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Avant-Guardian Musings

  • Fall 2025
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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
KPU FINE ARTS PARIS + VENICE BIENNALE FIELD SCHOOL (MAY/JUNE 2026)
KPU FINE ARTS PARIS + VENICE BIENNALE FIELD SCHOOL (MAY/JUNE 2026)
about 2 months ago
"No Fun City" Vancouver: Exploring Emotions of Detachment in Palermo, Sicily at AISU
"No Fun City" Vancouver: Exploring Emotions of Detachment in Palermo, Sicily at AISU
about 4 months ago
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
about 5 months ago
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
about a year ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago

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As we start the week in a storm of activity, new beginnings, and global uncertainty, I am grounded in my word for 2026– INTENTIONAL 🩶— “done with purpose, willingness, deliberation, and consciousness.” I see this word represe
As we start the week in a storm of activity, new beginnings, and global uncertainty, I am grounded in my word for 2026– INTENTIONAL 🩶— “done with purpose, willingness, deliberation, and consciousness.” I see this word represented in the symbol of the heart, and for this reason and many others both personal and professional, I will be bringing this much needed energy to my year. The power of a yearly word is transformative. I started in 2019 and my words have guided and carried me through some important moments and life decisions. If you haven’t already, give it a try, but remember to choose very wisely ☺️ “Radiate” 2025 ✨ “Maintain” 2024 💪🏻 “Refine“ 2023 🙌🏻 “Acta non verba” 2022 🤐 “Audacious” 2021 💃🏼 “Fearless” 2020 😛 “Unapologetic” 2019 💅🏻 #happynewyear #wordoftheyear #intentional #monicavinader @monicavinader
Polar bear ride! 🐻‍❄️🏍️💨🏍️ First motorcycle outing of 2026 in the books. A balmy 4C 🥶We love you Vancouver— good to be home 💙😊Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year! 🥳 
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#happynewyear #vancouver #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstag
Polar bear ride! 🐻‍❄️🏍️💨🏍️ First motorcycle outing of 2026 in the books. A balmy 4C 🥶We love you Vancouver— good to be home 💙😊Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year! 🥳 . . . #happynewyear #vancouver #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motocouple #husqvarna #vitpilen401 #svartpilen401 #motogirl #motogirls
2025... where did it go?! 😂 Like a ray of light, I was very much guided by my chosen word of the year “radiate”— to shine and send out beams of energy— and this allowed for a great deal of adventure, new experiences, ideas an
2025... where did it go?! 😂 Like a ray of light, I was very much guided by my chosen word of the year “radiate”— to shine and send out beams of energy— and this allowed for a great deal of adventure, new experiences, ideas and people and opportunities to flow back into my life. Above all else, I found myself very much on the move all year! Travel took me from New York to Lausanne, Paris to Seoul, and Palermo to Maui, while my motorcycling stayed more on the road and less on the track as Brian and I balanced our time, energy, and commitments. But as always, we found every spare moment to prioritize this shared passion and we hope to find a way back to the track in 2026. Professionally, the year was... A LOT... and highlighted by many new research partnerships, conferences, workshops, writing projects, some failed plans and sharp detours, but also the planting of new seeds for future ventures. In the classroom, AI brought many new challenges and opportunities to rethink the purpose of my teaching and courses, but overall I was inspired and at times surprised by what my students were able to accomplish with the new assessment models I put into place. All of this technological change remains very much a work in progress for academics, and I prefer to remain optimistic that the artists I work with will find a way to maintain their voice and vision in it all. The historian in me knows this to be true. Personally, I connected more to my heart and intuition in 2025, listening to that inner voice to guide many key decisions. Brian and I also kept up a decent health and fitness regime that had us energized and aiming for consistency to match our midlife pace. Use it or lose it is a reality in your 50s!!! Sending wishes of peace and love and a very Happy New Year to all! May your 2026 be filled with fun, awe, purpose, and good health and much happiness. Remember to be good to yourself so you can be good to others. I’m still working carefully on my 2026 word… but whatever it is, I know it will be the right one ❤️ . . . #happynewyear #yearinreview2025 #wordoftheyear #motorcyclelife #arthistorianlife
Resting, dreaming, and plotting the year ahead 💙✨😘
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#maui #hawaii #vacationmode #newyear #planning
Resting, dreaming, and plotting the year ahead 💙✨😘 . . . #maui #hawaii #vacationmode #newyear #planning
Riding and chasing sunsets across Maui ✨💙🌺🌴🧡
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#maui #hawaii #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motogirl #vacationmode #sunsets
Riding and chasing sunsets across Maui ✨💙🌺🌴🧡 . . . #maui #hawaii #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motogirl #vacationmode #sunsets

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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.

