Author: Maggie Perez
Email: magdalene.perez@gmail.com
It may be a bit belated, but I wanted to share some of my favorite works from La Force de L’Art, a state-sponsored exhibition championed by Jacques Chirac which ran at the Grand Palais in Paris for a little more than a month before closing Jun. 25. I saw the mega exhibition back in June, when it was still being criticized among the local art community for being too “official”. Made up of more than 300 works of art by 200 artists (and rather hastily thrown together in less than a year), the mega exhibition carried the stated aim of bringing back France’s relevance as a center of contemporary art. By dividing the exhibition into 15 sections or “points de vue” (one curated by our very own Philippe Vergne), the exhibition’s organizers attempted to put some method to the madness, though inevitably the pieces within sections could ultimately sustain more of a conversation than the exhibition as a whole. To see all my photos of the exhibition click here.

Unfortunately during my brief stay in Paris I didn’t manage to squeeze in a visit to another important art destination that’s been causing a stir lately. Namely, the Musée du Quai Branly, a newly christened museum of “primitive art” situated on the banks of the Seine. Also a pet project of Chirac, the museum (showing more than 300,000 works from Asia, Africa, Oceania and the Americas) has been accused of utterly failing to distinguish between the 21st-century multiculturalism it claims to aim for and good old fashioned high-minded colonialism. Setting the tone is the museum’s design, planned by Jean Nouvel, which hides the building within a deep forest of exotic flora. To read more see the NYT: Heart of Darkness in the City of Light.
Just got back from a well-deserved vacation after a week of pounding the pavement at this year’s Art Basel fair - Europe's annual one-stop shopping mecca for high-rollin’ international art collectors. It was an exciting but somewhat overwhelming experience, to say the least, with row upon endless row of artwork from hundreds of galleries in the Art Basel exhibition hall, not to mention at three satellite fairs: Volta and Liste both representing younger galleries and artists, and the new Balelatina fair for Spanish and Latin American art. While there of course were plenty of names (and faces) that could be expected, some choice works still managed to stand out in a crowd: a few stunning cloth and bronze sculptures by Louise Bourgeois at Cheim & Read gallery, a toy-like miniature graffiti-man by Barry McGee at Deitch Projects, a near celestial wall piece by Korean artist Kwang-Young Chun made with carefully folded mulberry paper at Kukje Gallery, and an incredible series of ceramics by Bonnie Seeman - teapots and other vessels made to appear like delicate muscle, bone and plant tissue - at Mexico City’s Galeria OMR.
There was a bit of World Cup fever surrounding the fair as well. On the first afternoon, as the rush of multi-million-dollar morning sales slowed, many fairgoers took a time out to watch an important France-Switzerland game. (Including the fun-loving gallery owner Zach Feuer, who, wearing the Swiss colors with pride, gathered the better part of New York’s Chelsea galleries at the Kunsthalle later that night to celebrate his 28th birthday) There was also much buzz preceding the screening of Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, Douglas Gordon’s new film about the French soccer superstar, at Basel’s St. Jakob stadium. Just that morning the Art Newspaper reported that the feature length film had been purchased by MoMA for an undisclosed sum. A mixed crowd of the haute art elite and local die-hard soccer fans showed up for the sundown screening, but watching the film proved less exciting than reading the headlines, with a tedious 90-minutes of slow, wordless shots soon driving the audience out of the stands in droves.
As the whirlwind week of chasing sales prices and juicy gossip came to a close, I slipped into the recesses of the grand Bulgari auditorium at the Swisshotel for a more serious early morning discussion on the future of Mideast museums. Despite spilling over into a three-hour marathon with much of the time eaten up by lengthy presentations, there was plenty of interesting subject matter brought up by the ten-person panel, which included Jack Persekian, founder of the nomadic CAMP contemporary art museum and Al Ma'mal Foundation in Palestine; Dalia Levin, director of the Herzliya Museum in Israel; and William Wells, founder of the Townhouse Gallery in Cairo, where everyone from internationally recognized artists to neighborhood volunteers are welcome to develop work together. After touching on how censorship and political boundaries shape and influence Middle Eastern art, a fired-up audience member hit straight to the heart of another idea only partially articulated by some of the most innovative panel members: that the current model of museums, based as they are on old colonialist ideals and the antiquated concept of amassing endless archives, is simply obsolete. After sitting glued to my seat for more than three hours, I couldn't help but find myself thinking it was a shame that there wasn't more time to develop these thoughts.
Photos soon to come!
Just when you thought that reality tv surely couldn’t produce another American Idol style spin-off, Jeffrey Deitch of Deitch Projects dreamed up Artstar, television’s first and only “Who wants to be a famous artist?” playoffs. It must be said that if anyone were to pull such a stunt Jeffrey Deitch is the most appropriate — perhaps even forgivable? — offender. He certainly knows how to stay firmly tongue-in-cheek while selling to the masses (At the 2005 Armory Show he lured buyers by transforming his gallery’s booth space into a Deitch-branded bakery selling limited-edition sweets).

