Posts Tagged “Art”

05w08:2 Award This

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 8 number 2 (award this)

But first, the news:
Blogto.com is a new website dedicated to the city of Toronto and being better than the Torontoist (so cute it makes Antonia Zerbisias want to hurl), and for which I’m writing for. Last week I posted about the Untitled Art Awards, and last night I found the article on literary prizes on the This Magazine blog, and hence, I saw a theme. So, ‘On Awards’ via the blogosphere and shameless self-promotion.

As well, Jennifer McMackon is running a new series of submitted questionnaires. I sent mine in on the weekend, which you can check out here, the questions running as previous posts to that entry. – Timothy
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Fiction as a winner-take-all market | Andrew Potter
http://blog.thismagazine.ca/archives/2005/02/fiction_as_a_wi.html
“I’d like to see someone start a prize that comes with zero dollars attached. Not even a medal or a trophy. You just get some cheapo certificate, like you got in grade 6 for having perfect attendance or something. The trick would be to make it such a prestigious prize, that the very notion that mere money would accompany it would be offensive.”

The Untitled Art Awards | Timothy Comeau
http://tinyurl.com/4kh6k
“Art awards like this are merely props to support a status quo, an attempt to create a monolithic cultural identity, which is unwise, especially in a city as diverse as Toronto. It’s also unwise since monolithic cultural identities are games that Empires play, empires like USA and it’s Greek tutors, the Brits. It doesn’t fit Canada at all, and seems like another example of the Canadian streak of insecure provincialism.”

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emailed by Timothy on Monday 21 February 2005 @ 3:07 PM

05w07:2 Video Valentines

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 7 number 2 (video valentines)

Dear 640480,
I love you

PS: I’m only late with this because I was out of Instant Coffee until today.

Timothy
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3rd Annual Video Valentine | 640480 Collective
http://www.640480.com/valentine/main.html
13 Quicktime Movs

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emailed by Timothy on Wednesday 16 February 2005 @ 8:31 PM

05w05:2 Transcriptions

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 5 number 2 (transcriptions)

I managed to get a couple of transcriptions done this week, which I’ve posted on my blog goodreads.ca/commentary. – Timothy

——————————————————————— Canadian Art | Ydessa Hendeles
http://tinyurl.com/5lqcl
“Regardless of the challenge of changing economics, contemporary Canadian art provides a valuable heritage that provides a resource of insight into the course the country has traveled in its relatively short history. Though more submerged in the international dialog then would be preferred, it is there, and still gives those of us who seek it out a perspective on what it means to be here and indeed, where is here, an especially difficult notion to identify besides the behemoth below the border. The good news is that our history is becoming known internationally, as more and more people from here are interacting with there and sharing what has and is happening here. It is no longer necessary for artists to flee to reside in a major art centre outside the country to be visible and join into the dialogue. It is now appreciated that one can live in Canada and still be on the world’s stage, one can finally function from here. I think it is important to add to the fabric of the art world, expanding its realm, to radiate from the historical global centres.”

The Story Telling Problem | Malcolm Gladwell
http://tinyurl.com/6wzn6
“We don’t have access to our unconscious, we don’t know what these thing are coming, where they’re come from that bubbles up from the recesses of our brain. So what do we do? Well, we have a behavior that we just did, we just made a decision of a certain kind, we don’t really know where it came from, so we come up with an explanation, we make up a story. And we’re really really good at making up stories. I call this The Story Telling Problem. And this is something that happens over and over again.”

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 04 February 2005 @ 8:53 PM

05w04:1 Painting

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 4 number 1 (painting)


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A Powerful Collector Changes Course | Alan Riding
http://tinyurl.com/47os6
“In an article last weekend in The Sunday Telegraph of London, Andrew Graham-Dixon conceded that Mr. Saatchi could genuinely believe painting is now central to contemporary art. ‘It is also possible that, like a cannily contrarian fund-manager working in the equities market, he has simply decided that painting is currently an undervalued sector – and he has bet his portfolio on the proposition that it has a big recovery upside,’ Mr. Graham-Dixon wrote.”

