Thursday, April 30, 2009

Damien Hirst: Requiem at PinchukArtCentre

Death Explained (2007) by Damien Hirst

The PinchukArtCentre is currently featuring the art of Damien Hirst in an exhibit titled Requiem. The exhibit, considered a major Hirst retrospective, involves over 100 works by Damien Hirst dating from 1990 to 2009. The show brings together many of Hirst’s most renowned works which range from early iconic sculptures such as A Thousand Years (1990) to more recent works such as Death Explained (2007). The exhibit will come to a close on September 20th, 2009. For more information visit, www.pinchukartcentre.org.

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Mark Rothko and J.M.W. Turner exhibit at Tate Britain

The Tate Britain is currently exhibiting works by Mark Rothko and J.M.W. Turner. The exhibit, which is part of the BP British Art Displays, marks the first time that works by the two influential painters have been exhibited side-by-side. The exhibit reveals their similarities as well as their differences. It is always interesting to see the work of two artists from two very different generations exhibited at the same time. Needless to say, the exhibit is a unique experience. The exhibit will come to a close on July 26th, 2009. For more information visit, www.tate.org.uk.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Matthew Barney: Ancient Evenings: Libretto at Barbara Gladstone Gallery in Brussels

Matthew Barney’s ‘Ancient Evenings: Libretto’ (installation view) via Gladstone Gallery

Barbara Gladstone Gallery is currently featuring the art of Matthew Barney. The exhibit, titled ‘Ancient Evenings: Libretto,’ involves a series of drawings from a seven act opera that Barney is developing with composer Jonathan Bepler. The Barney & Bepler collaboration focuses on Norman Mailer’s novel Ancient Evenings-- a novel set in ancient Egypt that chronicles the journey of the dead. Thus, the opera explores the seven stages the soul passes through after bodily death according to Egyptian mythology.

Barney adds a twist by focusing on a 1967 Chrysler Imperial rather than the human body-- Egypt has been replaced by a contemporary industrial setting. The exhibit will come to a close on May 9th, 2009. For more information visit, www.gladstonegallery.com

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Art Blog Search Keywords

I’ve been talking to fellow art bloggers about common keywords that people use to find their blog. Some of them are to be expected, while others are over the top. What can I say… words are powerful.

Some of the common keyword searches for the Myartspace Blog are: myartspace, my art, controversial artists, artist statement examples, controversial art, and appropriation art.

In the last few days the following have been popular: rosenquist fire, appropriate media, artists and the recession, selling art online, birds of a feather flock together, offensive art, shepard fairy copyright infringement, and richard prince lawsuits.

Based on the art bloggers (and a handful of art site maintainers) I’ve spoken with here are some common keyword searches that people find their blog (or art site) with:

Common political, economic, and social art keywords -- Obama art, Clinton art, Bush art, political art, political protest art, McCain art, Congress art, DC art, propaganda art, depression art, economy art, social art, culture art, abortion art, Democrat art, Republican art, political party art, election art, union art, confederate art, apartheid art, war art, terrorist art, global art, state divided art, flag art, Hitler art

Common sex, love, porn, body part, and relationship art keywords -- relationship art, romance art, sex art, feces fetish art, orgy art, foot fetish art, love art, romantic art, bed art, lovely art, sexy art, condom art, birth control art, porn site art, fetish art, prostitute art, cathouse art, penis art, vagina art, group sex art, alt porn art, cock art, xxx art, anal art, boob art, breast art, blowjob art (perhaps due to the book about Andy Warhol), threesome art, cuckhold art, bbw art, sperm art, making babies art, love shack art

Common religious, faith, and healing art keywords -- religion art, faith art, god art, idol art, Muslim art, Christ art, Christian art, healing art, God heals art, God cares art, redemption art, Catholic art, faith based art, pastor art, preacher art, church art, Satan art, Lucifer art, demon art, ghost art, angel art, Moses art, Islam art, Tao art, Hindu art, Buddhist art, savior art

Common technology, new media, science and computer art keywords -- tech art, technology art, computer art, computer based art, new media art, iPod art, digital art, cell phone art, plasma art, dvd art, robot art, robotics art, biotechnology art, video game art, data art, icon art, sound art, tv art, radio art, sprite art, spam art, new media art, holographic art, mathematics art, science art, online art, internet art

Common medical, drugs, and psychology art keywords -- medical art, plague art, medicine art, operation art, swine flu art, hospital art, AIDS art, HIV art, abortion art, bone art, mental art, psychology art, Jung art, Freud art, disturbed art, mental illness art, sanatorium art, sanatorium art, mental hospital art, psych ward art, crazy art, rabies art, dead art, blood art, menstrual art, fertility art, suicide art, medial illustration art, corpse art, cadaver art, death art, virus art, disease art, dead on arrival art, coma art, drug art, meth art, cocaine art, needle art, recreational drugs art, psychedelic art, psycho art, depressed art, addiction art, patient art, marijuana art, mary jane art, smoker art, biology art, burn victim art, fallout victim art, doctor art, nurse art, drug addict art, drug user art

Interesting art keywords search in general -- how to be rich like damien hirst, did jeff koons buy show?, why does banksy do what he does?, banksy is more than one person?, how to be like banksy, how to be like shepard fairey, tracey emin in porn, damien hirst steals, picasso stolen art, how to be a rich artist, how to steal art, how to damage art, where to steal art, how to make art fakes, sell stolen art, cheat artists, art fraud, create fake art, sex art exhibit, is art school worthless?, art students are cheated, how to create art controversy?, how to live with an artist?, stop creating art

It is always interesting to check out the keywords that people use to find my blog-- if you have never done it you should! It can be good for a laugh or simpy to know what your readership is looking for. You would assume that people would find an art blog with searches for popular art news topics and the names of specific artists-- but that is not always the case.

In fact, Dion from Art News Blog recently posted about keywords and mentioned that 'hanging tits' is a common keywords search that people discover his art blog with. Feel free to share common keywords for your art blog. Be sure to include a link to your blog so we can see what all the 'search' is about.

Link of Interest:

Search Art Keywords -- Art News Blog
www.artnewsblog.com/2009/03/search-art-keywords.htm

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Art Space Talk: Dominic Rouse (Part 3)

THE EMPTINESS OF THE LONE & DISTANCED LOVER by Dominic Rouse

This is Part 3 of my interview with Dominic Rouse. To return to Part 2 click, HERE

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

DR: The internet is a wonderful marketing opportunity which I attempt to exploit as much as I can. As I live in a remote part of the world I could not operate effectively without it. It is now an accepted mode of business contact and a wonderfully immediate way in which to get work under the noses of those you think might be interested. Most of my sales and other leads are initiated via internet contact.

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

DR: Last year I shipped an exhibition to the States which was shown at a number of venues and has just finished its initial ‘tour’ with a four month showing at the 21c Museum in Louisville, KY curated by William Morrow, director of the International Contemporary Art Foundation.

‘Haunted by a Painter’s Ghost – Symbolism & Photography in the Digital Age’ is now available as a travelling exhibit aimed at University Museums where I hope it will form an interesting fit with their digital art departments as well as those of art history and mythology.

For those who may be interested www.hauntedbyapaintersghost.com has all the details of the exhibition including installation views, merchandising opportunities and shipping, insurance and rental information.

Beside this I will be exhibiting my work at Verve Gallery of Photography in Santa Fe NM in a joint show with Douglas Ethridge between March 19 and May 8 2010.

TEA DANCE by Dominic Rouse

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

DR: None that I did not already have before. The price of my work is far removed from the dizzy heights where an economic downturn affects me greatly and I am looking to the future with a degree of optimism.

BS: There have been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

DR: Well, I don’t take a newspaper and I don’t watch television so I am not the best person to be discussing current events. However, I do believe that an artist should have the right to benefit from the creation of his work and that laws should be in place that discourage others from using his work for their own financial gain without first seeking his permission.

I was pleased when the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act was passed in UK in 1988 and especially so as the Association of Photographers (of which I was a member) involved itself in the drafting stages, helping to safeguard the rights of photographers to control the use of their work.

All that having been said, my experience of the law is that it is the perverse plaything of the aggressive and that Lady Justice is a woman of easy virtue who is bought and paid for by rich and powerful men and then given, when least needed, to those least deserving of her. So I won’t be placing too much trust in any laws that do exist to protect my work from abuse.

SHULAMIT & MARY by Dominic Rouse

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

DR: My thinking is that now is the time for us artists to be working hard on our marketing efforts so that when the tide does turn and the economy starts to improve we will be in a strong position to take advantage of the opportunities that will inevitably become available to those who are ready and prepared to take them.

It is a frustrating reality of the art world that we need to spend at least as much time on our marketing plans as we do on making our work. I have found that as difficult as it can be to produce worthwhile imagery it is as nothing as compared to finding an audience for that work in the marketplace.

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

DR: To take a piece of paper, coat it with a gelatin in which are suspended a million silver halides and then to allow first light and then chemicals to caress it in such a way that they leave behind an imprint of one's soul is an exquisite joy that no amount of criticism can diminish. I do not have ambition as such, every completed piece is an ambition achieved.




This is the conclusion of my interview with Dominic Rouse. To return to Part 1 of the interview click, HERE

You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews. Feel free to discuss the interview and the art of Dominic Rouse on the myartspace.com Forum-- www.myartspace.com/forum

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Art Space Talk: Dominic Rouse (Part 2)

STRANGE FRUIT by Dominic Rouse

This is Part 2 of my interview with Dominic Rouse. To return to Part 1 click, HERE

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

DR: My work is regularly put into the surrealist bracket which I don’t necessarily agree with. I read an article recently in which I and other photographers producing “imaginative” work were described as The New Symbolists and I am much more comfortable with this designation.


However, I do admire the works of Magritte and Escher and their like and I guess their influence is evident in some of my work. There are occasions when my prints are mistaken for etchings and this I attribute more to their detailed tonal structure rather than the influence of any particular artist.

Perhaps it is literary rather than visual artists that I respond to. My work contains references to Kafka, Larkin, Nietzsche and John Martyn amongst others and their words have often been the starting points for images. Nietzsche particularly provides rich pickings. Strangely perhaps, photographers don’t particularly inspire me though I do appreciate the work of Witkin, Koudelka and the Parke-Harrisons.

DON'T WALK AWAY RENÉ by Dominic Rouse

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?

DR: “When I lie, I am closer to the truth than documentary photography.” is a quote from the Czech photographer Tono Stano which in my view exposes superbly well the dichotomy of the camera. There is a tendency for people to believe the camera’s lies and advertising executives and newspaper editors exploit this delusion remorselessly.


The misguided belief in the veracity of the camera and the almost spiritual obligation placed on its practitioners to use it as a kind of adjunct to the Ten Commandments has, in my view, resulted in clamorous praise for many frankly uninteresting photographs.

A man may point his camera at the atrocities of war and earn the Pulitzer Prize, another may point his camera at sexual intimacy and earn himself a judge’s ire but what is war photography if it is not pornography for the power hungry perverts who demand the right to censor our lives?

That a work of art that is prohibited in a given age becomes in time valued and admired, informs us that the morality of today serves as no useful guide to the morals of tomorrow and further reveals the transient nature of the certainty which moralists of every age so confidently profess. There is no surer sign of ignorance than certainty and those who tell you that they have all the answers are quite simply not asking the right questions.

I am interested in the unseen and the obscene as an appreciation of the obscene leads to a greater understanding of beauty and the exploration of the hidden self leads to a greater understanding of others. Language limits our capacity to understand, art does not.

The point is that the censored camera is no more an instrument of truth then the mouth or the pen and to laud its dubious capacity for honesty is to undermine its higher values. We may use a paintbrush to paint the living room or decorate the Sistine Chapel and even the dullards amongst us can discern which of these is the greater achievement.

Simply put, the camera’s misleading association with ‘the truth’ has led to it being under-utilized and the time has arrived when we can at last use it to produce works of imagination that will in time bear comparison with the highest forms of art.

As an aside, one might argue that because of the prevalence of the camera and its overuse - because every day throughout the world millions of images are made by millions of people - the ability to produce a memorable image using a camera is a far greater achievement than to do so using paints, brushes and a canvas where competitors are fewer. Indeed, I sometimes wish that I could paint badly as there appears to be money in it.

ONCE A CATHOLIC by Dominic Rouse

BS: What are you working on at this time? Can you give our readers some insight into your current work?

DR: I have been in marketing mode for longer than I intended over the past few months and the production of new work has suffered accordingly. I don’t see myself working in themes or on particular projects. Whatever he may tell you to the contrary an artist is ultimately a spectator of self because there is no subject more revealing. I view the folio as an ongoing body of work which will presumably end with my demise or some less abrupt form of disability.

I don’t feel comfortable discussing work before it is completed but I would say that I have no immediate plans to change direction drastically as there is still much to explore within the current style of work.



To read Part 3 of my interview with Dominic Rouse click, HERE

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Art Space Talk: Dominic Rouse (Part 1)

Digital imaging tools are now providing the creative freedoms previously the reserve of painters and the fine art digital print is now regarded equally as favorably as the traditional darkroom photograph. The digital domain almost 're-invented' photography and has been embraced by those photographers who felt hampered by the technical constraints of the old analogue processes.

One such practitioner is the photographic artist Dominic Rouse, described by America's BW Magazine as a "master of digital manipulation" and whose superbly-crafted black and white silver prints were lauded by the editor of the British Journal of Photography as "masterpieces" when 'Haunted by a Painter's Ghost' was exhibited in London.

Brooks Jensen, the editor of LensWork Publishing described Rouse as "one of the most interesting photographic artists working today" and compared his photographs to the paintings of Pieter Bruegel, Hieronymus Bosch and René Magritte. Rouse's work is certainly dark in tone and has a visionary edge that does bear comparison with the likes of Bosch & Breugel but it goes beyond that.

His provocative fantasies provide endless opportunities for speculation and possess qualities that force the viewer to suspend both belief and disbelief in unison. His prints are not only challenging and alluring but are also impeccably crafted things of beauty providing seamless transitions between the world of contemporary digital art and the timeless qualities of large format photography.

UNDER CONSTRUCTION by Dominic Rouse

Brian Sherwin: Dominic, what can you tell us about your academic background concerning art? Did you study art formally? Tell us about your art studies in general-- any influential instructors?

Dominic Rouse: I didn’t study art as such but I did study photography for four years after completing my secondary education. On leaving school I took a year’s press photography course which led to a five year career in photojournalism and then I returned to college for three years to study commercial photography as I felt that I needed to broaden my horizons.

This second stint of my photographic education took place at the Blackpool & Fylde College of Further Education where I was fortunate to come under the tutelage of the ‘Blessed Trinity’ of Roger Goodwill, Gordon Read and most especially Geoff Clark who were each inspirational educators. Twenty-five years after leaving Blackpool I am still in touch with Geoff and many of the lessons I learned from him then remain valid today.

Another lecturer who deserves mention is Ted Gray who taught technology which was my special area of interest. It was at Blackpool under his guidance that I learned to make improbable imagery using multiple exposure techniques which gave me a pretty good living until the arrival of Photoshop.

LADIES-IN-WAITING by Dominic Rouse

BS: Tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

DR: Now that is an excellent question! If we assume that press photography and advertising photography do not constitute “visual art” (and I don’t think they do) I would say that it wasn’t until twenty years into my photographic career that I was in a position to make the images that I really wanted to make. It was at that point in mid-1996 that I bought my first workstation and finally the images that filled my head and my sketchpads started to appear as two–dimensional realities.

Between 1996 and 2000 I effectively put my fine art on the back-burner while I built up a library of saleable stock imagery consisting largely of older commercial work revamped in the computer. In 2000/01 I finally gave up commercial work altogether and concentrated solely on my fine art prints.

ECCE HOMO by Dominic Rouse

BS: Can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your art.

DR: I consider it my good fortune to have been ‘classically trained’ in the skills of the large format photographer and also among the first photographers to explore the potentials that the new digital tools have given us. It is my belief that the digital realm has granted to us photographers a freedom of expression previously reserved for painters and that this new freedom combined with the traditional photographic processes has the potential for great things.

Art is often defined as the search for truth and beauty and many an artist sets out to reveal the truth but quickly discovers that there is no such thing. He is left to give his honest impression of the lies which is the closest that Man has to a truth. An artist who is only interested in the truth will soon find himself unemployed. I would define my photographs as expositions of the fallacy we know as truth and I might add that beauty is measured in degrees of deceit, the greater the beauty the greater the deceit. Nonetheless, I am addicted to beauty though unfortunately I am a habit that beauty has managed to kick. It is comforting to consider that if all that existed was beautiful, beauty would cease to exist.

Perhaps my images have the potential for truth as they are inaccurate representations of reality.

GO-BETWEEN by Dominic Rouse

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

DR: My images are produced as toned silver gelatin prints in limited editions of eight and sixteen. They are hand-made in a traditional 'wet' darkroom using an enlarger and photographic paper developed and then bleached and toned using chemical solutions.

When collecting the elements that I need to compose an image I shoot on colour transparency material because it is much more scanner friendly than negative material which is designed to be projected onto photographic paper and has a coarser composition which shows up all too readily as granularity in high resolution drum scans.

Once all the elements have been digitized then the compositing begins. When finished, the file is written to black and white negative material using a film recorder which is essentially the scanning process in reverse.
This film is processed in the usual way and from the resulting negative the prints are made.

It might be worth mentioning that digital negatives are often better than those made in a camera because of the controls that imaging software offers. One obvious advantage is the 'sharpening' filter which, used with discretion, produces a crisper negative that contributes enormously to print quality.


To read Part 2 of my interview with Dominic Rouse click, HERE
Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Wikipedia Threatens Artists and Fair Use?

www.wikipediaart.org
I have reported on the Wikipedia Art project since its ‘birth’. The project itself, as well as the communication I had with artist Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern, interested me. Due to my interest I have been very close to the story. In fact, at one time a few bloggers confused me for one of the projects ‘fathers’. Thus, I feel that it is important to reveal updates to the story as they come in. If anything you could say I’m a supportive ‘participant’ of the Wikipedia Art project as a whole.

I was informed of the project earlier this year when artist Nathaniel Stern, a fellow www.myartspace.com member, contacted me about an ‘Internet-based and interventionist project’ that he and Scott Kildall had been working on. Stern informed me that the project would be titled "Wikipedia Art," and that the project is art that exists only on Wikipedia. I found the project to be intriguing because technically it is art that anyone can edit-- a mass collaborative project that welcomes all.

At the time Stern explained to me, “The caveat, of course, is that the piece needs to follow the enforced rules on Wikipedia. Any changes to the art must be cited from 'credible' external sources: interviews, blogs, or articles in 'trustworthy' media institutions, which birth and then slowly transform what it is and does and means simply through their writing and talking about it.”. He added, “It may start as an intervention, turn into an object, die and be resurrected, etc, through what we've started calling "performative citations.".

Needless to say, the Wikipedia Art project did not last long on Wikipedia. The project, or at least that aspect of the project, was ’dead’ in under 24 hours. Thus, Kildall and Stern documented the project-- its process and outcome-- on their own website-- www.wikipediaart.org. Unfortunately, their project has not been well received by the Wikimedia Foundation. In fact, reports state that they have been threatened with legal action.

According to the Ars Technica website-- backed by contact I’ve had with Kildall and Stern-- artist Scott Kildall received a letter in March from Douglas Isenberg, counsel for the Wikimedia Foundation. Isenberg demanded that the wikipediaart.org domain be transferred to the Wikimedia Foundation. Due to the letter Kildall and Stern sought legal help from James Martin. Martin sent a reply to Isenberg on the behalf of Kildall and Stern.

In the letter Martin noted that the wikimediaart.org site did not claim to be connected with or endorsed by Wikipedia in any way and that the site was not being used for any commercial purpose. Martin stated, "We are disappointed by Wikimedia's efforts to suppress free speech by threatening legal action,". However, Isenberg’s replies apparently made it clear that the Wikimedia Foundation would not accept Kildall and Stern’s project as a mere critique or art project.
According to Kildall and Stern, Wikimedia Foundation threatened to take the case to the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and hinted at further legal action. In fact, Isenberg mentioned a past legal issue involving another site-- a scare tactic. The pressure was on-- Kildall and Stern sought further help from a number of sources, including the Fair Use Project and Lawrence Lessig-- FUP and Lessig offered advice, but refused to help directly. The duo than made contact with Paul Levy of the Public Citizen Litigation Group-- who accepted the case on a pro bono basis if the issue goes to litigation. Levy is noted for having worked to defend fair use of trademark names in the past.

According to reports, Levy’s position is that the Wikimedia Foundation is trying to “skirt US law” due to the fact that they are fully aware that legal precedents strongly suggest that Kildall and Stern’s Wikipedia Art project, including the domain name wikipediaart.org, are protected by free speech and fair use grounds. Needless to say, Levy has made it clear that if the Wikimedia Foundation files a UDRP claim against the Wikipedia Art site he will seek a declaratory judgment of non-infringement on behalf of Kildall and Stern. In response to the Wikimedia Foundation’s attorney, Mike Godwin, Levy stated, “We are not willing to allow this dispute to be resolved by reference to private law instead of the law of the United States that governs both your client and mine.".
Mike Godwin, the attorney for the Wikimedia Foundation, has stated that no litigation was threatened or commenced. In fact, Godwin informed Ars Technica that there was never a threat of legal action against Kildall or Stern. Godwin insists that he contacted the artists on behalf of the Wikimedia Foundation in order to request that a disclaimer-- stating that the Wikimedia Foundation is not associated with the site-- be added to www.wikipediaart.org.

Godwin stated, "The possibility of a disclaimer is inherent in the suggestion that we resolve our differences amicably,". However, as reported by Ars Technica, none of Isenberg’s correspondence-- who originally contacted Kildall and Stern on behalf of the Wikimedia Foundation-- mentions anything about a disclaimer request nor does the Isenberg correspondence state that a disclaimer would be a possible resolution in regards to the dispute.

Obviously, if you go by reports, the Wikimedia Foundation is flip-flopping on the situation. As for Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern-- they have support. Ars Technica and the Electronic Frontier Foundation have both showed support for the Wikipedia Art project and the issue over the domain name wikipediaart.org. In fact, Corynne McSherry of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, has stated that she is disappointed with Wikipedia over the issue. It should be noted that the Electronic Frontier Foundation has represented Wikipedia in the past in support of free speech.
As it stands it seems that the situation is in legal limbo. The Wikimedia Foundation has yet to withdraw its original letter-- so the threat of facing legal action is still a reality for Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern. The situation has not been good for the Wikimedia Foundation’s image either-- bloggers have pointed out the contradictions and hypocrisy involved with this specific situation. After all, Wikipedia would not exist if it were not for free speech and 'fair use'.
That is the key point to remember when thinking about this situation-- the fact that Wikipedia would not exist if it were not for free speech and the defense of 'fair use'. If Wikimedia Foundation were to pursue legal action against Kildall and Stern it would potentially establish a legal precedent that would work against Wikipedia in the future-- which might be why the situation is in legal limbo.
Anyone who follows the Myartspace Blog knows that I take a hard stance in support of copyright and trademark law. However, I also support the concept of "fair use" as long as it is not an extreme interpretation of the defense. In this situation we have two artists who have commented on-- and made parody of-- a widely known website. Thus, I would say that the actions of Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern fall under the defense of "fair use". They are not making profit from the Wikipedia Art project or wikipediaart.org-- they are simply offering a critique of a widely known website. This is a prime example of why we have "fair use" in the first place.
That said, it is not hard to find companies and organizations that expect all or nothing interpretations of ‘fair use’ until another individual or entity expects it of them. The fact that this specific situation involves a ‘fair use’ hassle from the Wikimedia Foundation-- which relies on the defense of 'fair use'-- comes as a surprise to individuals who, up until now, were supportive of Wikipedia in general.

The Wikipedia Art project article has been removed from Wikipedia, but an article detailing the Wikipedia Art controversy has recently appeared on the site. Which begs the question-- why would the Wikimedia Foundation-- which prides itself on free speech and open knowledge-- consider taking legal action against two artists in a way that would stifle free speech and hinder 'fair use' as we know it in the first place?

Links of Interest:

Wikipedia Art controversy -- article on Wikipedia
www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_Art_Controversy_2009

Wikipedia Threatens Artists for Fair Use -- Electronic Frontier Foundation
www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/04/wikipedia-threatens-

Wikipedia Art dispute pits artists against Wikimedia Foundation -- Ars Technica
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/04/wikipedia-suit-could-put-it-on-the-wrong-side-of-fair-use.ars

Wikipedia Art: A Virtual Fireside Chat Between Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/02/wikipedia-art-virtual-fireside-chat.html

Art Space Talk: Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern (interview with Kildall and Stern) -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/04/art-space-talk-scott-kildall-and.html
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Pablo Picasso: Picasso: Mosqueteros at Gagosian’s Chelsea Gallery, NY

Bust (1970) by Pablo Picasso, via Gagosian Gallery

Gagosian’s Chelsea Gallery in New York is currently featuring an exhibit titled, Picasso: Mosqueteros,. The exhibit focuses on paintings created by Picasso during the last years of his life. The exhibit is considered a survey of Picasso’s late life as it examines his thought process from 1962 to his last productive year, 1972. The exhibit was made possible due to backing from Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, Museo Picasso, The Museum of Modern Art, and a number of other private collections. The exhibit will come to a close on June 6th, 2009. For more information visit, www.gagosian.com

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Sophie Calle: Take Care of Yourself at Paula Cooper Gallery

Sophie Calle, from “Take Care of Yourself,” French Intelligence Officer, Louise (2007). Via Paula Cooper Gallery.

Paula Cooper Gallery is currently featuring the art of conceptual artist Sophie Calle. The exhibit involves Calle coming to terms with a lover’s breakup via email. Calle has used the traumatic experience as a way to explore issues of intimacy clashing with mass technology. In the past Sophie Calle has explored similar themes. For example, she once hired a private detective to follower her at her own request in order to document the experience. The exhibit will come to a close on May 22nd, 2009. For more information visit, www.paulacoopergallery.com

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Art Space Talk: Morgan Riccilli Slade (Part 3)

Crows and Flowers by Morgan Riccilli Slade
This is Part 3 of my interview with Morgan Riccilli Slade. To return to Part 2 click, HERE
BS: Morgan, what are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

MS: I think embracing technology as a tool is inevitable and necessary, and self promotion is and always has been a very important aspect to any artist. It is important to move the arts and artists out of a system were it was all too contained.

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

MS: I have serious concerns about the world in general, but the art world will soldier on. Artists can be very resourceful people.
Big Chicken by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: There has been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

MS: I am not sure why a copyright would restrict creativity. I don’t entirely subscribe to the Creative Commons argument. I think an artist should reserve the right to give up the right, if that makes sense.

Red Apple by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

MS: Adapting to your environment is key to any kind of survival. It is important to not become too comfortable. Changing studios, can be pretty traumatic in itself. I would never discount financial concerns when discussing the artistic practice, but recessions have a way of turning into very productive periods when you are not chasing money.

BS: Finally, do you have a personal website that you would like to share with our readers?

MS: Yes I do. Please visit, www.morgansladestudio.com





This is the conclusion of my interview with Morgan Riccilli Slade. To return to Part 1 of the interview click, HERE

You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews. Feel free to discuss the interview and the art of Morgan Riccilli Slade on the myartspace.com Forum-- www.myartspace.com/forum
Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
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Art Space Talk: Morgan Riccilli Slade (Part 2)

Blown by Morgan Riccilli Slade

This is Part 2 of my interview with Morgan Riccilli Slade. To return to Part 1 click, HERE

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

MS: The energy and freedom that was present in the American art of the 60’s and 70’s would be an undeniable influence, but it would be hard for me to pin down any defining piece or artist. Music plays a big role. Refine : refract 7 Crystal Skull, for example, takes the song by the metal band Mastodon and reduces it to a series of tones and then builds it back into an ambient soundscape. I also like Picasso, Krautrock and the Baroque period.

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Is there one? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?

MS: I don’t think that I have a specific message. What I am more interested is presenting a different way of looking at a something that already has an established dialog. It is however, important for final result, no matter how conceptual, to work on an aesthetic level. I like beauty. Butterflies by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: What are you working on at this time?

MS: Currently, I am prepping a showing of refine : refract 1. The central video component has been finished for a year and now I am adding some serigraphs and dry pigment prints. The video is a a series of 500 illustrations that play in sequence beginning with a black frame, building up to a complete image, and slowly disintegrating to a black image again.



The soundtrack is an abstracted version of 'Claire de Lune' by Debussy. The prints add to theme by referencing a Bergamask and A Summer Night’s Dream.

