Link
Found her on Anaba which is Martin Bromirski's blog (I posted his work a month or so ago) and its a great little corner of the internet.
Anyway, Tamara makes some pretty cool little constructions with traditional and not traditional materials. The results are a kind of weird accumulation of stuff. Some are oddly beautiful some are ugly, they are all quirky and sometimes barely stay together.
Im Kevin Horton, this is my blog for Senior Thesis class/ garbage bin for all of my other interests
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Sunday, November 27, 2011
And I guess
I should show off my shit... it keeps me motivated in a lot of things.
It is a 1974 Honda CB360 with a kickstart only CJ360 engine. 71 honda xl250 front rim, I made a lot of the parts for this guy.
Some pictures from building it can be seen on my other blog The Dirty Old Town
It is a 1974 Honda CB360 with a kickstart only CJ360 engine. 71 honda xl250 front rim, I made a lot of the parts for this guy.
Some pictures from building it can be seen on my other blog The Dirty Old Town
Another version
Here is a picture of another version of that red triumph I posted a while back.... crazy weird sissy bar.
Found it in this awesome set on Flickr....
Found it in this awesome set on Flickr....
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Studio Visit with Glenn Goldberg
I forgot my camera and have these terrible cell phone shots... thats Glenn standing there in front of the painting with the half circle.
Link to some of his older work
Glenn is a great guy and a great artist, a real old soul. He was a teacher at the Chautauqua Art Institute while I was there last summer. His studio is in Bushwick and he invited me and Rory to come out sometime. We finally made it out there last Tuesday.
We hung out for a while at first sitting and talking, but Glenn needed to keep busy so he took the big canvas with the half circle down, set it across 2 chairs and started to cover it in dots with a white-out pen.
Glenn has a distinct view on art, a little old school, a little spiritual, all hard work. He is an old-school new yorker really. Raised in the Bronx and all that jazz. The way he talks about his work is very interesting. For example after laying down several hundred dots as we sat there he pauses and says "Look at that, that is good work. Its not good art yet, but it is good work." I have never really heard anyone talk about what they make in that way before. It is like as long as you work hard, make good work, the good art will follow. He says you need to figure out what you want to make, what kind of work you want to do. Not necessarily "abstract painting" or "sculpture" but almost more literal than that. How do you want to physically spend your time? What kind of motions do you want to go through? How do you want to engage with the process of making? Is it a fast process? Is it slow and meditative?
We talked about being a studio rat, and digging deeper and getting more and more consumed by your work. A lot of what we talked about relates to something Rachael told me when I was bugging her in her studio last week. It really stuck with me, she said something like if you are totally into what you are doing, always working hard at an idea, even if it is the dumbest idea ever, and you have your own personal logic and sense of direction, no one can touch you.
It just makes sense, because I have been thinking a lot lately about making work that actually matters to me, getting rid of all the people in my work who I like but do not matter (painting people out as Phillip Guston said) taking a position, developing a personal logic for how to make work and pursue an idea. It basically all boils down to JUST DO IT. Let the work take over, direct it but be consumed.
Later Glenn bought us dinner and showed us around the new building at Cooper Union, where he teaches a class. It was like being in the Death Star. He has a show coming up in New York in January at some gallery uptown. Ill put it on my blog when I find out when and where exactly. Id recommend going to it to anyone. His work is very unique and interesting, almost has an outsider feel to it, but it is very idiosyncratic and in conversation with a lot of art history.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Joe Reihsen
Trying to get a feel for the scene in LA. These are some great, strange paintings. Acrylic and Oil, fractured space, atmospheric space, furniture for paintings. looks like he uses an air brush too. kind of mysterious looking.
Joe Reihsen
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Joshua Neustein, Sergej Jensen, N.Dash
Untitled Gallery
I saw Sergej Jensen's show at PS1 last spring... I thought it was just smart. Interesting to try to talk about too. Like I guess it's in the realm of painting because he is definitely in conversation with abstraction. But there is no paint to be found... its really pretty cool. And like I said about Maria Walker in an earlier post, the image almost seems accidental sometimes, or even inconsequential in this case. So what kind of a gesture is that? Interesting... My only criticism is how similar all 3 artist's work is... which is of course why they are grouped together, but I could almost ascribe it all to one of them. Which bugs me because I think that working this way makes it really easy to come up with a pleasing final product.
I saw Sergej Jensen's show at PS1 last spring... I thought it was just smart. Interesting to try to talk about too. Like I guess it's in the realm of painting because he is definitely in conversation with abstraction. But there is no paint to be found... its really pretty cool. And like I said about Maria Walker in an earlier post, the image almost seems accidental sometimes, or even inconsequential in this case. So what kind of a gesture is that? Interesting... My only criticism is how similar all 3 artist's work is... which is of course why they are grouped together, but I could almost ascribe it all to one of them. Which bugs me because I think that working this way makes it really easy to come up with a pleasing final product.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Just to keep up
with the flurry of posting today.... here is one ill be thinking about for a while. Lifted it from a youtube video, its a panhead in Jason Jessee's warehouse.
Russell Maltz
Forgot about this guy... I like stacks and piles too, for their narrative qualities. I think it is interesting how he takes kinds of images of detritus or everyday/ construction subject matter and formalizes it in some way; organizes it, arranges it. Maybe disrupts it in a way?
Russell Maltz
Russell Maltz
Haim Steinbach
Julie told me to look at Haim, I actually just came across his work somewhere, I forget what I was reading.... seems to be about revealing some identity through creating relationships of objects. Or creating some identity by presenting these strange groups of objects... Also building formal relationships.
