Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Apologies, yet again, TNG. I've finally handed in my last graduate paper and, after what is going to be an exceptionally celebratory weekend (as it also includes my birthday), I will be back full time next week.

Here are a few arty events this weekend, though it seems like everyone's schedules are so jam packed that no one has time to hit any galleries.

Tonight

Artomatic is still in full swing, and head over there tonight to meet some of the artists and check out the immense amount of work on display.

Tomorrow:

Transformer Gallery opens Here and Now, with a few events, at 1840 14th St., NW. The web site notes that the new show focuses "on issues of place, time, fragility, security and fantasy, this two-site exhibition features 17 artists creating large scale, site-specific installations and environments within Transformer's project space."

Tomorrow and Sunday:

Mid City Artists Spring Open Studios
— The Mid City Artists, a diverse group of more than 40 professional artists, open their studios today and tomorrow from 12-5 p.m. Galleries are between Logan and Dupont Circle. Visit their web site to check out the artists, download a map of the participating studios and plan your own weekend art festival. (Local artist Chuck Baxter’s work will be in display this weekend at the Mid City Artists Spring Open Studios on Saturday and Sunday. (Photo courtesy Mid City Artists))

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Friday, May 09, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Please forgive me. I'm entirely too busy and forgot that yesterday was Thursday. So, better late than never, here are two arty options this weekend.

The obvious first event is Artomatic, a month-long multimedia arts event that draws together visual artists, musicians and performers and brings their work to the community without charge. The opening is today at 1200 First St., NE. If you can't make the opening, don't worry, since it runs through June 15.

Also opening this week is Scott G. Brooks' show Under the Skin, at Long View Gallery, 1302 9th St., NW. The opening is Saturday from 5-8 p.m. and the show runs through June 7. The Chosen One, right.

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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Happy Thursday, TNG! This means it's almost the weekend, which I will be spending in sweatpants, writing papers, and watching La Dolce Vita. I can't wait. Here are some fun art events that you should go to for me, since graduate students can only lead glamorous lives part time.

Thursday:

The Ellipse Arts Center opens The Thread as the Line: Contemporary Sewn Art tonight with a talk at 5:30 p.m. Reception follows at 6:30 p.m. Clarendon Strings will perform during the reception.

Friday:

The Foundry Gallery opens The Figure is Central: Paintings by Stephen Nordlinger today with a reception from 6-8 p.m. Nordlinger's figurative work is based on close observation to catch the motion, the mood and the attitude of his subjects. He works in acrylic, pastel, charcoal, tempera, watercolor and digital images on paper, canvas, Mylar, X-rays and multimedia board. 1314 18th St., NW, 1st Floor. Nordlinger's work, Let's Celebrate, is above.

DCAC’S Sparkplug collective launches its first exhibition as part of an ongoing pursuit of adventures beyond the commercial gallery system. Sparkplug is a gathering of a dozen or so DC metro area emerging artists, curators and writers that meet once a month to discuss their work, explore common concerns and ideas and dream up creative engagements both in DC and around the globe. Opening reception is tonight at 7-9 p.m. at 2438 18th St., NW.


Saturday:

The American Art Museum holds a talk, Color as "Cool" at 3 p.m. in conjunction with the Color as Field show, which runs through May 26. Exhibition Curator Karen Wilkin examines the evolution of Color Field painting.

Sunday:

Mindy Wiesel gives a talk about her work, Of Roses and Rasa, at the Prada Gallery in Georgetown at 2 p.m. 1030 Wisconsin Avenue, NW.

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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Soirée Carte Blanche @ The Phillips Collection

For those who like their happy hour with some culture, The Alliance Francaise is throwing this event on Thursday at the Phillips Collection, Soirée Carte Blanche.

From the press release:

Come and celebrate le 1er mai at this electro-mix happy hour with an artistic twist. Dance alongside a backdrop of French videos, tour the museum’s renowned French paintings and bring your iPod to participate in a music-mix contest. The winner for the best musical selection will receive a free session of classes at the Alliance Française and a Contemporary Membership to the Phillips Collection.

Light food and a cash bar. Guided Tours at 6:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. General Admission $10 in advance, $12 at the door; Phillips Collection and Alliance Française Members $6 in advance, $8 at the door. Reservations at 202-234-7911 x16 or x31.

