AnEndlessArray of Geekery Brought to you By Lauren Scime.

27th May 2008

Merchandizing Culture: Falling into the Gap

posted in art and theory, dribble, reviews

About 2 weeks ago, The Gap released it’s limited edition artist-designed t-shirt collection, featuring the likes of Chuck Close, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Ashley Bickerton, Kenny Scharf, Barbara Kruger, Kiki Smith, and several other past Whitney Biennial participants. I can’t say I’m suprised at this recent sellout by big name artists, and I’ve become too immune to this sort of marriage of main stream art and commercial fashion to be nauseous about it, but it still stings.

Gap Artist Tees

but I’m not the only one who is irritated with this grotesque display of commodification though. The subtly cynical tone of the LA Times article is one we can all appreciate:

The spring runways were an art fest with Marc Jacobs collaborating with Richard Prince on bags at Louis Vuitton, Dolce & Gabbana hand-painting tulle ball gowns, and Michael Kors taking inspiration from Van Gogh. And now, at last, the trend has arrived at the mall.

Like many of you, my idealistic notions of art prevents the existence of a Gap Chuck Close t-shirt from leaving anything shy of a bad taste in my mouth. It’s the sad reality of the commercial art world today. The avant-garde is so quickly swallowed up by the corporate machine, we rarely have time to see an artist mature anymore before they are propelled by the forces of the market into a state of being the next big art star…Of course, these folks have been art stars since the 1980’s so it’s not like they just recently fell into the fashion world. This just merely serves as a reminder to us that the corporate giants at the center of late capitalism are at the very core of art patronage.

Some Brief Slanty Background:

The corporate takeover of funding for the arts, though gradual, began to pick up momentum in the 1990s when The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), once the largest supporter of the arts in the US, came under scrutiny for supporting “morally objectionable” works. According to Wikipedia:

In 1996, Congress cut the NEA funding to US$99.5 million (almost in half) as a result of pressure from conservative groups, including the American Family Association, who criticized the agency for using tax dollars to fund highly controversial artists such as Robert Clark Young, Barbara Degenevieve, Andres Serrano, Robert Mapplethorpe, and the so-called “NEA Four.”

As our country becomes increasingly more conservative, and the moral majority dictates more and more of what can be done with government funding, the art world has had little choice but to embrace corporate sponsorship.

Piss ChristSome of the most prestigious collections around are held by the likes of Gap, Inc. and London advertising baron Charles Saatchi. Museum exhibitions are commonly funded by corporate sponsors, whose logos adorn banners and printed materials.

And one of the largest financial supporters of the arts in the United States is Altria Group, the umbrella company that owns Phillip Morris, Inc. - yes, THAT Altria Group - the largest manufacturer of tobacco in the world and one of the largest producers of alcohol. So Piss Christ is bad and cigarette money is okay? Yes, the conservatives are a moral bunch indeed….

The Cost of Selling Out

Artists have always had to be resourceful to make ends meet, and selling out is certainly nothing new. I don’t mean to belittle these artists for taking advantage of this opportunity to make a buck. None of us is above wanting to make money, and anyone who says otherwise is foolish. My problem with Gap t-shirts donning artists’ works and Takashi Murakami handbags is not the trending of individual artists’ works as fashion commodities, but rather the implications this has on the art world at large.

The commodification of contemporary art stars is problematic to the notion of cultural production, as it neutralizes the avant-garde, and muddies the contextual value of art production. So I urge you with caution to remember that the same machine that makes artists into commodities, also has the capacity to make impotent the meaning behind their works.

Some Further Related Reading:

Privatising Culture: Corporate Art Intervention since the 1980s by Chin-Tao Wu

Idiosyncratic Identities: Artists at the End of the Avant-Garde (Contemporary Artists & Their Critics) by Donald Kuspit

The Dialectic of Decadence: Between Advance and Decline in Art (Asthetics Today) by Donald Kuspit

Art Criticism(Volume 21, Number 2) : Administrativism and Its Discontents by Mark Van Proyen

“The Myth of Criticism in the 1980s,” by Howard Singerman

posted in art and theory, dribble, reviews | 3 Comments

19th May 2008

Art Notes: Highlights from SFAI’s MFA Exhibition

posted in art and theory, out + about, reviews

One of the top graduate fine arts programs in the country, San Francisco Art Institute always puts on a hell of an MFA show. I’m not just saying this because I went there. It’s true. Sure, there are plenty of pieces I didn’t care for, as is the case with any large exhibition. By and large, however, SFAI puts out a good bunch, year after year. This year was no exception.

I didn’t make it to opening night on Friday May 16th - I was just getting over a nasty case of bronchitis, so the swarming crowds seemed a bit daunting - but I did check it out on Saturday afternoon, when the space was a bit less packed with bodies.

