Sunday, November 30, 2008

Updated 2008 Fountain Miami Press Release

Fountain Miami 2008

October 28th, 2008 fountain Posted in Current Fountain Art Fair | No Comments »

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Fountain Miami 2008
2505 North Miami Ave Miami FL 33127
Telephone: 917.650.3760
Email: info@fountainexhibit.com
Website: http://fountainexhibit.com
Dates: December 3–7, 2008; 11am–7pm
VIP/Press brunch: Wed Dec 3, from 10am to Noon and Thur Dec 4, from 9am to Noon
Reception for the artists: Friday, December 5; 7pm–midnight
Wynwood Arts Tour: Saturday, December 6; 7pm–10pm
Cost: Suggested donation of $5 at the door for all weekend access

New York (November 22, 2008) - Fountain Miami, the alternative art exhibition known for presenting cutting-edge and independent art galleries, sets up shop in an industrial warehouse located at 25th Street and North Miami Avenue for its latest installment this December. Fountain is a guerrilla-style art event, dubbed by many as the “Anti Art Fair” for its brash, off-the-wall offerings of non-traditional art exhibitions in the art fair environment.

Recruiting avant-garde galleries who showcase progressive primary-market works, Fountain breathes fresh life into the Miami Beach “Basel Frazzle,” giving gallery-goers and art enthusiasts the opportunity to see new works without traditional booths or selection juries. While most fairs have fallen into the hands of corporate management, Fountain remains independent, and as such presents work in a forward-thinking manner. Unencumbered by the strict presentation guidelines and parameters found at other fairs, Fountain preserves the visions of galleries and dealers to provide an environment reflective of the artists and their works.

Fountain’s venue, a large and dramatic 16000 square-foot complex with both interior and exterior exhibition areas, is adjacent to all the major Wynwood fairs. Participating galleries receive approximately 1200 square feet of exhibition space, so visitors can expect massive installations of contemporary painting, sculpture, performance and new media art.

Artnet – the most widely read art site on the web – describes Fountain: “Likeability and chutzpah used to be what art was about. That, and a little guerrilla mentality, which you had at Fountain in spades. This is the place where you reminisce about the good old days, when you did it yourself, when inspiration and magic struck like a bolt from the blue. Here at Fountain, the artists and dealers are hungry and they welcome all visitors warmly. They are having fun and that’s the vibe. I felt like sitting down, having a beer, and hanging.”

Fountain Miami 2008 participating galleries include:

Glowlab - New York
Leo Kesting - New York
Open Ground - Brooklyn
Radau - Miami
Jonathan Shorr Gallery - New York
Yum Yum Factory - Brooklyn
Dada Art Gallery - Philadelphia
Briceno Gallery - Miami

Fountain was launched in March 2006 in New York in an effort to leverage support for independent galleries overlooked by the larger, corporate-sponsored art fairs. The name “Fountain” is a nod to Marcel Duchamp’s controversial sculpture which shook up the art world when it was rejected by the Society of Artists’ exhibition in 1917. Similarly, in defiant contrast with The Armory Show, Art Basel Miami Beach, Pulse, Scope and the numerous other international art fairs, Fountain has received wide public support and critical acclaim for its experimental slant. In form and spirit, the artwork exhibited at Fountain reflects the avant-garde attitude of the Dada art movement, while attracting the attention of the international clientele and top collectors who attend the more traditional fairs.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Huckenpahler's Comments About qi peng's (Kurtz + peng) New Photographs

Viewers can see qi peng's latest series of marker-based abstract photographs here. James Huckenpahler, who will be exhibiting at Iao PROJECTS in August 2009, commented on Twitter that "digging the marker on film pieces, a little Stan Brakhage, a little Eno c. 77million paintings."

