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Archive for the ‘Exhibitions’ Category

New Exhibition @ Michael Mazzeo Gallery

Monday, September 6th, 2010

Sorry for the lack of updates as of late–it’s not that nothing interesting has been happening, it’s the opposite actually. I moved to a new city (SF!), am working with new people, and perhaps most exciting–I’m exhibiting new work! I’ll have five original pieces from the work I produced at MacDowell this past summer in a small exhibit at Michael Mazzeo Gallery that I’m calling ‘Speed of Dark’.

Speed of Dark #333

The images shown are some of my first experiments with the subject matter and format, so I think it serves as a good introduction to the series. I’m still working on developing it into a larger body of work (and therefore a larger show) with this material, but I’m excited to be giving a preview of what’s to come. I’m also excited that I’ll be sharing the gallery with the talented Dave Jordano. Dave’s series of minimalist Midwest landscapes is the perfect complement to my dense patterns of light and shadow.

Dave Jordano, Terra-Caelum 7, from the series Prairieland

Exhibition details below:
Recent Developments: Eric William Carroll & Dave Jordano
Opening Saturday, September 11th 6-8PM
Michael Mazzeo Gallery
526 West 26th Street, Suite 209
New York, NY 10001
Exhibition runs through October 16th

I should note that this is actually a pretty rare chance to see my original blueprints in person. For those who know my working process, the blueprints generally serve as an intermediary step towards the creation of the final piece. The fact that they are so fragile and light sensitive usually prevents me from exhibiting the originals, but sometimes they’re just too beautiful not to! I hope that if you happen to be in NYC this fall you’ll get the chance to see them. I’ll leave you with a short video of what I got up to this past summer…

Show!

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Atari Sunset

My ginormous found photo collage/bleaching/silkscreen experiment ‘Atari Sunset’ is currently hanging in Michael Mazzeo Gallery. The show invite is below:

Burning Desire Invite

The opening is tomorrow evening–come on out!

Processed

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

An artist living in New York City is like a kid living in the cereal aisle of a grocery store–faced with seemingly unlimited choices, many bright and colorful, and most crap. I’ve tried to do my best filtering, but there is still an overwhelming number of good exhibitions to see.

Josh Brand, Untitled, 2009, Unique C-print, (14 x 11 in)

Josh Brand, Untitled, 2009, Unique C-print, (14 x 11 in)

‘Processed – Considering Recent Photographic Practices’ is an exhibition at Hunter College based around more experimental processes (think more Walead Beshty, less Edward Steichen). Curator Amie Scally has done a pretty good job of highlighting some lesser-known artists (and White Columns alums) along with bigger names like Wolfgang Tillmans and Marco Breuer. Josh Brand’s work is both beautiful and understated, comprised of small photogram experiments. I was also surprised by Jennifer West’s work. Her films were transferred to DVD and digitally projected in the gallery. This was enough to pique my interest in her work, but ultimately left me unsatisfied. For an artist that creates unique 70mm films by painting, scratching, and staining the actual film stock, the DVD transfer was pretty far removed from the actual piece. I imagine it would be analagous to hanging a large photograph of a Rothko in lieu of the actual canvas–sure, the picture is there, but it’s not the real thing, and it’s obviously been compromised. If anyone knows where I can see some actual projects of Jennifer’s work, let me know–I feel like it would be a real pleasure to see.

If you’re a fan of the similar shows currently up at the Met and MoMA, this show is definitely worth a trip. Check it out–it’s up until December 12th. Details here.

Studio

Monday, September 28th, 2009


‘Mono’. Pigmented ink print, 14″ x 14″, 2009.

Quick Italian lesson: ’studio’ means ‘I study’ (conjugated from ’studiare’). I’ve been trying to study as much as possible lately, but I feel my efforts have born little fruit. But a couple nuggets have emerged–for instance–I created a new site-specific piece at the Camera Club of New York. Parts of it are continually exposing throughout the course of the exhibition. It’s up until October 30th, but if you can’t make it–here’s a quick pic of what it looks like (nicely coupled with Dan Estabrook’s images on the left):


Installation view at the Camera Club of New York’s exhibition ‘First Impression’

I’ve also been working on some new work in my own studio—a new suite of prints titled ‘Ultra Violet‘, as well as a couple one-off’s (continuing my interest in the crossover between sound and vision):


Ultra Violet work prints on the walls of my studio–each print is 20″ x 20″

Are you an artist living and working in New York? Let’s arrange some studio visits!

My New York Debut

Monday, September 14th, 2009
Untitled, 2008 © Michelle Kloehn

Untitled, 2008 © Michelle Kloehn

Just a heads-up that I’ll have a piece in the upcoming exhibition ‘First Impression’ at the Camera Club of New York. This would make my first public exhibition in New York City, pretty much within a year to-the-day of moving here. I installed my piece over the weekend and just saw the rest of the work today–it’s going to be a conceptually tight and visually stimulating show. Read the press release here.

The opening is this Wednesday, September 16th, from 6-8PM. The Camera Club is located at 336 W 37th Street, 2nd Floor. Come out, show your support, and be part of the art (part of my piece will be exposing throughout the course of the exhibition).

