03.02.08

Posted in Art Talk at 6:08 pm by Gabriel Thy

This blog has been discontinued die to HTML or browser issue, but is re-constituted, and will be functional here.

02.17.08

On the Clutter of Objectivity

Posted in Art Talk at 12:04 pm by Gabriel Thy

Fellow artist and good friend, Stevens Jay Carter, recently posited this question on the nature of observing, “The other day I was viewing the work of an artist.  As I was admiring the work I began to think to myself; is it  possible to accept my thoughts if I removed myself  from my association with this artist? What would I actually think about this work through a stranger’s eyes, unaware of the artist’s history or background!! And furthermore, is it fair to let a work and the work alone form the picture of the artist!

My thoughts were immediate.

“Conversely, can the opinion of a critic or arbiter of a work of art be judged without including such biases as “credentials” or “personality” or “sexual orientation” of that critic, whether he be of some renown for such services or merely an ordinary passersby? Schools of thought betray themselves in this argument.

“Basically, there is always more than one way to do nearly anything under the sun. So, in judging a work of art, there will be some who insist upon knowing the “artist” and others who deny the importance of such criteria.

“After all, do we need to know anything at all about the creator of the polio vaccine or the bicycle to deem worthy these works?

“And recall de Kooning, who is damned near unique in his field in appreciating the skills and artsmanship of the ordinary house painter or artisan, while most of us who posture within the art world would simply laugh at such a charming but gross sentimentality.”

Another friend and accomplished painter, Peter Harper, added these simply put, but core-seeking words, “Pablo Picasso was an asshole!!! But a great painter. He wouldn’t be my friend but I admire his work.”

Warehouse Arts Complex Show: 2/22/08

Posted in Event Calendar at 10:35 am by Gabriel Thy

I am pleased to announce that I will be showing several works at the Warehouse Arts Complex Group Show “PEACE NOW!” 

Artist Reception: February 22, 2008. 6-9 PM.

The show will stay up for the observance of the 5th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the March 19, 2008 “March for Peace” in Washington and other cities around the country. The show will feature painting, sculpture, installation, photography, video, et cetera. Curated by Molly Ruppert

Come out and join the spectacle!

02.14.08

On the Nature of Art Over Time

Posted in Art Talk at 8:22 pm by Gabriel Thy

Beckmann’s Death

In a letter to Stephan Lackner, dated January 29, 1938, after fleeing Germany For Amsterdam after being dupped a painter of “degenerate art”, Max Beckmann nevertheless writes, “politics is a subordinate matter whose form of appearance is forever changing according to the need of the masses. Hence, it is nothing essential – what mattersis that which endures, the unique, the being in the flight of illusion – the withdrawal from the workings of shadows – perhaps we’ll succeed in that.”We should not confuse the specifics of political intrigue with the costumes and postures of the times in which any particular artist works. While Beckmann continued to stress his reluctance to consider the politics of his time anything more than the passing fancy of accidental geography, he did not shy away from depicting in his work the shapes and depths of such external geographies while digging deeper for the internal, or the invisible.

Writes Beckmann, “Politics is an odd game, not without danger, as I have been told, but certainly sometimes amusing.”  He observes that “making war and peace” are natural components to the catastrophic nature of the modern world, and seeks to assail it by artistic investigations.”The greatest danger which threatens mankind,” he said, “is collectivism. Everywhere attempts are being made to lower the happiness and the way of living by mankind to to the level of termites. He is more interested, like Henry Miller once put it, not in society, but in individuals, in the particulars as well as the whole, because he finds in the “I” and the the “you” emanations of the “self: as the great veiled mystery of the world.I would add to Beckmann’s words that the world is self-evident. The world is what stresses us, divides us, threatens us,  confuses us, tricks us, buys us, sells us, gives us over to strangers. The loss of liberty is a quickening of the spirit of the world.

The opening lines of my long 1982 poem – Contrapunctus America – Section 1, Some kind of joke – highlights these points made by Beckmann:

The year is nearly unimportant. Zinc is in pattern
but I can only purchase my thoughts on even numbered
days. Poor, acquainted more clearly
with a poor folk’s rag theory
than with the possibilities awaiting
to be chosen, I swear on a stack of paperbacks
I ain’t no fucking prophet
but a walking man walking,
walking without bail and rolling on past
damp December, born into debt,
a free state, and a slap upon
the cheek…born to choose, born to hesitate,
free to lose in storming screaming success,
my swelling head tossed off in oft repeated duress,
and designated on some long lost Monday
to openly investigate.

