Off Center

Outside Ideas from Inside the Walker Art Center

Part of: blogs.walkerart.org

 
by Matt Peiken at 2:20 pm 2008-03-25
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Wolfgang Puck is among five finalists for the James Beard Foundation’s 2008 Outstanding Restaurateur Award. The Beard Awards, according to the foundation, are “the country's most coveted honor for chefs; food and beverage professionals; broadcast media, journalists, and authors working on food; and restaurant architects and designers.”

The nomination isn’t really news — Puck is an annual nominee of the Beard Awards, which recognized Puck in 1991 as Outstanding Chef of the year and bestowed Puck its humanitarian award in 1994. Puck’s 20.21 opened at the Walker in May 2005.

Here’s a list of all the 2008 Beard Award nominees. Winners will be announced June 6.



 
by Nate at 11:15 am 2008-02-27
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artshare2.pngThe Walker has joined the growing number of institutions participating in ArtShare, the Brooklyn Museum’s art sharing application on Facebook. The team at Brooklyn launched ArtShare in November 2007, and the response was immediately positive. By adding this app Facebook users are able to rotate works of art on their profile, showing their favorites or just items that pique their interest. The app even works with Facebook Pages, and has been added to the Walker’s page here. (Like the Walker? Become a fan of our page!)

If you’re a Facebook user, give ArtShare a try and let us know what you think!

A big thanks to Shelley and Michael for making the application so open and also for working with other institutions to bring everyone online - they were responding to inquiries from us on day one and ready to help integrate our collection.


 
by Matt Peiken at 1:36 pm 2008-02-19
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Here are a couple features/reviews from over the weekend to prime your mind and grease your wheels for artists on the Walker horizon:

prezens.jpgNew York Times review of the new CD from Drew Gress, who brings his 7 Black Butterflies combo March 28, co-headlining with the Prezens Quartet.

NPR’s Fresh Air featured Czech filmmaker Milos Forman, the focus of our Regis Dialogue and Retrospective in April. Forman is here April 12 for a public discussion about his career with LA WEEKLY film critic Scott Foundas.


 
by Matt Peiken at 11:47 am 2008-02-04
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trisha-brown_drawing.jpgThe New York Times profiled Trisha Brown yesterday, focusing on her swan song on the dance floor. An exploration of Brown’s drawings anchors the Walker’s Year of Trisha, in collaboration with the University of Minnesota. Newsday also profiled her, spending time on Brown’s “Foray Forêt,” which premiered with the boost of a Walker commission in 1990. Make sure to pick up a copy of the March/April issue of WALKER magazine, which reaches the public by the third week of February. Brown discusses her drawing at length and the connections to her choreography.

Also in Sunday’s Times is an illuminating piece on Jasper Johns. The writer quotes Richard Prince, whose Spiritual America opens here March 22, as saying Johns “made me look at abstraction in a new way.”


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 12:21 pm 2008-01-30
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Just got an email from Tyler Green at Modern Art Notes:

Nancy Holt, Robert Smithson’s widow, recently sent an email out detailing specific threats to Smithson’s masterpiece, Spiral Jetty. Please take action before 7 pm ET today.

Yesterday I received an urgent email from Lynn DeFreitas, Director of Friends of the Great Salt Lake, telling me of plans for drilling oil in the Salt Lake near Spiral Jetty. See Attachments. The deadline for protest is [today] Wednesday, at 5PM. Of course, DIA has been informed and are meeting about it today.

I have been told by Lynn that the oil wells will not be above the water, but that means some kind of industrial complex of pipes and pumps beneath the water and on the shore. The operation would require roads for oil tank trucks, cranes, pumps etc. which produce noise and will severely alter the wild, natural place.

If you want to send a letter of protest to save the beautiful, natural Utah environment around the Spiral Jetty from oil drilling, the emails or calls of protest go to Jonathan Jemming 801-537-9023 jjemming@utah.gov. Please refer to Application # 8853. Every letter makes a big difference, they do take a lot of notice and know that publicity may follow. Since the Spiral Jetty has global significance, emails from foreign countries would be of special value.

They try to slip these drilling contracts under the radar, that¹s why we found out so late, not through notification, but from a watchdog lawyer at the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, the group that alerted me to the land leasing for oil and gas near Sun Tunnels last May.

