Murals Set in Motion at International House


Libbie soffer at Painted Bride Art Center


Studio Z Design


Reliving Resurrect Dead

Posted in Front Page, Philly Art News, Reviews

Mon

20

Feb

Photo of a Toynbee Tile by David A. Riggs, from Flickr.com.

Post by Erica Minutella, February 20, 2012

While running late for the DVD Release Party of Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles at the Trocadero Theatre on February 6, a friend casually remarked, “I don’t think we’ll have to worry. The line for the last screening wrapped around the corner. But who comes out on a Monday night to see an art documentary?”

A few hours and 500 people later, it became eminently clear that quite a lot of people do — at least, when said art documentary revolves around a mystery over thirty years in the making. For artist Justin Duerr, the tantalizing tiles he noticed embedded in street corners during treks throughout Philadelphia offered too great a call to ignore.

Known as the Toynbee Tiles, this street art of unknown origin has been spreading paranoiac messages about the media all along the east coast, and even as far as South America, since the early Eighties. As the Wikipedia page relates, the tiles carry variations on the following message:

TOYNBEE IDEA
IN Kubrick’s 2001
RESURRECT DEAD
ON PLANET JUPITER

Richard Dreyfuss might be apt to jump to extraterrestrial conclusions when encountering repetitive, inexplicable messages, but Justin and the team of Toynbee enthusiasts he encounters in Resurrect Dead remain just as assiduous in their search for a strictly human explanation. Director Jon Foy’s Philadelphia-based documentary will take you on a journey over familiar streets, as clues and red herrings battle with each other and with the audience’s curiosity. While this Philadelphia hunt doesn’t involve Nicholas Cage and the Declaration of Independence, local viewers may find this mystery even more exciting, if only because the very real solution lies surprisingly close to home.

Find future screenings here, or relive the mystery again and again on DVD. Find the upcoming schedule for Movie Mondays at the Troc here.

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Five Acts at Marginal Utility

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Mon

13

Feb

Sharon Hayes, "I March In The Parade Of Liberty, But As Long As I Love You I’m Not Free," 2008

Post by Kira Grennan, February 13, 2012

FIVE ACTS: CHRONICLES OF DISSENT, at Marginal Utility through March 18, brings together five artists who work with the subject of contemporary political protest, investigating how different marginalized voices of opposition speak and are being heard.

Some of the pieces in the exhibition–those by Sharon Hayes and Mark Tribe–restage historical episodes, revealing new meanings for a contemporary audience.  Tribe’s Port Huron project reenacts protest speeches from the 1960s and 70s, critically examining the change in public response to markedly similar political situations.  Hayes’ piece, “I March In The Parade of Liberty But As Long As I Love You I’m Not Free,” records the artist giving a public speech to an anonymous lover in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, drawing from early gay Liberation parade slogans, among other sources.  Her work interrogates the relationship between public and private speech, exposing the emotional underpinning of collective political action.

Other pieces in the show–those by Yael Bartana, Andrea Bowers, and Naeem Mohaiemen–document specific recent events or issues, providing a platform for discussion and exposure in the space of the gallery.  Bartana’s “Wild Seeds” shows a game staged by the artist in a stunning mountainous landscape in the West Bank, where a group of teenagers, bodies entangled, simulates an actual confrontation between Jewish settlers and the Israeli army.  The voices and movements of the teens teeter between playfulness and aggression, and the viewer is lodged in an intentionally uncomfortable state of ambiguity.  In Andrea Bowers’ “Nonviolent Civil Disobedience Training—Tree Sitting Forest Defense,” the artist is trained to sit for a prolonged period of time in the branches of an enormous tree as an act of nonviolent protest. This piece, with its do-it-yourself position, bridges theory and practice, urging visitors to follow up words and ideas with concrete action. Finally, Naeem Mohaiemen’s pairing of photographs and text, “Live True or Die Trying,” records the narrative of two rallies in Dhaka, Bangladesh on the same day—one organized by young Islamists and the other by a group of university Leftists, while his video Nayak (lost hero of history) pieces together a protest from mobile phone clips.  The artist’s construction of these narratives conveys his own responses and biases, betraying the uneven, personal nature of documentary.

