Category Archives: art

Pay attention, people! While you were sleeping naked breasts are destroying the American way of life.

Last night was the closing night of Artomatic. There were friends, old and new. There was bourbon. I’m sure there was other stuff, too, but I don’t have time to tell you about that because

a) I have that icky feeling that someone put little socks on all of my teeth while I was sleeping (see also: bourbon), and

b) I just picked up the Post and read in the Reliable Source that the reason our country is going to hell is all of the artwork depicting nudity in the Nation’s Capital. GOP delegate Robert Hurt has helpfully explained, “The Lady Godiva thing – that’s what it conjured up, and that’s not what our country’s about.”

Holy cats and kittens, people! Where’s John Ashcroft when we need him? We haven’t got time to send up the Ashcroft signal. (Ironically enough he’s locked in mortal combat with his former cronies at the FCC and DOJ over the satellite radio merger. That’s not working out so well for him, according to the front page of today’s Washington Post, but that’s a story for another day).

According to Dallas Morning News reporter Wayne Slater, the encroaching bustification of our proud nation didn’t make the Texas GOP convention platform.

“You don’t have nude art on your front porch,” the article quoted Hurt as saying. Speak for yourself, Mr. Hurt! (Note to self: get nude art for front porch. Also, get front porch).

Now that I know where we’re all going and why we’re all crammed into this handbasket, I’m going to drink some more coffee.

Then I’ve got to figure out the SilverDocs schedule. If I go, I’m going on a VIP pass so I get guaranteed seating for events because I am much too tired to have to think about getting places super early and standing around in line with commoners. Plus the conference looks really good this year, maybe even better than the films (and there are some very good movies on the schedule this year). But that’s also a post for another day.

Frida

Spent some quality time with the in-laws, catching the traveling Frida Kahlo show which celebrates the 100th anniversary of Kahlo’s birth by gathering together an astonishing number of her works and hundreds of photographs of Kahlo and her family and friends. It was organized by the Walker Art Center (Minneapolis) and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and in between Minneapolis and San Francisco, the show spent a few months at the at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which is where we caught up with it.

(Small New Yorker mention when the show first opened: Peter Schjeldahl, “All Souls: The Frida Kahlo Cult”)

It was an amazing show, but it was depressing. Deeply depressing. Profoundly depressing. Astonishing and completely worthwhile, yes, but deeply sad. Husband and I skipped the audio tour. Most of the people in the show had picked up the headsets, which was nice because it meant you could hear a pin drop even in rooms that were crowded. On the other hand, by the end of the exhibit the people who’d listened had a hundred yard stare that made me want to make sure the museum had locked the stairs to the roof and put away all of the sharp objects.

The show features over a hundred photographs of Kahlo and her family and friends, plus a dizzying array of her paintings. Many of these works have never been displayed publicly in the U.S. before, and certainly have never been displayed together. Arranged chronologically rather than thematically – although you could argue that in this show that’s really the same thing – the groupings represent the major periods in her life. Spinal surgeries, the miscarriage in Detroit, the first divorce from Diego, etc.

The show wrings the viewer out and plops them on the floor of the final room, wherein the last grouping of works is a series of cheerfully bright still life paintings.

These final works were introduced with words from Kahlo’s diary about her own death, “I hope the exit is joyful — and I hope never to come back.” They represent the agony of Kahlo’s final year as she coped with pneumonia and the amputation of her leg. These are mostly works she created because she knew they would sell and she could use the money for her medical bills. Look closely at the festive paintings and you can see she was so doped up that she must have struggled mightily to maintain her focus on her subject and to control her every brushstroke.

People exited the show looking like they’d just been released from Azkaban. To further disconcert the viewer, they then get to try to shake the dementors off their back while walking straight into a Frida Kahlo emporium with more licensed tie-in products than I think I’ve ever seen for any show. Rooms of neckties and paperdolls and jewelry and clothing and other happy household objects festooned with images of Frida and her monkeys. Looking at the reproduction necklace – complete with thorns and hummingbird – threatened to bring back the migraine I’d just gotten rid of. (Actually, I have to admit that piece was so weird, it was oddly attractive).

It’s a brilliant show and was well worth the trip, but before we left town we went back to the museum to hang out with the Buddhas and look at the stone temple for a while to recover.

Monday’s journey in the rain was no fun, but Tuesday’s trip back still took well over 4 hours and started to make us both a little stir crazy in the car. At one point I thought Husband brightly exclaimed, “Let’s pretend we’re Canadian!” When asked him what he meant, he couldn’t remember what he’d just actually said, because we immediately became preoccupied with ending every sentence with, “eh?”

It’s good to be home. Now I have to clean the house because Husband’s mother-in-law is on her way to stay with us.

Artomatic

Despite being the Steering Committee Co-Chair, I was slow to sign up for Artomatic this year and ended up way way down on the waiting list. I’ve got a site now and and lots of people are anxious to know if the ants are returning.

I won’t keep you in suspense, I’ve convinced Roger we should use my installation space to get as many people as possible involved in our Sunflower Project (see also: sunflower art festival).

I’m also doing a performance piece, but more on that later, I’ve just returned from a run in Golden Gate Park and I smell like a yak. I should really take a shower since Jessica and I are going to while away the rest of the day eating and drinking coffee and shopping for yummy shoes.

Artomatic in Art in America Magazine

In the May 2008 issue of Art in America magazine, J.W. Mahoney writes about the DC Art scene in, “To a Different Drum.” On the 2nd page of the article, he talks about Artomatic:

Of two particularly avant-garde institutions that have endured the test of time, though, only one has a fixed address… (he then talks about DCAC before moving on to Artomatic)

The other institution, Artomatic, established in 1999, is fluid in every respect. It is an annual – sometimes semiannual – resolutely non-curated exhibition of Washington-area artists, a pay-for-space proposition open to anyone at all who wants to show something they have made. it takes place anywhere large enough to accommodate the deluge of art that comes in, making exhibition spaces out of anything from a former children’s museum to two floors of an office building, to an enormous empty laundry complex. The presence of so much amateur work is overwhelming, promting the Washington Post’s chief art critic, Blake Gopnik, to compare visiting Artomatic to an extended dental appointment. But the beauty of Artomatic’s esthetic anarchy is in its abundant innocence, not in any obviously savvy consideration of contemporary art issues. And, critically viewed, some surprisingly serious, innovative work crops up in unusual places, just around some unlikely corner of the show.

Nice to see some kind words about now, everyone is in overdrive creating and hanging work and complaining and generally getting on one another’s nerves (not to mention placing dozens of phonecalls and generating hundreds of emails per day) so it’s good to be reminded why we’re doing this.

It’s been another 15 hour day and I’m losing my voice so enough is enough. Time to finally watch The Orphanage, if I can stay awake.