From the New Museum press release: "Centering on 1993, the exhibition is conceived as a time capsule, an
experiment in collective memory that attempts to capture a specific
moment at the intersection of art, pop culture, and politics." One of my early favorite art exhibitions focusing on the 1990s was the 2000 exhibition at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Passages from the 90's. It was difficult not to compare that viewing experience 13 years ago with this one. Overall, I walked out of the New Museum fully convinced that 1993 was a very good year for contemporary art.
JR with Charles Ray's Family Romance
All hail the New Museum for allowing flash free photography! Even the
guards were happy to take photographs of people posing in front of the
art. My only complaint is the sheer amount of people in the galleries
that made a personal viewing experience nearly impossible (my fault for
seeing it on Saturday). I was surprised at the scale of Charles Ray's sculpture above as I had always presumed it was my height. The intermediary in between adult and child size made it even more disturbing. Needless to say, it was a popular photo opp for nearly everyone with a smart phone.
Felix Gonzalez Torres on the 4th floor
This was my first time seeing Torres' billboard installed in a gallery rather than a reproduction. I even liked the orange rug (gasp) by Rudolf Stingel. Hearing Kristin Oppenheim's Sail on Sailor was chilling especially in the context of all the AIDS related work that was produced at the time (and installed on this floor).
Felix Gonzalez Torres detail
Janine Antoni's Lick and Lather
With a couple exceptions, the installation of NYC: 1993 was very successful. I was enamored with photographing nearly every bust in Janine Antoni's Lick and Lather. I will spare you images of each one but these were the two most haunting erasures of identity in both soap and chocolate.
Janine Antoni's Lick and Lather
Janine Antoni's Lick and Lather
Robert Gober's Prison Window
I could write an essay on why this is one of my favorite artworks (and someday I hope to do so). However, the installation of Prison Window at the New Museum was less than desirable. Tucked in a corner at the base of a staircase, with Rudolf Stingel's orange rug bouncing off the white walls, I was less than likely to spend any time with it. When I first encountered this installation at CAMH, the viewer walked into a room constructed solely for the artwork. A small passageway into the piece indicated that you could easily be inside of a prison. Certainly not the case at the New Museum.
Jack Pierson's Stay
I knew this sculpture first and foremost as a postcard in 1999. In my mind, it is only viewed on or over a doorway so this was a perfect encounter.
David Hammons, In the Hood
I am drawn to Hammons' acerbic wit and look forward to viewing any piece by him wherever I go. The cut sweat shirt resembled a beheading with its references to racial tension.
A self-portrait reflection in Glenn Ligon's text reinterpretation of Robert Mapplethorpe's controversial photographs.
There were many other works NYC: 1993 that I was thrilled to see: Paul McCarthy's Cultural Gothic, the text piece by Sean Landers, burned books from Ann Hamilton's tropos, and Steven Pippen's pinhole photographs exposed and developed in train toilets. It was also eye opening in terms of thinking how many of the artists were dead or were no longer making work that is regularly seen in the public eye. This exhibition and Jay DeFeo's retrospective at the Whitney were the museum highlights of the Winter Break Part 2 (AKA "spring break") whirlwind visit.
Showing posts with label Janine Antoni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Janine Antoni. Show all posts
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Emoji Art History: The Not So Serious Side Project (Part 1)
It began during finals week at the end of last semester while lying in bed unable to sleep. Deliriously I began recreating works of art with the Emoji app on my iPhone and posted 18 of the results on Instagram. I stopped for a month but kept thinking of new ones. Five weeks later with the new Postcard Collective Winter submission deadline looming, I revisited it. I settled on a form, deciding that I would simulate texting the artist at the top and include only the title of the artwork below. There are many limitations of Emoji - unfortunately there are not enough icons to create some of my favorite artworks (I am still wishing I could do more with Duchamp). Here are 28 in no particular order with a list of 15 others to attempt (coming soon).
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: David Hockney
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Walter De Maria
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Yves Klein (with a little help from a friend)
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Wayne Thiebaud
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Vincent van Gogh
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sol LeWitt
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sherrie Levine
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Roy Lichtenstein
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Robert Smithson
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maurizio Cattelan
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Mark Di Suvero
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Marcel Duchamp
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: John Baldessari
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Jeff Koons
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Janine Antoni
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Henri Rousseau
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Grant Wood
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Georgia O'Keeffe
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Frida Kahlo
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Eleanor Antin
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Ed Ruscha
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Damien Hirst
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Christian Marclay (made while staring at Marclay during an artists' conversation at the Wexner Art Center last night)
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Andy Warhol
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Edvard Munch
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maya Lin
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Tom Friedman
One of my favorite parts was pretending for a few brief minutes that I did indeed have all these artists as contacts in my phone.
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: David Hockney
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Walter De Maria
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Yves Klein (with a little help from a friend)
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Wayne Thiebaud
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Vincent van Gogh
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sol LeWitt
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Sherrie Levine
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Roy Lichtenstein
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Robert Smithson
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maurizio Cattelan
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Mark Di Suvero
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Marcel Duchamp
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: John Baldessari
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Jeff Koons
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Janine Antoni
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Henri Rousseau
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Grant Wood
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Georgia O'Keeffe
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Frida Kahlo
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Eleanor Antin
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Ed Ruscha
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Damien Hirst
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Christian Marclay (made while staring at Marclay during an artists' conversation at the Wexner Art Center last night)
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Andy Warhol
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Edvard Munch
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Maya Lin
Jacinda Russell, Emoji Art History: Tom Friedman
One of my favorite parts was pretending for a few brief minutes that I did indeed have all these artists as contacts in my phone.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Dessert Tour of San Francisco (while on the subject of "Real Cakes")
The nastiest cake of the trip on display in Chinatown. Any guesses how old this is?
The most beautiful breakfast appetizer: Pepple's Donuts in the Ferry Building at Embarcadero (see that blueberry one in the front row second from the left? Buy that one).

