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Avant-Guardian Musings

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“Art is an outlet toward regions which are not ruled by time and space”
— Marcel Duchamp

Avant-Guardian Musings is a curated space of ideas and information, resources, reviews and readings for undergraduate and graduate students studying modern and contemporary art history and visual art theory, film and photography studies, and the expanding field of visual culture and screen studies. For students currently enrolled in my courses or the field school, the blog and associated social media links also serve as a place of reflection and an extension of the ideas and visual material raised in lecture and seminar discussion.

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Blog
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
about 8 months ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago
Top 10 Modern and Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Visiting In 2023
Top 10 Modern and Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Visiting In 2023
about 2 years ago

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Summer freedom vibes ✨💃🏼☀️🕶️🍓✨more than ever, not taking it for granted.
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#shamelessselefie #summer #stressfree #freedom
Summer freedom vibes ✨💃🏼☀️🕶️🍓✨more than ever, not taking it for granted. . . . #shamelessselefie #summer #stressfree #freedom
Going into June like… 💃🏼✨💋🏍️💨
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#startofsummer #zerofucks #motorcycleofinstagram #motorcycle #sportbikelife #aprilia #apriliars660 #motogirl #whistler #seatosky
Going into June like… 💃🏼✨💋🏍️💨 . . . #startofsummer #zerofucks #motorcycleofinstagram #motorcycle #sportbikelife #aprilia #apriliars660 #motogirl #whistler #seatosky
Today was all about urban, graffiti, and street art, and I am always struck by the range of materials, content, and creativity in Paris. Here’s a small survey of work that caught my eye as we made our way from Belleville through the Marais to C
Today was all about urban, graffiti, and street art, and I am always struck by the range of materials, content, and creativity in Paris. Here’s a small survey of work that caught my eye as we made our way from Belleville through the Marais to Central Paris 👀✨💙 . . . #paris #streetart #urbanart #arthistory #graffiti
Happy Birthday Brian @barenscott 🎂🎉😘 Gemini season is here! And while we didn’t get to ride today, we did get to race bikes at the Louvre video arcade, see all the motorcycle shops in Paris, eat yummy pastries, drink wine and picnic in the T
Happy Birthday Brian @barenscott 🎂🎉😘 Gemini season is here! And while we didn’t get to ride today, we did get to race bikes at the Louvre video arcade, see all the motorcycle shops in Paris, eat yummy pastries, drink wine and picnic in the Tuileries, and explore the street art in Belleville. And tonight, we will dine and celebrate at your favourite restaurant. You know there is no one else with whom I would rather spend a day chilling, wandering the streets, and laughing. “You and me and five bucks.” I love you forever, and I hope this next year brings you more of what you’ve been dreaming about❤️
If I could pick one couture creation from the Louvre Couture exhibition I posted about earlier, this John Galliano for Christian Dior gown from his Fall 2006 haute couture collection would be it! Inspired by the court of Louis XIV and many of its mos
If I could pick one couture creation from the Louvre Couture exhibition I posted about earlier, this John Galliano for Christian Dior gown from his Fall 2006 haute couture collection would be it! Inspired by the court of Louis XIV and many of its most rebellious women, the gown is designed with partial armour and creates this beautiful tension, movement, and awe that is hard to express. Simply put, Galliano is a true artist and this dress is a masterpiece. . . . #louvre #paris #louvrecouture #johngalliano #hautecouture #fashion #arthistory

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© Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com, 2010-2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Street artist Shepard Fairey posted to Instagram this past week a collaboration he did with American punk and new wave band Blondie on this mural at Bleeker and Bowery in downtown NYC, across from the former CBGB’s where the group got their start in…

Street artist Shepard Fairey posted to Instagram this past week a collaboration he did with American punk and new wave band Blondie on this mural at Bleeker and Bowery in downtown NYC, across from the former CBGB’s where the group got their start in the 1970s. Lead singer Debbie Harry is prominently featured.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

