Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Artist Stalking Again
I may or may not have learned where this house is located above. Another reason to visit Venice Beach in the not so distant future.
Also, my essay, Stalking Artists: In Pursuit of Home, will be published in an upcoming issue of Art Review. I am very happy to add another authored publication to the website, resumé, and life long goal of becoming a writer.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
For Anh-Thuy and her entry for the Postcard Collective
"Please rinse your card in water for 1-2 minutes for best result."
Check out Anh-Thuy Nguyen's website here.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
A Few New Photographs for "Autobiography"
Jacinda Russell, Boise, 1986, 2013
Jacinda Russell, Tucson, 1997, 2013
In the last month, I decided that I will grow one of these for every decade of the rest of my life. Unfortunately, I don't have one for 2000-2010 but I can live without it.
Jacinda Russell, Swimsuit Bag, 2001 - present, 2013
Jacinda Russell, We are Not That Different, He and I, 2013
The above triptych concludes my exploration with both of these images.
Sadly, my encaustic experiment last summer turned green. No one knows why - perhaps a reaction between wax and archival inkjet prints. I printed my favorite image of the grid and it is now framed and ready to be sent to University of Tennessee in August. As of now, the title is still The Collection and Its Return though that could change because it is also a family portrait of my brother and me.
Monday, February 18, 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
"The Clock" Marathon
How much do I love Christian Marclay's The Clock? An awful lot. This article in the New Yorker is one of my favorite profiles and I reread it before taking the trek to the Wexner in Columbus. I first saw The Clock at the Venice Bienale in 2011. I was glued to the sweat stained Ikea couch for 1.5 hours and only pried myself away in the middle of the afternoon because there were so many other exhibitions to see. Long story short, I could have watched it for hours. Lucky for me, I had an opportunity this winter (and again in early April).
Waiting for Drew and Amelia to arrive - first clock portrait of the day on my microwave.
Counterclockwise from left: Amelia, Drew, Larry (he stayed home), Maura, and me leaving for Columbus.
Surprise, surprise... clocks available for purchase at the Wexner's gift store.
Another clock portrait (sparing everyone several others): Amelia, Maura, Corrinne, and Matt waiting for the conversation with the artists to commence.
Third row view of a conversation with Christian Marclay and Josiah McElheny. One of my favorite quotes from this event came from Marclay: ""when you deal with history, there is always a lot of fiction involved." I also enjoyed hearing how he initially wanted to present the piece at an airport or train station but that involved many restrictions and he refused to censor himself. Marclay also revealed that the couches are used as an individual viewing experience, not like the auditorium where we gather together to see a projection. The moment Marclay said "this is not a marathon piece," Amelia and I simultaneously responded with "sounds like a challenge."
I knew I wanted to see the second hand strike midnight. In addition, it was important to witness as much of the video past normal museum hours as future viewing can always take place from 11-5 pm.
How does one prepare for an art watching marathon? We put a lot of thought into this. It involved using the restroom prior to standing in line and a small bag of trail mix. One giant oversight on my part is that I didn't have dinner but after watching Hollywood eat repeatedly in front of me for 2 hours, I was very hungry by the time I left. I walked in with the mentality that I was flying across the country with a window seat and two people sleeping beside me that I didn't want to disturb.
It was difficult to see in the darkness but I managed to scrawl notes once I finally found a seat. Here they are transcribed below (as 5.5 hours was a very long time, my thoughts grow more brief and less coherent):
6:28 PM: First in line, two minute wait. 30 minutes standing in back of the room before I found a seat.
General Observations: I am surprised at how anxious this video makes me - I want time to move forward faster and faster and there is hardly any rest.
Knowing that Marclay made this in London with access only to videos and DVDs in the UK is informative. There are many English actors and film clips.
It is shocking to see how young many of the actors are (which made me feel older no thanks to the continual passing of time).
I love all the references to inexact time. For instance, "it's a few minutes past 7" is spliced in between transitions of 7:02 and 7:07 PM. Another small detail that occurred on a couple of occasions is people's encounters with clocks that are wrong and their overwhelming urge to change time (Marlon Brando was the first).