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Caron's "Waves of Mu" Featured in 15 Bytes Blog

November 25, 2008

More Waves

Our November edition of 15 Bytes featured a short video clip of Amy Caron and crew installing her Waves of Mu project. The video was from an Alaska installation but was run in conjunction with the unveiling of Waves of Mu in New York. The New York Times called it ". . . a refreshing work that gives cutting-edge science the sass and spunk it lacks." 
We heard this week from the recently returned Caron. "I'm fresh off the Waves of Mu run in New York City and writing to you from my secret hideout deep in the woods where I'm scheming my next contemporary art move and gearing up for the next gig," the artist writes. "Luckily my place of escape has wireless so I can keep you posted on what happened and what's happening. 

"Yup, we drove Shaggy and the Silver Bullet smack into the middle of the east village and did nine back-to-back shows and managed to escape without a scratch.  whew.  The Performance Space 122 Gallery/Theater run went super good and what a thrill to finally share my goods with the people who were first in on the project!"

She also sent us an audio clip of an interview with her broadcast on the local NPR station. 

Update Fountain Miami 2008 Press Release

Fountain Miami 2008

October 28th, 2008 fountain Posted in Current Fountain Art Fair | No Comments »

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Fountain Miami 2008
2505 North Miami Ave Miami FL 33127
Telephone: 917.650.3760
Email: info@fountainexhibit.com
Website: http://fountainexhibit.com
Dates: December 3–7, 2008; 11am–7pm
VIP/Press brunch: Wed Dec 3, from 10am to Noon and Thur Dec 4, from 9am to Noon
Reception for the artists: Friday, December 5; 7pm–midnight
Wynwood Arts Tour: Saturday, December 6; 7pm–10pm
Cost: Suggested donation of $5 at the door for all weekend access

New York (November 22, 2008) - Fountain Miami, the alternative art exhibition known for presenting cutting-edge and independent art galleries, sets up shop in an industrial warehouse located at 25th Street and North Miami Avenue for its latest installment this December. Fountain is a guerrilla-style art event, dubbed by many as the “Anti Art Fair” for its brash, off-the-wall offerings of non-traditional art exhibitions in the art fair environment.

Recruiting avant-garde galleries who showcase progressive primary-market works, Fountain breathes fresh life into the Miami Beach “Basel Frazzle,” giving gallery-goers and art enthusiasts the opportunity to see new works without traditional booths or selection juries. While most fairs have fallen into the hands of corporate management, Fountain remains independent, and as such presents work in a forward-thinking manner. Unencumbered by the strict presentation guidelines and parameters found at other fairs, Fountain preserves the visions of galleries and dealers to provide an environment reflective of the artists and their works.

Fountain’s venue, a large and dramatic 16000 square-foot complex with both interior and exterior exhibition areas, is adjacent to all the major Wynwood fairs. Participating galleries receive approximately 1200 square feet of exhibition space, so visitors can expect massive installations of contemporary painting, sculpture, performance and new media art.

Artnet – the most widely read art site on the web – describes Fountain: “Likeability and chutzpah used to be what art was about. That, and a little guerrilla mentality, which you had at Fountain in spades. This is the place where you reminisce about the good old days, when you did it yourself, when inspiration and magic struck like a bolt from the blue. Here at Fountain, the artists and dealers are hungry and they welcome all visitors warmly. They are having fun and that’s the vibe. I felt like sitting down, having a beer, and hanging.”

Fountain Miami 2008 participating galleries include:

Glowlab - New York
Leo Kesting - New York
Open Ground - Brooklyn
Radau - Miami
Jonathan Shorr Gallery - New York
Yum Yum Factory - Brooklyn

Fountain was launched in March 2006 in New York in an effort to leverage support for independent galleries overlooked by the larger, corporate-sponsored art fairs. The name “Fountain” is a nod to Marcel Duchamp’s controversial sculpture which shook up the art world when it was rejected by the Society of Artists’ exhibition in 1917. Similarly, in defiant contrast with The Armory Show, Art Basel Miami Beach, Pulse, Scope and the numerous other international art fairs, Fountain has received wide public support and critical acclaim for its experimental slant. In form and spirit, the artwork exhibited at Fountain reflects the avant-garde attitude of the Dada art movement, while attracting the attention of the international clientele and top collectors who attend the more traditional fairs.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Phelan Accepted into culturehall Online Gallery

