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ART NOW Links to Visual Art Sections: » Comix & Political Cartoons » Flags & Quilts » International Artwork of Protest » Magazines » Murals » Painting & Collages » Participation Art Work » Photography » Poster Art » Sculpture & Installations » Web Sites The Pierro Gallery of South Orange, New Jersey presents, HEADLINES, an exhibition where artists have utilized news headlines in creating their artwork. The work of the seventeen participating artists "questions the source, delivery, interpretation and public reception of headlines." Various world events inspired much of the artwork. Also, many artists utilized the internet when making their artwork. Mary Birminigham served as curator for the exhibition and it will be held at the Pierro Gallery of South Orange from May 7 through July 16, 2006. Included in HEADLINES is Carlo Vialu's series, We Will Be Greeted with Flowers which uses flowers to represent weapons and other images of war. Included in the series is an outdoor installation of flowers that form the shape of an AK-47 and a jigsaw puzzle also in the shape of a weapon of war. The use of the flowers and the images of war serves as a juxtaposition of "material associated with pleasure and materials associated with war."
Also included in HEADLINES is Henry Sanchez's Joan and John work side by side. Sanchez uses images from political ads, campaign posters and newspapers to create digital prints. He disguises the figures' faces by covering them with glitter. In Joan and John work side by side, Sanchez presents a group of spectators surrounding the the two politicians covered in glittered. Sanchez use of glitter emphasizes the mysteriousness and glamour surrounding politicians.
October 2 - November 21, 2004 Exit Art presents The Presidency, an exhibition for which artists were asked to "put into a visual feeling their concept of the presidency." Concept: Papo Colo. Curators: Papo Colo and Jeanette Ingberman. www.exitart.org ![]() Timothy
Blum's "Champertous Connivance," a crumbling plaster
bust of Washington, and Arbuzo Virtmanis's "Remote
#1 Emperor's Bedroom," a cardboard replica of
the President's bedroom on Air Force One, are
on display at Exit Art until Nov. 21, 2004.
Among the works on display are: Jonathan Allen's series of 42 digital prints entitled "Portraits of Corruption." Replicas of presidential portraits from George Washington on are lined one after another in slim black frames, each distorted according to a 1-10 corruption level. George W. Bush, a 10, is an undistinguishable swirl, except for a visible U.S. flag pin in the lower right corner of the print. In Allen's series, no image is left undistorted. Other
mixed media pieces include Francis Michael Palazzolo's
overtly denunciatory "White-Shit-House #17 and White
Shit House," a simple image of the white house rendered
with brown feces, and Arbuzo Virtmanis's more subtle
"Remote #1 Emperor's Bedroom," a life-size replica of
the President's bedroom on Air Force One made from corrugated
cardboard. Rutherford Chang's video project "Dead Air" reduces President Bush's 2003 State of Union address to pauses and gasps of air. In absence of the actual speech, Bush's slight breaths and quirky mannerisms are comical; followed by the thunderous applause and standing ovations they take on an eerie tone. In a statement the artist wrote that the piece comments on the "meaningless and absurd political theater centered on the role of the presidency." In another video project, Bonita Makuch's "Oh Beautiful," explicit excerpts from the Starr Report, voiced by two porn stars, loop over images of a U.S. flag fluttering in a clear blue sky. (based on Sandre Ogle's article in Recount, A Magazine of Contemporary Politics)
October 21 - November 6, 2004 the White Box, 525 West 26th Street, New York, presents Democracy is Fun?, an exhibition that explores how the cross-pollination of media, technology and culture impacts artistic production and the social mechanism of art in politically tense times. Inspired to propose a new possibility for curatorial process in the upsurge in election-related exhibitions and adhering to the spirit of democracy, Democracy is Fun? is organized to provide a physical and virtual platform to demonstrate, document and archive curatorial and artist-led actions with a proficiency of technological production tools. Democracy is Fun? brings together, through a collective production-survey, a group of actions with the purpose to unite various perspectives on American politics. Through the interruption of singular actions, Democracy is Fun? exposes the distinctive concerns of these cultural producers as a whole, while accentuating a stance of democracy which can hold many perspectives. Artists: Anne-Marie Schleiner / Bjørn Melhus / Hug & Magnan / Jonah Bruckner-Cohen/ Kendell Geers/ Larry Litt/ Michael Anderson / Pursue the Pulse/ Randall Packer / Ricardo Miranda Zuñiga / Serkan Ozkaya / Assume Vivid Astro Focus / Sislej Xhafa. Actions: Bikes Against Bush/ Blame Show/ Bush League / CoDECK / Contagious Media/ Experimental Party / Freedom Salon / K48 / Majority Whip / Screensavers Group/ Six Feet Under: Make Nice / Imagine Festival. OPENING RECEPTION: Thursday, October 21, 6-8pm With "Speech for the End of the World", Randall M. Packer, Secretary, US Department of Art & Technology ELECTION NIGHT EVENT: Tuesday, November 2 a night to unite for the democratic practice, featuring screenings, and performances by Larry Litt and Screensavers Group. For more information, click here.
