Archive for May, 2008

May 19, 2008 Art, Performance Art, sculpture
Scoring the Ice - Allan Kaprow's Fluids at Angels Gate - Slobodan Dimitrov - Rolleiflex

The first of Slobodan’s Rolleiflex photos from Fluids at Angels Gate are in, and awesome. The photo above is my favourite photo from the project so far. Check the other four out over at the AGCC blog.

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Art, sculpture

Militaria just sucks me right in. Strap a rocket launcher onto a piece of art and I’m interested. What can I say?

Flickr user Viewbase took the above photo at the International Women Artists Exhibition: China/Beijing 2008 (or at least that’s what I gleamed by zooming on a label, but my lack of Chinese language skills prevent further informativeness. He/she also doesn’t allow us regular folk to access his files for downloading, nor does he/she arrange photos into sets. So you’re just gonna have to creep around the his/her stream to hunt down the rest, if you’re so inclined…

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May 16, 2008 Art, Gallery, Museum

The weekend is here.

Friday, May 16

Edith Abeyta, Dyed @ Scout. I posted about this installation a few days back, all the details are here. I haven’t seen it past it’s initial stages, but I’m sure it’s tops. Reception/Party/Trunk Show is 7-10.

Saturday, May 17

Vexing: Female Voices From East L.A. Punk @ Claremont Museum of Art. I’m jealous that this show isn’t being done in LA proper. I have A LOT of opinions of punk history, mainly that everything has been watered down to this LA, New York & London axis that really has little to do with how the scene evolved. But I won’t go into that here, other than to say that it’s a damn shame that most young folk today get their introduction to punk either through Penelope Spheris’ snapshot of a film Decline of Western Civilization or through any number of books that cover the scene in LA as if it only took place in Hollywood. Anyways…….. This show should be awesome. Alice Bag has a great post about the show on her blog, too. Reception is at 7 PM.

Misato Suzuki, Unknown Quantities @ Sam Lee Gallery. Misato is new to me, but I keep seeing more than solid work at Sam Lee, so I’m gonna keep pimping it. Also featured in the Project Room is Carrie Yury. Reception is 6-9 PM.

Sunday, May 18

Salty Dog Bites The Hand Artist Talk & Film Screening @ Angels Gate Cultural Center. All of the folks in our current exhibition will be on hand to talk about their work. For the screening we will be showing Justin Long’s goofy re-telling of the Odyssey and exhibition curator Allan Sekula’s film The Lottery of the Sea. I can’t say enough how much this is a can’t miss opportunity to see Allan’s film work. Artist Talk at 3 PM & the screenings start at 6 PM. We’re going to break for chow and good times between the talk and the screening, so join us for that, too.

COLA 2008 @ Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery. There are two faves of mine in this exhibition, El Camino College Professor Joyce Dallal, who has constructed a paper airplane based installation, and ex-AGCC Studio Artist Timothy Nolan, who’s work never fails to move and impress me with its unyielding precision. Also featured on the visual arts side of things are Judie Bamber, Erin Cosgrove, Lewis Klahr, Suzanne Lacy, Stas Orlovski, Louise Sandhaus and Alex Slade. Also notable, but having nothing to do with the exhibitions side of things is that Phranc received a fellowship this year (she’ll be performing on April 13). Reception is 2-5.

At Top - Heather Rasmussen’s installation Pier J, Long Beach, California. Google Satellite Photograph, 3/39/2004. 1″=1′-0′, as seen in Salty Dog Bites The Hand. It links to a Flickr set of the installation, FYI.

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May 14, 2008 Art, My Curatorial Work, Photography

Artist Portraits - Lindsay Foster - Salty Dog Bites the Hand

I guess I’m the curator for this project, I hadn’t really thought of it that way until today, but I’ve spent the past six months gnawing at my Executive Director’s heels for funding to buy a case of the discontinued Polaroid Type 55 instant 4″x5″ film that makes this project possible, so I guess I’m wearing that hat. But it’s really all about having an excuse to have Slobodan shoot the artists that make everything we do at the Center possible, and to document them as workers.

That’s CalArts student Lindsay Foster up top and Professor Allan Sekula below. The other six portraits can be seen over at the Angels Gate blog, and the entire series of 42 (so far!) can be seen in the project’s Flickr pool.

Artist Portraits - Allan Sekula - Salty Dog Bites the Hand

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Art, Public Art, Uncategorized, Video

The above is raw, unfiltered, animated awesome from BLU. I guess street art isn’t dead yet, or is this some new, wonderful species of animal entirely?

