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8.03.2010

Please help: Son of Paul Shambroom, Joan Rothfuss hospitalized after fire

BERJAYA
On July 15, Leon Shambroom -- the son of photographer Paul Shambroom and independent curator and writer Joan Rothfuss (formerly of the Walker Art Center) -- was trapped in a house fire in South Minneapolis and was overcome by smoke inhalation. Rescuers found him alive but unconscious, and he remains in a coma today, likely with severe brain damage.

With costly long-term care expected, his friends are working to raise funds to help his family cover medical expenses. Acknowledging Leon's twin jobs as a DJ (Schlomo Sapien) and a delivery driver in Minneapolis, two events are being planned: "Pizzas for Leon" next Tuesday, and a concert this Wednesday night in Northeast Minneapolis. (Out-of-towners: Scroll down for news on ways you can help.)

Benefit concert: A fundraising concert for Leon will be held Wednesday night, Aug. 4 from 8 'til 2 a.m. with 100 percent of proceeds going to the family:
Club Underground/Spring Street
355 Monroe Street Northeast, Minneapolis
$8 (suggested donation)

8 pm - 2am
18+ until 10:30 pm
21+ only after 10:30 pm
8-9 Skroller - psychedelic breaks invocation & circle blessing
9-10 AARGH! (Neil vs. Nestor) - hardstyle
10-11 PMT vs. Serious B - happy hardcore
11-12 SQUIGGLES - happy hardcore
12-1 Pistoff Christoff - psytrance
1-2 Hardkornate - psycore
Pizzas for Leon: When you order a pizza from any of these Pizza Hut locations between 5 and 10 pm on Tuesday, Aug. 10, and tell the dispatcher you want to help Leon, a portion of sales will go directly to his medical care:
Uptown Pizza Hut (612) 374-4000
2313 Hennepin Ave S Minneapolis, MN

Broadway Pizza Hut (612) 522-1778
1300 West Broadway Ave S Minneapolis, MN

Dinkytown Pizza Hut (612) 623-0775
1402 5th St SE Minneapolis, MN

Chicago Ave Pizza Hut (612) 825-9820
4800 Chicago Ave S Minneapolis, MN

Nokomis Pizza Hut (612) 721-4191
5004 34th Ave S Minneapolis, MN

Columbia Heights Pizza Hut (763) 781-4000
3854 Central Avenue NE Minneapolis, MN

Robert Street Pizza Hut (651) 457-1855
1730 South Robert Street St. Paul, MN

Portland Ave Pizza Hut (952) 884-2822
7844 Portland Avenue S Minneapolis, MN

Grand Ave Pizza Hut (651) 221-1000
975 Grand Avenue Saint Paul, MN

Cliff Road Pizza Hut (651) 289-3672
2135 Cliff Road Eagan, MN
For those outside the Twin Cities or not fond of pizza: The family has set up The Leon Shambroom Fund and a PayPal account to go with it. Click to donate:




BERJAYA
I've never met Leon, but as a longtime colleague of Joan's at the Walker and the guy often pestering Paul for quotes or permission to reprint his photos, I've always been fond of the family. I hope you'll help out however you can with this sad situation.

7.30.2010

RIP cartoonist John Callahan

BERJAYA
NY Times:
John Callahan, a quadriplegic, alcoholic cartoonist whose work in newspapers and magazines made irreverent, impolitic sport of people with disabilities and diseases and those who would pity and condescend to them, died on Saturday in Portland, Ore. He was 59 and lived in Portland.

The causes were complications of quadriplegia and respiratory problems, his brother Tom said....
BERJAYA

Bits: 07.30.10

BERJAYA
Matthew Moore, Moore Estates (detail)

• 20x200's newest edition shows Matthew Moore's Moore Estates (West), aerial photos of a plot of his family farm planted with sorghum and wheat to show a 1/3 scale map of the suburban community that's being developed nearby. Here's how the project, "Rotations," looked in 2005, 2006 and 2007. (Thanks, Kristina.)

• Atlanta's National Museum of Patriotism is closing its physical space.

• Gary Hustwit (Objectified, Helvetica) has another film in production: Urbanized, which "looks at the issues and strategies behind urban design, featuring some of the world's foremost architects, planners, policymakers, builders, and thinkers," is slated for release in 2011.