Some thoughts on the future of painting | Timothy Comeau
http://tinyurl.com/6aq7k
“As a 20th Century fashion, we can assume that in the future historians will be able to date our paintings by this look, just as easily as we can with past centuries. We know that the 16th, 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries have style, a theme of subject matter, a look. In the 20th Century, painting became obsessed with itself as a viscous medium resting on a surface. We don’t know what 21st Century painting will look like – this century’s look has not yet developed. It seems that in a world where all of our images are perfectly rendered on screens, the human touch evident in brushstroke and viscosity is what makes painting valuable. It occurs to me then that perhaps the traditional tales of the rise of Modernism, and especially Ab-ex painting in the 1950s, ignores the concurrent development of television. These things make me think that this style has legs to go into the 21st Century. At the same time, we 20C folk are limited to thinking of everything as ‘human touch’ and go on and on about ‘humanity’ – this vast 19th C hangover of industrialization

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emailed by Timothy on Sunday 30 January 2005 @ 2:40 PM

05w02:1 Roadsworth

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2005 week 2 number 1 (Roadsworth)

Those of you in Montreal will be familiar with Roadsworth, the stencil artist who has made a name for himself by decorating the streets and getting arrested at the end of November. If you’re a regular reader of the Zeke’s Gallery blog, you’ll also be familiar with the story, as Chris Hand has been coordinating the effort of publicizing his predicament. This issue of Goodreads reproduces an article on the subject that was published last week in the Globe and Mail, and links to one of the Chris’ entries where he offers a 6MB mp3 file of an interview he did on a Montreal radio station. – Timothy

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When the stencil his the road | Reid Cooper
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/reidcooper/
“The seriousness of the charges and the potential punishment, however, has to be seen in light of the overwhelming support for Roadsworth’s images. Chris Hand, the director of Zeke’s Gallery on the Plateau, who is organizing public support for Gibson through his webpage, says he was ‘surprised about how many people thought the art had been done by the city.’ Bernard Lamarche, writer for Montreal’s Le Devoir, says ‘It is absolutely shocking that there is a criminal attitude against his art. They should hire him to do more of this around the city to acknowledge their supposed willingness to be a cultural centre.’ Jonathan Achtman, a resident of the Plateau says the art ‘makes the streets more pleasant. By arresting him instead of aligning themselves with him, the city has squandered an opportunity to show itself as the progressive city that I like to think I live in.’ Even the political adviser to the Mayor of the Plateau Mont-Royal borough, Richard Coté says, ‘Roadsworth’s work makes people smile.'”

More Free Roadsworth | Chris Hand
http://zekesgallery.blogspot.com/2004/12/more-free-roadsworth.html
within the text there is the link to the audio file

Roadsworth Gallery | Mike Patten and Zeke’s Gallery
http://mikepatten.ca/gallery/view_album.php?set_albumName=roadsworth
photo gallery

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emailed by Timothy on Wednesday 12 January 2005 @ 10:23 PM

04w52:1 Zeke's Gallery Interview with Marc Mayer

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 52 number 1 (Zeke’s Gallery interview with Marc Mayer)

The goodreads.ca homepage uses Blogger to archive the posts. I did this way back in May so that I could provide RSS feeds, and because it has a feature where you can email your posts, so by putting that e-address in the mailing list, I could automatically archive the emails. As many of you know, Blogger offers the ability to leave comments, which I have had off until now. Since the weekend, you can leave comments on the goodreads.ca homepage regarding any links or issues you may have.
And now for self-promotion:

Remember the time you spent almost ten dollars on that issue of Harpers or the Walrus and were disappointed? Remember the time I got in trouble because I didn’t tip enough to the lousy waiter for bad service, especially when they’re already making a wage, but then there was the time I tipped the cab driver out of sympathy even though he took the longest route and effectively ripped me off? Now, remember that great article you read about some time ago on Goodreads?

I don’t have a wage and have all the debts associated with being chronically underemployed, so I think tapping on the tip jar at Christmas time is something I should feel no shame or embarrassment in. Please consider a small amount to help me help you into the new year. There is a PayPal link on the goodreads.ca homepage, or email me for my address if you’d like to send a cheque. If we are comrades in poverty, or you’re a newbie subscriber, than don’t worry about it.

