this week in art

TALK ABOUT NOTHING

Theater innovator Robert Wilson will discuss emptiness and the void on December 6 at the Rubin Museum

Rubin Museum of Art
150 West 17th St. at Seventh Ave.
October 18 – January 29, $15-$30
212-620-5000
www.rmanyc.org

Running in conjunction with the exhibition “Grains of Emptiness,” which opens November 5 and includes works by Sanford Biggers, Theaster Gates, Atta Kim, Wolfgang Laib, and Charmion von Wiegand relating to Buddhist ritual practice and impermanence, Talk About Nothing features nearly two dozen conversations pairing artists, writers, musicians, filmmakers, philosophers, and religious leaders discussing “what is and what isn’t.” The intriguing series, produced by resident Rubin programming genius Tim McHenry, begins October 18 with British author Karen Armstrong and 96th Street Mosque head Imam Shamsi Ali and continues with such pairings as British sculptor Antony Gormley and the Venerable Tenzin Priyadarshi of MIT’s Dalai Lama Center for Ethics and Transformative Values, film director Mike Nichols and math and science philosopher Christopher Potter, video installation pioneer Bill Viola and Buddhist teacher Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, actor Brian Cox and psychology professor Alison Gopnik, comedian Sandra Bernhard and author Michael Cunningham, composer Nico Muhly and writer Andrew Solomon, multimedia performance artist Laurie Anderson and writer Charles Seife, and theater director Peter Sellars and academic and author Raj Patel. Although some of the events are already sold out, stand-by tickets could be available, so what have you got to lose? Well, nothing. You can also score free tickets to multiple talks by submitting a three-minute YouTube video about nothing by October 27 and placing in the top three.

AN-MY LÊ AND LYNNE TILLMAN IN CONVERSATION

An-My Lê, “Patient Admission, US Naval Hospital Ship Mercy, Vietnam,” archival pigment print, 2010

Murray Guy
453 West 17th St. between Ninth & Tenth Aves.
Saturday, October 16, 4:30
Exhibition continues through October 30
Admission: free
212-463-7372
www.murrayguy.com

Vietnamese-American artist An-My Lê, who fled Saigon with her family in 1975 when she was fifteen, has been photographing war and the military since the early-to-mid-1990s, taking documentary shots of troops in training, Vietnam War reenactments, and landscapes of such bases as 29 Palms in California. In her latest series, on view at Murray Guy through October 30, Lê visited hospital ships, training areas, and landing sites in Haiti, Indonesia, Ghana, Egypt, Senegal, and Vietnam, capturing the men and women of the U.S. military in everyday situations and posing for the camera. Men in fatigues laze about in front of a lush green forest, a supply distribution convoy makes its way along a barren beach, a highly decorated officer prepares for a portrait session aboard the USS Ronald Reagan, one soldier helps another during combat life-saving training, and a security guard surveys the ocean landscape from the rail of the U.S. naval hospital ship Comfort. In the north gallery, Lê displays a succession of portraits of woman soldiers, including a line shack supervisor, an aircraft carrier arresting gear mechanic, and a forward look-out. Meanwhile, in the south gallery, five prints of the USS Dwight Eisenhower passing through the Suez Canal take the viewer on a brief ride. Although none of the shots involve actual combat on the front lines, together they offer a different look at war: gorgeously composed shots, many in spectacular deep focus, that are beautiful in their own right in or out of context. The exhibit can perhaps best be summarized by “Patient Admission,” which depicts a Buddhist monk and a U.S. soldier sitting on metal folding chairs aboard the US naval hospital ship Mercy, their hands in their laps, a silver vertical beam separating them in the background, a complex visual commentary on war and peace. An-My Lê will be at Murray Guy for a special discussion with writer Lynne Tillman on Saturday, October 16, at 4:30, shedding yet more light on this stunning series.

