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Entries tagged with 'Art'

Word of Mouth

Art and Commerce Come Together Once Again at San Francisco's MiniMarket

By Tania Ketenjian

There are more photos in this gallery. View them all.

When first entering the light filled Silverman Gallery in the heart of downtown San Francisco, a familiar sense takes over. As has become increasingly more common in the art world, art and commerce have come together in the gallery as curator/owner Jessica Silverman, with partner Carolina Amaris, present MiniMarket. Renegade art and design brand CITIZEN:Citizen set the creative structure for MiniMarket which brings together a highly selective group of designers and artists’ work from all over the world -- Berlin, NY, LA and San Francisco -- to be sold as goods.

Over the course of the month of August, pieces ranging from prints to lace earrings to sun glasses to gold vibrators will be sold, with prices ranging from $1 for a button with a sparrow on it to a $3,500 doorstop.

What is unique about this particular art and commerce marriage is that MiniMarket seems more of a mash-up of a pop-up store, art gallery, boutique and performance. At the opening night party, Tanya Wischerath was painting masterpieces on fingernails in one corner while Keiko Takano was presenting extraordinary culinary treats in another. It made for quite a rare San Francisco event. While standing in line to get a flavor of the tasting menu, Keiko explained each and every ingredient the way an artist might explain process. The art wasn’t simply relegated to the permanently tangible but the luxuriously intangible. Over the next month, there will be film screenings, design your own nail art and a discussion about the art of punk.

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Word of Mouth

Must-See Summer Art Spectaculars

By Carol Lee

summer art

New York definitely slows down during the summer but there's still plenty to do and that's especially true of the art scene this season. There are many outstanding group shows -- from closet-size to institutionally large -- worth trekking in the heat for, as well as once-in-a-lifetime public art installations. Here's a short list of must-see summer spectaculars. (Clockwise from top left: "It's Not Your Fault: Art from Iceland," Chirs Burden, My Barbarian, "Who's Afraid of Jasper Johns?" and "What Comes Naturally")

[Performance] My Barbarian: Post-Paradis, Sorry Again
Thurs, July 3 & Fri, July 4, 7:30 p.m. $10.
The New Musuem, 235 Bowery
www.newmuseum.org

[Group Show] "Who's Afraid of Jasper Johns?"
Conceived by Urs Fischer & Gavin Brown
Tony Shafrazi Gallery, 544 W. 26th St., Through July 12.
www.tonyshafrazigallery.com

[Group Show] "What Comes Naturally"
A show about contemporary flowers curated by Glynnis McDaris
Fake Estate, 526 W. 26th St. #502, Through July 12.
www.fakeestate.us

[Group Show] "It's Not Your Fault: Art from Iceland"
Curated by Markús Thór Andrésson
Luhring Augustine, 531 W. 24th St., Through August 8.
www.luhringaugustine.com

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Word of Mouth

This Week in Art Openings: Three Group Shows

By Mary Logan Barmeyer

There are more photos in this gallery. View them all.

“there is no there there”
there is no there there is hard to nail down. These six multi-media artists focus on intangibility, doing so by contrasting presence and invisibility, conceptual and physical space, mostly by using abstraction and ambiguity. Lauren Luloff deconstructed banners, quilts, crests and flags and reconstructed them in bright paintings that re-tell their folk narratives in a new perspective. The poster piece for the exhibition was created by Jeremy Everett, whose work expresses the dichotomies of human experience: sex and death, beauty and decay, and chance and determination. He does this by making crystallized sculptures of laundry detergent and porno mags, which we think is a pretty intangible idea.

Rivington Arms, 4 E. 2nd St., first floor, (646) 654-3213. Opening reception July 3, 7–9 p.m. Through August 1.

“Will Happiness Find Me?”
This is a colorful exhibition by four young artists, Daphne Arthur, Mary Reid Kelley, Jason Ledet and Juliana Romano. Paintings on canvas, some using multimedia materials, make up the bulk of the exhibition, but you’ll also see a comical video by Mary Reid Kelley. In this piece, the artist recites a poem about a young World War I aviator lamenting rejection by a ballerina named Camel Toe. Somehow, by the end of the video, happiness has found both the aviator and Camel Toe in the form of machines that replace each other.

Marvelli Gallery, 526 W. 26th St., second floor, (212) 627-3363. Opening reception July 3, 6–8 p.m. Through August 8.

