March is here but don’t put your woolens away laddies and lasses.
BSA predicts at least two more snow storms before you can work on the tan line. Because, you know, we are weathermen too. Our weekly interview with the Streets
BSA predicts at least two more snow storms before you can work on the tan line. Because, you know, we are weathermen too. Our weekly interview with the Streets
These are not heady times, but neither are they maudlin. We’re just getting really focused on some things that are a bit more consequential.
If the Whitney Biennial 2010 is taking hits for being restrained due to budgetary cuts and the Armory is criticized for being overblown, you could say the Fountain show is optimized for impact. Now in it’s 4th year, there wasn’t any fatty hype that needed to be trimmed. With some of the machine-fog of a bubbled art market clearing, it’s not surprising that there are some strong voices here.
Fountain for me is a kind of raw, dense, and measured survey of the moment, and curator David Kesting steers this 10,000 sf. ship of serious mis-content with an uncanny skill for cutting out the flim-flam. Herding cats can be easier than directing artists, and a fair number of these felines may border on feral, but the bow is pointed in a surprisingly assured direction. Because of it’s outsider billing you could expect anarchy here but in many ways this collection of 20 or so galleries, collectives, and projects can be rather unified.
And it couldn’t possibly be more thoughtful – Whether it is a Swoon benefit rep speaking earnestly about sustainable communities, La Familia’s co-founder Jennifer Garcia explaining their nearly 50-member collective’s contemplation of the definition of family, Gregg Haberny’s hyper-wrought stabs at oil oligarchy and hypocrisy in general, street artist Zeus’ dripping corporate logos, or Dave Tree’s shovel-blunt criticisms of agribusiness’s seedless produce, you get the idea that somebody is actually studying the underbelly. All this frankness is refreshingly hopeful and many pieces are downright fun. But if these are the artists in the margins that portend our future, we may be heading for a cultural awakening and radical realignment of society.
The projects in Fountain New York 2010 include NYC based collective The Art Bazaar, Christina Ray – Swoon Benefit for the Braddock PA Studios, Leo Kesting Gallery from New York, Galerie Zeitgeist from Paris, the Brooklyn based project Open Ground, Baltimore based Nudashank Gallery, We-Are-Familia artists collective which will be displaying their keep-sake boxes with work from Whitney Biennale 2010 artist Rashaad Newsome, LA based website ArtSlant, Shelter Island Projects Boltax Gallery and Sara Nightingale Gallery, CREON gallery, UK based Holster Projects and artists installations by: Alison Berkoy, Miguel Parades, Seth Mathurin, Temporary States and Gawker Artists.
Fountain NY 2010
Pier 66 at 26th St in Hudson River Park NY, NY 10011
Telephone: 917.650.3760
Email: info@fountainexhibit.com
Website: http://fountainexhibit.com
Dates: March 4-7; 11am–7pm
The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of StencilHistoryX
Learn more about this piece by Czarnobyl at Stencil History X
See more at StencilHistoryX.com
Last Day of FEBRUARY! Make Snowmen while you still can!
For the most part winter can be a bit barren of new street art in New York. But these days the street art explosion continues no matter what the weather! Despite the crushing snow and black ice, BSA’s Images of Week keeps finding new stuff. This week’s crop includes a new-for-us REVS and a bunch of El Sol 25 with HAND PAINTED surrealist paper collages. Enjoy!
CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE
Just released on the 21st, a new film and interview with Jean-Michel Basquiat at the age of 25 – by his close friend Tamra Davis. Salted Peanuts anybody?
Dizzy Gillespie ,”Salt Peanuts” on TV in 1947
Dizzy Gillespie ,”Salt Peanuts” great quality audio
We got hit by a big snow storm, which means everybody gets to stay home and play Guitar Hero! Or, you can make a SICK art project in the kitchen with MILK, FOOD COLORING, and DISH SOAP
You’ll never guess what happens when you mix them.
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Nope, it’s not that thing cousin Ralphy has growing on his face….
“A ‘New Brow’ art movement because it was new thinking in the art world.”
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HUNG LIKE A BILLBOARD
Dan Witz at Jonathan Levine Gallery
Jonathan Levine Gallery Presents: Five Year Anniversary Group Exhibition
Jonathan LeVine Gallery
Five Year Anniversary
Group exhibition
February 27, 2010 through March 27, 2010
NEW YORK, NY (January 26, 2010) — Jonathan LeVine Gallery will celebrate its fifth anniversary with a commemorative group exhibition featuring exceptional and exemplary new works by forty artists who are either currently represented by the gallery or who have exhibited at the gallery in the past five years. The exhibition will be on view from February 27—March 27, 2010, and there will be an opening reception on Saturday, February 27, from 7—9pm.
Since 2005, Jonathan LeVine Gallery has been an important venue for Street Art (ephemeral work placed in public urban environments) and Pop Surrealism (work influenced by illustration, comic book art, and pop culture imagery). As such, the pieces in this exhibition—comprised of paintings, drawings, and sculptures—will be primarily figurative with a strong sense of narration.
