Art Talk of the Town
There is an almost endless supply of art talks, lectures and readings throughout Los Angeles and this week is no exception. Here are five coming up in next week or so that you won't want to miss. And they're free!
I really love listening to artists talk about their work and influences. Particularly those whose work I can't seem to wrap my head around. I find that in most cases I gain a genuine appreciation for their work and the process each one engages in to arrive at their artistic destination.
Los Angeles is home to more working artist than any city in the United States, so it's no wonder that virtually every week there are art talks, panel discussions, lectures and readings somewhere to be found here. We thought we'd point out a few you might find of interest. You can also check our Calendar each week.
Euan Macdonald: KIMBALL 1901-
Thursday, February 24, 2011, 3:30 – 4:30pm
Pitzer College Galleries
Discussion and exhibition walkthrough with artist Euan Macdonald and director/curator Ciara Ennis at Nichols Gallery, Pitzer College.
KIMBALL 1901-, a site-specific installation for Pitzer Art Galleries, by Scottish/Canadian Los Angeles-based artist Euan Macdonald, is comprised of a stop-motion video and an edition of silk-screen printed anagrams. Employing one of the earliest forms of moving-image technology, Macdonald’s stop-motion video is a portrait of an abandoned antique parlor piano surrounded by a lifetime of discarded books in a neglected living room. Constructed frame-by-frame, with books of various shapes and sizes, the video captures the gradual building and dismantling of a wall that both obscures and reveals the dusty old piano positioned behind. Through the collapsing of time and space and ongoing cyclical process of construction and disassembling, the film reflects on the vicissitudes of a lifetime packed with experience, human loss, entropy and the transient nature of our existence.
Referencing another life lived to the full is Macdonald’s series of silkscreen printed anagrams using all the letters of the title Play The Piano Drunk Like A Percussion Instrument Until the Fingers Begin To Bleed A Bit (1979) by Charles Bukowski. Linked by the piano’s subject matter and apparent randomness of the stacked books, the anagrams provide a compelling yet quieter companion piece to the continuous and chaotic building and removing of the wall.
Pitzer College Galleries
1050 North Mills Ave.
Claremont, CA 91711-6101
A Conversation about Al Taylor with artist Terry Winters
Thursday, February 24, 2011, 7 – 10pm
Santa Monica Museum of Art
rsvp@smmoa.org or (310) 453-9184
New York artist Terry Winters speaks about Al Taylor and his work. Winters will talk about Taylor's artistic process and the New York art scene in which it developed.
Winters' paintings, drawings, and prints have been featured in numerous exhibitions, both nationally and internationally, including two retrospectives at the Whitney Museum of American Art; his work is in such important collections as the Museum of Modern Art, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
The first American survey of work by
this important and prolific artist. The exhibition features two major series in Taylor’s vast oeuvre: Wire Instruments (1989-1990) and Pet Stains (1989-1992). These distinctive bodies of work will illustrate the importance of Taylor’s process and creative breadth.
Taylor was born in Springfield, Missouri in 1948. He studied at the Kansas City Art Institute and moved to New York in 1970, where he lived and worked until his death at the age of 51 from lung cancer in 1999. Taylor worked for many years as studio assistant to Robert Rauschenberg (where he met his future wife Debbie) and was acquainted with such burgeoning luminaries as James Rosenquist, Cy Twombly, and Brice Marden. Although these relationships nourished Taylor’s abundant talent, his future work was inspired but not defined by these friendships. Out of financial necessity, he scavenged art materials from the street. His connection with the commonplace--which remained unpredictable and deep--resulted in a body of work that is singular, inventive, and eloquent.
Taylor began his studio practice as a painter in the seventies and early eighties. By 1985, however, he had developed a unique approach to process that encompassed a synergistic relationship between two-dimensional drawings and three-dimensional assemblages. Taylor’s goal was to create a new way to experience and envision space; the works from this period helped him refine his investigations of visual perception across several dimensions. ”Al felt that his work was research into vision,” says Debbie Taylor. ”His work is really about looking, but he used everything around him. Seeing something could lead him to making one of these pieces, that could combine with something that he’d read that morning, or with some music playing on the stereo, or with something on TV. Any of those things could inspire him.”