"Corpus Kinetics"
This group video exhibition is all about the human bod. Laura Calhoun, Robert O'Connor and Bryan Zanisnik have each developed a narrative that expresses various physical functions and meanings. Calhoun, using the body as a place of religious practice, documents a Brazilian ceremony of choreography and tug-of-war with a rope. O'Connor puts his body in a Christmas decoration and performs various movements, indicating the body as the site where nature and culture conflict. And Zanisnik puts himself in submissive roles to show, among other things, the relationship of fetishization to banality.

Cuchifritos, 120 Essex St. (inside the Essex Street Food Market), (212) 420-9202. Opening reception, July 5, 4–6 p.m. Through July 26.

Fashion Schmashion

Amazing Hair Creatures

By Kim Hastreiter

nagi noda nagi nodanagi noda

My friend Aimee just sent me photos of amazing creations made by an artist friend of hers named Nagi Noda (check out her website) in Tokyo recently and they are awesome. Check them out.

L.A. Woman

Buy a Fake Basquiat, Support Real Art at LACE - Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions

By Ann Magnuson

Fake basquiat

Or nab a genuine Andrea Zittel smock! Or a real Vito Acconci lithograph! Or an original John Baldessari! Or an honest-to-God Paul McCarthy! Or a tried-and-true Sister Corita, Sherry Levine, George Stoll, or Jim Isserman! Or any one of over 100 original artworks by a galaxy of art stars from yesterday, today and tomorrow! Your big chance is tonight -- this Thursday, May 22 -- when all this art is up for auction at Re:PRESENT, LACE's 30th anniversary benefit/art auction that yours truly has been asked to emcee and perform at! (Details here.)

So pick up a pair of trashy, patent-leather, thigh-high platform boots on Hollywood Boulevard (where LACE currently resides) and climb aboard the Way Back Machine with my new character, The Time Traveling Hooker, as she takes you backwards, forwards and sideways through a brief history of time and LACE! (Find out why young girls were comin' to the canyon and gettin' the hell out of NYC long before it went to the Sex and the City clones!) Musical accompaniment will be provided by Kristian Hoffman, harpist Alexander Rannie and special appearance by Phranc! (With a performance earlier in the gallery by the ever adorable Will Power!)

Doors open to the public at 7 p.m. Will Power goes on at 7:30 and our show starts at 8 PM followed by a live auction!

Fieldsreadyforweb.jpgrusselreadyforweb.jpg

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Word of Mouth

This Week in Art Openings: Women, Women and More Women!

By Mary Logan Barmeyer

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Just in time for the closing of WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution at P.S.1, comes another round of women-related art exhibits.

Laurie Simmons, “In and Around the House”

Simmons produced this seminal body of work from 1976 to 1978, at the height of an era when female artists were starting a new dialogue in contemporary art. Associated with both the strategy of cultural memory used by the Pictures Generation -- Cindy Sherman, Richard Prince, Louise Lawler -- and the surrealism of Man Ray, Rodchenko, Bellmer and Gordon Matta Clark, she puts on a show of black-and-white photographic vignettes of perfectly domestic dolls in a dollhouse. Ironic and seemingly serene and safe, these Stepford Wives-esque scenes may still strike a chord, as they did with many when they were shot.

Carolina Nitsch Project Room, 534 W. 22nd St., (212) 645-2030. Opening reception May 16, 5-7 p.m. Through June 28.

Lisa Dahl, Susan Hamburger, Margaret Murphy, "Dwell"

Another seductively-sweet-but-actually-not-made-of-sugar exhibition comes from three women with a knack for lavish interiors and armed with a sharp-witted view of society's dirty truths -- namely, exorbitant consumerism and an obsession with status and faulty politics. Traditional-style paintings touching on current events and pop culture focus on the home as a scene that reflects these unfortunate truths, gleaming and perfectly polished as if a domestic diva just swept through. Images of homes that ordinarily might make you covetous -- a lovely, probably overdone garden, say -- here might make you reconsider your envy ("Who would pay so much for landscaping? They must be trying to show up their neighbor," you'll say.).

Cheryl McGinnis Gallery, 1287 Madison Ave., (212) 722-1144. Opening reception May 16, 6-8 p.m. Through June 21.

