Australia @ Concertina Gallery

Since Logan Square’s Concertina Gallery is pretty fresh and steaming, I’ll introduce their newest show  by introducing the space itself: as I understand it, Concertina Gallery is the apartment gallery lovechild of directors and SAIC graduate students Katherine Pill and Francesca Wilmott, who, along with co-founder and former resident Corina Kirsch and design help from current resident Caitlin Bauler, are sharpening their curatorial teeth with a series of professional shows within their living space as well as their street-level storefront windows. Having heard that their first show was a success, I dropped by for the opening of their second, a two person exhibition featuring a film installation by Anthea Behm and photography from Aron Gent, titled Australia.

Aron Gent

Aron Gent, Australia and Mountainside

Strangely enough, the Concertina directors were able to run into two artists who were using the film Australia, an endearingly surreal but ultimately mediocre 2008 Kidman / Jackman joint from director Baz Luhrmann, who you might remember from his other endearingly surreal but ultimately mediocre films, Moulin Rouge and Romeo & Juliet. While both artists are working with and from the same, very specific source material, the artists worked separately, without knowledge of or intent for a double exhibition. However, the rarity and possible pointlessness of a film like Australia as a source of overlap makes it a pretty good curatorial hinge for both artists work to swing from. Neither artist is dealing directly with the content or themes of the film, only using it as an available corpus to serve their processes.

Aron Gent, California Landscape

Aron Gent, California Landscape

For Gent, the film provided a sex scene for his Jennifer project, a serial narrative dealing with pregnancy and abandonment within a west coast landscape. The image Australia captures the entire film’s sex scene through a long-exposure photograph, and is paired by a photograph of a mountainside, where rocky forms suggest concave breasts; and a large wall mounted photograph of a California landscape, with rolling mountains fading to mist. Though the work can’t expected to convey the same content as the entire Jennifer series, the essentials did come through. Themes of sex and time and place, each presented in a drawn out and extended form, effected in me that same feeling of quiet drift as produced by a Less Than Zero, a mid-career Ed Ruscha, or of a strong drink at a high altitude.

Anthea Behm

Anthea Behm

Behm’s work used Australia to examine the act of observing. In one darkened room, a small monitor rests on the floor with the film playing. A projection in another room shows a video of an unknown woman watching the same film and describing what she is seeing. That these two elements of the piece are in separate rooms makes observing both at once impossible, but in a suitably quiet setting a viewer could watch the film and hear the second viewer’s description of the film at the same time. Experienced in this way, Behm’s second viewer functioned like a disruptive feedback device, an imperfect and voiced mirror to my own internal, unvoiced observations. However as the gallery became louder, and as the reverse-moth social effect brought more people to crowd into the darkened room, the monitor became less important. Instead, the projected film became its own piece, presenting the inadequacy and pointlessness of a human being as vehicle for automatic representation, highlighting the difference between the thing itself and its description.

The irony of me describing this piece is not lost on me.

Australia

While both artists’ present different content in their work by very different means, I never felt like they constituted two separate shows. There were three questions at work here, two presented by the artists and a third, presented by the curators, on the measure and nature of overlap necessary to unite artists into a unified group show. We’ve seen plenty of group exhibitions justified by media (works on paper, collages, paintings) or geography (Chicago artists, Baltimore artists), but not so many brought together by source material alone.

I give it a:

7.8

Anthea Behm and Aron Gent‘s Australia opened October 23, 2009 and runs through November 15th, 2009 @ Concertina Gallery.

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Weekend Preview – Haughty Canadian Accents

One day late but twice as nice, here are my picks from this weekend’s openings. Today’s juicy news: Tony Wight Gallery will be moving next year to a new location, 845 West Washington Boulevard. Don’t worry, its just around the block. Speaking of moves, ebersmoore (formally Ebersb9) is closing its current show by opening its doors for the first time tonight at their new West Loop location, 6-9 PM @ 213 N Morgan #3C. The new space looks great.

Zombies @ Antena

With a fall theme and work from just about everyone in the city, Antena’s Edra Soto curated Zombies: A Mindless Affair looks like it’ll be a fun show down in Pilsen. On the project wall space is Irene Pérez – wish her goodbye and good luck, as she’ll be celebrating the exhibition this week by moving to Spain. Opening reception Friday, October 23rd, 6-10 PMAntena1765 S Lauflin, 1R.

Night Cemetary

Deborah Boardman, Night Cemetary

Fred Sanback @ Rhona Hoffman

Consider if you will the minimalist installations of Fred Sanback. Opening Friday, October 23rd, 5-7:30 PM @Rhona Hoffman Gallery118 N. Peoria.

Fred Sanback

Fred Sanback

Australia @ Concertina

The new and buzzworthy Logan Square apartment gallery Concertina holds its second opening this weekend, a strongly concept driven show featuring the exhibition specific work of film artist Anthea Behm and Co-Prosperity Sphere curator / artist Aron Gent entitled Australia. Doors open Friday October 23rd,7-10 PM @ Concertina Gallery, 2351 N. Milwaukee.

