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Tag: Visual Art

  • The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

    The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

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    An installation view of ‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism’ at the Met. Courtesy The Met, Photo by Anna-Marie Kellen

    Among New York neighborhoods, Harlem has long stood out for its immense impact on culture. Early in the Twentieth Century, it emerged as an epicenter of music, art, theater, literature and dining—the result of the mass exodus of millions of Black Americans from diverse backgrounds who left the rural south to settle in the urban north. More than 175,000 people came to Harlem, including artists, writers, musicians and great thinkers who would pave the way for the Harlem Renaissance’s most recognizable names: W.E.B. Du Bois, Josephine Baker, Augusta Savage, Cab Calloway and many more.

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s recently opened show, “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism,” pays tribute to it all with an exhibition featuring over 160 artworks by Black artists from the 1920s through the 1940s, in what is the first survey of the subject in the city since 1987.

    The exhibition is divided into sections that highlight everything from activism to nightlife, featuring what the Met calls “the first African American-led movement of international modern art,” and showcasing the work of artists like Charles Alston, Aaron Douglas, Meta Warrick Fuller, William H. Johnson, Archibald Motley, Winold Reiss, Augusta Savage, James Van Der Zee and Laura Wheeler Waring. Also shown are portrayals of African diasporan subjects as rendered by Matisse, Munch, Picasso and a handful of others.

    SEE ALSO: Robert Alice Is Behind the First Collection of Generative Art NFTs at Christie’s

    The start of “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” recognizes writer and philosophy professor Alain Leroy Locke, whose 1925 book of cultural criticism, The New Negro, set forth principles of “a new vision of opportunity” for African Americans and helped shape the Harlem Renaissance and, with it, American culture as a whole. There’s a portrait of the writer by Winold Reiss, alongside a copy of his book, which includes the essay ‘The Legacy of the Ancestral Arts,” that invited black artists to embrace African aesthetics. There are also portraits of thinkers like Zora Neale Hurston, presented in a portrait by Aaron Douglas.

    A painting of people eating outdoors under umbrellasA painting of people eating outdoors under umbrellas
    Archibald J. Motley, Jr., ‘The Picnic,’ 1936, Oil on canvas. Juan Trujillo / HowardUniversityGalleryofArt,Washington,D.C.

    The section titled “Everyday Life in the New Black Cities” is full of stunning paintings, including Hale Woodruff’s 1930 The Card Players, depicting a cubist-inspired scene of pool players in a dark bar and Pool Parlor, a 1942 painting by Jacob Lawerence—the first example of the artist’s work to be included in the Met’s permanent collection.

    Overall, the exhibition is wide-ranging and thoughtful in both its curation and presentation. Photo highlights include the James Van Der Zee photo Couple, Harlem, from 1932, with its stylish couple in fur coats posing with their Cadillac on a street lined with brownstone buildings.

    A black and white vintage photo of two people in fur coats posing next to a 1930s style carA black and white vintage photo of two people in fur coats posing next to a 1930s style car
    James Van Der Zee, ‘Couple, Harlem,’ 1932, printed later, Gelatin silver print. James Van Der Zee Archive, The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Gift of Donna Van Der Zee, 2021

    Women are highlighted throughout the show, which is refreshing. In a section devoted to “Portraiture and the Modern Black Subject,” a 1943 portrait by William H. Johnson called Woman in Blue depicts a woman staring confidently into the painter’s gaze—it looks as if she’s wearing a uniform, signaling the strength of the working woman. There are pieces by women artists, including Laura Wheeler Waring’s Yellow Roses on view, and plenty of representation: a photo of acclaimed singer Josephine Baker taken in 1925 by Adolph de Meyer shows her in all her glamorous glory.

    A major highlight of the exhibit is the room of paintings by Aaron Douglas, who created monochromatic, graphic images of silhouettes of African Americans throughout history real and imagined. Some of the most exciting sections are the galleries devoted to the Black nightlife that came to define Harlem and the “Artist as Activist” section, which explores the civic activism at the core of the Harlem Renaissance. William H. Johnson’s Moon Over Harlem, which depicts police brutality after a race-related riot in August of 1943, is particularly moving.

    A stylized collage of people on a street under an orange moonA stylized collage of people on a street under an orange moon
    William Henry Johnson, ‘Moon over Harlem,’ 1944, Oil on plywood. Smithsonian American Art Museum

    The exhibition ends with a tribute to Harlem: the 15-foot-long 1970 mural The Block by artist Romare Bearden. It depicts a block of mid-century buildings in the NYC neighborhood, including the block where Bearden, a member of the Harlem Artists Guide, had his art studio on 125th Street. He worked in the same building as artist Jacob Lawrence and poet Claude McKay, and his depiction takes the viewer back to old New York, capturing its bustling essence in a lively street that continues to be a hub of African American cultural life.

    A Harlem Renaissance exhibition at the Met was arguably long overdue, but don’t let that stop you from checking it out now. One show can’t cover the wide breadth of a decades-long art movement but “The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” does much to capture its impact and legacy. It’s a strong introduction to what should be a lifelong journey into the lives of these influential artists and luminaries.

    A museum exhibition dominated by painted portraitsA museum exhibition dominated by painted portraits
    Portraits are a major focus of ‘The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism.’ Courtesy The Met, Photo by Anna-Marie Kellen

    The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism” is on view through July 28.

    The Met Pays Tribute to New York’s Great Black Artists

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    Nadja Sayej

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  • Library Street’s ‘Little Village’ campus to open in May with Charles McGee exhibit

    Library Street’s ‘Little Village’ campus to open in May with Charles McGee exhibit

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    Courtesy photo

    Next to The Shepherd is the Charles McGee Legacy Park, a permanent sculpture garden in honor of the late artist.

    The long-awaited Library Street Collective project anchored by The Shepherd in East Village is opening on May 18.

    They’re calling the whole 3.5-acre campus spearheaded by Library Street Collective co-founders and partners Anthony and JJ Curis, “Little Village.” It spans several blocks in Detroit’s East Village neighborhood and includes The Shepherd, the Charles McGee Legacy Park, a skate park designed by McArthur Binion and Tony Hawk, a bed and breakfast called ALEO, and the Lantern building.

    Located in the former Good Shepherd church, The Shepherd has been redesigned by architectural firm Peterson Rich Office (PRO) to include two new gallery spaces, the Little Village Arts Library, performance art spaces, installations, and a mezzanine above the main gallery. A new cocktail bar called Father Forgive Me by Joe Robinson and Anthony Curis is slated to open in the church’s former garage.

    The Little Village Arts Library will feature exhibition catalogs, monographs, and research materials on artists of color who have contributed to the Michigan art community curated by Asmaa Walton of Black Art Library.

    With the Shepherd’s May opening also comes an expansive exhibit of Charles McGee’s work in collaboration with the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD). This inaugural exhibition of The Shepherd, titled Charles McGee: Time is Now, is curated by MOCAD artistic director Jova Lynne and will be on view from May 18 to July 20.

    McGee’s monumental career included sculptures, large-scale public works, paintings, and assemblages with themes chronicling the Black experience. The work in Time is Now “honors the way McGee’s practice fluctuated across narratives of representation, and his mastery of assembling patterns while deconstructing images across intimate drawings and larger-than-life sculptures,” according to a media announcement.

    In tandem with Time is Now, MOCAD and Library Street Collective will present a sister exhibit at MOCAD titled Kin-ship: The Legacy of Gallery 7 from June 28 to September 23.

    A permanent sculpture garden in honor of the late artist, the Charles McGee Legacy Park is also slated to open at The Shepherd on May 18 with three sculptures that McGee conceptualized before his passing in 2021.

    click to enlarge ALEO is a bed and breakfast located in the Shepherd's former rectory. - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    ALEO is a bed and breakfast located in the Shepherd’s former rectory.

    “We count ourselves among the many who were touched by Charles McGee’s life and career, his commitment to uplifting the arts in Detroit and his passion for this city,” the Curises said in a statement. “It was truly a privilege to call him our friend. We look forward to celebrating Charles’ legacy with the inaugural exhibition at the Shepherd and are thrilled to partner with MOCAD on this historic moment.”

    The Lantern, a mixed-use space a few blocks from The Shepherd, will house nonprofits Signal-Return and Progressive Arts Studio Collective (PASC) in addition to providing over 5,000 square feet of artist studio space and nearly 4,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space. It will also be the headquarters and recording studio for Detroit-based music label Assemble Sound.

    ALEO, located in The Shepherd’s former rectory, is envisioned as a haven for artists and others seeking a “cultural retreat.” The bed and breakfast, also set to open in May, has work by nearly 30 Detroit-based artists, or artists with ties to the city, in guest rooms and communal spaces. It’s also the headquarters for McArthur Binion’s Foundation and nonprofit Modern Ancient Brown, which provides residencies and mentorship to BIPOC artists and writers.

    Across from the Shepherd is another project called BridgeHouse, two repurposed residential buildings that will house a new pâtisserie by James Beard award-winning chef Warda Bouguettaya to serve ALEO guests and neighbors. BridgeHouse will be encapsulated within a two-story deck that will function as an outdoor meeting space, viewing platform with views of the skatepark, and stage for performances.

    “The Shepherd reshapes an institution that built community around religion, to one that will build community around the arts,” said Nathan Rich and Miriam Peterson of PRO. “Anthony and JJ’s commitment to expanding access to arts in the city of Detroit is nothing short of transformational. Our firm is honored to play a role in this special project.”

