GG_sm Lorna Mills and Sally McKay

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Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact

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diana_3

Diana, Princess of Wales. I WON. I WON.

(Ed Pien did the retarded pumpkin on the right. He and a bunch of other jealous also-rans are threatening to chase me around with their cell phone cameras until my Diana pumpkin smashes against a wall)

This also counts as a Canada Council KEY MOMENT in my art career making me the anointed one for the next 12 months. (Luis Jacob is so last summer)

- L.M. 10-31-2007 3:35 am [link] [2 refs] [23 comments]


TM_40sm

I rarely go to About.com, the info site owned by the New York Times, there's something about the page layout and the logo that I can't stand. (except I went there for tips on pumpkin carving prior to creating last year's non-award winning masterpiece ) But I will overcome my distaste for friendly orange spheres because they have hired one of my favourite writers, the brilliantly witty, informed and cranky Pierre Tristam of Candide's Notebooks to create the content for their new Middle East Issues site.

- L.M. 10-27-2007 2:22 am [link] [9 comments]


neuts catalogue

Lisa Kiss, super desinger extraordinaire, just won an OAAG award for her design of our Neutrinos They Are Very Small catalogue. Yay.

- sally mckay 10-26-2007 12:54 am [link] [5 comments]


evening primrose


The evening primrose is my favourite plant. I think there are a bunch of varieties. The ones in our garden are weedy things that slowly take the shape of pokey spikes. They produce little yellow blooms that open at sunset and die off the next afternoon. Me and VB tend toward the nocturnal ourselves, and we like to sit outside in the evening. This scraggly little plant, popping open new buds every single night, makes very good company.

- sally mckay 10-22-2007 9:02 pm [link] [3 comments]


This week's little image assignment for school is about "the gaze."

acconci Vito Acconic, Theme Song, 1973
video, 33 minutes

sample dialogue:

Look right in here, right into me. Oh look how my body’s waiting for you.

We don’t have to worry about tomorrow, we don’t have to worry about forever, it just has to be about now. We don’t need any illusions, we don’t want any illusions, right?

Sure, you can be on stage, you can be on stage with me. I’ll put you in the spotlight!

I’ll admire you, I’ll love you. I’ll watch every move you make.

You’re gonna let me be all alone. You’re gonna leave me before we even had a chance to get started.

I’ll remember the time when we could’ve been together.

Oh wouldn’t you have wanted to be a memory for me? Wouldn’t you have wanted to be fixed in my mind?

Vito Acconci activates ‘the gaze’ in a most aggressive and frustrating manner. The artist lies on a carpet­ — his face seemingly crushed up against the inside of the monitor's screen — attempting to seduce the viewer to join him in the space that he inhabits. It is a prolonged monologue, conducted an unpleasant, bar-stool tone of seedy, hasty need. Yet at times, watching this video, I thought about succumbing, if only to stem Acconci’s relentless flow of sleaze. But of course, this creature addressing me is not a person, it’s an artwork, and I am categorically, ontologically unable to join Acconci in his representational space, even when I reluctantly agree to do so.

As viewers, we are both tantalized and rebuked. We gaze and the artwork appears to gaze back. We are implicated by the representational gaze, but it remains remote. As with Lacan’s glittering sardine can (see comments), we are not seen by that which we behold. Seduced, and then rejected­ — by an artwork! It’s shameful but it’s also deeply funny. I walked away from Theme Song laughing and feeling that despite (or because of), the existential gaps and voids, I’d been given a weird little gift.

see the video here (but it's better full screen on a tv monitor)

