Tag Archives: Ooga Booga

WEEKLY WRAP UP | JULY 7-11, 2014

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This week we spent a day at the New Museum, announced the book launch for Queer Zines at Pro qm in Berlin, gave you a tour of le Chateau de Vaux-Le-Vicomte just outside of Paris, announced ‘My Atlas’ – an outdoor summer screening series in Los Angeles about women travelers, toured Heimo Zobernig’s new exhibition at Mudam in Luxembourg, announced a screening of the new documentary Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists at 356 Mission in L.A., spent a cloudy Paris day at Martial Raysse at Centre Pompidou, and gave you a sneak peak of Yvonne Rainer: Dances and Films at The Getty.

What a great week!

HAIRY WHO & THE CHICAGO IMAGISTS

Hairy Who Catalog (1969), Washington, D.C. : Corcoran Gallery of Art (image from http://momalibrary.tumblr.com)

Hairy Who Catalog (1969), Washington, D.C. : Corcoran Gallery of Art (image from http://momalibrary.tumblr.com)

This Sunday, July 13, at 356 Mission in Los Angeles, they will be screening the documentary Hairy Who and the Chicago Imagists, introduced by Ricky Swallow. The event is free and begins at 8:30PM sharp.

I’ve always loved the colorful, fantastical, and highly stylized work of artists like Jim Nutt and Christina Ramberg. I’m very excited to see this new documentary film, which will give an overview of this art movement based in Chicago in the 1960s. Watch the official trailer here.

Chicago-Style Modern Art With Everything: 
In the mid 1960s, the city of Chicago was an incubator for an iconoclastic group of young artists. Collectively known as the Imagists, they showed in successive waves of exhibitions with monikers that might have been psychedelic rock bands of the era – Hairy Who, Nonplussed Some, False Image, Marriage Chicago Style. Kissing cousins to the contemporaneous international phenomenon of Pop Art, Chicago Imagism took its own weird, wondrous, in-your-face tack. Variously pugnacious, puerile, scatological, graphic, comical, and absurd, it celebrated a very different version of ‘popular’ from the detached cool of New York, London and Los Angeles. Hairy Who & The Chicago Imagists is the first film to tell their wild, woolly, utterly irreverent story.

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The Hairy Who Sideshow (1967, Chicago : Hyde Park Art Center) (image from momalibrary.tumblr.com)

The Hairy Who Sideshow (1967) Chicago : Hyde Park Art Center (image from http://momalibrary.tumblr.com)

WEEKLY WRAP UP | JUNE 24-27, 2014

Chuckwallah lizard in Joshua Tree National Park (photo by Erica Magrey)

Chuckwallah lizard in Joshua Tree National Park (photo by Erica Magrey)

This Week on the PARIS-LA Blog!

MONDAY: Katie Grinnan’s Astrology Orchestra

TUESDAY: Jodorowsky‘s new film The Dance of Reality

WEDNESDAY: Artists’ Books & Cookies 2 at Ooga Twooga

THURSDAY: Don’t miss Friday Flights at The Getty this summer!

FRIDAY: Vasquez Rocks!

Chuckwallah lizard in Joshua Tree National Park (photo by Erica Magrey)

Chuckwallah lizard in Joshua Tree National Park (photo by Erica Magrey)

FRIDAY FLIGHTS AT THE GETTY!

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Something hip is happening at The Getty! Now you can visit the museum on the hill, and enjoy a beautiful California summer evening outside, listening to music, watching performance, and enjoying local beers and bites. Sarah Cooper is curating a great series of Friday night events at The Getty this summer: Friday Flights.

I’m really excited to announce that Wendy Yao of Ooga Booga is hosting this Friday!

If you can’t make this week’s event, you can catch a night hosted by No Age on Friday July 18th, and Mikael Jorgensen on Friday August 8th.

