M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
 

Art Reviews

 

 

     

    Jason Fox
    Feature Inc.
    >>
    By Lily Faust

    Kim Keever
    Feigen Contemporary
    >>
    By Mary Hrbacek

    Amy Yoes
    Michael Steinberg Fine Art
    >>
    By Joyce Korotkin

    Stephen Hughes
    Robert Mann Gallery
    >>
    By Nicollette Ramirez

    Chinese Photography Today
    Chambers Fine Art
    >>
    By Joel Simpson

    Lee Kang-So
    White Box
    >>

    By Jessica Park

    Linda Van Boven
    Florence Lynch Gallery
    >>
    By Lee Klein

    Linn Meyers
    Margaret Thatcher Projects
    >>
    By Mary Hrbacek

    Drama, Romance, Loneliness
    Massimo Audiell
    >>
    By Joyce Korotkin

    Ernest Briggs
    The Anita Shapolsky Gallery
    >>
    By Joel Simpson

    Yoshio Taniguchi
    Designing the new MoMA
    >>
    By Jari Chevalier


    Tina Modotti and Edward Weston
    Throckmorton Fine Art
    >>
    By Gu Huihui


    Sleeping Giant
    The Wynwood Arts District, and
    the future of Art in Miami
    >>

    By Michael MacInnis




                  


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    Jason Fox

    Feature Inc.

    By Lily Faust

    Eight paintings and a lone sculpture placed in the center of the gallery highlight Fox’s idiosyncratic iconography: cartoon-based images of single men, in many cases shown from the shoulders up, bearing visual cues of obvious impenetrable human emotion; a smirk, a blank stare. Simultaneously frank, quirky and urgent, Fox’s work bridges painting and cartooning, synthesizing the shorthand of linear caricature. Sinuous lines accentuate washes of paint, utilizing painting techniques that move from illustrational to painterly, often borrowing from the vocabulary of Pop and narrative art.

    The paintings are notable for their play on collective imagery, utilizing clichés to establish an unexpected truthfulness in capturing human character. The four drawings located at the entrance of the gallery are remarkable in parodying comic “types,” such as “the villain”, “the drunkard,” or “the knave”. These near life-size drawings compel the viewer to have a one-on-one encounter with characters reminiscent of Dr. Seuss’s “the Grinch”. In Untitled, a gaunt face is visible through the four slats of an enclosure; something like closet, or perhaps a jail. Illuminated from the outside, the slats cast repetitive shadows, which appear as gray horizontal bars on the face, pushing the drama of the image toward an effective graphic tension of black and white. In another work, titled Jeff, the face is ominously blank; no eyes, no lines, except for a red, styrofoam clown nose collaged onto the middle of the face. Floating on a milky white surface, the face is outlined by gestural strokes in red paint, accentuated by scrawling lines to depict the shoulder-length hair. The mouth shows ambiguity, fixed in a curious, tentative smile. Considering the absence of features, and the reduction of portrait elements, the painting expresses more than what initially meets the eye. The deceptively blank, atonal face, in spite of having no eyes, returns the viewers gaze, striking dissonance in the observer.

    Monument for Destruction, a cement and resin sculpture, has a humorous touch that belies the work’s impressive artistry. Half figure, the piece is cast from the waist down with two cement legs on bulbous feet that support a red pelvis, made from resin, while topped by a phallic spike, whose constituent parts, like spinal vertebrae, gradually change in color from bright red, to pale pink, to white. Resistant to specific interpretation, yet obviously rich in metaphor, the sculpture brings to mind issues of consciousness, both spiritual and physical. The work here confirms Fox’s answer to a question that appears on the Q&A sheet that the gallery provides. Responding to, “Are these portraits?” Fox states, “they’re portraits of being stuck inside a big, powerful, stupid, funny, crazy, violent, ignorant, dangerous head looking into a mirror.” The direct appeal of these words is matched by the zany energy of the artwork bordering on existential horror (and mirth), appreciated by all who have been there.
    Through 2/19.



