Now, at the push of a button, you can make up the title of your very own art exhibition, with a real colon and everything!
Mine was Postcolonial Dreams: John Waters and Too Many
Dinner Parties. That sounds nice.
Now, at the push of a button, you can make up the title of your very own art exhibition, with a real colon and everything!
Mine was Postcolonial Dreams: John Waters and Too Many
Dinner Parties. That sounds nice.
This weekend, I saw a performance of Tennessee Williams’ “Vieux Carré” by The Wooster Group. The Wooster Group is an ensemble of experimental theater artists. They are based in New York City at The Performing Garage in Soho, and their productions tour nationally and internationally.
The video, from the groups video blog, is a mashup of text from reviews of the play, script and stage directions.
The text below is their description of the play (I’ll try to add one of my own to this post sometime soon).
Like Williams’ first big success The Glass Menagerie, Vieux Carré (1977) is a “memory play,” set in the boarding house in New Orleans where Williams himself stayed as a young man during the Depression. The young writer, as narrator, remembers his artistic and sexual awakening there. Inhabitants of the house swirl up out of the writer’s mind as archetypal Williams characters, longing for release and haunted by thwarted dreams. In The Wooster Group’s version of Vieux Carré, the Group experiments with new modes of expression for Williams’ lyric voice.
I was one of the writers participating in the 23rd Annual Critics’ Residency program, at the Maryland Art Place. Along the way, I saw some great art, met some interesting people, and I’ve grown as a writer. Art criticism is a new “language” for me, but I think I’ve definitely learned some new vocabulary.
There is an art exhibition in Baltimore that spans two museums.
At the Contemporary Museum, the show is Dawoud Bey: Class Pictures, a collection of color photo portraits. Dawoud Bey took “The Class Pictures” of students in public and private high school students in cities across the country. They’re real portraits though, with personality. These are not the cheesy backdrop photos we all lined up to have taken in high school. The portraits depict students from all over the country, and from many walks of life. In sum, these portraits of individuals offer a portrait of their world.
At the Walters Museum, the other part of the show is called Portraits Re/Examined. This show was curated, in part, by high school students. They worked with artist Dawoud Bey to select portraits from the Walters collection to show alongside 10 of Bey’s similarly evocative portraits. The students were asked to address the question of race and class in portraiture. Some striking comparisons have developed between the older historic drawings, paintings, and portrait miniatures from the Walters’ collection and the contemporary photographs of ordinary people.
The student-curators also will create auxiliary components for the exhibition, including a blog, Facebook page, podcast series, and cell phone audio tour.
Both exhibitions run from December 13, 2008 until February 16, 2009.
For months now, all the talk in my neighborhood has been about the Round Robin Tour. Something like a dozen Baltimore bands have been on tour together. What’s special about it is the format of the show. The show starts, and one band plays one song. Immediately after that, another band plays another song, and so on until all the bands have played a song. Then, they do it again, and again. It’s great! For anyone who gets sick of listening to sound checks between each and every band, this is a dream come true. It’s a wonderful idea, and Baltimore is very proud to have these bands draw huge crowds nationwide – no kidding, huge crowds! The show’s almost over, but there’s one performance left, and you can download the compilation from the tour!
Tonight, the Round Robin tour celebrated its homecoming at Sonar, here in Baltimore, by kicking off a two-night series of round robin performances. The first night was called “eyes night” and it featured nearly as much performance art as music. Many of the acts were accompanied by video projections, and the overall vibe was mellower. Tomorrow, feet night, will be more raucous.
Another interesting thing about this tour is that the tour bus they used is powered by vegetable oil.
This whole thing was concocted by the same talented crew who brought an event called Whartscape as an answer to Baltimore’s Artscape. The group’s called Wham City.
Here’s a rundown of the many and diverse performances to be seen and heard in the Round Robin Tour.
