Saturday, December 15, 2012

Southern Fried

Robert Boyd

 
Jamal Cyrus, Texas Fried Tenor, November 29, 2012, performance

I saw Jamal Cyrus perform Texas Fried Tenor a couple of weeks ago at CAMH. I don't want to pretend that I "understood" it. For example, what did the pointing (above) have to do with the rest of it? But one part is clear--he deep-fried a saxophone and had the fryer miked so that we could hear the noise. It was, in a sense, a new way to play the sax. And the bizarreness of deep-frying a saxophone strikes me as a classically surreal juxtaposition. (You can go to the CAMH now and see the deep-fried saxophone on display.)

 
Jamal Cyrus, Texas Fried Tenor, November 29, 2012, performance

So that's all I was thinking when I left the performance. I didn't write about it until now because I wasn't sure what to write.

Last night, Jamal Cyrus was at the Art League talking about his mini-residency as part of Stacks, the multi-artist residency program curated by Robert Pruitt. Cyrus had created a variety of pieces, including this one:


Jamal Cyrus, piece made for Stacks, 2012, grits and plastic sheeting

The piece was made by splattering hot grits onto dark plastic sheet. Cyrus described the work as being inspired by the famous story of how in 1974 soul singer Al Green was attacked in his bathtub by a crazed ex-girlfriend. She threw a pot of boiling grits onto his back, went into a bedroom and shot herself dead. Green subsequently gave up the pop life and became a baptist minister.

What struck me about this new piece and Texas Fried Tenor is that that they both involve the combination of music and boiling hot food stuffs. It seems a little too specific to be coincidental, but then again, I don't see any other obvious connection between these two pieces., so maybe it is coincidental. But whether intentional or not, it's curious and makes me think on a Saturday morning, as I listen to Al Green croon a request to "dip me in the water" ("Take Me to the River," Al Green Explores Your Mind, 1974).

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Going Nowhere, Fast

Robert Boyd

As metaphors go, the hamster wheel is a good one. The idea of man being on a hamster wheel, endlessly, mindlessly running with no destination, a willing cog in the machinery of modern life--you can't beat it. It's hardly surprising that artists of all stripes would employ this image. That's what James Ciosek has done with Human Hamster Wheel.


James Ciosek, Human Hamster Wheel, mixed media, 2012

But a metaphor like this doesn't belong to one artist. "Which one of us exercises on the old treadmill --- Who hides his head, pretending to sleep?" Yeah, I've reached rock bottom here--I'm quoting Jethro Tull ("One Brown Mouse" from the album Heavy Horses, 1978). But that lyric popped into my head as I watched people in the Human Hamster Wheel going nowhere, fast.

But what really popped into mind was an installation by Los Angeles artist Liz Young that I saw in 1990 at the Center on Contemporary Art in Seattle. The name of the piece was Neglected Fixations, and it was part of a group show called Low Technology: Artist Made Machines curated by Larry Reid. It features a human-sized hamster wheel (which had some people walking in it constantly--you could see sweat pouring off them when you viewed it) while Young sat nearby in a metal bath-tub filled with water. The metaphor here is a little different because Young was a paraplegic--paralyzed in a car accident when she was 18. Human-powered wheels have a different meaning for Young, I suspect.


James Ciosek, Human Hamster Wheel, mixed media, 2012

The thing is that whatever the metaphor, the idea of building a giant version of a really small thing has been a popular artistic strategy since Claes Oldenburg did it in the early 60s. There is something inherently fun about it. When you get inside Human Hamster Wheel, you aren't thinking about the futility of modern existence--you are playing. You're on a carnival ride powered by yourself, desperately trying to keep your balance.

Ciosek was quite thoughtful in how he made it. It really is a scaled up hamster wheel, but he added a governor to check the maximum speed it could turn. The wire mesh that you can see on the inside is temporary. It's there so that people can use the wheel safely. Without it, people would undoubtedly trip and break their noses and/or teeth on the cross-beams. But the mesh is held in place with tie-wraps. When (and if) this sculptural contraption finds its way to a permanent resting place, the mesh can be removed and it will revert to being a pristine sculptural object.


James Ciosek, Human Hamster Wheel, mixed media, 2012

But for now, the safety features remain in place and you can see it in back of Lawndale. (The Continuum performance collective will be putting on a carnival-like performance fest with Human Hamster Wheel as the centerpiece on Saturday, December 15 from 3 pm to 5 pm.)

