Sunday, February 11, 2007

encourage creative impulses

at the Rudolf Stingel exhibit at MCA Chicago, the walls are made of foam core with silver on top and you can write on them or color or otherwise make them your own. Like this:

I wrote a love poem to Kris and doodled a bit, just to take advantage of the opportunity.

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Saturday, February 10, 2007

the Field Museum

I love this picture because of the contrast.

I was all excited about visiting because of the vivid descriptions in the Time Traveller’s Wife and because I’m a museum whore. It was so much better than I’d even expected. And they have student discounts!

Posted by M at 05:02:51 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, February 5, 2007

on my calendar

Edward Hopper is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where it debuts May 6 through August 19, 2007; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, where it will be on view September 16, 2007 through January 21, 2008; and The Art Institute of Chicago, where it will be seen February 16 through May 11, 2008.

Posted by M at 18:13:41 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Arresting

Graffiti, Deborah Mills-Thackery, color photograph, 2006.

The information below is about a new gallery for local artists opening in San Jose, CA, but the image was so striking that I wanted to highlight it.

SAN JOSE, CA.- Two Fish Design, the producers of Phantom Galleries and owners of Anno Domini gallery, announces the launch of KALEID (Greek for beauty and form, and a shortened take on kaleidoscope.), a gallery dedicated to local artists.

KALEID emerges from the very successful fifth annual Holiday Gallery of Gifts, a project of Phantom Galleries. This year’s holiday art sale which was temporarily housed in the former Artist & Craftsman Supply store at 88 South Fourth St., saw a substantial increase in foot traffic and art sales from December 2 - 23, 2006.

In their effort to keep the momentum going for the benefit of local artists, Brian Eder and Cherri Lakey (Two Fish), approached the San Jose Redevelopment Agency and Downtown Association to stay in the city owned building until it is leased to a permanent tenant . The concept was met with enthusiasm and support by all.

KALEID features over 60 artists from the San Jose area, giving them both exhibit and sales opportunities like no other here in Silicon Valley. The gallery showcases fine art, limited editions and creative gifts in a wide range of mediums and price points originating from the artists themselves.

In addition to bridging the artist and public exposure gap, Two Fish envision KALEID to be an incubator for creative enterprise. “If you think about each artist or display in KALEID as a micro business, you can imagine some of these artists opening boutiques, creative service businesses or unique social spaces. What if all the retail downtown was independently owned and operated? Imagine the unique, artful experiences for the people that live, work and visit here. It’s an experience you most certainly won’t get at a chain retailer or mall.” says Lakey.

Brian Eder adds, “People are looking for authentic experience, not the manufactured kind. A gathering of local artists like this brings our creative culture to the surface and gives us all a chance to celebrate its existence.”

KALEID will host First Friday artists’ receptions expanding the downtown art walk currently focused on the SoFA district. Each month KALEID will highlight two new “Featured Artists” by giving them 60′ of prime wall space near the gallery’s entrance. These exhibits are awarded to those that are challenging the status quo of contemporary art here in San Jose.

The grand opening is First Friday February 2 from 7pm - 9pm. The two featured artists for February are: Deborah Mills Thackery, Graffiti on an Abandoned Train. This series of color photographs explores myriad textures and colors found on turn-of-the-century railroad cars left in a field to rust and weather found near Woodstock, New York. Everett Taasevigen’s new body of paintings, Test for Echo, is one part of his long term body of work: The Ring, which consists of seven sets of seven doors. Taasevigen continues to use a monochromatic palette, wide sweeping movements and layers of graphite while revealing new ideas and emotions to a long held theme of his style of minimalism.

Posted by M at 01:23:08 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, January 29, 2007

David Kapp

These look more like Thiebaud, but the stuff I saw at that gallery this weekend reminded me of urban Impressionist paintings. Very nice.

Posted by M at 04:06:30 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

The Mouse Takes Paris

I think that I’m bemused …

(Photograph)

IT ALL BEGAN WITH A MOUSE: France’s Grand Palais museum recently paid tribute to Disney’s work, which drew heavily on European images and ideas.
JACQUES BRINON/AP

France’s arbiters of high art anoint Walt Disney’s ‘genius’

Europeans have flocked to an exhibit celebrating the animator, who drew heavily from European artists and settings.

It took the French to “discover” the genius of William Faulkner and Billie Holliday. And in a most unusual event at the most improbable of places, the world’s guardians of culture are rediscovering an American animator named Walt Disney. Moreover, Disney has made it to the Grand Palais, a museum of arts high and fine, as a 20th-century “genius” often dismissed as being, well, too Mickey Mouse.

It’s paradoxical enough that the French, perhaps the leading snoots on middle-class Americana, did a major reappraisal. But droves of Parisians have lined up for months to see “Once Upon a Time Walt Disney.”

(Photograph)
Grand Palais: Disney exhibit was a hit with Parisians.

AUGROS PIERRE/NEWSCOM

The show illuminates two main points: That Disney deserves to be liberated from the corporate image spawned by Disney Inc. And it reveals how deeply Disney drew from European artists, fables, settings, and imagination.

Disney produced “an imaginary world somewhere between Europe and America,” says curator Bruno Girveau.

Some 14 of Disney’s 17 major films, including “Cinderella,” “Pinocchio,” “Snow White,” and “Fantasia” “originate in European libraries,” exhibit text suggests.

The mass appeal of Disney has “obscured the extraordinary origins of his artistic adventure,” says Mr. Givreau.