Taylor made no distinction between his three-dimensional constructions and his drawings. Dismissing the term ”sculpture,” he preferred to see the 3-D work as ”drawing in space.” Fashioned from such simple elements as wooden broomsticks, wire, carpentry remnants, and other ephemera, his constructions offer a multitude of distinct points of view. Taylor’s drawings, in fact, often inspired the development of his three-dimensional works, which he created as an extension, in order to ”see more.” Taylor remarked that ”[the work] isn’t at all about sculptural concerns; it comes from a flatter set of traditions. What I am really after is finding a way to make a group of drawings that you can look around. Like a pool player, I want to have all the angles covered.”
The drawings and constructions titled Wire Instruments show Taylor experimenting with the simplest variations of geometric form (especially the triangle). These fragile ink, pencil, and gouache drawings and wood and wire constructions have not been the focus of any previous exhibitions or scholarly investigation. Their simplicity and ephemeral beauty provide a poignant glimpse into Taylor’s creative production.
The body of work called Pet Stains (which includes Pet Stains, Pet Names, Pet Stain Removal Devices, and the Peabody Group) portrays sensuous, abstract imagery of drop-like puddles, formulated with toner, paint, or ink on paper. The constructions in this series are made from wood and Plexiglas that is dribbled and dripped with paint of every viscosity. In this series, Taylor transformed patterns of dog urine on an urban sidewalk into art. The playful ease and subtle humor of these works is apparent: various pee-stains are often tagged with imaginary names of the dogs/artists who made them--Buddy, Norman, Getty, Goya, and Everready or, with a nod to Duchamp, given such titles as Puddle Descending a Staircase, and so on. Again, as in Wire Instruments, permutation and variation on the theme is integral to his process--how many pet names, how many puddles of pee can he transform into nuanced drawings or quirky constructions.
Wire Instruments and Pet Stains will include 47 works. Connie Butler, The Robert Lehman Foundation Chief Curator of Drawings at the Museum of Modern Art, will contribute a major essay to accompany the exhibition.
Santa Monica Museum of Art
Bergamot Station G1
2525 Michigan Ave.
Santa Monica, CA 90404
Froebel Star Folding Workshop and LISTENING with Alex Harvey and Anna Ayeroff
Saturday, February 26, 2011, 2 – 5pm
Institute of Cultural Inquiry
Reservations required. Visit www.culturalinquiry.org to reserve a place
The Froebel star was designed by Friedrich Wilhelm August Fröbel (1782-1852), the German educator who developed the concept of ‘kindergarten’ and the Froebel gifts and occupations which inspired Frank Lloyd Wright. As a child, the future architect played with Froebel blocks, “with the cube, the sphere and the triangle,” all of which remained “in his fingers” as he began to design his famous buildings. Fröbel’s building forms and movement games were also forerunners of abstract art, as well as a source of inspiration to the Bauhaus movement.
The star, made from folded strips of papers,
is one of Froebel’s “occupations, “ used to help children recognize and appreciate the common patterns and forms found in nature. At the ICI, the act of folding a Froebel star becomes a cipher for creating a unique chronicle of our times. Please join us and help us write (and fold) a history of our world that is “hidden in plain sight.”
While folding, workshop participants will hear an unfolding of the history of failed utopian colony, Clarion, Utah. LISTENING with Alex Harvey and Anna Ayeroff is a collaboration based on Ayeroff’s installation “Clarion Calls,” on view as part of the first iteration of the ICI’s 100/10 project (100/10∆1: Alex Harvey and Anna Ayeroff).
Materials will be provided but we encourage you to bring unusual papers to the workshop. This workshop qualifies for researcher membership.
Institute of Cultural Inquiry
1512 S. Robertson Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90035
Martin Gantman: Empire / Artist Talk
Sunday, March 20, 2pm
Kristi Engel Gallery
Martin Gantman investigates global capitalism through visual and social inquiry. The main part of the exhibition consists of digital prints of imagery found on the internet that Gantman uses to illustrate the ways in which the costs and benefits of globalization affect us, both economically and socially. In multiples of 25, Gantman amassed these images in order to represent the tangible outcomes and effects of bottom line economics.