    Library Street Collective’s sister gallery Louis Buhl & Co. will relocate to Little Village later this year where it will have its first in-house production studio.

    For more information, see lscgallery.com.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Award-winning Detroit musician Audra Kubat hosts songwriting workshops and performance at the DIA

    Award-winning Detroit musician Audra Kubat hosts songwriting workshops and performance at the DIA

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    Detroit-born musician Audra Kubat will be at the Detroit Institute of Arts this weekend, not only to perform, but also to share her songwriting knowledge with others.

    On Saturday, March 16 during two sessions at noon and 1 p.m., the award-winning singer-songwriter, composer, and educator will allow guests to become contributors to her art. The workshops will be a collaboration between Kubat and guests to write a song inspired by select artworks within the DIA, mainly created by women artists.

    The guided songwriting process will start with a creative discussion, developing observations into lyrics, and finally being paired with a melody that will become a cohesive, reflective lyrical piece of music. Through the collaborative activity, participants will gain some understanding of how to turn visual inspiration into a song.

    The songs created during the workshops will be performed by a group led by Kubat at the concert that follows at 2 p.m. The family-friendly show will feature favorite songs from Kubat’s catalog, plus the new tracks, with the artist joined by celebrated musicians Emily Rose and Ozzie Andrews.

    The workshops and the concert will take place in the DIA’s Rivera Court. Admission is free for residents of Wayne, Macomb, and Oakland counties.

    Limited spaces are available for the workshops, so early registration is required. Anyone interested in participating can register now online at dia.org.

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    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Local artists can connect at 313 Day Detroit Artists Market

    Local artists can connect at 313 Day Detroit Artists Market

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    Old English D earrings by Art Nuts.

    In honor of 313 Day, local “art dealer” Art Nuttz is hosting a Detroit Artists Market at Extra Crispy Studios. The free event will feature art, streetwear, toys, home goods, and fashion, all crafted by Detroit artists. The hope is for the market to not only allow local artists to sell and showcase their work, but also be a place for connecting with fellow creative people in the city. There will also be models, videographers, stylists, photographers, designers, and more present, so you could meet your next collaborator or even just make a new friend. Food will also be provided by Chef Fresh and music will be spun by DJ Tiptonaires. Extra Crispy Studios announced on March 6 that they are moving from their Michigan Avenue space on April 1, so this may be one of your last chances to visit. While the upcoming event is free to attend, $25 tickets can be purchased on Eventbrite for anyone who wants a special 313 Day gift bag.

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    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Tamponpalooza event showcases local artists to raise feminine hygiene products for metro Detroit women in need

    Tamponpalooza event showcases local artists to raise feminine hygiene products for metro Detroit women in need

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    Tamponpalooza, an annual metro Detroit event created by Ken Brass in 2014, serves as a platform and fundraiser to address the need for feminine hygiene and hair care products among homeless and low-income women and girls.

    Although Brass is not a woman himself, the local community organizer, who is also the host of Detroit’s Soundoff Sundays open mic night, started the event with the mission of using art to spread awareness about women’s health. Since its first event in 2015, Tamponpalooza has continued to grow with more donations and new sponsors each year.

    This year’s installment is scheduled from 7-11 p.m. on Saturday, March 23 at the D Loft in Hamtramck.

    Held during Women’s History Month, Tamponpalooza showcases women in various ways, featuring local women poets, singers, illustrators, and more. Among others, the upcoming event will include performances by Ari B, Beezy Brown, Bella Sweets, Chani the Hippie, Lucy Ghavalli, P Tha Poet, and Vee Marie. Plus, the night will be hosted by Detroit musician Kay Bae and radio host Melody Freshh. There will also be vendors selling an array of food, art, and handmade products.

    Brass also collaborates with many women to organize and promote the event, including long-time sponsor and Detroit influencer Randi Rossario, who highlighted Tamponpalooza’s significance in a recent Instagram video.

    “Could you imagine not having pads or not having tampons? Some people don’t have to imagine it because it’s a reality,” Rossario said. “Every single year, my brother Ken and I do an event called Tamponpalooza with a bunch of other sponsors. It’s a fundraiser for female hygiene products. You’d be surprised how many people actually need this. So, if you in the metro Detroit area, please get with us.”

    Admission to Tamponpalooza is free with the donation of essential items such as pads, tampons, hair brushes, shampoo, conditioner, undergarments, purses, diva cups, soap, body spray, and other basic supplies crucial for women’s well-being. Without a donation of products, attendees can instead contribute a monetary donation of $10 or more.

    All proceeds support various shelters across metro Detroit, including the Detroit Rescue Mission, Alternative for Girls, South Oakland Shelter, and Creating Opportunities To Succeed.

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    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Norwest Gallery is heavy on the melanin in sixth anniversary show, but the gallery almost didn’t make it

    Norwest Gallery is heavy on the melanin in sixth anniversary show, but the gallery almost didn’t make it

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    Randiah Camille Green

    Abstract paintings by India Solomon on view at Detroit’s Norwest Gallery as part of Heavy Melanin.

    Walking into Norwest Gallery for the Heavy Melanin exhibit, a painting of blue and white blotches on black draws my eyes to the left.

    Getting closer, I notice there are braids snaking through the piece like a maze underneath clumps of white paint and yellow speckles. There’s something mesmerizing about it, as the braids loop and curl, like the clouds passing time as your momma braids your hair on the porch in the summer and kids splash in fire hydrant water.

    Heavy Melanin is Norwest Gallery of Art’s sixth-year anniversary exhibit. It went up in February and is on view until April 28. As we’d expect from the Black-owned gallery helmed by Asia Hamilton in Detroit’s Grandmont Rosedale neighborhood, Heavy Melanin revels in the diversity of the African and African American aesthetic through a range of mediums.

    “Every February is our anniversary month and it’s always a celebration of Black artists,” Hamilton tells me. “It’s also Black History Month, so we always do an exhibit that celebrates Black artists as a whole and Black people as a whole. That’s why there are so many different genres and expressions of the culture.”

    As you venture further into the gallery, the art oscillates between the deep abstract and figurative depictions of Blackness including sculpture, photography, painting, collage, and even a woven tapestry. It includes work by a slew of Detroit-based artists, as well as some national and international artists as well.

    “Aisha With the Hair,” a photo by Ghanaian photographer Nana Kwadwo Agyei Addo, sits in front of a hazy sunset backdrop, the brown of her skin so rich she seems to glow against the golden time of a day. Her braids loop behind her to mirror the shape of her face, eyeshadow as blue as the hues of sky behind her.

    Elsewhere, Jaiel Nelson paints a young woman with butterflies fluttering around her locs and another in a vulnerable moment with flowers and the winged insect attached to her bare body. Detroit abstract painter India Solomon exhibits two works with darker hues that feel different than her usual, vibrant work.

    The gallery feels exuberant with a joy that makes you want to dance or just sit back and catch a vibe to the soundtrack curated by Detroit Sassi Blaque bumping in the background. But the gallery almost didn’t make it to this moment as Hamilton says she considered closing it several times as she struggled with funding and sales to keep it going.

    “Last year, we were really struggling… I was ready to close this place,” she says. “I mean, I wasn’t ready to close but I was threatening to. It’s hard. I don’t just have extra money to be paying rent.”

    The gallery charged a $20 admission fee for the opening reception of Heavy Melanin and Hamilton says she sold 100 tickets. She says generating income through ticket sales and programming is important for the gallery to survive and encourages visitors to purchase the art, not just look at it.

    “Sales are very important. Art galleries are here to sell art. It’s not a museum, there’s a difference,” she says. “The opening was only $20. You spend that just kicking around.”

    Norwest Gallery also has a “Hype Market Gift Shop” that sells prints and things like handmade jewelry that are more affordable for everyday gallery goers who probably can’t drop $4,000 on an abstract painting. The gallery was also named as an awardee in the Gilbert Family Foundation’s Seed and Bloom program, which awarded 10 Detroit artist organizations $150,000 each, over three years.

    Heavy Melanin is on display through April 28 at Norwest Gallery of Art; 19556 Grand River Ave., Detroit. Gallery hours are from noon-6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Wednesday and Thursday by appointment, and noon-4 p.m. Sunday.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Library Street Collective founders to open a bed and breakfast in Detroit’s Shepherd building

    Library Street Collective founders to open a bed and breakfast in Detroit’s Shepherd building

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    ALEO Detroit, a bed and breakfast for artists with the founders of Library Street Collective at the helm, is expected to open in the spring.

    The space will be housed within the Shepherd building, a 110-year-old Romanesque-style church in Detroit’s East Village that is being transformed into a cultural arts center. The name ALEO refers to “Angel, Lion, Eagle, and Ox,” figures once pictured on a mural inside of the former church, according to an Instagram post from @aleo.detroit.

    Founded by Anthony and JJ Curis, Library Street Collective is known for its focus on modern and contemporary art, connecting Detroit with diverse artists from across the globe. ALEO Detroit hopes to give visiting artists a place to stay overnight that is creative and community-centered.

    The first floor will offer communal spaces including a living room, library, dining room, outdoor patio, sunroom, and chef’s kitchen, designed to facilitate events, meetings, and curated programming.

    On the second floor, there are six guest suites, designed by Holly Jonsson Studio at ROSSETTI, for overnight stays.

    Finally, the third floor will house the headquarters of artist McArthur Binion’s Modern Ancient Brown Foundation, which supports BIPOC artists and writers through residencies and mentorship.

    In addition to accommodation, guests can also enjoy breakfast by Warda Patisserie, which will open within the Shepherd’s converted farmhouse in the summer, along with a second restaurant.

