Yearly Archives: 2011

PAT STEIR: THE NEARLY ENDLESS LINE

Pat Steir’s “Nearly Endless Line” winds through the Sue Scott Gallery on Rivington (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Sue Scott Gallery
1 Rivington St. at Bowery
Through Sunday, January 9, free
212-358-8767
www.suescottgallery.com

Today is your last chance to see New York City-based artist Pat Steir’s “The Nearly Endless Line” at the Sue Scott Gallery on Rivington St., but it is not nearly the end of the seventy-year-old Newark native’s line work, as her Whitney mural, “Another Nearly Endless Line,” will be visible from Madison Ave. while restaurateur Danny Meyer turns the lower level space into a new café. Whereas the Whitney piece is a flaglike conglomeration of multiple colors, the work at Sue Scott is a dark, mysterious black-and-white installation (with blue lighting) that winds through the gallery, across doors, and over every nook and cranny in its path. Seemingly aglow with a life of its own, the line occasionaly pauses for a little flourish, a loop here and there, as it makes its way back to the entrance. “It’s almost like a map you can’t follow, a road map to a place you can’t go,” Steir has said of the Whitney piece, but the statement relates just as well to the Scott work. The show also includes a time-lapse video of Steir creating “The Nearly Endless Line” in addition to several abstract works that recall ancient Asian scrolls. The gallery is a little hard to find, so just look for the white wall dripping that Steir left on the outside brick as a marker.

THE ENGLISH BEAT

Dave Wakeling leads the English Beat through a groovy gig at Webster Hall last summer (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Highline Ballroom
431 West 16th St. between Ninth & Tenth Aves.
Sunday, January 9, $30, 8:00
212-414-5994
www.myspace.com/officialbeatspace
www.highlineballroom.com

We have to admit that we were forced to catch the English Beat last August at Webster Hall, figuring them to be just another once-hot ’80s retread living off the past, playing warmed-over versions of ancient hits, with only one original member in tow. Damn, were we wrong. Instead, we had a rollicking good time as Dave Wakeling led the Beat through a thirtieth-anniversary celebration of their seminal album I JUST CAN’T STOP IT, along with a few covers and even a new song. The dance party never stopped as a comfortable and relaxed Wakeling shared funny stories about crazy nights in New York City way back when and how most of the band now downs coconut milk in lieu of the harder stuff, referring to Rhythmm Epkins on drums, Wayne Lothian on bass, Matt Morrish on sax, Raynier Jacildo on keyboards, Musashi “Moose” Lethridge on guitar, and Antonee taking the First Class Toaster part made famous by Ranking Roger. The generous setlist ran the gamut from such EB classics as “I Confess,” “Can’t Get Used to Losing You,” “Twist & Crawl,” “Hands Off, She’s Mine,” “Stand Down Margaret,” “Tears of a Clown,” and “Mirror in the Bathroom” to a cover of the Staples Singers’ “I’ll Take You There.” Running long, Wakeling cut a General Public tune, making a sly jab at RR. The Birmingham native, long since relocated to California, also added a snippet of Pearl Jam’s “Better Man” to “Save It for Later,” just as Eddie Vedder has been adding a snippet of “Save It” to PJ’s performances of “Better Man” for years. The band also featured the new “The Love You Give Lasts Forever,” part of a benefit project for Acoustic for Autism; in fact, they’re readying the first English Beat studio album since 1982’s SPECIAL BEAT SERVICE, so don’t be surprised to see other fresh tracks tonight, when EB plays the Highline Ballroom with the Brooklyn Rundfunk Orkestrata, Toubab Krewe, and the Lost Fingers. Tickets are half price if you bring in an unemployment stub and present it at the box office. You know you want to go. So just go. Plus, it’s Sunday night, so what else do you have to do?

globalFEST 2011

The chamber music of Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Ségal will be part of globalFEST at Webster Hall January 9

Webster Hall
125 East 11th St. between Second & Third Aves.
Sunday, January 9, $40, 7:00
www.globalfest-ny.org

