Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Shipwrecks and Other Moons

Robert Boyd

One could, on seeing Ted Kincaid's photos at Devin Borden Gallery, be tempted into a conversation on the authenticity of photography. But that conversation would be old hat. What interests me is that these highly manipulated images are not obviously double-coded. They aren't images of things and about being images of things. They generally lack irony.


Ted Kincaid, Shipwreck 712, 2012, digital photograph on Hahnemühle photo rag pearl, 22x30"

This misty, seemingly faded image of a shipwreck is meant to be seen as an image of a shipwreck. In the 18th and 19th century, people who lived in coastal towns probably knew of people who had been in shipwrecks or had witnessed shipwrecks themselves. It was a popular subject of paintings--J.M.W. Turner painted more than one shipwreck, for example.

For a modern person, however, shipwrecks are extremely uncommon (notwithstanding the Costa Concordia). And the image of a foundering schooner like Kincaid's Shipwreck is likely to evoke nostalgia more than, say, sublime terror. One might think about Turner or Géricault, Ernest Shackleton or Patrick O'Brien's The Thirteen Gun Salute. But what we know looking at this picture is that it is meant to represent the past. The only irony in the work is that it uses modern technological methods to depict the past. Otherwise, it is simply what it seems--a romanticized image of shipwreck, laden with all the symbolism such images suggest (mortality, futility, the power of nature, etc.).


Ted Kincaid, Stormy Sea 807, 2012, digital photograph on Hahnemühle photo rag pearl, 22x30"

Kincaid's show is called Earth, Sea and Sky. Stormy Sea and Shipwreck are the two "sea" pictures. There are several landscapes, which are similar to the nautical pictures in their sense of nostalgia. Kincaid's landscapes aspire to be simultaneously gothic and sublime, and therefore to recall late 18th century/early 19th century literature and art.


Ted Kincaid Earth Sea and Sky installation view.

But the oddest and most original pieces in the show are his series of Possible Moons.


Ted Kinkaid, Possible Moons

These moons float in miasmal space. Indeed, they seem suspended in some unhealthy medium quite unlike the cold vacuum of outer space. Of course, this is also nostalgic. Until the early 20th century, scientist believed there was a medium in space called ether.


Ted Kincaid, Possible Moons 1011, 2012, digital photograph on Hahnemühle photo rag pearl, 20x16"

 These moons are mysterious and somewhat threatening. The antique look of the images might make one think of early science fiction--more H.G. Wells with his sinister plots (see First Men in the Moon, for example) than Jules Verne.


Ted Kincaid, Possible Moons 1010, 2012, digital photograph on Hahnemühle photo rag pearl, 20x16"

It used to be an insult to refer to pictures as being literary. Being so described was to suggest that the art in question betrayed its essential nature. But I think the infinitely manipulable nature of digital photographs puts paid to such notions of essentialism. To say then that a work is evocative of some older literary source or genre is no insult. The only issue then is whether it does this well or poorly. I think Kincaid's images do it very well. But they shouldn't be hanging on the white walls of a modern gallery. They should reside in some wood-paneled library whose owner retires there to read 18th and 19th century literature (perhaps The Castle of Otranto or Wuthering Heights) on his Kindle.





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Saturday, January 12, 2013

The Menil's PTSD

Robert Boyd


The Art Guys, The Art Guys Marry a Plant, 2009, live oak tree that the Art Guys married in a performance

As many of you probably alread know, the Menil is getting rid of the Art Guys tree (the remnant of their 2009 performance, The Art Guys Marry a Plant).  Ironically, this happened at the same time that the Picasso vandal, Uriel Landeros, has turned himself in after months on the lam. This will sound a little dumb, but I only realized now that there is a link between these two things. In each case, a piece of art belonging to the Menil was vandalized. And these two acts of vandalism seem to have really shaken the Menil.