Pablo Picasso, Le Moulin de la Galette (1900). Picasso was born on this day in 1881.

Pablo Picasso, Le Moulin de la Galette (1900). Picasso was born on this day in 1881.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

October 25, 2020

As I prepared the round up this week, I noted that Picasso’s birthday would correspond with my weekend post. I, along with almost every art historian I have ever known, possess a deep seated love/hate relationship with the artist. We love Picasso because most people come to art history with at least a passing knowledge about him and his life, providing a ready gateway to talk about and introduce modernism and modern art in survey courses. At the same time, we hate that Picasso represents the worst stereotypes about the “genius” male artist embedded in the Western canon of art, and most of us have to work especially hard to bring visibility and ask the critical questions about what the stakes are around these constructions. In this sense, Picasso brings out the best and worst in my discipline, and his legacy continues to cast a long shadow on art history and the means through which artists and the art world define the “rules of the game.”

Having said all this, I wanted to share and feature my very favourite Picasso work, Le Moulin de la Galette, an oil painting from 1900 that is mostly overlooked and rarely taught. Why? Because the painting represents the work of the young Picasso, the “unrefined” artist as a young man trying on existing styles and themes (in this case, of the French Impressionists) long before creating his signature “original” style. But what I love about discussing and teaching this early painting is that it is a work of art that captures a particular rite of passage faced by all artists at various points of their lives—learning, absorbing, and immersing oneself in the current cultural and artistic milieu. It is this willingness to observe, this sheer curiosity and passion to understand and fully embody and creatively explore what is “happening” and contemporary in the world (at the level of art, culture, and the current zeitgeist) that makes one a critical and engaged artist.

In the Guggenheim’s description of this painting (in their collection), we should all recognize something of our present moment, something Picasso also wanted to explore and capture. “In Le Moulin de la Galette, Picasso adopted the position of a sympathetic and intrigued observer of the spectacle of entertainment, suggesting its provocative appeal and artificiality. In richly vibrant colors, much brighter than any he had previously used, he captured the intoxicating scene as a dizzying blur of fashionable figures with expressionless faces.” Importantly, it is not Picasso’s originality or his own celebrity that matters so much here, but more so his ability to be an astute observer of the modern moment and to reflect that back to audiences. In my opinion, we need more of this kind of artist and artistry in the world.

A FEW MORE THINGS BEFORE THE ROUND UP

ElDFqXYVMAETZjz.jpeg
  • I have been eager to view the new Borat film Borat Subsequent Moviefilm ever since hearing rumours of its existence following news reports earlier this year that Sacha Baron Cohen had crashed Republican events in character. I cannot express enough how much I loved this film, and not necessarily for the humour and various hijinks (which there are plenty), but more so as a film historian understanding how Baron Cohen’s subversive and calculated filmmaking has earned him a place in cinema history alongside the likes of Charlie Chaplin and films like The Great Dictator. This one will stand the test of time and for all of the right reasons (see the NY Times article I include in the round up to learn more about Baron Cohen’s background and education).

  • I was very honoured to be recognized by my university as an Open Access Learning Champion during International Open Access Week (October 19-25, 2020). I have included here the great graphic KPU Open Education assembled for social media, with my statement about being a United Nations Open Pedagogy Fellow. I hope to blog later this year or early next about my experiences working with an interdisciplinary team of academic peers to develop great OER (Open Educational Resources) for ourselves and other educators. It has been a steep learning curve during Covid times, but well worth the experimentation and outcomes! My full statement reads:

    “Art history is among the most disciplined areas of academic study, and Open Access resources remain largely limited and focused on more traditional understandings of visual art and culture. The powerful stakes around how art historians have in the past, and continue today, to historicize, understand, order, and make meanings around art, can therefore remain hidden from view. This is especially the case for art historians, like me, who seek to challenge and subvert the status quo of what can be seen and understood as “art” and to question who gets to make those decisions. It is my goal to demonstrate the critical potential of incorporating open pedagogy into art history courses in ways that proactively lead the conversation around visual literacy and criticism while revealing/unpacking the mechanisms of the art world.”

