an attempt to compile all the things that I do into one news blog

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

East and West: Cultures and Ideas Collide in Heady Installation Show
For City Paper

SCHOOL 33'S TWO-PERSON show, guest-curated by Andrea Pollan of Washington's Curator's Office, presents the new work of two female installation artists, Baltimore's Liz Ensz and New York's Eun Woo Cho. Both artists work large scale with mixed-media, using intentionally limited palettes in these pieces. With much of the work created specifically for this show, it's a serendipitously appropriate pairing. Ensz and Cho separately tackle unique cultural tribulations, from a similarly intense, personal perspective. The two projects, focusing on questions of religious and cultural identity, fill the space both vertically and interactively, with an even split between the artists' respective Western and Eastern motifs.

Historical religious strife is a recurring theme in Ensz's work, and in her new pieces, "Does the Light of God Blind You or Lead the Way Home for You?" and "This End Is a Beginning, This Beginning Is an End," she revisits these concerns. Abandoning her typically vibrant palette, Ensz's enormous fabric pieces are a minimal, and conspicuously allegorical, black and white. Reusing previous patterns of religious symbols--the Star of David, crosses, and the Islamic star and crescent moon--interspersed with various artillery, Ensz uses a fabric reduction process called devoré to create murky, translucent tapestries of tense imagery. Hung from floor to ceiling like the walls of a sanctuary, the back-lit images glow with a false lull, mimicking their religious origins.

While the presentation is beautifully solemn, "Does the Light" lacks the subtlety of Ensz's colorful works, which are so awesomely dense and elaborate that their political overtones often come as a surprise. Here, you feel prompted by her color choices, and somewhat expect to look for the ominous. Ensz pairs this piece with a contrastingly hopeful, white fountain in front of a marble-like velvet wall. Using a floral design, Ensz invokes images of cyclical renewal--buds to wilting blooms and back to buds again. "This End Is a Beginning, This Beginning Is an End" is only the second time Ensz has used fiberglass in an installation. With astonishing craftsmanship, she has wielded the material into a flawless, three-dimensional Moorish fountain, with similarly decorative, translucent panels. Her clean, exact hand translates seamlessly from medium to medium. The functioning, labor-intensive fountain and velvet backdrop still invite a comparison to religious holy places--without any blatant, religious iconography--rather than a specific, religious affiliation. Ensz has admittedly allowed the current, political spectrum to influence her art and, with this piece, offers a cautiously optimistic view of the future.
Cho's installation primarily involves video and presents images extracted from a previous live performance, "Red Skirt Project." Television screens rest on wooden props from the initial performance, dressed with fake flowers and Cho' signature red ribbons. The videos show young women dressed provocatively in red, interacting with the props and repeating at variously distorted lengths the word "ma," the Korean (and universal) word for "mother," as they make their way through the set. Cho's piece is purposely feminine, with the specific, personal context of the artist's Korean heritage.
The video alternates between the original, white lighting, and a chaotic, red filter. The shots in natural lighting are close-cropped, and personal, following faces and bodies closely. The girls interact playfully, revealing and re-concealing their breasts and emphasizing their naked legs. The red scenes show wooden props suspended from ribbon, the chanting intensifies, and the girls struggle to climb to an unreachable, precarious summit. An assemblage of cryptic fragments and symbols add up to a perpetually ambiguous sentiment, and its power is in that ambiguity. With continually looping references to a collective struggle, shame, and a desire to remain connected to one's roots while exploring conflicting ideals, the video is never resolved. Cho explores the simultaneous omnipresence of the duality of existing in two cultures and the perspectives it forces on her. The piece celebrates the beauty of the female form while grappling with the cultural stigmas placed on it.
As an installation, the original performance is dissected and re-examined, edited and multiplied on five monitors, affording a glimpse into Cho's creative process. Exhibited between photographs from the same performance and abstract sketches, the work reads as the past, present, and future of the piece as it continues to go through its various, dynamic mutations. Cho is constantly exploring and reinterpreting "identity" through her art.
With both installations sharing visual and thematic similarities, the overall exhibition is visually powerful and dense in its subtext. Together, the two pieces echo one another's elaborate simplicity, a struggle to place themselves within the context of their roots and their art. Ornate decoration becomes chaotic paranoia, which in turn melts fluently into temporary resolutions, where their questions are picked up again.

