this week in art

FRIEZE SCULPTURE AT ROCKEFELLER CENTER

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Jaume Plensa, Behind the Walls, 2019 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

30 Rockefeller Plaza
Between West 48th & 51st St. and Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Daily through June 28, free
212-588-8601
www.rockefellercenter.com
frieze.com
online slideshow

The Frieze New York art fair takes place May 2-5 at Randall’s Island Park, where tickets run up to $85.50 with ferry service and a magazine subscription. But you can get a free taste at Rockefeller Center, where Frieze New York and Tishman Speyer have partnered for Frieze Sculpture, an exhibition of public works by fourteen artists, with pieces lining Rockefeller Plaza outside and a few hidden away in lobbies. The participating artists are Nick Cave, Aaron Curry, Jose Dávila, Walter De Maria, Rochelle Goldberg, Goshka Macuga, Ibrahim Mahama, Joan Miró, Paulo Nazareth, Jaume Plensa, Pedro Reyes, Kiki Smith, Sarah Sze, and Hank Willis Thomas. The display is curated by Brett Littman of the Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, whose choices were inspired by Noguchi’s 1940 News on the facade of the Associated Press building as well as the 1934 Diego Rivera mural that the Rockefellers destroyed because it included an image of Lenin.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Nick Cave, Untitled, 2018 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

One of the themes linking many of the works is that of protest, of speaking out to fight the status quo and to initiate change. Paulo Nazareth’s DRY CUT [from Blacks in the Pool — Tommie] depicts a larger-than-life cutout of Tommie Smith raising his gloved right hand while accepting his Olympic medal in 1968. An untitled piece by Nick Cave features an arm with a fist at the end emerging from an old gramophone speaker. Jaume Plensa’s monumental Behind the Walls is a huge white head with disembodied hands covering the eyes, as if refusing to see what is happening. Joan Miró’s Porte II consists of two slanted doors with a long chain dangling in between, as if a threat of punishment.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Goshka Macuga, International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation, Configuration 25, First Man: Yuri Gagarin, 2016 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Rochelle Goldberg’s Cannibal Junkie and Kiki Smith’s Rest Upon are reminders of humanity’s connection to nature — and what might occur if we’re not more careful. Ibrahim Mahama has removed the nearly two hundred flags of UN countries that surround the skating rink and replaced them with fifty ratty flags made of jute in Ghana, evoking global poverty. Hank Willis Thomas’s Harriet and Annie (Capri) and Josephine and Kazumi (Real Red) offer passersby a public platform to share their thoughts. And Goshka Macuga’s Institute of Institutional Co-operation, seen below Dean Cromwell’s 1946 mural The Story of Transportation, shows just what we are capable of.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Paulo Nazareth, DRY CUT [from Blacks in the Pool — Tommie], (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

There will be several family programs, on alternate Sundays at 10:30 am, held in conjunction with the sculpture display. On May 12, Noguchi educators will lead a “3D: Build Up!” tour of the sculptures for four-year-olds (advance registration required). On May 26, “Your Neighborhood: Public Art” offers a guided tour for five- and six-year-olds, followed by a model-making workshop (advance registration required). On June 9, “Figures: Strike a Pose” consists of a tour and a workshop for children ages seven to eleven with advance RSVP. And on June 23, the drop-in “Get the Scoop: Stories and Art” offers children two to eleven the opportunity to explore the exhibit and make art in response to what they experience.

FRIEZE NEW YORK 2019

Artists ruby onyinyechi amanze and Wura-Natasha Ogunji will present a live collaboration at Frieze New York

Artists ruby onyinyechi amanze and Wura-Natasha Ogunji will present a live collaboration at Frieze New York