The Baker Artists Awards celebrate Baltimore’s artists on the Web with an ongoing exhibition of its diverse artistic practice, and the Mary Sawyer Baker Prize will establish Baltimore’s reputation as a creatively rich and vital place to live with a civic commitment to value its individual artists.
Please take a minute to visit my work on the Baker Artist Awards web site. As a Baltimore artist, I am eligible to win the significant Mary Sawyers Baker Prize or maybe bragging rights as Baltimore’s Choice. Either way, please follow the link and vote for me… and, if you live in Baltimore, you could also Nominate your own work! Now go sign-up and vote to help me get my work out there!
Visit my nomination at http://www.bakerartistawards.org/nomination/view/dylan-kinnett
Today I finished reading The Basis of Criticism in the Arts by Stephen C. Pepper. I promised a friend that I would a quick overview of the four categories of art criticism that are described in the book.
Stephen C. Pepper’s “Theory of Empirical Criticism” goes something like this. Good criticism, even art criticism, is akin to good philosophy. It ought to be rational, and based on evidence. Data, such as empirical observations (i.e. “facts”) can be given as evidence. Feelings and impressions can be given as factual evidence, too. Evidence of feelings and impressions is called “danda” – an often overlooked type of evidence, in the sciences, but a very important one when it comes to art. Evidence of these facts is the only legitimate basis for criticism. (Skepticism is not as good as evidence. Dogma is not as good as evidence. Superstition is not to be confused with danda; it is not evidence. )
Pepper says there are four useful ways to organize evidence. With these things in mind, he proposes four distinct ways to approach art criticism.
This is probably the most common, and perhaps the default type of art criticism. Here’s how it works. It should be self-evident that pleasure is good, pain is bad. Mechanistic criticism is a logical extension of that truth. If the art causes pleasure, then it is good art. If it does not cause pleasure, then it is bad art. (The “mechanistic” question here seems to be, “How does the art cause me to feel?” ) Since people have varying thresholds for pain and pleasure, it makes sense that they would have varying standards regarding the qualities of art. Sophisticated mechanistic criticism will delve into the reasons why a work of art can cause pleasure. The mechanics of pleasure can be at work wherever the senses can find it: sound, rhythm, sight, pattern, texture, etc.. Conversely, a sophisticated mechanistic criticism will criticize art in terms of its ability or failure to cause pleasure. If the art fails to cause pleasure, it can be compared to something that does cause pleasure, and lessons can be learned. Mechanistic criticism is often described with words like “hedonistic” or “epicurean”, although those words are unfortunately associated with gluttony. It isn’t really the goal of mechanistic criticism to advocate for gluttony, so much as mere pleasure.
This is the type of criticism that would probably be most useful for performance art, theater, and the like. Here’s how it works. All things are subject to cause and effect. With art, the object of art is (usually) the effect. The act of creating the art is (usually) the cause. In any case there’s an event involved, whenever there is art (sometimes the art itself is the event). Contextualistic criticism is chiefly concerned with events, but not just the creation events.
All things are also experienced; they are sensed somehow. With art, the object of art is experienced. It is seen, or heard, or touched or even imagined. So, contextualistic criticism is an examination of those events, the creation and the experience of the art. If the work of art involves a good experience, then it is a good work of art. If it does not involve a good experience, then it is a bad work of art. The “good experience” here is not exactly like the pleasurable experience that mechanism emphasizes. The criterion in this case is the intensity, or the depth of the experience. For example, the horrific tale of Odysseus vs. the Cyclops may be frightening, and therefore off-putting from a mechanistic point of view, but wow what a rush! From a contextualistic point of view, that rush might qualify the story as “good”.
The “event” in question might also be a historical event. Contextualism considers these events as well. For this reason, most of the types of criticism I learned about in college fall under this category: psycho-analysis, historicism, Marxism, maybe even feminism – these are all concerned with factors at play upon the art event. They are all part of the context.
