmetry continues Dorit Cypis' exploration of the psycho-physical-social aspects of history, knowledge and experience, drawing on details revealed in her recent performance The Artist and Her Archives, which was presented at the conclusion of a research residency, FabLab (looking for patterns), at 18th Street Art Center, Santa Monica, California. A Symmetry, a further iteration developed for Las Cienegas Projects, is a time line of photographs charting when the seven objects (named above), chosen from the artist's personal archive, were created, sighted, and/or obtained. What confound the linear indexing of these objects are the stories behind each one that weave a labyrinthine path of personal, historical, and political dimensions.

Dorit Cypis has used performative strategies, photography, and social sculpture to explore identity as psychophysical and political since the 1980's. Her work has been presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art, International Center of Photography, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Orange County Museum, Walker Art Center, Musee d'Art Contemporain/Montreal, Musee desBeaux Arts/Bruxelles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Orange County Museum of Art, in addition to international galleries and artist spaces. Cypis has taught on the topics of identity, representation, social relations, and conflict transformation at universities and colleges across the USA as well as in Canada, Holland, France, Switzerland, and Israel.  She is currently teaching at Otis Center for Art and Design.

Cypis has designed and directed public programs including Kulture Klub Collaborative, Minneapolis, 1992-1998, (artists working with homeless youth to develop their capacity for creative expression) and Foundation for Art Resources, FAR, Los Angeles, 1979-1982, (assisting artists to work collectively and to situate art in the public domain). She earned an MFA (1977) from Californian Institute of the Arts, and after completing a Masters of Dispute Resolution (2005), Cypis founded and currently directs Foreign Exchanges, developing tools of engagement across personal and cultural differences.

Cypis has received numerous awards and fellowships, i.e. National Endowment for the Arts, Japan Foundation, Bush, McKnight, Jerome, Ordway and Durfee Foundations, City of Los Angeles Cultural Arts, and Fellows of Contemporary Art.  She is Chair of the Middle East Initiative, Mediators Beyond Borders.




 
 

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Collage Art: Cless

 
 

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via Conscientious by Joerg Colberg on 2/28/11

Cless.jpg

Continuing my series of posts on collage art: Here's Cless, who at times also incorporates other media than just photographs or cutouts.


 
 

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Giffy

Nice Bike

Long Beach Flea Market 02

Long Beach Flea Market 01

Olympic Blvd. - 021811

Spaces | LA

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via The Flog by mocoll on 3/27/10

Beverly Hills

- ACE Gallery
- Benjamin Trigano Gallery
- Gagosian Gallery
- Kopeikin Gallery
- M+B
- Michael Kohn Gallery
- Regen Projects
- The Conference Room

Chinatown

- 2nd Cannons Gallery
- acuna-hansen gallery RIP
- abacot gallery
- Black Dragon Society RIP
- Bonelli Contemporary
- China Art Objects Galleries
- Chung King Project
- Cottage Home
- Daniel Hug RIP
- David Patton Los Angeles RIP
- David Salow Gallery
- Fringe Exhibitions
- High Energy Constructs RIP
- Jack Hanley Gallery RIP
- JAIL
- Mandarin Gallery
- Mary Goldman Gallery RIP
- Mesler&Hug
- Parker Jones
- Peres Projects
- Redling Fine Art
- Sam Lee Gallery
- Sister
- SolwayJones
- Telic Arts Exchange
- THE BOX
- The Company
- The Happy Lion
- Trudi RIP
- Young Art Gallery

Culver City

- angstrom gallery
- Anna Helwing Gallery RIP
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- cherry and martin
- Cardwell Jimmerson
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- CRAIG
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- d.e.n. contemporary art RIP
- fette's gallery RIP
- Honor Fraser
- Indie Collective
- Kinkead Contemporary
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- Koplin Del Rio
- Kim Light / Lightbox
- LAXART
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- project: RIP
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- Scion Installation LA
- sixspace RIP
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- The Constant Gallery
- Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects
- The Lab101 RIP
- The Museum of Jurassic Technology
- Walter Maciel Gallery
- Western Project

Downtown

- bank
- Bert Green Fine Art
- Cirrus Gallery
- compactspace
- Crewest Gallery
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- FIVE THIRTY THREE
- I-5 Gallery at the Brewery
- INMO Gallery RIP
- Morono Kiang Gallery
- Raid Projects
- Switch Art Gallery
- Tarryn Teresa Gallery
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- Unitard RIP

Hollywood

- ACP (Artist Curated Projects)
- C4 Center for Contemporary Art
- Eighth Veil
- LACE
- Michael Benevento
- Overduin and Kite
- Synchronicity
- Subliminal Projects

La Brea / West Hollywood

- Circus Gallery
- Fahey/Klein Gallery
- glü gallery
- Khastoo Gallery
- Heavyweight Gallery
- Merry Karnowsky Gallery
- New Image Art Gallery
- SCALO | GUYE
- South La Brea Gallery

Mid-Wilshire

- 1301PE
- ACME
- Angela Hanley RIP
- Carl Berg Gallery
- Concrete Walls Gallery
- Crisp London Los Angeles
- Hammer Museum
- Karyn Lovegrove Gallery
- LACMA
- Marc Foxx
- PawnShop Gallery RIP
- Steve Turner Contemporary

NELA

- Another Year in LA
- Apartment 2
- Drkrm
- Glendale College Art Gallery
- Kristi Engle Gallery
- LittleBird Gallery
- Me & You Variety Candy Los Angeles
- Monte Vista
- Outpost for Contemporary Art
- Shotgun Space RIP

