Mapanare.us Constantly.Consuming.Culture.
  • Art
  • Interviews

Miami Art Week 2021 Is Dead! Long Live Miami Art Week 2021!

12/8/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

One of the funniest things about Miami Art Week, every year, is that people (myself included) act like going to a bunch of art shows is analogous to  a tour in Afghanistan. I will excuse myself a LITTLE because I often drive back and forth between Miami and North Broward. Those who make that drive daily will tell you, it resembles a scene from a movie where people flee some disaster or alien invasion.

Even so, come on; it is looking at art not mining uranium. 

Shut up.

The next time I complain feel free to throw this in MY face.

There are some truly magnificent pieces at various shows this year. But at a number of shows I kept walking up to things thinking they were "Mr. Brainwash" and sadly they weren't. Why in the name of all that is holy would anyone imitate that? In my opinion it is a JOKE, something created to make fun of the art business and collectors. You can pretend to be "in on it" if you like but you really aren't.

Unless you are actually Banksy, you are not.

I suppose when something makes money it repeats like burping up a bad burrito. It is a sort of art Nigerian scam. Remember when "Mr. Brainwash" rented the giant place on Miami Beach for years? Did ANYTHING sell? And if so what museum bought the piece with Darth Vader holding a can of fucking Dr. Pepper? And what is its current value? When all the details come about about Mr. Brainwash comes out some day; it may well not harm the value of those pieces. But the people imitating it? I suspect there will be depreciation.

This wasn't just one fair, although Context seemed practically DEDICATED to this development.

Usually you see a large number of Andy Warhol pieces but I saw fewer this year. Do not FEAR! There were still plenty of paintings and mixed media works that LOOKED like Warhol. Lots of celebrity pieces and many of them were SPARKLY!

Fuck 8th generation pop art. Fuck sparkly photos of celebrities. Fuck Star Wars or Disney character pieces and fuck you if you think any of that is interesting or ironic or hip or whatever bullshit you tell yourself so you can pretend you have a soul. Also Banksy/Mr Brainwash has run its course. Early on it was provocative and fun but it is all now a parody of a parody of a parody. It is a Pussy Riot concert at a Vladimir Putin re-election party.  
​

Is this pandemic related? Or has everyone lost their damned mind?

Then there is the old "this artist spent most of his life in a filthy insane asylum creating work using his own shit, we think he died of starvation. Would you like to purchase a piece for more money than the artist ever saw in their entire life?" problem. I don't go on about how the uber rich or corporations buy art. That has been the way since humans crawled out of our caves and it will be the way until the end or until we all live in some utopian society we create to eliminate such inequality. Yet there is something incredibly distasteful in selling the work of people who suffered, literally suffered, during their lives for insane amounts of money. I don't mean they "suffered for their art" while they worked at the post office or just generally "suffered in obscurity." 

That is the vast majority of humanity. 

I mean they had miserable, horrible lives and tried to make some sense of it through the creative process and were despised despite their talent. The very institutions selling and supporting their work after their deaths would show a living artist LIKE them to the door POST HASTE should they have the temerity to show up. Perhaps calling after them "get back to us after you die!"

Recognize these sorts of artists now, while they live.

Some folks will point out that I wrote something about the Gee's Bend quilters at Art Basel. Yes, I did. But those were proud women who took control of their lives and work. Supporting that work supports the artists who are still there, still creating right NOW (more on this soon).
Picture
THIS is street art
Then there was Covid. It is starting to look like the new variant isn’t AS concerning as hysterical TV news people made it but we didn't know this a week ago.
​

The coughing, maskless crowds remind me of Starbucks employees who have to put up with thoughtless customers. Some folks are willing to endanger others trying to make a bizarre point at some imagined intersection between medicine and politics. The employees (the artists and gallery owners) have to put up with the manner-less potential customers. I wasn't at many collector previews? But the word was that people were more polite and masked. Keep in mind. Most of the gallery people were masked but not all the fair employees were nor were the majority of fair attendees.

Most fairs made no effort whatsoever to enforce masks. Three of seven even asked for proof of vaccination and only one enforced masks, at least when I was there. There were a lot of reports talking about vaccination cards and enforced masks but ALL of those people went to previews, not the actual fairs. I am not knocking them for this. You cannot write a preview about the fair after it has opened. Even when I went to the previews, mask wearing was, at best, about the same as at a Publix.
Picture
One day they will rule us
SO, what was good at this year's Miami Art Week?

First of all I saw some chickens behind the Ice Palace where NADA was held. I feel unlucky if I go to Miami and don't see wild chickens. Please don't sacrifice them. They are pretty. I literally watched one of the chickens thinking about crossing the road. It stood there. It looked back and forth at the traffic, ultimately deciding; “fuck it, I don’t really need to get to the other side.”