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Thailand, Travel

The last of my vehicular Thai photos. I fell in love with the various forms of human and machine powered bike-like conveyances that I saw in Thailand. I can’t wait to go back and photograph more. If the can-do spirit of the Thai people is manifested anywhere in their culture, it speaks most to me through the sheer variety of bikes and trikes I saw nearly everywhere in the country.

There are 54 vehicles in this most recent upload, so I’ll only be able to feature a few here. See the rest in my Thailand 2007 set. Also, an excellent companion to this post is Pink Tentacle’s recent post on pimped out Japanese scooters.

Two Wheels Good!

Kanjana's Hello Kitty Bike for Two - Yodakeng, Thailand

Above - The scariest vehicle I rode in Thailand was this bike. I put my 180 lb. ass down on that back seat when Kanjana picked me up as I was wandering around the village aimlessly, and she rode me home on its almost flat tires. I thought the whole thing was going to collapse with every turn of the pedals.

Long Live the King Chopper - Bangkok, Thailand

Above - Seen parked in front of the Queen’s Gallery in Bangkok. In the proper royal shade of yellow. I saw a surprising number of choppers in Thailand, all being driven by Thais going for the full-on biker look. I saw a guy making a high speed corner in Sri Racha on a purple chopper that would put Jesse James and his crowd to shame.

Hip Thais on Vintage Mopeds - Temple on the Mountain, Kalasin, Thailand

Above - Seen as I was driving down the hill from the Temple on the Mountain, this trio was part of a caravan of Thai hipsters on mod bikes and Harleys all going to pay their respects at the shrine. There must have been 20-30 of them, but I had trouble getting shots.

Smiling Girls on Motorbike on Highway - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - Somewhere in Eastern Thailand, two girls, looking very Miyazaki-esqe, having a good time shopping on their motorbike.

Teen on Mini-Bike - Yodakeng, Thailand

Above - I love this kid. I kept seeing him around the village in Yodakeng, and he always gave me a sour look, like “If you try to marry my sister and take her away, I’ll beat you up!” He had no trust or love for that strange foreign guy wandering around his town.

Police Motorbike - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - Parked in front of a temple, two cops do their thing. I saw a lot of cops riding double on small bikes. There’s something about being in a foreign country that makes you nervous about the police - if they talk to you about anything, you’re going to look like an ass and maybe get into trouble, and you might not have any idea what’s going on or why. But seeing cops riding on cheesy mopeds makes them seem disarmingly goofy and nonthreatening, especially to a Californian used to seeing musclebound, Terminator clones in uniform.

Family on Moped on Highway 2 - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - As far as I can determine, there’s no legal or impractical limit to the number of people who can fit on a moped in Thailand, nor any restrictions on traveling on the equivalent of the interstate as a helmet-less trio, at 20 miles per hour.

Family on Bike with Surly Kid - Pattaya, Thailand

Above - Another trio. I have a feeling that this is how most young Thais first learn how to drive, at age two, holding the handlebars of their family’s scooter.

Covered Face Moped Riders on Highway - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - A common sight, people with their faces covered on bikes. Lots of dust and filter masks in Thailand, and there’s something transhuman and cyberpunk about it.

Motocycle with Symmetrical Baskets

Above - I believe that this is the vehicle I would like to ride around the world in. I got all ga-ga over the symmetrical baskets on this bike.

Three Wheels Better!

Dirt Bike Tuk-Tuk Conversion - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - These dirt bike Tuk-Tuk variants were super common in Kalasin province. They all looked super cool, the aesthetic I really got into was the wheelie factor with hanging mudflaps.

Tuk Tuk on Highway - Kalasin, Thailand

Above - The obligatory Tuk-Tuk photo. I didn’t expect to see these driving on the highway in rural areas, but they were all over, and not just in urban places.

Moped With Umbrella and Sidecar - Bang Sean, Thailand

Above - My favourite species of Thai vehicle, after the chopper tractors, has to be the bike with sidecar. I saw so many sidecar variations that it made my head spin. This guy was by no means the most laden rider I saw. but he was moving pretty quick for someone with a potentially wind catching umbrella mounted to his vehicle.

Recycling Sidecar Bike in Traffic - Pattaya, Thailand

Above - Recycling sidecar. I believe that it’s a lot more likely that America is going to become more like the 2nd and 3rd worlds than they are going to become like us, and I like it. When I start seeing vehicles like this on the streets of Los Angeles, I’ll know that I’m right. We’re almost there now, but not quite.