“I know Disney and the stories from Europe,” says Helen Phalempin, a Paris school teacher visiting the Grand Palais last week. “What I didn’t know was how much Snow White and Fantasia borrowed from earlier German and French films.”

Americans may be unaware that Disney – unable to enlist in World War I because he was only 16 – joined the Red Cross and was sent overseas, arriving after the armistice. He spent a year in France soaking up the culture. He and his wife, Lillian, returned in 1935, and brought back some 350 books of illustrations – romantic castles, royal ceremonies, woodland sprites, evil witches, anthropomorphized animals.

Indeed, the farmlands and forests of America, or the newly sprawling suburbs of Los Angeles, aren’t the main source of the Disney magic. Rather, working in Burbank with dozens of refugees and vagabond artists from Europe, many of them Jewish, the Disney bunch borrowed from masters like Honoré Daumier and Bruegel, imitated Gustav Dore’s illustrations of “Dante’s Inferno,” consulted landscapes by Philippe Rousseau for the “Jungle Book,” snatched ideas from 1920s films like F.W. Mernau’s “Faust” and Chaplin’s “Modern Times,” and revised “Pinocchio” from the Italian writer Carlo Collodi. They copy, embellish, and alter from every possible source – producing a highly cross-pollinated vision in “living color.”

Pinocchio is a Mediterranean boy, living in a Bavarian Alpine village modeled after the German town of Rothenburg ob der Tauber that has Scandinavian-style chalets – a rendering by Disney artist Gustaf Tenggren of Sweden, raised in a chalet.

One arresting museum feature shows Disney clips next to clips from European films from the 1920s; some images seem directly lifted by Disney animators.

As Disney said, “it all began with a mouse.” Yet it probably began with a number of mice, distant cousins of Mickey that trace to 19th-century European illustrators.

Along with Beatrix Potter’s creatures, there are pre-Mickey mice by French artists Benjamin Ravier and Philippe Rousseau and a violin-playing mouse by German artist Heinrich Kley, whose art Disney collected and whose whimsical “skating elephants” were the inspiration for later “Fantasia” drawings. Those illustrations captured the imagination of Spanish surrealist Salvadore Dali, who collaborated with Disney after World War II (though only 18 seconds of film resulted.)

US outsiders found refuge in France

But, as Uncle Walt might have said in his Sunday evening Wonderful World of Disney prologues, “now let’s hold on a minute and step back.”

France has long been a US sounding board. In the 1950s and ’60s, Paris was looked to by American outsiders – minorities, jazz musicians, and artists – as a refuge. Faulkner was out of print before being discovered by French literati. Jerry Lewis’s offbeat humor was first appreciated here. In the aftermath of German occupation, American pop culture was the rage in Paris, viewed partly as a way to get rid of Nazi shadows.

This month, a tap-dancing musical honoring Josephine Baker’s 100th birthday just closed; the jazz singer was born in St. Louis but felt most at home in the Paris of the late 1920s. “Looking for Josephine” travels to Barcelona and then to New Orleans, La., and is the only tribute anywhere to her centenary.

Disney, “Uncle Walt” to millions of Mouseketeers by the late 1950s, came across as an ordinary guy who somehow got diverted from a career as a milkman in Kansas City, Mo. (Indeed, a teacher there once pronounced him “second dumbest” in the class.) But Disney was no slouch. He corresponded with Charlie Chaplin, socialized with Spencer Tracy, and knew Sergei Eisenstein, the Russian film director. They were all Disney fans.

The Grand Palais assesses Disney as a “modest artist.” But his genius lay elsewhere. He brought to life a new art form. He’s gauged less as a virtuoso cellist and more as conductor of an orchestra.

Under Disney’s creative hand, for example, backgrounds were as much a “character” in a film as Jiminy Cricket or Daffy Duck. Backgrounds had their own creative artistic directors: Trees with arms, or polka-dotted toadstools that jump and dance. The entire picture was alive. “Snow White” took 200 years of manhours to complete, and even that didn’t satisfy Disney, according to his biographer.

The section of the “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” called “Night on Bald Mountain” was designed by Max Reinhardt, the European impresario known to Americans as the owner of the castle Leopoldskron in Salzburg, which played home to the von Trapp family in “The Sound of Music.”

Decency – but with sharp edges

It was in the 1950s that the irritation with the Disneyization of reality set in. Disney came to represent a world of happy endings, fuzzy creatures, and the harmonizing of animals, humans, and nature in a way that has little relation to the darker underside of a world smashed by Auschwitz. The sense that Americans looked at the world through a Disney vision of a “small world after all,” got laid at Disney’s door, especially overseas. Yet that ignores many of the sharper-edged realities in Disney’s own work. The shooting of Bambi’s mother, or the wicked witch in “Snow White,” are truly fearsome images. The dark forests whose branches reach out to ensnare princesses caused mothers all over the world “to pull their children out of the theaters,” as Pierre Lambert, a historian of animation in France, points out. (His mother pulled him out of a French showing at age 5.)

Yet Disney’s concept, forged on a farm in Missouri and in Kansas City, is finally one of the decency of ordinary people striving to surmount difficulties, much as he did. It is a vision, the French note, that has traveled all over the world – most recently to Asia in the form of a Hong Kong Disney.

While the Paris show closed Tuesday it will shortly travel to Montreal, opening at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts on March 8, closing June 24.

Posted by M at 02:47:32 | Permalink | No Comments »