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Pan Recommends for the week of December 13 to December 19

As we glide into Christmas, the number of shows and performances dwindles. Everybody is too busy shopping and drinking eggnog, I guess. Here are a few things on tap in Houston this week.

FRIDAY


Cat hugging a puppy, swiped from this

HUG: A Performance by Alonso Tapia at the Caroline Collective, 6:30 to 9:30. "Artist Alonso Tapia will stand in the middle of a vacant room at Caroline Collective, and members of the audience will be invited to hug him for as long as desired." Personally, I'm not into hugging. I prefer a firm handshake, or even a brief wave from across the room. But if Friday rolls around and you need a hug, Caroline Collective is the place to be!

SATURDAY

Counterclockwise at Lawndale Art Center, 3 pm to 5 pm. With James Ciosek's Human Hamster Wheel as the centerpiece, Counterclockwise is a carnival/performance art festival. Artists include Unna Bettie, Koomah, Jonatan Lopez, Kiki Maroon, Jessica Mendez, Raindawg, Hilary Scullane, Militia "Malice" Tiamat, Rowdy Tidwell, Y.E. Torres, Jana Whatley, Sway Youngston and The Amazing Mind Reading Cat. But will the cat give you hugs?

Curtis Gannon and David Anderson: Between Coats And Layers at Meyer Metro Gallery, 6 pm [open through December 29]. Curtis Gannon is known for his deconstructions (literally) of comic books. I don't know anything about David Anderson except that he's a painter.

Jon Read: Notes From The Dark Ride at Domy, 7 pm [through January 17]. Jon Read is the operations manager at Diverse Works, but like many who hold such positions, he is also an artist. The Dark Ride is a work in progress, a literal self-propelled ride through an environment of Read's creation. (If he needs a site to put it up, there's 75 vacant acres just south of 610 between Kirby and Fannon that I recommend.) This show presumably will consist of sketches and plans for the ride.

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

The Misuse of Kitsch: Michael Arcieri's Cold War Paintings

Robert Boyd

Michael Arcieri's new show at Avis Frank Gallery features a bunch of paintings of cold-war era imagery in canvases where three distinct images are arranged vertically.


Michael Arcieri, Bonneville Blast, 2012, oil on canvas, 48" x 45"



Michael Arcieri, New for Spring, 2012, oil on canvas, 48" x 45"

You will be forgiven if when you look at these paintings you are reminded of James Rosenquist--particularly I Love You in my Ford.


James Rosenquist, I Love You in my Ford, 1961, oil on canvas, 6'10¾" x 7'9½"


Michael Arcieri, Chaser, 2012, oil on canvas, 44" x 42"

Arcieri's Chaser will remind you of Rosenquist's F-111.


James Rosenquist, F-111, 1964-65, Oil on canvas and aluminum, 10' x 86'


James Rosenquist, F-111 (detail), 1964-65, Oil on canvas and aluminum, 10' x 86'

Michael Arcieri doesn't come off well in these comparisons. I Love You in My Ford related the all-American automobile to both sex and death, and in doing so spoke to its era of burgeoning highway expansion and the freedom promised by universal car ownership. Arcieri's images, by contrast, are a nostalgia trip. Their easy ironies might have been shocking if painted in 1961, but even then the juxtapositions would have seemed obvious and heavy-handed. Now, they are pointless. The Cold War ended--decisively--in 1989. Since then, the U.S. (and the world) have not faced an existential threat of war. This isn't to say we might not in the future. But as a subject of art, the Cold War has lost its urgency. Whereas, when Rosenquist painted F-111, every American above the age of 9 or so knew that nuclear war could erupt at any time, and if that happened, the nation, if not the world, would be obliterated.

In short, Arcieri's cold war paintings are trite and unoriginal. Arcieri is a skilled painter, but he employs those skills in this exhibit to make modestly clever works that have no urgency to them, no personal feeling. Comparing him to James Rosenquist, an artist captured the zeitgeist in a powerful and unexpected way, is unfair perhaps--but Arcieri brings the comparison on himself by blatantly copying the style that Rosenquist invented. It's a weird thing to say about an artist like Rosenquist who cultivated a distancing, mock-commercial-art style, but his work exudes authenticity; Arcieri's paintings are well-wrought but empty pastiches.


Michael Arcieri, Joe From the Bar, 1949, 2011, oil on canvas, 30" x 24"

In a separate gallery, Arcieri has a group of paintings, including Joe from the Bar, 1949, which look  paintings of freeze-frames from old movies shown on an old black-and-white television. But again, the strongest sensation one gets looking at these is of their profound unoriginality.


