Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Cooper Cole Gallery exhibits G.B.Jones August 6th


G.B. JONES
Organized by Kunstverein Toronto
in collaboration with D St-Amour
August 6 - September 10, 2022
 
Opening reception and book signing: Saturday August 6, 5-7pm
 
G.B. Jones is recognized for many accomplishments: for the success of her post-punk band Fifth Column (1981-2002), the widespread influence of the many queer punk zines she co-authored, including J.D.s, Double Bill and Hide, her coining of the term “queercore,” and her prolific work as a “no-budget” filmmaker, scene photographer and visual artist. Her drawing series, “Tom Girls,” originally published in J.D.s, replaced Tom of Finland’s iconic, “hyper-virile studs” with bold, uncompromising leather dykes, co-opting Finland’s objectified, male-on-male erotica and presenting a world of “nasty female role models.”
 
In 1994, Feature gallery and the publishing imprint Instituting Contemporary Idea in New York released G.B. Jones, a monograph compiling Jones’ “Tom Girls” drawings alongside show and film posters, record covers, comics and commissioned writing. As part of a campaign by the Canadian Border Services agency against allegedly pornographic or immoral materials in the 1990s, copies of Jones’ book were seized by the Canada Border Services Agency and barred from entering the country on the charge of depicting “bondage.” Jones was later informed that the seized copies had been burned by Border Control agents.
 
27 years later, in collaboration with Jones, Kunstverein Toronto is putting G.B. Jones back in circulation in Canada. A re-publication of the book will launch on August 6 at Cooper Cole alongside an exhibition of related drawings, photographs, posters, ephemera and tributes that reflect the reach and influence of Jones’ heterogenous practice, both at the time of the original release of G.B. Jones, and today.

This project was curated by Kunstverein Toronto together with research and publication direction by D St-Amour.
 
“Dodie Bellamy on G.B. Jones’s Nasty Female Role Models” Frieze Issue 200, Jan 9, 2019

 
G.B. Jones (b. Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada) is an artist, filmmaker, musician, and publisher of zines. Jones’ drawings first received notoriety when published in the Toronto-based queer punk zine J.D.s that she ran with Bruce LaBruce. Her prolific drawing series Tom Girls is widely recognized, and reimagines Tom of Finland’s drawings by replacing all the hyper-masculine subjects with women, subverting the intent into a contribution to third-wave feminist art. In 2002, Jones began a series of collaborative collages with Paul P., many of which were published in the book A Queer Anthology of Rage. Jones’ spray-painted images of Ionian columns - one of which is permanently installed at Cooper Cole - references her post-punk band Fifth Column (1981–2002) and suggests the weaving together of her music and drawing practice.
 
Jones has exhibited her art nationally and internationally since the early 1990s, in spaces such as Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus; Participant Inc., New York; Mercer Union, Toronto; The Power Plant, Toronto; Kunsthalle Exnergasse, Vienna; White Columns, New York; AKA Artist Run Space, Winnipeg; Muncher Kunstverein, Munich; and Schwules Museum, Berlin.  She was included in the 2012 exhibition This Will Have Been: Art, Love, and Politics in the 1990s, which was curated by Helen Molesworth for the MCA Chicago and subsequently travelled to the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and the ICA Philadelphia. She has also exhibited at national and international galleries including David Zwirner, New York; Cooper Cole, Toronto; Paul Petro Contemporary Art, Toronto; Feature, New York; Galerie Clark, Montreal; and Or Gallery, Vancouver. G.B. Jones lives and works in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and is represented by Cooper Cole.
 
Kunstverein Toronto is a curatorial and publishing platform operating alongside its partners in Amsterdam, Aughrim, Milan and New York. Moveable in both time and space, Kunstverein Toronto is dedicated to experimentation, discussion and hospitality in art, exhibition and publication practices. Fundamentally, Kunstverein Toronto seeks to foster exchange between local and international conversations, contexts and generations. Kunstverein Toronto was founded in 2014 by Kara Hamilton and Kari Cwynar. We program in dialogue with a local advisory board as well as an international group of artists, curators, thinkers and enthusiasts.
   
