Sunday, January 19, 2014

Jonathan Ferrara Gallery


JFG logoINSIDE ART
mid-January 2014

CURRENTLY ON VIEW
 
Regarding the Incidence of Purpose
a memorial retrospective
of the work of
Sandy Chism
1957 - 2013

curated by Matthew Weldon Showman 
  
1 January - 8 February 2014 
Reception: Saturday 1 February, 6-9pm 

  

 
Jonathan Ferrara Gallery is proud to announce Regarding the Incidence of Purpose, a memorial retrospective of the work of artist Sandy Chism curated by Matthew Weldon Showman. One year after the artist's passing, the exhibition honors Chism and her work. Regarding the Incidence of Purpose will be on view from 1 January through 7 Feburary, 2014, with opening receptions on Saturday, January 4th, 5-7pm, Saturday January 11th, 5-8pm and February 1st, 6-9pm.

Sandy Chism was a Professor of Painting in the Newcomb Department of Art at Tulane University from 1996 - 2012.  She had a BFA from University of Kansas and an MFA from University of Arizona where she studied under famed painter Robert Colescott. Chism had six solo exhibitions with the gallery since 1999 and her work has been exhibited locally, nationally and internationally. In July of 2000, a ten-year survey of her work was exhibited at the Contemporary Arts Center, entitled Sandy Chism: A Survey and included paintings as well as large scaled mixed-media installations. A catalog was published by the Contemporary Arts Center.  She has received grants from the Louisiana Division of the Arts and the Pollock Krasner Foundation and been awarded residencies at the Santa Fe Art Institute and the First International Colony of Artists in Debrecen, Hungary. Her paintings are featured in the permanent collections of the New Orleans Museum of Art, Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation Collection in Los Angeles, Emprise Bank in Witchita, Kansas and Liquitex Paints, New Jersey. Chism's work has been reviewed in Art in America, New Orleans Art Review, The Times-Picayune, Gambit Weekly, Forum Magazine and The Journal Santa Fe. She is known for her works that combine the ethereal and the concrete. Similarly, her work often incorporates imagery to describe the flux between opposites in nature such as the cycles of life and death, the single versus the multiple, the micro and the macro, stillness and frenzy and chaos versus order.

Showman describes the artist's body of work:

Regarding the Incidence of Purpose; this phrase inherently poses juxtaposition in concept. Similarly, Sandy Chism's paintings are wrought with these sorts of contradictions: strength/weakness, conflict/accord, natural/man-made, real/imagined, hope/despair . . . This internal struggle can be seen in all of the various bodies of work that Chism produced over her 35 year career. Presented side by side in this exhibition, these works illustrate one seamless narrative of struggle, memory and nature. The paintings consistently air poetically towards the positive. Chism created haunting yet uplifting visions to profoundly inspire the viewer.
  
On January 2nd, 2013, Chism died from ovarian cancer at age 55. Her spirit lives on through her work. The Sandy Chism Estate is represented by Jonathan Ferrara Gallery.
  
 For any inquiries please contact Matthew Weldon Showman
  

    Chism's other exhibitions at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery
  
In the Trying, 2012  
 
Sliver, 2010 
 
Small Wonder, 2006 
  
Closer, 2004   

In Between2003  


Stillness In Frenzy, 2001 
(online gallery not available)

    
 
 
UPCOMING NATIONAL EXHBITIONS
 
Generic Art Solutions (G.A.S)
FĂștbol: The Beautiful Game
curated by Franklin Sirmans
 
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)
Los Angeles, CA
 
2 February - 20 July 2014
 
  
FĂștbol: The Beautiful Game examines the subject of football-nicknamed by one sports commentator The Beautiful Game-and its interactions with societies around the world. As a subject, football touches on issues of nationalism and identity, globalism and mass spectacle, as well as the common human experience shared by spectators from many cultures. Celebrating the sport on the eve of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, the exhibition includes approximately thirty artists from around the world, working in video, photography, painting and sculpture. Two room-sized video installations-Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, by the artists Philippe Parreno and Douglas Gordon, and Volta by Stephen Dean-anchor the exhibition. Other works by artists including Miguel Calderon (whose 2004 video Mexico v. Brasil represents a 17-0 victory for Mexico), Robin Rhode, Kehinde Wiley, and Andy Warhol provide a sense of the miraculous possibilities of the sport as universal conversation piece.



   
CURRENT NATIONAL EXHIBITIONS
Gina Phillips
I Was Trying Hard to Think About Sweet Things
 
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
New Orleans, LA
 
5 October 2013 - 27 January 2014

   
  
I Was Trying Hard to Think About Sweet Things -a mid-career survey by New Orleans artist Gina Phillips continues at The Ogden Museum of Southern Art. 
   
 
Born in 1971 in Madison, Kentucky, Gina Phillips is a painter, sculptor, fabric artist, educator and musician. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from University of Kentucky in 1994, and a Master of Fine Arts degree from Tulane University in 1997. Phillips' work has been exhibited across the US and in Europe including Prospect.2 Biennial, Ballroom Marfa, Mobile Museum of Art, New Orleans Museum of Art, The University of Kentucky and the Acadiana Center For the Arts. Her work is included in the private and public collections worldwide, including the University of Kentucky, Lexington; New Orleans Museum of Art; Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation, Los Angeles; The House of Blues Collection; NASA; and the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, 21c Museum, Louisville; Marilyn Oshman, Houston, TX and The Drake Hotel, Toronto, Canada.
  
Hailing from rural Kentucky, Phillips' childhood was spent surrounded by a musical and artistic family known for their mechanical and creative abilities. Her grandmother was a self-taught artist and Phillips learned early on that almost anything can be re-used to create something functional or artistic. This exhibition will include works from throughout her career-from her Kentucky early years with raw narrative works made from paint, wood, metal and fabric, to her most recent narrative paintings and sophisticated fabric work created on her "free-motion thread-drawing machine" in her studio in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans. 
  
The exhibition runs through January 27, 2014.
  