What made me realize the connection is an editorial by Rainey Knudson, wife of Michael Galbreth (half of the Art Guys) that was published in Glasstire. Knudson is the publisher of Glasstire, and she acknowledges her bias right up front. But she also points out that when the controversy first flared up, Glasstire purposely played it low-key because of the possible appearance of a conflict of interest. Her piece was entitled "On Institutional Cowardice: The Menil Collection." In it, she wrote
Here is what the Menil is going to say about this decision:
-       They want to save the tree;
-       They’re worried about vandalism.
Here is the truth:
-       They’re tired of the controversy around the artwork;
-       They need to raise money for their drawing center and want this distraction to go away;
-       They don’t believe in the artwork and are sorry they ever accepted it into their collection.
Certainly similar speculations were made last night as members of the local art scene made the rounds to various openings.  And this feels right. Except for one thing--in little over a year, two artworks in the Menil Collection have been physically attacked. And until a week ago, both attackers were still out there. Now that Uriel Landeros has turned himself in, the Menil only has to worry about one attacker. (Unless Uriel Landeros was responsible for both attacks--unlikely but possible, I suppose.)

The weird thing about the deaccessioning of the tree is the timing. The director of the Menil, Josef Helfenstein, met with the Art Guys in December of 2012 and told them of "his decision to move the tree, either behind a building somewhere on the Menil campus, or preferably, off the premises entirely," according to Knudson. Why a year later?

Since we're all engaging in speculation here, let me offer this. In December 2011, someone snaps the Art Guys' tree in two. In June 2012, Uriel Landeros spraypaints Woman in a Red Armchair by Pablo Picasso. The Menil--perhaps specifically Helfenstein--feels besieged by barbaric destructive criminality. Perhaps this feeling of lurking danger grows over time. And the most vulnerable piece of art in the collection is the still fragile, right-out-in-the-public Art Guys tree. The tree--it sits there, so inviting to suggestible sociopaths. What to do? Hide it? Give it away? So you can see where this is going.

In the end, it may not have been institutional cowardice, but institutional paranoia (if not full-blown PTSD) that caused the terrible decision to remove the tree.

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Uriel Landeros' Attorney

Robert Boyd



Emily DeToto, the lawyer representing Uriel Landeros (the Picasso grafitti guy, for those coming late to the party), was interviewed on ABC-Eyewitness News. They put up this nice long clip from the interview on their website. She seems a bit nervous, and probably says too much (like when she says Landeros is an accomplished graffiti artist, but only does legal graffiti). She seems highly frustrated with Landeros mouthing off to the press and on social media. She suggests that the bond will be high because he had already fled to Mexico for several months.

In an interview with the Houston Chronicle, she said, "A criminal defense attorney's worst nightmare is when your client gives an alleged full confession on tape." No doubt! And given this, there doesn't seem any way that Landeros will be found not guilty. I think DeToto's job is to minimize his sentence. I expect a plea deal.

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I-10 Links

Robert Boyd


I know where I'm going the next time I visit New Orleans. I'm always suspicious when some boosterish persons decides that this or that neighborhood is an "arts district." That said, the art scene along St. Claude Ave. seems like a real, organically-formed thing. Last time I went to New Orleans to look at art, I wasn't all that sure where to go (not that it kept me from seeing some excellent art). Now, thanks to New Orleans design firm/art blog Constance, I have a map.

I'm not sure where to go the next time I visit San Antonio. After all, the gallery scene seems to have been decimated there in 2012, according to Art Magazine, an online magazine covering art in San Antonio and the region. First in April, several galleries in the Blue Star Arts Complex closed when Blue Star started charging market rate rents. Then David Shelton moved his gallery to Houston. Art Magazine tried its best to put a positive spin on things, and not all art news from San Antonio in 2012 was bad. But San Antonio's collector base is apparently either too small or doesn't buy locally, and that makes running a gallery there a risky venture. ["2012: What changed?", Haydeé Muñoz De la Rocha, Art Magazine. Hat-tip to Glasstire]

FPH has a suggestion on which gallery not to visit in Houston.  Art Writers grant recipient Harbeer Sandhu pulled no punches in his pieces for the FPH's "Worst of Houston" feature. His choice for worst art gallery? War'Hous, the gallery located on Main near Lawndale and the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft.
If you like your art easy (both in execution and in content), decorative, vapid, and shallow, then this is the place for you.  Nothing here will challenge you–nothing will make you think or feel in ways you’d never expected to; nothing will make you feel uncomfortable; nothing will challenge your preconceived notions.  This is where beautiful people go to pose beside paintings of beautiful people. [...]
Dandee Warhol, the gallery’s proprietor, whose name is a rip-off of a lame ‘90s band whose name is a play on the name of a truly great conceptual artist, was voted “Houston’s Best Artist” by readers of Houston Press in 2011.  All that proves is the lameness of Houston Press readers. ["The Worst of Houston: 2012 Edition", FPH, January 7, 2013]
If this is the kind of vitriolic rant we can expect from Sandhu's proposed blog, then I say right on!