     


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    Kim Keever

    Feigen Contemporary

    By Mary Hrbacek

    Defined by misty air and diffuse light, these color photographs of majestic mountain landscapes conjure an ephemeral feeling of form emerging from chaos. Empty, pristine settings evoke a primordial quality reminiscent of an early geologic age, spurring philosophical queries regarding the nature of time and perceptions of reality. Rocky peaks observed from the air stress a sense of unending space, like the far reaches of the American West. Rather than document the known, natural world, Keever creates his own topologies in fish tanks; utilizing plaster of Paris rocks, colored lights, and colored pigments in the water. Then he photographs these homemade environments, capturing the effects that transform within their confines.

    Landscape as a genre offers limitless possibilities with diverse implications; superficially, these images are related to the grand tradition of Albert Bierstadt and the Hudson River School. Keever's backlit rock out-croppings and roiling cloud formations suggest the turbulent natural phenomena associated with JMS Turner, or even Thomas Cole. But the anonymity of place and the fleeting effects convey an unreal dimension. The intermingling of earth and sky evokes a silent eternal quality associated with remote areas. Time, measured in the millennia required to create the earth's tectonic plates, acquires new meaning.

    Happy accidents add formal details; dark scratches and smudges enrich the harmonious hues that provide for lush surfaces. Here the mutable physical dynamics of nature become metaphoric equivalents of mercurial human emotions. Ansel Adams photographed panoramas of the Western United States with similar results. While these photographs have a familiar veneer, appearances can be deceiving; Keever reaches beneath the surface to provide a taste of spectacle and fabricated photo-drama, not unlike a cinematic stage or natural history diorama.
    1/6 through 2/19.

     


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    Amy Yoes

    Michael Steinberg Fine Art

    By Joyce Korotkin

    Amy Yoes’ Room Tone, a complex installation of interrelated parts whose sum total presents a kind of retrospective of her own body of work reads as a metaphor for the interior landscape of public and private memory. All of the works in this show; paintings, sculpture, and ink wall drawings, re-appear in miniature in the heart of the exhibition, an intricate sculpture titled Beehive 2003. Something of a cross between an architectural model and an elaborate post-modernist doll house, this piece functions as both an artwork in the show, as well as a miniature museum repository for work that Yoes has created since her days at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1984. Filled with psychological spaces one can peer into, the model serves as an interior and exterior replica of not only the artist’s personal and professional history in the art world. The pool on one side of the house, for instance, replicates an installation the artist once created, in which white marble amphora on red felt circles floated around like giant lily pads on a lovely lake, propelled by hoses. Inside, echoing the cycles of studio life, works are hung or set leaning against the walls, as if they were still in progress or perhaps waiting to be shipped out to a show or sent to a collector. On the upper levels of the construction are models of works yet to come, the embodiment of ideas still in formation.

    In the main space of the “real” gallery, the originals of works that are represented in miniature within the model are exhibited. Five colorful, nearly kinetic paintings, each with multiple vanishing points, are hung in a row. Graphic, flat and yet full of illusionistic depth, they contain a pastiche of decorative images from architecture and theatrical sets. Scaffolding, balconies and platforms careen around in skewed space with no gravitational anchor. Ornamental embellishments float around like dancing satin ribbons. The effect is that of a visualization of a wild musical composition.
    Huge, site-specific sepia ink drawings, reminiscent of 18th century nature studies, grace the gallery walls. Derived from Yoes’ filigree and flourish pattern paintings, titled Fragments, some of these works intertwine around the gallery’s structural columns in the center of the room. If one stands in a particular spot (subtly marked on the floor), the drawings on the column and the wall, beyond, coalesce perfectly into one greater whole which is emblematic of the structure of this idiosyncratic exhibition in which every element, as if in a huge puzzle, falls into place to complete the picture.
    1/7 through 2/12.

     


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    Stephen Hughes

    Robert Mann Gallery

    By Nicollette Ramirez

    These small prints are a welcome change from the large scale works by German artists like Gursky, Struth and Ruff, and packs as much visual punch. Capturing natural and man-made landscapes across Europe and America, Hughes’ prints evoke a kind of peace that can only exist when people are not the focus of the work. Human beings are shown here as an afterthought, framed against the immensity of space.

    Sometimes Hughes chooses landscapes that are somewhat reminiscent of the English suburbs. In Atlantic City I, USA, 2004, Atlantic City never seemed so bleak. We see a school bus, a red car, and and two boarded up buildings with a wide lawn littered with debris against the backdrop of a boardwalk that tells the viewer, ominously, of the cold ocean beyond.

