Phlegm in New York

English Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, West 17th Street mural, Chelsea, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm with Know Hope, East Village, street art, graffitiEnglish Street Art in NYC, Phlegm, East Village mural on grate, street art, graffitiClick to enlarge

I passed a large mural on my way to Chelsea and the Meatpacking District twice this week and the second time I decided to take photos and research who was behind the elaborate 3-part work. Turns out UK street artist Phlegm was visiting New York City this month and completed his first three murals in the U.S. right here in Manhattan—the other two in the East Village—and one of them an addition to an existing work by Know Hope (second from bottom.)

You can see a video of the bottom mural in progress here.

Bottom two photos by Matthew Kraus. All other photos by collabcubed.

NYC Culture on the Cheap: Weekend 7/13

Free and cheap things to do in New York City, New York City Summer 2012 Culture, Exhibits, art, music, Eleanor Friedberger, Kusama at Whitney, Shakespeare in Parking Lot, PS 1 Warm UpClick to enlarge

If you’re in New York City this summer weekend, there are more free and cheap things to do than time to do them. Here are just a few that look especially interesting to us…too bad we can’t be in more than one place at a time.

1. Art The Yayoi Kusama Retrospective opens at the Whitney Museum. Friday nights from 6-9pm admission is pay-what-you-wish, otherwise general admission is $18. Can’t make it this weekend? Don’t fret, the exhibit runs through September 30th. And if you’re downtown be sure to check out the lawn installation at Pier 45, Hudson River Park.

2. Art/FilmChristian Marclay’s The Clock opens July 13 through August 1 at the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center. FREE. Prepare for long lines. 24-hour video collage.

3. MusicEleanor Friedberger with Ex Cops. Friday, July 13th at 7pm; Pier 17 at The Seaport. FREE.
Also: for a more Latin evening: Calle 13/Ana Tijoux/Ritmo Machine at the Prospect Park Bandshell in Brooklyn. Friday, July 13 at 7pm. FREE.

4. TheaterShakespeare in the Park(ing) Lot – “The Merry Wives of Windsor” July 12 to 28. Municipal Parking Lot at the corner of Ludlow and Broome. Thursday – Saturdays at 8pm. FREE.
Also: Twelfth Night presented by New York Classical Theatre at Castle Clinton, Tues through Sun, till July 22th at 7pm. FREE.

5. Art/Architecture/MusicWarm Up at PS1, Saturday July 14 at 3pm with Terrence Parker, D3, Ron Morelli, Jeremie Delon, and Steve Summers. Check out Wendy, see Lara Favaretto’s exhibit Just Knocked Out, and dance the evening away. $15. Free for MoMA members.

6. Graphic DesignNow in Production is Cooper-Hewitt and Walker Art Center’s exciting exhibit exploring some of the most vibrant sectors and genres of graphic design today. Open weekends through September 3, 2012 in Building 110 on Governors Island. FREE.

7. ArtTomas Saraceno’s Cloud City on the roof of the Met. (See our previous post) Through November 4, 2012.

8. FoodPaper Magazine’s Super Duper Market. July 13-15. Pop-up super-store bringing the coolest food artisans and innovators under one roof. 410 West 16th Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues.

9. FilmPersepolis on Pier 1 (Riverside Park near 70th Street), Friday, July 13, 8:30-10:30pm. FREE.

And you might be interested in contributing to Bike-In-Theater’s Kickstarter so that they can get their events going this summer as well.

Manuela Viera-Gallo: Pentagon

Chilean contemporary art, Manuela Viera-Gallo, wooden pigeon sculpture with megaphoneChilean contemporary art, Manuela Viera-Gallo, wooden pigeon sculptures with explosives for headsChilean contemporary art, Manuela Viera-Gallo, wooden pigeon sculptures with explosives for headsClick to enlarge

New York-based artist Manuela Viera-Gallo was born in Rome to politically-exiled Chilean parents, and later grew up herself in Chile. Her point of view has, since then, been strongly shaped by the social and political violence that has affected the history of most Latin American countries. One of her recent works titled Pentagon, consists of a “basket” of wooden pigeons with their heads replaced by explosives and megaphones standing on a pentagonal wooden coup. Viera-Gallo’s piece mocks the U.S. Department of Defense.

From the artist:
The birds are characters in evident confusion, realizing military operations, press conferences and damage control before an imminent, but unknown threat. It is a reflex of disconnection and perplexity before the chaos of a highly complex defense system, but which is dishonest and in a constant crisis. The are like blind birds defending a condemned nest.

I like the names of some of the individual pigeons, such as Kamikaze Pigeon and UN Peace. This post goes out to Emma, a true fan of pigeons.

