a little something

You've got to dig to dig it, you dig?
People, Places and Things – solo exhibition at Dina Mitrani gallery
2620 NW 2 ave. February 14.

Coupling, an exhibition organized by Kristen Thiele.
Trisha Brookbank / Brian Burkhardt
Robert Chambers / Mette Tommerup
Carlos de Villasante / Rebecca Guarda
Guerra de la Paz
Kathleen Hudspeth / Adler Guerrier
Alvaro Ilizarbe / Jen Stark
Mary Malm / Kerry Ware
Winston McCarthy / Addison Walz
Beatriz Monteavaro / Gavin Perry
Leyden Rodriguez-Casanova / Frances Trombly
Claudia Scalise / Brian Reedy
February 14, 2009
Buena Vista Building
First Floor
180 NE 39th St.
MIAMI DESIGN DISTRICT
ON VIEW FEB 14 – FEB 21

Gean Moreno’s publishing house announced its subscription scheme and publication lineup.
[NAME]publications
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JANUARY 18, 2009
[NAME] announces the four books it will publish in 2009
MIAMI—[NAME] Publications, a non-profit Miami-based publishing house, has announced the four books that it will produce in 2009, in its series dedicated to Miami artists.
Volume 1: WWW by Daniel Newman
Volume 2: Quiet Village by Beatriz Monteavaro
Volume 3: Black Licorice by Clifton Childree
Volume 4: Casa de Carton by William Cordova and BASE collective
The first volume in the series will be published in May. The other three will appear in the second half of 2009. It is the intention of [NAME] Publications that this series grow, over the next five years, to 20 volumes and that it reflect the diversity and depth of the Miami art scene.
[NAME] Publications has also devised a simple subscriptions system so that these books can be conveniently delivered to you. Please see attached PDF for details.
About [NAME] Publications
Founded in 2008 by Gean Moreno and supported by a grant from the John S and James L Knight Foundation, [NAME] Publications is a non-profit publishing house that will focus on Miami artists and cultural topics that are relevant to the local community.
_________________________________________________________________
Subscriptions:
___$60: gets you the four books that will be published in 2009 as part of [NAME]’s Miami Artists Series.
__$100: gets you the four books that will be published in 2009 as part of [NAME]’s Miami Artists Series and an artist’s t-shirt made exclusively for [NAME].
__$500: gets you the four books that will be published in 2009 as a part [NAME]’s Miami Artists Series, an artist’s t-shirt made exclusively for [NAME] and 10% discount on all multiples that [NAME] produces in 2009.
__$1000: gets you the four books that will be published in 2009 as a part [NAME]’s Miami Artists Series, an artist’s t-shirt made exclusively for [NAME], 10% discount on all multiples that [NAME] produces in 2009, and a limited edition artist’s print produced exclusively for [NAME] subscribers at this level.
Please make checks payable to Name Publications.
Please send s ubscription materials to:
[Name] Publications
4241 SW 62 Avenue
Miami, FL 33155
Thank you for your support.
This saturday, January 10 .
Lynne Golob Gelfman
water / clouds / sand
JANUARY 10 – JANUARY 31, 2009RECEPTION FOR THE ARTIST
SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 7-9PM
LUMINAIREX 161 NE 40th Street, Suite 201,Miami, Florida 33137 P: 305.571.5144 Contact: alyssa.hathaway@luminaire.com
I have given New World School of the Arts a piece for their auction.
NEW WORLD SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Presents
Alumni Art Exhibition and Auction
Opening Reception and Auction
December 4, 8:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Exhibition open from December 4 to January 23, 2009
Monday – Friday, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
New World Gallery
MDC Wolfson Campus, Building 5
25 NE 2nd Street, Downtown Miami
The Studio Museum in Harlem presents VIdeoStudio:
VideoStudio is a new, ongoing series of video and time-based art. Just as the frames of a video change with the passing of time, this project presents programs that rotate monthly. Programs include both compilations of work by several artists organized around a loose but pointed theme, as well as presentations of selected work by individual artists and art collectives. Expanding the Museum’s engagement with digital and new media practices, VideoStudio reflects the influence of recent technology on contemporary art. Focusing on emergent projects as well as on work that has played an invaluable role in the histories of modern art and black thought, this initiative explores video art’s experimental history and continued possibilities for shifting our perspectives as viewers, artists, individuals and communities.