    ALEO Detroit is part of a broader cultural arts initiative at the Shepherd Detroit, which so far includes Legacy Park featuring sculptures by artist Charles McGee, as well as a skate park designed by Tony Hawk and McArthur Binion. The building’s revitalization was recently featured in Architectural Digest.

    The founders believe that Detroit is “in the midst of an artistic renaissance,” and hope that ALEO Detroit offers visitors a comfortable and immersive experience that showcases the heart of the city’s creative scene.

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    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Norwest Gallery hopes to secure new location for Womxnhouse Detroit and a bigger gallery space through Seed and Bloom program

    Norwest Gallery hopes to secure new location for Womxnhouse Detroit and a bigger gallery space through Seed and Bloom program

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    Ten BIPOC artists in Detroit will be getting a boost from the Gilbert Family Foundation over the next three years. 

    The Gilbert Family Foundation’s newly announced Seed and Bloom program in partnership with United States Artists will give $150,000 to artist-run businesses and community organizations like Norwest Gallery of Art, House of Jit, and Sidewalk Detroit. 

    The funding will be distributed as $75,000 in the first year, $50,000 for the second year, and $25,000 in the third year. Grantees will also receive business coaching and resources to help them grow their artistic practices. 

    “Artists are entrepreneurs and innovators. Their art not only helps us think differently about beauty, humanity, and society, it also catalyzes deeper social connections across our city,” said Gilbert Family Foundation Executive Director Laura Grannemann. “Through Seed and Bloom: Detroit, we aim to expand access to neighborhood-based art by supporting artists and their organizations with technical assistance, capital, and more.”

    Norwest Gallery of Art owner and Womxnhouse Detroit founder Asia Hamilton tells Metro Times she hopes to secure a new location for Womxnhouse. The residency program previously brought together cohorts of women and nonbinary artists who filled Hamilton’s childhood home with art installations. The residency was put on hold in 2023 but Hamilton is plotting a comeback for either this year or 2025.

    Hamilton says she has been talking with Nour Ballout who runs artist residency Habibi House about purchasing a collaborative space together that would be used for both Womxnhouse and Habibi House artists.

    She also has plans to eventually purchase a bigger space for Norwest Gallery, which she currently leases in the Grandmont Rosedale neighborhood.

    “My goal this year is to do things differently,” she says. “I’m going to invest the money into my business so the business can make more money. We’re going to have more programming in the space — paid events, classes, summer camps.”

    Danielle Eliska Lyle’s Neighborhood Bodega production company, which focuses on telling stories about women and the Black diaspora, is also one of the selected projects for Seed and Bloom. 

    “Neighborhood Bodega is a multimedia production house committed to telling stories about women and Black culture/the Black Diaspora,” the filmmaker tells Metro Times. “The focus will be on strengthening the foundation and momentum of the production company by producing narrative works as well as encouraging organic efforts for a collective that fosters working relationships for a Black and brown film crew.” 

    Other projects chosen for Seed and Bloom include Halima Afi Cassells’s apparel swap meetup the Free Market of Detroit, Garage Cultural, BULK Space, Tiff Massey Studios, and filmmaker Juanita Anderson’s Indija Productions.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • A Rare Rediscovered Banksy Heads to Auction

    A Rare Rediscovered Banksy Heads to Auction

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    Banksy, Happy Choppers, (2006). Courtesy Anderson & Garland

    A rare work by Banksy, the elusive British artist famed for his humorous and at times political street art, is heading to auction years after it was rediscovered and rescued by a team of restoration specialists.

    In 2008, the owner of an office building in London’s Shoreditch neighborhood was flipping through a book dedicated to Banksy’s local work when he recognized his own property in one of the images. After racing down to the building, he found the art had been painted over—but not entirely. A small section of a helicopter propeller from the original work was still visible at the top.

    “We were astounded to discover that our newly purchased office building was the canvas for an artwork of this significance,” said the owner, who has chosen to remain anonymous, in a statement.

    The work was originally painted by Banksy in 2006, as documented by his former manager Steve Lazarides in BANKSY CAPTURED (Volume 1). Entitled Happy Chopper, its depiction of helicopters is a regular motif used by Banksy, who has included the aircraft in past works like his 2003 Wrong War placards. The painting was considered to be a security risk by the building’s former owner, who subsequently covered the work in black paint and neglected to mention its existence when selling the property.

    A complicated restoration process

    Upon discovering that he was now in possession of a Banksy, the building’s current owner enlisted the Fine Art Restoration Company, a London-based company which had previously restored Banksy works. The restoration process was a complicated one—for starters, Happy Choppers couldn’t be removed as one piece for fear of it breaking apart, and instead was removed from the building in sections. “To our knowledge, no one had attempted to rescue a fragile work of high-profile street art like this before,” said the owner.

    Banksy’s medium of spray paint also presented challenges. “As these murals do not use a medium traditionally found in art, our conservators investigated the chemistry of the original pigments and developed new techniques suitable for the safe treatment of aerosol art,” said Chris Bull, director of the Fine Art Restoration Company, in a statement. The year-long process included cleaning pollutants, city air and pests that had contaminated the work’s surface and removing overpaint and local graffiti that had been added on top of the work.

    Now, the fully restored painting is ready for a new home. It will hit the auction block later this month when it highlights the Spring Fine Art Auction for Anderson & Garland, an auction house based in Newcastle. Happy Choppers, which contains an estimate of between £500,000 ($633,000) and £700,000 ($886,000), will be on view in the auctioneer’s saleroom ahead of its March 20 sale.

    “Previously gracing the side of an office block, it has been painstakingly restored and professionally adapted to domestic proportions,” said Fred Wyrley-Birch, director of Anderson & Garland, in a statement. “We are hoping that institutions will be interested in this important piece so that enthusiasts of Banksy’s work can enjoy it for years to come.”

    A Rare Rediscovered Banksy Heads to Auction

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    Alexandra Tremayne-Pengelly

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  • Detroit artist Jon Harris gets studio visit from Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain

    Detroit artist Jon Harris gets studio visit from Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain

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    Jonathan Harris meets Yolanda Díaz Pérez, the Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain.

    Jonathan Harris is no stranger to high praise and international attention following his viral “Critical Race Theory” painting in 2021. But he wasn’t quite expecting to get a request from the Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain for a tour of his studio.

    Yolanda Díaz Pérez, who is both the Second Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of Labor and Social Economy of Spain, made a private visit to Harris’s studio on Tuesday with her delegation. Harris says the Spanish embassy emailed him saying Pérez wanted to meet and learn more about his work during a trip to the U.S. He actually missed the first email, but luckily they reached out to him a second time.

    Pérez also took a private tour of the Detroit Institute of Arts, met with United Auto Workers union members, and met Congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar in Washington, D.C.

    “It was kind of surreal,” Harris says about Pérez coming to his studio. “It’s different for me now when I get on the internet or [am] just out in public. You never know who’s watching… I’m just glad that whatever they saw they liked and appreciated to say, ‘OK, I’m going to come out and see this guy and talk to him to see where his head is.’”

    Harris showed Pérez and her team several of his new paintings that he hasn’t exhibited before, along with some older, personal pieces. One of the new paintings, “Let It Burn,” is based on a photo of members of the Hitler Youth Movement in Nazi Germany burning a massive pile of books from 1933.

    In Harris’s modern version, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis throws a copy of journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones’s The 1619 Project onto the steaming pile as the spirits of Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, and Harriet Tubman appear in the smoke.

    In 2023 Florida banned Advance Placement African American studies courses from schools under DeSantis’s “Stop Woke Act.” The ban aligns with backlash from DeSantis and Donald Trump against The 1619 Project, which examines the lingering effects of slavery and segregation like voter disenfranchisement and the racial wealth gap. While the book-burning youth and the historical figures appear in black and white, Harris painted DeSantis in color.

    “When I read about that story, I just felt like it’s very eerily similar to what Black people are dealing with today in America,” Harris says. “So I just wanted to create something to show how serious it is and how history repeats itself. If you look at what’s going on in Florida… things that [DeSantis] is allowing are going to be very detrimental to Black history in the future.”

    Harris’s new piece echoes a similar message to his “Critical Race Theory” painting, which garnered national attention for showing a white man “erasing” historical Black figures with white paint. It’s hard not to compare Harris’s work to that groundbreaking piece. Though the painter tells us he’s “not into politics,” messages of social justice undeniably ring true in paintings like “Critical Race Theory” and “Let it Burn.”

    click to enlarge Harris’s “Remember Who You Are” and “Let It Burn.” - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    Harris’s “Remember Who You Are” and “Let It Burn.”

    During Pérez’s visit Harris gave a sneak peak at an untitled student protest painting commissioned by the University of Michigan. It doesn’t depict any specific cause and instead shows students making protest signs, holding candlelight vigils, and leading marches.

    Around his studio, Harris also talks about personal paintings honoring his father.

    “I wanted to sort of give him his flowers while he’s still here,” Harris says about a painting of his dad wearing a cape, titled “Hero.” Purple flowers fluttering across the painting are a tribute to Harris’s mother who has passed away.

    In another new piece that he’s yet to exhibit called “Remember Who You Are,” Harris’s father directs him to look at a younger of himself in the mirror. The young Harris is holding red balloons while a monarch butterfly sits on the older version’s knee with remnants of the balloons at his side.

    “My dad reminded me who I am, not to get caught up in certain worldly things and just to remember to be present,” he says. “The balloons represent childlike happiness and it’s like it’s forever gone, but now you have the wisdom, and the knowledge, and strength.”