D St-Amour is a writer, curator and book maker currently located in Tio'tia:ke - Mooniyang (Montreal).
 
G.B. JONES
Organized by Kunstverein Toronto
in collaboration with D St-Amour
August 6 - September 10, 2022
 
Opening reception and book signing: Saturday August 6, 5-7pm
For sales and press inquiries please contact the gallery: 
+1.416.531.8000
#coopercolegallery#fineartmagazine#sunstormartfun
 

Oklahoma Contemporary presents: Blockbuster Guadalajara exhibition to consider history, present and future of creative communities

Blockbuster Guadalajara exhibition to consider history, present and future of creative communities

La casa que nos inventamos, featuring 19 Mexican artists and nearly 50 works, finds parallels to Oklahoma City

A logo featuring a stylized house and the profile of a person's face in light blue, pink, orange and green with the words La casa que nos inventamos: Contemporary Art From Guadalajara stacked underneathOpening across Oklahoma Contemporary’s campus on Sept. 23, La casa que nos inventamos: Contemporary Art From Guadalajara provides an opportunity to consider how, since the 2000s, one city in Mexico has built upon its rich cultural history as the capital of the state of Jalisco to become a leading hub of contemporary architecture, design, cuisine, literature and visual art. 

In recent decades, the social and economic impact of culturally dynamic communities has been widely recognized. The exhibition La casa que nos inventamos, which translates to “The house that we invented,” reflects on and responds to place — to the rich and complicated history, present and future of a creative community.


Guest curated by Viviana Kuri, director and chief curator of the Museo de Arte de Zapopan(MAZ), the exhibition features nearly 50 conceptual artworks — paintings, sculptures, installations, performances — created within the last decade by 19 visual artists from or living in Guadalajara. Featured in the survey are works by figures who rose to international prominence in the 2000s — Gonzalo Lebrija, Jose Dávila, Eduardo Sarabia, Francisco Ugarte — as well as by a generation of artists — Isa Carillo, Larissa Garza, Renata Petersen — who have gained greater attention in recent years.


“After years of research, dialogue and exchange with the artists, galleries, institutions and collectors of Guadalajara, we’re thrilled to welcome this special group of artists to Oklahoma,” says Oklahoma Contemporary Director Jeremiah Matthew Davis.

An art installation featuring a mountain of folded and crumpled paper next to a large television screen in an empty, blue-lit warehouse spaceThrough focusing on one dynamic art scene across platforms, La casa que nos inventamos provides a moment to consider the many factors — strong art museums and schools, generous supporters and galleries, plentiful studios and collective spaces — that together make a city’s creative community distinctive, resilient and enduring.


“We believe this exhibition and its related programs will uncover some unexpected parallels between the communities of Guadalajara and Oklahoma City,” Davis says. “For anyone who has ever wondered how an arts scene grows from tender seeds to a thriving ecosystem, this show is a must-see.”

The exhibition will launch concurrently with Oklahoma Contemporary’s Open House, a curated weekend filled with one-of-a-kind arts experiences, including performances from and talks withLa casa artists, tours, art-making, music, a car parade and more. The free festivities will reflect some of the pomp and circumstance originally planned for the arts center’s grand opening, which was canceled in March 2020 because of the pandemic.

Dubbed Open House to mirror La casa que nos inventamos, the weekend will welcome the public not only its new facilities, but also to the messages within the blockbuster Guadalajara show.

“This beautiful, immersive exhibition dives deep into an exciting scene in Mexico, and prompts vital questions: What makes for a fertile creative community? What defines the cultural language of a city?” says Kate Green, guest director of curatorial affairs at Oklahoma Contemporary. “As the title suggests, the answers lie within the artworks, artists and dynamic city — in the beautiful house they have together invented.”