In the gallery: Logistically it is fascinating to see jockeying for seats. The noise from the reception is very loud and interferes with the sound. The couches are the same Ikea versions found in the Venice installation.
Frequent references: Flight delays. Who comes out at night? Super heroes, comic book characters, James Bond and Tom Cruise.
General Observation: I am thinking that Marclay can never watch a movie in the same way again. Does he constantly see new clips he wish he had included? Would he consider making this again in 20 years? If not, I am sure another artist will.
Oh yes. I remember why I hated Sean Penn so much when he was younger.
Frequent references: Dinner hours are punctuated by eating soup and the lighting of candles. Nokia flip phones.
General Observation: It gets dark so early. I saw the sunset at 6:45 PM and it hasn't been light outside since. It makes me think that seasons play a role in addition to hours. I only saw two references to daylight existing after 6:45 and they occurred at 8:07 and 8:58 PM and they felt out of place.
Ancient reference to the past: I had forgotten that there was a phone number you could dial with a recorded voice telling you the time (always used after power outages). Is that ever passé.
Frequent references: dressing up in tuxedos. Vincent Price.
8:09 PM: Charlton Heston put on an 8-track.
8:15 PM: Johnny Depp's first appearance of the evening.
People are finally done eating dinner (yes!) and now it's time to attend a play or the symphony.
Question: How many people still carry pocket watches?
General Observation: 8-9 PM feels so late in the movies.
8:35 PM: Johnny Depp's second appearance.
The Twilight Zone at last!
8:43 PM: A very young Eli Wallach with a mustache sighting.
In the gallery: At last it is quiet in the hallway. There is no line up of people standing behind me [later I learned from Amelia that Christian Marclay was positioned directly behind me for a few minutes].
Frequent references: Jimmy Stewart and Pierce Brosnan.
8:58 PM: My old Mickey Mouse watch arrives on the scene.
9 PM: Full frontal nudity.
9:04 PM: Amelia and Drew left for dinner. I am the only marathon runner left. There are only seven others in the room with me.
Murders are now occurring en masse. Funny how genres of films start to equate to times of day. There are very few Westerns scenes included in the dark.
Dexter!
General observation: This is my time of day but I do not relate to much of what Hollywood portrays happening now.
9:30 PM: out comes the liquor.
General observation: Starting to think of how few clocks I have around the house in comparison to what I see before me.
9:48 PM: Edward Norton's first appearance of two.
Bette Davis might be the woman that pops up most often. Also Naomi Watts.
Aside from drinking, night time provides many instances of card playing and eating straight out of the refrigerator.
Around 10 PM guns are now prominent.
10:01 PM: First execution.
10:04 PM: Oh how I loved Back to the Future when I was a kid.
Frequent references: nightmares, horror movies, tub soaking, and John Cusack. Also, the later it gets, the more older movies are incorporated.
10:18 PM: 3 hours and 18 minutes of sitting down. I finally stand up again!
General observations: So glad subtitles are never provided. The sound overlapping into each scene is indeed masterful [by this time Maura has returned and is sitting next to me]. One starts to think of clock styles after watching this for so long. Many people winding grandfather clocks and also featured are some gaudy (read hideous) versions from the 1960s.
10:25 PM I took the following photograph and later tweeted "I am the marathon."
10:44 PM: Another Johnny Depp sighting.
10:50 PM: The gallery is back to standing room only. An older woman who is the only one in this room that has been stationed here long enough to rival me, brought a neck pillow. Clearly, I am ill prepared!
Frequent references: Robert De Niro. Metronomes, hourglasses and swinging guillotine blades.
11 PM: So many people are asleep at this time in the movies (rather startling).
Question: Where are all the heist flicks? Those are always dependent on the clock.
11:14 PM: Cat count = 3.
11:31 PM: Really wondering if my eyes can handle watching a screen much longer. Growing very weary.
General observations: If people are not drinking, committing murders or sleeping, they are lying in bed watching television. There are so many stopwatches with animals on them. My favorite is a hen pecking the time that is featured at least twice.
11:40 PM: Godzilla!
11:42 PM: Final Johnny Depp sighting of the night.
Question: Do men still pass along watches to their sons as valuable possessions?
A few minutes to midnight: time to walk along building ledges.