Happy Holidays,

– Timothy
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My interview with Marc Mayer | Chris Hand
http://zekesgallery.blogspot.com/2004/12/my-interview-with-marc-mayer.html
“Artists are important contributors to our intellectual life. Forget all that stuff about how art contributes to spiritual life, or quality of life, or even pleasure, artists bring new information into the world from the unique perspective of the visual arts heritage and the growing set of tools at their disposal. We learn things that we can’t learn anywhere else, that we can’t learn from philosophy, from science, from nowhere. […] Canadians need to buy Canadian art, it’s the best investment they can make. […] The art world functions in very different ways in different countries, when it works well, there’s a strong market that supports many artists and there’s a strong cultural infrastructure that permits a certain independence for institutions to identify and explain the really great stuff as a service to the public and to posterity. […] [Other country’s] artists have a big collector, connoisseur and commentary machine behind them and so smart people from those countries who want to be artists have a shot at a bright future, though it’s only possible for a small few, even there. In any case, I view the current art economy in Canada as an interim situation. We can’t go on forever like this. We need to encourage a national market, like, now.”

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emailed by Timothy on Tuesday 21 December 2004 @ 1:42 AM

04w48:2 The Proposed Changes to the Canada Council

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 48 number 2 (The proposed changes to the Canada Council)


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Is the horse dead yet? | Chris Hand
http://zekesgallery.blogspot.com/2004/11/is-horse-dead-yet.html
“What Canadian Visual Artist can compare with the reputations that Celine, Gould or the OSM have on an international level? The past two Canadian representatives to the Venice Biennale have done really bad electro-acoustic music and appropriated George W. Bush’s Christmas Card to the American public as what they thought was ‘cutting edge Canadian Art.’

From this seat, if the visual artists out there would stop worrying about the chump change doled out by the Canada Council, get their acts together and set up a meeting with Liza Frulla (or better still, Paul Martin) then perhaps they’d be able to convince the holders of the purse strings that the Canada Council should be giving out scads of cash.

As I don’t see that happening, ever. The only other way that I can see visual artists making the money that they deserve is by selling it. Part and parcel of the process of selling it, is displaying it, marketing it, promoting it, etc.”

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emailed by Timothy on Thursday 25 November 2004 @ 1:51 PM

04w46:2 Artist-Run Centres

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 46 number 2 (artist-run centres)

Thanks again to AA Bronson and Andy Patterson for allowing me to publish their articles on the Goodreads site. – Timothy

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The Humiliation of the Bureaucrat | AA Bronson
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/aabronson/
“…wanting a Canadian art scene just like in New York, or London, or Paris in the thirties; as a Canadian artist typically unable to picture the reality of a Canadian art scene except as a dream projected upon the national landscape as a sea-to-shining-sea connective tissue; that is as a dream community connected by and reflected by the media; that is, authenticated by its own reflection in the media; as such a Canadian artist desiring to see not necessarily himself, but the picture of his art scene pictured on TV; and knowing the impossibility of an art scene without real museums (the Art Callery of Ontario was not a real museum for us), without real art magazines (and artscanada was not a real art magazine for us), without real artists (no, Harold Town was not a real artist for us, and we forgot that we ourselves were real artists, because we had not seen ourselves in the media – real artists, like Frank Stella, appeared in Artforum magazine), as such an artist desiring such a picture of such a scene, such a reality from sea-to-shining-sea, then, it was natural to call upon our national attributes – the bureaucratic tendency and the protestant work ethic – and working together, and working sometimes not together we laboured to structure, or rather to untangle from the messy post-Sixties spaghetti of our minds, artist-run galleries, artists’ video, and artist-run magazines. And that allowed us to allow ourselves to see ourselves as an art scene. And we did.” AA’s famous article on the history of artist-run centres in Canada, from 1983.