Aron Gent, Australia

Aron Gent, Australia

John Chiara and Sean McFarland @ Swimming Pool Project Space

Fresh physically static work this weekend at the Swimming Pool Project Space in Albany Park, with work from John Chiara, who is apparently too cool for negatives and directly exposes his photos instead; and the phenomenal collaged and rephotographed work of Sean McFarland. Show opens Saturday, October 24th, 6-10 PM @ Swimming Pool Project Space, 2858 W. Montrose.

John Chiara

John Chiara

the only caribou is a coffee shop

Seven Artists of the Week – A Sokolowian Plot Twist

This week’s picks from Ryan. As always, click images for links.

Trenton Doyle Hancock, from Cult of Color: Call to Color

Trenton Doyle Hancock, from Cult of Color: Call to Color

David Altmejd, The Spiderman

David Altmejd, The Spiderman

Dzine, Out of Nothing

Dzine, Out of Nothing

Glen Brown, To Wit, Wise Humor

Glen Brown, To Wit, Wise Humor

Pia Fries, BEROTEL Y6

Pia Fries, BEROTEL Y6

Chris Johanson, Totalities

Chris Johanson, Totalities

Chris Burden, Urban Light

Chris Burden, Urban Light

Closing remarks!

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Eric Lebofsky @ Western Exhibitions

Western Exhibitions opened a pair of new shows last Friday, Eric Lebofsky‘s Superfreaks and Melissa Oresky‘s A Wilderness of Edges. The two are pretty separate and operate in very different ways, so I’m going to review these two separately, starting with Superfreaks and hitting the sister show next. To prove I’m serious:

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks

A few months ago Eric Lebofsky began using the blogging service Tumblr as a host for a daily drawing / blogging project titled Superfreaks (link points to the blog). His characters, each rendered at a comfortable scale in ink and colored pencil, are heroic transformations of common satirized personalities like Introverted Extrovert Man. Here in Western Exhibitions second gallery space and separated (though barely) by frames rather than by posting dates, Lebofsky’s heroes hold themselves well, funny by way of observational comedy and clever by way of creepy absurdity.

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks: Introverted Extrovert Man

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks: Introverted Extrovert Man

Like any good joke, the work has its serious implications as well, and with Superfreaks we see work that both throws light on makes light of the natural tendency to view others entirely by way of their faults, especially neroses and personality flaws, or simply by their occupations and attached stigma. To see these characteristics manifest physically, with the nervous eyes of the Political Advisor or the retro constitution of Anachronism Man, gives the drawings a functional element which also allows the identities/personalities in those pieces without text to be questioned and understood by their deformities.

Eric Lebofsky, "Superfreaks"

Eric Lebofsky, "Superfreaks"

While there is content to take home, the volume and production method does make the work come off as an elevated kind of art made to entertain friends. Stumbling on the blog where these are posted, an unknown guest might even mistake it for a bizarre single panel web comic. Whether that all matters or not may or may not matter at all – they are entertaining drawings, choosing to revel in their conceptual content rather than critique it.

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks: Allen Ginsberg

Eric Lebofsky, Superfreaks: Allen Ginsberg

I give it a:

7.4

Eric Lebofsky‘s Superfreaks opened Friday, October 17th and will continue through Saturday, November 18th @ Western Exhibitions, 119 N. Peoria.

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Weekend Preview: this gun won’t shoot

Hey, its Thursday and there are some good shows opening this weekend and you will find a list of the best of them below!

On Paper @ Gahlberg Gallery

With works on paper from Claire Sherman, Felix Malnig, Melissa Oresky (see below), and Robyn O’Neil (also at Tony Wight and recently reviewed here), this new exhibition at College of Dupage’s Gahlberg Gallery is so good I’d post it here even if I didn’t work there. If you’re in the suburbs, stop by. On Paper opens tonight, Thursday, October 15th from 5-8 PM @ the Gahlberg Gallery, 425 Fawell Blvd, in Glen Ellyn.

Claire Sherman, Cliff III

Claire Sherman, Cliff III

Melissa Oresky / Eric Lebofsky @ Western Exhibitions

Speaking of Melissa Oresky, her second opening in as many days is at Western Exhibitions, where she’ll be showing recent work in a show titled A Wilderness of Edges, with the second space opening Eric Lebofsky‘s Superfreaks, a collection of daily work began this August 10th. I stopped by Melissa’s studio earlier this month under the pretenses of interviewing her for this website, so keep an eye out for that too. Both shows open this Friday, October 16th from 5-8 PM.

Eric Lebofsky, Sarcasm Man

Eric Lebofsky, Sarcasm Man

David Corbett @ 65GRAND

Artist David Corbett‘s new work sneaks into 65GRAND under the title Change Makes it New. Show opens this Friday, October 16th from 7-10 PM @ 65GRAND, 1378 W Grand Ave (on Noble).