"For Celebrities, Apathy Can Be a Form of Political Credibility"
"For Celebrities, Apathy Can Be a Form of Political Credibility"

theatlantic.com

"Meet the New Innovators: 8 Artists Who Are Disrupting the Traditional Way of Buying, Selling, and Valuing Art"
"Meet the New Innovators: 8 Artists Who Are Disrupting the Traditional Way of Buying, Selling, and Valuing Art"

artnet.com

"From the streets to the studio: show explores how Basquiat, graffiti and hip-hop culture stormed the art world in the 1980s"
"From the streets to the studio: show explores how Basquiat, graffiti and hip-hop culture stormed the art world in the 1980s"

theartnewspaper.com

"Will 2020 Be a 'Lost Year' for Students?"
"Will 2020 Be a 'Lost Year' for Students?"

chronicle.com

"Banksy confirmed authorship of a new artwork in Nottingham"
"Banksy confirmed authorship of a new artwork in Nottingham"

artsy.com

"Vandals Attacked 70 Artworks in Berlin Museums in Broad Daylight"
"Vandals Attacked 70 Artworks in Berlin Museums in Broad Daylight"

artnet.com

"Open Sky: Portrait of the Canadian Pavilion in Venice (SHORT FILM)"
"Open Sky: Portrait of the Canadian Pavilion in Venice (SHORT FILM)"

nfb.ca

"Sacha Baron Cohen: This Time He’s Serious"
"Sacha Baron Cohen: This Time He’s Serious"

nytimes.com

"Watch Every Episode of Bob Ross’ The Joy Of Painting Free Online "
"Watch Every Episode of Bob Ross’ The Joy Of Painting Free Online "

openculture.com

"Professor Is In: Imposter Syndrome When Odds Are Against You (PODCAST)"
"Professor Is In: Imposter Syndrome When Odds Are Against You (PODCAST)"

professorisin.com

"For Celebrities, Apathy Can Be a Form of Political Credibility" "Meet the New Innovators: 8 Artists Who Are Disrupting the Traditional Way of Buying, Selling, and Valuing Art" "From the streets to the studio: show explores how Basquiat, graffiti and hip-hop culture stormed the art world in the 1980s" "Will 2020 Be a 'Lost Year' for Students?" "Banksy confirmed authorship of a new artwork in Nottingham" "Vandals Attacked 70 Artworks in Berlin Museums in Broad Daylight" "Open Sky: Portrait of the Canadian Pavilion in Venice (SHORT FILM)" "Sacha Baron Cohen: This Time He’s Serious" "Watch Every Episode of Bob Ross’ The Joy Of Painting Free Online " "Professor Is In: Imposter Syndrome When Odds Are Against You (PODCAST)"
  • Meet the New Innovators: 8 Artists Who Are Disrupting the Traditional Way of Buying, Selling, and Valuing Art

  • From the streets to the studio: show explores how Basquiat, graffiti and hip-hop culture stormed the art world in the 1980s

  • For Celebrities, Apathy Can Be a Form of Political Credibility

  • Will 2020 Be a 'Lost Year' for Students?

  • Banksy confirmed authorship of a new artwork in Nottingham

  • Vandals Attacked 70 Artworks in Berlin Museums in Broad Daylight

  • Open Sky: Portrait of the Canadian Pavilion in Venice (SHORT FILM)

  • Sacha Baron Cohen: This Time He’s Serious

  • Watch Every Episode of Bob Ross’ The Joy Of Painting Free Online

  • Professor Is In: Imposter Syndrome When Odds Are Against You (PODCAST)

 

Comment
Phillip Sutton, Autumn Flowers (1955) in the Tate Modern Collection.

Phillip Sutton, Autumn Flowers (1955) in the Tate Modern Collection.

Weekly Round Up.... And a Few More Things

October 18, 2020

This past week I had a lot of time to reflect on the value and place of academic conferences, both in my own experience as a grad student and professor, but also as a ritual event in the world of academia. In the past, I had wondered if all of the expense and energy used to move hundreds of people across the world to one locale for 3-5 days was worth it. Anyone who has ever delivered a conference paper to a room filled with only the panelists and chairs will know this feeling well!

As with most things disrupted by Covid-19, the annual conference for my discipline—the Universities Art Association of Canada—was held remotely and online this year. I had submitted a proposal to co-chair a panel with my research colleague and friend Dr. Lara Tomaszweska of Openwork Art Advisory on the topic of commerce, aesthetics, and the “value” of contemporary art. The conference was to be held in Vancouver this year, and we were excited to host our panelists and introduce them to our city. Last year I attended UAAC to co-chair a panel in Quebec City, and it was an incredible trip filled with immersion in the local art and culture scene, visits to museums, galleries, and urban sites, and lots of incredible local cuisine. And then of course there were all of the conversations, sharing of ideas, and other impromptu discussions in the conference venue hallways, over meals, and even at the airport— these, among the spontaneous ways that academics communicate and learn from one another.