Gerhard Richter, Onkel Rudi (Uncle Rudi), 1965, oil on canvas, 87 cm x 50 cm

Again Arcieri is channeling another painter from the 60s--Gerhard Richter. And again, Arcieri falls far short. Joe From the Bar, 1949 is a banal film image. Onkel Rudi is, however, Richter's actual uncle. Rudi (Rudolf Schönfelder) was a Wermacht soldier and died in combat in World War II. Aside from the personal meaning of the image for Richter, it reflects the anguish that people of his generation felt acutely--that their parents and older relatives had all been Nazis. Like James Rosenquist's 60s paintings, Richter's employ a startlingly original idiom to tap into the spirit of his generation of Germans. Arcieri copies that idiom to make a banal but well-executed painting.

It's unreasonable to expect Arcieri to be as brilliant as Rosenquist and Richter, but he shouldn't paint like them if he doesn't want to be compared to them.  He can paint very well--he now needs to find his own direction and his own subject.

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Monday, December 10, 2012

A Vuvuzela for Montrose

Robert Boyd


Patrick Renner, sketch for Funnel Tunnel

Have you ever thought, "Montrose Boulevard is pleasant enough, but it would be vastly improved by a giant vuvuzela"? Me too. Our long wait is almost over.
[Art League Houston] is also beginning a public art program titled The Esplanade Project which will place major temporary public art on the medians on Montrose Boulevard.  The first sculpture will be Funnel Tunnel by artist Patrick Renner.  It will be a found wood and metal piece 180' long directly across the street from the ALH site.
This teaser was included in a year-end beg-o-gram from the Art League. It doesn't say exactly when, but look for it sometime next year.

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Sunday, December 9, 2012

Selling Art in Hotel Rooms Seems Like a Good Idea to Me

Robert Boyd

 
Mark Flood in a room at the Deauville Beach Resort (photo by Julia Halperin)

People keep sending me this photo from Artinfo of Mark Flood's hotel room installation at the Deauville Beach Resort (upstairs from NADA) in Miami. The idea being that Flood was inspired by the Pan Art Fair (which included three of his paintings, courtesy of Front Gallery). According to Artinfo,
The mini-show has not been publicized and visitors can only see it if they are accompanied by a staffer from Zach Feuer Gallery, which is participating in the fair downstairs.
Both the exhibition and the signs toy with the idea of “going viral,” according to the gallery. Flood hoped that people would leave the “LIKE” signs lying around various Miami Beach hot spots, and news of the exhibition would slowly leak out without advance press. ["Mark Flood Installs Ad-Hoc Exhibition in Miami Hotel Room [UPDATED]," Julia Halperin, BlouinArtinfo, 12/2/2012]
The Pan Art Fair may have been the proximate inspiration, but let's face it--hotel art sales have been a thing for a long, long time. And there is one big difference between Flood's Miami show and the Pan Art Fair--Flood actually sold some paintings in Miami. No one in Houston was willing to write that big check, alas!


Another view of the Flood hotel room show from the Tuesday After

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Friday, December 7, 2012

Continuum Live Art Series - Opening Night (part 1, NSFW)

Dean Liscum

On the last Friday of November, Continuum's Live Art Series Opening Night occurred at Avant Garden. The performances kicked off a 6-month residency at Avant Garden that will include workshops along with performances through April 2013. I attended the event, which started on time and ran on schedule because they had more performance art than you could shake a neon green recorder at. Here's what I saw.


southmorehouse presents' David Tyson Moore and his day-glow phallic symbol

southmorehouse presents' David Tyson Moore and Laurette Cañizares served as the M.C.s and  got things started with their performance Be A Woman 2. In it, the couple prepared for hosting the show. Cañizares went through her beauty routine and Moore mirrored her. It started and ended in slapstick. The two took the stage dressed in matching bra, panties, and head scarves and end in sport coats, his and her matching iridescent wigs, and hats.


Laurette and David...

However, a few moments slipped into intimacy. Whether intentional or accidental, I don't know.



After Mirror, I went to the back of Avant Garden, where Christine Cook had set up her piece This Body Is... In it she stood stark naked and stoically next to a chalk board that had the words "This Body Is" written on it. Adjacent to it, a small table with a cup full of colored chalk stood. The implication was that the audience was invited to comment on the performers body. To do so one had to get in the performer's personal space. You could think what you want or say what you want--Reubenesque, zaftig, pleasingly plump, fat, enveloping, squeeze-ilicious, etc.--but that was just talk until you recorded it in chalk.





