Tag Archives: Jen Graves

Color: A Guilty Pleasure Dome

If we needed art shows to always be somber and appropriate, we might be disappointed with a show dedicated to Xanadu. Why is this necessary, this homage to Olivia Newton John and roller skates? Is Seattle really better off with neon laser beams and thirty-something women in legwarmers dancing down Third Avenue?

I think it is.

Like Erin Shafkind, I spent my childhood in the 1980s in Los Angeles, yet I somehow have never seen Xanadu. (My parents weren’t purists or hippies, but if I wanted to bite snowflake shapes out of Velveeta cheese and watch non-PBS TV I had to go down the street to Tracy Clark’s house and I guess I was never there when Xanadu was on.) At this point I don’t feel like I need to see Xanadu now that I’ve seen how several artists have used Xanadu.

Xanadu, the film, is about the frustration, then celebration, of an artist. It’s about fantasy clashing and exploding into reality; utopias and dystopias. It’s about color. Xanadu: A Stately Pleasure Dome, curated by Erin Shafkind at SOIL, is about letting yourself have a hot relationship with media. By “hot” I mean Marshall McLuhan hot. McLuhan wrote about how different media are hot or cold, and our responses to them are hot or cold. TV (a show on a box in your living room), he said, is cold because it’s easy to control; it’s smaller than you. Film (a movie in a theatre) is hot because it is huge and enveloping and becomes your world. Hot is engaged, cold is distanced. In inviting these artists to participate in this show, Shafkind was essentially inviting them to let themselves have a hot response to Xanadu. The same invitation is extended to the viewer of her curated exhibition– except here the invitation is to have a hot exchange with hot art.

That is a lot to ask on both counts, when hot isn’t what’s cool.

In Chromophobia, David Batchelor writes succinctly about how color has been uncool for much of the lifespan of the Western world. Throughout art, history, and literature, color is associated with base desires, sex, the feminine, intellectual decay, loss of control, fall from grace.

Charles Blanc in 1867:”The taste for colour, when it predominates absolutely, costs many sacrifices; often it turns the mind from its course, changes the sentiment, swallows up the thought. . . The lower strata of nature takes the first place instead of human beings [who] alone represent the loftiest expression of life, which is thought.”

Roland Barthes, 1970′s: “Colour. . . is a kind of bliss. . . like a closing eyelid, a tiny fainting spell.”

L. Frank Baum’s Dorothy, on leaving colorful Oz to return to black-white-gray Kansas, 1900: “East, West, Home is Best.”

Kant, 1790: “The colours which give brilliancy to a sketch are a part of the charm. They may no doubt, in their own way, enliven the object for sensation, but make it really worth looking at and beautiful they cannot.”

In more subtle, less specific language, contemporary art criticism still often communicates a preference for non-color. I think of Jen Graves’ writing about Isaac Layman’s photographs at Lawrimore Project. She explains how this photograph

is fine as a cover for The Stranger, but it lacks the conceptual rigor of the “darker, almost morbid, and therefore interesting” Hot Dog Wrapper.

Aside from the fact that Otter Pops is colorful and Hot Dog Wrapper is not, I can’t find any differences in the conceptual implications of the two works; except to say that the mere use of color is meaningful, with its own host of conceptual implications and seedy association with pleasure.

Xanadu the art show has helped elucidate for me this quiet yet persistent discourse about color. During the Xanadu artists’ talk at SOIL, Cable Griffith talked about how participating in this show gave him the excuse he needed to finally use the neon colored acrylic paint he always pined for in the art supply store.

Cable Griffith, Pleasure Pan-Portal, 2010

Andy Arkley and Julie Alpert talked about their giddy opportunity to use colored laser beams in their collaborative video Gene’s Got Lasers, Who Could Ask For Anything More?

Color is a forbidden fruit that the artists in Xanadu: A Stately Pleasure Dome let themselves eat for the purpose of this show. Like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz and Sonny in Xanadu, they had a dream/lapse/fall/trip into color. Like Dorothy and Sonny, I expect they’ll need to return to Kansas/Earth/greyness. Though I’m not sure I buy the reason why.

{photo by Stewart McCullough}

p.s. Also in the show, and fitting with this post was Joey Veltkamp’s PINK portrait of Gretchen Bennett and Amanda Manitach’s “hermaphrodite, bathing in the fuchsia and banana yellow glow of Gene’s Got Lasers, Who Could Ask for Anything More?

Amanda Manitach, Glory, Utopia (the head of Samuel Taylor Coleridge on the body of Terpischore)

A neat pile of pink bubblegum lies at the rollerskates of this blushing hermaphrodite who sheepishly, daintily, resides somewhere between utopia and dystopia.

Alice Wheeler on Seattle, the wild west, the physical space of a woman, and Feminism.

