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

art reviews

 

 

Patti Smith
Robert Miller Gallery
>>
By Ola Manana

Jonas Mekas
Maya Stendhal Gallery>>

By Ola Manana

Art Basel Week in Miami
In The First Person
>>
By Rachel Hoffman

 

              


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Patti Smith
Robert Miller Gallery

By Ola Manana

 

To the casual observer, it would seem that poet rebel-rocker turned visual artist, Patti Smith’s show at the Robert Miller Gallery was designed to attract as little attention as possible. Like the non-sound of a pin dropped onto a carpet, these photographs demand an absorbent contemplative silence, a rare achievement for contemporary art.

Smith’s music placed her on the map in 1975 with her break through record, Horses. Since then she has produced other acclaimed work in poetry and music. Less known for her visual art, this show makes you wonder why her collective contributions are not generally considered as a whole; the music informs the silence. There are different kinds of silences, however. In one photograph Smith explores the silence beneath the hand of God. In GOD’S HAND, ROME, (2005) a detail of the hand of God appears huge, in marble, on the left side of the photograph. Beneath it, a somewhat defaced sphinx maintains its upward gaze. The juxtaposition between a sphinx that would certainly have been known in Egypt as having divine authority, and God, in the Roman depiction, is notable because the two elements are there. God appears to be somewhat bigger, the sphinx is on guard, an injured sentinel who has spent inestimable hours watching.

The title of the show offers a clue as to what Smith is doing in this work. In reference to the ideas of Pythagoras, the legendary philosopher/mathematician, the focus is placed upon the journey, or the space between two points. The journey that Smith takes in her photographs documents points on an endless pilgrimage, some which seem like endings, but carry over to the next. She documents the graves of Brancusi and Blake, and other fetishistic items: John Keat’s bed, or Rimbaud’s silverware. Simultaneously stark and warm, these photographs are like love letters to the dead. Many of them use archaic means (gelatin silver prints) to document archaic objects, but move beyond documentary photographs into the realm of fine art. While she does not forget to visit the tomb of Caesar Agustus, which is absolutely still, that stillness is duplicated in like manner in the photograph BALL AT ST.CLAIRE SHORES, (2006). The focus of the photograph, what appears to be a small plastic ball is suspended in a wave, frozen in perfect symmetry in the middle of the page.

In the photographic drawing MY STEED IS OLD from 2006, there appears the phrase “My steed is old, said the innkeeper, but not as old as the rainbow,” The photograph shows an aging white horse, who’s jaw reaches over the wooden plank of his corral and rests on it. The word Steed is well put. This isn’t merely a horse, a charger or a stud; it is a rescuer. He has not been defeated because he is stuck in a cage, he has succeeded because he has moved beyond the point where physical movement matters. He is a point on the continuum. The rainbow is the continuum, a future dream that is completely unattainable because it keeps slipping into the present. In another photograph of a white horse Smith reverses this concept. WINGED HORSE-THE PALACE OF MUSIC, BARCELONA, takes an absolutely still, solid mass, a sculptural element in a building, and gives it the visual weightlessness of a cloud of white smoke. At the same time appears to be charging down from the sky. Smith balances the finality of death with the possibility of change.

“You have come/the door is open/you will not find me/ you will find my love.”1
In TRAVELER’S BED, (2006) Smith creates a sculpture of a bed that seems to appear as if out of a dream. The bed frame is made to look exactly like a middle- eastern stretcher. Photographs of sick and wounded, from places such as Qana, near disaster sites depict exact replicas of this design. Two planks protrude out of either end for transport. This is not a sleeping bag, or a cot. The trip that is being taken is either a trip to the hospital or to the morgue. It rests on the floor and an ordinary white sheet rests on it, somehow deflecting the crudeness of the wood. It has lightness, because it is crumpled and almost seems to float above the bumpy mattress. But upon closer inspection, it is obviously a poem. The carefully inscribed wavy handwriting covers the seams, and otherwise forms distinct geometrical shapes. The accumulation of notes taken during a long journey is written all over it; constellations form. The sheet, taken with Smith during her journeys, is a literary achievement as well as an element of sculpture. The words drawn in very ordered patterns intermittently slip into chaos. Next to the bed is a tray with grain, which appears to have been tampered with. Like the Egyptian funerary ritual of placing grain in proximity to the dead, for the presumed afterlife, it is an offering for those who have gone before us, as well as to nurture the suffering.

This is a very understated body of work, it reveals itself through contemplation. The trick is not merely finding the stone scroll. The journey of Pythagoras involves deciphering it.