Not long before this, on the same busy street, I watched a young woman cross, against the lights, with cars coming from both directions. She never looked up from her cell phone. One day the chicken will be the dominant species.

Nada, as always, was a fun and interesting fair. Read more of my non ranting thoughts HERE.

Favorites from various fairs

Next, the scaled down nature of this week was a plus. Art Basel 2021 seemed less massive. There were less modern or impressionist masters, which belong ina museum, on display.   As a result there was more top shelf contemporary art on hand. The fair itself even seemed less frantic. Perhaps it was having two collectors days early. If so , maybe that innovation should be kept in place.

There were no ridiculous publicity stunts that received wide coverage. In fact the things that WERE for publicity were fascinating and even for good causes. You could call THIS a publicity stunt but it is also just plain cool.  The linked piece is from the Miami Herald and it is a wonderful story that happened at Art Miami. I did two pieces on Art Miami (one, two).


Then there were Untitled and Ink Miami which were both as good, if not better than usual. 

Untitled held its opening the day before the other fairs which was smart. They were the only game in town and it gave people, gawkers and collectors, a chance to look at their leisure without worrying about getting to the next fair. All of that would have been for nothing if they hadn't had one of, if not the best, collections of art in the entire week. I did three pieces (one, two, three) on the show. It could have been more than that but some photos didn't come out. Untitled also wins in the category of set up. Their fair is always set up to avoid crowding and it has wonderful light, not just this year but EVERY year.

​Ink Miami is held at the Dorchester Hotel and is free. They were the best about covid precautions of any fair and they also have the bonus of having pieces that are affordable scattered among the unaffordable (for most of us). You see pieces by Man Ray and then, in the next space, young artists starting out. This is always a fair to attend for quality and manageability.

Certainly there is a great deal that is gross about Art Week in Miami. The usual South Florida money grabs and faux celebrities desperately trying to be seen. The traffic sucks too but let’s be honest; all these things are endemic in South Florida. When was that idyllic time when there was no traffic on I-95? 

The week is a rare opportunity for people who enjoy art and not because you might get a glimpse of a privately held Picasso. It is because you will get to see a significant number of artists who are not yet in museum collections but one day will be.
Picture
The train track I crossed to get to an art show I didn't bother to write about
0 Comments

Art Basel Miami Beach 2021, A Mix Of Modern And Contemporary Art (Part 2)

12/6/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

Every piece shown at Art Basel Miami Beach 2021 was not contemporary. There were Picassos, Miros, Kandinskys and more. I just didn't take photos of them, instead concentrating on more recent art. The point here is, hopefully, to let people know about recent artists or even artists from the past that are less familiar.

I didn't IGNORE the historical!

Jean-Paul Riopelle's  Le puits hanté (1957) shown by Galerie Thomas (Munich) is an example of the artist's (fairly) early move into abstract.  He is a Canadian artist born in Montreal.  He was one of the principle proponents of Refus global, a manifesto that rejected academic training in art. It also rejected religion and was strongly anti-establishment. He traveled to Paris as part of a fellowship from the Canadian government.

His early work is associated with the Surrealists but the piece below was created well after his ongoing movement into abstraction. He lived with American Artist Joan Mitchell for some time. You can find out more about him at the Guggenheim Museum site. He stopped painting in 1992 and passed away in 2002.

​Elizabeth Glaessner's  Blue Recluse (2021) was shown by PPOW (New York). She is a California-born artist who lives in New York City. PPOW has, for years, represented a fascinating and diverse group of artists. Find out more at  elizabethglaessner.com.

Picture
Le puits hanté (1957) by Jean -Paul Riopelle's
Picture
Blair Thurman's Whip Stocking 2021 and Donna Huanca's  Espejo Alborotado (2021) were shown by Peres Projects (Berlin). I am not 100 percent sure of the title of Huanca's piece.

Yinka Shonibare's Moving Up is an installation representing the Great Migration--when millions of African-Americans moved from the rural South to the North and Midwest. The Great Migration changed America in fundamental ways. Shonibare is from, and currently lives, in London.

Ed and Nancy Kienholz The Grey Window Becoming  shown by Templon (Paris). Before 1972 Ed worked alone. After 1972 all the pieces were collaborative. Their work is always thought provoking and there is something charming about them doing it together. Regardless of marital status, artistic collaboration breathes new life into the process.

​
Check out the work Andy Warhol did with Basquiat (in my opinion these rejuvenated Warhol, you can quibble about how much he contributed, of course).

Whip Stocking (2021) by Blair Thurman & Espejo Alborotado by Donna Huanca

Picture
Moving Up an installation by Yinka Shonibare
Picture
The Grey Window Becoming by Ed & Nancy Keinholz
Hayv Kahraman's IV, was shown by Jack Shainman Gallery (New York).  She is a painter, sculptor and performance artist. To me? This was the best painting at Art Basel this year. Period. Fight with me if you wish.