I [yes, finally] listened to Jen Graves’ podcast of her interview with Alice Wheeler. Wow. The interview is more of a monologue, but it’s one that is wholly worthwhile. She said so many things that no one else seems to be saying; yet lots of people must be thinking about them, right?

I hadn’t realized that I have this idea of what the [contemporary] [female] [American] artist is supposed to be like. I hadn’t ever articulated it or heard it articulated before; at least not in this way. There’s this female artist template, and I’ve been sharing studio space with her all along. Negotiating.

There are conversations about feminism and what it means to be a female artist, but they are usually among feminists, and they are few and far between. If they make it into a larger arena, they seem to be bullied back into specificity so quickly that no response is required from the greater community.

Apparently I’m chickenshit because I can’t find the words to elaborate on my own experience as a female artist, nor bring myself to provide examples for any of the points I’m making. Sometimes it feels dangerous enough just writing this blog. Sometimes I’m struck with the thought that writing a blog about the art scene I’m participating in isn’t really what I’m “supposed” to be doing. I’m fairly certain it would have been safer to be quiet. Ah well, it’s too late for that.

Eco-Macho, Not-So-Macho, Thoughts on Bloggery, and a Media Invasion

susan

[Susan Robb, I Am A Land Animal]

“Eco-macho…taps into that old and apparently endlessly rich metaphor of the Northwest as a place rooted in the interpenetration between the urban and the rural, a place that’s both somehow ahead of the mainstream and off the grid. The idea has been cultivated by Northwest artists and writers from time immemorial. Just to name a few recent examples: Charlie Krafft, with his Mystic Sons of Morris Graves crew and his weapon ceramics; Gretchen Bennett, with her Native American blankets, street stickers in the form of Mount Rainier, and colored-pencil adaptations of Kurt Cobain on YouTube (not to mention the Aberdeen native himself); Claude Zervas, with his Eva Hesse–like Northwest rivers and passages made in thin, white cold-cathode fluorescents with their dangling wires; Susan Robb, with her both hopeful and dark insistence on humans as animals. This is the current Northwest School.”

I just read this article by Jen Graves this morning, though it was written last April. It is so directly pertinent to our conversation about Regionalism. Talk about forgetting our own art history; even one that was articulated just one year ago! Or, in my case–rather than forgetting–just now learning our art history. For various reasons of life and cliff-hanging tumult, my attendance to all things art-related in my three years here has been spotty, at best.

I am very excited to be becoming a part of this art community, but I don’t really know that much about it, yet. It is with this confession that I named this blog; I started writing as a way to get to know the artists and spaces in my city. Also, my baby was taking twenty minute naps (which, to any babies reading this, DOES NOT REALLY COUNT as a nap) and blogging was a way to do something creative, at home, in a short amount of time. This medium is ripe for someone with a rather impulsive personality. I get all excited and worked up about something and make some seemingly-confident statements, click “Publish” and proceed to be overcome by the urge to run and hide under the nearest pile of dirt. Maybe this is just another extension of what it means to try to make your life as an artist — sticking your neck out; submitting to likely rejection; passionately, unknowingly, reinventing the wheel.

stickerlayout.indd[Gretchen Bennett, Mountain of Dirt Sticker]

Sometimes the abundance of what I don’t know hits me like a sack of glass bricks, and I’m humbled by people that really do know a lot.

Seattle’s art-writing media are changing in nature, and I wonder how this will change the content. We are losing the model of the few people (i.e. “critics” that are invested full-time, employed, and published on real live paper) that know everything, and we’re gaining many voices (many of them artists who are already spread thinly across many projects, with time to write only in the wee hours of the morning) that know some things about some things. It is mind-boggling to me that I, for example, now have a platform not too different from that of some people who are much more entitled to it. Despite this fact, the seasoned critics have been nothing but gracious and welcoming to us renegade blogging artists. They could have relegated us as cocky, hapless, new-sheriffs-in-town; instead they’ve added us to their blogrolls with open arms, declaring that if people aren’t reading our blogs, they’re not reading about art in this town.

claude

[Claude Zervas, La Bûche]

Likewise with some of the art spaces here. In the spirit of exercising my rights as the gushy, why-not-lay-it-all-on-the-line artist, I wrote my letter of (intentionally unrequited) love to the Henry, never thinking they’d entertain my ideas. (It simply felt necessary go through the motions of asking the question, if that makes any sense.) Now Betsey Brock wants to meet me for coffee and help me with an exhibition proposal.

So, in light of our collective examination of what’s missing in the Seattle art scene, this here is a gleaming representation of what we’ve got. Instead of an art establishment that turns up its nose at artists challenging the foundation, Seattle has one that joins in.