 


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Jonas Mekas
Maya Stendhal Gallery

By Ola Manana

 

Revered as the father of American avant-garde cinema, Jonas Mekas stands out, not only for his films, but also for his role in helping to make experimental avant-garde films accessible to the public. As one of the founders of the Anthology Film Archives, the converted art movie house in Lower Manhattan, he has also helped other filmmaker have their work shown for some 35 years.

This show at the Maya Stendahl Gallery, however, focuses on Mekas’ own films. Curated by co-owner Harry Stendahl, the exhibition utilizes ten large flat screen TVs and two projectors that play Mekas’ films in loops, simultaneously. The films playing all at once creates a randomly chaotic atmosphere, similar to the effect of the distinctive jump-cut editing process that Mekas is known for.

Mekas is not interested in telling a chronological story, instead he stitches together imagery like a musician would construct a musical score, using a variety of notes. This cerebral rhythmic editing process is evident in the film, Phil Glass Plays for Ralph Steiner’s Mechanical Principles at AFA. (2000). In this film, the silhouette of Glass playing a grand piano is set against the background of Steiner’s film, a montage of close-ups of dials turning and gears shifting. As Glass subtly rocks back and forth he in effect creates visual counterpoint with the objects moving on the screen. The cohesiveness of this piece is all about time, and it succeeds by transporting the viewer almost instantly into another space.

In Salvador Dali at Work, (1964) the viewer is transported into an afternoon in Dali-land. A fuzzy close-up of Dali in profile crashes onto the screen. He appears later wearing a Mona Lisa sandwich board, is then joined by a friend who twitches a lot, and we see him again with a fetching young blonde, who seems indifferent to being bound up with rope like a ball of twine. Then, it appears that Dali comes across some whip cream which he squirts onto the young lady’s forearm and continues frosting her whole body like a cake. The yard is littered with “empties” and a chair covered with whip cream. This non-plot, as it were, is compelling not only for its historical value of the characters but for the panache with which it was carried out.

In Destruction of the Berlin Wall, (1990) Mekas documents the event by filming a crane snatching up the graffiti enhanced sections of concrete and dropping them in a cloud of dust onto a pile. The vulnerability of the wall, in the grip of the machine’s great claw is amplified by the small amount of time it takes to move each piece. Mekas captured the exact moment in which the Berlin Wall became like a useless piece of paper, crumpled and tossed into the garbage, a happening which combined with stunning images and the precise hour of the day needed no commentary.

By departing from traditional narrative film structure, Mekas artfully crafts sequences which appear to be on their own time, imbuing scenes with a dream-like quality. His uncanny knack for being in the right place at the right time is critical to all of his films; sometimes it involves a famous event, like the Lennon/Ono “Bed-In For Peace” or it could be just filming a dog running down the street, Mekas is there immortalizing the image. In The Song of Central Park, (1966) a wonderful sequence of out of focus, high contrast park visitors is smattered onto the screen in short edits, creating an animated pattern which feels like abstract painting. He films tourists with cameras, pretty girls bopping, swirls of fiery autumn leaves, then, the camera stops for a moment on the place where a tree meets the ground, lingers, and moves on.

 


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Art Basel Week in Miami
In The First Person

By Rachel Hoffman

 

Continuing our new series of first-person accounts of art world events, as told from the perspective of individual artists, “In The First Person” presents this second installment of Rachel Hoffman’s diary narrative of Art Basel Week. The idea is to cut through the flood of pre-packaged press offerings, and discuss the events on a more human scale, one voice at a time.

5. 12. 06

I watch the traffic pouring into Miami Beach from the balcony of a high-rise condominium on a little island on Biscayne Bay. In just one day, Art Basel Miami Beach 2006 will open. Although the work that I do as a performance artist is not connected to this fair, the term “Art Basel” has become synonymous with the start of the art season in Miami. People say “Art Basel Week,” when they mean everything under the sun. Soon a storm of celebrity art collectors, dealers, curators, writers, artists, and all sorts of fancy people from all over the world will electrify Miami with more of everything, everywhere.

I am going to spend the night with my friend Lamia Endara. She is a beautiful Egyptian born curator and photographer who lives and works in Miami. From her bedroom window, I feel like I am floating in a tiny glass flying saucer above the city.
Lamia and I are preparing our own projects, and planning itineraries for things we would like to see in the next few days. As we work, she prepares her favorite drink made with a deep red pomegranate liqueur. I sip it slowly, talking calmly and for a moment I imagine myself as the goddess Demeter, freshly emerging from the underworld; maybe it was the elevator ride up to this glass cocoon in the sky.

