The Brooklyn Rail

Critical Perspectives on Art, Politics and Culture

MAY 2010

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ArtSeen

LUC TUYMANS

by Greg Lindquist

ArtSeen

Luc Tuymans (b. 1958) is best known for his captivatingly blurry, washed-out, and bleached representational paintings with latent yet powerfully evocative conceptual agendas. His traveling retrospective, which I saw at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, its second destination, is an ambitious exhibition that asks crucial questions across the development of Tuymans’s oeuvre: Where do formal and conceptual shifts occur in his career and how does one affect the other?

FRANCIE SHAW Weights and Measures

by Craig Olson

ArtSeen

With Weights and Measures, Francie Shaw continues her evolution into a remarkably poignant interpreter of images. This collection of 36 drawings uses black ink and brush on white paper as the only tools for her malleable, sparse drawings.

TRIS VONNA-MICHELL Not a Solitary Sign or Inscription to Even Suggest an Ending

by Natalie Haddad

ArtSeen

Since his graduation from the Glasgow School of Art in 2005, Tris Vonna-Michell has traveled to the United States, Germany, France, Japan, and various other locations to seek out histories based on personal, and often autobiographical, inquiries.

DUNCAN CAMPBELL Make It New John

by Sophie Landres

ArtSeen

Stainless steel body panels, aluminum V6 engine, leather interior, and gull-wing doors that lift like an eagle taking flight, the ill-fated DeLorean DMC-12 achieves a mythological presence in Make it new John, Duncan Campbell’s recent film and corresponding installation at Artists Space.

REFLECTIONS ON THE WARRIOR ARTIST

by Robert C. Morgan

ArtSeen

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797 –1861) is a major printmaker who worked during the late Edo period in early 19th century Japan. He is associated with the movement known as Ukiyo-e or “floating world,” which produced woodcut prints for the common class.

AND ONE MORE THING: DAVID HAMMONS, MELVIN WAY, WALTER SIPSER, ANDREW CASTRUCCI

by Geoffrey Cruickshank-Hagenbuckle

ArtSeen

Looking like some mongrel mix of Lettrisme recalling Raymond Lull, more formal than abnormal, Walter Sipser’s pen and soft lead opaque icons pose convincingly as prints but are instead hand drawn. Before apprenticing himself to encryption, did he plan to lay siege to the city of Richmond?

DAWN CLEMENTS

by Thomas Micchelli

ArtSeen

Dawn Clements burrows into her drawings with an alarming relentlessness. The indelibility of her ink strokes, scraping out every detail she can catch, mirrors the fatalism of her conceptual path: once she starts, there is no turning back.

BROOKLYN DISPATCHES: Dog Years

by James Kalm

ArtSeen

One of the attractions of art is its ability to present truth, and speak it to the face of power. Likewise, the pill who points out that the emperor has no clothes wins kudos from classmates, but now that we’re out of school, cultural institutions and the art market are our classrooms.

TATIANA TROUVÉ

by Kara L. Rooney

ArtSeen

Entering Trouvé’s modular, multi-room installation is like delving into four dimensions simultaneously: Superman’s arctically isolating Fortress of Solitude; the acid-gothic sculptural machinations of Banks Violette; Albrecht Dürer’s perspectivally tweaked reality; and the post-WWII asylum—all dashed with narrative overlays of Jorge Luis Borges and Jungian psychoanalysis.

TEN YEARS HUNTING [PART I]

by Charles Schultz

ArtSeen

It’s not for nothing that psychologists refer to the first four or five years of childhood as the formative years. In tandem with the development of motor skills and the ability to use language, a child cultivates a sense of self—the nascent stage of forming a personal identity. The same might be said for an art gallery.

LIL PICARD AND COUNTERCULTURE NEW YORK

by Valery Oisteanu

ArtSeen

Lil Picard was an unusual hybrid of the European and American avant-garde, combining the urban sophistication of a Berlin intellectual of the 1920s and 30s with the American bohemianism of the 1950s and the rising feminist art of the 60s.

SI YEON KIM Barricade

by Patricia Milder

ArtSeen

Seoul-based artist Si Yeon Kim places everyday objects into symbolic arrangements so that they become personally poignant melodramas with heavy cultural connotations.

JOAN JONAS Mirage

by Cora Fisher

ArtSeen

When Jonas performs on video, her force of consciousness bubbles to the surface of the medium. Against the will of the censor, she pries open its logic with her own concatenations.

SHARING THE LIGHT: ALAN UGLOW’S GENEROUS ECONOMY OF BEAUTY

by Joan Waltemath

ArtSeen

Two museum exhibitions in Germany give an in-depth look at the work of a New York painter, Alan Uglow.

 

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