Blogs Centerpoints

Centerpoints: Buddhism and Art, Translating Peace

• “The main thing that attracts me to Buddhism is probably what attracts every artist to being an artist—that it’s a godlike thing,” says Laurie Anderson in an interview with The Believer. “You are the ultimate authority. There is no other ultimate authority.” • When Chris Burden’s Metropolis, a kinetic sculpture/mini-cityscape, opens at LACMA on Saturday, [...]

“The main thing that attracts me to Buddhism is probably what attracts every artist to being an artist—that it’s a godlike thing,” says Laurie Anderson in an interview with The Believer. “You are the ultimate authority. There is no other ultimate authority.”

When Chris Burden’s Metropolis, a kinetic sculpture/mini-cityscape, opens at LACMA on Saturday, it’ll whiz some 1,100 tiny cars through its 18 lanes of traffic at speeds of around 240 miles per hour.

For a show opening in New Delhi Friday, Yoko Ono has produced new versions of the WAR IS OVER! poster she created with John Lennon in 1968. Now translated into 108 languages (including Klingon), the series’ newest additions include Telugu, Urdu, Tamil (pictured), and Kannada.

Rest in Peace: Dara Greenwald. The artist, community organizer and Just Seeds member succumbed to cancer at age 40. Co-author, with partner Josh MacPhee of the book, Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now, Greenwald spoke about activism and participatory art at the 2009 Creative Time Summit.

• Among the tens of thousands of Nigerians protesting subsidy cuts that have brought a doubling of gas prices is Seun Kuti, son of afropop legend Fela Kuti. “Our grandfathers had their chance. Our fathers had their chance” he said at a rally in Lagos. ” If we don’t take a stand for corruption in Nigeria now, then we too have lost.” Seun, who performs in Minneapolis in April at a Walker-sponsored event, was joined in protest by his brother, Femi, author Chinua Achebe, and others.

Jenny Holzer’s “Truisms” get a motherly tweak in a spoof Twitter account, @JennyHolzerMom. A sampling: “BEAUTY IS A MOVING TARGET BUT SWEETIE THAT IS A LOT OF EYE MAKEUP.”

“The revolution brought everybody’s talents into light. People started to talk from their hearts,’ says Egyptian musician Shaimaa Shaalan in a forthcoming documentary about the post-revolution arts boom. Here’s the trailer.

•  The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences plans to change eligibility requirements for nonfiction films: Starting in 2013 only documentaries reviewed by the New York Times or Los Angeles Times will be considered for Oscars. Thom Powers, who programs documentaries at the Toronto International Film Festival, says it’s “a strange thing indeed” for the Academy to cede powers to outsiders–namely newspapers–in considering eligible films.

Ryan Gosling gets museums.

• Want more links like this? Follow Art News From Elsewhere on the Walker homepage.

 

Send in the Cats: An Open Call

As you may have gathered, I’m a dog guy. But seeing as the internet is especially fond of cats, we’ve been doing a weekly (more or less) nod to feline fanciers in the Walker homepage’s Art News From Elsewhere section. Our art-linked Friday Cat Breaks have shown us Ai Weiwei’s cats; the increasingly abstracted cat [...]

As you may have gathered, I’m a dog guy. But seeing as the internet is especially fond of cats, we’ve been doing a weekly (more or less) nod to feline fanciers in the Walker homepage’s Art News From Elsewhere section. Our art-linked Friday Cat Breaks have shown us Ai Weiwei’s cats; the increasingly abstracted cat art of Louis Wain (pictured), a World War I–era illustrator institutionalized with schizophrenia; and HTML server errors, in cat, to name a few.

But we need more. And we need help. So if you come across contemporary art–related cat links, leave them in comments for consideration for future editions. Thanks!

Centerpoints: Face Replace, Hockney v. Hirst, Polish Banksy

• Andy Warhol, Salvador Dali, Steve Jobs: These are some of the figures Kyle McDonald and Arturo Castro use in their face-substitution experiment, which uses face-tracking technology and color interpolation to create creepy mashup visages. • David Hockney confirms: Language on posters for his Royal Academy of Arts show are a dig at Damien Hirst. [...]

Andy Warhol, Salvador Dali, Steve Jobs: These are some of the figures Kyle McDonald and Arturo Castro use in their face-substitution experiment, which uses face-tracking technology and color interpolation to create creepy mashup visages.

David Hockney confirms: Language on posters for his Royal Academy of Arts show are a dig at Damien Hirst. “All the works here were made by the artist himself, personally,” it reads. He says Hirst’s use of assistants is “insulting to craftsmen.”

• Once controversial, Zbigniew Libera‘s 1996 artwork rendering of a concentration camp in Legos has been acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, which dubbed it “one of the most important works of contemporary Polish art.”

• It’s important “to situate an institution as a civically engaged place that has a stake in the political–or even just empathetic, compassionate–constellation of a city,” says Dan Byers, associate curator of the Carnegie International and former Walker curator.

The Village Voice has laid off celebrated film critic J Hoberman. New York Times critic A.O. Scott notes that the paper “has been mostly irrelevant for years, EXCEPT for J Hoberman and a few others.” Hoberman has been a writer for the paper since 1983.

• Urban swings, trashcan basketball, and subway-stair slides are part of a trend Joop de Boer predicts for 2012: urban interventions that realize playful ideas within urban environments.

• Rest in Peace: Modernist ceramics artist Eva Zeisel, jazz saxophonist Sam Rivers, Color Field painter Helen Frankenthaler.

• PBS’s Art:21 released its trailer for Season 6, which will feature artists Ai Weiwei, Marina Abramovic, Lynda Benglis, Glenn Ligon, Sarah Sze, Catherine Opie, and others.

• An art student has Banksied the Polish National Museum, sneaking one of his portraits onto the wall in imitation of the UK street artist. “I decided that I will not wait 30 or 40 years for my works to appear at a place like this,” he said.

• Want more news like this? Check out Art News From Elsewhere, updated throughout the day on our homepage.