So that's what contrapposto is...
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Children's book illustrations, for all ages
Using superlatives are a questionable tool, but it's unavoidable in the case of The Snowy Day and the Art of Ezra Jack Keats, a new exhibit at the Skirball Cultural Center. Based on the luminous and thoughtful work of children's book illustrator Ezra Jack Keats, The Snowy Day is one of the most beautiful, inventive exhibitions I've ever seen. You'll find it rouses your energy on a scale similar to that of their Noah's Ark exhibition. It will invigorate the scroogiest of scrooges.
The Snowy Day proves that book illustrations don't just belong in books. "Finally, he reached the King's high palace" has the glow of a Klimt and the sublimity of a Caspar David Friederich painting. It takes your breath away, in what can only remotely match the awe of a traveler who has reached his destination.
But of course, book illustrations are meant for books, and this show is a testament to the value of the hand-held page. One can imagine words scrawled into the space Keats left for them, be it a marbled sky or a mound of snow. But his illustrations, too, can easily stand alone.
Jack Ezra Keats gained notoriety after his publication of The Snowy Day in 1962. It was the first full-color, modern book to feature an African American protagonist-- an important addition to the conversation on civil rights. He went on to publish other books with African American protagonists, a choice that led many to think he was black. Keats, in fact, was the son of Jewish immigrants in Brooklyn.
The Snowy Day proves that book illustrations don't just belong in books. "Finally, he reached the King's high palace" has the glow of a Klimt and the sublimity of a Caspar David Friederich painting. It takes your breath away, in what can only remotely match the awe of a traveler who has reached his destination.
But of course, book illustrations are meant for books, and this show is a testament to the value of the hand-held page. One can imagine words scrawled into the space Keats left for them, be it a marbled sky or a mound of snow. But his illustrations, too, can easily stand alone.
Jack Ezra Keats gained notoriety after his publication of The Snowy Day in 1962. It was the first full-color, modern book to feature an African American protagonist-- an important addition to the conversation on civil rights. He went on to publish other books with African American protagonists, a choice that led many to think he was black. Keats, in fact, was the son of Jewish immigrants in Brooklyn.
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Ezra Jack Keats, “After breakfast he put on his snowsuit and ran outside.” Final illustration for The Snowy Day, 1962. Collage and paint on board. Courtesy Skirball Cultural Center |
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Ezra Jack Keats, “They added a picture of swans . . . leaves . . . and some paper flowers.” Final illustration forJennie’s Hat, 1966. Collage and paint on paper. Courtesy Skirball Cultural Center |
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Installation view (replete with interactive bathtub), The Snowy Day and the Art of Ezra Jack Keats. |
The Snowy Day and the Art of Ezra Jack Keats is on view at the Skirball Cultural Center (Los Angeles) through September 7, 2014.
Friday, April 18, 2014
100 Strong: Connecting through the power of food
Artist and chef Maggie Lawson draws a clear distinction
between ceremony and ritual. A ceremony is a way of formalizing an event in a
community; a ritual can be inscribed within that ceremony, or it can be a
mundane, everyday occurrence all its own. Ritual, so defined, is fundamental to
Lawson’s practice: “Ritual is very important in my work. I like engaging with
everyday rituals that have a lot of power.” Like eating. As a chef, this comes
easy for Lawson: her recent project, The
Takeout Window, was a huge success. Staged in her North Oakland neighborhood, Lawson transformed
her home-studio into a site for engaging passersby in the ritual of sharing
food. Envisioned as a one-time event, it was such a success that she staged The Takeout
Window a second time.
Food happens to be the catalyst in Lawson’s newest project, 100 Strong, a public performance with a
meal at its center. The event will again be staged in Lawson’s neighborhood, a
venue that she was inspired to re-use: “[The
Takeout Window] made me feel like my whole neighborhood was my studio.” Lawson
enjoys drawing on the resources nearest to her, and what better place to stage
an art project than in your own backyard?