FRIDAY FLIGHTS HOSTED BY OOGA BOOGA

Date: June 27, 2014
Time: 6:00–9:00 p.m.
Location: Museum Courtyard
Admission: Free; no reservations required; Parking $10

Ooga Booga is an innovative storefront shop that features alternative objects, design, fashion, artist books and editions, as well as records and visual projects by musicians. Under the direction of owner Wendy Yao, the store presents objects with a disregard for conventional boundaries, with a punk-inspired irreverence, showing that artists and ideas in any discipline can be engaged in the same aesthetic discussion. For Friday Flights, Yao has invited a group of artists and musicians who, each in their own way, deals with performance—one of the deepest connections between music and the visual arts.

Avey Tare of the renowned sound innovators Animal Collective, teams up with Black Dice’s Bjorn Copeland for an sound installation and performance. Avey Tare, whose practice with Animal Collective spans ten studio albums that pushed electronic music into wholly new, kaleidoscopic territories, isn’t new to the museum context—he co-staged an environmental sonic experience inside New York’s Guggenheim Museum in 2010. Bjorn Copeland’s distorted noise-rock with Black Dice has also thrived in the art context, appearing in an installation by artist Peter Coffin at Andrew Kreps Gallery, composing tracks for painter Richard Phillips, and performing in art venues like the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, The Andy Warhol Museum, and more.

Nguzunguzu are an integral force within the L.A.-based Fade To Mind collective, specializing in piecing together disparate club elements into a peculiar sound that is all at once tough, emotive, sexy, and scary. Nguzunguzu’s sets are a dizzying combination of digging, blending, and seamless re-contextualization. Never content to stay in one place for too long, Nguzunguzu’s journeys may take you around the weirder edges of chart R&B and hip-hop, Baltimore club, globetrotting urban pop, eski, zouk, footwork, kizomba, or kuduro, before splintering into genres unknown.

MAL PAIS is a collaboration between artists M. Cay Castagnetto and MPA conceived nine months ago and born today as a rant-band. From the lookout point between four tracks looping separate circles, MAL PAIS’s performance shadows the work of Henry Hills, Ester Ferrer, Libby Howes of the Wooster Group, and Yvonne Rainer.

Alexa WeirFlora WiegmannRikki Rothenberg, and Busy Gangnes are all Los Angeles-based dancers who, individually and collectively, bring dance to unique environments such as galleries, outdoor spaces, malls, and music venues. They will perform a three-hour structured improvisational score using found movement and borrowed choreography. The piece travels throughout the museum.

Wendy Yao

Wendy Yao

 

ARTISTS’ BOOKS & COOKIES AT 356 MISSION THIS WEEKEND

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Artists’ books and cookies! Two of my favorite things! Unfortunately I will be in New York City this weekend and will miss this great event in Los Angeles. Check out the details below.

Fundación Alumnos47ForYourArt & Ooga Booga present 
Artists’ Books & Cookies 
June 28-29, 2014 
Ooga Twooga/356 S. Mission Rd. 

Please join us for a two-day presentation of artists’ books and cookies! Artists’ Books and Cookies presents a mosaic of independent artist book publishing and hand-made artists’ books constructed with special attention to unusual techniques and materials. In its third iteration, Artists’ Books and Cookies has drawn contributions from individuals living in Los Angeles, across the country and around the world. For information on previous iterations: Artists’ Books & Cookies and Artists’ Books & Cookies 2

Saturday, June 28 
11am-6pm open for viewing 
12pm discussion presented by Alumnos47 
2pm Art Book Review presents: Nikki Darling, Brian Kennon and Monica Majoli on artists’ books  
4pm John Tain in conversation with special guest 

Sunday, June 29 
11am-6pm open for viewing 
11am-1pm mimosa social
4pm-6pm zine swap
Bring your zines to share and trade! This informal gathering encourages our creative community to swap ideas, techniques and, of course, zines. 

Cookies from Sqirl 
All programming for Artists’ Books and Cookies is free and open to the public.