TWI-NY TALK: FRANK STEFANKO & DANNY CLINCH

Danny Clinch, “Harley, Allaire Industrial Park, Wall Township, NJ 2007” (© Danny Clinch, 2007)



FROM DARKNESS TO A DREAM

Morrison Hotel Gallery
124 Prince St.
October 15 – November 7, free
212-941-8770
www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

The Boss might be off the road and in between albums right now, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t plenty of Bruce Juice to be devoured these days. Bruce Springsteen was recently in Toronto for the world premiere of THE PROMISE: THE DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN STORY, Thom Zimny’s behind-the-scenes documentary of the making of the seminal 1978 album, and the film is currently being aired on HBO prior to the release of the highly anticipated DARKNESS boxed set on November 16. On October 15, the Morrison Hotel Gallery’s SoHo branch looks back at those glory days and beyond with “From Darkness to a Dream,” an exhibit of familiar and never-before-seen photographs of Springsteen taken by Frank Stefanko, who shot the covers for DARKNESS and THE RIVER, and Danny Clinch, who has been shooting Bruce since 1999, including the covers for THE RISING, MAGIC, and WORKING ON A DREAM. Stefanko, who met Springsteen through Patti Smith, captures Bruce at a pivotal time in his career, during the three-year hiatus following the breakout success of BORN TO RUN, when Bruce’s future was in doubt. Clinch, who met Springsteen while an assistant for Annie Liebovitz during the TUNNEL OF LOVE sessions, reveals a more mature, relaxed Bruce, whether onstage, in the studio, or hanging around with his motorcycles. Stefanko and Clinch recently discussed with twi-ny their involvement with Springsteen and the upcoming SoHo show.

twi-ny: Frank, you photographed Bruce during a turning point in his career, when it took him three years to release DARKNESS ON THE EDGE OF TOWN and another two-plus years to make THE RIVER. In your book DAYS OF HOPES AND DREAMS, Bruce wrote that you “latched onto the very conflicts and ideas I was struggling to come to terms with: Who am I? Where do I go now? He showed me the people I was writing about in my songs. He showed me the part of me that was still one of them.” What do you think it was about the two of you that made you instantly click?

Frank Stefanko: I think the most important thing we did, before ever putting a roll of film in the camera, was to sit down in my living room and chat. In our “getting to know each other” conversation, we found out we had a lot in common. We both came from working-class families. Bruce’s mother was Italian and his father was Dutch Irish. My mother was also Italian and my father was Czechoslovakian. We had families that worked hard, and there was a sense of honesty and dignity. The best of these cultures — honesty, dignity, work ethic — seemed to rub off on us. It helped me to understand the character of the young man I was to capture on film. There were other similarities between us. We both were New Jerseyians, we both loved the Jersey Shore, and we both grew up with the same music around us, so this guy who was about to stand before my lens seemed very familiar to me.

twi-ny: Danny, as evidenced by your December 2008 show at the Morrison Hotel Gallery on Bowery, you’ve taken pictures of such musical icons as Johnny Cash, Lucinda Williams, Neil Young, Joan Jett, Tupac Shakur, Radiohead, Norah Jones, Michael Stipe, Kanye West, Tom Waits, and James Brown. How does Bruce Springsteen compare as a photographic subject with these other superstars, both shooting him in a prepared, posed setting as well as when he’s performing onstage?

Danny Clinch: Honestly, Bruce is a great subject; he gets the process. A subject has to participate in some way for the photograph to be successful. Also, as a photographer you have to be ready to get it when it’s there. He also understands that giving me great access backstage or onstage will result in good photographs. But it takes time to get that trust.

Bruce Springsteen, “Darkness,” Back Cover / Album Square (© Frank Stefanko, 1978)

twi-ny: In the 1970s and ’80s, Bruce was notoriously protective of his career, from the songs he would put on record to the album covers and promotional photographs he would allow to be seen by the public. In the 2000s, he seems to be much more relaxed about both, releasing several records in a relatively short period of time and being seen much more often in photo spreads. Would you both agree that there has indeed been such a change in Bruce’s attitude about his image, and if so, why do you think that is? How do you think your two sets of images, from completely different periods, will either complement or compete with each other when hung together in the gallery?

DC: What I remember about the ’70s and ’80s were the Springsteen album photographs that are ingrained in my memory. Some of them were Frank’s. But if you look at Frank’s photographs from back then, it seems Bruce was already open to having Frank come hang where the band was, a diner, on the street, leaning on his car. These weren’t glamour photos; these were documents of who he was at the time. And he has given me the same opportunities. Although I am often hired to do these shoots, sometimes Bruce and I come up with some ideas/inspiration and just get together and shoot some photographs, knowing that we’ll use ’em down the road. This is why I think our photographs will complement well in the gallery show. It’s a different era, but the same trust was given to get these great opportunities.