The eighth annual golbalFEST, which brings together international music from all over the world, returns to Webster Hall on January 9 with an impressive lineup of thirteen performers across three stages. This year’s participants are India’s Rhythm of Rajasthan, Hawai’i’s Kaumakaiwa Kanaka’ole, the Creole Choir of Cuba, Brazil’s Orquestra Contemporânea de Olinda, New York/Cuba’s Pedrito Martinez Group, the Mali-France duo of Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Segal, Haiti’s RAM, Senegal’s Yoro Ndiaye, Egypt/New York’s Zikrayat Colombia’s LA-33, the Congo’s Diblo Dibala, Peru’s Novalima, and New York/India’s Red Baraat. The show runs from 7:00 to 12:15, and tickets are $40.

UNDER THE RADAR: PHOBOPHILIA

Surreal multimedia PHOBOPHILIA takes audiences on a bizarre journey (photo by Julio Pantoja)

HERE Arts Center
145 Sixth Ave. at Dominick St.
Through January 10, $20
212-352-3101
www.here.org
www.undertheradarfestival.com

Part of the Under the Radar Festival, 2boys.tv’s PHOBOPHILIA is a surreal journey into fear and darkness, terror and temptation. After gathering in HERE’S lobby, the two dozen audience members are led back outside in small groups and taken through a different entrance, where they must check their coats and blindfold themselves before heading into a secret location. Once there, the blindfolds are removed, and they are seated in specific, extremely low metal folding chairs while a suited man with a black bag over his head balances precariously on a trunk, an interrogation light on the floor behind him. Eventually the man reveals himself, opens the trunk, and then the real fun begins, a multimedia performance piece that includes sculptural video imagery, song and dance, action sequences, and plenty of mystery. Inspired by the work of Jean Cocteau, creators Stephen Lawson and Aaron Pollard fill PHOBOPHILIA with haunting elements of magic and intentional confusion, keeping the audience off balance as they bend and twist the lines between art and artifice, audience and actor, fiction and reality, witness and voyeur, torture and pleasure. The forty-five-minute piece continues through the weekend, with performances scheduled for 5:00, 6:00, 7:00, and 10:00 on January 8, 1:00, 5:00, 6:00, and 7:00 on January 9, and 6:00 and 7:00 on January 10.

FRANZ XAVER MESSERSCHMIDT 1736-1783: FROM NEOCLASSICISM TO EXPRESSIONISM

Franz Xaver Messerschmidt, “The Yawner,” tin cast, 1771–81 (Szépmuvészeti Múzeum, Budapest)

Neue Galerie
1048 Fifth Ave. at 86th St.
Through Monday, January 10, $15
212-628-6200
www.neuegalerie.org

After the death of his leading advocate, Martin van Meytens, and failing to receive a desired position at the Academy of Fine Art in Vienna, Bavarian-born Austrian Franz Xaver Messerschmidt went a bit off the deep end. He returned to his home in the small village of Wiesensteig and devoted the bulk of his remaining years (1771-83) to creating “character heads,” busts based on faces he made in the mirror by pinching himself (although he did continue receiving commissions during this time as well). Many of the heads are on display at the Neue Galerie through Monday, January 10, the first one-man museum show of Messerschmidt’s work ever to be held in the United States and one that next goes to the Louvre in Paris. The exhibit begins with several of Messerschmidt’s early commissioned busts of prominent Viennese figures, Baroque pieces that show off his immense skill at carving out facial characteristics with exacting detail, from the eyes, nose, and mouth to the cheekbones, chin, and hair. But his presumed madness, heightened by a fear of evil spirits around him, soon becomes evident in the second room, which contains a glass case of seven of the character heads, depicted in odd, unusual grimaces, winces, yawns, and other comic and serious poses, every wrinkle, neck muscle, eyebrow, and double chin a glimmer of perfection. Forget about the names of the sculptures — such intentionally silly, banal titles as “Surly Old Soldier,” “Afflicted with Constipation,” and “Just Rescued from Drowning” were assigned by a promoter after Messerschmidt’s death in 1783 (at the age of forty-seven) — and just bask in the glory of the work itself, from the intense beard on “Capuchin” to the rare depiction of teeth and a tongue in “The Yawner” to the beautiful hat of “The Artist as He Imagined Himself Laughing,” all of which predates (and perhaps predicts) German Expressionism but feels as modern as if it were created yesterday. There is also a thirty-minute documentary on Messerschmidt, and classical music fills the third-floor galleries. Also on view at the Neue is the excellent “Postcards of the Wiener Werkstätte: Selections from the Leonard A. Lauder Collection” (through January 17) in addition to the outstanding permanent collection, including exquisite paintings by Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele as well as drawings by Klimt, Schiele, Kokoschka, Lubin, and others.