• Steal this movie: "The Yes Men Fix the World is our second feature film. It's won a bucket of awards and accolades, but we're still broke. We are hoping that people who share it will donate some money so that we can do even more outrageous actions." Download the torrent here.

The New Yorker offers up a series of photos showing glimpses of the U.S. military's black ops from artist Trevor Paglen's new book, Invisible: Covert Operations and Classified Landscapes.

Artthreat: "Artist Wu Yuren has been arrested, beaten and is being held in a Beijing jail according to his wife, Canadian Karen Patterson."

• A series of nice street interventions -- including a subway-vent shark -- by Spanish artist Kapo.

• Anne "Interview with A Vampire" Rice is leaving Christianity, thanks in part to the Westboro Baptist Church and Minnesota's proseletyzing anti-gay "punk" band You Can Run But You Cannot Hide (she links to the Minnesota Independent as part of her rationale).

William Powhida at Platform, Seattle

BERJAYA
Brooklyn's William Powhida, who last brought us the work How The New Museum Committed Suicide With Banality, is in a show closing at Seattle's Platform Gallery on Aug. 5 that covers more art-world content: His talismanic schematics featuring art dealers, collectors, critics and bloggers conjure the cult-like and mysterious qualities of contemporary art today.

Via Happy Famous Artists.

7.27.2010

Bush billboard: "Miss me yet?" Spraypaint wielder: "No."

BERJAYA
A billboard showing George W. Bush along with the words "Miss me yet?" has been vandalized. Now it shows Bush sporting a black Tom Selleck-esque moustache and includes the answer: "No."

Earlier: RNC graffiti -- Greed Over People, Get Out Phascists, etc.

7.26.2010

Bits: 07.26.10

BERJAYA
Jason Lazarus, Untitled (Summer 2010)

• "The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) won three critical exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) anticircumvention provisions today, carving out new legal protections for consumers who modify their cell phones and artists who remix videos — people who, until now, could have been sued for their non-infringing or fair use activities." Via Hyperallergic Labs.

• Chicago exhibition: Sense & Sensibility (a group show featuring a work by Jason Lazarus [above]), Rainbo Club, through Aug. 21.

A lawsuit has been filed in Detroit over the removal of a Banksy mural, said to be worth $100K, by a nonprofit gallery.

• Francis Alÿs on his 10-year project filming inside sand tornadoes: "Going inside tornados is also quite addictive, so it’s hard to stop and say, 'That’s enough, it’s not going to get any better.'"

• Modern Art Notes' America’s Favorite Art Museum tournament is underway. Based on reader votes, two locals move on to the next round: The Walker was seeded at number 12 and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts at 38. The Walker moves on, having defeated MCA Chicago, and the MIA squeaked by the Nelson-Atkins.

• Hey look at this guy of the day: He's just poppin' balloons.

Duluth street sticker: Sinbad on a Viking ship

BERJAYA
Even before the modification, I thought this logo -- for a Duluth, Minn., solid waste transport company -- was pretty awesome (Viking poop!). Then somebody stuck the Sinbad photo on it.

7.08.2010

Mountain of 11,000 trees

BERJAYA
Lovely. Agnes Denes' Tree Mountain: A Living Time Capsule, in Finland. Matt Olson at ROLU writes:
Eleven thousand trees were planted in a complex mathematical pattern by eleven thousand people from around the world, to be maintained for 400 years. One of the largest environmental reclamation sites in the world, Tree Mountain, created from refuse material from a gravel pit, was declared a national monument to serve future generations with a meaningful legacy. Dedicated in 1996 by the President of Finland, dignitaries, and participants from around the world.

Walter Robinson's Napalm air freshener

BERJAYA
Regina Hackett begins her look at text-based artworks with this image by Walter Robinson, from his 2007 installation Forest.

Bits: 07.08.10

BERJAYA
Fiona Banner, Harrier and Jaguar 2010, installed at Tate Britain through Jan. 3, 2011

• Amara Antilla, co-founder of RECESS, interviews artist Huong Ngo in the first installment of Lessons Learned, a blog feature on "conversations with artists who are rethinking in a similar way, how, where, and with whom learning happens."

• Another nice time-lapse video from BLU: "Big Bang Big Boom."

• Documentary: Unurth has all 57 minutes of Sebastian Peiter's street-art history, Guerrilla Art, based on his book of the same name.

