this week in art

CHELSEA ART WALK 2012

Artist Patrick Lundeen will play with his band, the Oblique Mystique, at Mike Weiss Gallery as part of Thursday night’s Chelsea Art Walk (Lundeen’s solo show, “Good for You Son,” continues at the gallery through July 28)

Multiple locations in Chelsea
Thursday, July 26, free, 5:00 – 8:00
artwalkchelsea.com

More than eighty galleries and some two dozen artist studios will remain open until 8:00 on July 26 for the third annual Chelsea Art Walk. Although summer is of course the time for group shows (not that there’s anything wrong with that), there are a handful of solo exhibits worth looking out for, including “Jake Berthot: Artist Model, Angels Putti, Poetry Visual Prose, works on paper” at Betty Cuningham, “Zoe Strauss: 10 Years, A Slideshow” at Bruce Silverstein, “Luca Pizzaroni: Bianco Trash” at Fred Torres Collaborations, Shawn Barber’s “Memoir: The Tattooed Portraits” at Joshua Liner, “Patrick Lundeen: Good for You Son” at Mike Weiss (including a set by the artist’s band, the Oblique Mystique, at 7:00), “Holly Zausner: A Small Criminal Enterprise” at Postmasters, and “Jim Marshall: The Rolling Stones and Beyond” at Steven Kasher. Among the special events are tours at 6:00 & 7:00 led by “fledgling theater company” Rudy’s Meritocracy (meet at Tenth Ave. & Twenty-first St.), a book signing with William Steiger and Rainer Gross at Margaret Thatcher Projects, and visitors to Ultra Violet Studios can have a Polaroid portrait taken of them, among numerous other gallery and artist talks and tours and opening and closing receptions.

CHRISTIAN JANKOWSKI: DISCOURSE NEWS

One of these bottles in Christian Jankowski exhibit at Friedrich Petzel Gallery could have been ours (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Friedrich Petzel Gallery
537 West 22nd St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Through July 27, free, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
212-680-9467
www.petzel.com

Back in April, we received several e-mails about Christian Jankowski’s upcoming exhibition at Friedrich Petzel Gallery in Chelsea. Thinking it was just the usual series of press releases, we filed them away, to be revisited once the show began and we checked it out. We really wish we had paid more attention back then, because they turned out to be invitations to actually be part of the multimedia show. The Berlin-based Jankowski specializes in work that explores the meta surrounding the art world, resulting in multidimensional installations that are as much about the work itself as they are works of art on their own. The show at Friedrich Petzel contains four distinct elements that combine to give viewers a fascinating look into Jankowski’s unique creative process. As you enter the gallery, you are met by a flatscreen monitor hanging from the ceiling, depicting NY1 Senior Business Anchor Annika Pergament giving a fake report about Jankowski’s latest installation, the very “Discourse News” that you are watching. Pergament talks with so-called experts about Jankowski and his oeuvre while highlighting such questions as “Why is the artist so obsessed with the discourse?” It’s so professionally done that it’s difficult to determine what’s real and what’s staged, but what really makes it so riveting — and so entertaining — is that it lets visitors in on the inside joke from the very start. Meanwhile, to the left behind the reception desk, the words “Please Stop You’re Boring Me to Death” are written out in white neon along with a drawing of two people, taken from something a visitor wrote in a gallery sign-in book, as Jankowski once again creates a work of art about something someone else said about a work of art. “Review,” the piece we were invited to be part of, consists of dozens of handwritten advance reviews that “renowned art critics” rolled up and placed in sealed glass and plastic bottles, then sent to Jankowski, who has scattered them across the gallery’s main space, where the pre-reviews tantalize visitors since the writings will never be read, as opposed to our review that you’re reading now and cannot be rolled up and stored away forever, sight unseen, within a sealed bottle. The show concludes with the forty-seven-minute black-and-white video The Eye of Dubai, in which a blindfolded Jankowski — and his blindfolded crew — make their way through Dubai led by local artist Rami Farook and followed by BBC World News, which is preparing a Collaboration Culture documentary about the project, the meta becoming an integral part of the discourse. Just the idea of an artist walking around blind in the massively growing international city that now hosts a highly touted art fair invites plenty of discourse on its own, but including the BBC doing a story on it takes it to the next level. Jankowski, whose ”Living Sculptures: Caesar, Dali Woman, El Che” was installed in the Doris C. Freedman Plaza entrance to Central Park in 2008-2009, also currently has a piece in the Public Art Fund’s “Common Ground” group show in City Hall Park, a granite grave stone that says, “Christian Jankowski 1968- Buried Somewhere on Common Ground in City Hall Park,” because in Jankowski’s world, even the eventual death of the artist can be a work of art worthy of further commentary.