    Harris says he doesn’t have any upcoming exhibits in the works and while he appreciates opportunities to show his work, he “isn’t chasing” any galleries or museums at the moment.

    “I’m not changing my subject matters and creating work to be praised. I’m working on pieces I feel in my soul and, hopefully, when people look at it they understand the sentiment,” he says. “At one point it was like, I really wanna be in a museum or I really wanna be in this gallery… and now I don’t know if I still want to do that. Right now, today, my mind is more so on impact. How can I create change? How can I improve the conditions for people around me?”

    He adds, “I’m not into regular politics and I’m damn sure not about to get into art politics. If it happens, it happens but I don’t want to say that that’s my goal because it’s really not. I could literally just paint every day for a year and be satisfied because I’m happy.”

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Beyond Frieze: An Insider’s Guide to What’s On in the Los Angeles Art Scene

    Beyond Frieze: An Insider’s Guide to What’s On in the Los Angeles Art Scene

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    Frieze L.A. in 2023. Photo by River Callaway/WWD via Getty Images

    Los Angeles continues to solidify its place as a cultural hub, attracting prominent artists, museums and New York-based galleries drawn in by its gravitational pull—not to mention Southern California’s enviable climate and relaxed atmosphere. While L.A.’s art scene has experienced pivotal bursts of growth and evolution, the changes happening now are setting a different tone and pace with some art experts referring to this period as the Los Angeles’ golden era of art. What’s beyond doubt is that the city has firmly staked its position as a destination for art aficionados, boasting headline-grabbing gallery and museum exhibitions, revered art fairs and a coordinated push to keep highlighting talented, historically under-represented artists.

    The Obvious Must-See: Frieze L.A.

    If you’re currently in Los Angeles, you don’t want to miss this standout March art fair. Inspired by the acclaimed annual Frieze Art Fair in London, Frieze L.A. now draws gallerists and collectors from far and wide who come to see the vibrant artwork and attend the associated cultural events that enliven this city. This year, Frieze Los Angeles will take place from February 29 through March 3 at the Santa Monica Airport, which will host 95 gallery showcases.

    One must-see booth is Sean Kelly Gallery’s solo presentation of L.A.-based conceptual artist Awol Erizku (stand A18). Erizku confronts traditional Eurocentric interpretations of beauty, tapping into varied inspirations ranging from Ancient Egypt to hip-hop, using mediums such as neon work, photographs, lightbox and silkscreen with an accompanying musical playlist. Visitors should also look for the site-specific artworks dotting the fair and inspired by the unique history of Santa Monica Airport, where Hollywood set designers in the early 1940s created an entire mock suburb to camouflage WWII operations. These pieces are part of The Art Production Fund’s “Set Seen” exhibition.

    Other L.A. art happenings worth checking out

    A stylized painting of a blonde woman in a white bathing suit in front of a red backgroundA stylized painting of a blonde woman in a white bathing suit in front of a red background
    ‘Coca Cola Girl 1’ (2019). Lococo Fine Art Publishing

    First, head across town to Felix Art Fair—another must-see Los Angeles art fair, which runs concurrently with Frieze. This unique fair, located in the iconic Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, ingeniously fills guest rooms with artwork from galleries both well-known and emerging, creating an exciting, Spring Break atmosphere. Some exhibition rooms open right onto the pool, making the fair not only a great Hollywood hangout but also a true breath of fresh air. Felix’s set-up always introduces me to new and exciting artists, which is why it’s an event I attend every year.

    Next on my must-see list is this month’s debut of Destination Crenshaw, an open-air museum that spans more than a mile and celebrates Black artists with connections to L.A., where you can see pieces by Kehinde Wiley, Artis Lane, Maren Hassinger and others.

    Beyond that are two gallery exhibitions that visitors and L.A. natives and transplants should make time to see.

    David Kordansky Gallery presents Sam Gilliam’s “The Last Five Years

    This exhibition celebrates trailblazing artist Sam Gilliam with three bodies of work from his last five years: watercolors, drapes and tondos. To me, Gilliam’s drapes (made from washi, a handmade Japanese paper soaked in both watercolor and acrylic paint) embody the genius in material experimentation that cemented his name in the art world. The vibrant yet translucent drapes are pleasantly haunting, suspended from the ceiling, they immerse us in his art.

    Marian Goodman Gallery presents Tavares Strachan’s “Magnificent Darkness

    From groundbreaking, MacArthur Prize-winning artist Tavares Strachan, this six-environment show is epic in size and scope, with site-specific work that utilizes mediums including ceramic, bronze, marble, hair, painting, neon and sound. The newly built Seward Gallery space has been transformed: a vast clay earthen floor challenges visitors’ expectations and contextualizes life-sized ceramic sculptures depicting notable African American figures and themes of aspiration and hidden histories.

    Rounding out my list of must-see art in L.A. is the Getty Center’s new exhibition, “First Came a Friendship: Sidney B. Felsen and the Artists at Gemini G.E.L.” For those fascinated with the relationships between artists and their processes, this exhibition delivers context and celebrates the art world’s seminal late-20th-century pioneers as well as prominent 21st-century artists.

    Finally, make time to stop by Santa Monica’s iconic Shutters on the Beach hotel. Perched on the Pacific coast, the resort invited me to curate an art collection that would blend the novel with the familiar. I selected pieces that evoked an upbeat, relaxed, oceanside vibe, including Ellsworth Kelly’s celebrated leaves (Cyclamen II, Cyclamen IV and Camellia III), John Baldessari’s depiction of fish (Blueberry Soup, and Carrot Soup) and David Hockney’s whimsical land and seascapes—many of which are readily viewable while dining or relaxing at the hotel.

    My most recent acquisition for the resort is Coca Cola Girl 1 by pop artist Alex Katz, a nostalgic lithograph hung in the lobby area, a stone’s throw away from Claes Oldenburg’s Slicing Strawberry Shortcake—an etching of a large slice of strawberry-topped cake leisurely floating down a river. Feel free to get in touch with me, as for a limited time during Frieze, I’ll be giving private tours of the property’s collection as part of the resort’s Culture on the Coast package.

    Art Los Angeles Contemporary Reception At The Home Of Gail And Stanley HollanderArt Los Angeles Contemporary Reception At The Home Of Gail And Stanley Hollander
    Art advisor Cynthia Greenwald (l.) and Alex Couri at the Art Los Angeles Contemporary Reception at the home of Gail and Stanley Hollander. Photo by Jesse Grant/WireImage

    Beyond Frieze: An Insider’s Guide to What’s On in the Los Angeles Art Scene

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    Cynthia Greenwald

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  • Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey ‘Art, Beats + Lyrics’ tour headed to Detroit

    Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey ‘Art, Beats + Lyrics’ tour headed to Detroit

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    Art, Beats + Lyrics mixes visual art, hip-hop, and Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey.

    Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey is celebrating the 20th anniversary of its Art, Beats + Lyrics festival, which is headed to Detroit’s Eastern Market in March.

    The event includes visual art, hip-hop, and cocktails. It’s set for 7 p.m.-midnight on Friday, March 1 at Eastern Market.

    “Art, Beats + Lyrics merges together two things that have the unique ability to connect people of all cultures, ages, and ethnicities — music and art, ” says Keenan Harris of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Honey. “For 20 years, Art, Beats + Lyrics has been creating unique art experiences that provide a platform for urban artists and musicians to showcase their artistic creativity.”

    The tour stops also include the newly launched “The Verse: AB+L Metaverse Experience.” Otherwise, details are still under wraps.

    Previous versions of the event have featured performances from acts like Kendrick Lamar, Rapsody, Mannie Fresh, Scarface, Bun B, and more.

    The event is open to attendees ages 21 and older only, with valid ID. There is no cover, but the event has a limited capacity and is open on a first come, first served basis.

    RSVPs can be made at jackhoneyabl.com.

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    Lee DeVito

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  • Curator Aimee Ng Opens Up About What She Learned from the Frick Madison

    Curator Aimee Ng Opens Up About What She Learned from the Frick Madison

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    The Frick Madison is closing soon. Photo: Joseph Coscia Jr., courtesy The Frick

    This month marks the last full one for the Frick Madison, the can’t-miss experiment from the 88-year-old institution that brought fantastic works from Henry Clay Frick’s former home to the Marcel Breuer-designed building on Madison Avenue that for many years housed the Whitney Museum of American Art. If you haven’t been yet, you should head over ASAP, because the recontextualization does much for the already stellar works of the collection. The Frick Madison closes March 3, after which the building will be turned over to its new owners, Sotheby’s, and the Frick will reopen in its historic home on Fifth. We caught up with Frick curator Aimee Ng to hear about what the institution learned from the experience.

    Broadly speaking, what would you say the curatorial team at the Frick learned from the experience of the Frick Madison?

    That art can continue to surprise us. Moving the Frick’s collection to the Breuer building transformed the way we saw some of the works we know (or thought we knew) so well. And not just the curators: long-time Frick members, critics and journalists and even staff members discovered new things about works of art they thought they knew inside out, and discovered new things in the collection, objects they never noticed in the setting of the house. We’re excited to return to the Frick house with new perspectives on the art.

    In 2021, you told Jason Farago at The New York Times that, “We really wanted that Marfa feeling.” Could you expand on that?

    That “Marfa feeling” is the sense that the installation respects and responds to the site, that the place itself—including and especially its empty spaces—shapes the experience of the art. Because we were dealing with Marcel Breuer’s Brutalist building, we took inspiration from the Minimalist installations at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. At Frick Madison, our teams celebrated the power of “less,” exploiting the force that a single or a few objects in space can exert on a viewer, which is so different from the layered, complex, plentiful domestic settings of the Frick house.