Once we understood the conference would be moved online, I knew that much of that same energy or hard to describe frisson would be lost, and indeed, despite attempts to reproduce the conference virtually, there was something very much missing, an irreplaceable sense of presence that is impossible to duplicate in a Zoom meeting. Here I want to stress that our session panelists provided excellent presentations and arguments—that was never in doubt, and we were incredibly grateful for the opportunities to meet our participants—but what we were not able to do was engage in all of the kinetic and fully embodied rituals of academic discourse and debate that happen only when people are sitting in a room together.

It is only now that I understand how much I have taken this ritual event for granted, and I realize as well that it is this precise sense of lack and sadness I feel when leading synchronous teaching sessions in my courses over my institution’s version of Zoom (BigBlueButton). We all feel what is missing, students and professors alike, and it is deep and profound. In the end, nothing can take the place of simple human contact and exchange in an academic environment. We can certainly attempt to simulate this world in a virtual online format—and it is the best we can during a global pandemic—but all of this technology cannot be made to replace what many of us know to be the only way to truly engage as academics, students, and human beings.  

A FEW MORE THINGS BEFORE THE ROUND UP

  • Last weekend I spent 10+ hours in a car traveling for Canadian Thanksgiving and had a chance to listen to the entire season of Wind of Change, a fantastic podcast debuting this summer that tracks the story of how the song “Wind of Change” by the German heavy metal band Scorpions, was connected to CIA efforts to create pro-democracy propaganda in the wake of the fall of the Berlin Wall and Soviet Bloc. No spoilers, but if you have ever heard the story in your modern art history class of how the CIA propped up Jackson Pollock and Abstract Expressionism as the global art of freedom in the 1950'-60s, you will find this story both familiar and within the realm of possibility!

  • Speaking of culture, history, and politics, more than a half dozen people whose opinion on all things cultural and of-the-moment I respect have told me to watch Crash Landing On You — a South Korean television series now on Netflix that tells the story of a South Korean fashion entrepreneur and heiress and her love affair with a member of North Korea’s elite police. Yes, you read that correctly, and it is next up for me once I complete all of my midterm grading.

How Much Do You Really Miss Going to the Movies?
How Much Do You Really Miss Going to the Movies?

nytimes.com

#MeToo Medusa sculpture to be installed across from New York courthouse where Harvey Weinstein stood trial
#MeToo Medusa sculpture to be installed across from New York courthouse where Harvey Weinstein stood trial

theartnewspaper.com

Jenny Holzer launched a new public artwork campaign encouraging voter participation
Jenny Holzer launched a new public artwork campaign encouraging voter participation

artsy.net

Think for yourself: how to judge expertise in a time of conflicting opinions (PODCAST)
Think for yourself: how to judge expertise in a time of conflicting opinions (PODCAST)

cbc.ca

Emily in Paris Is the Hate Watch We Can’t Stop Watching
Emily in Paris Is the Hate Watch We Can’t Stop Watching

slate.com

3 artists pushing back against colonialism by using the tools of their colonizers
3 artists pushing back against colonialism by using the tools of their colonizers

cbc.ca

Feels Good Man, a film that truly gets how things are passed across the Internet
Feels Good Man, a film that truly gets how things are passed across the Internet

arstechnica.com

The UK government is trying to draw museums into a fake culture war
The UK government is trying to draw museums into a fake culture war

theguardian.com

UP CLOSE: Mike Kelley at The Broad (VIDEO)
UP CLOSE: Mike Kelley at The Broad (VIDEO)

The Broad

Mr Ewok “Game Over", Wall in Wynwood via Museum of Graffiti (VIDEO)
Mr Ewok “Game Over", Wall in Wynwood via Museum of Graffiti (VIDEO)

Museum of Graffiti

How Much Do You Really Miss Going to the Movies? #MeToo Medusa sculpture to be installed across from New York courthouse where Harvey Weinstein stood trial Jenny Holzer launched a new public artwork campaign encouraging voter participation Think for yourself: how to judge expertise in a time of conflicting opinions (PODCAST) Emily in Paris Is the Hate Watch We Can’t Stop Watching 3 artists pushing back against colonialism by using the tools of their colonizers Feels Good Man, a film that truly gets how things are passed across the Internet The UK government is trying to draw museums into a fake culture war UP CLOSE: Mike Kelley at The Broad (VIDEO) Mr Ewok “Game Over", Wall in Wynwood via Museum of Graffiti (VIDEO)
  • How Much Do You Really Miss Going to the Movies?

