Archive for the current events Category

(sub)Urban Decay

Posted in Art, current events, digital, Jason Gray, news, Photography, recession on March 6, 2009 by Jason Gray

Here are a couple photos that I took recently on a trip out of Chicago.  These were all shot in Springfield, Illinois at the site of an abandoned K-Mart.  It is strange to see such a huge empty building and parking lot in a place where you would expect a department store to be sustained.  I guess the morning headlines tell the truth….

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All shots, Nikon D300, Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 AT-x

Read more »

Live Hard, Create Compulsively, Die Young

Posted in abstract, Art, current events, Links, Martin Kippenberger, Miscellaneous, mixed media, MOMA, Tom Bennett with tags , , , , , on February 27, 2009 by Tom Bennett

I first discovered Martin Kippenberger’s work in London at the Tate Modern a few years ago. I responded to his energized use of various mediums and his sense of dark humor, particularly in his paintings. Apparently he was a crazy-ass mess. He died of liver failure back around the time I first saw his work.

MOMA presents a big retrospective which I will see. Who wants to go? The Times has a review by Holland Cotter: Martin Kippenberger

Tom Bennett

Synesthesia

Posted in "But Is It Art?", abstract, Art, awareness, current events, Jason Gray, Miscellaneous, neuroscience, news, Psychology, Scientific American Magazine, synesthesia, Uncategorized on February 27, 2009 by Jason Gray

Scientific American: Hearing Colors, Tasting Shapes [ NEUROSCIENCE ]
People with synesthesia–whose senses blend together–are providing valuable clues to understanding the organization and functions of the human brain

My reaction:
After reading this article, it seems that synesthesia might be a completely perceivable condition, or at least that its possibility appears logically explicable. As our society becomes Read more »

Anatomy Of A Giant

Posted in abstract, Art, current events, figurative, Links, performance, technique, Tom Bennett, Work in Progress with tags , , , , , , on February 26, 2009 by Tom Bennett

A recent monotype.

Back 2/09

2009, 20″ x 16″

Hirst worth more dead than alive?

Posted in Art, current events, news, Toni Tiller with tags , , on February 18, 2009 by Toni Tiller

This Spanish sculptor seems to think so.

Links Du Lapin #13

Posted in "But Is It Art?", current events, Uncategorized with tags , , , , on February 16, 2009 by Toni Tiller

Michael Jackson is selling off some of his prized possessions. I’d comment on this one but I think it speaks for itself.

“Beacons of Humanity”: Baghdad’s first Sadrist Art Exhibition

Posted in Art, current events, exhibits, Stephanie Gerolimatos with tags , , , , , , on February 14, 2009 by ssstephg

My pal Bruce was kind enough to pass this really great NY Times article on to me. I think you all will find it very interesting, too. Thanks Bruce!

INTERNATIONAL / MIDDLE EAST | February 14, 2009
A New Role for Iraqi Militants: Patrons of the Arts
By STEVEN LEE MYERS
Baghdad exhibition sponsored by followers of Moktada al-Sadr


photo by Stephen Farrell
borrowed from NY Times

brief excerpt from article:

The goal was “to show the entire world that we are not as the media portrays us, a movement that believes only in bearing arms and knows no culture other than that of violence,” Sheik Mazin said of Mr. Sadr’s movement, which is widely blamed for its part in the violence that followed the American invasion in 2003.

“The Sadr movement,” he said, “is also one that believes in ideas and encourages and patronizes the arts.”

And so Baghdad’s first Sadrist art exhibition, titled “Beacons of Humanity,” collected 80 works of art by 39 Iraqi artists and displayed them for three days on the eve of a Shiite holiday commemorating the martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, Imam Hussein, which culminates in Karbala on Monday.

-Steph G

Some Attention

Posted in 35mm, Art, awareness, current events, film, Interview, Jason Gray, Links, Miscellaneous, news, Photography, portrait on February 13, 2009 by Jason Gray

I recently had a photograph featured in print for Shore Bride Magazine. The article features information on a client of mine who selected the image. I generally make it a practice to sneak some 35mm shots in on all of my digital shoots, and it turns out that this happened to be one of those! Who says film is dead? You can find out more information on Cynthia here, and read more from the writer here.

R.I.P. Lux Interior

Posted in current events, news, Toni Tiller with tags , , , , , on February 5, 2009 by Toni Tiller

The Cramps were a huge part of my Jersey teen years, a band who’s sound and aesthetic paved the way for the legion of rockbilly disciples that exists today. They did it way back when this kind of retro was just not cool, and they did it with their own psychotic edge. Unfortunately Lux Interior passed away last night of a pre-existing heart condition in California. I have a lot of fond memories of him in a vinyl cat suit and a pair of stilettos destroying himself at City Gardens (Shitty Gardens for those in the know) and though I haven’t seen them play in years I will miss his warped and fearless spirit. The world needs more Lux Interiors.