So let us presume now that the poet has few means beyond those into which he is born. He writes that he is born into debt, that is perhaps to say original sin with individual and trillions of dollars of national debt in the worldly extreme. Which of these two debts is more persistently pressed upon his life?  It has long been presumed that he is born to choose which path might set him onto the most glorious pursuits of liberty, the pursuits of personal success even to the ends of loss. But the world is everpresent. And thus, he is also born to hesitate as a sudden residual of the free state of mind in which free choice is the common denominator of all humanity except when corruption and worldly notions intercede.The world’s inertia claims his attention and even mimics his attention span. He is lost in time, but has no choice about one matter, the most import matter – he must openly investigate in order to transcend the chaos of a world marked with lies and illusion. In this succession of aims, the man becomes artist, regaining his soul in his death to the world.

Britain’s Fascinating Muslim Artist

Posted in Art Talk tagged , , at 6:47 pm by Gabriel Thy

Sarah Maple

After reviewing the previous blog entry, I am pleased to note there seem to be a notable exception to my previous comment. And while many may speculate that it is always easier to comment upon one’s own culture and whatknots, it cannot be overlooked that Islamic insiders don’t often have the same luxury of criticizing the inner workings of its own culture than many others do. So in that regard, this particular artist’s reputation should be considered even more profound.

Sarah Maple is a British artist. Sarah Maple is also a Muslim. Here’s an interesting link to an interview of a young British Muslim, who also happens to be an artist named Sarah Maple who questions with audacity and style the conflicting aspects of her own identity.

Excellent interview. An intelligent woman, and exquisite rising young artist, Maple’s talent, humility, and intensity of spirit should take her far.

11.19.07

British Artists Afraid To Address Islam

Posted in Art Talk tagged , , , , , , , , at 10:39 am by Gabriel Thy

The Global Statement

Britain’s contemporary artists are fêted around the world for their willingness to shock but fear is preventing them from tackling Islamic fundamentalism. Grayson Perry, the cross-dressing potter, Turner Prize winner and former Times columnist, said that he had consciously avoided commenting on radical Islam in his otherwise highly provocative body of work because of the threat of reprisals.

Perry also believes that many of his fellow visual artists have also ducked the issue, and one leading British gallery director told The Times that few major venues would be prepared to show potentially inflammatory works.

“I’ve censored myself,” Perry said at a discussion on art and politics organised by the Art Fund. “The reason I haven’t gone all out attacking Islamism in my art is because I feel real fear that someone will slit my throat.”

Perry’s highly decorated pots can sell for more than £50,000 and often feature sex, violence and childhood motifs. One work depicted a teddy bear being born from a penis as the Virgin Mary. “I’m interested in religion and I’ve made a lot of pieces about it,” he said. “With other targets you’ve got a better idea of who they are but Islamism is very amorphous. You don’t know what the threshold is. Even what seems an innocuous image might trigger off a really violent reaction so I just play safe all the time.”

The fate of Theo van Gogh, the Dutch film-maker who was murdered by a Muslim extremist in 2004 after he made a film portraying violence against women in Islamic societies, is the most chilling example of what can happen to an artist who is perceived to have offended Islam. Perry said that he had also been scared by the reaction across the Islamic world to Danish cartoons deemed anti-Muslim in 2006 and by the protests against Salman Rushdie’s knighthood this year.

Across Europe there is growing evidence that freedom of expression has been curtailed by fear of religious fundamentalism. Robert Redeker, a French philosophy teacher, is in hiding after calling the Koran a “book of extraordinary violence” in Le Figaro in 2006; Spanish villages near Valencia have abandoned a centuries-old tradition of burning effigies of Muhammad to mark the reconquest of Spain, against the Moors; and an opera house in Berlin banned a production of Mozart’s Idomeneo because it depicted the beheading of Muhammad (as well as Jesus and other spiritual leaders).

Read it all, and don’t neglect the comments. That’s where the REAL story exists.

10.30.07

Gabriel In New York City

Posted in Art Talk at 7:15 pm by Gabriel Thy

My Paintings in NYC (And Alex With My Card)

In New York City, on Thursday September 6, I showed a few antagonistic paintings in a tiny sweltering East Village basement. Highlights included a long chat with a New York poet about the enigmatic state of literature from the perspective of Generation Y still searching for its own voice, networking with a fellow who owns and operates the same image press I’ve had my eye on for some time now, and the pride of beautiful young fancies who flashed this old poet and painter a smile or two.

Then there were the three young folks from Denmark who spent several long stints staring at my large centerpiece called FOR DENMARK, which is a painting I whipped out in a mere fifteen minutes in a bluster over the Cartoon Rage going on in Europe and across the Islamic world on February 12, 2006. The three Danes, two young guys and a gal, approached me at one point to confirm their interpretation of the work, thanking me for the peace. Well, a Christ-figure complete with stigmata and tears of blood, two fishes painted in a corner and a Jewish bagel popping up from a toaster, and the words FOR DENMARK etched in red across the background renders the explanation rather bluntly, doesn’t it?

