Monday, November 29, 2010

live art & real time (frank smigiel)

using my blog to help me put together my aesthetics essay for Frank

Smigiel (SFMoMA curator, and SFAI professor)
excuse the mess :)



*place.
breaking down borders between fine art and the everyday.

Watch the full episode. See more ART:21.


David Ireland:
5oo Cat Street (Mission District).
"a way to heighten awareness around us"



Yayoi Kusama:

Yayoi Kusama - Kusama's Self Obliteration (1967) Part 1


Yayoi Kusama - Kusama's Self Obliteration (1967) Part 2




Yayoi Kusama - Kusama's Self Obliteration (1967) Part 3





Yayoi Kusama's 'Repetitive Vision,' c. 1996, Pittsburgh field seminar





Yayoi Kusama, Infinity Mirror Room (Phalli’s Field), 1965, sewn stuffed fabric, mirrors, 360×360 x 324 cm. Installation, Floor Show, Castellane Gallery, New York.


Yayoi Kusama, Self-Obliteration by Dots (detail), 1968, performance, documented with black-and-white photographs by Hal Reif.


Yayoi Kusama - Ascension of Polkadots on the Trees

Ascension of Polkadots on Trees, Singapore Biennale 2006. Taken by Terence Ong in September 2006.


Yayoi Kusama, "Infinity Mirror Room—Phalli's Field (Floor Show)" (1965-98). Sewn

stuffed fabric, board, mirror room without ceiling, 8 x 15 x 15 ft.


Yayoi Kusama, Mirror Room (Pumpkin), 1991,
Mirrors, wood, papier mâché, paint,
200 x 200 x 200 cm.
Collection, Hara Museum, Tokyo.

"This installation was made with mirrors to create a dizzying effect where Kusama’s dots appear to go on and on into infinity. The room is orange, like a pumpkin, which Kusama later left as a public artwork for a museum in Japan." -http://www.truetotheblue.com

ACCUMULATION #1, 1963
object, 150 x 110 x 110 cm



Dieter Roth:

Richard Serra:

Richard Serra at MoMA - Torqued Ellipse IV (1998)


speaking on the sculpture and it's environment: http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online/show-full/piece/?search=Richard%20Serra&page=2&f=People&cr=12

*time.
birth and death of aesthetic.

William Kentridge (birth and death):
birth and death (chaos and order) Return.
revolving objects that become an image at certain point of the revolution for a split second while smoothing moving through revolutions.




Dieter Roth (immortality):
aesthetic passed down to three generations.

with Björn Roth. Gartenskulptur (garden sculpture) 1968-1996


David Ireland (duration?):
500 Cat Street. (duration? quotes on?)

Francis Alÿs (captured time as the only aesthetic with nothing else left):


Francis Alÿs - Algunas veces el hacer algo no lleva a nada

Richard Serra:
colorizes for 8-10 years (some may claim painterly quality in these years) but Serra knows that after this time period the color will turn flat dark amber and will remain so for the rest of its lifetime.

Richard Serra Talks with Charlie Rose


Richard Serra The Matter of Time Guggenheim Bilbao Spain

The Matter of Time, 2005. Installation of seven sculptures, weatherproof steel, Varying dimensions. Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa GBM1996-2005

from ( http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online/show-full/piece/?search=Richard%20Serra&page=2&f=People&cr=12 ) "
There is also the progression of time. There is the chronological time it takes to walk through and view The Matter of Time, between the beginning and end of the visit. And there is the experiential time, the fragments of visual and physical memory that linger and recombine and replay."

*identity.
dependency, fulfillment, personalities...

Andrew Andrew:
past 10(?) years dressing exactly the same.





DJs Andrew Andrew Meet Gilbert & George
Brooklyn Museum


Andrew Andrew's Joy
from their youtube channel: AndrewAndrew TubeTube


MoMA Party in The Garden ~ Steppin' & Repeatin' #1


The 2010 Whitney Art Party ~ Steppin' & Repeatin'

(ex. of them correcting each other as to what the appropriate way to appear)
Waves of Mu ~ Andrew Andrew Dinner Theatre

ANDREW ANDREW PLUS PLUS (By Tristan)

_________________________


J. Morgan Puett

CCA Graduate Lecture Series


David Schafer at Mildred's Lane 2010 "Sad Pavilion" excerpt 2

more dieter roth:











No comments:

Post a Comment