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Word of Mouth

Artist Q&A With Troy Brauntuch

By Mary Logan Barmeyer

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Troy Brauntuch’s conté-crayon-on-cotton pieces put a little lingering eeriness into otherwise mundane objects and places -- a stack of shirts, a dry cleaner’s -- that are sourced from a combination of his personal life and the public world. We caught up with him to hear about his technique, his early career at Artists Space with Cindy Sherman and Robert Longo, and the story behind the images. A solo exhibit of his work is on view at Friedrich Petzel Gallery through May. 17

Mary Logan Barmeyer: Often we hear your work referred to as an "investigation of public and private imagery" -- what does that mean?
Troy Brauntuch: Public imagery would be those pictures that are seen and available to everyone like magazines, newspapers and books. Private would be working from photographs taken by me. I collect images from the world, and of course a picture from a magazine can take on a very private narrative/meaning to me.

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L.A. Woman

Dan Attoe at Peres Projects BERLIN

By Ann Magnuson

30.jpg

One of my favorite young artists, Dan Attoe, has two shows opening this month. First up is the American painter's second Berlin solo show at Peres Projects BERLIN which opened over the weekend. The exhibition, called "Simple Thoughts and Complicated Animals," features new works in painting and mixed media sculpture and runs from May 2 until June 21.

Attoe's second show this month, "American Dreams" opens at Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León, MUSAC in Leon, Spain and will be on view from May 17 – July 6, 2008.

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L.A. Woman

Tseng Kwong Chi Opening at Paul Kasmin in NYC Tonight!

By Ann Magnuson

tseng kwong chi

If I were in NYC I'd be at Paul Kasmin Gallery tonight when the resurrection of the late, great photographer Tseng Kwong Chi begins! (If you have PAPER's March issue laying around read my L.A. Woman column for the inside scoop!) Kwong was a dear friend of mine during the glory days of Downtown NYC and we shared a lot of laughs (and tears) from 1979 until his untimely death from AIDS in 1990. According to the gallery's press release, the show will be "a comprehensive survey of Tseng’s pioneering series of self-portraits featuring 100 large-scale, black-and-white photographs, some of which will be on view for the first time."

Kwong Chi had a magnificent eye and an equally magnificent sense of humor. Dressed in a vintage Communist Mao suit he would insinuate himself into iconic American (and worldwide) landscapes creating arresting tableaux that are simultaneously ironic and beautiful. Check 'em out! (And try to make the opening which I'm told will be a scene reminiscent of the good ole daze. I'm so bummed I can't be there! But I'll just commune with Kwong's delightful spirit here on the left coast, somewhere under the Hollywood sign!) FYI to those of you across the pond: the show will also be in London from April 15-May 31 at Ben Brown Fine Arts!

More about the show (which runs until May 3) from the Paul Kasmin Gallery:

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Word of Mouth

Act up. Sign up for Agathe Snow's "Stamina: Gloria et Patria," a Week Long Dance-a-Thon at the Armory

By Carol Lee

Stamina: Gloria et Patria

Performance, performance, performance! That's what the Whitney Biennial 2008 is all about with the Park Avenue Armory and Art Production Fund joining forces and getting in on the action. Though there will be a parade of special events at the Biennial off-site the Armory, one can't-be-missed orgy of decadence and resilience is Agathe Snow's mad-as-a-hatter "Stamina: Gloria et Patria," a week long dance-a-thon starting this Sunday, March 9th through March 16th. It's free and open to the public, and goes on everyday from 11 a.m. till 11 p.m., except on the last day when it'll be a 24-hour bender! So start your special ballroom diet, dust off those dancing shoes and get ready to get seriously physical. Over 50 DJs in rotation have been lined up to bust out their best jams for this historical gathering. This is going to be completely B-A-N-A-N-A-S! So in the words of the mistress of ceremony Agathe Snow: Dance! Dance for a Change! Dance for a Cause! Dance to Win!

In order to participate you need to pick up your free dance card at the Whitney Museum's Visitor's Service Desk or the Park Avenue Armory's Information Desk. You can also sign up and see the footage from the Stamina 2005 at www.stamina2008.com.

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Word of Mouth

Whitney Biennial's Opening Night Party Is a Boozy, Arty Fest

By Carol Lee

whitney biennial 2008 opening

Yes, it's here -- to be celebrated and to be scrutinized -- the Whitney Biennial 2008. Tuesday night I went to the preview party, which is a great occasion to congratulate, to see, to be seen, to drink and to complain a bit. But no matter what one thinks of the show, the energy is so infectiously effervescent that it's hard to be a sourpuss on this night. I give props to anyone who manages to soak in the art because most people (this one included) are too busy boozing it up and chatting up whomever's around. Here are some snaps from the affair by our "Artist Residency" photographer Aubrey Mayer and myself. So the art season in New York has officially kicked off. Now if only spring would hurry up and get here already!