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Maggie Lawson |
When Lawson moved to Oakland in 2004 as an Americorps
intern, the city had already undergone numerous demographic turns. These days the
city’s longstanding African-American population is in transition. Thousands of
transplants, many of them young, white locals from San Francisco, are moving to
West Oakland for lower rents. Many fear not only that the white influx will
displace traditional black residents but that amid all this change the vibrant
history and the civic legacy— Oakland is the West Coast’s epicenter of African
American civil rights —of the town will be forgotten.
Oakland’s history of demographic shifts goes back centuries. The indigenous Ohlone inhabited the
region without interruption for thousands of years before the Spanish arrived
in the 1770s, followed by an onslaught of Gold Rush immigrants and settlers in
the 1840s. In the 1850s, jobs on the East Bay waterfront drew European, Asian,
and African-American settlers; by the 1930s a vibrant African-American
community had begun to take hold in Oakland—West Oakland, to be precise. That
was one of the few places on the East Bay where African-Americans were
permitted to own property; in 1966, black civil rights reached a new height on
the West Coast with the formation of the Black Panther Party. Set against these
decades, it is somewhat startling to see that in the last ten years, the number
of white residents in some parts of Oakland has doubled, nearly equaling the
number of African-Americans in certain traditionally black neighborhoods. (Lawson
has observed a similar shift in her North Oakland neighborhood, which has not
only affected black residents, but other racial minorities; Oakland is one of
the country’s most racially diverse cities.) Oakland has a long history of
displacement and revival, all viewable from multiples perspectives of identity.
The city’s rich population history seemed to beckon Lawson;
it fortified her interest in “the sense of place that already exists and the
new aesthetic that’s being laid over it.” Lawson understood that she was part of this new aesthetic:
“I’m coming at this as a white, low-income woman, but still with a fair amount
of privilege. What’s my role as an artist and an entrepreneur in
gentrification?” These thought processes are what gave birth to 100 Strong, a project that would provide
a space to acknowledge the history of her neighborhood, to connect with it, and
maybe even to reconcile with it. “With this piece I think we’re coming up
against the more dramatic repercussions of gentrification…. No one likes to
feel like they’re the gentrifier or the gentrified. This project explicitly
intends to grapple with that…to look for some sort of healing around it, bring
in this more sacred element to it, of ritual
and transformation.”
Since the conversation will develop around a meal prepared
by Lawson and her chef collaborators, the menu is important. Whatever they make
will reflect the history of the neighborhood. They are still in the process of
determining their method (the dinner is six months away), but they’ve been
brainstorming: a few ideas include collecting recipes from neighbors, researching
dining establishments in the neighborhood from the last two hundred years, and using
ingredients from different cultural groups that have inhabited the area. The
meal will tell a story of shifting populations, of identities in flux.
Other artists in the area have tackled gentrification, like
photographer epli. For her project “Here. Before. Art in a Contested Space,”
she lent cameras to five traditional residents in West Oakland (those whose
families lived there for multiple generations) to capture their realities.
epli’s goal was to stage an honest conversation about the subject, an intention
that matches Lawson’s.
Gentrification has a sting to it. It is Lawson’s hope that 100 Strong will encourage people to
confront the issue directly; she wants them to ask questions and to reflect on
the history of their neighborhoods and their place within it. A paramount
concern of Lawson’s is how the value of one’s labor impacts that place. For
this reason she has done some financial restructuring since The Takeout Window. Previously, the
contributing chefs (her neighbors) were asked to contribute small amounts for
the cost of producing the piece; most earned their money back from donations. This
time around, Lawson wants funding to be a part of the process, a gesture deeply
wedded to the project’s concern with value. (As she asked, “How do we value
what we create? What is the value of the social impact we make with our work?”)
She wants her collaborators to feel that their contributions are not only
appreciated, but valued. A group of community members are helping to raise the
funds. So far they number four, among them a food blogger and a graphic
designer and illustrator.