Her work is about the people regarded as "others." Immigrants, in particular. In America every generation of immigrants faces a unique, directed form of discrimination and dehumanization. This simple fact makes lots of white folks uncomfortable. Let me say, as an old white guy; fuck them.

This is the sort of art we need for the people coming to our country NOW. I know it won't help but maybe it makes people think. 

Forget for a moment the philosophy, the intent of the artist and look at the painting. There is an almost Dali-like precision there. It seems like every brush stroke has its own purpose and life. This is an artist who matters and will matter more as time goes on. Collectors should be throwing money at this gallery (and I rarely make such predictions).
​
Find out more at hayvkahraman.com.

Sam Falls' Riverside is a lovely piece of work but I may damn with faint praise in this context. Many people with different world views and views of art might actually like this glazed ceramic, mounted on  cement board with a brass border piece better. It is beautiful and unencumbered with philosophical meaning and that has its place. The world needs pure beauty.
Picture
IV by Hayv Kahraman
At the end of the last post featuring art, it may seem these artists are being "stuffed in." The reason is actually that these pieces are too memorable to leave out. One is a top three piece from the entire week. 

Let's start with that impressive piece, from the bottom up; Tiwani Contemporary (London) showed Tupac y Tupac, Time lords of the Andes. Or, a failed Fitzcarraldo  (2021)  by Umar Rashid .  Rashid's work always has the best titles and it is always nice to see colonialists being impaled at a fancy art fair (figuratively, of course). The artist is from Chicago and currently lives in Los Angeles.

Double Head with Blue Paintings by Mark Manders, was shown by Tanya Bonakdar Gallery (New York City). The piece is painted bronze, painted canvas, painted wood, wood and iron.

The remaining pieces are:

Morris, Gainesborough, Turner, Riley (2021) by Grayson Perry shown by Victoria Miro (New York ).

Pastoral Scene (2021) by ​Barthélémy Toguo shown by Galerie Lelong & Company (New York, Paris).

​Found Wanting by Christina Forrer shown by Luhring Augustine (New York).

Morris, Gainesborough, Turner, Riley (2021) by Grayson Perry,Pastoral Scene (2021) by ​Barthélémy Toguo &
​Found Wanting by Christina Forrer 

Double Head with Blue Paintings by Mark Manders 

Picture
Tupac y Tupac, Time lords of the Andes. Or, Tupac y Tupac, Time lords of the Andes. Or, a failed Fitzcarraldo (2021) by Umar Rashid
0 Comments

Art Basel Miami Beach 2021, Dialed Down, More Manageable And The Best Show For Casual Visitors In Years (Part 1)

12/5/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

Were there more contemporary artists at Art Basel Miami Beach 2021 or were these artists just more noticeable because there were fewer galleries packed with Picassos, Kandinskys etcetera? 

It is difficult to quantify but nonetheless the contemporary artists stood out. It also may be partly because this edition of Art Basel seemed scaled down, more manageable for the casual art fan, not looking for "investments" or something to impress the neighbors in the Hamptons.

I'm not disrespecting the notion of trying to impress the neighbors. I try to impress mine by shooting out street lights with a shotgun. Different  sorts of neighbors I suppose.


Afriart (Kampala) was one of the first galleries to catch my eye, with the joyful, ecstatic work of Sungi Mlengeya. One of the most common apologies on this website is  "the photos  do not do the work justice." It is true here even more so than usual.  You can see better images  on the gallery website linked above. Even those do not capture this series.

Mlengeya is a Tanzanian painter whose portraits are a celebration of the women who surround her.  If you can look at these works and not feel better about the universe? I am not entirely sure I want to know you. The composition too is intriguing. I couldn't help but notice that she often uses white in the way other artists use black, it is a background. Black is what matters in these paintings from a compositional standpoint.

In addition to the gallery website you can learn more about the artist at
sungimlengeya.com.

Rele (Lagos, Los Angeles) showed work by Marcellina Akpojotor. She works with a more colorful palette and employs collage in her work. She is featured on the gallery website as well.  The gallery link is to her show, Daughters of Esan.  Akpojotor's father was her introduction to art which she followed by studying at  Lagos State Polytechnic. She uses discarded fabric from fashion houses which calls to mind an earlier story from Art Basel on the Gee's Bend Quiltmakers. 

​You can find out more at
marcellinaakpojotor.com.

Picture

by Sungi Mlengeya

An oak trees landscape by Shota Nakamura was shown by Peres Projects (Berlin). Nakamura was born in Japan and now lives in Berlin.  He is a graduate of Musashino Art University (Japan).  This piece is a landscape with a figure but there are other pieces that are more abstract and others that are more focused on the figure. Bright colors and geometric shapes seem common in his work. You can find out more about the artist at  shotanakamura.com.