The power in this piece lay in the fact that you had to not only write your thoughts/feeling about it but you had to confront the artist and subject while you did.

In the attic, Militia "Malice" Tiamat performed Know Thy Self. In this piece, audience members experienced it one at a time. A guide greeted me at the stairs and instructed me to form a single question and hold it in my mind until it resonated through my body, until I felt it in my feet. Then I was ready and could enter. In the midst of fog and disco style lights, I ascended the stair into the attic. I sat before "Malice" and asked my questions. She stared at me for an instant and then answered confidently and calmly, "No, you're not. Not now. Not until spring."


photo by Steve Patlan 

I've never given fortune tellers or futurist much credence. I still don't. But Tiamat's performance had a satisfying feeling of mystery and possibility. The Jean Michel Jarre atmosphere didn't hurt.

M.C. David urged the crowd upstairs into Noelle Dunahoe's performance of Lights. In it, she sat in an old fashioned rocking chair and choreographed a light display show of bald bulbs as if she were spinning a yarn for her kith and kin by commanding her own limited universe of constellations.


photo by Hilary Scullane 

During the light display she asked a series of questions. Here's just a sampling:
Are you alive? 
Have you grown? 
Have you changed? 
Can people change? 
Have you known Love? 
Are You loved? 
Do you love? 
Was it worth it?
And then it just ended.

Next it got emotional (ok, more emotional) as Koomah injected the emo with The First Time I Say... in which s/he used a red marker to draw red circles (symbolically kisses? cuts? orifices?) on her/his arms and face.


S/He circulated the room with a bowl of band-aids and invited audience members to place them over the circles. After which, s/he ceremoniously tore them off one at a time.



Finally, s/he stripped to the waist displaying the eponymous slogan The First Time I Say I Love You temporarily tattooed across her/his torso and screamed "Love".



I'm not sure if s/he seduced anyone in the crowd, (I've tried screaming "Love" at someone before with no luck), but it shifted the mood to raw.

Perhaps this was intentional in preparation for Minotaur Blues by Jonatan Lopez. Perhaps, not.

The piece started in total darkness with Lopez clothed in a transparent sheet and white boxer briefs. He circled the room, illuminating his face with a flash light and confronting audience members with his apologies for his transgressions and for what he deemed were the transgressions of life. "I am sorry for..." was his refrain. He then shifted from sorrow to anger, lashing out at the artist Daniel Kayne for killing himself and declaring that he, Lopez, used to think suicide was an act of bravery but now knows it's an act of cowardice. The Minotaur then talked of his own slow self-death caused by grief and meth usage. He pulled out a glass meth pipe and smashed it with a hammer, and then another and another.



Finally, he scooped up the broken shards in his hands, thrust them into his crotch and masturbated, smearing the resulting fluid on the floor and on the wall spelling out "Help".



At first I was a little confused and stupidly literal minded. Lopez played the Minotaur but he did not appear as the half-man, half-bull. I didn't get the connection. By the end, even I got it. He was the Minotaur in a maze, but the maze that he could not escape from wasn't built by Daedalus. The maze he couldn't escape was life: its highs, its lows, its end. I'm not sure if he was sorry he couldn't help us or that we couldn't help him.

RainDawg followed Lopez's performance with his Homage to Daniel Kayne. He stood up straight and brought his hands together in the traditional christian gesture of prayer and intoned "I want to perform with Daniel Kanye." Repeatedly. And of course he did just that--invoked the memory of Daniel Kayne and incorporated that memory into his performance in the mind's eye of the beholder. He ended the piece with same line followed by a single word. "Again."

I hope, for the sake of Kayne's memory, that RainDawg and others do.



After that series of performances, I needed some fresh air and a drink, so I got one at the bar outside. Unfortunately, in doing so, I missed a large portion of Love Exorcist performed by Tina McPherson via streaming video from the "exorcist stairs." (I put that in quotes because I don't know if that's the stairs from the movie of the same name or the scene of an actual exorcist or a really dark, that is dark as in cool, goth bar). I do know that the exorcist was a success and the woman was un-loved or de-loved and it wasn't painless because she cried.



And due to technical difficulties (a.k.a. the Love Demon), this following random fashion show stream briefly interrupted the exorcism...