A collaboration
100 Strong is a
collaborative project. Lawson’s left-hand women are chefs Ikeena Reed and Keri
Keifer, both owners of catering businesses in Oakland. Reed has strong ties to
North Oakland: her family has been in the neighborhood for four generations.
Her mother was a teenager in the Black Panther heyday and participated in their
Free Breakfast and Youth Apprentice programs. (Lawson lives just blocks away
from the community college where the party’s founding members held their
meetings.) Keifer has lived in Oakland for eleven years since leaving her home
state of Illinois to join California’s farming and farm-to-table movements.
Lawson is also from the Midwest, lured to the culinary mecca that is the Bay
Area.
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Ikeena Reed |
When asked how Reed and Keifer’s backgrounds inform the
project, Lawson grew animated: “They’re both spiritual, self-aware people, and
we’re negotiating the same dynamic among the three of us that’s taking place
out in the neighborhood. I’m really inspired by their work. They create really
beautiful things that speak deeply to who they are culturally and to the other
folks they’re serving.” All three women are concerned with issues of food
justice, and Lawson sees 100 Strong
as an opportunity for herself and her collaborators to pursue the creative
parts of their craft while also making a social impact.
The other members of Team 100 Strong are fundraisers—the community members mentioned
above—and filmmakers. 100 Strong is
also a story, and so documentation is fundamental to ensuring access to the
project. This includes recording the event itself, but also the process, which
is no less important to Lawson. She plans to coordinate with a local filmmaking
duo whose company, Radiologie, produces
content for small businesses. Lawson says they are masterful storytellers. Aware
that there are other ways to document a process besides using video and
photography, Lawson is considering other formats: a recipe book, maybe; even
the very words you are reading now.
Ultimately Lawson plans to stage an exhibition. This will be
her first time strategizing how to use the elements from a community piece to
tell a story in a museum or art institution. Her goal is to engage audiences
who weren’t present at the performance, but of course she hopes the 100 Strong dining audience will also
attend.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Life is a balancing act (Alexis Lago at Couturier Gallery)
Serene and surrealistic, Alexis Lago’s watercolors (and a
few oil paintings) call to mind scenes from storybooks or fables, often casting
man and nature at odds or in tandem. His exhibition, Possible Moves, is now on view at Couturier Gallery. Expect to be
welcomed by a beaming, Klimt-esque oil painting from across the room, this flanked
by a whimsical and equally contemplative ensemble of works.
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Lago is a Cuban native whose gentle yet crisp strokes lend
his work a distinct quality; the same goes for his sensitive treatment of
marine animals, a relic of his background in biochemistry. In Penitente (Penitence), a stream of fish
fall headlong from the sky like meteors, straight towards a patch of earth in
which a man is buried. The man is Lago himself, his head protruding just above
the surface, awaiting the inevitable. The painting’s verticality is not
isolated; much of Lago’s work assumes this format, highlighting binaries like
sky and earth, groundedness and flight. In Concilio
de abajo y arriba (Council of Above and Below), a crane extends its neck
from out of a sallow sky, looking down (perhaps) on a scene of clashing ships
below. It strikes a contrast between the madness of man and the serenity of beasts.
Maybe being a polar bear, a solitary creature, isn’t so bad after all.
Lago’s oil paintings are just as
vivid. That Klimt-esque painting, Move of
the Eraser Fish, is strikingly beautiful. Three men bear the weight of a
monstrous fish laden with color, almost like a patchwork quilt. The heavy
lifters are in motion, floating through a golden, ethereal space. It is a scene
of struggle amidst celebration. The piece calls to mind a painting by the early
twentieth-century artist Suzanne Valadon, Le
Lancement du Filet (Casting of the Nets)—an imagined prequel to Move of the Eraser Fish.
Indeed Lago leaves much room for
imagining. His own creativity encourages it, be it a centaur-portrait or a tree
of human portraits in the form of what? acorns? They are whatever you want them
to be.