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Thursday, January 10, 2013

Some Questions for James Drake

Virginia Billeaud Anderson 

On January 12 Moody Gallery opens Group Exhibition of Gallery Artists, and it is unsurprising James Drake is part of the group. Surely, every time I visit Moody there are a few pieces by Drake displayed, and I’m having a memory of how parentally puffed up Betty Moody seemed on the opening night of Drake’s Station Museum exhibition.

According to Moody’s press release Drake will be showing works from his “Red Touch” series, so I contacted the artist to ask a few questions, and his replies clarified his choice of red for intensity, and the political reality underlying his series.

Virginia Billeaud Anderson: Your use of red pastel goes back for some years. Please comment on your attraction to it as an art medium. Are you drawn to its classic old-masterish quality?

James Drake: I started using the red pastel (chalk) about fourteen years ago while living in New York. I do not use much color, but felt an intense red was appropriate for this specific subject matter. While I love classic old master drawings these were not influenced by or based on that love and appreciation. I believe most of the “old masters” used more of a sienna color and I wanted these drawings to have an intense contemporary red.


James Drake, Red Touch #2, 1999, Pastel, charcoal and lasquox fixative on paper, 60 1/2" x 45” Courtesy of Moody Gallery 

VBA: Your works on paper seem heavily influenced by Renaissance and Baroque drawings. Do you look to them for inspiration?

JD: Yes, I have a very real passion for Renaissance/Baroque drawings and always succumb to their beauty, sensitivity, and grace. And yes, they are a tremendous inspiration.

VBA: Why do you work in very large size?

JD: I work in a very large scale because when I draw on that scale it is necessary to use my entire body and is very physical. Up and down ladders, arms swinging, pacing back and forth - it is all a part of the process. Also, most people think of drawing at a scale of about an average sheet of paper measuring 20”x30”, however, these large drawings are meant as finished pieces and not sketches for paintings or other works. And of course, there is a certain drama inherent in large works that I try to convey to the viewer.

The Red Mirror is about 11 ft. x 21 ft and I have made many other drawings in that scale and some larger. For example my drawing City of Tells is 12 ft x 32 ft and I am currently working on a drawing that will be exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego (formerly the La Jolla Museum) in June of 2014 that is 15 ft in height x 342 ft in length. It is a grid divided into ten sections which are in turn, composed 1266 drawings measuring 19”x 24.”

VBA: Do you begin with a preliminary sketch? Or, for a work as large as Red Mirror, do you project an image to guide your design?

JD: Yes, I usually make preliminary sketches and in the case of The Red Mirror, made about fifty or so. Sometimes I draw a very large figure or object on a separate piece of paper and then, move that drawing around on the final large paper to establish the composition and position of the figure or object. This gives me a sense of what the final drawing might look like and I can try different placements without drawing the figure each time.


James Drake, Red Touch #1, 1999, Pastel on paper, 45” x 56” Courtesy of Moody Gallery 

VBA: There seems to be psychic distance between the Red Touch images and the more clearly political Exit Juarez, or the Trophy Room installation, two unforgettable works I saw in 2010 the evening I met you at Station. Please comment on what seems like incongruence. Or, is there a link?

JD: Actually, the Red Touch series of drawings were based on and inspired by a body of work titled Tongue-Cut Sparrows which dealt with a prison language and political issues prevalent along the U.S. Mexican border. Briefly, Tongue-Cut Sparrows depicted women using an invented sign language to communicate with their loved ones in jail or prison. They were able to stand on the street, look at the men in jail and speak to them using this sign language. I made drawings, a book, prints, and a video of this truly unique phenomenon. This piece has been shown in many museums throughout Europe and the United States, including the 2007 Venice Biennale, curated by Rob Storr.

