Thursday, February 17, 2011
Video: A trailer for Marcel Dzama's new film
Such a strange, strange fellow. A lot of Lynch embedded in this one.
Film: "Hiroshima, Mon Amour" (1959) & Duras
A dark, lovely film from Alan Resnais in 1959.
Marguerite Duras wrote the screenplay, and I recently finished reading her 1984 novel The Lover for the feminist book club this month. It's distant and haunting: a strange, autobiographical perspective on Lolita.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Artist: José Lerma
I've been aware of José Lerma's work for the last few years, my interest sparked by a print of his that I saw while working at Tandem Press in Madison, WI.
His globby, paint and fabric-stacked portraits are hilarious and heavy, yet delicately intricate. Lerma has been quite busy lately, showing at Andrea Rosen in New York and Gallery Loock Berlin. He also curated a huge group show called A PERSON OF COLOR: a mostly orange exhibition recently (including some of my favorites: Matt Nichols and Josué Pellot) in Milwaukee at Green Gallery. And, excitingly enough, opening April 8th, he's on the docket for gallery 2 at Chicago's Western Exhibitions.
José Lerma, Untitled 2, 2006
Lithography, woodcut, ed. 20. 32" x 30 1/4". Printed at Tandem Press.
Lithography, woodcut, ed. 20. 32" x 30 1/4". Printed at Tandem Press.
His globby, paint and fabric-stacked portraits are hilarious and heavy, yet delicately intricate. Lerma has been quite busy lately, showing at Andrea Rosen in New York and Gallery Loock Berlin. He also curated a huge group show called A PERSON OF COLOR: a mostly orange exhibition recently (including some of my favorites: Matt Nichols and Josué Pellot) in Milwaukee at Green Gallery. And, excitingly enough, opening April 8th, he's on the docket for gallery 2 at Chicago's Western Exhibitions.
José Lerma, OLL KORRECT, 2010
José Lerma, Untitled, 2010
Monday, February 14, 2011
Quoted: Anne Elizabeth Moore
Here are some thoughts that have been sticking with me, from Anne Elizabeth Moore, a writer, artist, activist, and zine enthusiast based in Chicago. The statements are taken from a recent January 10th, 2011 PBS Art:21 interview she did with Caroline Picard (of the Green Lantern). The interview is continued here on Bad at Sports. (Emphasis added in bold).
Image credit: Anne Elizabeth Moore, cover for "Unmarketable," pub. The New Press, Fall 2007
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I think, too, I’ve not only gotten extremely depressed by the heteronormative and tiny independent publishing scene in the US, but I’ve gotten bored with how media operates. A stressed out country does not read, and they certainly do not react to what they read about with action. Don’t get me wrong: the destruction of the independent publishing scene goes against the founding principles of this country. The loss of sustained independent bodies of reporting has directly contributed to the tracking and cessation of further violations of civil and human rights in the US, not to mention allowed for unchecked limits to freedoms in academia and elsewhere. But I’ve also really enjoyed moving away from the idea that journalism is the only solution. Smart people can get the same information from different sources.
Because copyright doesn’t actually cover all matters of intellectual property rights: there are a ton of things that we do, make, use, and create that we don’t bother to assign copyright to. Cooking, for example, and quilting and knitting and sewing. Traditionally known as women’s work. Most of this isn’t eligible for copyright because, in the theory that went into creating the law, they worked from the accrued common knowledge of a group of people and result in products that are intended for private consumption. So: the law is publicly acknowledging that some work traditionally identified as feminine doesn’t matter in terms of this law, which after all is about the right to have ownership over, but also profit from, your own work. This is therefore a law that is fundamentally flawed, in several different arenas. Fighting it on its own terms isn’t going to change the basis of our understanding about the kinds of work that matters and the kinds of work that don’t.
Image credit: Anne Elizabeth Moore, cover for "Unmarketable," pub. The New Press, Fall 2007
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I think, too, I’ve not only gotten extremely depressed by the heteronormative and tiny independent publishing scene in the US, but I’ve gotten bored with how media operates. A stressed out country does not read, and they certainly do not react to what they read about with action. Don’t get me wrong: the destruction of the independent publishing scene goes against the founding principles of this country. The loss of sustained independent bodies of reporting has directly contributed to the tracking and cessation of further violations of civil and human rights in the US, not to mention allowed for unchecked limits to freedoms in academia and elsewhere. But I’ve also really enjoyed moving away from the idea that journalism is the only solution. Smart people can get the same information from different sources.
- AEM
Because copyright doesn’t actually cover all matters of intellectual property rights: there are a ton of things that we do, make, use, and create that we don’t bother to assign copyright to. Cooking, for example, and quilting and knitting and sewing. Traditionally known as women’s work. Most of this isn’t eligible for copyright because, in the theory that went into creating the law, they worked from the accrued common knowledge of a group of people and result in products that are intended for private consumption. So: the law is publicly acknowledging that some work traditionally identified as feminine doesn’t matter in terms of this law, which after all is about the right to have ownership over, but also profit from, your own work. This is therefore a law that is fundamentally flawed, in several different arenas. Fighting it on its own terms isn’t going to change the basis of our understanding about the kinds of work that matters and the kinds of work that don’t.
- AEM
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Video: Cinthia Marcelle's "Cruzada"
CRUZADA from cinthia marcelle on Vimeo.
Cinthia Marcelle (b. 1974) is a Brazilian artist in film, installation, and photography who recently won the 2010 Future Generations Prize (with an international jury, including Robert Storr). Her video work evokes a hypnotic and mysterious narrative, a duel and a dance that interacts directly with the Brazilian landscape.
View the other construction films here, and see more photographs of her work at Galeria Vermelho and Sprovieri.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Interview: FANTASTIC STANZAS at the Post Family
I am so thrilled about this recent interview from Chad Kouri of the Post Family here in Chicago. His enthusiasm is contagious! Many thanks.
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