Thursday, December 23, 2010

When I Have Time Off, I Look at Art and Drink.

I recently shook myself free from the shackles of corporate America and enjoyed a week off between my emancipation and the start of an amazing new position. I made some calls, bought some tickets and had an incredible time. Here’s a brief snapshot of what I saw, drank and thought in New York and Dallas.

New York

What I Saw:

John Baldessari: Pure Beauty
Oct. 20, 2010 – Jan. 9, 2011
Metropolitan Museum of Art

The most extensive retrospective to date of Los Angeles-based artist John Baldessari, Pure Beauty is an exceptionally organized show, offering highlights from every decade of the conceptualist artist’s career. His early use of text, photography and film and the underlying theme of “What makes art, art?” has influenced countless contemporary artists, apparent in the works of Cindy Sherman and Jenny Holzer.

Standout Piece:

In 1970, frustrated with the limitations of his previous work, John Baldessari burned pieces he created between 1953 and 1966. “Cremation Project,” as it became to be known, was not only a disavowal of his previous life as a painter and what came of his efforts, but a definitive moment in Baldessari’s transition towards a more hands-off approach in creating art.

Image courtesy of DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel


Pure Beauty was organized by LACMA in association with Tate Modern. It is on view at the MET until Jan. 9, 2011. For more information go here.

What I Drank:

Vodka. And a lot of it. I spent Friday night at a
big gay toys for tots benefit and it was open bar. Enough said.


What I Thought:

“Cremation Project” is a lasting testament to the transition in Baldessari’s career and creative process. Maybe the piece resonated so much because I’m in the process of my own career transition. And who hasn’t wanted to burn it all to the ground before.

Dallas

What I Saw:

The Dallas Museum of Art

My first time to the DMA, I was extremely impressed with the facilities, the diversity of the permanent collection and the breadth of community programming.

For visitor information, go here.

Standout Pieces from Re-Seeing the Contemporary (Oct. 15, 2010 - March 20, 2010):

David Szafranski's “Is it Fear or Desire” and Alan Saret's "Deep Forest Green Dispersion"


Deep Forest Green Dispersion, 1969, Alan Saret, American Galvanized hex netting, painted,Dallas Museum of Art, gift of John Weber


What I Drank:


What didn’t I drink?! Delicious margaritas at an excellent authentic Mexican restaurant, bottle after bottle of assorted red wines (bought in a slightly dream like shopping spree at Costco) and Miller Light. From a bottle and from a keg.

What I Thought:


Texas gets a bad rap.