“Through over 40 works — massive outdoor sculptures, a sprawling colorful mural, quiet paintings, a luminous video, lively performance — by nearly 20 emerging and mid-career artists, the exhibition transforms Oklahoma Contemporary inside and out.”

A sculpture of a cactus growing raw steaks and gold coins is displayed in a small pile of sandLa casa que nos inventamos includes artworks by artists Octavio Abúndez, Alejandro Almanza, Zazil Barba, Julieta Beltrán, Carrillo, Claudia Cisneros, Hiram Constantino, Dávila, Garza, Florencia Guillén, Cynthia Gutiérrez, Carmen Huizar, Lebrija, Jorge Méndez Blake, Petersen, Daniela Ramírez, Gabriel Rico, Sarabia and Ugarte.

Oklahoma Contemporary’s connection to Guadalajara dates back to 2014, as the organization planned the first of four solo exhibitions at its temporary experimental arts space, Marfa Contemporary, in Texas. After collaborating with Lebrija, Dávila, Ugarte and Méndez Blake, director Davis and founder and board chairman Christian Keesee traveled to Guadalajara to learn more about the city’s arts scene and creative community.

Those years of research and relationship building are reaping rewards, Green says. “La casa que nos inventamos: Contemporary Art From Guadalajara is an extraordinary opportunity to experience and learn from one of the most vibrant hubs of contemporary art in the Americas.” 

The exhibition is on view Sept. 23, 2022 – Jan. 9, 2023.

###

A media kit featuring the press release (in English and Spanish), a bio of Kuri and high-resolution images can be found at bit.ly/OC_LaCasa. Interviews with the artists, curators and Oklahoma Contemporary staff can be organized through Lori Brooks (lbrooks@okcontemp.org). Past press releases and information are archived at oklahomacontemporary.org/media.

Images: (1.) Gonzalo Lebrija, Breve historia del tiempo, 2020. Plymouth Duster, dyed water, receptacle. Dimensions variable. Photo: Fernando Marroquín T. Courtesy Colección Jumex. (2.) La casa logo, Museo de Arte de Zapopan's Paulina Magos in collaboration with Oklahoma Contemporary's Marie Butterline. (3.) Claudia Cisneros, Economía del lenguaje, 2020. Installation/performance. Guadalajara mosaics, cotton pillows, newspaper flowers, video, projection channel. Dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist. (3.) Gabriel Rico, I Have Anticipated You III, 2019. Ceramic and sand. 66.9 x 66.9 x 27.6 in. Courtesy of the artist.


About Oklahoma Contemporary

At the new, state-of-the-art Oklahoma Contemporary, visitors explore art and creativity through exhibitions, performances and a wide variety of educational programs. At its core, the multidisciplinary contemporary arts organization is an inclusive space. Exhibitions and most programs are free. You are always welcome here.


In addition to the 8,000 square feet of galleries for visual art, Oklahoma Contemporary’s new downtown home includes a flexible theater, a dance studio and nine classrooms for Camp Contemporary and Studio School. The 4.6-acre grounds also include The Studios, a renovated warehouse that houses ceramics, fiber, painting, printmaking and sculpture classes. Campbell Art Park, our Sculpture Garden and North Lawn lend outdoor space for exhibitions, programs and performances.


After providing contemporary art experiences of all kinds for 30 years at the State Fairgrounds, these new, centrally located facilities dramatically increase Oklahoma Contemporary’s capacity to meet growing demand for arts and culture across our city, state and region. 


Oklahoma Contemporary is a regional 501(c) (3) nonprofit organization founded in 1989 by businessman and philanthropist Christian Keesee and Kirkpatrick Foundation Director Marilyn Myers.

Oklahoma Contemporary logo (the words stacked and spelled out with vertical lines between each letter)

Learn more: okcontemp.org

               
      

At Artists Space catch Circus Amok Saturday, August 13 Begins promptly at 2pm in Cortlandt Alley

Circus Amok

Saturday, August 13
Begins promptly at 2pm
Cortlandt Alley 

In conjunction with our current exhibition Attention Line, the radical New York City circus and theater troupe Circus Amok makes its triumphant return with its first new show since 2018 at Artists Space in Cortlandt Alley on Saturday, August 13th at 2pm. The show is free and open to the public.

