
Rocking J’s hostel in Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica. (Photo by C-M.)
Monthly Archive for October, 2009

Mountain Strip, an installation by Blane de St. Croix at Black & White Project Space in Brooklyn. (Image courtesy of Black & White.)
- In NYC: Mountain Strip, by Blane de St. Croix at Black & White Project Space in Williamsburg, through Jan. 10.
- In NYC: Steampunk Haunted House at the Henry Street Settlement/Abron Arts Center in SoHo, opens Wednesday at 6 p.m. (Admission required.)
- In NYC: Doug DuBois, All the Days and Nights, at Higher Pictures, opens Thursday.
- In NYC: 1969 at P.S. 1 in Queens, through April 5.
- In NYC: Who Shot Rock & Roll at the Brooklyn Museum, opens Friday.
- In NYC: Lisa Ludwig, The Art Neighborhood, at Jack the Pelican Presents in Williamsburg, through Nov. 13.
- In NYC: Gruesome Demise at Pandemic Gallery in Brookly, opens Friday.
- In NYC: Paul McCarthy at Hauser & Wirth, opens Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 6 p.m.
- In NYC: Art History with Benefits, alecture organized by the Bruce High Quality Foundation that examines the relationship between patronage, sex and family, on Thursday, Nov. 5 at X-Initiative in Chelsea, at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. (I wish I was in NYC for this one…)
- In L.A.: Dan Witz, Dark Doings, at Carmichael Gallery, opens Thursday, Nov. 5th at 7:00 p.m.

Since I’m on a dog kick…another mutt. (Photo by C-M.)

Hollywood, 1972, by Henry Wessel Jr., at LACMA. (Image courtesy of LACMA.)
- In L.A.: New Topographics: Photographs of Man-Altered Landscapes at LACMA, opens Sunday.
- In L.A.: The Giant Robot Biennale at the Japanese American National Museum, opens Saturday.
- In L.A.: Susan Anderson, High Glitz, at the Kopeikin Gallery, opens Saturday.
- In L.A.: Main Street Video, with Miranda July, Spike Jonze and Lance Bangs and many others at Space 15Twenty, opens at 7 p.m.
- In NYC: Josh Gosfield: Gigi Gaston – The Black Flower at Steven Kasher, opens Thursday.
- In Mexico City: 100 Fotografos Mexicanos at the Cuartel del Arte in downtown, opens Friday. (Thanks for the tip, Big Papi G.)
- In Paris: Nicolas Touron at Galerie Alain Le Gaillard, through Nov. 21.
There are years so transformative, they stand out on name alone: 1492. 1776. 1968. On the surface, 1959 would not appear to be one of them. But 1959: The Year Everything Changed, by Slate regular Fred Kaplan, begs to differ. This was the year, after all, that Miles Davis recorded Kind of Blue, ditching the rigidity of bebop for a freer style of improvisation. It was when Fidel Castro and a gang of barbudos took over the island of Cuba. And it was when a tinkerer-engineer named John St. Clair Kilby introduced the microchip, a thumbnail-sized piece of technology that would revolutionize the world of computing (and allow for the eventual dissemination of LOL cats to the universe). Not to mention all of the era’s other significant cultural happenings: the Guggenheim Museum opened its doors to the public, Robert Frank’s book The Americans arrived in the United States and MoMA unveiled an exhibit titled Sixteen Americans, a show that helped give rise to artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, Allan Kaprow and Jasper Johns.
“I’ve generally been suspicious of books like this — Cod: The Fish That Changed the World — the idea that everything is affected by one event,” says Kaplan of his broad survey. “But so many of the things that we associate with the late ’60s and the Baby Boomers, they were rooted in the late ’50s — and instigated by a generation that came of age during war and became disgruntled at the phony period that followed.”
1959 is definitely one hell of a yearbook (and one hell of a dishy read), featuring appearances by Norman Mailer, John F. Kennedy, Lenny Bruce, Herman Kahn, William Burroughs, John Cassavetes and Margaret Sanger. (Interesting fact: old Mags got around.) The book captures the era’s high creativity, as well as the high anxiety generated by the Cold War. “[Mort] Sahl put it this way,” writes Kaplan, of the period. “Whenever he saw an airplane approaching, he never knew whether it was going to drop a hydrogen bomb or spell out ‘Pepsi-Cola’ in skywriting.”
With the Gugg celebrating it’s 50th, Frank’s photos on display at the Met and Kaprow’s tires being rethought by William Pope L. at Hauser & Wirth, we figured that there was no time like the present to talk to Kaplan, a veteran jazz writer, who was kind enough to submit to our questioning. Here, he reveals his distaste for art skulls, the type of Picasso he’d like to hang in the loo and why he’d like to dump pig blood all over Robert Indiana’s Love sign.
C-M: If you were to die and come back as a piece of art, what would it be?
KAPLAN: Calvin Tomkins, in his biography of Robert Rauschenberg, wrote that when he went to the Sixteen Americans show, he saw a piece by the artist called Double Feature. It had a man’s shirt with a pocket, so [Tomkins] mischievously dropped a quarter into the pocket. I want to come back as that — so that people can mischieveously drop quarters into my shirt pocket.
Continue reading ‘The C-Mon Q&A: Fred Kaplan, author of ’1959.’’

Here’s how my day began yesterday: ran into these guys in the National Park in San Jose filming an anti-Oscar Arias skit. (That’d be Oscar Arias as in the Nobel Laureate and President of Costa Rica.)

Later the same day, I ran into the real Oscar Arias at an event with the mayor of Beijing to mark the establishment of a Chinatown in San Jose. (Arias is the jowly one in the tan jacket.) And since that wasn’t surreal enough…
…this international diplomatic ceremony — attended by two mayors and one president — got rolling with this stunning rendition of the Star Wars Death Star theme Imperial March by a local high school marching band. Awesome.

A detail from Colmena, 2005, an installation by Baltazar Torres. (Photos by C-M.)
For a lot of folks, Costa Rica is synonymous with zip lines and monkeys and lots of eco-marketing. But the capital of San Jose has a lively cultural scene as well. Today I stumbled right smack into a wonderful new arts space and museum called TEOR/eTica — which showcases works from the collection of the TEOR/eTica foundation, an organization dedicated to promoting Central and Latin American artists. Their permanent collection is small, consisting of only a few hundred works. But what I saw of it was compelling. I got lost in Baltazar Torres’s installation, Colmena, shown above (and after the jump). Though that may be because I enjoyed looking at myself in all the little mirrors…
Afterward, I also got lost in a gigantor hunk of super-fresh cheesecake with stewed strawberries at the awesome new bistro/cafe Kalu, located right across the street. A work of art, indeed.
Click on images to supersize. Continue reading ‘Theoretically: TEOR/eTica, a new contemporary arts space in San Jose, Costa Rica.’