    In Buffalo, USA, 2004, a field of white snow is interrupted by the jutting masculine lines of an abandoned factory, the rust and grey and grime contrasting with the white snow and blue sky. Bari I, Italy, 2003 suggests a similar bleak beauty. This photograph shows a playground without children. Completely devoid of life, the work suggests an “empty stage”, a space where one can imagine something occurring, but nothing else.

    The stark beauty of Hughes landscapes come from a juxtaposition of straight and horizontal lines, coupled with the dynamic of natural and man-made worlds colliding. In Genoa, Italy, 2002 waves from the ocean come right up to recreational facilities, where men play football. The flat planes of brown earth colliding with the horizon of hazy buildings and mountains in the distance are punctuated by the lone figure of a man engaged in an ambiguous task. These images, though not staged, are intriguing and leave the viewer with an odd sense of unfulfilled desire.
    Through 3/5.

     

     


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    Chinese Photography Today

    Chambers Fine Art

    By Joel Simpson

    The varied styles of this work by six Chinese photographers; Chi Peng, He Yunchang, Hong Lei, Song Dong, Weng Fen and Zhang Huan, are entirely consistent with trends in photography elsewhere in the world, including examples of staged photographs, urban landscapes and body identity themes. The varied styles of this work are entirely consistent with trends in photography elsewhere in the world, including examples of staged photographs, urban landscapes and body identity themes. The show includes work that is astonishingly original, as well as some that looks naïve to the jaded, Western eye, but which may resonate more strongly with Chinese viewers.

    In the series of urban landscapes, titled Birds Eye View: Shenzhen and other cities, by Weng Fen, each image overlooks a contemporary city in China; with its high-rise office and apartment buildings, many of which are still under construction. Each is viewed from behind a foreground wall, where one or two uniformed schoolgirls with braids looks over to the scene beyond. The walls take up most of the foreground, and the skies — two of them with dramatic clouds — most of the background, leaving the landscape to occupy a narrow strip in between, deadening the composition. We’re clearly being asked to view the bustling present from the perspective of an innocent future. The symbolism may seem a bit heavy-handed to western eyes, but one can only imagine what the issues of urban development might be in China, and how these images might offer a gentle remonstrance to go-go developers regarding the legacy they are leaving.

    At the opposite stylistic extreme is the twelve-image work, Seeds of Hamburg, by Zhang Huan. These large prints document a performance piece in which Zhang, his naked body covered in bird seed, enters a gazebo-size cage into which twenty-eight doves are released. They proceed to feed off of him, and he emerges carrying one of doves in his arms, and then ends up flat on his back in front of the cage with several birds pecking on him. Zhang seems to be making a statement about martyrdom, constraint, care and sacrifice, themes that seem especially relevant to contemporary China.

    Zhang’s work follows the lead of another multiple in the show, Song Dong’s Sampling the Water, a thirty-three-image installation depicting the photographer, waist-high in the surf, patting at the water and changing body positions. The press release informs us that this work was one of the “most celebrated images of Chinese photography in the 1990s.” One can only surmise that its symbolism of a lone individual trying to make meaningful shapes out of a patch of sea, with the suggestion of dogged commitment to a futile endeavor, resonates with a certain audience there. Has photography become the new samizdat medium for China?

    With these thoughts in mind, we can wonder what issues Chi Peng’s two black and white photographs, titled Consubstantiality, evoke. Two people are shown, from the waist up, facing each other in open palm contact; both are naked and completely painted (or powered) in white. The figures, both with short cropped hair and no facial hair, are apparently but not assertively male and female, with the male taller than the female. They look away from each other, one of them gazing into the camera. In the second image, the heads seem to to have switched bodies — or maybe they’re the same person’s head. The implication seems to be that the two people are so close that they share the same body, hence the title. These photographs present striking graphic images; the facial and body surface similarity pose universal questions of sameness, difference, and the sharing of inner and outer selves between intimate lovers. The cropped hair and farded body surfaces suggest a curiously purified, even austere context, with a hint of life-after-death. They are compelling images in the West, and one must presume special meaning to a Chinese audience.
    Through 2/19. ¶

     

     


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    Lee Kang-So

    White Box

    By Jessica Park

    Is it possible to discuss contemporary Korean art, or any art for that matter, without talking about national identities one way or another? Perhaps not. Or at least not when it comes to Korean art from the 1870s and 1880s, when finding “Korean-ness" or balancing Korean characteristics with Western art forms was one of the major issues in the Korean art world. Lee Kang-So, born in 1943, is among the most distinguished artists nationally and internationally, who has managed to give expression to the Korean spirit in Western art forms. This show presents an overview of his recent paintings, photographs, and one sculpture piece.