Where contextualism stresses the qualities of the experience, or the event, organistic criticism stresses a unity of experience. The difference is subtle, and I’m not sure I fully understand it yet. In science, organistic thinking is any consideration for a part’s relationship to a whole: atoms and molecules, the classification of species, planets and galaxies, etc. In art, the organistic concern is the unity of things. Is the work of art a coherent whole? Do its parts combine into more than their sum? Are there no extraneous parts? Is the plot orderly? How are the parts connected? Aristotle is a perfect example of an organistic critic. About art and science and literature, he wrote about these things.
(I’d like to edit this post to contain examples of the other types of criticism, as well.)
This one has a misleading name. They all have difficult names, but this one sounds like it should be the name of organistic criticism, which considers the form of things, but no. Formistic criticism is more like psychology, or sociology. (I know, there’s a debate over whether those two things are the same. I don’t want to go there.) Stephen C. Pepper, being an American Pragmatist, had to sneak this one in at the end of his book. I smell an agenda here, so I’m going to attempt to rephrase this category.
According to Pepper: the formistic aesthetic value is defined as conformity with the norm implicit in the art object itself. In addition, formism champions common sense as the ultimate authority on whether a work of art is good, or not.
There is an ancient theory of perception, older even than Aristotle, which states that only like perceives like … A man appreciates in that only a normal man, with a well integrated and relatively free emotional life, can perceive normality. … The norm is embodied there (in the work), and a normal man finds satisfaction because his impulses are in harmony with the impulses of the work, both being normal. … Formism in its stress on the perceptions and reactions of the normal man thus acts as a sort of governor over the whole aesthetic field. It holds art to the healthy golden mean, to what is sane and sound.
Nowadays, I’m not really sure how much we need to appeal to a “healthy golden mean” with our aesthetics. I wonder what that would do to the art market, if suddenly the demand were normalized in spite of all the variety in the product. I’m going to try to rephrase formistic criticism, as a different sort of approach to “the norm”.
If there has never been anything like it before, if it defies classification, a formistic critic will be dismayed. If there has, then the formistic critic will quickly set to work comparing the similarities, looking for the trends, the norms, the –isms and even the post-s. We have formistic criticism to thank for all the –isms in the art lexicon, I think. This is probably the second most common type of criticism, after mechanistic criticism.
How is this talk of –isms different from a contextualist discussion of events, moments, and contexts? I think the difference is that the contextualist would put the emphasis on the experience of the art, but a formistic approach is most concerned with the norms that it embodies.
After that long discussion of –istic –isms, and right after I wash my mouth out, I’d like to question the author of this book on one more point. He says that these four categories are best left distinct from each other. He says, in the introduction, that they shouldn’t be used together. He also cautions against the influence of dogma over criticism, so I’m sure he won’t mind if I try an integrated approach. Why can’t I use them all? Why can’t I use elements from each, as needed? Wouldn’t that be a great way to avoid dogma anyway? Breaking all the criticism into categories is an interesting exercise, for explaining how the criticism works, but is it really useful as a way to conduct criticism? I guess I’ll find out.
There’s this new, controversial anthology of nearly 4,000 poems, entitled Issue 1. It is large enough to defy the limits of traditional bookbinding, with its 3,785 pages. It defies another assumption about books, too. This anthology was compiled by editors Stephen McLaughlin, Gregory Laynor & Vladimir and Aleksandrovich Zykov, but its contents weren’t exactly “written”. An article in Poetry Magazine’s blog describes exactly how the text was compiled. Suffice it to say that the book was generated, not written.
Issue 1 features the names of several thousand people, living and dead, poets and not. With each name is a poem, or at least what looks like a poem. These texts were not written by the people whose names accompany the texts. Instead, some of the texts appear to have been algorithmically generated by a computer program named Erica T. Carter.
