Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Issue No. 188: BRUCE(X)PLOITATION

BRUCE(X)PLOITATION Signing

Bruce LaBruce takes over The Hole with bloodied x-rated zombie extravaganza in the gallery and a book signing in the shop.
TOMORROW: May 31st, 8-10pm

The Canadian artist, photographer, film maker and gay porn director Bruce LaBruce (www.brucelabruce.com) will be in town long enough to create a gory Polaroid performance piece at The Hole and promote his latest book: Bruce(X)ploitation, a collection of unpublihsed Polaroids. Special guest appearance by Kembra Pfahler!

BRUCE LABRUCE (b. 1964, Canada). Bruce LaBruce’s photographs and films have been exhibited internationally, including numerous world premiers at the Sundance, Berlin and Locarno Film Festivals. LaBruce has written and directed three theatrical productions, the most recent, Macho Family Romance (2009), commissioned by Theater Neumarkt in Zurich. LaBruce was a contributing editor and frequent writer and photographer for New York’s index magazine, and he has also been a contributor to Eye and Exclaim magazines, Vice, Honcho, Inches, Butt, Dazed and Confused, Tetu, Fake, Attitude, Blend, Tokion, Purple Fashion, and The National Post, among others. He currently writes a weekly column for Vice. He has directed a number of popular music videos in Canada, two of which won him MuchMusic video awards. LaBruce’s recent solo shows include "Untitled Hardcore Zombie Project", Peres Projects, Los Angeles (2009), and "Obscenity", a controversial exhibit of new photographs at La Fresh Gallery in Madrid in February, 2012. His 2010 film starring Francois Sagat, L.A. Zombie, premiered as an installation entitled "L.A. Zombie: The Movie That Would Not Die" at Peres Projects, Berlin in 2010. Other noteworthy solo exhibitions have been held at Alleged Gallery, New York; the Pitt Gallery, Vancouver; MC MAGMA, Milan; Bailey Fine Arts Gallery, Toronto; John Connelly Presents, New York; Gallery 1313, Toronto; Antigua Casa Haiku Gallery, Barcelona, and Gallery Wrong Weather, Porto, Portugal. Last year LaBruce directed a restaging of Schoenberg’s melodrama Pierrot Lunaire at the Hau Theater in Berlin.

Taken from press release.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Issue No. 187: The Historical Box

Press Release
The Historical Box
Curated by Mara McCarthy
Hauser & Wirth London, Piccadilly 23 May – 28 July 2012
Opening: Tuesday 22 May 6 – 8 pm

On 23 May, Hauser & Wirth opened 'The Historical Box' in its Piccadilly gallery in London, following the exhibition's critically acclaimed presentation in Zurich. Curated by Mara McCarthy, director of The Box, Los Angeles, this exhibition showcases key pieces by influential American artists including John Altoon, Judith Bernstein, Simone Forti, Wally Hedrick, Robert Mallary, Barbara T. Smith and Stan VanDerBeek, many of which have never been exhibited in the UK. 'The Historical Box' brings together a collection of important performance, film, dance, drawings and sculpture created during the political and social turmoil of the Sixties and Seventies in the USA. It aims not only to broaden the canon of art history, but also to highlight the contemporary relevance of the issues which these artists confronted over three decades ago.

Upon entering the main gallery, visitors encounter Wally Hedrick's massive installation, 'The War Room' (1967/68 – 2002) and the black tondo painting 'Rhondo (Irac, 2003)' (1970 – 2003). Initially a response to the Vietnam War, 'The War Room' is constructed from eight large canvases, which Hedrick referred to as 'wounded veterans'. Painted black and bolted together, these canvases create a room into which visitors can walk – immersing themselves in a dark contemplative space. Since its creation, Hedrick re-painted 'The War Room' twice for both the Gulf War and the Iraq War, emphasising the unavoidable parallels between these three conflicts.

Robert Mallary's sculptures and assemblages, made from abject materials draped over wood and metal frames, line the walls of the Piccadilly gallery. 'Harpy' (1962), named after the violent, mythological creature with a human head and bird-like body, is a tattered, winged figure, constructed from old tuxedos over thin steel rods and frozen in place with polyester resin. With its looming body, outstretched arms and precarious pointed base, 'Harpy' evokes both the foreboding presence of a large, menacing figure and the vulnerability of a skeletal frame that could collapse to the ground at any moment.

Barbara T. Smith was a pioneer of feminist performance art during the Sixties and Seventies. Archival material from a selection of her most well-known performances, such as 'Feed Me' (1973) and 'Scan 1' (1974), will be on display in 'The Historical Box'. These interactive performances used quasi-religious rituals, often led by the artist, to explore issues of gender, power and the spiritual in an overwhelmingly secular society.

Also addressing issues of power and gender, Judith Bernstein's works combine fervent and gestural mark-marking with her own unique brand of humour. Bernstein's 'Horizontal' (1973), a large-scale drawing of a twisting screw that was infamously censored from a 1974 exhibition at the Philadelphia Civic Center Museum, will be shown alongside the drawing 'Supercock' (1966), created during Bernstein's time as one of the few female graduate students at Yale School of Art. Both 'Horizontal' and 'Supercock' present a comical critique of the male-dominated art world, a world into which Bernstein and many other female artists were just beginning to break.

The exhibition is accompanied by a performance of Simone Forti's seminal Dance Construction, 'Hangers' (1961), first seen in Yoko Ono's Chambers Street loft in 1961. 'Hangers' straddles the boundaries of dance, performance art and minimalist installation. During the performance,
dancers balance in looped ropes hanging from the ceiling whilst additional performers walk between them, causing the ropes to sway subtly as they brush past. The ropes will remain throughout the duration of the exhibition as a sculptural remnant of the performance.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a screening of films by Stan VanDerBeek. VanDerBeek is considered by many to be one of the first multimedia artists.

Beginning as early as the Fifties and continuing throughout his career, VanDerBeek experimented ceaselessly with emerging forms of computer-based media and rudimentary animation. His works combined film with painting, photography, architecture, and mass-produced print media to create complex compositions in the spirit of Surrealist and Dadaist collages. A selection of animation frames from VanDerBeek's films are also on display in the exhibition.

For information on these and other events occurring in conjunction with 'The Historical Box', please visit the gallery's website: www.hauserwirth.com.

Scan 1 — Barbara T. Smith, 1974
3 vintage prints, 1 hood used during performance, 3 cue cards and lip print
Size variable

Harpy — Robert Mallary, 1962
Polyester, resin, impregnated tuxedos and steel
228.6 x 284.5 x 66 cm / 90 x 112 x 26 in
Photo: Fredrik Nilsen

HORIZONTAL — Judith Bernstein, 1973
Charcoal on paper
274.3 x 381 cm / 108 x 150 in
A La Mode — Stan VanDerBeek, 1959
Animation frame / Collage on paper
21.4 x 20.2 cm / 8 3/8 x 8 in






Friday, May 18, 2012

Issue No. 186: HOMOCCULT SHOW Closing Reception - Friday 11 May

Sandra Oviedo & Richard

Celina Paddock

The work of Sandra Oviedo & Erik Peterson

Heather Lynn, Betty DeVoe & the work of Elijah Burgher


Mateo & the work of George Keller

Heather Lynn, Betty DeVoe, companion & the work of Christos Andres

Allan Vandever & Jamie


Sigils by Elijah Burgher

More Sigils & Elijah Burgher's Portrait of Sleazy Christopherson

Richard, Jamie & Celina Paddock



from "As Doors Open Into Space" by Sleazy Christopherson

Sunday, May 6, 2012