Andre Woolery ”Bruised Thumbs” at Frontrunner Gallery opens February 23rd.
Andre Woolery’s images of icons in tacks and other materials are so bold. not to be missed and I can’t wait to see them all up close!!
Andre Woolery ”Bruised Thumbs” at Frontrunner Gallery opens February 23rd.
Andre Woolery’s images of icons in tacks and other materials are so bold. not to be missed and I can’t wait to see them all up close!!
While on the subject of the Glock and police, here’s a current photo exhibit:
re-blogged from burnedshoes:
© Leonard Freed, Behind New York City’s ‘Police Work’
#1: A man dead by drug overdose, 1972
#2: Police try to clear the sidewalk of sleeping drunks on the Bowery, 1978
#3: A policewoman plays games with community children, 1978
#4: The accused and the arresting officer confront each other again, 1978
#5: “Isn’t he cute?” a woman asks of a police officer, 1978Disappointed with the loss of two photographers to the commercial world, Edward Steichen told Leonard Freed one day that if he ever went professional, his work would lose all interest. “Be a truck driver.”
It was with this amateur, insatiable curiosity that Freed, who joined Magnum Photos in 1970, took an interest in the New York Police Department and the African-American struggle for civil rights. In 1972, to counterbalance the NYPD’s poor public image, the photographer started an investigation into people’s attitude towards the boys in blue. He began by getting to know them better.Forty years have passed since Freed first began to document these officers. And although his original book, Police Work, published in 1980 and no longer in print, a larger collection of prints from the series is on display at the Museum of the City of New York through March 18, 2012.
(via foxxxynegrodamus)
Sanford Biggers (@noshun) The Cartographer’s Conundrum opens Feb 4 @Mass_MoCA…. I’m really excited to see this installation. I’ve recently acknowledged the influence of my experience at Egyptian religion/science camp. It was a traumatic couple of summers during my formative years, but I would not have gone on to study Math & Art without it…. I need to see more of this Afrofuturist idea at work. Also, good reason to go to the Berkshires! *toe wiggle* Can’t wait. Won’t be late.~zoom~
From the Mass MoCA website:
The Cartographer’s Conundrum is a major multi-disciplinary installation By New York-based artist Sanford Biggers. This new work is inspired by the Houston, Texas based artist, scholar and Afro-futurist John Biggers (1924-2001). A cousin of his subject, Sanford Biggers’ goal is to both study and expand the emerging genre of Afro-futurism, which engages science-fiction, cosmology and technology to create a new folklore of the African Diaspora while simultaneously illuminating the underrepresented career of master painter and muralist John Biggers.
Afrofuturism was a phrase coined in 1995 by cultural critic Mark Dery in is essay Black to the Future, where he links the African American use of science and technology to an examination of space, time, race and culture. In this text Dery defines afrofuturism as: “Speculative fiction that treats African-American themes and addresses African-American concerns in the context of 20th century technocluture - and, more generally, African American signification that appropriates images of technology and a prosthetically enhanced future…” The movement began in earnest in the mid-1950s with musician Sun-Ra, whose music blended science-fiction, mysticism, African culture (with a particular focus on Egypt) and jazz fusion, all of which coalesced in his 1972 film Space in the Place. In 1975 George Clinton formed his bands Parliament and Funkadellic, which took afrofurturism to new often absurdist heights. Today the movement is still strong, encompassing contemporary musicians like Saul Williams, Janelle Monae, OutKast and DJ Spooky along with writers like Paul Beatty, films like the Matrix, Bladeand Chronicles of Riddick and visual artists like Sanford Biggers.
This use of afrofuturist imagery and ideologies links both Sanford and John Biggers work. John Biggers began as a mural painter in the genre of social realism - portraying African American life. His work took a shift when in 1957 he won a UNESCO fellowship, becoming of the first African American artists to travel to Africa. His trip took him to West Africa, and later he traveled to Nigeria and other African countries. This experience had a profound impact on his work, which afterwards took these African themes, merging them with his images of African American life to create allegories about life, spirituality, hope and survival. John Biggers work also touched upon Afrofuturism in his use of sacred and fractal geometries and mystical imagery.