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Monday, April 28, 2008

American Experience: Walt Whitman


I have a very great appreciation for Walt Whitman — I will occasionally go around quoting "Song of Myself," I receive updates on Washington-area events via CyberWalt, and the above picture is frequently my desktop wallpaper. So, imagine my delight when I saw that PBS was showing an American Experience: Walt Whitman earlier this month.

I think part of my love for Whitman comes from the fact that his poetry reflects his sexuality, and he wrote it at a time when attaining publication for risque verse (and not being subsequently censored, which it was) was difficult, but he didn't care. Whitman's poetry is also transcendent: it is a reflection of the strife and turmoil of the 1860s, yet much of what he touches on is applicable for every generation.

For those who only know the poetry, American Experience is a wonderful way to learn about Whitman the man. And if you're a literary nerd like me, there is something strangely satisfying about seeing the Whitman critics who are featured on the show.

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup


Ms. Cavanaugh is back, having passed her thesis defense, and is now counting the minutes until she can dip into the flask she has surreptitiously hidden in her bag. So on that note, here are some art events for the coming weekend!

Thursday:

The Washington Project for the Arts hosts Staged @ Lofts 11 at 6:30 p.m. The event features the work of Bridget Sue Lambert, Steve Frost, Nathan Manuel, Anita Walsh and Annie Peters. At Lofts 11 - 1125 11th Street NW, 8th Floor Penthouse.

Friday:

Philippa Hughes of the Pink Line Project will be giving a talk on art collecting at the Pyramid Atlantic Art Center in Silver Spring. It starts at 6 p.m., is followed by wine tasting, and is for SINGLES. If you happen to be taken, you can go to collector talks on the other nights. See here for more.

Art Whino
celebrates their new space in National Harbor with La Femme.

Saturday:

The American Art Museum hosts the third installment of their American Pictures Distinguished Lecture Series, with a talk by Garry Wills on Thomas Eakins’s William Rush Carving His Allegorical Figure of the Schuylkill River (above). 4:30 p.m., tickets distributed an hour in advance.

Saturday and Sunday:

The artists at 52 O St. are opening their studios from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days.

Sunday:

Swing by the National Portrait Gallery to see Edward Steichen and Zaida Ben-Yusuf, whose portraits taken in the early 20th century are pretty compelling.

Upcoming:

Sign up for Art Anonymous, an event on May 10 at the Corcoran, where you can bid on paintings by top D.C. artists. The catch is that names are on the back, so you won't know whose work you're buying. Luckily some artists, like Amy Lin, are pretty distinctive. Tickets are $65 for non-members.

And go check out the Hirshhorn's new web site!

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Tonight: STAGED


TNG Reader Steve Frost is a local artist whose work will be featured tonight in "STAGED," a one night only art event hosted by the Washington Project for the Arts. Artists Bridget Sue Lambert, Anita Walsh, Annie Peters, and Nathan Manuel will be featured as well. Photos of some of the art are included after the jump.

STAGED
Thursday, April 24, 2008
6:30pm - 8:30pm
Lofts 11
1125 11th Street, NW
Washington, DC






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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

My apologies, TNG-land. I don't have a weekend art roundup for you today, since I'm about to turn in my master's thesis tomorrow. I've spent the last few months eating, sleeping, and breathing Emily Dickinson, as many of you have probably realized, since I haven't been able to talk about anything else.

So, if you have any art events, leave 'em in the comments. And wish me luck on my scary, looming defense.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Artist Profile: Mary Coble

Mary Coble, Note to Self
Copyright the artist, courtesy Conner Contemporary Art

(Coble staged a live performance in which she had over 100 names of murdered GLBT hate crime victims inscribed on her body using a tattooing needle without ink.)

Mary Coble is a local performance artist whose works often deal with sexuality. Photographs of her performances are part of the Hirshhorn's Recent Acquisitions show and are often on display at Conner Contemporary.

The New Gay: What are some of the ideas and themes that your work engages with?

Mary Coble: My work deals with issues which I feel a sense of urgency toward and that I want to bring to the attention of my viewers – social injustices (in the form of individual or community suffering), societal stereotyping and abuses of language (hate speech) have been dominate themes throughout my work. My goal is to make people question themselves, each other and our experience as a community that is part of a larger world.

TNG: How does your work engage with your sexuality?