Plurality of medium is a crucial part of the exhibition; text pieces stand alongside videos, spoken words, and still images.  This rich variety, native to the practices of the five artists in the show, mirrors the diverse means protesters have found to articulate their concerns in the current global economic and political climate.   Several of the artists live and work in multiple cities, a fact that indicates the complex collective voice the exhibition presents. In her statement, curator Yaelle Amir describes the way oppositional movements vary according to each particular language, tactics, location, and movement size.  The exhibition feels in some ways like a cross-section of the specific energy and texture of these different oppositional voices, allowing visitors to enter the verb ‘to protest.’  Looking at the pieces, we become conscious not only of the issues around which the protesters converge but also of the wide range of options available to make our voices heard.

Personally, I found the exhibition to be an invocation to pay attention to and engage with these different options, first within the space of the gallery, and then continuing on into my everyday life.  The pieces in FIVE ACTS: CHRONICLES OF DISSENT speak clearly about the potential energy of art as activism, taking the position that the two are never really separable.  Every expression, just as much as it is personally motivated and felt, is immediately engaged and implicated in a larger, political conversation.

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Art Scam Alert

Posted in Art Scams

Mon

06

Feb

Two InLiquid members have received a suspicious looking email from the following email address: gaythanluozo@gmail.com.

Update 2-20-2012: As of the last post, nine more members have reported receiving an email from this address. A few have received the following response to their queries:

 

“Thanks for the message, I am very happy to know that the item is
available for sale. i must tell you that my wife  browse through the
net and saw your item artwork (Sarah’s Baby II, and The Monster Who
Grew Small, with J. Vollmer) now, and we are  very much interested in
the immediate purchase because we need it for our new apartment,we
will like to  buy it before someone else requested for it, and we will
be paying you securely with a Bank cheque  which will be payable to
your name and we will wait till it clears your bank before the pick
up,You don’t have to worry about shipment, my shipper will handle it.
This is because i will be traveling out of the country any moment from
now on a business proposal.i want you to get back to me with the information needed to send you
the payment so that the payment can be mailed out to you soonI:EFull Name
Standard Address
CELL NUMBER
Total costkindly get back to me So that i can proceed with the payment
arrangement and relay it to you, consider it sold and get back to me
with the details of yours in which the cheque will be written,i await
your message…thanks & regards”

 

Read more on how to avoid Buyer/Shipping Scams similar to the one above by clicking here.

 

Do you know of a scam you’d like to report? Send it to erica@inliquid.org and we’ll be happy to post it to the blog under the new Art Scams section, which you can find by clicking on “Categories” at the left-hand side of the screen.

Find more helpful tips for avoiding scams:
artscams.com

If you’ve already been the victim of a scam, find a roundup of steps you can take here.

 The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3):
www.ic3.gov

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Space Savers Project at Breadboard

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Mon

30

Jan

Thomas Buildmore, "Today was pretty awesome." Photo by Christopher P. McManus.

Post by Leah Abrams, January 30, 2012

Have you ever been loath to leave that perfect parking spot right in front of your apartment? Maybe you’ve even considered accidentally-on-purpose dragging that blue recycling bin into the street to deter future parkers. Or maybe you are that person who, in very deliberate disregard of the law, pulls two orange cones from your trunk and plops them in the middle of the spot. You’re not alone. The practice of ‘space saving’ is not unknown in Philadelphia, nor is it a banal one. It is in fact a hotly contested issue in many neighborhoods, and a group of space savers are using art to air their opinions with The Space Savers Project. The pieces neither condone nor condemn the practice, but seek to create a dialogue about new concepts of spatial use.

The Space Savers Project opened Friday at the Breadboard’s EKG Exhibition Space at the Science Center (3600 Market Street), where it will be on display until February 5. A group of ten artists created their own interpretations of space saving objects, which range from practical to political to playful. Piper Brett’s efficient space saver is comprised of laser cut neon Plexiglas, which folds neatly for easy assembly and storage. In contrast, Thomas Buildmore displays a 48” x 48” custom-designed orange road sign (think: “Road Work Ahead”), which boldly proclaims the message: “Today was pretty awesome!!” This sign moves away from practicality and uses the previously passive parking space to “cannibalize the symbols and language of road construction,” and perhaps bring a few smiles to otherwise frustrated parking spot searchers.

A couple of the artists reach toward childhood in creating their space savers. Christopher P. McManus likens the tension-filled quest for a parking space to the deadly conflict over another highly desirable item: Air Jordans. Inspired by the crimes Air Jordans provoked, McManus fashioned a large paper-mâché Air Jordan as a simultaneous “visual joke” and “grim threat”: as silly or absurd as space saving may appear, it’s a real practice that brings real tensions to neighborhoods. The father-son team of Brent and Oscar Wahl channel the same vein of thought with “MINE.” Constructed primarily from Tinkertoys and decorated with glitter, the piece points out that the possessive nature of space saving can be childish, but the urge to claim something as your own can be felt at any age.

