The 3rd Ward is a class space. Located in Brooklyn off the Wardlaw exit on the L line. They offer different classes such as circuitry and Etsy selling.
Pim Palsgraaf made 2-d and 3-d works. The sculptures consisted of favola-like urban structures built on top of taxonomied animals. The structures were mostly made up of model pieces with some foam as filler, all painted a uniform gray. The 2-d work were washy images of interior spaces. Some looked industrial others looked more residentials.
http://www.pimpalsgraaf.nl/
http://www.3rdward.com/
About.
This is a blog for for students of the New York POP (Professional Outreach Program) to read about and leave there own impressions about upcoming and ongoing art shows and openings in New York and the surrounding boroughs. So that we can all make sure to see the best shows before they are taken down.
How to post.
Email gocre8 @ gmail.com (close the gaps) with NYpop in the message title and I will add you to the authors list.
Title your post: Show name/Artist. Gallery.
Put the date and also the dates of the show if possible.
Write a basic description of what the show is. What it looks like. Pictures help, but need your descriptions to help clarify.
Leave your impression or anything else personal and/or pertinent.
End with the address and/or web address to make it easier for the reader to find the described show.
Title your post: Show name/Artist. Gallery.
Put the date and also the dates of the show if possible.
Write a basic description of what the show is. What it looks like. Pictures help, but need your descriptions to help clarify.
Leave your impression or anything else personal and/or pertinent.
End with the address and/or web address to make it easier for the reader to find the described show.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Thursday, September 10, 2009
A Book About Death. The Emily Harvey Foundation.
Sept 10, 2009
The Book About Death was a project put together by Mathew Rose. There was an open call for anyone to submit postcards about death. The only requirements were that the edition was 500 and it said "A Book About Death" on it. One of each card was displayed on the wall and the boxes the cards arrived in sat on the floor for anyone to take. The idea being that any visitor could make their own, unbound book about death. The opening had various fluxus flavored performances.
A historical note: A Book About Death was in homage to Ray Johnson.
A Book about Death / by Ray Johnson (Ray Johnson : s.l. 1960s). A set of offset mailings compiled in no prescribed order. Cf. Ray Johnson : Correspondences (Paris etc. 1999) and Correspondence, an exhibition of the letters of Ray Johnson (Raleigh 1976). Each copy has various foliations. Each copy has some sheets not found in the others. See Clive Philpott, 'Ray Johnson's Book about Death 1963-1965', published in Blastitude 13 (August 2002).
We showed up to a giant line going down the street past all the trendy clothing stores. Seeing a Gap store with (badly) dancing models and ice water handed out off of trays by servers was pretty shocking to me. I guess people no longer have to decide if they want to go to a club, go to a restaurant or go shopping. They can have it all.
We made it in after a 20 minute wait and the place was packed. The cards were being picked up by the visitors in a manner that reminded me of the unbridled desire orchestrated by the shops below. We arrived late, so soon after we got in the gallery space we pushed all the postcards to the walls and prepared for the performances.
The first was Requiem for Rubber Bands by Cecil Touchon. A woman sang while we strummed stretched rubber bands handed out to the audience.
The second was a cacophony of people reading different scripts. It was hard to make out anything they said, though mostly because the audience was talking so loud they drowned out almost everything the presenters tried to say.
The third, and in my opinion the only good performance, was by a German called Brandstifter who had recorded people's names upon their entering the gallery with an old tape deck. For the performance he said some words in German than played the tape deck into the microphone. The tape started with him saying, "All the mentioned persons have to die", which was then followed by the voices of the audience saying their own names. After about ten minutes he then took the tape out, pulled the tape out of the cassette and pulled it around the audience--effectively killing the work. Silly yet profound, the essence of good Fluxus.
The fourth performer, Mark Bloch, seemed to be doing an infomercial in art drag about his old book and his plans for a new book on Ray Johnson. Showing that covering yourself in artsy collage images doesn't make you an performance artist.
The fifth presenter read about another performance, but I couldn't hear any of it due to the poor sound system.
The sixth was a flash based animation.
The seventh was also a movie, but surprisingly to me by Carolee Schneeman. It turned out to look like a pretty banal video of a cat (dying). Yet it did hold my attention and it was one of the few times the audience actually got quiet, which seems telling (of something).
The eighth was a teacher at the university of Pennsylvania who curates, takes picture of Road Kill, etc... her introduction to herself was longer than her "performance" which was marred by computer problems and no sound. Which seemed especially ironic after she introduced a piece called, "A Banjo bout Death". She left without being able to show anything.
Ninth was a flash videos about death euphemisms that kept playing as a leather pants man began to play a twelve string guitar.