  
  
  
 
Gina Phillips. Fort Dirt Hole, 2013. fabric, thread, ink and paint. 156" x 324"
 
Closing Performance
Saturday 18 January


As her 20 year retrospective show draws to a close (closing 27 January), Gina Phillips will sing some of her funny sad songs in the exhibition space on the 5th floor of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art on Saturday, January 18 at 3 o'clock. Her music and art inform each other...filling in the blanks of intertwining narratives . The title of the show itself comes from one of her song's lyrics. Her bandmates will be joining her: Ross Karsen sings and plays guitar, Steve Walkup on percussion and Monica McIntyre sings and plays cello for this intimate performance.


Margaret Munz-Losch
 
Reflecting Realism
 
Wright Art Gallery, Delta State University
Cleveland, Mississippi
 
19 January -  21 Ferbuary 2014
Reception Sunday, January 20th 2 - 4pm 
  
  


The Wright Art Center Gallery at Delta State University is pleased to announce the upcoming exhibition REFLECTING REALISM set to open with a public opening reception for the artists on Sunday, January 19 from 2 - 4 PM.  Exhibiting their works will be sculptor William Beckwith of Taylor, MS; painters Charles Carraway of Terry, MS; Laurin McCracken of Ft. Worth, TX; Richard Kelso of Jackson, MS; Margaret Munz-Losch of Somerville, TN; and Jerrod Partridge of Jackson, MS.
Margaret Munz-Losch's work reflects a deep fascination with mystery and adventure. Her vivid compositions observe complex---and sometimes uneasy---relationships between the natural world, art, and identity which result often in surrealistic dreamscapes which marry the mundane and the fantastical.  As an emerging artist, she exhibited her work in Los Angeles. She also became the director of a mural company during her time there before moving to Tennessee. Margaret's work has appeared in group and solo shows and most recently she was awarded winner of the No Dead Artists competition at the Jonathan Ferrara Gallery in New Orleans, LA.
REFLECTING REALISM will be available for viewing from January 19 through February 21, 2014.  The gallery is open Monday through Thursday 8 AM - 8:30 PM and on Friday 8 AM - 4:30 PM.  For further information please contact the Art Department at 662-846-4720.


  
 
Skylar Fein
The Lincoln Bedroom
 
C24 Gallery
New York, NY
 
1 November 2013 - 22 February 2014
 
   
The exhibition presents an installation continuing the artist's re-envision of historic moments and figures. Fein's exhibition will be on view November 1, 2013 - February 22, 2014.

Abraham Lincoln shared a bedroom with Joshua Speed in the 1830s in Springfield, IL. Many historians, biographers, and scholars have speculated about the nature of their relationship, causing an ongoing debate about Lincoln's sexuality. Fein's work combines factual and fictional histories, and proposes evidence of these uncertain moments through his imagery and objects. Since no photographs exist of the Speed residence, the artist relied on photos and sketches of similar structures, as well as on his imagination to create an impressionistic, and slightly hallucinatory re-creation that is far from a museum period-room.
Visitors will have the opportunity to enter Fein's vision by walking up the stairs above the Speed shop and entering the bedroom. They will be greeted by the faint smell of hay and tobacco, and hear music reminiscent of that moment in time. The artist and his team have recreated the facade of the Speed store, along with a replica of the painted miniature of Judge John Speed, the family patriarch, and Speed and Lincoln's bed - complete with straw-stuffed mattress, among other décor and furnishings.

For his research Fein went to Louisville, KY to spend time with the remaining Speed family. He toured Farmington, the family plantation of John Speed, which still stands in immaculate 1840s condition. At the conclusion of Fein's visit, he received approval from Virginia Speed, a noted art collector and philanthropist, and her assurance that she would view the installation along with other members of the Speed family.

"It would have been nice to have a Speed and a Lincoln be the first people to walk through the installation," Fein says. "But there are no Lincolns left." Abraham Lincoln's last undisputed descendant, Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith, died childless in 1985.  



  
Read more about The Lincoln Bedroom
featured in:
 
 
 
 
 
Dan Tague and Krista Jurisich
Decisive Moments
Photographs from the Cherye R. and James F. Pierce Collection
 
Honolulu Museum of Art
Honolulu, Hawaii
 
18 December 2013 - 8 June 2014 


Decisive Moments is drawn from the extensive, rich collection of 20th-century and contemporary photographs assembled over 40 years by Jim and Cherye Pierce.

French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson wrote in the preface to his 1952 book Images Ă  la Sauvette (published as Decisive Moments in the U.S.), "To me, photography is the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of a second, of the significance of an event as well as ofa precise organization of forms which give that event its proper expression." His well-known "decisive moment" image Behind the Gare St. Lazare, of a man in mid-step over a puddle, opens this exhibition. His capturing that precise moment imbues the image with its visual power and magic.

This exhibition of 80 images from the Pierce collection examines the idea of the decisive moment as it has evolved in photographic practice from the early 20th century to the present-from Cartier-Bresson's well-timed click of the camera shutter to Sandy Skoglund's Fresh Hybrid, in which she created an elaborate scene of found materials and real and fake models. Over the last century photographers have had a much more deliberate, manipulative approach, conceptualizing and constructing their own decisive moments, controlling the visual, psychological, and emotional impact of their images through darkroom techniques, the staging of images, the use of new technologies such as computer digital imaging, and the incorporation of non-photographic media and materials.

The exhibition examines these strategies through the works of artists such as:

Diane Arbus, Luis Cruz Azaceta, BrassaĂŻ, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Binh Danh, Dawn DeDeaux, William Eggleston, Dan Estabrook, Lotte Jacobi, Krista Jurisich, Yousuf Karsh, AndrĂ© Kertesz, Soo Kim, Deborah Luster, Robert Mapplethorpe, Daido Moriyama, Irving Penn, Sandy Skoglund, Dan Tague, Maggie Taylor, Michael Wolf, and many more.




