Showing posts with label Jason Villegas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Villegas. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Introducing Exu

Robert Boyd



A few months back, I wrote about my own personal writing crisis. Writing reviews of art shows just wasn't satisfying to me anymore. Obviously I haven't quit writing--I have written nine posts since then, but none have been reviews of art exhibits.

The problem is that I still see art in the galleries and artists spaces and museums that I love. I would like to share this love. I have an impulse to grab people by the lapels (even if they don't have lapels and even though I am opposed in principal to unsolicited lapel grabbing) and say, "Look at this!" People who follow me on Instagram know this. I frequently post photos of art I just seen and liked. (I'm ROBERTWBOYD2020 if you want to follow me there.)

Anyway, I think it was this impulse to share art I like that made me want to do my new project--a tabloid-sized newsprint art magazine called Exu. There are other things I could have done. I could have curated an exhibit, for example. But an exhibit lasts maybe a month, then it comes down, and not that many people see it--particularly if they live someplace else. I could have started a Tumblr. But while I look at images online constantly, there is something not quite satisfying for me about seeing them there. That was always a problem I had with this blog--I tried hard to show as many images as possible, but I wasn't particularly happy with the small, relatively lo-res images I reproduced.

My background is in print publishing. Before I started the job I have now, that was my profession. I still buy lots of physical books, especially books that have a visual component--art books and comics. I could get them on Kindle or another electronic delivery systems, but for the reasons above, I don't find that particularly satisfying. (I read plenty of all-prose books electronically, though. I'm not a luddite.)

So what I wanted to do was to publish something (IRL as they say) that would show the artwork I liked in a large format. I didn't want to do it the way art magazines like Artforum or, locally, Arts+Culture do--a small picture surrounded by type. I wanted the image to be everything. I wanted it to take up the whole page, or as much as it could. If there is a magazine that embodies this concept, I'd say it's Toilet Paper, the art magazine published by Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari--page after page of images with nary a word among them.

I picked the newspaper tabloid format because it's large and because tabloids have a tradition of eye-catching graphics and, well, lapel-grabbing stories. That made me think I wanted there to be narrative content in my magazine. The pictures should tell stories, or at least imply them. So that ruled out abstract images (although in the end, I have one pure abstraction and one word-based image). Then I decided that the narrative could also be prose. I was specifically thinking about literary nonfiction and great magazine writing. So I contacted some writers I know and commissioned some prose. And since we're talking about narrative, the visual printed artistic medium that best exemplifies narrative is comics. I don't know that many Houston cartoonists--it's not a hotbed like of great cartoonists like Seattle or New York. But I contacted the ones I know for a few pages of comics.

The name Exu was inspired by a work of art I saw in Chasity Porter's Dormalou Project (a mobile art gallery). She had a show up of work by Anthony Suber called Archaic Habit. It was a cool show that mixed contemporary African-American pop culture and rootsy African culture seamlessly (and humorously in some cases). One of the works had the word "Eshu" in the title. Eshu is a Yoruban orisha, or deity. I was more familiar with the Portuguese spelling, Exu. In Brazil, Exu is in the pantheon of the syncretic religion of Candomble. He is the god of the crossroads--you invoke him to help you make decisions. I lived in Brazil for a while and I had a statuette of Exu. In Brazil, Exu is identified visually with the Devil. (All the other Orishas are identified with Catholic Saints.) My cheap ceramic statue was a rather old-fashioned representation of the devil--pointy beard, horns, all red.

I realized that Exu looked a lot like Pan. It's said that the modern image of the devil was a result of medieval Italian farmers plowing up old statuettes of Pan, becoming frightened, calling the parish priest who would then associate this horned, goat-footed idol with the devil. I don't know if this story is true, but the resemblance of Pan to images of the devil are undeniable. It pleased me to think that the visual image of Pan migrated to the visual image of the devil who then migrated to Exu, a god that was exported from Nigeria in the holds of Portuguese slave ships. It seemed to me that although Pan and Exu were too very different deities, they had a certain mysterious connection over space and time. (I also liked that they both have three letters in their names.)