One socially conscious artist, Linda Yun, used this opportunity to create something beneficial to the feline inhabitants of the neighborhood: a shelter for stray cats, complete with food, blankets, and litter. “Move Along/Please Stay” is, however, only “seemingly-generous.” Despite its elaborate construction and positive message, the artist admits it is still a selfish space saver.

Despite the differences in the artwork, viewers are continually asked to consider the compelling and pertinent question of private vs. public. Though the idea of saving a public parking space is a bit ridiculous, is it really that absurd to want a space of your own, a space of stability in the ever shifting landscape of urban streets?

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Lovely Things – and Lovelier Worlds – at Projects Gallery

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Mon

23

Jan

Matthew Osborn's work at Projects Gallery

Post by Erica Minutella, January 23, 2012

In the late nineties, the television show Sliders envisioned a world where traveling through parallel universes would be as simple as flicking a remote control switch. While science may take a while to catch up with fiction, the imaginations of a few local artists have opened their own, much closer doorway into the unfamiliarly familiar.

At Lovely Things, the Bambi Gallery Pop Up Show on display at Projects Gallery through January 28, and curated by Candace Karch, the work of four artists – Jim Garvey, Matthew Osborn, Bonnie Brenda Scott, and Stacey Lee Webber – presents visitors with a meandering trip that strands them in uncharted territory.

Enter the doorway and you’ll be confronted with a room populated by creatures from a Jim Henson production gone wrong. Brought to life by Matthew Osborn, these cartoon monsters shift uncomfortably through their colorfully mundane confrontations with insomnia, boredom, and alcohol abuse. Stripped of the glamor of unreal circumstances, Osborn’s monsters are more likely to inspire pity than fear. At once amusing and quietly unsettling, his creations are also endearingly relatable.

A few steps into the next room will flip you back in time with thoughts of museum-dwelling pressed penny machines, as Philadelphia-based artist Stacey Lee Webber manipulates the traditional geometry of coins. Suspending them in shadow boxes or reworking them into tools, Webber draws attention back to the smallest denomination. While the childhood joy of turning a crank to flatten pennies was grounded in the act itself, Webber’s work draws audiences to the finished product, evoking unexpected shapes from an everyday object so often stripped of defining surfaces as it is passes from hand to hand.

Take a tangential trip downstairs to wind your way through an industrial maze of street art by Jim Garvey. Graffiti-spattered ladders hoist themselves up into the air like tattooed circus performers, juggling the identities of object and art in between flashes of a video installation on the back wall.

Resist the temptation to hold your breath as the back room plunges you into the darkened cosmos of Bonnie Brenda Scott. Skeletal remains crawl their way across the floor’s wasteland, providing an eerie accompaniment to a neon pink monster elevated on plastic crates. Prisms and giant hands, lined like images out of a palmistry textbook, illuminate the walls. Like the grownup rendition of a child’s room covered in glow-in-the-dark decals of the solar system, Scott’s installation presents an extra-dimensional, alchemical universe that might leave you in need of terrestrial reorientation.

Take a spin around Lovely Things before the show closes this Saturday.

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Lucia Koch at Lucía de la Puente, Lima

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Wed

18

Jan

 

Cono Norte (Los Olivos) 2011. Photo from gluciadelapuente.com.

Post by Laurens Dhaenens, January 18, 2012

Using diverse strategies and materials, spanning from the installation of light filters and translucent materials to the use of photography, Brazilian artist Lucia Koch critically dissects the issues of space. Introducing subtle alternations in private and public spaces, she questions what constitutes a space, how we create it, and how we live within it. Working in situ, the artist departs from the particularity of a location to reshape its experience and open up new perspectives on its structures and functions. However, in her site-specific interventions the original space always remains legible. Koch modifies a space without erasing its singularity. As such, her work simultaneously locates the viewer both inside and outside a space—in an ambiguous position, which generates a critical attitude toward architecture and its effects.

Lucia Koch’s exhibition at Lucía de la Puente, Un Tour, was centered around/on a wall. Characterized by its irregular curved form, its undulating surface, and its brown color, the wall articulated the antithesis to the rational architecture of the gallery. Diagonally installed, it distorted the spatial unity of the room and obliged the visitors to make ‘un tour’ in what is normally an open, surveyable space. By altering the gallery space and choreographing the visitors’ movement, Koch’s exhibition articulated a critical exploration of the significance of the gallery as a physical space and as a defining context.