PERFORMING REPRESENTATIONS

Jimenez Lai, “storefront back of house,” ink on paper, 2012

Storefront for Art and Architecture
97 Kenmare St.
Tuesday, July 24, free, 7:00
212-431-5795
www.storefrontnews.org

As part of the book launch for Jimenez Lai’s Citizens of No Place: An Architectural Graphic Novel (Princeton Architectural Press, May 2012, $19.95), the Storefront for Art and Architecture is hosting a special one-day-only exquisite-corpse drawing conversation with Lai, Drawing Center executive director Brett Littman, and architects Johanna Meyer-Grohbrügge and Michael Young. “Citizens of No Place imagines alternate worlds and engages with the design of architecture through the act of storytelling,” the book’s preface explains. “It offers narratives about character development, through which the reader can explore relationships, curiosities, and attitudes, as well as absurd stories about fake realities that invite new futures to become possibilities.” While discussing representation, the participants will create a continuous drawing, in conjunction with the Storefront’s current exhibition, “Aesthetics/Anesthetics,” which explores the nature of architectural drawings, with works by Lai, Vito Acconci, Sam Jacob, Philippe Rahm, Juergen Mayer H., Jorge Otero-Pailos, Noura Al Sayeh, Sho Shigematsu, Ling Fan, and others.

BILL BOLLINGER: THE RETROSPECTIVE

Extremely satisfying and necessary Bill Bollinger retrospective runs through July 30 at SculptureCenter (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

SculptureCenter
44-19 Purves St., Long Island City
Thursday – Monday through July 30, $5, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
718-361-1750
sculpture-center.org
bill bollinger slideshow

“I only do what it is necessary to do,” Brooklyn-born sculptor Bill Bollinger said in 1968. “There is no reason to use color, to polish, to bend, to weld, if it is not necessary to do so.” Bollinger, who died of alcoholism in 1988 at the age of forty-eight, is the subject of a small but fascinating retrospective at SculptureCenter in Long Island City. Concentrating on his most productive years of the late 1960s, the two-floor show consists of many works that repurpose standard industrial supplies, emphasizing space, form, and materiality. Using wheelbarrows, lightbulbs, Manila rope, plastic hoses, electric cables, aluminum pipes, and sections of Cyclone fencing, Bollinger created a conceptual oeuvre that brought together art and commodity in unique ways; indeed, sometimes you have to look twice before realizing what is part of the show and what is merely part of SculptureCenter’s former-factory home. But that is not meant to detract one iota from Bollinger’s extremely satisfying work, particularly “Cyclone Fence,” a gently, beautifully twisted chain-link fence that rises from the floor as if it’s alive, and “Graphite Piece,” in which black graphite powder has been thrown against a wall in its own room. A contemporary of such more well known artists as Richard Serra, Eva Hesse, Bruce Nauman, Dan Flavin, Carl Andre, Donald Judd, and Robert Smithson, Bollinger participated in several important and influential group shows in the late 1960s, as well as having his own solo exhibition at the Starrett-Lehigh Building in 1970, before personal problems, including a custody battle for his son that he ultimately won, sent him upstate into relative obscurity. The show is supplemented with a series of drawings upstairs as well as preparatory sketches, notes, and letters downstairs that reveal Bollinger’s detailed creative process. The retrospective also includes Bollinger’s only known film, in which he tries to balance what appears to be a telephone pole on the ground, only to knock it over once he does so, toying with the viewer’s expectations. “It is all very easy to execute, does not exist until it has been executed, ceases to exist when it has been taken down,” he once explained. “Bill Bollinger: The Retrospective” offers a much-needed, well-curated look at an important twentieth-century artist whose history had been threatening to cease to exist.

