Monday, July 09, 2007

Free Summer Movie Festival at Pace Wildenstien

Michal Rovner's 1997 film, Border, screens at 10:00 a.m. and 1:15 p.m.

Lucas Samaras's 1969 film, Self, screens at 11:15 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.

John Chamberlain's 1968 film, The Secret Life of Hernando Cortez, (starring Ultra Violet and Taylor Mead) screens at 12:00 p.m. and 3:15 p.m.

Agnes Martin's film, Gabriel, screens at 4:30 p.m.

The festival remains on view through August 24, 2007, Pace Wildenstien is at: 534 West 25th Street NYC.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Al Pacino signs on for Dali movie



Al Pacino has been cast as Salvador Dali in director Andrew Niccol's Dali & I: The Surreal Story, a movie that is scheduled to start shooting in June in New York and Spain. The script is based on Dali and I by the Belgian author Stan Lauryssens, a journalist who has written five books on the Third Reich, as well as the prize-winning thriller Black Snow. Dali and I relates Lauryssens' experiences as Dali's neighbor during his final years in the village of Cadaques in Spain.

From Artnet

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Saturday, December 09, 2006

Art Basel and orbiting events - day two

Let's start with the celeb sightings today - frankly I'm tired and need to do the easy stuff first. Jay Z and Beyonce this was a total fluke. I was leaving through the most inconvenient door - because where I was going was right on the other side. I get my bag checked and the next thing I know - I'm looking at this really beautiful woman - with big eyes and the most perfect skin I've ever seen. Pretty amazing, so it took me a few moments to see the bodyguards - and then there was HOV. The amazing thing is that I always assumed that he was like 6'2" in fact he is more like 5'10". 5'10" nicely dressed though. It was then I realized who it was - I'm the worst on that stuff (although reading this week, you'd think it was all I do.



Dennis Hopper I attended the "art loves movies" event last night for a special screening of "Easy Rider".(full disclosure - I had never seen this all the way through before) Hopper mentioned that at the time he was influenced by Allen Darcangelo, Ed Ruscha, and a few other of the california artists at the time. Funny thing you can really see this during the quieter road scenes, which granted act as a transition between scenes, but still the influence is there.

The secret mass transit system I think some people know this, but did you know there is a mass transit system that effectively links all the art fairs together? Here are the basics - every fair has a bus that goes from ABMB to the other events - AQUA, NADA, and ~pulse. So your basically looking at a web of bus trips that emulate from the big show at the convention center. This has probably saved me and a number of folks a ridiculous amount of money in cab fares.



NADA This is a good show. Saw some really interesting stuff here - most of it I had not seem before. Murray Guy is showing Matthew Higgs (above), and other than having a great first name, his work is just great. While reusing book elements, he isolates them and allows the viewer to apply outside thinking to his work. This is not far from the process that William S. Burroughs and Bryon Gysin developed in the seminal book "The Third Mind". Samson Projects (Boston) is showing the classical nudes of Gabriel Martinez. Galerie Olaf Stuber (Berlin) is showing just a couple of photos by Poison Idea. Galleri Christina Wilson, and White Columns had a few really interesting pieces as well.



Flow Art Fair is probably the best of the smaller fairs. I know this is saying quite a little bit. here's the deal, the galleries are positioned below ABMB but above the NADA and AQUA fairs - and maybe this is just me but the quality seems higher than all of the rest (with the exception of ABMB). I was real dubious of the show - thinking it was just a me too type of event. A bought a Lori Nix(not the one above) from the Block Gallery in Boston. I was pretty giddy after that and completely ignored doing any kind of legitimate note taking. So sorry about that - I'm going back Saturday and I'll have some real notes for you then.

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Sunday, October 15, 2006

Warhol - Empire


As time passes, Andy Warhol's art continues to become more and more relevant (weather you like it or not). This season we are seeing more of AW than ever (the celeb paintings, the piss abstractions, and we will see plenty at the fairs this fall/winter) Warhol's understanding of the mundane is in force now more than ever. On July 25th 1964, from 8:06pm till 2:42am, Warhol (or an assistant) trained a camera from the Time-Life Building to the Empire State Building and treated this architectural icon, he once described, as "a star" to the full on Warhol method. Just watching - not judging - not interfering. The Camera's lens never moves, nothing happens, lights on and lights off, people enter and leave..."nothing" happens -- for eight hours.

Empire is on view in Andy Warhol Supernova: Stars, Deaths and Disasters, 1962-46 at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, Canada

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