Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Grizzly Grizzly exchange exhibition with Tompkins Projects

Grizzly Grizzly is proud to announce an exchange exhibition with Tompkins Projects.
Please join us Friday, March 11 from 6-10PM for the opening reception.
Current Grizzlies showing recent work include:
Mike Ellyson
Jacque Liu
Dennis Matthews
Mary Smull
Cindy Stockton Moore
Gallery Hours
12pm to 6pm, Fridays & Saturdays
and by appointment
127 Tompkins Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11206


http://grizzlygrizzly.wordpress.com/2011/02/23/omission-breath/

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Bruce Wilhelm, Rob Lee and more at Mulherin Pollard

opening Thursday, Jan 6th from 6 to 9 pm
Mars Needs Answers
MULHERIN POLLARD PROJECTS
317 10th Ave (between 28th & 29th) . New York, NY 10001
PH.212.967.0045 info@mulherinpollard.com
Bruce

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Trudy Benson @ Freight + Volume

the press release


May 6th - June 13th, 2010


Reception: Thursday, May 6th, 6-8 PM
 
FREIGHT AND VOLUME

542 West 24th Street
New York, NY
10011
PHONE: 212 691 7700

FAX: 212 989 8708
HOURS:

Tuesday - Saturday

11 AM - 6 PM or by appointment
 
freight + volume

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Trudy Benson @ Edward Thorp Gallery


Hello everyone,


I'm participating in a five person show at Edward Thorp Gallery here in Chelsea this fall; show dates are September 25 through October 31. Participating artists are: Trudy Benson, Simone Shubuck, Neil Farber, Mike Hein, Sebastian Dacey. Hope you will come down!


Edward Thorp Gallery
210 Eleventh Avenue, 6th Fl
New York, NY 10001
T.212.691.6565
Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11am to 6pm
edwardthorpgallery@gmail.com
Edward Thorp Gallery


Best Wishes,

Trudy Benson

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Trudy Benson review of Corin Hewitt at the Whitney


Trudy Benson
23 November 2008


Corin Hewitt's work has been described as borrowing from postminimalist and performance forebearers such as Gordon Matta-Clark and Bruce Nauman in its blending of performance, photography, and installation. His work also deals with the themes of transformation; preservation; the cyclical stages of growth and decay, and life and death; and the relationship of part to whole. Seed Stage, currently on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art, serves as a theater for transformation. Hewitt has created a studio within the Museum as a nucleus in the gallery space Seed Stage occupies. Through the corners of the walls housing Hewitt's workspace we can catch only a small glimpse of the work that he executes live for three days of every week for three months during museum hours.
Hewitt asserts "What I need is here, and if not, I can make it here". What we cannot see as viewers, pivotal to his process, is the root celler that has been installed beneath the very floor Hewitt stands. He has several tools: some for practical use and some for aesthetic construction, but the way he uses these tools overlap and blur between practicality and aesthetic outcomes. He puts up preserves, paints and blowtorches food products and prints out color schemes – all to eventually photograph. These photographs are gradually displayed on the outer wall of the gallery space (which is set up like a ziggurat).
The temporal element of Seed Stage is really what fascinated me. His theme of transformation leads into the theme of endlessness. His process could recreate itself as simulacra hypothetically forever. Photographs of photographs posted inside the studio and outside in the gallery. Time captured (literally) on the film of a camera for however long the aperture is allowed to stay open. Light contained as time in these photographs resonates with the internal containment of the artist's studio inside of the gallery space. Both artist and living roots contained inside of the museum establishment were to be present in real time rather than in the afterwards that is usually present in pieces other than performance. Although viewed through small openings, the voyeuristic quality of the piece came apart when the Hewitt made eye contact with me and returned my smile as he went about his work.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Monday, October 20, 2008

Trudy Benson's Review of Jeff Koons' "On the Roof" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York


In his 1958 essay "Jackson Pollock", John Berger asks us "how far can talent exempt an artist if he does not think beyond or question the decadence of the cultural situation to which he belongs?". "Jeff Koons On the Roof" exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featured three pieces from his Celebration series installed in the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden. Balloon Dog (Yellow), Coloring Book, and Sacred Heart (Red/Gold) were factory-made of high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating and range in height from ten feet to almost nineteen feet. According to John Berger's problem of the Western artist in a disintegrating culture, Jeff Koons' recent rooftop exhibit, featuring pieces from his "Celebration" series, falls short of any kind of consideration beyond the decadence of today's culture.

"The constant problem for the Western artist is to find themes for his art which can connect him with his public,". According to Berger, an artist's theme is the emergent significance found in a subject. He went on to describe Pollock's desperation in finding his theme in our disintegrating culture where every artist's purpose is accepted, and criticism only consists of distinguishing between the gifted and those who are not gifted. The result of our disintegrating culture could be considered to be the inability to find a cultural significance within an artist's purpose. In Pollock's struggle to think beyond his cultural situation, he could only find significance in the impossibility of finding any cultural significance. In doing so, he has succeeded in thinking beyond his culture. And, "If a talented artist cannot see or think beyond the decadence of the culture to which he belongs, if the situation is as extreme as ours, his talent will only reveal negatively but unusually vividly the nature and extent of that decadence,".

Balloon Dog (Yellow) stands 121 inches tall: a highly reflective golden rendition of a balloon twisted into the shape of a dog. Coming out from the elevator onto the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, this is the first piece we come across. The piece is truly sensational, enticing the viewer with its vast scale, its familiarity of form, and with its luster. The backdrop of our toy, aptly selected, no doubt, is a gorgeous Manhattan skyline. To the immediate right of Balloon Dog (Yellow) is the bar featuring three specialty drinks created in honor of each of the pieces on display. Standing over 140 inches tall and to the left of Balloon Dog is Sacred Heart (Red/Gold). A bright candy red, it is made to look like a heart-shaped chocolate wrapped in cellophane and topped off with a golden cellophane gift bow.

According to the pamphlet provided for the show, Koons is said to look for his inspiration in today's consumer world. It is also stated that he wishes his art to communicate with as broad an audience as possible. In these pieces, Koons' themes involve the appropriation of objects found within the world of consumerism. Any conceptual theme beyond fingering consumer decadence Koons admittedly owes to Marcel Duchamp's readymades. He has commented on this debauchery by achieving stardom personally and creating objects that call forth the seductive qualities of consumer media. He has demonstrated his sophisticated talent in his knowledge of his material and expressed an astute aesthetic sensibility. Still, he has failed to look beyond what our culture is dissolving into. It can be said that Koons' theme do indeed connect him to his culture; however, Koons has failed to make the theme of appropriation personally significant in "On the Roof".
Trudy Benson

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Balthus



Mr. Wiggles Goes to the Mountain

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