- sally mckay 10-20-2007 8:34 pm [link] [5 comments]


robert bateman
Robert Bateman, Burrowing Owl. Image from North Coast Cafe

excertp from Sarah Milroy on Robert Bateman...
Let's be clear: There is no conspiracy operating here. The fact is that Bateman engages with a subject matter that is dear to the hearts of Canadians: the beauty of the natural world. But he describes it in terms that are essentially those of illustration. There is no way in which his handling of paint, or his understanding of what painting is, pushes that medium forward, or even gives it a personal inflection. There is no way in which his paintings reveal interesting thinking about the relationships between man and nature; his environmentally themed paintings, for example, have all the sophistication of Reader's Digest illustrations.
interesting letters to the editor (Globe and Mail)...
Over-the-top challenge
Ross Bateman
In her criticism of the Robert Bateman show at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection (A Tale Of Two Shows - Review, Oct. 4), Sarah Milroy has a point of view that neatly wraps a common anxiety of her profession. Her worry is that the public is ignorant and, if it is unfortunate enough to stumble on an art show that panders to this ignorance, it becomes bewildered. If true, it's good this was brought to the public's attention; I don't think it had noticed.

A humble illustrator
Ken Nutt
I have got up off the porch long enough to write to thank Sarah Milroy (A Tale Of Two Shows - Review, oct. 4) for her concern about us small-town folk not knowing enough to defend ourselves from exposure to the art of Robert Bateman. It was helpful of her to give us some guidelines: Abstraction equals good; realism equals bad.

- sally mckay 10-16-2007 5:20 pm [link] [23 comments]


books

The International Festival of Authors opens on October 17 at Harbourfront. My video, English, updated as usual, will be projected on an 8' by 8' wall for the 10 days of the festival. (2,522 titles as of this week).

(I'm sure that Margaret Atwood & Alice Munro worked very hard on all those books that I just chewed up and spit out onto a screen for two seconds each.)

I won't be at the gala opening because its the same night that ETHEL AND THE MERMEN are playing at the Smiling Buddha on 961 College st. at 10:30 pm. (and also, I forgot to ask for comps to the big party with Maggie and Ian before the damn thing sold out, because then I could have brought Ethel and the Mermen with me as arm candy)

- L.M. 10-16-2007 2:06 am [link] [11 comments]


More bad shit in USA...
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

media@caedefensefund.org

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE PERSECUTION & ILLNESS FORCE SCIENTIST TO PLEAD IN PRECEDENT-SETTING CASE
Scientist's Wife and Daughter Comment on Case

Buffalo, NY – Today in Federal District Court, Dr. Robert Ferrell, Professor of Human Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, under tremendous pressure, pled guilty to lesser charges rather than facing a prolonged trial for federal charges of "mail fraud" and "wire fraud" in a surreal post-PATRIOT Act legal case that has attracted worldwide attention.

"From the beginning, this has been a persecution, not a prosecution. Although I have not seen the final agreement, the initial versions contained incorrect and irrelevant information," said Dr. Dianne Raeke Ferrell, Dr. Ferrell's wife and an Associate Professor of Special Education and Clinical Services at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. "Bob is a 27 year survivor of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma which has reoccurred numerous times. He has also had malignant melanoma. Since this whole nightmare began, Bob has had two minor strokes and a major stroke which required months of rehabilitation."

Dr. Ferrell added that her husband was indicted just as he was preparing to undergo a painful and dangerous autologous stem cell transplant, the second in 7 years.

The Ferrell's daughter, Gentry Chandler Ferrell, added: "Our family has struggled with an intense uncertainty about physical, emotional and financial health for a long time. Agreeing to a plea deal is a small way for dad to try to eliminate one of those uncertainties and hold on a little longer to the career he worked so hard to develop... Sadly, while institutions merely are tarnished from needless litigation, individuals are torn apart. I remain unable to wrap my mind around the absurdity of the government's pursuit of this case and I am saddened that it has been dragged out to the point where my dad opted to settle from pure exhaustion." (read Gentry Ferrell's full statement )

Dr. Ferrell's colleague Dr. Steven Kurtz, founder of the internationally acclaimed art and theater group Critical Art Ensemble, was illegally detained and accused of "bioterrorism" by the U.S. government in 2004 stemming from his acquisition from Dr. Ferrell of harmless bacteria used in several of Critical Art Ensemble's educational art projects. After a costly investigation lasting several months and failing to provide any evidence of "bioterrorism," the Department of Justice instead brought charges of "mail fraud" and "wire fraud" against Kurtz and Ferrell. Under the USA PATRIOT Act, the maximum penalty for these charges has increased from 5 years to 20. (For more information about the case, please see "Background to the Case" below or caedefensefund.org)

JURIDICAL ART CRITICISM?