    Lee Kang-So is best-known for his large-scale monochrome landscape paintings that hint at mountain cliffs, hills, trees, and the like; utilizing a few quick brush strokes. In these paintings the artist uses less brush strokes and colors than in earlier works. On white-ish blue gray canvas, black strokes dance freely with a distinct rhythm, reminiscent of Korean traditional literati ink paintings or calligraphic works. Not only the lack of information on the scenes but the artist’s playful brush strokes convey all the more charming mysteries about the depicted landscape, as well as the artist himself, as if one would secretly hope an especially whimsical Buddhist monk would have some brilliant spiritual insights.

    The black and white photographs, which he began exhibiting in 2003, are equally serene and meditational. Yet, they are also informational in that they give us some clues about how the artist perceives landscapes in a more tangible way (they are much less imposing scales too). While his visions for paintings tend to be extensive and spacious, his lens seeks details, such as street corners, floors, walls and stairs. These photographs of rural villages in various Asian countries are laudations of the beauty of ancient architectonic culture in Asia, where human engineering never seems to overrule nature’s own coexistence. It is clear that this artist is particularly fond of polished lines, either of wooden floors, columns, or streets and their brilliant merging with raw rocks and natural landscape that surround them.
    Kang-So’s photography draws our attention back to his early mysterious paintings, and reveals that his aesthetic eye has always searched out a harmonious moment in nature; order and disorder exist together peacefully. His only sculpture piece in the show, a pristine shape of a plaster house seated on scattered rocks, is especially suitable in this setting, where the piece rests on an extended platform in the middle of the gallery, whose original corner stones remain exposed. Whether his art is cliché of Asian culture or not, his talent in conveying the beauty of nature and its harmony with human being is still truly amazing.
    Through 2/12

     


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    Linda Van Boven

    Florence Lynch Gallery

    By Lee Klein

    In multi-panel photographic works, which are not for architectural purposes, externalized Linda Van Boven investigates “women who walk the streets”. Using surveillance camera shots captured in instances as close-ups or scans, the artist creates a series of cinemagraphic sequences redolent of effects employed in Damian Loeb paintings.
    Shots of prostitutes from afar come off as if the women are being spied by one of the once ubiquitous TV police reality genre programs, and thus expose moments, which seemingly on cue, might raise one’s adrenaline level or otherwise affect a moment of not quite breathless intensity. Meanwhile within the sentence created by the consecutive photographs are placed unexpected ephemeral interludes of spoons with jam, lotus blossoms, assemblies of broken furniture, and woodland scenes; suggestive that the artist is trying to take us to a place or a moment in time which may soon be gone.
    The portions of work here that does not show women hustling read as if hyper-realistic paintings, like the vegetable dye transfer and acrylic on polylaminate works by Robert Rauschenberg, exhibited simultaneously at the Chelsea branch of Pace Wildenstein gallery right across the street.
    Through 2/26


     


