Saturday, April 17, 2010

A Week of Art in Austin

You may be asking, “Isn’t every week in Austin a ‘week of art’?” Well, this week is of particular significance as Art Alliance Austin holds Art Week Austin. The AWA schedule includes over 700 public displays, multiple community events and lectures and forums; culminating with Art City Austin, an Austin-style celebration of art and culture on the 24th and 25th.

The action really gets going tonight with David Ellis Live at Co-Lab, and on Sunday testsite presents the opening reception for Maison Erectheum. Also, Dan Cameron, founder of the not-for-profit U.S. Biennial, Inc., and artistic director of Prospect New Orleans, will be giving a series of Art Talks discussing current trends in contemporary art and his selection process. There’re docent-led Public Art Bike Tours departing from Mellow Johnny’s, as well as events at AMoA on Saturday and Sunday. Plus, Fusebox, Mindpop! Action Summit, and Pecha Kucha night are all happening this week in conjunction with AWA. And while you’re out there getting involved in all of AWA’s 700 plus programs, make sure you participate in the 2nd Street District Installation “One swallow doesn’t make a summer”, addressing the City’s development concerns and featuring the work of one of our favorite Austin photographer’s Barry Stone.

This is going to be a huge event, focused intently on your favorite city. So scour through that schedule for your must-sees, or just pop into your favorite gallery and check out what’s happening. And don’t forget the ACP event on Friday at Caffé Medici. See you then!

FotoFest: Part II

We haven’t quite had enough of FotoFest just yet, so ACP ventured down to Houston again last weekend for some exciting Contemporary U.S. Photography, as well as the Richard Misrach lecture. The weather was lovely, the venues were astounding, the lecture was educational and the city was welcoming.

Our first stop was at 2101 Winter St. to see the highly recommended FotoFest headliner, The Road to Nowhere? curated by Natasha Egan, Associate Director and Curator, Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago. Egan describes this show as “address(ing) a repertoire of diverse but related themes including politics, surveillance, race, war, and economic insecurity. While the work is oftentimes critical, a quintessentially American optimism is evident.” Egan did a terrific job in selecting artists for this show, which somehow filled the massive complex that is Winter Street Studios: an old furniture factory that now houses 75 studios over its two enormous floors.

Eirik Johnson

While there were over 20 artists in the exhibition, a handful stood out in my mind as having a particularly beautiful sensibility and consistency while addressing the show’s theme. Eirik Johnson’s series Sawdust Mountain is based on the Oregon wilderness and the poverty that plagues this naturally beautiful and visually rich area. Johnson uses a large format camera to make interesting, yet simple compositions of the frontier. His prints are nice and large, enough so that all of the information he records is easily readable. Take a look here to see the entire series and more projects from Eirik Johnson.

An-My Lé

An-My Lé is another photographer whose work stood out from the pack at The Road to Nowhere?. Lé has been featured on Art21 and has shown photographs from her series Small Wars at many esteemed institutions such as the Museum of Contemporary Photography. The aesthetics of her photographs convey the notion of the human footprint within the larger scope of the environment, as the large-scale of her prints often depict warfare as a toy-like game. This image in particular, 29 Palms: Mechanized Assault, looks more like a detailed drawing than a photograph when viewed from any further than a couple of feet. Lé has a unique approach to war documentation and the effect of her images is especially sobering.

Victoria Sambunaris

Victoria Sambunaris is the third artist from this exhibition who really stuck with me, partially because we saw her work again later that day. Sambunaris works with a similar approach as that of An-My Lé, but she points her camera at uninhabited areas to emphasis the landscape. Sambunaris’ scenes are stark and expansive, often featuring an interruption from some organic form. The two images above take the conventional landscape as frequently seen in painting and enlarge them to a scale that we almost can’t recognize. As we try to put ourselves into these images, we begin to understand how transient our worldly significance actually is. We later saw Sambunaris’ work at the MFAH for their FotoFest exhibition Ruptures and Discontinuities. More on that below.

After spending hours on Winter Street, we went back to the Menil to see Leaps into the Void: Documents of Nouveau Realist Performance. Ironically, there are no photographs to document our visit, as we didn’t want to get asked to leave in the process of recording the exhibition. However, we can tell you that the exhibit spans all mediums and has a particularly vivid film piece documenting the construction of a large sculpture that was later destroyed as part of the performance. While the prints themselves were merely fast, blurry snapshots serving to record various performances, the show as a whole did a nice job of recreating the Nouveau Realist movement.