 

NEWS
 
Guns in the Hands of Artists 
featured in 
THE ART NEWSPAPER

International Edition
January 2014

 

The gallery owner Jonathan Ferrara is a man on a mission. In 1996, along with artist Brian Borrello, Ferrara organized the first Guns in the Hands of Artists exhibition in New Orleans. This inspired initiative involved turning guns removed from the city's streets into works of art. Painters, glass artists, sculptors, photographers and poets used the firearms to produce challenging works that addressed the issue of gun control in the US. Ferrara is now reprising the project, working with city authorities and the New Orleans Police Department to obtain weapons by way of its gun buy-back program. Artists including Rashaad Newsome, Mel Chin, Skylar Fein, Deborah Luster, Peter Sarkisian, Dan Tague, Andrei Codrescu, Luis Cruz Azaceta and Bradley McCallum will transform the guns into art; their works are due to go on show at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery in an exhibition timed to coincide with Prospect.3Notes for Now, the New Orleans biennial (25 October 2014 - January 2015).



Tribute Exhibition for Sandy Chism
work by over sixty friends, colleagues, students and mentors
curated by Laura Richens
 
The Carroll Gallery, Tulane University
New Orleans, Louisiana

13 - 30 January 2014
 Reception Thursday, January 16, 5:30 - 7:30 pm 
  
  

New Orleans LA - Jan. 2 2014 - The Carroll Gallery in Tulane's Newcomb Art Department will host the exhibition "A Tribute to Sandy Chism:  an exhibition of work by friends, colleagues, students and mentors" from January 13 - 30th.  Sandy Chism was an associate professor of painting and drawing at Tulane who passed away in January of 2013.

"This exhibition will bring together work by so many people who were influenced by Sandy in one way or another, and we hope it will serve as a fitting tribute.  She was an inspiring professor to so many, a wonderful colleague, and an artist of such evocative works," said Laura Richens, Curator of the Carroll Gallery in the Newcomb Art Dept.   

Participating artists include:  Zarouhie Abdalian, Raine Bedsole, Eleanor Bernadas, Simonette Berry, Taylor Bonds, Lisa Bulawsky, Ellen Bull, Angela Burks, Joseph Burwell, Kyle Chaput, Teresa Cole, Aaron Collier, Liese Dart, Bonita Day, Alyssa Dennis, Laura Doughtie, Becky Durham, Jennifer Drinkwater, Eden Gass, David Gillies, Brian Glaser, Margot Goodan, Rachel Granberry, Adam Hall, Ronna Harris, Brian Hitselberger, Emily Huffman, Jennifer Ickes, Maureen Iverson, Jeremy Jernegan, Josh Knott, Yasamin Keshtakar, Karyn Kirke, Molly Knobloch, Casey Lard, Victoria Le, Nicole Lehrer, Barbie L'Hoste, Kathleen Loe, Allison McAshan, Judith Burns McCrea, Amy McKinnon, Kayleigh Maier, Madeline Marak, Ali Mills, Lance Morris, Lara Mossler, Adam Mysock, Matteo Neivert, Jamie Oliver, Gina Phillips, Marc-Anthony Polizzi, Laurel Porcari, Laura Richens, David Robinson, Blake Sanders, Hannah March Sanders, Karoline Schleh, Gordon Sherman, Billy Solitario, Alexis Stahl, Ben Trinh, Annie Walker, Josh Windham, Bronwen Wyatt, and others.

The exhibition's Artists' Reception will be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, January 16.  The reception is free and open to the public. www.tulane.edu/~art/



Adam Mysock  

 
Gina Phillips, Nikki Rosato, Dan Tague and
NO DEAD ARTISTS
featured in 
NOAR - New Orleans Art Review

October - December 2013

 

 

 
 
  
DIRECTOR NOTES

For my director notes this month, coinciding with Regarding the Incidence of Purpose, I would like to share with you Jonathan Ferrara's reflections on his relationship with Sandy Chism . . . 
 

In Memoriam ---

"I first met Sandy Chism when she was selected for the 1999 No Dead Artists Juried Exhibition.  She was a Professor of Painting at Tulane University and had only been in New Orleans for a year or so.  I was drawn to her work and to her wonderful spirit and enthusiasm for her work and art in general.  I immediately offered her an exhibition at my fledgling gallery on Baronne Street and that began a 14-year relationship that produced numerous works of art, exhibitions and, most importantly, an enduring friendship.  She was an artist at heart, an instructor by profession and a kind and gentle soul with a powerful voice and spirit.

As a professor, her influence on the creative landscape of New Orleans and beyond is well documented by the success of her former students...from Gina Phillips to Adam Mysock, Aaron Collier, Eden Gass, Amy McKinnon, Sidonie Villere, Laurel Porcari, and Billy Solitario among the many.  She was revered for her intellect and for her attention to detail. 

As the longest running artist I had at the gallery, I counted Sandy among the many mentors I have had over my almost twenty year gallery career.  I would always solicit her opinion when considering an artist, ask her what she thought of current trends in the art world and, when I had more time in my life, ask her about my own work and the various processes she employed in her work.  She was, as always, very forthcoming and I know she knew that her wisdom was being incorporated into my vision for the gallery.  She was there at the beginning and we worked together on seven exhibitions over 14 years.  I was privileged to be able to see her aesthetic evolve over the years and yet, still maintain the same through line as she explored her creative vision.  The juxtaposition of opposites was always there in her work...from stillness to frenzy, chaos to order, the digital to the natural, she incorporated these juxtapositions within the work.  Other references seen in her work include the tangles and knots she so dearly loved, the ever-present grid and the horizon line that harkens back to her Kansas roots.

The very first exhibition in 1999 at my old Baronne Street gallery was a fantastic combination of paintings and installations.  One that comes to mind is a major installation that involved water dripping onto a salt pillar that would slowly dissolve over time and at the same oxidize metal elements within the piece.  It was a wonderful show, which led to her first review as well as the gallery's first review in Art In America.  It was a magical moment as that review bolstered both of our hopes for a bright future in the art world.  Soon thereafter in 2000 her mid career retrospective, Sandy Chism: A Survey, followed at the Contemporary Art Center with a published catalog.  This cemented her reputation as one of the premier artists in New Orleans and the South. In 2001, her highly successful From Stillness to Frenzy exhibition took place at my old Carondelet Street gallery.  That led to a major acquisition by the New Orleans Museum of Art and major local collectors acquiring almost the entire body of works.  This exhibition had the sublimely beautiful "iceberg" paintings she later became known for.  They had such a serene calming beauty to them that, one day to my surprise, I literally discovered a visitor in the back gallery sitting on the floor in front of one painting meditating in the Lotus position.  Her work inspired such reactions and evoked an inner peace that radiates from the canvas.