James Castle is what was once referred to as a "folk artist"  or, more recently, an "outsider artist." And this often means someone who labored in obscurity on their art, then was "discovered" after their death.  Castle was from Idaho , was deaf and never ventured far from where he was born.

It is hard to imagine his work being welcomed in the world of fine art while he was alive. It is impossible to imagine him walking into a gallery in New York or San Francisco with these pieces during his lifetime and being welcomed.  But after his death he has been shown worldwide and his residence is a cultural center and sponsors "artist in residence" programs. 

I always cringe a little when I read stories like them, and I read them a lot. On the one hand? It is nice what he did with his life is being remembered. On the other hand? There are James Castles a plenty out there right now being scoffed at by people who curate shows of "outsider art" for sale. There are some who consider anyone without an MFA an outsider.

These pieces were shown as part of Art Basel's Kabinett sector; this  is entirely appropriate, of course.
​
Picture
An oak trees landscape (2021) by Shota Nakamura
Picture

Works by James Castle (Art Basel Kabinett Sector)

Soshiro Matsubara' shown by Union Pacific (London). Haunting and almost all varieties of green, the painting is transfixing. I did also wonder, briefly, why a gallery in England was called "Union Pacific '' but I didn't think to ask until I was halfway across the show.

Walter Price's Who can see forever on a clear day, was shown by The Modern Institute/Tony Webster Ltd. You can see more from the artist HERE. The piece is acrylic, enamel, photo collage, clothespins, various glues and staples on wood.
Picture
Picture
Who can see forever on a clear day (2021) by Walter Price.
Sean Landers' Fox  (2021) was shown by Taka Ishii (Tokyo). The piece is oil on linen.

Guilleromo Kuitca's Idea de una pasion (1992) was shown by Sperone Westwater (New York). The painting is acrylic on canvas.

​Chantal Joffe's Jessica (2012) was shown by Cheim & Reid (New York). The work is oi on linen.

You will notice these three paintings (which you can enlarge by clicking) are from the past 30 years. The majority of these paintings, even those not dated, are from recent years.

All are artists worth discovering. 

Fox, Idea de una pasion and Jessica

0 Comments

Art Miami 2021 Interesting And Sometimes Spectacular Contemporary Artists (Part 2)

12/4/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

Art Miami 2021 did have some interesting and sometimes spectacular pieces.

​Imperial Love by Alexi Torres falls into the spectacular category. It is oil on canvas and is 96 x 192 inches (that is 16 by 8 feet for the math challenged). The massive painting was shown by Contessa Gallery ( Palm Beach, Cleveland).

It was impossible to get a shot of the painting without people in front of it but you can see more of the Cuban-born artist's work HERE.​

Picture
Gabrielle Graessle 's Hu hott (below) was shown by Yusto/Giner (Marbella, Madrid). Graessle is a Swiss artist and you might expect, her works are known for their use of color. They tend to be cheery and fantastical.

Below Hu Hott (forgive the missing umlat)  is Donald Sultan's Mimosa, August 28, 2021 shown by Jerald Melberg Gallery (Charlotte). Read an old interview with Melberg HERE. This piece is graphite, charcoal and conte (basically compressed powdered graphite/charcoal and clay). 
Picture
Hu hott
Picture
Mimosa, August 28, 2021
0 Comments

Art Miami/Context Lots Of 8th Generation Pop Art, Significant Masters And A Smattering of Interesting Contemporary Artists

12/4/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

There sure is a great deal of 8th generation pop art out there. Likewise a bizarre amount of imitation of art that, it is highly likely, was intended as a joke. 

Money talks so someone must have bought the garbage for it to be imitated. 

The perfect antidote for garbage art is Cernude Arte (Coral Gables). They show Cuban artists from masters to contemporary artists.  This year, as always, they showed a who's who of Cuban artists going back decades. The two pieces here by Mariano Rodriguez and Demi come from 1944 and 1987 respectively. The choice of these photos was random and more based on the fact that Mapanare has run innumerable pieces on Cernuda (type their name into the search section on the site). These artists seemed under represented.

La Finca is oil on wood and was part of a solo show by the artist in 1944 at the Lyceum in Havana. In the same year his work was shown as part of a group show , Modern Cuban Painters, at MOCA (NYC).  The piece, like many Cuban paintings of the era, has a strong influence from the Paris school but there are twists on that theme. Cuban iconography abounds in the work. His work also has a strong Mexican influence. Find out more HERE. 

Demi was born in Cuba, then as a youngster she moved to Puerto Rico. Nine years later she came to the mainland United States. There is obviously a mix of abstraction and the figurative in her work which often relates to children. There are odd juxtapositions but they don't seem to be unsettling. They are more like the imaginings of a child. Find out more HERE. 