FRIEZE ART FAIR
Randall’s Island Park
May 2-5, $27-$53 per day
frieze.com

Frieze New York returns to Randall’s Island Park this week with two hundred galleries from around the world showing their wares in the big white tent. Among this year’s highlights are a tribute to Linda Goode Bryant and her gallery Just Above Midtown (JAM), the “Electric” VR exhibit curated by Daniel Birnbaum, “The Doors of Perception” display of works by self-taught artists curated by Javier Téllezwill, the annual Frame, Focus, and Spotlight sections, the Diálogos celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of El Museo del Barrio curated by Patrick Charpenel, a reading room, food from Court Street Grocers, Frankies 457 Spuntino, Roberta’s, Foul Witch by Blanca, and Black Fox Coffee, and pieces by such key figures as Dawoud Bey, Tracey Emin, Jenny Holzer, Robert Indiana, Lorna Simpson, Anish Kapoor, Alex Katz, Ana Mendieta, Howardena Pindell, Robert Rauschenberg, Nari Ward, and many others. Below are some of the scheduled talks and performances, all free with fair admission.

Thursday, May 2
MATCHESFASHION.COM: Designing the Future with Brandice Henderson, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 2:00

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: Sneakers and the Luxury Market, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 4:00

Friday, May 3
FRIEZE TALKS: Simone Leigh in conversation with Saidiya Hartman, Talks Lounge, 12:30

ruby onyinyechi amanze & Wura-Natasha Ogunji — twin: live performance + drawing, North Entrance Lawn, 12:30 – 4:00

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: More Sex, Fashion, Pleasure: Christopher Kane and Liz Goldwyn In Conversation, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 2:00

FRIEZE TALKS: Sheila Heti in conversation with Josephine Decker, Talks Lounge, 3:00

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: The Dialogue Between Art and Fashion with Grace Wales Bonner, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 5:00

Nico Wheadon, Aruna D’Souza, and Sable Elyse Smith will discuss the state of the art world at Frieze

Nico Wheadon, Aruna D’Souza, and Sable Elyse Smith will discuss the state of the art world at Frieze

Saturday, May 4
FRIEZE TALKS: Aruna D’Souza in conversation with Nico Wheadon and Sable Elyse Smith, Talks Lounge, 12:30

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: Art & Queer Culture with Richard Meyer, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 2:00

FRIEZE TALKS: Andrew Durbin in conversation with T. J. Wilcox, Talks Lounge, 3:00

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: Art and Dance with Pari Ehsan and Friends, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 4:00

Sunday, May 5
MATCHESFASHION.COM: Transcending the Social – 1970 and Today, with William T. Williams & Courtney Martin, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 12:30

FRIEZE TALKS: Valeria Luiselli in conversation with Terence Gower, Talks Lounge, 12:30

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: Cameron Russell on Sustainability, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 2:00

MATCHESFASHION.COM Talk: Food as Art: A Live Installation with Laila Gohar, MATCHESFASHION.COM Lounge, 3:00

KOSTIS VELONIS: LIFE WITHOUT TRAGEDY

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Kostis Velonis’s Life without Tragedy is a temporary social gathering spot on Astor Place’s South Plaza (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

ONASSIS FESTIVAL
Astor Place South Plaza
April 10-30, free
onassisusa.org
online slideshow

As part of Onassis Festival 2019: Democracy Is Coming, Greek sculptor Kostis Velonis has installed Life without Tragedy on the South Plaza of Astor Place, near Tony Rosenthal’s movable black cube called Alamo. Developed by Velonis and Christian Kotzamanis, the work consists of a trio of dark gray wood steps that evoke Greek amphitheaters that would stage tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides and served as places for sociopolitical discourse. Presented in conjunction with DOT Art, the Village Alliance, and the Public Theater, which is hosting most of the events during the festival, including Tim Blake Nelson’s Socrates, the sculpture has narrow steps that are not easy for adults or children to climb, a striking comment on the state of political discussion today in the United States, Greece, and around the world as real-life tragedies wreak havoc and fascism is on the rise.

