All posts tagged Visual Art

sfPeek: Monster Drawing Rally

This year, I volunteered as a seller at the Southern Exposure Monster Drawing Rally. Being a seller was hot, sweaty, and fun. But the volunteers who amazed me most (aside from the artists, of course!) were the photographers who tried to catch the drawings as they flew off the tables and onto the walls. Hundreds of drawings were created in a span of three hours and photographing and documenting them was not as simple as it might sound. These folks (Andy Vogt, Sarah Smith and Terrance Graven) worked out a system. It required a lot of pre-planning, even construction. Nobody knew how it was going to play out, and in the best spirit of dedicated volunteerism, they made it work. 

Now, you can reap the benefits of their hard work with this peek into the artwork created at this year’s MDR: http://soex.org/ImagePool/23.html. Also a great resource for geeky arts lovers (like me) who are always looking for new artist websites.

Allium Sativum

Allium SativumI haven’t been very good at keeping up with my San Francisco arts discoveries on this blog, in part because I did not have stable internet at home for three weeks, and in part because I’ve just been mentally worn out from working and arranging the move back into my new/old apartment.

But there is always time for art. This week’s adventures included: the Ask Dr. Hal show, Mortified, a 60s dance party, and the HOMEY benefit at SOMArts. I had hoped to make it to the poetry night at 16th & Mission but worked late … next week, perhaps.

Last night my friend Amanda invited me to The LAB 25th Annual Auction. One of the benefits of moving to San Francisco is that there are so many talented artists who are supporting the local non-profits during this recession by donating affordable art for fundraisers. The LAB auction was full of work that I wanted to take home and put on the bare walls of my new apartment. I got this idea in my head that the first artwork I purchase in San Francisco should be significant somehow, which in truth is just my way of trying to impose some self-restraint in such a tempting environment. Ha.

Each work there was significant in its own way. There was a painting by Ana Theresa Fernandez that I bid on because I love her work, and because her show at Galeria de la Raza was the first show I saw when I moved here. But I was outbid. 

There was a piece I won, by Kristen Chappa, called Animal Migration study. It is a lovely, quiet piece and the title reminded me of The Starling Drawings by Adam Chapman, which is one of the last installations I saw in North Adams.

I kept coming back to a painting by David Fredrick Benzler, Allium Sativum. The mat and frame were black and brown and the drawing was completely different than anything I own. In fact, I couldn’t figure out what it was, or if it was supposed to be something at all. Allium Sativum. It sounded vaguely familiar, and Latin. The watercolor was white and light colors on black paper, floating toward the upper right corner like a jellyfish, or a science fiction object, maybe an organic spacecraft. 

I liked the mystery. My life right now is all about trying to figure things out. Sometimes, it’s not possible. Not a bad thing. I bid on David Benzler’s painting and won. It’s hanging on my wall right now. 

But this morning, it was haunting me. Allium sativum. So I looked it up. Turns out, not so mysterious. A household staple that exists even in my bare, spare apartment. 

I am a little disappointed that I couldn’t just let the mystery stay a mystery … but I still love my new painting.

Next week … poetry in the Mission! And I am thinking about taking Stephen Elliott’s upcoming workshop at the Grotto. If this blog is any indication, I need a little kick-start.

Contemporary Art in the White House?

A friend tipped me off to this over-the-top (in her opinion) but strangely compelling (in my opinion) appeal by Jonathan Melber. Perhaps Michelle Obama could display Spencer Finch’s Trying to remember the colour of Jackie Kennedy’s pillbox hat (in 10 parts), 1993  … a tongue-in-cheek reference to fashion, perception and memory.

I’m sure there are better choices out there. Any suggestions?

Landscape Beyond Landscape ]

Opens tonight at SOMArts. Featuring work by Sue Averell, Seamus Berkeley, Laura Buss, Jack Freeman, and Mona Miri.

Industrial Lights, Urban Farmers, and Magic

The MacArthur Foundation has announced its Genius Awards. The 25 recipients included thirteen in the sciences and eight in the arts. I was particularly pleased to see the name of recipient Jennifer Tipton, a lighting designer who is on the faculty of Yale (go CT!). Large-scale light installations have just hit my radar in the past couple of years—seems like technological advances have made light and video and even more exciting way to bring art into public space.