    SEE ALSO: The Year in Museums – Controversy, Repatriation and More

    Do you think this experiment opened up the museum to new audiences?

    Certainly. To begin with, the Breuer building looks like a public museum from the outside and beckons people inside in ways that the Frick house simply does not, as it was built as a private residence. So, we have had many visitors come in off the street, curious about what is inside Frick Madison, who had no familiarity with the original Frick before. Our exhibitions and programs at Frick Madison also engaged audiences new to the Frick. An amazing moment was when the “Barkley L. Hendricks: Portraits at the Frick” exhibition was on at the same time as the exhibition “Bellini and Giorgione in the House of Taddeo Contarini.” One contemporary, one deeply historical, and yet both were profoundly connected to the Frick’s collection.

    This iteration of the museum grouped art and objects by nationality. Were there some countries that worked better with Marcel Breuer’s architecture? I thought the Dutch did very well.

    I found the Breuer building’s contrast with the frilliness of the 18th-century French paintings and sculptures—like Fragonard’s Progress of Love and Houdon’s Comtesse du Cayla—particularly delightful, in that the French works lent a sense of lightness and frivolity to the Brutalist architecture with its giant trapezoidal window, and vice versa—that the architecture lent a monumentality and solemnity to the otherwise whimsical French works.

    What other institutions might you like to see in a new location, if only for a couple of years?

    An obvious one would be the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, which must retain its installation as a condition of the bequest. Like so many English country houses, I’d love to see its collection in a new location just so that the works of art could be better seen, lower down, with more light. Imagine the Gardener’s extraordinary paintings, sculptures, and sometimes downright wacky decorative arts objects in Tadao Ando’s Modern Art Museum in Fort Worth or David Chipperfield’s Neues Museum in Berlin. Really, I think every institution should have the kind of reboot that the Frick has just had, at least once. It’s like getting a whole new art collection.

    Curator Aimee Ng Opens Up About What She Learned from the Frick Madison

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    Dan Duray

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  • Best Bets: Black Art Houston, Danish String Quartet and Vintage Toys

    Best Bets: Black Art Houston, Danish String Quartet and Vintage Toys

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    Happy day-after-Valentine’s-Day! If you’re not quite ready to let go of the holiday spirit, we’ve got great love songs and a love-at-first-sight musical. If you’re over it, we’ve got a ton of art, short films, and one of the country’s most popular game shows visiting Houston. Keep reading for these and more of our picks for the best things you can do over the next seven days.

    We may be post-Valentine’s Day, but you’ve got one more chance for a program of reimagined love songs with one of Houston’s most talented performers tonight, Thursday, February 15, at 7:30 p.m. when The Hobby Center for the Performing Arts presents Holland Vavra in LOVE, Holland (Vavra – not the country). During the cabaret-like experience, part of The Hobby Center’s new “Live at the Founders Club” series, you can hear Vavra take on love songs from artists like Huey Lewis & The News, Marvin Gaye, Elvis Presley, and more. The series will continue this season with performers like Michael Cavanaugh, Belinda Munro and Camille Zamora, doing the music of Billy Joel, Elton John, Natalie Cole and more. Tickets for tonight’s show are still available and can be purchased here for $49 to $59.

    It’s love at first sight and some very concerned parents in Craig Lucas’s Tony Award-winning musical The Light in the Piazza, which Opera in the Heights will open on Friday, February 16, at 7:30 p.m. The company’s artistic and general director, Eiki Isomura, recently told the Houston Press that the show’s score, written by Adam Guettel, “is a blend of popular and operatic styles,” and he attributes the popularity of the show to “how utterly gorgeous the music is” and “the way the setting transports the audience to Florence and then Rome.” Performances, which will be sung in English and Italian with English surtitles, are also scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Saturday, February 17, and 2 p.m. Sunday, February 18, at Lambert Hall. Tickets are available and can be purchased here for $29 to $85.

    You can hear “one of the pillars of the chamber music repertoire,” Franz Schubert’s String Quartet in D Minor, D. 810 – more commonly known as “Death and the Maiden” – on Friday, February 16, at 8 p.m. when DACAMERA welcomes the Danish String Quartet back to Houston and to the Wortham Theater Center. In addition to Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden,” which wasn’t published until three years after the composer’s death, the Grammy-nominated quartet (comprised of violinists Frederik Øland and Rune Tonsgaard Sørensen, violist Asbjørn Nørgaard, and cellist Fredrik Schøyen Sjölin) will play Henry Purcell’s Chaconne in G Minor, Joseph Haydn’s String Quartet in G Minor, and Dmitri Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 7 in F-sharp Minor. Tickets to the performance can be purchased here for $46 to $76.

    On Saturday, February 17, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston will kick off Black Art Houston, a weekend of events all celebrating contemporary Black art all around the city. The citywide initiative not only includes the opening of the MFAH’s new exhibition “Multiplicity: Blackness in Contemporary American Collage,” but exhibitions, open studios, writing workshops and panels at a variety of community partner locations, including the Contemporary Arts Museum of Houston, Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, Houston Museum of African American Culture, Project Row Houses, and many more. You can view the full schedule of events and locations here. Many events are free, but check the schedule for any potential cost, too. (Also, “Multiplicity: Blackness in Contemporary American Collage” will continue through May 12.)

    When you think about your favorite toy from childhood, what do you think of first? Maybe G.I. Joe or Barbie, or possibly a Lego structure towering over the coffee table in your family’s living room (with a parent yelling in the background after stepping on a stray Lego for good measure). If you’re interested in a little blast-from-the-toy-box-past, swing by the Houston Toy Museum on Saturday, February 17, starting at 10 a.m. when Texas Time Warp Collectibles takes over the space for their Vintage Toy Show. You can browse the museum’s exhibits while also browsing through the wares of over 20 vendors for all your throwback toy needs, such as Star Wars figurines, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and more. Admission to the event is $5 at the door.

    Experience the world of Daniel Johnston, described by Rolling Stone as “the outsider folk artist whose childlike pleas for love captivated the likes of Kurt Cobain and Tom Waits,” on Saturday, February 17, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. when Deborah Colton Gallery hosts the opening reception of their latest exhibition, “Daniel Johnston: I am a Baby in My Universe.” With almost 200 works of art representing 45 characters, the exhibit will serve as a comprehensive introduction to the characters that populated Johnston’s imaginative world. Saturday night’s reception, which also marks the gallery’s 20th anniversary, will also welcome Johnston’s sister, Marjory Johnston, and special musical guest Kathy McCarty and Speeding Motorcycle. If you can’t make it, the exhibition will continue through March 16.

    Certain prognosticators may be predicting Wes Anderson’s “utterly delightfulThe Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar – “a densely detailed journey with an intricate Russian doll story structure” – to take home this year’s Oscar for Best Live Action Short, but you can decide if Anderson’s Roald Dahl adaptation is the best of the nominees on Sunday, February 18, at 5 p.m. when the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents 2024 Oscar-Nominated Short Films: Live Action. The five nominated short films will be screened again at 7 p.m. on February 24, March 1 and March 8 leading up to the Academy Awards on March 10. And if short films are your thing, the museum will also screen the nominees for animation and documentary, too. Tickets to the screenings are available for $7 to $9.

    In the United States, it’s the longest-running syndicated game show. It’s current incarnation, starring Pat Sajak and Vanna White, celebrated 40 seasons just last year. Of course, we’re talking about Wheel of Fortune, and the series’ famous wheel and word puzzles are coming to town on Sunday, February 18, at 7:30 p.m. when Wheel of Fortune LIVE! visits The Hobby Center for the Performing Arts. Mark L. Walberg will host the tournament-style proceedings, with groups of three randomly selected audience members invited on stage to play the fame with the goal of making it to the Bonus Round (and win very real destination trips and cash prizes). Tickets to the show are available here for $29.50 to $49.50

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    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Female artists and performers celebrate ‘Divine Wisdom’ in new exhibit

    Female artists and performers celebrate ‘Divine Wisdom’ in new exhibit

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    Dawn Marie Smith, “Flip Phone.”

    This is a group show of feminine power. Opening on Friday, Divine Wisdom: Femme Alchemy Through Contemporary Art and Performance includes visual art by five female artists working in Detroit along with multiple installations and performances at the Jam Handy. It features work on feminine identity, sexuality, and occult practices by Shaina Kasztelan, Sara Nickleson, Olivia Guterson, Dawn Marie Smith, and Sedona Cohen. There will also be floral art by Four Leaf Clover Studios, aerial silks by Dari Blythe, a piano and vocal performance by Chakrubs founder Vanessa Cuccia, a Suzy Poling light installation, tattoo models styled in Supernatural Lingerie, and a DJ set by FemmeDom Detroit founder Petra Steele. “As a curator, I explore how feminine power can be inculcated through art, meditation, sexuality, psychedelics, and other experiences,” Divine Wisdom curator Samara Furlong said about the show. “These five artists channel energy and knowledge through their artistic processes into work that creates conversation and community. They are speaking to the collective consciousness and creating a space for growth and healing. Artmaking for these women is an alchemical process — a means for transforming the world around them and us.”

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Rhizome’s 7×7 Models a Deeper Collaboration Between Art and Science

    Rhizome’s 7×7 Models a Deeper Collaboration Between Art and Science

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    Ben Shirken (l.) and Reggie Watts at this year’s 7×7. Photo by Owley Studios, Courtesy of Rhizome.