Below the Cernuda works are paintings by Lou Ros shown by Robert Fontaine Gallery (Palm Beach). These two pieces were tucked right by the passage between Art Miami and Context and are easy to walk past. Stop and have a look if you go to the last day. 

When you read about the French painter, he lives in Paris, you will see the words "figurative expressionist" and "abstract" quite a bit. While these are certainly expressionist (at least in the basic definition of the word) they are representational and lovely little pieces.​

Picture
La Finca by Mariano Rodriguez
Picture
Liquid Life by Demi
Picture
First Haircut by Demi

Golden Tailed and Plum Throated by Lou Ros

Julio Larraz is a Cuban-born artist and these pieces were shown by Duque Arango Galleria (Medellin). Larraz began his art career as a cartoonist and caricature artists using his middle name, Fernandez.  He is a painter, draftsman and sculptor. He is  one of the most prominent living Latin American artists.

His father was a journalist who was imprisoned by one of the pre-Castro regimes and was owner/editor of the newspaper, La Discusion. When Castro came to power freedom of the press ended and the family, ultimately, came to the United States.  You can find out and see more at  juliolarraz.com.
Picture
The king of diamonds by Julio Larraz
Picture
The scout near Har Kardem by Julio Larraz
Louis K Meisel Gallery (New York)  showed Montauk Sail and Keep Palm + Carry On by Susan P. Meisel. The gallery is best know for representing and championing some of the great photo realist painters of the 1970s and beyond. These are , of course, not that. These are bright, fun paintings by half of the Meisel gallery's team. She is also a photographer and sells high end real estate. I hope the real estate is her HOBBY because her paintings are lovely.

There is a hint of Carribbean art here but it isn't anything derivative. There is something quite "New York" about it even with the palm trees. You are allowed to create fun art. Not everything has to be a pile of skulls.

Montauk Sail and Keep Palm + Carry On By Susan P. Meisel

Picture
"G-sim"  Seyeon  was shown  by Galerie Bhak (Seoul). This piece is acrylic on canvas.  The brushwork is complicated and perhaps the concept is too. Is it an explosion or a bouquet of flowers? It has elements of both doesn't it? It likely has nothing to do with one of these things but it is truly a striking painting.

Below Seyeon's explosive work are paintings by women painters whose work comes from an era when women artists were dismissed. Which , it is sad to say, wasn't all that long ago.

​Tabletop Still Life by Mercedes Matter (left) was shown by Dean Borghi Fine Art (New York).  This piece is oil on canvas board and is from 1940. Matter was an American artist, born in Philadelphia, in an artistic family (her dad was Arthur B. Carles). She studied with a who's who of American modern painters, including Hans Hoffmann. She assisted Fernand Léger with his well-known WPA funded murals. She taught at NYU and Pratt and was also a writer. Yet, somehow her work was, and is, less well-known that some of her male contemporaries.  Her art is of similar quality to some of her teachers, including the one mentioned above (which is high praise). Find out more HERE.

Sin titulo (Aves) by Sofia Bassi was shown by Pablo Goebel Fine Arts (Mexico City).  The painting is oil on masonite. "Sin titulo," of course, means "untitled." Bassi was a Mexican surrealist painter, born in 1913 in Veracruz.  She didn't start painting until the mid 1960s and was self taught. Look at her work and marvel at that. The technique is impressive, refined.

She also murdered her son-in-law.

​There is some indication he may have had it coming.  Find out more about the non-art part of this HERE.  There are better sources but none that could be found readily online in English.​ This version is garbled and seems to be a poor translation of something but the idea general story comes through.
Picture

"Sin Titulo (Aves) by Sofia Bassi & "Tabletop Still Life" by Mercedes Matter   

0 Comments

NADA Miami 2021 Showed Work By A Plethora Of Artists From Galleries All Over The World, With Nary A "Mr Brainwash" Influenced Piece In Sight

12/3/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle
(Yes, Im so tired I collapsed into first person)


Once I told a friend that NADA Miami was a fair where a significant percentage of the art looked like a school project. They thought this was an insult. It was, in fact, a compliment.

The comment referred not to a middle school project but an MFA project. There are no copies of copies of copies of bad pop art at NADA or if there are I didn't see it (nary a whiff of reverence for "Mr Brainwash"). There is art that is high concept, that has humor, that is technically brilliant, that is poignant and there are even some pieces that have all of these things.  This description also doesn't come close to covering all the variation at Nada, this year and every year.  This year may be one of the best editions in Miami.

The photos here are somewhat random. There was a great deal to see, even though the fair isn't massive.  80m2 Livia Benavides (Peru) showed the piece immediately below. I tried to find the name of the artist and the piece but was unsuccessful (I forgot it). If only there was some sort of implement where you could write things down to remember such information.

I can tell you that Raster (Warsaw) showed Skinformer, the second image below, and that it was created by Aneta Grzeszykowska. 

