I'm having a Flood show this week. I know, pretty lame.
I set up a bunch of stuff to make good luck charm bags.... because it's a new year and I need all the luck I can get.
Stop by if you can. Burn some incense, take a nap.
It's pretty much just my attempt to start the year off on the right foot.
Monday, January 18, 2010
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
East Austin Studio Tour 2009
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Performa 09 | Alterazioni Video and Ragnar Kjartansson
C.R.R. member may recall our field trip (!) to see RoseLee Goldberg speak at ArtHouse last month. She presented a slide show history of performance art and gave a sneak peak into what to expect from this year's PERFORMA Biennial.
PERFORMA, founded in 2004, is a multidisciplinary non-profit arts organization dedicated to live performance art. To encourage the further development of performance, PERFORMA organizes a biennial in New York City that highlights performance art’s critical role in contemporary art... The 2009 biennial runs from November 1-22. It includes ten new commissions by artists like Guy Ben-Ner, Mike Kelley and Yang Fudong, and new works by more than eighty others.
New York Times' fashion and design blog The Moment recently featured the Italian collective of Alterazioni Video and Ragnar Kjartansson biennial performance. The article paints a vivid picture of the performance - tuxedos, bowling balls, exploding light bulbs, limoncello - which was summarized as “a live and multimedia piece based on joy, infinite profound joy.”
More videos can be found on the PERFORMA website: performa-arts.org/blog/tv/
PERFORMA, founded in 2004, is a multidisciplinary non-profit arts organization dedicated to live performance art. To encourage the further development of performance, PERFORMA organizes a biennial in New York City that highlights performance art’s critical role in contemporary art... The 2009 biennial runs from November 1-22. It includes ten new commissions by artists like Guy Ben-Ner, Mike Kelley and Yang Fudong, and new works by more than eighty others.
New York Times' fashion and design blog The Moment recently featured the Italian collective of Alterazioni Video and Ragnar Kjartansson biennial performance. The article paints a vivid picture of the performance - tuxedos, bowling balls, exploding light bulbs, limoncello - which was summarized as “a live and multimedia piece based on joy, infinite profound joy.”
More videos can be found on the PERFORMA website: performa-arts.org/blog/tv/
Monday, October 26, 2009
Public Ad Campaign

Jordan Seiler
The New York City project Public Ad Campaign, recently featured in the New York Times, adheres to the following belief:
"...public space and the public's interaction with that space is a vital component of our city's health. By visually altering and physically interacting with the public environment, residents become psychologically invested in their community... Outdoor advertising is the primary obstacle to open public communications. By commodifying public space, outdoor advertising has monopolized the surfaces that shape our shared space."
The resulting actions, primarily the work of Jordan Seiler, are chronicled at www.publicadcampaign.com along side the work of other artists doing similarly subversive public installations.

OX, France

Sam 3, Spain
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Eric Steen
Here are some links to blogs Eric Steen contributes to. He was one of the visiting artists who gave lectures at Ox-Bow over this past summer about micro-utopias and radical education. I plan on fleshing out this post more later, but I wanted to get some of his information up on this blog.
psuart.blogspot.com
(his work in teaching in Portland)
http://ericmsteen.blogspot.com/
(his personal blog with information on his beer/conversant pieces)
psuart.blogspot.com
(his work in teaching in Portland)
http://ericmsteen.blogspot.com/
(his personal blog with information on his beer/conversant pieces)
Jeremy Boyle
Man/boy art = gooood. Plus a good clean formal eye. He does mostly sound and video installations. Lots of clips on his website

piece consists of a concrete bench cast hollow, with its internal cavity serving as a sealed sub-woofer speaker enclosure. A recording of nearly sub-audible sound is played through this bench and is not experienced until someone is seated and feels the vibrations of the sound. The bench is designed to be typical of a public concrete bench, the only difference being its shape of a cube meant for one rather than rectangular for the possibility of multiple simultaneous users. This creates a situation where the user necessarily has a private experience with the piece, placing a shift in the function of the public bench and allowing for a private experience to take place within a public setting (without removing the person from their public position and function.


midi-controlled pneumatic guitar and drum kit

piece consists of a concrete bench cast hollow, with its internal cavity serving as a sealed sub-woofer speaker enclosure. A recording of nearly sub-audible sound is played through this bench and is not experienced until someone is seated and feels the vibrations of the sound. The bench is designed to be typical of a public concrete bench, the only difference being its shape of a cube meant for one rather than rectangular for the possibility of multiple simultaneous users. This creates a situation where the user necessarily has a private experience with the piece, placing a shift in the function of the public bench and allowing for a private experience to take place within a public setting (without removing the person from their public position and function.


midi-controlled pneumatic guitar and drum kit
Monday, September 28, 2009
Contortionist Jazz Exotica, Devin Flynn


Contortionist Jazz Exotica
Contortionist Jazz Exotica is a newly debuted collaboration of a blog between Joe Legs (now of Austin and formerly of Richmond, VA) and Zak Loyd (formerly of Austin, now in Brooklyn). Zak has worked with the Eyeplug video collective in Texas and is now operating as Vid Kidz with Melanie Clemmons in New York.
Devin Flynn appeared along side his Y'all So Stupid web-video series at the Alamo Drafthouse tonight. The series, which was made for AdultSwim.com, can be seen on the bigger-than-your-computer-screen at Okay Moutain through October 31st. The show, titled SuperStupid, includes a collection of drawings and supplemental videos of Flynn's earlier work.
Labels:
animation,
blog,
devin flynn,
joe legs,
the internet,
zak loyd
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