martes, 26 de enero de 2010

berenice abbot y sus amigos


































Así que pasen los años...dos retratos de Berenice. La de joven es de Man Ray, del que fue ayudante. Fotografías:Edward Hooper, James Joyce, Djuna Barnes, Fouijita, Cocteau, Silvia Bach, Solita Solano, Eugene Atget por Berenice Abbot)


RETRATO DE UNA DAMA CAMINANDO
En el Norte los pájaros empluman un largo viento.
Ella es hermosa.
El otoño forma hielo en la cáscara de limón.
Sus lentas costumbres acompañan la oscura mente.
La escarcha impone una frágil quietud en la laguna.
Sobre el fresco, pequeño montón de húmeda hierba
Los pájaros caen como lluvia de vidrio.
(Djuna Barnes)

sábado, 16 de enero de 2010

ryan mc ginley



























































"The photographer of the year"






















Obsessive might also describe Mr. McGinley’s rigorous method of working. From 1998 to 2003, when he lived with friends in Greenwich Village, he took Polaroid pictures of anyone who visited. He wrote the name of his subject, the time and the date on each Polaroid, then fastidiously placed them on the wall. Eventually the apartment walls were covered with tidy Polaroid grids.

The treatment of gay male bonding “feels refreshingly direct and immediate, autobiographical without being narcissistic,” Mr. Cotter added. “Among other things it’s part of a new approach to the visual depiction of gay life in art.”

The skateboarders, musicians, graffiti artists and gay people in Mr. McGinley’s early work “know what it means to be photographed,” said Sylvia Wolf, the former curator of photography at the Whitney, who organized his show there. “His subjects are performing for the camera and exploring themselves with an acute self-awareness that is decidedly contemporary. They are savvy about visual culture, acutely aware of how identity can be not only communicated but created. They are willing collaborators.”

(TNYT)

sábado, 2 de enero de 2010

arte lifting






¿O decoración?


















































This work was an installation, set up as a lab experiment in progress, complete with scalpels, lab coats, needles and a microscope. Piles of dicarded, cut-up craft objects lay about the desk, some with their innards seeping out, others rearranged, Frankenstein-style.


By doing this, I was turning a table full of craft objects into an artwork in its own right, it had a point beyond the technique, beyond the things themselves.

(Beccy Ridsdel)