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    Linn Meyers

    Margaret Thatcher Projects

    By Lily Faust

    These drawings offer the experience of perceiving the shifting of pictorial space, so tangible that one can almost touch the subtle movement, itself. Upon closer inspection, one realizes that it is all linear magic, achieved by slight aberrations in the tightly spaced lines. Meyers works with lines and dots, drawn on Mylar with extra-fine and medium point markers, and broad tipped pens. Her optically rigorous surfaces suggest the idea of “in front/in the back/and in between,” hinting at fluctuations in the picture plane.
    In Untitled, thin, crimson lines, horizontally drawn, overlap with vertical sepia ones, creating a vividly undulating surface. The interaction of the delicate lines enhances virtual depth and distance. In a narrow section of the composition, the vertical lines are absent, with only the meticulously drawn, tight horizontals remaining. The essential vocabulary of the artist, confined to the minute modulations of parallel lines, can be examined here, creating the illusion of movement and depth. In applying the principles of her unique vision, Meyers effectively contrasts the areas in which the vertical and horizontal lines resonate, defining and emphasizing her sense of space.
    These drawings, through the dispersion and compression of lines and of dots in separate or joined instances, extend pictorial distance. Unlike the endeavors of Renaissance artists who used perspective to create pictorial depth, Meyers exploits the optical dynamism inherent to adjacent lines or dots. Building on the work of Modernist artists, specifically Op-Artists, such as Bridget Riley, Victor Vasarely, and Agam, she arrives at more intimate and poetic conclusions. Her lines, which are drawn freehand, show immense control in the manner that they continue along the length of the paper in delicate parallel lines. They are also spontaneously irregular, reflecting the natural quirkiness of the hand drawn line. The taut balance that she establishes between control and spontaneity reflects the paradoxical nature of these drawings. Simultaneously constructing and de-constructing space, they tease the eye, compelling the viewer to experience “being” and “nothingness” through the rhythms of the lines and dots that punctuate space.
    Through 2/19

     



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    Drama, Romance, Loneliness

    Massimo Audiello

    By Joyce Korotkin

    Alone in the cool darkness of a Paris night, Kevin Cooley’s lone figure lurks in the shadows on the shore of the Seine, illuminated only by the distant festive lights of the Bateaux Mouches as they glide past. In a cocoon of silence, despite the loudspeakers and crowds of revelers on the passing boats, the archetypal 21st century rock teenager sits enveloped in the scent of history, the ghosts of La Belle Epoque embedded in the surrounding architecture of winding stairs, curved bridges and dark paths; above him an incandescent aubergine sky. Cooley’s exquisitely composed, color saturated photographs evoke a silent, interior aloneness that perfectly characterizes the theme of this show of emerging artists curated by Massimo Audiello, Christopher Bogia and Jen DeNike, entitled, Drama, Romance, Loneliness, Narcissism and Many More Diseases of the Soul.

    Jen DeNike’s video, Worshipping False Idols, explores narcissism the setting of a Louisiana swamp. DeNike’s lens follows a latter day “Narcissus,” a young man with movie-star good looks who wanders naked through the primeval dank waters and ruins. Oblivious to the primeval beauty of his decaying surroundings, he carries a small camera that, echoing DeNike’s lens, is also aimed exclusively at himself. In Death of a Brother, a Scandinavian ritual in which brothers are buried head to head becomes a metaphoric exploration of death and Eros. Here, DeNike’s “brothers” are laid to rest above ground, erotically stroked and gently covered by flowers.
    Like a slap in the face from a 1940s film, Angela Fraleigh’s large scale figurative imagery violently collides with expressionist obliterations in luridly colored large scale paintings. Incorporating painting, photography and performance, Fraleigh photographs herself masquerading as her mother in invented scenes of brutality and passion. In defiance of historical depictions of romance, her re-enactments of archaic notions of the vulnerability of women are obliterated, replaced with a contemporary, open indulgence in lust, power and passion.

    While Ann Toebbe reduces the sum of our lives to the unnoticed little objects and places that comprise memory in stylistically naïve paintings resembling doll house floor plans, Christopher Bogia chronicles the status of dogs, increasingly spoiled, coiffed, primped and costly, as replacements in our alienated lives for unfulfilled emotional needs. In one work, the dog appears as a yarn painting, nostalgically recalling school and camp craft projects; in another, it appears going for a walk on printed fabric in the style of digital video game graphics.
    Rachel Foullon sums up the whole of cultural history with paper floor sculptures into which real objects are inserted. Echoing a landscape of the mind and the vicissitudes of time, things such as houses and foliage appear and disappear as one walks around the silhouetted black mountain of history.
    1/6 through 2/26



     


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    Ernest Briggs

    The Anita Shapolsky Gallery

    By Lee Klein

    This exhibition of widely divergent and colorful styles covers three decades of work by Ernest Briggs, who was included in curator Dorothy Miller's landmark Twelve Americans exhibition in l956 at the Museum of Modern Art. In turns raffish, exuberant, primitive, naïf, and emotive one should make a couple of visits to these canvases in order to get at the particular brand of abstract art exhibited here.