Centering on the global economic forum held annually in Davos, Switzerland the exhibition also utilizes physical evidence of Gantman's interactions with both the "players" and the "workers" of the
economic status quo, including letters written to CEOs and government officials (as well as any responses he received) and his own experiences in communicating with people internationally about economic globalization. While Gantman has been working on this project for several years, the 2008 Global Meltdown has made this project even more significant as it exposes the social and economic differences in scale that corporate globalization creates.
Gantman creates a visualization of globalization and in doing so highlights the connections between culture and business that are inherent in the 21st century global landscape, while also acknowledging the basic and open questions regarding globalization writ large.
Martin Gantman is a Los Angeles based artist and writer who has exhibited internationally including venues in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Rome and Viareggio, Italy; and La Coruna, Spain. His project, “See you when we get home.” was featured in Art Journal magazine. He also co-edited "Benjamin's Blind Spot: Walter Benjamin and the Premature Death of Aura" for the Institute of Cultural Inquiry, distributed by DAP Publications in 2001.
Kristi Engel Gallery
5002 York Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90042
Convergence: Art, Memory and Science in the work of Deborah Aschheim, Laurie Frick, George Legrady, and Brad Miller
Saturday, March 26, 2011, 4 – 6pm
Edward Cella Art & Architecture
Join artists Deborah Aschheim, George Legrady and Laurie Frick for an overview of selected recent projects which set the stage for an engaging dialog about the function of artistic inquiry within the cognitive sciences including the roles of personal experience, data collection, and research.
Los Angeles native artist Laurie Frick is
currently on exhibition with Edward Cella Art + Architecture. Entitled Sleep Patterns, each of Frick’s wall-based works and a site specific installation, represent the resonant rhythms of the neural paths of the human mind. Using scientific tools to measure these, Frick desires to visually present our biological nature though a unique language of pattern. This is Frick’s debut exhibit with Edward Cella Art + Architecture, as well as her first on the West Coast.
Frick’s recent works are conceived from five years of daily activity charts captured in ten minute intervals over twenty-four hours from a colleague’s self quantified sleep patterns, along with her own nightly EEG sleep data collected over a period of one hundred nights. Using these data streams, Frick looks for inherently familiar proportions found in each, and it is through these common patterns that Frick begins to represent human time as fragments. Based in neuroscience, each piece is an experiment with the way the mind interprets and processes familiar daily experiences.Deborah Aschheim is a Los Angeles based artist whose work deals with memory, place and ideas about the future. Her work bridges the gap between art and science by exploring visual interpretations of nostalgia and memory lost. She is currently the 2009-2011 Hellman visiting artist at the UC San Francisco Memory and Aging Clinic in San Francisco and was recipient of 2003 City of Los Angeles (COLA) Individual Artist fellowship. She has received grants from the city of Los Angeles, the city of Pasadena, and The Durfee Foundation among others. Aschheim lives and works in Los Angeles and shows nationally.
George Legrady is an artist in the field of interactive media arts and professor at UC Santa Barbara. A pioneer in embracing computers with his artistic work, projects like "Pockets Full of Memories" and "Making Visible the Invisible" at the Rem Koolhaas designed Seattle Public Library have made him a reference in the field. He has received awards from the Creative Capital Foundation, the Daniel Langlois Foundation for the Arts, Science and Technology, the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Science Foundation, and the Ars Electronica Festival.
Brad Miller is a Los Angeles based sculptor and ceramic artist whose work refers naturally occurring forms and complex organic systems for both their physical and conceptually aesthetic properties. His work is in numerous public and private collections, including the Brooklyn Museum, Denver Art Museum, LA County Art Museum and the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian. Miller was the executive director of Anderson Ranch Arts Center from 1984 to 1992. He currently maintains a studio in Venice Beach and shows nationally.
Edward Cella Art & Architecture
6018 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036