Shout out to Alex (girl in photo), Scott, Tom, Julian, Kari, Ted, Un, Ethan and Liberty Sue, each for your generosity of spirit…

There was some talk of an Antagonist Movement Berlin gallery which interested me for some swirl down the road, and I even sold a couple packs of postcards to two NYC artists…

If you are a MySpace member you can view more pictures here.

10.04.07

Benefit for Iraq Veterans Against the War

Posted in Art Talk, Event Calendar tagged , , , , , at 11:50 am by Gabriel Thy

IVAW Artwerk by Gabriel Thy

This past weekend, I was privileged to donate thirteen pieces of art consisting of five paintings, seven prints, and a copy of my book to a silent auction fundraiser for the Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) hosted by my friend, Martine Zundmanis.

Here, in Martine’s own words:

Friends—

Thank you all for coming to my place for the benefit party Sunday!!! I think it’s safe to say that a grand time was had by all and we were all able to show our love and admiration for Iraq Vets Against the War vets and supporters and for the Washington Peace Center volunteers and staff.

You all pulled together over $1200 in donations and art bids – UTTERLY AMAZING!! I want to especially thank the artists who all donated so much more than expected: DARREL WILLIS, GABRIEL THY, JAMES SHELVIN, ISIS, & NICOLE ENTWISTLE. I donated pieces made by DORIS ZUNDMANIS and OBERON BENASUTTI & Jose Rodriguez donated a piece made by VERONICA VELASCO MENDEZ. Thanks to their extreme generosity the auction raised over $500 dollars from art lovers who had fun out-bidding each other and will treasure your pieces.

Thanks also to Adam Kokesh (Nat’l IVAW Co-Chair), Geoff Millard (DC IVAW Chapter Pres), and Jay Marx (Wash. Peace Ctr. Coordinator) for giving us their inspiring words and updates on their respective organizations current campaigns and actions. TROOPS HOME NOW! NO WAR ON IRAN! To contact them go to www.ivaw.org and www.washingtonpeacecenter.net

It was a privilege and an honor to have poet Rick and Carlos Arredondo join our gathering of friends and neighbors and Jim and the Peace Bus with all the Vets, CodePinkers and Greens! Rick’s poems are TRUTH – fantastic, and he and Mike got the party singing strong with live music! We also have a big shout-out to Jim for loaning and Glenn for bringing the BBQ grill and to Echo, Norman, Jay, and my big-bro Reich for set-up and clean-up help – you guys ROCK!

I had a wonderful time hosting and thank you so much for supporting IVAW and Washington Peace Center! Together we struggle and Keep Up the Fight!

Love & Peace–
Martine

08.09.07

Antagonist Show In NYC on September 6

Posted in Art Talk, Event Calendar at 6:53 pm by Gabriel Thy

Yes, that’s right. Outsider art is antagonist art. The Antagonist Movement with its roots in the East Village has invited me up to the Niagara Club for a one night group show on Thursday, September 6. I have accepted, and eagerly look forward to my first show in New York where I’ll show five or six works.

Here is the Niagara info:
112 Ave A at the corner of 7th St. East Village NYC
The gallery is downstairs past the bar.
Tele: 212-420-9517

Show opens at 9 PM. All artwork hangs for the duration of the night until closing time at 2 AM.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE ANTAGONIST ART MOVEMENT:

The Antagonist Movement creates venues around New York City.
1. Thursday night. One night showcases with live music.
2. Two month shows bases around a theme.
3. Public Access show. Tuesday nights on MNN 67 or RCN 110 at 11pm. The show covers the art shows. It’s called Antagovision.
4. Writer’s night. The first Sunday of every month.
5. Films. AAM has four films coming out, including two documentaries on the art shows. One narrative featuring punk rock icons from the lower east side, and a documentary that covers female bands in the mid 90s. All of the films have been selected and won a verity of film festivals. To find out more about the release date contact Troma.
6. Fanzines and books. AAM has published a fanzine called Psycho Moto Zine and a book called “Somewhere Between a Punch and A Hand Shake.” Both feature AAM artists and writers.
7. Clothing line. Each year we feature new artists in the designs. All the money goes back into our projects.
8. Over seas art shows. Showing in Berlin October 18th to 26th.
9. Street art. Street Gallery. Sticker Art.
10. In the future AAM plans two books, more clothing lines, and another documentary on the art show in Berlin.

American Visionary Museum

Posted in Art Talk at 6:51 pm by Gabriel Thy

Postcards

Well, yesterday was a fine day in the life of this particular artist. The American Visionary Museum in Baltimore, MD purchased some of my art. It’s not that big a deal, yet, but it’s a great start. Shows promise of things to come, perhaps. I’ll write up the full story in the near, but right now I’ve got to head out to buy some crab meat for the crab dressing cassarole I sling together for events like this awesome pig roast some rocker friends and their roller derby girls are hosting this afternoon.

But check out the museum. It’s on the map. And now, in some small way, so am I.

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