In 2003 and 2004, Sandy began to explore the abstract gestural side of her work.   The In Between and Closer exhibitions saw her incorporate 1950's fabric into her canvases.  She would layer swaths of the fabric across the surface of the canvas that would appear to be pixilated when painted over with her gestural strokes and pourings.  This was her creating the juxtaposition between the digital and natural world and also between stillness and frenzy. Several works from this suite were exhibited in Hungary as part of an international cultural exchange.  A few of these works including one from my own collection are featured in the middle gallery.

In August of 2005, Sandy, like a majority of New Orleans, suffered the wrath of Hurricane Katrina... Hers was an especially traumatic experience as her home and studio got over 12 feet of water during the flood.  She had worked tirelessly to build a beautiful new studio with large glass windows so she could commune with nature as she painted; all to be taken away in that fateful storm.  Sandy, like so many New Orleans artists, sought refuge at various artist residencies across the country...Sandy at The Santa Fe Art Institute.  There she created her homage to Katrina in the beautifully haunting Levee Break featured in the main gallery.
This painting toured the country as a part of the 2006 traveling exhibition New Orleans Artists in Exile that went to New York, Atlanta, Miami, Shreveport and Wisconsin.

In 2006, for the annual opening of the art season, Art For Arts' Sake, we debuted a brand new body of work, Small Wonder. Katrina had so affected her...she was still rebuilding her home years later and painting out of her Tulane office...that she embarked on a suite of works to relieve and communicate the experience of the storm.  I remember vividly, her telling me that she was so dumbstruck when she returned after a month to her Gentilly home to see the destruction wrought by the storm.  As she entered she remembered that she had left a plate of bread and butter on the dining room table.  She was amazed to find that, in the storm, the table had risen up 12 feet and settled back on the floor and that the bread and butter were still on the plate and untouched. The bread was moldy but the butter was just the way it had been left.  This reality transfixed her; she commented how could something so fragile survive something so destructive.  Ever the artist and the mirror of the world, Sandy managed to take that thought and create an entire body of work from it.  At around the same time, a friend had given her a small animal figurine.  She saw in this figurine a certain strength and also a certain fragility...just like the butter.  So, she created the works in Small Wonder, which, by her placement of the figurine within the canvas, imbued a sense of presence and power to these tiny animals.  Several of the works in the exhibition were almost 8 feet tall and 4 feet wide.  The remaining Small Wonder works are featured in the main gallery as well.

Still reeling from Katrina, from 2007 to 2009, Sandy focused on rebuilding her home and studio.  And in 2010 she debuted Sliver, an exhibition large paintings and metal works.  As she said so eloquently...these large-scale works of roller coasters, rocket trails and bees hover around the verge of change. Likewise, compositions and variations in the speed of working hinge on change. Both the process and the series vacillate between full and fast and then suddenly still and empty. Like the feeling you get in your chest when you swing too high, careening into space and then briefly, you're just hanging there.  Two of these large-scale paintings are in the main gallery.

In 2012, fully aware of the progress of her cancer, Sandy embarked on her last solo exhibition.  I can still remember visiting with her and discussing the paintings of coal tipples she was working on.  She had become fascinated with these antiquated structures. The tipples resemble ladders. They evoke aspirations to climb out of the steep embankments. Similarly, they recall feeble towers of Babel; their frailty is a result of abandoned beginnings. To celebrate this impulse to get above base origins, I have adorned the structures and surroundings with spare but intense color, a small residue of imagined high mindedness. Yet, the physical structures still struggle to rise above thicker paint or rushing perspectives. Age and entropy make merely maintaining verticality a virtue and a goal.  This was to be her last body of work.  While we talked she asked me to take care of her work after she was gone making sure that I was okay with that.  It was the first time I had ever been asked that question and it caught me so off guard I had to simply hug her trying to deny the reality that she had come to accept. 

This exhibition is in honor of Sandy, in honor of that commitment and in honor of her wonderful creative spirit.  She lives on through her work and her influence is felt in the work of her students.  She was talent lost too young, a spirit gone too fast, a friend taken too soon.  This is for you Sandy...I miss you."

--- Jonathan Ferrara

JONATHAN FERRARA GALLERY 
400a Julia Street | New Orleans, LA 70130

Gallery Hours
Monday - Saturday | 10am - 5pm
and by appointment
 #fineartmagazine

Saturday, January 18, 2014

gallery nine5
gallery nine5
#fineartmagazine


H. Benitez Fine Art Gallery II Bird Road Art District | Saturday, January 18th 2014


H. Benitez Fine Art Gallery II
Bird Road Art District | Saturday, January 18th 2014


"Vacunao" | Limited Edition Reproduction | Call for Pricing
Join us this Saturday, January 18th, at
H. Benitez Fine Art Gallery II for:

The Bird Road Art Walk
From 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm

 
         Join us this Saturday and take in the vivid and vivacious: from Humberto's abstract "Paper Angel" series and the grand "Builders of Heaven", to limited edition giclees like "Vacunao" that exemplifies the magnitude of romance and movement.

The H. Benitez Fine Art Gallery II Exhibiting Artists

Julio Bordas
Visual Artist

Holly Jones
Visual Artist


Roxy Sora
Photographer


 
      Also on view will be "CafĂ© con Rumba!", our line of limited edition Humberto Benitez Cafeteras! Each is signed and includes certificate of authenticity. They're going fast, so reserve yours today!

Start Developing your Art Collection with an Acquisition
Program at the H Benitez Fine Art Galleries!