MC: I’ve created several bodies of work that deal with issues rooted in the Queer community. My community and my identity inevitably influence my work. However, I strive to have my work reach beyond one community to have a universal appeal.

TNG: Who are some of your artistic inspirations or favorite artists?

MC: I get really excited by the performance art that was occurring in the 1970’s by artists such as Marina Abramovic, Vito Acconci, Gina Pane, Chris Burden and Yoko Ono, just to name a few. These artists took great risk inserting their bodies and the concept of performance into the vernacular of what would be considered art.

Catherine Opie’s early work within the Queer community is a lasting inspiration because of the exposure and dignity she extended to our community through her beautiful and often blunt images.

TNG: Performance strikes me as one of the most powerful art forms, and I'm always disappointed when museums show stills from performances instead of a video. What do you think is lost when a performance is captured as a photograph?

MC: Seeing a photograph or even a video of a performance is an experience that is very different from being present at a live performance. It’s a second hand experience that leaves out many of the aspects that make performance so powerful. The immediacy and unmediated act of viewing any live event can never fully be expressed through other mediums.

To be fully enveloped in a performance means to experience the atmosphere and setting, the interaction of the viewers with one another and to be aware of all of your senses in the moment. These things are critical to the viewers experience as well as the basic concepts conveyed.

However, I do believe a live performance can be later supported with the video or photographic evidence that documents legacy. I’ve been moved by many beautiful images that serve as documentation of a performance. I appreciate them with the understanding that this is the documentation of the art, not the art itself.

I think it’s important to have the ability to be able to view the documentation of past performances in order to have a visual aid that co-exists with the written or verbal account. This documentation helps serve as a memory, however distorted, or an introduction to historically support the piece.

TNG: How long have you been a performance artist? What attracted you to the art form?

MC: My background is in fine art photography. Four years ago I began incorporating performative aspects to my practice. Photography did not allow me to fully express concepts that I was working with, so I migrated to another way to get the ideas across. I never intended to work in performance but conceptually and visually this medium gives me exactly the tools that I need to convey my concepts.

I’m attracted to the ephemeral nature of performance, the intimacy of the experience for myself and my viewers, the incorporation of all of the senses, the physicality of the act and the power of performance to address contemporary issues to an audience in a very immediate way.

Mary Coble, Binding Ritual Daily Routine
Copyright the artist, courtesy Conner Contemporary Art


TNG: Do you have any performances coming up?

Right now I’m mentally working through a performance I just completed in NYC at the Pulse Art Fair called Blood Script.

In my three past performances called Marker (performed in New York, DC and Madrid) I stood silently and invited viewers to write on my body in Sharpie marker derogatory slurs that had been used against them, they had heard used or had used against others.

For Blood Script I chose 75 of those hateful terms and had them tattooed, without ink, onto the front portion of body in a very ornate script. After each word was completed, watercolor paper was pressed against the fresh incision and a blood impression was created. As a hate speech amassed on my flesh, the wall beside of me also filled with the hate speech.

With this performance I set up a dichotomy between the “beautiful” visual of the text and the nasty meaning behind the word. Once the viewer were drawn in they then considered how these words affected them personally.

Do you have a favorite art spot or event in DC?

One of my favorite things about DC is that there are so many amazing venues available to experience art at and most of them are free. I feel very lucky to live in a town where I get to see such a diverse amount of art and attend lectures by world renowned artists and it cost me nothing to do so.

TNG: What do you do when you aren't working on art?

MC: What? Not working on art? It never stops but sometimes I can multitask so I do get other things done. I also teach in the Department of Fine Arts at George Washington University and work with children in the arts. When I’m not doing that, I love spending time outdoors with family and friends.

TNG: How long have you lived in Washington?

MC: I’ve lived in various parts of DC around seven years. I moved here from North Carolina with intentions of going to graduate school and then leaving. There is something very unique about DC that I just can’t seem to give up.

TNG: What do you see down the road artistically?

MC: I’m excited because I see endless opportunities and challenges for myself. There are a lot of ideas that I want to explore.

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Thursday, April 10, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Thursday:

• No events, since you should be attending the TNG party tonight at Solly's. See you there!