FS: I have noticed a loosening of restrictions over the years regarding Bruce’s images. Some of it may be because Bruce and his management may be more comfortable with the fact that there is nothing to hide. I think Bruce has matured, and those issues have become less important, while other issues affecting humanity and the planet have become more important. In general, however, I just think that because he is one of the most photographed performers alive today, with his images everywhere, you start to get a sense of . . . well, this is part of the legacy and it’s OK. Regarding Danny Clinch’s images and mine hanging together in our show, Danny and I have talked about this and we both agree. The fact that these images have been taken with thirty years between them, they work beautifully together. There is a common thread that weaves these images together . . . they have soul. There is a moody, soulful quality in both of our work that has transcended time and space. You will see a younger, DARKNESS-era Bruce and a more mature, contemporary Bruce; however, we both are able to show the soul, moods, and essence of the artist that is Bruce Springsteen.

ZILVINAS KEMPINAS: BALLROOM

Yvon Lambert
550 West 21st St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Through October 16
Admission: free
212-242-3611
www.yvon-lambert.com
ballroom slideshow

Lithuanian multimedia artist Zilvinas Kempinas, who represented his country at last year’s Venice Biennale, has turned Yvon Lambert’s main space into a disco wonderland with “Ballroom.” Red, white, and blue lights reflect off the floor and onto mylar panels that cover the walls as rotating fans blow air down onto more than a dozen circles of unwound magnetic tape. The tape is held in place merely by the air itself; don’t worry if you step on it, because it will hold its shape like magic. All the elements combine for an ultracool experience; all that’s missing is thumping disco music. In the front room of the gallery, Roman Opalka’s “Passages” continues the French artist’s series of white paintings of numbers in order, a stark contrast to Kempinas’s lively “Ballroom.”

PIPILOTTI RIST: HEROES OF BIRTH

Visitors get lost in a dreamlike immersive environment in Pipilotti Rist show at Luhring Augustine (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Luhring Augustine
531 West 24th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Through October 16
Admission: free
212-206-9100
www.luhringaugustine.com
www.pipilottirist.net
heroes of birth slideshow

In fall 2008, Swiss artist Pipolotti Rist transformed MoMA’s Marron Atrium into a meditative multimedia immersive environment with “Pour Your Body Out (7354 Cubic Meters),” a twenty-five-foot-high, two-hundred-foot-long site-specific video installation about the interrelationship between nature, humanity, and the animal kingdom that could be seen while resting in a specially designed central island. Rist has now transformed Chelsea’s Luhring Augustine gallery with “Layers Mama Layers,” an immersive environment in which film of grazing sheep and futuristic green laser swirls are projected onto both sides of rows of translucent sheets of fabric hanging from the ceiling. Visitors become part of the installation as they walk through the rows, the film beaming onto their bodies. Whereas the projections are sharp on the outside sheets, they become more and more diluted and abstract the closer to the center you get, with the people walking past turning into eerie, otherworldly shadows. Meanwhile, a hypnotic lullaby plays, furthering the dreamlike atmosphere. (Don’t start counting those sheep.)

Pipilotti Rist’s “Massachusetts Chandelier” lights up the back room at Luhring Augustine with glowing underwear (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

In the back gallery, Rist has installed “Massachusetts Chandelier,” a video sculpture composed of underwear she collected from friends and family, arranged as a large light, hanging from the ceiling, onto which she projects brightly colored images that makes it look alive. Be sure to check out the wallpaper as well, although you might have a bit of trouble explaining to children what one of the repeated images is. In the front room, “All or Nothing” is a small, three-panel video of the wallpaper, along with an altar of flowers and a watercooler where you can grab a drink. Rist’s work is always engaging, and “Heroes of Birth” is no exception, a fun show guaranteed to please.

CONFLUX FESTIVAL

Urban historian and guerrilla photographer Steve Duncan will give keynote address at seventh annual Conflux Festival (“Sewer, NYC” photo © Steve Duncan)

NYU Barney Building
34 Stuyvesant St.
October 8-10, $5-$9
www.confluxfestival.org

