Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Ai Weiwei : Photography

Excited to attend Fred Ritchin & Brian Palmer's talk Thursday night at the SVA Theater, posted here earlier.

With anticipation, have returned to Ai Weiwei's thoughts on photography below:

(originally posted on his blog on January 16, 2006, written July 25, 2003)

The practice of photography is no longer the means for recording reality. Instead, it has become reality itself. Photography as a medium is also endowed with all the fundamental implications of a material object, such as scale, density, and focal points. It also acts as a gauge for all potential realities, having evolved into a marvelous relationship between our understanding of material images and photography as a material object itself. Images become an important reference point for distinguishing between the authenticity and potentiality of objects, and within the distinction they once again become truth itself.

Photography as reality provides the act of photography with another layer of significance. This is similar to the seemingly truthful- but actually false- state of various kinds of "knowledge." No matter whether or not we are convinced of the information that is presented to us, every bit of it is useless in allaying our doubts about the likelihood of the photograph. Analyzing light, density, and amounts causes logic and emotion to become dissociated amid a dependence on facts and feelings of unfamiliarity.

Once photography has broken away from its original function as technique or means for documentation, it is merely a fleeting state of existence that has been transformed into one possible reality. It is this transformation that makes photography a kind of movement and gives it its distinctive significance: it is merely one type of existence. Life is merely an undisputable fact, and the production of an alternative reality is another kind of truth that shares no genuine relationship to reality. Both are waiting for something miraculous to occur- the reexamination of reality. As an intermediary, photography is a medium endlessly pushing life and perceived actions towards this unfamiliar conflict.

In Tandem : Allora & Calzadilla

Clamor, 2006
© Allora & Clazadilla

This is an excerpt from an interview with Hans-Ulrich Obrist from Paris in December 2003.

Allora :
We just talked and talked and talked. We had infinite conversations for a long period of time. We were both seeing things together and reacting together and sharing all of our time together, so it just happened that we started to develop ideas and works together.

Calzadilla :
The fact that there is always another person with you, who sees things from a point of view that is not your own, means that there is always this questioning; and it is through this process of questioning that we developed our collaborative practice. I believe that generative self-questioning that is produced by a work is a very important dimension in art: the potential of a work of art to provoke the public into a space of individual questioning about a particular subject, about preconceived notions of truth, about the way one sees the world and the way one lives in it, about one's relationship to history, about one's relationship to other people and so on.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Art Fair Madness

29FEB-20APR

7MAR-11MAR

Scope New York
7MAR-11MAR

8MAR-11MAR

8MAR-11MAR

29MAR-1APR

3MAY-6MAY

4MAY-7MAY

"I'd never go to an art fair, it would be like watching your parents make love."
- John Baldessari

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Brian Palmer & Fred Ritchin : It's Not the Technology!

Documentary, journalism, and forms of fine art that fall under the broad category of "nonfiction visual storytelling" have been upended by the digital revolution. Our audiences have fragmented, and, in some cases, our livelihoods decimated. Many of us, by choice and necessity, have adopted new modes of capture, image processing, and dissemination. Many more of us work feverishly to create new business models to keep our careers afloat.

But the current crisis in our fields is less about the digital than it is about certain enduring and fundamental questions. What is the purpose of our work? Who are we in relation to the people, places, and events we examine and explore? Put another way, whom, if anybody, do we serve with our work? Technology complicates and obscures these matters, but it does not erase them.

In this session we hope to contribute to the global effort of tracing potential paths out of the current chaotic media environment toward substantive, ethical, and sustainable framework and practices that harness the digital without fetishizing technology. (via)

Thursday, March 1st, 7pm
SVA Theatre
333 W. 23rd St.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Wknd Crawl Highlights

Jon Kessler @ Salon94

Michael Zelehosky @ Dodge

Alec Soth @ Sean Kelly

Mary Corse @ Lehmann Maupin

Will Ryman @ Paul Kasmin

Bill Jensen @ Cheim & Reid

Portraits/Self-Portraits from the 16th to 21st Century @ Sperone Westwater

Vivian Maier : Through the Nanny's Eyes



all images Vivian Maier

The NYTimes Magazine published a selection of images from Vivian Maier's undeveloped film. Take a look here.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

The Virgins Show @ Family Business


The Virgins Show curated by Marilyn Minter
Family Business
opening tonight 16FEB
520 w 21st St

Virgins include Andrew Brischler, David Mramor, Rebecca Ward, Hennessy Youngman, with born-again virgins such as Mika Rottenberg, Laurel Nakadate and Wangechi Mutu.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Mitch Epstein

A tree grows allover NYC, not just in Brooklyn for Mitch Epstein's newest work that will be on view soon at Sikkema Jenkins. We admired the photographs in the wknd's NYTimes Magazine : How To See A Tree and can't wait see them in person.



all images © Mitch Epstein

Mitch Epstein
Sikkema Jenkins
16MAR-14APR

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Doug Wheeler @ David Zwirner


(via)

Doug Wheeler
thru 25FEB

Great article in NYTimes here.

Unbelievable! Cannot begin to explain the sensations of elation, content, disbelief, confusion, and stunning disorientation that this show radiates, no pun intended. It's a must see, even with the long lines and wait time. And please, do stay in there as long as you can to experience the shift of time and light - I wanted to live in that space. It may possibly be this year's "The Clock" exhibit, ironically also around the same time last year.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Will the Real Cindy Sherman Please Stand Up

"Untitled Film Still", 1977

"Untitled Film Still", 1978

"Untitled", 1981

"Untitled", 1983

"Untitled", 1985

"Untitled", 2008
(all images via FT)

Great interview and article on her here.

Cindy Sherman
26FEB - 11JUN