NEW MUSEUM BLOCK PARTY

Experimental composer Sxip Shirey will be performing at 2:45 at the New Museum Block Party in Sara D. Roosevelt Park on July 21

New Museum of Contemporary Art, 235 Bowery at Prince St.
Sara D. Roosevelt Park, Chrystie St. between Delancey & Broome Sts.
Saturday, July 21, 12 noon – 5:00
212-219-1222
www.newmuseum.org

The sixth annual New Museum Block Party takes place on the Lower East Side on Saturday in nearby Sara D. Roosevelt Park as well as the museum itself. There will be live outdoor performances by experimental artists Chris Giarmo/Boys Don’t Fight, Yvonne Meier, Sxip Shirey, and High Priest of Antipop Consortium, a Bowery Artist Tribute in which visitors can remix and recontextualize poems that have ties to the neighborhood, a digital archive of New Museum catalogs (in which you can create your own mix-and-match mini-catalog), an Op art workshop, a Lower East Side photo show, an interactive paper workshop led by Nicolás Paris, an alternate-color demonstration, and free admission to the museum (with tours every hour at a quarter past), where you can check out the exhibitions “Ghosts in the Machine,” “Pictures from the Moon: Artists’ Holograms 1969 – 2008,” “The Parade: Nathalie Djurberg with Music by Hans Berg,” and “Carlos Motta: We Who Feel Differently.”

SUPER SÁBADO! EL MUSEO’S BLOCK PARTY

The Welfare Poets will perform at annual El Museo Block Party on Saturday

FREE THIRD SATURDAYS
El Museo del Barrio
1230 Fifth Ave. at 104th St.
Saturday, July 21, free, 11:00 am – 8:00 pm
212-831-7272
www.elmuseo.org

El Museo del Barrio’s monthly free celebration of art, music, dance, and food heads outdoors on July 21 for a family-friendly summer block party on 104th St. Most of the special events take place in the late afternoon, with the Welfare Poets, domino tables, a pop-up photo booth, art workshops, A Lo Afro-Colombiano and KR3Ts dance classes, DJ EX spinning soulful tunes, and El Barrio’s Freshest 2012 breakdancing competition. The museum’s galleries are open as well, so you can beat the heat by going inside and checking out the exhibitions “Caribbean: Crossroads of the World” and “Voces y Visiones: Gran Caribe.”

CREST HARDWARE ART SHOW

Tools are not always what they seem at Crest Hardware (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Crest Hardware & Urban Garden Center
558 Metropolitan Ave. between Lorimer & Union
Daily thorugh August 31, free, Monday – Saturday 8:00 – 7:00, Sunday 10:00 – 5:00
718-388-9521
www.cresthardwareartshow.com
crest hardware art show slideshow

The annual Crest Hardware Art Show is an exhibit like none other, a fun, lighthearted display spread throughout the Brooklyn store, which is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary this year. More than one hundred artists have works on the shelves, down the aisles, hanging from the ceiling, and out in the garden, most of which are made of and/or comment on objects available at the popular hardware store. Priced from $10 to $8,888, with most works between $100 and $500, the show is like a treasure hunt, with a majority of the pieces artfully “hidden” as if they are regular hardware items. Chelsea Bahr uses toilet seats in “All the Things I’ve Read on the Pot.” Bernadette Scelta paints a paintbrush painting in “Paint a Wall and Clear Your Mind,” which evokes Magritte as it hangs among the paintbrushes. A pair of rats with a broom are not happy in Peter Pracilio’s “Damn Housing.” Aya Rosen and Ruti Dan create offbeat faces using unusual materials in “Where the Midnight Summer’s Dreams.” Jilly Ballistic places gas masks on Marilyn Monroe and a would-be subway rider that resemble nearby safety goggles and paint odor respirators in “Seven Year Itch à la Jilly Ballistic” and “E Train to World Trade Center.” Joseph Silva’s “50 Shades of Gray” features fifty squares of different shades of the color gray as if they were paint swatches. Jude Ferencz uses wires to create such Tim Burton-inspired works as “Crucified Copper” and “Copper Skate Punk.” Damien Olsen’s “Bill Murray” tells the bizarre tale of a hungry alligator and an unfortunate person. And visitors are encouraged to put on the headphones and groove to Kayrock’s self-DJ’d “Emergency Synthesizer Tool Box.” Other pieces incorporate power drills, hammers, watering cans, ladders, wrenches, chain saws, flashlights, nuts, bolts, locks, spray paint, pliers, lamps, screws, rat traps, duct tape, and other hardware elements in inventive ways. The Crest Hardware Art Show is a great way to spend a few hours when one of you wants to see art while the other is getting ready to do some home improvement. Sales from the works benefit the City Reliquary, the museum and civic organization down the street on Metropolitan Ave.