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The Long Weekend curated by Nancy Buchanan and Joseph Santarromana |
Nancy Buchanan and; Joseph Santarromana
Present in association with Phantom
Galleries LA:
The Long Weekend
Installations and Performances
Jordan Biren and Corrina Peipon, Ashley
McLean Emenegger, MaryLinda Moss and
Nikii Henry, Danial Nord, Cielo Pessione
& John O'Brien, Astra Price, Natasa
Prosenc, Joseph Santarromana &
William Roper, Evelyn Serrano, Suzanne
Siegel, Kyungmi Shin and Todd Gray
Organized by Nancy Buchanan &
Joseph Santarromana
Phantom Galleries LA in Pasadena
680 E. Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena
91101
Friday, March 28, Saturday March 29,
Sunday March 30
7 to 10 pm
For information:
Liza Simone
Phantom Galleries LA Executive Director
PhantomGalleriesLA.com
213.626.2854
Examining themes of fashion and
consumption, we will present durational
performances and installation works in
this former furniture store's windows.
Questions regarding the relationship of
art and commerce today are myriad, and
while there are no simple answers, most
observers agree that there are many
troubling implications of the influences
of speculation, branding and celebrity
on the current climate. Giving away the
aesthetic experience through such a
temporary event is a return to earlier,
more idealistic times, yet placing the
work within a shopping district anchors
it to the realistic present. We imagine
this to be an exciting event which will
attract art audiences, as well as
provide an unusual experience to
passers-by.
Jordan Biren and Corrina Peipon present
a tableau/performance, "The
Exchange of the Avant-Garde"
inspired by quotes taken from a recent
Norman Klein discussion of the late Jean
Baudrillard:
"...avant-garde strategies are now
central to the branding of all
products..."
"...The simulacrum was simply the
original itself. It had emerged as the
glowing center of all global
branding...It was simply the mood that
sold anything. "
The tableau represents the
"look" of a business
transaction, while an inner dialogue
belies conflicted psychological
realities of personal negotiation
through a world of branded transactions.
With the supporting text contradicting
the appearance of the action, only the
image of the event remains, an image
meant to draw attention to the
presumptions, or "branded"
recognition, of what is taking place. A
search for what defines in what we see
that which we are told we are seeing. _
Nancy Buchanan's "3 Fates"
sees myth reduced to marketing;
throughout cultural history, sacred and
mythic women have appeared in threes,
sometimes also merging into one mythic
figure. In Greek mythology, the three
Fates personified destiny and controlled
the thread of life from birth to death
(and beyond). The Greek word moira
(_____) translates as a part or
portion—and so, one's fate is the part
one is destined to play in life. While
their forerunners were draped in white,
could the gowns worn by these
fashionable "Fates" hint at
what lies beyond fashion? Siren-red
satin, prison-jumpsuit orange,
camouflage (with glitter).
In Ashley McLean Emenegger's
"Judgment Day," colorful felt
cut out dolls hang in the balance above
a miniature, faux mythological
environment, the Garden of Eden meets a
metaphoric apocalyptic collapse, where
the yearning for sincere expression
clashes with the expectation and
imposition of compliance to the
contemporary notion of aesthetics.
Beckoned by the allure and idealization
of the Promised Land below, the dolls,
both identical and unique, are naturally
confused by the conundrum of self
declaration versus the desire to fit in.
MaryLinda Moss collaborates with Nikii
Henry to create a Performative
Installation. Through the evening
figures moving through space will leave
an imprint, a record of the presence of
the body in the world. Using gauze and
plaster, 'clothing" will be formed
on the body. As the body moves on, it's
image is left behind to create a record
of the journey through time and space
Danial Nord addresses the troubling
relationships between art and commerce,
and the implications and influences of
speculation, branding and celebrity on
the current art-making climate. His
inspiration comes from Hollywood's
historical misrepresentation of artists,
and overheard dialogues between dealers
and potential clients at recent Art
Fairs. Nord's installation centers on a
projected clip from the film "On
the Town" which shows a ballerina
as an artist, described in the film as
"the perfect urban woman",
making a painting.
Cielo Pessione & John O'Brien
create a tableau in which two personages
appear in the dark at the center of the
space, like a players in a theatre. The
female personage will have a pile of
rags or fashion magazines under her She
could be a Queen, he a Poet. Each has a
different style of dress, which means
different ways to live and to consider
the capitalism of attire.
Astra Price addresses what food we have
and what food we use. Inspired by
constantly seeing fruit trees that have
gone unharvested and unused, this
two-part work will repurpose unused
domestic fruit in two phases. On night
one, she will process this food; juice,
simple salad, etc… and serve it to the
people on the streets. Given the city of
Pasadena's origin having strong ties to
citrus production, this work addresses
some issues of site specificity, but can
just as easily be applied to larger
concepts of consumption and waste.
Natasa Prosenc's installation,
"Innocence – Dissolved"
metaphorically performs the impasse of
fast lane consumerism wrapped into the
ideology of progress; the discarded toys
suffocating in the thickened gooey mass
of the past embodied emotional
investment, that has nowhere else to go
except release into obsession with
possession and consumption. As our
environment is cluttered with an
unprecedented excess of material
objects, our culture witnesses a
steadily dissolving ability to infuse
these objects with emotion. It is this
emotional investment that animates our
relationship with objects and with
materiality as such. Now that this
emotional link is loosening, our world
is changing. These old-fashioned toys,
once brimming with the energy from a
child's power of imagination and warmth
of her touch are now discarded, as are
the imaginative and emotive habits that
go along with them.