...or maybe it was part of the exorcism. I'm not sure.

At this point in the evening I also became unsure of the order of events. Let's just say it seemed like the next performer was Chuz Martinez in The Destruction of A Dream whereby the artist Jimi-Hendrix-ed (yes that's a verb) an acoustic guitar. I could bore you with a blow-by-blow comparison of their processes and techniques. Instead, let's just say that Jimi had a good sledge-hammer swing and kerosene, where as Chuz favored a knife, but with the same result.



I'm not sure if the Dream represented the music industry in general, an ex-lover, the U.S. drone strike program in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the state of acoustic guitars, the rise of poverty in the U.S. or the failure of technology to actually transform our lives rather than help us trivialize and devalue ourselves at the speed of Moore's Law. Whatever metaphor you picked to read into this performance, it was destroyed/conquered/defeated.

While the staff at Avant Garden was cleaning up the remains of the guitar, Jade, with the help or combative assistance of RainDawg, performed The Doll Bride in the Guilded Cage. It consisted of his character, the groom, forcing the doll bride to do something against her will. It wasn't exactly clear what his goal was or what she was objecting too. In what I witnessed of the performance, they embraced, struggled, she broke free and hide in the ladies restroom. Then she emerged, they embraced, struggled, and she broke free. The metaphor was as obvious as the behavior is common place. As one drunken observer noted, "I see that shit at this bar every weekend."


Love or Wrestling in 19th century costumes

Without, I suspect, the mid-19th century costumes.


Jade about to be hugged or harassed

Black Magic Marker followed Jade's piece with the Gory Story of Love. Love turned out to be Agape and not Eros. BMM started off wearing a black mask with a red sequined something on it. He played a base guitar and talked about the greatest love a.k.a. the crucifixion story. He then took off the mask and crowned himself with a ring of thorns and continued to thrash away at his base, all heavy-metal and reverb.  A cross appeared.



There was blood. There was proselytizing.

Just me personally, but if I've got to choose on a Friday night, I'll take bloody masturbation over crucifixion.

Tentative Title (hey that's what the program said), which was Evan McCarley's piece started stealthily in that she, like everyone else in the room, was standing around drinking a beer. I assume that it started either when she ordered it from the bar or when she meandered near the stage but the performance didn't attract my attention until she threw the beer down at the edge of the stage and smashed the glass. Then she took her seat on the stage, removed her shoes, and began to cry, then to sob...hard, as in someone drop-kicked a kitten type sobbing.



She stood up mid-sob and removed her shirt. She removed her pants. Still sobbing, she embraced a few members of the audience.



Then she returned to center stage and thanked the audience. Thanked us for what I'm not sure because I didn't know the context. So instead of feeling somewhat voyeuristic and removed from the whole piece, I decided that it was a tribute to those who died in the recent attack of Gaza by Israel. In this context, the piece worked for me, except there wasn't enough hard sobbing...but then there couldn't be.

Next, it was Nestor Topchy's turn. I'd been anticipating this all night. I'd even mentioned it to patrons at Lawndale's opening as I left early. Then I experienced I Got Nothing on Laura and Jim, which was Nestor standing on stage and apologizing for not performing. He said that he wasn't going to perform because Jim refused to perform and Laura was going to have a nervous breakdown or a stroke or both if she had to perform. He called Jim to the stage. Jim came and stood on the stage. Nestor mentioned that performance art is not entertainment and it's OK to fail. Nestor then pulled out some pants that were way too big for him, christened them "big boy pants" and put them on as ostensibly a metaphor for taking responsibility for his failure to perform and thus "wearing the pants." Then he put a paper bag on his head, tore a hole in the front and stuck his nose out of it. Finally, he invited the audience to rub noses with him (possibly in solidarity, possibly as consolation) as he left the stage.


Big Boy Pants? Always a boy never a man?

Now I realize this could have been a brilliant performance in which the performance is a non-performance, and I totally didn't get it. It could have been a performance about being unable to perform, about impotence, about fear of failure, about failure, about aging, about creatively calcifying, about performers losing their creative edge.

And perhaps it was.


Performing but not performing

Nevertheless, if it was, it was both brilliant but it was not convincing. It was like having two stars of Houston's first generation of performance artists stand before an enthusiastic crowd of performance art's next generation and say "Oh if it's only you, I prefer not to," and then rubbing their noses in it.


Rubbing your nose in it

(to be continued...after I overcome my disillusionment)

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