Stella's Pastry in North Beach was on Alexis's list. I caved to peer pressure and bought the dessert below that Amelia and I shared late one night after portfolio reviews.

It was a Mixed Berry Tart Slice. My dessert quota of the spring was met.

Because we haven't discussed chocolate yet: Amelia imitating Janine Antoni's Lick and Lather at SFMOMA. We were contemplating how (and why) on earth someone would want to bite off the nose of this artwork.
From a Bomb Magazine interview with Antoni: "The first time it happened was in Venice. Lick and Lather, self-portrait busts—seven in chocolate, seven in soap—were shown at the Venice Biennale. Halfway into the show, a young woman, a teenager from Czechoslovakia who was there with her parents on vacation, bit three noses off my chocolate heads! One after the other until the guards stopped her. The Italian newspapers went nuts, they had these funny little drawings of a very fat woman with a fork—with my nose on the tip. And they talked about the history of work being destroyed, like the Pieta. Another article talked about Stendahl’s Syndrome-how this teenager was so overcome by beauty she couldn’t help herself."
Needless to say, we were not compelled.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Substitutions
Looking for someone to be me for five days this month... Must be able to participate in the Animation Search committee meetings and attend a lecture, meet with five BFA thesis students, teach seven classes, and feed my cats. Anyone?

Cindy Sherman as Richard Prince, Richard Prince as Cindy Sherman, 1983
Matthew Barney as Gary Gilmore in Cremaster 2
Duane Michals, Self-Portrait as Someone Else I and II, 1968
Alfred Hitchcock poses as a woman for a magazine article, c. 1964
Douglas Gordon, Self-portrait as Kurt Cobain, as Andy Warhol, as Myra Hindley, as Marilyn Monroe, 1996
Bruce Conner as Dennis Hopper and Dennis Hopper as Bruce Conner, From The Dennis Hopper One Man Show, 1973
Janine Antoni, Mom and Dad, 1993-94

Cindy Sherman as Richard Prince, Richard Prince as Cindy Sherman, 1983
Matthew Barney as Gary Gilmore in Cremaster 2
Duane Michals, Self-Portrait as Someone Else I and II, 1968
Alfred Hitchcock poses as a woman for a magazine article, c. 1964
Douglas Gordon, Self-portrait as Kurt Cobain, as Andy Warhol, as Myra Hindley, as Marilyn Monroe, 1996
Bruce Conner as Dennis Hopper and Dennis Hopper as Bruce Conner, From The Dennis Hopper One Man Show, 1973
Janine Antoni, Mom and Dad, 1993-94
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