Friday, October 26, 2012
Insubstantial
...funny, I keep reading about art work that has been produced and that echo ideas I've had in the past but have not implemented because I didn't think they had enough substance...
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Vacuity Redux
Obama has been campaigning for four long years, but this last month before his re-election will give new meaning to the word "interminable". The vacuousness both candidates have used to avoid talking about any real issues facing the future of this nation makes the vacuum of outer space seem replete. The coverage of this hollow exercise hasn't been much better. I quote from an article written in the October issue of Artforum about Barbara Kruger's take on Media from the 80's: Kruger’s take on electoral coverage is still horribly apt: dominated by “polls and statistics, an inescapable dose of numerical narrativity that constructs and collapses ‘public opinion’ with a kind of hydraulic ease.”
November won't come soon enough.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
one more letter to one more editor
I know, I know, Modernism has come and gone, but I’ve always
thought that “form follows function” was a good principle to follow. I’m having a tough time negotiating the form
of your latest issue with its function. If
I’m supposed to hold and open it in order to read it, or even to look at its
ads, you have finally found the magic formula that thwarts such action: a 10”x10”
magazine format with 550 pages.
There is a certain beauty in the symmetry of those numbers,
but their combination yields an issue that is finally so heavy, and so squirmy
that it is impossible to hold, much less behold. I keep trying to read it; but every time I
pick it up, I find myself putting it down.
The only way to get into it is to put it on some kind of podium as if it
were an unabridged dictionary in a library.
If the intention for your 50th anniversary issue was
to help readers correct their posture by forcing them to read it on a flat surface,
then maybe form still follows function.
However, I like to slouch on the couch while reading about art criticism
in a “glossy”. Next time you want to
investigate your own history, please put it out in a format that facilitates
reading, such as a hardback book that holds itself rigidly together, or maybe
two skinnier magazine issues…. Of course this implies that legibility be one of
ArtForum’s functions.
Sincerely
addendum weeks later:
I wrote a few weeks ago to complain about the size and weight of your 50th anniversary issue whose mass only equals that of your 2007 summer at the height of the housing boom. I am now sheepishly writing to tell you how much I enjoyed its written content after getting over my comfort issues with its form.
Sincerely
...weird how this blogspot graphic interface works
addendum weeks later:
I wrote a few weeks ago to complain about the size and weight of your 50th anniversary issue whose mass only equals that of your 2007 summer at the height of the housing boom. I am now sheepishly writing to tell you how much I enjoyed its written content after getting over my comfort issues with its form.
...weird how this blogspot graphic interface works
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Ponto Final (end of the line)
My family hails from Egypt.
My father loved his birth country, and I grew up listening to stories of
what sounded like a magical kingdom. ...And kingdom it was. I spent countless hours listening to stories
of his fascinating Egyptian life, of his great friendships, of his home and family
I never met, of his horse rides along the pyramids with his dog Faris, and of
him crossing the desert on a jeep with only a wet handkerchief on his head which he kept wet by dipping in a bucket of water he had on the seat next to him. Stories illustrated by beautiful black and
white photographs my mom has in deteriorating photo albums in Switzerland.
It was a different Egypt then; an Egypt where Jews were
welcomed and thrived. So much so, that
when my father, who was in the equestrian team that was slated to go to the
Olympics before the Second World War, was denied a visa because he was Jewish,
the team leader decided that if Raymond, my father, could not participate, then
the team would not be going to the Olympics.
And they didn’t.
After the war and the creation of Israel, all that
changed. Nasser took over the kingdom
and made life miserable for Egyptian Jews by persecuting them and expropriating their wealth. My father always
thought of himself as Egyptian first and Jewish second; but he eventually was forced by circumstances to leave the country he loved. He ended
up emigrating to Brazil, a country my parents knew nothing about and whose
language they did not speak, in order to create a new free life. A country he did not die in, but where I was
born, and where I learned to be rootless.