Picture above: Installation by Phoebe Washburn

2008 whitney biennial opening2008 whitney biennial opening
Rirkrit Tiravanija & Hanna Liden

MORE PHOTOS AFTER THE JUMP >

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Word of Mouth

Artist Residency (Whitney Biennial 2008 Edition): Olaf Breuning

By Aubrey Mayer

olaf bruening

In his regular feature, "Artist Residency," Aubrey Mayer takes a photo of one of his favorite artists and ask him/her a series of simple questions. Here is Swiss-born multi-media artist Olaf Breuning who is part of the Whitney Biennial 2008.

Aubrey Mayer: Where are you from?
Olaf Breuning: Switzerland

AM: Where do you live?
OB: Manhattan

AM: How did you become an artist?
OB: Tuck a canvas and a brush and made a painting… no that is only a joke.

AM: What is the oddest job you've ever had?
OB: Working in a bank

AM: Who's your favorite non-living artist?
OB: Berthold Brecht

AM: What book are you reading at the moment?
OB: Cool It! by Bjorn Lomborg

AM: When are you happiest with your work?
OB: When I cant’t stop working.

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Word of Mouth

The Whitney Biennial's Off-Site Armory Show Is a Roomy Survey of This and That

By Carol Lee

whitney biennial 2008

Just checked out the Armory (where Aaron Young had his motorcycle collaboration with Tom Ford back in September 2007) installment of the Whitney Biennial 2008. The curators, Henriette Huldisch and Shamim M. Momin, took a leap of faith a few blocks down on Park Ave. and 67th St. and gave the Biennial a lot more room to breathe. Though that may have been the intention, my overwhelming first impression after a quick glance was that the art strewn about in this powerhouse landmark is hard up to compete with the majestic building itself, which really exerts its personality in a rumbling and brooding way like John Huston in Chinatown.

In a show where the venue is a co-star, there are some great works of art too. Carlo McCormick and I agreed that DJ Olive (Gregor Asch)'s somber, cryptic and musical installation was one of the best -- it's the Urs Fischer piece of this Biennial. The key is to really take your time and savor each room (every artist/collective gets a room) for what it is -- don't try to look for the glue that binds everything together, it's not that kind of show. I have not seen the main event yet -- I'm saving it for tonight! So this is by no means the last word on the Biennial but -- dare I use the C-word -- watch out for the curmudgeons, I think we're in for some controversy!

Picture above: Installation by Bozidar Brazda

MORE PHOTOS AFTER THE JUMP >

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Word of Mouth

Noble & Webster Erect "Electric Fountain"; Alan Vega and A.R.E. Weapons Rock Jeffrey Deitch

By Carol Lee

noble & webster; electric fountain

The dark-humored British artist duo Noble & Webster (Sue Noble & Tim Noble), famous for their light bulb sculptures in the shape of dollar signs and words like "Yes" (you might have caught this in Jay-Z's "Blue Magic" video) and "Forever," have erected "Electric Fountain" in Rockefeller Center last Wednesday. The "fountain" is a steely sculpture installation that sprinkles 3,390 LED bulbs worth of electricity, weighs 61,000 pounds, is 35 feet tall, and is on view through April 4. The sight of this $1 million (thank you Lexus and Jeffrey Deitch) outdoor project is as exciting, novel and gaudy as the famous Christmas tree and the fountain at the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas –- you must go see it!

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Word of Mouth

Last Chance to See Urs Fischer's Hole at Gavin Brown

By Carol Lee

urs fischer at gavin brown

Do yourself a favor -- take a break from the holiday shopping madness and stop by Gavin Brown's Enterprise tomorrow for it's the last day of Urs Fischer's "holy" show "You." The experience is sublime, disorienting and strangely calming. You'll regret not having seen it if you don't!

www.gavinbrown.biz

L.A. Woman

Phranc's Art Show at CUE in NYC (With Free Hootenanny with Phranc & Ann!)

By Ann Magnuson

cueI am so happy to report that the flu I had for one terrifying week has abated and I will be winging my way east to support PHRANC at her first New York solo art show this Thursday Dec. 6 at the CUE Foundation gallery in fabulous Chelsea! (There must be one or two of you who aren't going to Miami!) CUE asked me to be one of their two guest curators for the month of December and I could think of no better artist to invite than PHRANC! (Read all about Phranc, her art and the show in my L.A. Woman column in the December issue of PAPER!)