Haim's website
Haim's website
Isa Genzken
Minimalism collides with the body collides with painting and sculpture in the work of Isa Genzken
David Zwirner
David Zwirner
Friday, November 11, 2011
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Things have gotten really vertical
and fucking Rachel Harrison has found her way into my studio and I can't get her the fuck out! It is a little frustrating!
So it has been an ok week, I never feel as busy as I want to be though. Ill just put up some pictures of work... The tall stretchers are my next project, stemmed from the smaller ones I made a while back, as well as Chris Martin's painting on stilts that was at The Corcoran, that was taken down by the time I got down there.... I really like the form, it invokes a protest sign, a WWF fan sign, someone mentioned african rituals, they are also paintings personified in a way, I mean they literally have legs.... so yea, honestly they bore the shit out of me right now as they are, so Ill be working on them for a while and they will eventually go in the project space when my time comes I think.
Last Friday, I went to the city for class to do studio visits. I thought it was really good even though we didn't get to spend a lot of time with the artists. It was more time than Ive ever spent in a 'professional's' studio so I can't complain that much. I did have a lot of questions for Allison though, that I didn't get to ask....
After that I met up with some more friends and went to Bartolami Gallery for a Jonathan Meese performance.
Link
It was funny, I was drunk from a show that had free vodka in water jugs, it was entertaining and ridiculous, people got mad, I'm not sure if it is a sustainable idea but what the hell Im glad I went, and I even got my hands on his devil puppet and gave him a hug afterwards.
Goals for this week: Keep fucking shit up, bring work to be shown at Art House to Art House, read "Ecce Homo" by Isabelle Graw in this months art forum....
this is too long.
So it has been an ok week, I never feel as busy as I want to be though. Ill just put up some pictures of work... The tall stretchers are my next project, stemmed from the smaller ones I made a while back, as well as Chris Martin's painting on stilts that was at The Corcoran, that was taken down by the time I got down there.... I really like the form, it invokes a protest sign, a WWF fan sign, someone mentioned african rituals, they are also paintings personified in a way, I mean they literally have legs.... so yea, honestly they bore the shit out of me right now as they are, so Ill be working on them for a while and they will eventually go in the project space when my time comes I think.
Last Friday, I went to the city for class to do studio visits. I thought it was really good even though we didn't get to spend a lot of time with the artists. It was more time than Ive ever spent in a 'professional's' studio so I can't complain that much. I did have a lot of questions for Allison though, that I didn't get to ask....
After that I met up with some more friends and went to Bartolami Gallery for a Jonathan Meese performance.
Link
It was funny, I was drunk from a show that had free vodka in water jugs, it was entertaining and ridiculous, people got mad, I'm not sure if it is a sustainable idea but what the hell Im glad I went, and I even got my hands on his devil puppet and gave him a hug afterwards.
Goals for this week: Keep fucking shit up, bring work to be shown at Art House to Art House, read "Ecce Homo" by Isabelle Graw in this months art forum....
this is too long.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Lauren Luloff
paints on bed sheets and kills it.
http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/visiting-artists-lauren-luloff/
Lauren's Blog
http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/01/visiting-artists-lauren-luloff/
Lauren's Blog
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Actually
I lied about no pictures. here is a picture of a panhead. thank you Japan. time for a meeting of the minds of kevin. I love this shit so its going in my blog, when im not thinking about art im thinking about old motorcycles.
Studio Journal
Yea. Had a crit with Catherine Murphy today that went well. She told me to think more about scale (go bigger) and try to make pieces that are more memorable... something I never really thought of before. Or I never really though of that way before. She is a little old school i think, but very smart and I take her opinion seriously. She told me to be more ambitious, tackle more, but dont make too big of a mess. I suppose she means be ambitious and concise, dont let too much cloud my head, but dont lose sight of some of the ideas I have. She said that painting is a magic trick and sculpture is not, and the biggest challenge for me is how can I make painting both sculptural and a magic trick. We discussed how the great secret to art history is how art works negotiate time. It was a good crit. Everyone usually tells me I need to self edit more. I agree, but at the same time I have an idea of the more memorable pieces (if thats what its about) and also what the more successful pieces are in my eyes and that usually goes along with what everyone who comes in says isnt working. But I like to show everything Ive made regardless. With all that being said, i dont agree with her wholeheartedly about a few things. I think the idea of an artwork being successful but not memorable is an interesting idea and if the goal is to make something memorable, making it bigger is the easy way to do it. although I can agree with her that scale is limiting me to a certain extent right now. I think she was into the work and she brought up a few ideas that she said she herself would be thinking about for the rest of the day at least.
Goals for this week are to start brainstorming ideas for the project space, and read a few articles. I want to start making some moves on some new pieces too.
Im meeting tomorrow with the little study/ crit/ discussion group that me and a few friends put together. We are talking about our most favorite artwork of all time and why we like it and how it has affected us and our work. should be fun.
Trying to go to NYC on Thursday to see the Joanne Greenbaum, Micheal Krebber, and Trudy Benson.
Talked to Jim today and Im stoked for the studio visits on friday.
no pictures, sorry
Goals for this week are to start brainstorming ideas for the project space, and read a few articles. I want to start making some moves on some new pieces too.
Im meeting tomorrow with the little study/ crit/ discussion group that me and a few friends put together. We are talking about our most favorite artwork of all time and why we like it and how it has affected us and our work. should be fun.
Trying to go to NYC on Thursday to see the Joanne Greenbaum, Micheal Krebber, and Trudy Benson.
Talked to Jim today and Im stoked for the studio visits on friday.
no pictures, sorry
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