It is constructed of leather and wood.

It is unsurprising to find out that her work is held in the collections of the Guggenheim Museum, Pompidou Center, Hammer Museum and Fotomuseum Winterthur (she is  a photographer). In 2005 Grzeszykowska showed a collection of family photos with her own image removed from all the pictures. She lives in Warsaw.

Picture
Shown by 80m2 Livia Benavides

Skinformer by Aneta Grzeszykowska

Sorry We're Closed (Brussels) deserves mention for their name alone. I have an image of people heading to a showing at the gallery, getting there and saying "Damn, they're closed." Of course in Belgium they would likely say this in French, Dutch or German.

Fortunately there was no need to include them for the name alone.  They had some lovely pieces including these two mischievous sculptures. Obviously there is something totemic here and I want to belong to the culture that erects such totems. The artist is Eric Croes and he is another artist bridging the gap between fine art and crafts. In fact the bridge is getting so big there is barely any reason to make any distinction.

​Artists like Croes are the reason. 

Folks who love art owe artists like him a debt and this is written without an ounce of irony and no tongue in cheek.
Picture
by Eric Croes
Misako & Rosen (Tokyo) showed work by Brazilian artist, Tiago Carneiro da Cunha.  Sometimes when you look at a large amount of art your prejudices show. I am conscious of this so I look for work outside those I gravitate to. Carneiro Da Cunha's paintings, however, conform to what I love. I cannot always define it but part of it is certainly the juxtaposition of bright color with darkness, the expressive brush work and the fact each composition uses enough paint to cover a house.

These are paintings you cannot take your eyes off. 

By Tiago Carneiro da Cunha

Picture
Picture
Picture

Aleksandra Waliszewska (top) & Marta Nadolle (below)

​If NADA is any indication Poland has some good things happening. Leto (Warsaw) showed work by Aleksandra Waliszewska an Marta Nadolle. The top piece is another of the blendings of fine art and craft. Basically it is a rug. It also is one of the most striking pieces at this fair (or any of the fairs). The photo doesn't do it justice.

Nadolle's pieces (and not just the one above) made me wonder if I was supposed to be amused or concerned when I looked at the character. The info in the booth said all these are events from the artist's life.

We've all had nights like that.

The booth didn't have information on precisely what medium or technique was used in either piece so a trip to the linked gallery page may be in order if you want to find out more.
Picture
Shown by Towards Gallery (Toronto)
Picture
Constant Gardener by Dale Lewis
The last two samples from NADA Miami 2021 (but certainly not the least) include a tapestry shown by Towards Gallery (Toronto) and one of a series of paintings by Dale Lewis shown by Edel Assanti (London).

The former is one of a series of tapestries made with various techniques and materials at a number of fairs. Some, like this one,  tell a story. I confess to not knowing what that story is but I want to. Getting someone viewing your work to think about it and wonder what is behind it? Means something. 

Guess what? This is also part of that crossing the boundary from craft to art, the very same border I've suggested barely exists.

Lewis's works, as a series, are among the best GROUP of paintings I've seen. They represent various public liaisons and I am not sure I've ever seen this represented in a similar fashion. There is nothing dark or seedy about the paintings. They are bright. They are joyful. They are a celebration. They made me want to go get a blow job in the park.

The paintings are also large. This one is  78 3/4 x 66 7/8 inches and the others are all of similar size. He uses a mix of acrylic and oil.
0 Comments

Design Miami 2021, The Fair That Focuses On The Functional

12/2/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

It is redundant to write that Design Miami 2021 is dedicated to ...design... but a mention of it being the only fair during Miami Art Week totally dedicated to design is difficult to avoid.  

This  merits discussion.

Many fairs will have furniture as art or textiles. In most cases, however, these are non-functional versions of those items. Design Miami is much more about the functional--although not totally so as you will note from the photos below. It is a unique fair and if you are attending a number of the fine art focused fairs it can be a bit of a visual palate cleanser.

Side Gallery (Barcelona) showed work by Czech designer, ​Tadeas Podracky. Podracky is an experimental designer whose work from The Metamorphosis series is below. In addition to Design Miami, he has been shown at FOG San Francisco, Maison et Objet Paris, Mudac Museum Lausanne, Designblok Prague,  Salone del Mobile Milano, London Design Festival and Dutch Design Week. This is in addition to a number of prestigious residencies.

Find out more  at tadeaspodracky.com.

Also below is the booth from Objective Gallery (New York, Shanghai). You will be rewarded by checking out their Instagram page. The Twist Column Lights that bookend the booth manage to be both elegant and powerful.

