Art Meets Rock
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RICHARD KERN, Nirvana, Courtney Love
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left: WILLIAM ENGLISH, Vivienne Westwood in Sex, 1975, courtesy of Maggs Brothers, London right: URS LΓTHI, Un'isola dell'aria, 1975, particolare, 28 fotografie, cm60x50 cad, Collezione Fabio e Virginia Gori
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IAIN FORSYTH & JANE POLLARD, A Rock'N'Roll Suicide, 1998, Live performance, Photo: David Cowlard courtesy Kate MacGarry, London
Museo Pecci di Prato in Florence, Italy presents an exhibition entiled LIVE! Art Meets Rock. The exhibition, curated by Luca Beatrice and Marco Bazzini, adopts a suggestive perspective to show how the history of contemporary art and of rock music have followed parallel paths to contribute to the construction of the cultural universe of the last forty years. Music and the visual arts have crossed and overlapped, over time, engendering a unified and consistent landscape; what draws them together is the performative dimension, articulated according to the specific occasion within an exhibition or a concert. LIVE!offers a parallel and original reading of historic events by exhibiting paintings, sculptures, installations, video clips, artworks, LPs, graphic works, photographs, magazines and films. Artists include Andy Warhol, Yoko Ono, William English, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Cindy Sherman, David LaChapelle and more. The exhibition will be accompanied by Live!, a book published by Rizzoli with contributions by Luca Beatrice and Marco Bazzini. LIVE! Art Meets Rock view at the Museo Pecci di Prato until September 16.
1000 Kisses


On view now at The MAMBO (museum of modern art in BogotΓ‘) β works by Colombian artist Ruven Afanador. The exhibition has been awaited for more than twenty years and features his greatest works. The exhibition, entitled βIβll be your mirror, Ruven Afanador: 80 Portraitsβ, features pictures from the artistβs books: Torero (2001), Shadow (2004) and Thousand kisses (2009). In his last book, Thousand Kisses, the photographer drew his attention to various flamenco dancers. The artist is fascinated by staging the body, so he did not choose any old dance at random. Ruven Afanador was born in Columbia in the sixteenth century city fo Bucaramanga, La Ciudad de los Parques high in the scenic plateau above Rio de Oro. Afanador's photography is a celebration of the poetry of bodies motion. Exhibition is on view until October 9.
GIUSEPPE VENEZIANO sculpture in Venice, Italy
Photo by Adarsha Benjamin
Elite of the Obscure
Harry Gamboa, Jr, Cruel, 1975. Super-8 film. Showing Willie HerrΓ³n III
This September, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)Β presentsΒ Asco: Elite of the Obscure, A Retrospective, 1972β1987, the firstΒ retrospective to present the wide-ranging work of the Chicano performanceΒ and conceptual art group Asco.Β Geographically and culturally segregated from the still-nascent Los Angeles contemporary art scene and aesthetically at odds with the emergingΒ Chicano art movement, Asco members united to explore and exploit theΒ unlimited media of the conceptual. Creating art by any means necessary βΒ often using their bodies and guerilla tacticsβAsco merged activism andΒ performance and, in doing so, pushed the boundaries of what Chicano artΒ might encompass.Β Asco: Elite of the ObscureΒ includes nearly 150 artworks,Β featuring video, sculpture, painting, performance ephemera andΒ documentation, collage, correspondence art, photography (including theirΒ signature No Movies, or invented film stills), and a series of worksΒ commissioned on occasion of the exhibition.Β Asco: Elite of the ObscureΒ is on view at the Los Angeles Contemporary Museum of Art September 4 to December 4.
[ART] Pacific Standard Time
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Post-war Los Angeles was like a subtropical greenhouse where art flourished β a movement emerged that would define the second half of twentieth century contemporary art in America β artists like Ed Ruscha and John Baldessari, and major events like Warhol's first exhibition, and Marcel Duchamp's first retrospective. But most of what we know about this time is only the very tip of the iceberg and the Getty Research Institute has been tirelessly diligent: "Through archival acquisitions, oral history interviews, public programming, exhibitions, and publications, the Research Institute is responding to the need to locate, collect, document, and preserve the art historical record of this vibrant period." And as a result of these efforts one of the more monumental series of art exhibitions, collectively entitled Pacific Standard Time, will be on view this fall and winter at 60 venues across Southern California, including the Getty, the Hammer and LACMA. The above photograph, by Julian Wasser, is of a nineteen year old Eve Babitz β considered a muse or a midwife to the Los Angeles art movement β nude and playing chess with Marcel Duchamp at his retrospective. She won.