Kober in December Group Show at Gallery Lombardi

Xmas Expo

Opening: 
Thurs. December 4th, 7pm-10pm


with live music by:
Black Cock -rock
The Chris Vestre Group, -instrumentals
Lelia Bela - solo vocals & unique instruments "Being Born"
Owen Towles -drummer -not the kit kind
DJ Katherine -katastrofik

Exhibit up until Jan.10th

featured artists include: 

Michael Abelman
Alejandra Almuelle
Ethan Azarian
Paul Beck
Leila Bela
Candace Briceno
Todd Campbell
Daniel Chairez
Charlie Chauvin
Jennifer Chenowith
John Cobb
Christopher Fitzgerald
April Garcia
Chia Guillory
Toni Henderson
Hector Hernandez
Kristin Hogan
Tim Kerr
Rachel Koper
Mike Krone
David Lozano
John MacPherson
Chase McClasky
Zach McDonald
Dennis McNett
Kevin Munoz
Nate Nordstrom
Mike Parsons
Hope Perkins
Greg Petite
Greg Piwonka
Ron Prince
Alonso Rey Sanchez
Andy Rihn
Sean Ripple
Deborah Robertson
Matthew Rodriguez
Sam Sanford
Eric Satrum
Jason Schmidt
Marc Silva
Annie Simpson
Mary Sledd
Morgan Sorne
James Stacy
Ellen Tanner
Give Up
Eric Uhlir
Win Wallace
Tim Weins
Brandon Ziskind 





Kober's Upcoming Exhibitions

Austin, Texas
Xmas Expo, group show
opening: Thursday, Dec. 4th 7-10pm 
50 artist group show 
through Dec. 4- Jan. 10th

Wrong Side of the Tracks
group show
Kismet Gallery
Albany, New York
January 12th

Kentucky National 2009
Murray State University
Murray, Kentucky
Clara Eagle Gallery
January 16th- February 18th
Jurror:Mark Masuoka

Running on Empty
group show
Athens Institute for Contemporary Art
Athens, GA
Jan. 31st- March 22 2009

Studio 27.28
solo show
2728 Girard Avenue
Philadelphia PA 19130
February 2009

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Fetzer Featured on The Obama Art Report Blog



Albert Wang Interviews Himself (Joke Series, No Kidding)

OFFICIAL OCCUPATION: Who knows?


LATEST BOOK READ: Goya by Robert Hughes. Yes I am pretending to read it.


FAVORITE COLOR: I like all colors... yeah, I'm an artist so I don't discriminate.


FAVORITE CURSE WORD: F&ckadelic...


SIGN: Libra, same as Lee Harvey Oswald.


CURRENT HAIR COLOR: Black is back.


TATTOOS: None except the black eye my ex-girlfriend could have given me. 


PIERCINGS: None except some old-school lobotomy.


PREFERRED TOOTHPASTE: Ah, I don't care. I brush with twigs if I had to.


FAVORITE NEW PRODUCT: No Logo by Naomi Klein because it's a bestseller about being anti-commercial. A living contradiction.


WEAKNESSES: Not getting to Art Basel Miami Beach!


FAVORITE EMOTION: Mad and can't take much anymore.


LEAST FAVORITE EMOTION: Betrayed by love.


GUILTY PLEASURES: Ex-girlfriend, reading Victorian erotique fiction.


HOW THE HELL DO YOU PRONOUNCE MY LAST NAME?!?!!!: Wang, not Wong!


WHAT'S IN MY CD PLAYER NOW: Hmm... Q-Tip's new album "The Renaissance."


RECENT TRIPS: New York City. Not New York City. 