Pieces from The Metamorphasis by Tadeas Podracky

Picture
Jason Jacques Gallery (New York) 's booth with its Nick Weddell pieces and dome will probably be the booth the average visitor will most readily recall. Some of Weddell's whimsical textile pieces are also below. He is a native of Austin Texas. His pieces mix the absurd with the unsettling with a dash of the primitive (in the literal meaning of the word, not the "art" one).
Picture

by Nick Weddell

The two function, lovely pieces below were shown by Twenty First Gallery (New York).  These two pieces  sat across from each other in the booth and are quite the juxtaposition--smooth, elegant and obviously man-made next to what appears a crumpled rock wall.

Below those are photos of the Moderne Gallery (Philadelphia) booth and a piece shown by R & Company Gallery (New York). 

​Design Miami Runs from December 1 to 5, 2021.

Shown by Twenty First Gallery (New York)

Picture
Moderne Gallery (Philadelphia) booth
Picture
Shown by R & Company Gallery (New York)
0 Comments

IFPDA Ink Miami 2021 Dedicated To Printed Art, A Small Fair With Substance, You Will Find Young Artists Mixed In With Man Ray  & George Braques

12/1/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

IFPDA Ink Miami 2021, at the Dorchester Hotel ( Miami Beach)  is always a fair with substance and diversity. There are print artists who also work as painters. There are world renowned artists sharing wall space with little known young artists. You will also see a smattering of the likes of George Braque and Man Ray tossed in for measure. There are not many photos here and that is because MANY of the pieces in the fair are behind glass and in this context that makes them difficult to photograph. This is just a sampling of work that you can see online where you register for tickets (Ink is free but you need to register for tickets in advance). The fair closes at 3 p.m. Sunday December 5.

One of the most impressive pieces at ANY fair in 2021 is Donald Teskey's Pharos, a carborundum print of significant size shown by Stoney Road Press (Dublin). If you didn't know better you would not think this piece was a print. It seems more like a painting.

David O’Donoghue, co-founder of the fine art press, says that these massive sized prints were a project conceived during the pandemic. See? Some good came of this mess!.  O’Donoghue says that the process to create these prints is physically and mentally taxing and therefore when they work on them they only do it two days a week.  When you see this , and you should , you will see how  thick the result is.

It is magnificent work that is in an edition of 40 costing $9750.

Picture
Pharos by Donald Teskey
Tandem Press (Madison, WI), like Stoney Road Press, takes up two rooms at this year's fair. Paula Panczenko, of Tandem says that for the past few years the press has been working with new artists but fortunately not TOO new.

"The really interesting thing is we'd begun to work on projects with all these people and Covid hit but because we worked with them before we were able to do things on Zoom and by phone or through the mail," she says. "They are very familiar with our printers and studio. We didn't bring anyone in but they'd been to Tandem so they knew what was possible. We'd do the proofing and send things to them. It worked out well. It wouldn't have been possible to do that with a new artist."

Work by Alison Saar is always unique and unmistakable. Below are two of the pieces shown at the fair--Congolese Resistance (2021) and Wrath of Topsy (2021). As you will notice these are not typical "prints." The former is screen print and acrylic spray paint on an aluminum tin. The latter is screen print on found cotton and seed sacks with sewn edges and grommets.

Congolese Resistance & Wrath of Topsy by Alison Saar

Flying Horse Editions (Orlando) showed work by Lavar Munroe Beware of the Dog IX, VII and II. They've shown this series before but we always write about them. Probably for the same reason they bring them to the fair; they are interesting. The pieces are mixed media on a three color lithograph on Arches  En Tout Cas. This is a paper that has a rough side and a fine side.
Picture
Beware of the Dog IX, VII and II by Lavar Munroe
GraphicStudio (Tampa) showed work by Mark Dion. This piece, Chart 35, Anatomy of Global Warming, is part of a series of similar pieces and is a screen print on book cloth in an edition of 20. They had a number of other great work, as all these galleries do, including an atypical piece by Alex Katz.
Picture
This piece by Louis Lozowick is close to actual size and was shown by Susan Teller Gallery (New York).  Lozowick was a Russian-American painter and printmaker. He was a friend of Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and El Lissitsky. Many of his pieces were more geometrical than this, which sells for $400. It is a small piece by an important artist and a piece of history.
Picture
0 Comments

IFPDA Ink Miami 2021 Starts At Today, December 1, at Dorchester Hotel (Miami Beach)

12/1/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
IFPDA Ink Miami opens today at 10 a.m. December 1, 2021 at the Dorchester Hotel (1849 James Ave., Miami Beach). Ink Miami is a small, manageable fair that focuses on prints and printmaking (there are some other media tossed in here and there occassionally). Ink Miami is free but you will need to register for tickets.

This year's fair features many of the galleries and university fine arts presses that always grace the fair. Among casual art fans I am often told that this is their favorite fair. Hell, some art collectors have said the same. This may relate to the fact that this is the only fair that focuses on printed works. While you can surely find pieces that are incredibly expensive you will also see work that most can afford.

