Art Basel 2010 – first look

art basel miami beach

Hey folks, Art Basel’s here! Time to break out your dark suits and pink sneakers, or whatever it is you do when you want to impress your fellow art people. I can’t tell if it’s me or the art, but I’m starting to get bugged by the over-prevalence of art that combines a few random elements in a faux-careless arrangement and calls it a day. Luckily as always there are lots of exceptions to every rule, and lots of delightful and profound things to be seen. Overall the fair’s taken a more subdued turn from years past, but there are plenty of exceptions to that rule, too. For example see above: The Brain Trap, by Robert Williams at Tony Shafrazi’s booth.

art basel miami beach

The day starts off at the Rubell Collection, where Jennifer Rubell created a breakfast installation for all comers. Breaking a person-sized hole in the wall behind the Rubell’s fabulous collection space, she bought and gutted the house behind the property and installed a series of pedastals in conjoined rooms. On the first, hundreds of small ceramic bowls. On the next a mountain of spoons. And so followed crock-pots of porridge, packets of sugar, and boxes of raisins. Attendees emerged back onto her patio with the delicious little bowls.

art basel miami beach

Inside, of course, the contemporary art is unrelenting. But anyway, back to Basel.

art basel miami beach

You want painting? So does everybody I think. It goes over your sofa and impresses your friends. Unfortunately, from wandering around Basel you’d think artists weren’t making them anymore — all the paintings seemed to be old. Here’s one from 1987, and it’s by Guillermo Kuitca, at Mary-Anne Martin Fine Art.

art basel miami beach

You want photography? There was a little more of that going on, but even then not much! This is a nice new piece by Thomas Struth (you should seek it out, because there’s a spectacular boat photo next to it). There were also a number of Candida Höfer photos around, prominently displayed. (Don’t talk to me about Thomas Ruff — he’s put his talent on hold while he plays around in photoshop with pictures of naked girls he’s downloaded from the internet.)

art basel miami beach

Some drawings by Sandra Vasquez de la Horra in one of the Art Kabinett mini-booths. I guess drawing is still cool, as there was plenty to be found, both in the anal/detailed genre and in the crude and rough mode. But let’s move on to some of the more fun stuff, eh?

art basel miami beach

Nick Cave’s Sound Suits at Jack Shainman were a hit. They’re covered with buttons, and 100% wearable. And yes, that Nick Cave.

art basel miami beach

The great (and department-of-skills-y) lunar lander model by Tom Sachs at Sperone Westwater. Huzzah to the New York obsessives!

art basel miami beach

A 2001-monolith-looing stack of speakers and amps that turns out to be set up with piano wire and guiltar pickups on the back and playable. Naama Tsabar at Dvir Gallery.

art basel miami beach

Damien Hirst continues to find new ways to say “fuck it.” Here’s a detail of a huge gold(?) cabinet with rows and rows of emeralds. I would like for Kayne West to buy one of these for his bedroom.

art basel miami beach

This amazing chandelier thing goes with Neuger-Riemschneider gallery, but I couldn’t quite figure out the artist’s name.

art basel miami beach

Here’s the rest of the booth, with uncomfortable wax over rebar statues.

art basel miami beach

They’re charging money to get in to Design Miami ($25!), when the only thing really worth seeing is the jungle room and maybe the space-age pod bed you can see at the New Times’ slideshow.

art basel miami beach

The Video lounge was all but eliminated this year, replaced by a few pods in the middle of the fair. But less turns out to be more — the pods are very practical (with good noise-blocking headphones), and themed with very well curated work. Pick up the brochure before just sitting down.

art basel miami beach

Mmmm… skateboards. Mounir Fatmi, Lombard-Freid.

art basel miami beach

Old-school charming conceptualism, there you are! Matthew Buckingham’s chalkboard indicates, “Close doors when not illuminated.” Murray Guy.

art basel miami beach

OK, that’s enough for now. I wanted to show you some nice ceramic vases that I saw (seriously!) but let’s end with something bright… Ryan McGinness’ work at Michael Kohn, which I JUST NOW noticed indicate “Acrylic on canvas,” (they looked for all the world like digital images in person), so maybe rethink the thing about painting being dead?