Rebel on Certosa Island
As part of the Venice Biennale in Italy, James Franco's siteβspecific film installation,Β entitledΒ Rebel, will open on the island of Certosa. Β Rebel is a collaboration with artists Douglas Gordon, Harmony Korine, Paul McCarthy, Ed Ruscha, Aaron Young that "unites the myth-making allure of cinema and contemporary art, and acts as interrogative ode to Hollywood iconography." Rebel will be on view on Certosa Island from September 4 to November 27.Β Photo by Adarsha Benjamin
Appropriated Imagery: Richard Prince + Jackson Pollock
Guild Hall of East Hampton presents Richard Prince βCovering Pollockβ featuring 27 new works that are focused on Jackson Pollock, a leader of the Abstract Expressionist group. Richard Prince uses appropriation to distill and disrupt Americaβs compulsive fascination with iconic brands, fame, and lifestyle. This is the first public viewing of βCovering Pollockβ and the first museum exhibition of Richard Princeβs work on Long Island. On view until October 17.Β
[EXHIBITION] Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera
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The two most famous artists to have come from Mexico, the lives of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera have attained a mythological status. A major touring exhibition, which comes first to Chichester from Istanbul and Dublin, brings together works by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera for the first time ever in the UK. On view now until October 9 at the Pallant House Gallery in Chichester, U.K.
Pornography and Motherhood
Madison Young isn't your average pornstar β she's an artist, a feminist, and a sexual educator. Young, born Tina Butcher, caused uproar when she exhibited a show, entitled Becoming Milf, at her gallery Femina Potens Art Gallery, that explored her own new found motherhood, as well as the societal myths and stereotypes of motherhood. Β The above photograph caused such a controversy that some accused Young of pedophilia. "Iβm brand new to motherhood.Β My little girl is only eight weeks old right now.Β Iβm sure that sharing my life with my daughter will inspire, influence and affect my work in different ways as she gets older.Β Right now, as the mother of a newborn, one of my greatest challenges is time.Β Iβve always tried to balance more than is humanly possible in a day but now I have a tiny little being who needs and demands my attention 24/7.Β Iβve had to really prioritize what areas of my life I need to be giving my energy to right now.Β Iβll be working mostly local for at least Emmaβs first year, and if I decide to take out of state or country gigs next year then it will be a family affair.Β I take Emma along with me whenever I can, such as to university speaking engagements and to the art gallery, and Daddy watches Emma during the more adult-oriented work experiences."
Reflections within a Jeff Koons Sculpture
Venice, Italy. Photography by Adarsha Benjamin
[Excerpt] An Interview with Bruce LaBruce
Bruce LaBruce is a filmmaker, an artist, and a pornographer, and underneath the blood soaked sheets and layers of half rotting flesh of the undead he is one of the greatest auteurs and romantics of the last few decades. I was able to ask Bruce a few questions and we talked about important topics such as his childhood in rural Canada, the alternative gay movement, sex in art, and a few of his current and upcoming projects, including his film L.A. Zombie Hardcore, a documentary on the artist himself entitled The Advocate for FagdomΒ by French filmmakerΒ Angelique Bosio, and a short film involving two female to male transexuals which will premier at the Berlin Porn Festival this October.
You wrote a memoir called the reluctant pornographer β what does pornography mean to you? Well, lately I've been saying, which has sort of gotten me in trouble, because lately I've been calling myself a pornographer and saying I express solidarity with pornographers β that all pornography is art, really, because its a form of creative expression, its the mediation of reality, its made by people who use the tools of cinema, or making art, so why shouldn't it be considered art as well? There's good art and there's bad art and there's good pornography and there's bad pornography, but its all sort of an artistic expression as far as I'm concerned.
How important is sexuality in art or expressing sexuality through art? For me personally, sex has always been an engine behind my work, both in terms of representing and in terms of making it, on a personal level, but I think the sexual and the creative drives are very much linked, but on the other hand I know people who are relatively, or fairly, or completely a-sexual who have very strong artistic drives, so I don't think that's necessarily the case for everyone. Certainly with the gay movement was always based on that kind of sexual engine as well, which for me is yet another reason why, for me, the assimilation movement, which tends to be more domesticated and kind of based on ideals of monogamy borrowed from straight culture - it kind of dissipates the energy of the gay movement in my opinion. Yeah, sex is so ubiquitous in pop culture and advertising that its kind of hard to ignore it as an artist.
Do you think its more ubiquitous now than it has been? Well, I think that whats been happening in the last ten to fifteen years is that violence supplanted sex as the main driving force of popular fetish and popular advertising and certainly the media news sells violence and death in a very titillating kind of sexualized way - which is kind of creepy.
Full article and interview coming soon.....