IFPDA stands for the International Fine Print Dealers Association , in case you were wondering. This year's list of exhibitors can be found HERE, along with other information on attending the fair. This link also includes the virtual version of the fair if you are unable to attend (or are not currently in South Florida).

0 Comments

Scope Miami Beach 2021, An Eclectic Mix, At One Of Miami Art Week's Lynchpin Shows

11/30/2021

0 Comments

 
Picture
by Patrick Ogle

Scope Miami Beach 2021
had some new galleries and some that have shown there for years. The show is a lynchpin of Art Week.


Katharine Story works out of Laguna Beach, California bridging the gap between couture and fine art. The pieces in the middle of her booth are clothing to be sure but they are not to be worn but displayed (for one you'd likely need to be nine feet tall to wear them). The clothes around the sides are the wearing kind of clothing. A single example of her work is below the group shot.

Her art, and this is art, is unique. Not all that long ago textiles were not considered fine art. Tattoo artists and graffiti artists were derided. Now they are embraced and shown alongside painting, sculpture. Just because something is functional doesn't mean it isn't art.

Picture
by Katharine Story
Picture
by Katharine Story
Rizomiarte (Parma) showed these tapestries by Tomaso Buldini. The artist is a painter and video artist who works and lives in Bologna. Find out more about the artist and his technique at tommasobuldini.com.
Robot Love Art calls Melbourne, Florida home. Yet, the sign above their booth said "Space Coast." Artist, James Meagher said that the reason for this was that they'd tired of explaining that it was Melbourne Florida rather than Melbourne, Australia (presumably they were also tired of all the "shrimp on the barbie" comments as well).

The first image is work from a recent group exhibition by Orlando, based artist, Clifton Chandler.

The flowered pieces below are by Meagherr and are both made of repurposed skateboard decks. The one that looks less like a skateboard, Morphos on Daisies, sells for $500. These pieces are beautiful.

Find out more at robotloveart.com.
Picture
Roberta De Mutiis' work, shown by Arte Globale (London) is as if ancient cultures had embraced the CoBrA School. You can see more pieces , including others on display at Scope, at the gallery website. There is something both whimsical and scary about the work.
Picture
by Roberta De Mutiis
The Contemporary Art Modern Project (Miami/Westport) and Parlor Gallery both represent artists that may be interviewed soon on this site. 

The former showed
Idris Habib's Chinua. The subtlety he represents black skin and black features is subtle and masterful. He is an artist whose work you can recognize from across the room, like (but obviously different from) Kandinsky or Picasso. He is unique.


Moses Zibor's piece, also shown by The Contemporayr Art Modern Project, captures the attention partly with the theme. What is going on here? Any painting that can make you ask that question is already a success.

Porkchop's work was shown by Parlor Gallery (Asbury Park). When you first see it you may also ask yourself a question; is this what would happen if the Pope formed a black metal band? (a development that should be encouraged). If an interview ever comes to pass? This may be the first question.


Chinua by Idris Habib & Up by Moses Zibor

Picture
by Porkchop
Picture
Parlor's booth
0 Comments
<<Previous

    ART Stuff

    Galleries, shows and more on ART. Part of the aim of this is to "demystify" art. You are allowed to enjoy art even if you weren't an art major in college.

    Categories

    All
    Art Basel 2010
    Art Basel 2011
    Art Basel 2012
    Art Basel 2013
    Art Basel 2013
    Art Basel 2013 Previews
    Art Basel 2014
    Art Basel 2015
    Art Basel 2016
    Art Basel 2017
    Art Basel 2018
    Art Business
    Art Chicago
    Art Chicago/Next 2011
    Artist Resources
    Art Miami 2011
    Art Miami NY 2015
    Art Prizes
    Art Publications
    Art Shows
    Art Week Miami 2013 Previews
    Book Launch
    C2e2 2011
    Crowdfunding
    Design
    Digital Media
    Education
    Exhibition
    Exhibits
    Expo Chicago 2012
    Expo Chicago 2013
    Expo Chicago 2014
    Expo Chicago 2015
    Expo-chicago-2016
    Expo-chicago-2017
    Expo Chicago 2018
    Expo Chicago 2019
    Fashion
    Films
    For Sale
    Fundraiser
    Jewelry
    Lecture
    Mapanare Events
    Miami Art Week 2017
    Miami Art Week 2018
    Miami Art Week 2019
    Miami Art Week 2021
    Miami Art Week 2022
    Misc
    Music
    News
    Opeings
    Opening
    Openings
    Party
    Performance
    Philadelphia Fine Art Fair 2019
    Photography
    Previews Miami Art Week 2019
    Prints
    Public Art
    Screenings
    Shows
    Sofa Chicago 2013
    Video

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    December 2022
    November 2022
    April 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    June 2021
    March 2021
    July 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010