via Art Info ‘some the the best art from Frieze and the new Frieze Masters’:
Tag Archives: painting
Art again!
Okay I have nary an excuse for why I haven’t posted but I’m here posting now and it’s pretty artastic. These two artists I found recently and actually think they visually complement each other so here they are:
These photos are by Patty Carroll titled ‘Anonymous Portraits’
and these mixed media pieces are by Scott Waters titled ‘Domestic Violence”
Gallery Openings This Week
Well it’s been months since I’ve moved back to nyc and I can count on one hand the number of galleries I’ve been to…..and not a single museum. Shame on me. I’m the worst artist ever….so in lieu of trying to see more art I thought I’d post a list of some NYC openings this week in case y’all wanted to see some too. Seriously. Go. Don’t be a slacker like me.
Opening In Next 7 Days
Chelsea
Thursday, July 26
ArtNowNY and The City Firm Present, “The Art of Rap: Remixed & Mastered”
ArtNowNY, 6 – 9 PM
548 West 28th Street, 646-535-6528
Show #6: How to Write a Novel
Field Projects, 5 – 8 PM
526 West 26th Street, No. 807
Between Two Thoughts
Visual Arts Gallery, 6 – 8 PM
601 West 26th Street, 15th floor, 212.592.2145
Summer Show
Praxis International Art, 6 – 8 PM
541 West 25th Street, 212-772-9478
First Year in New York
Galerie Richard, 6 – 8 PM
514 West 24th Street, 212-510-8181
31 Women in Art Photography
Hasted Kraeutler, 6 – 8 PM
537 West 24th Street, 212.627.0006
The Secret in their Eyes
RL Fine Arts, 6 – 8 PM
39 West 19th Street, Suite 612, 212-645-6402
DUMBO
Wednesday, July 25
FRESH 2012—Annual Summer Exhibition
Klompching Gallery, 6 – 8 PM
111 Front Street, Suite 206, 212-796-2070
East Village / Lower East Side
Wednesday, July 25
“Lyrical Color,” a Pocket Utopia group show
Pocket Utopia, 6 – 8 PM
191 Henry Street, between Clinton and Jefferson
tamara gayer: the inside
toomer labzda, 6 – 8 PM
100a Forsyth Street, 917 488 3388
Thursday, July 26
CANNONBALL!
frosch&portmann, 6 – 8 PM
53 Stanton Street, 646 266 5994
Melissa McCaig-Welles and John Leo present: KINGBROWN at Klughaus Gallery
Klughaus Gallery, 7 – 11 PM
47 Monroe Street, 646-801-6024
Midtown
Thursday, July 26
Liberty in the Forest
Chashama 266 Gallery, 6 – 9 PM
266 West 37th Street, 212-391-8151 x 26
Tribeca / Downtown
Tuesday, July 24
Surprise Surprise
FB Gallery, 6 – 9 PM
368 Broadway, No. 209, 917.495.2457
Williamsburg / Greenpoint / Bushwick
Thursday, July 26
site95 Benefit
Present Company, 6 – 9 PM
101 North 13th Street
Intimate Planet
The Bogart Salon, 6 – 9 PM
56 Bogart Street, 203-249-8843
It’s a scary world
This series of photos, Bodybuilder’s World by Kurt Stallaert, are kind of fantastic. I’m creeped out by normal bodybuilders, but these digitally manipulated, seemingly steroid laden, youth are beyond scary. It’s an eerie depiction of something I consider to be a common affliction in our society. That’s not saying that I think bodybuilding is running rampant among todays youth. Not at all. The issues of body image and that they affect people of every age…that’s what I take away from these for some reason. Is that what the artist intended? I have no idea. That’s what I see though, and I’m intrigued…and more than just a little bit bothered by these.
via DesignBoom
Live Girls
Panni Malekzadeh’s work deals with ‘human vulnerability, boredom, fragility and the imprisonment of oneself’, according to her artists statement. I personally love and loathe these. Parts of them seem to take themselves too seriously and yet I find them ingeniously funny as hell at the same time. Maybe I’m missing the point, or maybe I don’t take neurosis very seriously (although I should considering I have plenty of my own). Judging by the artists reference to Plath and contradiction I’m guessing she intends to have this split reaction. Either way I think there is an interesting depth and quality to them that makes me want to keep looking.
