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Modern Painters William J. Simmons December 2015
BY WILLIAM J. SIMMONS TRUE PORTRAIT BY KRISTINE LARSEN TO FORM DEBORAH KASS SHAKES UP THE CANON 60 MODERN PAINTERS DECEMBER 2015 BLOUINARTINFO.COM FORM DEBORAH KASS SHAKES UP Deborah Kass in her Brooklyn THE CANON studio, 2015. BLOUINARTINFO.COM DECEMBER 2015 MODERN PAINTERS 61 intensity of her social and art historical themes. The result is a set of tall, sobering, black-and-blue canvases adorned with “THE ONLY ART THAT MATTERS equally hefty neon lettering, akin, perhaps, to macabre monuments or even something more sinister in the tradition of IS ABOUT THE WORLD. pulp horror movies. This is less a departure than a fearless statement that affirms and illuminates her entire oeuvre—a tiny retrospective, perhaps. Fueled by an affinity for the medium AUDRE LORDE SAID IT. TONI and its emotive and intellectual possibilities, Kass has created a template for a disruptive artistic intervention into age-old MORRISON SAID IT. EMILY aesthetic discourses. As she almost gleefully laments, “All these things I do are things that people denigrate. Show tunes— so bourgeois. Formalism—so retardataire. Nostalgia—not a real DICKINSON SAID IT. I’M emotion. I want a massive, fucked-up, ‘you’re not sure what it means but you know it’s problematic’ work of art.” At the core of INTERESTED IN THE WORLD.” Kass’s practice is a defiant rejection of traditional notions of taste. For example, what of Kass’s relationship to feminism, queer- Deborah Kass is taking stock—a moment of reflection on what ness, and painting? She is, for many, a pioneer in addressing motivates her work, coincidentally taking place in her issues of gender and sexuality; still, the artist herself is ambivalent Gowanus studio the day before the first Republican presidential about such claims, as is her right. -
Art in the Age of the Coronavirus June 6 - December 12, 2020
Life During Wartime: Art in the Age of the Coronavirus June 6 - December 12, 2020 Deborah Kass “I use history as a readymade,” Deborah Kass has declared. “I use the language of painting to talk about value and meaning. How has art history constructed power and meaning? How has it reflected the culture at large? How does art and the history of art describe power?” Most discourses around power and meaning today are—or should be—undergoing serious reconsideration. Theories of knowledge have bent to the breaking point. The combined weight of political instability, alternative facts, a growing rejection of science and the destabilizing effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as the growing use of state violence, have mined the confidence of people around the world but of Americans especially. Enter Deborah Kass’s Feel Good Paintings For Feel Bad Times. A set of canvases that use language and the sanctioned stylings of celebrated male artists to express key cultural conflicts, they marshal wit and graphic punch to force a confrontation between the canonical (the orthodoxies established by male artists) and the disruptive (their appropriation by a female artist). The results are demystifying, cutting, and often hilarious. They are also hopeful. At times being funny is simply saying what’s true. — CVF, USFCAM Deborah Kass, Isn’t It Rich, 2009. Oil and acrylic on canvas. 72 x 72 in. (182.88 x 182.88 cm). Courtesy of the artist and Kavi Gupta, Chicago, IL. Photo by Christopher Burke. Deborah Kass, Painting With Balls, 2005. Oil on linen. 84 x 60 in. -
TRIB LIVE | Aande
TRIB LIVE | AandE Artist displays her Warhol roots By Kurt Shaw Published: Saturday, November 3, 2012, 9:03 p.m. Updated: Sunday, November 4, 2012 Many artists strive to replicate the success of Andy Warhol, but few have replicated his art like Deborah Kass. The New York City-based artist spent eight years working in the vein of the Pop Art king, only to create something uniquely her own. “There’s no artist of my generation for whom Andy is not an influence. I mean, he was huge in everyone’s consciousness,” says Kass, a 1974 graduate of Carnegie Mellon University’s art department. Kass, who was born and raised in Long Island, says Warhol was a big reason she chose to attend Carnegie Mellon. But it wouldn’t be until nearly 20 years later that she would mine the artist’s oeuvre for ideas and inspiration. Now, the artist and her influence meet again, but in a different way. Just last weekend, Kass, 60, was in town for the opening of her first retrospective, “Deborah Kass: Before and Deborah Kass‘Before and Happily Ever After’ 1991 Happily Ever After.