See the fabulous and whimsical and socially relevant 3-D art from the Cardboard Cobbler, a.k.a. The Jewish Lesbian Folk Singer, a.k.a Tupperware Lady Legend, a.k.a All Around Great Gal, a.k.a Phranc!

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Word of Mouth

Mark Mothersbaugh's L.A.

By Alexis Swerdloff

mark mothersbaugh

mark mothersbaugh's rugs

Mark Mothersbaugh is a man of many hats. He performs in the still-going-strong band that he founded in 1972, DEVO (for which he is famous for donning a red "Energy Dome" hat), he composes movie scores (he’s Wes Anderson’s go-to music man), he creates postcard art and most recently, he’s taken on rugs. An exhibit of his art-rugs, “Rugs During Wartime and Peacetime,” taking place at Scion’s Installation L.A. Gallery beginning Nov. 17, explores “the imagery we choose to bring into our homes and how we interact with it for the purposes of comfort and peace-of-mind rather than an esoteric sense of art for art’s sake.” Take a look at the designs pictured above! We asked him to guide us through his favorite L.A. spots and he kindly agreed. So without further ado, Mark?

My favorite places in L.A. have changed throughout the years, for reasons that include having adopted two children in the last two years. But, some things never change. So, minus the benefit of a night's sleep (DEVO just flew into Sao Paulo last night for a concert), here goes.

BOOKS: I still am a long time fan of Book Soup. The staff is helpful, and even if I don't have something particular in mind, there is always something there to take home.

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Fashion Schmashion

Check Out Kenny Scharf's Donuts at Paul Kasmin

By Kim Hastreiter

kenny scharf donut paul kasmin

Don't forget to stop in to the Paul Kasmin Gallery (293 Tenth Avenue) to check out my friend Kenny Scharf's new show with a donut theme. (Ya gotta love it.) I had dinner with Kenny the other night, and he was complaining about how hard he was working to get the show finished and especially how long the paintings of the donuts with sprinkles took him as opposed to the ones with simple icing. He kept moaning that it took him like five hours longer to do sprinkled donuts because he had to paint every single sprinkle and put a shadow on it. He had just finished cranking out a bunch of them for his show. Here's one of his iced donuts. Check out his show -- I really like what he's been doing.

Eye Spy

PAPER in 3D

By David Hershkovits


Isn't it nice that someone would be thinking of us like this? No lie... This video is from Metacafe.

Word of Mouth

"The Opening" at Reena Spaulings Is a Show About Nobody

By Carol Lee

reena spaulings

Art shows are back in swing now which means catching up with the folks that we were hiding from all summer (JK!). I went to a beautifully disastrous opening last weekend at Reena Spaulings. There were people smoking on the fire escape, trying to uncork a champagne bottle with teeth, and hanging out and not really looking at art... that is until some guy started splattering buckets of black paint all over the blank canvases on the wall, creating a huge mess on the floor and writing sarcastic messages like "Relax It's Only a Crap Reena Spaulings Show" in a sloppy handwriting. Then he walked out of the room and everyone went back to drinking, smoking and blabbering. Well, that "some guy" was the artist Merlin Carpenter and the show was simply and facetiously called "The Opening." I loved this rude "happening" and the general battitude that was all around -- coming from both the artist and the spectators. It was, how shall I put it... very downtown. O.K., so Reena Spaulings, IS very downtown (it's on the corner of East Broadway and Essex -- it really doesn't get much lower than that), but you know what I mean. Maybe it's just that I was coming off of a socially-challenging summer and happy to see my friends again, but being at this show that celebrated nobody in particular felt very festive.

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Fashion Schmashion

RIP Elizabeth Murray

By Kim Hastreiter

elizabeth murrayI was sad but also glad to read the op-ed piece in the New York Times today about Elizabeth Murray, the painter who passed away earlier this week from lung cancer. Elizabeth was one of my art school mentors when I was a graduate student at Cal Arts in the '70s and I always really loved her. Although I was not a traditional painter, she was such a wonderful and generous teacher supporting all my crazy multimedia and conceptual art projects I attempted in those days with gusto. I used to bump into Elizabeth every once in a while in the Village and we'd have a quick chat, but our lives never really crossed again after school. But every time I would read about her success or her shows or her retrospectives, I'd smile because she was a lovely, lovely and beautiful person and deserved it all. Ask anyone who knew or had the chance to meet her. Whether the op-ed writer or one of her student interns. RIP Elizabeth.