Friday:

• The Newseum opens today. I went to a preview this week, and it's a nice space, with a deck overlooking Pennsylvania Ave. There are lots of interactive activities, interesting documentaries (the one I saw on sports writing was great), part of the Berlin Wall, and way more information than you can ingest in one visit. But with the $20 admission fee, you better plan to spend quite a bit of time there.

• The Artwalk murals are unveiled at noon today at 10th Street between New York and H. The 12 24'x6' murals depict artists' interpretations of the theme "emerge."

The End of Nature opens at the Warehouse Gallery tonight. Artists explore what they will miss most after global warming destroys the environment. Meet the artists reception is from 6-9 p.m. and the show runs through May 4.

Paul Rhymer's Golden Eye Mount is part of The End of Nature

Saturday:

Art Whino hosts Yuri's Night, an artistic celebration of outer space. I don't know what to say about it, other than it might be just the sort of ridiculous night that's really fun.

• There's a lecture at the Hirshhorn at 2 p.m. on illuminated buildings. Architectural historian Dietrich Neumann speaks on the blurring of illusion and reality in architecture and film.

Sunday:

• The National Portrait Gallery opened two photography shows this weekend, one by Edward Steichen and the other by Zaida Ben-Yusuf. Both were based in New York in the early 20th century and their work is a compelling look at the cultural icons of their time. I saw it yesterday and I love Ben-Yusuf's photo of retired president Grover Cleveland fishing and Steichen's portraits of Charlie Chaplin.

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Thursday, April 03, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

It's the weekend again, and here are some art events to see you through.

Friday

The Textile Museum, which I swear I am going to some day soon, opens Blue, the sister show to last year's Red. Blue celebrates the creative vision of contemporary textile artists working with natural indigo dyes and explores the history and significance of blue textiles across time and place.

The Passion of Dimension, a solo bronze sculpture show by Catherine Bohrman, runs at the Foundry Gallery, 1314 18th St., NW. Opening reception is tonight from 6-8 p.m. and closing reception is April 27 from 1-4 p.m.

Hirshhorn After Hours is tonight. Advance tickets are sold out, but there are still some left at the door.


Saturday

Hatnim Lee's large-scale, color saturated photographs are on display at Transformer Gallery. EDIT: She'll be giving an artist talk today at 2 p.m.

Irvine Contemporary opens Heidi Taillefer's show, Muses and Heroes (above), tonight with a reception from 6-8 p.m. Her work fuses realism with mythology and includes references to Victorian culture and science fiction.

Artist Cara Ober, who I talked to here, will be interviewed by art writers Kriston Capps and EDIT: Brandon Fortune, the curator of painting and sculpture at the National Portrait Gallery, at the Randall Scott Gallery tonight from 5-6:30.

Sunday

Head to the mall and visit the Freer and Sackler Galleries today. Patterned Feathers, Piercing Eyes, Edo Masters from the Price Collection closes on the 13th, and having seen it last weekend I can say it's well worth a trip.


Heidi Taillefer, Seeds of Doubt, 2007. Oil on canvas. 16 X 24 inches

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Thursday, March 27, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

It's a slow weekend around here, since it seems like everyone is going to New York for The Armory, but here are a few things to check out.

Thursday

- Head to the Hirshhorn at 7 p.m. to see artists Theresa Hubbard and Alexander Birchler discuss Eight, right, their film that is part of the Cinema Effect.

Friday

- For an art party, hit to the Arlington Arts Center for the closing of Wreckfest at Tiffany's. The show is part of Collectors Select, in which area curators filled a room to their choosing. Philippa Hughes juxtaposed Tiffany windows that were in her room with tags by local graffiti artists. 3-11 p.m. Anyone want to dash out after work with me?


Sunday

- ArtCade Crit Night features a sneak preview of the thesis work by American University MFA students. Jeffrey Cudlin of the AAC and City Paper will be speaking. 6:30-9 p.m. at the Katzen Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave., NW.

Also of note

- Go get your tickets for Hirshhorn After Hours on April 4. The tickets for the art party with music, drinking, and activities really sell out and you really want to be there.

- The National Gallery closes a couple of shows this weekend. Oh, and this is also the last weekend to go see the Stephen Colbert portrait before it leaves the NPG!

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Artist Profile: Manon Cleary

Manon Cleary is a painter living and working in Washington. Though she is straight, her husband, Steve, is bisexual, and his sexuality factors into her work. Her work is part of the permanent collections of the Chicago Art Institute, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, The Brooklyn Museum, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art.