“ And it’s on display at, where else, The Andy Warhol Museum. At first glance, you might be hard pressed to tell a Warhol from a Kass, especially on the fourth floor of the museum where no fewer than 10 Warhol-inspired portraits by Kass of her friends hang alongside nearly as many by Warhol. There’s Warhol’s portrait of his friend, Victor Hugo, next to Kass’ friend, Norman Kleeblatt, fine-arts curator at the Jewish Museum in NewYork. -
A Medici to Spray Paint and Graffiti Artists by FELICIA R
ART & DESIGN A Medici to Spray Paint and Graffiti Artists By FELICIA R. LEE JAN. 28, 2014 From left, the filmmaker Charlie Ahearn and the artist Lee Quiñones at ABC No Rio.CreditDamon Winter/The New York Times “Times have changed,” Aaron Goodstone said stoically, eyeing the spruced-up brick tenement at Ridge and Stanton Streets on the Lower East Side, now hip, where his friend Martin Wong once lived. Thirty years ago, when Mr. Goodstone was a teenage graffiti artist, he vied with drug dealers for the corner pay phone to reach Wong in his buzzerless sixth-floor walk-up: a salon, a studio, an archive and a refuge among the crumbling buildings and gated storefronts. Wong, a major painter in the East Village art scene, who died in 1999, was also a major collector. A mentor to young artists, he amassed about 300 works of graffiti in that small railroad apartment. Nearly 20 years after he donated his collection to the Museum of the City of New York, nearly 150 of those works are in “City as Canvas: Graffiti Art From the Martin Wong Collection.” The first exhibition of Wong’s collection, opening on Tuesday and running through Aug. 24, it is one of several graffiti and street art shows in the United States and abroad at museums and galleries in the past several years. Lee Quiñones’s “Howard the Duck” (1988). CreditMuseum of the City of New York. The exhibition prompted Mr. Goodstone’s recent trek to Wong’s old neighborhood. He was accompanied by the filmmaker Charlie Ahearn (director of the seminal 1983 film “Wild Style,” about New York’s hip-hop and graffiti scene), who shot a 13-minute documentary for “City as Canvas.” The film shows how several artists helped the museum’s curators choose and identify the artworks, some unsigned or misidentified: Mr. -
Painter Deborah Kass Looks Back on Her Two-Decade Career with a New Show on the Way, Deborah Kass Weighs in on Channeling Louise Bourgeois, Andy Warhol and More
Painter Deborah Kass looks back on her two-decade career With a new show on the way, Deborah Kass weighs in on channeling Louise Bourgeois, Andy Warhol and more By Paul Laster Postered: Wednesday December 2 2015 Photograph: Rayon RIchards Deborah Kass A feminist artist who mines art history, pop culture and her own Jewish identity, Deborah Kass appropriates iconic images, quotes and song lyrics and makes them her own. Her paintings often critique the male-centric character of 20th-century art by putting a satirical spin on the efforts of famous male artists, from Picasso and Jackson Pollock to David Salle and Ed Ruscha. Andy Warhol has proven to be an especially fertile subject: Kass’s best-known works include parodies of his “Elvis” paintings and portraits of Liz Taylor, which ironically led to a 2012 retrospective at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. Fresh off the unveiling of her public art sculpture, OY/YO, at Brooklyn Bridge Park, she’s readying a solo show for Paul Kasmin Gallery, which features the latest entries in her sharp and thought-provoking oeuvre. The best of Deborah Kass Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man (1991) “For this piece, I was riffing on someone who I thought was a very important artist: David Salle. But I was coming at his work from a feminist perspective: There’s a male figure instead of the female one in the Salle painting I borrowed from, and I overlaid a portrait of Picasso. The abstraction above refer- ences Jackson Pollock, another artist I’ve appropriated, while the title comes from James Joyce.” Photograph: Courtesy the artist/Paul Kasmin Gallery Four Barbras (1992) “When I made this painting in 1992, multiculturalism and identity issues were the topics of the day. -