• Fascinating book of the day: Photographer Rose-Lynn Fisher's microscopic look at bees turns a common garden insect into an unfamiliar and engrossing landscape in the just-published volume, BEE. Beautiful/Decay has the pics.

• Minneapolis exhibition: 2009/10 McKnight Foundation Visual Artist Fellows Exhibition: Michael Kareken, Aldo Moroni, Carolyn Swiszcz, Piotr Szyhalski, opens Friday at MCAD.

• London exhibition: Whose Map is it? new mapping by artists, Institute of International Visual Artists, on view through July 24.

Siah Armajani named 2010 McKnight Distinguished Artist

Benjamin Newland's Nomadic Sound Systems "open up new possibilities for electronic music performance to play with location, narrative and choreography of the sound system components themselves, in human surround-sound."

Interviewed by Hyperallergic, artist Dread Scott offered a July 4 reading from an 1852 Frederick Douglass speech:
Go where you may, search where you will, roam through all the monarchies, and despotism, of the Old World, travel through South America, search out every abuse, and when you have found the last, lay your facts by the side of the every-day practices of this nation, and you will say with me that for revolting barbarity, and shameless hypocrisy, America reigns without rival.
MPLSArt.com has an iPhone app.

7.05.2010

Video: Chicago's new eyeball


The Chicago Tribune looks into the making of downtown Chicago's newest sculpture, a 30-foot orb modeled after sculptor Tony Tasset's eyeball. Props to the motherland: The fiberglass ball was fabricated in Sparta, Wis., -- not so far from where I grew up -- by F.A.S.T. Corp., which made the world's largest fiberglass sculpture, the 145-foot-long muskellunge that makes up Hayward, Wisconsin's Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame.

Via C-Monster.

Bohyun Yoon's Mirror Mask

BERJAYA
Artist Bohyun Yoon on his Mirror Mask:
When I first came to the U.S, I had a communication problem as English was not my native language. Observing people's faces and gestures helped my understanding, and I started to inquire and develop a project about non-verbal communication. In "Mirror Mask", I focused on the concept, where I questioned how we are universally able to communicate with our body regardless of race or language. This mirror shows more angles of the face so that it helps communicate and exaggerate our facial expressions to one another.
Via Designboom.

James Chance photographs Manila's cemetery dwellers

BERJAYAImage from James Chance's "Living with the Dead," used with permission

The intersection of poverty and overcrowdedness means the world's poorest are often pushed into unlikely and surprising living environments, from shantytowns and favelas to massive landfills like Jakarta's Bantar Gebang (where children of ragpickers run a radio station) and Manila's Smokey Mountain. In his recent series, photographer James Chance looks at another unexpected community, Manila's North Cemetery, where more than 2,000 people live among the graves of presidents and paupers alike. Photo District News, which reports that 40 percent of Filipinos live below the poverty line, offers a stunning presentation of Chance's "Living with the Dead" series.

Update: As a winner of a $10,000 POYi Emerging Vision Incentive award, Chance will be continuing the project. He plans on focusing on individuals who live and work in the cemetery, including Rodolfo "Rody" Villenueva, the caretaker, and a squatter named Bobby.

6.30.2010

Publisher swipes Alec Soth concept for book cover

BERJAYA
Alec Soth, Peter's Houseboat, Winona, Minnesota, 2002

After chronicling Nike copping Christian Marclay's concept and AT&T borrowing Jeanne-Claude and Christo's style, here's another one from the ripoff files. It's every big as egregious, although closer to home. St. Paul-based photographer Alec Soth blogs that in 2006, the publisher Little Brown and Co. (owned by Hachette Book Group) contacted him about the possibility of licensing his 2002 photo Peter's Houseboat (above) for a book cover. They wanted to buy rights to the image and to photoshop in a child, and they provided a mockup of what the cover would look like (below left).

Soth declined. Now, three or so years later, while browsing at a chain bookstore, he discovered they'd knocked off the image anyway (below right).

BERJAYA

"Now I hear that Winter’s Bone became a movie and won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance," Soth writes. "I can’t wait to see the poster."

Coming in September: From Here to There: Alec Soth's America, at the Walker Art Center.

