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Posts Tagged With "Contemporary Art"

Act Now (Or Later)

November 16, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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Art / activism at the Guggenheim

The G.U.L.F protest at the Guggenheim on Nov 5, 2014 as pictured in Hyperallergic’s coverage.

Recent incidents staged by the artist/activist group G.U.L.F. at the Guggenheim in New York have been spectacular in every sense of the word. Along with actions earlier in the year, the sequence of events has brought attention to G.U.L.F.’s cause via new channels quickly and globally. The action itself was eye-opening, but the blow-by-blow of the evening’s events on November 5 – complete with Keystone Cop style museum security – is downright entertaining.

Act Now and Save As

G.U.L.F. is an offshoot of the larger group, Gulf Labor. The “52 Weeks” campaign concluded by Gulf Labor earlier this year featured weekly contributions from artists, writers, and activists focusing on Gulf Labor’s cause.

Available at their blog, the 52nd week’s contribution for example invites viewers “to download, print, or . . . see a higher resolution version of the work.” In order to do so, the site instructs the viewer to “please click here or right click and then click ‘Save As’. ”

Think about that.

Acting Later

Artwork by G.U.L.F. contributor Claire Fontaine.

Screenshot from the Gulf Labor website featuring the 52nd week’s contribution by Claire Fontaine.

The biggest oh shit aspect of this story is reserved for museum institutions. Sure, most museum institutions will focus solely on the security implications, perhaps improving training of security guards or tightening procedures for purses and backpacks.

But, they’re looking in the wrong place. The real story is how this turn of events illustrates the precarious position these institutions inhabit in our connected world.

One of the dirty little secrets of the museum world (although they don’t think it’s dirty) is the lengthy nature of exhibition cycles. Because “outsiders” don’t really think much about it, it’s often surprising to many that exhibitions are planned 2-3 years in advance, and sometimes more.

Why does this matter? The very nature of the exhibition cycle lends itself to a limited number of topics that are safe-but-still-edgy-enough. Gender? That’s an issue that’s going to be around awhile. Race? That topic has still got some life in it. Sexual orientation? Gay marriage court cases won’t get wrapped up for a while. Income inequality? The poor will always be with you. The environment?

How Contemporary – And Relevant – Can You Be?

Twenty years ago, one could say they were interested in – or “followed” – a particular cause. Now, that’s kind of meh. Access to information – even among the developed world’s have-nots – has improved exponentially within an infinitesimal amount of time, historically speaking. News cycles have sped up dramatically in just the last decade. As a result, the culture of the developed world now looks at the big picture issue through the lens of trending.

This isn’t good or bad. It’s just different. Income inequality becomes microfinance. Race becomes Ferguson. Gender becomes gender reassignment as part of health insurance plans in Oregon.

Museum institutions want so badly to be relevant. So how relevant can these museum institutions – steeped in the organizational traditions and processes of the past – be when the issues to which they should be responding are now trending on a monthly and weekly basis? True, collecting institutions have an advantage over non-collecting institutions in their ability to respond to trending events, but bureaucracy will usually be the problem in organizations with those kinds of budgets.

And, speaking of organizations with big budgets, the The Guggenheim Abu Dhabi won’t open for a couple of years in case you were wondering. Meanwhile, Gulf Labor’s new campaign – entitled “Countdown” – launches shortly.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Culture, Technology Tagged With: Activism, Contemporary Art, New Institutionalism

Turns In The Creative Process

June 18, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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There’s just a slow turnin
From the inside out
A slow turnin
But you come about.
– John Hiatt


In late 2012, I began experimenting with ways to get works away from the wall and interact with people and environments differently. And, since then, my process and work reflect this shift. But, I hadn’t taken time to reflect on what changed – and where – in order to take this turn. Was there an exact moment?

Detail from #OTWH - results from a turn in the creative process.

Detail from #OTWH, part of the #Hashtag series.

Perceptions in Contemporary Art

For some time, and for various professional reasons, I’ve been stepping back and studying a perceived lack of interest in contemporary art by the wider public. As a result, I’ve developed a number of theories, nearly all of which are beyond the scope of this blog piece. But, I’m routinely forced to return to ideas centered around three concepts:

Subject Matter

What is a work “about?” Does the subject and content resonate with the viewer?

Context

Is the viewer given any kind of hint or a point of entry that encourages engagement? Is this purely the job of gallerist or curator? Or, is there a responsibility as artist?

Boundaries

What are the physical or perceived boundaries which limit the engagement of the viewer?