Deborah Kass Artist Interview – Why Que...Ah Kass Sees Much More
CR FASHION BOOK WHY QUEER ARTIST DEBORAH KASS SEES MUCH MORE WORK TO BE DONE THE ART PIONEER SPEAKS WITH CR ABOUT REWRITING WOMEN’S PLACE IN HISTORY AND WHY FEMINIST PROGRESS IS JUST BEGINNING BY JENNIFER SAUER JUN 4, 2020 PHOTO COURTESY OF KAVI GUPTA GALLERY. ARTIST RIGHT SOCIETY/ARS. eborah Kass takes in the world around her and distills it meaningfully into her artwork. This process was how she found her creative voice— D using the language of art history as a starting point for her own expression. Her practice has spanned more than five decades across painting, photography, sculpture—even neon light installations. But her most recognized style is often a pop cultural spin on the artistic greats who came before her—from Eugène Delacroix and Pablo Picasso to Jasper Johns and Jackson Pollock. In both homage and critique, Kass’ paintings rewrite their work through her lens, infusing them with Disney cartoons, female artist icons, and texts on gender and identity. “BLACK +BLUE #2,” 2015 PHOTO COURTESY OF KAVI GUPTA GALLERY. ARTIST RIGHT SOCIETY/ARS. PHOTO COURTESY OF GRACE ROSELLI PANDORA BOXX PROJECT. The Texas-born artist (b. 1952) found worlds of inspiration in New York, the city where she was raised. By the time she was in grade school, Kass decided to pursue an art career. She took drawing classes at The Art Students League and spent hours in the city’s storied museums—which now aptly house her own artworks. She pursued her dream through drawing classes at The Art Students League and hours spent in the city’s storied museums—which now aptly house her own artworks. -
The New Yorker, January 11, 2016 1 Contributors
PRICE $7.99 JAN. 11, 2016 JANUARY 11, 2016 5 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN 17 THE TALK OF THE TOWN Amy Davidson on extreme weather; lightsabers; after “Downton”; David Bowie; James Surowiecki on taxing corporations. Katherine zoepf 22 SISTERS IN LAW Saudi Arabia’s first female attorneys. Simon rich 28 DAY OF JUDGMENT NICK Paumgarten 30 THE WALL DANCER A rock-climbing prodigy. TAD Friend 36 THE MOGUL OF THE MIDDLE A studio head tries to reinvent Hollywood. BEN Lerner 50 THE CUSTODIANS The Whitney’s conservation methods. FICTION ANNE Carson 60 “1 = 1” THE CRITICS A CRITIC AT LARGE THOMAS Mallon 63 The rise of the radical right. BOOKS 69 Briefly Noted MUSICAL EVENTS ALEX Ross 70 Igor Levit and Evgeny Kissin. POEMS Frank x. Gaspar 27 “Quahogs” Jane VanDenburgh 56 “When Grace at the Bliss Café Calls” marcellus hall COVER “The Great Thaw” DRAWINGS Kim Warp, Farley Katz, Will McPhail, Benjamin Schwartz, Liana Finck, Charlie Hankin, Edward Steed, Joe Dator, Paul Noth, William Haefeli, Roz Chast, Tom Cheney, Tom Chitty, David Borchart, Tom Toro, Barbara Smaller, David Sipress, Jack Ziegler SPOTS Pablo Amargo THE NEW YORKER, JANUARY 11, 2016 1 CONTRIBUTORS Katherine Zoepf (“SISTERS IN LAW,” P. 22) is a fellow at New America. Her first book, “Excellent Daughters: The Secret Lives of Young Women Who Are Transforming the Arab World,” comes out this month. Reporting for this piece was facilitated by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Sarah Larson (THE TALK OF THE TOWN, P. 20)is a roving cultural correspondent for newyorker.com. -
The Bronx Museum Champions the Brave, Unflinching Martin Wong By: Andrew Russeth