Year in Art 2008
for CIty Paper


Baltimore's art community continued to grow in activity and quality in 2008, and it's increasing scope is the primary reason City Paper changed up its year-end top picks process a tad this year. So much is going on in visual art in Baltimore right now a good deal of it doesn't always get covered in local media, including CP, and in our current hobo economy mainstream media arts coverage, sadly, is often one of the first to feel the constriction of the belt. (Fact: The sports desks will always be better staffed than the arts.) So for this year's Top 10 list CP asked for top 10 lists from its visual arts writers--Martin L. Johnson, Bret McCabe, and Kate Noonan--and lists from local arts bloggers Cara Ober (Bmore Art) and Alex Ebstein (There Were Ten Tigers) in an effort to offer a more varied Top 10 list and, ideally, bring some CP reader attention to other arts coverage out there. Plus, as in any arts community, we're all in this small boat together. (See citypaper.com for individual top 10 lists.)

1 Franz West, To Build a House You Start With the Roof: Work 1972-2008, Baltimore Museum of Art

The BMA's Franz West retrospective doesn't win the prize because it is an edgy, ambitious, or challenging show. It doesn't even win because it brought international press (finally) to a Baltimore institution. To Build a House is the best show of the year because it embodies what the Baltimore art scene is all about: It is a ballsy, irreverent romp with everyday materials and a devil-may-care attitude. West may be an international super-artist from Austria, but his attitudes and sentiments are refreshed and renewed here in Baltimore. Hands-on, clunky, hilarious, and, even ugly, West's oeuvre of furniture, collage, installation, and sculpture compels and fascinates Baltimore viewers because it mirrors and embodies us. (Cara Ober)

2 Grimaldis @ 405, Area 405

"Area 405" sounds like it should be located in a remote spot of the New Mexico desert and, fittingly, the gallery is a wee bit off the beaten path for the average Artscape patron. But C. Grimaldis Gallery's satellite exhibition of large-scale sculpture held in Area 405's industrial space was more than worth the extra effort to find. Outside of Grimaldis' usual white-box format, the works revealed new and unexpected facets. Chul Hyun-Ahn's "Tunnel" was the show's real stand-out, eliciting both fear and wonderment with the use of mirrors and light to create the optical illusion of an infinite abyss. (Kate Noonan)

3 Agenda: Queering Popular Media, Current Gallery

Curator Jamillah James' Agenda is fun. Self-aware in its humor, and often heavy handed, the exhibition tackles issues surrounding the impact of homosexuality and fringe lifestyles on contemporary media. With a large dose of video and installation-based work by more than 30 artists--including top dogs such as Ryan Trecartin, K8 Hardy, and Dynasty Handbag--the exhibition is big, bold, and exciting. Over three hours of looping video footage is included throughout the exhibition, with a schedule of additional screenings, including Trecartin's critically acclaimed I Be Area and Jennie Livingston'sParis Is BurningAgenda boasts a symbiotic relationship with contemporary media, finding ways to react to, mock, and reclaim it in new and seriously ballsy ways. (Alex Ebstein)

4 Sondheim Prize Finalists, Baltimore Museum of Art

This year's list topper and current exhibition on view at the BMA might make you forget that there was, in fact, another soaring work of brightly colored sculpture displayed in the Thalimer and May Galleries. Maren Hassinger's pink and inviting womblike "Love" set the tone for the rest of the show, which also featured the works of Becky Alprin, Melissa Dickenson, Dawn Gavin, Molly Springfield, and prize winner Geoff Grace. Grace's mind-boggling installation piece, "it's the linger, not the long" adeptly blended the theoretical with the everyday and proved that conceptual art really can be approachable after all. (Kate Noonan)

5 Jeffrey Kent, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, Creative Alliance at the Patterson

The works of local painter Jeffrey Kent find mysterious, endearing ways to combine moods and ideas that don't always cohabitate so vibrantly and invitingly within in the same vocabulary, much less on the same canvas. Kent's sometimes comic-book inspired, frequently text-heavy images evoke moments of both the raw and the pristine, the muscular and the vulnerable, the life-changing and the mundane, and the unmistakable power his images exude come from such a controlled orchestration of such heavy and subdued moments. Kent's works derive power not from blunt juxtaposition, but from creating new moods, feelings, and from familiar human foibles. (Bret McCabe)