This season, we are pleased to feature video work by Elizabeth Axtman, Sanford Biggers, Jonathan Calm, Nanna Debois Buhl, Carla Edwards, Rico Gatson, Adler Guerrier, Jayson Keeling, Bouchra Khalili, Wangechi Mutu, My Barbarian, Robin Rhode, Abbey Williams and Lauren Woods.
Fall/Winter 2008-09 Calendar
November 12-December 11, 2008: Filmic
December 12, 2008-January 8, 2009: Psychogeography
January 9-February 12, 2009: Letters from the Left Coast . . .
February 13-March 15, 2009: Muted—November 12—December 11, 2008: Filmic
Rather than using video as a tool for simple documentation or as a performance partner, the artists in Filmic take a critical look at cinema and its history, and have turned their cameras on the camera itself. Since the earliest days of video art, artists have been cognizant of the medium’s predecessor in cinema, as well as cinema’s unique cultural place between fine art and mass culture. As such, cinema creates reference points for many people who are strangers to each other but carry shared memories and experiences from the movies they’ve watched. In this program, some artists borrow liberally from commercial films, using clips as found objects. Others manipulate film images to create new cinematic collages, and still other artists reenact famous scenes to examine how films create collective memories, shaping our sense of the world and ourselves.Sanford Biggers (b. 1970, Los Angeles, California; lives and works in New York, New York)
Carla Edwards (b. 1977, Winfield, Illinois; lives and works in Brooklyn, New York)
Rico Gatson (b. 1966, Augusta, Georgia; lives and works in Brooklyn, New York)
Jayson Keeling (b. 1966, Brooklyn, New York; lives and works in New York, New York)December 12, 2008—January 8, 2009: Psychogeography
Psychogeography: The study of the specific effects of the geographical environment (whether consciously organized or not) on the emotions and behavior of individuals.From the Surrealists to the French avant-garde Lettrist movement, the city has been a privileged site for examining the psychological relationship to the space that surrounds us—a position most aptly described above by Guy Debord. Urban spaces can be limiting in their grid-like order, but liberating at the same time; “breaking the grid” exposes radical possibilities for reshaping the use of the city and even creating a new psychic relationship to ourselves. The artists presented in this program realize that transiting through any landscape is a psychological journey as much as it is a physical one. Whether moving through streets, in buildings or even across borders, the subjects of each of these videos—for the most part, the people are hidden or never fully reveal themselves—grapple with the consequences of being in and feeling out a space.
Jonathan Calm (b. 1971, Brooklyn, New York; lives and works in New York, New York)
Adler Guerrier (b. 1975, Port-au-Prince, Haiti; lives and works in Miami, Florida)
Bouchra Khalili (b. 1975, Casablanca, Morocco; lives and works in Paris, France)
Robin Rhode (b. 1976, Cape Town, South Africa; lives and works in Berlin, Germany)January 9—February 12, 2009: Letters from the Left Coast . . .
January 9-25, 2009:
My Barbarian (Malik Gaines, Jade Gordon and Alexandro Segade; founded 2000, Los Angeles California)January 28-February 12, 2009:
Lauren Woods (b. 1979, Kansas City, Missouri; lives and works in San Francisco, California)February 13—March 15, 2009: Muted—
Bringing together videos in which viewers do not hear sounds that should correspond to the images we see, Muted— asks what kind of voice can be assigned to silent subjects. By drawing attention to these shifts in sonic quality, the videos in this program draw attention away from what we see, towards alternative forms of representation. Not all the videos are silent; yet, they collectively question the aesthetic structures that suture image to sound and give the viewer/listener/reader access to information. Barriers between viewer and image, as well as between artist and subject, emphasize the intractability of objects—art or otherwise—as well as the unrecognized world of their murmurs and mutterings.Elizabeth Axtman (b. 1980, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland; lives and works in Oakland, California)
Nanna Debois Buhl (b. 1975, Aarhus, Denmark; lives and works in Brooklyn, New York)
Wangechi Mutu (b.1972, Nairobi, Kenya; lives and works in New York, New York
Abbey Williams (b. 1971, New York, New York; lives and works in Brooklyn, New York)
The exhibition features untitled(study of threefourone), a work of mine originally shown at Locust Projects in 2004.
