Shelf Life, this Saturday July 12th

Kathleen Hudspeth and I are collaborating on a suite of works on paper, using various techniques (lithography, xerox transfer, screenprinting, monoprinting and drawing).  We are merging our individual vocabularies in these works and having fun doing it.

So the show opens Saturday, July 12th. The space was used by Placemaker Gallery.  The address is 3852 North Miami Avenue.  Here is the press release.

Twenty Twenty is pleased to invite you to the opening reception for the group exhibition:

Shelf Life

Featuring work by:
Kevin Arrow
Alyse Emdur
Adler Guerrier
Jason Hedges
Jay Hines
Kathleen Hudspeth
Alexandra Kuechenberg
Nick Lobo
Daniel Newman
David Rohn
Tom Scicluna
Frank Wick

Shelf Life affirms the importance of an expiration date. In some cases the work is ephemeral discussing the relevance of longevity to the importance of creation.  In other cases it is the concept behind the work that talks about a lifespan of some kind.  Art attempts to defy its end whereas an art exhibition is created with the understanding that it will only last for a short period of time.  This exhibition has a shelf life whereas the art in it addresses the idea while still attempting to defy it.
Exhition runs through August 10th 2008

Exhibition Location:
3852 North Miami Avenue
Miami Fl 33127
786 217 7683
Design District

The space for this exhibit has graciously been donated by Dacra realty.

‘Thoughts on Democracy’ opens tonight

Please come by to see “Thoughts on Democracy‘ at the Wolfsonian.  I have mentioned the show before.

The member preview is tonight.  please RSVP.

MEMBER EVENT
Thursday, July 3
6:30-8:30pm


Join us for a preview to mark the opening of A Bittersweet Decade: The New Deal in America, 1933-43 and Thoughts on Democracy: Reinterpreting Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms Posters. Free to all members; guests $10. RSVP required: 305.535.2645 or rsvp@thewolf.fiu.edu.

my posters

Barkley L. Hendricks

Mr. Cool

Trevor Schoonmaker, of the Nasher Museum at Duke University, organized Birth of the Cool, a retrospective of Barkley L. Henricks’s paintings. The exhibition will travel to the Studio Museum in Harlem. I got a chance to check out the catalogue, at The Project, where Hendricks is having show, Thank you, Mr. John.

Here are some pics of Thank you, Mr. John:

Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks Barkley L. Hendricks

on Rauschenberg

Rauschenberg

I am a big fan of Rauschenberg’s, fuck that, i love the guy. He sits high in my pantheon, (it’s a multi-tiered dodecagonal space).

Here are some kind words from Jerry Saltz.

AMERICAN INVENTOR by Jerry Saltz


Robert Rauschenberg was not a giant of American art; he was the giant. No American created so many esthetic openings for so many artists. Jasper Johns, his sometime lover, said, “Rauschenberg was the man who in this century invented the most since Picasso.” His output always bordered on the mad and ecstatic; his art could be theatrical, wan, redundant or just cruddy-looking. In fact, everything he made, good or bad — and many think his late work is junk — has an edge of wit, optical nerve and invention.Sometimes those qualities could be almost invisible, as in his 1953 Erased de Kooning Drawing, which is exactly what the title says. In this page of faint smudges, Rauschenberg stumbled onto kryptonite. He’d rocked the boat of Abstract Expressionism and set out toward the more populist shores of art. (It’s touching and telling that de Kooning gave the drawing to Rauschenberg, knowing what the young artist intended.) This ritualistic killing, however aggressive or loving, gives you a sense of how desperate Rauschenberg and his generation were. They wanted to move on from high-minded heroism to something more vernacular. Rauschenberg seemed to make it all possible.

A year later, saying he “had literally run out of things to paint on,” Rauschenberg invented a new form, the combine. Not quite painting, not quite sculpture, it was for him like discovering fire. He began to use everything from bedding to doors to parachutes. One combine, Monogram, features a stuffed goat encircled by a tire atop a horizontal painting. Rauschenberg is a mischievous Satyr grazing on art history, or the goat is a gargoyle protecting the art. Either way, the title suggests that Rauschenberg was leaving his mark.

That mark has lasted. Large swaths of the current Whitney Biennial owe him a huge debt. Yet as young artists are still expanding on the idea of the combine, by the late 50s Rauschenberg had tired of it, and he went on to another new technique: using a solvent to transfer images from one surface to another. He used this low-tech, ethereal process to make his set of luminous illustrations for Dante’s Divine Comedy. Here, Dante and Virgil are athletes out of Sports Illustrated; Olympic weight lifters stand in for giants in the eighth circle of Hell; astronauts are the sinners. It is one of the most visually literate works ever made, by one of the most articulate artists who ever lived.

I love Rauschenberg. I love that he created a turning point in visual history, that he redefined the idea of beauty, that he combined painting, sculpture, photography and everyday life with such gall, and that he was interested in, as he put it, “the ability to conceive failure as progress.” Most of all, I love him for his fecundity and fearlessness.


Rauschenberg