Sanford Biggers had always been inspired by his cousin”s work and journey. So, after being awarded a Creative Capital grant in 2008 Sanford Biggers used the opportunity to concieve of a new project that would place him and his cousin side by side. Sanford began by traveling through western Africa along the same route John Biggers followed in the 1950s, meeting with colleagues and family members along the way.
Blaxidermy Must-see: Sanford Biggers at Brooklyn Museum “Sweet Funk—An Introspective”
Mark Bradford - “Strawberry” - Go & see it at ICA Boston before the show ends!!
After watching his Art21 special a few times and having seen disparate pieces here and there in group shows, it was great to see a solo Mark Bradford show. I came away with a better appreciation for the artist’s process and materials, especially the hair-rolling papers, of course!
What I was truly amazed with, which cannot be seen in photos of Bradford’s work, is the number of layers that are built up in these ‘paintings’. In each of his large scale collages of found papers, the artist uses the dregs of street trash to carefully lay out images that resemble maps and other highly structured forms.
In a Pop-Impressionist moment, at the macro-level, we can see the whole structure, with colors, shapes, and an overall abstract form singing in harmony like a Kandinsky. Moving closer, much of the source material is still legible- from cell phone ads to the halftone prints of NBA & sneaker billboards.
Bradford’s layering of images calls for an urban scavenger hunt, where we can imagine the complete process of transformation from trash to treasure
Bravoooo!/Genius. I will definitely post more when I re-visit the show before it closes.
Find out more about Mark Bradford at Art21 or pinocchio is on fire
Another gorgeous sculpture by husband-wife team Colin & Sas Christian - via @arrestedmotion - I’ve posted their work here before. Their NY show at Opera Gallery opens in March.
The pattern on this is so Tlingit, Northwestern Native American, but the form is clearly that of Nefertiti, the most beautiful queen of Egypt. Interesting.
Life-size wax sculpture of former Israeli PM Sharon by Noam Braslavsky is set to go up in Tel Aviv on Thursdy. This depicts Sharon in his current vegetative state, which the artist says represents the country in limbo. Quite chilling. Do you think this is disrespectful?
Sonya Kelliher-Combs, “Common Thread”
HIDE: Skin as Material & Metaphor is such an interesting theme for an exhibition! I will definitely check out part 2/2 of this exhibition series at National Museum of the American Indian in NYC when I make my art trip this month. Our largest organ/external interface deserves some attention. Sonya Kelliher-Combs is a sculptor whose work in the exhibition uses animal skin as well as synthetics.
Source: HIDE exhibition site,
Happy Columbus Day!
I’ll admit, I loooove Pop Art. It’s so sweetly self-referential and, umm, marketable. Ron English, pop-surrealist extraordinaire, strikes again. I blame a 5th grade visit to Roy Lichtenstein’s studio. Thank you, Sunday School. According to his website, Ron will be there all day today! Go There.
Amber Rose sculpture in Status Factory by Ron English
A must-see show for anyone interested in the many interpretations of the BOOB in Pop Art (see: Marilyn Mickeys, Raquel Cowgirl, Lucy Exposed, etc., etc.)
Show: Status Factory at Opera Gallery, 382 West Broadway, NYC.
Source: Scott Beale / Laughing Squid’s flickr album
(via birthofasupervillain)
(via freddybeezy)
Guns/Taxidermy…. didn’t catch the name of this artist at VOLTA NY 2010. If anyone knows, please let me know!! Loved these sculptures!
Eve Fowler’s “Gloria Hole” photo series freaks me out. The show @ Horton Gallery in Chelsea closes tomorrow.
One thing I forgot to tell you
http://hortongallery.com/exhibition/onethingiforgottotellyou