Today Mohamed Morsi announced that he was shutting down the
last working Synagogue in Egypt for so-called “security reasons”. To the world at large, it’s just one small blip
on the news ticker. To me, it should not
matter. I am not Egyptian, not religious, and, hey, where there were once
80,000 Jews living in harmony with Christians and Muslims, there are now only
100, or so, who for some unknowable and insane reason remain in a country that has long ceased to welcome them. What does it matter if they
can no longer get together and celebrate their beliefs, right? No, it should not matter to me, yet the news
weighs on me because of the stories I grew up with, learned by rote, and understand
now, many years later, how they form who I am.
If this Arab Spring goes on for much longer, god help us when
the summer comes.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
The Adam Smith of Art Criticism
I just wasted a couple of hours reviewing The Invisible Dragon for Amazon- so what the hey, might as well post it on my digital diary:
I fully understand David Hickey’s impulse in writing these
essays. The strongest essay being the one
in which he reacts to the Academy’s defense (or not) of Robert Maplethorpe
during the culture wars of the 80’s. I
thought it was really incisive and a truly creative way of seeing things, and
it gave me a lot to think about. As to
his more general thoughts on Beauty, the essays themselves are cogent and in
the abstract, if not in the particulars, convincing.
Hickey is basically ranting against the “Academy” (or Art
Establishment), and not because he sees it as colluding with the market, like
some reviewer inferred, in fact, quite au contraire. In these essays Hickey defends the
marketplace for being the ultimate arbiter, through democratic wrangling, of
value, beauty, and meaning.
Again, I do get the impulse behind this kind of thinking. It must be born of years of looking at too
much uninspiring art sanctioned by the Academy due to its prescriptive value
instead of that thing that good art can do, which is move us in ways that
perhaps will always remain essentially undefinable. And boy is there ever a lot of that crap out
there passing for Art (and the word Art still implies “good” even after all
these years since Greenberg).
Hickey decries the Academy (in which he includes even what I
find to be our no-real-lover-of-the-arts Government) for funding such art on
the basis of it being “good for us” instead of “making us happy”. And he does this by riffing on the
Declaration of Independence and by quoting Thomas Paine. And again, I feel his pain (no pun intended); but I think his
approach might be simplistic. In essence, Hickey calls for Beauty to be
determined in the Forum, the laissez-faire marketplace. Given that in this day and age a lot of the
art sanctioned by the Academy has precisely to do with investigating the deleterious
effects of the market on the production of “true” art, I can see where he might
have ruffled some feathers; and I smile at the thought of that.
I love his attitude and his writing; and I viscerally feel
what he is longing for, but his solution does not ring true. And I say this as a person who believes that
markets work for the good of the people, most of the time; but even
laissez-faire capitalism needs some regulation when decisions made according to
its principles do more harm than good.
The market alone has made as many mistakes about what is good art as the
Academy has. Norman Rockwell is still
crap[1],
as is Thomas Kincaid. Unfettered
democracy might produce what the people want, and Hickey has the right to slap
the word “Beautiful” on the result; but I don’t think it’s that easy. That being said, the book is a good read and
gets one really involved in determining and arguing one’s own value system.
[1] Even
though, at some point, someone, probably “the marketplace”, convinced The
Academy, or more precisely the Guggenheim to embrace it/him for a season.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Connected
I just started reading this cool book called Tubes about the physical internet. It starts with a subject that is close to my heart since I am way more enamored with the physical than the cloud: the author going to a printshop in Milwakee to see a monster printing machine made in Germany print a map of the internet. I wish I could have seen that. The author was inspired to follow the "internet" one day when his modem stopped working because a squirrel chewed through the rubber coating of the wiring that brought the internet into his house.
For a few months now, Curtis and I have been experiencing intermittent problems with our internet connection. The darn thing keeps blinking in and out. We have called our internet provider several times; and I imagine that sometimes we actually speak to someone in America. But judging from the wonderful accent (and I'm not being ironic here, I love accents) of some of the people we have talked to, a lot of the time we get connected to "Jason" or "Kelly" in India, where parts of the physical internet look like this:
As an aside, I would much rather that the web technicians answering my calls tell me their names are Satish or Padmani, Mohandas or even Mohammed; but I digress...