—Media and film
theoretician Maja Manojlovic
Joseph Santarromana & William Roper
reprise their 2007 "Malambing Thang
in which the artists contemplated the
nature of desire and longing and how
these emotional states create and/or
affect the perception of ones identity.
In the current 'Malambing Thang (Live),'
these same issues of longing, desire and
identity attempt to play themselves out
as pure commodity. Viewers on the street
will see the backs of a group of people
in the video projection and will have to
look around the projection to view the
live performers.
Evelyn Serrano invites viewers to a
session of dysfunctional, mid-air
storytelling, where the
"truth" is spinned, Serrano
has engaged a sign spinner to manipulate
a short poem exploring connections
between the spectacle of corporate
identity, the branding of culture and
the contemporary choreography of
meaning.
Suzanne Siegel once shopped for chairs
at this very furniture store – she
recalls that they were expensive and the
salespeople had attitude. Siegel's
"Shopping Expedition"
references memories of shopping trips to
the city (Boston) as a child and also
nostalgia for a gentler consumer
experience.
Kyungmi Shin & Todd Gray will
create a performance and a video
projection piece for "The Long
Weekend" during the performance
night, Todd will be installed in the
window space and drum for the duration
of the evening; this drumming will
trigger a random choice of short video
projection sequences created by Kyungmi
of Kumasi market in Ghana. The Kumasi
market is the largest open-air market in
West Africa, and the video was shot
walking around the market.
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About the artists:
JORDAN BIREN has recently resumed his
long dormant performance practice to
augment over two decades of work in
single channel video. In both video and
perfomance, his work considers
permutations of meaning behind narrative
articulation. He teaches Video Art at
Cal State University San Bernardino.
Nancy Buchanan addresses issues of
power and money in her work, taking the
form of video, drawing, collage, and
installation. She is faculty of
Film/Video at CalArts.
Todd Gray has exhibited his photo based
work internationally and is represented
in the permanent collections of museums
and universities here and abroad. Gray
maintains studios in both Inglewood,
California and Takoradi, Ghana.
Ashley McLean Emenegger is by tradition
an assemblage artist whose work
questions established
"absolutes", reveres and
summons the feminine, and speaks to the
tender parts of the soul. Her felt
installation work also contends with the
issues of absolutes versus personal
mythology but in a more humorous manner
with vibrant color, child-like media,
and less subdued irreverence.
MaryLinda Moss delves into the
ephemeral, the transitional, the
transformative in ourselves, the
vulnerable point from which we come to a
new awareness of self. Her sculpture
relates to the body and its processes,
and has a unique quality in its use of
organic matter in conjunction with other
materials. Her sculptural and
installation pieces are an abstracted
embodiment of our emotional and
spiritual experiences often relating to
the cycles and elements of the natural
world.
Danial Nord's work critiques the
influence of consumerism and commercial
media in our overstimulated environment.
He currently lives and works in Los
Angeles. Nord studied at the Tyler
School of Art and the NYU Center for
Digital Multimedia. This past year he
exhibited solo projects at HAUS and
Fringe in Los Angeles.
John O'Brien was born in Sagamihara,
Japan; he currently lives and works in
Los Angeles, California and Umbria,
Italy. His work has shown itself to bear
an effective confluence of diverse
attitudes and disciplines. Installation,
video, performance, sculpture, painting
and drawing come together in an artistic
practice pointed at the investigation of
objects and their significance to us.
His practice encompasses studio art,
public art, art writing and curatorial
work.
Cielo Pessione was born in Rome Italy,
she currently lives and works in Los
Angeles, California and Umbria, Italy.
After finishing her art degree at the
Liceo Artistico, she completed her
University studies with a doctorate in
Modern Literature at the Sapienza
University of Rome. She works in the
visual arts (fiber arts, installation
and printmaking) and works with
performance in both traditional and
experimental settings.
Astra Price is a new media artist
interested in exploring the non-static
world in art and life. Currently she
gives shape to her explorations through
video in a variety of forms including
improvisation, installations and
single channel work and has been
recently been focusing on concerns of
food
in her kitchen and in her art.
Natasa Prosenc is an internationally
acclaimed visual artist whose work
challenges the conventions assigned to
video art and narrative film. By
escaping the categories her visual
concepts tap into the preconscious
sentient self prior to all thought and
theory.
William Roper is an artist working in
the disciplines of music, theater and
the visual arts. He eagerly awaits the
return of The Great Waschbär.
Joseph Santarromana's work is
biographical, addressing the perception
and construction of identities. His work
has been exhibited internationally and
he is currently teaching at California
State University in Long Beach and the
University of California in Riverside,
He also runs a video art DVD Publishing
company: www.system-yellow.com.
Evelyn Serrano is a Cuban artist,
mother, and independent curator
currently living in Los Angeles County,
California. She is also the Assistant
Director of Programs at the CalArts
Community Arts Partnership (CAP). She
has exhibited her work in solo and group
exhibitions nationally and
internationally. Serrano feels honored
to have worked with talented groups of
visual artists, writers and actors for
several exhibitions and art events she
has curated both nationally and
internationally.
Kyungmi Shin is an installation artist
whose work weaves the language of
photoraphy, sculpture, painting and
video. She studied at SF Art Institute
& UC Berkeley, and currents lives
and works in Los Angeles and Ghana.
Suzanne Siegel is an assemblage artist
whose work focuses on social/feminist
concerns. She has been exhibiting
locally and nationally for thirty years.
36 photos | 262 views
items are from between 29 Mar 2008 & 05 Apr 2008.