A cover idea featuring art by Ike Morgan

So Exu it was. (Exu is pronounced "EY-shoo", by the way). My next task was to pick artists. I knew I wanted the art to be native 2-D art. No three-dimensional art (so no sculpture or installation) and no time-based art (so no film or video or performance). I wanted the transition from artwork to printed page to be as seamless and uncompromised as possible. But the world of 2-D art contains multitudes. The artists I chose had to be familiar to me. It would have been easy for me to simply pick my friends, but I wanted there to be an identifiable editorial vision here. Also, I wanted to pick artists from a variety of genres, styles, schools, media, etc. Many of these artists are unlikely to have ever met one-another, but here in Exu, they can share a space. I want Exu to be a kind of secular artistic sacra conversazione.

So we have street art next to "outsider" art next to MFA art. There's painting, drawing, printmaking and photography. I worked hard at being aware of various artistic traditions and looking at all of them. I'm haunted by the notion that there are great artists out there who I just don't know about. And there were people I wanted to include but for various reasons could not--I couldn't find a way to communicate with them, we couldn't agree on of piece to publish, or most often I just lost the thread as I got busy with other artists.

In the end, here's who is in Exu: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Kelly Alison, Seth Alverson, Debra Barrera, JooYoung Choi, Jamal Cyrus, Bill Daniel, Nicky Davis, Nathaniel Donnett, Matthew Guest, the Amazing Hancock Brothers, Hillerbrand+Magsamen, Perry House, John Hovig, Galina Kurlat, Emily Peacock, Fernando Ramirez, Sophie Roach, Christopher Sperandio, Jason Villegas and Inés Estrada. These are the writers I've included: Great God Pan Is Dead veteran Dean Liscum, Pete Gershon, John Nova Lomax, Jim Pirtle and a piece by the late, great Sig Byrd. And Exu includes the following cartoonists: Mack White, Scott Gilbert, Sarah Welch and Brett Hollis. And the cover is by Ike Morgan. Most of these artists are located in Houston and vicinity, with some from San Antonio, Austin, Waco and DFW (and two expatriate Houstonians in New York).

I'm running an Indiegogo campaign for Exu right now. The purpose is not so much to raise money (even though money is nice!) but to pre-sell copies. Please take a look. And scroll down to see some of the art that will be featured, much larger and in higher resolution, in Exu.



Seth Alverson



Nathaniel Donnett


Fernando Ramirez


Scott Gilbert


the Amazing Hancock Brothers


Hillerbrand+Magsamen


Galina Kurlat


Ike Morgan


Emily Peacock

Monday, October 21, 2013

Jason Villegas' List of Guys (NSFW)

Robert Boyd

Some people keep a list of who they've slept with. Some people reveal that list. Andie McDowell's character does so in a scene from Four Weddings and a Funeral, making Hugh Grant seem like an inexperienced schoolboy in comparison. Tracy Emin did it in a tent.


Tracy Emin, Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–1995 (destroyed), 1995, tent and applique letters

Jason Villegas abandons his typical stretchy polo shirt fabric and goes back to the primal art making activity of drawing. On pieces of paper, he drew cartoon-like images of each of the 63 sexual encounters he remembers between 1995 and now. The drawings are hung at about eye-level in a snaking arrangement that allows you to look at them in roughly chronological order. One side of each page has the drawing in what looks like ink marker, and the other side has his description of the person (or persons) and the date in pencil.


Installation view

Called The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, this installation isn't one you want to just breeze through. It's worth it to look at both side of every drawing.


High School Janitor, 1995

I don't know how old Villegas was when he lot his virginity, but it may have been with this man, a high school janitor, in 1995. Which is pretty creepy.


Ghetto Gangster Chub Chaser, 1995

"Chub chasers" is just one of several unfamiliar sexual preferences I was introduced to that night.


Scrotum Pump Bear, 2008

Like scrotum pumping. Lord was I reluctant to type that into Google. But apparently it's a thing, and one that Villegas encountered once.


Emotionally Attached Pear Bear, 2009

A lot of Villegas' encounters are with bears.


Hobbit and Bad Idea Bear, 2009

Sometimes his descriptions are totally perplexing. I guess a "Hobbit" could refer to a very small guy, or even a guy who was a big fan of Lord of the Rings. And "Bad Idea Bear"? Was it a guy that maybe Villegas should have avoided? Maybe he met them at a comic book convention--that would explain the Captain Marvel logo and what I think may be the Captain America logo on their t-shirts.