It’s worth noting that the purpose of this computer program, aside from the linguistic parsing of patterns in English poetry, is to “disrupt the Academy’s mission of exclusion, its selfishness and greed, its supercilious arrogance. It does so by composing texts that democratize both the processes of reading and writing. It’s obvious that many of Erica’s poems are as good as most of what emerges as academic verse. But more important, absent an author, any reader’s reading is a valid reading.”
Many of the people whose names appear in the Issue 1 publication are angry, because their names appear in the anthology, without permission, and alongside texts that they did not write. A good overview of the controversy was titled “How to Make a Poet Cry on the Interweb Using Search Technologies”
The people at forgodot.com announced early last week that they would release an anthology called “Issue 1″ with new poetry from […] around 4000 names, most of which belong to contemporary poets who might be considered “avant-garde” and dead ones. […] if you were […] one of the other living poets they claimed they would publish, you would […] go to their site and realize that you had neither submitted any poetry to them nor had given permission to use anything previously published. This would leave you with three options. You could get irate or elated that someone actually bothered to list your name with contemporaries and icons, or you could keep a wary eye on their site to see what would happen next. One way of doing that would be doing what I did: leave a comment and ask to be notified when others did the same. Your inbox would then flood with hundreds of comments.
I blogged about it, other poets blogged about it, it became an instant internet meme. Everyone in the poetry world knew about it.
One of the most popular blogs about poetry is maintained by Ron Silliman, whose name was also used in Issue 1. He is one that might fall into the “irate” category, and he does have a point. After briefly reviewing what’s interesting about Issue 1, he concluded, Issue 1 is what I would call an act of anarcho-flarf vandalism
. (You may be wondering: what is Flarf, anyway?) Silliman and others have mentioned the possibility of legal action.
The PDF file that contains Issue 1 disappeared from the internet shortly after its publication – perhaps in response to the controversy – but it resurfaced. Along with it came a “polite clarification” from the editors. This kind of clarification is important to consider, before deciding whether to condemn or censor a work of art.
Indulge me in an obscure analogy. Let’s say I sit down and write the most vile, nasty, over-the-line-type-of-toxic-racist missive I can think of. Better yet, rearrange some Google vomit into an original composition and save myself a few minutes. If I were to distribute this speech, it would be considered a hate crime. I could, however, shape this text into letterforms — say, large 120pt letters composed of 10pt type. If I were to spell something like “racism is bollocks” out of such illegal text, the mode of reading would be altered. The formerly despicable statement would be neutralized.
This is an approximation of my original expectations regarding the reception of this magazine. I expected its size, format, and (to my eye) clearly algorithmically generated content to make our intentions clear. I wholeheartedly support the world of small press publishing and small press writing. Following the distribution of Issue 1, I would consider myself to be a member of that community on some small scale.
A lot has been written about Issue 1 and not all of it is negative. In addition to this clarification, and the post on Poetry’s blog, a recent radio interview from Ceptuetics gives an account of the motivations and methods behind the creation of Issue 1. It has been pointed out that the appropriation here is nothing new, in the art world. Marcel Duchamp comes to mind for creating things similar to Issue 1. The difference, I suppose, is that DaVinci was long dead, and couldn’t be bothered when Duchamp added facial hair to the Mona Lisa. Rauschenberg erased a work of art by de Kooning, and de Kooning approved, reluctantly. So you see, something like Issue 1 is not without precedent.
For my part, I’m intrigued to see that my name made it on a list that is largely comprised of living, “post-avant” poets. Some of the other poets who were included have chosen to go ahead and “claim” the poetry that appears with their name. In closing, here’s “my” poem.
A habiliment of fore-ends
A habiliment of invasions
A habiliment of surgeons
A habiliment of banquets
A leverrier
A leverrier
A leverrier
A leverrier
Wrapping oxygen
Dissolving past
Dissolving existence
Dissolving plucking
Implored
Implored
— Dylan Kinnett
Ever since I met with Physicalism, I’ve been curious about what its like to be an art critic. Physicalism is somewhat antagonistic towards art criticism, for its tendency towards “bullshit”, but it can’t all be bullshit, can it? What if it is? Can it be fixed?