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Arbol de la ida y vuelta (Round Trip Tree), 2012 Watercolor on paper |
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
The aura of authenticity
The excitement of recognizing an original work of art has a distinct punch. Not only have you struck a personal connection ("That's on my refrigerator magnet!"; "I used that in my thesis!"), but its very reproducibility makes it all the more exciting. You are face-to-face with a celebrity.
Cultural theorist Walter Benjamin argued that the more an original is reproduced, the more its "aura" fades; the less powerful it becomes. (According to Benjamin, aura is a correlate of "authenticity," or originality.) With reproduction now at our fingertips, is the aura all but extinct?
This New Yorker illustration by Rose Blake creates a space for considering Benjamin's theory:
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Rose Blake, Sketchbook, The New Yorker, April 14, 2014, p. 59 |
A museum visitor stands before a towering wall of artwork, the very piece above him displayed on his iPad. It seems absurd, even reprehensible, but it makes perfect sense: By pulling up a reproduction of the original, he's reified the glory of its originality. ("Is this it? ...Yes!") Now consider the position between himself and the artwork: Why remain distant from a work of art when you can hold a version of it in your hands?
Benjamin believed that distance was an affect of power: the more mystifying a work of art, the more powerless the viewer. Reproduction, therefore, is good: it dilutes mystery, it dilutes the "aura."
Aura is not sublimity. A work of art can still carry us away or ground us, even with hand-held technology (as long as the visitor looks up). What is more, today museums are much more conscious of visitor experience. This can have an inverse effect on the quality of exhibitions, but that's a discussion for another time. Concerns have radically shifted since Benjamin's seminal essay of 1936: visitors are a priority as much as artwork (and artists). If a viewer strikes a relationship with a work of art, the museum has succeeded. This isn't to say that museums always prefer proximity over distance. Illustrations like Blake's remind us of this.
Benjamin believed that distance was an affect of power: the more mystifying a work of art, the more powerless the viewer. Reproduction, therefore, is good: it dilutes mystery, it dilutes the "aura."
Aura is not sublimity. A work of art can still carry us away or ground us, even with hand-held technology (as long as the visitor looks up). What is more, today museums are much more conscious of visitor experience. This can have an inverse effect on the quality of exhibitions, but that's a discussion for another time. Concerns have radically shifted since Benjamin's seminal essay of 1936: visitors are a priority as much as artwork (and artists). If a viewer strikes a relationship with a work of art, the museum has succeeded. This isn't to say that museums always prefer proximity over distance. Illustrations like Blake's remind us of this.
I'm not pro-iPad; in fact I cringe at our reliance on hand-held technologies to guide us through experiences. But now that they've been adopted, I can't help but consider how they can also enhance experiences. Some art can be elusive, and a museum can't fill in every gap. Rose Blake's museum visitor, for all we know, might be Googling that painting on the upper right to find out more about it. He will walk away now, perhaps having discovered that even modern art can make sense after all.
Friday, April 4, 2014
Photography as an instrument in prison reform
This post is a continued conversation about SFMoMA's Bearing Witness symposium, March 16.
The irredeemable nature of our prison system can be considered a human rights emergency, and yet the issue is often cast beneath larger shadows. In an effort to reverse this, freelance writer and curator Pete Brook considers photography’s game-changing role in prison reform. For many, prisoners carry a stigma of sub-humanity that is debilitating and merciless, a condition that, Brook shows us, activists have tackled through the power of photography. The project Tamms Year Ten, prompted by the horrendous treatment of inmates at the super-max prison in Illinois (now closed), invited prisoners—all of whom were in solitary confinement—to request a photograph of their choice to be sent to them. Here is an example of one such request:
A grey & white (mix) “Warmblood” horse(s) in an outdoor environment — shown in action, such as rearing up or jumping or climbing. I’d like the photo to convey freedom, strength, and the wisdom of nature.Additional instructions: If possible, taken in a cold environment so that clouds of hot breath can be seen.
