Thursday, April 30, 2009

Richard Allen Morris, Morris Code, Works from 1957-2007 [Photographs]


Richard Allen Morris, Morris Code, Works from 1957-2007 [installation view]. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Richard Allen Morris, Morris Code, Works from 1957-2007 [installation view]. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Richard Allen Morris, Morris Code, Works from 1957-2007 [installation view]. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

Richard Allen Morris, Morris Code, works from 1957-2007
Peter Blum Gallery
526 West 29th Street
New York, New York
Through May 9, 2009

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Cildo Meireles at Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona [Photographs]


Cildo Meireles, Through [installation view], 1983–1989 / 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Through [installation view], 1983–1989 / 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Through [installation view], 1983–1989 / 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Missão/Missões (How to Build Cathedrals) [installation view], 1987.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Missão/Missões (How to Build Cathedrals) [installation view], 1987.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Insertions into Ideological Circuits: Coca-Cola Project, 1970. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Volatile [installation view], 1980-1994.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Volatile [installation view], 1980-1994.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Eureka / Blindhotland [installation view], 1970-1975.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Cildo Meireles, Babel [installation view], 2001.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

Pl. dels Angels, 1
Barcelona, Spain
Through April 26, 2009

Monday, April 27, 2009

The Pig at Deitch Projects Long Island City [Photographs]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


The Pig [installation view], Deitch Projects, Long Island City. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

4-40 44th Drive
Long Island City, New York
Through August 9, 2009

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Picasso Videos, Donald Judd's Love for Whiskey (and Clogs), and Other Links [Compendium]


Ruben Ochoa, three the hard way, 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]

Massive Picasso coverage, new Warhol album covers, an epic Ernesto Neto installation, the news that Donald Judd collected fine whiskey, and the nicest day so far this year in New York.  There's a lot to get excited about this week:

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Gavin Turk, Jazzz, at Sean Kelly Gallery [Review]


Gavin Turk, A Night at Bird Land [detail], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles    [more]


At first, it seems that Gavin Turk is following his usual formula, adopting Jackson Pollock as his latest macho disguise.  (Previous projects have explored Guevara, Presley, and Sid Vicious, most famously).  There are copies of Pollock drip paintings with manic, sardonic titles in the main space (Something Different!!!!!, Ascension, both 2009), while the side galleries contain various curiosities: 2008’s Ash, actually composed of bronze, and 50/50 (2007), a mirrored table with a continuously spinning copper coin.  A video features Turk dressed as a chess-playing automaton (The Mechanical Turk, 2008), moving the same, single piece around an empty board.  It’s a dangerously apt metaphor for Turk’s career of camouflage conceptualism.  If his parodic approach to art history seems tired – a caricature of itself – that’s the point.  The results, the Pollock copies especially, are intensely pleasurable, and, in photographs modeled on Hans Namuth’s mythologizing portraits of Pollock at work, Turk appears to be having the time of his life.  



Gavin Turk, Ash, 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Gavin Turk, The Mechanical Turk, 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Gavin Turk, 50/50, 2007.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Gavin Turk, Ascension, 2009.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

Gavin Turk, Jazzz
Sean Kelly Gallery
528 West 29th Street
New York, New York
Through May 2, 2009

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Ryan McGinness, Ryan McGinness Works., at Deitch Projects [Photographs]


Ryan McGinness, Ryan McGinness Works. [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Ryan McGinness, Ryan McGinness Works. [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Ryan McGinness, Ryan McGinness Works. [installation view], 2009

Ryan McGinness, Untitled (Black Hole, Black-on-Black), 2008.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Ryan McGinness, Untitled (Sculpture Study 1), 2009.  Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

Ryan McGinness, Ryan McGinness Works.
Deitch Projects
18 Wooster Street
New York, New York
Through April 18, 2009

Monday, April 20, 2009

Michelle Lopez, The Violent Bear It Away, at Simon Preston Gallery [Review]


Michelle Lopez, Southern Trees/Black September [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]

Once you get over the shock of seeing a whole tree pushed through a gallery white wall, held precariously by sandbags and rope, it’s Woadsonner (edit) that haunts longest. A repurposing of the sleek, leather car sculpture that appeared in Lopez’s last New York show, at Deitch Project, way back in 2001, its innards spill out of a dilapidated, unpeeled casing. The last piece in the spare show is cast ash that appears first as a plume of smoke, then a head of hair flying through the floor.  Called Self-portrait as Special Mission Project / Akira Revisited and encapsulating the curious, personal melancholia on display throughout, it's enough to make you worry about where she’s been these eight years and how long we'll have to wait for a followup.