This Struck Me as Unusual

Posted in Art, collection, current events, museum, Toni Tiller on February 1, 2009 by Toni Tiller

So I was sitting at home toying with my microwave frozen dinner (don’t ask), pushing the little raviolis around my plate and looking for anything but the Superbowl to watch on TV, when I saw a commercial for an art museum. I’ve never seen a television commercial for an art museum before, have you? It was for the The New Britain Museum of American Art in New Britain, Connecticut. After I got over my initial “Am I really seeing what I think I am seeing” reaction I kind of thought it was a bold move, and effective since I live in Connecticut part time and had no idea it existed. Now not only do I know it’s there, I want to go check it out.

So has anyone else seen anything like this? They also openly advertise that they are happy to rent out the museum for weddings, parties, corporate events, and are even able to provide catering if you should need it. Is this the way small museums are going to be staying afloat in turbulent financial times? I don’t have any particular criticism about it, but I also don’t know if these are common practices.

What do you guys think?

-Toni “bunnie” Tiller

Model Causing Mayhem

Posted in Art, awareness, current events, digital, figurative, film, Interview, Jason Gray, Photography, rape on January 30, 2009 by Jason Gray

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Recently, I was hired to cover the 3rd Annual Ducati Fashion Show, an event that puts on display the latest motorcycle-related clothing available from the Italian, speed bike manufacturer.  After the shoot, in contacting each of the models regarding their photos, I found out a bit more about one of them, Michelle Niemiec, through her Myspace profile (myspace.com/Mniemiec22 ).  As it turned out, she is much more than a pretty face.  Michelle is the author of Industry Exposed, a book that provides guidance to neophyte models through frank discussing of her own experiences.  In addition, Ms. Niemiec is also the founder of NationalTalentAssociation.org, an editor at Model Scene Magazine, and the Vice President of Women Against Sexual Predators (W.A.S.P.) Chicago.  Upon learning all of this, I was naturally intrigued, and also very impressed (that’s a lot of achievement and involvement for a 26 year old).  So, in the spirit of good blog journalism, I approached Michelle to see if she would be interested in answering some questions on behalf of D’ArteBoard; she politely obliged.  Here is what followed: Read more »

Depressionist Movement at Brandeis U

Posted in Art, collection, current events, Miscellaneous, museum, news, recession, Tom Bennett with tags , , , , , on January 29, 2009 by Tom Bennett

Due to its radically diminished endowment, Brandeis University is planning on selling off one of the world’s great collections of postwar art, the entire holdings of the Rose Art Museum.
From the Boston Globe: It will sell off a 6,000-object collection that includes work by such contemporary masters as Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, and Nam June Paik.
The move shocked local arts leaders and drew harsh criticism from the Association of College and University Museums and Galleries. Rose Art Museum director Michael Rush declined comment this evening, saying he had just learned of the decision.

Brandeis is also discussing a range of sweeping proposals to bridge a budget deficit that could be as high as $10 million, such as reducing the size of the faculty by 10 percent, increasing undergraduate enrollment by 12 percent to boost tuition revenue, and overhauling the undergraduate curriculum by eliminating individual academic programs in favor of larger, interdisciplinary divisions.

Other plans under consideration include requiring students to take one summer semester, allowing the university to expand its student body without overcrowding, and adding a business program. The changes would take place, at the earliest, in 2010.

“This is not a happy day in the history of Brandeis,” President Jehuda Reinharz said tonight. “The Rose is a jewel. But for the most part it’s a hidden jewel. It does not have great foot traffic and most of the great works we have, we are just not able to exhibit. We felt that, at this point given the recession and the financial crisis, we had no choice.”

Brandeis said the museum would be closed late this summer. It was founded in 1961; a new wing designed by celebrated architect Graham Gund was added in 2001.

Announcement of the closing came as Rush was searching for a chief curator. A leading expert on video art, he had arrived in 2005 with plans to expand the museum. He also launched a full scale analysis of the museum’s value by Christie’s auction house. Dennis Nealon, the university’s director of public relations, would not say how much the collection is worth.

Experts on university art collections said the move was unusual, but not unexpected.

“Clearly, what’s happening with Brandeis now is that they decided the easiest way is to look around the campus and find things that can be capitalized,” said David Robertson, a Northwestern University professor who is president of the Association of College and Univertsity Museums and Galleries. “It’s always art that goes first.”

But there is no precedent for selling an art collection of the Rose’s stature. Internationally recognized, the collection is strong in American art of the 1960s and 1970s and includes works by Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns, Morris Louis, and Helen Frankenthaler.

“I’m in shock,” said Mark Bessire, the recently named director of the Portland Museum Of Art. “And this is definitely not the time to be selling paintings, anyway. The market is dropping. I’m just kind of sitting here sweating because I can’t imagine Brandeis would take that step.”

Hey, it may just well be more important to keep the college afloat than to keep the collection intact.
Tom Bennett

Postmodern Lady Justice

Posted in Art, art on paper, current events, Drawing, Gaza Strip Conflict, Jason Gray, mixed media, news, portrait on January 23, 2009 by Jason Gray

Charcoal, Pastel, 5B Pencil and Eraser on Paper, 18″ x 24″.

2009-01-23-at-02-45-14

“Postmodern Lady Justice” is the second drawing in my ongoing reductive series dealing with the turmoil over the Gaza Strip.

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