Yearly Archives: 2011

HAI BO

Hai Bo, “Passing Traveler,” pigment print mounted to Dibond, 2009

Pace/MacGill Gallery
32 East 57th St. between Park & Madison Aves.
Tuesday – Saturday through February 26, free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
212-759-7999
www.pacemacgill.com

Photographs capture moments in time, but in the large-scale work of Hai Bo, time does anything but stand still. On the wall that greets visitors in the front of the Pace/MacGill Gallery on East 57th St. for the Chinese photographer’s latest solo show, “Shadow — 3” depicts an artist at an easel, looking at a skull on a table in the corner as sunlight streams in. The canvas on the easel is blank as the man contemplates his own life and death. On the other side of the wall hangs “Shadow — 2,” a picture of the same room only without the artist and the easel. Despite their numbered sequence, it is impossible to tell which photograph was taken first, leaving the viewer to wonder whether the artist has not arrived yet, has come and gone, or has succumbed to the ultimate fate of all people. Hai Bo regularly returns to his native village of Changchun in Jilin province, where he photographs old friends and relatives on their passage from life to death. “Their today is our tomorrow,” he tells Stephanie H. Tung in her brief essay in the exhibition catalog. “By showing the loneliness, helplessness, and even despair of these old men, I want to convey the emptiness of success and ambition, and the futility of power and strength.”

Hai Bo is all smiles at opening of new show about the fleetingness of life (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

In “Old Man,” Hai Bo photographs an eighty-year-old neighbor in a forest in the fall, dead leaves scattered on the ground, surrounded by bare branches as the slightly arched man stands with his head against a tree arching in the opposite direction, his face sullenly pointed downward, at the mercy of the power of nature as his days fade away. In “Smoke,” a group of old men in black, their faces unseen, wander in the snow in front of a homeless shelter, smoke rising from the one-story horizontal structure, their hopes and dreams — and lives — drifting away. In “Passing Traveler,” a sepia-toned photograph shows an elderly man walking up a barren path that dissipates behind him, the wide expanse of his past disappearing in the background, his future brief and uncertain; he is captured midstep, as if teetering on the precipice. Pathways play a central role in a number of the works; in “2007 — I,” a far-off man becomes part of an empty winter landscape, while in “Early Evening Light — 2,” a seated man on one side of a narrow bricked walkway watches two seated men talk on the other side, the fenced-in path running between them and into the distance, where it comes to an end as twilight beckons. Curiously, the only piece that feels out of place is the triptych “Yesterday,” a series of three black-and-white images of two younger men, one holding a cigarette, in the midst of what seems to be a lively, thought-provoking conversation in a darkly lit room, with no outside elements of nature threatening their future. The title evokes an immediacy not evident in the other photographs, which instead focus on the passage of time and approaching death while also revealing a deep, innate respect for and, in humbling ways, a celebration of lives lived.

WINTER JAM NYC

GreeNYC mascot Birdie will be on hand for annual Winter Jam in Prospect Park

The Nethermead, Prospect Park
Enter at Ocean Ave. & Lincoln Rd.
Saturday, February 5, free, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
www.nycgovparks.org

It’s been one crazy winter, with record-breaking amounts of snow being dumped on the city. If you haven’t taken advantage of all the fun the white stuff can offer, head over to Prospect Park on Saturday for Winter Jam, the free annual sports festival sponsored by the Parks Dept., the Olympic Regional Development Authority, and the Prospect Park Alliance. Scheduled activities include cross-country skiing, showshoeing, and snow sculpting on the Lake Placid Snow Field, skiing and snowboarding lessons in the “Learn To” Area, the Red Bull Butter Cup snowboard trick contest, and the Pride of New York Winter Market. It’s sort of like Brooklyn’s own mini-version of the Winter X Games. There will also be live performances by the Skyriders, the Nick West Quartet (11:30), Sister Sparrow & the Dirty Birds (12:30), Dujeous (1:30), InnerParty System (2:30), and BR & Timebomb (3:30), hosted by Craig Baldo.