David Corbett

David Corbett

C. J. Pyle @ Carl Hammer

I just stumbled on this one and won’t be able to make the opening, but the work looks too cool not to mention. C.J. Pyle’s  Kilroy’s Delight opens Friday, October 16th 5:30-8 PM @ Carl Hammer Gallery, 740 N. Wells Street.

C. J. Pyle, My Marie

C. J. Pyle, My Marie

Carroll Dunham @ He-Said-She-Said

Located just up the street from the backyard compound of The Suburban, Oak Park gallery He-Said-She-Said will be featuring artist Carroll Dunham‘s new drawing work this weekend. Here’s hoping its as funny and fucked up as the rest. Drawings opens this Saturday, October 17th from 6-8 PM @ He-Said-She-Said, 216 N. Harvey Ave in Oak Park.

Carroll Dunham

Carroll Dunham

Thats all for now. I might add to this list later tonight, since there are plenty of good shows this weekend, but those above are good enough for me.

Seven Artists of the Week – Deadlines.

Weekly picks from Ryan, click for links. Check out last week’s exhibition photos here for clips of his work and many others, including plenty of previous artists of the week.

James Siena, One, One...

James Siena, One, One...

Faris McReynolds

Faris McReynolds

Marissa Textor, Sand Grain

Marissa Textor, Sand Grain

Joseph Hart, Untitled (Head on a Spike)

Joseph Hart, Untitled (Head on a Spike)

Jim Gaylord, Am I Legend?

Jim Gaylord, Am I Legend?

Cleon Peterson, The Occupation

Cleon Peterson, The Occupation

Chris Johanson, Totalities (installation shot)

Chris Johanson, Totalities (installation shot)

Practicing kick flips on the bed.

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Weekend Preview: a Bataillean pleasure kingdom

New spaces, happenings! This week’s preview picks are rare!

Stolen @ Garage Spaces

A brand new and curious sounding space in Humboldt Park opens this Friday with Stolen, a group show curated by Mike Bancroft and featuring appropriation artwork from Bert Stabler, Maria Perkovic, Roberto Cardenas, Evan Plummer, Alex Inglizian, Bridget Bancroft, Gabriel Carrasquillo, Experimental Sound Studio artists and more (including work from Mike himself). The show’s schedule is kind of mobile, but catch it for sure this Friday, October 9th from 5 -10 PM @ Garage Spaces, 1337 N Maplewood.

Stolen @ Garage Spaces

Stolen @ Garage Spaces

Tanya Hastings Gill @ LivingRoom Gallery

Paper cut artist / SAIC professor Tanya Hastings Gill is opening a new installation at LivingRoom Gallery entitled Rise and Fall. I like paper cutting. The show opens this Friday, October 9th at 5 – 8 PM @LivingRoom Gallery, 1530 W. Superior

.

Rise and Fall

Rise and Fall

Embodiment @ Eel Space

I actually have no idea what this show is really about, however it features Lauren Gregory‘s piece Mother Web, featured below and good as hell. Embodiment also features work from Nikki Renee AndersonIsabelle SchiltzMadeleine BaileyAlex Chitty,  Chris Tourre, and  opens this Saturday, October 10th from 6-9 PM @ Eel Space, 2846 W. North Ave, Apartment #1A.

Lauren Gregory, Mother Web

Lauren Gregory, Mother

39 Verbs @ Packer Schopf

Sunday night brings a new event produced by Industry of the Ordinary: titled 39 Verbs, the one night happening will feature 39 artists and cultural workers from Chicago reinterpreting the thirty nine verbs plucked from Industry of the Ordinary’s website history.  Features Candida Alvarez, Inigo Manglano-OvalleDawoud BeyTony Tasset, Paul Klein, Natasha Egan, and so, so much more. Event takes place Sunday, October 11th, from 5-8 PM @ Packer Schopf, 942 W. Lake.

Industry of the Ordinary

Those are my standouts, hope you can catch one or all.  If you’ve been following it, check out Art Prize‘s thrilling conclusion this Saturday, where one lucky artist will walk home with monetary proof that democracy and the arts are purposefully rare partners on this waxy dance floor called integrity.

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Seven Artists of the Week – Blondes

This week’s picks from Ryan, click images for links. If you’re in California this week, check out his work in the exhibition INFINITY, curated by Andrew Schoultz and opening this Saturday, October 10th @ Scion Space L.A.

Bianca Casady

Bianca Casady

Butt Johnson, Mario, Patron Saint of Brooklyn

Butt Johnson, Mario, Patron Saint of Brooklyn

Chris Natrop, Black Black Butterfly Sparkle Bomb 2-4

Chris Natrop, Black Black Butterfly Sparkle Bomb 2-4

Julian Duron, Impossible Corner

Julian Duron, Impossible Corner

Tomma Abts, Feio

Tomma Abts, Feio

Verne Dawson, Korrigan on the Run in Brittany

Verne Dawson, Korrigan on the Run in Brittany

Aaron Noble, Saladin

Aaron Noble, Saladin

Work nights!