Word of Mouth

Devastating News About Artist Couple Theresa Duncan & Jeremy Blake

By Carol Lee

theresa duncan & jeremy blake

The tragic and disturbing news (The New York Times article) of the art star couple Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan has caught us all off-guard. The 40-year-old Duncan who committed suicide on July 10 was a digital artist who created the award winning CD-Rom Chop Suey and a blogger of The Wit of the Staircase. Her boyfriend and digital/video artist Jeremy Blake was last seen at the Rockaway Beach on July 17 supposedly walking into the ocean leaving his clothes, wallet and a suicide note behind. The mysterious disappearance of Blake and the many speculations on the reasons of their demise have unnerved the art and media communities. The latest L.A. Times report reveled on a theory that the couple had been in a Scientology-related state of paranoia before their last days. They even contacted Beck who is a well-known scientologist and whose Sea Change album cover Blake designed. PAPER has followed and written about the works of Blake and Duncan in 2003 and 1999 respectively. We’re deeply saddened by the loss of our friends and two of very talented and vital members of the art world.

Photo of Theresa Duncan by Joshua Jordan
Photo of Jeremy Blake by Donald Graham

Fashion Schmashion

Art and Fashion Collabs Are Everywhere

By Kim Hastreiter

tom ford marilyn minter campaigncindy sherman for french vogue

Art is certainly ruling the fashion world these days. Marilyn Minter's new Tom Ford ad campaign is gorgeous (see photo at left) and Cindy Sherman's piece for Carine Roitfeld's French Vogue is outrageous (see photo at right). Levis is collaborating with Damien Hirst for a fall show. Where will it stop? I think Versace should collab with Kehinde Wiley -- wouldn't that be amazing? And oh yeah, Jeff Koons with Marc Jacobs. Just imagine how great that would be... (thanks by the way to WWD for the photos of Cindy Sherman)

Word of Mouth

Party Train: Summer Is Awesome!

By Carol Lee

summer party

I LOVE summertime in New York City -- so much fun stuff to do! I've been a total spaz running around from this to that. My brain is too fried from the heat, so without much ado, here's a visual recap of all the fiestas I've been hitting up.

Picture Above: Opening at Joseph Latimore's gallery Sensei on E. 1st St.

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L.A. Woman

Happy 100th Birthday to Charles Eames!

By Ann Magnuson

This year marks the centennial of modernist designer Charles Eames' birth. Together with his wife Ray, the Eames' created some of the most enduring modernist architecture and furniture in the world. This story in Thursday's LA Times celebrates their unique vision, which you can see on display in their own films (Powers of Ten is one of my all-time faves), including the above video.

House is a whimsical document the couple made after five years of living in what is now viewed as one of the most important architectural works of art in southern California (and the world!). Ironically, the Eames' (who celebrated the beauty and artistic merit of everyday objects) were anti-elitist and it's a shame their creations have been fetishized and turned into expensive object d'art for the super-rich and the Design Nazis currently taking over Beverly Boulevard. But how fitting that Charles and Ray Eames have become the legends they deserve to be!

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L.A. Woman

L.A. Man: Randy Focazio (and His Art!)

By Ann Magnuson

randy focazioRandy Focazio is known around these parts as our #1 Commentator! Randy is a man of many opinions and insights. Well, did you know he is also a visual artist? It's true and he's got a big art opening this Wednesday at The Burgendy Room that everyone MUST go to! (in Hollywood at 1621 1/2 Cahuenga; 8 p.m. til 2 a.m. The show will be up for a month, FYI!) Randy's surreally expressionistic and deliciously disturbing paintings will satisfy anyone with a Kafka-esque itch that needs to be scratched (preferably with razor-sharp fingernails painted black!). I particularly like his absinthe-drenched numbers (green being my fave color) like the spooky painting above. See more of Randy's art here on his MySpace page! Or just see ya at The Burgundy Room Wednesday night!

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Word of Mouth

"I Like to Watch" Opening Night at the Canal Chapter

By Carol Lee

This past Saturday was the opening night for "I Like to Watch," a group show that I co-curated with Carlo McCormick at the Canal Chapter. It was hot as hell but we all had a great time laughing and sweating. Here are some pictures... actually lots of pictures by Caroline Torem Craig, who is also one of the artists in the show.

i like to watch

i like to watch

MORE PHOTOS AFTER THE JUMP.

ALSO, CLICK HERE FOR THE SCARY HAIRY HUNCH PHOTOS!