Preface to “Money Value Art” | Andrew J. Patterson
http://goodreads.timothycomeau.com/andrewpatterson/
“If economic dependency on the United States was already a foregone conclusion by the beginning of the 1950s, then Canadian distinction from the expanding American empire had to be asserted in a different domain. The cultural realm provided an excellent opportunity. Beginning with the 1941 Artists’ Conference in Kingston, Ontario, the Federation of Canadian Artists and other arts-funding advocates ‘invoked the nati onal interest as the best strategy for defending and advancing the boundaries of what they understood as culture,’ perhaps with a utopian fervour and perhaps strategically. Indeed, coalitions of visual and performing artists of the time tended not to position themselves as autonomous modernist artists. Instead, they engaged in discourses concerning democracy, culture, nation building, and public space. They worked alongside agrarian and labour activists, proto-feminists, and even popular entertainers. It is worth noting that the Brief Concerning the Cultural Aspects of Canadian Reconstruction, presented to the 1944 federal Turgeon Special Committee on Reconstruction and Re-establishment, resolved that Canada’s National Gallery should be radically decentralized and reconstituted as a network of location-based centres and practices.”

Artist-Run Centre posting | Sally McKay and Guests
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/comment/29074/
“It’s even more imperative that ARCs (or parallel galleries, as they used to be called) re-articulate their purpose, and do it in a language that inspires a new generation. Running an ARC is a ton of work. It requires a dedicated volunteer board with enthusiasm for the future and a vision for the programming. It requires staff who feel invested enough in the institution to put in extra hours making art shows happen on a shoestring. It’s a team effort that, when it works, works great. But inspiration is required and that inspiration seems to be in short supply. Institutions change internally and so does the cultural climate around them. In the 1970s artists needed ARCs because there was nowhere else to show their work. It was a let’s-put-the-show-on-right -here-in-the-barn mentality that drove the long hours and creative solutions to systemic an d structural problems. Now there’s a sort of entrenched misery, a doom and gloom attitude that we will all volunteer our energies, even if its no fun at all, to maintain a system that has become integral to visual art production in this country. But why?”

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emailed by Timothy on Friday 12 November 2004 @ 3:10 PM

04w41:1 The Cutting Edge Becomes Dull, Needs a Sharpener

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 41 number 1 (the cutting edge becomes dull, needs a sharpener)


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From…Early 21st Century Art (New York: Kramer Publishing 2035) | Tom Moody
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/tommoody/?29368
“The death of so-called site specific art came in 2004, at a talked-about show most people never saw.”

The TAAFI Panel on the Avant-Garde | Sally McKay and Guests
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/comment/29330/
“‘I did not really expect a group of pundits with careers embedded in fine art and it’s discourse to dismiss the field with such an apparent lack of anxiety.’ So bored were they by their work in the arts, the gala soirees and seminars of their art fairs … so bored is Mr. Monk with his basically cultural civil servant position and salary, he doesn’t think he could recognize the avant garde – how tragic to be so dissapointed in one’s life work. Either that or he just likes walking around blindfolded. Pin the tail on the Donkey or play ball! – desolee (guest) 10-05-2004 9:21 am”

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emailed by Timothy on Thursday 07 October 2004 @ 10:47 PM

04w38:1 Art vs. Design

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Good Reads Mailing List | 2004 week 38 number 1 (art vs. design)


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Real Art | Peter Bagge
http://www.reason.com/0408/bagge.shtml
“Mr. Grumpy Goes to an art museum and comes out belaboring the obvious […] Rather than try to ‘teach’ people to appreciate art that has no meaning or relevance to their lives, we should instead be marvelling at the countless inspired man-made objects that litteraly surround us, both inside and outside our own homes. So who needs modern art museums? !?” [Online comic]

The graphic grab | Rick Poynor
http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,3605,1291320,00.html
“Valli isn’t alone in believing that the intense visual pleasures offered by graphic culture are beginning to usurp the place of fine art. In recent years, many artists have emphasised the conceptual, rather than the aesthetic, content of their work. Design, on the other hand, has often been unashamedly retinal, intent on creating a new visual form. […] Both Anderson and Valli argue that it is graphic culture, not art, that reflects the mentality and concerns of our time. Graphic expression connects with people because its fundamental purpose is communication, and this applies to even the most esoteric forms of message-making, such as TDR’s. If it doesn’t communicate, it fails. ‘I don’t think contemporary art is ever going to come back,’ says Valli. ‘The people who are going to change things visually are people who are working in a more graphic way. As art installations became more three-dimensional and conceptual, graphic designers just took over.’ If we were to remake Robert Hughes’s Shock Of The New documentary in 30 years’ time, Valli suggests, its focus would be graphic culture. ”

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emailed by Timothy on Monday 13 September 2004 @ 3:24 PM