The Act of Viewing Art

The idea of what the boundaries are exactly ties directly to how we understand the act of viewing art. For most, when we think of art viewing, it is an act that takes place in front of a flat, usually framed, object on a white wall. This applies even to the so-called “enlightened” among us. Of course, this is over-simplified and does not take into account sculpture or performance. But, that’s partly my point. The mental picture conjured by most when we think of art viewing – and even engaging with art – involves standing in front of a white wall in a museum or gallery.

And that’s just the physical component. Now consider the concept of boundaries with regard to the aforementioned topics of subject matter and context.

All of this has implications for the future of contemporary art and how new audiences engage. That, however, is a yet another blog post.

#OTWH - contemporary art by emerging artist Matthew White.

From the #Hashtag series. #OTWH is wall-mounted, sitting over a foot from the wall.

Effects on Process and Practice

Biases and stereotypes are everywhere inside us, whether we like it or not. For example, I’m struggling with the use of a John Hiatt lyric in this post. Why? Something tells me that mixing Americana with weighty content on the creative process is somehow wrong. But why should it be? Our “networked” brains – to lightly reference Lane Relyea – work differently now.

Unconscious bias weaves its tentacles into an artist’s process and ultimately, practice. I noticed that there were certain mental steps I would take when that “time to start a new piece” alarm would go off. Is that just habit? If so, that’s scary enough. Or, is it something deeper tied to perceived boundaries?

. . . Which brings me to the turns I started taking around 2012. Like many unexpected turns in process, it has led to new ideas, greater flexibility, and new ways of seeing. One series of work I’m calling the #Hashtag series is a direct result.

In this case, information from tangentially related professional pursuits led to new questions and ways of doing things creatively.

But, like any path that starts with a single turn, what happens next?

Do you have a personal account of a turn you took in your creative process? Please, do share.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Creativity Tagged With: Contemporary Art, Creativity

Meanwhile, The Art World Crisis Continues . . .

May 11, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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The Continuing Crisis in Contemporary ArtThey say the sun an-a shines for all,
But-a yin some people world, it never shine at all.
– Bob Marley


In most fields, money and technology are good things. For many in the art world, the one-two punch is staggering.

Ben Davis, in his post “The Crisis in Art and What It Means to Write About It”, wrote:

If you somehow took a poll of critics and writers about the state of contemporary art, “excited” wouldn’t be the first word you’d hear. Pretty much everyone agrees that things are dire. Money is drowning out everything.

To his credit, and if I can sum up the takeaways from the piece, he acknowledges that money and technology are making this an interesting time for interesting conversations.

Destabilizing Forces At Work

The reason critics and writers would not be excited about the contemporary art world right now is that money and technology are destabilizing a field that worked pretty well, for a while, for a small group of people.

Now, any asshole with a smartphone can share and comment on art (some would say review or even curate). To make matters worse, said asshole can actually create images (some would say art).*

To make matters even worser . . . It doesn’t even have to be a smartphone any more. It can be a mildly intelligent phone.

Creative destruction at work.

Money and technology caused the collapse of the telephone switchboard operator job market.

Creative Destruction

Speaking of phones, I’m reminded of the telephone operator crisis in the 1970s and 1980s. Never heard of it? If you were a telephone switchboard operator, those twin angels of death – money and technology – were at work then too.

In 1970, there were more than 420,000 switchboard operators. Within years, hundreds of thousands of them had lost their jobs. Meanwhile, more people were making more calls, more cheaply, and making them faster.

Interestingly, today, telephone switching technology isn’t thought of as a job killer.

The Specter of Decentralization

Ben sounds open to the changes we’re watching in the contemporary art world and looking at them honestly. After all, more money usually means more people interested. And, technology means more people getting more things done faster. You may not like all those things being produced, but lucky for guys like Ben, it means more stuff to write about.

Where it sucks for guys not like Ben, is that with a decentralization of influence underway, the power that was once in the hands of the few is in a whole lot of other hands. With mildly intelligent phones.

 

* The any asshole phrasing is significant for me personally. In a conversation with a DJ once, he told me angrily that “any asshole with a laptop is a DJ now.” He said this while his dual iPod beats were falling out of synch.

 

Updated February 25, 2016.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Culture, Technology Tagged With: Contemporary Art, Continuing Crisis in Contemporary Art

So, You Own An Art Gallery?

May 8, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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Not a physical one. TheMWGallery.com started years ago when I began to think about web space as gallery space, an online gallery being open 24 hours a day to display work and share some of what happens during acts of production.

Otherwise, wouldn’t work just sit in a flat file, rack, or on a wall at home?