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Lumpen Re-Release Party (not actually a release party)

While I don’t like getting this soap box dirty with unrelated posts, I want to do some quick hype work for Lumpen’s next issue since I like the magazine and I’ll have some writing in it and more upcoming as more issues come. The magazine, which has run for longer than any independent culture rag has any business surviving, is getting a big face-lift this month with expanded coverage in many areas and a new look from new designers. All good things if you like paper and ink.

While some design issues have pushed the release back past its target, well, hell, the release party is still on and I’ll be there supporting the thing whether or not the thing is there. Also Barry Sanders’ exhibition Tales From the Bubble will be up for viewing and there will be a few bands to see if you’re into that sort of thing. The event starts tonight, Saturday October 3rd, at 8:00 PM @ the Co Prosperity Sphere in Bridgeport, 21 S Morgan St.

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Weekend Preview – Rainy Seasons

Its an institutional weekend!

Heartland @ Smart Museum

This weekend’s biggest show is at University of Chicago’s Smart Museum this week. Featuring work from a variety of artists, including and hopefully highlighted with a new huge wall piece by Deb Sokolow, Heartland brings out artists from and work speaking to the middle of America, which I guess we’re technically in.  While the show already opened last night, it will featuring an ongoing series of events and tours and talks, including a performance today by Whoop Dee Doo!, a film screening in Wicker Park, and more. Heartland runs through to January 17th, 2010 @ the Smart Museum, 5550 S. Greenwood.

Greely Myatt, Cleave

Greely Myatt, Cleave

Daria Martin @ Museum of Contemporary Art

Another cool institutional draw, Daria Martin‘s specially commissioned, multi-dimensional film Minotaur will go up for public review this weekend. Looks like a pretty dense piece, and at ten minutes could allow for a few views to appreciate the depth. The exhibition opens this Saturday, October 3rd, 10:00 AM @ the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Daria Martin, Minotaur

Daria Martin, Minotaur

There’s always more to see, but those are my picks this week. Also, if you’re in the Wicker Park/Bucktown area, stop by the Flatiron building and Sapere Art for their Points of View art competition which I helped judge. If you’re lucky you might even spy one of my paintings in the building.

As always, get out while you still can.

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Seven Artists of the Week – Lost Time

This week’s picks from Ryan, delivered fresh. Click images for bigger.

Alfred Jensen, The River Diagram, Lo Shu

Alfred Jensen, The River Diagram, Lo Shu

Gerhard Richter, War Cut II

Gerhard Richter, War Cut II

Lamar Peterson, Balance

Lamar Peterson, Balance

Mary Heilmann, Lovejoy Jr.

Mary Heilmann, Lovejoy Jr.

Richard Colman

Richard Colman

Ryan Wallace, Waking Premonition

Ryan Wallace, Waking Premonition

Xylor Jane, Brood

Xylor Jane, Brood

Cooling off.

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Caleb Weintraub @ Peter Miller Gallery

Remember this psychotic painting at the Hyde Park Art Center‘s Signs of the Apocalypse/Rapture show by Caleb Weintraub? It was the one with the kids with axes and the owl costumes and crushed space and the one which, when I wrote about that show, I complimented as the show’s “only piece to actually disturb me.” There was something feverish about that painting, small as it was; what the hell was going on? For some expansion and explanation, Weintraub’s work is up for review this month, and with a large exhibition (selling like fire) in the West Loop’s Peter Miller Gallery, we might find some answers.

Caleb Weintraub @ Peter Miller Gallery

Caleb Weintraub @ Peter Miller Gallery

Like a few other artists showing around town, Weintraub is working in a representational, illustrative, and narrative mode. Also like a few other artists, he’s working in a sorta post-apocalyptic, sorta surreal setting. While his images don’t describe events within a specific storyline, they do come out of a specific circumstance: some how or other, the children have taken over and, with a little of the supernatural afoot, are reinventing humanity and culture with blind idiosyncrasies and campfire voodoo. The artists statement lays it all down, but suffice to say that we have extremely literal illustrations referencing from a consistent, designed and imagined world.

Caleb Weintraub, Beard Contest

Caleb Weintraub, Battle of the Beards

If all that sounds negative, it might be. It is disarming to see a show with such direct, unabashedly contrived content, regardless of paintings quality. Weintraub is an excellent painter, and these images contain some very skilled pooling impasto (sort of ala Adam Scott) along with more traditional brushwork and spraying and more. Standing before a larger painting like Battle of the Beards orThe unlikely resurrection of General Burnside on account of his estimable whiskers, picking out the variety of techniques can a pursuit in itself. There are some paintings where the pallete suffers, is either overwhelmed or underwhelmed and seldom balanced, but they all fall squarely in the class of cool stuff to look at. From what I can gather, they’re his best paintings yet.

