Thursday, February 28, 2008

Art periodicals that are art objects



Is publishing art dead? I don't think so especially with new "publications" like The Thing Quarterly and North Drive Press stepping up to deliver some really interesting packages of high quality - low cost art objects.

This winter I received the latest North Drive Press and was thrilled with the package. Your mileage may vary, but these are really a lot of bang for the buck.

Here are the links:
http://www.northdrivepress.com/
http://thethingquarterly.com/

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Thursday, February 21, 2008

Fontana Mix for late February

Lisa McCarty opens a show of paintings at DCAC Friday, 7 -9.

The earliest recording of Allen Ginsberg reading Howl has recently been found in the Gary Snyder archive located at Reed College. Reed has been nice enough to place the recording on its web site. Visit Reed College via this link.

In more ego related news, Douglas Witmer gave me a nice plug on his website yesterday. Go here.

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Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Jason Horowitz @ Blue Sky Gallery, Portland



A few of you may remember that I checked in with Jason a few months ago, well here is a quick update. Blue Sky Gallery in portland is showing his work through the end of the month. (I think - because I'm just not sure when the show ends) Anyway, it hardly matters, I'm a fan of Jasons work and I think its worth looking at. One of the things that is really interesting to me about the work is that is has to be seen in person, this is really one of those art as experience versus art as a jpeg.

Jason seems to have had a pretty good turnout for his opening - he sent over a photo of the installation as well.

My last post about Jason is here.

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Julius Schulman: Palm Springs @ Palm Springs Art Museum



I was able to see a preview of this show during it's hanging - most of the work was still on the floor. What follows is really just a few random thoughts put together about what I perceive along with what I was told. If you read the last Palm Springs report you will know that I regard JS to be one of the dominant forces in photographing the modern period of architecture - in fact he has been a force since the 1930's when he started photographing R. M. Schindler and Richard Neutra's work as early as 1936. Then moving into the 40 - 50's working with the Eames, Saarinen and the Case study houses, JS could have pretty much rested his career right about then.

The exhibition currently on display at the Palm Springs Museum is basically centered around four of the predominant Architects work in, plus a smattering of highly notable images from his past. The four (Richard Neutra, William F. Cody, Albert Frey, and E.Stewart Williams) architects are the core of Palms Springs modern (I would also add Donald Wexler and The Krisel/Alexander architect/builder team).

The work in the show is some of the best architectural photography ever made. Much of the work is still the benchmark to all architectural photography being produced today. Really it's an embarrassment of riches. It's interesting - the photography is so good it gets out of the way after a while - what I mean is that you start focusing on the buildings and what is good and great about each architectural vision - so you need to be careful about how you look at the work because you can get lost in the details pretty easily.

Highly Recommended.

Kaufmann house, Richard Neutra, 1946. Photo: 1947
Copyright J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission.
Julius Shulman Photography Archive
Research Library at the Getty Research Institute

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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Quick mention by JT Kirkland at Thinking About Art

Thank you JT Kirkland for the kind words on your blog, Thinking About Art.

Follow this link for the article.

By the way, Sunday is the last day. So get down there - I'll be around a little bit this weekend so say hello.

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A quick tour of Palm Springs Modernism

This weekend my wife and I took a weekend trip in conjunction with her former college, the University of Texas. For some reason Catherine seems to think she dragged me out there, which couldn't be further from the truth. We are both fans of the "Modern" probably me more than her - so go figure. Please consider this a quick overview.

The Modern Aesthetic in Palm Springs really grows from a number of sources; the Post World War II boom in prosperity, A desire to "bring the outside in" (merging the home with the environment), and a profound belief or optimism in the future. To top this off, the Hollywood studio system usually forbid anyone from being more than 100 miles away from the studio - Palm Springs fit just inside that limit. Armed with these ideals - and the desire to produce new "serious buildings" the architects of Palm Springs along with european transplants somehow found themselves in a place where the modern was exactly what home owners were looking for. International architects, Richard Neutra, Albert Frey, and local architects William Cody, Donald Wexler, and E. Stewart Williams carved impressive careers - but more importantly created an architectural treasury that we are able to see and still be influenced by 60 - 70 years later.

One last note: this architectural legacy would never had quite the impact had it not been for the amazing talent of Julius Schulman, THE photographer of mid-century design - and still working at age 90 today.



Frey House II
So named because it was the second home that he built for himself. This is more a mountain retreat, minimal and tightly compressed. Tiny by anyone's standards, the house is low maintenance and literally perched on the side of the mountain - its floor ending at a glass wall makes you feel like your almost floating. It's location plays a key role in the house as well - a large boulder that was unable to be moved serves as a room divider further bringing the outside in.



The Kaufmann House
This is the grand jewel of Palm Springs mid-century homes. Built in 1946-47 designed by Richard Neutra for the same family that commisiond Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater. In fact, FLW had already designed a building for the location (The Boulders) and was shocked to learn of the commission going to Neutra that he would trash talk him (Neutra) whenever the mood struck.

Sadly we were unable to tour the Kaufmann House, it is about to be auctioned by Sotheby's as a work of art rather than a building. Quite a compliment.

Kaufmann house, Richard Neutra, 1946. Photo: 1947
Copyright J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission.
Julius Shulman Photography Archive
Research Library at the Getty Research Institute



Donald Wexler and the great experiment
Donald Wexler was influenced by the international style of the Bauhaus and it shows in his buildings, they still carry a modernist approach however they show the roots of its beginning a little bit more. For example, The Dinah Shore residence (above) is clearly modernist, but with a slight hint of his roots in the international style. This is further exemplified by his experiment in 1961 - 1962 of developing a "Home System" using steel fabrication in a planned or modular way. Although only 7 of these buildings were able to be produced before a steel embargo killed the project in early 1963, Wexler had opened a door that is only starting to take place again with the new modular construction or prefab movement of today.

My photo of the Steel house (below) is intended to show the international flavor of these homes. Please remember that these are smaller homes - 2 bedrooms at most and are designed for lower incomes than many of the houses that we know as masterworks.



A few photos of some interesting homes



The Abernathy House
Also known as the "Pavillion House" designed by Willian F. Cody



The Bougain Villa House
Designed by William Burgess



Madras Oasis
Designed by William Krisel

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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Back in town...

Sorry for vanishing like that - here what's happening on the blog this week;

Julius Schulman @ Palm Springs Art Musuem,
A tour of Modernist Architecture in Palm Springs (can you guess where I've been)
Some photos of Jason Horowitz at Blue Sky Gallery in Portland, Oregon
Some upcoming shows in DC this month
And if I'm not careful a "Fontana Mix"

Things should get pretty busy here this week so please do drop back in.

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Blog of the moment (for me at least)

I've spent far too much time on SELLOUT in the last few hours not to at least mention it. What is SELLOUT? you ask. I'll just quote from The site itself:

"SELLOUT is a dialogue about every practical aspect of being a visual artist--from saving money to resizing jpegs, and everything in between. It is more than a professional advice aggregator and hot-tip provider. We want any information we provide to be fleshed out as anecdote or called out as bullshit."

Visit SELLOUT by following this link.

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Friday, February 01, 2008

A quick review in the City Paper today



Thanks go out to Kriston Capps for his review of my show in the Washington City Paper today. You can even read it online here.

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