__________________________________________

H Benitez Fine Art Gallery II | Bird Road Art District
4277 SW 75th Avenue | Miami, Florida 33155
hbenitezart@aol.com | +1(786)877-1045

Gallery Hours:
Monday - Friday 1:30pm-6:00pm | Saturday and Sunday by Appointment


 
#fineartmagazine

Sphere Of Words


 
January 25th, 2014 at 2:00 PM
New York Public Library
Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
South Court Auditorium
Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street
New York, NY 10018
Russian-American poets and musicians will present the magnificent poetry project of the New York-based poet and journalist Gennady Katsov "SPHERE OF WORDS," consisting of 180 poetic meditations inspired by masterpieces of world art, from Trecento to the present.

The bilingual multimedia presentation will include reading of poems from SPHERE OF WORDS, in Russian by the author Gennady Katsov, and in English by Alex Cigale, the translator. The presentation will be accompanied by the musical tribute from outstanding musicians Vadim Neselovsky and Julian Milkis, as well as the slide-show of matching paintings projected on the screen.

- Gennady Katsov, Russian-American poet and journalist, a well-known figure in the 1980s Moscow literary circles and one of the creators of the iconic Moscow club «Poezia». He has been a journalist since 1993 and returned to writing poetry only in 2011, after 18 years of silence.
- Alex Cigale, Russian-American poet, editor, and translator whose works appeared in such leading journals as The Colorado, Green Mountains, North American, Tampa, Tar River Poetry, The Literary Review, Drunken Boat and McSweeney's. His translations of Silver Age and contemporary Russian poetry also appeared in Literary Imagination, Modern Poetry in Translation, PEN America, Plume, Two Lines, The Manhattan, St. Petersburg, and Washington Square Reviews, and his versions of Gennady Katsov's poems in Cimarron Review and Verse Junkies.
- Vadim Neselovskyi, a renowned piano player and composer, professor at Berklee College of Music in Boston and the winner of the legendary Thelonious Monk competition (Washington, DC, 2010)
- Julian Milkis, internationally acclaimed soloist, chamber musician, recitalist, and jazz clarinetist, a true "cross-over artist" and Benny Goodman's only student.

"A long-time journalist and observer of the popular and high culture scenes, with this book-length project, Katsov has returned to his roots in poetry. A life-long habit of looking and reading closely is everywhere in evidence in these ekphrastic poems. As has often been remarked about that hotter medium, the film screen, what a viewer faces on a flat, projected surface (the 180 poems of this volume might well stand in for 180 degrees) is simultaneously both window and mirror, so that what the watcher sees reflected therein are projections of her own self, as a sample of all humanity. At his best, Katsov "casts a cold eye on life, on death," as projected onto this canvas "through seven heroic centuries". In the most effective of these poems, he succeeds in establishing, in the voice of a guide or a confidant or a co-conspirator, a tone of intimacy with the reader so that we, looking along with him, are brought at the same time into a closer relationship with ourselves." Alex Cigale, poet, translator, editor
#fineartmagazine

January Newsletter


The Armory Show | Piers 92 & 94
---------
January Newsletter

---------

Happy New Year Wishes from The Armory Show
The Armory Show Team wishes you a Happy New Year!
For information regarding exciting on-site developments, assistance planning your visit, and all further inquiries, please visitwww.thearmoryshow.com.
Please note our new mailing address:
The Armory Show
One Penn Plaza, Suite 1710
New York, NY 10119
We look forward to greeting you in March and anticipate the strongest edition of the fair to date.
Warm regards,
The Armory Show 
March 6-9, 2014
Piers 92 & 94
Twelfth Avenue at 55th Street
New York City


EXHIBITIONS


Image: Isamu Noguchi, Peking Drawing (Man sitting), 1930 and Qi Baishi, Crabs, c. 1930
Isamu Noguchi and Qi Baishi: Beijing 1930 at The Noguchi Museum
While en route to Japan for his first time since childhood, Isamu Noguchi paid an unexpected visit to Beijing (then called Peking) from July 1930 to January 1931. A fateful encounter with a Japanese businessman and art collector, Sotokichi Katsuizumi (1889-1985), exposed the young artist to Katsuizumi's small collection of scrolls by the poet, seal carver, and traditional ink painting master Qi Biashi (1864-1957). Noguchi was entranced by what he saw, and asked to be introduced to Qi Baishi whom he observed and studied with.
Organized by the University of Michigan Museum of Art in a collaboration between The Noguchi Museum, Isamu Noguchi and Qi Baish: Beijing 1930 explores this pivotal but lesser-documented moment of Noguchi's career, which resulted in some 100 ink scroll paintings. This exhibition marks the first pairing of Noguchi's scrolls with those by Qi Baishi, which have been selected from the same period, alongside the seal that Qi made for his young pupil. Prior to meeting Qi Baishi, Noguchi's sculptural work effectively jumped between figuration and abstraction. This exhibition suggests the lasting significance of his study of traditional ink brush technique with Qi Baishi was less a point of departure than a stimulus for his reconciliation of the two in his later outlook on sculpture.
Closing January 26, 2014
The Noguchi Museum
9-01 33rd Road
Long Island City, NY 11106
www.noguchi.org


Image Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The first major exhibition of Chinese contemporary art ever mounted by the Metropolitan, Ink Art explores how contemporary works from a non-Western culture may be displayed in an encyclopedic art museum. Presented in the Museum's permanent galleries for Chinese art, the exhibition features artworks that may best be understood as part of the continuum of China's traditional culture. These works may also be appreciated from the perspective of global art, but by examining them through the lens of Chinese historical artistic paradigms, layers of meaning and cultural significance that might otherwise go unnoticed are revealed. Ultimately, both points of view contribute to a more enriched understanding of these artists' creative processes.
Featuring some seventy works by thirty-five artists in various media—paintings, calligraphy, photographs, woodblock prints, video, and sculpture—created during the past three decades, the exhibition is organized thematically into four parts: The Written Word, New Landscapes, Abstraction, and Beyond the Brush. Although all of the artists have challenged, subverted, or otherwise transformed their sources through new modes of expression, Ink Art seeks to demonstrate that China's ancient pattern of seeking cultural renewal through the reinterpretation of past models remains a viable creative path.
Closing April 6, 2014
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10028
www.metmuseum.org