Refract 7 Crystal Skull by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: I assume you are exhibiting at this time?

MS: I currently have work in two venues in the Bay Area and am hoping to launch a salon style artist space near the end of the summer with refine : refract 1.



To read Part 3 of my interview with Morgan Riccilli Slade click, HERE

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
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Art Space Talk: Morgan Riccilli Slade (Part 1)

The work of Morgan Riccilli Slade is at once mysterious and seductive. His large paintings engage viewers with rich visual storytelling. Bold, bright colors layered and woven around seeming disparate images pop off the canvas. Nostalgic silhouettes referencing childhood lend a sweet tone to otherwise satirical social messages. At first benign, they innocently urge you closer until the narrative surfaces.

Slade's works on paper and video balance a keen sense of history and photographic nostalgia while capturing a modern elegance and bold graphic style.

Morgan Riccilli Slade studied Fine Art, Photography and Photographic Theory at the University of California at Santa Cruz. After graduating in 1991 he has exhibited work in San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Jose, and continues to work in multiple mediums in art and design.

Morgan Riccilli Slade was one of 50 finalists of the myartspace.com Bridge Art Fair Miami competition. Slade was chosen by the myartspace.com panel of jurors-- which included, Elisabeth Sussman, Senior Curator, the Whitney Museum; Janet Bishop, Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA); JoAnne Northrup, Senior Curator, San Jose Museum of Art; and Michael Workman, Founder of Bridge Art Fair. His work was represented digitally by
www.myartspace.com at Bridge Wynwood in 2008.

Refine : Refract 1 by Morgan Riccilli Slade

Brian Sherwin: Morgan, what can you tell us about your academic background concerning art?

Morgan Slade: I grew up in Los Angeles and got a degree in Studio Art at the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1991 after doing some studying at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. The University was a great place to study at the time because the art department was totally at odds with itself.

What was always an academic and traditional program, albeit a strong one, under the direction of Victor Burgin, it was being questioned. All of the sudden we were studying Roland Bartes, Umberto Eco, semiotics, and photography theories. It was all very exciting, and allowed for us extend dialog regarding our work, but did cause tension with professors teaching from a more formal and aesthetic perspective.

BS: At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art? Did you have early influences?

MS: My grandmother is an avid painter and my parents were involved with the film industry growing up so I think there was a natural progression more importantly, support. The main struggle I had was trying to settle on a medium, which never happened so I work with several.


Refine : Refract 2 D100 by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: Morgan, can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your work? Perhaps you can tell us about your refine : refract series?

MS: I think that the best place to start would be the refine : refract series. These works are about the deconstruction and modification of a sign, and re-construction with a very purposeful re-presentation of image and concept. Memorial and nostalgia are also ongoing themes.

One of the main things I got from studying under Victor Burgin, and we did not talk about art as craft very much, was to draw on varied references to come to a singular, distilled conclusion. Refine : refract begins conceptually and builds to a tangible product.

The mediums vary and in some cases utilize more than one. I feel that it is important to remember however, that we are dealing with a visual and sometimes aural medium that engages a viewer and needs to be ‘read’, so aesthetic values do play a role in the finished product.

I also enjoy working in a much more non objective and more singular manner were the image comes first and the final piece is more about graphic quality and immediate impact. Float by Morgan Riccilli Slade

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

MS: While refine : refract is open to employing elements of video, photography, audio and the kitchen sink, and the work is created over a longer period, a piece like Float which is made with dry pigment in enamel is designed to be a more physical process.
Most of the design is prep work and the final piece is made quickly, like a negative being burned into photo paper. The result is an image that appears to be simultaneously coming together as is falling apart only to hold on for a moment.
It is important for me to work in a physical manner also, because sitting in front of a computer making still images into a moving film can be tedious. I tend to work on several things at one time so I am constantly switching back and forth.


To read Part 2 of my interview with Morgan Riccilli Slade click, HERE

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
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Art Space Talk: LeRoy Howard (Part 3)

The Last Supper Project, 1-3 by LeRoy Howard

This is Part 3 of my interview with LeRoy Howard. To return to Part 2 click, HERE

BS: What are you working on at this time? Can you give our readers some insight into your current work?

LH: The Last Supper Project is ongoing. I have completed four pieces, numbering 12 images, and am considering one more piece, bringing the total number of images to 13, or perhaps 14. I model each piece after an existing work of art, some quite closely as in the Last Supper and others are more loosely built on the target image.

As I look at the classic paintings, sculpture and photography I hope to create a larger dialogue with them, bringing them forward in time and hopefully make them as relevant today as when they were first made. All my work is shot in black and white, against a black backdrop which isolates the action and abstracts the human interaction, which I hope offers a more universal reading to the emotional narrative within each piece. I have tried some in color, but am not convinced it would have the power I find in the black and white prints.

Yet I take my inspiration from personal experiences and it is that which brings life and power to the images for me. And all these pieces, in one way or another, explore a variety of emotions revolving around loss, grief, doubt, despair, and betrayal. Not the upside of human emotion, but perhaps it is the power of this side that holds my attention.

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

LH: Initially I thought of using the web, by creating my own web-site, as an extension of my portfolio in order to show people my work. Since that time the internet has become much more central in responding to calls for exhibition as well as sharing my work with galleries, curators and other artists. Then with the development of sites like MyArtSpace the chance came up to engage with other artists, viewing and discussing their work and in return getting their reactions to mine.

My main conviction in making art is the notion that it is a dialogue and that my job is not complete until I hear back from someone. I make the art, someone sees it and they respond. Then the circle is complete. There is that sense of connection that the internet makes happen in a way that is very difficult for most artists who do not have gallery representation to receive. Even when we get our work into a show, it is not often possible to gain a viewer’s thoughtful response, and so the internet has really changed things in this regard.

The Last Supper Project, 1-4 by LeRoy Howard

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

LH: I certainly hope so! There are a number of calls for work I am responding to and I am also working with another Bay Area photographer, preparing an exhibition proposal for a two-person show.

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

LH: Looking at the photographic gallery scene I’d like to see things loosen up. There seem to be rather narrow ideas of what they expect to bring to the market and the sort of creative imagery that I work with doesn’t seem to elicit much interest.

In many markets the number of galleries you can approach are limited. However, in the East Bay (Oakland, Berkeley, etc.) there seems to be a renewal of the gallery scene with a lot of small scruffy galleries open to a great variety of materials, ideas and approaches. So there is hope.

BS: There has been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

LH: Honestly, I haven’t given it much thought. I think an artist should be able to protect their work and the marketability of that work, particularly in the internet age when often what one has is an image of that work. But I recognize that things get fuzzy when one artist quotes another, or borrows an image and reworks it, like the Shephard Fairey piece on President Obama. Since I do “quote” some of the classics maybe I’m wandering over to the other side of that issue.

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

LH: Well, Polaroid has gone out of business and I used a lot of their product working out my staging and angles and such. But Fuji instant film seems to be working to fill that gap. Oh, and I will dearly miss their Type 55 PN, which produces the most seductive B&W negative I’ve seen. I will mourn that! Other than that, I can’t say I’ve changed how I work or had to adapt because of the present economic situation.

The Last Supper Project, 1-5 by LeRoy Howard

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

LH: I try to focus on creating meaning by developing an emotional connection with the viewer. It is the human element that is most powerful for me and figures centrally in my images. I find the human figure creates an emotionally immediate connection, and I feel the nude presents a primal quality and a sense of timelessness.

In my more recent work I have been exploring the use of facial expressions that more directly present emotion and point to a narrative. My work has always suggested a narrative context, but now I purposely build that sense and open it up for the viewer to join. Perhaps I am inviting people to connect with one another, rebelling against so much abstraction in art or a coldness and alienation that comes from the “deadpan” school.

This is the conclusion of my interview with LeRoy Howard. To return to Part 1 of the interview click, HERE

You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews. Feel free to discuss the interview and the art of LeRoy Howard on the myartspace.com Forum-- www.myartspace.com/forum

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
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Art Space Talk: LeRoy Howard (Part 2)

Under Construction, No. 6 by LeRoy Howard

This is Part 2 of my interview with LeRoy Howard. To return to Part 1 click, HERE

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

LH: I photograph with a 4” x 5” camera, using film and make in-camera multiple exposures. As my background is in traditional photography I hold myself to the technological constraints that come with film. I discovered during earlier work that one can photograph the body many times over on the same sheet of film if the background is black. Each body appears to hold it’s full form and substance. The only bleed-through comes when the bodies superimpose on each other, which gives rise to some wonderful juxtapositions and physical relationships.

Many have suggested that I could just as easily make the photographs individually and digitally combine them, but that doesn’t interest me. There is something about the process of staging and practicing to get the body in just that right place so the two or three characters portrayed in a given photograph are seen engaging with one another. It is almost like staging a play or a performance piece, then shooting that. There is something about the calm discipline as I set up and imagine the characters and their emotional state that is as gratifying to me as the completed image.

And the gifts of the overlaps and overlays are such that I could not think to do it in Photoshop. There is a magic involved in working this way and when I see the juxtapositions of body to body, the overlap of one blending into another, the piercing of flesh by flesh, I find myself drawn on and overwhelmed with the final image.

Beyond capturing the image, I am looking into alternative printing processes. I began making gelatin silver prints, but now (out of necessity) many of my prints are digitally made. I have taken workshops for printing in bromoil, platinum/palladium and photo-graveure, and plan on producing editions in one or more of these media.

Under Construction, No. 1 by LeRoy Howard
BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?
LH: This is a more difficult question to consider. I know of many artists that photograph themselves, but don’t think I can claim them as influences. I think we have just happened upon a particular technique that works for us. I recall reading an interview with Cindy Sherman where she said something that reflected my own thinking. In effect, “I’m easy to work with and I’m always around.” I don’t have to communicate my ideas to another. I can just let it flow through my body and mind and see what the camera captures.
Early on I saw an image by Joel Peter Witkin where he had set up an amazing tableau using up to five or six people in the image along with painted backdrops, furniture and built sets. I came away from that with the idea that it was o.k. to set it up, to stage it. Once could pursue their ideas and create meaning by setting it all up. There was a great deal of freedom in this idea. It felt as though I was given permission to abandon the constraints of standard photography.
One artist I greatly admire, as he does build meaning in a variety of ways and is fully photographic in his approach is the Japanese photographer, Eikoh Hosoe. If I am influenced by others, it is by studying their work where I discover that I can give myself permission to do something different, that there are no constraints on my ideas or approaches.
My main influences come from classical painting and sculpture as well as modern dance. I suppose my greatest influence is the time I spent living and visiting Japan, where I first saw Butoh avant-garde dance. Butoh has had a long-lasting influence on my work, probably lending it a sense of darkness, nudity and dramatic narrative.

Under Construction, No. 4 by LeRoy Howard
BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?
LH: Not sure I intend this as a message or a philosophy, but I think my work does explore and celebrate our emotional, and perhaps spiritual being. I want to elicit an emotional involvement on the part of the viewer. I aim at the senses so that there is no question in their mind that there is something to feel and that makes them alive.
While I know that the components of my images may have specific meaning, I leave the overall meaning of the piece or image to the viewer. And while they may not be able to construct a narrative, I don’t think they are left wondering that there is a reason for the image. So much of modern photography, some call “deadpan,” seems purposely devoid of emotion and meaning, beyond apparently saying, “this is what is here”, and frankly, that doesn’t resonate for me.



To read Part 3 of my interview with LeRoy Howard click, HERE

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
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Art Space Talk: LeRoy Howard (Part 1)

Born and raised in Houston, Texas, LeRoy Howard is a fine-art photographer, based in Berkeley, California. LeRoy photographs himself, nude, with Japanese dance masks, fans and other cultural artifacts. He constructs in-camera multiple exposures into dreamlike or psychological narratives, improvising within unfinished construction and various rooms in his home.

Since 2002 he has shown his work in Northern California, the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Kobe and Sakai, Japan. His recent work explores the uses of narrative and the personal experience within the built space in defining the self.


St. Sebastian, No. 5 by LeRoy Howard

Brian Sherwin: LeRoy, you were selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA. As you know, NYAXE Gallery is operated by the founders of www.myartspace.com and www.nyaxe.com and serves as a way to bridge the online and physical art world. Why did you decide to submit your work for consideration?

LeRoy Howard: While I have been fairly successful in getting my work into juried shows around the country and in Japan I hadn’t been paying attention to the Bay Area gallery scene. The NYAXE Gallery looked like a great opportunity to get to know a new gallery in the Bay Area. Additionally, I liked the idea of the connection between the web-based networking site and a physical gallery. It also appealed to that perverse part of my nature.

For some time now bricks-and-mortar shops and galleries have been putting up web-sites to help expand their reach and promote their efforts. In this case I saw a web-based enterprise setting up a physical gallery to help expand their market reach. I admire an operation that looks at all possible avenues to reach their market and expand their consumer base.

Lastly, I have enjoyed the web-site a great deal, met many artists and engaged in some interesting conversations about our art. This chance to talk to other artists is something hard to come by. I work by myself in my studio and don’t get out much. So I felt good about the NYAXE gallery invitation.

St. Sebastian, No. 2 by LeRoy Howard

BS: What can you tell us about your academic background concerning art? Did you study art formally? Tell us about your art studies in general-- any influential instructors?

LH: I have minimal formal training in art, nor have I and received an BFA or MFA. In my early years I studied design at a pre-architecture curriculum at Texas A&M University before taking a year to study art at the University of Houston. I did not complete the program and eventually moved to Alaska where I took up with a 35mm Pentax and began teaching myself how to photograph the landscape and small towns of Southeast Alaska.

I devoured books and magazines and more or less taught myself the rudiments of photography. At that time I’m sure I was influenced by Ansel Adams, given the nature of scenery in Alaska. Yet I’m sure I was studying other artists as I have strong memories of photographing the small towns, and playing with the odd effects one gets from industrial light sources.

Years later, in 1991, I moved to Japan and began studying with a number of professional photographers, most notably Tim Porter who runs the Tokyo Photo Workshops. He is a rigorous photographer who knows just about everything there is to know about the craft and technology of photography.

After settling in the Bay Area in 2001 I took a number of workshops from well-known Bay-Area photographers such as Judy Dater and Frank Espada.

BS: Tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

LH: I suppose I began to challenge myself when I lived in Alaska, but it wasn’t until I began taking workshops in Japan that I began to explore the idea of creating imagery and building meaning, moving beyond the basic idea of reportage, landscape and street photography.

Since 1991 I have been pushing myself to develop a multi-layered sense of meaning and it seems that I am beginning to think more like an artist who uses photographic technology rather than a photographer who captures a scene imbued with meaning. At the heart of my work is the desire to communicate with the larger culture through the meaning created in my images. Kneeling Maiden by LeRoy Howard

BS: Can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your art.

LH: I have developed a certain technique in creating meaning in my work, which is that I photograph myself, usually nude, and sometimes with Japanese dance masks, native American tribal masks, and other artifacts. This comes from my deep awareness and fascination with the idea that our being, or our identity, is separate from our bodies.

Our sense of self is independent of the physical and this understanding has allowed me to put myself within the work without feeling that the work is about me. I see myself more as an actor or technician helping to stage the work and less as the director, though I set the thing in motion. Since I am in front of the lens when the image is taken, I really have this sense that I am a participant in a larger process.

I give a lot of thought to what the body is doing in the image and what is communicated to the viewer. I understand the iconic value and what may be communicated by various poses and attitudes the body can take. Initially I borrowed easily found poses like that of kneeling in prayer or contemplation to the cruciform pose, knowing that on a cultural level the meaning inherent in these poses would say something to the viewer. Even when the image wasn’t overtly religious.

I think this comes from an early exposure to renaissance art which almost totally is made up of religious imagery. And so I find many of the attitudes my body takes can be traced to religious imagery. Yet, I wanted to move beyond these easy targets and develop a repertoire of more natural poses that provided the foundation for including facial expression, which began as part of the process with this current project.

I’m calling my current body of work, “The Last Supper Project.” Following a year of taking classes at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, one of which was an Art and Religion class I came up with the initial idea of conducting a theological exploration by re-presenting Leonardo’s Last Supper. I divided the picture into five images and posed myself, nude in all the roles.

What I found when I looked at the work was a strong representation of outpouring emotion, in this case male expression. Reflecting that this work was based on a narrative that dealt with betrayal, loss and grief I saw the opportunity to explore male emotional expression and communicate this to the viewer. The work that has come after is loosely based on iconic artwork, whether photographic, sculptural or painted, and inspired by the illness, decline and eventual loss of my father.


To read Part 2 of my interview with Leroy Howard click, HERE

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
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Rosson Crow: FOCUS: Rosson Crow at Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Queen’s Butcher Shop, 1910 by Rosson Crow

The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth in Texas is currently featuring an exhibition titled FOCUS: Rosson Crow. The exhibit involves a small collection of Crow’s grand-scale paintings. The exhibit marks Rosson Crow’s first solo exhibition in a museum. In the past her work has shown at Deitch Projects, New York and White Cube, London. The exhibit will come to a close on May 17, 2009. For more information visit, www.mamfw.org.

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Alex Katz: Fifteen Minutes at Pace Wildenstein

Sunset 3 by Alex Katz, via Pace Wildenstein

Pace Wildenstein gallery in New York is currently featuring the art of Alex Katz. The exhibit involves a new series of ten large-scale landscape paintings. Katz created the paintings on linen and canvas with the goal of capturing the essence of twilight and sunset. Katz has stated that in his new series of paintings he has “found” his own eyes. In other words, Katz feels that he has broke away from his influences. The exhibit is titled Fifteen Minutes. The paintings will be on exhibit at Pace Wildenstein gallery until June 13th, 2009. For more information visit, www.pacewildenstein.com.

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Sunday, April 26, 2009

Art Space Talk: Nick Weber

Nick Weber is known for carving figures out of the darkness. His illuminating artwork creates a nocturnal narrative that is established by night lights or the glow of a lit cigarette. Painting in oil on canvas, Weber explores issues such as class, sexuality, and the fragility of male self-esteem. Viewers have described Weber as a modern day Rembrandt. He studied art at Stanford University. Nick Weber was recently selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA.


Further Lane by Nick Weber

Brian Sherwin: Nick, you were selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA. As you know, NYAXE Gallery is operated by the founders of www.myartspace.com and www.nyaxe.com and serves as a way to bridge the online and physical art world. Why did you decide to submit your work for consideration?

Nick Weber: So many galleries in the country go with trends or marketability, so I felt that Catherine and Brian were making a brave choice by allowing the submissions to determine what kind of show they would architect. I was also drawn to the idea that the work would be exhibited in Palo Alto.

I graduated from Stanford in 1993, and worked as a chef at St. Michael's Alley, a cafe next to the gallery space. It was at St, Mike's that I had my very first art show, back in 1994, so it was amazing to me that 15 years later I would participate in a show not 200 feet from there (in a space where we used to store large vats of olive oil and whatnot -- I was actually offered that space as a studio in June of '94 but headed back east instead). In addition, many of my night landscapes are set in Palo Alto. These night scenes should be recognizable to people who live in the old part of town.

Seated Figure by Nick Weber

BS: What can you tell us about your academic background concerning art? Did you study art formally? Tell us about your art studies in general-- any influential instructors?

NW: At Stanford I studied with Nathan Oliveira, who was head of the art department there until 1996, and a close friend of Richard Diebenkorn. He is a wonderful painter, and an inspiring and patient teacher. He has always told us that the art is a lifetime pursuit, one that required persistence.

That was a hard thing to understand, but 20 years later I'm seeing how ideas that seemed disconnected when I was in college are finally starting to connect -- like night paintings and reduction.

BS: Tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

NW: I could draw very well as a kid. In 1978 I won the Kelloggs stick up for breakfast contest by drawing snap, crackle, and pop -- I got a Schwinn bike in the deal, my first 10-speeder. In high school I was more into music and sports, but my freshman year at college I took a drawing class and I felt like I had re-found myself after wandering around lost for years. It was an amazing feeling, and my teacher was very encouraging

Byron St., Palo Alto by Nick Weber

BS: Can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your art.

NW: My work comes from my own life. If I paint because I feel sad or lonely, or am overcome by a lovely woman or an enchanting glimpse of a night landscape then I know it comes from a true place. The series of porn paintings took me years to get the courage to do. I felt bad and dirty at first and worried what people would think of me. Now I feel proud that I overcame that and put the work out there into the world -- it took guts. My current series is more like straightforward portraiture, but I'm trying to simplify the paintings, and stay away from being illustrative.

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

NW: I have been painting from life as much as possible these days. I love working from photographs at times, especially with the night paintings, because it's pretty difficult to paint at night on location in the dark -- hard to see well. But the photos are tricky, they like to take over. It helps to remember that they are merely reference materials.

Working from life gives the work an urgency, forces you to figure out what it is you're trying to say. I've been using walnut alkyd oil as a medium, and using a rag to get the effect of light.

22nd St., Chelsea by Nick Weber

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

NW: One of my favorite painters is Balthus. I admire his sense of humor, the eroticism of his pictures, and his sensual and direct application of paint. I went to the Met a few months ago and was mesmerized by a Derain still life, and Braque's cubism. Lucien Freud amazes me because I think he keeps getting better, and he's like 106 years old...

I love Munch's work because it is so very personal and tells stories without being narrative. Giacometti is so honest -- doesn't give much of a crap about color, and I've heard he sometimes painted for 48 straight hours. I listen to quite a bit of Dylan when I paint, because he creates a visual world in his songs, and reminds us that imagination and reality meet.

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?

NW: Mostly I want people to look at the paintings and think 'this has to do with me'. I want people to see a night landscape and think about a romantic time they had, or a portrait and think -- I know that guy. I often hear people say 'I'd never want a painting of someone I don't know in my house." I think that's the lamest thing I've ever heard. If you have the painting in your house for a while you will know the person.

Besides, we walk down the street and immediately have opinions about the people we pass. And after enough years on the planet we should understand universal humanity. That's mostly what it's about, that and sexuality.

BS: What are you working on at this time? Can you give our readers some insight into your current work?

NW: As I mentioned above, I've been working from life lately, straightforward portraiture, but simplified. I'm trying to let go of the impulse to make things pretty. That doesn't mean I am interested in distortion, like John Currin. I believe that that get back to illustration. But I have always found myself 'correcting', or cleaning up my 'mistakes'. I'm trying to resist that urge, and put out something that is more raw, to trust my hand more than my brain.

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

NW: I have always adored looking at paintings in art books. Going to museums is special, but a good reproduction can really introduce people to an image in a very intimate and profound way. Now that we have the internet, this process can go way beyond printed reproduction. We all grew up listening to music that was proliferated through radio, etc. You didn't have to see a band in concert to know all their songs. In this same way, the internet helps us get our imagery out there to connect with a much larger audience.

Standing Figure by Nick Weber

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

NW: I currently have work at John McWhinnie's gallery on east 64th st in Manhattan, and will be showing at The Fireplace Project in East Hampton, NY this summer, as well as at Glenn Horowitz Bookseller, also in East Hampton this summer.

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

NW: Sure. I worry that very personal work is passed over in favor of hip or happening work. Having lived in west Chelsea on 26th st and 11th ave for 10 years, I had a chance to walk into galleries every day. I'm always looking for that basic, human, emotional connection. Sometimes I found it, but often I saw work that seemed very cold, and afraid of being vulnerable.

BS: There has been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

NW: Copyright issues have not affected me very much, but I think we need to be protected to a certain extent. I'm also a musician, and was laying down a guitar track today. The producer said to play this ZZ Top riff that everyone knows, then change it enough so that it was my own...I guess that should be what we do, take our influences and create something new with them. Clearly, I don't think people should be able to steal imagery or music.

Parking Lot in the Rain by Nick Weber

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

NW: Well I make a living as a portrait painter, and people have been a tad more reluctant to drop several thousand dollars for a portrait when they have lost more than a third of their money. So I have had to become more of a salesman, and think really hard about why people should get their portraits done. I've got some good reasons, the most important of which is to celebrate existence -- especially in tough times.

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

NW: just that I hope I keep doing it and continue to figure out some of the mysteries of life and art in the process.


Nick Weber is currently a member of the myartspace.com community. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.

Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
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James Rosenquist loses home, two studios, and art to a wild brush fire in Florida

Sun Li, Oil and acrylic on canvas, 74.3 x 48 in. (188.6 x 121.9 cm.), 2005. Courtesy Acquavella Galleries. Painted at Aripeka, FL

The west Florida home of world renowned artist James Rosenquist has been lost to a wild brush fire. The fire also claimed two of Rosenquist’s Florida studios-- which contained recent artwork that was destined for an art show in New York City. Rosenquist, 75, has stated that he was “totally wiped out”. I’ve been told that Rosenquist evacuated safely and that he watched his home and studios burn from a boat near his property. Apparently the 80 acre fire has since been contained. No one was injured in the blaze.

Most of the media reports of the incident describe James Rosenquist as a famous Pop artist. However, when I interviewed Rosenquist in 2008 he offered some thoughts on that. He stated, “They called me a Pop artist because I used recognizable imagery. The critics like to group people together. I didn't meet Andy Warhol until 1964. I did not really know Andy or Roy Lichtenstein that well. We all emerged separately.”.

Links of Interest:

James Rosenquist: Painting is done with a paintbrush -- Myartspace Blog www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/01/james-rosenquist-painting-is-done-with.html

Interview with James Rosenquist -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2008/04/art-space-talk-james-rosenquist.html

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Picasso: The value of a name?

Apparently there has been a lengthy battle over Picasso’s name in the UK. It started when Manders Paints, owned by Dougie Urquhart, decided to introduce a line of paints called Picasso Tint to Taste. The estate of Pablo Picasso quickly took legal action in order to prevent Manders Paint from using the family name on their products. The verdict is in-- Picasso lost.
The case has been described as a landmark ruling due to the fact that only Dougie Urquhart’s company, Manders Paints, can use the name Picasso as a brand name for UK based painting products. Needless to say, the Intellectual Property Office (IPO) has sided with Manders Paints on the issue. However, the Picasso estate has appealed in the past-- so it is likely that they will continue to fight for their namesake.
The Picasso estate argued that the use of the name ‘Picasso’ without their consent amounted to exploitation by Dougie Urquhart and his company. In other words, they feel that the only reason Urquhart desires to use the name is due to the commercial value it has for his specific market-- products for painters. That said, Urquhart’s legal team pointed out that names of other famous painters, such as Renoir and Matisse, have been registered as trademarks with or without the consent of those respected families.
The Picasso estate is known for adamantly defending Pablo Picasso’s name and art. In fact, the movie Surviving Picasso (1996 Merchant Ivory Productions) experienced the wrath of the Picasso family during production. The producers were unable to obtain permission to feature replicas of Picasso’s art on the set. From what I’ve read the only painting in Surviving Picasso that is based on an authentic Picasso painting is the scene where Picasso, played by Anthony Hopkins, creates a section of Guernica-- though the scene is filmed in a way as to make the image only slightly visible.
This case involving Manders Paints and the Picasso estate begs the question-- what is the value of a name? I suspect that eventually we will see other art products named after artists. Perhaps in the future one will be able to purchase Hirst Black, Fairey Red, or Koons Blue. That said, is the last name of the artist as important as the visual legacy he or she leaves behind? Does commercial use of an artists name without his or her consent-- or estate consent-- harm the market for his or her art? What is the value of a name? Thoughts?

Link of Interest:

UK paint firm wins Picasso battle
Manders Paints
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
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Kunstmuseum Basel to exhibit ‘complete survey’ of Vincent van Gogh landscape paintings

Trees in the Asylum Garden by Vincent van Gogh

Kunstmuseum Basel is preparing to open an exhibit billed as the "the world's first complete survey of landscape paintings" by Vincent van Gogh. Though barely known during his lifetime van Gogh’s surviving paintings, groundbreaking painterly technique, and life continues to captivate viewers. The exhibit involves a collection of over 70 landscape paintings by the Dutch legend and will also feature landscape painting by a handful of his contemporaries-- including, Henri Matisse and Camille Corot.

According to Wikipedia, The Kunstmuseum Basel houses the largest and most significant public art collection in Switzerland, and is listed as a heritage site of national significance. Its lineage extends back to the Amerbach Cabinet purchased by the city of Basel in 1661, which made it the first municipally owned museum. Its collection is distinguished by an impressively wide historic span, from the early 15th century up to the immediate present. Its various areas of emphasis give it international standing as one of the most significant museums of its kind. These encompass: painting and drawing by artists active in the Upper Rhine region between 1400 and 1600 and on the art of the 19th to 21st centuries.