Charlie

[Charles Krafft, porcelain firearm]

Dear Henry

Dear Henry,
Hi, I love you. We’ve met on several occasions (I worked for you as a Gallery Attendant in 2000), and I talk about you on my blog rather often (gettingtoknowyoubetter.wordpress.com). You are super. You have style and class, and you hit the nail on the head a good 8.5 times out of 10.
I have a great idea that YOU are a part of! I think we should create a “Seattle Exchange Program” that would be situated in one of your galleries!
Together (my contribution would be of no cost to you) we would explore the cities of the world, depositing Seattle artists in them, and in exchange, gathering artists to show here in our Seattle Exchange Program. (We could think of a new name if you don’t like that one.)
For example, I happen to know of the perfect space in Berlin where a group of Seattle artists could have a show. Simultaneous to this show in Berlin would be a show here in Seattle featuring work of some Berlin artists. I am sure YOU know of possible exhibition spaces in most cities anywhere! You are grand.
We could play with themes and curatorial ideas, so that there might be two exhibitions on different sides of the globe tackling the same concept. The inherent messages and audiences would be initially transplanted in physical location, but would ultimately take on a boomerang effect: The scope and intent of the exhibitions will have been made more significant by their travels.
I imagine this being a kind of process-based endeavor, where the focus is on the act of exchange rather than making the pristine exhibitions you’re known for. The exhibitions might be messy and alive and possibly perfect in their imperfections.
If you don’t want to devote one of your beautiful galleries to this project, I bet we could think of some kind of satellite space. The possibilities are endless, don’t you think?
I hope this doesn’t come across as flippant; please know that you have my heart. I could shop my affections elsewhere, but it just wouldn’t be the same.
Love,
Susanna
   

Friday June 12, 2009

Dear Henry,

Hi, I love you. We’ve met on several occasions (I worked for you as a Gallery Attendant in 2000), and I talk about you on my blog rather often (gettingtoknowyoubetter.wordpress.com). You are super. You have style and class, and you hit the nail on the head a good 8.5 times out of 10.

I have a great idea that YOU are a part of! I think we should create a “Seattle Exchange Program” that would be situated in one of your galleries!

Together (my contribution would be of no cost to you) we would explore the cities of the world, depositing Seattle artists in them, and in exchange, gathering artists to show here in our Seattle Exchange Program. (We could think of a new name if you don’t like that one.)

For example, I happen to know of the perfect space in Berlin where a group of Seattle artists could have a show. Simultaneous to this show in Berlin would be a show here in Seattle featuring work of some Berlin artists. Then a few months later, a different group of Seattle artists would show in, say, Austin, and Austin artists would show here in Seattle. I am sure YOU know of possible exhibition spaces in most cities anywhere! You are grand.

We could play with themes and curatorial ideas, so that there might be two exhibitions on different sides of the globe tackling the same concept. The inherent messages and audiences would be initially transplanted in physical location, but would ultimately take on a boomerang effect: The scope and intent of the exhibitions will have been made more significant by their travels.

I imagine this being a kind of process-based endeavor, where the focus is on the act of exchange rather than making the pristine exhibitions you’re known for. The exhibitions might be messy and alive and possibly perfect in their imperfections.

If you don’t want to devote one of your beautiful galleries to this project, I bet we could think of some kind of satellite space. The possibilities are endless, don’t you think?

The economy is rough, and you’ve probably suffered budget cuts in recent months. Programs are dying and relationships ending. Maybe that makes this the perfect occasion to sow some new seeds?

I hope this doesn’t come across as flippant; please know that you have my heart. I could shop my affections elsewhere, but it just wouldn’t be the same.

Love,
Susanna

 

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pleasedonttouchberlin

Panel Discussion: Regionalism In the Contemporary Art World, Sincerity, History, and Everything.

“To be an artist, you might as well tattoo ‘Shithead’ on your forehead. You’re always in a position where you have to explain who you are and what you do and why you do what you do. It’s a weird job to have in the long haul.”

- Seattle artist Dan Webb 

Dan W. was spouting quotable phrases left and right. Jen Graves is really charming. (As the only paid art critic in town, it would be easy for a lot of people to hate her; but when you’re in a room with her, you can’t help but love her.) It was a rousing evening. There was a lot on the table!  I think all we really did was get all the issues on the table, and then look at them. I could talk about this stuff for days. 

Is there such a thing as a Seattle Artist? If we entertained the notion that there were such a thing, what would s/he look like? Dan W. offered that Seattle artists might be more sincere than your average artist.

Stephen Lyons from Platform made a kind of squirmy (like, eww) movement when he said “sincere,” saying usage of the word made him uncomfortable in the context of contemporary art. 

Jen G. talked about how Vancouver artists seem to reference their own city’s art history in a productive way, whereas American artists seem to forget where they came from. (I’d say this is true on the whole– not just with art.)

This begs the question: Do artists working in Seattle need to fashion themselves as Seattle Artists?