Thank you for your consideration of this serious environmental matter.


 
by Matt Peiken at 4:05 pm 2008-01-09
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Kara Walker installing her exhibition at the Walker Art Center in 2007.

The Walker’s exhibition Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love has won one of the museum industry's most prestigious honors — “best monographic museum show,” by the International Association of Art Critics/USA Awards.

The awards, the art world’s equivalent to those given by the New York Film Critics Circle and the Drama Desk, recognize artists, curators, critics, scholars, cultural institutions, museums, and galleries nationally for their contributions to the field. A ceremony for the honors is March 17 at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City.

Curated by Walker Deputy Director and Chief Curator Philippe Vergne and Assistant Curator Yasmil Raymond, the exhibition has received wide critical attention since premiering at the Walker in spring 2007, including cover stories in Art in America and Artforum, and features in New Yorker, The New York Times, Art+Auction, and W. In addition, the American Institute of Graphic Arts cited the catalogue cover in its annual 50 Books/50 Covers. Kara Walker was named last spring to "The Time 100" among "people who shape our world."

Here is the complete list of award winners for 2006/2007:

BEST MONOGRAPHIC MUSEUM SHOW

First place: Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love. Organized for the Walker Art Center. Curator: Philippe Vergne and Yasmil Raymond

Second Place (tie): Rudolf Stingel. Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Curator: Francesco Bonami; A Rose Has No Teeth: Bruce Nauman in the 1960s. Organized by the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Curator: Constance Lewallen

BEST THEMATIC MUSEUM SHOW NATIONALLY

First place: The Geometry of Hope: Latin American Abstract Art from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection. Organized by the Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas at Austin. Curator: Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro.

Second Place: WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution. Organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Curator: Connie Butler

BEST MONOGRAPHIC MUSEUM SHOW (NEW YORK CITY)

First Place: Gordon Matta-Clark: You are the Measure. Organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art. Curator: Elizabeth Sussman

Second Place: Richard Serra Sculpture: Forty Years. Organized by the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Curators: Kynaston McShine and Lynne Cooke

BEST THEMATIC MUSEUM SHOW (NEW YORK CITY)

First Place: Glitter and Doom: German Portraits from the 1920s. Organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Curator: Sabine Rewald, Jacques and Natasha Gelman

Second Place: Ecotopia: The Second ICP Triennial of Photography and Video. Organized by the International Center of Photography. Curators: Brian Wallis, Christopher Phillips, Edward Earle, Carol Squiers, Joanna Lehan

BEST SHOW IN A COMMERCIAL GALLERY (NEW YORK CITY)

Daughters of New York DADA. Organized by the Francis F. Naumann Fine Art

BEST SHOW IN A COMMERCIAL GALLERY

John Baldessari. Organized by Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles

BEST SHOW BY AN ALTERNATIVE SPACE or SMALLER ORGANIZATION

First Place: Moving Pictures. Organized by Williams College Museum of Art. Curator: Nancy Mowll Mathews

Second Place: High Times, Hard Times: New York Painting 1967-1975. Organized by Independent Curators International. Guest curator Katy Siegel with David Reed advisor

BEST SHOW IN A PUBLIC SPACE

Anish Kapoor: Sky Mirror. Rockefeller Center, New York. Organized by the Public Art Fund

BEST ARCHITECTURE or DESIGN SHOW

First Place: Poiret: King of Fashion. Organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Curators: Harold Koda and Andrew Bolton

Second Place: Skin + Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Curator: Brooke Hodge

BEST HISTORICAL SHOW

First Place: Manet and the Execution of Maximilian. Organized by the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Curator: John Elderfield

Second Place: Spanish Painting from El Greco to Picasso: Time, Truth, and History. Organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. Curators: by Carmen Giménez and Francisco Calvo Serraller

BEST EXHIBITION OF TIME-BASED ART (VIDEO, FILM, or PERFORMANCE)

Joan Jonas: The Shape, The Scent, The Feel Of Things. Organized by Yvon Lambert Gallery, New York, NY


 
by Matt Peiken at 11:22 am 2007-12-12
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gauguin-sculpture.jpgTyler Green breaks news this morning on his Modern Art News blog that the Art Institute of Chicago has concluded that a Paul Gauguin sculpture in the museum’s collection, The Faun (c1888), isn’t from Gauguin at all, but from the so-called Greenhalgh Forgery Gang (aka The Bolton Forgers) — apparently fine art’s equivalent to the Legion of Doom.