Dolphin, 2009

Not all encounters are with "bear" types. Sometme in 2009 he hooked up with a sleek fellow he describes as a dolphin. This sent me back to Google, but in this case it appears to be a personal description. At least, I couldn't find "dolphin" used to describe a type of gay man. (There is a Gay Dolphin gift store in Myrtle Beach, though.)

The overall effect is amusing. Villegas seems to see his sexual partners as slightly ridiculous over-all, but the effect is not of Villegas making fun of them so much as he is making fun of himself. "Look who I end up with!" he seems to be saying. It's fertile comic ground--the bad date joke is a staple of stand-up comedy. And the presentation is perfect for the subject matter. Once you start, you'll find it hard not to finish going through this maze of guys.

Called The Good, The Bad and The Ugly runs through November 2 at Peveto.


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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Pan Recommends for the week of October 17 to October 23

Robert Boyd

THURSDAY


an older piece by Claire Cusack

Claire Cusack: 3 at  Koelsch Gallery, 6–9 pm. A show by assemblagist Claire Cusack.


Tom Huck, The Commander in Thief Rides Again, 2008, Linocut, 18 x 24 inches

Messengers of the Posada Influence featuring Artemio Rodriguez, The Amazing Hancock Brothers, Tom Huck, Dennis McNett and Carlos Hernandez at the Museum of Printing History, 6–8 pm. I saw this partly hung last weekend at Zinefest Houston, and it looks great. There is also a talk today at 5:30 by Tom Huck.

FRIDAY


Nicola Parente installation

Nicola Parente: Pelagico at Gremillion & Co. Fine Art, 6–8 pm. Big abstractions by Nicola Parente that remind me (in the photos I've seen) a little of Gerhard Richter's squeegee paintings.


Franklin Sirmans

Lecture by Franklin Sirmans on Prospect.3 at the Menil Collection, 7–8 pm. LACMA curator Franklin Sirmans is the director of next year's Prospect 3, the highly regarded biennial in New Orleans. He'll be talking a bit about his plans for it.



Ellen Fullman: Performance at the CAMH, 7–9 pm Friday and Saturday. For Ellen Fullman's performance, think "world's longest guitar."

SATURDAY


Michael Kennaugh, Red Figure, 2013, graphite, acrylic and wood, 8 x 12 x 9 inches

 Michael Kennaugh, New Work: Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture at Moody Gallery, from October 19 (opening reception October 26). Even though the reception is not until next week, you can swing by this Saturday and see work by Michael Kennaugh.


Louviere + Vanessa, Loup Garou, 2005, photograph on metal plate, 53x 33 inches

Louviere + Vanessa at  d. m. allison, 6–8 pm. I don't know anything about these photographers, Jeff Louviere and Vanessa Brown, but the images on the d.m. allison website are dynamite. (The pair have one of the weirdest websites I have ever seen--you have to draw arrows to navigate it.)

 
Jason Villegas, Polo Pile Tapestry, 2011, fabric assemblage, 35 x 40 inches

Jason Villegas: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly at Peveto, 6–8 pm. The preeminent master of art made of old polo shirts, Jason Villegas, returns. Should be a fun show.


still from PARALLEL by Harun Farocki, 2012, 2-channel installation on single-channel video, color, sound, 17:00 

Aurora Picture Show Presents Kino B: Contemporary Cinema by Berlin-based Artists (Guillaume Cailleau & Ben Russell, Harun Farocki, Isabella Gresser, Bernd Lützeler, Anna Marziano, Deborah S. Phillips, Michael Poetschko, and Daniel Steegmann Mangrané) at the Aurora Picture Show, 7:30–9:30 pm. A bunch of cool-looking short films and videos.

SUNDAY

 
Hiroshi Sugimoto, Pagoda 409, Tyrrhenian Sea, Priano, 1994, 2011, optical glass with black-and-white film

Words and Things: Buddhist Texts and Ritual Objects from Japan at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 11 am – 5 pm. Some very old, very beautiful Buddhist calligraphy and objects, as well as at least one modern one (above).



Houston SLAB Parade & Family Festival at McGregor Park, 1 to 6 pm. Will feature music, spoken-word performance, street artists and, of course, some bad ass vehicles.

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Pan Recommends for the week of July 18 to July 24

Robert Boyd

Last weeks was all about commercial galleries and big institutions. This week shifts the focus somewhat to alternative events and venues: performance, artist run spaces, unjuried shows, etc. Here are a few of this weekend's events.