Art Basel 2010 warmup

positions

Well folks, it’s that time again. The weather is completely going to be cooperating this year: a little drizzle tomorrow, and then cool and beautiful straight through the weekend. You can find some absurdly overstuffed lists of “events” so I’m going to link to a few of the more moderated things

  • ArtFagCity’s list of fairs, with the caveat that I think Scope has always been worthwile, and is high up on my list.
  • Liz’s guide to events and parties at The Heat Lightning. I’ve been adding events there, so it’s official to me.
  • Another good guide to the fairs at Beached Miami. And here is a pretty nice PDF map that you can print, with locations and deets on all the fairs.
  • The New Times’ list also looks pretty good.
  • And here’s an oddball list of events in the New York Times(!).

Here’s a tentative list of things I may or may not do, which I WILL be adding/correcting to:

Tuesday Nov 30

  • Opening of Frances Trombly: Paintings at Girl’s Club, Ft. Lauderdale.
  • Arts for a Better World opening.

Wednesday Dec 1

  • 10 pm Art Loves Music (Metric)

Thursday Dec 2

  • MAM Party, Scope party, NADA party(?)
  • Basel Antics (Phantogram!)
  • Transit lounge: live performance by Panic Bomber with a band

Friday Dec 3

  • 4 – 8 pm — Island (at the mondrian)
  • 7-11 pm — Reception at Carol Jazzar

Saturday Dec 4

Sunday Dec 5

  • Breakfast in the park, FIU Frost art Museum

Too big to fail is Socialism, and Republicans are responsible

You might have missed it, but GM stock sale last week sealed the deal on a sea change in how our economy is going to work for huge companies going forward. When the bailouts of the financial industry were initiated, the outcry assumed that the taxpayers were “paying” to save the industry, and that the money was either mostly or totally gone. But in fact, many banks have repaid the money with interest, and while the government has not broken even on the deal, it is still possible that it will turn out to be profitable. We now see that the same may end up being true of GM, too: the sale of the government’s initial batch of GM stock went remarkably well — the company appears to have recovered, and if it continues to flourish it’s possible that the remaining stock will be sold at a sufficiently high price that we taxpayers will end up making money on the GM bailout, too.

This should make us uncomfortable. And the not unreasonable presumption that the government’s interventions in the management of GM had a role in the success should make us even less comfortable. Because these pieces of good news set an irresistible precedent for how to deal with future calamities.

Liberal and conservative economists so vary in their proposed remedies to problems that it’s it’s seldom possible to untangle economic facts their statements. But in the darkest days of the financial collapse, the one thing that all economists agreed on was that if you were going to bail out these huge companies, you had to make sure that no company was allowed to stay “too big to fail” going forward. Companies behave dangerously if they believe they have the safety net of a government bailout protecting them, but the safety net is unavoidable for huge companies. They’d have to be broken up into smaller companies, lest the whole process be repeated in the future.

But when the financial reform bill came along in July, too big to fail provisions were conspicuously absent. Why? Well, the whole bill just barely squeaked by Republican opposition. Measures to limit the sizes of companies were practically laughed out of the legislation by Senate Republicans, who instead proposed new bankruptcy procedures for large failing institutions. Republicans are fundamentally responsible for the absence of too big to fail provisions in the current legislation.

So consider these two facts: that the U.S. government now implicitly backs our largest corporations, and that when needed, government intervention may likely be good for both the taxpayer’s bottom line and for the companies involved. This, much more so than healthcare reform of anything else that has happened under the Obama administration so far, is classic Socialism. It’s richly ironic that Senate Republicans and the administration of George W. Bush, which began the whole process, are the ones fundamentally responsible.