One of the frequent phrases the women repeatedly used while signing to their loved ones was “I want to feel and touch you.” Therefore, because they were denied physical contact I made the Red Touch series and used an intense red to convey that sense of passion. I was born in Lubbock, Texas, but spent my early childhood in Guatemala. All of my family lived in Guatemala at that time and I am convinced that a lot of the issues and works I have produced are a direct response to that experience.


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Pan Recommends for the week of January 10 to January 16

Robert Boyd

Busy weekend ahead for art. Here are some of the shows we're looking forward to.

FRIDAY


The Bridge Club, The Voyage Out II, 2012, archival digital print, 24" x 36"

The Bridge Club: Still at Art Palace, 6 pm, through February 16. The Bridge Club, a four-woman performance group noted for their very deliberate performances (and their wigs) are performing again at Art Palace as well as displaying a selection of "stills" from their previous performances.


 SATURDAY


Ian Hamilton Findlay and George Oliver, Arcadia, 1973, silkscreen print on paper

Ian Hamilton Finlay: Printed Works at Hiram Butler Gallery, 11 am, runs through February 23. I'm not sure if the print above will be in this show, but any show by this late post-modern neo-neoclassicist is worth checking out, in my opinion.


Clifford Owens, Photographs With an Audience (New York) (detail), 2008-09

Clifford Owens, Anthology at the CAMH at 2 pm. Clifford Owens performs as part of the CAMH's Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art. This particular performance is the performance equivalent of a singer doing a covers album.



Devon Britt-Darby, Trust Exercises

Devon Britt-Darby, Keepsakes from Several Occasions at PG Contemporary (Milam St. location) at 6 pm. PG Contemporary's old location with one final show will close out with a bang with a show featuring Devon Britt-Darby, former Houston Chronicle art critic and central figure in The Art Guy's Marry a Tree affair. I'm looking forward to a spectacle, if not an outright scandal!


Maggie Taylor, Small Boat Waiting, 2012, inkjet print

Maggie Taylor, No Ordinary Days at Catherine Courtier Gallery at 6 pm, runs through February 9. Maggie Taylor returns for a new exhibit of her gently surreal painterly photo-collages.

What exhibits will you be seeing this weekend?

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Houston's Favorite Art From 2012

Robert Boyd

The votes are in--the people have spoken. Below are the most popular exhibits, performances and art fairs as chosen by an internet poll. There were 329 responses (of which 72 had to be disqualified*). Here's what you all thought was the best art of the year in Houston.

Favorite Exhibits

 
Christian Marclay, Grey Drip Door (The Electric Chair), 2006, synthetic ink on synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 94 3/8" x 51 1/4" from the exhibit Silence

  1. Silence at the Menil Museum with 28 votes
  2. Richard Serra, Richard Serra Drawing: A Retrospective, Menil Museum with 26 votes
  3. tie: Hillerbrand+Magsamen , eState Sale at the Art League Houston and Aaron Parazette, Flyaway at the Art League Houston with 20 votes each
  4. Lisa Chow and Y.E. Torres, Once there was, once there wasn't: Two tales from the minds of Lisa Chow & Y. E. Torres at ARC Gallery with 19 votes
  5. Flying Solo at the Art League Houston with 16 votes
  6. tie: Debra Barrera, Kissing in Cars, Driving Alone at Moody Gallery; Staring at the Wall: The Art of Boredom at Lawndale Art Center; and James Turrell, Twilight Epiphany at Rice University with 15 votes each
  7. tie: WAR/PHOTOGRAPHY: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath at the MFAH; Geoff Hippenstiel at Devin Borden Gallery; and Emily Peacock, You, Me & Diane at Lawndale Art Center with 14 votes each
  8. tie: James Ciosek, Human Hamster Wheel at Lawndale Art Center; In Plain Sight at McClain Gallery; [Hx8] at Station Museum;YE Torres and Erin Joyce, Raised in the Wild: Memories of a Bad Unicorn at the East End Studio Gallery; and Eric Zimmerman, Endless Disharmony & Telltale Ashes at Art Palace with 13 votes each
  9. tie: Debra Barrera, Drive Me There and Back Again at Blaffer Art Museum Window Into Houston; Sasha Dela, The Emotional Life of a Spy at the Art League Houston; Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at the CAMH; Laura Lark, The Livable Forest at Devin Borden Gallery; Peter Lucas, Voyager Found at Lawndale Art Center; and David Politzer, When You're Out There at the Houston Center for Photography with 12 votes each
  10. tie: Adela Andea, Primordial Gardens at the Art League Houston; Jamal Cyrus, STACKS residency at the Art League Houston; Sandy Ewen, Projection and Amplification at ARC Gallery; The Big Show at Lawndale Art Center; Lisa Marie Hunter, Camouflage at the Art League Houston; Phillip Pyle II, STACKS residency--Black Friday at the Art League Houston; M'Kina Tapscott STACKS residency--New Soil: Tessellations of Dark Matter at the Art League Houston; Julia Zarate, In Somnis Veritas at the East End Studio Gallery
An additional 357 (!) exhibits got votes, so congratulations all around.