Photos courtesy of the artist and 7_70’s flickr

via arte al limite

Leeds Street Tree Grates: HeineJones

Typographic Tree Grates in Melbourne, Australia, designed by HeineJones, SEGD Merit 2012Typographic Tree Grates in Melbourne, Australia, designed by HeineJones, SEGD Merit 2012Typography, cool tree grates, environmental graphics, Melbourne, Australia, Typography in architectureClick to enlarge

HeineJones, an interdisciplinary design consultancy based in Melbourne, was approached by the city council of Footscray to design an interpretive solution describing the function and intent of a new “rain garden” installed as part of a streetscape redevelopment for Leeds Street. HeineJones’ solution presented the function and intent of a water garden as a piece of poetry, laser cut though the 10mm steel plate of the tree grates. Presented in different scales and languages, the urban poems include large words that form abstract snippets of information about the rain garden, with the poem in its entirety reproduced in smaller type.

The intent of the design is to engage the public in an emotive and legible way, whereby the passage and movement of the water into the system is through the information itself.

via segd

Beatriz Leyton: Family Life

Pinned tableaus of rooms, Chilean contemporary art, Beatriz Leyton, Family LifePinned tableaus of rooms, Chilean contemporary art, Beatriz Leyton, Family LifePinned tableaus of rooms, Chilean contemporary art, Beatriz Leyton, Family LifeClick to enlarge

In her work titled Family Life, Chilean artist Beatriz Leyton creates large tableaus illustrating the rooms in a typical home—kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, living room—using pins. Why pins? To depict the fragility of the home and family as well as the illusion of the ‘American Dream’.

Leyton uses thousands of pins against black fabric which give these pieces a glow-in-the-dark type of effect. The perspective alone is impressive.

via macro museo

Cildo Meireles: Fontes (Fountains/Sources)

Cool art installation, hanging rulers, wall clocks and vinyl type, interactive art, Brazilian contemporary art, Cildo MeirelesCool art installation, hanging rulers, wall clocks and vinyl type, interactive art, Brazilian contemporary art, Cildo MeirelesCool art installation, hanging rulers, wall clocks and vinyl type, interactive art, Brazilian contemporary art, Cildo MeirelesClick to enlarge

Brazilian artist Cildo Meireles wasn’t always a fan of conceptual art, but in the 1970s he started to create works in protest of Brazil’s military dictatorship. These interactive/performance works carried political messages in a poetic way.

Meireles reflects:

…When a work of art kidnaps you for a fraction of a second, it takes you to another time …I realized that, of all the movements that I had studied, conceptual art was the only one that didn’t use any of the things linked to art: inks, brushes, canvases. It could be made from anything. It gave complete freedom. It is the most democratic way to produce art that has come up. That is something that deserves credit.

Meireles’s works typically revolve around space, dimension, and time. His installation Fontes (Fountains/Sources) is a perfect example. Using 6,000 rulers, 1,000 clocks, and 500,000 vinyl numbers, along with a soundtrack, Meireles invites spectators to interact with the work, circulating through the paths created by the hanging rulers.

Here’s a video from a first person perspective:

Photos: Ihall’s flickr; Jock303’s flickr; Penny Jones’ flickr; and the artist.

via arte al limite

Pascal Broccolichi: Sound Installations

Art and sound installation, contemporary French art, Raccorama, piles of mica dust, Pascal BroccolichiArt and sound installation, contemporary French art, Raccorama, piles of mica dust, Pascal BroccolichiArt and sound installation, contemporary French art, Raccorama, Table d'harmonie, piles of mica dust, Pascal BroccolichiClick to enlarge

French sound and visual artist Pascal Broccolichi creates installations that envision sound as a vocabulary of forms, but whose focus is on listening. In his piece Raccorama (top four photos) Broccolichi takes mica dust and places it in identical heaps, following a specific pattern which is then emphasized by iodide spotlights. Loudspeakers play a sound piece simulating the patterns of sound flux in motion.

In a more recent work, and variation on the Raccorama theme, Broccolichi creates similar mica dust heaps, this time placing a loudspeaker in the center of each creating a crater. This installation titled Table d’harmonie (bottom photo), also plays a sound piece simulating sound flux in motion.

via LABoral

Jitish Kallat: The Cry of the Gland

Contemporary Indian art, photography, sociology of pockets, Jitish Kallat, BaselContemporary Indian art, photography, sociology of pockets, Jitish Kallat, BaselContemporary Indian art, photography, sociology of pockets, Jitish Kallat, BaselClick to enlarge

Jitish Kallat is an Indian artist who works in varied media and is based in Mumbai. His installation The Cry of the Gland, made up of large photographs focusing on male shirt pockets and their content, is in essence a sociological study of modern India. Interesting to see the range of colorful Madras and cotton shirts, fabrics typically exported from India, some pressed and clean, others worn and torn, but all depicting a middle class. There’s an overwhelming quality to the floor-to-ceiling installation that seems to reflect the massive population of over one billion, as well.