#LikeUs, Matthew White, Mixed Media Contemporary Art, 2014

#LikeUs, Matthew White, Mixed Media, 2014.

Spaces such as this became widely referred to as “artist sites” or “portfolios.” An “artist site” sounds awfully bland however, and a “portfolio” sounds too academic. A “gallery” on the other hand is a term that isn’t too loaded for those not living and breathing the peculiarities of the contemporary art world on a daily basis.

Since starting TheMWGallery.com, a lot has changed online and in the art world. Social media now gives artists more channels to stream images of work, thoughts on process, and news. For some, this dilutes the artist persona and image. For others, it provides the audience with more substance to engage. Sites like Saatchi Art have grown larger, connecting artists and art enthusiasts around the world by providing a digital venue for showing work.

Nothing will ever fully replace a physical space, but a strong virtual presence is becoming an absolute must. And as a multimedia artist, it’s hard to imagine a creative life without a strong virtual presence that works in tandem with an offline existence.

I routinely receive questions on this topic, and here are some of the remaining, more frequently asked questions:

Do you use sites like Saatchi Art?

Yes, I have posted one series of work exclusively on Saatchi Art. Other works may also be made available there by series as well.

So, wait, are you represented by a “gallery?”

No. Not right now. I’m certainly not opposed to it.

So, you sell your work directly?

Yes. I can, and I do.

What about shows in the physical world?

I do solo pop-up shows, group shows, and I donate to non-profit auction invitationals.

Could this all be bigger?

Yes. I’m open to new ideas and opportunities. Artists, gallerists, enthusiasts, just reach out. I like ideas. Ideas are fun.

Do you like asking yourself rhetorical questions?

Who doesn’t?

 

Do you have other questions or want to reach out? Contact contemporary artist Matthew White directly.

Updated April 11, 2016.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Culture Tagged With: Contemporary Art

Who Is The Cross Disciplinary Artist? (Part 3: Employment)

February 10, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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Balloon Dog Orange

A history in commodities: Jeff Koons.

 

I was lucky enough to be employed,
Working for a while on a fishing boat
right outside of Delacroix.
But all the while I was alone
and the past was close behind.

– Bob Dylan

A few months ago, one of Jeff Koons’ ten foot tall balloon dog sculptures sold for a record breaking $58 million.

Based on a composite of differing accounts, it was just over thirty years ago – disgusted by his lack of sales in New York – that Koons had moved to Florida to live with his parents. He adjusted course and studied to become a commodities trader on Wall Street. It was then that Jeff Koons was able to fund the work he wanted to make.

In Part 2 of Who Is The Cross Disciplinary Artist?, we briefly discussed Francis Bacon – his work, Three Studies of Lucian Freud, also sold in 2013 for a record breaking sum. Like Bacon, Koons’ path to art success would be considered unusual by most in the art world. But, should it?

Artist Disqualifier: Employment Outside of the Arts

Many who follow the accepted arts education path go on to a career somewhere “in the arts” – whether it be in an arts organization, gallery, teaching, or the broader field of arts administration, as it is called. This is exactly what some of them want to do. For others, it is not exactly what they had in mind.

For those that are doing what they love, part of the compensation is exactly that – doing what you love. Many in this category accept that there is limited potential financial value but intrinsic value in this career path (For a painful shot of Adam Smith on the topic, here is a Forbes article).

On the faces of those who find themselves in a different reality, you will observe a kind of stupefied look of . . .  Why don’t others value what we in the arts do or how hard we work? Or: They (meaning everyone else) should pay for this work we do. It’s important!

As I heard a friend say in a talk recently: “An artist’s time and materials do not factor in to the cost of the work. You can charge $12,000, but that doesn’t mean you’re going to get it.”

That’s some tough love, and in so many other fields, these variables would be a factor. In the end, the kernel of truth in this statement is: What is the added value that this person’s hand has brought to these materials? Whether you like Adam Smith and Austrian Economics or not, the market can be a real bitch.

So, Here’s the Rub: How Do You Fund Work?

For many, like Koons, the motivation to make the work you want to make is greater than a) the need to professionally identify absolutely as someone “in the arts” and b) the discomfort of performing your second, third, or fourth desired occupation to generate the capital necessary to support your art making.

This is an important distinction. It gets at the heart of the importance of the creative mind, its process, and its pursuits. Some spend their days not doing what they want to do most in life, but in turn having the resources to support some or most of their creative pursuits. Others grind their days away doing something closer to what they want to do, but never having the resources to fully realize their visions either.