A few examples:

Here is a link to Tipton’s 2008 installation at Rensallaer Polytechnic Institute.

Here is a link to the Google image search for Jenny Holzer’s truisms. (The MassMoca video is pretty great, too.)

Here is a link to Doug Aitken’s “Sleepwalkers,” a collaboration between the Museum of Modern Art and Creative Time.

I can’t seem to find the MTV2 artist competition/online show that gave the winners control of a Times Square billboard … does anyone know more about that?

Back in North Adams

After a long weekend in San Francisco, it’s good to be home! SF was full of discoveries … although many people I have met in San Francisco describe it as “provincial,” I was amazed (again) by how easy it was to fall into conversations about the arts.

Some of the most interesting conversations I had were on the bus. After catching the #19 down to SomArts, I overheard a man talking about his artwork at Hospitality House, which offers a free-of-charge arts studio for homeless and poor individuals. turns out we were both headed toward the annual Homeless Coalition Art Auction.

Walking through SoMa, I came across the new Southern Exposure space (unfortunately it was closed), and Electric Works. Although you can’t see it on Electric Works’s website, they have a meticulous and beautiful space that mixes white walls with beautifully crafted detailing and what appeared to be re-purposed fixtures from the 1800s.

Closer to my hostel, I walked by the White Walls gallery, where I was stopped by a gallery assistant (or art installer) who was working on their new Shepard Fairey show. In my experience gallery assistants can at times be a little … snooty? … but this guy gave me some stickers and invited me to the opening. My friends and I tried to go but there was a line around the block. Guess all that friendliness pays off!

Had no trouble getting a good table at the Rebel Reading Series in Bernal Heights, but I was surprised to meet a North Adams “neighbor,” a fellow writer who lives in Troy and was visiting the Bay Area.

I returned to North Adams with a cold and an invitation to a Mexican Independence Day celebration from the founder of Gritmedia, who lives here in NA. Turns, out, Gritmedia worked on the website for Echoing Green, a global nonprofit that offers seed money for social change organizations. Dan and I are developing a Little Cities proposal for one of their grant programs.

I feel like I end too many blog entries with this conclusion, but here it is again:

Small world. Gotta love how art can lead one through a series of new encounters and exhilarating discoveries in an unfamiliar city.

New Links

As Amy Sample Ward points out on Netsquared , the number of people and organizations starting blogs keeps growing. I’ve added two new visual arts sites to my blogroll (scroll down, on the left):

  • Art21 – founded in 1997, the mission of Art21 is “to increase knowledge of contemporary art, ignite discussion, and inspire creative thinking by using diverse media to present contemporary artists at work and in their own words.”
  • DailyServing – founded in 2006 by Seth Curcio, DailyServing is a “site for art lovers to visit daily to find resources and updates on happenings within the Contemporary Arts.”

Speaking of blogs … how do you readers keep track of websites and blogs? I use Netvibes (for blogs and podcasts) and recently shifted from bookmark folders to tags. But I can’t fight the feeling that there might be a better, long-term solution out there. If you have it, please share.

A Midwesterner Returns to Her (Disappearing) Roots

Due to a link on the UnConvention homepage, this blog had a 300% increase in visitors yesterday. Thanks, UnConvention! While I have your attention, let me ask for your help:

From September 24 through October 8, I will be visiting cities in the Midwest (Wichita, Kansas City, Des Moines, Rochester, Twin Cities, St. Croix Falls, Sioux Falls, Omaha) in search of visual artists and writers who live and work there. I’ll be bringing my podcast gear and scouting for interviews to post on this blog.

The goal is to highlight the work of some talented artists, and to collect stories about the opportunities and challenges of working artists in “little cities” (outside the top 20 metropolitan areas). Yes, I realize the Twin Cities are #16. I am also traveling to places I lived and reconnecting with my artistic roots—the Pillsbury House, Masque Youth Theatre, the …

…well. As I am writing this, I thought I would link to the Sioux Falls Community Playhouse, but I see it closed in 2002. And the Jeune Lune, where I had my first professional audition, closed this summer.

Philanthropy is changing, demographics are changing, economics are changing. What does this mean for artists in little cities? If you know a working artist who lives in one of these cities, send me their name, contact info, a link to their website or images of their work … or have them contact me directly at lex@lexleifheit.com.

And please, pass this on!