Wednesday, April 23, 2008

MICA MFA Thesis @ Decker Gallery

THIS is a fabulous show postcard:


April 25th - May 5th
Reception Friday, the 25th from 5 - 7pm

Linda Weintraub Speaks @ Goucher

Chair of the art dept, Allyn Massey and speaker Linda Weintraub

Linda Wientraub, author of Art on the Edge and Over, and other publishing endeavors, spoke to a full audience at Goucher College's Kelly Lecture Hall on art and "egocentrism," an appropriate topic for Earth Day.
Weintraub broke the lecture down into a seemingly irrelevant set of artists, Andy Goldsworthy (and how could she not mention him?), Damien Hirst, Wim Delvoye and Claude Monet.

A packed Kelly Lecture Hall

To open, she posed the quetion of our individual impact on our environment as stationary members of the audience, asking us to then consider our impacts in other life activities. She showed slides highlighting important works from the artists she selected, but neglected to comment on their "carbon footprints" as artists. She instead asked us to consider what their art made us think about...Goldsworthy, she argued, lulled us into a false contentment, Hirst showed us truths we would conventionally shy away from, etc.

This sort of breakdown seemed inappropriate and disappointing to those who had taken the time to dig around on her website. Personally, I had hoped to hear more on contemporary eco-artists, people conscious of their movement and decisive about the ecological importance of their creative message...but I suppose, when speaking to a mixed audience, one tends to boil an issue down to the basics.
I know she knows what is up, and this talk merely an introduction into the vastness of this subject, but I wish she had addressed artists who were more current and direct in their messages. Seeing 10 pieces I had seen before added nothing to my understanding of the work, or my perceptions of each artist.
Weintraub could easily have spoken for an additional hour, at which point she probably would have scratched the surface of the current eco-art movement, and only begun to satisfy my curiosity, I mean it was Earth Day, I wanted to hear about fungus!

But, please do visit her site, there is much to be learned, and many artists balancing a sense of humor with a sense of environmental responsibility...which produces some amazing artwork.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Lotta Art Preview

A teeny Kevin Sherry next to a piece by Zoe Charlton

School 33's annual event, Lotta Art, a benefit event in which attendees each get to take home a piece of art via lottery, will take place this Saturday, April 26th.
Here are a few of the pieces donated by local artists:

Daniel Stuelpnael's abstract painting

Rick Delaney

Emily C-D

My personal favorite, a piece by Ryan Jedlicka

Monday, April 21, 2008

Maryland Art Place Critics' Residency Program



Critic: Robert Berlind

Writers: Darcelle Bleau, Robert Jason Fagan

Artists: Vincent Carney, Timmerman Daugherty, Dennis Farber, Symmes Gardner, Catherine Kleeman, Isabel Manalo, Jacqueline Schlossman, Jacquelyn Singer, Diane Szczepaniak

Saturday, May 3 Public Forum with Robert Berlind and participating artists and writers from the 22nd Annual Critics' Residency program. The forum will be moderated by Mark Alice Durant.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

For All You [other] AK Slaughter Fans

Photo by Justin Tsucalas

Aside from being professional hot babes, these kids play shows that you should go to:

APRIL 26, Talking Head.
Doors 9, Show 10, $7
W/Height, Velella Velella, and maybe Frenemies

You will be hard-pressed to find something better to do that night.

Check out their myspace: www.myspace.com/thisisakslaughter