Jindrich PolĂĄk, Ikarie XB-1 [Voyage to the End of the Universe], 1963 (still). Courtesy the National Film Archive, Prague
 
“Report on the Construction of a Spaceship Module" at the New Museum
For their presentation “Report on the Construction of a Spaceship Module,” tranzit will transform the Fifth Floor gallery of the New Museum into the simulated interior of a spaceship.
The vessel is inspired by the spacecraft in the iconic Czech science-fiction film Ikarie XB-1 (1963), which melded postwar utopianism with Soviet utilitarianism. In its structure and design, it recalls future fantasies from the socialist Eastern European side of the Iron Curtain and explores the ideological role that outer space played during this time. On view in and around the spacecraft will be 117 artworks, including video, sculpture, print, and installation, by artists hailing primarily from cities around Eastern Europe, notably Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Bucharest, and Bratislava, all of whom tranzit has worked with previously.
“Report on the Construction of a Spaceship Module” offers an allegory of “anthropological science fiction,” where the exhibition space becomes an estranged and exciting universe that dramatizes the cross-cultural translation involved in the presentation of art. The unique model evokes the challenges that contemporary artists experience in exhibiting works, or that curators come across in organizing exhibitions that stitch together diverse artworks, selected across generation, cultural context, personal narratives, and time.
January 22 – April 13, 2014
The New Museum
235 Bowery
New York, NY 1002
www.newmuseum.org


Carrie Mae Weems, Untitled (Man and Mirror) from Kitchen Table Series, 1990. Gelatin silver print, 27 ¼ x 27 ¼ in. Collection of Eric and Liz Lefkofsky, 115-128.2010, promised gift to The Art Institute of Chicago © Carrie Mae Weems. Photography © The Art Institute of Chicago
Carrie Mae Weems: Three Decades of Photography and Video at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Carrie Mae Weems is a socially motivated artist whose works invite contemplation of race, gender, and class. Increasingly, she has broadened her view to include global struggles for equality and justice. Comprehensive in scope, this retrospective primarily features photographs, including the groundbreaking Kitchen Table Series (1990), but also presents written texts, audio recordings, and videos. The exhibition traces the evolution of Weems’s career over the last 30 years, from her early documentary and autobiographical photographic series to the more conceptual and philosophically complex works that have placed her at the forefront of contemporary art. Although Weems employs a variety of means to address an array of issues, all of her work displays an overarching commitment to better understanding the present by closely examining history and identity. It also contains a desire for universality: while African Americans are typically her primary subjects, Weems wants “people of color to stand for the human multitudes” and for her art to resonate with all audiences.
January 24 – May 14, 2014
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10128
www.guggenheim.org


Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry, The Little Prince.
New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1943
The Morgan Library & Museum, New York
Photography by Graham S. Haber, 2013
The Little Prince: A New York Story at The Morgan Library & Museum
Since its publication seventy years ago, Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry's The Little Prince has captivated millions of readers throughout the world. It may come as a surprise that this French tale of an interstellar traveler who comes to Earth in search of friendship and understanding was written and first published in New York City, during the two years the author spent here at the height of the Second World War.
Focusing on the story's American origins, this exhibition features twenty-five of the manuscript pages—replete with crossed-out words, cigarette burns, and coffee stains—and all forty-three of the earliest versions of drawings for the book. Also on view are rare printed editions from the Morgan's collection as well as personal letters, photographs, and artifacts.
The Little Prince: A New York Story is the first exhibition to explore in depth the creative decisions Saint-ExupĂ©ry made as he crafted his beloved story that reminds us that what matters most can only be seen with the heart.
January 24 – April 27, 2014
The Morgan Library & Museum
225 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
www.themorgan.org


Sarah Michelson (b. 1964), Devotion Study #1—The American Dancer, February 2012, at Whitney Biennial 2012. Photograph © Paula Court
Sarah Michelson: 4 at the Whitney Museum of American Art
Choreographer Sarah Michelson premieres a new work on the Museum’s fourth floor, where she previously presented Devotion Study #1—The American Dancer, her Bucksbaum Award–winning piece from the 2012 Whitney Biennial. For this piece, the culmination of her Devotion series, Michelson continues to explore the dialogue between the form and history of dance through intense physicality, rigorous formal structures, and precise staging. The new work, 4, will be presented in an eight-performance engagement.
This exhibition is organized by Jay Sanders, Curator and Curator of Performance.
January 24 – February 2, 2014
Whitney Museum of American Art
945 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10021
http://whitney.org


Image: Ferran AdriĂ , Plating Diagram. Ink on paper, 11x17 inches, Courtesy of elBullifoundation.
Ferran AdriĂ : Notes on Creativity + Deborah Grant: Christ You Know it Ain't Easy!! at The Drawing Center
In the Main Gallery and The Lab, Ferran AdriĂ : Notes on Creativity is the first major museum exhibition to focus on the visualization and drawing practices of master chef Ferran AdriĂ . Notes on Creativity will emphasize the role of drawing in AdriĂ ’s quest to understand creativity. His complex body of work positions the medium as both a philosophical tool—used to organize and convey knowledge, meaning, and signification-—as well as a physical object—used to synthesize over twenty years of innovation in the kitchen.
Presented in the Drawing Room, Deborah Grant: Christ You Know it Ain't Easy!! is an installation that will combine painting, drawing, and collage to recount the fictional meeting between African-American folk artist Mary A. Bell and renowned modernist painter Henri Matisse. For Christ You Know it Ain't Easy!!, which takes its title from the Lennon/McCartney song “The Ballad of John and Yoko,” Grant spent over two years researching primary documents including Mary Bell’s drawing and letters.
January 25 – February 28, 2014
The Drawing Center
35 Wooster Street
New York, NY, 10013
www.drawingcenter.org


