Weekly Twitter Round Up


Andy Warhol, Dracula (1981)
October is all but finished and tomorrow's Halloween celebrations call for a temporary reprieve from all the hard work that has gone into the midterm season (from students and faculty alike!). Halloween was always my favourite holiday growing up (I loved the idea of temporary performance) and it was great to see all of the creative costumes around Vancouver streets this past weekend. This Ken Lum number paying homage to conceptual art was one of my favourites--thanks Brendan for the twitpic! As for tonight, I invite you to grab some treats (before you start handing them out tomorrow night) and check out a few of my favourites from around the Twitterverse this week.

Cinema's Greatest Wildly Prolific Directors 




How to Plan a Wildly Successful Open Studio Event or Arts Walk




Steve Jobs v Julian Assange: what makes a good biography? | Anne Perkins 



What Wikipedia deletes, and why




Still don't have a #Halloweencostume? Our curators have some ideas for you: 



Liu Xia, wife of Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, exhibits photographs in France (smuggled out of China)



Performance artist gives birth in NYC gallery 

Street Art and the Occupy Movement: Disturbing Categories

While Damien Hirst's For the Love of God diamond encrusted skull has come to signify
the worst of corporate greed in the Occupy movement, graffiti artist Shepard Fairey's reconfigured
"Obey" campaign signals the potential for artistic intervention. 

A few weeks ago, I began paying closer attention to the art production associated with the growing Occupy Wall Street movement. At that time, a call for participation was circulated from the protest organizers and a great deal of interest and buzz has since been generated online about how, why, and through which media forms artists can engage with furthering debate and conversations about the core ideas fuelling the movement.

Fairey's original "Obey" signs sparked a much
larger conversation about public dissent when they first
began appearing in urban spaces in the early to mid 2000's.
Observing what has emerged in the form of art projects, what strikes me as most interesting is how much the street and graffiti art community have responded and come to support the aims of the various Occupy protests in large cities around the world. At the outset of the protests in September, street artist Shepard Fairey’s "Obey" images—a project that originally juxtaposed political propaganda and corporate visual vocabulary and textual references—have become closely associated with the rich visual campaign launched by the Occupy Wall Street organizers. Not surprisingly, the use of highly mobile, quickly reproducible, and often clandestine media forms like the poster (digital and paper format) have close connections to previous protest movements (most notably Paris 1968), but also with the aims and practices of many street and graffiti artists. Also intriguing is how references to elite and top-end contemporary art practices are deliberately aligned with corporate greed and connections to the business world. I am curious what Damien Hirst makes of his diamond skull becoming the literal poster child of Wall Street evil.

For their part, street artists seem to be taking this moment as an opportunity to align their interests with the protesters. Take for example Banksy who reportedly dropped off a new sculptural work to the Occupy London protest organizers—a satirical play on the instantly recognizable Monopoly game board.  As London’s ArtLystdescribes, “The work is a 3 dimensional depiction of a Monopoly Board with Mr Money Bags portrayed as a down and out panhandler. There are large scale models of playing pieces, including a sports car (to represent bankers) and a red plastic house with a Tox tag sprayed onto it. This is a reference to not only the jailed London Graffiti artist but also to the toxic mortgages that kick started the current recession. “ Interestingly enough, the article goes on to mention that the work has already been valued at over £400,000, but it is not entirely clear whether the work will be auctioned off at some point to support the London protesters.

Banksy's Monopoly sculpture features Mr. Money Bags as a homeless beggar
(image courtesy: Demotix)
At a more grass roots level, I was quite impressed with the clever response by Occupy Oakland to the recent crackdown and then reinvigoration of their protest. They took the fences that had been used to partition out those camping at their site and turned them into an impressive sculptural installation. And across the globe in South Korea, a performance artist has formed “One-Man Demonstrations.com” (not an actual web site) attempting to fight against the protest fatigue that many fear will end the Occupy movement sooner than later. For his part, the artist Lim Ok-Sang engages people on the street in a playful and entertaining way, trying to point to the absurdity of the global economic situation. As he explains, "It is another extension of artistic expression. We are trying to create a combination of demonstrations and performances and of course to use the power of the web as much as we can."
Oakland fences used to create a sculptural work (image courtesy: ARTINFO)
Lim Ok-Sang helps counter protest fatigue through his street-level performances
(image courtesy: Reuters)
But not all street and performance contributions have been seen as completely aligned to the interests of the Occupy movement. Take for example the graphic artist turned urban street provocateur K-Guy, who also lent his support to the London folks by carpet-bombing the area near the protest site with a work that reads: “Greed: You Can Bank On It.” While certainly eye-catching and sure to create conversation, the contribution raises some questions as K-Guy prepares to open an upcoming solo show at the London West Bank Gallery. 

K-Guy's carpet bombing at the Occupy London protests
(image courtesy: Vandalog)
As street art blogger Vandalog aptly points out, there seems to be something unsettling with his timing: “He has made what is (likely) a very temporary piece, put it right next to a legitimate protest about putting people over profits, and then used photographs of the protest and his artwork in order to immediately turn around and try to sell something.” I am also left speculating whether the clearly highlighted word “Bank” is sending some kind of a message to Banksy. Maybe it is just a coincidence, but the rivalry between street artists at a time when valuations for graffiti art works are going through the roof leaves me wondering. Whatever the case, it seems that street artists have forged the closest connection with the Occupy protesters thus far.