  • #MeToo Medusa sculpture to be installed across from New York courthouse where Harvey Weinstein stood trial

  • Jenny Holzer launched a new public artwork campaign encouraging voter participation 

  • Think for yourself: how to judge expertise in a time of conflicting opinions

  • Emily in Paris Is the Hate Watch We Can’t Stop Watching

  • 3 artists pushing back against colonialism by using the tools of their colonizers

  • Feels Good Man, a film that truly gets how things are passed across the Internet

  • The UK government is trying to draw museums into a fake culture war

  • UP CLOSE: Mike Kelley at The Broad (VIDEO)

  • Mr Ewok “Game Over", Wall in Wynwood via Museum of Graffiti (VIDEO)

Comment
Joan Brown, Thanksgiving Turkey (1959) in the MoMA Collection.

Joan Brown, Thanksgiving Turkey (1959) in the MoMA Collection.

Weekly Round Up... And a Few More Things

October 11, 2020

The practice of gratitude has a very special resonance this Thanksgiving. Who among us haven’t experienced the continuing and relentless disruption and change that causes moments of serious self-reflection, worry, sadness, and fear? On the flipside, however, is the ever-present reality that we are slowly and surely finding our way, getting through this time, and yes, maybe finding new things to be thankful for.

I asked two of my classes this week to reflect on gratitude in a small online exercise. Using a virtual “white board” that invites individuals to make anonymous comments in a shared space, the students shared gratitude both profound and also very personal. Many were thankful for their health (both physical and mental), for their safety and security as Canadians, while others talked about their friendships, the hobbies that sustained them through times of boredom and lockdown, and the kindness of strangers (for those who worked in retail, restaurants, and other essential services). What struck me was how many of the gratitude posts related to human connection. Spending some time this week in the retail district downtown shopping for Thanksgiving gifts, I found myself happy simply to be in the company of other human beings. Even socially distanced and wearing masks, we were groups of strangers experiencing and enjoying one another’s company— “smizing” and giving knowing nods, understanding that this moment may be fleeting with winter and the second wave upon us.

So, as we gather and find responsible ways to celebrate Thanksgiving this weekend, make sure to take that extra time to speak your gratitude aloud, and to maybe write some of your thoughts down. Once we get to the other side of this strange year, you may want to be reminded of what sustained you.

A Few More Things Before The Round Up

  • The Art Newspaper’s online event series “New models for new times: Rethinking the art market in a changing world” caught my eye late last month, and the topic is both timely and very much needed. Later this week, I will be co-chairing a panel at UAAC on the topic of commerce, aesthetics, and the value of art, and I continue to research this area with sustained interest, especially as the pandemic continues to wreak havoc on all aspects of the art world. As the talk series description reads, “The past year has presented the art trade with unprecedented challenges, but it has also revealed how changes in the way we do business may re-shape the industry into a more collaborative one.” The series has already featured one provocative talk “Is the new spirit of collaboration lip-service or game-changing?” and will have two further events, “Breaking boundaries—local is the new global” on October 15th and “Economist Clare McAndrew in conversation with Georgina Adam” on October 22. Registration is free and can be accessed here.

  • I was one of the many who devoured Elena Ferrante’s four Neapolitan novels a few years ago and have recommended both the books and the well produced and brilliantly shot My Brilliant Friend television series that follows closely to the spirit of the stories. I am now about halfway through Ferrante’s most recent and very highly anticipated novel The Lying Life of Adults and it is excellent! I was also happy to learn Netflix has optioned the book for another television series and cannot wait to see how this book is brought to the screen. See trailer below.

  • And as it is Thanksgiving Day long weekend, you can be sure that I will be catching up on the latest season of The Great British Baking Show. Much easier on the waistline, and who doesn’t love a creative competition show that showcases artistic talents and food!

What ‘Bad Art’ Really Means
What ‘Bad Art’ Really Means

artreview.com

How To Be At Home, Andrea Dorfman
How To Be At Home, Andrea Dorfman

nfb.ca

What We Mean When We Rant about Digital Art
What We Mean When We Rant about Digital Art

canadianart.ca

Monopoly Honors The Beloved Bob Ross With A Happy Little Set Based On His Works
Monopoly Honors The Beloved Bob Ross With A Happy Little Set Based On His Works

designtaxi.com

The Gray Market: Why Trump’s Effect on the Arts Economy Will Live in Infamy
The Gray Market: Why Trump’s Effect on the Arts Economy Will Live in Infamy

artnet.com

The New Museum Is World Class, but Many Find It a Tough Place to Work
The New Museum Is World Class, but Many Find It a Tough Place to Work

nytimes.com

Saturday Night Live Misunderstands Its Role Right Now
Saturday Night Live Misunderstands Its Role Right Now

theatlantic.com

Frieze: the show goes on (PODCAST)
Frieze: the show goes on (PODCAST)

artnewspaper.com

Questioning the Future: Rem Koolhaas/AMO at the Guggenheim (VIDEO)
Questioning the Future: Rem Koolhaas/AMO at the Guggenheim (VIDEO)

