Friday, October 21, 2011
Thursday, October 13, 2011
I Now Need A Big Yard So I Can Buy This
RICHARD SERRA, Cycle, 2011, Weatherproof steel, 62' x 56' x 14'
Copyright Richard Serra. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery. Photo by Lorenz Kienzle
I consider space to be a material. The articulation of space has come to take precedence over other concerns. I attempt to use sculptural form to make space distinct.
– Richard Serra
Monday, October 3, 2011
A Lot Like Yesterday, A Lot Like Never
Billed as a masterpiece by some (not so much by others) I spent a good portion of last Saturday at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, watching Video and Sound Artist Christian Marclay’s The Clock. With the help of six assistants and almost three years, Marclay was able to create a twenty-four montage of thousands of film and video clips depicting or referencing the precise time of day.
Originally debuting at White Cube, Mason’s Yard last fall, The Clock went on to be screened at Paula Cooper in New York and at this year’s Venice Biennale where it was awarded the Golden Lion. “The Clock has an appeal, as everyone is concerned about time. We never have enough time to do anything,” Marclay told a news crew after his big win in Venice.
The MFA’s debut of The Clock (it co-purchased one of the six copies in existence with the National Gallery of Canada) coincides with the opening of the museum’s new Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art, a $12.5 million refurbishment of the museum’s 1981 west wing, designed originally by noted architect I.M. Pei.
Christian Marclay’s The Clock will be on view at the MFA until October 10. For more information go here.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
The Super Gross Medium Was the Message
But there at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), in the shadow of the mausoleum that Eli Broad built for himself, I couldn’t help but fixate on the materials used to create my temporary bed; a mixture of cement and “liquid that was used to clean corpses in an autopsy room in Mexico – four gruesome fatalities, all products of drug – and gang-related violence.”
The commission, a collaboration between LACMA and the Los Angeles Nomadic Division (LAND), encourages its audience “to feel the overwhelming energy of aggression that produced the infused material,” while existing as both monuments to the dead and a place for the living to rest.
Never before had Marshall McLuhan’s over referenced theory rang so true for me. Although at times I’ve found an artist’s use of certain medium amusing (Hirst with flies, Warhol with his piss), the connection between Margolles, her medium and the lives that those benches represented was overwhelming. How did Margolles come into possession of the liquid? How many lives have been lost to drug related violence in Mexico? Do the victim’s families know that these benches exist; that they are bringing joy and awareness to people a short trip, but a world away, from their hometown? It was a lot to think about before a nap.
Teresa Margolles’ benches will be on display on the Resnick North Lawn at LACMA until August 28, 2011. For more information go here.
Editorial Disclaimer: The author of this post received discounted or complementary admission to the above mentioned exhibition, courtesy of the host institution, organization or gallery.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
A Useful Way to Use All These Bottle Tops. FINALLY!
Organized by the Museum of African Art, New York, When I Last Wrote to You about Africa, showcases Anatsui’s ability to create pieces from a variety of surprising materials that are both beautiful and serve as critiques on modern social and political life in Africa. His bottle top sculptures exist as tapestries, huge shiny, booze stained tapestries. “The liquor bottle tops and labels have something in common with the Ghanain practice of naming textiles. The names given to textiles and drinks reveal a lot about the culture and, at times, the history of a place. The bottle tops were introduced by European traders, and alcohol was one of the commodities they brought with them to exchange for African goods.”

Sacred Moon, 2007, aluminum and copper wire, 103 x 141 inches. Image courtesy of Jack Shainman Gallery.
When I Last Wrote to You about Africa will be on view at the Davis Museum until June 26. For more information, go here. To see more of Anatsui's work, go here.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Steaming Piles of Polyurethane: This is Why I Love Lynda