6 Habitat, Rosenberg Gallery at Goucher College

Recent Baltimore transplant Sebastian Martorana may have not come up with the idea of a "Homeland Security Blanket," but his execution of the concept gets the terror and terroir of the Bush years exactly right. Sculptured in white marble, the piece depicts a blanket, a stars and stripes-less American flag, shrouding the body of a young child. This work, which sits innocuously on the floor of the home-themed exhibit Habitat at Goucher College, may be the show's highlight, but the disparate pieces--from photographs of neglected houses being reclaimed by nature to hyper-real paintings of sleeping bags--collectively gather everything safe and scary about the place of home in everyday life. (Martin Johnson)

7 Cliff Evans Empyrean, the Library

Cliff Evan's five-channel video installation "Empyrean" gave Baltimore a taste of international quality: superbly crafted new media work in an equally lofty and pristine environment. Co-curated by erstwhile City Papercontributor Jason Hughes at the Library and Andrea Pollan of Curator's Office, "Empyrean" presented a loose narrative of appropriated and layered imagery so perfectly edited it was seamless. Relying on Renaissance painting esthetics, Evans' chaotic and beautiful piece utilized luscious texture, luminous skin, and quirky pop cultural references to examine global politics, television, fashion, and consumerism. Visually seductive, "Empyrean" is similar to and equally compelling as the Russian video sensation "Last Riot" by AES F, an outstanding work at the 2007 Venice Biennale. Luckily, we Baltimoreans only needed to travel to Federal Hill. (CO)

8 Cottage Industry, Contemporary Museum

In a year in which a Louis Vuitton store opened as part of the Brooklyn Museum of Art's Takashi Murakami exhibit, it's hard to remember when putting Van Gogh on a coaster was reason for outrage. But just when museums and megastores appear to be moving toward a merger--Warhols in Aisle 6, housewares in Gallery D--the Contemporary Museum's celebration of small-scale art entrepreneurs, aptly titled Cottage Industry, reminded us that art and commerce can exist in peace. In what has been a trend this year at the Contemporary, the best pieces were outside the museum's walls, particularly Fritz Haeg's "Edible Estates" lawn garden in Northwest Baltimore and Lisa Anne Auerbach's storefront satire "The Tract House." (MLJ)

9 Ethnography of No Place, Rosenberg Gallery at Goucher College

Curator Laura Amussen's Ethnography of No Place dealt with psychological landscapes and imagined places. Rosenberg Gallery, a difficult space to unify, was transformed with each artist's vision of "no place," and the seven participating artists worked within the theme in a variety of dynamic ways, creating imagined spaces out of everything from mylar to maps to doll house furniture. Viewers followed the lazy waves of Kazue Taguchi's installation to the neon peaks of Aili Schmeltz's string mountains, stopping in all the invented architecture along the way. The lack of human presence within the work, much of which employed or referenced familiar materials, offered an isolating view into a beautiful but desolate set of spaces. (AE)

10 Sonya Clark, Loose Strands, Tight Knots, Walters Art Museum

As symbol and substance, human hair, whether on one's head or stored in objects, connotes both strength and weakness, virility and love. Sonya Clark--who makes historically informed, delicate objects from her own hair--made use of the Walters' collection to establish a history of art through accumulations of human hair. From wreaths of dreadlocked human hair to a print-out simulation of hair growth over the course of 100 years, Loose Strands reminds us of the symbolic power of our bodily excesses over the course of centuries, and accents our own intimate connection with our own hair and the hair of loved ones. (MLJ)

Stories From the Woods at Current Gallery


Stories From The Woods
October 3 - 31, 2008
Current Gallery
Curated by Alex Ebstein

Exhibiting Artists:
John Bohl
Bonner Sale
Emily Nachison
Christine Tillman
Annie Grey Robrecht
& Emily Slaughter

Stories From The Woods investigates a fascination with the natural world. The showcased artists explore a contemporary reinterpretation of nature, while simultaneously drawing from past folklore and classic painting. Through stylized, representational, sculpture, narrative paintings, and whimsical installation pieces by a group of invited, regional artists, Stories from the Woods seeks to transform the space into a platform for these fantastical narratives.






2008

THIS IS AN ARCHIVE


FEBRUARY 2007
Superficial Prima Donnas
Alex Ebstein & Andrew Z. WIlliams