September 20, 2010
September 17, 2010
Dallas VideoFest 2010 is Almost Here!
Opening night is this Thursday, September 23, and it runs through the weekend. The whole thing is at the Angelika Mockingbird. There will be 3 different channels of programming on 3 screens at all times.
So, time to start deciding what to see.
If you prefer to see more titles at a glance and don't mind clicking for each program blurb, see the online schedule for the Fest here. The Fest website also has trailers and other good stuff.
If you prefer not to have to click for the program blurbs, you can download a PDF of the complete schedule in chron order here. This is the "classic" version I've been putting together for some years, with the programs in chronological order WITH the blurbs right there. The PDF is also (yellow-) highlighted to indicate which programs sounded most interesting to me based on my own idiosyncratic preferences, what I've seen before, etc.
I haven't kept up with all the info coming out about particular programs (see the Fest's Facebook page), so please feel free to add info in comments to this post.
Hope to see you at the Fest!
UPDATE to share the benefit, such as it is, of some additional notes for an art-oriented friend:
On the chron schedule, in some cases I just highlighted the first letter – those also sounded interesting but maybe not quite as much, for me. Most of my guesses are based solely on written descriptions – I didn't have advance access to any Festival submissions this year – and I could easily change my mind.FURTHER UPDATE: Just uploaded a slightly revised chron schedule with one correction and reflecting additional info from Bart about what he'd thought I'd like – here. His estimates re- my likes aren't 100%, but helpful.
Beyond that, I CAN say . . . I think more than one doc on Thursday will be very good – I'd pick one of those based on your interests.
On Friday, DON'T MISS the Alt Animation compilation. Re- Lethe, I've seen just one other Lewis Klahr piece – with my co-curator, Danette Dufilho, for the I Heart Video Art series – and it blew both our minds. And I've seen David Reilly's Please Say Something, and it's brilliant.
On Saturday, if you haven't already seen a lot of Ant Farm, the doc on them would be good. I think Bela will be educational for me; and I don't want to miss the Macbeth piece, although Shakespeare inspires not-so-great as well as great stuff, so you never know. I'm looking forward to the doc on Jeff Koons and The Girl with Black Balloons, and Mars.
Sunday, I'm curious about Webisodes. I think the Vid Garbage compilation shd be considered "do not miss" – in particular, I've seen Prim Limit (which is sort of a sequel to the eteam installation I wrangled for The Program 2008), and I think you'd really like it. I'm v. interested to see Erasing David. Curious about Memories of Overdevelopment. And I never miss The Texas Show, as a way to keep up with the Texas-based community.
All that said, there's usually something I failed to focus on that turns out to be wonderful.
Undead for Dinner
"[P]hotographer Sally Davies decided to buy a ["Happy Meal"] from McDonald's, set it out on a table, and take a picture of it every day until it disintegrated. That was 137 days ago and the . . . fries look as fresh as the day they came out of the fryer, and the burger — minus a little patty shrinkage — is virtually unchanged." More at Grub Street; see also Leo Foley's museum of barely-decayed hamburgers collected during the last 19 years.
Unfortunately, the meals are not so impervious that human digestion can't extract the calories.
Using iPads to Make Virtual Light Sculptures
. . . which are then used to make stop-action animations:
As I understand, the technique shown was developed by Berg. (Thanks, Ben!)
September 13, 2010
Candidate for GOP Nomination for Stark County Treasurer
I don't think I've ever seen anything so simultaneously funnier/scarier.
(Thanks, Danny!)
September 12, 2010
"Sustenance" Update
Lots more visuals of the exhibition here. (For a larger version of the image at left, click on it; the work is by Jesse Morgan Barnett.)
The exhibition includes works by Brian Fridge, Chris Hefner, Darryl Lauster, Devin King, Frances Bagley, Iris Bechtol, Jeff Zilm, Jesse Morgan Barnett, Justin Ginsberg, Kate Helmes, Kimberly Aubuchon, Kristin Mariani, Linnea Glatt & Jim Cinquemani, Lizzy Wetzel, Lou Mallozzi, Ludwig Schwarz, Matt Hanner, Michael Mazurek, Patrick Murphy, Sedrick Huckaby, Shannon Brunskill (with Courtney Brown), Tom Orr, and Temporary Services. Exhibition checklist and more at the Sustenance FB page or blog.
September 11, 2010
"Sustenance" Exhibition
. . . opened at 11am today in the blue building at 337 Singleton Blvd., Dallas, and will stay open 'til 10pm tonite (and the show will be up for a month or so; see the Sustenance FB page or blog for more details).
Congrats to Stephen Lapthisophon, Anne Lawrence, and all the artists on an exciting show. (The pic at right is what you might see as you enter Brian Fridge's installation.)
Notes from Anne about the opening today:
Shannon Brunskill and Courtney Brown will start their performance around 11 a.m.The exhibition includes a small installation of ART WORK newspapers and related materials. These are truly the LAST of what I've got, so come 'n get 'em.
Linnea Glatt and Jim Cinquemani will start the "Social Circle: Watermelon Social" around 6 p.m.
Devin King will be performing in his space on the 2nd floor around 9 p.m.
There is plenty of parking around the building. You can turn into the lot before the building, closest to the bridge or park in the large open lot across the street. Be careful crossing Continental! The cars are fast.
September 10, 2010
The World Came to Worley's
I'm not perfectly objective here, since Cris Worley is my homey; but. She opened her new space on Monitor in Dallas, TX last night, and it looked great, and everyone was there.
Cris had planned just to consult, and she'll be doing plenty of that; but she missed having a space in which to show work. She found a great location in the Design District, sharing a building with Gallery Urbane. The space will be open Saturdays 11-5 and weekdays by appointment; see crisworley.com for more info.
Photos of many of the people and most though not all of the art work at the opening here (apologies to the people I missed shooting and esp. to those I didn't miss – none of the usual fixes have been made).