Caleb Weintraub, Things that may or may not go on in the dark, in the night

Caleb Weintraub, Things that may or may not go on in the dark, in the night

However, we’re still looking at pictures of children in forests with weird shit going on, which is an exhausted setting bordering on pop surrealist trope. It’s possible that the dynamic way that the paint has been used is the only thing separating Caleb Weintraub from your run of the mill Juxtapoze Magazine, Mark Ryden, middle brow bullshit, because boil off the backstory and the content is pretty much the same. The question that Sunday Games and Souveniers poses is really whether all that really matters, and whether making grungy, curiously painted pop surrealist art will bring it into the more serious contemporary art conversation that Ryden et al aren’t a part of. It certainly looks smarter.

Caleb Weintraub, Situation Room

Caleb Weintraub, Situation Room

I would say maybe. Weintraub’s work dances the issue’s razor so delicately that I can’t find an imbalance either way, and it wouldn’t be my place to push him one way or the other. I can say that my experience of viewing the show including a serious doubt at the imagery and content of the work, along with a dynamic pleasure of observing the way Weintraub works.

Caleb Weintraub, While wandering, we just came upon it there, like it had sprouted up out of the ground and we knew we would never see anything the same way again

Caleb Weintraub, While wandering, we just came upon it there, like it had sprouted up out of the ground and we knew we would never see anything the same way again

While I liked Caleb’s apparently absurd, mysterious imagery in the Hyde Park exhibition, I ultimately don’t care about his narrative, am not moved by the pictured drama, and connect with the work only when the paintings are good enough as paintings to make me forget them as illustrations. Thankfully that isn’t a rare event at Sunday Games and Souvenirs either. It’s not a perfect show, but there’s certainly plenty here to like.

I give it a:

6.9

Caleb Weintraub’s Sunday Games and Souvenirs runs September 11th, 2009 through October 17th, 2009 @ Peter Miller Gallery, 118 N. Peoria.

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Robyn O'Neil @ Tony Wight

First some back story on Robyn O’Neil:

Robyn is a Houston all-star who, while not doing the media rounds, cranks out me-sized graphite drawings which may pass as illustrative, narrative, and serial, with one leading to the next in a giant comic book panel approach to story-telling. As the tale goes, a little drawing of a track-suited dude was the spark for the seven-year project, each drawing expanding on the mythology of the race of track-suited dudes and their trials and their tribulations and, with the 2007 execution of These final hours embrace at last; this is our ending, this is our past, their last moments too. The track-suited dudes were dead (long live the track-suited dudes), the end. What’s next?

For that answer we’ll need to cut to Tony Wight Gallery and On Sinking, their latest exhibition and O’Neil’s first or second substantial presentation of new works since killing all her characters.

Robyn O'Neil, Hurricane

Robyn O'Neil, Hurricane

The imagery picks up where it left off, at sea. Most works in this show feature the ocean and only the ocean, its strength visible and rendered in waves that ripple like muscle fiber, flexing and relaxing and tearing depending on the image. These landscapes or seascapes should be understood as abandoned, which they are in the sense that there aren’t any of the usual characters in view because (and here’s where the back story comes in) those characters are all dead as shit. They’re all pretty dramatic pictures of the arbitrary power of nature over man, the insignificance of man, etc, sort of, but not entirely, because there’s a problem and its a big one.

Robyn O'Neil, Almost Calm

Robyn O'Neil, Almost Calm

In trying to describe an apocalypse, and of a view of a totally abandoned landscape, the drawings suffer from an intractable element in the illustrative method which O’Neil uses. Simply put, when you describe a three-dimensional space, the drawings describe those areas visible to the viewer depending on his or her presence within the assumed space. Whether we are the artist or an imagined observer, the the narrative of the space assumes our existence. In short, the problem is that we’re still here.

Robyn O'Neil, A Song of So Many Beginnings

Robyn O'Neil, A Song of So Many Beginnings

If we’re still here, then we’re certainly not a track-suited dude, and if we’re not one of them, then it follows that we’ve just been looking in on their experiences like a kid with an ant farm. Sure, you may have learned a life lesson or two about the ultimate meaninglessness of existence and the purposelessness of labor in the face of inevitable and total mortality, but when the ants all die, you throw out the farm or start the whole cruel mess over again. These works provide an epilogue for her past narrative more than show a new direction or reading for her work, except perhaps to suggest that O’Neil just really likes drawing the ocean and big landscapes and would probably gladly continue doing so even without a narrative structure.