Miami book fair shopping guide

books In the past I’ve questioned the point of going to a book fair, but of course there are lots of great things about the fair. Hopefully by now you’ve “scoured the program”: and figured out which author events you’re attending. Now it’s time to hit the tents and look at some books. There are a couple of hundred exhibitors, and many have thousands of books, so you’re going to be overwhelmed. Even if you’re not planning on buying anything, bring a couple of sturdy tote bags, just in case. Here’s a taxonomy of booths you’re going to find, in ascending order of how useful I, personally, find them.

  • Sponsor booths: Bless the sponsors, for they make the book fair possible. Some of them are actually great organizations, too, such as WLRN and the Arsht Center. But you’ve got books to see and no time to chat. Walk on by.
  • Libros en español: Actually some of these are fun to look at. In particular the books in the Mexican pavilion are fun to browse for their interesting, European-style cover designs.
  • Spiritual/religious stuff: Lots of books are religious books, and lots of book stores are religious book stores. If that’s your thing, have at it.
  • Single-book booths: These are mostly lunatics with a self-published title and to be avoided, however one guy with a guide to retiring into homelessness is completely entertaining and worth checking out (you’ll see a chair made of pvc pipe and soda bottles).
  • Event booths: For example, the Key West Literary Seminar has a very nice booth with a carefully culled selection of food books (food books being the theme of their January 2011 get together).
  • Used books: Just be careful — it’s very easy to buy more than you can comfortably carry for the rest of the day. Come back at the end of the day on Sunday when you’re going straight home — odds are you’ll be able to get a better deal then anyway. The better used book booths have their stuff meticulously organized into categories. I gout a copy of a book published by UM in 1970 about the effects of pollution on Biscayne Bay from Leedy’s books for $10, but if you’re in the market for Freakonomics, The Audacity of Hope, a Kurt Vonnegut novel, or something along those lines, you should be able to find them used for very nice prices.
  • Historical/collectors books: You book collectors know who you are. For the rest of us, these are lots of fun to browse (they sort of merge with the category above to some extent).
  • The Council of Literary Magazines and Presses: This one is worth seeking out — literary journals you haven’t seen since that time you got lost in the library at college. But lots of the writers in these publications are the stars of tomorrow, and some are hardcore avant-gardists. Generally all these publications are exceptionally well edited, and they’re beautiful as little mini-book objects. Many have art and photography in addition to poetry and short stories. When I stopped by, they were going 2 for $2 or 5 for $5(!), and i found it irresistable not to grab a bunch just on the basis of covers.

One last thing — DO stop by the Mexican pavilion to eat. They have awesome stuff, not the least of which are shockingly good mole pork enchiladas. Yum.

Miami International Book Fair – a quick flip through the guide

mitchell kaplan

I went to see Eugene Robinson and Pat Conroy last night; both were really interesting, and as entertaining as John Waters in their own ways. (That’s Mitchel Kaplan, owner of Books & Books the patron saint of the fair, introducing Conroy.) But onward and upward! Here’s what’s on my to-do list after a cursory look through the Fair’s guide and website. You should still check out Hillary’s guide for the full scoop. I’ll be adding to this post a little bit throughout the day from the fair.

Friday, Nov. 19

  • 8pm, Patti Smith: Hopefully you have your ticket already!