Also, there will be a panel discussion with the artists, the curator Michael Mazzeo, and Russell Lord, a Fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The talk is at the School of Visual Arts Amphitheater on Tuesday, September 22nd, at 7PM. The admission is $10 for the general public (but I’ll buy you a beer afterwards)–otherwise get to work on your fake SVA student ID.

So, to recap, there are two dates you should be aware of:
* Wednesday, September 16th, 6-8PM @ Camera Club of New York (336 W 37th St) – First Impression exhibition opening
* Tuesday, September 22nd, 7PM @ School of Visual Arts Amphitheater (333 W 23rd St) – Panel discussion with artists, curator, and resident smart-guy

Andreas Gefeller ‘Supervisions’ @ Hasted Hunt

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Major thanks to Jörg Colberg for pointing this show out–it somehow passed under my radar–and boy am I glad I saw it. Gefeller’s images depict the deconstruction (and reconstruction) of a variety of spaces. His process is clever and his results are stunning. Like Jörg, I find that some images work better than others, but I disagree with Colberg’s critique of the image below.


Andreas Gefeller ‘Untitled (Beach)’, 2006

I don’t think Gefeller’s intention was to make a seamless image of the shore, but rather an image that speaks to the passage of time (much like the image ‘Untitled (Parking Site)’ with the progressive lengthening of the tree’s shadows). Additionally, ‘Untitled (Beach)’ stands as one of the best metaphorical images (intentional or not) of the photographic transition from film to digital. Grain literally transforms into large pixels that mimic the compression artifacts of digital photography.

For myself, the least successful images are the ones that simply flex the photographic muscle of Gefeller’s process, such as ‘Untitled (Leaves)’. Technical prowess and physical beauty aside, these images don’t get my brain going like the Academy of Arts series, where the content and form really seem to make sense.


Andreas Gefeller, ‘Untitled (Leaves)’, 2007

Still, Gefeller packs a whollop of a show which I’d highly recommend checking out–it’s up through May 16 @ Hasted Hunt.

Chelsea Photo Round-up

Friday, March 6th, 2009

*partially written prior to the weekend
I’m totally skipping out on the art-fair craze this weekend, opting instead to take advantage of the warmer weather and visit Beacon, NY; home of the Dia and apparently where the film Super Troopers was filmed. I did, however, manage to get around Chelsea this week to see a few photo-related shows.

My first stop was at David Zwirner to check out the Philip-Lorca diCorcia show ‘Thousand‘. I don’t really care for the book, and when I saw PLdC’s ‘A Storybook Life’ work at the Art Institute of Chicago, I wasn’t too impressed. This exhibition, however, really works for me. The exhibition of 1,000 Polaroids (varying between the smaller pack-film images and 4×5″ ones) in a single row gives the viewer the impression that they are examining an enlarged film reel. Super clean lines, a simple and logical flow, and the decent quality of the images all make for a pleasurable experience. There are no hits or singles in this show, which is partly due to the fact that there are 1,000 photographs on display; for the most part, they all blend together, which is actually quite relieving. With sooo many photographers striving for big great images, it’s kind of nice to see a show full of small OK ones…not that anyone could pull this off. ‘Thousand’ works because it’s by diCorcia (we can use the pictures to reference his other well known works), and it’s full. Overall, a really unexpected and pleasant surprise.


(photo stolen from chelseaartgalleries.com)

Next, I was off to Galerie Lelong to see the Alfredo Jaar piece ‘The Sound of Silence’. Normally I’m a pretty big fan of anything that references photography and Simon & Garfunkel, but Jaar’s piece seemed a bit over-dramatic to me. The main piece consists of an intimidatingly strange theater space in which one outside wall is completely covered with florescent lights. Inside, a short film of Jaar’s loops in which he recounts the story of troubled photojournalist Kevin Carter. The story is mightily depressing, so perhaps the lights on the outside are a small attempt at relieving the sadness. Regardless, I still felt pretty down leaving the show. A small, square framed print with the text ‘WHY?’ in white on a black background kind of summed up the cliché-ness of Jaar’s worst work for me. I also didn’t care much for ‘Searching for Africa in LIFE’, but I like the dialog it creates around photojournalism. It’s worth a stop in…the show is heavy on content but comes up a bit short on form, which is kind of Jaar’s thing, so, if you’re into that…

Last stop was Wallspace to see Walead Beshty’s ‘Popular Mechanics’ show. I feel like I’ve been seeing Walead’s work everywhere since I moved to New York, from the Whitney Biennial to The Sculpture Center to various group shows in Chelsea–seriously, the guy is all over the place! And for the most part, everything I’ve seen has been pretty knock-out amazing, too. But I guess all good runs have to come to an end, and the current show at Wallspace is exactly where it ends. A combination of Beshty’s popular color photograms of folded paper is juxtaposed with black & white portraits of ??? I’m lost–I don’t get any of the references, and the press release is just as obtuse as Beshty’s ‘vague referents’. I’m sorry, but if an MFA graduate and art-history drop-out can’t get your references and clever in-jokes, it should probably stay in the studio. Even the installation seemed bad in a forced-cleverness kind of way. I still think Beshty is capable of producing some of the most exciting contemporary photographic work today, but this latest show was a big flop. If anyone wants to fill me in on the references, please do–I think I was initially too upset with the show to do the research, and now I’m just lazy…