Witness as a beleaguered band of circus performers flee fire and flood, transphobia, misogyny and more, seeking refuge in the arms of New York City. But…will they find it?? Find out for yourself when you attend Circus Amok's back-alley political queer extravaganza!

Expect stunning stilters, jaunty jugglers, astounding acrobats, drag queens, nerd bots and more...danger, glamour, glitter, beware!! The show's star-studded cast includes Becca Blackwell, Jules Skloot, Claire Dolan, Stephanie Woods, Pher Gleason, Lex Alston, Kym Bernazky, David Guzman, Zo Williams, and Kali Therrien, with the infamous Circus Amok band directed by Jenny Romaine and featuring Ben Meyers, Jessica Lurie, Mary Feaster, and Lee Free, and a set designed by Scotty Heron.


Circus Amok, The Experimental Walking Tour, 2002. Performed in various parks across the five burroughs. [A color photograph of several figures marching in the middle of the street while holding up posters. One of the figures is wearing stilts, while others are pushing carts or instruments on wheels. From the sidewalk, various pedestrians look on.]

Dedicated to confronting contemporary social justice issues since 1989, Circus Amok began presenting one-off performances at P.S.122 before inaugurating their annual free outdoor shows in 1994 in small neighborhood parks and well-traveled public squares in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. Their outlandishly funny, politically feisty, joyously queer one-ring spectacles combine traditional circus skills–tight rope walking, juggling, acrobatics, stilt walking, clowning–with experimental dance, lifesize puppetry, improvisational techniques and live music. Essential to their performances is a fervent, energetic addressing of timely political themes, which in recent years have included housing, health care, gentrification, gay marriage, immigration, the Department of Homeland Security, police brutality, police stop-and-frisk policies, and public education. Circus Amok’s gender-bending performance art expands the notion of what a circus can be for its public, and creates inimitable physical and verbal spectacles that invite the audience to envision a more empowered life of community interaction and equanimity.

Jennifer Miller, the director and founder of Circus Amok, is an Obie, Bessie, and Ethyl Eichelberg award winning playwright and performer who has worked with alternative circus forms, theater, and dance for over thirty years. As a dancer, Miller has performed with Cathy Weis, Jeff Weis, Jennifer Monson, John Jasperse, Johanna Boyce, Doug Elkins, and They Won’t Shut-up among many others. Miller is a professor of performance at Pratt Institute.

Accessibility

Artists Space is fully accessible via a wheelchair lift and automated door in front of the entrance on 80 White Street. The cellar gallery can be accessed via the ground floor elevator. Artists Space welcomes assistance dogs, and has wheelchair accessible non-gender-segregated toilet facilities. If you have any further questions about access please email info@artistsspace.org.

Supporters

Support for Artists Space is provided by Lambent Foundation Fund of Tides Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation, The Cowles Charitable Trust, The Cy Twombly Foundation, The David Teiger Foundation, The Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, The New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature, Imperfect Family Foundation, Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, The Stavros Niarchos Foundation, The Willem de Kooning Foundation, The Fox Aarons Foundation, Herman Goldman Foundation, The Destina Foundation, The Luce Foundation, May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation, Arison Arts Foundation, The David Rockefeller Fund, The Jacques and Natasha Gelman Foundation, The Jill and Peter Kraus Foundation, The Richard Pousette-Dart Foundation. 
#circusamokfun#fineartmagazine#summerartfun

Thursday, July 28, 2022

The Gerald Peters Gallery, opening reception for Penelope Gottlieb, July 29 in Santa Fe, NM