Saturday, Nov. 20

  • 11:30 am, Dave Eggers: Talking about his book Zeitoun. Like he’s ever not interesting. (Tickets required, but free. Hit the site now to get them. Room 3210.
  • 2 pm, Write that Book Already!: I think this is part sort of a motivational thing, part guide to the publishing industry. I’m not aware of planning to write a book, but this might be fun? Room 3314.
  • 3:45 pm, Storyteller Gerald Hausman: In the kids area! Folktales from Native Americans, the Caribbean, and and Old Florida.
  • 4 pm, Climate and the Environment: “Experts exchange views, both terrifying and hopeful.” I wonder if there will be any experts or pro-geoengineering folks on the panel. Room 7106

Sunday

  • 11 am, How to Get Published Successfully: This sounds like the guide to the publishing industry. Also: “harnessing the power of social media.” Room 3314.
  • Also at 11, Doxtors Without Borders – Writing on the Edge: Based on a book for which a bunch of writers and a photographer visited DWB sites around the world. Could be amazing! Room 7128.
  • 12 pm, Haiti Noir: Murdes and mysteries set in post-earthquake Haiti. Moderated by Les Standiford. Presentation Pavilion A.
  • 2:30 pm, Bits N Pieces Puppet Theatre, Hansel and Gretel: Four words: Nine foot tall puppets. Once Upon a Time Stage, kids area.
  • 5 pm, Jonathan Franzen: On Freedom, and on being Franzen. Room 3201.

John Waters at the book fair

john waters miami international book fair

Downtown Miami was going crazy last night because of the Heat game, but a few blocks away there was a smaller, but in its own way more intense gathering. John Waters was in town for the Miami International Book Fair. In a huge room at Miami Dade College (don’t call it “Community!”), Waters packed in a crowd of intense folks of both genders and all ages — many born after his most notorious films were released.

Waters is a charmer. He’s got the self assurance about him that comes to many with a ge, though I get the feeling he was a pretty confident guy from the beginning. He was interviewed by my pal Brett Sokol (who, incidentally, did a great job, tho the q&a afterwards suggested that you could throw absolutely anything at Waters and elicit a stream of fascinating anecdotes), who at one point asked if Waters and his friends felt cool when they were making the first few movies. “Well, yes,” Waters responded. I don’t know exactly what it is about film directors, but they seem to almost always be fascinating people. (For example, check out the video of Errol Morris and Werner Herzog chatting recently—the conversation is irresistqble even if you’ve never seen a single film by either of them.) Here, then, a few of my favorite of Waters’ anecdotes from last night:

  • He had a subscription to Variety when he was 12 years old.
  • He’s currently got a film in pre-production, but his last film fell through/was rejected by the studio. It was “a children’s Christmas movie … about a family of meat thieves.”
  • When he was a little kid, he’d look up Tennessee Williams in the library, and the index would say “see librarian,” because Williams’ work was considered controversial. Same thing when he looked up “homosexuality.” See librarian. Waters quips, “well, I could see that the librarian was homosexual…” But he quickly makes an interesting point — not just that there’s absolutely no reason to keep any book fron children, but that it’s a bad idea to keep children from exploring anything that they’re interested in, because the things that they’re forbidden from doing can come to loom large in their imagination and form obsessions later in life. (He said it much smarter than that…I’m working off some sketchy-ass notes here.)
  • Complete strangers tell him their darkest secrets all the time. “I’ll get on a plane, and the woman next to me will lean over and say, ‘my whole family fucked me Easter morning.’”
  • “Don’t as a fat person to be Santa Clause for Christmas — that’s rude!”

He also talked about the current state of student filmmaking, and how good the scene is for people like him coming up now, what with studios being happy to fund low-budget indie work on the hopes that it might pay off. Converesely, he’s having a hard time attracting the ~$5 million or so budgets he needs to make the polished movies he currently does, because at that price studios only want blockbusters. And he had a fascinating bit of advice for aspiring filmmakers: watch lots and lots of movies, and watch them with the sound off, because dialog and music are a distraction from cinematography, which the lack of sound forces you to analyze.

john waters signing

So, wow, the book fair is awesome. After the talk, Waters sat at a table, and everyone and their face-pierced niece lined up and got to chat, be photographed with, and get their book signed by him. No kidding, one guy had three copies of the new book (which, by the way, is awesome, and you totally should get a copy. If you hurry you might be able to nab a signed coppy at Books & Books), plus another of Waters’ books, plus a guitar, and everythign got signed and the guy posed with Waters and the guitar and took up long moments from everyone’s life and it was totally cool. There are about a million authors coming between now and Sunday (weekday evenings, plus all day Friday – Sunday).