World Domination
My newest project has me pondering all kinds of things, Pinky and the Brain namely, but that aside since it has nothing to do with the project other than I can’t say ‘World Domination’ without thinking of those choice lab rats. This quad of images is part of an ongoing look at how big businesses are dominant within the world but more so the American landscape, and how our priorities and freedoms are being skewed, have been skewed or will be skewed in the future. Also supposed to be a little humorous…but in a kind of sad way?
Like Watching Paint Thrive
I was all ready to hang up my paint brushes and give up on the medium all together (not really but I thought about it for a minute) based on the way of art as of late but seems there’s hope for the painters yet. Though maybe in a slightly different form than before.
via NyTimes:
In Five Chelsea Galleries, the State of Painting
Painting is a lot of things: resilient, vampiric, perverse, increasingly elastic, infinitely absorptive and, in one form or another, nearly as old as humankind. One thing it is not, it still seems necessary to say, is dead.
Maybe it appears that way if you spend much time in New York City’s major museums, where large group shows of contemporary painting are breathtakingly rare, given how many curators are besotted with Conceptual Art and its many often-vibrant derivatives. These form a hegemony as dominant and one-sided as formalist abstraction ever was.
But that’s another reason we have art galleries. Not just to sell art, but also to give alternate, less rigid and blinkered, less institutionally sanctioned views of what’s going on.
Evidence of painting’s lively persistence is on view in Chelsea in five ambitious group exhibitions organized by a range of people: art dealers, independent curators and art historians. Together these shows feature the work of more than 120 artists and indicate some of what is going on in and around the medium. Some are more coherent than others, and what they collectively reveal is hardly the whole story, not even close. (For one thing there’s little attention to figuration; the prevailing tilt is toward abstraction of one sort or another.) A few of the shows take a diffuse approach, examining the ways painting can merge with sculpture or Conceptual Art and yield pictorial hybrids that may not even involve paint; others are more focused on the medium’s traditional forms. Read the entire article
Artful Mishmash
I’ve been feeling less than awesome lately, even though I’ve been extremely productive…don’t know I’ve just been in a bummer mood. I figured some art always cheers me up so here’s the post o the day!
Fluid Pigment series by Thomas R
Kissing sailor by Eduardo Kobra
Basketball Diaries by Ronald Hall
Design block by Lucie Skrivankova
Automatic reason by Rudolf Janák
and if you haven’t yet: Submit your Work!!
Submit your work!
Hey everyone! Happy Monday! I’m enjoying some thunderstorms and a cup of coffee and I have to say it’s pretty grand. I sure did miss having proper storms living in SF, and we’ve had our fair share of them since I’ve been back in good ol’ nyc. Enough about the weather though…. I was having a thought nugget and voila! I post this:
I’m sure there are many of you out there that are extremely talented folks and I’d like to post some of your work on the site! I’ve decided once a month I’d like to do a reader contribution post with all of your wonderful work. Paintings, Illustrations, Photography, Fashion Sketches…what ever as long as it generally fits in to the theme of the blog (which is pretty varied). I’ll do the first post on July 1st so send your best work (please limit to 2 samples please) for me to post up on the blog to share your talents with the world, to windandturnclothing@gmail.com. I can’t wait to see your work!
and here’s a niblet of a new photo series I’m working on called Rapid Expansion:
Machu Picchu McDonalds
Documenta 13 and the future of Art
Described in NYTimes as an ‘unruly organism of a show’, Documenta 13 is a sprawling exhibition of art going on in Kassel Germany. I’ve not seen it, I spent the last few days in Tennesee not Germany, but I felt struck by a battery of emotions about the exhibit (and art itself) after reading Jerry Saltz’s article on NYMAG about ‘Post Art’ and that the way we view art will continue to change. Which I agree is inevitable in an ever evolving field but I’m not sure I enjoy the glimpse of the future quite as much as he does. If these things are the shape (or lack there of) of art to come, I’m not sure I like it. But maybe I’m just being ‘roped off’, as he says. What do you all think?
Check out the article and check out some images from Documenta 13.






















































