The fact is this: A creative mind brings that creativity and vision to all pursuits in life. As we’ve unfortunately learned since 2008, high finance can be an incredibly creative field. Half-joking aside, entrepreneurship, for example, is every bit as creative a pursuit as painting, performance, or sculpture. In fact, it’s arguably more creative and more beneficial to more people.

Ultimately, an artist’s practice  – if profitability is part of the plan – is an entrepreneurial activity itself. And just like a startup in any other industry, it takes upfront capital and usually, ongoing infusions of capital. For most, that means employment outside of an art practice.

These are the indisputable facts to be observed routinely and repeatedly throughout the art world. At the risk of going on an Objectivism-fueled rant here, outside of private benefactors, until a third party extorts from other parties the necessary funds to satisfactorily support the artist’s self, family, and work, market forces will continue to be the driving factor. Spoiler alert: Those necessary funds will never be enough.

But, Here’s The Other Rub: What About Time?

As mentioned in the first in this series of articles, it is often said by respected voices in the contemporary art world that for one to be a “serious” artist, he or she must work full-time at that practice.

It’s nice to think that this qualifier could be so neatly black and white. And, I once saw some merit in the argument. But, this idea is absolutely wrong, and it stems from fallacies regarding the nature of work and productivity.

Paraphrased and in a nutshell from the Boundless textbook content on the topic:

Given that the technology available in a particular industry or economy allows firms to use labor and capital more or less efficiently, changes in technology alter the combination of inputs required in the production process. An improvement in technology usually means that fewer and/or less costly inputs are needed.

It is for this very reason that fewer executives had secretaries in the 1990s or assistants in the 2010s. People can now perform most of those same tasks on their own. So, rather than send everyone home each day just after lunch, companies quit hiring secretaries and assistants. One person’s time became all that was required to do what was once the work of two people. The Above Average Joe still works his 40 hour week, and the shareholder  – who might also be the Above Average Joe – benefits from the profits.

That's right. Hayek (F.A., not Salma) shows up in an art blog. That just happened. Why? You'll have to read.

That’s right. Hayek (F.A., not Salma) shows up in an art blog. That just happened. Why? His thinking can actually be observed in any artist’s practice.

These same principles are at work in an art practice as well.  Sure, an artist can dedicate 40-80 hours a week to being an artist and making the work they want to make. That this is required of an artist however, involves a number of flawed assumptions including this critical one: All tasks tied to production demand the same amount of time and resources from every artist everywhere.

Sure, there are always things to be done when you’re an artist. But do those things yield a return on investment – tangible or intangible – for your practice that is greater than “outside” pursuits might? It’s one question an artist asks daily, knowingly or unknowingly.

Skeptical? Check out Hayek’s The Pure Theory of Capital. Or, observe these very forces at work in the studios of the world’s most successful artists, including that of our friend Jeff Koons. How might his time outside of “the arts” have enriched his work, his practice, and ultimately, contemporary art as we now know it? I think we have an idea. The truth is, he was never away from the art.

So What?

The sooner we in the arts community take the blinders off and have a more realistic understanding of the economics, motivations, and diverse viewpoints that are really in play, the sooner everyone benefits. True diversity of viewpoints and experience are critical if contemporary art is to meaningfully engage people.

Meanwhile, the creative minds of artists that can solve practical problems and speak beyond the rote topics of artspeak are sorely needed in professional pursuits outside of the usual “accepted” arts occupations.

In the end, the idea that being a serious artist absolutely requires undivided attention to tasks directly associated to being an artist undermines the artist’s potential while shortchanging the viewer and our wider culture. We all lose.

Disagree? Agree? What Would Marx Say (WWMS)? Unload here.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Creativity, Culture Tagged With: Art, Contemporary Art, Creativity

Who Is The Cross Disciplinary Artist? (Part 2: Education)

February 4, 2014 By Matthew White 2 Comments

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I’m in the middle without any plans. I’m a boy and I’m a man. I’m eighteen. And I don’t know what I want. – Alice Cooper

In 2013, Francis Bacon’s Three Studies of Lucian Freud broke a record, selling for $142 million. Bacon’s path through the art world is considered unusual. He had only about two years’ worth of any kind of formal education. And, his production was largely funded by his work in interior design and, well, let’s say lifestyle choices.

In Part 1 of Who Is The Cross Disciplinary Artist?, we named some popular categories and labels used to help corral today’s artist. In Part 2, let’s take a look at one of the popular factors for disqualifying the “seriousness” of an artist and her work.