Koch’s wall created two spaces, both marked by the conflict between the geometric architecture of the gallery and the organic design of the wall. In the first space the gallery context disappeared in favor of the physical space. The wall did not appear as an object but as an element emphasizing the spatial structure of the gallery. In the second space, however, the gallery context prevailed due to the presence of a photograph of the interior of a coffee package, enlarged to an architectural scale (Café extra-forte, 2011). The wall no longer appeared as a structural element; instead, it appeared as a sculpture, reflecting the qualities of borders, separations, and divisions—or what could be called the aesthetics of walls. Consequently, instead of simply contrasting ‘the white cube,’ the wall created two dialoguing rooms, which both, in turn, challenged the experience of the gallery with the presence and absence of objects.

If the wall altered the space structurally, the photograph Café extra-forte transformed it illusorily. Yet both evoked the expansion of space beyond the visual and physical borders surrounding us. The wall was perforated but not transparent; thus it incorporated the presence of the other side without making it visually accessible. Similarly, the photograph virtually expanded the room only to impose yet another border. Through this process of creating and denying spaces, Lucia Koch emphasizes the surface of walls as an element of communication between the inside and the outside, the internal and the external—a motive that also returns in her photographic series Cono Norte (2011).

Café extra-forte prefaced the four photographs exhibited in the last room of the gallery. Produced during the artist’s travels through el Cono Norte, the northern district of Lima, this series reflects her impressions of the regional architecture. Each photo exposes the interior of a box, marked by cuts, and in some cases, colors. Parallel to her series of Amostras de Arquitetura, they represent specific architectural spaces on a miniature scale. Whereas most of the photos only display basic interiors, such as Los Olivos, 2011, others have more elaborate designs, such as San Martin de Porres, 2011. Through their differences, the photographs demonstrate the heterogeneity of the architecture of the region. Heavily influenced by a massive rural urban migration and a decade of intense economic activity, el Cono Norte is marked by a persistent conflict between center and the periphery, wealth and poverty. As one of the most populated areas of Peru, its architectural landscape is in a state of flux. Koch expresses the transitoriness inherent to this situation with the use of cardboard boxes. In the photograph San Martin de Porres, 2011, this material yields a beautiful confrontation with the elegant design, making explicit the coexistence of divergent realities within this zone.

Although Lucia Koch’s work incessantly suggests the endless expansion of space, it stops short of actually showing what lies beyond the sphere of the interior. Only vague impressions of the outside penetrate the cut out windows in the Cono Norte series. Nonetheless, far from recovering the interior at the expense of the exterior, Koch focuses on the borders and transitions between the inside and the outside through her ongoing interest in windows, walls, and other visual filters. Empty and thus reduced to their structure, the interiors render a direct confrontation with spatial limitations that continuously surround us all. Going further still, each one being unique, they also represent intimate personal spaces which, uncovered, expose barriers between you and the other.

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Art Scam Alert

Posted in Art Scams

Mon

16

Jan

 

Email culprit number two: Martin Dillon from the UK. Like any good thief, he uses multiple aliases: dillon_m2mm@yahoo.co.uk, bijmoi@yahoo.com.uk, and bijmoi@yahoo.com.ca, among others.

Find a list of other names to look out for here.

Do you know of a scam you’d like to report? Send it to erica@inliquid.org and we’ll be happy to post it to the blog under the new Art Scams section, which you can find by clicking on “Categories” at the left-hand side of the screen.

Find more helpful tips for avoiding scams:
artscams.com

If you’ve already been the victim of a scam, find a roundup of steps you can take here.

 The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3):
www.ic3.gov


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Art Scam Alert

Posted in Art Scams

Wed

11

Jan

 

If you happen to receive an email from a Mike Walter, using the email address sgtmikewalter@gmail.com, be warned, it is a scam.

The body of the email may look something like this:

Subj: Artwork Enquiry

Hi,

I hope this message finds you in a good condition , I am really
impressed with your good and beautiful works I was going through the
internet to get a beautiful artwork. i came across your works and my
eyes caught “  Chosen Paths & Space Walking  “. still available for
sale?

I will like to have more details about the artworks as well the total
price for the piece (shipping excluded) so that i can proceed with
payment.

Your quick reply will be highly appreciated, i will be waiting to read
from you .

Kind Regards.

Mike.

Two of the biggest red flags in this email? The abundance of typos and the fact that it comes from a free email client.

Thanks to Marc Salz and Favi Dubo for the tip-off.