Link of Interest:

www.kunstmuseumbasel.ch

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
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Friday, April 24, 2009

Damien Hirst Talks Fallen Prices, Diamond Skulls, and Bronze Meteorites.

For the Love of God by Damien Hirst

Damien Hirst has been busy with the largest exhibit of his artwork to date-- which recently opened in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev at the Pinchuk Art Centre. The exhibit, titled “Requiem”, was organized by billionaire Victor Pinchuk and involves more than 100 works of art by Hirst. However, Hirst apparently has other things on his mind. He recently made statements about plans for exhibiting his $100 million platinum and diamond skull, titled For the Love of God, throughout London and that he is thinking about making bronze meteorites. Hirst also recently commented about money and the art market.

Damien Hirst is in a unique position due to the fact that he is a top selling artist as well as an influential-- did I say extremely wealthy?-- art collector. That said, Hirst has stated that he is not buying in the current market. Apparently he is waiting for prices to be more favorable before investing. Hirst stated that ’Cash is King’ in the current art market-- suggesting that artists and art dealers are willing to accept less due to the burden of the fractured economy-- thus, it is a waiting to game to capture great deals.

Hirst knows the market-- last year an auction of his work at Sotheby’s earned nearly $200 million. The irony being that Hirst’s groundbreaking auction success coincided with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.. Since that time art prices have dropped upwards of 50%. Based on Hirst’s recent statement it would seem that he expects prices to drop further before the art market-- or the economy for that matter-- is stable. That said, Hirst views the ongoing global financial crisis as the perfect time for artists to come into their own, so to speak.

Hirst recently stated that he feels that artists have an easier time making art during bad economic times and that it is a “good thing” that art collectors are not buying art as they had in recent years. Hirst went on to suggest that artists should not create art with the idea of financial gain and that the only thing that matters is if the work is “good or not” instead of how much the art is priced or how much it cost to create.
One can assume that Hirst feels that the prior strength of the art market-- a strength that made him a very wealthy artist as well as art collector-- may have held some artists back as the pursuit of wealth overtook the pursuit of creating works that last outside of the art market bubble. The irony being that Damien Hirst has become-- in the eyes of some art critics-- the symbol of extravagance that has reduced the art market to its current condition.

Links of Interest:

Hirst Says Art Prices May Still Fall as His Biggest Show Opens
www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=aBGFO001TIWY

Damien Hirst says crisis will stimulate artists
www.news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090424/lf_nm_life/us_ukraine_art_hirst_1
The "bejewelled trinkets" of Damien Hirst
Damien Hirst is Looking Ahead
For the Love of God: Damien Hirst Threatens Young Artist with Legal Action
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
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Art Space Talk: Ami Muranetz

Ami Muranetz was born and raised on Vancouver Island. Muranetz has shown in solo and group shows across British Columbia. In 2001, she was one of twelve finalist's in Nescafe's Big Break Awards in Acapulco, Mexico for young entrepreneurs in Canada. While traveling and teaching throughout China Muranetz spent the majority of her spare time researching the major world religions including Buddhism, Daoism, Hinduism, Christianity, and various Pagan beliefs.

Through the comparison of these diverse ideologies she sought to express the commonalities through her art. She has stated that her work began to tell stories that included not only her own cultural perspective, but also shared symbols and meanings that exist in all nations.
Arc Angel (detail) by Ami Muranetz

Brian Sherwin: Ami, what can you tell us about your academic background concerning art? Did you study art formally? Tell us about your art studies in general-- any influential instructors?

Ami Muranetz: I did artwork years before I went to school for formal training. It started as a passionate interest as a child, and moved into a serious vocation as a senior in high school. It wasn't until I was 23 that I realized I hated working minimum wage jobs to support my artwork, instead of making my work support me. I enrolled in the Visual Arts Program at Camosun College in 2007, and underwent an intensive two year long program studying everything from painting, ceramics, and sculpture, to silk screening, modern art history and animation.

The faculty in our program are exceptional instructors, and beyond training us in a multitude of mediums they also taught us patience, an attention to detail, and the fine art of perseverance.

Sensory by Ami Muranetz


BS: Tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

AM: My earliest memories of creating art were around 4 years of age, where I sold my artwork on the side of the road. These pieces generally sold for 25 cents to my neighbors, providing positive support that would later feed my passion for art.

BS: Can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your art?

AM: Work I created before attending a visual arts program focused mainly on self-portraits and painting. I was deeply inspired by the life of Frida Kahlo, and modeled many of my earlier works on her expressive style and use of color.

Since attending school, I have attached broader meaning to my work by expanding the themes that capture my attention, and expressing them in greater conceptual terms. Recent works that I have completed address social issues regarding how we now interact with others, and the systems behind our contemporary culture.

Tubes by Ami Muranetz

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

AM: Issues that either inspire or piss me off usually spurn my ideas forward. These situations then challenge me to rethink how I can most effectively voice my opinions about them using installations and art processes. Sketchbooks and notepads are my constant companions, and must admit I have a decent collection that I keep for later use and ideas.

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

AM: I regularly keep updated on the international art world and recent trends through the Internet and magazines. I'm very intrigued as to how China has been supporting their artists, and see this as a positive step towards becoming more self-sufficient.

Kiki Smith has been a strong female that has inspired me to move forward with what I'm doing. Kate Raudenbush, another New York artist has been an influential person to my creative practice. The three dimensional sculptures she builds for Burning Man in Nevada are built with a specific intention for interacting with them, and are also visually stunning. SWOON is another artist who has blown my mind in terms of scale and the accessibility she creates for her audience.

What You Never Knew by Ami Muranetz

BS: So what is there a specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?

AM: I want to communicate to the viewers of my work the connection we all share with one another. There are basic human needs we all experience; the need to be loved, appreciated, supported, and encouraged by our community. It may sound clichéd to mention, but I find we are sometimes more informed about the world around us but farther apart in terms of relationships.

This is the era of the online social networking tool, where we have the ability to make many friends in a shorter time frame, but fewer deep connections. I wish to rekindle for others a sense of oneness, one that extends beyond ideas of religion, spirituality, or individuality. The only guidelines I follow when making work is that it touches something within myself.

Crucifixion #2 by Ami Muranetz

BS: What are you working on at this time?

AM: My upcoming wedding as been the biggest creative endeavor I've started during this period. We're traveling to the Burning Man Arts Festival in Nevada, where we will officially make our nuptials. Work that has been built there sometimes impacts me far more than something I would see in a gallery space or art museum. The work is built for the purpose of interacting with the people, as opposed to the collectors. I would like to be funded by them in the near future to build an installation.
BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

AM: Online social networking tools have been one of the greatest tools for artists to reach a larger audience and market. My experiences with sites such as Terminus 1525, face book, and MyArtSpace have introduced me worldwide network of artists whom I otherwise would not have met in person. The Internet is one of the most cost efficient, innovative, and practical methods to show the world what you do and why.

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

AM: I have an upcoming group show titled Fourteen that will be exhibiting work produced during our two-year visual arts program. I have another group show slated for the middle of May in Washington State at the Viking Union Gallery, and a group show scheduled for this October in New York at Agora Gallery titled Beyond Borders.

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

AM: One concern that I have encountered personally is when artists are not properly respected and compensated for the work they do. Artists are expected to pay for their materials, pay for documentation, pay for shipping, and even in some cases, pay their gallery to show work. Placing the entire onus on the artist to pay the bill is unfair, and is unheard of in business transactions. Artists should respect themselves, and demand back their respect and dignity.

Christine by Ami Muranetz

BS: There has been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

AM: These laws can be used to either protect or punish artists by both sides. I tend to see copyrights as necessary precautions to protect work that has been lovingly made by artists from corporations, businesses, and copycats for their personal uses. These steps can ensure that your artwork is not being sold by someone else for their profits. However, we are inspired by the creative pursuits of other artists, and consciously or unconsciously derive many of our "original" ideas from the previous work of others, either by further elaborating on a concept, theme or technique. I'm into the creative commons copyright that recognizes true original creativity is a myth, and encourages the sharing of ideas.

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

AM: As to date, I have always been adapting my practice to suit my economic situation. Not having access to a kiln, print, dark room or painting studio has been an adaptation I've recently and sadly had to make. When you are faced with limited situations, you adapt your practice to your environment. My latest desire is to acquire a huge warehouse in Vancouver where I create any scale of work I choose.

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

AM: Remaining positive in the face of any disaster has been my mantra over the past five years of making art, and continues to serve me well. If you are going to make art, then you are going to make art and no one can deny you that privilege. Understanding why I make art has been the current revelation I've had, and knowing that I make art not for recognition but to express myself has allowed me to expand the risks I'll make.














You can learn more about Ami Muranetz by visiting her blog, www.muranetz.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.


Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

UW-Milwaukee Grad Student feature: Sarah Holden

This is the third in a series of MFA student features from the graduate program I work in at Peck School of the Arts, the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee. These will be cross-posted on implicit art at nathanielstern.com

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UW-Milwaukee Grad Student features are licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License


Sarah Holden is a graduate student in the Jewelry and Metalsmithing department at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee . She received her BFA in Craft: Material Studies from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA in 2008. She works in a variety of materials from precious metals to plastics, fiber, steel and reclaimed items, although her formal training is concentrated in the field of Jewelry and Metalsmithing. Since the field of adornment utilizes such a variety of media to explore the current definitions of jewelry, Sarah creates work that exists somewhere between adornment, performance, fashion and sculpture. She is interested in how the language of adornment communicates information about its wearer through cultural signifiers.

TALK ABOUT YOUR CURRENT PRACTICE. WHAT DO YOU MAKE AND WHY IS THAT IMPORTANT TO YOU?

I am working on a series of personal devices that are reactive to the emotional unrest of being separated from all that is familiar. I have turned to Feminism, Fetishism, and Ritual as ways to approach understanding the wearer of my work. The work in my studio now embraces the theory of woman as objectified possession through scopophilic gaze, and attempts to confront, retaliate, and threaten through the power of amulets. The most current piece I am working on is in the form of a brassiere, simultaneously exploring constriction and freedom; demanding the viewer to gaze upon the wearer and then punishing them for doing so. The wearer or subject matter of my work is most commonly me, however I feel the subject matter is universal and relates to the story of many others. I am intentionally working with fiber, a material known for its gendered history as female and I wish to reclaim it as something dangerous and powerful. The line of the thread has become an important part of my visual language as well, evidence of the act of making, understood in the same way as the written word. Working in this way is allowing me to analyze why working with the body is so important to me as well as investigate the power of emotion in art.

WHAT GOT YOU TO THIS POINT? WHAT WERE YOU DOING OR MAKING BEFORE AND HOW DID THAT LEAD YOU TO THIS KIND OF PRODUCTION?

Fashion, adornment and the human desire to decorate have always interested me. What I learned in my undergraduate experience is that the absurdity of accepted Western dress is also an important thread in my work. Three of the most successful pieces I made during my BFA reflect these ideas . “Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” and “Sea Anemone for Daily Wear,” are part of the same series dealing with my fear of physically being injured, extending out to emotional or psychological threats.



“Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” was first in the series and is a two-piece swimsuit constructed of felted orange tubes or anemone “fingers” which posses the hunger to consume anything that might want to approach the wearer of the piece in the water. After making the anemone suit I felt like this protection could be widened to daily life. “Sea Anemone for Daily Wear,” is by first glance a brightly colored container that resembles the form of a sea anemone living on a coral somewhere. Upon closer inspection the container is fabricated of formed copper and silver. The surface is revealed to be a mixture of paint and colored pencil that mimics the same hue of the fuzzy fiber “fingers” found inside the compartments of the container. The “fingers” are offered parts of a brooch to be collected and then constructed, with the assistance of magnets, on the wearer as daily protection from negative energy that might harm the wearer throughout the day.



These pieces were introduced fiber into my metal work, which I feel has been a successful step towards the work I am making now. The anemone pieces also started to push my work from a more intimate scale to acknowledge the entire body as the frame for my pieces. “Empire Line Posture Device,” is when I started to become fascinated with the absurd history of modern dress and one of the largest pieces I have made to date. The welded steel construction has a hinged steel strap, which rests at the empire line, just under the breasts and is connected to a melon-sized ball of sliced steel circles, which extends out about 5 feet behind the wearer. This piece speaks to the nonsensical and accepted evolution of western garmetry which has allowed me to consider a certain level of fantasy in my work.


WHO INSPIRES YOU – THAT YOU KNOW PERSONALLY, AS WELL AS HISTORICALLY OR IN CONTEMPORARY PRACTICE?

I love being an artist because I am surrounded by creative people who are interested in all the weird things you don’t hear about every day. My friends are what push me to continuously investigate and allow me to be a weirdo without penalty. Erin Williams was a graduate student when I was in undergrad and she taught me to always question why. I look up to her and feel like her work is the lens through which I understand my own work. In the arsenal of visuals that I always return to are the extensive variety of African and Asian tribal dress as well as the history of western dress from corsets to high heel shoes. I find the reality of these images interesting and try to apply the same absurdity in my own work. In contemporary practice I pull imagery everywhere from the avant garde fashion of Commes Des Garcons, Issey Miyake and Jean Paul Gautlier to performances of artists like Vito Acconci, Jana Sterbeck, Rebecca Horn , Annie Sprinkle and Carolee Schneeman. The fashionistas make us look at the body in unusual ways while the work of the performance artists amazingly transforms the body into the artwork to be viewed. Although I do not consider the work I am making now jewelry per se, I am very aware of the work that is being made in my field and find that the work of Katja Prins , Iris Eichenberg , Gerd Rothman and Pia Aleborg specifically deals with the body as subject however different the methodologies are utilized to create their discussion.

TELL US ABOUT YOUR FAVORITE AND LEAST FAVORITE WORKS OF ART FROM YOUR ENTIRE REPERTOIRE – WHY THEY DESERVE THOSE TITLES AND WHAT YOU LEARNED FROM THEM.

The least favorite work that I made was last fall when I was working primarily in gold. I received a very prestigious fellowship from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, VA to purchase gold and incorporate it in my work. First, I have to say that it was amazing to be included in the Fellowship and I am so glad that I had an opportunity to include gold into my vocabulary, but something about the finished work just didn’t make sense to me. I am completely comfortable working in gold now because of the opportunity, and feel like it will come back into my practice one day, but trying to force it into that work specifically did not work. I was researching scent, and the olfaction system as an identification method and the research was very interesting to me, however when it came to the execution of the work, something just didn’t work. I think now it was the gold itself. I told myself I was going to work in gold, I needed to know this language in order to be a proper metalsmith, but something just wasn’t happening for me. For about six months I was making work I really wasn’t into, but I felt like I needed to make that work, to get back to the work I enjoyed. I think this was the clearest example for me that I can never decide what material I am going to work in before I finish my research and begin making the work. My favorite work was definitely the “Sea Anemone Suit for Swimming,” and “Empire Line Posture Device.” At that time I was really excited about my research of tribal dress as well as avant garde fashion, sculptural garmetry and prosthetics. It was also a time when I was completely invested in the research and not worried about entering shows as much. Allowing myself to experiment without deadlines proved to be a very productive time in my practice.

WHAT ARE YOU WORKING ON RIGHT NOW, AND WHERE DO YOU SEE YOUR WORK HEADED NEXT?

Right now I am making a series of objects that exist in the area of the neck and upper body, you could say neckpieces and brassieres, and I can’t decide if they are just one or both. I am very interested in Feminism and how that applies to my work, which always exists on the body, and deals specifically with sexuality. This is my second semester of graduate school and although I feel like I am starting to understand my practice, I certainly don’t have everything figured out yet, but I am in a very exciting stage of discovery. The making and the research has proved to be a very emotional investigation into the type of work I feel I need to make to feel successful. The objects that I am making now are active, while the body itself is passive. I want to continue this farther, not by activating the body and performing the objects but by somehow creating an electrical component that activates the objects as the viewer interacts with them closer and closer. So the objects themselves start to have this life, which is because of the body they are ‘living’ on or a part of, but the interaction is between the objects and the viewer.





More on Sarah Holden:

website - www.sarahholdenmetalsmithing.com
blog - www.insideamakersmind.blogspot.com
blog - objectifiedbodies.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Art Space Talk: Valerie Gillespie

Valerie Gillespie is an artist who utilizes text within her visual message. She states that she is an advocate for art that speaks. Gillespie has exhibited at Local Color Gallery in Dallas and Arlington, Texas. She has also exhibited at Janette Kennedy Gallery in Dallas, Texas. She studied art at Randolph College and is currently attending graduate school at New York University.

Brian Sherwin: Valerie, what can you tell us about your early years concerning your interest in art?

Valerie Gillespie: I started creating at a very young age. My mother was big into fashion design and around the age of five I started mimicking her sketches. I loved watching her create from her imagination and the amount of energy was so inspiring. She bought me my first art set at age six and ever since then I’ve been creating.


BS: And your academic years? Are you currently in college for art?

VG: I went to school for Art at Randolph College and graduated with a Bachelor’s in Art, specifically Painting. I studied Architecture abroad in Spain during my undergraduate years and worked throughout as a Teacher’s Assistant in the classroom. I am currently in graduate school at New York University. I plan to receive my Master’s degree in Studio Art by 2010. This summer I will be abroad in Venice, Italy studying Painting.

BS: Tell us about your art in general…

VG: My art can be described as abstract; however, I always have some sort of story to tell in each piece. I am a huge advocate of art that speaks. I usually strive to educate and inform my viewers on topics that are influential or personal to me.

BS: Concerning art that speaks-- would you say that a lot of art today lacks an authentic visual message?

VG: Yes and no. All art has some type of visual message or concept. What differs in each specific art piece is the content more so. Most content deals with themes. In my art, I take several specific themes and express them aesthetically on a canvas.


BS: Your art often involves text-- can you give us some insight into your choice of using text?

VG: The use of text is extremely important in my work as I am often touching upon the aspects of human nature and the notions of consciousness.

BS: What can you tell us about your influences?

VG: During my high school and undergraduate years I was heavily influenced by Romare Bearden, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Jacob Lawrence. Today I look at a lot of Kara Walker and Lyle Ashton Harris’ work.

BS: Can you give us some insight into your current work?

VG: At the present moment I am working on my “Belonging” series. I started the series in 2008 and I am hoping to add a few more pieces.

BS: Tell us more about your “Belonging” series..

VG: My “Belonging” series represents a collage of ideas and thoughts surrounding the notions of Consciousness. The series seeks to explore the various aspects of human nature and why we think and act the way we do.

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and how it has open doors for emerging artists?

VG: I think that the use of the internet and the World Wide Web are fabulous resources for artists in terms of gaining exposure. I’ve learned so much about myself and others simply by exposing myself to new ideas and art right at my fingertips in the comfort of my own home!

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

VG: I have an upcoming show in Venice this August at the end of my second semester of NYU. I am definitely looking forward to that!

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time? Also, would you say that the current state of the economy has harmed emerging artists?

VG: As far as the art world and issues, I am still in constant awe of the lack of exposure or rather the difficulty that African American artist’s face in getting their Art “out there”. In terms of the economy, sure it’s been hard, but creating art is something that I would do whether or not I sell my work. As an artist I’ve always made it work. That’s what we do for our passion!

BS: When I interviewed Sylvia Sleigh she mentioned that while the art world of today is more accepting than it was in the 60s and 70s there is still a degree of sexism to be found. As an artist who happens to be female-- would you say that you have experienced lack of opportunity due to gender alone? Does that aspect of the negative side of the art world concern you as much as the lack of opportunities for minority artists? In your opinion, how can we-- artists and art appreciators --bring real change to the structure of the art world?

VG: I can honestly say that gender is a factor and I know that it exists; however, personally I have not experienced it. I also know that the art world is not equal. Women and minority artists both seem to experience this inequality on all levels. The mere fact that we are categorized or identified depicts this. Often our Caucasian male counterpart is labeled or categorized with the single word “artist” only.

If there is an exhibit showcasing the work of a woman or African American for example, the art world knows it. When we are labeled as “artists” and “artists” only, then I feel that the art world will be equal. Change? We can bring about change by embracing this concept. Art allows us to have a wider cultural experience and we can learn from this.


BS: As an artist who utilizes words as a crucial aspect of your work does it concern you that some artists and companies have tried-- or have-- trademarked specific words? For example, there was a recently an issue involving Shepard Fairey, a young graphic designer, and the word ‘obey’. Representatives of Obey Giant Art Inc. sent the designer a cease-and-desist letter because of his use of the word ‘obey’. Fairey’s representatives suggested that only Shepard Fairey can use the word ‘obey’ in visual art or a design. As an artist who uses words does that alarm you?

VG: Yes! This is a scary thing. How can you control or own a word? Words are given to us to speak and express and communicate freely. They are what we use to respond and tell stories. For me personally, this alarms me because words are the symbols and characters that I use in my work to create art and communicate with my viewers.



You can learn more about Valerie Gillespie by visiting her website-- www.valgillespie.mysite.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
Myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Whitehot Magazine becomes anchor sponsor for MYARTSPACE London Calling 2009 Competition

Whitehot Magazine becomes anchor sponsor for MYARTSPACE London Calling 2009 Competition

Myartspace.com, the premier online venue for contemporary art is pleased to announce that Whitehot Magazine is now an anchor sponsor for their Juried London Calling Competition.

Palo Alto, CA(PRWEB) April 21, 2009--myartspace.com, the premier online venue for contemporary art has announced a partnership with Internationally-based Whitehot Magazine for the site’s upcoming juried art competition, London Calling 2009.

Ahead of the May 15 deadline for contest registration and submission of work, Whitehot Magazine will offer users of myartspace.com $25-off coupons toward the London Calling registration fee. The coupon will be offered through the magazine’s site, www.whitehotmagazine.com from April 21 through the contest deadline of May 15th.

“We are very excited that Whitehot Magazine, a hip and prestigious art publication, has chosen to work with us on this competition“ noted Catherine McCormack-Skiba, founder of MYARTSPCE. “By offering coupons to potential artists, they are helping to curb the cost of entry fees and promote an excellent competition that will help talented artists gain much-deserved exposure. We’re also excited about working together with White Hot Magazine. They’ve got the pulse on the contemporary art market. ”

Whitehot Magazine deploys over 130 journalists to cover art world happenings, exhibitions, interviews with leading artists and art space promotions. Its website connects to over 36,000 monthly users by delivering the latest buzz, events and discussions going on in the international art community. The site also offers a sophisticated search resource for art-related content. "Whitehot feels that myartspace has the artist's best interest in mind. We look forward to the results of the London Calling competition and are proud to sponsor it." said Noah Becker, publisher of Whitehot Magazine

The aim of London Calling, one of many competitions launched by the myartspace.com founders, is to shine light and give exposure to extraordinary work in its growing community of talented artists. World-class jurors will select the top three artists to represent at the Scream London Gallery in June 2009. Scream Gallery, known for its edgy and progressive atmosphere, is located in the heart of West London’s art district. Jurors include Vanessa DesClaux from the Tate Modern, Tom Morton from the Hayward Gallery and Francesco Manacorda from the Barbican Gallery.

Contest registrants must have an account on myartspace.com to qualify for the coupon.
Artists interested in learning more about London Calling 2009 can do so by clicking on the following link on the White Hot Magazine Site: www.whitehotmagazine.com

About MYARTSPACE:
MYARTSPACE, the premier online venue for contemporary art, is one of the fastest growing and diverse communities on the internet. Its members include more than 50,000 artists, collectors, galleries and other art world professionals from across the globe, and it currently has on display hundreds of thousands of pieces of fine art. Membership is free and artist can upload an unlimited amount of work including images, music and video. Myartspace is created and run by CatMacArt Corporation. CatMacArt Corporation is located in Palo Alto, California. www.catmacart.com.

Website: www.myartspace.com

About WHITEHOT MAGAZINE OF CONTEMPORARY ART
Whitehot Magazine was founded in March 2007 by visual artist Noah Becker and comprises over 130 journalists covering the art world with reports, reviews and interviews from around the world. WM publishes a print magazine and online magazine and offers a press release and posting area for galleries and artists to promote their projects. The magazine writers also review of exhibitions and conduct interviews with important figures in the art world. WM is committed to assisting with promoting new gallery spaces or discussing important work with established artists and most importantly—creating effective connections, criticism, promotions, and other face-to-face opportunities such as curated events and discussions.

Website: www.whitehotmagazine.com

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Art Space Talk: Geoff Tate (Queensryche)

Photo Credit: Greg Watermann/January 2009
More info: L-R: Ed Jackson, Scott Rockenfield, Michael Wilton, Geoff Tate

Queensryche, formed in 1981, is considered to be one of the most influential bands to rise in the 1980s-- largely due to the fact that Queensryche broke from the marketable direction that was expected from bands in that era. Throughout the 1980s Queensryche delivered something more than just songs about sex, fun, and hangover memories-- they delivered socially charged songs that challenge the listeners perception of the world and relationships around us. Today they continue to carve their own path musically and conceptually.

For nearly three decades the band has meshed aspects of visual art, video art, and performance art into their performances on stage. Due to their thought provoking lyrics, sound, and performances the band has been dubbed the ‘thinking man’s heavy metal band’. Concept albums by Queensryche, such as Operation: Mindcrime, are often mentioned alongside other notable concept albums, such as The Who’s Tommy and Pink Floyd’s The Wall. To date over 20 million Queensryche albums have been sold worldwide.

In an interview conducted by phone I discussed the visual aspects of Queensryche with frontman Geoff Tate. Geoff offered his thoughts on critics, copyright, and the challenges that musicians and visual artists face today. He also offered some insight about American Soldier -- a recently released concept album by Queensryche that tells the story of war from a firsthand perspective.

Brian Sherwin: Geoff, Queensryche performances often involve aspects of film, video art, and performance art. In a sense, various aspects of art are meshed together in order to heighten the experience of the audience. You could say that the audience is hit with a visual and audio bombardment. That said, how involved are you with the visual aspects of the tours? Do you oversee the process? Are you involved with the planning directly?

Geoff Tate: Yeah, I’m directly involved in the process. We have been collecting and cataloguing images for 28 years. In the early days it was difficult to keep track of images because keeping everything on file was a laboring process. With the technology of today the process is easier because the images, clips, and audio can be saved on computer files. So there is a lot of resources for us to pull content from within the collection when we are planning stage shows or videos.

For the stage performances I’m directly involved in selecting actors that have the talent to convey the themes and emotions that we want to capture for the audience. I help select and arrange the video clips that play behind us on the stage. So I would say I’m deeply involved and interested in the meshing of visual and audio for our shows and how that communicates to people at the show.

BS: Can you go into further detail about the importance of the videos that play behind Queensryche during performances?

GT: The videos that play behind us can be a crucial aspect of the show. So it is important to be involved in the process. The story told visually on the screen can help the audience to stay connected with what I‘m saying. In a live performance you can sometimes have audio issues-- for example, people might have trouble hearing the lyrics-- so the visuals keep the connection going. They keep the general concept going.

When I’m on stage and the film is playing behind me I can look out into the crowd and see that the audience is looking at the video instead of locking on to just me, or just one of the guys. I can see that because of the video the audience remains connected with what the music is about instead of being distracted-- I can see in their eyes that they understand the point.

People today are so used to minimalism, you know, empty spaces. I think that viewers need something more than that. They need visual art combined with audio at concerts because it is a strong communication tool. The visuals help to communicate the message clear.

You can have fun with the videos as well. For example, you can switch things up and include images that at first don’t seem to be connected to what is being said, but later on have it come together… so the audience is like “Oh my God, I get that!”.

BS: Relationships are a common theme on Queensryche albums-- one could say that both Operation Mindcrime and American Soldier and other albums are at heart about relationships and how individuals interact in various situations. When it comes to visual art-- are you attracted to artwork that deals with a similar theme-- art that conveys the joy and pain of relationships in general?

GT: I’m attracted to different types of art. The art that attracts me personally does not necessarily have to involve the themes I’ve explored with music. With Queensryche the themes we explore varies depending on the project. We have dealt with subject matter like madness and how you get to a point in your life where you accomplish goals and then start to really question what things are worth. So when we look for artists we look for someone who can convey those feelings visually and connect them to the lyrics and sound.

It can be hard to find a visual artist who cant match visually what I’m saying in a song. Some art, like painting, has a certain feel to it-- it can be full of movement or be static. So you have to think about that when selecting visuals in order to find what works as an image and with the audio.

American Soldier cover art -- Hugh Syme

BS: I understand that one artist you like to work with is Hugh Syme. Syme has done album art for Iron Maiden, Aerosmith, Megadeth, Rush among other bands. Can you discuss the connection you have with Syme?