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Fashion Schmashion

Damian Hirst's 100 Million Dollar Bling

By Kim Hastreiter

damian hirst"For the Love of God", Damian Hirst's latest piece of brilliant and outrageous art, was unveiled at his latest show called "Beyond Belief," at Jay Jopling's new gallery, White Cube 3, in London's West End. The piece, which was seen in magazines and newspapers around the world this weekend is, according to the artist, the "most expensive piece of art ever made" (the price tag is 99 million dollars). It was even given a full page photo in the New York Times Magazine's Style section. Is this fashion? is this jewelry? Is this bling? WHO WILL BUY THIS? WHAT an amazing and loaded object to put out there in the world. He financed the work and he will make the dough on it when it sells. "For the Love of God" (called this because this is what Hirst's mum supposedly said when she heard about it for the first time) is a human skull, cast in platinum and encrusted in 8,500 diamonds, including a 50 karat pear-shaped gem plopped on the forehead of the skull.

I must admit, although many of my friends hate Hirst (especially his dead aniimal stuff), I think this is one of the most brilliant pieces of art I've seen in a while. Yes it's hype, but yes, it's also so so smart and says so much about art, the artworld, money, greed and our sick society. I just can't stop thinking about this amazing piece of art. I mean LOOK AT IT! It's completely blown my mind.

Word of Mouth

Portfolio: 15 Photographs by Mark Likosky

By Carol Lee

Mark Likosky has been traveling the world with a more personal style of reportage photography. These photographs were taken within the last few months on a half-frame camera while Likosky passed through several U.S. states including Virginia, South Carolina, Michigan and Massachusetts. An archive of his work is currently being compiled into a series of books. www.marklikosky.com.

Mark Likosky

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE ENTIRE PORTFOLIO >>


Word of Mouth

Summer of (Art) Love

By PAPERMAG Editors

suitcase

Here's a report from our special correspondent Gary Pini...

Art freaks from around the world will be heading to Europe this summer to celebrate the rare confluence of four major events: the Venice Biennale, documenta 12, Art Basel 38 and skulptur projekte munster 07. The 52nd edition of the Biennale has the theme "Think with the Senses - Feel with the Mind. Art in the Present Tense" and was curated by Robert Storr -- the first time by an American. Storr was formerly in the department of painting and sculpture at MoMA. Seventy-seven countries will participate and it will feature a show dedicated to African contemporary art. Documenta, which is only held every five years, takes place in Kassel, Germany. This year's version is under the artistic direction of Rodger M. Buergel and is curated by Ruth Noack. You can find more info about all four shows including dates, hours and prices at their jointly sponsored website www.grandtour2007.com.

Word of Mouth

About Last Night... Strippers, Max Fish, RTX, China Chalet & Closing Party at Participant

By Carol Lee

simon & sophie

This is more like "About Many Nights Last Week..." PAPER's incorrigible Carlo McCormick and I had a raunchy date last Tuesday at Headquarters strip club where they were having a book signing party for Filthy, Funny and Totally Offensive. A few cocktails, an egg roll, a lap dance and an awkward encounter with a co-worker later, we headed down to -- you guessed it -- Max Fish where I ran into more people including my friends Simon and Sophie. They were both wearing fun sunglasses (pictured above). Then I cruised on over to see Jennifer Herrema's band RTX at Club Midway where I ran into an old friend Jess Holzworth who's been holed up on Sonoran Desert out in Arizona for the past few years. She's been on the road with Jennifer who's on tour to promote the new album Western Xterminator. I missed The Jewish who opened for RTX.

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Word of Mouth

Portfolio: 12 Photographs by James Ryang

By Carol Lee

James Ryang is a photographer based in New York City who has spent the past year traveling to Tokyo for personal visits and assignments. These images are selections from a book that he's working on about his time there. He currently works on fashion, advertising, and editorial assignments and is a contributor to BlackBook, i-D and The New York Times. www.jamesryang.com.

james ryang

james ryang

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Word of Mouth

Wear & Tear: Getting Ready with Glynnis McDaris & Nicole Lombardi

By Carol Lee

Welcome to the first episode of Wear & Tear, a new show on PAPER TV hosted by me!! Each show will feature girls getting ready for a night on the town... before a party, an art opening, a dinner, a benefit, a gala, what-have-ya's. On any given New York night, there's always something fun to do, which is why we love this town so much! The legendary Diana Vreeland once said, "There is no such thing as unconscious dressing." I'll have to agree with her wholeheartedly! Even if your modus operandi is "casual" or "sporty," there's a reason why you put on those drawstrings and the windbreaker.