LATEST KICK: Getting in and out of relationships. Supporting Amy Caron, Circlegal, Kurtz + peng, and qi peng through culturehall at Fountain Miami 2008.  


SMOKER: NO


DRINKER: Nope, I'm boring am I?


COFFEE?: Nope, it causes cancer yeah.


HOW DOES ALBERT TAKE COFFEE?: On a lithographic plate.


THICK OR THIN PIZZA?: I don't give a s**t. 


DISLIKES: Hypocrites and art critics and supposed professionals who don't answer my phone calls back!


SNOBBY ABOUT: Being a socialist?


PRIZED POSSESSION: My ex-girlfriend and art collection.


THINGS I DO NOT NEED: Luxury.


THINGS I DO NEED: Getting Iao PROJECTS into Art Basel soon.


I LOVE TO HATE: The Crackberry and iPhone.


POP QUIZ: Why do my friends joke that I am part racoon?  Email me your answer/guess and I’ll send you proof.


[Because there is no answer.]

Brian Staker Photographs Michelle Kurtz (Circlegal) Executes Live Art at L'Astelier Cafe on November 7, 2008


Brian Staker Photographs Michelle Kurtz (Circlegal) Executes Live Art at L'Astelier Cafe on November 7, 2008





Brian Staker Photographs Michelle Kurtz (Circlegal) Executes Live Art at L'Astelier Cafe on November 7, 2008





Brian Staker Photographs Michelle Kurtz (Circlegal) Executes Live Art at L'Astelier Cafe on November 7, 2008





Amanda Sanfilippo From Burlington City Arts Analyzes Caron's "Waves of Mu"


Amy Caron Interviewed by Bonnie Grice on National Public Radio

Amy Caron's "Waves of Mu" Photos


Caron's "Waves of Mu" in Various News Outlets

"...a refreshing work that gives cutting-edge science the sass and spunk it lacks..." - New York Times.com

I'm fresh off the Waves of Mu run in New York City and writing to you from my secret hideout deep in the woods where I'm scheming my next contemporary art move and gearing up for the next gig.   Luckily my place of escape has wireless so I can keep you posted on what happened and what's happening.

WHAT HAPPENED
Yup, we drove Shaggy and the Silver Bullet smack into the middle of the east village and did nine back-to-back shows and managed to escape without a scratch.  whew.  The Performance Space 122 run went super good and what a thrill to finally share my goods with the people who were first in on the project!

Last recent tidbits are that I taught a lecture/demonstration at Bennington College in Vermont following the NYC show - great program that is very attuned to the interdisciplinary approach to art.  I also did an interview with a nice  woman who is devoting a chapter in her upcoming book Minding Spectators and Performers: Enacting Embodied Cognition On-Stage and Off  to the Waves of Mu show. 

More Press:

"Delightful show and an impressive installation.  Amy Caron is a firecracker of a performer..."  - Time Out  NY.com

"This hard-to-describe but incredibly smart work is the perfect balance of learning and entertainment." - Time Out NY.com

"It is funny that people talk about Ann Liv Young challenging the audience/performer contract when she is really just yelling at you. Waves of Mu actually does challenge that contract in interesting ways." - Andy Horwitz, Culturebot

"An artist to watch" - Gay City News

Other NYC highlights:

*Independent Film Channel came to shoot a spot in my installation (I'll keep you posted on when that airs)
*Sold out panel discussion and shows (science IS sexy)
*An agent took me to lunch (everything life changing happens over lunch no?)
*I got the ENTIRE Wednesday night audience to come out dancing with me (Priceless!)

There was so much that happened in New York - too much to pack into one email, but what a time we had.  I promise to one day soon start a real blog so you all can have easy one-stop-shopping for the Amy action, but for now I'll revel in the soon to be forgotten art of the hand-made poorly-formatted email/newsletter.  Ain't it sweet?

My New York City romp didn't stop at PS 122 either.  I had a simultaneous show at The Philoctetes Center in NYC.  Three of my 2D works were part of the group show Body As Image. 