    We are reminded that Briggs studied with abstract expressionist stalwart Clifford Styll, who is said to have had the largest impact on the latter artist's body of work (though Styll's continents of chroma seem wider and thicker than Briggs sometimes slashes sometimes dabs sometimes splotches). Further, Matisse and or Bearden seemingly influenced certain works such as Untitled l964. Finally, Untitled December l952 has all of the primaries from Mondrian's grid, which then explode into a sea of slashes and dashes, pouring down with a few other colors in a thunderous rain.
    Through 2/19.

     

     


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    Yoshio Taniguchi

    Designing the new MoMA

    By Michael MacInnis

    How to make architecture invisible — this is the key to understanding Yoshio Taniguchi’s approach to the risky task of reinventing the home of New York’s Museum of Modern Art in a time where the term “modern” rings quaint. In 1939, when the original Goodwin and Stone building was constructed on 53rd Street, giving birth to MoMA, the glaring contrast between the severe minimalist facade of the new modern structure and its formalist neighbors, a row of intricately detailed Victorian brownstones, was such that no one needed to ask which was the modern building. It was as if a spaceship had landed in a forest, eviscerating the surrounding trees.
    Today, however, one would be hard pressed to distinguish a Midtown office building from a residential tower, or for that matter, a museum tower. To be sure, this is not the first time that MoMA has had to reassert its identity in a volatile architectural environment. There was the Philip Johnson addition in 1964, and in 1984 Cesar Pelli added the museum tower. But here we not talking about another addition; Mr. Taniguchi was asked to, essentially, reinterpret the past while defining the essence of MoMA for future generations.

    In technical terms, this meant nearly doubling the capacity of the former building, from a total exhibition space of 85,000 to 125,000 square feet, with six floors of new and renovated galleries designed around a glass-topped atrium that soars 110 feet above the lobby. The new MoMA building, which was constructed under the supervision of architects Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF), holds some 630,000 square feet, with a lobby that spans 53rd and 54th Streets, providing for two entrances on both sides of the city block. The original Goodwin and Stone building marks the 53rd Street entrance to the MoMA Roy and Niuta Theaters and The Modern restaurant, and an entirely new entrance on 54th Street provides public access through a low-key, unified facade that faces a mostly residential block. A seven-story office tower sits atop the gallery building, housing conservation studios and offices for MoMA staff, while construction is still underway on The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research Building, which frames the eastern side of the museum’s Sculpture Garden.

    This final stage of the project, the most extensive rebuilding and renovation in MoMA’s seventy-five year history, will house the museum’s archives and library, as well as the Celeste Theater. Scheduled to open in 2006, the new 110-seat venue will add a third public screen to MoMA. On a practical note, it is worth mentioning here that all of the museum’s facilities; film, theater and “special” exhibitions are included in a single admission fee of $20. To assure full access for people of all economic brackets, Target, the art-friendly retail giant, has agreed to sponsor a weekly free admission for everyone, Friday nights, from 4:00 to 8:00 pm. Moreover, JPMorgan Chase, the museum’s lead sponsor, covered a major portion of the $425 million project.
    If this were an entirely new museum, built from the ground up, then such a project might call for the flamboyant design of a Frank Gheery, whose signature titanium tourist attractions have won press accolades and put previously unknown destinations on the map. Everyone has heard about Bilbau; but who has heard anything about the art the museum shows? Taniguchi’s design for MoMA, on the other hand, not only allows the artwork to take center stage, but equally important, the building takes into account the magical dynamic of people moving through a public space defined by great art.

    There is a reserved, understated elegance in in this design; the invisible hand of the architect gets out of the way. Distinctions between exterior and interior space are blurred, as natural light and glimpses of the surrounding urban environment seem to be everywhere wherever you wander throughout the building. Monumental windows and curtain walls reveal the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden and city street-life below, while the larger-than-life Contemporary Galleries on the second floor, with 22-foot high ceilings hovering above a city bock of column-free space, dwarf even the most ambitious Chelsea art spaces.
    The second floor also houses a media gallery for moving-image and sound works, as well as the Paul J. Sachs Prints and Illustrated Books Galleries. On the third floor there are galleries dedicated to design, drawings and photography, while the fourth and fifth floors are devoted to painting and sculpture from the MoMA collection. Temporary exhibitions are mounted in the Rene d’Harnoncourt Exhibition Galleries on the sixt floor, which feature 18-foot high ceilings and sky-lit spaces.
    In addition to the traditional infrastructure of the museum, there are also the modern amenities that visitors have grown to expect (or at least accept) today; three retail shops designed by New York’s Gluckman Mayner Architects, and four dining spaces designed by the firm, Bentel & Bentel.