I was pretty happy to get back into the streets to watch the crazy show called, 'new york city at night'.
The Emily Harvey Foundation - 537 Broadway, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10012
http://www.emilyharveyfoundation.org/
http://abookaboutdeath.blogspot.com/
The Book About Death was a project put together by Mathew Rose. There was an open call for anyone to submit postcards about death. The only requirements were that the edition was 500 and it said "A Book About Death" on it. One of each card was displayed on the wall and the boxes the cards arrived in sat on the floor for anyone to take. The idea being that any visitor could make their own, unbound book about death. The opening had various fluxus flavored performances.
A historical note: A Book About Death was in homage to Ray Johnson.
A Book about Death / by Ray Johnson (Ray Johnson : s.l. 1960s). A set of offset mailings compiled in no prescribed order. Cf. Ray Johnson : Correspondences (Paris etc. 1999) and Correspondence, an exhibition of the letters of Ray Johnson (Raleigh 1976). Each copy has various foliations. Each copy has some sheets not found in the others. See Clive Philpott, 'Ray Johnson's Book about Death 1963-1965', published in Blastitude 13 (August 2002).
We showed up to a giant line going down the street past all the trendy clothing stores. Seeing a Gap store with (badly) dancing models and ice water handed out off of trays by servers was pretty shocking to me. I guess people no longer have to decide if they want to go to a club, go to a restaurant or go shopping. They can have it all.
We made it in after a 20 minute wait and the place was packed. The cards were being picked up by the visitors in a manner that reminded me of the unbridled desire orchestrated by the shops below. We arrived late, so soon after we got in the gallery space we pushed all the postcards to the walls and prepared for the performances.
The first was Requiem for Rubber Bands by Cecil Touchon. A woman sang while we strummed stretched rubber bands handed out to the audience.
The second was a cacophony of people reading different scripts. It was hard to make out anything they said, though mostly because the audience was talking so loud they drowned out almost everything the presenters tried to say.
The third, and in my opinion the only good performance, was by a German called Brandstifter who had recorded people's names upon their entering the gallery with an old tape deck. For the performance he said some words in German than played the tape deck into the microphone. The tape started with him saying, "All the mentioned persons have to die", which was then followed by the voices of the audience saying their own names. After about ten minutes he then took the tape out, pulled the tape out of the cassette and pulled it around the audience--effectively killing the work. Silly yet profound, the essence of good Fluxus.
The fourth performer, Mark Bloch, seemed to be doing an infomercial in art drag about his old book and his plans for a new book on Ray Johnson. Showing that covering yourself in artsy collage images doesn't make you an performance artist.
The fifth presenter read about another performance, but I couldn't hear any of it due to the poor sound system.
The sixth was a flash based animation.
The seventh was also a movie, but surprisingly to me by Carolee Schneeman. It turned out to look like a pretty banal video of a cat (dying). Yet it did hold my attention and it was one of the few times the audience actually got quiet, which seems telling (of something).
The eighth was a teacher at the university of Pennsylvania who curates, takes picture of Road Kill, etc... her introduction to herself was longer than her "performance" which was marred by computer problems and no sound. Which seemed especially ironic after she introduced a piece called, "A Banjo bout Death". She left without being able to show anything.
Ninth was a flash videos about death euphemisms that kept playing as a leather pants man began to play a twelve string guitar.
I was pretty happy to get back into the streets to watch the crazy show called, 'new york city at night'.
The Emily Harvey Foundation - 537 Broadway, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10012
http://www.emilyharveyfoundation.org/
http://abookaboutdeath.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Blane De St Croix



Blane De St Croix is sculptor who makes sections of landscapes out of various non-traditional materials such as building materials, model trees, foam, flocking, etc.
A large work at Smack-Mellon, a more than one hundred foot scale model Mexican/American border fence snaked through the gallery space, has brought him to the attention of various other project spaces. He is currently working on multiple projects including a giant upside down strip-mined mountain at the Black and White project space down the street from my studio. I have been helping him occasionally on his current project as it is, like any good project, more than you can realistically do in the time allotted.
Blane sees himself coming out the tradition of landscape painters. Formally he uses shape, color, and texture to imply greater space.
He has an impressively short statement which I would like to emulate:
My work utilizes sculptural object, installation and drawing. Employing a combination of natural and industrial materials. I am interested in articulating humankind’s desire to take command over the earth --alluding to conflicts with ecology, politics, ourselves and the level of human absence and/or presence in industry. I often borrow from man-made elements and architectural environments and adjoin them with natural habitats, asking us to reflect on our precarious relationship with our surroundings.
http://blanedestcroix.blogspot.com/
http://www.blackandwhiteprojectspace.org/
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