guggenheim

Make a Book with Meat (or other atypical materials) ft. Ben Denzer (VIDEO)
Make a Book with Meat (or other atypical materials) ft. Ben Denzer (VIDEO)

artassignment

What ‘Bad Art’ Really Means How To Be At Home, Andrea Dorfman What We Mean When We Rant about Digital Art Monopoly Honors The Beloved Bob Ross With A Happy Little Set Based On His Works The Gray Market: Why Trump’s Effect on the Arts Economy Will Live in Infamy The New Museum Is World Class, but Many Find It a Tough Place to Work Saturday Night Live Misunderstands Its Role Right Now Frieze: the show goes on (PODCAST) Questioning the Future: Rem Koolhaas/AMO at the Guggenheim (VIDEO) Make a Book with Meat (or other atypical materials) ft. Ben Denzer (VIDEO)
  • What ‘Bad Art’ Really Means

  • How To Be At Home, Andrea Dorfman

  • What We Mean When We Rant about Digital Art

  • Monopoly Honors The Beloved Bob Ross With A Happy Little Set Based On His Works

  • The Gray Market: Why Trump’s Effect on the Arts Economy Will Live in Infamy

  • The New Museum Is World Class, but Many Find It a Tough Place to Work

  • Frieze: the show goes on (PODCAST)

  • Saturday Night Live Misunderstands Its Role Right Now

  • Questioning the Future: Rem Koolhaas/AMO at the Guggenheim (VIDEO)

  • Make a Book with Meat (or other atypical materials) ft. Ben Denzer (VIDEO)

Comment
A.Y. Jackson, The Red Maple (1914). Jackson, born on this week (October 3, 1882) in Montreal, was a founding member of Canada’s Group of Seven. His modernist paintings have historically forged the association of Canada with its romanticized “wildern…

A.Y. Jackson, The Red Maple (1914). Jackson, born on this week (October 3, 1882) in Montreal, was a founding member of Canada’s Group of Seven. His modernist paintings have historically forged the association of Canada with its romanticized “wilderness”— a legacy that is actively subverted by new generations of Canadian artists while still providing important studies and painted records of our shifting natural environment.

Weekly Round Up... And a Few More Things

October 04, 2020

With one month of the fall semester under my belt, I am just starting to find something of a balance and rhythm with the new normal. None of this has been easy—not for myself or my students—and it has only been through a grueling trial and error process gained mostly through teaching this summer that I have figured out what to let go of, and what to amplify. Not unlike what many of us have been experiencing with the pandemic (in terms of the people we want to have relationships with, those we do not, how we want to spend our free time, and realizing what truly matters in the day to day etc…) there has been a collective reckoning. All of this is reflected in an art world that continues to shine a critical light on many of its practices and norms. In this spirit, I turn back to the round up as a way to capture the cultural zeitgeist, if for no other reason than to look back on this time at some future date and wonder how we survived it!

A FEW MORE THINGS… BEFORE THE ROUND UP

  • The Vancouver International Film Festival continues through October 7th and there are still so many films I want to see! You can check out this useful guide through the Georgia Straight if you need a quick primer and place to start.

  • I finally stepped foot inside my first art exhibition since the March lockdown and it did not disappoint. I cannot say enough about Kent Monkman’s Shame and Prejudice show on at the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver, and last week’s artist talk with Monkman (which I attended virtually) is now available for viewing.

  • I continue to follow the stories connected to the spiraling academic job market (particularly in the US) and I have been recommending The Professor Is In website, and especially the podcast, to grad students and colleagues who are “out in the wilderness” and looking for guidance on how to transition to an alt-academic career. Now, more than ever, we should all have a Plan B.

The End of Art History
The End of Art History

hyperallergic.com

4 Museums Decided This Work Shouldn’t Be Shown. They’re Both Right and Wrong.
4 Museums Decided This Work Shouldn’t Be Shown. They’re Both Right and Wrong.

vulture.com

In a Threat to Banksy’s Empire, an EU Court Rules That He Can’t Hold Trademarks
In a Threat to Banksy’s Empire, an EU Court Rules That He Can’t Hold Trademarks

artnet.com

As statues topple, artist Ken Lum wants us to rethink the monuments
As statues topple, artist Ken Lum wants us to rethink the monuments

cbc.ca

Ai Weiwei on China, free speech – and a message for London
Ai Weiwei on China, free speech – and a message for London

guardian.com

Pulitzer Prize-winning historian explains the lure of authoritarianism
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian explains the lure of authoritarianism

cbc.ca

The Demolition of LACMA: Art Sacrificed to Architecture
The Demolition of LACMA: Art Sacrificed to Architecture