WILLIAM KENTRIDGE: LET US TRY FOR ONCE

(photo courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery)

William Kentridge’s “Let Us Try for Once” in infused with the spirit of Dada (photo courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery)

Marian Goodman Gallery
24 West 57th St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Tuesday – Saturday through April 20, free
212-977-7160
www.mariangoodman.com

In 2017, South African multimedia genius William Kentridge staged Kurt Schwitters’s 1932 Dada poem, “Ursonate,” at the Harlem Parish as part of the Performa Biennial. In December, his extraordinary production The Head & the Load, which explored the fate of nearly two million black Africans forced into service by colonialist European countries as porters and carriers during World War I, also incorporated text from “Ursonate.” Kentridge turns to Dada again for the title of his latest exhibition at Marian Goodman, “Let Us Try for Once,” taken from the last sentence of Tristan Tzara’s 1919 Dada Manifesto: “If all of them are right and if all pills are Pink Pills, let us try for once not to be right.” In a promotional video, Kentridge notes that the title “comes out of the sense that everybody’s certainty of their own rightness is behind so much of the violence which is exacted to beat that sense of rightness into others.”

The show is divided into four sections across two floors. In a back room, a two-channel video of Kentridge’s inspired performance of “Ursonate” plays, featuring such language as “rakete rinnzekete,” “fümmsböwötääzääUu pöggiff,” and “rrummpff tillff toooo?” along with visuals and, at the end, musical accompaniment. KABOOM! is a three-channel sculptural installation that is a miniaturized version of The Head & the Load, with audio, video, drawings, and projections. “This was not its starting point of The Head & the Load, but it is what the work itself, the material we were dealing with, pushed us towards,” Kentridge explains in a statement. “By the paradox I mean the contradictory relationships towards Europe — the desire of Africans to be part of Europe, to share in the wealth and the richness of Europe, and wanting to resist Europe and its depredations.”

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Lexicon is a collection of large bronze sculptures that Kentridge compares to text in a book, representing “the heaviness of words or thoughts,” including a telephone, an ampersand, a movie camera, a knight on a horse, and a pitcher; Processione di Riparazioniste Maquettes (Full Set) is a horizontal procession of smaller laser-cut steel objects, while Paragraph II, three rows of twenty-three bronzes, evokes black type on a white page. In fact, many of these pieces have appeared as images in Kentridge’s videos in which he turns the pages of dictionaries and historical books.

William KentridgeDrawing for 'Wozzeck Opera', 2017Charcoal on paper

William Kentridge, Drawing for Wozzeck Opera, charcoal on paper, 2017 (courtesy Marian Goodman)

The exhibition also offers a sneak peek of his latest opera, Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, which is coming to the Met in December. Kentridge has previously adapted Shostakovich’s The Nose and Berg’s Lulu; at Marian Goodman, preparatory charcoal drawings give a sense of the flavor of his take of Berg’s version of Georg Büchner’s unfinished Woyceck and continues Kentridge’s exploration of the Great War. “The conceit of the production was thinking of Berg’s Wozzeck as a premonition of WWI. This is where war and ideas around it entered the project,” Kentridge notes. “Let Us Try for Once” lends fascinating insight into the recent past, present, and immediate future of this marvelously talented artist.

LAWRENCE WEINER AND GLENN FUHRMAN IN CONVERSATION

flag art foundation book

Who: Lawrence Weiner and Glenn Fuhrman
What: Artist talk in conjunction with publication of The FLAG Art Foundation: 2008-2018
Where: Gagosian Shop, 976 Madison Ave. at 75th St., 212-796-1224
When: Tuesday, April 16, free with RSVP, 6:00
Why: In celebration of its tenth anniversary, the Chelsea-based FLAG Art Foundation has published The FLAG Art Foundation: 2008-2018, a fully illustrated catalog that looks back at its first fifty exhibitions, which has featured such artists as Louise Bourgeois, Mark Bradford, Maurizio Cattelan, Robert Gober, Félix González-Torres, Jim Hodges, Ellsworth Kelly, Charles Ray, Gerhard Richter, and Cindy Sherman. On April 16, gallery founder Glenn Fuhrman and seventy-seven-year-old Bronx-born conceptual artist Lawrence Weiner will be at the Gagosian Shop on the Upper East Side to discuss the history of FLAG as well as its current exhibition “On Board the Ships at Sea Are We,” consisting of works by Weiner, Rachel Whiteread, and Robert Therrien examining scale, materiality, and absence. The catalog includes a foreword by Fuhrman, preface by founding director Stephanie Roach, and original contributions from Ashley Bickerton, Delia Brown, Patricia Cronin, Cynthia Daignault, Lisa Dennison, Sarah Douglas, Elmgreen & Dragset, Eric Fischl, James Frey, Louis Grachos, Stamatina Gregory, Jane Hammond, Hilary Harkness, Jim Hodges, Philae Knight, Josephine Meckseper, Richard Patterson, Jack Shear, Carolyn Twersky, Lesley Vance, Rebecca Ward, and Heidi Zuckerman. Admission is free with advance RSVP.