GT: We work with Hugh Syme regularly. He is an artist who has a great reputation in the music world. He can take ideas and turn them into something with little direction. Share some thoughts with Hugh and he can do it. For example, he did the cover art for our recent album American Soldier. The album involves interviews I had with war vets from WWII all the way up to Iraq. The concept and lyrics are based on those interviews so it is like their voice, their thoughts about war, are heard. So I needed an image to convey that.

I spoke with Hugh for about 20 or 30 minutes about the concept and he returned with this idea of the soldiers boots which is on the cover of American Soldier. The image is kind of like the saying, ‘you don’t know a person until you walk in their shoes’, but in this case its you don’t know a soldier until you walk in their boots. It worked for the album. Hugh is able to take that basic image and incorporate it into everything from stage design to promotional materials for the band and tour.

When Hugh makes a cover it becomes a part of the promotion itself. He does this seamlessly-- makes it look easy because he knows what he is doing and sticks to it. Working with him has been a very positive experience. You don’t have to hunt him down to check on his work and progress-- sometimes it can be like pulling teeth when working with artists for album art.

Sometimes the artists you work with does not take the job seriously and you have to make sure they are actually working on something. Hugh is not like that. He does great work and is ok with others being a part of the process. When you find an artist like that you want to keep going back to them.

BS: What are your thoughts on criticism? Both music and art criticism?

GT: Why should anyone give a rats ass about what a music critic has to say about music? How many music critics have actually performed or know how to play an instrument? The same goes for art critics. I doubt many of them have ever created art, painted, or if they did they probably did not ‘make it’ so instead they rip apart people who have. Criticism is just an opinion, that is all it is no matter how much the person knows or thinks they know about the subject. It all comes down to their personal likes and dislikes.

I'll give you an example. I often visit art museums when I have time to myself and enjoy the Louvre. During visits I’d say that 9 times out of 10 I will walk past what an art critic says should “strike” me. The artwork that should have caught my attention, according to the critic, just did not strike me at that particular time. During another visit it might. Or I might walk past works that stuck out before because they did not catch my attention during that particular visit. Art is subjective. What you like can be due to how you are feeling at a specific time.

The problem with art and music critics is that they attach competition to everything. That is really their only purpose. So you have some people trying to live up to what a critic says is right or “good” instead of exploring their own creativity. If I did that I would have never got to where I am today.

BS: You once mentioned that we have become a mediocrity worshipping culture. Can you go into further detail about that?

GT: Modern people, especially in America, are so used to black and white marketing. Absolute black and white marketing. Because people are conditioned to expect absolute black and white marketing it can be hard for them to think outside of the box and to see things, products or bands, for what they really are.

BS: Do you have a stance on copyright?

GT: I can speak as someone who has had a long career in the music business. The idea of copyright is over. It is basically dead today. I think we could look into new ways of doing things, but I don’t know if that would even be enough to secure rights to intellectual property. I’ll use Queensryche as an example, we have seen a 90% drop in royalties since the 1990’s because of the advent of the internet and the advancement of file sharing technology.

It is too difficult to enforce copyright when technology makes it so easy to obtain music, or visual art for that matter, without paying for it. Because of that there is no real music industry today. It is just difficult to enforce copyright and no matter what you do someone will work around it.

BS: So because of rampant unchecked downloading the music industry is pretty much dead? Can it be turned around?

GT: The music industry of today is a façade compared to the past. I’ll put it this way, 10 years ago a record label would ship a million albums to retailers when a new album came out. The sell numbers of those shipments would be calculated to help decide chart ranking, the position and so on. Today you are lucky if 5,000 to 10,000 are shipped. Today the record label, the executives, jump up and down in joy if 500 are sold at retailers in the first week when in the past it used to be that you would need to have sold 60,000 in the first week to get that same response.

Society today just does not have respect when it comes to using stuff without permission. The same thing is happening with the movie industry in recent years and I’m sure the art world will have similar problems. It really hurts young musicians today because in the past a record label would give a band a three or four album contract from the start. Today they go through young bands like they are on a factory production line. A lot of young bands are dropped quick. They don’t have time to grow under the wing of a record label like they would have in the past.

BS: As you suggested, copyright infringement is becoming all too common in the age we live in. One could say that it is becoming harder for musicians and visual artists to protect their works as well as the intention of their creative contributions to society. Today it seems that a musician or visual artist, if popular, will be praised for infringing on the copyright of other musicians and visual artists instead of being questioned about their ethics and intentions.

The artist Shepard Fairey’s history of copyright allegations comes to mind. That said, do you support copyright law? Or do you feel that “fair use” should be extended further? Should music and art be fair game for anyone to use without the interest of the artist in mind? Or should artists be able to protect their works-- and in a sense, their market from those who would try to profit from it without compensation?

GT: I think people don’t take notice when someone infringes on copyright because they don’t understand or care about intellectual property. We have a generation, no, two generations now that have grown up with no understanding of intellectual property rights. They expect music and art to be free while not really doing anything themselves to contribute to culture other than adding to the problems we already have regarding the rights of musicians and visual artists.

I’d say that most of the musicians who support free culture have probably never been on stage, have never made any real money with their albums, or have based their career on using content that does not belong to them. Visual artists probably face a similar situation.

So they either support it because they are not at a place, or may never get to a place, where copyright matters to their career or they support weakened copyright because they have already tapped into the intellectual property of others without paying compensation and don’t want their job of taking from others to get any harder.

BS: So what about free culture supporters who suggest that strong copyright blocks or limits creativity?

GT: I don’t buy into that. Copyright has not blocked or limited my creativity. Like I said earlier, the people who make that claim have probably not produced something that people want to buy so copyright is not important to them. If they created something that people wanted and paid money for they would probably change their position really fast.

If they made their living from music or from visual art they would want to protect their intellectual property and be compensated when someone infringes on it. They would want to be able to support themselves and their families. At one time copyright was a good way to do that.

There are others who see intellectual property as limiting and don’t realize, or don’t care, that we have built our life around this, what we do on stage, and what we have created over the span of almost three decades. You could say we built our lives around copyright because it fed our kids, sustained our families, and helped us maintain some control over our careers and what we were able to provide.

Musicians and visual artists need and want to get compensated for what they do just like any other profession. It isn’t a hobby. Unfortunately, like I said earlier, there are two generations now that have grown into the idea that music, art, and anything creative should be free. The bad thing about that is that once music, art, and film has no value in the market it really won’t have any value at all in this money driven society. If creative works should be free, everything should be free, and I don’t see that happening anytime soon.


BS: Finally, your recent album, titled American Soldier, is a salute to service men and women-- it is a concept album about war from the perspective of those on the front lines. As you know, the war in Iraq has not been popular-- many artists have spoken out against the war with music and visual art.

Sometimes these works depict soldiers as nothing more than cold bloodied killers or mindless pawns-- you could say that they have insulted the men and women who defend their freedom to express. In a sense, some of the art in recent years has depicted American soldiers in a dehumanized manner. What are your thoughts concerning that? Is that one reason why you decided to work on the album?

GT: You could say that. People often speculate about situations, especially war. They make up their mind about a group of people even though they have most likely not been anywhere near their shoes-- or boots. How can I talk about Iraq if I have not been there? How can I talk about war if I have not experienced it directly? How can an artist comment on the soldiers serving in Iraq if they have not met any?

This is what I know... everyone hates war, including American soldiers. Every soldier I interviewed for the album, including my father, hated war. None of them want to fight like that yet they are able to sacrifice themselves, time with their family, and everything else.

We wanted to let the soldiers tell their own story without, for example, a painter telling their story based on speculation alone while in the comfort of an art studio. Soldiers were interviewed for the album and their thoughts are included throughout the album. It is not like soldiers are a different species or some primitive being designed to kill. They are us. They are people. The album reflects that.

For example, the song Home Again focuses on the feelings of separation that soldiers feel when they’re away from their families in a dangerous situation. These men and women are faced with one question every second during war, “will I make it back home again.”. I know that soldiers think more about life than death and more people need to understand that. They want to live and they want the war, the bad situation, to be over. In some ways we can all relate to that.

You can learn more about Geoff Tate by visiting his website-- www.geofftate.com. You can learn more about the band Queensryche by visiting their site-- www.queensryche.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Art Space Talk: qi peng (Part 3)

qi peng was born in Queens, New York in 1976 and received his masters degree at Yale University. He is a conceptual artist who executes “interviews” as a form of collaborative portraits with various art professionals and also uses primary/secondary documents to examine the contemporary art market. Occasionally he does paintings, photographs, and works on paper. The artist’s studio is located near downtown Salt Lake City and he works sometimes in New York City for street art or fine art special projects.

He has been exhibited in various places including the Projects Gallery, The Lab at Belmar, modern8 Gallery, James Cohan Gallery/NURTUREart, Metro Pictures, Art Raw Gallery, and Anna Kustera. qi peng is currently represented by The Barbara Ann Levy Gallery based out of West Palm Beach, Florida (www.balgallery.com). qi peng will have his first solo show at Envoy Gallery located in Lower East Side, New York City during June 2009.

"untitled collaborative piece" by David B. Smith and qi peng.
Courtesy of David B. Smith and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS)
New York.

Brian Sherwin: Concerning the directions you have taken with your art-- do you see yourself following a specific path? For example, do you still find time to paint while working on these other projects? Or would you say that you have found your ‘calling’, for lack of a better word?

qi peng: Oh yes, I still paint even with all of the work in the conceptual art stuff. The workload is pretty bad now so I may have to consider getting some assistants to help out especially in my work just like the studio system of the Renaissance era which wasn't such as a bad thing. Who knows whether Rubens could have been a conceptual artist with his official signature on the work of others? (laughs)

Painting is not dead, for me, as far as I am concerned. It's a daily or weekly exercise and an emotional testament to the resiliency of any artist. It even helps out with the conceptual art because even traditional painting or draftsmanship is the hallmark of what thoughts have solid construction and which ones have a foundation built on sand. I doubt that I could ever give up the brush and canvas or wood panel in my lifetime. Too much into my bloodstream.

Even with the new media art and video art being paramount within our media-laden culture, I seriously do believe that we need the primacy of good composition of our personal imagery. It's a matter of which tools that we choose to engineer the final artwork accordingly.

Even these interview portraits are a form of painting. Just that they are mixed media with photographic evidence and verbal phrases instead of acrylic and oil. That is painting in the loosest sense of the term. Or so we will think of it as such.

Brian Sherwin: You have exhibited at Projects Gallery, James Cohan Gallery, Art Raw Gallery and a number of other spaces. What do you enjoy most about exhibiting in general? Do you desire for viewers to be participants, so to speak, or do you view exhibiting as a way to gain feedback? Perhaps both?

qi peng: Exhibitions for me, is a form of public understanding and sharing of whatever projects I have done. A lot of my work has been shown at benefit art shows such as the coordination between NURTUREart and James Cohan or the Visual Aids and Metro Pictures. The artworks were sold for a good cause and for me, that is very important to remain socially engaged, as Sartre would have put it.

The interview portraits, none of which have been exhibited yet, are one layer of participation between the art world professional as well as myself and then with the public exhibition of them, a secondary layer of participation with the viewer is added to the pieces' meaning. I have received a lot of good feedback mostly online, particularly through the myartspace interface and email.

I am always glad when viewers are active participants within the public displays of art. I remember the huge impact that the Oldenburg metal sculpture of a clothespin in Philadelphia had on my daily routine of travel near Market Street. It was a reminder to take life in slowly and to realize that the visual cues surrounding us should not be ignored. Perhaps I have taken the dictum that life and art cannot be distinguished one step further as I have considered exhibiting private documents such as contracts or legal deeds as potential materials for the causal gallery visitor or museum fanatic to look at.

It's pretty much similar to pop art which takes the everyday and using its alchemy to transform that mundane object into something that has a special charm. I do think that contracts, tax forms, and even my cellular phone bill are all special pieces of art if one is able to step back and realize how much these little things are a sincere part of their lives.

Gallery exhibitions are really fabulous to have as a form of public communication too. Art needs the context of being placed within the context of starting an intellectual dialogue and discourse session. Without this context, there would be only this void and art would be merely for art's sake which defeats the purpose of why one paints or does conceptual art if even that artist is the only person that sees the pieces. Plus they are a lot of fun to join and help out.

For example, Art Raw Gallery is an emerging artist gallery in Chelsea which has a touch of the raw experimentation that was going on during the counterculture era with uncensored self-expression. James Cohen Gallery in conjunction with the NURTUREart benefit exhibition was a fabulous venue to exhibit a smaller study of one of my abstraction paintings and so on. Each venue is like solving an individual problem and to be able to engage the viewer with a visual solution based on the set constraints of the space. Makes for good art engineering supposedly.

Also as I have grown professionally I've begun to slow down where I exhibit work. It's very exhausting to have to pursue scattershot locations but with the scale of my projects going up, I think that a few group shows and one solo show per year would be sufficient for the type of workload I have to deal with. Hopefully, with potential gallery representation, the workload can ease as I don't have to focus on the self-marketing as much and then I can focus on getting back to the heart of the studio time I really do need.

Best is to have fun wherever you exhibit. Know that as long as you can pour your heart into each project, the people will appreciate what you have achieved based on your conceptual drive. Most of all, I really enjoy the huge challenge of trying to figure out to fit my work into any given architectural form.

Brian Sherwin: Is there a specific message that you strive to convey as far as the art world is concerned? If you could contact every artist, curator, art critic, and art dealer-- and every other ‘player’ within the art world-- what would you say?

qi peng: The message that I hope to convey to the public about the contemporary art world is that it is very much a game in the sense of the later Wittgenstein. All art projects and transactions are a form of thought experiments which are conducted within the context of this huge game plan. Just as Wittgenstein refers to language-games as a way of us to manipulate single words to express a meaningless subject, an art dealer has to offer a context for a single painting to have meaning through the exhibition game.

To clarify, the word "water" doesn't mean anything just by itself except when we choose to give it a context such as a command like "WATER!" or a question like "Water?" Similarly, a Xylor Jane painting doesn't have any singular meaning just by itself unless the gallery owner can explain its own context within art history or the use of its images relative to other types of art such as photography or other square paintings or even outsider spiritual art.

Paintings have to interact in this larger game in order to gain validity just as the word "water" has to gain validity through the repeated acceptance by others as a term by the linguists. A painting by Xylor Jane has to function in the way that the art market game has to define why a Jane artwork ought to be important through the networks of art critics and museum curators who are trusted by the collectors and general public that her works have critical importance.

The riddle is that the "meaning" of a painting has to be defined by an external force rather than its inherent properties of just being another bunch of shapes and lines on a support. What makes that particular combination of paint special over that of an amateur? That's the problem that art critics have to solve is how to interpret (read here the word "market" as well) for the public who may not understand the piece on a first glance.

Also here is the crux of the problem. If an artist chooses not to abide by the rules of this game, then he or she tends to get left out of the equation of recognition, sadly enough. Which is why my interview portraits are an attempt to democratize the art system. I can offer a chance to showcase an emerging artist with the same tools as an established artist and so on. This pecking order within the hierarchy of the contemporary art world can be deconstructed. Feels like some type of liberation movement, in an odd way.

For me to be able to speak to each art professional and tell them to be yourself would probably be too much of a naive approach. I sincerely would like to express my interest in being able to remove the front to see what the true character of a particular person would be regardless of status or the label the public imposes on them.

For example, Buck Naked's blog "How's My Dealing?" has a lot of really interesting anecdotes about individual curators or gallery owners and like a cubist portrait, one could create a composite of the whole person in question. Granted a lot of information on that website one has to take with a grain of salt but it does provide an insight that a magazine like Art+Auction would never touch in terms of the quirks of the individual.

I think that the impersonal attitude has been way too dominant within reporting of the arts and the general public has a very hard time to relate to the highbrow so much. That explains why street art and lowbrow art has become much more popular recently because people can enjoy rather than argue about the artwork, which makes for good debates indeed.

The art market has become a rather elaborate chess game since the early 1980's before the rise of the blue-chip galleries such as Gagosian and Mary Boone. A lot of it has to do with Reagan's economic policies being the mantra for people's outrageous behavior during that time period and since the art world reflected that milieu, the "greed is good" mentality somewhat infected the expectations of collectors and even some artists and gallerists. Plus the shift of power from the gallery to the collector was a huge trend that anyone with a lot of wealth could define the museum acquisitions and collections marketing such as the Phaidon monographs that are associated with the Rubell Family Collection in Miami.

My artwork does touch on those economic issues in a rather direct way and by asking the art professional how they are dealing with the recession and its aftermath becomes a telling signal for not only the state of the art market's health but also the individual's personality in the way that they deal with hardships on a psychological level.

Brian Sherwin: Is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

qi peng: First of all, I would like to thank you, Brian Sherwin, for taking the time to host this discussion with me about topics of your own choosing. I think that it has been rather delightful to be able to converse with you regarding some rather challenging topics that aren't always easy to address or even contemplate.

Also this is a chance to thank the myartspace website to allow me to feature some traditional and some conceptual work which may seem bizarre at a first glance. I truly think that myartspace points in the direction of combining successfully the driving force between social networking websites as well as the traditional framework of gallery networking.

On a professional level, I would like to thank the following people who have supported me thick and thin through wind and fire: Barbara Ann Levy (wonderful gallerist and fellow New Yorker in Florida), Camilla Fallon (fellow Yale graduate), Peter Halley at Yale University and Mary Boone, Wendy White at Leo Koenig (fabulous artist), Christina Ray at Glowlab (most fabulous-est gallerist), Vanessa Buia at Buia Gallery, Daniel Gellis at The Conference Room Gallery, Brian Staker at Salt Lake City Weekly, Sibyll Kalff at Iao PROJECTS, Ruth Lubbers at VSA Arts of Utah, Edward Winkleman with his brilliant Winkleman Gallery, William Powhida (still owe you one), James Kalm with The Kalm Report, Mindy Kober at Iao PROJECTS, Ruby Carlsruh, Vincent de Sarthe, Alex Farkas, James Wagner and Barry Hoggard at ArtCat, Travis Tanner and his assistants at Tanner Frames, all those people who agreed to become part of the interview portrait project, the Gateway Apple Store whose employees who had to bear with me using their station as a temporary office, and pretty much everyone in the galaxy of the art world I love too much... I am sorry if I left you out here.

On a personal level, I would like to thank the following persons: my guardian "stepfather" Powell, my family and close friends too numerous to name here, Circlegal at Iao PROJECTS, The Street Phantom (Joey Krebs), Adam and Marie Rosepink, Paul Winkfield, Andrew Wrigley, Alexis Granwell at Tiger Strikes Asteroid, David Andrew Frey at culturehall, David B. Smith at HQ, Eric Doeringer the infamous painting bootlegger, Ilse Murdock, Brian Sherwin at myartspace, Kadar Brock the Absolut genius painter, and my close friend Matt Jones at Buia Gallery who has some of the most beautifullest works in this world.

Without people, I doubt that I could make it or want to make it as an artist. Yes, art is in my bloodstream. I don't think that I could ever step away from the home plate of the act of creation in the stadium of an artist.

On a final note, I do wish to allude to a much more fascinating conceptual art which I am in the midst of: an Eharmony dating conceptual art project. I am trying still to figure out how to convert the private details of my search for the girlfriend of my dreams as a work of art, but it isn't as easy as I thought it would be.

I am thinking about the final product of a flowchart drawing but right now I'm still plugging along in the early stages of this wonderfully offbeat work of performance art combined with hopefully some traditional artwork based on Eharmony. At least, I won't need the help of Dr. Phil in any case.

Now, only if I could figure out to make the wedding as part of a solo exhibition... could the gallerist act as the priest witnessing the vows... just another thought... LA FIN.




To view my entire interview with qi peng please click on the 'qi peng' label below. You can learn more about qi peng by visiting his website-- www.qipeng.net. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Art Space Talk: qi peng (Part 2)

document 2, by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann Levy Galleryand qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

Brian Sherwin: For one project, titled 'documents', you sent unsolicited submission letters to over 400 galleries throughout the United States. My understanding is that you saved the acceptance and rejection letters as a part of this project. In a sense, your project documented the struggles that many emerging artists have while seeking gallery representation. Can you go into further detail about this specific project?

qi peng: The "documents" series is a compilation of both acceptance and rejection letters that resulted from my experiences of having put together some faux portfolios of some gaudy artwork that I crudely executed and putting together a packet for various galleries throughout the nation, mostly concentrating on my hometown of New York City.

I started this project in October 2007 and began with a successful registration of my artwork with the Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York organization because I knew that I could garner a good reply letter from them. It was then that I made two trips to New York City and one trip to Denver in order to slam dunk, in a good way, my resume and portfolios to all sorts of places ranging from blue-chip galleries such as Mitchell, Innes, and Nash all the way to more underground joints such as Participant, Inc. It was rather expensive but I was glad to have the help of my "stepfather" Powell who was willing to call up each gallery one by one to find out what the submission policy was. I guess that it was my earliest collaboration by far.

Joseph Beuys once said that everybody is an artist. Funnily enough, the documents series have been proving otherwise that it is a circle of tastemakers who define who can become "the artist." It's very much like the wine industry in that there is a whole lot of politics involved in getting certification indeed. What we need is a bottle shock in the art industry and I think that the internet is helping out with the shifting of the gallery system such as the online only galleries of NYAXE, Ugallery, Collegeartonline (CAO), and The Barbara Ann Levy Gallery which was a former New York space now relocated to West Palm Beach, Florida.

Also more traditional galleries are offering online purchase options such as Paige West's Chelsea gallery Mixed Greens where anyone can pick up a Kammy Roulner drawing on the fly. I seriously do believe that if the art market can be forged as being more transparent then the artist and collector relationship can develop into a more positive direction without all the drama that's involved in product placement.

And there is the emotional struggle that is hidden within the codes of these documents indeed. It's also rather awesome to see the infinite number of ways that the character of "qi peng" is rejected by each gallery assistant or director. The LewAllen Contemporary rejection was the most hilarious one since it was sent as a personalized postcard lacking a signature. Hopefully I can thank them for sending me a mass mailed rejection letter someday. Granted, I don't make it rather evident through the rather perfunctory typefaces and corporate gallery logos like some twisted riddle but the viewer would need to read literally between the lines.

I think that too many people can attack the fact that much of conceptual art can be too nerdy or detached for their liking which is why I pursue conceptual art projects that have a "beating heart," something that I can capture with the tonality of personal emotion without the veneer of over-analysis. Plus there is so much black humor in my own utter stupidity in trying to find gallery representation like a shotgun wedding.

Contacting galleries like this just doesn't work, and knowing the tragic end of it, there it emphasizes the beauty of my happy failure as an artist whose success is at the mercy of the critics and curators nowadays. Hopefully the documents can make for some good vintage wine labels someday! After all, I see each gallery submission as a scientific experiment gone awry like some perverse tilting at the illusory windmills.

Plus, we live in this world that is immersed in documentation. The inherent contradiction is that we require more documentation to become more transparent to the public eye yet the documentation which has too many pages tends to obfuscate the truth. It's like having so much details that obscurity rather than clarity is the result. Strange, isn't it? The same applies to my life through these seemingly straightforward documents that rejected or accepted the character of "qi peng."

People who skim these drawings will think that oh, it's a rejection or acceptance thing. I am hoping for a profound engagement where people begin to ask questions like, "How was qi peng rejected from this gallery?" or "Why was qi peng rejected from the final round of this art competition?" It's like trying to paint a portrait of qi peng based on people's responses to the character without ever having seen the real person like some mysterious Godot character where a whole play can be based on a physically "nonexistent" persona.

And the art world gets caught up in this type of paperwork similarly to the federal tax organizations. That is the strange irony of the supposed freedom that causes a lot of people to stereotype the supposedly bohemian workings of the gallery system. It's a jungle of bureaucracy out here and easy to get caught up within its spider web.
document 13 by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann Levy Galleryand qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.
Brian Sherwin: Out of curiosity-- as I’m sure some readers will ask this upon reading our interview-- how many rejection letters did you receive compared to acceptance letters? Also, is the project ongoing?

qi peng: Wow, I haven't kept count really but in terms of gallery representation I have scored a big, fat zero which is not surprising there. The acceptance letters I have received so far have been from organizations such as Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York and a few others. I even got a rejection letter in the form of a critique that specified that the judges couldn't determine the dimensions of the paintings I had submitted the images for even though I tabulated the dimensions on a separate sheet of paper. Very hilarious indeed!

This project has been ongoing although honestly, things have been slowing down as I focus on the interview portraits more and more. In reality, I think that gallery representation will fall naturally on its own terms but I have no interest in being a critical darling or rock star in the contemporary art world. I consider myself to be a daily bread median worker, a part of the overall system who is happy to labor each and every day. No perks needed in fact.

I look forward to extending the idea behind the documents series into other things such as exhibiting my complete receipts from a whole year of buying stuff in 2008. Once, I was tempted nearly to exhibit my tax filing returns to the IRS as a work of art but perhaps that would have caused problems with the government if they found out that I was too forthright about my business. I know that art is the delicate balance in becoming too transparent about one's own intentions and disappearing magically into the background to see what follows.