Favorite Performances

 
Emily Sloan, Carrie Nation Hatchetation, performance at Notsuoh

  1. Emily Sloan, Carrie Nation Hatchetation at the The Lone Star Performance Explosion with 23 votes
  2. Zubi Puente and Y.E. Torres, Let's Play Doctor at the Continuum Live Art Series/Avant Garden with 20 votes
  3. tie: Jim Pirtle performance at Notsuoh as part of The Lone Star Performance Explosion and Tina McPherson, Love Exorcist at the Continuum Live Art Series/Avant Garden with 16 votes
  4. Non Grata, Force Majeure at the The Lone Star Performance Explosion with 14 votes
  5. tie: Nathaniel Donnett, ZZzzzzzz at the Art League Houston and Nancy Douthey, Chicken 'N Dinner at the  The Lone Star Performance Explosion with 13 votes
  6. tie: Emily Sloan, Is that a Baby Ruth in the Swimming Pool? at Darke Gallery and Militia "Malice" Tiamat, Know Thy Self, Continuum Live Art Series/Avant Garden with 12 votes
  7. tie: Daniel- Kayne, Three Day Fast at the The Lone Star Performance Explosion; Orion Maxted performance at Notsuoh at the The Lone Star Performance Explosion; and Non Grata , [performance at Avant Garden], The Lone Star Performance Explosion with 10 votes each
  8. tie: Jonatan Lopez performance at Avant Garden during the The Lone Star Performance Explosion and 1KA performance at the The Lone Star Performance Explosion with 9 votes each
  9. tie: Jamal Cyrus, Texas Fried Tenor at CAMH; Miao Jiaxin, I Have a Dream at Box 13; and Pope L., Costume Made of Nothing at the CAMH with 8 votes each
  10. John Pluecker, Antena Books: Pop-Up Bookstore and Literary Experimentation Lab, Project Row Houses with 7 votes
An additional 43 performances got votes. Congratulations all.

Favorite art fairs
  1. Texas Contemporary Art Fair with 73 votes
  2. Pan Art Fair with 48 votes
  3. Houston Fine Art Fair with 43 votes
A few closing comments. It's not always obvious where the boundary between exhibit and performance is. That was especially the case with with Radical Presence: Black performance in Contemporary Art at CAMH and STACKS at the Art League. Stacks was additionally difficult to deal with because it was, in effect, a series of residencies followed by one-person shows. So do you deal with them separately or as part of a greater show? I split them into separate shows and performances, but several people wrote in STACKS as a combined unit.

The favorite art fair question was admittedly a bit of a joke. 48 votes for the Pan Art Fair probably comes close to the entire attendance of the Pan Art Fair. But thanks everyone who voted.

* Unfortunately, there appeared to be some ballot stuffing activity. I created an algorithm to detect ballot stuffing, and while I probably missed a few, the 72 votes that were disqualified were almost certainly all from ballot stuffing. It's very disappointing that anyone would do something like this. I don't  understand it--there is no prize being given here. It's like cheating to win the election for junior high class president--and about as mature. All I wanted to do with this poll was to see what shows people liked best. The results however are almost certainly somewhat skewed by self-dealing on the part of certain people. You know who you are (and so do I). The result of these shenanigans is that I will probably not be running this poll again next year (or ever). It's not worth it to deal with the cheaters.

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