More than seventy-five digital artists will converge on the East Village and the Lower East Side for the seventh annual Conflux festival, which focuses on “contemporary psychogeography, the investigation of everyday urban life through emerging artistic, technological, and social practice.” The festivities begin Friday night with the keynote address from urban historian and guerrilla photographer Steve Duncan, followed by a live multimedia performance of “Ulysses Syndrome” by the Soundwalk collective. Saturday’s activities include a sermon and walking tour with Reverend Billy and Savitri D and the panel discussions “FlowSlow,” “Super G Residency,” and “Public-Space Art and Foursquare,” ending with a live performance by Fall on Your Sword. There will be more panel discussions on Sunday, including one hotly anticipated gathering of Duncan, Moses Gates, Julia Solis, and twi-ny fave Miru Kim, in addition to a live “Forwards/Backwards” performance by Mike Rugnetta and Patrick Davison. Another cool aspect of Conflux is a group of site-specific installations, workshops, and performances, including “Tone Garden” by Stephanie McCarty and Andrew Siu, “Barcode Cinema” by Kristin Lucas and Lee Montgomery, “I cannot compete with this” by Rebecca Nagle (in Times Square), “Six Degrees of Attachment” by Nathaniel Lieb and Sarah Nelson Wright, “Love Box” by Sabine Gruffat and Bill Brown, “Urban Hobo” by Betsy Davis, “Public Utility Trail Network” by Katarina Jerinic, “Knish Alley Revival” by Laura Silver, and “Telepresence” by Derek Lerner, among dozens of others.

NEW YORK COMIC CON & ANIME FESTIVAL

Comic Con will team up with the New York Anime Festival this weekend at the Javits Center (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center
11th Ave. between 34th & 39th Sts.
October 8-10
Weekend Pass: $50 (Friday Pass $30, Saturday Pass $40, Sunday Pass $30)
www.newyorkcomiccon.com
www.newyorkcomiccon.com/en/NYAF

This year New York Comic Con teams up with the New York Anime Festival for a three-day party of the best in comic books, graphic novels, superheroes and villains, animated shorts and features, artists, writers, filmmakers, video games, collectibles, live music, and so much more. A lot of the fun comes from just watching your fellow attendees, many of whom show up in elaborate costumes. Among the many guest on hand to sign autographs (some free, some ticketed, some paid) and/or participate in panel discussions, concerts, and sneak-peek screenings are Adrien Brody, Michelle Forbes, Bruce Campbell, Joyce DeWitt, Cary Elwes, Lou Ferrigno, Maggie Q, Morgan Spurlock, Boom Boom Satellites, J. Michael Straczynski, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Seth Green, VAMPS, Stan Lee, Todd McFarlane, Frank Miller, Puffy AmiYumi, M. Knight Shymalan, Tricia Helfer, Eric Bana, Priscilla Barnes, William Katt, Tara McPherson, Noah Wyle, Echostream, and James Marsters. (Sorry, folks, but Gil Gerard canceled.) Below are just a handful of recommended events by day.

You never know what or who you’ll enounter at the annual New York Comic Con and Anime Festival (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Friday, October 8: Oyama X Nitta Shamisen Concert, Room 1E09, 2:00

Friday, October 8: Remembering Harvey Pekar, with Jeff Newelt, Dean Haspiel, Peter Kuper, Rick Parker, Joseph Remnant, and Danny Fingeroth, Room 1A22, 4:30

Friday, October 8: Robot Chicken, screening and panel with Seth Green and Matt Senreich, IGN Theater, 6:45

Friday, October 8: MUTANT GIRLS SQUAD, Room 1E02, 7:45

Friday, October 8: Dash Shaw and Chip Kidd in Conversation, Room 1A14, 8:15

Saturday, October 9: MTV Geek with Stan Lee and Bill Plympton, Room 1A08, 11:00 am

Saturday, October 9: Mort Walker and Beetle Bailey, with Mort Walker and Tom Spurgeon, Room 1A15, 1:00

Saturday, October 9: Spotlight on Dean Haspiel, with Dean Haspiel, Walter Simonson, Nick Bertozzi, Joan Hilty, and Jonathan Ames, moderated by Christopher Irving, Room 1A23, 2:45

Saturday, October 9: Minori Chihara Concert, IGN Theater, 7:30

Saturday, October 9: Roddenberry Is Back! with Eugene “Rod” Roddenberry Jr. and Trevor Roth, Room 1A23, 9:00

Sunday, October 10: Castles, Forests, and Bath Houses: The Worlds of Hayao Miyazaki, Room 1E13, 11:00 am

Sunday, October 10: Welcome to the Space Show, Room 1E03, 1:00

Sunday, October 10: The Walking Dead on AMC, with Andrew Lincoln, Jon Bernthal, Sarah Wayne Callies, Laurie Holden, Steven Yeun, Frank Darabont, Robert Kirkman, and Gale Anne Hurd, IGN Theater, 2:15

Sunday, October 10: Voice and Art — Veronica Taylor and Misako Rocks!, Room 1E12, 3:00

Sunday, October 10: Bruce Campbell Spotlight, with Bruce Campbell, Room 1A08, 4:00