Posts Tagged ‘ contemporary art

Rest Energy @ Sub-City Projects

Images of the most recent performance by the Cover Artists.

Photos courtesy of Candida Alvarez, curator for Sub-City Projects in Chicago.

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And more about money

“…Never has the American art world functioned so efficiently as a full-service marketing industry on the corporate model…” [full text here]
Hirst: Golden Calf
From February of 2009, but still relevant none the less. Worth a read.

The last paragraph in particular might even give one hope.

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More about money

Homepage A great site I learned about through Facebook. This post in particular caught our eye – especially now that we’ve officially launched the UPP. Always a fan of Chris Burden.

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around Town

We will be performing this Friday night at 6.3p – don’t miss it!
in partnership with Sub-City ProjectsReperformMarinaUlay
@ The Fine Arts Building
410 S. Michigan Ave.

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Robots

abramovicSecondLifeA lot of our work lately has been involved with looking at the human:digital interface. Is that the same as the human:machine interface? What are the differences that I am interested in exploring? How does our work in Performing the Self (the avatar as the real), as well as our work with the digital (trying to perfect our way of speaking to a camera by interviewing ourselves, editing, memorizing and repeating), etc. open up these ideas – but on the other side of the machine equation?

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Me likeee

This guy Graham is a new media artist doing some interesting work – just learned about him from the Media Modes symposium being held at the School of Visual Arts, NY in November. Check him out.thumb_mewithart

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Another thought on the value of art

An article from today’s NYTimes Opinion pages about the traditions of “conceptual art74366682HO003_skull

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What is the value of art?

Andrea Fraser, 2004Marlene Dumas famously wrote,
“lf a Prostitute is a person /
who makes it a profession/
to gratify the lust of various persons /
for economical reasons or gain, /
where emotional involvement may /
or may not be present— /
Then it seems not so far removed /
from my definition of an artist.”

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Ruby & Cash re-perform Robert Longo’s “Dancing Couple”

couple-dancing_web

dancing-couple

31. If an artist uses the same form in a group of works, and changes the material, one would assume the artist’s concept involved the material.”

What does it mean to re-perform a drawing? Even if the original drawing was life-sized? How does involving the body – as a viewer, as opposed to a producer – change the experience with the artwork as object?

There is a sort of object-producer dichotomy in the drawing that is absent when we perform the action. Our bodies are object. Object twice-removed…When we do reperformances, we don’t claim authorship at all. We break free from the notion of authorship, so in a very real sense, Longo is still the author; we’re just allowing him to use our material, to use us as material.

Why Longo?

We were looking for: A portrait. A couple. An object that captured the idea of identity wrapped up in the exterior. Something to model Cash & Ruby on. Something that was already present in – already visually present in the art world – while at the same time, related to our cultural consciousness. Our awareness of ourselves during the 1980s in America. A man and a woman wearing business suits. Money. The notion of surface. Radical surface. A young Caucasian man and woman, well-dressed, attractive.

Transporting ourselves from the analog to the digital. Flattening everything. Giving it all the same value. That’s what happens with the composite. We don’t put ourselves into any sort of scene: it’s a completely clean, neutral space, a non-space, digital space. The original piece of work has all sorts of potential. Our reperformance is just one type of actualization that is available for Robert Longo’s original drawing.

This video by Circlesquare takes it to the next level.

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Sage Wisdom 1

SingingSeal

This is the best piece of advice that we gave today:

The way to understand Art is to say it the way you imagine a seal would, in the middle of the night, at the top of your lungs, eight times fast:

“ART! ART! ART! ART! ART! ART! ART! ART!”

Videotape that, put it on your blog and voila: instant artist.

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