Tag Archives: Los Angeles

PARIS DE NOCHE AT NIGHT GALLERY

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When I first thought about an exhibition at Night Gallery my instinct was to tear down all the walls, which I thought created difficult triangular areas and didn’t offer long distance viewing of the work that would be possible in an emptier space. I proposed this idea to Mieke and Davida who both considered it but ultimately didn’t want to make such a dramatic change. They had a hand in the design of the space with architect Peter Zellner and had invested a lot of emotion and money into it. 

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The odd angles of the plan and my desire to see work from far away reminded me somehow of my longstanding interest in urban planning and how it relates to hanging an exhibition. Unable to do a destructive renovation à la Haussmann, I realized that I could just think on a different scale about the space to afford the views I wanted. I started to think of Amy’s Ladder as an Eiffel Tower and she had also mentioned making some kind of fountain. I also wanted to make a series of paintings that look like building facades and show them all in a row, and could imagine looking down a boulevard of paintings with Ladder-Monument at the end of it. Each artist of the group show could create different “arrondissements” of work, connected across the oddly angled vistas. 

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The title Paris de Noche contains references to the nature of the neighborhood around Night Gallery, of art galleries as a spearhead of gentrification (Haussmanization?) of industrial and traditionally Mexican neighborhoods, to the joyful cynicism behind Kippenberger’s “Capri at Night” which I read as a critique/enjoyment of the aspirational fantasy behind the name of Ford Capri, as well as an embrace of the dowdiness of post-war Germany and later Los Angeles (the restaurant “Capri”).

When I saw Andrei’s corrugated fence paintings, which together formed a kind of wall, I thought they perfectly reflected the beauty of the trashed industrial non-site surrounding Night Gallery. 

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Amy Yao, Silent Sneeze II, no. 7 (lux), 2014 synthetic rice paper, fiberglass, polyester resin 9 x 18 in. (22.9 x 45.7 cm)

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Pentti Monkkonen 2 Rue Michael Jackson, 2014 fiberglass, aluminum, steel, enamel 72 x 43 in. (182.9 x 109.2 cm)

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Andrei Koschmieder Untilted (Shredder), 2014 paper, glue, resin 87 x 74 in. (221 x 188 cm

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Pentti Monkkonen Dandelion, 2014 bronze, stainless steel, acrylic 24 x 24 x 82 in. (61 x 61 x 208.3 cm) Edition of 9, 2 AP

When you’re in my hut
You know what’s up
Let your mind be free
Relax your body 

(Pentti Monkkonen, from the press release)

Until December 20th
2276 E 16th Street
Los Angeles, CA 90021

BENJAMIN SEROR AT REDCAT LOUNGE

The Marsyas Hours

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Benjamin Seror’s improvised stories are inspired by phantoms of literature, art history and everyday adventures. Over three Tuesday evenings (november 18, 25 & December 2) in the REDCAT Lounge, he developed and performed a new version of his latest project, The Marsyas Hour, an impromptu script for a TV pilot that recounts everyday life on Mount Olympus through the eyes of the young satyr Marsyas. Apollo defeated Marsyas in a flute contest, and had him tied to a tree to be frayed alive – but Marsyas survived the punishment and committed his life to defeating the gods.

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Using speech as the principal subject and tool, Benjamin Seror’s performances take the audience on journeys far into the heart of Dante’s Inferno or to nights spent dancing to the delicate sound of New Order’s Perfect Kiss. Also a musician. Seror plays multiple instruments, backing up his narratives with emotive songs that switch modes of language, underlining the complexity and possibilities of language.

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REDCAT
ROY AND EDNA DINEY/CALARTS THEATER
631 West 2nd Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012

NOAH PURIFOY, OUTDOOR DESERT ART MUSEUM OF ASSEMBLAGE SCULPTURE

Artist Noah Purifoy (1917 – 2004) created his Outdoor Desert Art Museum of Assemblage Sculpture over 15 years in Joshua Tree. The non-profit, all-volunteer Noah Purifoy Foundation (NPF) established in 1998 preserves and maintains the site for public participation.

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Born in Snow Hill, Alabama in 1917, Noah Purifoy lived and worked most of his life in Los Angeles and Joshua Tree.  Purifoy moved his practice out to the Mojave desert in 1989, where he lived for fifteen years until his death in 2004.  Recognized as the founder of the Watts Towers Art Center in the 1960s, Purifoy created ten-acres full of large-scale assemblage sculptures, constructions and installations on the desert floor in Joshua Tree.  Constructed entirely from junked materials, this otherworldly environment is one of California’s great art historical wonders.  NPF’s mission is to preserve and maintain Purifoy’s outdoor museum as a permanent cultural center and park, and to promote greater public appreciation for the values embodied in Purifoy’s work.

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I went there last week end, I was really impressed.
Just 2 hours and half from Los Angeles. You must go!
The lady there asked me to keep my pictures private, so you should go to see it.