Santa Monica

- Angles Gallery
- GR2
- Christopher Grimes Gallery
- Craig Krull Gallery
- James Gray Gallery
- Mark Moore Gallery
- Patricia Correia Gallery
- Patricia Faure Gallery
- Patrick Painter Gallery
- Richard Heller Gallery
- Robert Berman Gallery
- Rose Gallery
- Ruth Bachofner Gallery
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- See Line Gallery
- Shoshana Wayne Gallery
- Track16 Gallery

Silver Lake

- Chime and Co.
- Found Gallery
- Gallery Revisited RIP
- GarageGallery
- Ghettogloss Gallery
- Hope Gallery
- Junc Gallery
- Justin's Museum of Contemporary Art
- Kreiling &
- LA Municipal Gallery
- Light & Wire Gallery
- Little Bird Gallery
- Machine Project
- Materials & Applications
- Thinkspace
- Secret Headquarters
- siteLA
- Subiminal Projects

Venice

- Commissary Arts
- LA Louver
- The Balmoral RIP


 
 

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Uh...yeah

Desks of the Rich and Famous: Workspaces of Highly Creative People

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By far the best thing @ MOCA lately

Heli Oiticica and Carlos Cruz-Diez...

 
 

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via Daily Serving by Catherine Wagley on 2/4/11

L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast
A weekly column by Catherine Wagley

Julio Le Parc, Lumiére en mouvement-installation, 1962/re-fabricated 2010, painted drywall, mirrors, stainless steel, nylon thread, and two spotlights, 42 ft. 5 in. x 16 ft. 10 in. x 16 ft., collection of the artist, photo by Iwan Baan.

When Light and Space sculptor James Turrell installed one of his light tunnels at the Whitney Museum in 1982, a woman leaned against a wall she thought she saw, fell and broke her wrist. She happened to be the wife of the Oregon State Supreme Court Chief Justice, and subsequently sued the museum. Her testimony: "It was a receding wall, I leaned against it, and it wasn't there." Turrell retells this story often, and, when he does, he sounds insightful while the woman sounds silly—entitled, and perhaps a bit of a fine art philistine (reported the BBC, "Whilst concerned for her safety, Turrell has recalled her testimony with a smirk"). And even if suing a museum over an art work that did what it was supposed to—toyed with perception—does seem like irrational vengeance-seeking, there is something genuinely ominous about art that can trick you so effectively. It plays God, and makes you feel like a passive participant. "I don't function in the same situation as the general public," Turrell has said. "I am the maker not the observer."

Even before  Turrell and a handful of other young American artists started experimenting with light, a number of artists from Latin America had already begun to do so, some working out of the US or Europe. Their work has been far less prominently exhibited in the states, and some has not been shown at all. Now, five installations by Latin American Light and Space artist are featured in a surprisingly low-key, charming exhibition at MOCA.

Carlos Cruz-Diez, Cromosaturación, 1965/re-fabricated 2010, painted drywall, fluorescent lights, and colored plastic, 155 15/16 x 603 15/16 x 291 5/16 in., collection of Carlos Cruz-Diez, photo by Iwan Baan.

Suprasensorial: Experiments in Light, Color, and Space includes only six artists, two of whom worked as a team (and it may be the first MOCA show in years that hasn't been annoyingly overhung): Carlos Cruz Diez, Lucio Fontana, Julio Le Parc, Hélio Oiticica and Neville D'Almeida, and Jesús Rafael Soto.

Walking through Suprasensorial, you feel not that you are being awed, but that you are participating in a certain science-fair-style awe about the way light works. If you enter through the second door,  the first piece you'll encounter is Rafael Soto's Penétrable BBL bleu, a sea of hanging rubber cords that resist your body weight as you push through them. Then there's Carlos Cruz-Diez's Cromosaturación, a series of fluorescent colored rooms you can see into but not out of–when I was in the green room, a child's winter coat had been abandoned on the floor; it shouldn't have been there, of course, but it made the space feel lived-in, communal rather than austere.

Hélio Oiticica and Neville D'Almeida, Cosmococa-Programa in Progress, CC4 Nocagions, 1973/re-fabricated 2010, water, pool, electric lights, projected images, sound, and paint, 24 ft. 7 1/4 in. x 45 ft. 1 5/16 in., Projeto Hélio Oiticica, Rio de Janeiro. photo by Iwan Baan.

It's Hélio Oiticica's and Neville D'Almeida's Cosmococa-Programa in Progress, CC4 Nocagions that has received the most press since the exhibition opened, and understandably. They've made a swimming pool for a museum, and those who choose to climb in (you can buy swim wear in the gift shop and there's a line of changing rooms and lockers outside the installation) listen to John Cage and, as they float, watch a looping slideshow of Cage's music notations covered in drawings made with lines of cocaine. " The water removes uncertainty," D'Almeida told MOCA curator Alma Ruiz.

But my favorite work in the exhibition remains Julio Le Parc Lumiére en mouvement-installation. It reminds me of a West Hollywood hotel lobby, pretty, certainly, but glitzy in an almost commercial way. I imagine an exuberantly costumed, intermittently morose and enthusiastic Ariel Pink performing Round and Round inside Parc's reflective. It'd be swank, melancholic, ephemeral and kitschy all at once. In other words, perfect.


 
 

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