February 07, 2021

Lots of interesting coincidences this week, and when this happens, I tend to take notice and want to muse and share. In my Intro to Visual Art, Urban, and Screen culture course, I released an online module related to the subcultures of hip hop and punk as they emerged and evolved at around the same historical moment of the 1970-80s in the Bronx and London.  This content, coming on the heels of modules related to the rise of graffiti and street art, is critical to the pedagogical underpinnings of my course as it provides for a discussion around both the mainstreaming and commodification of urban subcultures, but also of their global proliferation, circulation, and distribution (beyond their original urban context) and cross-over appeal via the screen. In this case, the screen was MTV, the world’s first 24-hour music channel on American cable television.

Above all else, MTV emerged as a dedicated platform for music videos, and when it launched in the summer of 1981, the channel made history for debuting the first rap video ever to be broadcast—Blondie’s Rapture. So you may be asking why a new wave punk band was the first to introduce rap music to a mainstream audience? After all, rap is a form of music linked to a distinct subculture of hip hop that is closely tied to African American performers and DJs. This is the question that I am asking my students to probe, but more specifically how and why Debbie Harry becomes a kind of vicarious guide to not only the world of rap music, but also street and graffiti art. If you watch the Rapture video (linked below), you will see Harry leading and dancing the audience through an underground East Village club and street scene, merging and overlapping the worlds of punk, glam rock, and hip hop complete with cameos by street artists Jean-Michel Basquiat and Lee Quinones and hip hop pioneer Fab 5 Freddy.   

This past week, street artist Shepard Fairey happened to debut a large scale mural featuring Debbie Harry across from the famed CBGB music club in the same neighbourhood that had served as the setting for Rapture (see my feature image for this post). As Fairey describes in his Instagram post accompanying an image of the piece, Blondie had collaborated with him on the mural and he was inspired by the affinity felt with both the band and the punk subculture of New York. Fairey, who is perhaps one of the most important living street artists to mainstream graffiti to the masses (in part, with his Obey sticker series and contribution to Barrack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign with his “Hope” poster) has spoken out and at great length about his belief in the power of subculture to unite unlikely audiences despite any residual fear of “selling out.” As Fairey explained in a 2004 interview:

“I would consider my inside/outside strategy toward corporations somewhat of a Robin Hood effect... I use their money, which becomes my money, to produce stickers, posters, stencils, etc… I have been able to convince some of the corporations to invest in the cultures that they try to exploit, helping to create a more symbiotic relationship between the creators and harvesters of culture. It's not an easy game but I'm making the best of life without a trust fund.”

Interestingly, Debbie Harry and Blondie’s choice to partner with and showcase key members of the hip hop and graffiti underground of New York in their premier MTV video has something of the same mechanisms at play. At the very least, in an effort to appeal to the harvesters of culture at MTV, Blondie provided the spotlight and opportunity for a new audience to meet and acquaint themselves with real underground figures of New York. Put another way, Harry could have appropriated rapping without doing any of this (incidentally, she did not rap again), but she chose instead to pay proper respect and shine a light on the East Village subculture however candy-coated she had to make it for MTV. Recall that the early 1980s was still a time when African American music had largely been the subject of wholesale appropriation by generations of white American musicians. As such, this was at least a step in the right direction, and within a decade or more when African American rappers would come to rightfully lead and cross over hip hop to a global audience via mainstream media channels, there would be recognition of what a punk rocker from the East Village had done to help get that process started.

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Jean-Michel Basquiat, Debbie Harry, Fab 5 Freddy, and Lee Quiñones on the set of Blondie’s “Rapture” video, 1981. Photos by Charlie Ahearn

A few more things before the round up:

  • Instagram has proven to be a wonderful research tool for many academics, especially for those of us who explore popular culture topics and the history of film and new media. Many accounts have sprung up in recent years targeting and specializing in specific topics and posting rich content. A great example and fantastic new account that I want to share here is queer.cinema.archive run by one of my department’s BFA alumni, Derek Le Beau. Derek features what he describes as “queer films, characters, and actors in the early days of film and Hollywood’s Golden Age” and he has been teaching me a thing or two as I take in his daily posts.

