September 7, 2009

Who Moved My Cheese?

Per Bloomberg, the vaults of an Italian bank contain 17,000 tons of parmesan cheese, held as collateral for loans to cheesemakers. "So precious is the cheese that each 80-pound wheel, worth about 300 euros, is branded with a serial number so it can be traced if it is stolen."

But "[t]hieves tunneled into one warehouse in February and made off with 570 pieces . . . . 'Thank heavens we caught the robbers before they grated it,'" said the vault manager.

Or ate the serial numbers. More at the link.

September 6, 2009

New Work from Eteam

What can you learn about a society from what it throws away? These and other questions are explored by eteam's new video, PRIM LIMIT, which follows what happened after the artists opened Second Life Dumpster (more here and here) – what items were dumped there, who hung out there, how the Dumpster fit in with its virtual surroundings, etc. You can see a low-res version of the video here.

Eteam also has another new piece I like a lot, Truth in Transit; you can see that and more of their work here.

(Both images are from PRIM LIMIT; click on them for larger versions.)

September 5, 2009

Feud Between Hirst & Teen Artist Escalates Over Pencils?

Per the UK Telegraph and The Independent, the pencils, from Hirst's Pharmacy installation, are allegedly worth £500,000 and were kidnapped by the teen, Cartrain, as part of an effort to obtain the return of the teen's artworks, collages that included images of Hirst's For the Love of God.

According to The Independent, "Hirst reported [Cartrain] to the Design and Artists Copyright Society and a string of legal letters were sent to [his] art dealer, Tom Cuthbert, at 100artworks.com, about the teenager's pieces, also called For the Love of God. The online gallery surrendered them to Hirst with a verbal apology." [Emphasis supplied.]

As of this writing, however, 100artworks.com is still offering several of the offending collages for sale; in fact, in its description of the piece at left, the dealer provides a link to an earlier article in The Independent concerning Hirst's supposed objections to the work.

UPDATE: The New York Times reports that Cartrain and his father have been arrested.

Airan Kang's Shakespeare

At Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery, along with other desirable items. As Blake wrote, I want!

September 4, 2009

The 22nd Annual Dallas Video Festival

Save the dates! Thurs. - Sun., November 5 - 8. (If you're not familiar with the Fest, see my previous posts here, here, and here.)

(There will be no The Program in 2009, but as usual, the regular Festival will include some video art.)

September 3, 2009

Antidepressants



(Thanks, Ben!)

FundRager for Flux Factory

If you're in NYC, do this! I would if I were there. (Or, consider sending a check.)

9/11, 9 pm - late
RSVP for location at fluxfactory.org
password: LifeRaft
$15

Come play on a boat with the best arts collective in Long Island City. We're taking over a 140-foot, 3-story, now-legendary boat docked deep in industrial Bushwick with two dance floors, a band stage, decorations in collaboration with Rubulad, and tons of fun until sunrise. This is a FundRager for the construction of Flux Factory’s new space, complete with a gallery, artist-in-residency program, and communal production facilities.

DJ's: 2melo, Atom C., Cathy, Cobra Krames, Comrade, Eamon Harkin, Justin Carter, Geko Jones, Shred, Tinseltown, and Tubby Lamborghini

Bands: ALIENS!, Brandstifter Live from the Ironing Board, Les Heures, Manburger Surgical, Miwa Gemini, Nopresha, Panonian Wave, Radio Wonderland, SK Orchestra, Womb Sharks, White Limo, and Zebu

Performers: Cock Tales, The Committee for the Spacio-Coporeality of Encounter, Computer Spoken Intercourse, Dennis Kyros Magician, Gay KK, Lázaro Valiente, Neverforgettable Memories, Pearl Harbor: Our Weapon is Love, The Port-A-Potty Deluxe No Standing Anytime Service Station (PPDNSASS), and SURPRISE!!!

Uncategorizable: A Boat Invasion by La Collette, Campfire Stories, Color Me Crazy with Last Up Larry, Heather via teleconference, It's Only Temporary, The Kissing Kiosk, light installations by Julius Schmiedel, live screenprinting by Gabe + Jolie, Minor Treat Baked Goods, projections and potentially non-vegetarian popcorn by Annie Reichert, projections by Ted Lee, and tarot by Courtney Weber.

With special surprise guests!

August 31, 2009

SEE "In the Loop"

It's sorta like Dr. Strangelove, except it's a fictionalized yet only-too-plausible version of the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. Brilliant, hilarious, and fast; be alert, or miss half the fun.

Samples:

Malcolm Tucker: Right. Was it you?
Simon Foster: No, it wasn't. No. What?
Malcolm Tucker: You do know what I'm talking about, don't you?
Simon Foster: No. And... And... whatever it was, I almost certainly didn't do it.
Malcolm Tucker: Was it you, the baby from Eraserhead?
Toby Wright: No, no.
Malcolm Tucker: Then it must have been you, the woman from The Crying Game.
Judy: It wasn't me.

or (between a sorta Colin Powell-ish James Gandolfini and a sorta Hillary-ish Mimi Kennedy):

Lt. Gen. Miller: You're beautiful.
Karen Clarke: I'm sure you say that to all the girls.
Lt. Gen. Miller: Yes, I do . . . And some of the soldiers, too.
Karen Clarke: That's why you shouldn't run for office: bimbo eruptions.
Lt. Gen. Miller: Come on, don't believe that shit. I'm not gonna run for office. I'm just trying to do something different.
Karen Clarke: It's one of the reasons I like you. I know your passion about education and housing and . . .
Lt. Gen. Miller: Lingerie.
Karen Clarke: There you go.
Lt. Gen. Miller: Bestiality.
Karen Clarke: I'd forgotten about that. Are you still allergic to the dog?
Lt. Gen. Miller: Yes, yes, I wake up and my eyes are closed and my head is swollen and I look like a giant ball sac.
Karen Clarke: Oh, my God. You know, they do have modern medication for that sort of thing. Beautiful ball sac, though.
Lt. Gen. Miller: Thank you very much.
Gandolfini's facial simulation of his beautiful ball sac alone is worth the price of admission.

Trailer here; more at IMDB.