Artist Disqualifier: Lack of Formal Arts Education

For years, one path has been most promoted as resulting in a financially successful career as an artist: The formal arts education. An MFA is considered “safest.” It gets the necessary attention from the necessary players: curators, gallerists, and art buyers. However, as the Bacon example above proves, not every great artist or auction record breaker requires that education.

"I always think of myself not so much as a painter but as a medium for accident and chance." - Francis Bacon

“I always think of myself not so much as a painter but as a medium for accident and chance.” – Francis Bacon

Come on. Francis Bacon is an anomaly.  He was born in 1909 into extraordinary times in Europe. And, anyway, not everyone becomes Francis Bacon.

Fair enough. But, consider this: The contemporary art establishment as it stands now does not allow for Francis Bacon. The lip service it pays in championing the cause of diversity rings hollow. Any kind of real diversity would include diversity of experience.

The dirty little secret is that the formal arts education path can be a good one – when you attend the right schools. And, just what those right schools are is up for debate. As a culture, when we require the supposed best and brightest to follow roughly the same academic path and are then even more selective from a subset of that larger group . . . does it result in real diversity? No. Just the opposite.

The unintended – or, perhaps intended – consequence of the contemporary art machine is that we generate artists who have proved themselves simply in playing by societal rules. Sure, they may break art world rules by incorporating an animated .gif or a defiantly placed penis somewhere in the composition, but is that all that art is supposed to do for people?

If the same machine were applied in the technology world, there would be no Silicon Valley as we know it. There would be no Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, or Michael Dell. No Facebook. Maybe a Google. But, no Twitter. The diverse viewpoints and life experiences that exist outside the funnel would neither be heard nor championed. As a result, innovation would be stifled.

The Big Picture

The debate on the value of formal education isn’t actually the most important point here. The takeaway for the collective arts community is a larger one. Artists, community arts organizations, and gallerists that routinely bemoan the lack of interest by the unwashed public should dig deeper:

Is contemporary art uninteresting and irrelevant to so many people because the accepted path to become an artist makes it so?

Ponder that one before finding out how Jeff Koons plays into all of this in Part 3 of Who Is The Cross Disciplinary Artist? . . . 

Updated March 17, 2016.

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Filed Under: Contemporary Art, Creativity, Culture Tagged With: Art, Contemporary Art, Creativity

4 Days in #NOLA: The Country Reporter Tours New Orleans

January 7, 2014 By Matthew White Leave a Comment

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So, I drifted down to New Orleans . . . – Bob Dylan

New Orleans . . . what really can one say about the city that hasn’t been said? Well, here’s one attempt.

In late 2013, The Country Reporter took a trip focusing on local contemporary art, food, and the requisite libation.

New Orleans Stops Included . . .

New Orleans is obviously a culinary destination. Whether creole or cajun, contemporary, or nouveau southern, it doesn’t really matter. You’re going to eat some good food there. However, one big surprise in this trip included Peche. A whole fish shared by a table can be a pretty significant social event, especially there.

On the contemporary art portion of the itinerary, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art had a facility and program more than worth an extended visit.

New Orleans White Fleet Taxi Service

We’ve even provided a taxi’s phone number for your New Orleans tour. You’ll need it.

And, outside of any institutional trappings, New Orleans has more than its fair share of colorful and talented local contemporary artist community. What the Whitepoint tour below does not convey are the personalities and cast of arts characters you can find in this one-of-a-kind city. A French Quarter trip is absolutely unnecessary – and arguably not recommended – to discover them.

Katrina, The Elephant in The Room

One goal of the trip was to avoid use of the word “Katrina” if at all possible. Here and there, you can still see direct and indirect effects of the legendary storm. If you choose, you can still tour devastation. But, memories and stories of the storm naturally emerge in the course of friendly conversation. This is perhaps the best way to understand the storm’s effects on the people and their city.

As natural disasters do in all cities, the event becomes part of the community fabric. There are horrific accounts. There are also inspiring insights – into both community and humanity.

In the end, New Orleans remains a strange, interesting, and surprisingly intimate place to visit.

I Give You . . .  The New Orleans Tour

Take The Country Reporter’s smart tour here via Whitepoint. 4 Days in #NOLA is broken down into a roughly four day itinerary:

[wpscape image=”1″ scapeid=”97″]

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Filed Under: Culture, Travel Tagged With: Contemporary Art, Food, New Orleans

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Matthew White

Multimedia artist Matthew White shares thoughts and meanderings. Subjects in the Tokens From The Well arts and culture blog include travel, creativity, contemporary art, music, culture, his work, and delightful randomness.

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