I recently checked in on my friends, photographer Glynnis McDaris and musician Nicole Lombardi, to see what kind of fashion mood they were in for the opening night of Glynnis's show "Rising and Falling Forever" at Fake Estate Gallery. Unfortunately the show is over already -- but it was really great! You can take a peek at her beautiful photos right here and on her web site!

Word of Mouth

Art Attack: "Dig Cunt" & Creative Time's B-Day Party at the Bowery Hotel

By Carol Lee

gelitin

This weekend, I headed out to Coney Island to check out Gelitin's "Dig Cunt" project. The unpredictable Austrian collective decided to dig three six-foot-plus holes on the beach everyday (then cover them at the end of the day) for a week as part of Creative Time's 33rd Anniversary bonanza. The whole concept seems Zen in a very western sort of way. It was such a fun time to be out on Coney with gorgeous weather and a mellow crowd, that is until I almost lost an arm on the bumper car.

Creative Time has really been celebrating its birthday in style. Last Thursday, they threw a big benefit auction/dinner at the chic Bowery Hotel. One of the honorees was Amanda Burden who looked smashing in a strapless red number. Co-host of the night David Byrne (the other was Debbie Harry), clad in a flamingo pink suit, worked the lottery cage and greeted the guests in his sweet but shy way. Artists whose work raised the most money were Vik Muniz ($62,000, live auction) and Matthew Barney ($15,000, silent auction). My favorite encounter of the night was the Vietnam Veterans Memorial architect Maya Lin. She is so ageless! Well, congratulations to you, Creative Time and here's to another 33 years!

MORE PHOTOS AFTER THE JUMP >

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Fashion Schmashion

Frisco Day Two: Part I

By Kim Hastreiter

luggage storesigns Mollusk

Yesterday was fun. Started out meeting my friend, artist Tauba Auerbach, for lunch at the Slanted Door in the Ferry Building. (amazing.) Tauba brought with her the amazing Laurie Lazer of Luggage Store Gallery fame. I have wanted to meet Laurie for years now and can't believe I've not met her till now. She's awesome. She and her partner Daryl have been running their awesome gallery for 20 years now out of a store front in a still-ungentrified, slightly shabby Market Street area (see the painted door above) and has launched careers of so many artists that have gone on to fame. Laurie and Daryl actually created a legendary show years ago that was the precurser to the "Beautiful Losers" show and helped define the super special moment in the Northern Cali school of art by showing kids like Barry McGee, Margaret Kilgallen and Chris Johanson. Tauba A was an intern there when she was a Stanford student and of course LS gave her her first show. I LOVED this woman Laurie.

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Word of Mouth

Portfolio: 15 Photographs by Kazumi Asamura

By Carol Lee

Photographer Kazumi Asamura was born in Tokyo, Japan and has lived and worked New York City for the past seven years. Her work has appeared in Tokion, Tokion Japan, Dazed and Confused Japan and Studio Voice, among other publications. She also contributes to several Japanese magazines as a writer, introducing the New York underground scene to Japanese audiences. Her Polaroid project series, "Newyorkster," in which she documented over 100 downtown New York artists, was featured in PAPERMAG's "MANHATTAN" exhibit in 2005. www.nyster.com.

kazumi asamura

rivington arms

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Fashion Schmashion

HELLO SAN FRANCISCO

By Kim Hastreiter

william scottwilliam tyler

I hopped to San Francisco for a few days (where I am now) to see my great friends Ben and Chris Ospital and to attend a benefit for some of my favorite artists in the world. The program is called Creative Growth, and I've been working with these guys on their advisory board for over 15 years. CG is an arts program for mentally handicapped adults and is located in Oakland. Ben and Chris, who own the coolest clothing store in San Fran called MAC (Modern Appealing Clothing), turned me onto Creative Growth decades ago. Since the first day I stepped into the industrial building in Oakland in the early '90s and met the artists and saw the amazing work they do, I was hooked. I have been collecting art and rugs since that day and have amassed quite a collection. The two artists I am especially taken with are William Tyler and William Scott -- see their work above.

So here I am. Ben and Chris know *everyone* in this town. They've had their store for over 25 years and are just culture vultures. I'm so lucky to know them because whenever I come to town they roll out the red carpet, and literally every hour of my time is spent doing something fabulous and new. They drag me around to meet amazing people -- from artists to chefs (that's a big thing here) to museum directors to gallerists to designers...

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