WALLY CARDONA: INTERVENTION #4: ROBERT SEMBER

Wally Cardona will team up with Robert Sember for INTERVENTION #4 at BAC on January 8

Baryshnikov Arts Center
450 West 37th St.
Saturday, January 8, $15, 8:30
www.bacnyc.org
www.wcvismorphing.org

In such widely praised works as REALLY REAL, A LIGHT CONVERSATION, SITE, and EVERYWHERE, Brooklyn-based dancer and choreographer Wally Cardona has continued to investigate the architecture of space as well as human emotion and interaction. In 2005’s EVERYWHERE, commissioned for BAM’s Next Wave Festival, he placed barriers across the floor as dancers made their way through an ever-changing maze that led to a thrilling and surprising conclusion. In 2007’s site-specific SITE at DTW, Cardona again used objects to deconstruct and reconstruct the stage set in another of his “landscape” works. In addition to often incorporating physical objects into his pieces, Cardona also regularly collaborates with a diverse array of individuals, including sound artist Phil Kline, teacher and dancer Rahel Vonmoos, the music groups ETHEL and the Brooklyn Youth Chorus, video artist Maya Ciarrocchi, and interior designer Douglas Fanning. For his current project, INTERVENTION, Cardona is holding residencies in several cities, where the host institution selects a local expert not from the field of dance for him to work with for five days, creating a single, unique performance. This past week Cardona has teamed up with Robert Sember, part of the Ultra-red activist art collective, a former researcher for Columbia’s Department of Sociomedical Sciences, and a Vera List Center Fellow at the New School, for INTERVENTION #4, which will take place tonight at the Baryshnikov Arts Center on West 37th St. Cardona will be back at BAC on February 12 for INTERVENTION #5 and March 26 for INTERVENTION #6 before heading to Washington, DC, with the fascinating project. Meanwhile, Paris-based choreographer Jennifer Lacey is participating in similar residencies, called MY FIRST TIME WITH A DRAMATURGE, which will eventually come together with Cardona’s INTERVENTION and music by Berlin-based composer Jonathan Bepler for the more expansive TOOL IS LOOT. Tickets are only $15 to see one of Brooklyn’s most innovative and creative choreographers in a one-time only performance tonight, so don’t miss it.

HILARY EASTON + COMPANY

Hilary Easton will present a free performance of LIGHT AND SHADE at City Center Studios on Saturday morning

City Center Studios
130 West 56th St., fifth floor
Saturday, January 8, free with RSVP, 11:30 am
www.hilaryeaston.com

“I love dancing,” choreographer, dancer, teacher, and native New Yorker Hilary Easton explains in her artist’s statement. “I love inventing movement, watching it, doing it.” That joy comes through in her work, which has been presented since 1992 at such venues as PS122, Danspace Project, SummerStage, the American Dance Festival, and Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors. Back in October, the New York-based Hilary Easton + Company held the world premiere of their latest work, LIGHT AND SHADE, at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, and they’re bringing it back as part of this weekend’s APAP conference with a special free performance at City Center Studios. The forty-five-minute duet will be performed by Michael Ingle and Emily Pope-Blackman, set to a sound score by Mike Rugnetta, with lighting design by Kathy Kaufmann and costumes by Madeleine Walach. The piece explores the many ways of experiencing intimacy, between the dancers onstage as well as between the performers and the audience.