November 6, 2015 Big heat: The Bronx Museum Champions the Brave, Unflinching Martin Wong By: Andrew Russeth Martin Wong loved firemen. The late East Village artist, whose paintings stand as some of the most original and brave art produced in New York in the past 40 years, painted an intimate portrait of one in bed, still wearing his heavy jacket under the covers, in My Fire Guy (1988). “I really like the way firemen smell when they get off work,” he wrote in another piece from the same year. “It’s like hickory smoked rubber and B.O.” And in one of his masterpieces, Big Heat (1988), two firemen in full uniforms (hats on their heads, oxygen tanks on their backs) kiss in front of an abandoned building, which looms over them ominously. Friends gave Wong FDNY gear, and despite warnings, he couldn’t resist gallivanting around downtown Manhattan sporting the stuff. (“It’s a felony to impersonate a fireman,” he once explained. “So of course I wore them.”) And so, while I could not at first believe my eyes, it was a joy to find a team of firemen perusing the Bronx Museum of the Arts’ superb Wong retrospective one morning this week, admiring his paintings of shuttered storefronts, ruined buildings in downtown Manhattan, boxers, and prisoners—and, yes, joking with each other about that make-out session. Wong, I hope, was staring down from someplace and swooning. It was an unreal sight, but also somehow a weirdly plausible one: of course magical things were going to happen when so many of his paintings were brought together. -
Deborah Kass
DEBORAH KASS Born 1952 San Antonio, TX EDUCATION 1974 BFA, Painting, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 1972 Whitney Museum Independent Studies Program, New York, NY 1968-70 Art Students League, New York, NY SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2014 “feel good paintings for feel bad times,” Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA 2013 “My Elvis +,” Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY 2012 “Deborah Kass: Before and Happily Ever After, a Mid-Career Retrospective,” Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA 2010 “MORE feel good paintings for feel bad times,” Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York 2007 “Feel good paintings for feel bad times,” Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York “Armory Show,” Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY 2001 “Deborah Kass: The Warhol Project,“ Weatherspoon Art Gallery, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, NC 2000 “Deborah Kass: The Warhol Project,” University Art Museum, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA “Deborah Kass: The Warhol Project,” Blaffer Gallery, University of Houston, Houston, TX 1999 Exhibition catalogue, “Deborah Kass: The Warhol Project,” Newcomb Art Gallery, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 1998 Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA 1996 “My Andy: a retrospective,” Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Kansas City, MO 1995 “My Andy: a retrospective,” Jose Freire Fine Art, New York, NY “My Andy: a retrospective,” Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, LA 1994 Barbara Krakow Gallery, Boston, MA 1993 “Chairman Ma,” Jose Freire Fine Art, New York, NY “Chairman Ma,” Arthur Roger Gallery, New Orleans, -
Alyson Shotz Education 1991 University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, MFA 1987 Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R
Alyson Shotz Education 1991 University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, MFA 1987 Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, Rhode Island, BFA Solo Exhibitions 2020 Derek Eller Gallery Grace Farms, New Canaan, CT (postponed) 2019 Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, TN 2017 Derek Eller Gallery, NYC, Night James Harris Gallery, Seattle, WA 2016 Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, PA, Plane Weave Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, Weave and Fold Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum, San Antonio, TX , Scattering Screen 2015 Galleri Andersson Sandstrom, Stockholm, Sweden, Light and Shadow Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, Charleston, SC, Force of Nature 2014 Wellin Museum, Hamilton College, Force of Nature Derek Eller Gallery, NYC, Time Lapse Carolina Nitsch Project Room, New York, NY, Topographic Iterations, Tspace, Rhinebeck, NY, Interval 2013 Visual Arts Center, University of Texas, Austin, Invariant Interval Eli and Edythe Broad Museum, Geometry of Light Carolina Nitsch Project Room, New York, NY, Fluid State Derek Eller Gallery, North Room, New York, NY, Chroma 2012 Indianapolis Museum of Art, Fluid State Borås Konstmuseum, Borås, Sweden, Alyson Shotz: Selected Work Phillips Collection, Washington, DC, Ecliptic Galeria Vartai, Vilnius, Lithuania. Interval 2011 Espace Louis Vuitton, Tokyo, Geometry of Light Andersson Sandstrøm Gallery, Stockholm and Umeå, Fundamental Forces Carolina Nitsch Contemporary Art, New York, NY, Fundamental Forces Derek Eller Gallery, New York, NY, Wavelength -