You should check out my awesome girlfriend’s guide to the bookfair (she’s deep in the Books & Books crew, so the “insider” thing is no line), and check back here — I’m going to be more or less camped out over there for the next few days, and with any luck blogging regularly. BTW, earlier this week I wrote a quickie thing about Waters’ mustache at The Heat Lightning, where it’s JOHN WATERS WEEK!

November Arthop, 2010

artwalk november miami wynwood

The November artwalk is for all intents and purposes a sort of opening act to ArtBasel, and considering the impressive showing last month, it’s surprising how underwhelming everythign was. With some notable exceptions! Take, for example, the Littlest Sister show at Spinello Gallery: this is an “art fair” that truly earns its scare quotes, packing a dozen or so “booths” into the gallery’s storefront space (tho note that the space is at least three times the size the gallery was in when Littlest Sister was inaugurated). It’s replete with a slick website, high production values, and a “VIP lounge” reaturing spiffy photorealist paintings of insects by Marc Dennis.

artwalk november miami wynwood

The work is mostly small-scale, and organized into “booths.” It’s “intimate” as all getout, and actually a surprising number of the pieces are worth the close look that the setup demands.

artwalk november miami wynwood

For example, this pretty fruit-sticker collage piece.

artwalk november miami wynwood

Eric Doeringer, also in the house!

artwalk november miami wynwood

A particular low point was the Cum Rag Manifesto, which incredulously claims to have been produced with the, um, assistance of homeless men and “street hustlers” in exchange for free fast food.

artwalk november miami wynwood

One of a series of similar photographs by Xaviera Simmons at David Castillo. These were particularly striking in Wynwood, where contemporary straight photography often seems verboten. They were accompanied by a large wooden wall sculpture and a train-window video with which they did not quite mesh, but that’s how good photography does sometimes.

artwalk november miami wynwood

I walked by this one place, and a doorman opened the door for me? I was really thrown off by that, and ended up walking in out of sheer curiosity. There was a decked out bar, some sort of gifts being given out, and models selected for their height and looks walking around giving out price lists. The gallery was overflowing with competently executed lowbrow paintings and sculptures in something of a mishmash of styles, which it turns out is the work of Miguel Paredes, mogul of Miami’s rave flyer printing empire.

artwalk november miami wynwood

Works of a few of Miami’s fringe cultural celebrities, including Otto Von Schirach, the TM Sisters, Rat Bastard, and Dino, by Francesco Lo Castro.

artwalk november miami wynwood

I wanted just to convey how Artwalk has changed over the last couple of months — not just the little food fair, but all along NW 2nd Avenue there are food carts and vendors. This picture was taken very early, so there aren’t crowds parading up the street yet.

artwalk november miami wynwood

It’s always fun when Snitzer has something that’s a complete laughable disaster, right? Check out Jon Pylypchuk’s sculptures and paintings, made with Great Stuff™ (overused art material par excellence) arranged into vague faces with blacklight bulb eyes, many smoking a cigarette.

artwalk november miami wynwood

Meanwhile, back uptown! At Dimensions Variable, a somewhat half-baked but rockin installation/video by Daniel Milewski.

artwalk november miami wynwood

Last but not least! Jim Drain at Locust! I walked in and immediately noticed the not unpleasant smell of Art Being Made, and what do you know? This art is in point of fact not finished. You can’t blame the artist, as the gallery hosted the Smash and Grab fundraiser just a week ago, and it’s sort of cool to let people walk in and look at your unfinished stuff (without really even clarifying that it’s unfinished — quite a few people were confused on the point). That’s it — I’ll see you

Can you fix the budget?