Welcome
To New York: An RNC Scrapbook
Includes photographs by Bella Frank (Sweden) Santo Barbieri (Canada) Michael Mulley (Buffalo) Antrim Caskey, Amelia Holowaty-Krales, Diane Green-Lent (NYC) and Video from Peter Sanders (NYC) For more information, click here.
The Freedom Salon, curated by Apsara DiQuinzio and Tina Kukielski, brings together politically-minded and socially progressive work by contemporary artists working in a variety of media. Exploring the themes of the Imagine Festival: Democracy, Freedom, Prosperity, Community, Justice, and Future, the work in this exhibition activates critical dialogue on global and local levels during this significant cultural moment. The Salon offers a lively range of provocative works such as Enrique Chagoya's Poor George drawings, Taryn Simon's photograph of a judicially convicted innocent, and Dread Scott's altered NY Times contrasting the boom of war with a booming stock market. With savvy handouts from Yoko Ono, Harrell Fletcher, Paul Chan, and prankster/activists the Yes Men.
The Schroeder Romero "Watch What We Say" is an exhibition of new and recent visual works in a variety of media presenting a mix of emergin and established artists "who address pressing political isssues of the moment in poetic, subversive, emotional and clear-eyed terms." To learn more and review these skillful thought-provoking works go to http://newsgrist.typepad.com/photos/watch_what_we_say/ .
Death to the Fascist Insect that Preys on the Life of the People is an examination of the current state of world affairs. Curated by Peter Corrie, and TAG Projects, an arts group residing in a vacant space in DUMBO's 70 Washington Street building, the works range from playful teasing of our current administration to works dealing with the ugly realities of war. Pictured here is Peter Corrie's Dear W.
Make
Nice concept by Larry Litt and Juan Puntes
Organized by Raul Zamudio. Make Nice will be
the theme of the fifth edition of White Box¹s annual
summer series, Six Feet Under. As in previous years,
Make Nice will consist of exhibitions mounted by critics
and curators who will take possession of White Box¹s
exhibition space for the duration of one
Yo! What Happened to Peace? An exhibition of peace and anti-war posters will open at the Stay Gold Gallery on Friday, August 6, 7-10 pm. The collection will be exhibited through September 5, 2004. The gallery is located at 451 Grand St., Brooklyn, NY 11211. Curated by graphic artist John Carr,the show was originally sponsered by and exhibited at Tokyo's renowned CWC Gallery. The exhibit arrives in New York after just having been shown at Zeitgeist Gallery in Cambridge, MA during the Democratice National Convention. More info can be obtained by visiting yowhathappenedtopeace.org.
"MAJORITY WHIP" AT WHITE BOX; Curators Kathy Grayson and Laura Tepper have organized "Majority Whip," a show of political art by over 40 young artists that opens on May 1, 2004, at White Box in Manhattan's Chelsea art district. The gallery space is being converted into a ramshackle U.S. Senate interior and filled with works on paper that are designed to inspire viewers to become politically involved -- and register to vote. Sales from the exhibition benefit Project Democracy, a Florida voter registration nonprofit, while the floor of the ersatz Senate is to be used for lectures and performances during the run of the show. The catalogue of the exhibition is designed by Scott Hug and doubles as the fourth incarnation of K48, his popular art show in a magazine.White Box is located at 525 West 26th St.; 212-714-2347. The exhibition is open from 5/1/04 through 5/29/04.