Weekly Twitter Round Up



The days of fall are growing shorter while the list of things to do grows longer—funny how that works.  The Twitterverse however never fails to entertain and educate, and so here are a few favourites from the past week. Grab some coffee or hot chocolate and a yummy treat (I baked these Pumpkin Blondies this weekend--yummy!) and check them out. 

Books that go where the iPad can't (yet): Over 1,000 art books @Frieze but how many will there be in the future?



What would it look like if the whole world made a film?




A creepy new site that takes your #Facebook data and turns it into a short horror film




The first 30 days, in photos




Wild Salvador Dalí documentary narrated by Orson Welles! "A Soft Self Portrait" from 1967




"Focus on the funk: an interview with Cornel West" at The Immanent Frame




Judith Butler at Occupy WSP (with echoes of Life of Brian's 'We are all Individuals'!!)

Art and Celebrity: Abramovic, Sherman, and Ai Take Center Stage


Ai Wewei recently directed the cover shoot for W Magazine's "art issue."
Strolling through the bookstore this past week, I happened upon an unlikely figure peering out of the fashion magazine section. There she was, Marina Abramovic, performance artist meets fashion model, featured on the cover of the British indie publication  Pop Magazine. Beautifully made up in a black and white large format photograph with an unusual doll draped across her shoulders, Abramovic resembles something of a puppeteer with a doppelganger Marina prop. Bizarre and fascinating—I immediately picked it up. And maybe that was part of the point. Looking at Pop Magazine’s mission statement on-line, a statement they provocatively term a "manifesto" (cue avant-garde associations), the stated purpose of the magazine intersects the world of art and fashion through the lens of pop: “With a bold international perspective and an understanding that the cultural and business LANDSCAPE is being dramatically rewritten, POP looks to join-the-dots and CELEBRATE the world’s key creatives. Fashion and its related universe is a prism through which so much of contemporary CREATIVITY, as well as the evolving celebrity culture, ends up being refracted.” No doubt I have already been noticing the growing partnership between contemporary art and the word of fashion. Earlier this year I blogged about Daphne Guinness and her “performance” piece at Barney’s in NYC. But we are also now seeing the heavy weights in the world of art taking part in this growing trend.

Marina Abramovic on the cover of Pop Magazine--
she appears on all three coversof the Fall 2011 issues.
Cindy Sherman for MAC Cosmetics-- I actually "get" this collaboration.
Take for example Cindy Sherman, who recently partnered with MAC cosmetics to create an advertising campaign for their fall collection. As a cosmetic company, MAC has always touted its outsider status (they were an early promoter of AIDS awareness with their VivaGlam line) and the ubiquitous black packaging and minimal design was seen as very radical when they first emerged on the very girly and "pink" makeup seen in the late 1980’s. As the Guardian noted when they wrote about the collaboration, most makeup campaigns “use beautiful models to impress upon women how wonderful the cosmetics will make them look. Also, to make them feel inferior, ugly, and more likely to reach for their purse.” Clearly, this campaign then with its anti-beauty and satirical approach to makeup (Sherman poses in a series of deliberately unattractive and even clown-like poses for the pictures) questions all of that, but still leaves in place the unsettling reality that the final pictures are created to sell the very product they question.

More Sherman-- but the sad clown face does not deter sales for MAC
Another more recent example involves the very controversial artist Ai Weiwei, an artist who has been featured prominently on my blog and has made headlines all year for his battle to retain his artistic vision and freedom of expression within his Chinese homeland. Just a few weeks ago, Ai was named the most powerful artist of the year by the influential British art magazine Art Review. In  a press release the magazine stated, “Ai's power and influence derive from the fact that his work and his words have become catalysts for international political debates that affect every nation on the planet: freedom of expression, nationalism, economic power, the Internet, the rights of the human being." Almost at the same moment, Ai was also getting buzz for directing the cover shoot for W magazine’s “art issue” one of the most important fashion magazines in the trade. The cover image, which features model Sui He (see image at top of post), was controversial, both for the fact that many Chinese models approached to do the shoot resisted for fear of reprisals from within China for working with such an outspoken artist, and also the subject matter of the shoot, which alludes to the NYC Tompkins Square Riots of 1988, and by connection, Ai’s own arrest earlier this year by the Chinese authority and the recent Occupy Wall Street protests. 

In the end, much like in the case of Sherman and Abramovic, the W magazine cover remains a vehicle through which to sell consumer goods and inspire new trends in the never ending cycle of fashion. This leaves open the question of what message the contemporary artists are also able to put forth in their collaborations. Perhaps a new awareness and audience for contemporary art, yes, but also the risk of diluting or side-stepping the important conversations around the critical practices these individuals are part of. I remain cautiously optimistic for now that the art will shine beyond the spectacle.  

Further Reading:

John A. Walker, Art and Celebrity Pluto Press, 2003.