The story is pretty similar from the MFAH unfortunately, where cameras are not allowed to open their shutters on the artwork. We arrived early to get a good seat to hear Richard Misrach speak and in the process managed to get a look at the Alice Neel paintings on exhibit in the main gallery. Along the way, we also got a glimpse of a few Frank Stella pieces from the MFAH’s permanent collection, which are casually hung up in a narrow hallway. Apparently, either by mistake or design, not many people knew about Richard Misrach’s lecture, making for an intimate setting inside the MFAH’s pristine theatre. Misrach reviewed work over his career all the way up to his current digital color negatives, showing one beautiful slide after another, all the while tying into the theme of Ruptures and Continuities. One of the interesting events at the MFAH, aside from this lecture of course, was finding the exhibition. Ruptures and Continuities: Photography Made after 1960 from the MFAH Collection, is located through a long underground tunnel, across the street and obscured in one of the hundreds of galleries within the museum, and features almost 200 iconic images from the photographic hall of fame including Lewis Baltz, Bernd and Hilla Becher, William Eggleston, Richard Misrach, Ed Ruscha, Cindy Sherman, and Andy Warhol. Also on display was another of Victoria Sambunaris’ landscapes. There is so much incredible work here, most of which is scattered throughout various canonical textbooks on photography and photo history, to view it all in one place is an absolute treat. Meanwhile, outside of the photography exhibit, there are world famous paintings and sculptures, as well as ancient artifacts. There’s really nothing like the MFAH in Austin. But I, for one, was especially tickled just to be in the presence of an original Eggleston print, but there was so much to look at it was difficult to let it all fully sink in. Ruptures and Continuities is up until May 9th at the Audrey Jones Beck Building and is definitely worthy of a second visit.

All in all, not a bad return visit to the FotoFest Biennial. We sure would like to have included some installation shots from the Menil and MFAH, but if maintaining their incredible collections requires forgoing documentation, then who are we to argue. Please support this amazing, one of a kind festival and treat yourself to an experience, the likes of which may never be rivaled. These museums and galleries are comforting places whose sole purpose is to open their doors to you. So get out there! Carpool, share a room, day trip if you have to, but support FotoFest and support the photographic community, all the while expanding your own knowledge and interests and participating in the larger Arts community.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Abelardo Morell: The Camera Obscura

In this video Abe Morell demonstrates the Camera Obscura right before our eyes.
I'm very much looking forward to hearing him speak about his work and how he decided
to utilize this basic optical phenomenon of which photography so heavily depends.


Thursday, March 25, 2010

Photojournalists, if you're looking to make things happen, keep reading.

June 20-25, 2010, Pulitzer prize-winning photojournalist David Hume Kennerly leads a unique one-week Summer Institute at the Annenberg Center, The University of Southern California.

http://www.kennerlyinstitute.com/

Blending an extraordinary hands-on assignment photography experience with intensive academic inquiry, the Kennerly Institute is tailored for individuals who seek to hone their photojournalistic skills and to become leading edge visual communicators. The Institute encourages participants from the private, public and non-profit sectors who have a wide range of responsibilities and interests, including photojournalists, university fellows, journalism professionals, military photographers, semi-professionals and dedicated amateurs. Participants will be selected on the basis of experience and a personal statement.

Enrollment is limited to maximize one-on-one mentorship and keep ratios small. Apply early to secure a spot. $250 discount for applications received by April 1, 2010.
Select Seminars

* The Top Ten Photos that Changed History
David Hume Kennerly, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photojournalist
Geoffrey Cowan, Director of the Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy

* The Role of Photography in Documenting – and Making History
Jim Gaines, former managing editor, Time, Life, People Magazines

* Relevant Impactful Images in Today’s Media Reality
David Friend, Vanity Fair's editor of creative development

Photography Instruction sessions include:

* Assignment shooting, editing and presentation with Kennerly and a team of award-winning photographers
* The Lost Art of Photo Editing
* Shooting Hollywood
* One-on-one portfolio reviews and mentoring
* New Media & Emerging Technologies seminar
* Creation of a self-published book of images using the most current technology

Select participants will study and work with world-class photographers, political figures, journalists, and new media experts in an intimate setting in Los Angeles, California at the home of the Annenberg Center on Communication Leadership & Policy on the University of Southern California campus.

Richard Mishrach Lecture at the MFAH


In conjunction with FotoFest and Ruptures and Continuities: Photography Made after 1960 from the MFAH Collection the MFAH will host a number of lectures around the subject of photography, beginning with a lecture by Richard Misrach at 6:30 p.m. Friday, March 26. Misrach’s work has changed formally over the years, but his images have consistently played with the fine line between the sublimely beautiful and the desolate and devastated. Stop by for this lecture and see the incredible collection of photography the MFAH is exhibiting.

See the exhibit overview and images here.


Monday, March 22, 2010

FotoFest: Week 1


It really isn't easy to leave Houston this time of year. Only the SXSW activity in Austin over the last few days compares with the excitement down by the gulf. The comtemporary art scene is flourishing in H-town right now, forming the perfect foundation for FotoFest’s theme; U.S. Contemporary Photography. We visited Houston for the opening weekend and are here to tell tales of amazing places and fantastic visions.