TNG: What are some of the ideas and themes that your work engages with?

Manon Cleary: I [do] what graduate school professors used to call "one man show images" — that is, a sustained exploration on one theme.

I did a Rape Series of self-portraits in oil and graphite on canvas which were slashed and burned. It was a more positive outlet for self-mutilation, which is one response to rape. I had been raped in Kazakhstan in the mid-nineties while there as an Artist-in-Residence.

I did a twin series, because I am identical twin and our parents dressed us alike and sent us to dancing school so we really were a freak act á la Diane Arbus.

I did a lot of nude self-portraits, which a review in Art In America said was a triumph in narcissism. I saw it more as a look at myself separate from my twin and an appreciation of my own body, separate and different from hers. Also it was started in my thirties, and it was a discovery of my own beauty after feeling skinny and tit-less in my teens and twenties. Luckily I took enough photos then that I could continue to do these drawings long after the body sagged.

I also did nude men, and like the men of yore, I sometimes used it as an excuse to get men to take their clothes off and "pose" for the so-called "female gaze." I didn't have to ask my husband to take his clothes off when I met him. He was staying in Baltimore with a friend from New Hampshire and we were talking in the garden about my art after an opening of some of my pieces. I turned around and he was nude and asked me if I wanted to use him as a model. Ultimately I did, but in rubber, not nude. He has a rubber fetish and I have started a series of him in rubber hoods, with the rubber abstracting and revealing the figure by reflection. The black rubber is a wonderful subject for the graphite technique. I have also done men in plastic bags, a full body condom, as it were, when friends were dying of AIDS. It abstracted the figure beautifully, with transparent and translucent areas as the figure moved closer to or stretched the surface of the bags.

TNG: What media do you work in?

MC: In painting, now, because of my lungs. I use water-soluble oils or if I want to make a quicker piece, gouache and ink on paper. In drawing, I use either pastels on sanded paper for colored drawings, or powdered graphite and pencil on rag paper for black and white drawings.

TNG: Do you have a favorite art spot/event in DC?

MC: I used to love First Fridays, but R Street is sort of dead and too far to walk lugging oxygen tanks. Georgio Furioso's building on 14th street is more interesting, and I love to go to Addison/Ripley, though parking is a drag, as they are my gallery in D.C., so it is like going home. I also enjoy going to Osuna's openings, but it is so far out, so I have to rely on the kindness of strangers to get me out there with oxygen. He does themed group shows where he draws upon his old time stable of artists as well as new ones, so it is good to see old friends.

TNG: Does your work engage with your sexuality, or your husband's bisexuality?

MC: If narcissism involves sex, yes, I spent years with my right hand. Steve [my husband], has more of a fetish side of him, and as a Scorpio I don't want to think of him with someone else. So thinking of his bisexuality requires that. He is a sexy man, so I would have to watch my back, front, left and right.

TNG: How would you describe the DC art scene/community? Is it a good place to be an artist?

MC: I think it is a snore fest. It might be my age, but I am not seeing shows that excite me or that I want to buy work from. Signal 66 was a bright light for a while. Maybe it is like hats: Republicans don't buy art, they have art. There is just too much "investing" in art. Molly Rupert and her Warehouse if another bright light.

TNG: How long have you been making art?

MC: Professionally, that is selling art or getting commissions, it has been since 1964, when I did a couple of oil portraits. My first gallery representation was in 1970 when I moved to DC and met Franz Bader, who gave me my first solo show and handled my work for about four years.

TNG: Do you have any upcoming shows?

MC: I had a solo show in October at the District of Columbia Arts Center. Herb White, their "angel" and major benefactor chose an artist every year for "Herb's Choice" and the previous year he had asked me to be his choice. I was working on a 40-year retrospective and didn't have time. He died this past June and Jessica, his daughter, told me he had intended to ask me again for the 2007 show. I chose to do skies as an old boyfriend and I had spent a long weekend at his house in Florida and I brought one of my skies as a houseguest present. He had a boat and we went through the waterways in it searching for the wonderful Miami Beach skies for clouds. A few of these photos or combos of photos became some of the pastel drawings in the show.

TNG: What do you see down the road artistically?