Robyn O'Neil, For the Next Breath

Robyn O'Neil, For the Next Breath

These post-track-suited-dudes drawings only occupy about half of the show, however. The rest is the kind of interesting, gestational work I would expect to see when starting a new body of work. The largest of them, For the Next Breath leans on scale the artist’s detailed working method to create a kind of landscape on the three-quarters-reversed view of an anonymous man’s head. The size and tight, meticulous rendering of the hair suggest a physical proximity which balance large, deep margins of untreated surface. The two other pieces in this theme, To the Left and Occurrence feature three other men, similar but not identical. As a total break from landscape and drawn narrative (the titles still suggest a story), these show O’Neil reaching into the toolbox of drawing, testing rhythm and scale as main thrusts, and finding some success. The Dismantled, and Turbulent Beliefs, while enjoyable, could even be considered one-offs.

Robyn O'Neil, The Dismantled

Robyn O'Neil, The Dismantled

In total, On Sinking is not the cohesive show that one might expect from Robyn O’Neil. While there are some strong pieces, the work can best be seen as evidence of a transition, suggestions of things to come. If you’ve followed O’Neil’s career, it may even be a popcorn and soda glimpse of O’Neil’s struggle to reinvent, that great and necessary fight which, while it may produce a few bad drawings, really separates the career artist from the post-grad star child. Love the work or not – it makes for a good exhibition.

I give it a:

7.8

Robyn O’Neil‘s On Sinking opened on Friday, September 11th and will run through Saturday, October 31st @ Tony Wight Gallery, 119 N. Peoria.

Paul Nudd @ Western Exhibitions

Its quite possible that Scott Speh, owner and director of Western Exhibitions in the West Loop, is curating his 2009 exhibitions in order to destroy you. When examining the last few shows at the gallery, we find some aggressive works: first an eyeball assault show from Geoffrey Todd Smith show, followed by a Dutes Miller show aimed at giving you dick nightmares, and now comes Paul Nudd‘s VOMITROMITON with sights set on spoiling your dinner.

Paul Nudd, VOMITROMITON

Paul Nudd, VOMITROMITON

First the obvious: there are a lot of pieces in VOMITROMITON and not much difference between them. The main body of work, a collection of no less than twenty two paintings in the titular series, can as well be thought of as different instances of the same set, with the same colors and materials applied in very similar ways in each. Their strength and variation comes out in their compositions, which while also more alike than not, exist in blobs and bacterial nests that tell the same kind of surface history as the organic development of mold or boils.

Paul Nudd, Vomitromiton 14 (detail)

Paul Nudd, Vomitromiton 14 (detail)

While certainly gross looking up close, with pink micro turds and shower-drain nets of questionable hair alongside fake vomit and shit-brown puddles of paint, the pieces are quite traditionally attractive from any distance more than eleven inches. The pinks and greens and browns work, and the compositions are active and playful. Without the grime and slime connection, each painting would be a rather conventional exercise in limited form, abstract composition. I don’t mean that the slime and grime can or should be looked over; part of the fun of these paintings is that each form, while being used abstractly, has a reference as specific as puke or as general as “questionable goo I’d rather not touch.”

Paul Nudd, Son of 4-B

Paul Nudd, Son of 4-B

In addition to the paintings series are another eight works on paper, each following the a similar material theme but on a smaller stage. Like much of Nudd’s work, the collages include textual riffs on descriptive phrases, such as one of the lists on Dog Lungs reads: Hog Lungs, Lung Spots, Pink Lung Pox, Liquid Lung Pus. This rambling, punning approach seems perfectly in line with the creation of the works themselves, each an experiment, topping the last like a fifth-grade lunchroom contest to see who can gross out the best.

Paul Nudd

Paul Nudd, Dog Lungs, Black Dog Lungs, Brown Milk Sac, & Black Brains.

I have a feeling that Nudd, with an imagination full of black milk and sinus cakes could plumb his mind for a thousand such drawings and paintings. While each are badass in their own right, the sheer quantity makes individual examination difficult. It’d be extremely difficult to pick a favorite among the bunch. The single standout came in Burning Head Bush, the singular figurative work in the bunch. Its demand for attention came not only because it is a fucked up, awesome painting, but from of its deviation from the group.

Paul Nudd, Burning Head Bush

Paul Nudd, Burning Head Bush

There were a few other tangential pieces in this area, proving the prodigious output of the artist and turning the office into a kind of high quality Paul Nudd gift shop. Also featured was the video DirtBurths, an honestly revolting piece that really has to be seen to be appreciated. His Slug Text Drawings, arranged like wallpaper behind the Western Exhibitions office, are fun for their use of type and language and I want one.

Paul Nudd, Slug Text Drawings

Paul Nudd, Slug Text Drawings

I have no problem with gross out art, and having followed Nudd’s work from the top bleachers for a few years, have accepted his use of a disgusting aesthetic because I believe he’s trying to do more than turning my stomach. I don’t see him using the crust subversively, neither questioning the human capacity for revulsion or trying to root out why we’re disgusted by a particular form or texture, in fact the art depends in part on our unquestioned ability to be find pretty random forms gross. It has to be gross. There would be no fun, no beauty in it otherwise.