LUNAR NEW YEAR FESTIVAL

Qi Baishi, “Two Rabbits,” hanging scroll, ink and color on paper, twentieth century (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of Robert Hatfield Ellsworth, in memory of La Ferne Hatfield Ellsworth, 1986)

Metropolitan Museum of Art
1000 Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.
February 4-6, most events free with recommended admission of $20 adults (children under twelve free)
212-570-3828
www.metmuseum.org

The celebration of the Year of the Rabbit heads uptown for the Met’s three-day Lunar New Year Festival, beginning tonight at 6:00 with “The Emperor’s Private Paradise: Its Survival and Conservation,” a lecture by Henry Tzu Ng held in conjunction with the exhibition “The Emperor’s Private Paradise: Treasures from the Forbidden City.” At 8:00, David Rakoff hosts “Gilded Ink: Write like an Emperor,” an evening of prizewinning short stories by college students, preceded by a tour of “The Emperor’s Private Paradise” at 6:30. Tomorrow the Year of the Rabbit hops all over the museum, with a Sesame Street puppet show at 11:00, Storytime in Nolen Library at 11:45, a lion dance procession at 12:15, a fan and ribbon dance, calligraphy and face painting, a costume demonstration, and a drawing workshop at 1:00, a youth orchestra concert at 1:30, a tea ceremony at 2:15, and Peking Opera performances of LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD at 3:00 (one hour children’s show, $15) and 7:00 (full concert with acrobatics, live music and dance, martial arts, and more, $30). The festivities conclude on Sunday with a special look at “The Emperor’s Private Paradise,” featuring a series of lectures beginning at 2:00, including Maxwell K. Hearn’s “Art, Artifice, and Identity—The World of the Qianlong Emperor,” Nancy Berliner’s “A Chinese Garden in Space and over Time,” and Ben Wang’s “The Musicality of Chinese Poetry and Calligraphy in the World of the Qianlong Emperor.”

SANCTUM

Executive producer James Cameron’s SANCTUM is all wet



SANCTUM (Alister Grierson, 2011)

Opens Friday, February 4
www.sanctummovie.com

Executive producer James Cameron’s mosh-up of TITANIC, AVATAR, ALIENS, and THE ABYSS is, well, abysmal. Inspired by a real-life 1988 expedition documented by SANCTUM writer and producer Andrew Wight in NULLARBOR DREAMING, this underwater spelunking adventure is classic Cameron: a combination of stunning imagery with absurd dialogue and overmanipulated melodrama. Richard Roxburgh stars as Frank McGuire, a tough-as-nails cave diver who has sacrificed his personal life for the opportunity to boldly go where no one has gone before. His latest challenge is a monster cave in Papua, New Guinea, in a dive sponsored by millionaire adventurer Carl Hurley, ridiculously played by Ioan Gruffudd, who awfully delivers the awful dialogue he is given. Carl has brought along his girlfriend, Victoria (Alice Parkinson), while Frank is joined by the seventeen-year-old son he doesn’t know very well, Josh (Rhys Wakefield). After a massive tornado hits them harder and faster than expected, the team is trapped in the seemingly limitless cave system, desperately trying to find a way out before they all drown. The 3-D effects are extremely cool in the beginning, if over the top, but they soon fade into the background as clichéd scene after clichéd scene chokes the story. It quickly devolves into a POSEIDON ADVENTURE wannabe, but with stale characters and little emotional involvement as well as more than its share of unintentional laughs. Still, there are some breathtakingly gorgeous shots, but SANCTUM is, ultimately, all wet.

FIRST SATURDAYS: FRAMING OUR HISTORY

Hank Willis Thomas will discuss his long-term installation, “Unbranded,” at the Brooklyn Museum on Saturday night (Hank Willis Thomas, “Why wait another day to be adorable? Tell your beautician ‘Relax me,’” chromogenic photograph, 1968/2007)

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Saturday, February 5, free, 5:00 – 11:00 (some events require free tickets distributed at the Visitor Center)
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org