MC: I am terminally ill, so I am temporarily blocked, wondering what I have time to do a whole exhibition of. Also, every piece I make is an investment of a part of what lungs I have left. I think I will be making more of the men in rubber. TNG

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Thursday, March 13, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Here's just few art events to get you through the weekend. I won't be at any, since I am fleeing the District for ten days. Don't worry, I won't be anywhere fabulous.

Thursday, March 13

The Five Senses: More Than Meets the Eye is a new show at the Target Gallery running through April 6. It kicks off tonight with a reception from 6-8 p.m. and a gallery talk by juror F. Lennox Campello at 7 p.m. The artwork in the exhibition incorporates two or more senses (touch, taste, see, smell and hear). At the Target Gallery, Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 North Union St., Alexandria, Va.

Friday, March 14

Bethesda Art Walk — The monthly event at Bethesda’s galleries features new artwork and refreshments. For a list of participating galleries visit www.bethesda.org.

Saturday, March 15

Here's the pick of the weekend, and what I really wish I were going to be here for. The Sartorialist, the fabulous fashion web site that features photographs of well-dressed people on the street (above), is coming to the Adamson Gallery for a photography show. The opening reception is tonight from 6:30-8:30 p.m. It's going to be packed and everyone is going to be dressed to the nines, so get there early and make sure you're wearing something amazing.

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Wednesday, March 12, 2008

TONIGHT! Two Great Tastes That Taste Great Together

This post was submitted by Jenny, our TNGer in training. We expect great things from her.

Or one after the other (because Lesbian Events Shall Occur Only On Wednesdays).....I'm speaking, of course, of Mothertongue at the Black Cat, followed by Jello Rasslin' at Phase 1. How better to wash down some earnest pwems by our womenfolk than with some gelatin in all the right places? At the Cat, spoken word is $8 on the backstage, with special guests DC Drag Kings and Burlesque Troupe. The Kings, as you may know, can no longer be seen at Club Chaos, since Chaos has shut down, largely due to the meddling of some jackass named Rob Halligan. So, you move to Dupont Circle, into a building that has housed a gay nightclub for a decade, and then you start bitching about the noise? Or, possibly Chaos closed because of the resolute ineptitude of owner Carlos Aguilar. Frankly, who cares. That place was a few years past Fun, and once the weapons-wanding commenced, you kind of got the feeling it was going the way of the old Hung Jury.

Anyway! Go check that show and then hurry soberly across town for another tradition as real as slumber party naked pillow fights and high school locker room orgies, yes, it is nominally-clothed women grappling one another in Jello (non-vegan). The party is in honor of manager Angela's birthday, and you should get your ass down there. As the flyer below the fold clearly states, No Cover. $1 Beer. Etc.



Two great events tonight, Wednesday 3/12:

Mothertongue @ The Black Cat, 1811 14th St NW, Show at 9 PM, 18+, $8 Cover

Jello Wrastle-Off Part Deux @ Phase 1, 525 8th St. SE, 21+, No Cover, $1 Beers

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Thursday, March 06, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

There are lots of art events this weekend, TNG readers, so I can only give you some highlights. Sadly, my master's thesis is falling fast and taking me with it, so my attendance at events this weekend will be held to a bare minimum.

Friday, March 7

DCist opens Exposed, its second annual local photography show. I'm all about supporting local talent, and last year's show resulted in some photographers getting their own shows, so you never know what you'll see here. 7-9 p.m. at Civilian Art Projects, 406 7th St., NW.

• Amy Barker-Wilson opens a show of works on canvas, paper and silk at the Foundry Gallery, 1314 18th St., NW. Cool Water, above.



Saturday, March 8

• Sheila Canby, curator of Islamic Art and Antiquities at the Freer and Sackler Galleries, lectures on Iran’s shrines at 2 p.m. in the Meyer Auditorium, 1050 Independence Ave., SW.

• The Walt Whitman lecture I told you about last week is today at 4:30 at the American Art Museum. The John Alexander retrospective closes on the 16th, so if you haven't seen it, get yourself down there. Everyone I've sent has loved it, and I'm planning to make my third trip before the lecture.

Victor Ehikhamenor, an artist, writer, and former classmate of mine, opens his new show, Invasion of Privacy, on Saturday from 4-7 p.m. at the Jennings Gallery, 3135 Westover Drive, SE. Click on his name to see some of his fantastic work.