Text by Oliver Maxwell Kupper for Pas Un Autre
GLEE Curated by Cecilia Alemani
Blum and Poe gallery in Los Angeles presents Glee, a group exhibition curated by Cecilia Alemani featuring Michele Abeles, Shannon Ebner, Sharon Hayes, Tobias Madison, Kaspar MΓΌller, Virginia Overton, Joan Semmel, Andra Ursuta, Jakub Julian Ziolkowski.Β The exhibition Glee brings together artworks by nine artists from different generations, working in both America and Europe. Glee is an exhibition informed by a synthetic look; a show in which works appear coated in a shiny patina charged with a startling artificiality. Imbued in an atmosphere of joyful madness, the exhibition is agitated by a strange, at times erotic, tension. Simultaneously affected and sincere, superficial and deep, pop and rotten, the selected works share a blissful and seductive presence that can hide an incumbent sense of tragedy.Β Glee will be on view until August 27 at Blum and Poe.
Carlo Mollino: Un Messaggio dalla Camera Oscura
Born into a Turin architect and civil engineerβs family, Carlo Mollino studied art history and architecture and made a name for himself as a skier, racecar driver and aerobatic pilot, as an author and photo artist. Yet his international renown is primarily based on his work as a designer of furniture and exclusive interiors in the spirit of the gesamtkunstwerk β the German philosophy of total art. His organic language of forms was not least inspired by the form of the female body β as particularly evidenced by the part of his photographic work he always kept private: over 1,000 Polaroids portraying beauties of Turinβs night life in the nude in mise-en-scΓ¨ne settings. The pictures were part of the preparation of his βHouse for the warriorβs restβ (today: Casa Mollino), a villa in Turin on the Po River.Β An exhibition, opening at this month at the Kunsthalle Wien in Vienna,Β will juxtapose furnishings of the villa with a selection of these Polaroids for the first time. It explores the boundaries and bridges between this universal artistβs male erotic imagination and his intellectual and artistic attitude. On view at theΒ Kunsthalle Wien from August 31 to September 25.
Cris Cleen Works
Short documentary on tattoo artist Cris Cleen by Andreas Tagger from Brothers By Choice.
[LONDON] Power of Making
Left: Blond Lips, Charlie Le Mindu using Hairdreams. Image by Manu Valcarce - Right: Sandra Backlund knitted dress, Β© John Scarisbrick
The Victoria and Albert Museum in London and Crafts Council celebrate the role of making in our lives by presenting an eclectic selection of over 100 exquisitely crafted objects, ranging from a life-size crochet bear to a ceramic eye patch, a fine metal flute to dry stone walling. Power of MakingΒ is a cabinet of curiosities showing works by both amateurs and leading makers from around the world to present a snapshot of making in our time. On view SeptemberΒ 6 to January 2, 2012.
[FILM STILL] MY HUSTLER by Andy Warhol
Directed by Andy Warhol & Chuck Wein. With Paul America, Ed Hood, Joseph Campbell, Genevieve Charbon. In this early Warhol narrative, several men and women on Fire Island vie for the attention of a hustler. Featuring catty dialogue, a few long takes, and limited camera movement, the film appears artless at first but ultimately proves canny, casual, and affecting. Β On view tonight and Wednesday night the MoMA in New York Β as part of the Hot and Humid: Summer Films from the Archives series.Β
What Does Jesus Think of Lapdancing?
If you can believe it, she has read the bible a total of six times. Canadian born artist Charmaine Wheatley is as prolific as she exhibits her work, but lately its sex thats been on her mind. Her new series of erotic illustrations are a testament to her own path of discovery of sex outside the confines of her religious upbringing. Having been living in New York for a little over a decade, Charmaine Wheatley β with ample freedom and wells of creativity β has certainly found her artistic identity, but as for her sexual identity, its exploration is all there on the canvas, per se. Charmaine Wheatley's artwork is extremely multi-dimensional. Mediums integrate into mediums: from illustration, to performance art, to sculpture and back again. In her collaboration with DJ and sound artist Taketo Shimada, inspired by her namesake β her name comes from the widely recorded song and 1920s standard "Chaarmaine" β they are trying build and demonstrate the personality of CHARMAINE. And if this collaboration is an example, it is proof unto itself how multifaceted and adroit the sum of Charmaine Wheatley's artistic ambitions are. A description of this collaboration then makes total sense: "....a direct reference to fantasy, gift giving, sound art, contemporary feminist dialogue and pop culture while investigating issues of intimacy and sexual tension that dissolve any boundaries between sexual preference, cultural or class backgrounds, age or gender types." Pas Un Autre was lucky enough to ask Charmaine Wheatley a few pertinent questions, after the jump.
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