Do you know of a scam you’d like to report? Send it to erica@inliquid.org and we’ll be happy to post it to the blog under the new Art Scams section, which you can find by clicking on “Categories” at the left-hand side of the screen.

Find more helpful tips for avoiding scams:
artscams.com

If you’ve already been the victim of a scam, find a roundup of steps you can take here.

 The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3):
www.ic3.gov

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Slicing into Space 1026

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Wed

11

Jan

Photo from Jay Hardman's "Unsustainable," courtesy of Space 1026.

 

Post by Leah Abrams, January 11, 2012

Friday night, I walked off Arch Street into Space 1026 and felt almost as if I were entering a birthday party – a crowd of exuberant people, bright and happy voices, and the omnipresent smell of birthday cake. The event was in fact the opening of Jay Hardman’s Unsustainable.

The exhibition features ten pieces from the artist, including photography, the most intriguing perhaps being “Michigan” - a scaled model of a construction site, several feet long, and fashioned predominantly from cake and frosting. The cake is carved into a striking simulation of the messy, ripped-up topography of a construction site with miniature details, such as fencing, added for context. A contractor in the construction industry, Hardman draws from this experience, but says his exploration really began with the concept of a piece of paper being a plane for creation, which led to an interest in how cake tops were used as surfaces for creating artwork. The earliest cake piece in the show, “Justin Loves Fire Trucks,” from 2005, is a small, round cake topped with tiny red fire trucks. This early sculpture is endearing and gently amusing, a contrast to the more serious “Michigan,” which presents a snapshot of seeming destruction.

However, Hardman does not see “Michigan” as being a negative statement, but a neutral one. He views construction as a natural cycle of replacing old with new.

“When things get old, they need to be fixed or it’s time to start over,” Hardman says. “It’s an organic process.”

Rather than viewing buildings as sterile or disconnected from human experience, he hopes in his work to “personify buildings and dwellings as significant extensions of the body.” What happens tangibly in a neighborhood also happens socially; there is a parallel cycle of decay and renewal.

In addition to his cake sculptures, Hardman creates sculptures in the miniature using craft supplies and real construction site materials. He believes that the different mediums he uses create “different points of entry for different people.” Some people respond more strongly to the use of cake, others connect to the miniature scaled objects.

If either or both of these methods peak your interest, don’t miss Jay Hardman’s unique and provocative Unsustainable, through January 28 at Space 1026.

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Casting some Light on the Holidays

Posted in Front Page, Reviews

Wed

21

Dec

"Buckskin Gulch, Escalante, National Monument, Utah," by Glenn Bizewski

Post by Erica Minutella, December 21, 2011

By now, hearing endless repetitions of holiday music and seeing the city mummified in strings of lights might leave you feeling more akin to Mr. Potter than George Bailey. But thanks to the stalwart efforts of a few arts spaces, like Cabaret Red Light’s recent mischievous rendition of The Nutcracker at the Painted Bride Art Center, the holidays face some much-needed reworking.

One such chance to recapture the holiday spirit before the weekend can be found at the Light Room Gallery. The photography on display for Holiday Show 2011 offers the rare opportunity to find holiday gifts without the atmospheric torture that comes standard with every department store visit.

Tucked away on Wallace Street, just a block from the imposing walls of Eastern State Penitentiary, the homey space of the Light Room Gallery beckons visitors into a room frosted over with white like a snowdrift brought in through the outer doors. If the sight of a fireplace isn’t enough to thaw the chill of commercialism from the wary newcomer, a glance at Tony Rocco‘s “Struggle in the ‘Italian’ Market,” just above the stairway, will finish the job. One of the few color photos on display, a forceful splash of vibrant flames in the foreground will continually recapture your eyes as you wander through the space.

Travel across vignettes of the city as you walk along a wall of works by Erin Yard. Refresh yourself with a brisk draft from Ranjoo Prasad’s “Chestnut Hill Winter Stream,” just before cutting into “Fruit Series,” by Joshua Marowitz.

Lose yourself in Mary Anne Broderick-Pakenham’s misty seascapes. Almost post-apocalyptic in their ghostlike desolation, Broderick’s Landscapes series could double as establishing shots from the mind of Rod Serling. On the wall opposite, three photos by Glenn Bizewski will strand you in the midst of towering rock formations, as you stare into dizzying pockets of devastating height.

Catch these photos and more at the 2024 Wallace Street space through January 7, and let your heart expand a few sizes as you return home, maybe even bearing gifts in support of local artists.

Stop by the gallery tonight at 8 pm for a demo by Tara Hornung on how to archivally mount / matte / and frame your photographs.

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