6. 12. 06

The next day I’m having another sweet red drink, this time delivered by a bartender with thick curly black hair while relaxing on the front porch of a hotel on Ocean Drive. My hectic performance schedule begins tomorrow. I have been sewing a costume made of gold fabric for almost two months; my hands are aching and I’ve stuck myself with the sewing needle so many times that tiny spots of blood have soaked into my costume. It is not noticeable, but it is really there. Sometimes I think that the small doses of physical pain help to alleviate anxiety and sadness. I prick myself again and again, continuing this repetitive stitching and poking while I think.

Earlier today, I attended the opening of Art Basel’s “Art Positions” with Kari Snyder, a Miami based photographer, and my friend, Lamia, who is also a photographer. We really liked a video by the South African artist, Robin Rhode, that was shown at the Rubenstein Gallery. It was packed inside, but eventually we worked our way to a comfortable viewing position and stood mesmerized for quite a while. Lutz Bacher’s distressed black and white images of famous politicians and entertainers, printed with funny wisecrack captions, also caught my attention. This work was at the Taxter & Spengemann Gallery. My favorite piece here is a luscious image of Marilyn Monroe, with a made up caption declaring, “Go Fuck Yourself.”

After spending quite a bit of time looking at art, we hung out at the beach to watch the singer, Peaches, perform with her band; but I was too distracted watching the crowd to fully appreciate the music.

6. 12. 06

Today I got through my first performance; clad in my hand-stitched Venus Girdle, an absurd body sculpture based on the myth of Venus’s seductive undergarment. The idea of magical lingerie capable of rendering a woman totally irresistible amuses me immensely. My interpretation of this garment looks like something between a ballet tutu and a Venus flytrap. I enjoy the idea of having something carnivorous on my crotch. During the performance I painted myself in pink war paint while doing a playful belly dance. Although I consider this performance to be a love ritual, a homage to the goddess, I find something aggressive in the whole process of adornment and seduction. I’m often driven by instinct, and sometimes that makes me feel helpless and out of control; but it can also be fun and a little dangerous.

Afterwards, I manage to clean off enough of the costume make-up to attend another art fair Professional Preview. This time it’s at one of the countless hotel art fairs that have sprouted up in the vicinity of the Miami Beach Convention Center, where Art Basel takes place. These hotel fairs are really crowded, and It’s difficult to move through the hallways.

I stop to visit an exhibitor, Erika Schneider of Bleu Acier, Inc., to see how things look in her room, and to say hello. She published a beautiful edition of one of my performance stills. She seems very busy, so I decide to check out the other rooms and to also visit another nearby hotel fair. There are several such art fairs within walking distance; each with catchy names like “Flow” or “Bridge”. Some are simply named after the hotel they’re located in as in “Aqua” at the Aqua Hotel. Still, others have more focus and history. For example, further down the beach, across Ocean Drive, the “DiVA” art fair was showing work that focuses on digital video art. This fair, by the way, was held in shipping containers arranged like a small village directly on the beach. There was even a “mobile art gallery” called “Shore / Cohen Mobile Gallery” making the rounds in a white truck that would park near the bigger art fairs and tap into the foot traffic. This was later that night though, when I went to the Scope-Miami fair in Wynwood. Their truck was parked across from the big line waiting to get into Scope.

Wynwood is just a quick trip from Miami Beach if you have a car, but I’ve heard it takes forever if you have to rely on shuttles or taxis; I drive. This is where all the new galleries are located. It’s also where the the larger “booth fairs” set up shop. Scope-Miami, which used to be a hotel fair, is probably the best known of these; but there is also one called “Pulse” and a new photo fair called, “Photo Miami” which made it’s debut. The gallery, Edge Zones, also held a fair featuring local artists. This is where I am scheduled to do another performance. There is also a fair called “NADA” which, though not really in Wynwood, seems nearby if you’re driving.

At Scope, I take some notes, and I am drawn to the colorful and dreamlike sculptures by Kirsten Krüger called “Grief” at the booth of Umtrieb- Galerie für aktuelle Kunst. The gallerist is very friendly. I say a few words to him in German. He seems surprised. I tell him that my father was born in Munich. When he says, “Was machst Dein Vater?”, I feel sad. I want to tell him that my father has died, but suddenly I have forgotten how to speak German. The language makes me feel cold, and I realize that I cannot say it in English either. I think of the title of the installation which all of the sudden fits so well, and then of my father. I feel overwhelmed and lonely. The conversation goes on for a few moments, and then I decide to leave.

Lamia spots me walking from the booth. She senses my sadness and wraps me next to her in her scarf. We are feeling cold, so we bundle together as we walk to her car.