Carolee Schneeman's exihibit "Devour" opens Nov. 7, 2003 and will run until Nov. 15. Devour is a multi-channel video projection in which looped fragments of political disasters and domestic intimacy are locked within the ambiguous menace of enlarged details both human and mechanical. Her work is at the EyeBeam 540 W.21st, NYC, open Sat.-Tues. from 12:00 - 6:00 PM. Pop Patriotism at Momenta Art Sept. 7- Oct 7, 2002. Offering artifacts of popular culture placed alongside the work of artists skeptical of America's renewed devotion to its flag, the exhibition POP Patriotism addresses the implications of this recent trend. The explosion of patriotic fervor that first swept across the country last fall and winter, seemingly justified by the trauma caused by what occurred in September, has a less than wholesome side that appears to have little to do with a simple pride in one's nationality. Focusing on the mass marketing of national sentiment and nostalgia engaged in by the media, fashion and entertainment industries, the artwork included in POP Patriotism reflects a skepticism towards the propagandistic and commercial opportunism that has been so prevalent in the past several months. Curated by Peter Scot. Momenta Art is at 72 Berry street, Brooklyn, 11211 NY.
"Celebrate America's Freedoms: A Day of Remembrance": Different programs of commemorating September 11 are being documented by the American Association of Museums (AAM) and the Institute of Museum and Library Services, (IMLS) in "Celebrate America's Freedoms: A Day of Remembrance." The initiative will highlight the role of museums in collecting and hosting the images and words which portray contemporary histories as well as the role of museums as special places where communities can reaffirm and discuss the freedom to assemble, the freedom to create, the freedom to worship, the freedom to inquire, the freedom to express ideas, and freedom from fear. Ground Zero: A 300-piece exhibit of paintings, photographs, digitally altered images & sculptures about the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks is on view at the Museum of ndinArt in Detroit. Organized by NY artists Danny Scheffer, Frank Shifreen and Julius Vitali, "Ground Zero," features works by 60 artists. The exhibit is intended to reflect the range of attitudes about Sept. 11, from patriotism & ruminations on the imagery of that day to anti-American perspectives and appeals for peace. The curators say they want to broaden the public discussion about terrorism, national security, news coverage, patriotism & freedom of expression in times of war. 13 Jul - 24 Aug, 2002. SHOW: The Flag: a collaborative exhibition at the Armory Northwest Gallery in Pasaden, CA (May 12-June 16, 2002) focusing on the portrayal and display of the American flag. Included are historical works from the 1960s, as well as artworks inspired by the Sept. 11 attacks & their aftermath. The flag can embrace the ideals on which this country was founded, court controversy and dissent, or achieve both simultaneously. A public dialogue hosted by Carol Wells, Exec. Director of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics, with Carol Sobel, First Amendment specialist for the ACLU, will be held on June 15, from 2 - 4 PM. Street Weapons: Technologies of Youth Culture, Social Activism & Direct Action: An exhibition, planned for Feb. 2002, of creative devices and tactics used by activist groups to nonviolently resist the bodily harm that gathering in public places often engenders. The exhibition will be preceded by a series of workshops with organizations focused on direct action on and around the Yale campus. Workshops will be led by Jordi Claramonte of Fiambrera Obrera-Las Agencias; Kate Rich, specialist at the Bureau of Inverse Technology on Overcasting; Electronic Disturbance Theater; Natalie Jeremijenko on 'engineering change'; and others. Contact Natalie Jeremijenko at Yale University, (203) 432 4326. Conference:A group exhibition at Walter Jennings Gallery at Kenkeleba looking at the world since 9-11. Includes a new installation by Dread Scott looking at how the US war is affecting the people of Afghanistan. December 12, 2001- February 9, 2002. 219 E 2nd St (at Ave B), NYC. Opening Sunday, December 16, 2001 3-6PM. For more info, call the gallery at 212-674-3939.
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