Our calls and their solutions have yielded no results thus far. The answers the technicians have given us on the phone, because god forbid in this day and age they send a physical person, American or not, to diagnose our problem, has had to do with our filters or modem; all things we can change by buying new ones. I don't mind buying new equipment if the equipment is actually the problem; but I hate buying new stuff blindly if that is not going to solve the problem. It's a waste of... well, of everything: copper, plastic, energy, money, time... everything. As it is, the last technician we spoke to, an American woman called Marie, pinpointed our problems to our filters. After Curtis yelled at her on the phone, asked to talk to her supervisor, and finally handed the phone to me so I could talk to both women, I acquiesced to buying new filters. We changed the filters and "voila": nothing happened, we still have intermittent problems. At this point they want us to buy a new modem. And at that, I put my foot down and asked for a wire technician to come here and touch my physical internet before I buy anything else.
You see, last year at this time, our sewer line made in the 70's of tar impregnated paper finally gave up the ghost and we had to have the plumbers install a new, this time PVC, sewer line. And as we were inspecting our backyard to find out what the best way to lay the line was, we found our phone line; the one through which our internet connection also comes through.
Yesterday after talking to one more internet technician somewhere in the world, I braved my mosquito infested woods to go take a picture of my "tube", my very own little physical connection to the Big Cloud. A connection in a little woodland creature paradise, where everybody loves to gnaw on wires and plastic coating, that has looked like the pictures below and has been out there for more than a year through sweltering heat, freezing cold and an unusually rainy season.
I, personally, with no training whatsoever, think that maybe, just maybe, my connectivity problems might, just might, have something to do with the way the fiber optic tubes are coming into my house. Hey, I'm not ruling out the modem, mind you, but the following pictures give me pause. Forgive their quality as I was taking them while standing on a patch of poison ivy, in a hot and humid day, while being consumed by those little black and white mosquitos we inadvertently imported from Asia in water collecting in the wells of old tires being transported from there to here on some ship. Yes we are all very much connected...
Our calls and their solutions have yielded no results thus far. The answers the technicians have given us on the phone, because god forbid in this day and age they send a physical person, American or not, to diagnose our problem, has had to do with our filters or modem; all things we can change by buying new ones. I don't mind buying new equipment if the equipment is actually the problem; but I hate buying new stuff blindly if that is not going to solve the problem. It's a waste of... well, of everything: copper, plastic, energy, money, time... everything. As it is, the last technician we spoke to, an American woman called Marie, pinpointed our problems to our filters. After Curtis yelled at her on the phone, asked to talk to her supervisor, and finally handed the phone to me so I could talk to both women, I acquiesced to buying new filters. We changed the filters and "voila": nothing happened, we still have intermittent problems. At this point they want us to buy a new modem. And at that, I put my foot down and asked for a wire technician to come here and touch my physical internet before I buy anything else.
You see, last year at this time, our sewer line made in the 70's of tar impregnated paper finally gave up the ghost and we had to have the plumbers install a new, this time PVC, sewer line. And as we were inspecting our backyard to find out what the best way to lay the line was, we found our phone line; the one through which our internet connection also comes through.
Yesterday after talking to one more internet technician somewhere in the world, I braved my mosquito infested woods to go take a picture of my "tube", my very own little physical connection to the Big Cloud. A connection in a little woodland creature paradise, where everybody loves to gnaw on wires and plastic coating, that has looked like the pictures below and has been out there for more than a year through sweltering heat, freezing cold and an unusually rainy season.
I, personally, with no training whatsoever, think that maybe, just maybe, my connectivity problems might, just might, have something to do with the way the fiber optic tubes are coming into my house. Hey, I'm not ruling out the modem, mind you, but the following pictures give me pause. Forgive their quality as I was taking them while standing on a patch of poison ivy, in a hot and humid day, while being consumed by those little black and white mosquitos we inadvertently imported from Asia in water collecting in the wells of old tires being transported from there to here on some ship. Yes we are all very much connected...
1 is the phone company box
2 are the flags the technicians put out signifying something
3 is my favorite, I call it my "al fresco connection", close ups follow
The arrow points to the cable snaking around the tree and disappearing underground once more
![]() |
first world country my ass |
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