    The essential difference between the new MoMA, and what was before, is that where there had been a single building with various additions over the years, we can now speak of a fully integrated campus facility, with historical underpinnings. But the physical space is only one part of the equation. This is the city which, after all, razed Mckim Mead & White’s legendary Pennsylvania Station because, nice as the building was, people didn’t take the train anymore. Now it’s up to the decision makers at MoMA; the curators, the board of directors, the director, to make this building work.

     

     


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    Tina Modotti and Edward Weston

    Throckmorton Fine Art

    By Gu Huihui

    This subtle, quietly revealing exhibition about the collaboration between Tina Modotti and Edward Weston during the years the pair had spent together in Mexico, from 1923 to 1926, documents a brief but pivotal moment in the history of Modernism. Weston, dedicated to photography as a fine art medium, had left his family and traveled to Mexico, hoping to reinvigorate his artistic development; the twenty-seven-year-old Modotti, a former minor film star and recently widowed, was embarking on an uncertain new career. Both artists actively sought out the unfamiliar landscape for new insights and inspiration. Their works share an obvious formal affinity — Modotti was Westen’s protege and lover — which gives the exhibition its visual coherence, and yet, upon closer examination, the divergent trajectories of the artists are nevertheless abundantly foreshadowed.

    We see the formalist Weston mature as an artist; his single-minded focus on photography, not as social realism or narrative, but as a formal composition consisting of a few simple elements takes root. Modotti inherits her mentor’s aesthetics. But while the compositional elements in her photographs can appear to derive from Westen, her different concerns and motivations emerge in even the earliest of these groupings. The differences can be subtle; her choice to use sepia tone paper and a softer focus lends a more sentimental, nostalgic feel to her work. For example, her photograph of an oil tank is not only striking for its composition, but the image evokes a feeling of empathy. Modotti, who remained behind in Mexico, without Weston until 1930, would gain notoriety for her political activities; indeed, she would eventually abandon artist pursuits for her sociological idealism. Even in her early works, the energy is much different from Weston. Modotti was influenced by Mexico itself, and her photographs implied narrative if not outright social commentary, while for Weston everything was fodder for composition; Mexico was little more than an exotic studio location rife with unfamiliar design elements. The exhibition carefully juxtaposes and weaves photographs of the two artists together, so that their divergent paths are clearly evident.

    Woman with a Flag, for example, shows Modotti’s debt to Weston in its strong, spare composition. Yet, unlike Weston, we are drawn to the substance of who this person is; there is a social subtext. Modotti immerses herself in the lives of the people of Mexico, and manages to incorporate their issues into the work. Sometimes it is only a matter of what or whom she chooses to photograph. Among her portraits and still-life images are the photographs of murals (a conceptual choice that is already one step removed from reality), including one with Diego Rivera. Mexican artists such as Rivera and Siquerios had a major impact on Western modern art and the confluence of ideas in Mexico.

    Weston’s subjects, on the other hand, remain the existential other; opaque, foreign, unknowable. The subject in Bell Peppers are almost unrecognizable and appear monstrous. In his trademark stark, high-contrast black and white, both plants are presented at the same time with a relentless scientific precision and with a monumental, heroic quality. In his portraits, though not so dehumanized, the personality of the subject is much less important than the artist’s eye. While this may sound cold, everything is gorgeous.
    Seeing the work of these two artists together in this context forces one to look closely. The difference between teacher and student, as well as the social and aesthetic dynamic of radically different personalities converging and diverging, allow for a unique hands-on glimpse into the beginnings of the modern era.
    Through 3/12.


     

     


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    Sleeping Giant

    The Wynwood Arts District, and
    the future of Art in Miami

    By Michael MacInnis

    It’s a great place to live, work and visit; it’s an easy sell — Tony Goldman, CEO of Goldman Properties, is talking about what many art world insiders are talking about today; Miami. The city hosts two major art fairs, Art Miami, once a predominantly Latin American art fair which (after a brief identity crisis) has quietly evolved into a promising international boutique style fair, and Art Basel Miami Beach, the the Swiss mega-fair franchise with the bottomless bank account. On the surface, it might appear that the enormous marketing resources behind the Swiss fair, which enjoys a uniquely generous sponsorship arrangement with UBS Investment Bank, is driving Miami’s resurgence as an international center for art. But in fact the changing demographics of Miami, and the intelligent real estate development policies of Mr. Goldman and like-minded “romantic developers” in the years preceding are what lay the groundwork for this moment we are witnessing today. The city’s influx of cultured, upwardly mobile professionals has yielded a critical mass of serious collectors rife with creativity and open to new ideas.