via Else

Aisha Zeijpveld: What Remains

Aisha Zeijpveld, Egon Schiele-inspired photographs, New Dutch Photography, contemporary photographyAisha Zeijpveld, Egon Schiele-inspired photographs, New Dutch Photography, contemporary photographyAisha Zeijpveld, Egon Schiele-inspired photographs, New Dutch Photography, contemporary photographyClick to enlarge

Dutch photographer Aisha Zeijpveld lives and works in Amsterdam as a freelancer for a variety of commercial magazines. In her personal work she likes to experiment and focuses on people’s vulnerabilities as well as on the absurd.

In her series What Remains, Zeijpveld was inspired by Egon Schiele’s sketches and paintings of ‘unfinished’ figures. She transforms this way of sketching into her photographs by cutting out silhouettes in cardboard and having her models pose with arms, shoulders, and faces disappearing into their background. First, however, she works on pencil studies (see images at bottom.)

via new dutch talent

Super (Duper) Market: Pop-Up Shop

Paper Magazine Food and Artisan Pop-up Super Store, NYC, July 13-15, 2012There’s a bit of pop-up mania lately, at least in New York. I’ve just been to two events in the past week that involved pop-ups (the Herman Miller Pop Up Shop Finale with House Industries and Bing’s For Humankind Pop-Up Expo at Openhouse Gallery full of innovative projects combining technology and design) and there seem to be plenty more on the horizon.

Next week, starting Friday July 13th through the weekend, Paper Magazine is presenting the Super (Duper) Market. Apparently not just a pop-up shop but a pop-up super store. This one revolves around cool food and innovation. Could be interesting. Artist Maira Kalman is participating as well!

If you’re in NYC and looking for things to do, might be worth popping by.

Kris Kuksi: Intricate Art of Gods & Monsters

Incredibly intricate sculptures of gods, goddesses, monsters, and war, sacred cow, Kris Kuksi, Incredibly intricate sculptures of gods, goddesses, monsters, and war, sacred cow, Kris Kuksi, Incredibly intricate sculptures of gods, goddesses, monsters, and war, Kris Kuksi, baroque, rcococoClick to enlarge

Artist Kris Kuksi had a difficult and solitary childhood growing up in Kansas, leaving him to keep to himself and his active imagination. Fascinated with the grotesque and macabre from a young age, it’s no wonder that his sculptures are elaborate intricately detailed mixed-media works depicting the historical rise and fall of civilization, with tortured Gods and soldiers along with millions of other things going on in every nook and cranny. There’s a hellish quality to them, reminiscent of Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights.

From the artist’s website:
Each sculpture embodies the trademarks of his philosophy and practice, while serving as a testament to the multifaceted nature of perception – From timeless iconic references of Gods and Goddess, to challenging ideas of organized religion and morality, to the struggle to understand, and bend, the limits of mortality. None is complete without a final and brilliant touch of satire and rebuke all conceived in the aesthetic essence of the Baroque fused with the modern day industrial world. In personal reflection, Kris feels that in the world today much of mankind is oftentimes frivolous and fragile, being driven primarily by greed and materialism.
From top to bottom, left to right:
Dharma Bovine; Dharma Bovine detail; Auto-Cephalic Supplicating Vehicle; A Heroic Abduction; two details of A Heroic Abduction; Church vs. State; below Church vs. State detail Map of the US with a line drawn through the top 11 most religious cities submersed in resin for water effect. Oil from both tanks spill into the mix; Churchtank Type 8; Church vs. State.

There are so many more of these sculptures, as well as paintings and drawings, on Kuksi’s website and facebook page. Definitely check them out.

Photos © Kris Kuksi

via Joshua Liner Gallery

Michelangelo’s David à la Missoni

Missoni sculpture in Meatpacking district, NYC, dEmo and Luca Missoni collaboration, The David, fun sculpture, installationMissoni sculpture in Meatpacking district, NYC, dEmo and Luca Missoni collaboration, The David, fun sculpture, installationMissoni sculpture in Meatpacking district, NYC, dEmo and Luca Missoni collaboration, The David, fun sculpture, installation

Click to enlarge

This past Saturday, on our way over to the High Line for an evening stroll, Daniela and I spotted a large — yet much smaller than the original — 5-meter tall version of Michelangelo’s David plopped down, smack in the middle of 9th Avenue and 14th Street sporting a classic Missoni zig-zag skin. Right in the heart of the Meatpacking District, this surprising sight was not missed by many. There was no sign or explanation attached, but upon googling I discovered that the statue is the creation of, and collaboration between, Spanish artist dEmo and Luca Missoni. Originally installed in front of the Missoni store in Madrid, Spain back in 2010 with a larger zig-zag patterned outfit, for their Fashion’s Night Out, the statue seems to have made an appearance in Barcelona as well, and is now in NYC until September 2012.