• Baltimore art star Cara Ober opens a new show today from 7-9 p.m. at the Randall Scott Gallery.

• The curators of the Collectors Select show at the Arlington Arts Center, 3550 Wilson Blvd., are on hand to talk about the show from 4:30-5:30 p.m.

Also of note: the Environmental Film Festival kicks off Tuesday. The 16th annual festival features 115 documentary, feature, animated, archival, experimental and children’s films selected to provide fresh perspectives on environmental issues across the globe.

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Thursday, February 28, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup


The new exhibits just keep coming… I attended three press openings this week, and I’m going to have to take a little museum break, or else invest in some shoes that don’t give me blisters. Read on for details about the new shows and some other events happening this weekend.

And make sure to mark March 8 on your calendar, when the American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery kick off their Distinguished Lecture Series with a lecture by writer Allan Gurganus on Walt Whitman at 4:30 p.m., with free tickets being distributed an hour in advance. I’ll be there and so should you, but please don’t get there before me and steal my ticket (seriously, I even belong to “CyberWalt,” an online nerd-fest).

Thursday, February 28

• The Corcoran Gallery of Art hosts An Evening with David Berman, the subject of Sodium Fox, one of the two complete portraits featured in Wild Choir: Cinematic Portraits by Jeremy Blake. 7 p.m. $20.


Friday, February 29

• The Smithsonian American Art Museum opens Color as Field: American Painting, 1950–1975. This show comes on the heels of a year-long Color Field revival in the District, and frankly, we’ve seen enough. Color Field artists (Morris Louis, Helen Frankenthaler, Kenneth Noland, etc.) have ties to Washington, and are known for their large canvases on which they have poured, sprayed, stained or painted washes of color. But there are some pretty paintings, like Jules Olitski’s Cleopatra Flesh, above, and the bright colors might be enough to end winter doldrums. And stop by my artist-crush John Alexander’s retrospective going on downstairs for a really intelligent, humorous and thought-provoking show.

• Lesbian artist Mary Coble, whose work is part of the Hirshhorn’s Recent Acquisitions show, speaks with Ryan Turner at the museum today at 12:30 p.m.


Saturday, March 1

•The Corcoran is opening The American Evolution: A History Through Art today + they’re closing Wild Choir: Cinematic Portraits By Jeremy Blake tomorrow = you should go there this weekend. The new show is culled from permanent collection pieces and presents an evolving view of some of the major facets of the American experience -- Money, Politics, Cultural Exchange, Land and the Modern World. The politics section is the most compelling, ranging from a room dedicated to representations of George Washington to one of Kara Walker's fantastic silhouettes.

Baltimore Fair for Contemporary Prints and New Editions is a chance to pick up some art for not a lot of dough. 12 major contemporary art dealers, galleries, and presses are on-site for this biennial, which also runs tomorrow. There are some works by Louise Bourgeois, Robert Motherwell, Dieter Roth, and Richard Serra up for grabs, which is pretty awesome. 11 a.m.–5 p.m.

Sunday, March 2

• Let me just say that the National Gallery of Art knows how to throw a press opening. The museum is opening In the Forests of Fontainebleau: Painters and Photographers from Corot to Monet. The show features 100 paintings and photographs that examine the rise of plein air painting in a forest 35 miles from Paris. The artists used to travel to Italy to paint landscapes before realizing that they had some pretty fabulous scenery in their own backyard. Gustave Le Gray’s photographs are fascinating, but it’s Théodore Rousseau who steals the show. Rousseau returned the same sites over and over to paint them under a variety of conditions (morning, night, fog, rain, etc.) and his Sunset Over the Sands of Jean de Paris actually looks like its on fire. The NGA won me over by serving the French menu that they created for the Garden Café for the duration of the exhibit, and it’s excellent. Several area chefs contributed dishes, and following up the show with chocolate mousse with crème anglaise sounds like a recipe for a fantastic afternoon. (Monet's Bazille and Camille is above)

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Thursday, February 21, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

Here's the weekend art roundup. Nothing new opened this week at the museums, but there are some coming up soon (Color as Field, American Painting 1950-1975 at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and The American Evolution, A History Through Art at the Corcoran), so I'll have previews on those for you here next week.