Can you fix the budget? Sure, the Tea Party is full of batshit crazy and staggeringly stupid people. But the idea at its core — that the federal budget is a mess and we’ve been deficit spending like it’s crack — is pretty sound. So, ok smart guy, what would YOU cut to make it work? Don’t tell me, because your local New York Times digital department has put together a nifty little app that lets YOU play with the budget. You get all the different suggestions floating around, and you get to see the effects on the budget shortfall in 2015, and 2030. (It’d be even cooler if you could generate a unique URL to your solution for twitter, etc.)

Airbnb

A story in The Atlantic about Airbnb, a service that lets you turn your apartment into a mini-hotel. I used the service on a recent trip to New York, and found an awesome little apartment in Brooklyn for a kind of amazing price.

October arthop, 2010

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

October is supposed to be the beginning of the Official Art Season, and while September gallery exhibitions may be impressive in their own way, October is when we begin to expect to see the up-to-ArtBasel-leading A-game. And, unless you’re double-scoop, capital-S Serious about your Art, you were happy this month.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

But since I’m lowercase-s about art, let me first tell you about the Castillo backyard party. You get to it by walking through a door that says “Exhibition Continues This Way,” which it sometimes does, but not this month, as the “Annex” was closed. Instead you got four bars, each serving two different Specific Cocktails prepared by a particular purveyor of Fine Libations that no doubt in-kind donated said Booze in hopes of being name-checked on blogs not unlike this one. (I’m going to talk about art soon, so bear with me?) There was a particular rum beverage that involved cucumber slices and jalapeno peppers which was subtle yet remarkable. My point, such as it is, is that from this particular vantage the Art Walk begins to look like a block party that David throws once a month that the other gallaries just piggyback on. Sheesh — four bars, and the line for each is like 10 minutes long! We’ve got art to look at?

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Castillo Gallery’s backyard parties would be no more than a joke if the art inside did not hold its own, but with infrequent exception it does. In fact!: Art and Parties are but two of many thins that Castillo has done exactly right since opening a few years ago. I’ve been a fan of Pepe Mar since he had a whimsical “studio” at Art Center on Lincoln Road years ago, and this particular solo show is only slightly less brilliant than the best work he’s ever done. It’s mostly divided between Louise-Nevelsonish gold-painted basket assemblages and web-like contraptions made out of toys and rope.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Fuck!, the Gavin Perry show at Snitzer? I guess you guys mostly saw it last month, but I was blown the fuck away. There was a wild crazy ceiling-hanging sculpture by the door, which gave way to galleries filled with . . .

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

. . . incredible wall-hanging drip paintings/sculptures. Strictly speaking they’re Helen Frankenthaler via custom car paint technique, but in person they’re pure left-brain Joy. I’m somewhat familliar with Gavin’s techniques, but here he’s created work that is completely indifferent to understanding and completely impervious to indifference. These pieces (“paintings”, I guess) are I’m pretty sure impossible to not love. The free-standing monolith sculptures were maybe slightly less so, yet each was charged with its own mysterious chromatic powers.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Over at (the Newly Remodeled!) Gallery Diet, an impressive installation by Gene Moreno.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Ok, can we talk about bad art for a minute? I always try to stop in to new places on my gallery hops, in search of new Stuff? And sometimes it’s a refreshing surprise? But not tonight, when we meet the Anton Solomoukha show at Black Square Gallery, a series of high-pretention, upscale-presentation photoshop images. If I were making fun I’d show you a series of ‘em, because each was Bad in its own special way. As it stands, you’ll have to infer from this one.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Next to Castillo, an interesting development: a little nighttime mini-fair with vendors selling clothing, trinkets, and food.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

… and featuring the GastroPod.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

Brian O’Connell’s rammed-earth walls at Dorsch, replicating walls that existed when the space was a lamp factory.

miami wynwood design district artwalk october 2010

And as always, Miami Poetry Collective’s Poem Depot — poems made to order on the spot — featuring Abel.