8. 12. 06

Today is much cooler and I am not dressed appropriately. I am wearing a bright and short yellow vintage dress. I now feel shy about it. I decide to hide behind a large pair of sunglasses. As I walk down Lincoln Road with a stack of magazines in my hands, wind gusts blow through the thin fabric of my delicate cotton frock. I shiver. This cloudy weather depresses me.

Today my friend Kalup Linzy, an artist who shows at the Taxter & Spengemann Gallery, arrives from New York. His videos are also being shown at the Sagamore Hotel in South Beach, which is known for having an art focus. While I wait for his arrival, I decide to visit some more art fairs, but all of the walking and looking wears me out. After a while, I decide to go back to my place to work on my costume some more, and maybe even take a nap. I begin to think that I just won’t have the energy to go out tonight, despite so much happening.

At around 10 p.m. Kalup and Lamia both start calling me. They talk me into going out for a while so I throw my yellow baby doll dress on, with a pair of high heels and some red lip gloss. Slutty.

Kalup invites us to a party hosted by the art collectors Al Giolio and Paul Bernstein. We drive around for a while looking for the address. When we finally arrive, I am really impressed by the super-cool collection. Of course my favorite pieces are Kalup’s hilarious yet powerful videos, “Ride to da Club” and “Lollypop”. Laughter is so powerful. After we order screwdrivers and talk for a while, I go over alone to watch the videos again and again. All of the doors and windows here are open. We can look out at the water. I feel really happy. I love visiting galleries and museums, but there is nothing quite like experiencing art in a living space, as a real collection. Art collections are cool because they say a lot about the collectors. I once heard a collector say that he usually buys the work that he is able to respond to on an emotional level. He says he cannot explain it, but that it’s very much like falling in love. I cannot know for sure, but this seems to be true also of Al and Paul. Now I feel like a hopeless romantic.

9. 12. 06

Today is the roughest day yet. Months of preparation have gone into the next dissolving hours, when I will unveil my latest persona, “Lady Danger”. She wears another Venus Girdle of sorts. This one is adorned with gold spikes inspired by Josephine Baker’s famous banana skirt, but with a silly tiger head on the crotch. It has a set of teeth that appear slightly human, with molars. A tiger print tail sprouts from the back with a red and pink satin scorpion stinger on the tip. I am told that this looks like a sex toy, but I pretend to be too innocent to confirm the observation. After the performance in South Beach I go back to Wynwood to the Zones Fair in the Edge Zones gallery space, where I coax Lady Danger into one more performance for the night.

10. 12. 06

I’m on a hammock that’s tied between two palm trees, having a drink. It’s near the outdoor bar at the Raleigh Hotel. This is a popular place to spend Sunday evenings for locals in Miami. A friend has been feeding me chocolate and champagne. We move on to red wine. I have to skip dinner again, the drinks make me start to feel sleepy.

When I stand up, my high heels sink into the sand and my hair is windblown and tousled from being on the hammock. A man who looks to be in his mid- fifties with silver hair approaches me. He tells me that I look kind of mermaidish with my pale skin, dark hair and red lips. I tell him that he is just imagining things because we are only a few steps from the ocean. He argues with me about that for a moment, and then I give in; I tell him that I am indeed possessed by a water spirit.
My cell phone rings. Thank god. It’s my friend Kalup asking me to meet him and a super-cool painter at Kehinde Wiley’s Fish Fry at the Raleigh Hotel. What a remarkable coincidence! I am already at the Raleigh. I look over and I see a group of familiar faces, artist friends of Kalup that I met over the summer when I was in New York. Jeffrey Deitch is there, so I guess this must be a big art thing.

I wander over to a table where I’m invited to share a bottle of champagne, Kalup comes over and I offer him a glass. He asks me to join the party, introducing me to new people: SunTek Chung, Derrick Adams, Kambui Olujimi, Shaun Leonardo, Kianga Ford, Mickalene Thomas, Hank Willis Thomas, Wangechi Mutu, and Iona Rozeal Brown.
SunTek Chung takes photos as we drink and laugh in the comfortable tents at the Raleigh. I find that I don’t have much to say. My voice is scratchy. I am still exhausted from yesterday’s performances. The party begins to wind down and most of the group piles into a silver convertible. The rest of us go to the Marlin on Collins Drive. I have one more drink, then decide to say goodnight.

Walking down the beach trying to collect my thoughts, I feel sort of sad that Art Basel 2006 is over. But next month there’s Art Miami 2007, which promises another round of parties and VIP events to keep the art momentum going, albeit on a much more intimate scale.

 

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