11:55 PM: Moment my brother would most enjoy - Bruce Banner turning into the Incredible Hulk.
11:59 PM - 12 AM: Fantastic! Celebrations, explosions, murders, and numerous clock faces flashing by quickly.
12:05 AM: Calling it a night.
12:10 AM: The view while waiting for Drew, Amelia, and Maura to appear:
After hearing Marclay reveal that 5 AM was the hardest to complete, I am compelled to return and see the hours of 5 - 10 AM. I oscillated back and forth between finishing night but I think I want to witness the times when I am hardly awake. When The Clock leaves Ohio, I will have spent 12 hours in front of it. Chances are no other artwork will ever come this close.
Waiting for Drew and Amelia to arrive - first clock portrait of the day on my microwave.
Counterclockwise from left: Amelia, Drew, Larry (he stayed home), Maura, and me leaving for Columbus.
Surprise, surprise... clocks available for purchase at the Wexner's gift store.
Another clock portrait (sparing everyone several others): Amelia, Maura, Corrinne, and Matt waiting for the conversation with the artists to commence.
Third row view of a conversation with Christian Marclay and Josiah McElheny. One of my favorite quotes from this event came from Marclay: ""when you deal with history, there is always a lot of fiction involved." I also enjoyed hearing how he initially wanted to present the piece at an airport or train station but that involved many restrictions and he refused to censor himself. Marclay also revealed that the couches are used as an individual viewing experience, not like the auditorium where we gather together to see a projection. The moment Marclay said "this is not a marathon piece," Amelia and I simultaneously responded with "sounds like a challenge."
I knew I wanted to see the second hand strike midnight. In addition, it was important to witness as much of the video past normal museum hours as future viewing can always take place from 11-5 pm.
How does one prepare for an art watching marathon? We put a lot of thought into this. It involved using the restroom prior to standing in line and a small bag of trail mix. One giant oversight on my part is that I didn't have dinner but after watching Hollywood eat repeatedly in front of me for 2 hours, I was very hungry by the time I left. I walked in with the mentality that I was flying across the country with a window seat and two people sleeping beside me that I didn't want to disturb.
It was difficult to see in the darkness but I managed to scrawl notes once I finally found a seat. Here they are transcribed below (as 5.5 hours was a very long time, my thoughts grow more brief and less coherent):
6:28 PM: First in line, two minute wait. 30 minutes standing in back of the room before I found a seat.
General Observations: I am surprised at how anxious this video makes me - I want time to move forward faster and faster and there is hardly any rest.
Knowing that Marclay made this in London with access only to videos and DVDs in the UK is informative. There are many English actors and film clips.
It is shocking to see how young many of the actors are (which made me feel older no thanks to the continual passing of time).
I love all the references to inexact time. For instance, "it's a few minutes past 7" is spliced in between transitions of 7:02 and 7:07 PM. Another small detail that occurred on a couple of occasions is people's encounters with clocks that are wrong and their overwhelming urge to change time (Marlon Brando was the first).
In the gallery: Logistically it is fascinating to see jockeying for seats. The noise from the reception is very loud and interferes with the sound. The couches are the same Ikea versions found in the Venice installation.
Frequent references: Flight delays. Who comes out at night? Super heroes, comic book characters, James Bond and Tom Cruise.
General Observation: I am thinking that Marclay can never watch a movie in the same way again. Does he constantly see new clips he wish he had included? Would he consider making this again in 20 years? If not, I am sure another artist will.
Oh yes. I remember why I hated Sean Penn so much when he was younger.
Frequent references: Dinner hours are punctuated by eating soup and the lighting of candles. Nokia flip phones.
General Observation: It gets dark so early. I saw the sunset at 6:45 PM and it hasn't been light outside since. It makes me think that seasons play a role in addition to hours. I only saw two references to daylight existing after 6:45 and they occurred at 8:07 and 8:58 PM and they felt out of place.
Ancient reference to the past: I had forgotten that there was a phone number you could dial with a recorded voice telling you the time (always used after power outages). Is that ever passé.
Frequent references: dressing up in tuxedos. Vincent Price.
8:09 PM: Charlton Heston put on an 8-track.