Minimalist Photography, Chelsea style

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

OK, one of the great things about living in New York City is that there really never is a shortage of art shows–photography art shows–to go and experience. Minneapolis is great, but seriously, Weinstein would have to put on a new show every day of the week in order to keep up with the pace here. The selection to choose from is so huge, in fact, that it really helps to plan, dare i say ‘curate’, your gallery hopping experience. My latest researching tool of choice is artcards.cc–it has a great user interface that allows you to arrange and print your gallery itinerary–perfect for you obsessive nerd types.

Anyway, last week I realized that there was a whole spat of potentially interesting minimalist photography shows within 10 blocks from where I work, so I decided to check them out, see if any interesting juxtapositions/realizations came up, and get my brain thinking about the current state of Chelsea photo shows.

First stop: Gagosian Gallery (21st Street) – Hiroshi Sugimoto7 Days / 7 Nights

This was my second visit to this show, as I had never seen a Sugimoto exhibition in person before, and the beauty of the presentation kind of warped my experience of it the first time around. Approaching it a second time, equipped with expectations, I still found the photographs to reek of beauty…perhaps a little too much. The concept behind the images is a bit thin–the images are long exposures, each from a separate day of the week, which span the entire course of, you guessed it, the day or the night. The rigid obedience to which Sugimoto follows his ‘rules’ is impressive, but other people have done it, and pushed the envelope a lot further, too (On Kawara and Tehching Hsieh spring to mind first, as they both have work currently on view at MOMA). I’ve realized that, for me at least, the selling point of Sugimoto’s work is it’s beauty–and that’s OK! The concepts behind the images are good supports, but are by no means the main interest of his work. Rather, Sugimoto has proven himself to be a master at rendering the concept of time in a gorgeously visual form.

Second Stop: Andrew Kreps Gallery – To Be Determined (group show)

Another show that seemed worthy of a second visit is the current exhibition at Andrew Kreps Gallery. Curated around a group of artist/photographers ‘…whose work stretch the limits of photography”, the show exhibits a surprisingly good balance of formal and conceptual investigations with the medium. Personal favorites were Walead Beshty’s experimental darkroom abstractions and Torbørn Rødland’s image of a stack of ‘Practical Photography’ magazines, but surprisingly good pieces from Roe Ethridge and Liz Deschenes were also present. Most artists were represented by only one or two pieces which seemed to be just about right. I probably could have done without as many tube-pieces from Josephine Pryde, but sculpturally they helped hold the space together. Overall an amazingly cohesive group show that provides an exciting survey of artists making work with photography, about photography.

Third Stop: Luhring Augustine – Luisa Lambri (closes today)

I really wanted to like this show, but I just had a gut feeling that I wouldn’t. Subtlety in photography treads an exceptionally thin line between beauty and boredom. Sugimoto, previously discussed, pulls it off with his large luscious prints. Unfortunately, Lambri’s images were so modestly sized (I can’t believe I’m actually complaining that photographer’s images weren’t big enough–I swear, Lambri is the only exception), that I wasn’t able to fully lose myself in the images. Additionally, the images were grouped in clusters that encouraged a game of ‘detect the differences’ from print to print. Her intentions of expressing the fourth dimension apparently take second when it comes to games ripped off from the back pages of ‘Highlights’. To Lambri’s credit, the far-back room of the gallery isn’t that bad, the images from the Centro Galego de Arte Contemporanea stand to be the most interesting of the entire show. Still, Sugimoto comparisons aside, I feel it could have been much better had the photographs been a little larger, and not grouped in cliché clusters.

Final stop: John Connelly PresentsJeffrey Tranchell (in the Tunnel Room)

I only visited this show one time, so I don’t feel entirely confident reviewing it, but I found interesting (note I didn’t say ‘good’ or ‘bad’) enough to warrant greater examination. The photographic works in the show are entirely lifted images from magazines with various price stickers affixed to their surface. Honestly as I write this out I can’t see how I would think this work would be anything but utter horseshit, but really, they aren’t that bad. There’s a beautifully simple coin rubbing that almost warrants a trip itself. The video which cycles through a series of images lifted from apartment rental listings is a little half-assed to me, but it still operates nicely in the space. All-in-all, a decent showing of work based on appropriated photography that doesn’t bore. Check it out–let me know what you think.

Ahh, blogging in my underwear on a Saturday night. Move to New York, kids. Be cool, like me.

Interview

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

Mind you this was at the opening and I’m sure I had a few drinks in me…

New Show Opening…

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

My new body of work ‘All Buildings Dream in Blueprints’ is opening this Friday, July 18th. Check it check it out if you can. Info here, quick write-up here.

‘Student Art Show’ – diazotype, 2008.