This looks good! I love art activism more than anything.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Mika Rottenberg



Ever since I saw Mika Rottenberg's video instillation "Mary's Cherries" in PS1 in 2004, I've tried to follow her work. Rottenberg's art explores the relationship between women's bodies and systems of production. Rottenberg is best known for her videos featuring working women, cast for their distinguishing physical characteristics, performing a kind of modern-day alchemy; tears are farmed as the secret ingredient for bread, and acrylic fingernails are made into maraschino cherries through elaborate zigzag assembly-line processes. With her use of humor and seductively disorienting spaces, Rottenberg opens up a funhouse mirror dimension for us to peer into–one that is at once zany and eerily true to life.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Theo Jansen




Theo Jansen was the first person I had seen on TED talks a couple years ago. His work is incredible, alive, and magical. This is one the most beautiful examples of the inspiration of nature and science in art. The second I saw his pieces walk... it's just so hard to stop watching- and the technical and engineering aspects of it just blows my mind...Man, so good.
Alexander McQueen

Alexander McQueen was a huge inspiration for me when I was studying fashion design years back, and continued to be even when I found my work to lend itself more to sculpture and installation. He died very recently this past February after the death of his mother. His work always just stunned me. The fashion world will not be the same without his presence.
Friday, June 25, 2010
Jan Svankmajer
Little Otik and Alice (an interpretation of Alice in Wonderland) are incredible stop motion animated movies created by the great Czech filmmaker, Jan Svankmajer. He was born in 1934 in Prague where he still lives. He trained at the Institute of Applied Arts from 1950 to 1954 and then at the Prague Academy of Performing Arts (Department of Puppetry). There are many examples of Jan Svankmajer's shorts on youtube if you are interested in seeing his other work. My favorite part of one of his films is "where the socks go" which is a clip from Alice before she meets the caterpillar.
Celestial Navigations - Al Jarnow
I just put this film on my Netflix queue. As I was watching the trailer I was wondering why some of the clips look so familiar and it's because Al Jarnow was an early contributor to Sesame Street and 3-2-1 Contact. ...can't wait to check it out in full.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
The Price of Milk - Harry Sinclair
"A symphony of magic... A not so simple story about two people in love."
The Price of Milk written and directed by Harry Sinclair--This movie is surreal in the most beautifully simplistic ways. When I first saw this I thought that if I were to ever direct a movie I would do it just like this.
The Beast Pageant - Albert Birney and Jon Moses
The Beast Pageant - Trailer from Albert Birney on Vimeo.
The Beast Pageant is a feature film written and directed by Albert Birney and Jon Moses in Rochester, New York. Check out the super cool trailer above. You can support them as well on their kickstarter page.
Death to the Tinman- Ray Tintori
"Lovely Awesomeness" best describes Ray Tintori's short film above. The 24 year old recently made a name for himself after creating MGMT’s Time to Pretend.
Are Mokkelbost






Guerra de la Paz





Allison Schulnik
Allison Schulnik's work is pretty amazing to watch on a days I feel uninspired. Her films have this messy gooey style that I think is so much more successful then when used in her paintings.
Schulnik explains, "I over-indulge. I really just make work and I don't really think about it. I like to see the material move and breath, and melt. I don't like things to stay static."
Why don't you do any dishes? Why? I always clean up the kitchen. Why?...haha. So random and good.
Tales of the Unexpected- Carl Burgess
Tales of the Unexpected from More Soon on Vimeo.
Carl Burgess' Tales of the Unexpected is like seeing crystal landscapes in your Italian ice.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Cai Guo-Quiang





I really love Cai Guo-Quiang's process in his explosion drawings. I also really enjoy the idea of the aesthetic of pain which he explains in the second video posted above. Cai Guo-Qiang was born in 1957 in Quanzhou City, Fujian, China. He was trained in stage design at the Shanghai Theater Academy from 1981 to 1985. Cai's work is scholarly and often politically charged. Cai initially began working with gunpowder to foster spontaneity and confront the suppressive, controlled artistic tradition and social climate in China. While living in Japan from 1986 to 1995, Cai explored the properties of gunpowder in his drawings, an inquiry that eventually led to his experimentation with explosives on a massive scale and the development of his signature "explosion events," artistically choreographed shows incorporating fireworks and other pyrotechnics.
Marco Brambilla
I love watching this in full screen mode- it seems so epic and monumental. Check out more of Marco Brambilla's work here.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Pieter Hugo







Kara Walker


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I love Kara Walker's work, it explores race, gender, identity,violence and sexuality. I had the pleasure of being able to see her lecture at the SFMOMA in 2005. She captured the audience so easily with the way she speaks about her art, her process, and her subjects. In the the Second Youtube post, that is a podcast between Kara Walker and curator Gary Garrels ,they begin to talk about the idea of "failed revolution" around 5:48- this idea really intrigued me. Read more about Walker in this article done by the New York Times.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Kerry James Marshall





Although Kerry James Marshall currently lives and works in Chicago, Illinois, his time spent in Watts, Los Angeles, California where he observed the Black Power and Civil Rights movements had a significant impact on his paintings. Strongly influenced by his experiences as a young man, he developed a signature style during his early years as an artist that involved the use of extremely dark, essentially black figures. These images represent his perspective of African Americans with separate and distinct inner and outer appearances. At the same time, they confront racial stereotypes within contemporary American society.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Everyday I'm hustlin'
I love this comedy sketch by Katt Williams. It's too funny. I've been working non stop the past couple months to save up to be able to get back to California and get back into my art work. And I just got word the other day that I was accepted as an Artist in Residence in Mendocino, California. I can't wait to get back into my art 24/7! It's 'bout time.
Nienke Klunder













Nienke Klunder makes some amazing transformations to tell a story within her photography or through what you could call a photo-essay or series. Each is unique, powerful and runs the gamut for emotional range. The series above is simply titled, ‘Sequence 5′ and is really amazing. The images are undeniably thought provoking and really dive headlong into some interesting aspects of the human condition in the context of modern social norms and culture.
This series, from a soldier to a clown, is actually a lot more gradual – I’ve only included half the images.
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