    The intersection of art and technology gets a lot of press these days. In any given headline, it might be the “next frontier.” Or where cultural innovation happens. On some days, it’s spawning new job titles (e.g., curator of digital initiatives). And it always feels bright and shiny and optimistic and most importantly, new, even though artists have been experimenting with new technologies since the dawn of technology itself.

    And therein lies the challenge one faces when considering what exactly is happening at this much-publicized intersection. On one hand, the phrase is applied, seemingly broadly, to everything from NFTs and the ever-morphing works of Refik Anadol to the kinds of immersive installations pioneered by Sandro Kereselidze’s Artechouse. On the other, what reportedly exists at the intersection of art and technology seems strangely circumscribed. There’s computer-generated art and art inspired by technology at these crossroads but very little science.

    Or to put it another way, it seems there’s a lot more digital art being created at the intersection of the arts and technology than there are radical pairings of art and science. It may come down to people simply being more open to art borrowing from science and engineering than the reverse, even though there are plenty of notable examples of art inspiring scientific discovery. Niels Bohr in his development of the non-intuitive complementarity principle of quantum mechanics, for example, drew inspiration from Jean Metzinger’s cubist works.

    Claims that the dividing line between science and art is artificial come off as hyperbolic, but both scientists and artists are dreamers who channel their creative energies into untangling the world’s mysteries and building new things. It’s logical to consider what the intersection of art and technology could look like if the focus was on deep collaboration instead of just tapping into one or the other as a source of inspiration.

    Modeling a stronger synergy of art and science

    On a Saturday in late January, scientists, engineers, artists and the curious gathered at the New Museum in New York City for the relaunch of Seven on Seven (7×7), an event born out of a 2010 hackathon that paired seven engineers with seven artists to demonstrate what could happen when they worked together. The lineup of past participants is a fascinating who’s who of art and tech: Tumblr founder David Karp, Internet entrepreneur Jonah Peretti and Aza Raskin of the Center for Humane Technology… new media artist Tabita Rezaire, moving image artist Hito Steyerl and performance and installation artist Martine Syms. In 2015, Ai Weiwei collaborated with the hacker Jacob Appelbaum. This year, Boston Dynamics’ Spot took to the stage with dancer Mor Mendel as part of a collaboration between Boston Dynamics Director of Human-Robot Interaction David Robert and artist Miriam Simun with Hannah Rossi.

    Scientist–artist collaboration can take many forms: art-based communication can make science more accessible… new technologies become mediums in the hands of artists. What’s less common is what one Eos article calls “ArtScience,” which involves “artists and scientists working together in transdisciplinary ways to ask questions, design experiments and formulate knowledge.” 7×7, which is organized by the born-digital art and culture organization Rhizome, puts ArtScience on display by design. According to Xinran Yuan, this year’s producer and co-curator, it’s as important for the public to see collaboration between artists and scientists in action as it is to see the final output.

    Xin Liu, Christina Agapakis and Joshua Dunn. Photo by Owley Studios, Courtesy of Rhizome.

    That output was fascinating and surprisingly moving—Ginkgo Bioworks Head of Creative Christina Agapakis and artist Xin Liu’s yeast that lactates stood out—though I personally would have liked each duo’s presentations to be longer. Other 2024 7×7 participants included Replika AI CEO and Founder Eugenia Kuyda with artist and filmmaker Lynn Hershman Leeson; Nym Technologies CEO and Co-Founder Harry Halpin with artist Tomás Saraceno; Runway CEO and Co-Founder Cristóbal Valenzuela with comedian, writer, and actor Ana Fabrega; and engineer and entrepreneur Alan Steremberg with artist Rindon Johnson; and quantum physicist Dr. Stephon Alexander working with comedian, artist and musician Reggie Watts.

    The focus of this year’s event was A.I.—specifically, the role it might play in our lives moving forward. It’s a blisteringly hot topic in the art world, given the emergence of tools that many artists argue are, at best, plagiarism machines and, at worst, livelihood killers.

    “I’m glad that I’m alive right now at this really precarious time in human history and to be involved with A.I.,” Watts said at the end of an engaging and pleasantly optimistic talk on the potential of artificial intelligence in not only music but also improvisational creation. He was, however, pragmatic about the role artists need to play in the development of the technology. “I think it’s important for artists and technologists, but especially artists, to get ahead of the curve… even if you arrive at ‘this isn’t for me,’ be there at the table to have an opinion so it can be steered in a direction that’s most useful.”

    Simun also feels it’s important to consider the question of what our future with A.I. will look like. “A question I asked during my performance is: What would happen if we defined intelligence less on how well someone/something knows, and rather on how well they react to unexpected, ambiguous, and uncertain situations?” she told Observer. “If this was the metric by which we defined intelligence, how might we build our robots and our A.I. differently?”

    Dancer Mor Mendel with Boston Dynamics’ Spot piloted by Hannah Rossi. Photo by Owley Studios, Courtesy of Rhizome.

    What scientists gain by working with artists

    We’re culturally comfortable with art informed by science but less so by science informed by art—and that means we may be missing out on opportunities for innovation. Matthias C. Rillig, professor of ecology at Freie Universität Berlin, has considered the question in his own lab, which has an established artist-in-residency program, and among the many benefits of art-technology he has identified, idea generation stands out. “In conversations with the artist, unusual terms or connections appear,” he wrote last year. “One recent example of this was the term ‘soundscape stewardship’ that occurred in a conversation with Marcus Maeder,” which led to a paper in Science.

    Observer spoke with David Robert shortly after 7×7 about why Boston Dynamics collaborates with artists. “Putting the robot in other contexts, besides what it’s doing for its ‘job’ to earn its keep helps us figure out what’s possible,” he said. Working on projects with artists, he explained, can help engineers understand not only whether people like or don’t like a robot but also what aspects they like or dislike, which can suggest avenues for improvement.

    On the other hand, he added, “people project on them all the time and that’s a hard thing to design around.” Boston Dynamics has arguably done a top-notch job of getting people excited about robots, and it this point, it’s hard not to anthropomorphize Spot, which is bright yellow, moves like a happy dog and can be outfitted with what is functionally an arm but makes the robot look something like a friendly apatosaurus. It’s also currently painting with artist Agnieszka Pilat at this year’s National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) Triennial and has danced with BTS, walked the Coperni runway during Paris Fashion Week and given many kids and adults their first view of a real robot in action at Boston’s Museum of Science.

     

    On the other hand, there’s still a ways to go—even with the maximum encutification of robots (see, for example, the University of Manitoba’s Picassnake), people make jokes about killbots and the coming robot apocalypse. “It totally makes sense, given all the narratives that we’ve grown up with,” Robert said. “Most people haven’t had a direct experience with a robot.”

    The arts can change that. Simun’s 7×7 piece, as danced to the music of Igor Tkachenko and DJ Dede, offered an alternative to the imaginary robots we grew up with. “I hope the performance I created enabled the audience to gain a new and different perspective on the adoption of robots in our daily lives,” she said. “How are these robots being programmed to behave? To interact with us? To interact with their surroundings? … What kind of relationships with machines do we want, what will we get and what can we dream of?”

    In the end, the answer to those questions will be determined by the types of dreamers who took the stage at the New Museum—those for whom art is more than science’s ambassador and technology isn’t just another artist’s tool.

    Rhizome’s 7×7 Models a Deeper Collaboration Between Art and Science



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    Christa Terry

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  • Loralee Grace tackles environmental racism in ‘Futurelands’

    Loralee Grace tackles environmental racism in ‘Futurelands’

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    Detroit artist Loralee Grace.

    Loralee Grace has sold everything she owned to live nomadically three times.

    “Learning my taxes in America mostly fund an incredibly bloated military, policing, and prisons as opposed to social services fueled my desire to leave after art school due to my opposition to the violent militaristic overarching culture,” the Detroit-based painter says. “The way I traveled, I wasn’t, or was barely making any money — one way to not have to pay taxes.”

    She didn’t carry much with her on her travels but she always had mini art supplies to paint the landscape and people she encountered.

    The more she traveled and met the Indigenous people of those lands, she realized environmental issues like poor air quality are residual effects of colonialism. This inspired her to start a series in 2015 called Futurelands depicting landscapes like Turkey’s Pamukkale thermal springs and the sandstone canyons of Wadi Rum (aka Valley of the Moon) in Jordan.

    Paintings from her travels are part of her solo show Futurelands, on view at Detroit Contemporary until February 25. For Grace, a “futureland” is where the land is returned to Indigenous people.

    “The environmental issues we have are directly connected to taking the land away from Indigenous people,” she says. “I lived in Melbourne when the 2020 bushfire crisis happened. I wasn’t in any of the places where the fire took place but we got a significant amount of smoke in the city multiple times and I learned that had they left the land sovereignty in the hands of First Nations people, they wouldn’t have had this problem.”

    Often, Grace’s oil and watercolor paintings depict people wearing futuristic air filtration devices on their heads that look like astronaut helmets. In 2021, a painting of a woman she met in Uganda with solar panels and air filters was used on billboards around Detroit for a campaign against environmental racism.

    In Futurelands, a painting of Pamukkale shows three mysterious figures wading in the hot spring’s misty waters as if searching for a civilization that’s long been lost. They wear what look like space suits, one of them clutching her pregnant belly, contemplating what life will be like for her child on a planet where you can’t breathe the air.

    Above the future wasteland scene is a Turkish rug pattern. Grace, who is white, often infuses patterns relevant to the culture she is painting in her work that she finds through research. She sees her work as cultural appreciation rather than appropriation.