Coke Delivery Man - Bangkok, Thailand

Above - Gotta deliver that Coke! Awesome welded tube-steel sidecar + headlight-less rat bike = workin’ baby! Note the suburban-esqe real estate ads on the fence behind him. I saw a lot of propaganda for the detached house with lawn lifestyle in Thailand, marketed both to Thais and to European ex-pats. In fact, the largest billboards that I’ve ever seen (easily 150′ high by 400′ wide), in Pattaya, were dedicated to the purpose.

Motorbike with Propane Delivery Sidecar

Above - The fellow driving this bike delivered gas to the restaurant I was eating at in Pattaya. The rings on the sidecar are from big tanks of propane.

Thai Motorbike With Welded Sidecar - Bangkok, Thailand

Above - I don’t know why I think this bike is so beautiful, but I do. I love the minimal sidecar. I wish I owned a bike so that I could weld together something like this. It would be perfect for short trips around town and going to Home Despot and such. I shot this photo while Kanjana was haggling over the ingredients to make this, the most perfect soup I’ve ever eaten.

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May 12, 2008 Uncategorized

Hauling Ice For Row Nine - Allan Kaprow's Fluids at Angels Gate - Slobodan Dimitrov - 4x5

Slobodan Dimitrov’s 4″x5″ photos of Fluids just came into the office today. That’s me entering stage right, hauling a block of ice for the final row in this photo. See the other five from this series here. Rolleiflex and possibly Holga photos from Slobodan coming soon…

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Art

Edith is installing Dyed, a riff/revision/remix of a project she originally did at the Arroyo Arts Collective in Highland Park, what seems like a forever ago, at Scout, a boutique at 3rd and Fairfax on the Westside. The piece will go on view at a party this coming Friday night (7-10 PM), celebrating the new Scout collection and collaborations with Tsurukichi, a Japanese traditional indigo dyeing house. The previous incarnation was constructed from donated clothing, and this one is being constructed from a selection of dyed-black clothing, all cast away and in some state of abandonment, unwantedness or failure.

I stopped by yesterday afternoon to lend a hand setting up the warps for the woven structure that Edith is creating in the space, a task made slightly tricky by the absence of a few more inches of height on either Edith’s or my part. Onward to the photos. Short Flickr set here with more.

Tying Knots 3 - Edith Abeyta at Scout

Above - I love taking pictures of people tying knots. It’s a hard subject, since there’s a sort of uncoordinated and instinctive motion going on. You get a weird combination of motion blur and focus. I’m not sure any of my knot tying photos are any good yet, but I’ll get there eventually. I got a bunch of knot tying photos yesterday, there are four more in the set. Here Edith is tying the loop that attaches each piece to the supporting hook on the ceiling.

Putting up the Warp - Edith Abeyta at Scout

Above - Edith standing on a ladder, getting ready to loop one of the warp ends of the weaving onto its hook. This was tricky in some places and easy in others, and it did involve standing on the tippy-top of the A-frame ladder we were using. Luckily, we were able to compensate for our mutual lack of height by using one of those long hooks that you use to retrieve hangers and clothing from high places, which Scout conveniently had around.

Ladder Hero and Scout Owner Joey - Edith Abeyta at Scout

Above - Joey Grana, owner of Scout, our ladder hero, arriving with a taller ladder, to make our lives better, easier and more productive.

Starting the Weaving - Edith Abeyta at Scout

Above - The warp portion of Dyed completed, and the weft begun. The whole thing will be filled in with woven strips of tied together dyed-black clothing. Tying together the clothing was like digging through the back of some goth girl’s closet. The clothing gets tied together haphazardly into long ropes and then woven through. Based upon this project’s mechanics, Edith is a good roomie to have if you’re ever imprisoned in a high place and have a ready supply of laundry to make an escape with. Maybe this whole project is training for said escape…

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May 9, 2008 Art, Museum, Performance Art, Photography

Seen at Modern Art Notes. Explanation and background here. Flickr sets of jumping at MOMA and PS1 by Daily Marauder. Enjoy.

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Art, Gallery

In which C-Monster declares New York’s 303 Gallery to win the Douchebag of the Year award, triggering an interesting discussion amongst bloggers with a little spice of accusations of misogyny in the comments for your trollish pleasure. Find out why in the post.

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