So the current score is at last count: approximately 5 acceptances to about 25 rejections. Not bad although right now I'm currently in the process of working out gallery representation with someone I know. Details to be finalized later on, I suppose.
The documents series is a self-perpetual machine in many ways as I execute more artwork ready for the public to examine and determine whether they approve or disapprove of it. Which is why I am crossing my fingers for the series to infiltrate my upcoming artist's books that become issues of a DIY Parkett's. Overtones of Nabokov, I guess.
kadar brock at paula copper by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann
Levy Gallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.
Brian Sherwin: I understand that you are working on a project titled 'imaginary exhibitions'. For this project you will establish fake exhibitions at real or dead art spaces that exist in real time. Can you go into further detail about this specific project and your thoughts behind it?
qi peng: The imaginary exhibitions project was started because during the past year, I saw so many of my gallery stomping grounds disappear due to the terrible economy. The disappearance of a place like Roebling Hall or Rivington Arms was alarming as I had a chance to walk through their spaces last spring. Now they continue to exist as a memory in my own head. Also there is the playful fantasy of having the "power" to play the role of "curator" or "gallery owner" by allowing my artists friends to "exhibit" in places that they could dream about being in.
For example, it was fabulous to imagine having my friend Kadar Brock over at Paula Cooper Gallery which is a fairly respectable space. Ironically, after I showed him the piece online, Kadar mentioned that he enjoyed the ad that I created for his forthcoming show there this fall and I was happy about his assessment of this supposed event.
Apart from the fact that I get to celebrate the wonderful variety of my artist friends, the imaginary exhibition series is probably the closest that I will achieve to any form of institutional critique as I can use the parody framework to play on the branding of galleries (which Ashley Bickerton or Tom Sachs could probably do on a larger scale) as well as demonstrating that shows are created through valid art connections rather than the actual "worth" of the artwork being presented. A lot of the exhibitions are read through the context of how it's shown rather than the inherent meaning that the work delivers.
That's the irony of it but one can see that Saatchi's creation of the Hirst marketing machine during the past two decades seems to bear this theory out. Yes, it's somewhat sad that good art is manufactured a lot through effective marketing strategies which can create a dangerous precedent for how future artists, especially students, will think. And that mentality can create such a terrible example for the way that studio visits and art criticism is so dependent on the way that the art market system functions. One only needs to look at the way that commercial street art has usurped the symbolism of the iconography of revolutionaries. Poor Che Guevara must be rolling in his grave over how his image has become such a visual cliche!
Also this particular series allows me to play around in the sandbox of graphic design. By reconstruction of these fictional ads, I am glad to be able to put together the elements of a self-made marketing schema. It's certainly not easy to recreate or mimic the fonts that each gallery chooses by any means. I consider this to be a step forward in the idea of transparency and the DIY approach in the branding mechanism.
I also enjoy the strong challenge of parodying the marketing methods with this ironic homage to the gallery spaces that I enjoyed visiting, whether or not they are defunct. The most essential aspect of this is to put a huge twist on appropriation art with the unique touch of reinvention. I guess that digital collage would be its closest counterpart.
Luckily, I haven't heard back from any of the gallery spaces about these rather hilarious ads. I try to match the ad space to a particular format such as the square for ArtForum or the standard letter size for some of the other mainstream art magazines or exhibition postcard sizes. I hope to be able to continue working on this particular series even though it's quite a number of hours just to get one spread completed.
spray painting 18, by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann Levy
Gallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.
Brian Sherwin: You also create paintings and works on paper-- and have explored photography as well. Which mediums do you enjoy the most?
qi peng: Actually, I really enjoy painting the best. It's close to something which is spontaneous from the heart and a good break from the zany nature of my conceptual artwork. The spray paint works have gotten some decent attention and I am glad that my artist friend Matt Jones enjoys the ones in his own private collection.
On the surface they resemble a much more colorful hybrid between Wendy White (another fabulous mixed media artist) with Christopher Wool on acid. I sincerely enjoy exploring the limits of gestural abstraction where the painting is a record of my hand movements across the support. I also do a lot of works on paper that range from industrial landscapes to pretty mundane, in a good way, pen and ink-type of portraits.
Lately I've been planning the execution of some traditional oil paintings based on the scenes of Larry Salander and his family. To probe the drama behind the art dealer who is best remembered for his fraud is worth exploring from a psychological and metaphysical way. I think that it will be full of dark humor and irony when the series will be completed on a long-term scale. Plus it's a sly dig at the fact that Salander wasn't a big fan of Koons or Warhol and probably conceptual art in the same boat too.
Ironically, it's also a small counterbalance against the art magazine media's one-dimensional portrait of Salander as this art world Madoff. He definitely is a huge cheater but I want to be more of the Sherlock Holmes here in this instance. For example, why did this guy try to extend his magical powers to commit fraud on his various clients? What drove him to such underhanded manners?
I am excited that the paintings that I will be featuring will be in black and white to symbolize the grey nature of art dealing as well as in mirror image to symbolize the reversal of fortune for the man and his family as well as the backwards moral code that he followed. Also, there will be huge surprise with these traditional paintings as the ultimate irony but I wouldn't want to divulge the secret until after the series is over, if ever.
I surmise that being labeled as a conceptual artist allows for such a broad latitude that we cannot avoid being attracted all types of self-expression and execution of particular ideas into a final form. Painting is one of many tools which works more often than not which is why I delve so much into that realm. And for me, that is the most satisfying component of having a wide latitude like one of my heroes, Martin Kippenberger.
Brian Sherwin: What are your thoughts concerning the internet as a medium, so to speak. In recent years there has been an increase in art projects involving the internet. Do you feel that artists will continue to utilize the internet as a medium-- what is the future, in your opinion, for internet based art?
qi peng: Well, the internet has been such an influence for a very long time on the art world. For example, the marvelous German photographer Thomas Ruff has been appropriating pornographic imagery straight off the web years ago to blow them up to pixelated epics. Now I think that he does landscape photos that are very pixelated too. Also with internet projects such as Wikipedia Art, which is funny because there is a public portrait of "qi peng" on Wikipedia too, as well as artwork that contain Abode Flash animation with click-and-point capabilities which deliver very intriguing results.
I really do attest that it's not just the rich visual resources that the internet can provide for the base of imagery for painters, photographers, and even sculptors. It all boils down to the tradition of cataloguing, which I can point to the many decades that Gerhard Richter kept a visual encyclopedia within his Atlas series. Classification also becomes an essential artist's tool as well which allows one to draw the historical referents and method of artistic presentation.
I don't think that one ought to use the internet as a crutch for the creation of particular pieces but that it is important to celebrate the diverse vocabulary of the visual potentials with the internet as the conceptual jumping point indeed.
After all, there can be so much done with Google Maps or thumbnail imagery in remembering how much the internet is a fictional creation of our everyday reality through the portal of the computer. It's the imaginary mirror to our true souls and for me, cannot replace the base emotional crux of human relationships. So I prefer to leave the internet as one of many great tools that the artist has at his or her disposal.
Also the interview portraits wouldn't have been as successful without the networking tools of Twitter, Facebook, and just the World Wide Web itself. It would have been nearly impossible for me to travel extensively within reasonable expenses to visit each individual who was and will be involved within this particular series. Thus, the internet becomes a key component within the final artwork itself.
I guess that you could argue that many artists' websites end up being a work of art too. Plus I sincerely believe that the website for Aqua Art Miami is just one of the finest masterpieces of graphic design and online art in terms of being able to contain dense amounts of information with a clean and elegant interface. I can't help looking at the typography of anything which I see on any website I surf to anyways.
Brian Sherwin: Can you go into further detail about some of your influences?
qi peng: Well, I have such varied influences that it would be nearly impossible to delineate all of them here. So basically I will try to touch on the major ones here as much as I can within the next few sentences.
For the conceptual art component, I can name drop the following: Maurizio Cattelan (the biggest influence by far), Dan Colen, Terence Koh, Hans Haacke, Jenny Holzer, John Baldessari, Wade Guyton, Tom Sachs, On Kawara, Mark Lombardi, Mel Bochner, Art & Language, and Sophie Calle as the main people who inspired me.
For my paintings, works on paper, and photography, I can name check the following: Christopher Wool, Anselm Reyle, Wendy White (whose mixed media spray paint works I MUST recommend highly), Matt Jones (great friend), Kadar Brock (fabulous friend), Ion Birch, Marilyn Minter, Thomas Ruff, Gerhard Richter, Sigmar Polke, Stephen Shore, Martin Kippenberger, Andrew Wrigley (wonderful friend), Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, Claude Monet, Juan Gris, Wade Guyton, Kelley Walker, Dash Snow, Kristen Baker, Mark Lombardi (again), Paul Cezanne, Franz Kline, Jasper Johns, and so on.
I think that discovering more artists through myartspace, blogs, and mainstream art publications have bolstered my enjoyment of all art, even stuff that many people dismiss such as outsider art.



You can learn more about qi peng by visiting his website--
www.qipeng.net. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Art Space Talk: qi peng (Part 1)

qi peng was born in Queens, New York in 1976 and received his masters degree at Yale University. He is a conceptual artist who executes “interviews” as a form of collaborative portraits with various art professionals and also uses primary/secondary documents to examine the contemporary art market. Occasionally he does paintings, photographs, and works on paper. The artist’s studio is located near downtown Salt Lake City and he works sometimes in New York City for street art or fine art special projects.

He has been exhibited in various places including the Projects Gallery, The Lab at Belmar, modern8 Gallery, James Cohan Gallery/NURTUREart, Metro Pictures, Art Raw Gallery, and Anna Kustera. qi peng is currently represented by The Barbara Ann Levy Gallery based out of West Palm Beach, Florida (www.balgallery.com). qi peng will have his first solo show at Envoy Gallery located in Lower East Side, New York City during June 2009.

spray painting 18, by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann LevyGallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

Brian Sherwin: You received your masters degree at Yale University. Can you discuss your academic years? Did you have any influential peers or instructors?

qi peng: Art school at Yale University (also did studies in public health) was a fairly rigorous institution that focused on the artist being able to coordinate efficiently into the game of the contemporary art world. Apart from some of the best resources of the two art museums on campus, there was this weight of history throughout my time there.

After all, art students at Yale have to deal with the legacy of heavyweights such as Richard Serra, Chuck Close, and Robert Mangold from decades ago. There are also more recent successes such as Jessica Stockholder, Matthew Barney, Rosson Crow, and Justine Kurland from the younger generation. The students realize this.


Yale had a rather tight atmosphere. However, it wasn't competitive in the sense of being cutthroat. Yes, there were the times of backstabbing like some random episode of "Gossip Girl" but I wasn't the type to be involved in such affairs. I enjoyed studio time. It had to be on the downlow because I was somewhat of a conceptual artist and not really a painter at the time. I burned a ton of midnight oil at the Sterling Library where I did a lot of research as well.

I took a class in Russian literature and many in business school for management and economics, particularly regarding the health care field. I think that for me, walking to other parts of the school to take non-art classes, helped put my artwork into perspective at the time. Unfortunately, I have destroyed much of my legacy from that time and the earliest work that still exists are some pretty profane sketches I did when I moved to Philadelphia after graduate school.

I think that for me the liberal arts approach as well as the secret audit of classes due to Yale's strict policies really helped quite a bit in cornering me into the art prankster whom I am today.

william powhida (panel 1) by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara AnnLevy Gallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

In terms of influence back then, Peter Halley was and still is my personal favorite dude there. It is certain that he emphasized conceptual drive as well as being one of the primary movers and shakers of Neo-Geo abstraction. For me, I seriously believe that his methodology had such a great impact in my current studio habits because I really stopped executing artwork without a pre-planning stage. Hard to be spontaneous without tons of notes now.

Oh, and also his use of beautifully garish neon colors had a strong influence on my preferences for a industrial and flourescent color palette mixed with more traditional colors within the series of spray painted works on canvas and papers I've been pursuing during the past few years. There is no doubt that Halley was the person key to my development of what I do and seek within my artistic practice now.

Also Yale has a wonderful system for being able to place their graduates into the New York gallery system with its connections. Even though I ended up doing the public health circuit for years to get some experience with the everyday person, art has never been latent within me during all those years. Plus, without my strong experiences in other subjects particularly postmodern fiction and poetry, I doubt that I would have been pursuing the current admixture of visual and verbal cues within my interview portrait series.

And one mustn't forget that new media art is very much the conjunction of art with computer science and the branch of logic, particularly with the hypertext concept as the focus of the death of a single loci in knowledge. It's very hard to escape the web of references, even within the seemingly traditional artwork, that is in vogue nowadays.

edward winkleman (panel 2), by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara AnnLevy Gallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

Brian Sherwin: As a conceptual artist you have executed "interviews" for your project titled 'portraits'. The "interviews" are a form of collaborative portrait with various art professionals and also involves primary and secondary documents in order to examine the contemporary art market. Can you discuss this aspect of your work and why you decided to do it?

qi peng: At first, I was thinking about keeping a studio diary when I began to exhibit professionally two years ago after a six year hiatus. Ironically, after discovering the radical works of Sophie Calle, I seriously contemplated being able to deconstruct the boundaries between the private and public domains of my real and fictional lives, as "qi peng" is my pen name, and then I could have this realistic character whose body I could assume the identity of.

I pondered about why many artists wouldn't want to disclose what the process was for their becoming a successful artist and since I was rather process-oriented within my artistic focus recently, I felt that converting this studio diary of my acceptance and rejection letters would make for a fabulous series of prints and components for a future installation project.


After all, there is this remarkable sense of humanity in being able to analyze each step of an art career, whether it be mired in failure (ironically the title of one of my group exhibitions last year at the Laboratory at Belmar) or crowned success like a lot of the younger artists who seemed to achieve rock star success with the blue-chip galleries during the previous decade of the Bush Administration.

For me, the journey to my ultimate failure, being a rather cynical and humorous existentialist at best, was worth well documenting as a long-term art project. It seems now very logical to destroy any boundaries between art and my own life as art has become too addictive as a palliative to my own ills and joys.

april gornik (panel 1) by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann LevyGallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

Ironically, the interview portraits were a logical extension of the documents series that I had been focusing on during the past two years. The documents series is a Don Quixote-like search for gallery representation, which has become like a quest for the Holy Grail-- a mock fantasy if you will.

The documents series for me had too much of an ego trip, or mock ego trip as I interpreted them, so I felt that I wanted to diminish my own supposed achievements. That's the main reason why my name of "qi peng" is always lower case (which it's rather hilarious to see no two people spell my name the same way) because I see my humble artwork as the product of an artisan and not some thrill seeker like Julian Schnabel.


It was this sense of humility that I realized how much I wanted to do more collaborative work without losing the qi peng stamp. Logically, going the direction of a formalist structure such as the interview question and answer format would counteract the mass media's tendency to portray everybody as this one-dimensional stereotype and add a touch of humanity to each single art professional just like a commissioned portrait.

Also what is rather fascinating is that these interviews are the true intersection between more traditional art and new media art as I haven't met most of these people in the flesh yet but only through Facebook, email, and the internet. And yet many of them have become good friends as well.

Art magazines, just like most other media outputs, have this tendency to make these stereotypes too often in scripted articles that they pump out on a monthly basis. Ironically, Art in America magazine has recently started doing a monthly interview with a name-brand artist, such as Terry Winters. For me, my interview portraits are less about journalism as I hardly have the credentials to do any newspaper writing and more about grasping a sense of humanity using brushstrokes of words. I guess that the bitter irony is that the semblance of doing a piece of new journalism has caused people to ignore the fact that I am primarily a visual artist.

One can see a counterpart in the xerox book installation entitled "Working Drawings and Other Visible Things on Paper Not Necessarily Meant to be Viewed as Art" that Mel Bochner (a former Yale professor actually) exhibited back in 1966 when he was teaching at the School of Visual Arts at the time. I guess that people in the counterculture decade were more interested in the underlying process rather than the final product which is marketable. That explains the heyday of conceptual art which I think hasn't been as bold as the pre-Reagan era which was the rise of global consumerism during that era. I think that sometimes raw art is the way to go if that is the proper solution to the artist's puzzle.


I think that viewers need to see that my interview portraits are less of institutional critique and more of an objective type of verbal photography similar to the social portraits that August Sander, the friendly headshot portraits of Chuck Close, and the serial workouts of Thomas Ruff all executed during the last century. I am hoping to capture the zeitgeist of the contemporary art world without being too flippant like the infamous William Powhida or the enfant terrible Hans Haacke who was hypercritical of the system.

I do find the art world too anti-democratic in some of its functioning and for me, doing these interview portraits are a way to rectify the balance of power and bringing the art back to the hands of the people and away from the elitism. Either that or I have too much of the old school Marxist in my bloodstream.

I do hope that the viewers of these projects are going to appreciate the sense of "human-ness" regarding of their professional label of museum curator or gallerist or conceptual artist and see a flesh and blood person behind the mask, the label that we participants often get too caught up in. I think that reflecting on each other is the key to helping out artists and gallery owners become better people through art.

matt jones (panel 1) by qi peng. Courtesy of The Barbara Ann Levy Gallery and qi peng / Artists Rights Society (ARS) New York.

My questions, at best, are failed examples of objective "reportage" since my selective focus betrays the artist's own hand in the situation. This is the same dilemma that a documentary photograph who works for a news wire has to face as well. No photograph can be truly objective and even the most causal snapshot reflects the intention of the author through the act of cropping reality. My interviews can only approximate the whole figure of the art professional because there are certain aspects of the personality that I can only reach.

Think of it this way, even a full body portrait that Lucian Freud executes cannot trap the whole personage because there are hidden spiritual aspects that are hidden within the guts of the human being. At least, I make a concerted effort to engage the conversation to cover all types of topics ranging from personal habits and hobbies to restaurant recommendations and curating habits. I wouldn't be too surprised if a few gallerists, artists, etc. got sort of pissed off by my attempts to be too "intrusive" like some reality television show.
In any case, each interview portrait thus becomes a form of elegant collusion between the two characters to draw out self-identity. Happily enough, many of the people have used these portraits for their press material so it was nice to help them out just as well.



You can learn more about qi peng by visiting his website-- www.qipeng.net. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Friday, April 17, 2009

Art Space Talk: Sarah Maple

Sarah Maple has been called many things due to her art-- some people have lashed out at her with vulgar anonymous messages, others have praised her for her bravery and humor, some have called her the heir to Tracey Emin's throne. One thing is for certain-- she is not going to stop.


Sarah Maple

Brian Sherwin: Sarah, having interviewed you twice before I know that many people have misconceptions about your work. Many suggest that you do what you do simply for shock value. However, I believe that you are more concerned with the longevity of your art than simply producing a shock factor, so to speak. After all, your art is no more shocking than MTV-- and that is where the impact of your work can be found.
In my opinion, your art, specifically your series of photographs, documents aspects of cultural growth and expansion in that it captures the essence of youthful rebellion that has dominated culture, politics, and even religion in the last decade or so. In other words, if your art is shocking it is because society-- today-- is shocking. With that in mind-- your work grows with us and is therefore valid. What are your thoughts on this?
Sarah Maple: I agree!
This exhibition is shit by Sarah Maple

BS: Some of your recent exhibits have-- unfortunately-- involved harsh criticism from individuals who feel that you are exploiting your faith and ethnic background. For example, I’ve read that one exhibit was vandalized and that both you and the gallery owner had received death threats. Can you discuss your reaction to that form of aggression?

SM: At the time I was quite upset and disappointed and hugely frustrated. I was in no way exploiting, it just happens to be that Islam is so in the limelight right now that my work is receiving this attention. If this hadn't been the case I would have still had the same upbringing and I would have made work about it regardless. My work is very cathartic. I make work on my own experiences and feelings so it was natural for me to discuss it in my work and that's my right as an artist.

Fighting Fire with Fire No.2 by Sarah Maple

BS: When I interviewed you the first time you mentioned that there had been a few threats concerning you work. Has the recent controversy forced you to think twice about the direction of your work or the work that you choose to exhibit? Or has it inspired you to push your work further? In other words, does the anger inform you that you are in the right direction?

SM: It's inspired me in the way that I'm reacting to it. I mean I've been making work about the reaction and about offensive work and what is considered offensive, censorship, etc. So yes it was an inspiring experience. I would only change direction if I felt like I had dealt with the subject. Nobody can put pressure on me and force me to stop. I will not jeopardize my integrity as an artist.

I love Orgasms by Sarah Maple

BS: Has anyone ever suggested that you should stop due to concern for your safety? Do you have a point in your mind that would trigger you to stop creating-- or are you in it for the long haul, so to speak?

SM: I am in it for the long haul and I would not hold back on anything 'controversial' unless I felt it was immoral or disrespectful. That is why I will always stand by my work and not censor or destroy it.

BS: Can you describe how it feels to be caught between two ideologies? Perhaps you can put into words some of the personal conflict that arises from the meshing of East and West that is within you and that you have reflected with your work? Would you say that you are closer to establishing yourself as an individual regardless of your mixed heritage? Or do you think you will always be torn between the two?

SM: I think I will always be torn but things are becoming clearer, but it doesn't mean I'm happier with the results....it's quite upsetting, I wish I was still in the dark. I need my Mum!

For me personally growing up the whole clash thing was upsetting because I so wanted to be the best muslim I could possibly be and I wanted to embrace my culture but I felt a fraud. I don't see the point in doing anything if it's not done properly. I think many muslims who criticize me do not have this conscience.
Men only... by Sarah Maple

BS: Lets talk about sex. In your images you often portray yourself as somewhere between man and woman or as a deceptive toy-- in that you play on the desires of heterosexual men while making a feminist statement. Sometimes these statements are clear while other times they are slightly concealed. Tell us about some of the themes you explore concerning sexuality and gender roles. Why do you capture these themes within the context of your art?

SM: I am very interested in roles and stereotypes and feminism is my favourite subject because mainly there are so many avenues and I'm still not sure where I stand. Part of me thinks men still rule the world (or think they do!!) so why not accept it and women use their bodies to exploit that fact....or do we try and change it and fight against it and question the ridiculous notion of post feminism. I could go on all day about this subject, it’s so close to my heart.
Cocks: Champs Cock by Sarah Maple

BS: You have also been known to be masculine with your work. For example, your series of photographs titled Cocks. Can you tell us more about that specific series and the meaning it has for you?

SM: I used to work in a shop and got so bored I used to show off by getting different objects and pretending they were cocks (just like in the photos, haha!). And that's literally how it started. I have always been interested in the penis, just by what it symbolises, the power. And all it is is a bit of silly skin that looks so funny. But to have that silly bit of skin attached to you means SO much.

I bought this book called 'the Big Penis book' and it explains all about the wang through history, it's fascinating. I wanted to almost mock it, or mock it's importance,. But at the same time it's my way of proudly adorning my own one!

BS: So is there a specific message you strive to convey concerning sex and the role of sex in contemporary society?

SM: I think sex is great but I don't want it to be about the control of women or the objectification of women....I want women to get some control.

I'm a feminist because my friends are by Sarah Maple

BS: What about the art world itself? Have you experienced any form of sexism when it comes to exhibiting? I recall an interview I had with Sylvia Sleigh, who is noted for having made some huge cracks in the glass ceiling of the art world. She suggested that sexism in the art world still exists, but she went on to suggest that she feels that men in the art world today have a better understanding of women and are more apt to view women as equals whether it be in the studio or in an exhibit. What say you?

SM: I totally agree there is still sexism. My 'I wish I had a penis' piece was all about the art world. But that was more about my experience at art college. Since then I have felt a lot more confident as a woman in the art world. Maybe because that fact is quite obviously the heart of much of my work.
Who decided...? by Sarah Maple

BS: What about the humorous aspect of your work. Most, if not all, of your work contains humor on one level or the other. Based on prior conversations it would seem that humor is something you embrace. Do you think that it is important to be able to laugh-- even in the face of controversy and dealing with serious issues? Can you discuss that aspect of your work?

SM: There was a point where I considered I'd been foolish trying to discuss quite serious issues in such a light hearted way....but that's just me, there is always wit and humour. I don't see the point without. I just wouldn't bother if I couldn't be funny. I see the funny side in everything, even in the horrible things people say, I take inspiration from it all.

BS: In closing I’m going to ask one question: Who is Sarah Maple?

SM: I'm nice. And I like cats.

Links of Interest:

www.myartspace.com/blog/2007/08/art-space-talk-sarah-maple.html

www.myartspace.com/blog/2007/11/art-space-talk-sarah-maple.html

You can learn more about Sarah Maple by visiting her website-- www.sarahmaple.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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If Shepard Fairey can do it...

Shepard Fairey and his legal team have once again responded to the Associated Press. This time artist Shepard Fairey and his lawyer, Anthony Falzone of the Fair Use Project, suggest that the AP is hypocritical concerning their stance on copyright and the defense of “fair use”.

In a nut shell-- Fairey and Falzone have offered different examples of AP photographs of artwork-- from exhibit coverage and history in the making-- that were taken without “permission” -- all of which were taken for the purpose of reporting and newsgathering. Concerning the use of images without permission or licensing Fairey has boldly stated, “If the AP has the right to do what it’s done, then so do I.”.

Fairey and Falzone also suggest that the AP has listed the images for sale on The AP's image licensing database as a commercial product for "professional photo buyers.". However, sources have told me that the “professional photo buyers” are other news agencies and museums who desire to document the historic significance of the photographs. The AP also offers images for personal use-- such as a photograph of a historic event to hang in your home. However, I was not able to find any of the mentioned photographs listed for personal use.

Note: One thing I noticed about Shepard Fairey and Anthony Falzone’s statement is that they conveniently left out some key details about the photographs the AP offer for sale. Thus, I invite you to look at what the AP says about the images they offer for sale :

“AP Images is a source of images for professional photo buyers. However, you can purchase open edition reprints of AP photos for home or personal use through our partner Pictopia. Using state-of-the-art laser enlargers to produce museum-grade photographs and special archival materials in production and framing, Pictopia creates images that will last a lifetime. Images purchased for personal use may not be used commercially (in publications, brochures, advertisements, copies to sell, etc.) or reproduced for any use.”

Shepard Fairey’s recent statement can be found on his Obeygiant website as well as his blog on The Huffing Post . Know in advance that the Huffington Post moderator will most likely not accept a comment if the comment sides with the AP on this case or points out specific contradictions involving Shepard Fairey & Obey Giant Art Inc. concerning “fair use“.
Note: Keep in mind that Shepard Fairey is known for sending cease-and-desist letters to artists who comment on or parody his widely known artwork. In other words, you probably won’t find Baxter Orr or the creator of Steelerbaby mentioned in the comment section of The Huffington Post article titled, 'If the AP Has the Right to Do What It’s Done, Then So Do I'. Why? Because Shepard Fairey is not the champion of “fair use“ that he portrays himself to be.
Allow me to expose some of the contradictions of Shepard Fairey’s recent statement. Fairey declares, “As I have stated before I am fighting the AP to protect the rights of all artists…”-- if that were true-- if Shepard Fairey felt so strongly about the rights of fellow artists-- wouldn’t he respect the exclusive rights that artists have under copyright? Or the exclusive rights that the estates of deceased artists, such as the Rene Mederos estate , have under copyright?
Rene Mederos’s work was still protected under copyright when Fairey decided to use one of his images for a shirt design without permission, credit, or compensation. His reason-- after being exposed for infringement I might add-- for not contacting the copyright owner can be found in an interview Shepard Fairey had with Mother Jones-- "Well, how would I ever pay this guy anyway because he's in Cuba?" . Obviously the estate of Rene Mederos had no problem contacting Shepard Fairey. The shirt design was pulled from production and distribution.
Fairey goes on to suggest that he would like everyone to have the same “broad rights of fair use and free expression“ that the media, such as the AP, has. What Fairey fails to understand is that the defense of “fair use” favors newsgathering sources. That said, I’m sure that Fairey and his company, Obey Giant Art Inc., would love to have the same extended interpretation of “fair use” for his commercial interest. One could suggest that Shepard Fairey needs an extended interpretation of "fair use" to dominate in order to have continued success. Does he really want that though? Perhaps members of the Fair Use Project are whispering in his ear?
If Shepard Fairey's statement were honest-- which it is not if you go by his past actions-- why did he send cease-and-desist letters to Baxter Orr and Steelerbaby ? Why did Fairey call Orr a “parasite”, “mimic”, and “profiteer” for claiming the defense of “fair use” after Orr made a social comment and parody of Fairey‘s widely known ObeyGiant image? Why did Obey Giant Art Inc. representative Olivia Perches state "Anything with 'Obey' on it they can't have." in response to Larkin Werner’s Steelerbaby store on Cafepress-- implying that only Shepard Fairey can use the word ‘obey' in a work of art or design? Fairey's words and actions don't mesh. Could it be that Shepard Fairey is obeying the advice of his peers?
Note: Shepard Fairey's Obey Giant Art Inc. forced Cafepress.com to remove the Steelerbaby merchandise due to the fact that it involved the word ‘obey’ and the phrase ‘Obey Steelerbaby’. However, Fairey apparently lifted the cease-and-desist order after bloggers and the media picked up on the story.
Fairey goes on to suggest that the AP can’t “have it both ways”-- in other words, Fairey suggests that the AP should not be able to photograph artwork and art exhibits while at the same time defending their photographs when artists use them as he did with his Obama posters. Fairey fails to grasp the fact that under current law media sources, such as the AP, can take said photographs. Fairey also fails to mention that, unlike him concerning aspects of his artwork, the AP gives credit to artists when they photograph artwork and art exhibits. The point-- Fairey needs to realize that people don’t necessarily change laws by breaking them or by making a mockery of current law.
There is a need to keep things in perspective-- Shepard Fairey is not some wide eyed teen-- he is a man inching ever-closer to 40 years of age who obviously knows how to use the law in his favor when individuals infringe upon his artwork. If his current position on “fair use” is honest he could have went about it differently prior to infringing on the copyright of the AP. I don’t think current copyright law will be changed when individuals, such as Shepard Fairey, prove that “fair use” should be limited in order to protect the rights of copyright owners.
That said, if Shepard Fairey and Anthony Falzone of the Fair Use Project desire to extend the interpretation of “fair use” to the point that copyright can be bypassed for all purposes they will find that the majority of the art community-- which they are obviously trying to gain support from-- will not support them. After all, one does not have to look back too far in order to see how artists come together in support of strong copyright.
I assume that Fairey does not remember the number of artists and art organizations that stood against the orphan works legislation in 2008-- which, if passed, would have made it harder for artists, photographers, and other creatives to defend the rights to their work in court. The legislation would have benefited copyright infringers-- which is why so many artists raised their voice against it.
Note: If the 2008 orphan works legislation had passed it would have removed some of the court awarded damages that discourage copyright infringers in the first place. It should be mentioned that Brad Holland , a notable illustrator, was one of the leading figures in the fight against the 2008 orphan works legislation.
As the saying goes, pick your battles. If the Associated Press loses to Shepard Fairey & Obey Giant Art Inc. it will set a legal precedent that will greatly harm artists who desire to uphold their copyright in court when individuals and companies, such as Obey Giant Art Inc., infringe upon their rights. If Shepard Fairey and his company, Obey Giant Art Inc., can do it other companies will have a better chance of doing it-- to fellow artists... to you.
A win for Shepard Fairey and his company, Obey Giant Art Inc., will be a loss for the art community-- it will be a loss for the majority of artists who enjoy the protection that copyright offers, a loss for art dealers who work very hard to establish a market for the artists they represent, and a loss to art collectors and other clients who desire-- and expect-- unique works of art.
Needless to say, I have responded to Shepard Fairey in the past and will continue to respond as long as he attempts to distract the public-- specifically the art community-- from what I assume are his true intentions. One should question the artist who says to “question everything” when the contradictions and hypocrisy of his words and actions are so apparent.
The fact that Shepard Fairey obviously feels that he can dupe the public-- specifically the art community-- is a sign of brutal arrogance in my opinion. He must be called out for it.
Note: A response from the AP-- Paul Colford, Director of Media Relations for The Associated Press, has released the following statement in response to Shepard Fairey and Anthony Falzone:
“The Associated Press is still in the process of reviewing Mr. Fairey's response to its Counterclaims, but it is very revealing that rather than present any evidence to justify his own obvious misappropriation of the AP's copyrighted work, he instead focuses on making collateral attacks on the AP, one of the oldest and largest news organizations in the world, regarding standard newsgathering activities. Even more disappointing is the fact that Mr. Fairey appears to have deliberately omitted from his filing information regarding the newsgathering context in which the various images were generated and in which they are used. We note that Mr. Fairey admits that he engaged in the hypocritical conduct discussed in the AP's Counterclaims, including using the work of others without obtaining a license while at the same time threatening others for using his own works.”
Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Forum Topic: Is street art / graffiti art vandalism or should it be considered a right? How free is free speech?