    “I hope people can see that, and so far in my conversations people can tell how much care and thought I put into it,” she says, noting that she donates proceeds from her sales to organizations like the Indigenous-led non-profit Cultural Survival.

    A painting of a Nepali woman Grace met on her travels has her wearing an air filter decorated with solar panels and baby spider plants, which are thought to be natural air purifiers. Because Grace travels as a low-budget nomad, she often finds herself in remote villages, which she says gives her more authentic chances to connect with local people.

    click to enlarge A portrait of Detroit activist Eradajere Oleita by Loralee Grace. - Loralee Grace

    Loralee Grace

    A portrait of Detroit activist Eradajere Oleita by Loralee Grace.

    “Kathmandu has some of the worst [air] pollution in the world,” she notes, adding, “I’m more concerned with helping the people affected by pollution than trying to stop it or educate people, because we can’t stop it or change it ourselves,” she says.

    Her friend Eradajere Oleita taught her this prospect. Oleita is a Detroit-based environmental activist who started the Chip Bag Project to upcycle potato chip bags into sleeping bags for the homeless.

    Grace painted a portrait of Oleita for the show with a glass filter encasing her head and the skyline of Detroit and her hometown of Lagos behind her.

    Grace’s travels have taken her to 27 countries including New Zealand, Nepal, Iceland, Australia, India, Turkey, Montenegro, Jordan, and “Israel/occupied Palestine.” For now, the Grand Rapids native is based in Detroit where she’s lived for four years — the longest she’s stayed in one place in the past 15 years.

    Futurelands is on view at Detroit Contemporary until February 25. The opening reception is set for Saturday, February 10 from 6-10 p.m.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • RIP Lighthouse ArtSpace and the dying ‘immersive’ art trend

    RIP Lighthouse ArtSpace and the dying ‘immersive’ art trend

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    click to enlarge

    Courtesy of Lighthouse Immersive

    I scene from the Immersive Klimt exhibition at Detroits former Ligthouse ArtSpace.

    Between 2021 and 2023, the immersive art trend hit Detroit hard. It seemed like every few months there was another new “immersive” show: Immersive Van Gogh, Immersive Klimt, Immersive Disney, Immersive King Tut. We were typing “immersive” so much it stopped looking like a real word.

    But it seems like the immersive trend has died down in Detroit, especially with news of the closing of Lighthouse ArtSpace, which hosted the Van Gogh, Klimt, Disney and King Tut experiences.

    We suspected Lighthouse ArtSpace had shuttered back in December when we noticed no future exhibits had been announced for the space following the conclusion of Immersive Disney in October. The Lighthouse Artspace website had also been removed, and when we called to inquire, Detroit was no longer listed as an option. Crain’s Detroit Business confirmed Lighthouse ArtSpace’s closure on Wednesday.

    “In 2023, two of Lighthouse Immersive’s companies went through corporate restructuring under the (Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act) process,” Lighthouse Immersive President Corey Ross told Crain’s. “Management decided to close several locations including Lighthouse Detroit and focus on touring productions. This refocus has been successful with touring shows currently running in Japan, Singapore, Mexico, USA and Canada.”

    Lighthouse Immersive, the Canadian company that helmed Lighthouse ArtSpace, filed for bankruptcy in July and was forced to close several of its locations that summer after being locked out for not paying rent.

    Ticketholders for Immersive Disney in Atlanta were met with a sign on the door that read, “Lighthouse Immersive, the producers of Immersive Disney Animation, has not made the payments necessary to keep this venue operational. We are saddened by this very unfortunate turn of events, and we are hopeful the producer will remedy the situation as quickly as possible.”

    In addition to Detroit, Lighthouse Immersive had locations in Toronto, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Chicago, and Las Vegas. Now the company’s website only lists Toronto, Chicago, and Las Vegas.

    The Harmonie Club Building that Lighthouse ArtSpace occupied is owned by Detroit-based company Basco. Vice President of real estate for Basco Nevan Shokar told Crain’s Lighthouse Immersive owed them over $300,000 and they were only able to recover $50,000. According to Crain’s, the space is transitioning to a banquet hall facility.

    We saw Lighthouse’s Immersive King Tut show, which paired an interesting concept (Egyptian mythology) with flat and uninspiring visuals.

    We’ve always felt like immersive art was a bad trend for people who don’t appreciate real art that takes time and talent to produce. We’d much rather see an exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts or any number of local galleries than pixelated images projected on the wall like a bad drive-in movie.

    Rest in peace, Lighthouse ArtSpace.

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    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Barbara Kruger Is Still Flipping the Bird

    Barbara Kruger Is Still Flipping the Bird

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    An installation view of “THINKING OF YOU. I MEAN ME. I MEAN YOU”. Courtesy Serpentine South

    Until the late 1970s, making a zine was a labor of love and money. Love as in time spent assembling the thing—the cutting out, the sticking together. Money as in paying a service to print issues. By the end of the 1970s, though, with photocopiers a fixture in public libraries, agit-propagandists could make copies of their pamphlets and artwork themselves. Zine culture flourished. Granular, black and white Xeroxed appropriated images overlaid with Letraset phrases were affordable carriers for political statements and creative theorizing. Plus, they could be pasted up wherever the artists wished (until they were taken down).

    This kind of DIY approach has informed Barbara Kruger’s work since the early 1980s. The grain and the grit, the declamatory phrases, the high contrast—both visually and in polemic—were reflected in the Woman’s Art Journal’s review of Kruger’s first European solo exhibition (at London’s Institute of Contemporary Art) in 1983. The Journal positioned Kruger at the vanguard of DIY political art, saying she was “…fully aware of the politics of art in the age of mechanical reproduction. Her use of photography is radical, confrontational, agitational and obviously influenced by Benjamin’s theory of montage.”

    SEE ALSO: Is Matthew Wong the 21st Century’s van Gogh?

    The Benjamin in question is German art theorist Walter Benjamin, who used his 1935 essay, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, to predict how reproduction machines would specifically benefit artists whose work has a political basis. Authenticity lost its meaning (“…from a photographic negative, for example, one can make any number of prints; to ask for the “authentic” print makes no sense”) as the reproductive process itself was baked into the artwork. And reproduction means access—now artwork could be designed to be viewed on any wall, anywhere. Art and technology historian Margot Lovejoy folded Barbara Kruger’s work into Benjamin’s thinking for her 1989 essay, ‘The Copier: Authorship and Originality’, describing Kruger’s “…now characteristic black-and-white photographs re-photographed from existing sources…composed together with phrases typeset in Futura Bold italic and presented in red lacquered wood frame.”

    A poster of a strange looking person rendered in black and white with the words 'Our Leader' rendered on topA poster of a strange looking person rendered in black and white with the words 'Our Leader' rendered on top
    ‘Untitled (Our Leader).’ Courtesy the artist and Sprüth Magers

    The paste-up photocopying may be long gone but Kruger’s punchy aphorisms and unflinching strength (at nearly eighty) are still firmly evident in “THINKING OF YOU. I MEAN ME. I MEAN YOU” at London’s Serpentine Gallery. It’s been twenty years since Barbara Kruger’s last solo show in the capital and “THINKING…” is an undoubtedly power-packed addition to London’s art calendar. Part retrospective, part recent work, the Serpentine has given over all of its five gallery spaces to Kruger’s large-scale thoughtforms, mixing do-overs of early works with contemporary video and standalone sound pieces. 2020 artwork (Untitled) Remember Me (the two words laid over a Man Ray-esque grayscale all-seeing eye) is soundtracked by 2021’s Untitled (I love you) sound piece, in which a woman’s voice says nothing more than “hello?” and then “I love you”. Add a question mark to the image’s title and its nature changes altogether. Untitled (No Comment) is a huge LED screen video piece featuring found footage and sound. An acrobat bends himself in half while a male voice patronizingly praises women’s work around the house. There are single, loud clock strikes and snatches of quotations from Voltaire and Kendrick Lamar. A satnav tells someone off for their lack of empathic capacity. Amidst images of a talking cat and blurred-out Insta selfies, another anonymous voice says “thank you for sharing”.

    Two large conjoined walls of red and black textTwo large conjoined walls of red and black text
    ‘Untitled (Artforum).’ Courtesy the artist and Sprüth Magers

    Upgrading from paper collages to LED screens suits Kruger’s work—after all, she was making memes before memes were a thing. Double screens for new artwork Untitled (Artforum) show text revealing itself as it’s typed. White pages eventually packed with black words, an invisible hand then adds notes and marginalia in red for added clarity. This is the art of the twin twenty-first-century overs: over-explaining and oversharing. The desperate urge to be understood in a clamorous, look-at-me-please world. The three screens for Untitled (Pledge, Will, Vow) showcase worked and re-worked snatches of the US Pledge of Allegiance, last will and testament legalese and formal marriage vows. Some video screens are static LED images (backlit, never has Kruger’s trademark red looked redder). First exhibited in 1987 and now a motionless video artwork, the expression on the ventriloquist dummy’s face in Untitled (Our Leader) is as judgemental and unknowable in its stare as it ever was. In the age of #MeToo, 1989’s Untitled (Your body is a battleground), with its women’s face, one half shown as a photographic negative, possesses further layers of meaning.