THURSDAY



The Art Guys "Never Not Funny" at NotsuoH, 4 pm to midnight. The latest of the Art Guys' celebration of 30 years together is a durational performance--8 hours of stand-up comedy. (Will there be any young whippersnapper performance artists simultaneously doing 8 hours of heckling?)

FRIDAY


Forsman & Brodenfors, with Evelina Bratell (stylist) and Carl Kleiner (photographer), "Homemade Is Best," 2010

Graphic Design-Now in Production at the CAMH, including but not limited to Albert Exergian, Jürg Lehni and Alex Rich, Anthony Burrill, Pedro Fernandes, and Irma Boom, 6-9 pm, running hrough September 29. Well, this is something quite different--a show full of things that are designed to be visually interesting conveyers of information. It's nice to see this kind of artistic production acknowledged by art museums every now and then.


James McNeill Whistler, Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl -- this masterpiece was in the first Salon des Refusés

Salon des Refusés 2013, part 1, with Le'Ann Alexander, Jim Arp, Missy Bosch, JB Carrillo, Monica Chhay, Sarah Cloutier, Felipe Contreras, Jenna Jacobs, Rachel Jahan-Tigh Vines, Bartz Johnson, Jeremy Keas, Peter Lucas, Rob McDonald, Tracey Meyer, Lorena Morales, Michel Muylle, Christopher Olivier, Donna Perkins, Kelyne Reis, Will Schorre, Robert Sennhauser, Brian Sensabaugh & James Scott, Herbert Shapiro, Rosalind Speed, Alexine Stevens, Kamila Szczena, The Human Tour - Carrie Schneider & Alex Tu, Donna Villarreal, Dandee Warhol and Mary Beth Woiccak at BLUEorange, 6 pm. For the past few years, some gallery someplace has shown work that was not accepted for the Big Show. This year it's BLUEorange, and they are splitting their Salon des Refusés into four 1-week exhibits, starting this weekend.

 
VILD's sculpture made of test tubes was shown at the Matchbox Gallery at Rice

VILD, Submerged: origins of a Species at Fresh Arts, 6 pm. VILD are a pair of Rice undergrads, Vinita Israni and Linh Tran Do, and this installation involves a combination of art and science which is the kind of brainiac art you might expect from Rice students (at least Rice students who, unlike me, aren't spending their undergraduate years in a haze of alcohol and THC).

 
I have no idea what this is, but it was on the Error Forest Facebook page...

Error Forest with Jonathan Jindra, Sandy Ewen, Pablo Gimenez Zapiola, Y.E. Torres, Robert Pearson and Marisa R. Miller at El Rincón Social, starting at 8:30 pm. Performances, projections, sound installations and musical performances. The invite suggests dressing lightly--El Rincón Social is an unairconditioned space, if I recall correctly.

Art As Sacrifice featuring over 100 artists at Hardy & Nance Studios, 7 pm.  This event, organized by Pete Gershon, Stephanie Darling and the Hardy and Nance Studios is a giant art swap organized as a tribute to the late art scenester Anthony Palasota.

SATURDAY



CC aka Countercrawl 8, starting at Market Square Park (300 Travis St.) and leaving at 11:30am sharp, wandering thence to various locations and featuring Thien, Bryan Lee, Renee' Cosette, Jacqueline Jai, Emmannuel Nuno Arambula, Traci Matlock, Linda Cornflake, Noah D. Clough, Unna Bettie, Hilary Scullane, Y.E. Torres and more. Music, art, poetry, performance and bicycles combine for the 8th time for an afternoon/evening of fun.


Jason Villegas, I think...


Jason Villegas: Nouveau Jersey at Settlement Goods, 6–9 pm. The master of the polo shirt returns, this time not at a fancy art gallery like McClain but at a fancy clothes and stuff shop, Settlement Goods. Being irremediably unfashionable, this will be my first time stepping foot into this place of business.

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Sunday, August 30, 2009

Jason Villegas / The Art Guys at the McClain Gallery

I hit the galleries hard this weekend--six in total, three I had never been to before. I like to take pictures in galleries, but I feel a little uncomfortable doing it. Museums won't let you--the guards will sweep down on you if you try.