(Asha Schechter/Matt Lipps)
Arriving in Houston on a wonderful sunny and 70˚ spring Saturday, we headed straight for the Galleria. The Williams Tower on Post Oak Blvd hosted Assembly: Eight Emerging Photographers from Southern California, an awe inspiring curation from Edward Robinson and Sarah Bay Williams with the Wallis Annenberg Photo Department at LACMA. The eight participating artists include Nicole Belle, Matthew Brandt, Peter Holzhauer, Whitney Hubbs, Matt Lipps, Joey Lehman Morris, Asha Schechter and Augusta Wood. Contemporary photo historian Charlotte Cotton was originally asked to currate this show, at which point she suggested the team from LACMA. The prints here are big and beautiful, some of the largest C-Prints I have ever seen, and all presented differently but wonderfully. Although each artist presented equally amazing work, Matt Lipps’ photo-collages have become some of my favorite contemporary images with their vibrant, saturated colours and confusing use of space. Asha Schechter shares a wing with Lipps and offers a unique take on the materiality and nostalgia we associate with our photographs by imaging the editing process of sorting and stacking prints. Be sure to pick up one of her free newspapers while you’re here too. More about Assembly and LACMA here.


(Luis Mallo)
Next, we headed over to Sicardi Gallery on Richmond Ave to check out Luis Mallo’s series Open Secrets. Mallo pointed his camera at catalogueing and archiving systems to produce a stunning set of C-Prints, most of which span 30 x 39 inches. His shots are all frontal and offer a clear look at the organization and uniformity necessary to keep archives accessible, reverting back to how we organize our own lives and questioning what will seem worth archiving in future generations.

Then, a not-so-quick stop by the Menil to treat ourselves to the surrealist collection and the Maurizio Cattelan work that is on display ( sorry no cameras allowed ). While we didn’t see any photogrpahy on exhibit, Leaps into the Void: Documents of Nouveau Realist Performance was being installed during our visit and will feature both documentation and original works from the Nouveau Réalisme movement as the Menil’s contribution to FotoFest. More to come on this next time.


(Eileen Maxson)
Afterward the Menil, we payed Russel Etchen a visit down the street at Domy Books on Westheimer and looked at Eileen Maxson’s new work Orphans of Failure. Maxson discovered a consistancy in the years 1993 and 2010, which she explores through the creation of a 2010 version of a ‘93 calendar. Using digital media and on-demand production techniques with original and found images, Maxson uses 1993 as an analogue to the current year, depicting an odd rift in American culture and offering up the notion that 1993 is a foreign and distant place. There’s always tons to look at while you’re at a Domy Books, and Orphans of Failure holds its own nicely. Maxson’s sequencing is well executed, while each image carries its own mystique.


(Ben Ruggiero/Anna Krachey)
By this point I was getting hungry and the Austinite in me could just sense a Whole Foods near by. So after a nice snack and refreshing beverage, we found our way over to the Box 13 Art Space on Harrisburg Blvd to enjoy the Panta Rei opening. Panta Rei, Greek for “everything flows” in reference to an ever fluctuating worldly existance, features eleven Austin based photographers dedicated to the progression of the medium. The space at Box 13 was ample enough to hold this juggernaut of contemporary, forward thinking work. Aside from varied framing and camera play, images such as Barry Stone’s Black Cloud have been rotated upside-down and inverted. In the case of Adam Schrieber’s Halliburton Archiving Solutions (II), 1987, a light leak casts a beautiful blue light over the confusing picture plane. Scales change, colors are sometimes altered, framing is often suprising, lighting situations may be unusual but every single image maintains its own confidence and beauty sustained through knowledge and consideration. Although each print is lovely in it own way, Panta Rei is largely successful at controlling how images are read. This is an exhibition on photo fluency beyond all others.

And that was just the opening weekend. We’ll be back next week with more FotoFest action.



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Saturday, March 6, 2010


Elizabeth Chiles @ testsite

ACP’s own Elizabeth Chiles will be showing her work a lot this month. Her solo show, Book of Praise, will open at testsite on Sunday, March 7th from 3-5pm. In the announcement for Book of Praise, Claire Ruud writes:

“Taking compositions found within the landscape as a starting place, Elizabeth Chiles builds syntax out of the formal and affective relationships between darkness and natural light. Her photographs endow light with temporal and spatial presence—a visible presence that nonetheless gestures toward the imperceptible and ineffable. This handling of light transforms the everyday into something to be revered. In this way, the works in Book of Praise become an ode to a presence akin to that of an altar or inspired text, or what may be the aura of the sacred.”

testsite has been a multifaceted advocate of the collaboration between written and visual media since 2003, combining artists from near and far to experiment and freely explore projects in an environment conducive to an intimate conversation. Book of Praise responds to this space by creating an installation that Chiles sees as sacred in its balance and in its feeling of empty expanse.

Elizabeth Chiles is currently a professor of Art History at Texas State University and will be participating in the 2010 FotoFest Biennial, as well as the Texas State School of Fine Arts faculty show this month. Look for more on these events very soon.

testsite is located at 502 West 33rd Street and is open from 2-5pm on Sundays or by appointment.

Read more about testsite here and view Elizabeth Chiles’ work here.