Archive | December, 2011

Illuminating the Issue: Artists books as Social/Political Critique

22 Dec

Illuminating the Issue: Artists books as Social/Political Critique is a compact exhibition in the UWM Library, installed just outside the Special Collections area on the 4th floor. Max Yela, head of Special Collections, and Alverno College art student Margaux Carini, organize this rich display into a variety of themes touching on important issues in the contemporary landscape.

Gender, race, identity, politics and more are starting points for commentary, but it is the form they take which is most interesting. A book sounds simple enough on the surface — a cover and some pages in between in the most basic form. The artists in this exhibition stretch the concept of a book in many directions, from the simplicity of a single broadside print, to a crafted bag as metaphor, and a host of works stuctured like abstract literary sculptures.

Sarah Peters, Necessary Disclosures, 2003.

Sarah Peters of the Women’s Studio Workshop in Rosendale, New York, crafts a series of diminutive nested bowls in Necessary Disclosures (2003). Their fragile appearance belies the weighty issues of the text within. Conceived as symbiotic statements, Peter’s words dwell on a personal relationship, juxtaposed with larger global issues such as economics and Mideast politics. The micro and macro view of the world ever so gently mirror each other, held in delicate tension.

James Allen, Are Apelike Men Our Ancestors?, 2007.

James Allen, an artist from Seattle, Washington, who received his BFA from UWM, recuts and recasts a 1967 creationist treatise into a veritable explosion of delicate figures in Are Apelike Men Our Ancestors?. A butterfly, sheep, a car, horses, not to mention people, are liberated by his “excavation” of the text, transforming flat pages into a lively relief sculpture.

Caren Heft, book (foreground) and broadsheet (background) from If I Should Die: Children Murdered in Wisconsin in 1993.

Artist, gallerist, and publisher Caren Heft of UW-Stevens Point takes a direct, sober approach in If I Should Die: Children Murdered in Wisconsin in 1993  (1993). In book form as well as broadsheets, Heft’s work, part of the Children Don’t Count Project, memorializes in straightforward text the deaths of children under 14 years of age in 1993. The rawness of the paper and dignified clarity of the prints, which record the names, birth and death dates, and causes of death of young victims, are starkly poignant.

As with reading, it is best to take your time with the works in Illuminating the Issue, letting the details of craft and composition sink in. The main drawback to this exhibition is the necessity securing it in display cases. The objects are literally kept at arm’s length, but understandably so. Despite this space between, their messages come through. There is a sense of gravitas in these pieces, as part of the intellectual status of a book is that it is something of longevity; it is tangible and enduring. These works use the significance of this medium for lasting, resonant statements.

 

Illuminating the Issue: Artists books as Social/Political Critique continues through December 30, 2011.

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FOR MORE ART WITH A BOOKISH BENT…

There are been a number of recent articles about an ongoing art intervention of sorts in Edinburgh, Scotland. An anonymous artist had left a series of exquisite paper sculptures in various venus with messages and a Twitter component.

Here are pictures and articles of these gorgeous things:

Photograph by Chris Scott.

A beautiful photo essay and commentary by Chris Scott about the project: http://thisiscentralstation.com/featured/mysterious-paper-sculptures/

More in the Guardian newspaper:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2011/dec/01/edinburgh-book-sculptures

And from NPR:  http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/11/29/142910393/the-library-phantom-returns?ft=3&f=111787346&sc=nl&cc=es-20111204

Weekend Art Date: Dec. 23-25, 2011

22 Dec

MARN Holiday Bazaar

Secrets of the Dead: Michelangelo Revealed episode online from PBS.org

The Jewish Museum Milwaukee opens One World, One People: Jewish Photographic Portraits by Arnold Newman

Amuse-bouche: Under her watchful violet eyes

19 Dec

Amuse-bouche (http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amuse-bouche): an elegant French phrase literally meaning “to amuse the mouth,” typically describing a small, singular hors d’oeuvre.

Here, the term is appropriated for a little morsel of artistic delight to start the week. Enjoy.

Under her watchful violet eyes…

A larger-than-life image of Elizabeth Taylor gazed on La Peregrina, the enormous, 55.95 carat pearl pendant on a Cartier necklace. It was a highlight of last week’s auction of her collection at Christie’s. The pearl has a storied history, having been in the possession of King Phillip II of Spain in 1582, and subsequently passed down through the Spanish royal family. In the 19th century it changed hands, going to Joseph Bonaparte (brother of Napoleon). Richard Burton bought the bauble for $37,000 in 1969, presenting it to Taylor as a Valentine’s gift. It went to a new owner for $11.8 million dollars.  ( AP Photo/Mary Altaffer.)

Weekend Art Date, Dec. 9-10

9 Dec

Walker’s Point Center for the Arts

RedLine Milwaukee

PAINTED // Curated by Tyson Reeder video on YouTube

Amuse-bouche: The Royal and the Radical

5 Dec

Amuse-bouche (http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/amuse-bouche): an elegant French phrase literally meaning “to amuse the mouth,” typically describing a small, singular hors d’oeuvre.

Here, the term is appropriated for a little morsel of artistic delight to start the week. Enjoy.

The Royal and the Radical, the Establishment and the Avant-garde; however you describe it, Queen Elizabeth II and Yoko Ono’s handshake at the opening of the Museum of Liverpool (Liverpool, England) on December 1 is a meeting of two historic women.

As a picture, it’s quite striking for the play of red and black — and that single purple glove.

AP Photo/Tim Hales.

CoPA correction!

2 Dec

Mea culpa — the CoPA show does open today during regular WPCA gallery hours, but the reception isn’t until next week, Friday, December 9 from 5 – 9 p.m.

Until then, holding horses…

Weekend Art Date, Dec. 2-4

2 Dec

 

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