Matthew Brandt, Grays Lake, ID 7, 2013. © Matthew Brandt, courtesy Yossi Milo Gallery, New York.
What Is a Photograph? at the International Center of Photography
Organized by ICP Curator Carol Squiers, What Is a Photograph? will explore the intense creative experimentation in photography that has occurred since the 1970s. Conceptual art introduced photography into contemporary art making, using the medium in ways that challenged it artistically, intellectually, and technically and broadened the notion of what a photograph could be in art. A new generation of artists began an equally rigorous but more aesthetically adventurous analysis, which probed photography itself—from the role of light, color, composition, to materiality and the subject. What Is a Photograph? brings together these artists, who reinvented photography.
January 31– May 4, 2014
International Center of Photography
1133 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036
www.icp.org


EVENTS


Theaster Gates, Performance of See, Sit, Sup, Sing: Holding Court, 2012. Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, December 1, 2012. Photo: Max Fields.
Performance: Theaster Gates: See, Sit, Sup, Sip, Sing: Holding Court at The Studio Museum in Harlem
Theaster Gates’s See, Sit, Sup, Sip, Sing: Holding Court (2012) was created from tables, chairs and desks salvaged from a now-closed public school on Chicago’s South Side. Gates joins us in the Museum atrium for a special activation of the work by the artist. Designed as an experience for learning created by the people assembled in and around it, the installation will be a site for engaged conversation and dynamic interaction.
Thursday, January 16, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Holding Court is sold out. But you can follow the discussion on@studiomuseum’s social media and contribute to the conversation using #holdingcourt
The Studio Museum in Harlem
144 West 125th Street
New York, NY 10027
www.studiomuseum.org


Jared Bark (b. 1944), LIGHTS: on/off, performance at The Clocktower, June 21, 1974. Photograph by Babette Mangolte; © 1974. All reproduction rights reserved
FURTHER RITUALS OF RENTED ISLAND at Anthology Film Archives
Currently on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art through February 2, RITUALS OF RENTED ISLAND: OBJECT THEATER, LOFT PERFORMANCE, AND THE NEW PSYCHODRAMA - MANHATTAN 1970-1980 is an absorbing exhibition focused on a number of prime performance artists who populated Lower Manhattan in the 1970s. Their shows were staged in lofts, storefronts, artist spaces, music clubs, and venues like The Kitchen and Anthology in our early SoHo days. This linked screening series includes videos, films, and documentation from artists of the era and features many pieces not on view in the exhibit.
In addition to the artists and works in these 13 shows, selections of recently preserved short films by performance artist Stuart Sherman will be screened at the beginning of various programs.
VITO ACCONCI
Thursday, January 16, 7:30 pm
ERICKA BECKMAN / THEODORA SKIPITARES - SKIPITARES IN PERSON!
Friday, January 17, 7:30 pm
RALSTON FARINA
Friday, January 17, 9:30 pm
JILL KROESEN
Saturday, January 18, 3:30 pm
JULIA HEYWARD - ARTIST IN PERSON!
Saturday, January 18, 6:30 pm
MICHAEL SMITH - ARTIST IN PERSON!
Saturday, January 18, 8:45 pm
ROBERT WILSON
Sunday, January 19, 4:00 pm
RICHARD FOREMAN
Sunday, January 19, 6:00 pm
YVONNE RAINER
Sunday, January 19, 8:45 pm
BABETTE MANGOLTE
Monday, January 20, 7:15 pm
CHANTAL AKERMAN
Monday, January 20, 9:15 pm
JAMES NARES
Tuesday, January 21, 7:00 pm
JACK SMITH
Tuesday, January 21, 9:00 pm
Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Avenue
New York, NY 10003
http://anthologyfilmarchives.org


The New-York Historical Society, 77th Street Entrance. Credit: New-York Historical Society /Jon Wallen
Lecture: The Village: 400 Years of Beats and Bohemians, Radicals and Rogues at The New-York Historical Society
From Thomas Paine to Walt Whitman to Allen Ginsberg, Greenwich Village has attracted many of the passionate radicals and misfits who have helped shape our culture for more than four centuries. Author John Strausbaugh explores the colorful, rowdy, and at times tragic story of this enduring bohemian enclave.

John Strausbaugh is the author of The Village: 400 Years of Beats and Bohemians, Radicals and Rogues and a former writer and editor for New York Press. He wrote and hosted The New York Times's “Weekend Explorer” series of articles and videos on New York City history.
Tuesday, January 21, 6:30 pm
The New-York Historical Society
170 Central Park West
New York, NY 10024
www.nyhistory.org


Zanele Muholi. Sunday Francis Mdlankomo, Vosloorus, Johannesburg, 2011. Silver gelatin print, Image: 301⁄8 x 197⁄8 in. (76.5 x 50.5 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Robert A. Levinson Fund, 2012.72.1. © Zanele Muholi
Scholar Talk: "Three Aspects of South African Feminism" at the Brooklyn Museum
Feminist practice and scholarship have been a solid presence in South African contemporary art over the past thirty years. Pamela Allara, Associate Professor Emerita at Brandeis University, discusses three artists—Penny Siopis, Berni Searle, and Zanele Muholi—each born about a decade apart and whose work represents the wide range of feminist issues within South Africa.
Sunday, January 26, 2:00 pm
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, NY 11238-6052
www.brooklynmuseum.org


The International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Cartagena de Indias
The First International Contemporary Art Biennial, Cartagena de Indias, Colombia's opening weekend for Friends will take place February 7th through the 9th. Artists from 45 countries will be represented and it will include 50 works created for the Biennial. Berta Sichel is the Artistic Director. A section on Colombian art will feature the most up and coming as well as cutting edge artists in the country. A gala to benefit the Museum of Modern Art in Cartagena as well as art scholarship for Cartagena students will take place on Saturday February 8th. For more information contact info@biaci.org
February 7– April 7, 2014
Cartagena de Indias, Colombia
www.biaci.org
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FINAL DAYS! CLOSING THIS SAT. ANDRE KERTESZ & THEODORE FRIED: Converging Journeys in the Modernist Age


Madelyn Jordon Fine Art Logo
 
FINAL DAYS! CLOSING THIS SAT.
 