So I went to McClain Gallery with a different approach. I would ask for permission to take photos. I even made up business cards for this blog, to try to give a little legitimacy to my request. And I was prepared to get a "no." That would have been fine. But the reaction I got was weird. The fellow I talked to (McClain?) was indifferent to whether I took photos. But he was worried that I would write something controversial. This was a commercial gallery that existed to sell art--not to create controversy. I assured him that I had no intention of being controversial (kind of an empty promise because I have no idea what he would consider controversial). That ended my experiment with asking permission; in other galleries, I just whipped out the camera, hoping not to be kicked out. Still, given McClain dude's conditional permission, I snapped away.

The show in the front gallery is work by Jason Villegas, who also has a show up at the CAMH. You can't ask for better advertising than that  (or, as Don Thompson writes The $12 Million Stuffed Shark, CAMH enhances Villegas' brand in the eyes of local collectors). Villegas does his own version of crap on crap. For him, the crap consists of old golf shirts found in thrift stores, particularly ones that had little animals on them. Obviously the famous brand is the Izod alligator, but it turns out that there were (are?) lots of animal knock-offs.

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Conquistador, Jason Villegas, 2009

He approaches the work of tearing up and recombining golf shirts from every angle, including paintings of the assemblages. One of the pieces at CAMH consists of horizontal ripped pieces of shirts stapled to the wall in the shape of a rounded triangle. The shirt bits all have long thin curled up bits of fabric hanging down like fringe. So here at McClain, Villegas basically paints this assemblage. Twice.

Polo Pile
Polo Pile, Jason Villegas, acrylic and marker, 2009

Polo Pile as Subdued Microorganism
Polo Pile Subdued as Microorganism, Jason Villegas, acrylic, 2009

The hanging fringe of the original is replaced by paint drips in these versions.

He also creates self-portraits where he takes on the animal identity of each brand.

Self Portrait as Fox Brand
Self-Portrait as Fox Brand, Jason Villegas, marker and pencil, 2009

Self Portrait as Hare Brand
Self-Portrait as Hare Brand, Jason Villegas, marker and pencil, 2009

The biggest piece was drawn and stapled right to the rear wall of the gallery.

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Fox Brand Spirit Portrait, Jason Villegas, mixed media installation, 2009

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Fox Brand Spirit Portrait detail, Jason Villegas, mixed media installation, 2009

As you can see, the little fox appears to be drawn right on the wall. (Or maybe drawn on paper and pasted.) As the man I spoke with repeated emphasized, the McClain Gallery is a commercial enterprise. All these works are for sale; all of them have prices on a price list. Except this one, which is POR (price on request).

So what do you get if you buy "Fox Brand Spirit Portrait"? Does Jason Villegas come over to your house and staple the bits of torn golf shirt right on your wall? Does he draw a little fox on your plaster? I have often wondered this about installations that are sold through commercial galleries.

In a gallery in the back is a small show by The Art Guys. Whenever I see their work, I just dig their endless inventiveness and humor.

Lamp
Lamp, the Art Guys, burned matches on paper, 2008

Burned matches? Yep. Here's a detail.

Lamp detail
Lamp detail, the Art Guys, burned matches on paper, 2008

But here's my favorite piece in the show. I apologize for the poor photograph. I have done all kinds of digital manipulations to make it a little more readible.

Any of these places would be an excellent place to begin drawing
Any of These Locations Would be an Excellent Place to Begin a Drawing, the Art Guys, graphite on paper, 2008

It's hard to read, but the little phrases in this piece say things like "Left of center", "Exact center", "Slightly off-center", "Near the bottom", etc. That piece should go in a drawing textbook.

Impressions of the gallery? Very high-end commercial (although I should add that you could buy some of those Jason Villegas pieces for really decent prices). You look at the artists McClain shows, and they are almost all fairly well-known contemporary figures. In The $12 Million Dollar Stuffed Shark, Don Thompson speaks of how big New York and London galleries will have subsidiary relationships with galleries in other parts of the country, so that non-NYC galleries can market some of the big names from NYC to the hinterland. So I wonder if McClain has that kind of relationship with any blue chip galleries in NYC. Such an arrangement, I assume, would mutually benefit the artist (geographically expanding his market), local collectors (improved access to top artists' work), the local gallery (ability to show top NYC artists), and the New York gallery (improved access to non-NYC collectors). But I wonder how the contracts between the local gallery and the NYC gallery work? Of course, I have no idea if this is what McClain is doing in the first place, so please excuse this idle, completely uncontroversial speculation.