#geraldpertersgallery#fineartmagazine#summerartfun

The Bowery LA, presents Top: film still from Pasiphäe, Witch Queen of Crete: A Glory Hole Origin Story, 2021. Courtesy of Ron Athey & Hermes Pittakos Above: detail of Apollo of Belvedere, 2022. Courtesy of Adam Parker Smith Gallery Weekend Los Angeles: RON ATHEY AND ADAM PARKER SMITH Thursday, July 28th from 5:30 - 8pm


Top: film still from Pasiphäe, Witch Queen of Crete: A Glory Hole Origin Story, 2021. Courtesy of Ron Athey & Hermes Pittakos
Above: detail of Apollo of Belvedere, 2022. Courtesy of Adam Parker Smith
 


Gallery Weekend Los Angeles:

 
RON ATHEY AND ADAM PARKER SMITH


Thursday, July 28th from 5:30 - 8pm

844 N La Brea Ave, Los Angeles
 
For Gallery Weekend Los Angeles and in conjunction with Adam Parker Smith's ongoing exhibition, Crush, The Hole is proud to present a special screening of two short films by Ron Athey, the performance artist recognized as a founding father of the Cinema of Transgression movement of the 1980s. Gourmet French fries by Fried Out LA and draft beers by BRAMS Premium French Pilsner in our parking lot.


About the screening

Pasiphäe, Witch Queen of Crete: A Glory Hole Origin Story, Ron Athey with Hermes Pittakos. 9 minutes.
Entering the Forest of Acéphale, Ron Athey. 10 minutes. 

Ron Athey has been working at the vanguard of performance art for 25 years. Self-taught, his earliest work developed out of post-punk/pre-goth scenes, informed by the club actions of Johanna Went and the formulation of Industrial Culture. In the 1990s, Athey formed a company of performers and made Torture Trilogy, a series of works addressing the AIDS pandemic with the physical intensity of the 1970s body-art canon, such as COUM Transmission, Carolee Schneeman and the Viennese Actionists. His current body of work is largely inspired by the secret society of Acéphale, drawing parallels between pre-Occupation 1930s Paris and pre- Operation Spanner UK, responding to a reality where neo-fascism is mutating, creeping, and marching.



About the exhibition:

What is it about ancient statues that inspires breathless adoration, even occasional palpitations and fainting spells? For Crush, his fifth solo exhibition with The Hole, Adam Parker Smith poses this question in the form of five monumental marble sculptures, taking a drastic departure from his typical material and scale. The sculptures, which stand or rest at one cubic meter each, give the impression that the canon of classical statuary has been put through an industrial compactor. Such machined units as we know them are for shipping, stocking, stacking; like the square watermelons in Japan they are functional, disturbing. This ancient stone, from the same Carrara mountain owned by the same family as in Michaelangelo’s time, makes the sculptures faithful to their historical antecedents, but in this new form Smith interrupts our inclination to exalt in their presence, helping us to see these icons of mythology in a profoundly new way.
 

Email jessica@thehole.com for more information
Email aleiya@olucompany.com for press related inquiries

 
312 Bowery, New York 10012
Tuesday - Saturday 11am-6pm
(212) 466-1100 or poke@thehole.com

86 Walker Street, New York 10013
Tuesday - Saturday 11am-6pm
(212) 343-3100 or poke@thehole.com

844 N La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles 90038
Tuesday - Saturday 11am-6pm
(323) 297-3288 or poke@thehole.com
#the bowerygalleryla#fimeartmagazine#summerartfun

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Olivel Cole Gallery, INTRODUCING NOON SPIEGEL

 

INTRODUCING NOON SPIEGEL

Noon Spiegel is currently working on large scale paintings, and focusing on exploring the idea of Golden ratio and how it relates to Fibonacci Sequence, Binary Code and Sacred Geometry.

 
 

Noon Spiegel

Untitled, 2022

 
 

Noon Spiegel is a pseudonymous New York City Artist.

Currently he is working on large scale paintings, and focusing on exploring the idea of Golden ratio and how it relates to Fibonacci Sequence, Binary Code and Sacred Geometry.