nybooks.com

Artist-Activists Light Up Guggenheim Façade with Pointed Messages
Artist-Activists Light Up Guggenheim Façade with Pointed Messages

artforum.com

Zanele Muholi – ‘In My World, Every Human is Beautiful’ | Tate (VIDEO)
Zanele Muholi – ‘In My World, Every Human is Beautiful’ | Tate (VIDEO)

tate

How a Powerhouse Hollywood Agency Is Turning Artists Into Stars (PODCAST)
How a Powerhouse Hollywood Agency Is Turning Artists Into Stars (PODCAST)

artnet.com

The End of Art History 4 Museums Decided This Work Shouldn’t Be Shown. They’re Both Right and Wrong. In a Threat to Banksy’s Empire, an EU Court Rules That He Can’t Hold Trademarks As statues topple, artist Ken Lum wants us to rethink the monuments Ai Weiwei on China, free speech – and a message for London Pulitzer Prize-winning historian explains the lure of authoritarianism The Demolition of LACMA: Art Sacrificed to Architecture Artist-Activists Light Up Guggenheim Façade with Pointed Messages Zanele Muholi – ‘In My World, Every Human is Beautiful’ | Tate (VIDEO) How a Powerhouse Hollywood Agency Is Turning Artists Into Stars (PODCAST)
  • The End of Art History

  • 4 Museums Decided This Work Shouldn’t Be Shown. They’re Both Right and Wrong.

  • In a Threat to Banksy’s Empire, an EU Court Rules That He Can’t Hold Trademarks

  • As statues topple, artist Ken Lum wants us to rethink the monuments (AUDIO)

  • Ai Weiwei on China, free speech – and a message for London

  • Pulitzer Prize-winning historian explains the lure of authoritarianism

  • The Demolition of LACMA: Art Sacrificed to Architecture

  • Artist-Activists Light Up Guggenheim Façade with Pointed Messages

  • Zanele Muholi – ‘In My World, Every Human is Beautiful’ | Tate (VIDEO)

  • How a Powerhouse Hollywood Agency Is Turning Artists Into Stars (PODCAST)

Comment
Memories of VIFF from years past. I truly miss the ritual of picking up the signature VIFF programme and marking my selections with post-it notes, but this year, as with all things, nothing is the same.

Memories of VIFF from years past. I truly miss the ritual of picking up the signature VIFF programme and marking my selections with post-it notes, but this year, as with all things, nothing is the same.

Vancouver International Film Festival 2020 Online Edition | 10 Quick Hot Picks

September 24, 2020

Few things in this crazy year would compel me to re-emerge from my summer blogging hibernation, but I am doing just that to kick off the fall and promote another year of the Vancouver International Film Festival. As with all things cultural during the age of Covid-19, there has been major reassessment and creative reimagination of what is possible. And in the case of the VIFF organizers, this has meant the adaptation of a mostly online model that embraces the Netflix age where audiences will have the opportunity to stream most of the VIFF line-up in a “watch anywhere, anytime” modality. At the same time, attempts have been made to retain the spirit and vibe of the festival with a limited selection of in-theatre screenings of VIFF’s more anticipated films.

While I have many mixed feelings on all this, as I know many other die-hard VIFF goers do, I am choosing to look at the upside of all this. I figure if VIFF can find a way through this year, so can I. Most importantly, I will have the chance to stream and watch ALL THE FILMS on my own schedule for the very reduced subscription rate of $60 (see all ticket prices here— $30 for full-time students!) and in the comfort of my home on my Apple TV or computer over the span of the festival from September 24th to October 7th. In years past, I have always had to make the difficult cuts to my must-see list based on my teaching and research and/or bought tickets for screenings I was never able to attend. Big big plus.

VIFF_WebHeaders_True North.png

I am already incredibly excited with lots of the selections in this year’s programme and will be sending two sections of my ARTH 1130: Introduction to Film Studies course to the virtual VIFF as in year’s past. As promised to them, and to those students (past and present), friends, and colleagues, who ask me each year which films are at the top of my list, I present this assembled selection. These are my must-see picks so far, curated from a much longer list of 30+ films I have flagged for viewing.

So, without further adieu, my 10 Quick Hot Picks in alphabetical order with captions and links sourced straight from the VIFF website: www.viff.org


ANOTHER ROUND (Denmark)

“Inspired by the thesis that humans are born with a 0.05 deficit in blood alcohol content, Martin (Mads Mikkelsen) and three of his teacher buddies – all middle-aged men – decide to test the theory. Early results are encouraging. After a couple of shots of vodka, history class becomes a crucible of insightful debate. Time to kick this project up a notch… This intoxicating black comedy from Tomas Vinterberg (The Hunt, The Celebration) has a reckless anarchic spirit with a chaser of existential angst.”