8:15 PM: Johnny Depp's first appearance of the evening.
People are finally done eating dinner (yes!) and now it's time to attend a play or the symphony.
Question: How many people still carry pocket watches?
General Observation: 8-9 PM feels so late in the movies.
8:35 PM: Johnny Depp's second appearance.
The Twilight Zone at last!
8:43 PM: A very young Eli Wallach with a mustache sighting.
In the gallery: At last it is quiet in the hallway. There is no line up of people standing behind me [later I learned from Amelia that Christian Marclay was positioned directly behind me for a few minutes].
Frequent references: Jimmy Stewart and Pierce Brosnan.
8:58 PM: My old Mickey Mouse watch arrives on the scene.
9 PM: Full frontal nudity.
9:04 PM: Amelia and Drew left for dinner. I am the only marathon runner left. There are only seven others in the room with me.
Murders are now occurring en masse. Funny how genres of films start to equate to times of day. There are very few Westerns scenes included in the dark.
Dexter!
General observation: This is my time of day but I do not relate to much of what Hollywood portrays happening now.
9:30 PM: out comes the liquor.
General observation: Starting to think of how few clocks I have around the house in comparison to what I see before me.
9:48 PM: Edward Norton's first appearance of two.
Bette Davis might be the woman that pops up most often. Also Naomi Watts.
Aside from drinking, night time provides many instances of card playing and eating straight out of the refrigerator.
Around 10 PM guns are now prominent.
10:01 PM: First execution.
10:04 PM: Oh how I loved Back to the Future when I was a kid.
Frequent references: nightmares, horror movies, tub soaking, and John Cusack. Also, the later it gets, the more older movies are incorporated.
10:18 PM: 3 hours and 18 minutes of sitting down. I finally stand up again!
General observations: So glad subtitles are never provided. The sound overlapping into each scene is indeed masterful [by this time Maura has returned and is sitting next to me]. One starts to think of clock styles after watching this for so long. Many people winding grandfather clocks and also featured are some gaudy (read hideous) versions from the 1960s.
10:25 PM I took the following photograph and later tweeted "I am the marathon."
10:44 PM: Another Johnny Depp sighting.
10:50 PM: The gallery is back to standing room only. An older woman who is the only one in this room that has been stationed here long enough to rival me, brought a neck pillow. Clearly, I am ill prepared!
Frequent references: Robert De Niro. Metronomes, hourglasses and swinging guillotine blades.
11 PM: So many people are asleep at this time in the movies (rather startling).
Question: Where are all the heist flicks? Those are always dependent on the clock.
11:14 PM: Cat count = 3.
11:31 PM: Really wondering if my eyes can handle watching a screen much longer. Growing very weary.
General observations: If people are not drinking, committing murders or sleeping, they are lying in bed watching television. There are so many stopwatches with animals on them. My favorite is a hen pecking the time that is featured at least twice.
11:40 PM: Godzilla!
11:42 PM: Final Johnny Depp sighting of the night.
Question: Do men still pass along watches to their sons as valuable possessions?
A few minutes to midnight: time to walk along building ledges.
11:55 PM: Moment my brother would most enjoy - Bruce Banner turning into the Incredible Hulk.
11:59 PM - 12 AM: Fantastic! Celebrations, explosions, murders, and numerous clock faces flashing by quickly.
12:05 AM: Calling it a night.
12:10 AM: The view while waiting for Drew, Amelia, and Maura to appear:
After hearing Marclay reveal that 5 AM was the hardest to complete, I am compelled to return and see the hours of 5 - 10 AM. I oscillated back and forth between finishing night but I think I want to witness the times when I am hardly awake. When The Clock leaves Ohio, I will have spent 12 hours in front of it. Chances are no other artwork will ever come this close.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Emoji Art History Part 2
Since other people's versions of Emoji Art History went viral tonight, I am posting my remaining six and calling it a day. It was fun while it lasted.
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Allan McCollum
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Chris Burden
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Jenny Holzer
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: John Divola
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Marina Abramovic
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Nam June Paik
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Allan McCollum
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Chris Burden
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Jenny Holzer
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: John Divola
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Marina Abramovic
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Nam June Paik
Monday, February 11, 2013
Today's Acquisitions
New journal courtesy of Ex Libris Anonymous.