Noon is also a Sculptor, Filmmaker and Installation Artist. He has done site specific installations in a Public and Gallery setting around New York City area. His short films have been shown at Sundance and other Film Festivals.

Non has had several solo and group shows including Apex Art in New York, Joyce Goldstein Gallery NYC as well as highly publicized solo exhibition at Ticknor Gallery - Harvard University.

He is part of permanent collection of the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, as well as numerous corporate and private collections.

 
 

NOW YOU CAN VISIT US FROM THE COMFORT OF YOUR HOME THROUGH A FACETIME GALLERY VISIT

Just schedule your FaceTime appointment calling 305.392.0179 or just replying to this email

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VISIT US IN PERSON

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Lowell Ryan Projects presents Allison Lu Wang splash, drip, drip, woo, splash July 23 - July 31, 2022

Allison Lu Wang
splash, drip, drip, woo, splash
July 23 - July 31, 2022

Wednesday-Sunday 12-6pm

***Silver Lake: 
3118 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90026

Allison Lu Wang
nightcall , 2022
Archival ink on linen
48h x 36w in / 121.92h x 91.44w cm
AW-006

“Well dreams, they feel real while we're in them, right? 
It's only when we wake up that we realize how things are actually strange. 
Let me ask you a question, you never really remember the beginning of a dream do you?” 
- the character of Cobb in Christopher Nolan’s Inception


Lowell Ryan Projects is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Los Angeles-based artist Allison Lu Wang (b. 1994, Los Angeles, CA) titled splash, drip, drip, woo, splash. Composed of nine paintings, 48h by 36w inches in scale, all archival ink on linen, this will be Wang’s first exhibition with the gallery. In these recent works, Allison Lu Wang depicts various landscapes that are a reflection of the world she lives in both literally and figuratively. Her cinematic use of color and manipulation of imagery create works that take the viewer on a journey through time and place within the blink of an eye.

Wang’s process of landscape painting—or one might call landscape building—pulls from disparate sources in her life, imagination, experiences and fascinations. Her process begins in an analog format sourcing various printed images cut from magazines, books, etc., as well as directly painted elements, such as an orchid in her studio rendered in oil paint. Entering the digital realm, photographs of these collages and painted images are further expanded upon and manipulated on the computer. There is always a sense of place, whether a more direct image from a street in her native Los Angeles or a scene from a favorite movie or video game. Pictorially no subject matter is treated with more or less importance, however direct cinematic and pop-cultural references can take on greater significance conceptually to the artist. Anakin Skywalker’s transformation into Darth Vader—consumed by paranoia, power and greed, and Cobb’s team in Inception standing on a street awaiting an unknown force take on both emotional and contextual significance to the artist—references to real life emotions played out in a fantastical realm.
 
In a world increasingly separating itself from a grounding force, the emotional ramifications of one’s psychological existence are explored through both formal process and subject matter. While not immediately evident at first glance, the artist has placed an image of herself in each work. An obvious signifier of the personal nature of the work, but also a nod to the human experience and our emotional capacity to understand the shift from the Information Age into the Age of Imagination.

VIEW MORE
Allison Lu Wang
nightcall (detail), 2022
AW-006
 
Allison Lu Wang
why’d you only call me when you’re high, 2022
Archival ink on linen
48h x 36w in / 121.92h x 91.44w cm
AW-004
Allison Lu Wang
why’d you only call me when you’re high, (detail) 2022
AW-004
 
Allison Lu Wang
ocean drive, 2022
Archival ink on linen
48h x 36w in / 121.92h x 91.44w cm
AW-008
Allison Lu Wang
ocean drive (detail), 2022
AW-008
 
Allison Lu Wang
slippery [’scuse me], 2022
Archival ink on linen
48h x 36w in / 121.92h x 91.44w cm
AW-010
Allison Lu Wang
slippery [’scuse me] (detail), 2022
AW-010
 
For more information contact: info@lowellryanprojects.com
 
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