BEAUTY WATER (South Korea)

“Yae-ji’s looks have been the cause of endless bullying - an obstacle to career and romance. Imagine her excitement when she tries a mysterious skincare product that makes her drop-dead gorgeous overnight. But beauty comes with a heavy price. Cho Kyung-hun’s gripping animated thriller is a scathing critique of South Korea’s patriarchal, body-shaming culture.”


THE CURSE OF WILLOW SONG (Canada)

“Fresh out of prison, Willow Song (Valerie Tian) is now fending for herself in Vancouver’s unforgiving Downtown Eastside, enduring workplace harassment and anti-Asian sentiment. Retreating to an abandoned warehouse, her latent psychokinetic abilities manifest and an uncanny transformation commences. Karen Lam delivers an exceedingly eerie supernatural thriller steeped in searing social commentary that chillingly suggests Vancouver has left Willow with no alternative but to become a monster.”


FRIDA KAHLO (United Kingdom)

“It’s impossible to consider the history of Latin American art without acknowledging the enormous legacy of Frida Kahlo. British director Ali Ray’s new bio-doc for the Exhibition on Screen series is an in-depth look at the Mexican painter’s life and art. Featuring an impressive roster of academics, art historians, gallerists and Kahlo’s official biographer, Hayden Herrera, the film traces Kahlo’s suffering and pain, her passion, drive, radical politics and unique style.”


INTO THE STORM (United Kingdom/Peru)

“Shot over five years, Into the Storm chronicles a scrappy Peruvian teenager who taught himself to surf with a broken board he found on the beach, and earns a spot at former World Champion Sofía Mulánovich’s surfing school. Reminiscent of Hoop Dreams, Into the Storm navigates the trials and struggles of Jhonny Guerrero as he hopes to lift himself and his family out of poverty by becoming a professional surfer.”


MARCEL DUCHAMP: THE ART OF THE POSSIBLE (United States)

“What makes a work of art “art”? This question was central to French modernist Marcel Duchamp’s practice. The Art of the Possible is a mesmerising account of Duchamp’s life and work, showing how his radical rejection of 19th century ideals paved the way for countless innovations in culture and the arts. An impressive array of experts (Jeff Koons, Marina Abramovic, Michel Gondry) explore Duchamp’s legacy, as archival footage reveals a charismatic–at times cheeky–visionary light years ahead of his time.”


MOGUL MOWGLI (United Kingdom/ United States)

“On the brink of his big break, Zed (Riz Ahmed) instead finds his plans reduced to rubble. Rather than embarking on an international tour, the British-Pakistani rapper grapples with a degenerative autoimmune disorder that forces him to seek shelter with his estranged London family. Ahmed convinces on the mike, unleashing high velocity, vitriolic rhymes, but the devastating power of Bassam Tariq’s film truly comes from its deft articulation of the unique conflict churning within a bi-cultural artist.”


PARIS CALLIGRAMMES (Germany/France)

“Ulrike Ottinger, member of the New German Cinema of the 1970s and 80s (including Johanna d’Arc of Mongolia, VIFF ’89), offers a portrait of the artist in her youth and Paris in the 1960s. The film is named after the Left Bank bookstore where a circle of émigré poets, painters, and sculptors crossed paths and offers a collage of archival footage, film clips and home movies, enhanced by Ottinger’s thoughtful voice over. “A work of vital and energetic modernism.” - The New Yorker”


SUMMER OF 85 (France)

“VIFF favourite François Ozon’s look back at the mid-80s is a romantic, sexy, and ultimately tragic coming-of-age tale awash in gorgeous colour, sunny locations, and eye-popping period fashions. Sixteen-year-old Alex (Félix Lefebvre) is being questioned by police about the death of 18-year-old David (Benjamin Voisin). Cue flashbacks to a heady, beachside summer romance between the two, an experience that rocks Alex’s world… Anchored by fine performances from its leads, this is simply a treat.”


YALDA, A NIGHT OF FORGIVENESS (France/Germany/Switzerland/Luxembourg/Lebanon/Iran)

“Massoud Bakhshi’s gripping film (Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize-winner) centres on a live TV show on which a convicted killer must beg for her life. Maryam (Sadaf Asgari) has been found guilty of murdering her much older husband, and the courts have put her fate in the hands of his daughter Mona (Behnaz Jafari). As their confrontation approaches, we discover that both women know more than they’re telling about the crime… Yalda is a suspenseful, powerful work, suffused with the spirit of social protest.”


 
















 

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025