Still, when faced with a room which features only that specific aesthetic – and so much of it – the experience is reduced. I imagine Nudd may be the perfect artist to include in a group exhibition or museum collection, a context where his work would be all the grosser and challenging, fuming gas and splashing.

I give it a:

7.8

Paul Nudd‘s VOMITOMITON runs Friday, September 11th through Saturday, October 10th @ Western Exhibitions, 119 N Peoria St, #2A.

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Weekend Preview: 9/Party

Some cool openings this weekend, and here are the one’s I’m trying to see. Check out the bigger lists here or here or anywhere, really.

Group Painting Show @ Ebersb9

Five shows in and already Ebersb9 is getting out of the apartment space and upgrading to something newer, bigger, but hopefully just as cozy. Come see the last show at at the titular apartment, a group painting show featuring Howard Fonda, Tyson Reeder, Paul Wackers, Sabastian Vallejo, and Amy Mayfield. The show opens this Friday, September 25th, 6-9 PM @ ebersb9, 1359 W. Chicago, apartment B9.

Paul Wackers, Laboratory Experiments

Paul Wackers, Laboratory Experiments

Tales from the Bubble @ Co-Prosperity Sphere

Berry Sanders’ Tales from the Bubble, big black and white narrative oil paintings on paper inspired in part by Albert Camus? Sold. Stick around afterward for the release of this season’s Proximity Magazine, their fifth edition so far, complete with performances by Christo Mofisto, Magical Beautiful, The Gaze , and Mahjongg’s Hunter Husar. The show opens this Friday, September 25th, from 6-9 PM, with the Proximity release party to overlap and follow from 9-11 PM, all @  Co-Prosperity Sphere, 3219 S Morgan St.

Berry Sanders

Berry Sanders

Trevor Reese @ Believe Inn

Not just a science show, its Trevor Reese’s Not If, But When. That’s all I know, and thats enough for now. Opens Saturday, September 26th from 6-10 PMBelieve Inn, 2043 N. Winchester.

Trevor Reese

Trevor Reese

Philip Von Zweck’s Symposium @ threewalls

As a joint to his show, The Fortieth Anniversary of the First Anniversary of May ’98, artist Philip Von Zweck will be hosting a symposium to discuss the critical history that (sort of) informs the show, featuring talks by Carrie Gundersdorf, Melissa Johnson, Annika Marie, Simon Anderson, and Craig Carson. The event will be this Saturday, September 25th at 12 Noon – 5 PM @ threewalls, 119 N. Peoria.

Philip von Zweck

Philip von Zweck

Thats all I plan to see, except for you, around!

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Substance (for Julian) / Carl Suddath @ The Suburban

This last Sunday I made it back to Oak Park for the latest opening at The Suburban, which I experienced for all of twenty minutes before the sky opened and I had to run splashing for cover. While I didn’t have long to spend with the work, both Carl Suddath‘s installation in the small space and Tilman‘s installation in the larger held attention for what time I had.

Tilman, Substance for Julian

Tilman, Substance for Julian

According to Tilman, his “Substance (for Julian)” was created in part as a kind of memorial piece for the late Julian Dashper and, though the work did incorporate striking spacial elements and break the installation space in an interesting way, it is the blend of collaboration and memorial that makes Substance (for Julian) the compelling work that it is. Though Tilman and Dashper had collaborated in the past, this work comes off as an imagined collaboration in the present, with the artist allowing his memory and close understanding of Dashper’s work and working process to direct the piece. The result is an installation that, despite being about space and abstraction, speaks most strongly to the human and artistic tradition of legacy and influence as memorial.

Carl Suddath

Carl Suddath

Carl Suddath

Carl Suddath

I found Carl Suddath‘s sculptural installation to be pretty calm and reflective, an exercise in the rather painterly elements of color and light and texture more than form. The two sculptural pieces, one a constructed and painted abstraction and the other a cut and raw piece of wood, produced a balanced and subdued presence within the space. I had a feeling the constructed piece had been made and built and placed so as to take advantage of the light cast through the space’s small window, but with the skies ahead a half-lit softbox there wasn’t much light to work with. Between the colors Suddath employed, the colors of the floor and wall, and the even lighting over it all, everything felt confident and quiet.

The two spaces worked well together, and each was a rare find. I wish I had had the time for the kind of conversations which help inform more layered work like these two, but the weather wanted me see it on its face so I give it a:

7.3

Tilman’s “Substance for Julian” / Carl Suddath opened Sunday, September 20th and will run through to Sunday, October 25th at The Suburban, 125 North Harvey Avenue, in Oak Park.

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Seven Artists of The Week – blow down

This weeks picks from Ryan. Best batch yet. Click images for links to more.

Aragna Ker, Superman (zarathustra)

Aragna Ker, Superman (zarathustra)

Chuck Webster, Summer Bomb Pop

Chuck Webster, Summer Bomb Pop

Darina Karpov, Loophole

Darina Karpov, Loophole

Jeff Davis, The Sovereign Lamp of Self

Jeff Davis, The Sovereign Lamp of Self

Paul Wackers, Crystal Lake

Paul Wackers, Crystal Lake

Nathan Redwood, Inquiry

Nathan Redwood, Inquiry

Scott Reeder, Suicidal Shape (Study in Red)

Scott Reeder, Suicidal Shape (Study in Red)

Somethings in the oven.