I want to tackle two issues with this entry and hope to obtain feedback from readers. The first-- is street art / graffiti art vandalism or should it be considered a right? The second-- how free is free speech according to the law?

Forum Topic: Is street art / graffiti art vandalism or should it be considered a right?

There has long been a debate concerning illegally placed art on public property. That said, the debate has reached a boiling point in recent months due to Shepard Fairey. I’ve been following Shepard Fairey’s court problems in Boston. The Boston police claim that Fairey illegally posted his artwork on city property in Boston leading up to his exhibit at the ICA and have also brought an outstanding warrant from years ago to the table. Some of the charges have been dropped-- however, Judge Eleanor Coe Sinnott has ruled that Fairey will face 10 counts of felony vandalism charges. Rumor has it that there may be additional charges as well.

The case has spurred debate about the validity of illegally placed works of art. One side feels that illegally placed art should not be considered vandalism and should be considered free speech while the other feels that support for the illegal activity of famous artists, such as Shepard Fairey, will spur others to create art in illegal spaces. Supporters of illegally placed art feel that charging street/graffiti artists with a crime inhibits freedom of speech . Supporters of the law feel that artists should take more responsibility for how they promote themselves and their visual message while acknowledging that public property is just that, public, not the ‘canvas’ for one individual regardless of emotive or aesthetic reasons.

One interesting aspect about this specific case is that Shepard Fairey’s lawyer has stated that the image in question is readily available on the Internet and that anyone could have put the illegally placed works up after downloading the poster in order to paste it or create stencils with it. In fact, Fairey’s www.obeygiant.com offers posters as downloads-- along with warnings about not placing works illegally. Fairey’s lawyer also claims that anyone can buy Obey stickers and that Fairey has no control over how people use them-- which is understandable. However, I think there is more to the story.

On obey giant.com Shepard Fairey states, “Please use common sense and consideration when applying stickers or other propaganda materials. Giant is designed to provoke thought about the mechanics of the system we live in…not to destroy it. Everyone has to live here.”. However, Fairey has also posted video clips of his illegally placed works in progress-- including videos of he and his crew fleeing from police. Apparently those videos are no longer available on the site. Thus, one could say that Shepard Fairey is sending a very mixed message to fans and that his lawyer is trying to pin the illegal activity that occurred in Boston on Obey fans-- rather than Shepard Fairey taking responsibility and standing up for his work.

The issue of responsibility is at the core of this case. One interesting fact is that members of the street art and graffiti community have spoken out against Shepard Fairey’s actions in Boston. For example, Joey Krebs who is known as the LA Phantom and Phantom Street Artist has been very critical of Fairey’s actions-- including the commercialization of street art that has been fueled by Obey Giant Art Inc..

Krebs suggests that if Fairey truly believed in his visual message he would stand up for his work, admit what he has done, and take responsibility for it-- as most street and graffiti artists do in situations like this. In Krebs opinion the fact that Fairey has blamed the public, specifically fans, for his illegally placed works takes away from his street credibility. That said, the Phantom suggests that Shepard Fairey only has respect within the commercial aspect of the street art / graffiti community. He has stated that without risk-- and accepting risk-- street art and graffiti art is without purpose.

As the Phantom Street Artist has pointed out, most street/graffiti artists are not arrested over a dozen times and released so easily. Thus, Krebs feels that Fairey receives ‘get out of jail free cards’ due to his corporate connections and investors. Krebs also suggests that Fairey is speaking the language of corporations and money rather than an authentic message for the masses-- or minority groups that Fairey tends to appropriate images from. In other words, Krebs feels that Fairey is not really a representative of the street art and graffiti art community-- but is instead a representative of the commercialization that has bastardized the movement.

It is evident that many street and graffiti artists understand the law and view that as part of the process-- as a part of their history. In other words, some feel that the commercialization and legalization of all forms of street and graffiti art actually takes away from the movement that so many individuals have taken part in. In a sense, if current illegally places works were to be made legal it would take away from the impact of the works and the message they communicate visually-- in other words it would be a contradiction of the street art and graffiti art movement in general.

With this in mind I would say that most street and graffiti artists do not view their work as vandalism. However, that does not mean they view their work as a right either. In fact, I would say that many would agree that the power of illegally placed work is the fact that the artist is communicating in a way that challenges the law and the limits of free speech. One could suggest that is the very foundation of the movement. In other words, if it becomes lawful for artists to place work anywhere they desire-- if it is considered a right-- doesn’t that mean that both forms of expression would need to be redefined? What are your thoughts? Should all public property be an outlet for creativity? Should it be a right rather than a form of rebellion?

Forum Topic: How free is free speech?

I always find it interesting when the idea of free speech comes up in cases like this. Shepard Fairey is suggesting that he has a right to free speech concerning where he places his art and also for images that he uses without giving credit or compensation to copyright owners-- what he communicates within his art involving those works. That said, how free is free speech in the first place? We all know that there are some things you simply can’t communicate due to laws and other restrictions.

Should all messages, including those that are currently considered to be hate crimes, be free to be spoken verbally or visually in public spaces? My point is that when it comes down to the line there are limitations on freedom of speech no matter how much bravado you display in a court of law or how many sabers you rattle within the art community. Keep in mind that the laws that we have generally reflect the desires of the public. Thus, there will always be limitations and restrictions on free speech even if we don‘t openly admit it. What say you?

The way I see it-- if Shepard Fairey honestly feels that artists should have the right to place works anywhere within the public space and that to restrict artists with laws is an attack on free speech, he should have no problem with street artists placing their work outside his front door-- perhaps on the sidewalk in front of his gallery or in public locations outside of his exhibits at other galleries the same day of his opening. Is that not free speech?

Would he welcome street artists who choose to create works questioning his ethics to place their work on public property near his exhibits or near the Obey Giant Art Inc. HQ? If the Phantom Street Artist and others were to pay those public spaces a visit with visual criticism would Fairey welcome them with a wave and a smile? Would Fairey accept that-- I doubt it. So what is he really asking for? Freedom for his own message? Or freedom for all?

www.myartspace.com/forum

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor

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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Forum Topic: George Grosz Estate Sues MoMa Over Disputed Paintings

Forum Topic: The estate of George Grosz has filed a lawsuit against the Museum of Modern Art due to MoMA’s refusal to return three works of art to the Grosz estate.

The estate claims that MoMA acquired two paintings and a watercolor by Grosz which the artist had left behind after having fled from Nazi Germany in 1933. Apparently an art dealer sold the works to MoMA in 1952. However, the Grosz estate claims that they are the rightful owners and that the art dealer had no rights to the work.

The estate feels that the works had been stolen. So far MoMA has not responded. In your opinion, who is in right here? Should the estate have control over the works or should MoMA be considered the rightful owners?

www.myartspace.com/forum

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Monday, April 13, 2009

Forum Topic: Cuts to Art Funding

Forum Topic: I've been reading articles about major cuts to art funding throughout the United States. For example, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm (Democrat) has cut support for the arts from $7.9 million this year to $1 million in 2010. Also, Gov. Jon Corzine (Democrat) chopped $5.2 million from the arts budget in New Jersey-- he suggested that arts funding threatened healthcare funding. My guess is that we will see more of these cuts nationwide until the economy is more stable.

Is it a necessary evil in your opinion? Does it trouble you that funding for the arts has been on the decrease considering that President Obama mentioned the arts as part of his policy during the election? Do you expect that he will defend arts funding? What are your thoughts on public funding of the arts in general?

www.myartspace.com/forum

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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Forum Topic: How is the internet changing the global art scene?

Forum Topic: Due to the internet artists, curators, and art dealers are connecting in ways that would not have been possible not long ago. An artist can meet another artist from overseas with ease-- both can influence each other.

A curator from Japan can easily discover an artist from Canada. An art dealer in New York City may find out about an artist online that he or she would like to represent-- not knowing that the artist lives just a few miles from the gallery. Connections like this are made everyday online-- connections that would not have otherwise happened had those making the connections not been online.

With this in mind, how is the internet bringing the whole of the ‘art world’ together? Feel free to share your experiences or insight.

www.myartspace.com/forum

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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Art Space Talk: Antony Liu

Through painting, Antony Liu makes sense of broken things and searches for subtle beauty in the midst of discord. Liu states that he believes in the coexistence of things, but not in their equality. He explains that where conflict reigns, the possibility of harmony is present. He attempts to find bridges in order to situate what is displaced. Thus, his work reflects an interest in the unchanging laws of color science and theory. Liu states that he finds a sense of security in the fact that what we see can be identified and categorized.

Light Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

Brian Sherwin: Antony, what can you tell us about your academic background concerning art? Did you study art formally? Tell us about your art studies in general-- any influential instructors?

Antony Liu: My first formal art training was with artist Vernon Wilson in Los Angeles, California, where I spent a year and a half learning traditional figurative drawing and painting. Part of this included studying the fundamental principles of color, which entailed spending numerous hours learning how to identify, mix, and manipulate precise hues and values. These exercises in control over color became a reoccurring interest of mine over the years, and are currently the field upon which I explore my ideas.

I also attended Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, where I received a bachelor’s degree in Illustration. Several instructors there influenced my work including, Robert Kato who taught me a great deal about line quality and layers in drawing; and Lynn Aldrich who helped me view painting more objectively, which ultimately enabled me transition from representation to abstraction.

Green Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

BS: Tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

AL: I started drawing regularly in elementary school—in particular I remember obsessively writing the alphabet in large 3-dimensional shapes. In the 1980’s, I was excited about graffiti art of the hip-hop era and I created drawings emulating that same style. In my teens, I spent about 20 hours a week trying to perfect drawing people and representational still lifes. This led to enrolling in the Illustration program at Art Center. After Art Center, I took a long break from painting and spent most of my time doing graphic design. I am currently creating art again on a regular basis and look forward to maturing my work.
Pink Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

BS: Can you tell us about your art? Give us some insight into the thoughts behind your art.

AL: My art considers and explores conflict and harmony, displacement and resolve. I am interested in the idea that there is beauty in the midst of discord. My work is inspired by situations in life, people and relationships. I’m very interested in the idea of making right that which is wrong, finding bridges that help connect and situate displaced elements, and bring resolution to contention.
Red and Blue Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

BS: Can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

AL: I like to work in series. It allows me to work out ideas on several paintings at once. My paintings evolve over layers of paint applied one color at a time. I spend the majority of time mixing and adjusting colors.

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

AL: I really like the work of John Millei. I am drawn to the characteristics of both freedom and control interacting in his paintings. I like Sol Lewitt’s work for the same reason, including his examination of colors, lines, and shapes. I really like the subtlety of color in Milton Avery’s paintings. I am also influenced by the whole idea of color classification, as seen in ink color books, paint chips at hardware stores, etc. A significant amount of my inspiration also comes from people, places, and situations in life, particularly the unusual and peculiar ones

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers? Do you adhere to a specific philosophy as far as your work is concerned?

AL: Right now, I am trying to illustrate the idea that there is beauty within discord.

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

AL: I believe in using the internet to gain exposure to art. However, I try to use it cautiously when dealing with my own art; being careful how, where, and in what context I present myself. In general, I think that artists should not ignore the internet because the reality is it has changed the way people do things, including all the aspects of experiencing art.

Yellow and Green Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

AL: None at the moment, because I think that the artist will always have the need to create, and it will always be important for the audience to have art.

BS: There has been several stories involving copyright infringement in the mainstream press as of late. What is your stance on copyright? Do you see strong copyright as a reflection of artist rights in general? Or do you feel that copyright restricts creativity? Do you have a stance on this issue?

AL: I believe in copyright laws. How strongly I believe in it will reveal itself over time, perhaps as I come into closer proximity with situations involving infringement, or even experience it myself firsthand.
Dark Composition, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 24" X 24"

BS: As you know, the economy has been hard. Have you had to change-- or should I say adapt-- your practice due to the economy?

AL: The economy has affected certain aspects of my art. I have had to be creative about working in a smaller studio space, and I have had to adjust to working on smaller canvases. In general, though, the ideas I base my paintings on have remained the same.

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

AL: Not really. It’s something that I feel privileged to be able to do. It’s an alternate way for me to think about and process situations in life. I hope that my message will mature and refine itself.
You can learn more about Antony Liu by visiting his website-- www.antonyliu.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Art Space Talk: Allise Noble

Allise Noble states that attention to detail is an important aspect of her artwork. Her primary work involves drawing meshed with other mediums-- such as paint. Noble’s art has been described as whimsical and soft without structure-- a balance between a visual display of reality and the makings of dreams.

In a sense, Noble explore psychology-- specifically the psychology of identity-- within her work. The thoughts of her subjects are hidden and ambiguous. The viewer must look to the surroundings and other elements in order to solve the puzzle of what is in the subject’s mind. Noble strives to create work that conveys more than one meaning. Thus, her body of work is open to the interpretation of viewers.

Gwen by Allise Noble

Brian Sherwin: Tell us about your academic background. Did you study art formally? What about influential instructors that you have had?

Allise Noble: I always loved art growing up. My parents noticed this right away, as early as 3 years old, and from that point on I was highly encouraged. I have hazy memories of special craft days once a week when I was in preschool and kindergarten where my mom would get out containers filled with sequins, silk flowers, ribbon, pom-pons and foils and boxes of fabrics, paint, construction paper, crayons, markers … anything imaginable. Although the details over time have become vague, I still remember there was always something magical about that round plastic container.

I am currently a junior in college studying interior design as a major and art as a minor. Thus far, the majority of classes I’ve taken in my concentration are for interior design, which has led me to really think about how the colors and various facets of a figure’s backdrop or surroundings can be used as a tool to convey who the subject in a piece of work is.

Even within day to day life not on paper, a person’s surroundings can be an experience visually, and should be. Backdrops can easily change the entire meaning of a view. Someday when I have a house, it has always been my dream to have one room in it entirely made of cardboard. In this room, people would only be allowed to eat chocolate wafer cookies because they are the only food that looks accurately like corrugated cardboard.

I have been taking mainly 3D design classes lately involving sculptural work with materials such as textiles and fibers, wire, plaster, etc; just a mix of materials. I feel branching out in this way can help me incorporate 3D elements into my 2D work, and perhaps inspire some new techniques with my current textile work.

Through high school and even the beginning of college I strayed away from the 3-dimensional after some particularly traumatic experiences earlier in life involving a paper mache princess statue and later a replica of a gothic cathedral made of foamcore board. Interior design studio classes have also helped train my mind to think in this dimension that comes far less easily to me due to the fact that I am constantly working with space and having to imagine myself inside a flat drawing, and also due to the models of my own designs I have been required to build.

BS: Tell us about the thoughts behind your art. Can you give our readers some insight into any specific themes that you explore?

AN: I am most interested in some form of human figures as a subject in my work. I am fascinated by the subtle differences between individuals, both natural such as facial structures and chosen such as how people choose to present themselves visually to the rest of society and whom within that society they gravitate towards. I am also interested in exploring the differences between someone’s “alone” self versus their public or interacting self.

As well as the people themselves, whether they are realistic or abstracted, I am interested in the personal world they inhabit that depicts who they are, their unique personality and experiences. Emphasis is very important in how any entity is viewed, including one’s surroundings. Perception can visually alter how the world appears to different people just based on what they focus on or ignore, notice or choose to dismiss, and are drawn to or repelled away from.

I would love my art to be altered depending which viewer is looking at it, which is why I like to include more than one point of interest for the most part, and a fair amount of detail so that the viewer has the power to choose their focus, and draw meaning from that decision.

The Factory by Allise Noble

BS: Is there a specific message you strive to convey to viewers concerning your art?

AN: I always have a message in mind when creating something, since that is usually what spawns the idea. Still, I want the message’s formation within my artwork to be very unobvious and interpretive so others can make meaning based on their experiences and where they are in life. I am captivated by the idea of infinite ideas within a single image.

When creating my subjects, I don’t use exaggerated facial expressions or gestures. Their mannerisms are left very subtle, making it the viewer’s job to interpret the figure’s thoughts rather than the thought or emotion being blatantly expressed. I feel this keeps the viewer more involved, and allows them to relate to the subjects within an image much like they would to real people due to that level of ambiguity and uncertainty and hidden psyche. Most real people encountered in day to day life are not going to tell you exactly how they want or what they feel, nor will they divulge everything about themselves right away. Especially in first or second meetings, it is a process of risking inferences.

Something else I am interested in is communicating universal messages with very specific instances. For these sorts of concepts, I collect input by asking a single question of various individuals I encounter to make the specific instances I use even more personal, rather than just myself inventing scenarios. This way there is also a fun challenge for me in figuring out how to piece these scenarios together and make them fit.

I am currently working on a series of four pieces in which I’ve used this process, and have a second series floating around in my head (I am trying not to start too many things at once, as I always tend to do). The aim in much of my work is to take very distinctive visual and situational information and work it to convey themes that are relatable on many different levels.

Too many people go through life feeling like their minds are isolated from everyone else’s, and that just isn’t the case. The mere fact that so many feel isolated and alone in the way they view the world means that their human experience is in no way an outlier.

BS: What can you tell us about your process in general? Give us some insight into how you work… as in turning an idea into reality, so to speak? Can you discuss some of the methods that you utilize?

AN: When drawing, I always start with a sketch in a sort of “idea book” I keep that is only distinguishable in any way by me. After that, I turn this into a more perfected sketch, so lightly that normally only I who drew it can find where the lines are, on the piece of paper I am going to complete my final upon. These above steps are conducive in preventing the searing pain I feel when people want to see my work before it is at least relatively worked out to resemble completion, as people usually give up trying to distinguish my line work.

My detail is added for the most part when I shade or color rather than in the outline, though of course the opposite is true when doing pen work. I tend to work on the points of highest interest to me within a piece first unless such an order would be ridiculously impractical and cause issues later. Once I complete the most fun part of a piece, finishing up the less interesting parts doesn’t bother me because I am excited for the finished product. Almost always the background comes last because not only do I far prefer drawing living things, but the way these living things end up looking often determines the background.

As I said earlier, a figure’s surroundings are used as a vehicle to reflect more about them. When I work, I like being completely surrounded by my materials. I have to work on a table, never a desk with all those little rows of drawers on each side. If it is a desk sans drawers I suppose I can deal with it because it doesn’t look like a desk. I have a desk in my bedroom and I really only use it as a glorified dumping grounds. There’s just something utterly confining about using a desk. I feel like I should be reviewing my finances or drafting spreadsheets or some other craziness, not creating art.

For my textile work, I sit on the floor cross-legged for hours on end which has led to many parts of my body falling asleep that I didn’t even know COULD fall asleep. I have a highly organized Ziploc sandwich bag that I keep all of my trace paper patterns I’ve devised within, though for some of the smaller details or specific, one-use-only pieces I go pattern-less. I group all felt, fabrics, and possible adornments I will be using in a sort of collage on the floor in front of me to determine what to pair together, and then go to it.

My laptop being near me at all times is a must, not only for quick references but because it is currently my prime source of music and I cannot work without some form of song constantly infiltrating my ear canals. Oddly enough, I’ve also found recently I work much better when I have a beam of light from my desk lamp shining directly onto me. Maybe I’m genetically mutating into a plant, who knows.

Girltripped Contest- Morning by Allise Noble

BS: What about influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists, world events, or art movements?

AN: I have many artists whom I admire and whose work I adore (amongst them Ray Casesar, Chris Conn Askew, Alex Gross, Yoshitomo Nara), but I’m not sure if their work influences what I do as we have fairly different styles, subject matter, and reasons why we create the art we do.

Aesthetically, I am influenced by Japanese pop culture, especially the personification of inanimate objects or the likening of animals to humans with specific personas and modes of dress, utilized often in Japanese products and ads. This can be seen in my stitched octopi. I am also currently working on a series of ink and watercolor works featuring people in simplified, cartoon-like animal costumes.
I am also interested in extravagant, outlandish fashion, an idea which also meshes with the aforementioned series I’m working on. I look at a lot of books and photos online of non-traditional dress and costume, and it was through doing this that I came up with my pen and watercolor piece “Self Absorbed”. I also enjoy working with a mix of the antique and modern. I stray away from anything that looks explicitly present day because I don’t want my work to appear dated.
At the same time, I would never want my work to be void of any time because I feel like that would destroy the opportunity to include so many interesting, quirky little details. The past provides a traditional aesthetic, whose very definition is appearing dated which makes datedness acceptable and desired. The future is completely imaginative and open to interpretation. The past and future, especially intertwined, are the most timeless of times, I suppose.

Conceptually I have always been influenced by dreams, probably because I’ve had such vivid ones that I can actually remember in a fair amount of detail since about three years old. In 11th grade I began writing down my dreams in journals, and have done so ever since (I still remember the most impacting ones from childhood, and have since recorded those as well before I lose them).
Another trait that has been with me since childhood is the fact that I am a movie addict. I’m sure I inherited this from my dad. Every Friday growing up, he’d bring home a movie or two for my brother and I to watch. We would get to stay up “late” and eat popcorn. My family and I enjoy watching movies together to this day. I am influenced by some elements of cinematics such as silent films, the “homemade” aesthetic of old, low budget film sets, and the vintage idea of modernity as it pertains to robots and machines in old science fiction or horror movies. I am a willing partaker in B-movies from time to time, if you can’t tell.
Girltripped Contest - Mooncake by Allise Noble

BS: Where can your art be viewed at this time? Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

AN: I attend Central Michigan University, and have been submitting work to some periodic student shows there. I hope to find more opportunities to exhibit in the near future, right now, whenever I can.

Also, I have a shop at www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6820200. I’ll be selling some of my textile work hopefully soon among other things. I meant to have it set up sooner but I do enjoy creating the inventory more than dealing with all the business setup. My only goal is to make enough extra money to keep being able to create things. A lot of times I’ll give stuff to people for free.


I enjoy what I do immensely, and I would never be doing anything else with my time regardless so cheesy as it may be to say so, I’m just excited for people to like what I do and to have it put a smile on their face for a little while. I suppose that is why I’m an artist and not a real estate salesman or CEO.

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time? There has been a lot of debate recently about copyright and the rights of artists. Do you have an opinion on issues such as that?

AN: I do believe that copyrighting is an important issue. Nothing that is born from a person’s mind that they have poured their hard work and soul into should become public domain and for use by any other with no permission or guidelines. I feel like it is one of those issues, however, that is so difficult to define.
With a rigid, no tolerance under any circumstance policy, a lot of wonderful collage work I have seen would suffer because many images are found from magazines, newspapers, prints, etc. and were not created from scratch by the artist but manipulated and altered in such a way that the images were made that artist’s own. It is difficult to draw a line just in that instance, how much must a borrowed image be altered to not have to give credit or provide compensation, let alone multitudes of other specific instances.
In the realm of stolen ideas, how do we define a “copy” of someone else’s idea? Then there is the issue of the unintentional copy simply due to collective thought and the difficulty when so many ideas already exist to come up with anything purely new. I wrote a story once in junior high school only to find out accidentally while searching for something on google that the entire basic plotline already existed. It was quite a disappointment. I have a theory that 95% of human thought can already be found on Google.

BS: What about the internet? One could say that the art world is starting to catch up-- more galleries are turning to the World Wide Web in order to further exposure for their artists. How do you think the internet will impact the art world in say… a decade? Can you see a meshing between the traditional market and alternative (online) markets taking shape?

AN: The internet is a wonderful tool for artists (and not only to discover accidental idea stealing, haha). I have been exposed to so much inspiring art just from browsing various online art communities, much from people who were not well known or were just using art as a hobby, something to do after coming home from high school or work or over retirement.
Online, people who don’t live by major galleries can still be introduced to the works within them. A person can see an image they like in magazine, look up the artist, and view an entire catalogue of their work and learn more about them online. Firsthand I’ve watched individuals become interested in viewing and learning about art that never would have been had they not seen an image that really struck them online, and I think that is an amazing thing. Internet has made the art world more accessible to non-traditional art enthusiasts, the people who wouldn’t have ever thought to step into a gallery or museum.

I can certainly see a meshing between the traditional market and online market. No matter how grand technology becomes, the traditional market will never be lost. Online images, no matter how impressive the quality, can never replace the awe of seeing a work in person.

The Observer by Allise Noble

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art or the goals that you have?

AN: If I ever became famous, I would definitely put out my own soft drink. Having your own line of bottled liquids seems the thing to do nowadays once a person is famous, and I don’t much care for perfumes. It would be like bubble tea, only the squishy rectangles floating within a fruity beverage would have tiny line art drawings of my work printed on them. Ok, so I’d be lying if I said this goal was always close to my heart. I just thought of it now upon contemplating this question actually but nevertheless, I quite like it as goals go and plan to stick to it.

Honestly, I love what I do and will continue to create and look for opportunities to use my creations so long as I live. To communicate something that awakens an emotion inside a person, to be able to draw a connection to someone who thought they were all alone in their thoughts, beliefs, values, feelings, or experiences … these are the only goals I can really say I have. The rest cannot yet be told.
You can learn more about Allise Noble by visiting her www.myartspace.com profile. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

Friday, April 10, 2009

Copyright Infringement: Richard Prince and Larry Gagosian respond to Patrick Cariou's lawsuit

Right: Collage by Richard Prince. Left: Photograph by Patrick Cariou

The issue of copyright infringement and “fair use” concerning visual art has been a hot topic as of late. For example, the mainstream media has devoted attention to the case involving Shepard Fairey and the Associated Press concerning Fairey’s infringement of an AP owned photograph taken by Mannie Garcia. However, there is another important copyright infringement case in the works that has received little press compared to the Fairey AP clash-- even though the outcome of the case is just as important to the art world and to copyright law as we know it. That situation involves photographer Patrick Cariou, Richard Prince, exhibit catalogue publisher Rizzoli, Gagosian Gallery, and art dealer Larry Gagosian.

For those who don’t know about the case-- Patrick Cariou, a photographer and author, filed a lawsuit against Richard Prince in December of last year after Richard Prince and Gagosian Gallery failed to acknowledge his cease-and-desist letter. Cariou’s lawsuit claims that photographs used by Prince for a series of collages were illegally borrowed from his book Yes Rasta-- which was registered in 2001.

Cariou claims that his photographs were illegally used in at least twenty Richard Prince collages exhibited by Gagosian Gallery in 2008. The collages, eight of which were sold, were priced between $1.5 million and $3 million each. Prince did not give the photographer credit or offer compensation-- and has since suggested that Cariou is a mediocre photographer.

As mentioned, Patrick Cariou did not stop with just Richard Prince-- the suit, which was filed in a U.S. federal court, also targets the Gagosian Gallery, the owner of the gallery Lawrence Gagosian, and the publisher of the exhibit catalogue, Rizzoli. Cariou’s suit claims that all parties were involved in the infringement. Thus, if the court rules in Cariou’s favor the precedent may play a role in the willingness of publishers, art galleries, and art dealers as far as working with artists who have a history of copyright infringement allegations.

In other words, if the court favors Patrick Cariou art dealers may think twice before exhibiting or promoting artists who have a history of copyright infringement allegations against them due to the potential financial burden that would occur if the infringer is exposed by a copyright owner. On that same note, publishers may refuse to create exhibit catalogues for artists who are known copyright infringers. Needless to say, a win for Cariou-- and for copyright-- could potentially change the ’landscape’ of the art world as well as the art market in general.

Richard Prince and Larry Gagosian have-- for the most part-- been silent about Patrick Cariou’s allegations-- until now. Gagosian’s lawyers have responded to Cariou’s lawsuit. The Gagosian legal team suggests that Prince’s use of Cariou’s photographs are protected under “fair use”. They suggest that the collages are acceptable due to the fact that Cariou’s photographs of Rastafarians in their native environments are “factually based”. Gagosian’s legal team goes on to suggest that the exhibition of the collages was not “commercially exploitative” and that the collages were created with a “genuine creative rationale” in good faith.

