Showing posts with label Summer Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer Art. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2009

Art Must-Sees this Summer: New York Photographs


image of John Lennon by Bob Gruen, on view at Bonnie Benrubi


As you may well know, I get many of my topics from NYTimes, so of course today I have to tell everyone about another summer must-see. This summer on exhibition throughout 13 galleries in Chelsea, are photographs of New York. From Nan Goldin to Helen Levitt, one can view almost every perspective of the city through the last century.

This is sure to take up a day or two when visiting the city, so plan ahead to hit all of the venues. This loosely titled exhibit, called New York Photographs, is organized by galleries that specifically represent photography, so even if the New York Photographs show is over, this is an excellent gallery list to start with if you want a down and dirty education on the broad representation of photography in New York City. For instance, Yancey Richardson is a highly respected contemporary gallery with some of the hottest photographers on the scene, while something like Howard Greenburg Gallery seems to show more conservative black and white work. Overall, the beauty about photography and this city, is that both have come of age together; as photography was developed during the same period as the birth of the steam engine and the iron industry, so the city literally grew up around the photograph. I think that's what will be beautiful about these exhibits, viewing the increasingly complex relationship the photographic medium, which has recorded and re-presented the life of the city time and time again, has with New York. Reviewing in these galleries, how both the visual structures and the concrete structures have altered in context over the last century. I am certainly going to try to make it to see many of these galleries before the end of the month.

I have made a list of the participating galleries below, some have references to the New York Photographs show, while some mention nothing of it. Alas *shrug* I never fail to be disappointed in at least a few NY gallery websites.

Bonni Benrubi, thru Sept. 5
Danziger Project
Yossi Milo, thru Aug. 28
Deborah Bell, by appt. thru August
Edwynn Houk
Howard Greenberg
Hasted Hunt, thru Aug. 28
Janet Borden, worst website yet...*sigh*
Laurence Miller0, Helen Levitt thru Aug. 2
Pace/MacGill
Robert Mann
Julie Saul, thru Sept. 12
Yancey Richardson

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Art Must-Sees this Summer: Maya Lin's "Wavefield"



Storm King Art Center has added a new Maya Lin sculpture “Wavefield” to its collection. If you are not familiar with Maya Lin, her artistic career took off when, in 1982 as a young architectural student at Yale, her model of a wall embedded into the landscape was chosen for the design of the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial Wall. Her work is consistently concerned with structural reflections on the environment and “Wavefield” is no different; a waveform sculpture built from top soil, gravel, and low-impact grasses covers what was once a gravel pit on the Storm King campus. Maya Lin’s sculpture suggests the landscape as waves changing and forming over time, the piece forces a contemplation on our own ability to ‘move mountains’ for better or for worse. Her approach bridges a concern with sculptural installation and an environmental awareness, Maya carefully considers her carbon footprint and is in the process of planting trees on the periphery of "Wavefield" to counter the energy used during the process of producing the sculpture. Like such Earthworks artists as Andy Goldsworthy (whose work is also on view), Lin's obvious passion for natural forms has made her a staple in the international art scene and her work, considered both installation and land art, is in my opinion a contemporary mode on the sublime.

Storm King sits on 500 acres of manicured land and has developed a permanent collection of outdoor sculptures that are dependent on the changing landscape. In conjunction with the unveiling of Lin’s “Wavefield”, Storm King Art Center is exhibiting Maya Lin: Bodies of Water, on display are sketches, models and smaller sculptures by the artist in its museum building.

Maya Lin: Bodies of Water is on view until November 15, 2009

Storm King Art Center is located in the Hudson River Valley, one hour north of New York City.

This is the first installment of what I hope to be a 5 piece seasonal posting of Art Must-Sees across the US.