It comes with a few of the original pages still in tact and it's Button Omelet approved.
The best bag to receive cat claws from Kristina.
James Luckett's entry for the Postcard Collective.
Camden Hardy's entry for the Postcard Collective.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Herron Lecture
I had a good time at Herron School of Art last week when I delivered my lecture A Tale of Two Obsessions... It made my day to see a large faction of friends from the Ball State Department of Art and some past students in the audience. In addition, I saw an old friend from an Anderson Ranch residency who I hadn't encountered in 10 years who now teaches at Herron. Roughly 50 people attended and I was able to say two dirty words in an academic setting without getting into trouble. Overall, it was a success.
(Photographs courtesy of Natalie Phillips)
According to the specifications in my Indiana Arts Commission grant, I have to do one more presentation. The next one will be a guerrilla projection in downtown Muncie as soon as the weather warms up. Looking forward to seeing David C. Nolan's quotes on the side of unsuspecting businesses.
Poland Exhibition is on the Horizon
Echo of the Object is traveling to Wroclaw, Poland very soon!
Hannah's Tupperware watercolor painting & my 12 lunch bags rolled into two tubes.
I felt like I was building a cooler for 5 Objects Photographed Before Thrown Away (AKA the tight squeeze).
Due to the expense of shipping overseas and the sheer amount of work we made for the Echo exhibition, this is a smaller version of the show. Each one of us pared down our selections and will only be showing 1/3 - 1/2 what was initially exhibited in the Atrium Gallery.
Thanks Texas Gallery for teaching me how to build boxes and ship artwork. Thanks Photo 2 students for putting up with me constructing these during lab last week (and the rest of the Photo Department tolerating the Finishing Room's transformation into a UPS store).
Now to see if Jennifer, Hannah, David and I can get our shipping estimate well under $10,000.
Hannah's Tupperware watercolor painting & my 12 lunch bags rolled into two tubes.
I felt like I was building a cooler for 5 Objects Photographed Before Thrown Away (AKA the tight squeeze).
Due to the expense of shipping overseas and the sheer amount of work we made for the Echo exhibition, this is a smaller version of the show. Each one of us pared down our selections and will only be showing 1/3 - 1/2 what was initially exhibited in the Atrium Gallery.
Thanks Texas Gallery for teaching me how to build boxes and ship artwork. Thanks Photo 2 students for putting up with me constructing these during lab last week (and the rest of the Photo Department tolerating the Finishing Room's transformation into a UPS store).
Now to see if Jennifer, Hannah, David and I can get our shipping estimate well under $10,000.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Cat Claw Greeting Card (nearing completion) and the Woes of Too Much to Do
I hope this is the last entry of the card in progress. I am nearing 300 claws (and two teeth) as I start the "halo" around the list of participants. This afternoon I will photograph my piles of cats on paper that will be used in the scrapbook. I have mentioned the cat scrapbook for months now but as soon as I build cardboard boxes for shipping the lunch bags to Poland, I will have time to work on it rather than documenting its incomplete status. There are too many works that are floating around as partially done in the studio! This is frustrating but I have a goal of finishing this before traveling to Photolucida in April.
Also on the must conquer list in the coming weeks:
• a blog post on my marathon viewing of The Clock (coming soon after the Herron lecture)
• my collaboration with Camden Hardy (the mystery of the concrete block)
• edit more images in Autobiography that were rephotographed last week
• take James' advice and accumulate a portfolio of 4-5 series that explores my interests in collecting rather than bringing one project to the two portfolio reviews I have this spring
• somehow acquire 8-10 more exhibitions before the end of October
• eat, sleep, play with the cats, and breathe every once in awhile (I can dream)
Monday, February 4, 2013
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Lecture This Week at Herron School of Art
In conjunction with the Indiana Arts Commission grant, come see my artist's talk on A Tale of Two Obsessions: David C. Nolan & Marilyn Monroe and Arline Conradt & the Cat Scrapbook.
Above image courtesy of Amelia who is having a show at Gordy's Fine Art and Framing that opens this Thursday night in Muncie.
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