Mytriptoamericabymartinwong.Pdf
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Painting Is Forbidden, this anthology of newly commissioned texts and interviews examines the work and legacy of Chinese- American artist Martin Wong (1946–99). Entitled My Trip MY TRIP to America by Martin Wong, the book presents an expanded perspective on Wong’s practice through the inclusion of rarely seen reproductions of his photographs, poems, drawings, essays, recollections, and correspondence. A transcript of a lecture given by the artist at San Francisco Art Institute in T 1991 rounds out the picture of an impassioned practitioner A O working at what, at the time, appeared to be the margins of the M art world—but what today would be acknowledged as some ERIC of the most fertile grounds of the twentieth century’s cultural production: the streets of San Francisco and New York. A BY M BY A R T IN WONG Annotated cover of Splash magazine, April 1989. Text: Martin Wong, photo: Ken Nahoum. Reproduction rights courtesy Jordan Crandall. Image courtesy The Martin Wong Papers; Series II; Box 2; Folder 89; Fales Library and Special Collections, New York University Libraries. MY TRIP TO AmERICA BY MARTIN WONG Edited by CAITLIN BURKHART and JULIAN MYERS-SZUPINSKA CONTENTS foreword 4 Leigh Markopoulos my trip to america by martin wong 9 Alia al-Sabi and the Editors the actionability of the archive 19 Tanya Gayer and Julian Myers-Szupinska works by martin wong 27 martin wong, “it’s easier to paint a 89 store if it’s closed.” Introduced and edited by Caitlin Burkhart the dynamic: martin wong and 103 the asian american community Rui Tang whatusi in san francisco 113 Amelia Brod in conversation with two of the Angels of Light spring begins today! 123 Stuart Krimko index of images 131 works in the exhibition 133 acknowledgements 139 colophon 140 2 FOREWORD Leigh Markopoulos To navigate this encryption, communication with those who knew and loved Wong proved a significant resource for the orga- nizers of this exhibition during their research. -
“Some Places It Will Always Be Eureka and in Eureka It Will Always Be Valentine’S Day”
“Some Places it will always be Eureka and in Eureka it will always be Valentine’s Day” “Have you seen my Mondrian drawing?” We went into the kitchen. He grabbed the frame facing the wall next to the sink and held it up so I could see it, though there was no light to speak of. Neither the fact that Martin Wong owned a work by Piet Mondrian nor that he stored it close to splashing water in his sixth-floor walk-up apartment in a run-down building on New York’s pregentrification Lower East Side was incongruous. There, at 141 Ridge Street in apartment 9, Martin painted incessantly. In Martin’s private cosmos, cultural expression from distant eras and origins cohabited non- chalantly. There were Chinese blue and white porcelain stools to sit on and a drop cloth cum rug to catch wayward paint. Valuable ceramic figurines, books, and cartoon toys stood on every surface. Works of fellow artists that Martin had bought or traded for were inter spersed with prints by Utagawa Kuniyoshi and his own paintings on the walls. Tags by graffiti-writer friends covered the refrigerator. In spite of the treasured objects throughout, the place was primarily for painting, so it was pretty messy. In his collecting activities and in his art, Martin embodied a multiplicity of passions: Chinese ceramics, the paintings of Thomas Eakins and Winslow Homer, calligraphy, archers’ thumb rings, children’s lunchboxes, Mickeys and Minnies and Donalds, sign language, astro nomical constellations, graffiti, Loisaida, the writing and person of Miguel Piñero, men in prison, firefighters, Chinatown .