I decided to try being an art critic first hand. Of course, I’ve got no formal training in the field. I don’t have an art degree of any sort. Although my Dad’s an art professor, and I grew up surrounded by art, artists, and talk about art, that hardly qualifies me as a competent critic. I have studied philosophy though. There’s a lot of crossover, I’m discovering, between the field of philosophy and that of art theory. I have a writing degree, so I should be able to write about anything, even art, right?
I put together a sample of my writing and submitted it so that I could be considered for the 23rd Annual Critics’ Residency Program at the Maryland Art Place. I figured it was a long shot, but what the hell. It seems like an interesting program. Here’s how they describe it.
Taking place throughout the course of a year, the program will include studio visits and writers’ workshops led by critic Vincent Katz and will culminate with an exhibition, a catalogue containing critical essays and images of selected artwork, and a public forum.
I wasn’t quite sure what to submit for a writing sample. It’s not like I’m an established art critic or anything. I haven’t even freelanced an art review for the newspaper (although, that’s an ulterior motive of mine). I thought about, maybe, including the editorial from the first issue if Infinity’s Kitchen. Then, I thought against it. Still, it’s a good read, if you haven’t read it already. I finally settled on it. I gave them an excerpt from the undergraduate thesis I wrote. The second chapter of the thesis, titled Aesthetics in a Hypertext Age had a good bit of content that passes for art criticism in it.
Then, I dug through a bunch of notes I took during college philosophy classes. I was looking for something else I could cannibalize for the writing sample. I ended up stumbling on an interesting question: “How do we make meaning of things?” I applied the question to a new essay, which ended up being too long to include in the writing sample. That essay is called Meaning and Experience. (At least, that’s the first part. There’s more to say.)
I’m happy to say that I’ve been accepted to that writing program. It starts next Saturday. I’m very excited. Until then, I’m burying my nose in a book titled The Basis of Criticism in the Arts.
A man encounters a work of art. It is a mobile, with steel arms and flat sails that catch the currents in the air, warm and cold. Across and back it turns, arcing slowly through space, like a clockwork of metal clouds. The man says, “That’s not art, that pile of metal parts there. That’s not art. Why, I could have made that!”
Right! You could have made that! A human being made that. That’s the point. Then, it’s up to the other humans to come by and see the thing, wonder about it, and maybe make some sense out of it.
How is that sense made? Continue Reading
This will be a zine with literature and art, in particular, but we’re open to anything, in general. We’ll consider artwork of any media, style, or subject. The zine will have an online component, as well as a paper issue, so feel free to submit video, audio, etc.
We reject the notion that great art comes only out of misery and that all good artists are filled with angst and frustration. We say: delight — rather than despair — in creation. Artists are still constrained by certain dogmas, or unquestioned “truths” about what art is or should be. We encourage you to question rules about art and literature. We prefer to explore sensory imagery. Create an innovative process, combine media; and remember: there are no categories!
As a contributor, your work remains your sole property, and you grant our zine one-time rights to publication. Compensation for your inclusion in this, the inaugural issue, will be in the form of contributors’ copies, your name in lights, everlasting glory, etc.
To contribute, or for more info:
zine@nocategories.net
Sarah Newman Photography is an artist website, allowing an audience to discover new and innovative fine art photography. Sarah Newman and Dylan Kinnett launched the website publicly in the spring of 2006.
Sarah Newman and Dylan Kinnett designed this photography website together: the color scheme, logo/branding, and interface design, as well as HTML/CSS development. The photography is all Sarah, and selected from various collections of photographs developed during her life’s work.