Artstar, as you can probably surmise, follows a group of aspiring (mostly young) artists as they compete to become THE NEXT BIG THING. While no one gets voted off the island in this show, a panel chaired by, among others, Paper magazine's Carlo McCormick and art critic David Rimanelli, plays the time worn role of mixing barbed criticism with benevolent support in the way only a team of reality tv mentors can.
If you don’t find whole idea of watching art celebutants compete for the limelight distasteful (or if its just distasteful enough for your taste) you’ll have to get some mega-powered cable access to get the show, which is only available on the obscure Gallery HD channel.
While the show may only be in its first episodes on air, it seems that it may not be too difficult for attentive viewers to divine the winner. For a hint, just check which of the eight contestants had a solo exhibition at Deitch Projects late last year.
For those who like to gawk at big-name celebs, I recently went into the glitter-strewn trenches at the Whitney Art Party, an annual silent auction benefit in New York. Among the sightings were Chloe Sevigny (She gets around — I saw her on my block the other week during the Tribeca Film festival), Eva Mendez (whom I didn’t recognize but is incredibly beautiful) and Moby, who later jumped up on stage during a live “karaoke” performance.

As glamorous as it may sound, it’s no fun circling around hawk-like trying to snap pretty people’s pictures (especially when you’re not even sure who they are). Though the party did take a turn for the better when a bombshell singer took the stage to do a dead-on rendition of Janis Joplin's "Take a Another Piece of My Heart". For the full blow-by-blow click here.

In other Whitney-related news, I saw a great performance by Matmos and So Percussion at a Whitney Live event (sort of like Free First Thursdays but with a longer wait time to get in). Matmos is an experimental electronic music duo made up by Drew Daniel and Martin Schmidt. Schmidt is part of the conceptual art department of the San Francisco Art Institute and together the two have worked with Bjork on a number of projects. Teamed up with So Percussion, an experimental (you guessed it!) percussion group, they rocked the house to a packed crowd, and served as the perfect intro to an evening of wandering through the galleries and catching a last few moments with this year’s (also somewhat wayward) Biennial.
Update: For those who just can’t get enough, I finally uploaded the pictures from BOTH these events (Art Party and Matmos) to my flickr site. Enjoy!
Hi, this is Maggie again (New York correspondent and WACTAC alum). After posting about flickr I remembered I forgot to add a link to one of my favorite photographers from the Minneapolis area: massdistraction. I love how she always refers to her six-year-old son as her “little man” and takes amazing pictures of things like plastic toys that have been left abandoned on the stairs.

Susan Weil, Ziggurat, 1986
In other news, I recently did an interview with Susan Weil. At first, when I was asked to do the interview I had never heard of her work, but it turns out she was a friend and contemporary of Pollock and de Kooning and had a major influence on the work of Robert Rauschenberg, who she married back in the 50’s. When I discovered all this and saw her amazing contributions to abstract and figurative painting, I thought it was outrageous that her work has garnered so little attention after all these years.
The last straw was when her name didn’t appear on a Wikipedia search, so for the first time I was compelled to write my own Wikipedia article. You can also check out the interview above to hear Weil’s own thoughts on how women artists have been overlooked over the years. Best of all, she’s still doing incredible work today.
Don’t know if I need an intro, but anyway I’m a proud WACTAC alum who’s now crusin’ around New York (on her bike). I’m a big fan of the flickr.com online photo community, and just this morning my friend — who is also addicted to the site — sent me a link to a great newyorquino’s page who was doing a photo shoot in the Walker’s sculpture garden. The end result:

Coach Said Not To Walker Garden
It seems he was taking pictures of a band called “Coach Said Not To.” I checked out his other photos and they were wonderful as well. I highly recommend seeing more of linus (especially his doors series) and poking around flickr in general. It’s a highly addictive activity.