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Weekend Preview: no wrong do it again

What to see this weekend? Everything you missed and everything that was too crowded last weekend to really appreciate. There are so many new shows up in the city that this weekend’s line of openings almost seem cruel by adding more to the backlog. Whats worse is that this weekend’s shows are plenty strong too.

Eric Ellis @ The Coop

Come argue check out new work from artist and designer Eric Ellis. Don’t be afraid to make fun of him over the whole Geoff Mcfetridge sketchbook issue (see comments). The show opens the same date as this post (so if you’re reading this, get down there), Thursday, September 17th from 6 – 10 PM @ The Coop, 845 W Fulton Market.

Eric Ellis

Eric Ellis

Seacurrent @ Experimental Sound Studio

Chicago group Luftwerk (made up of artists Petra Bachmaier and Sean Gallero) will be showing off their newest piece, a sound and video installation which sounds like it looks as good as it sounds. Looks good. Opening reception this Friday, September 18th, from 6 – 9 PM, with a live piano performance by Hans-Peter Pfammatter at 7 PM @ Experimental Sound Studio, 5925 N. Ravenswood.


Luftwerk @ Experiment Sound Studio

Luftwerk

GroupSolo @ Swimming Pool Project Space

Here’s a new twist on the one night show: Carol Jackson, Tom Long, Jeffrey Grauel, and Diego Leclery will each take turns holding 45 minute solo exhibitions at Swimming Pool Project Space, with the building and installing of each show visible to the audience. While the four top shelf artists are enough of a draw, I’m also pretty excited to see how (and whether) this really comes off. The show opens (and runs in totality) this Saturday, September 19th, from 7 – 10 PM @ Swimming Pool Project Space, 2858 W. Montrose Ave.

Tom Long

Tom Long

Group Show for Daniel Pink @ Vega Estates

The last show at the Vega Estates project in Pilsen is all for Daniel Pink, former speech writer for Al Gore and big supporter of the copy. Curated by Lane Relyea, the show has Curt Bozif and Matthew Metzger (with Amy Adler, Conrad Bakker, Vince Leo and Sharon Lockhart) exploring and praising the photocopy and other dupe forms as talismans of progress. Check out the opening this Saturday, September 19th, from 6 – 10 PM @ Vega Estates, 723 W. 16th Street.

Daniel Pink

Daniel Pink

Polonia and Other Fables @ Renaissance Society

New photos from Allan Sekula in a show titled Polonia and Other Fables look at the social impact of global economics, all with a well researched Chicago focus. Opens this Sunday, September 20th @ The Renaissance Society, 5811 S. Ellis.

Alan Sekula

Alan Sekula

SUBSTANCE (for Julian) @ The Suburban

Michelle Grabner et al of the famous Oak Park backyard art space will be celebrating their 11th year of operation with and around the opening of SUBSTANCE (jor Julian) by the artists Carl Suddath and Tilman. Wit and abstraction and hot coals this Sunday, September 20th, from 2-4 PM @ The Suburban, 125 N. Harvey Ave., Oak Park.

Carl Suddath

Carl Suddath

Like I said, plenty to see! Keep an eye out for anything I missed.

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Seven Artists of the Week – ok!

Here are Ryan‘s picks for this week. Click images for more:

Matthew Palladino, Painting of Tapestry

Matthew Palladino, Painting of Tapestry

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Neo Rauch, Die Flamme

Neo Rauch, Die Flamme

Jim Drain, Orange Shadow

Jim Drain, Orange Shadow

Justin B. Williams, Uppercrust Enlightenment

Justin B. Williams, Uppercrust Enlightenment

Barnaby Furnas, Nat Turner

Barnaby Furnas, Nat Turner

Daniel Zeller, Six Stages of Denial

Daniel Zeller, Six Stages of Denial

Don’t turn off the lights!

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Seven Artists of the Week – Seven Thousand Artists of the Week

Oh Hi I thought you might like some artists of the week. Thanks Ryan. Click images for links.

Matthew Lock, join me for dinner

Matthew Lock, join me for dinner

Cordy Ryman, Stitched Block

Cordy Ryman, Stitched Block

Randy Sellers, Imaginary Landscape with Airstream (detail)

Randy Sellers, Imaginary Landscape with Airstream (detail)

Bjorn Copeland, Waist Expander

Bjorn Copeland, Waist Expander

Sumi Ink Club

Sumi Ink Club

Evan Gruzis, Shadow Man

Evan Gruzis, Shadow Man

Jeni Spota, Coat of Arms for the Coat of Arms

Jeni Spota, Coat of Arms for the Coat of Arms

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