Some highlights from this years MFA Exhibition:

Robert Jackson Harrington’s sculpture

Robert Jackson Harrington’s insane sculptural installation - I love the futility of the piece because this elaborate contraption doesn’t do anything at all (as far as I can tell).

Reeves Granade’s Painting

An impressive painting by Rives Granade

video wall installation piece

I can’t remember the name of this artist, but I did like this hell of a wall configuration with video monitors playing footage of 3d body innards. Maybe it’s because I’m a computer geek myself, but the body as an electronic network is utterly appealing.

Will Barclift’s performance

Will Barclift’s performance (image scanned from the artist’s postcard) - Will presented a video of the performance at the exhibition. Also, as a side note, this treadmill featured here is actually mine. I left it at my old roommate when I moved 2 years ago.

There were a lot more great pieces in the show, but I was limited to the images I took on my iPhone that turned out , and those that I could scan from postcards I was compelled to pick up. I guess you’ll just have to go there and look yourself if you want to see more.

If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area, the show is open daily from 11am-5pm until Saturday, May 24th at Herbst Pavilion in the Fort Mason Center. I highly recommend checking it out if you get the chance.

posted in art and theory, out + about, reviews | 0 Comments

17th February 2008

Back to My Roots

posted in art and theory, current events, dribble, general

Root Division

This week has brought an exciting new development in my life: I got accepted to the Studio Residency Program at Root Division, a nonprofit arts organization here in San Francisco’s Mission District. A few weeks ago, due to the urgings of friend and artist Deric Carner, I made the decision to apply to the program.

After speaking to the director on the phone about the application process, I quickly slapped together my portfolio, resume and finished updating my art portfolio website. That same afternoon I crossed my fingers and dropped off a folder containing evidence of my fine arts career to date. Anyway, to make a short story shorter, I interviewed and received notification 2 days ago that I got in. So I am officially going to have a studio space! I can barely contain myself, I’m so elated.

figurative painting

The program over at Root Division is great - you get a studio space at a much lower than market rent, and in exchange you just have to spend a few hours a month doing some sort of service for the organization. You can help with any number of things ranging from teaching community art classes to hanging exhibitions in their gallery space. In my case, they might also have me help out a bit with their website, since, as you know, this is my “thing.” I definitely consider the opportunity to be involved with the organization and spend some of my free time helping them out to be a perk rather than a burden.

As a studio resident, you also get the opportunity to show your work in their gallery, curate art exhibitions, and just be around the other studio artists in the program. Having gotten out of graduate school over 2 years ago, it’ll be great to interact with other working artists again on a day to day basis and be a part of the dialog.

So in addition to working full time on web design and development and running our company, I will be painting again and making other forms of art. It’s been a while since I’ve had a space to carry out my more involved art projects. I can’t wait to get started.

posted in art and theory, current events, dribble, general | 2 Comments

30th January 2008

Artlife: The Weekend that Kept on Going

posted in art and theory, current events, dribble, general, out + about

Edwardian Skeletons

The past week has been a whirlwind of events, with art as the focus. For the last year since starting our design business Object Adjective, I’ve been more or less out of the art scene - always dabbling on the periphery but not as involved as I once was. And while I love working in web design and development, it used to be that the practice of artmaking informed my design, my code, and vice versa. Continuing to work as an artist and stay engaged in the art and music scenes is important to me, and this past few days has served as a reminder.

A Little Bit Edwardian

Last Friday night was the Edwardian Ball - this year themed World’s Faire. Set at the Great American Music Hall, the gold leafed ornate detail of the old theater was the perfect backdrop for a night riddled with corsetry fashion shows, Edward Gorey inspired poetics and visuals, diverse Edwardian inspired music, art exhibits, and acrobatic performances.

Jeremy with Umbrella

Jeremy, Mici, August and I decked out in our turn of the century best, snapped a few pics at my apartment, and headed out to enjoy a night of music, art, and performance. The event was spectacular - with so much to see and do. Read the rest of this entry »

posted in art and theory, current events, dribble, general, out + about | 2 Comments

22nd January 2008

Helvetica: Documenting the Typographic Everyday

posted in art and theory, design, film + video, general, reviews

helvetica movieI spend all day looking at typefaces, carefully considering which to use and where, how much space to give the letters, the words, and how to balance the visually artistic aspects of type with pragmatic legibility and order. You would think that come the weekend, enough is enough. Nope. My rental du jour on Sunday was Helvetica, a documentary about the most common typeface in probably the entire western world. And it was pretty damn good.

The timeliness of this documentary is perfect, and not only because helvetica reached it’s 50th birthday in 2007. As the film points out, we’ve entered into a period in history where the tools of design are accessible to the public and social networking sites like Myspace allow the user to create their own designed pages as a means of fabricating their own identity. Since everyone has become an amateur designer, what better time to cast an eye on the most prevalent font in the world? Read the rest of this entry »

posted in art and theory, design, film + video, general, reviews | 2 Comments