    Untitled (I shop therefore I am) from 1987 is here too, of course—the Descartes quote about thinking and being developing onscreen into a series of consumerist and emotional phrases. There’s a whole room dedicated to Untitled (FOREVER). The floor is covered with an extract from Orwell’s 1984 (the O’Brien speech that begins: “If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—forever”), and the longest wall is filled with a section of a 1928 Virginia Woolf lecture. The ‘you’ from Woolf’s “You. You are here, looking through the looking glass, darkly…” is magnified as through a looking glass lens, with walls on either side crowded in text that ends, “THINKING OF YOU. I MEAN ME. I MEAN YOU”.

    Barbara Kruger is constantly revising her work, and this post-analog tweaking pays off. By keeping her intellectual and political wheels in motion (and swapping the Xerox machine for HD digital images and sound), she continues to lead the pack in her role as social commentator and narrator, neatly avoiding accusations of fustiness on the way. Her text and appropriated imagery remain rhetorical and funny, harrowing and sarcastic, and the new pieces show Barbara Kruger is still adept at flipping the bird at rotten establishment targets, from the patriarchy to capitalism and beyond.

    THINKING OF YOU. I MEAN ME. I MEAN YOU” is on view at the Serpentine Gallery in London through March 17. Booking ahead is advisable. 

    Barbara Kruger Is Still Flipping the Bird



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    Simon Coates

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  • Arts Travelogue: Finding Dali in Cadaqués

    Arts Travelogue: Finding Dali in Cadaqués

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    I recently went for a long walk, over several weeks, down the Costa Brava from Banyuls, France to Sitges in Spain. I walked with no particular destination and on no schedule, so when I ended up in Cadaqués, I stayed a while. I was drawn to this once-isolated, steep-sided harbor village where Salvador Dali spent much of his adult life, but it was more than this that attracted me.

    Cadaques. Costa Brava. Catalonia. Spain. Europe
    Cadaqués at night, with the church of Santa Maria de Cadaqués on full display. Photo by: Paolo Picciotto/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    Cadaqués has long been known as a stronghold of Catalan independence, and a safe harbor for smugglers and refugees from all over the world. The town is isolated in a craggy harbor and difficult to access even today with only one road in and one out. Most of the tourism is driven here by Dali’s house and some adjacent arts-related attractions, but as famous as Dali is, his name and his influence don’t overbear the small town.

    I walked in from the north through the arid Paratge de Tudela where the light is flat and intense. It has the effect of making the Mediterranean in the distance seem deeply, refreshingly blue as it shimmers off the morphic rock formations all around. A visitor with the right set of eyes could see elephants with skeletal legs, and camels with five humps within the play of light and shadow the rocks cast. Dali used this light and this landscape as the setting for many of his dramatic absurdities.

    Salvador Dali statueSalvador Dali statue
    The Salvador Dali statue in Cadaqués. Photo by: Mikel Bilbao/VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    If you draw a line between the towns of Figueres, Púbol and Cadaqués, you have a triangle across the Emporda. This is known to some as the Dali Pyramid, as it connects the three towns most important to him. He was born in Figueres and bought a castle for his wife in Púbol, but it was to Cadaqués that he was indelibly drawn. The stark landscape, its cluster of buildings and the stoic residents of the town begin to show up in his paintings as early as 1916.

    SEE ALSO: Exploring Japan’s Art Islands: A Guide to Naoshima and Teshima

    Dali lived in Cadaqués throughout his adult life in a twisted dream house of his own design, filled with his surrealistic fantasy furniture and fixtures. Being obsessed with Dali’s paintings in my youth, hiking the coastal trail around the finger of rock, up the hills and then down to the cove at Port Lligat was like walking through a dreamscape. A place I’d never been but knew so well.

    Museum-House of painter Salvador DaliMuseum-House of painter Salvador Dali
    The strange Museum-House of painter Salvador Dali. Photo by: Betend A/Andia/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    The first time I visited the house, there was a high school field trip scrambling through the place. The second time, I ended up giving my spot to a teacher from Taiwan who had ridden his bicycle halfway around the world and made the famous house one of his prime stops but came too late in the day to get a ticket.

    I didn’t need to tour the famous house; I know what’s in there. But to stand on the dock and face the entrance to the cove was like stepping into one of Dali’s seascapes, and I nearly expected a great Madonna to rise up out of the sea.

    ‘Punta Es Baluard de la Riba d’en Pichot, Cadaqués,’ (1918). © Salvador Dalí Museum Inc., St. Petersburg, FL

    The house isn’t sectioned off in any way. The dock, which seems unchanged since Dali painted it, is lined with small boats. It’s still a working area. Lobster baskets hang from a pole and the boats come in and out with netted fish. Is that Dali’s own skiff painted a bright yellow still moored, as it was in his Punta Es Baluard de la Riba d’en Pichot, Cadaqués.

    Spotting a homemade black-and-white label on the bright blue door of a private house adjacent to Dali’s Maisonette that reads ‘This is not Dali’s house’ seemed to me an exceptionally surreal happenstance—c’est no es pip. The whole place could be examined through Dali’s to reveal some hidden truth.

    A white doorknob in a blue doorA white doorknob in a blue door
    A door in Cadaqués. J. McMahon

    The church of Santa Maria de Cadaqués was just a few steps up above my hotel so I thought I would stick my head in quickly and see what was drawing the loose string of tourists milling about its courtyard.

    The church was originally erected in the 13th Century and then rebuilt in the 16th. It overlooks the bay and its wealth betrays the dedication of the townspeople to its upkeep. The 18th-century titular altarpiece, baroque to the point of monstrousness, minutely detailed and masterfully crafted, was almost too much to take in a church of its size.

    The Madonna looms over the nave at 22 meters high. The figure was immediately familiar—the open-armed Madonna inhabited Dali’s works in various forms for thirty years. Around her, the detail of the baroque altarpiece nearly overwhelmed me. I wasn’t prepared for this kind of majesty in a church with a congregation of just 400 or 500 people.

    At night, I had taken to hanging around at Netico’s House where a cosmopolitan group of renegades sat eating and drinking inside and out. My first night I took the sole table for one in the alley on which sat a placard featuring a sepia-toned photograph of an old man in olden times. I read the quote in Spanish and understood it to mean something like ‘Man is nature that has become aware of itself.’ This was a beer ad?

    I searched the quote and found it was from the manifesto of the French anarchist Elisee Recluse from sometime in the 1880s, so I ordered one.

    The narrow streets and alleys of Cadaqués were paved generations past with pieces of slate on edge so that both humans and donkeys alike could get a good grip when the weather played hell, in the meantime, it was playing hell on my already sore feet. Just sitting and listening to multi-lingual murmurings was a pleasure not only to the ear but to the rest of the body as well.

    When my beer came the label revealed it was made by an anarchist, nano brewer and the label depicted Angel Rock, a symbol of the city being squeezed into a fist until blood ran down the arm, not unlike Hunter Thompson’s gonzo symbol, and of course, it was because this was Cadaqués.

    The chain-smoking sisters who ran my hotel gave me some historical pamphlets about the town to read. It was an odd selection of history and quotes, but some of it gave real insight into the place. “The fates have not been kind to the people of Cadaqués… when disaster strikes, the only person you can rely on is a fellow Cadaquésenc, which has given rise to the town’s motto, Nos amb nos (Us with us).

    Place To Visit: Salvador Dali's Places - Figueras and CadaquesPlace To Visit: Salvador Dali's Places - Figueras and Cadaques
    Sculptures in the garden of the Casa-Museu (House-Museum) of Salvador Dali. Photo by Franco Origlia/Getty Images

    On a rainy afternoon, I ducked into the Expo Dali—one of the few places in town that seemed to be shamelessly profiting from using his name. The museum is full of photos of Dali and his entourage taken by the owner. It didn’t add up to much until I went up to the third-floor gallery. The room was hung with a hundred portraits of townspeople. Each sat in the same chair, in the same corner of a room in what could have been in any house in town.

    All the photos were taken in the 1950s. The people, men, women, youth and elders alike share an unmistakable profile, and each sits with a defiant expression and rigid air that personifies the people’s stoic attitude and the harsh realities of living on a rocky outcropping above a wind-buffeted harbor. They were the same people Dali had used in his paintings going back a century. Fishermen, market women and sailors all hunched over against the wind, climbing the tortuous streets or perched precariously on the sea-worn rocks.

    A painting of a seaside landscape with people in the foregroundA painting of a seaside landscape with people in the foreground
    ‘Cadaqués,’ (1923). Collection of The Dalí Museum, St. Petersburg, FL (USA); Gift of A. Reynolds & Eleanor Morse

    Was there ever a painter so attached to a specific landscape, one town, one single rock? Again and again, we see the shallow bay, the white-washed cluster of buildings huddled against the bare cliffs and the point of Angel Rock in the distance. Often when the coast isn’t the setting of Dali’s paintings then the arid planes and wind sculpted rocks of the Paratge de Tudela are. Whether it’s stilt-legged tigers eating like-legged elephants or Christopher Columbus discovering the new world, it’s all happening in Cadaqués.

    I was left with a chicken and egg question. Is it Dali’s legacy of being an outcast, unique and stand-alone, that influences the attitude of the town, or was it the individualism, stoicism and rebellious spirit of the town that made Dali what he was? Or was it just kismet—did Dali find just the right place on earth to unleash his particular kind of genius as seems the case with so many others over time? He wasn’t a fisherman or a sailor but he was a proud Catalan and seemingly a natural Cadaquésenc who lived their motto. Us with us, indeed.

    A rocky outcropping on the seaA rocky outcropping on the sea
    Inspiration for ‘The Great Masturbator,'(1929)? J. McMahon

    Arts Travelogue: Finding Dali in Cadaqués



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    J. McMahon

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