Richard Prince-- who is considered to be a pioneer of appropriation art and is often cited by copyright infringers-- has stated that Patrick Cariou’s photographs are not “strikingly original” or “distinctive in nature” and that his collages are “sanctioned under fair use”. Prince has also suggested that his use of Cariou’s photographs “poses no harm” to the value of Cariou’s work and that his use has instead increased the value of Cariou’s photographs. Prince also stated that his use of Cariou’s images reflect “established artistic practices”. However, Patrick Cariou and other supporters of copyright obviously have a different take on the situation.

Patrick Cariou has suggested that the unauthorized use of his photographs has harmed the integrity of his book Yes Rasta-- which involves photographs spanning a decade. Cariou has also suggested that Richard Prince would not have used 30 of his photographs if he were just a mediocre photograph. He feels that Richard Prince and Larry Gagosian are arrogant for suggesting that his photographs are not original or distinctive.

In the suit Patrick Cariou demands that the unsold artworks and exhibit catalogues be destroyed. Cariou also demands that the owners of the sold paintings be informed that it is illegal to display the work. This means that if the court sides with Cariou you will be hard pressed to find the Richard Prince collages involving Cariou’s work exhibited in a public collection-- or anywhere else for that matter. Needless to say, this case could be groundbreaking in that it will establish some order concerning how “fair use“ is interpreted-- either for or against it. The outcome of this case will drastically change the art world / art market.

While Shepard Fairey’s case against the Associated Press is a breeding ground for media buzz one could argue that the outcome of Patrick Cariou’s lawsuit against Richard Prince and Larry Gagosian is debatably more important for artists to observe-- especially artists who support copyright. It is true that if Shepard Fairey / Obey Giant Art Inc. wins against the AP it will set a legal precedent that will give companies-- like Obey Giant Art Inc.-- more pull when using copyrighted images for merchandise. However, the case involving Patrick Cariou and Richard Prince hits closer to home within the art world.

The case involving Cariou, Prince, and Gagosian will set a legal precedent that will effect the ability of artists to protect their copyright within the art world itself-- to protect their work from gallery represented artists and art dealers who-- debatably-- have more financial resources going into a case involving copyright infringement. Thus, emerging artists who support copyright should keep an eye on the outcome of Cariou’s lawsuit. I would go as far as to say that art dealers who support strong copyright should keep a watchful eye on the case as well.

Honestly, artists are not the only individuals harmed by weak copyright protection. Art collectors and art dealers can be harmed as well. Why invest in a work of art if it can be mass produced without restraint by any individual or company? The art market will be meaningless if we continue to stand back while copyright is chipped away to the point that artists are unable to uphold their copyright in court. Is my opinion extreme? Perhaps. However, there are enough examples of extreme interpretations of “fair use” to go around-- and people blindly accepting it-- to cause concern.

Links of Interest:

Fair Use in a Nutshell:A Roadmap to Copyright's Most Important Exception -- CopyLaw
www.copylaw.com/new_articles/fairuse.html

Richard Prince and Gagosian fight back over copyright -- The Art Newspaper
www.theartnewspaper.com/article.asp?id=17147

Patrick Cariou Versus Richard Prince -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/01/patrick-cariou-versus-richard-prince.html

Photographer Patrick Cariou Sues Richard Prince for Copyright Infringement
www.pdnonline.com/pdn/content_display/photo-news/photojournalism/e3i4b1f65d43468689993c27258f9c4eaf0?imw=Y

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Street Art Defacement: Appropriate Media vs. Banksy

Photo: Appropriate Media. www.appropriatemedia.net

An early piece by graffiti artist Banksy has been defaced by a group calling themselves Appropriate Media. The piece, titled The Mild Mild West, was located in Stokes Croft, Bristol. Appropriate Media ‘splashed’ the piece with red paint. The group proclaims that they will continue to deface works by Banksy. Appropriate Media mockingly suggests that they will continue to present ‘alternative versions’ of works by the artist. The works by Banksy are often considered alternative landmarks and have been known to increase the value of property.
The actions of Appropriate Media are eerily similar to an individual-- though later revealed as a group-- known as ‘The Splasher’. The Splasher targeted works by Banksy, Anthony Lister, and other renowned graffiti and street artists on the streets of New York City from 2006 to 2007-- it is believed that two individuals who tried to sabotage a Shepard Fairey exhibit in 2007 by lighting a stink bomb were also members of ‘The Splasher’. At the time Fairey proclaimed that the duo were “just jealous" of his art. The group retaliated by leaving a manifesto at another Shepard Fairey exhibit in NYC.
The Splasher group often left manifestos near the works they defaced. These manifestos detailed the purpose of the group-- which often proclaimed that the ‘commercial driven street art movement’ is a ploy to further gentrification in New York neighborhoods. In other words, members of The Splasher felt that Banksy, Shepard Fairey, and other mainstream accepted graffiti and street artists were working alongside gallery owners and city organizers in order to push low income families out of neighborhoods due to the increased property values that result from more affluent individuals moving into the community.
Photo: Appropriate Media. www.appropriatemedia.net

Oddly enough, Appropriate Media’s manifesto covers some of the same issues. The manifesto, though short, can be found on the Appropriate Media website:
“In the early hours of this morning, Banksy's 'Mild Mild West' on Stokes Croft in Bristol (UK) was repainted by a member of Appropriate Media, presenting an alternative version of this 'alternative Bristol landmark'.

Through this action, Appropriate Media asks? What is the value of street art??. How much time and money will be spent to restore this urban 'masterpiss' by urban masterpisser, Banksy.
Come on, you only care about it cos its a Banksy and he sells his lazy polemics to Hollywood movie stars for big bucks.
Come on, you only care about it cos makes you feel edgy and urban to tour round the inner city in your 4x4, taking in the tired coffee table subversion that graffiti has become.
Graffiti artists are the copywriters for the capitalist created phenomenon of urban art. Graffiti artists are the performing spray-can monkeys for gentrification.
We call for the appropriate and legitimate use of public and private property.
We are taking matters into our own hands
We will not seek permission
We will retaliate”

Appropriate Media has described Banksy and other mainstream street artists as “poor little middle-class white boys”. The group suggests that mainstream street artists are “self obsessed” and that “Never in the field of human history has so much paint been used by so many to say so little.”. The group also suggests that mainstream street artists have exploited the struggle of minority groups, stating, “are you making parallels between the struggle of black people with centuries of racism and the struggle of poor little middle class white boys with the need to deface private property?”.
Needless to say, members of the group demand that artists, such as Banksy, stay out of their communities and return to their “leafy suburbs“. Again, the words of Appropriate Media are eerily similar to those of The Splasher.

Photo: Appropriate Media. www.appropriatemedia.net
I doubt that The Splasher and Appropriate Media are connected aside from their shared beliefs. After all, one group is located in the US and the other group is located in the UK. However, the fact that two organized groups have challenged world renowned street artists in this manner reveals the unease that some individuals-- even within the street art community-- have for the commercialization of street art and what can result from it.
I think it is naive to write these groups off as “just jealous”. After all, they are anonymous aside from having a collective name. They don’t profit from their actions either. One could say that their actions are selfish-- but the flip-side of that coin is that they can also be viewed as selfless. They are placing themselves at risk for something they believe in-- sound familiar? The only difference is that their actions are the essence of rebellion rather than a form of commercialized rebellion involving the fame and wealth of an individual. Food for thought.
It is common for people to compare mainstream street artists-- such as Banksy and Shepard Fairey-- to ‘Robin Hood’. With that in mind, one could say that groups like The Splasher and Appropriate Media are like Robin Hood as well. After all, they are driven by passion and take action for what they view as an attack on low income communities. In their eyes they are 'stealing' something from the rich in order to show support for the poor. The only problem with this is that these two groups have, in a sense, stolen from everyone. Or have they? What say you?
Consider this an open topic on street art, the commercialization of street art, gentrification, and the defacement of art as protest.
Links of Interest:

Banksy backlash as protest defaces 'middle class' grafitti -- Telegraph UK
www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/5124049/Banksy-backlash-as-protest-defaces-middle-class-grafitti.html

Somerville’s only Shepard Fairey mural vandalized -- Wicked Local
www.wickedlocal.com/somerville/news/x549598518/Somerville-s-only-Shepard-Fairey-mural-ruined

The Splasher -- Myartspace blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2007/05/art-space-news-splasher.html

This gag sure stinks: Artist turns up nose as bomb ploy flops -- NY Daily News
www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2007/06/23/2007-06-23_this_gag_sure_stinks_artist_turns_up_nos.html
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

The Future of Art Criticism: Art Critic Jerry Saltz Interacts on Social Network

Facebook Screengrab AFC / www.artfagcity.com

Notable art critics can be tougher to reach than the President-- or a former President for that matter. That said, I noticed that Paddy Johnson from Art Fag City picked up on an interesting online debate spurred by art critic Jerry Saltz. Art bloggers often mention how Saltz interacts with his followers on various social networks-- in this case he asked an open question focused on which art critics and art publications his ‘friends’ and ‘followers’ liked best. (My understanding is that he asked the questions on Facebook and Twitter).

Apparently Saltz was a bit puzzled at the fact that most of the people who commented liked ArtForum, but were not exactly fans of ArtForum critics. From what I gathered art critic Dave Hickey was the favored art critic among those who commented. There were also a number of art blogs mentioned-- which reveals the changing 'landscape' of art criticism in general. I think it is great that Saltz is open to this form of debate and feedback.
Saltz has reach online and offline...

Jerry Saltz, a senior art critic for New York Magazine, is often quoted for having said, "We live in a Wikipedia art world. Twenty years ago, there were only four to five encyclopedias--and I tried to get into them. Now, all writing is in the Wikipedia. Some entries are bogus, some are the best. We live in an open art world.".
It should be noted that Saltz has been nominated three times for a Pulitzer Prize in Criticism-- it should also be noted that art bloggers-- and online critics / journalists in general-- can now be considered for a Pulitzer Prize. Yes, the art world is open-- the world is open. The credentials of old are just that-- old. The future is open to a new wave of opinions.
Today any critic can establish a following regardless of academic background or professional connections. With a bit of internet savvy an online critic can reach thousands of readers daily. I suppose only time will tell if this 'open world' is a good direction for art criticism in general. My bet is that it is as long as the art criticism is informed.
Thinking about this begs the question-- will the influential voices of the future art world be traditional publication art critics or will they be independent art bloggers who explore art criticism on their own terms? Perhaps a mix of both? Is the future now? What say you?

Link of Interest:

Massive Links! Social Media/Credit Default Swap Edition -- Art Fag City
www.artfagcity.com/2009/04/02/data-moshing/#comments
Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Monday, April 06, 2009

Courtney Love furious over missing Polly Morgan art

Musician and actress Courtney Love was the proud owner of an art piece created by British artist Polly Morgan-- note was. Apparently a shipping crew disposed of the untitled piece-- valued at $11,800-- while packing Love’s belongings. Love had been in the process of moving from Malibu to the Hollywood Hills.

Love had entrusted responsibility of her belongings to her personal assistant-- who was fired after the mishap. Sources close to Love have stated that she viewed the work by Polly Morgan as “priceless” and “irreplaceable”. The work of art involved a preserved young bird placed within a matchbox. The crew removed the pedestal the piece was displayed on without any trouble.



An example of Polly Morgan's art-- Testament (Robin), 2007

Polly Morgan is a British artist who utilizes taxidermy within the context of her work. Polly creates still lives with animals as her subject-- which she places in unexpected scenes. By observing these pieces the viewer is encouraged to look at the animals as if for the first time. The preserved animals are either road casualties or have been donated to the artist by pet owners and vets after natural or unpreventable deaths. Polly Morgan is rapidly becoming a name to watch among a new generation of British artists.

Polly Morgan's collectors include Kate Moss, Vanessa Branson, Damien Hirst, and Charles Saatchi. The piece that Courtney Love owned was a commissioned piece. I interviewed Polly Morgan for myartspace.com in November of 2008.

Art Space Talk: Polly Morgan -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2008/11/art-space-talk-polly-morgan.html

Links of Interest:

Love 'fuming over scrapped art'
www.9wsyr.com/entertainment/story/Love-fuming-over-scrapped-art/LCqryJrqD0e7enw8TkA3jw.cspx?rss=118

Courtney Love's £8,000 dead bird 'art' binned by removal men
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/5108935/Courtney-Loves-8000-dead-bird-art-binned-by-removal-men.html

Polly Morgan’s website
www.pollymorgan.co.uk

Take care, Stay true,


Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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Technology Will Save Art Museums and Art Galleries

Catherine McCormack-Skiba, CEO, founder and Creative Director of www.myartspace.com views digital displays of myartspace.com members art at her NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA. Myartspace is one of the first social art sites to have a brick & mortar presence.

With each passing year art museums-- and museums in general-- are finding new ways to attract the attention of visitors. While the days of huge headphones and decade old audio narratives are not exactly over-- there has been advances in recent years. For example, at the Milwaukee Art Museum visitors can explore with the new iPod Touch tour. Other art museums, such as the Baltimore Museum of Art, offer visitors touch-sensitive screens that allow people to take virtual tours of private art collections that they may otherwise not be able to view.
Art museums are also starting to explore what various websites, such as Youtube, can offer. Several are focusing on website improvements in order to create a more interactive experience for website visitors. Needless to say, it is apparent that art museums are striving to connect with a younger-- technology driven-- audience. The public in general expects this form of interaction.
Advancement in techology and presentation is not just a 'trend' to scoff at. There is no doubt that the art museum visitors of tomorrow will be heavily connected to the technology of their day. Thus, I think it is great that art museums are starting to explore the technology of the ‘here and now’ in order to prepare for that certain future. The art museums that fail to adapt may have an uncertain future.
Technology is also changing the way that the mainstream art world presents itself to a tech hungry society. Art galleries are slowly starting to embrace technology as a means of connecting with visitors in ways that were scoffed at a decade ago. Art gallery websites, such as the Scream London website (www.screamlondon.co.uk), are becoming more interactive. As I’ve said before, the art collectors of tomorrow will expect art museums and art galleries to embrace technology. It is great to observe galleries embrace what the public already knows-- great content and an interactive experience is a must.
As mentioned, not long ago certain individuals scoffed at this idea-- partly out of fear that said experience would somehow replaced the experience of viewing art face-to-face, so to speak. That experience-- so far--can’t be replaced, but that does not mean that directors and gallerists should openly avoid advancement. To think-- at one time certain art dealers were reluctant to have a website… times change. A willingness to adapt is the best way to secure the future of any business.
I'm certain that this change in attitude is partly due to the fact that art museums and art galleries-- in general-- are experiencing less foot traffic. Thus, embracing an interactive experience both online and in the physical space is one of the best ways to recapture the attention of the public at large. Can technology save art museums and art galleries? I think so. The fact that so many are striving to connect with the public in new ways is a good sign.

Links of Interest:
Art museums hope technology will sustain interest
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20090406/ap_tr_ge/travel_brief_art_museums_technology_1
Art and the Internet: The Artists Are Here. When will Galleries Participate?
www.myartspace.com/blog/2008/09/art-and-internet-artists-are-here-when_27.html

Social Art Site Has Offline Presence: myartspace.com opens NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/02/opening-of-nyaxe-gallery-in-palo-alto.html
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Art Market Crises: A Crooked Art Dealer and Angry Art Collector

Lawrence B. Salander in Court, Via New York Times

Weeding my way through recent art news I hit on two stories of interest. One involves a crooked art dealer and the other involves an angry art collector. Both stories are being hailed as examples of the collapse of the art market as we know. Oddly enough, in both situations the state of the economy has received some of the blame-- or is acknowledged for having opened the window for outsiders to view the deceit.
The art dealer, Lawrence B. Salander, was arrested in late March after being accused of stealing over $88 million from several art owners, investors, and Bank of America. Salander has been charged with grand larceny, forgery, falsifying business records, scheming to defraud, and perjury. Needless to say, the once prominent art dealer has pleaded not guilty. Salander faces up to 25 years in prison and his bail is set at $1 million.
My guess is that Salander will not be dealing in art anytime soon-- especially since his Salander-O’ Reilly Galleries is now bankrupt. This is the type of art dealer that gives all art dealers a bad name.


Francis Bacon, Study for a Self-Portrait, 1964, Via Rawartint

The art collector, George Weiss, is furious with high-profile auction house Christie’s. Weiss filed a lawsuit against Christie’s due to the fact that the auction house was unable to sell a self-portrait by Francis Bacon owned by Weiss. Christie’s had offered Weiss a minimum guarantee that the Bacon would sell. Unfortunately, the auction house failed to follow through after Weiss consigned the work. Christie’s has noted the turmoil of the art market in their defense. When all else fails-- blame the economy.

Links of Interest:
Christie’s Sued For $40M Over Francis Bacon Painting [Wall Street Journal]
The economic crises has fueled an already chaotic art world. In New York City there has been a betting game going on amongst gallery staff concerning which gallery will close next. Artists are have been forced to move to less expensive studios. Materials are becoming more pricey. Art museums are cutting staff and benefits. From that woodwork the roaches of the art market will surely be exposed-- and stomped upon.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Sunday, April 05, 2009

Art Space Talk: Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern

www.wikipediaart.org logo

Wikipedia Art is Dead. Long Live Wikipedia Art. (Before they kill it again.) On February 14th, 2009 – in a nod to the infamous ILOVEYOU email virus – Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern launched a page on Wikipedia called “Wikipedia Art.” The idea: art that anyone can edit. They simultaneously oversaw the publication of several online articles about the work, and cited these back on the Wikipedia entry page itself, so as to circumvent immediate deletion by strict Wikipedia editors.

Wikipedia Art was made “legitimate” and “encyclopedia-worthy” by Wikipedia’s own standards of verifiability, since its page referenced what are considered credible sources by Wikipedia’s own editors – including this very blog. The project lived on Wikipedia for approximately 15 hours as an intervention, performance and artwork, before it was removed by one of their administrators.

Kildall and Stern, both together and individually, agreed to answer a few follow-up questions about their work.

*Addendum and postscript*
Between the writing and publication of this article, Kildall and Stern were contacted by lawyers representing the Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia. They were challenged under trademark law for using the name "Wikipedia" in their project and specifically asked to transfer the WikipediaArt.org domain name to Wikimedia. The artists are currently in negotiations with their lawyers. While their research has concluded that Wikipedia Art is protected under fair use laws, Wikimedia nevertheless has deeper pockets than the artists. Updates will be intermittently posted on WIkipediaArt.org, while it lasts. The performance continues...


***
Brian Sherwin: What were some of your initial intentions for a work of art on Wikipedia?

Scott Kildall & Nathaniel Stern: We hoped to create a piece that would continuously transform, die and be resurrected, by a collaborating public. Once the initial entry and essays were published, we invited any and all potential partners – perhaps Wikipedia would call them conspirators – to write additional articles about the work. Our suggestion was that such writing should not just “cover” Wikipedia Art, but could also “change” it.

If someone publishes, for example, “On March 16, 2009, Wikipedia Art spawned the Wikipedia Art Object – which is green and spherical” on a “credible” blog, then one could cite that quotation back onto the Wikipedia page itself, making it “true.” In addition to being an interesting and artistic feedback loop between online communities and one of the main systems that informs them (Wikipedia), the work also serves as an intervention in, and pointer to, the egos and biases behind said system.

Sherwin: What was the response on Wikipedia itself?

Kildall & Stern: Within an hour, the “Wikipedia Art” page was tagged AfD (Article for Deletion) by Wikipedia editor, Daniel Rigal. After an AfD tag, the standard process is to have a 5-day community review on the merits of the article. What ensued was a hotly contested debate on several discussion pages. 15 hours its after its birth, an 18-year old Wikipedia admin calling himself “Werdna” removed the page, and locked it down from future inclusion on the site. Interestingly, this move was in violation of Wikipedia’s own standards, but we have no recourse there.

During these discussions, both of us stepped back and let others hash out the legitimacy and transformation of the project. We never participated in any of the Wikipedia Art online debates, on Wikipedia or elsewhere. We take the fact that so many people were involved in edits to the page, heated deliberation on Wikipedia, Rhizome, Art Fag City and elsewhere - not to mention that there were many outside attempts by others to put the work back on Wikipedia’s meta-Wiki, their page for Conceptual art, the page called “Wikipedia loves art,” and several others - as a testament to the piece’s success as both a collaboration and intervention.

Sherwin: What were your expectations and hopes?

Kildall & Stern: We had expected, as stated in the press release, that the “Wikipedia Art” page would just be removed temporarily, not locked down completely. We hoped there would be a chance, or chances, to get it back up after more publications came to the fore. In retrospect, we realize that this was a vain hope— the Wikipedia powers that be would never allow it. We feel lucky that it was not simply deleted immediately, without a whimper. We would have seen that as a real failure.

Sherwin: What was revealed to you about the Wikipedia structure?

Kildall & Stern: We are both strong Wikipedia supporters. We still contribute to the site on a regular basis and promote the values behind it – free information, creative commons and GNU licenses, etc. Like most encyclopedias, it only scratches the surface in its entries, but it’s a great and easy place to start when embarking on new research, or just looking for a few useful tidbits. And the fact that Wikipedia is not owned and run by a corporation is of enormous importance.

But one of the problems we discovered is that a huge demographic of very young people (ages 16-23) dominates the Wikipedia culture, ethos and information trade. The result is a bigger emphasis on pop culture and esoteric geek factoids, while topics like art movements and artists get sidelined. Try looking up something like “Warlock (Dungeons & Dragons)” as compared to, say, digital art star Cory Arcangel, who is currently on the cover of Art Forum. The standards for the two are completely opposing! The D&D page only uses online sources far from the mainstream, while the Cory Arcangel page references some of the most important museums in existence today. Despite this, the D&D page actually calls for “expansion,” while the Arcangel page is prefaced with a disclaimer that its citations are insufficient.

The pretenses that Wikipedia is somehow objective, that the same standards apply across the board, that anyone who cares enough and knows enough and is willing to dedicate their time can be an editor, all need to be challenged. Like it or not, Wikipedia is the dominant power behind online information, and so it is our responsibility – and theirs – to take each other to task.

In short, we see a self-propagating loop of dis- or mis- or what we call un-information, where websites and other references will now quote or cite Wikipedia as proof of vitality – or worse, assume something is unimportant if it does not have a Wikipedia entry, or its entry is short or full of disclaimers – reinforcing holes in cultural knowledge. Given that so many top sites simply copy text from Wikipedia in order to flesh out their content – making their surface scratching text the dominant online information – in a post-Wikipedia age, we very often have less information at our fingertips, rather than more.

Sherwin: How did the blogs respond to the event?

Kildall: We definitely received a polarized response from blogs and the public. I felt like my name was dragged around in the mud while at the same time I received numerous private emails commending the project.

The critiques ranged from the old refrain: “this is not art” to being “too slick” to being “half-baked”. The congratulations were on setting up a simple framework that led to discussions about Wikipedia’s power within a conceptual art context.

That a huge number of people had such diverse reactions to the project, in a time when many art projects simply get ignored by the blogosphere, shows that people care about how the structure of Wikipedia is deviating from its original mandate.

Stern: What I found most fascinating on both Wikipedia and in the other debates (for example, on Rhizome) was how quickly people imputed their own issues or desires on to the project. While playful artists like Pall Thayer and Shane Mecklenburger attempted to transform Wikipedia Art through conscious decisions and performative utterances on its Wikipedia page (admittedly mostly skipping over the publishing elsewhere part), many others just wrote about what it “meant,” and transformed the piece in that way, rather than how Scott and I had initially intended. Still, that precise process and debate, at least for me, was far more interesting than I would have expected.

For example, Wikipedian Daniel Rigal, who first marked the page for deletion, saw it as a well-meaning experiment that happened to break the rules; ironic, given that Wikipedia itself is a well-meaning experiment that happens to break its own rules. Performance artist and professor, Patrick Lichty, gave it its academic, tactical and tautological flare – things he and his performance-based online personae are endowed with.

Wedrna, the 18-year-old and recent high school graduate Wikipedian who eventually deleted the page, thought we “made it up at school.” Laid back artist and blogger Jon Coffelt just asked people what they thought; he found the whole thing rather amusing and interesting, from a distance.

Art blogging star Paddy Johnson felt pity for the Wikipedians, and how hard they must work to maintain such a huge web site – something she is all too familiar with over at her own site, Art Fag City. Rhizomer and blogger Tom Moody made it all about himself, his ideas, his own bruised ego – something, anyone who reads his blog or Rhizome discussions will know, he manages to accomplish this with just about every online debate he involves himself with (and there are many). South African writer, thinker and arts critic Chad Rossouw says the project is about how art only exists fully through discourse – most critics (myself included) would likely agree.

And so on; in retrospect, it seems so obvious that this would happen, that Wikipedia Art could not last, that the debates would start out interesting but then egos would get in the way and the debaters would place themselves in the front lines, then blame each other if they got hurt, and then blame the project itself as it, and they, unraveled. But during the actual unraveling, we mostly cocked our heads, opened our mouths, and watched in earnest. It was quite a performance.

Sherwin: What are your future plans with Wikipedia Art?

Kildall & Stern: Wikipedia Art is in Phase II. It has been taken off of Wikipedia, the online discussions have mostly died down, and we have properly archived the performance on our own website at WikipediaArt.org. We’re now hoping to see more in-depth writing about the work; we are courting a few academic publications and writers to see how Wikipedia Art’s meaning might still be transformed over time.

Sherwin: Where does Wikipedia Art lie within Conceptual Art’s history?

Kildall: This remains to be seen. At this point, Wikipedia Art is driving a stake into the ground, contextualizing what it was, or could be, through this very interview and beyond. It depends on how people write about it.

Stern: Isn’t that, how people write and talk about a work to find its place in history, the case with all art – conceptual or otherwise? For better or worse, it’s the writers, the media, the Wikipedians who decide.

According to his Wikipedia page, New York Times arts critic Jerry Saltz once said, “We live in a Wikipedia art world.” So be it.

Link of Interest:

Wikipedia Art: A Virtual Fireside Chat Between Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern -- Myartspace Blog
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/02/wikipedia-art-virtual-fireside-chat.html

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
www.myartspace.com
myartspace blog on Twitter
www.twitter.com/myartspace_blog

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2nd Annual myartspace.com Art Scholarship Competition

www.myartspace.com/scholarships
Myartspace, the premiere online venue for contemporary art, has launched the 2nd annual art scholarship competition, with $16,000 in CASH prize awards. This merit-based scholarship is intended for students who have a passion for art and demonstrate that passion in their work. Students using all mediums of visual art, including photography, digital media, and sculpture, are encouraged to apply. The program is intended to recognize and award young artists who exhibit exceptional talent.

Myartspace will provide three scholarship prizes for undergraduate students and three scholarship prizes for graduate students. First place winners in each category are awarded a $5000 cash scholarship. Second and Third place winners receive $2000 and $1000 cash awards, respectively. To be considered for a Myartspace scholarship, applicants must be undergraduate or graduate students in an art degree program.
Last year, scholarship applicants hailed from over 1,200 schools worldwide. For more information visit, www.myartspace.com/scholarships.

View the undergraduate and graduate winners of the 1st annual myartspace.com art scholarship competition below:


Lucy May: 2008 myartspace.com graduate art scholarship first place winner:

“Entering the competition was an excellent way for me to build a high quality gallery of my work online, since I don't yet have my own website. I was aware that the site is vast and diverse, and that there would be many applications for the Scholarship. I am honored that my work was selected and delighted that so many more people will be able to view my work as a result of this competition. I'm also excited about the possibilities that this will open up for me.” -- Lucy May


Justin Lowman: 2008 myartspace.com graduate art scholarship second place winner

“I don't think one ever imagines winning these things. Of course, I knew I couldn't win unless I tried. I enjoyed putting the gallery together. It gave me chance to take inventory on recent work. My placement at the top has rendered me speechless. Of course, there is a smile.” -- Justin Lowman


Jessica Wohl: 2008 myartspace.com graduate art scholarship third place winner

“As I'm sure all applicants were, I was hopeful about the competition, though I figured it was pretty competitive. The word 'scholarship' always makes students excited. My reaction to winning was, of course, surprised and excited! I am really honored. It gives me validation and makes me feel like I'm going down the right path.” -- Jessica Wohl


Sara Sisun: 2008 myartspace.com undergraduate art scholarship first place winner

“I was just checking out the myartspace site and saw the advertisement for the competition; I had my portfolio documented and available so I figured it would be easy to fill out one more application. I was completely shocked to hear that I had won; I thought the winners had already been announced. I’m nervous to hear back from graduate programs, so receiving such encouragement is really great.” -- Sara Sisun


Jessica Brown: 2008 myartspace.com undergraduate art scholarship second place winner

“This was a great opportunity for someone living in a pretty secluded place, such as Alaska, to get my art out there. I am a little shocked that I won a place in the competition because I know how many talented artists entered. Just by participating I feel more connected to the outside, let alone winning!” -- Jessica Brown


Zach Stein: 2008 myartspace.com undergraduate art scholarship third place winner
“I don’t see how an art student can pass up an opportunity like this. You don’t have to pay to join Myartspace. You don’t have to pay to join the competition. You don’t have to get your work to a location. You just take a picture and put it online. It’s a bit of a no-brainer.” -- Zach Stein

Myartspace is one of the fastest growing and diverse communities on the internet. Its members include more than 50,000 artists, collectors, galleries and other art world professionals from across the globe, and it currently hosts the work of nearly 30,000 artists. Membership is free and artists can host their own art galleries with unlimited storage capacity.
Catherine McCormack-Skiba founded the company in 2006. An artist herself, she notes “The Arts are an essential part of our society, and CatMacArt Corporation is proud to once again sponsor a meaningful scholarship program for young artists in undergraduate and graduate studies. A large part of the mission of the community is to provide opportunities for emerging and established artists to develop their careers . Given our record participation levels last year, we are hopeful that we can match the depth and breadth of the art submitted last year. It is a tough benchmark for us.”