This group exhibition served as a literal and figurative backdrop to Sextet: Six Roundtables on The Biology and Psychology of Sexuality, the Philoctetes Center (New York City) presents the exhibition, The Body as Image.  Eight artists explore diversity�and occasionally perversity�in the terrain of the human physique.

Caron's Future Plans, in the Words of Amy

After a brief time in hiding I will surface in Seattle in December for the Annual National Performing Network Meeting where I am scheduled to burst forth with art at something called Artburst - could get messy.  I've also been invited to lead a roundtable discussion titled Blurring the Lines where I will talk about the challenges and advantages of creating and touring work that is not easily categorized.  I've got the chops for that talk let me tell ya.

After that, I'll be focusing on the 2009 Waves of Mu shows in Salt Lake City, Seattle, and Provo.

That's all for now everybody.  Hope you all have a splendid Thanksgiving next week!

 - Amy

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Phelan to Be Featured in Group Show at Aeon Logic Gallery

Phelan will be featured in an inaugural exhibition at Aeon Logic Gallery which is opening up in Brooklyn. The location is 4 Malcolm X Boulevard Brooklyn NY 11221. The exhibit runs from November 1 to December 15. His statement is:

I wish I were a storyteller.  I wish I were articulate enough to bend the ears and capture the imaginations of those around me with my tales of life and love and legacy, to have my words flow from my lips like a mountain stream trickling around rocks and roots, collecting into a crystal clear mirrored pool in the valley. 
I am not.  There is this disconnect between my brain and my heart, between my brain and my soul.  I have tremendous difficulty deciphering my own hopes and dreams, let alone spinning a yarn that will hold captive the minds of others. But sometimes, things click.  The pawls align, the gears engage, and an image flows from my hand like that stream from the mountaintop.  Collecting its tributaries one after the other, building in volume and strength, becoming a powerful river until it pours onto paper like so much water into that lake in the valley.  Often, I have to keep these images close by, constantly looking for that place in my mind or my heart or my soul where they might have come from.  But they don't seem to fit 
anywhere very neatly.  They do, however fit in between.  Between my heart and soul, between my heart and mind, between waking and dreams, between disappointment and regret, between life and death, between sin and redemption.
They narrate for me what my words could not; what my mind or heart or soul could not have done alone.  They pull from all sources the shattered pieces and make them whole, to make available to the viewer that which sloshes around inside me like a whirlpool.  When asked what my work is about, I used to say that if I had the words to describe it, I wouldn't need to make the pictures to begin with.  But that is a cheap cop out.  It isn't true.  My work is about where people live.  Not on the mountaintop, or the pool in the valley, but on the slopes.  In between.

Maybe I am a storyteller...

Fetzer Featured on Obama Art Report With Election Victory Print




Fetzer's Obama Print at Signed & Numbered Gallery at 221 East Broadway in Downtown Salt Lake City

Wurm Moderates Literary Works on Trial Panel

Phelan Executes Temporary Wall Drawing at Iao: ABC During Rocky Mountain Art Show

Friday, November 14, 2008

Caron's "Waves of Mu" Reviewed by Sara Kuhn

1 comments:

sara kuhn said...

I saw this installation/performance on Sunday night and loved it. I think Aaron who wrote the above critique was doing what he accused the artist of - trying too hard. Better to let the experience work it's magic. I thought the champagne and chocolate added to the elegance of the installation and served as a catalyst for socialization, which I came to understand after Dr. Ramachandran's video clips, is a major function of this organ riding around in our skulls. There was a lot of video in the work, but it was unexpected and was a good fit for the frame of cognitive science which relies heavily on video experiments. I whole heartedly recommend catching this piece while it's in town - it's a fun ride and you actually learn something too!

Caron's "Waves of Mu" Reviewed in 10/19/2008 JawsBlog

10/19/2008

Waves of Mu: Review

Filed under: NeuroscienceNew York CityReviews — Jaws @ 11:37 am

So I went to the performance Waves of Mu at PS 122 last night.