The government is vigorously attempting to prosecute two defendants in a case where no one has been injured, and no one has been defrauded. The materials found in Steve Kurtz's house were obtained legally and used safely by the artist. After 3 1/2 years of investigation and prosecution, the case still revolves around $256 worth of common science research materials that were used in art works by a highly visible and respected group of artists. These art works were commissioned and hosted by cultural institutions worldwide where they had been safely displayed in museums and galleries with absolutely no risk to the public. The Government has consistently framed this case as an issue of public safety, but the materials used by Critical Art Ensemble are widely available, can be purchased by anyone from High School science supply catalogues, and are regularly mailed.

PROFESSORS OF ART & SCIENCE EXPRESS ALARM

"The government's prosecution is an ill-conceived and misguided attack on the scientific and artistic communities," said Dr. Richard Gronostajski, Professor of Biochemistry at SUNY Buffalo, where Professor Kurtz also teaches. "It could have a chilling effect on future scientific research collaborations, and harm teaching efforts and interactions between scientists, educators and artists."

"It's deeply alarming that the government could pressure someone of Dr. Ferrell's stature into agreeing to something like this. The case threatens all Americans' Constitutionally guaranteed right to question the actions of their government," said Igor Vamos, Professor of Integrated Electronic Arts at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

PLEA COMES AMIDST OVERWHELMING PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR DEFENDANTS

The plea bargain agreement comes at a time of overwhelming public support for the two defendants. A film about the case, Strange Culture—directed by Lynn Hershman Leeson and featuring Tilda Swinton (Chronicles of Narnia, Michael Clayton), Thomas Jay Ryan (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), and Peter Coyote (E.T., Erin Brokovich)—has drawn widespread critical praise and public interest, with screenings in dozens of U.S. cities after its selection to open both the 2007 Human Rights Watch International Film Festival and the Berlin International Film Festival doc section. An October 1st screening of the film at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City drew a crowd of 400 who stayed for an hour afterward for a discussion with Hershman Leeson, Professor Kurtz, and Tilda Swinton. Special Benefit screenings of the film in numerous cities have raised thousands of dollars to offset the two defendants' escalating legal costs.

BACKGROUND TO THE CASE

The legal nightmare of renowned scientist Dr. Robert Ferrell and artist and professor Dr. Steven Kurtz began in May 2004. Professor Kurtz and his late wife Hope were founding members of the internationally exhibited art and theater collective Critical Art Ensemble. Over the past decade cultural institutions worldwide have commissioned and hosted Critical Art Ensemble's participatory theater projects that help the general public understand biotechnology and the many issues surrounding it. In May 2004 the Kurtzes were preparing a project examining genetically modified agriculture for the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, when Hope Kurtz died of heart failure. Detectives who responded to Professor Kurtz's 911 call deemed the couple's art suspicious, and called the FBI. Within hours the artist was illegally detained as a suspected "bioterrorist" as dozens of federal agents in Hazmat suits sifted through his work and impounded his computers, manuscripts, books, his cat, and even his wife's body. The government has pursued this case relentlessly for three and a half years, spending enormous amounts of public resources. Most significantly, the legal battle has exhausted the financial, emotional, and physical resources of Ferrell and Kurtz; as well as their families and supporters. The professional and personal lives of both defendants have suffered tremendously. A trial date has not yet been established.