For more information visit, www.myartspace.com/scholarships

Links of Interest:

Myartspace launches 2009 cash scholarship competition for graduate and undergraduate students
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/04/myartspace-launches-2009-cash.html

Myartspace launches major Art Scholarship program for both graduate and undergraduate students
www.myartspace.com/blog/2008/07/myartspace-launches-major-art.html

myartspace announces Winners of 2008 Undergraduate Scholarship Competition‏
www.myartspace.com/blog/2009/01/myartspace-announces-winners-of-2008.html

The 2008 undergraduate and graduate winners
www.myartspace.com/scholarships/winners

Take care, Stay true,

Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
myartspace on Twitter
Myartspace Blog on Twitter

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Art Space Talk: Fanne Fernow

Fanne Fernow is an encaustic painter. She uses copious dots and shapes to make her paintings. Fernow suggests that art should be experienced slowly. She has stated that a work of art should engage a viewer for more than just that first split second look that we all have when we look at art. In a sense, she strives to open a window of exploration with her paintings-- so that viewers can discover the meaning for themselves while reflecting on their own individuality. Fernow was recently selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA.


Mantra Series No. 24: Oh No. 2. by Fanne Fernow

Brian Sherwin: Fanne, you were selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA. As you know, NYAXE Gallery is operated by the founders of www.myartspace.com and www.nyaxe.com and serves as a way to bridge the online and physical art world. Why did you decide to submit your work for consideration?

Fanne Fernow: First, I want to say that I am so pleased that I was selected. My entry in the competition, for lack of a better word, was totally a freak accident. A friend of mine was on the myartspace.com site, saw the announcement, and sent it to me. I had been entering a few shows, mostly encaustic shows. So when I saw the announcement, I entered really without thinking about it at all. To be honest, I didn’t even know what MyArtSpace.com or NYAXE.com were.

When I was selected, I … well, I had to look into it more, thinking that it might be one of those vanity situations or something. Since then, I have done a lot of exploring on both sites. A lot of it is pretty amazing. When I got the letter saying “Congratulations!” I was amazed. I know tons of people who enter everything and never hear a word again. I was so happy!
I have been a big believer in the idea of internet art marketing for a long time. I know that having a website, www.fannefernow.com, really helps people who are following my career. This is a few steps more advanced than that.

mono10 by Fanne Fernow

BS: You are an encaustic painter-- you use copious dots and shapes to make your paintings. My understanding is that you call these dots “mantras“. Can you discuss the thoughts behind your paintings?

FF: Sure. When I am asked to describe myself, I say that I am a “theologian, artist, writer,” in that order. My education is largely in theology, and I am very interested in the spiritual journey. A long time ago, an Episcopal priest named Jennifer Phillips asked me to describe my own piety. I had not really thought about putting it into words before. Subsequently I wound up in divinity school, and really started thinking about my own personal vision of holiness.

In Writing Down the Bones, Natalie Goldberg tells a story of a Buddhist teacher telling her that her writing, which she did every day, was meditation. Reading that was a big moment for me. I began to look at my studio, which is always a mess, as a holy place, and my paintings as an extension of what I was experiencing on my spiritual journey. I went through a period of time where I wanted to be a Buddhist, but I am not a Buddhist, I am a painter.

At first, I used words in my paintings to express what I was feeling. I was working in oils then, and I developed my own iconography: a funny little toothy dog named Fearless who was always standing on mountain peaks, great little women with what I call flower heads because of their hair who wanted to give advice. I was letting them say things that I wanted to tell people. I think they were more of a simplified intellectual approach to a spiritual journey.

This took a serious turn for the better after I switched from oils to wax. The wax, maybe the smell, or the sensuality of it all… I think that my paintings have become my image of holiness, or at least, what I think holiness IS. They are expressions of feelings themselves, not my explanation of what I feel. That is the best way I know to describe it. I have to be careful here, because it has always been important to me to not push my understanding onto other people. I want the people who experience my work to bring their own stories.

I have been incorporating my spiritual journey into “art” for as long as I can remember. Working intuitively is spiritual. I have always made intuitive art. I made things out of rocks and mud as a little girl in the woods behind our house in East Aurora, New York. I used to knit sweaters without patterns; bake bread without a recipe. I used to say that making bread was “a feeling, not a recipe.” And now I basically start with a wooden panel, perfectly made by a man I know to be on his own spiritual quest, and let the rest happen. As I ponder on with my work, this idea becomes safer and safer.

Working from the soul is a lot scarier than working from the brain, but the results are so much fun. I feel like my work is growing in leaps and bounds right now. Mantras, which I am supposed to be talking about right now, are still there, but they are now in the background, while before, they became the whole painting.

Metaphorically, I think that means that my journey with the holy is integrating with my practical walk. Now that is something really great. It is the idea of BEING peace or BEING holiness. People who know me would be surprised to hear me say this, I think. I don’t talk about it a lot. But in the core of me, that is who I am, and I think it has begun to shine through in my art.

The dots have a history. I have always loved circles and dots. I discovered the idea of the swirling dots a number of years ago when I was looking for a way to do a good background on a painting I was doing. I decided to do the dots. It was a big deal since the painting was 50 x 60 inches. I got bored just making rows of dots, so I started improvising, and before the painting was over, the dots had taken on a life of their own, and the painting had a totally new dimension! It was one of those great breakthrough moments that I will never forget.

The dots in that painting sang me to sleep that night. They climbed inside of me the way that I had climbed inside the dots that very day. I have had other moments like that as an artist, but that was a day my life as an artist took a whole new turn. Art was life. Life was art. Art became an expression of how I felt, not how I think.

Soon after that, my mother was diagnosed with cancer, lived 111 more days, and died. I had gone to Scottsdale to be with her and did not make any art during that time. When I returned home, I was not able to paint. I was working, but not taking any risks, not doing anything new.

Ultimately, my friend Anita Elliott invited me to take a class with encaustic artist Daniella Woolf. I took the class, felt like a bumbling idiot the whole time, did not make one painting in the class, and left feeling like I would never be doing that again. And when I was not even thinking about it, I realized that I wanted to do more of it. And I figured out a way to make my dots and keep going. Ultimately, I gave up the oil paint and worked exclusively with wax.

Making art to me is about having the courage to put down on the support what ever pops into my mind. And my evolution as an artist has happened because of this every once in a while, and I mean every once in a WHILE, I have courage.

So, the “copious dots” you asked about … each dot is a prayer, You might call it a wish, or a hope. Some times the mantras are about peace and other worldly ideas. Sometimes they are about my own evolution. I have to confess that some of my mantras are about wanting to win the lottery, or create bounty through my work! But the dots are filled with hope. I think that is the main thing.
Hall of Mirrors 4 by Fanne Fernow

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

FF: I love artists who have been courageous leaders …. Jackson Pollack, Andy Warhol, Jean Dubuffet. In the modern world, I love Squeak Carnwath, Marlene Dumas, Jenny Saville. In my own life, I am really inspired by my teacher Daniella Woolf, who really has inspired me to “play” in my studio, to take more chances. And my friend Roberta Lee Woods, whose studio is right next to mine… well, she is a waxer too. More of an asemblage, collage waxer. We are always bouncing ideas off of each other. And that is a great thing. I have my studio in an old grain warehouse called 17th Avenue Studios in Santa Cruz. There are about 40 of us in that space. The place has a great art vibe, and there is a lot of support there. I think I would have to say that just being a part of that group has been the most influential experience for me.

So many people I have known along the way have helped me. Sometimes by telling me to keep going, some have bought me paint, and given me money when I really needed it. People who buy my paintings, and keep coming back to see what I am doing now. My mom, who never discouraged me from making art.

waiting no one by Fanne Fernow

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers?

FF: I don’t know. I want their experience of my work to be an evolution. Art should be experienced slowly. There should be enough there to engage a viewer for more than just that first split second look that we all have when we look at art. Right now, I just want to invite people in, let them climb around in a painting, one at a time. Where does the painting take you? What is your “hall of mirrors”? I hope people want to wander in and search out all the nooks and crannies.

People often ask me what my paintings mean. I am often hesitant to tell them for fear that it will alter their own personal experience of the art. I don’t’ mean to be rude when I don’t want talk about it. I want to give people something to think about. But I want it to be about what they want to think about. Because that is more important for them, though they don’t always know that.

BS: What are you working on at this time?

FF: Right now I am doing a series called “Mantra Series Redux.” It is a re-consideration of some of the early Mantra Series paintings that didn’t quite work. I go back into them with encaustic medium, a little paint, and dry pigment. The dots, and the holes that I create when making the mantra paintings are persistently present. And so the paintings get a new dimension. They become translucent and dimensional in a whole new way. I am having blast.

mantra Series No. 10 by Fanne Fernow

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

FF: One of the really hard parts of experiencing art is that art is very intimate. For the true art lover, there is a relationship that must be established with a painting. The internet lets us hangout with art work that we might have only been able to see for a few moments at best. Maybe if a painting calls out to me enough, if I keep going back to it.. well, that might be the painting I want to own.

I had that experience myself while looking at the website of the Conrad Wilde Gallery in Tucson. I saw a painting by an emerging artist named Elee Oak. I kept looking at it. I called them, and we had a lot of back and forth about it. I asked a lot of questions about how the painting was put together. They were very patient with me, and finally I made a decision to go for it. I love that painting. We have been given a new way to find artists and art that really touches us.

One thing that is really important to consider is that a computer monitor is not the best way to see art. There is nothing like the real thing. I think that some prints are amazing – I particularly like “Iris Prints” which are water-based Giclees. But they give a painting, at least my paintings, a whole different personality.

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

FF: I don’t have any concrete plans right now. I am still entering shows, and competitions. I think that the NYAXE experience has really given me the push I needed to be able to send my work out more. One of the great things that “internet galleries” do is help artists expand our geographical limits. I know I will never be able to really make a living as an artist if I just sell in Santa Cruz.
My studio complex is having an open studio event May 2 and 3 in Santa Cruz. I suspect that will be my first public showing of the new work. I’ll also be participating in Open Studios which is sponsored by the Cultural Council of Santa Cruz County.
Red Sky Before Rain by Fanne Fernow

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

FF: Of course. I am concerned about what the economy is doing to artists. I am concerned that public projects will not include art as a way to reduce costs. I hope that there will one day be more federal funding for artists and public art projects. I am worried about censorship. FEAR NO ART.

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

FF: Yes. I would like to say that I am so grateful to be an artist. I think I am very lucky to have figured out that I am artist. And I am lucky that people actually pay money to have my work, either on original paintings or on three-dollar greeting cards. It doesn’t matter. On some level, I know that my work has touched people. How cool is that?

You can learn more about Fanne Fernow by visiting her website-- www.fannefernow.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews. You can learn more about the artists selected for NYAXE Gallery representation by visiting the following page, www.myartspace.com/nyaxegallery/winners.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
New York Art Exchange
myartspace blog on Twitter

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

Art Space Talk: Jennifer Wasson

Jennifer Wasson was born in Manhattan and began painting at an early age under the tutelage of her mother, an artist and art teacher herself. As a young adult, she studied oil painting at The Art Students League of New York for 2 years before moving to the West Coast. For the past 7 years she has been living and painting in San Francisco, CA. Wasson was recently selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA.

Mission Dawn by Jennifer Wasson

Brian Sherwin: Jennifer, you were selected for representation at the NYAXE Gallery in Palo Alto, CA. As you know, NYAXE Gallery is operated by the founders of www.myartspace.com and www.nyaxe.com and serves as a way to bridge the online and physical art world. Why did you decide to submit your work for consideration?

Jennifer Wasson: Shortly after a friend turned me on to Myartspace, I stumbled upon the NYAXE competition. I'll admit that I submitted my portfolio on a whim, but I feel honored to have been chosen for NYAXE representation. I'm finding that Myartspace is a valuable tool to reach out to other artists, potential buyers and and galleries. Already, I've made connections with artists all over the globe, and have seen a lot of inspiring work.
23rd St. 5 by Jennifer Wasson

BS: I understand that you were born and raised in Manhattan and that you began painting at an early age under the tutelage of your mother. an artist and art teacher herself. As a young adult, you studied at Boston College and The Art Students League in New York. Can you discuss your early years and academic years and how they have impacted you as an artist?

JW: My mother is an adamant believer in "learning through experience". So, her teaching was mostly hands-off. Starting at a young age, she'd set me up with an easel and paints, but the rest was up to me. The golden rule was "no coloring books and no copying". Aside from that, I could do whatever I wanted. I went on to spend countless hours of high school and college drawing, but it was at the Art Students League in Manhattan that I really immersed myself in oil painting. I gravitated towards the "uninstructed" classes (known for little talk and long model poses), carrying on my early imprint that art should be primarily "self taught". As much as I've learned from my wonderful teachers had, there's just no substitute for years of quiet, patient, studio time.

101 Sunset by Jennifer Wasson

BS: My understanding is that you are interested in balance. For example, in your art you seek the balance between form and formlessness. The process itself is one of creation and destruction. Can you discuss your art and your process of creating art in regards to the idea of balance?

JW: Finding the equilibrium between form and formlessness is a constant battle for me. But, I see beauty hanging in the balance... somewhere beyond true form, but before total abstraction. In my painting, this means leaving much up to the imagination. Every window, every car, need not be rendered in detail. Just a hint of a shape, or a glimmer of light, is often enough. So, what's left out ends up being just as important as what's left on the canvas. Like in a dream, your mind fills in the rest.

Sometimes, I feel drawn to sharpening my focus, but I don't want to merely replicate a scene. If a piece starts becoming too detailed, then it's time to make sweeping brushstrokes of destruction. Often, an entire painting will get destroyed and re-worked several times. But, what's gratifying about the process is that each session leaves ghosts of colors and shapes behind. These unintentional layers create depth and generally lead to a more interesting painting in the end.

Outer Sunset 4 by Jennifer Wasson

BS: Give us some further insight into the thoughts behind your work…

JW: The vacancy of the urban landscape can be haunting and mysterious. So many closed doors and closed worlds. But, shift the lighting, and the landscape becomes warm and enveloping. I'm fascinated by changes in atmosphere. Given the right atmosphere, even the most pedestrian scene takes on a sense of drama. The ordinary becomes mysterious.
Unfortunately, the bulk of the day (with it's hard forms and full-spectrum colors) holds little interest for me. But dusk, dawn, a gleam light through fog... those fleeting moments are heavy with mood and meaning. The world takes on a surreal quality, and I feel a longing to connect to something greater than myself. I feel inspired to paint.

Caesar Chavez by Jennifer Wasson

BS: What about influences? Can you discuss your influences in detail?

JW: Do I feel more influence looking at a master work of art, or simply gazing at sunlight on the pavement? I really can't say. I find inspiration in most art movements from the early Impressionists to the California Tonalists to contemporary geniuses.
When I'm feeling un-ambitious, I'll grab one of my favorite books like "Facing Eden: 100 Years of Landscape Art in the Bay Area" or "Chasing Napoleon" (a compilation of Tony Scherman's dark encaustic works). I rarely read the words, but I do "read" the paintings, sometimes spending 5 or 10 minutes on each one. But, again, I find just as much inspiration walking the streets of the Mission District at dusk, watching buildings blur into abstraction.
I'm also influenced by the many unique people in my life, namely family, close friends, and teachers. Most of what I've learned about the creative process itself, I owe to my long-time teacher Michael Markowitz. He taught me to feel my way through a painting, rather than just forging ahead with my mind. (Sometimes, the ego needs to step aside to open up a channel for the creative flow.) I learned that a good painting is born, not out of the perfection of academic techniques, but out of the struggle to engage the experience of painting.
Irving Sunset by Jennifer Wasson

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey to viewers?

JW: Rather than conveying a "message", I strive to generate a "feeling" through my artwork. If I'm successful, I create a mood that triggers an emotional response. Fleeting moments of the day, blinding in their beauty, remind us of the impermanence of everything we love. Perhaps that conjures up a sense of longing, appreciation, or transcendence. If you feel something, even just the smallest stirring, then I've conveyed what was needed.

BS: What are you working on at this time?

JW: I'm primarily working on my "Crosswalk Divinity" series. It's a continuation of the urban landscapes that I've been working on for years. But, in these paintings, there's a subtle undercurrent of religious symbolism. The telephone pole becomes the cross, the steeple of a church or mosque comes out of the shadows. Yet, the emphasis is always on the light and the atmosphere, rather than the man-made buildings of worship.
This juxtaposition raises questions about our relationship to what's sacred and unknown. For me, it's the mood created by the natural world that inspires awe and serenity. When the late day light casts an ethereal glow on the landscape, I sense my own connection to the divine.

Cole Valley Lights by Jennifer Wasson

BS: What are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

JW: Although I've had mixed feelings in the past about selling art on the internet, I think that web exposure can only help you an artist. Although a potential buyer is unlikely to purchase an original painting over the internet, looking at web images might prompt someone to buy a print, visit your studio, or attend your next show.
I think that I can speak for a lot of artists when I say that one of our biggest problems is reaching an audience. We spend a lot of time in isolation, working on our art, and don't have the means to promote ourselves. So, we rely on gallery exhibits and "word-of-mouth" to reach people. I think it would be wise for artists to embrace the internet to connect to potential buyers, galleries and other artists. Stay open to new media opportunities when they come your way. The fact that you're reading this now means that I've reached you through the ether, and that's pretty amazing.
after the rain by Jennifer Wasson
BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

JW: I hope to be involved in further shows through NYAXE as well as with the galleries that I show work at in San Francisco and Atlanta. At the moment, I'm preparing for Spring Open Studios at Hunters Point in San Francisco (May 2nd & 3rd), where I will be showing a new body of work. I'll know more about Spring and Summer exhibits soon and will update my web site with the details (www.wassonart.com).

BS: Do you have any concerns about the art world at this time?

JW: I've read the doomsday art buying reports, and I've watched some good galleries close down. But, I'm not really worried about "artists". Artists are used to living on a shoestring budget. We're survivors, industrious and creative with our options. We'll continue to paint, write, play guitar, and dance our way through this recession.
I'm sure that patrons will be tighter on the purse strings, and money harder to come by. But, the silver lining in this recession could be a diminished emphasis on soulless consumerism. That might even translate (stretch your imagination), into someone buying a painting that he loves, instead of a new TV. A girl can dream after all.

fog shrouds downtown by Jennifer Wasson

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

JW: For me, making art is not about imposing my ideas or ego on the canvas. It's about turning off my thinking mind and engaging the creative process. At it's best, the experience feels like I'm moving out of the way and allowing something more universal flow through me. It's a patient, quiet, and deeply challenging process that I rarely put into words. So, I feel honored and humbled to have shared my art and my thoughts with you.
You can learn more about Jennifer Wasson by visiting her website-- www.wassonart.com. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews. You can learn more about the artists selected for NYAXE Gallery representation by visiting the following page, www.myartspace.com/nyaxegallery/winners.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
New York Art Exchange
myartspace on Twitter
myartspace blog on Twitter

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Friday, April 03, 2009

Art Space Talk: Rassan Cobbs

Rassan Cobbs is an artist from Newark, NJ. Cobbs describes his work as “Dirty Mythology” due to the fact that he infuses elements of the fantastic into ordinary scenes. In Cobbs world, which has been described as urban gothic, a grazing rhino becomes a device for time travel while a businessman deflects bombs and birds with his umbrella.

Childs Play by Rassan Cobbs

Brian Sherwin: Rassan, tell us about yourself. At what point did you gain an interest in creating visual art?

Rassan Cobbs: I've always drawn. I was probably making little doodles before I could walk. Ma Dukes was an artist herself, but dropped out of art school to become a nurse. I guess you could say the bar was set pretty high early on. I'll never forget asking her to draw me a warrior or something like that and she drew me a Spartan soldier in full battle regalia. There were no stick figures in the Cobbs household.

Fast forward a decade and a half. After a failed attempt at becoming a rapper my ex-wife's mother bought me some oils and brushes. I started playing around and whaddayaknow? I actually managed to impress myself. This is when I painted "Gorillascape" based on photos of gorillas and astronaut suits. Up until that point everything I did was comic based. Nothing serious at all. It wasn't until the ex and I split that I decided to brush up some drawing and general foundation principles at the Tidewater Community College of Visual Arts. A modest little school in Portsmouth, VA (where I was stationed) with an immensely talented faculty.

Head Hunter by Rassan Cobbs

BS: So is photography an important aspect of your work in general?

RC: Aside from the obvious comic influence in my freehand work, I'll work from the occasional photograph. My pops was a pretty decent amateur photographer in the good ole’ days. The "Hayes Homes PJs" piece was rendered from a photograph he had taken long before the city blew up the projects.

BS: Tell us more about your art-- give us some insight into the thoughts behind your work?

RC: I've been told that my art has a dark tone to it. Perhaps urban gothic? I use the term "Dirty Mythology' as an umbrella to describe my work in general as I tend to infuse elements of the fantastical into the mundane or ordinary, which makes up about ninety percent of what I do. I've always enjoyed the freedom of being able to create my own personal mythology.
Time Traveler by Rassan Cobbs

BS: Rassan, can you discuss your process in general? Are there any specific techniques that you utilize?

RC: My creative process is pretty typical I think. I usually scour the internet, magazines and old postcards or photos until something grabs my attention. The occasional found relic. After that I'll take stock of whatever materials are on hand, mix a drink, turn on some music and zone out. As far as technique goes, I'll use anything from cheap brushes to pieces of dry sponge. I go through a lot of old socks. Anything goes when your on a budget.

BS: What about other influences? For example, are you influenced by any specific artists?

RC: That's a hard one. There are quite a few artist I admire. James Jean. Will Barras. As far as influence goes that's a tough one. Sam Keith's work with The MAXX. Mark Texiera's work with the Punisher and Ghost Rider. Vaugh Bode's Cheech Wizard. Frank Frazetta. My young mind was tainted by his paintings when I was about five or six. One of dad's homies had a hardcover volume of his paintings I would drool over while they were hanging out doing what adults did in those days. Kung Fu flicks, Planet of the Apes, and Cheech and Chong. Pop's always had copies of Heavy Metal around.
Technology by Rassan Cobbs

BS: So what is the specific message you strive to convey as far as your work is concerned?

RC: I like to stay away from making statements in my art. Political or socioeconomic. I get my daily dose of pain and suffering from the CNNs AND BBCs of the world. Keep in mind that I'm exposed to more than my fair share of death at my day job as a surgical technologist. Art for me is an escape. A blank surface for me is the playground where that last shred of innocence can roam free and unopposed. The casual observer or art critic is more than welcome to whatever interpretation they desire.

BS: What are you working on at this time?

RC: Balance between networking, work, painting, being a father and squeezing in time for a love life. The love life tends to spend an inordinate amount of time on the back burner these days. All work and no play as the saying goes.

BS: Rassan, what are your thoughts concerning the internet and utilizing the World Wide Web in order to gain exposure for your art? In your opinion, why is it important for artists to embrace the internet?

RC: I love the internet. Sites like myartspace.com have provided a forum for artists of all kinds . Where else can an outsider such as myself gain any positive exposure without the benefit of a contact heavy "rolodex". Some of you kids may have to "Google" rolodex.
When it Rains by Rassan Cobbs

BS: Will you be involved with any upcoming exhibits?

RC: No exhibits at the moment. Now is the time for experimenting and finding my "voice" as a artist. I would love nothing more than to start a collective of like-minded artist for group shows and mutual support but as an outsider the process can prove challenging. New York and New Jersey people get at ya boy!

BS: Finally, is there anything else you would like to say about your art?

RC: I sincerely hope you all enjoy what I'm doing.
You can learn more about Rassan Cobbs by visiting his myartspace.com profile. You can read more of my interviews by visiting the following page-- www.myartspace.com/interviews.
Take care, Stay true,
Brian Sherwin
Senior Editor
myartspace.com
New York Art Exchange
Myartspace Blog on Twitter
myartspace.com on Twitter

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Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Myartspace launches 2009 cash scholarship competition for graduate and undergraduate students

Myartspace.com, the premier online venue for contemporary art, is offering significant cash scholarship awards to talented art students around the world.

Palo Alto, CA (PRWEB) April 1 2009 -- Myartspace, the premiere online venue for contemporary art, is launching their 2nd annual art scholarship competition, with $16,000 in CASH prize awards. This merit-based scholarship is intended for students who have a passion for art and demonstrate that passion in their work. Students using all mediums of visual art, including photography, digital media, and sculpture, are encouraged to apply. The program is intended to recognize and award young artists who exhibit exceptional talent.

Myartspace will provide three scholarship prizes for undergraduate students and three scholarship prizes for graduate students. First place winners in each category are awarded a $5000 cash scholarship. Second and Third place winners receive $2000 and $1000 cash awards, respectively. To be considered for a Myartspace scholarship, applicants must be undergraduate or graduate students in an art degree program.

Artists interested in signing up for consideration for a Myartspace scholarship can find out more details by visiting the Myartspace scholarship page. The application process is easy and straightforward. Artists simply register for a FREE membership at Myartspace, where they can upload unlimited images, videos, and music. Members can then enter the free scholarship competition by submitting their online art gallery following the simple instructions listed on the scholarship page. THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION IS DECEMBER 16, 2009. Early registrants (students registering before June 15, 2009) will be granted a 3-month free trial subscription to Premium Services, normally a $75/year package.

Last year, scholarship applicants hailed from over 1,200 schools worldwide. Winners included Sara Susin (Stanford University), Jessica Brown (University of Alaska), and Zach Stein (University of Kentucky). Visit the Myartspace blog to see last year’s winning artist highlights, as well as the top 50 finalists.

Myartspace is one of the fastest growing and diverse communities on the internet. Its members include more than 50,000 artists, collectors, galleries and other art world professionals from across the globe, and it currently hosts the work of nearly 30,000 artists. Membership is free and artists can host their own art galleries with unlimited storage capacity.

Catherine McCormack-Skiba founded the company in 2006. An artist herself, she notes “The Arts are an essential part of our society, and CatMacArt Corporation is proud to once again sponsor a meaningful scholarship program for young artists in undergraduate and graduate studies. A large part of the mission of the community is to provide opportunities for emerging and established artists to develop their careers . Given our record participation levels last year, we are hopeful that we can match the depth and breadth of the art submitted last year. It is a tough benchmark for us.”

The scholarship program is one of several opportunities Myartspace provides for artists. In the Miami Basel competition, winning artists have their work represented at the Bridge Art Fair in Miami, FL. The competition is juried by a world class panel, with curators from The Whitney, SF MOMA, and San Jose Museum of Fine Art. The London Calling competition offers artists an amazing opportunity to show their work at Scream London Gallery, a globally renowned art establishment.

For more opportunities, please visit us at www.myartspace.com or email info@catmacart.com for further competition details. Myartspace is created and run by CatMacArt Corporation, www.catmacart.com

About MYARTSPACE:

myartspace, the premier online venue for contemporary art, is one of the fastest growing and diverse communities on the internet. Its members include more than 50,000 artists, collectors, galleries and other art world professionals from across the globe, and it currently hosts the work of nearly 30,000 artists. Membership is free and artist can upload an unlimited amount of work including images, music and video. Myartspace is created and run by CatMacArt Corporation. CatMacArt Corporation is also the developer of The New York Art Exchange (www.nyaxe.com). For additional information, see www.catmacart.com.

Website: www.myartspace.com
Scholarship:
www.myartspace.com/scholarships
Blog:
www.myartspace.com/blog
info: info AT catmacart.com

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