  • Several weeks back I shared how I was re-watching all five seasons of The Wire. Now that I have enjoyed taking a look back at that classic series, I am turning my attention to new-to-me shows that have come highly recommended. I am now one season into Hell On Wheels—an AMC produced television series which ran back in 2011-2016 that is set around the construction of the first transcontinental railroad across the U.S. I have been struck by how relevant and timely this show is for our current historical moment—many parallels around race relations, income inequality, and government/corporate corruption—and ironically enough, not that dissimilar to The Wire in terms of richly written characters and long narrative arcs.  

"Here’s Why I Believe Lockdown Has Pushed the Art World Out of Its Comfort Zone"
"Here’s Why I Believe Lockdown Has Pushed the Art World Out of Its Comfort Zone"

artnet.com

"Indigenous Photograph: a resource for visual storytelling – in pictures"
"Indigenous Photograph: a resource for visual storytelling – in pictures"

theguardian.com

"Anarchism on Film, From the Paris Commune to Emma Goldman"
"Anarchism on Film, From the Paris Commune to Emma Goldman"

hyperallergic.com

"Postgraduate art history students in UK say they are being encouraged to produce ‘less rigorous and ambitious’ research "
"Postgraduate art history students in UK say they are being encouraged to produce ‘less rigorous and ambitious’ research "

theartnewspaper.com

"What Everyone Who’s Mad at Robinhood Got Wrong"
"What Everyone Who’s Mad at Robinhood Got Wrong"

slate.com

"Art in the Netflix period drama Bridgerton"
"Art in the Netflix period drama Bridgerton"

theartnewspaper.com

"Why binge-watching TV might not replace weekly instalments"
"Why binge-watching TV might not replace weekly instalments"

theconversation.com

"Roni Horn’s “I am Paralyzed With Hope” Is a Flag for a New America"
"Roni Horn’s “I am Paralyzed With Hope” Is a Flag for a New America"

vulture.com

"Slow Look At Snow II: National Gallery of Canada (VIDEO)"
"Slow Look At Snow II: National Gallery of Canada (VIDEO)"

nationalgalleryofcanada

"OUTSIDER Art Fair New York 2021 (VIDEO)"
"OUTSIDER Art Fair New York 2021 (VIDEO)"

jameskalmroughcut

"Here’s Why I Believe Lockdown Has Pushed the Art World Out of Its Comfort Zone" "Indigenous Photograph: a resource for visual storytelling – in pictures" "Anarchism on Film, From the Paris Commune to Emma Goldman" "Postgraduate art history students in UK say they are being encouraged to produce ‘less rigorous and ambitious’ research " "What Everyone Who’s Mad at Robinhood Got Wrong" "Art in the Netflix period drama Bridgerton" "Why binge-watching TV might not replace weekly instalments" "Roni Horn’s “I am Paralyzed With Hope” Is a Flag for a New America" "Slow Look At Snow II: National Gallery of Canada (VIDEO)" "OUTSIDER Art Fair New York 2021 (VIDEO)"
  • Here’s Why I Believe Lockdown Has Pushed the Art World Out of Its Comfort Zone

  • Indigenous Photograph: a resource for visual storytelling – in pictures

  • Anarchism on Film, From the Paris Commune to Emma Goldman

  • Postgraduate art history students in UK say they are being encouraged to produce ‘less rigorous and ambitious’ research

  • What Everyone Who’s Mad at Robinhood Got Wrong

  • Art in the Netflix period drama Bridgerton

  • Why binge-watching TV might not replace weekly instalments

  • Roni Horn’s “I am Paralyzed With Hope” Is a Flag for a New America

  • Slow Look At Snow II: National Gallery of Canada (VIDEO)

  • OUTSIDER Art Fair New York 2021 (VIDEO)

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025