Tag Archives: Matthew Stone

MATTHEW STONE: OPTIMISM AS CULTURAL REBELLION

Matthew Stone optimistically melds the past, present, and future at the Hole (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The Hole
312 Bowery
Tuesday – Saturday through December 10, 12 noon – 7:00 pm
212-466-1100
www.theholenyc.com
www.matthewstone.co.uk
optimism as cultural rebellion slideshow

Matthew Stone is the very embodiment of the twenty-first-century artist. The twenty-nine-year-old Camberwell graduate is a painter, sculptor, photographer, techno composer, curator, performance artist, provocateur, music-video director, interviewer, art theorist, DJ, shaman, and event host. This past March, he collaborated with Catherine Borra on “The Next 100 Years,” which was about nothing less than “the future of art.” Stone, a protégé of Terence Koh’s and a leader of South London’s !WOWOW! art collective, which made a name for itself through its squat parties, has installed his first major U.S. gallery show at the Hole, a stunning collection of photographs on wooden boards that reaches back into the classical past while also foretelling the next generation of art. Evoking the name of his 2007 debut solo show at London’s Union Gallery, “Future Hindsight,” the new “Optimism as Cultural Rebellion” is based on Stone’s belief that “optimism is the vital force that entangles itself with and then shapes the future.” Upon first glance, it appears that the British artist has created classical-style paintings that recall Caravaggio, Michelangelo, and other Renaissance masters, but it turns out that they are actually photographs printed on birch and, in one case, fabric, making the two dimensional three dimensional. Many of the works are made of frames that have been folded into sculptural pieces set on the floor or dramatically arranged on wooden cubes. As realistic as the images appear to be — one work lies flat on the floor, actual drapery emerging from it — closer inspection reveals impossible poses and body formations. Amid all the cynical negativity prevalent in the art world today, Stone offers a fresh, nearly irresistible alternative, sticking it to the status quo with a calm sense of optimism that is both beautiful and stirring. (Also on view at the Hole through December 16 is Matt Stone’s “Residuum,” consisting of sculptures in a variety of materials and colors in the rear gallery; Matt Stone, an SVA grad who was an assistant to Judy Pfaff and is currently assisting Marilyn Minter, is not related to Matthew Stone, and yes, their shows were put together primarily because of the similarity of their names.)

PERFORMA 11: NEW VISUAL ART PERFORMANCE BIENNIAL

Elmgreen & Dragset’s HAPPY DAYS IN THE ART WORLD kicks off the fourth edition of the Performa biennial, which runs November 1-21 all over the city

Multiple venues in all five boroughs
November 1-21, free – $75
www.11.performa-arts.org

More than a hundred venues will be hosting cutting-edge experimental productions at Performa 11, the fourth edition of the biennial multidisciplinary arts festival being held all over the city November 1-21. Featuring art, music, dance, theater, film, architecture, and more in exciting combinations, the three-week festival consists of long-term exhibitions, special one-night stands, and other limited engagements that push the envelope of contemporary performance. Elmgreen & Dragset revisit Beckett in Happy Days in the Art World at the Skirball Center, with Joseph Fiennes and Charles Edwards. L’Encyclopédie de la parole’s Chorale turns political speeches, text messages, and movie quotes into choral works at the Performa Hub on Mott St. Rashaad Newsome holds a medieval rap joust Tournament in conjunction with his new exhibit at Marlborough Chelsea. Anthology Film Archives screens rare footage of one of Lenny Bruce’s last performances, as well as routines by Richard Pryor, Albert Brooks, and Andy Kaufman. Innovative installation artists Mika Rottenberg and Jon Kessler team up to create the chakra sauna Seven at Nicole Klagsbrun Project Space. Matthew Stone journeys into shamanism at the Hole. Mai-Thu Perret’s Love Letters in Ancient Brick at the Joyce SoHo reimagines Krazy Kat as a love-triangle dance. Dripping paint drives Jonathan VanDyke’s storefront drama With One Hand Between Us at Scaramouche. Israeli collective Public Movement choreographs public demonstrations in various parks for Positions. Daido Moriyama restages his thirty-year-old Printing Show—TKY at the Aperture Foundation. Deaf artist Christine Sun Kim will go from audio to visual with Lukas Geronimas in Feedback at Recess. Liz Glynn’s Utopia or Oblivion: Parts I and II will take place in several outdoor venues, using Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic dome as inspiration. Raphael Zarka mixes skateboarding and sculpture in Free Ride at the Performa Hub. Gerard Byrne turns the Abrons Arts Center into an interactive theater for In Repertory. Varispeed’s Perfect Lives Manhattan is an all-day performance of Robert Ashley’s opera. Performa Ha! gathers comedians and musicians at the HA! comedy club. And that’s only the first week of this outstanding collection of diverse talent and unique performances, with many of the events free.