Sarah Newman’s photographic work spans various subjects and media. Her roots are in traditional 35-millimeter black and white photography, but her exploration of the medium includes medium and large format, color, digital, and non-silver processes including platinum, gum-dichromate, and Van Dyke. Sarah Newman also creates photo-installations, in which she combines three-dimensional spaces with traditionally two-dimensional photographic images. Sarah’s interest in wide-ranging visual ideas and subject matter explains the extensive variety in her portfolio.
Of particular interest are Sarah’s “Frosting Paintingsâ€. The Frosting Paintings are a series of photographs of paintings made with cake frosting. This series, explores the line that distinguishes painting from photography by creating a new process that falls into neither one medium nor the other. Sarah paints clear plastic acetate, using six different colors of translucent frosting-gel. Then, she back-lights the paintings by placing the acetate on a light-table, and photographs the paintings with the light passing through them. The colors you see are true to the appearance of the back-lit paintings. The images—which are neither purely photographic nor purely painterly, but instead a (perhaps corrupt) hybrid of the two—create new and ambiguous spaces that invite individual interpretation.
The salient feature of the SarahNewmanPhotography.com website is its simplicity — the main idea is the photography, and the photography speaks for itself. The result is an immediate, accessible, and usable introduction to Sarah’s stunning photographs.
This just in from the notorious Lord North…
Well met, my friends. My latest solo painting show is in the hallways of my workplace, Disney Feature Animation! So if you happen by Burbank, California, gimme a ring and I’ll get you in there to see them! Since that may be inconvenient for you, I’ve thrown them up online at www.lord-north.com
Follow the links to “Strange Loops.”
Comments are appreciated.
Love to you and yours
Lord North is so notorious, to me, because I know him from my adolescence in West Virginia, when he and other like minded art students founded an organization called the Epicenter. It was an old barn turned artist space, and for a few years, it was a lot of fun.
Lord North was also the guest editor of my zine, once.
This is the cover of the issue he made, entitled “The Dam Age”. I’ve also unearthed the zine itself, which I’ll try to put online soon.
Check out his paintings. They’re delicious.
On Saturday, Sunday, and Monday (3/11 – 3/13) the Armory Show: the International Fair of New Art, was visited by the Physicalists – a group of artists who are challenging what has become the “norm†in contemporary art – art that is “deep,†angst ridden and visually uninteresting.
The Physicalists passed out over 300 balloons printed with the tenets of Physicalism (“refuse to bullshitâ€, “delight in creationâ€, “question art dogmaâ€, “invent visual ideasâ€, and “emphasize beauty.â€) Along with the balloons, they passed out over 400 copies of the Physicalist manifesto – see attached.
People were delighted. They exited the crowded Armory show and were greeted by sunny skies and smiling Physicalists in white jumpsuits.
The Armory show was the Physicalist’s second installation (the first was at Miami Art Basel and involved eggs). The Physicalists have installations already planned for Los Angeles and Berlin later this year.
For more information contact physicalists@physicalism.org


My friend Trisha has posted a new set of photographs. After the invaluable moral assistance she offered to me in the middle of the other night, I thought I’d try to get some Karma back by publicizing her lovely photographs. This set depicts Alice In Wonderland.
I recieved an e-mail today. It sparked my curiosity. Read it for yourself:
Greeetings friends, family, and fellow Physicalists,
For those of you who do not know, Physicalism is the name of we have given the group of ideas we have in response to the current state of contemporary art. In short, Physicalism is pro-beauty and anti-bullshit. We embrace visual ideas and invention and are fed up with the dense, inaccessible, angst-filled, “deep,” and ugly art the art education, art institutions and the art market promote. We do not think that one should need a degree in art, art history, or philosophy in order to be able to “get” or appreciate a work of art. Whether the meaning in a work of art is contained in visual or non-visual ideas, we think that the meaning should be accessible through the physical piece of art itself. We are fed up with looking at ugly- but supposedly “very deep and insightful” – crap. Out with angst, we say! Back to beauty! Continue Reading