It’s hard not to liquefy after reading this; the prisoner’s sense of deprivation is so patent as to inspire a visceral awareness of things that we take for granted, like “clouds of hot breath.” The essential humanity of this prisoner is clear; he craves freedom and nature and movement.
Josh Begley, on the other hand, takes a macro approach to prison reform, using photography to capture the geography of incarceration in the United States. His project, Prison Map, culls together aerial photos of prisons, prompting us to consider the abundance of prisons in our country and, most importantly, ask: why so many?
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Josh Begley, Prison Map (Facility 226). Google Image. Bearing Witness Symposium, SFMoMA, San Francisco. |
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
The List! (Resources for aspiring and/or realized activists)
AIDS AWARENESS
An AIDS coalition that played a formative role in
disseminating awareness in the early AIDS crisis and continues to do so. Their
longstanding mission is to turn silence, grief and fear into action.
An artist/activist collective that used bold visual tactics
to convey the urgency of the AIDS epidemic. Best known for the SILENCE = DEATH
campaign and “Kissing doesn’t kill."
An activist organization supporting queer folks and people
living with AIDS/HIV in New York City. Among their activities include staging
protests and demonstrations, such as their Prevention vs. Prosecution project.
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
A project that gives voice to the inhabitants of
California’s San Joaquin Valley, the proverbial breadbasket of America. The
Valley is also riddled with toxins and pesticides that its residents have to
live with on a daily basis. Voices from
the Valley uses photography, oral history and theater to bring to light
this pressing environmental justice issues.
IMMIGRATION
A project launched to rebrand the immigration movement and
promote immigrant’s rights. Why not turn immigrants into heroes? Artist and
activist Favianna Rodriguez (co-founder of Culture
Strike) sees the role of artists today as being one of institution
builders.
The Political Equator
Renowned for his work on the Tijuana-San Diego border, Teddy
Cruz considers the benefits of artistic experimentation in marginal
neighborhoods and how architecture can transform border conflict zones. He rethinks
urban development from the bottom up, and believes that the future of cities
depends less on building and more on socio-economic relations.
You can see Teddy Cruz’s TED Talk here.
Undocumented and
Unafraid
A slogan of the immigrant youth movement. Among the
organizations you can seek resources from are the Immigrant Youth JusticeLeague, based in Chicago.
LGBTI RIGHTS
Sexile
A bilingual graphic novel written and illustrated by Jaime
Cortez for AIDS Project Los Angeles. It captures the life of the fierce and
saucy Cuban transgender immigrant, Adela Vazquez.
You can download the entire publication from the artist’s
website.
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Jaime Cortez, Sexile (pg. 4), 2004. Ink on paper. |
Faces and Phases
A photograph series by photographer and activist Zanele
Muholi, Faces
and Phases seeks to quell the stereotypes of black lesbians and
transgendered people in South Africa, many of whom have been victims of rape
and violence. Her work is featured in an exhibition at the Yerba Buena Center
for the Arts, Public Intimacy: Art and
Other Ordinary Acts in South Africa. Get to know the lovely and charming Muholi here.
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Zanele Muholi, Anelisa Mfo Nyanga, Cape Town, 2010 |
CITIZEN RIGHTS
A collaboration between artists Cheyenne Epps and Kyle
Lane-McKinley, this project seeks to document items that have been mistaken for
weapons by police who then killed or unlawfully beat the citizens in possession
of those items. Objects visualizes
this issue through the use of t-shirts, artist’s prints, and a website that
depicts drawings of the objects on a world map, along with the events that
transpired.
POVERTY
An ongoing documentary project by Natalie Bookchin comprised
of video diaries by US residents barely getting by. Giving voice to a silenced
group of people, Bookchin asks her subjects questions such as, “What do you
think the middle and upper class need to know about poverty?” and “What would
you like to tell politicians?” They are told to address an audience not of
their class.
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