Didn’t really know what to expect.

The fist part of the program, is a giant room (instalation) with artists conceptualizations of the different parts of the brains. This, though a bit abstract was definitely the highlight of the evening. (pictures here). I particularly liked the portrayal of the thalamus.

Then came the performance part which seemed very erratic and non-sensible. The program started with the small (~30 people) audience having to sign a “wiaver” which was more of a thinly vailed joke at an individual consent form, used in clinical research.. The program from there began to just start veering all over the place. A few clips of an interview with V.S. Ramachandran instersupurced with some wierd acting/behavior by the 3 person cast. It was literally all over the place. Amy was very talented, and it showed, but I just didn’t understand what the point was.

Now granted, as one with a background in neuroscience, maybe I was not the target audience for such a performance. In a similar vein, my appreciation for modern art isn’t great. Nor do I have much appreciation for modern theater either. (I’m better with the visual art). So with that in mind, my review is probably a bit biased in that way.

Caron's "Waves of Mu" Reviewed in 10/16/2008 GayCityNews

PERFORMANCE

An Artist to Watch
Utah-based Amy Caron is an athlete, a product of rural life, a formally trained artist, and someone with a quick wit. She arrives in the East Village with "Waves of Mu," a neuroscience-based installation/performance work that is essentially a wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling representation of the brain, a memorable anatomy lesson. Walking through this beautifully complex installation, a play on scope and scale, gives a wow factor to the organ riding around in our skulls that we easily forget is our ultimate source. The room is a portal for a deeper understanding of the mind. Performance Space 122, Oct. 16-18, 7:30 p.m.; Oct. 19, 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $20, $15 for students & seniors, $10 for P.S. 122 members at ps122.com

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show in 11/13/08 City Weekly

ROCKY MOUNTAIN ART & ANTIQUES SHOW Everything from the old masters to contemporary work. Salt Palace Convention Center, 100 S. West Temple, 888-988-2787, Nov. 14-16, RMArtShow.com

Visit Iao PROJECTS in Booths 202 and 204 at the Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show

The Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show

Salt Lake City, UT, November 13, 2008 --(PR.com)-- The Premiere Art & Antiques Extravaganza of the Year.

After several months of preparation, the first annual Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show is ready to open in the Salt Palace Convention Center in Salt Lake City, Utah from November 14-16. They have gathered some top Utah artists and their artworks, like the legendary artist Arnold Friberg, the signed Designer Dolls of Marie Osmond, renowned Utah landscape artist Anton "Tony" Rasmussen (you've seen his murals at the SLC airport), and many other extremely talented contemporary artists and photographers.

The show also showcases a great collection of original etchings, woodcuts, engravings, lithographs, antique prints and limited editions of world-class art masters like Rembrandt, Durer, Rubens, Cézanne, Renoir, Picasso, Dali, and Chagall exhibiting for sale at the Show. The fine art & antique auction on Saturday November 15 will give art collectors an excellent opportunity to acquire those rare-find artworks from the art masters as well as original art directly from many talented contemporary artists.

In addition to the fine art section of the show, the Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show also presents a great collection of Victorian Age fine antiques, eighteenth century antique violins, early American & European Grandfather Clocks, Pre-Colombian American antiquities and fine ceramic works from ancient China.

You will also find signed Italian Art Glass, the last Henry Steinway-signed Steinway Piano, and the fine craftsmanship of antique and collectible cars made by Ford, Chevy, Lincoln, Cadillac, Mercedes, Jaguar, etc. at the show. And all these will be auctioned off in the exciting Fine Art, Antique & Collectible Cars Auction on Saturday November 15 from 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM.

The Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show is truly the Art & Antique Extravaganza of the year and something that art lovers and collectors will continue to look forward to year after year.

Richard Lee, Managing Director
The Rocky Mountain Art & Antiques Show