For more information about the case, with extensive documentation, please visit: caedefensefund.org

- sally mckay 10-12-2007 9:00 pm [link] [4 comments]


We're studying semiotics this week in school. I modified a bit of an assignment for the blog. It's not scintillating, but I gotta post something cause I'm afraid L.M. will abandon me for my bloggy slackerness!

vanderweyden
Rogier van der Weyden, St. Luke Drawing the Virgin, c. 1435-40. Image from SUNY- Oneonta

chairs
Joseph Kosuth, One and Three Chairs, 1965. Wood folding chair, mounted photograph of a chair, and photographic enlargement of a dictionary definition of “chair.” Image from philosophie-spiritualite.com

Joseph Kosuth’s “One and Three Chairs” reads like a text book illustration for semiotic theory. Here the sign of the chair is presented in three forms, a photograph of a chair, a chair, and a dictionary definition of a chair. Each instance of ‘chair’ functions very differently, yet all three are presented under a third, unifying category — that of art. It is as if the kind of self-reflexive step taken by artists such as Rogier Van der Weyden in his portrayal of St. Luke drawing the Virgin was here presented bare — divested of context and content so that the cognitive act of reference is itself the object of the work.

By choosing a referent as neutral as a chair, Kosuth draws attention to the codes of meaning rather than the content. In a contemporary context, the piece reads as illustrative, dry and didactic. But in the early days of conceptual art, there was an exhilaration to the notion that art ideas were not on reliant physical form. Releasing the idea from the object meant, at that time, emancipation from the market, from aura, from the gallery, from authorship, from genius and a whole host of artworld hierarchies. History has shown that conceptual art was ultimately as susceptible to commodification as other forms, but it did open the door for a slew of modes of meaning.

- sally mckay 10-12-2007 6:11 pm [link] [42 comments]


The artists behind VVORK (a favourite site of mine) recently curated an exhibition at Gallery West in Den Haag and invited me to write an intro essay for them.

(I also took advantage of Sally's reading on Aby Warburg to start me off on it)
- L.M. 10-11-2007 10:21 am [link] [7 comments]



cigs

Ontario election today! I don't know why the cigarette picture came up when I Googled Ontario election, but now that I see them I want one.

Also a referendum question on the electoral system. The Mixed Member Proportional option will turn us into Italy, so I voted YES YES YES. They can change it back in another 150 years if it doesn't work out.

- L.M. 10-11-2007 3:42 am [link] [11 comments]




pass_1_sm
pass_3_sm
pass_1_sm_n


- L.M. 10-09-2007 1:31 am [link] [add a comment]



October 8th and it's goddamn muggy cocksucking clusterfucking 30°C in this city.

I am so full of hate right now.

Spell-check turns cocksucking into crosskicking. Spell-check should know better.

- L.M. 10-08-2007 10:51 pm [link] [14 comments]




pass_4


- L.M. 10-08-2007 7:13 am [link] [3 comments]



GL_1
Gareth Lichty untitled 2007 8 km. of woven garden hose, 3' x 20' x 14' (foreground) 7' x 8' (background)

Installation at Zero to One, 107 King Street West, Kitchener, ON, in a three person show with
Ian James Newton and Sarah Kernohan.

- L.M. 10-07-2007 12:12 am [link] [1 comment]



traff3_sm
traff_sm_sl
traff4_sm_f

- L.M. 10-06-2007 1:50 am [link] [6 comments]


fenton cannon balls

Cannonballs on or off the road...which came first?
Errol Morris is trying to figure it out.
(thanks to Be Smiley)

- sally mckay 10-05-2007 6:03 am [link] [6 comments]


Ethelandthemermen

Objects of Affection Curated by Gordon Hatt October 5 - December 2, 2007
at Rodman Hall, St. Catharines. Opening Friday, October 5 at 7 p.m.

Featuring work by Susan Bozic, Meesoo Lee, Jillian McDonald, Maria Legault,
Warren Quigley & Tanya Read


Panel discussion with the artists: Friday, October 5 at 2 p.m. at Rodman Hall
Opening performance by Maria Legault: Friday, October, 5 at 8 p.m.

Music by the band Ethel and the Mermen at 9 p.m.!

[oh yeah, and there's art too. And Ethel and the Mermen!]