 ANDRE KERTESZ & THEODORE FRIED:
Converging Journeys  
in the Modernist Age
Don't Miss!

Andre Kertesz, Chagall Family Picnic, 1933, gelatin silver print, 7 1/4 x 10 inches, signed on recto, "A. Kertesz"

Theodore Fried, Orchestra Singers, c. 1968, 
oil on canvas, 29 x 23 inches
Save the Date
 
 Stanford Kay: Collected Works
Opening Reception: Fri., Jan. 31: 6-8  

Stanford Kay, Collector #3, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 48 inches
Gallery Statement

Founded in 1994, Madelyn Jordon Fine Art specializes in 20th century and contemporary art in all media. The gallery, located in Scarsdale, NY, in lower Westchester County, seeks to be a source for collectors (both experienced and new to the field) for quality works of art and unparalleled customer service. The gallery showcases the work of nationally prominent artists as well as those emerging. An eclectic sensibility is seen in the presentation of exhibitions in a wide variety of media, including painting, sculpture and printmaking.
  
 
Madelyn Jordon Fine Art
37 Popham Road
Scarsdale, NY 10583
914-723-8738 P
914-723-2592 F

Gallery Hours: Tuesday through Saturday, 10:30AM to 5:30PM
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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Walter Wickiser Gallery would like to invite you to join us at LA Art Show 2014!


Walter Wickiser Gallery would like to invite you to join us at LA Art Show 2014!
LAArtShow.Logo.jpg
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Time
Thursday, January 16th | 11am - 7pm
Friday, January 17th | 11am – 7pm
Saturday, January 18th | 11am – 7pm
Sunday, January 19th | 11am – 5pm

Place
Los Angeles Convention Center
(South Hall J and K, 1201 South Figueroa Street  Los Angeles, CA 90015)
Walter Wickiser Gallery's Booth Number: 1008
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Centurion Salon 108





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VIMEO LAUNCHES $500K PROGRAM SUPPORTING CROWDFUNDED FILMS





VIMEO LAUNCHES $500K PROGRAM 

SUPPORTING CROWDFUNDED FILMS


Crowdfunded filmmakers to receive free PRO accounts and access to newly created $500K Audience Development Fund for distribution on Vimeo On Demand

PARK CITY, UT, JANUARY 16, 2014 – Vimeo today announced it is deepening its commitment to the global direct film distribution movement by giving creators who have successfully raised $10,000 or more through crowdfunding platforms access to tools and funds to bring their projects to market on Vimeo.
To creators of distribution-ready films, Vimeo will grant free one-year PRO accounts and access to a  $500,000 Audience Development Fund to help select filmmakers market their projects. Vimeo’s curation team will review qualifying films on leading crowdfunding platforms, including Indiegogo, Kickstarter and Seed&Spark, and select projects to receive PRO accounts and an advance for marketing support. Vimeo will partner with these filmmakers to create campaigns on and off Vimeo.com to broaden film exposure and grow audiences in exchange for an exclusive digital premiere window for distribution on Vimeo On Demand.
“Vimeo is committed to empowering filmmakers with the world’s best platform for direct distribution,” said Vimeo General Manager of Audience Networks, Greg Clayman. “While crowdfunding has changed the game in getting films made, Vimeo is taking the next step supporting filmmakers to get their work seen and purchased on Vimeo and across the web.”
Vimeo On Demand is the quality direct distribution solution that enables all Vimeo PRO subscribers to sell work on their own terms. Through Vimeo, creators are able to choose their price, viewing format (stream or download), and geographical availability while retaining full ownership of their work. Earlier this month Vimeo added in-player transaction support, allowing creators to sell their work on their own sites or embedded across the web.
Filmmakers have access to Vimeo’s built-in audience of over 149 million monthly unique viewers across a wide range of connected devices, including desktop, phone, tablet, connected TV and game consoles, all in beautiful HD quality. For more information regarding Vimeo On Demand, please visit https://vimeo.com/ondemand.
Qualifying filmmakers interested in having their work considered for the Audience Development Fund can email crowdfunding@vimeo.com for more information.
About Vimeo
Vimeo® is the high-quality video platform for creators and their audiences. Vimeo’s mission is to empower and inspire people around the world to create, share and discover videos. Vimeo has over 22M registered members and reaches a global monthly audience of more than 149M. Founded in 2004 and based in New York City, Vimeo, LLC is an operating business of IAC (NASDAQ: IACI).


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Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Into the Void Anne Marchand, Judith Mullen, Tom Wilson, and Roy Wiemann January 9 - February 22

Into the Void
Anne Marchand, Judith Mullen, 
Tom Wilson, and Roy Wiemann
January 9 - February 22

Opening Reception: Thursday, January 9, 6:30 - 8:30 PM

Into the Void presents the works of four artists whose work takes the viewer into another realm. These four artists' works compliment and balance each other through color presentation and theory for a well rounded visceral effect that brings the viewer "into the void" of another world of calm yet energetic solemnity.
 
In Our Project Room:
New Photographs by Sarah Kaufman
January 9 - February 22
porter/contemporary
548 W. 28th Street, 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10001
212.696.7432
info@portercontemporary.com

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Into the Void Anne Marchand, Judith Mullen, Tom Wilson, and Roy Wiemann January 9 - February 22

Into the Void
Anne Marchand, Judith Mullen, 
Tom Wilson, and Roy Wiemann
January 9 - February 22

Opening Reception: Thursday, January 9, 6:30 - 8:30 PM

Into the Void presents the works of four artists whose work takes the viewer into another realm. These four artists' works compliment and balance each other through color presentation and theory for a well rounded visceral effect that brings the viewer "into the void" of another world of calm yet energetic solemnity.
 
In Our Project Room:
New Photographs by Sarah Kaufman
January 9 - February 22
porter/contemporary
548 W. 28th Street, 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10001
212.696.7432
info@portercontemporary.com

#fineartmagazine