What I find most striking is that anyone would go through the trouble of forging stone sculpture. Stone isn’t a very forgiving medium, and you’d think someone with the skill to create a detailed knockoff of a centaur in repose would have the goods to come up with something original (of course, faux Gauguin can probably fetch much more at the Sotheby’s or, failing that, the Uptown Art Fair). Then again, the mere act of copying a masterwork isn’t different, in concept, than a bar band covering Foreigner (masterwork? somebody must think so) — that is, until it’s marketed as an original (the Greenhalghs are serving time).

This reminds me of the deliciously subversive work of Improv Everywhere, which not long ago jumped on a case of mistaken identity to impersonate Ben Folds Five. The real Ben Folds thought the act was hilarious and invited the fake Ben Folds to take the stage in a choreographed opening of a real Ben Folds Five concert.

… which brings me to a closing thought: What would Gauguin, who would turn 160 next year, do?


 
by Matt Peiken at 11:44 pm 2007-10-29
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Kathy Halbreich (in white) has the McGuire Theater all to herself. Photo by Cameron Wittig.

 

Kathy Halbreich limped into the final hours of her final day — her 6,115th — as the Walker’s director.

“I fell into a drain. I think it’s appropriate,” she told a Walker staffer, referring to the giant plastic boot encasing her right foot and ankle, as she hobbled into the museum’s Skyline Room. “I thought, you know, ‘Take the next step — break a leg.’”

That next step — a new associate director position created for her at New York’s Museum of Modern Art — was barely alluded to during Monday’s triple-layered farewell tribute. The evening started with a champagne-toasted goodbye from Walker staff, merged into a formal tribute to Halbreich in front of nearly 400 staff, donors, board members and assorted dignitaries and closed with a Walker-wide “block party” — all of it hailing Halbreich’s 16-plus years leading the Walker and the deep impact she made on museum programming, funding, recruiting and its thinking.

Long, thin tables at the staff toast were topped only with boxes of tissue, and many staffers reached for them during speeches as touching as they were brief.

“I will miss your shuffle to my the office with one more idea you need to share immediately,” said Philippe Vergne, the Walker’s associate director and chief curator.

Howard Oransky, the director of planning and a longtime Walker staffer, praised Halbreich for “having changed the curatorial landscape of contemporary art.” He recalled that after seeing evidence that the Walker exhibited art primarily from American and Western European artists, Halbreich immediately conceived and launched the museum’s global initiative. This broadened programming across disciplines, heightening artistic discoveries in Africa, China, South Korea, the Middle East and elsewhere and stamping the museum with perhaps Halbreich’s most profound legacy in terms of programming.

“You are not only the finest example of what a museum director can be, but you have given us a home, a home built with ideas,” Oransky said.

Philip Bither, chief performing arts curator, thanked Halbreich for her “constant, tireless, exhausting support and trust and faith” and the “grace and humanity in how you ran the place.”

Sarah Schultz, director of education and community programming, put it plainly: “Good girls don’t make a difference. So on behalf of all the remaining bad girls, we salute you.”

Jazz pianist Jason Moran proved a fitting feature of the tribute inside the Walker’s McGuire Theater. He first performed at the museum in 2001 and then held residencies in 2004 and 2005, when he turned to the Walker’s visual arts collection for direct inspiration for new work. On Monday, he tweaked one of his own tunes into the retitled “She Puts on Her Coat and Leaves,” sampling and layering sound clips from an early Halbreich interview — Her pasted words: “My Husband. My Son. My Friendship. My Obsession” — atop a gorgeous, airy ballad.

Board members rattled off Halbreich’s accomplishments: Among them, starting Free First Saturday and the Walker’s teen arts council, a $100 million capital campaign leading to the museum’s new building and balanced budgets during every year of her leadership.

Halbreich said she leaves the museum with a succinct mission: Keeping the Walker “a safe place for unsafe ideas.”

“These were, for me, the happiest years of my life,” she said from the theater’s podium. “It has been my obsession, and I thank you all for supporting it. This is a very special place, and what we have isn’t reproducible.”


 
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