For its February First Saturdays free program, the Brooklyn Museum is honoring Black History Month with its usual wide-ranging schedule of events. Kicking things off at 5:00 will be the Fat Cat Big Band, with Jade Synstelien leading a group of up to sixteen musicians through jazz and bebop. At 5:30, Denzel Washington’s THE GREAT DEBATERS (2007) will be shown, introduced by author Trey Ells (RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW), who will also participate in a Q&A following the screening. At 6:00, curator and writer Kalia Brooks will discuss the exhibition “Lorna Simpson: Gathered”: Simpson’s photographs will also be the focus of the 6:30 Hands-On Art workshop, and people are encouraged to bring their own photos to add to a collaborative interactive project as well. At 7:00, curator Sharon Matt Atkins will take visitors on a tour of “Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera,” while at 8:00 a student guide will give a Young Voices gallery talk on the installation “American Identities: A New Look.” The always hot dance party gets under way at 8:00, hosted by DJ Stormin’ Norman, who will be playing hip-hop and soul tunes. And at 9:00, Hank Willis Thomas will discuss his long-term installation, “Unbranded,” while at the same time the Smalls Jazz Club All-Stars will take listeners back to the Golden Age of music.

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY: THE CLOCK

Christian Marclay’s twenty-four-hour masterpiece unfolds in real time in Chelsea

Paula Cooper Gallery
534 West 21st St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Tuesday – Thursday, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
Friday at 10:00 am – Saturday at 6:00 pm
Through February 19, free
212-255-1105
www.paulacoopergallery.com

Last summer, the Whitney presented “Festival,” a thrilling interactive retrospective of the work of Christian Marclay, featuring multiple site-specific installations and live performances. The New York-based multidisciplinary artist has followed that up with a supreme work of utter brilliance, the captivating twenty-four-hour video THE CLOCK. Screened in a large, dark gallery with roomy, comfortable seats, the film unfolds in real time, composed of thousands of clips from movies and television that feature all kinds of clocks and watches showing the minutes ticking away. Masterfully edited so that it creates its own fluid narrative, THE CLOCK seamlessly cuts from romantic comedies with birds emerging from cuckoo clocks to action films in which protagonists synchronize their watches, from thrillers with characters battling it out in clock towers to dramas with convicted murderers facing execution and sci-fi programs with mad masterminds attempting to freeze time. Marclay mixes in iconic images with excerpts from little-known foreign works, so audiences are kept on the edge of their seats, wondering what will come next, laughing knowingly at recognizable scenes and gawking at strange, unfamiliar bits. Part of the beauty of THE CLOCK is that while time is often central to many of the clips, it is merely incidental in others, someone casually checking their watch or a clock visible in the background, emphasizing how pervasive time is — both on-screen and in real life. Americans spend an enormous amount of time watching movies and television, so THE CLOCK is also a wry though loving commentary on what we choose to do with our leisure time as well. Although it is not necessarily meant to be viewed in one massive gulp, THE CLOCK will be shown in its entirety on Fridays this month, February 4, 11, and 18, beginning at 10:00 am. Since the film corresponds to the actual time, midnight should offer some fascinating moments, although you might be surprised how exciting even three o’clock in the morning can be.

THE YEAR OF THE RABBIT: 4709

The annual Chinatown Lunar New Year festivities will welcome in the Year of the Rabbit (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The annual Chinatown Lunar New Year festivities will welcome in the Year of the Rabbit (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Sara D. Roosevelt Park (and other venues)
East Houston St. between Forsythe & Chrystie Sts.
February 3-12
Admission: free
www.betterchinatown.com

The Year of the Rabbit is upon us, and the celebration kicks into full swing today, with the Chinese New Year’s Day Firecracker Ceremony and Cultural Festival in Sara D. Roosevelt Park beginning at 11:00, with live music and dance, speeches by politicians, drum groups, lion dancers making their way through local businesses, and lots of loud noises to ward off evil spirits and welcome in a prosperous new year. On Sunday, the twelfth annual Chinatown Lunar New Year Parade & Festival takes place, with cultural booths in the park (11:30 – 4:00) and a parade with floats beginning at 1:00 in Minuscule Italy. The annual march through Flushing, which also features lion dances, drummers, and fireworks, is scheduled for Saturday, February 12. For the next few weeks, Chinatown restaurants will be offering all kinds of special New Year dinners; it’s a tradition to eat a whole fish, with the head on, to bring good luck. Gōng xǐ fā cái!