- L.M. 10-04-2007 7:09 am [link] [8 comments]



Harwood_sm
Andrew Harwood Drag & Witch & Unicorn Merch Table & Kissing Booth 2007
Nuit Noir at Nuit Blanche, original images courtesy of Scott McEwan


- L.M. 10-03-2007 10:08 pm [link] [add a comment]


barbershop
Barbershop window on Bloor Street near Lansdowne, image courtesy of Lisa Neighbour

orest
Orest Tataryn Bloor NIGHTLIGHT 2007 Bloor Street near Lansdowne for Nuit Blanche

roti
Roti window on Bloor Street near Lansdowne, image courtesy of Lisa Neighbour

heather
Heather Nichol Bloor NIGHTLIGHT 2007 Bloor Street near Lansdowne for Nuit Blanche

Lena
Lyla Rye's DVD projection in the Carla Garnet Project 2007 Bloor Street near Lansdowne
for Nuit Blanche


Bloor NIGHTLIGHT was a partnership Nuit Blanche event, meaning an all-volunteer grass-roots effort without official Nuit Blanche sources of funding for creation or installation.

(ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem ahem.)

- L.M. 10-03-2007 7:14 am [link] [add a comment]



rachel_1
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 chocolate, mixed media, pre-performance

Rachel_2
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 performance shot

Rachel_3
Rachel McRae ABOMASUM 2007 post-performance

This was my favourite performance, the middle image does not fully convey her grim determination during the slaughter of the deer. GVB & Sally stood well back of the cleaver action. (Rachel's blog.)

- L.M. 10-02-2007 10:34 am [link] [1 ref] [2 comments]

tino
Martin Reis (aka Tino) as Le Facteur (inspired by Jacques Tati), Nuit Noire, Sept. 29, 2007
Photo: Wendy Lucas

Tino
The personalised telegram I received, much to my surprise when we happend across Le Facteur on a street corner (scan by L.M.)


- sally mckay 10-02-2007 6:15 am [link] [6 refs] [5 comments]


Lisa_5
Lisa Neighbour - WELCOME ALL FLIES 2007 installation for NIGHT SCHOOL at Hart House
during Nuit Blanche


- L.M. 10-02-2007 5:23 am [link] [add a comment]


Hicks_2
Gordon Hicks - LIGHT RAIN TONIGHT 2007 polycarbonate, plumbing, water
20 inches diameter, 3.5 litres per hour


Hicks_1
Gordon Hicks - LIGHT RAIN TONIGHT 2007
installation view on Bloor Street near Lansdowne for Nuit Blanche


Part of Bloor NIGHTLIGHT, during Nuit Blanche, this is one of ten Streetlight Sculptures - a project curated by Orest Tataryn. Other streetlights were by Lois Andison, Matthew Birch, Anne O'Callaghan, Thrush Holmes, Heather Nicol, Jonathan Sabine, Orest Tataryn, Christy Thompson and John Wilcox.

- L.M. 10-02-2007 2:16 am [link] [1 ref] [6 comments]


Sara Milroy reviewed Nuit Blanche
"A thought for next year. True, some of the real delights of the evening were the small things, like the stuffed architectural model of the city of Toronto by the UpBag collective, which we discovered by chance in a hallway at 401 Richmond. (I particularly enjoyed the Mies towers rendered in black corduroy, and the knitted CN Tower.) But the big guns - The Power Plant, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, the Royal Ontario Museum - were all more or less passive (throwing dance parties or staying open late to show your regular programming doesn't count), leaving it to Barbara Fischer at the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, at Hart House, University of Toronto, to be the only museum director in town to catch the Nuit Blanche fever. Her Night School program was packed with onlookers when we checked in.

What's wrong with these people? We shouldn't really need to apply the heart paddles - they are supposed to be the folks that believe in art, after all - but if heart paddles are indeed required, maybe the city/sponsors of Nuit Blanche or other patrons should consider grants to these leading centres to fund one major one-night-only project either in their gallery space or out in the city. (How about $20,000 each?)"
I agree with the statement "what's wrong with these people?" but I have a problem with her solution of simply pouring more money onto their turf. I know too many artists who put together superlative pieces with very little funding, if any at all, so excuse my peevishness on this point.

- L.M. 10-02-2007 2:15 am [link] [15 comments]