6.25.2010

Send your wishes to artist Rivane Neunschwander

BERJAYA
For Rivane Neuenschwander’s New Museum exhibition A Day Like Any Other, the Brazilian artist is inviting online and in-person visitors to write down their wishes, which will be printed on ribbons hung on the wall for museum-goers to take. On the installation Eu desejo o seu desejo / I Wish Your Wish (2003):
Visitors are invited to select ribbons printed with a wish to tie around their wrists. When the ribbon falls off, tradition has it that one's wish will be fulfilled. Visitors may write another wish and place it in the empty hole. This work of art is based on a similar practice that takes place at the church of Nosso Senhor do Bonfim (Our Lord of the Good End) in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil.
Share your wish.

NYC backpedals on ghostbike removal policy

BERJAYA
Ghost bike for Andrew Morgan, East Village NYC by Neil Fein, Flickr

Yesterday I linked up a story about how the New York Sanitation Department was planning to get rid of "eyesore" ghostbikes, the white-painted memorials to cyclists killed by cars. Via commenter Tskross comes news that they reneged, after pressure from the families of dead cyclists. The new policy, as reported by the Daily News:
"A memorial bicycle (ghost rider) will only be removed ... if the memorial bicycle meets the derelict bicycle criteria," the department said in a statement Monday. That means if the memorial bike is in bad shape - missing tires, handlebars, or pedals -- it still may be clipped from its post.
So the key is for families and friends to maintain memorial bikes: fair enough. As Tskross says, "score one for decency."

Where art goes, marketing follows: Maurizio Cattelan and Nike's 22-man foosball table

BERJAYA
"We love playing foosball here in Italy. We usually play it 2 vs. 2," reads text at the website of Milan's Nike Store. "Well, at Nike Stadium Milan we play it 11 vs. 11." It's the "the largest foosball table on the planet," enthuses the blog Mademan, making the same claim Gizmodo did about a 22-person table Amstel fabricated a few years.

But leave it to advertisers to oversell -- and to think they came up with the idea first.
BERJAYA
Beating them all to the punch by well over a decade is Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, who in 1991 created a 22-player table, called Stadium. He was tweaking the spectacle of sports, but at times he injected other ideas as well. The photo above shows the table in use by a soccer team Cattelan formed. In the early years of concern over a spike in immigration in Italy, he recruited Senegalese men on the streets of a small town near Bologna and asked them to be on his team, which actually played tournaments ("[M]y guys were always losing. It was bad"). He writes that the team name, emblazoned on the front of uniforms he had made, is a Nazi slogan:
It's a fake company. It's a word that comes from the German. It means "go home." It's the only memory I have from the war because my father and my grandfather were always saying "rauss." And you can still see this word on the streets in Italy — with the " ." So it's a ghost that's still around.

6.24.2010

Photo series: Brenda Paik Sunoo's "Jeju Grannies of the Sea"

BERJAYA
Brenda Paik Sunoo:
The women divers of Jeju Island (known as haenyeo) are unique and rare workers. For centuries, they have harvested seaweed and shellfish at depths of 20 meters, holding their breath for as long as two minutes without any equipment other than their rubber suits, masks and nets. The Korean women divers of Jeju Island have faced the tempestuous tides of history and struggle for economic survival. Their intimate relationship to the land and sea, their shaman beliefs, and their communal village life have kept them protected from modern pressures. In return, many of the haenyeo live a life of purpose and resilience well into their 90s. They illuminate a steady, fearless course and most of all, an enduring legacy.
Via Another Bouncing Ball.

Bits: 06.24.10

BERJAYA
Julie Mehretu, Berliner-Plätze (detail); full-sized image

• Heart as Arena on artist Dread Scott's Tuesday performance in front of the NY Stock Exchange, where he burned money: "During the performance, a couple curious traders had come over to see the action. They seemed mildly amused. This was a joke, really. They obviously felt at home. After it was all over they went back inside for the afternoon and ushered the Dow down 148.89 points. Burn." Via Hyperallergic.

• Episode 2 of Bravo's "Work of Art" in animated-GIF form.

• Among the revelations in Tyler Green's series of interviews with retired photography curator Weston J. Naef on the Corcoran's Eedweard Muybridge exhibition, the belief that many works attributed to Muybridge weren't actually shot by him.

• A Q & A with Sam Wainwright Douglas, director of Citizen Architect: Samuel Mockbee and the Spirit of the Rural Studio, the late great architect whose work combined a commitment to the poor and to aesthetics. The documentary screens for free at the Walker on July 1.

