so easy?!

Bridgitte Bardot in <em>God Created Woman</em> (1956).
Bridgitte Bardot in God Created Woman (1956).
Jean-Luc Godard said that all one needs to make a film is a gun and a girl. Shoot, I put so much extra in my last screenplay!!!

Cute article and one editor’s fatales françaises in Vanity fair

what i want to do this week 6.16.10

Pop. To be sure, the most important act of the week will be to honor the father (and mother concurrently); luckily the visit is possible this year on Father’s Day.
Cyrus. I am very looking forward to Cyrus with Marissa Tomei, a crush ever since My Cousin Vinny. This movie hits some of the themes I’m playing with in a literary vein.
Haunted. I’m going to check this one out at the Guggenheim. Curated by Jennifer Blessing, Curator of Photography, and Nat Trotman, Associate Curator with lots of blue chip work in photo, video, sound, and installation. In a nutshell,

examines myriad ways photographic imagery is incorporated into recent practice and in the process underscores the unique power of reproductive media while documenting a widespread contemporary obsession, both collective and individual, with accessing the past.

Laura Peterson Choreography, everyone. Flash mobs in two outdoor locations in lower Manahattan. I can’t wait to see this. June 22-25

what i want to do 6.1.10

robin, marion

with cate, russell, ridley

3 favorite talents

1 favorite story

somehow, everything is moving at the pace of … this,
but I will, i will, i….willl get to this film
or maybe when i go on vacation next week….

whitney, moma

okay, so i’m the last person not a tourist to catch this installation of the biennial and other landmark museum shows in town. But there were extenuating circumstances.
The biennial was pretty much what I have come to expect (there is a review by Peter Plagens in Art in America that captures my overall feelings while disagreeing about which were the worthwhile offerings). My favorite (and Plagens pan) was the Bruce High Quality Foundation ambulance/hearse. I’m also kind of sweet on Charles Ray’s flowers (also a Plagens pan).
MoMA’s exhibitions by Kentridge and Abramovic blew me away and gave me a much better rounded appreciation for the full body of work of these two. Perhaps I’ll get to elaborate soon……

the gauntlet is thrown

Christian Viveros-Fauné gives a big nod to Chris Verene’s new Book, Family in today’s Village Voice and throws down this assessment of “most artists” work:

…Substitute the word “art” for “cultural theory,” and you’ve just described a parallel universe for much of the stuff that regularly fills contemporary galleries and museums. While rafts of visual artists today flock to subject matter like Michael Jackson’s praxis and the emancipatory possibilities of “hamster nests,” very few sign up to tackle what were once tagged “grand narratives”—stories about how regular people deal with poverty, injustice, and suffering, among other conditions not fully captured by the drolleries of air quotes.

hal hartley

I had the great good fortune to notice that IFC is hosting the premiere of Hal Hartley’s latest films. I made tonight’s big screen showing of classics Surviving Desire, Ambition and Theory of Achievement. His new films are showing tomorrow 4/22. I picked them up on DVD and learned the Hartley is now back in New York after a handful of years working in Berlin. My interview with him from 2007 (in collaboration with Claire Adas) is archived here.
I’ll be hosting a movie night soon for these four new shorts.

new graffiti :: new collage

Back during the project now:here:this, which I ran with Artists Unite, several artists took up a technique of using Scotch Tape to grab images from printed matter and create layered collage (here’s an example from Tony Gonzalez). In the subway stop I use these days, some graffiti artists have taken a similar direction with a very clever technique: they are scavenging one poster to tag another. The results tend to run to the same (replaced heads, new eyes), but some of the pieces are great. Here are a few I’ve seen this month. I have no idea who the artists are…

Ed Hardy Ad #1. Ad tagged with Justin Timberlake’s eyes and smile. Too bad for Justin.
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Iron Chef Ad. Smart twist on the “eyes” theme (are we having flounder!?)
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Ed Hardy Ad #2. Unique use of Rhys’s necklace to bling up the ad.
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more info, no please

Doing some research on wordpress themes, I came across this website that I think is a writer’s book review site devoted to virtually everything cultural: ugly blog. What is everything cultural, you might ask? Well, imagine a syllabus that starts with Indonesian art and end with handbags of the apocalypse and you have the general scope. I say I think it’s a book review, because the site is relatively stream of consciousness and I am not confident of my following. I think I’m going to have to put this in my blog roll and spend a little time exploring this scattershot!
p.s. the expression “no, please!” should be tributed to leila shvetsov, who used this expression as a toddler when she was juggling learning both english and russian.

image (from an anarchist, so probably doesn’t care about copyright, but…) reportedly from October 2009 issue of Liberty. My source was this URL at ugly blog.

what i wanna do this week 4.9.10

this is one of those weeks that flies by, so much so that i’ve done one of the things i want to do this week as i’m writing this.
‡ Maly Theatre’s production of Uncle Vanya at BAM was superb. I like Uncle Vanya a lot to start with and the easy treatment of the play by this Russian company showed the true humor of that nation’s artists: witty, dark, absurd, sentimental, and bound to end up drinking.
‡ Pieter Hugo at Yossi Milo. This portraiture show features bizarre archtypal characters from Nigeria’s film culture, which is the third biggest in the world behind bollywood and hollywood. Aptly named, Nollywood, it looks karayzeee!

easter bklyn-style

IMG_0821-shoes

Easter according to my upbringing was a recognition of the rising of Christ from the dead. From my own spiritual study, it’s changed into a holiday that could celebrate the birth of higher consciousness and in yoga it is something done every time one meditates to bring awareness from the mortal to the immortal plane. My traditions, though, include dyeing easter eggs in geometric patterns (Ukranian) and eating chicks of bright yellow marsmallow (American) and hunting (White House lawn, et al); all of which I gave up long ago, though I still appreciate the colorful results. It was nostalgic today to see the pair of brightly-colored shoes on Union Street as I went for a stroll. I couldn’t help thinking they looked like hidden easter footwear!

The whole episode reminded me of two Christ-centric studies. The first is Gospel Truth, by Russell Shorto, which discuses current bible scholarship and is surprising in what it says about what the Catholic Church now believes. The second is Jesus of Montreal, a smart film that tells of a modern-day christ in the role of an actor-director of a passion play.

Happy easter!