    Some history: Towards 2000, faced with a moribund economy in Europe, the organizers of the Art Basel fair in Switzerland sought to buy into the action in Miami; at first seeking to purchase the Art Miami fair from its original owners. When they were rebuffed, however, a new fair was coined, Art Basel Miami Beach, which was to eventually debut in the same convention center in Miami’s thriving South Beach, where Art Miami takes place, only a month earlier in December. In other words; first came the revitalized neighborhood, and then the Basel crowd followed the money.

    But how did Miami’s South Beach become a thriving hotspot in the first place? Not merely by chance, to be sure. A quick reading of the Goldman Properties company profile is telling; founded in 1968, the company is credited with re-branding New York’s once infamous upper west side Manhattan (Remember West Side Story?) as an attractive neighborhood with a distinct, chic identity. Typically, Goldman purchases a strategic swath of undervalued properties in a part of town that big-box developers have all but written off. Rather than clear the deck and build new, he “recycles” the architecture that defines the neighborhood’s sense of place.

    In 1977, the company purchased 18 properties in an obscure manufacturing district in Manhattan, south of Houston Street (an area once destined to be cleared for an expressway). Today we call it Soho.
    In 1985, Goldman Properties applied the same recipe to Miami’s seemingly run down South Beach. Whereas adherence to an economy of scale had led conventional developers to shun the small boutique, Art Deco hotels that once shined along the waters’ edge, Goldman recognized the potential value of the hidden treasures waiting to be brought back to life. Here we have a somewhat mixed blessing, however, as the big-box builders managed nevertheless to dig in along the fringes of the Art Deco strip, once the South Beach imprimatur gained currency.

    Fast-forward to today: In the past year or so Tony Goldman and his son Joe Goldman have set about to transform a former warehouse district in Miami, called Wynwood, which boarders the city’s Design District, into a 24/7 neighborhood with New York’s Williamsburg across the East River as a model for the future; Wynwood is located “across the bay” from Miami Beach. To this end, the company has purchased some 20 properties (mostly warehouses) in a bid to create a pedestrian friendly grid system, with plans to widen sidewalks, for example, in anticipation of sidewalk cafes, storefronts, and lots of people.
    Unlike South Beach, however, where the task involved rejuvenating (and protecting) an existing neighborhood; or Soho, which had a highly developed public transit system already in place to bring people in, the challenge for Goldman this time around is considerably greater. Fortunately, like-minded players appear to be on the same page here. Craig Robins, who worked with Goldman in South Beach is the driving force behind the Design District in the north; and to the south, a loosely defined performing arts district which boasts a new concert hall and opera house (designed by Cesar Pelli) has received substantial public funding. And not to be overlooked, there are the individual efforts of artists who have begun transforming their own buildings into studios and gallery spaces.
    A cautionary note: The future is not now. You don’t want to be wandering the streets here at night, looking for your latte. At least not yet; this is after all a tough part of town in transition. But at the same time, the future is not so far away. When pressed for specifics, Mr. Goldman estimates that “The time for pedestrian traffic to develop here is in about three years.”

    Even so, Mr. Goldman, whose wife, Janet, is an avid collector, is not waiting three years to get started. Last month, January 8, 2005, timed to coincide with Art Miami, the city’s oldest art fair, the pair opened The Goldman Warehouse, which joins an impressive roster of private museums in the Wynwood Arts District, whereby prominent collections are shared with the public. Donald and Mera Rubell opened theirs in 1996, and the Margulies Collection is also in the neighborhood. Says Goldman, “We believe enough in this district to open our own arts center.” Given the Goldman track record, he should know. ¶

    Ed Note: The Goldman Warehouse is located in the Wynwood Arts District, at 404 NW 26th St., Miami FL 33127 www.thegoldmanwarehouse.com

     


 
 

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