• Calatrava reveals plans for new Museum of Tomorrow in Rio de Janeiro.

• Artist Eine does the entire alphabet, one letter at a time, on London storefront shutters.

• Dubbing them "eyesores," New York's sanitation department says it plans on removing ghost bikes -- memorial bikes painted white and chained to posts near sites where cyclists have been killed by cars -- due to a "handful" of complaints. A public hearing on the topic is scheduled for July 20.

• "Replace ad space with graf space": Here's how to have your graffiti art projected across Europe via digital display.

• Minneapolis exhibition: Guillermo Kuitca: Everything —Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008, opens Saturday at the Walker.

• New York gallery show: The Mass Ornament, curated by Minneapolis' John Rasmussen (Midway Contemporary Art) and including artist Jay Heikes, David Zink Yi, Gebi Sibony and others. June 25–August 13 at Gladstone on W. 24th.

A gallery of 18th-century Japanese monsters.

Wendell Berry withdraws donation of his papers to university over Big Coal ties

Poet Wendell Berry is ungifting his writings to his alma mater, the University of Kentucky, over its plans to name a basketball players' dormitory after the coal industry. Said Berry, who taught at the university:
“The University’s president and board have solemnized an alliance with the coal industry, in return for a large monetary ‘gift,’ granting to the benefactors, in effect, a co-sponsorship of the University’s basketball team. That — added to the ‘Top 20’ project and the president’s exclusive ‘focus’ on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics — puts an end to my willingness to be associated in any way officially with the University.”
Read Berry's "How to be a poet"

6.22.2010

Paired: BP graffiti and Huang Yong Ping's Amerigo Vespucci

BERJAYA
The way this anti-BP graffiti in Chicago extends from the wall to the ground and forms the outline of the United States reminds me of Huang Yong Ping's sculpture Amerigo Vespucci, which does the same thing. Of the latter work, Huang wrote:
An Italian-bred bulldog, the Neapolitan mastiff (mastino napoletano), is used here as a metaphor for Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian who documented the discovery of the American continent and after whom America was named. This bulldog’s urine forms the geographical outline of America in an instantaneous and accidental way. Here the line between the wall and the ground represents the world’s longest straight border (the United States–Canada border). Its fluidity implies extensiveness and overflowingness. It is an example of all “limits” and “borders.”
BERJAYA

6.21.2010

"I blame everyone for everything": Teabagger street art?

BERJAYA
GammaBlog finds this bit of street art, a filled-in version of the Office of Blame Accountability's form, which seems politically appropriate, given the shotgun-like ire of some in the political realm these days.

Bits: 06.21.10

BERJAYA
Graffiti by Homer in Kiev via Rebel Art

• Despite the efforts of righting hardliners, The Cove, an Oscar-winning hidden-camera documentary about dolphin hunting in Japan, will screen at six theaters starting July 3, with 16 more venues to be added later. Here's the trailer.

• Via Unbeige, news that the new Transformers movie will be filmed at the Calatrava-designed Milwaukee Art Museum.

"I M Pi" graffiti.

• Bad at Sports interviews artist Mark Dion.

• RIP Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese writer Jose Saramago and Sudanese activist and former NBA player Manute Bol.

• Graffiti du jour: Posterchild has been doing "Indian Head" stencils, based on the iconic old TV test pattern.

• Minneapolis exhibition: Ordinarily Here, a group show featuring artist Jenny Jenkins' embroidered gang tags, at the Weisman through Oct. 10. [Review]

• Buffalo exhibition: The Art of War, featuring Trevor Paglen, Walid Raad, Martha Rosler and others who address "global conflict through conceptual art," at CEPA Gallery through Aug. 22. Buffalo Rising offers a preview.

• Ridgefield (Conn.) exhibition: Fritz Haeg: Something for Everyone, which aims to reconnect "people with people, and people with plants and animals," Jun. 27, 2010–Jan. 2, 2011, at The Aldrich. More info here.

• Via GOOD, a PSA for Ghost Bikes.

• At the International Whaling Commission meeting in Morocco, officials weighing whether to lift a 24-year whaling ban hear evidence that whales and dolphins "can feel and suffer as humans do."

• As BP CEO Tony Hayward spent the weekend at an elite yacht race in England, the AP reports that the company has paid fewer than 12 percent of claims filed by victims of the BP oil spill.