Monthly Archive for January, 2012

Miscellany. 01.30.12.


Ayre and Yok in Manhattan. (Photo by Luna Park.)

On Public Housing

A view of the Marcy Houses. (Photo by NYC-Metrocard.)

Michael Kimmelman has an interesting piece about large-scale housing developments in the New York Times. He takes a look at the fate of the infamous Pruitt-Igoe projects in St. Louis and draws a comparison to the Penn South buildings in New York’s Chelsea, which have been largely successful as a housing development. He discusses how economic and other urban development factors can affect the success or failure of architectural design. All around an interesting piece. But while I dig Kimmelman’s focus on publicly-minded design (a breath of fresh air after Ourossoff’s era of mega-projects), it seems like a bit of an oversight to pen a very long story about these types of constructions and not even mention places like the Marcy Houses in Bed-Stuy or Red Hook Houses in Red Hook — two places with a history that is infinitely less rosy than that of Penn South.

Linkage

  • In an essay in Vanity Fair, Kurt Anderson says we are in a period of cultural stasis — relentlessly remixing everything that came before, but not necessarily adding anything new: “In our Been There Done That Mashup Age, nothing is obsolete, and nothing is really new; it’s all good. I feel as if the whole culture is stoned, listening to an LP that’s been skipping for decades, playing the same groove over and over. Nobody has the wit or gumption to stand up and lift the stylus.” Sure explains a lot of the art I see…
  • Holy Shit: Dude surfing a 90-foot wave.
  • Interesting essay in the Atlantic on how much information is too much for Google to have.
  • Bytebeats: music from the programming language C.
  • That point where Tony Curtis and Christopher Wool intersect.
  • A proposed turn-of-the-20th-century reconstruction of the Venus de Milo. Amazing and weird. (@giovannigf.)
  • The New York Observer profiles the life and times of artist and ArtNet editor Walter Robinson.
  • And the Wall Street Journal mag takes on Anne Pasternak, the director of Creative Time.
  • The Day in Art Merch: Private jets decorated with graffiti by RETNA.
  • Plus, speaking of airplane graffiti: The Boneyard Project. Making airplane hulls all pretty-like.
  • There’s nothing like a book review that revels in a little dismemberment: Heather Havrilesky on Caitlin Flanagan’s Girl Land. Yowza. (@embeedub)
  • “The main thing to remember is the sunlight, and the immense expanse of sky and earth that it illuminates: it sucks the color out of everything that it touches, takes the green out of leaves and the sap out of twigs, makes human beings seem small and of no importance.” — Mystery writer James Cain, on California in the 1930s.

Photo Diary: Outsider Art Fair, 2012.


A detail from Rome, ca. 1970, by the Rev. Samuel David Phillips.


An abstraction made from reclaimed lath board by Kinetic Tornado (in benefit of the Konbit Shelter Project).


Jaguar, by Oranit Solomonov.

Continue reading ‘Photo Diary: Outsider Art Fair, 2012.’

Photo Diary: Ai Weiwei at Mary Boone in Chelsea.

I know these are porcelain and that they’re hand-painted and that there’s four million of them (more on that here), but this install bears an uncanny resemblance to Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s silver-candy piece, Untitled (Placebo), from 1991 — which is currently on view at MoMA. And which can be touched and eaten.

Space cruising.

The other night I played a planetarium-sized video game. Pretty cool.

Calendar. 01.25.12.


In the Box-Horizontal, 1962, by Ruth Bernhard. Part of the exhibit In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States, at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, opening this Sunday. (Image courtesy of the Ruth Bernard Archive, Princeton University Art Museum.)

Bushwick artsy fartsies: Find me in ARTnews.


No Sleep Till Bushwick, 2008, by Skewville. (Photo by C-M.)

Hey Folks:

I’ve got a feature in the February issue of ARTnews about the artsy fartsies that are happening in Bushwick.

I’m sure this will occasion some bellyaching about how articles such as these “ruin” a neighborhood. But I want you all to rest assured that I’ve done the math and no New York neighborhood is completely ruined until it is featured regularly in the New York Times real estate section (check) *AND* on the cover New York magazine (not yet). Though, if you’re wondering what said coverage would look like, check out the mag’s 1992 cover story on Williamsburg.

Anyhow, you can check out my story at ARTnews.com — or better yet, pick up the mag on the newsstand and help me pay for the wide selection of craft beers that now clutter my local C-Town. Okay, maybe not. I’m a Tecate-12-pack-at-the-Food-Dimension kind of girl…

xox,
C.

Photo Diary: Sarah Braman at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in Chelsea.

Continue reading ‘Photo Diary: Sarah Braman at Mitchell-Innes & Nash in Chelsea.’

Miscellany. 01.19.12.


Billboard by French street artist Ox, in San Bernardino. Part of a billboard project on I-15 last month. Image courtesy of the artist.)

Calendar. 01.18.12.


South Philly (Mattress Flip Front), by Zoe Strauss. The photographer currently has an all-kinds-of-major solo exhibit up at the Philadelphia Museum of Art called Ten Years. Be sure to check it! (Image courtesy of Zoe Strauss. To see more, check out this slideshow at the NYT.)

PLUS PLUS PLUS: I’m speaking on a panel about Bushwick this Thursday at 7pm at the Bogart Salon. I’ll be unveiling my new interpretive dance called Health Food Stores Wrapped in Corten Steel Are Harshing My Mellow. Please come!!!!

PLUS PLUS: I’m going to be part of the crew doing a continuous 48-hour reading from Gertrude Stein’s The Making of Americans for Triply Canopy in Greenpoint. Bring your finest Modernist language. The show gets started on Friday evening. I’ll be on stage some time Sunday around noon.

C-Mon Giveaway Extravaganza: 2012 Stikman Calendars!!!!

Hey Folks:

First of all, Happy New Year!

Second of all, the perfectly wonderful Stikman has given me three of his 2012 calendars for giveaway, which means that this little lady (and her adorable little stick dude) could be hanging over your desk.

Y’all know the drill. Leave a comment below and this dapper pair could be all yours.

xox,
C.