Friday:

• Lisa McCarty opens her first solo exhibition, AstralBodies (right), at the District of Columbia Arts Center, which is a nonprofit arts space dedicated to promoting the area's under-recognized artists. Opening reception is tonight from 7-9 p.m.


Saturday:

• Kerry Brougher, acting director of the Hirshhorn and co-curator of The Cinema Effect, speaks about the making of the two-part exhibition at 2 p.m.

• Akemi Maegawa opens Invisible, Inc. at Irvine Contemporary tonight from 6-8 p.m. The exhibition features the her sculptures and installation works in a range of media.

Sunday:

• The National Portrait Gallery screens Wild Style! a film by Charlie Ahearn. Wild Style! is a portrait of the early days of hip–hop in the New York boroughs. A conversation with Ahearn follows the screening. 2 p.m. Make sure to stop by the RECOGNIZE! Hip Hop and Contemporary Portraiture show if you go.

Keep on your radar:

The Corcoran Gallery of Art presents David Berman onstage on February 28. Berman is from the band the Silver Jews, and is the subject of Jeremy Blake's Silver Fox digital portrait, which is part of Wild Choir, a show of three Blake works on display at the gallery. It runs through March 2, and really, I adore Blake, so I think you should go see it. Berman is onstage at 7 p.m. and tickets are $20.

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Saturday, February 16, 2008

Saturday: Benefit for Girls Rock DC!

Thanks to smergio for the email about...

Marvel: NakedLoveLiberation

February 16 at 10pm
$10/ $8 DCAC members
For Reservations Call DCAC at 202-462-7833
Ages 21+ (18+ will be considered, call Syrena at 240-418-7800 for approval)

A queer variety show consisting of drag king and queen performance, burlesque, African drumming and dance, spoken word/ poetry/ hip hop, modern dance and much more. Its intent is to illustrate the diverse elements of performance arts....in all its beautiful forms, talents, designs and colors.

A HUMONGOUS portion of ticket sales will go to benefit Girls Rock DC!, the first all-girl rock camp in the DC area. Thanks for your support!

DCAC, 2438 18th St NW, Washington DC

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Thursday, February 14, 2008

Weekend Art Roundup

In art news, the Stephen Colbert portrait will now be on display at the National Portrait Gallery through April 1. Fitting. Relatedly, the NPG is fast becoming one of my favorite D.C. museums, since RECOGNIZE! Hip Hop and Contemporary Portraiture is a great show, and the museum seems to have both a sense of humor and a willingness to display works that reach out to a broad audience but still retain artistic merit.



And here are some upcoming art events of note:

Thursday:

I'm not giving you any event suggestions for today, since you should be coming to our party. But if you're desperate for culture, I'm sure I can engage you in some sort of art-related conversation before I start ordering Jack and cokes.


Friday:

Time your lunch break to coincide with a 12:30 p.m. gallery talk conversation with curator Kelly Gordon and artist Kelly Richardson, whose Exiles of a Shattered Star (above) is on display at the Hirshhorn as part of Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality, and the Moving Image Part I: Dreams. Cinema Effect is rather unique for D.C. and marks the Hirshhorn's commitment to obtaining film and video works (hooray!). I saw it at the press opening, and an hour was not enough time to spend — some of the pieces are really long, but I think it would be worth an afternoon of your time to see. And you have till mid-May, when the show will be taken down for the second part of Cinema Effect.

Also check out the 2008 Corcoran Print Portfolio Show, You Won't Believe Your Eyes: The 23rd Annual Printmaking Portfolio. The opening reception is tonight from 7-9 p.m. at Civilian Art Projects.


Saturday:


Slideluck Potshow The Touchstone Gallery hosts D.C.'s second slideshow and potluck party. Slideluck Potshow is a non-profit arts organization that brings together artists and photographers for a night of artistic conversation. Meetups happen all over the world, and this is the second event being held in D.C. Potluck is at 7 p.m., slideshow is at 8:30 p.m. Click the link for RSVP info.


Sunday:

You have some time to go see this before it closes on the 29th, but Muslim Women in Germany: Photos from the Ostkreuz Photo Agency sounds like a great show. The Goethe-Institut displays this collection of works by members of the Berlin-based photography agency, which depict women as members of their Muslim subculture as well as of general society in Germany.

And don't forget — the Kennedy Center's Japan! Culture + Hyper Culture runs through today.

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