Michelle Lopez, Southern Trees/Black September [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Michelle Lopez, Southern Trees/Black September [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Michelle Lopez, Self-portrait as Special Mission Project/Akira Revisited, 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Michelle Lopez, Woadsonner (edit), 2009. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

Michelle Lopez, The Violent Bear It Away
Simon Preston Gallery
301 Broome Street
New York, New York
Through May 17, 2009

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Art Trend - Fire


Juan Zamora, Untitled, 2009, at A Coney Island State of Mind, Galería Moriarty in Madrid. Photo: 16 Miles.

In the past three days, in three cities, we have seen open flames in three different works of art. First we entered Galería Moriarty in Madrid to find a gentleman igniting the candle on the installation / drawing by Juan Zamora [above], who just had a solo show at the gallery that was reviewed in Artforum this month. It marks time - looking at the piece, wandering the gallery, running the space (the wax has accumulated on the floor) - and becomes the source of anxiety for the little man standing precariously on his plank.


Cildo Meireles, Volatile, 1980-1994, at Cildo Meireles, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA). Photo: 16 Miles

On to Barcelona, where Cildo Meireles's manic retrospective (which was just at the Tate Modern and also reviewed in Artforum) at MACBA featured his creepy Volatile (1980-1994) installation in a neighboring building. A dark room, anonymous powder lining the floors and floating in the air (which appeared to be flour but was later revealed to be talcum powder by a friendly guard), the faint smell of gasoline, and a single open flame. Suddenly we have become Zamora's terrified figure.


AIDS-3D, OMG Obelisk, 2007, at The Generational: Younger Than Jesus at the New Museum, New York. Photo: 16 Miles

Returning to New York and the New Museum's triennial, we saw that AIDS-3D had returned the open flame to its primordial associations, staking torches around their OMG Obelisk (2007) a site that appears destined for some sort of mysterious, prehistoric ceremony.

Though I am sure that I am missing dozens of examples, two precedents come to mind: Urs Fischer's Untitled (Branches) (1995) [below], which was featured prominently at the 2006 Whitney Biennial (and before that at the Palais de Tokyo) and Gina Pane's 1973 piece, in which she laid on above a bed of candles for thirty minutes (extended by Marina Abramović in 2005 to seven hours, broken into intervals, as part of her Seven Easy Pieces performance). Fischer's piece defines the ritualistic possibilities for the candle, while Pane's action more clearly hints of danger and violence - the startled surprise - that Meireles seems to covet.

Zamora's quirky drawing piece ends up standing out as the hardest to place and easily the funniest. After being activated by an observer, it runs a slow-motion play: the figure staring nervously at the candle until it completely burns down, uninterested in our presence.


Urs Fischer, Untitled (Branches), 2005, at Palais de Tokyo. Photo: suncana


Marina Abramović performing Gina Pane's 1973 piece,The Conditioning, 2005. Photo: The New York Times

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym, at Gladstone Gallery [Photographs]


Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]


Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym [installation view], 2009. Photo: 16 Miles [more]

Thomas Hirschhorn, Universal Gym
Gladstone Gallery
530 West 21st Street
New York, New York
Through April 11, 2009

Friday, April 10, 2009

The Boiler at Pierogi [Photographs]


The Boiler [installation view]. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Jonathan Schipper, Invisible Sphere (215 Points of View), 2005-2009. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]


Jonathan Schipper, Invisible Sphere (215 Points of View) [detail], 2005-2009. Photo: 16 Miles   [more]

While the rest of the art world collapses, Pierogi is taking over more Brooklyn real estate, showing three crisp works by three different artists in a warehouse space they have dubbed The Boiler.  Yoon Lee presents an impasto-heavy, almost-Baroque take on Julie Mehetru, while Jonathan Schipper's gigantic spherical video-monitor sculpture hangs from the epic ceilings via heavy chain.  It's a perfect use of the space.  

Tavares Strachan, meanwhile, wields more ideas than I have seen in quite a while to arrive at a piece that would be a marvel to look at even without all of the conceptual conceits.  Here's an explanation of part of the piece from Jerry Saltz, who also loved it:
In 2004, Strachan cut a 2.5-ton block of ice from the Alaskan Arctic, shipped it to the Bahamas (where he's from), and exhibited it there in a hermetically sealed refrigerated room powered by solar cells. Pictures suggest that it was interesting there; now, installed in a former boiler room, it's like hell freezing over. Far above the case two fans blow two flags: one at the current wind speed of Mount McKinley, the other at the Bahamas' Nassau airport's.

Yoon Lee, JFK, 2008. Photo: 16 Miles    [more]


Tavares Strachan, The Distance Between What We Have and What We Want (Arctic Ice Project), 2004-2009. Photo: 16 Miles    [more]

The Boiler at Pierogi
191 North 14th Street
Brooklyn, New York
Through April 19, 2009