INTERROGATIONS OF FORM: MUSEUM AS SANCTUARY

 (image © Julio Salgado)

(image © Julio Salgado)

SUNDAY SALON
Park Ave. Armory
643 Park Ave. at 67th St.
Sunday, April 14, $25, 3:00
212-933-5812
www.armoryonpark.org

In December, Cuban artist and activist Tania Bruguera was arrested in Havana for protesting Decree 349, which criminalizes public and private art that the Ministry of Culture deems unpatriotic or does not receive government permission for commercialization. “Before there was censorship, you could play around. Now you go to jail, now they take your house. It’s not a joke. There are no more games to play,” Bruguera told the Guardian in February. “What we want is to eliminate the decree and work together to find regulations that are based on the needs of the artists and what will protect them, not only the government.” Bruguera, an artist-in-residence at Park Avenue Armory, will be at the armory on April 14 for the Sunday Salon discussing a place to seek refuge: The presentation, part of the Interrogations of Form series, is entitled “Museum as Sanctuary.” The salon kicks off at 3:00 with an introduction by Bruguera and “Make Sanctuary Not Art,” a ritual gathering on safe spaces led by Luba Cortes, Geoff Trenchard, Jackie Vimo, and Abou Farman. From 4:30 to 5:30, the pop-up exhibition “You See Me?!?” displays work by undocumented LGBTQ Mexican American artist Julio Salgado and the collective Emulsify, including the video installation “Con Cámaras y Sín Papeles.” The afternoon concludes at 5:30 with “Institutions as Sanctuary in Times of Exclusion,” a conversation with Alexandra Délano Alonso, Camilo Godoy, Sonia Guiñansaca, Bitta Mostofi, and Verónica Ramírez, moderated by Bruguera.

FIRST SATURDAYS: FRIDA KAHLO

Nickolas Muray, Frida in New York, carbon pigment, 1946 (printed 2006), © Nickolas Muray Photo Archives (photo courtesy Brooklyn Museum)

Nickolas Muray, Frida in New York, carbon pigment, 1946 (printed 2006), © Nickolas Muray Photo Archives (photo courtesy Brooklyn Museum)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, April 6, free (some events require advance tickets), 5:00 – 11:00
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Brooklyn Museum celebrates Frida Kahlo in the April edition of its free First Saturday program. There will be live performances by Renee Goust, Calpulli Mexican Dance Company (Puebla: The Story of Cinco De Mayo), and Pistolera (with visuals by Screaming Horses), as well as Yas Mama!’s El Noche de las Reinas with Lady Quesa’Dilla and DJ sets by Hannah Lou and Shomi Noise, hosted by Horrorchata; pop-up poetry with Danilo Machado, Jimena Lucero, and Francisco Márquez; the community talk “Art and Disability” with Dior Vargas and Kevin Gotkin; pop-up gallery talks of “Life, Death, and Transformation in the Americas” with teen apprentices; a hands-on workshop in which participants can adorn instant photos with a Kahlo-like flourish; and an “Archives as Raw History” tour focusing on disabled artists and visitors with archivist Molly Seegers. In addition, the galleries will be open late so you can check out “Frida Kahlo: Appearances Can Be Deceiving,” “Eric N. Mack: Lemme walk across the room,” “One: Do Ho Suh,” “One: Egúngún,” “Something to Say: Brooklyn Hi-Art! Machine, Deborah Kass, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, and Hank Willis Thomas,” “Infinite Blue,” “A Woman’s Afterlife: Gender Transformation in Ancient Egypt,” “Kwang Young Chun: Aggregations,” and more.