Artists in this exhibition have developed prominent creative voices for themselves as individuals, while also playing valuable roles within the historical context of the larger Street Art and/or Pop Surrealism movements. All of them have been influential in shaping the gallery’s program, creating work with a unique counter-culture point of view.
In LeVine’s words: “I believe that my program represents a generational shift, and that the artists who I work with will continue to define the evolution of this genre.”
Artists with work in the exhibition include (more to come):
Adam Wallacavage AJ Fosik Andrew Brandou Andy Kehoe Blek le Rat Chris Mars Dan Witz Date Farmers Dave Cooper Doze Green Eric White Erik Mark Sandberg Esao Andrews Gary Baseman Gary Taxali Invader Isabel Samaras James Jean |
Jeff Soto Jim Houser Josh Agle (aka Shag) Kathy Staico Schorr Mark Dean Veca Miss Van Natalia Fabia Ray Caesar Ron English Scott Musgrove Shepard Fairey Souther Salazar Stephan Doitschinoff (aka Calma) Susan Crawford (aka Plankton Art Company) Tara McPherson Titi Freak WK Interact Xiaoqing Ding |
A BENEFIT ART AUCTION TO HELP THE PEOPLE OF HAITI…
MONEY RAISED GOES DIRECTLY TO DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS AND THEIR CURRENT MISSION IN HAITI!
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17th, 2010
ENVOY Enterprises (131 Chrystie St. – New York City)
6pm – 10pm
* Featuring works by:
Zoe Crosher
Miya Ando
Jordan Eagles
Cordy Ryman
Erika Ranee
Jeffrey Hargrave
Michael De Feo (and Marianna!)
Gabriel J. Shuldiner (and Fiona!)
Dorin Levy
Andrzej Zielinski
Matthew Deleget
Rossana Martinez
Miriam Cabessa
Robert Goolrick
An Hoang
Karlos Carcamo
Hermes Payhruber
Keren Moscovitch
Seyhan Musaoglu
Antoine Lefebvre
Kyoung eun Kang
Nicky Enright
Shani Peters
Brian Petro
Elia Bettaglio
Cecile Chong
Casey J. Diskin
Morgan Ersery
Christine Gedeon
Lea Bertucci
Suzanne Kathaleen Stroebe
Marina Zamalin
Danielle Goldsmith
George Towne
Vincent Como
Yen-Ting Chung
Genevieve White
Christopher Stout
Jess Ramsay
Mary Younkin
Josh Bricker
Joseph Ayala
Leah Dixon
Paul Vlachos
Loretta Lomanto
Tomoe Tsutsumi
Karen Dolmanish
Michael Gaffney
Bianca Franco
David Mann
Heide Fasnacht
Davina Hsu
Jae Kyung Kim
Chandrika Shrobe
Aya Rodriguez-Izumi
Jasmin Geyer-Gershony
Avi Levy
Amy Finkebeiner
Yevgeniy Rybakov
Ivo Bonacorsi
Rochelle Rubinstein
Fiona Conrad
Holly Overton
Samuel Vider
Jacqui McLoughlin
Chris Mezte
Joan Matalon
David Boim
Ryan Turley
Nicole Bezerril
Rodolfo Moraga
Emanuele Sferruzza Moszkowicz
Bridget O’Rourke
Eleanor White
Steve Page
Linda Griggs
Logan T. Sibrel
curated by Gabriel J. Shuldiner and Dorin Levy
http://envoy.typepad.com/envoy/2010/02/artists-for-haiti-art-auction-17-february-2010.html
Our Weekly Interview With the Street
Sure, you may think its a great day to go play in the snow. But after a few snow angels, a couple slides down the hill on an inflateable mattress, and peeing your name in the white stuff, you will probably head inside to watch Youtube videos of chickens who can make pancakes and that Major Lazer simulated fornication REMIX again. Oh yes you will!
So don’t get all Sanctified Street-Art Preacher Man when Chris Stain tells you he’s been making his stencil projects under a roof with central heating for the last couple of months instead of painting big pieces outside on the wall like a Street Artist. We can’t all be Robots Will Kill.
Chris first did a big mural in an old Soho building that was once probably a factory. And then probably a drug den, then an artist studio, and now a stock photo publishing agency and community space. So, the living room/lounge area had a big wall and he had a blast one afternoon getting up a pretty bumpy bulwark – careful not to bump his head on the ceiling light fixture or tumble into the glass coffee table.
Another gig he did was last week in Brooklyn at the Brooklyn Bowl called Rock and Wrap It Up which is an anti poverty organization. More on that here Win4Hunger. It was pretty funny seeing him with what amounted to SPOTLIGHTS clearly demarking his place on the wall.
He had 3 hours before the bands started, so Gracias a Dios he had help from two sisters Heather and Robyn Macionus, who rocked the piece in record time, and added a bit of visual interest of their own – or can’t I say that? Okay, they are both gorgeous – now it’s all out in the open!
Additional Viewing:
Sunday 2/28 from 12-5
Thru April during hours of operation
M-Thur 10:00am-8:00pm, Fri 10-6, Sat 10-6, Sun 10-8