In my opinion, no. I think we need to make ourselves international artists. And I guess my answer to the first question is also no; there shouldn’t be such a thing as a Seattle Artist. 

I see curators as having the opportunity to frame art and conversations in such a way that poses questions surrounding issues like “regionalism.” (Maybe there is such a thing as a Seattle Curator? Or maybe there isn’t, but there should be?)

One thing that I see as missing in Seattle is thoughtful risk-taking by the major art institutions. It seems that the risk-taking is left to the gallery dealers, with the museums only showing “new” artists after they’ve been around for ten years and recognized by the rest of the world. The way this plays out strikes me as odd, because a gallery dealer has so much more to lose than a non-profit art space. Because the museums don’t take risks, there is a lot of pressure on Seattle galleries to fill the void. 

Dan W. talked about how we all need to just accept the American model of the gallery/patron-based art system. He spoke of the specialness of making an object that a [wealthy] individual loves enough to want in his/her own home. 

I find specialness there as well; but when there aren’t enough risk-taking galleries and wealthy patrons to go around, what’s left?
IMG_4065

TVP part 3: Local Is the New Conceptual

TVP isn’t really about Vancouver anymore (well, no more than it’s about textured vegetable protein) but it’s a catchy way to refer to the identity crisis of Seattle’s art scene.

When I left this train of posts dangling, I had imagined I’d pick up RIGHT HERE! Local IS the new conceptual!!! Ah the sweet smell of synchronicity! Dan Webb should be credited for first uttering the phrase “Local is the new conceptual,” and now we have a panel discussion (swoon, I love panel discussions) tonight called “Local Is the New Conceptual” moderated by Jen Graves at Greg Kucera. 7pm.

(I only found out about this event because my blog stats alerted me that this blog o’ mine was listed as a link on SLOG that would likely cover the discussion. Funny.)

There’s so much to talk about!

Some questions to pick up where we left off: What is missing in Seattle’s art scene? What might fill the void?

I think the crux of the problem is that Seattle’s art scene has been built using the template of the New York art scene, as most art scenes in the U.S. are. The New York art scene thrives on the romance of the (preferably tormented) artist slogging away in his studio creating masterpieces that rich people snatch up like hotcakes. Young artists barely out of art school are preyed upon (if they’re lucky) and celebrated and then lost in the frenzy. A few artists have repeat successes and Whitney shows are had and books are written. This works in New York, with its gallery culture. This doesn’t work in Seattle, because there is no gallery culture.

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We need a new template.

I think one is emerging, right here. In the writing, in these blogs.

Something exciting is happening, and while it might include galleries, it is not of galleries. We’re banding together, and it’s going to be good. And it will be unique to Seattle.

Textured_vegetable_protein

Klatched

I finally made it to my first Art Klatch this morning, for a special topic of discussion: art-writing in Seattle and the changing roles of the professional (i.e. paid) art critic and renegade blogger artists. The issue is quite relevant in this city (era?) where the former is decreasing by the minute, while the latter steadily increases.

It was great to be in a room with all of these people. It was packed! 

I’m a little surprised to notice that it seems to be my writing about art that is finally connecting me with other artists here, rather than my actual art practice. That seems to be true of many of the artists that were there today. 

I will do my best to summon early morning gumption and go every week at 7am.

The Vancouver Problem: Joining the Conversation

I’ve been thinking a lot about Jen Graves’ essay The Vancouver Problem, in which she explains why she thinks Vancouver is a better art city than Seattle. As a relative newcomer (3 years) who has lived in several international art cities, I’ll add my voice to this conversation.

Sadly, I have to agree with much of JG’s argument: if Seattle and Vancouver were left to brawl it out in front of an international audience, it is clear that Vancouver would win. Vancouver has built itself as an international art city; Seattle has built itself as a Pacific Northwest art city. [Sighing, heart sinking.] I disagree, though, with her estimation that this disparity between the two cities is largely due to a higher quality of art and artists up north.

Conceptual art has a much stronger presence in Vancouver, and conceptual art is what puts cities on the map, presently. That said, I don’t think Seattle should force itself onto the international map by painstakingly re-packaging itself as a conceptual art city.  While I recognize the relevance of minimalist relational art as much as the next MFA graduate, I am often distraught when mediocre work within this genre is locally applauded simply for existing; as if enough praise will coax more (and presumably better) such work into being. Likewise, I don’t think Seattle’s ticket into the larger forum will come from its doting on the age-old Seattle aesthetic of Morris Graves et al. These seem to be the two dominant voices in our community: One camp works to mold Seattle into a typical international art city; the other camp looks only in a mirror for inspiration and relevance. Neither one seems to be drawing from the internationally engaged artists under their noses. There is certainly a place for the region’s art history, just as we must encourage excellent work in all media– whether conceptual photography or installation or (even!) painting.

This will probably be a long post, and I am holding a squirmy baby. So,

to be continued…