You can watch a video of the statue’s installation in Madrid, here.

Bottom photo solifestyle; all others collabcubed.

Rosa Verloop: Nylon Sculptures

Rosa Verloop, Dutch contemporary art, creepy sculptures, nylon stocking soft sculptures, monstrous sculpturesRosa Verloop, Dutch contemporary art, creepy sculptures, nylon stocking soft sculptures, monstrous sculpturesNylon soft sculptures, Dutch contemporary art, Rosa Verloop, Creepy portraits, disturbing cabbage patch doll like sculpturesClick to enlarge

I would be lying if I said that I love these sculptures. They actually creep me out a bit. They have a Cabbage Patch Doll with Proteus syndrome quality that’s, well, for lack of a better word, disturbing. Nevertheless, I find Dutch artist Rosa Verloop’s nylon soft sculptures fascinating, as well as a great way to recycle ripped stockings. The third photo down on the right is the artist herself wearing one of her pieces as a costume at the Boschparade 2010 (in The Netherlands), and the one below that, which looks like a deformed skull (or Frankenstein-ish monster) with a built-in camera is just great.

Photos: courtesy of the artist, except for second from top by Ed Jansen at Zomer Expo 2012.

via Ed Jansen’s flickr

Ottó Vincze: Identified Flying Objects

Ottó Vincze, Hungarian contemporary Art, Installations with flying umbrellas, Facade Make-up for the OccasionOttó Vincze, Hungarian contemporary Art, Installations with flying umbrellas, Facade Make-up for the OccasionOttó Vincze, Hungarian contemporary Art, Installations with flying umbrellas, Life preservers, balloons, cool installationsClick to enlarge

Hungarian artist Ottó Vincze lives and works in Szentendre. Most of his works are installations, some with movement, others static. Many give the illusion of objects flying, and at least three of them involve umbrellas.

From top to bottom, the four installations above are:
Facade-Makeup for the Occasion
Sinking Centres of Gravity
Cognitive Save
Pioneer Progress

via molnar ani galeria

A Memorial Bowing: Snarkitecture

Typographic Installation, Typography as sculpture, Orange Bowl Type as memorial, Miami, SnarkitectureTypographic Installation, Typography as sculpture, Orange Bowl Type as memorial, Miami, SnarkitectureTypographic Installation, Typography as sculpture, Orange Bowl Type as memorial, Miami, SnarkitectureClick to enlarge

Last month when I was on Snarkitecture’s website getting information on their recent Odin Pop-Up Shop project, I noticed this project earlier in 2012. Alex Mustonen and Daniel Arsham, the Snarkitecture duo, reconstructed the 10-foot letters from the old Miami Orange Bowl and whimsically scattered around the east plaza of the new Marlins Ballpark. Created as a sort of memorial to the stadium that was demolished in 2008, A Memorial Bowing feels like a mix of ruins and renewal, with some of the letters submerged and others standing tall.

The alignments of the letters spell out new words and are a nice complement to the new stadium, which can be viewed through the type at different points.. Really, you can’t go wrong with monster-large type.

Photos by Noah Kalina

Haegue Yang: Venetian Blinds Art

Korean Contemporary art, Venetian Blind art installations, Haegue Yang, Heike Jung, Documenta13Korean Contemporary art, Venetian Blind art installations, Haegue Yang, Heike Jung, Documenta13Korean Contemporary art, Venetian Blind art installations, Haegue Yang, Heike Jung, Documenta13Click to enlarge

South Korean artist Haegue Yang (aka Heike Jung), living and working in in both Berlin and Seoul, believes that there is “a mysteriousness and spirituality in the most banal things.” Her use of window shades in many of her installations seems to be proof of this. Presently, Yang has an installation titled Approaching: Choreography Engineered in Never-Past Tense (top five photos) as part of documenta (13) in Kassel, Germany through September 16, 2012. These artfully hung and motorized clusters of Venetian blinds have appeared in some of her previous works, but this block-long installation and its choreography must certainly be fun to experience. Earlier aluminum blinds works include: Citadella; Manteuffelstrasse 112; Escaping Transparency; Three Kinds; Yearning Melancholy Red and others.

Haegue Yang’s fascination with domestic items doesn’t limit itself to blinds. She uses foldable laundry racks, cans, cups and cup cosies, just to name a few, in her other more sculptural works.

Photos courtesy of the artist; Carnegie International; and Camila y el Arte.

via wsj