DIRECTIONS TO

NOAH PURIFOY
OUTDOOR DESERT ART MUSEUM OF ASSEMBLAGE SCULPTURE*
63030 BLAIR LANE JOSHUA TREE
FROM LOS ANGELES:

San Bernardino Fry. 10 East to Hwy. 62.
Hwy. 62 through Morongo and Yucca Valleys.
Continue Hwy. 62 into Joshua Tree to YUCCA MESA St.
LEFT on YUCCA MESA St. to ABERDEEN.
RIGHT on ABERDEEN (cross Border St.) to CENTER AVE. (Aberdeen dead ends at CENTER AVE. and as you turn left on CENTER AVE. the roads are unpaved)
LEFT on CENTER AVE. and curve to right into BLAIR LANE (Also unpaved road). • You will see NOAH’S DESERT ART MUSEUM on the left at 63030 BLAIR LANE.

ps: The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) will present a major retrospective of artist Noah Purifoy entitled Junk Dada in June 2015

CORY ARCANGEL : tl;dr

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

tl;dr

Cory Arcangel

Team (Bungalow)

306 Windward Avenue

September 14th – November 9th 2014

Team (gallery, inc.) is pleased to announce a solo show of work by New York-based artist Cory Arcangel. Entitled tl;dr, the exhibition will run from 14 September through 09 November 2014 and will inaugurate our project space in Los Angeles. Team (bungalow) in located at 306 Windward Avenue in Venice, CA. Concurrently, our 47 Wooster Street space in New York will house an additional show by Arcangel under the same title. 

Arcangel’s work has long dealt with the status conferred upon differing cultural ephemera: the privilege endowed so-called Fine Art as compared to the visual vernacular of “lowbrow” pop culture. Much of his early work consisted of hacked Nintendo cartridges; for Super Mario Clouds, a particularly epochal work, he removed all visual content from a copy of Super Mario Brothers, leaving only the drifting clouds of the game’s background. This work was shown in Team’s original Chelsea basement space in 2003, and was then included in the 2004 Whitney Biennial. Concepts like “8-bit” and “hack” — so suspect to the art world of 2003 — have been completely assimilated with this renegade work being exhibited in 2012 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

For this exhibition — his first in Los Angeles — the artist is showing several of his historic video game works running on cheap tablets and Smartphones via a Nintendo emulator. This gesture further complicates the works’ established relationship with appropriation and contextualization, while also acting as a miniaturized retrospective for this aspect of his oeuvre. The fact that visitors will be able to physically access the images’ supports by handling the tablets and PDAs also aids in this process of canon-debunking. 

The devices will be presented on grooved, wooden display racks, as they might at a commercial electronics outlet. While the original pieces relied upon grand presentation and white cube context to establish their Fine Art status, this gesture acts almost in reverse, using the now-iconic body of work to elevate (and fetishize) the consumer technology. The exhibition serves as a kind of funhouse mirror reincarnation of those early works, retaining parts of their power and significance but also providing them with a new, highly contemporary existence. 

In addition to the Nintendo pieces, the installation will include elements that highlight other aspects of the artist’s career. Acrylic magazine cases containing issues of Arcangel’s The Source zines — physical documents of the code he has written for his myriad projects — are presented alongside objects from his recently founded merchandise line Arcangel Surfware, which are hung retail-style from display hooks. Commercial-grade plastic shelves contain a selection of semi-obscure CDs and DVDs —  Nick Lachey’s, A Father’s Lullaby for example. Audio will be provided by a Sony iPod doc playing mp3s related to Kelly Clarkson’s 2004 song Since U Been Gone, a recurring motif in Arcangel’s production. 

During the past two years, Arcangel has completed several diverse projects outside the space of the gallery. He worked extensively with a team of researchers and computer experts in collaboration with The Andy Warhol Museum to unearth and preserve Warhol’s lost digital experiments, which he wrote about for the summer edition of Artforum. This past May, he launched the aforementioned publishing and merchandise imprint, Arcangel Surfware, whose products include bedsheets, iPad covers, and magazines. In July, he released his debut novel, Working On My Novel, published by Penguin. 

The 36-year old Arcangel has been the subject of numerous international monographic exhibitions at both galleries and major museums, including The Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, The Whitney Museum in New York, The Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin, The Barbican in London and MoCA in Miami. His work is included in many public collections, including the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, MoMA in New York, The Tate in London, Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie, the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in Washington D.C. and the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst in Zürich. 

We are excited to open Team (bungalow) in Los Angeles, our first exhibition space outside of New York City. The space, housed in a bungalow and a one-car garage, is quite possibly the smallest gallery in the city of Los Angeles. Our plan is to alternate exhibitions by artists represented in New York by Team, along with solo shows by artists from other galleries whose work excites us. Exhibitions by Margaret Lee, Pierre Bismuth and Bradley Kronz are forthcoming. 

Gallery hours are Friday through Sunday, noon to 6 PM.

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

(image http://www.teamgal.com/)

WEEKLY WRAP UP | SEPT. 8-12

Masonic Temple, Glendale, CA

Masonic Temple, Glendale, CA

This week we watched the films of Owen Land at HRLA; announced Patti Smith and her band at Fondation Cartier; announced the performance series Step and Repeat at MoCA Geffen; attended Secret Recipe‘s exhibition HaFo SaFo at 3 Days Awake in L.A.; stopped by Matias Faldbakken at Standard (Oslo); announced Clément Rodzielski at Chantal Crousel; invited you to participate in Marcos Lutyens‘ K-Tanglement hosted by Kunstverein; stopped by Jonathan Binet at Gaudel de Stampa; and featured Thank You For Coming, an experimental food and art space in L.A.