Thursday, November 22, 2012

Things of Interest, Volume 1

Self Portraits done to a different drug every day - earlier this semester we discussed the use of drugs and their connection to artmaking. Chelsea brought this link forward as an extension of that.

This strange animation reminded Danica of our interviews! Art jargon.


She also thought this award-winning short film might be of interest: Ryan.

TGG Gallery - We spent a lot of time discussing the space of the online gallery - especially in regards to Jamie's project "Tasty, Kinky". Claire's friend Tobin has an online gallery and you should check it out!

Sarah wanted to share a couple of links dealing with tattoos and street art:

- An interview with Chad Bojorquez
- And a video about the C/S Symbol (don't know what that is? click and find out - it's super interesting)

The Ditch Witches are feeling inspired.

Another instalment of 'Things of Interest' coming up soon!

Love, Claire

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

INTERVIEWS

Jerry charged us with interviewing each other - having a conversation about art, our lives, whatever. These are some things our groups find particularly relevant and would like to show you.

The Rush-In Bandit
 

Intrigue. Romance. McDonald's.

Carson, Erin, Kate & Bess 

Anything But 

That's a Sexy Picture 

KIDS & SKIDS



Monday, November 12, 2012

Can You Make Me An Elephant?


To most people, balloons are simply associated with children, décor and celebratory events. Their role is usually meek − look cute and embellish. But to the internationally-acclaimed Swiss performance artist Victorine Müller, they hold a much greater meaning and usefulness. The inflatable aspect of balloons is an essential part of her work. For over fourteen years now, she has been combining the disciplines of painting and sculpture, with sound art and performance. 

When I stumbled upon her work earlier this week, I was absolutely blown away by the seemingly weightless PVC structures (this is how Müller characterizes them) of transparent forms, which are usually animals. What really astounded me was that she places herself inside the air-filled animals, emitting a tangible aura− “breathing animistic energy into the beast she inhabits” (design boom).

Performative sculpture is Müller’s favourite medium, often dealing with notions of spiritual and emotional dynamism. It certainly provides audiences with an immersive experience. This is what she had to say about her work:

'I’m interested in creating moments of sensitivity, moments when our defenses are down and we are open to new things. moments of powerful concentration. ... I create zones, put forward pictures, show processes that touch the viewer, that invoke associations on various levels, transport people into a different state, so that things hidden may become visible, accessible, opening up possibilities – to demonstrate something that is not said and cannot be said, but that is'.


This is my favourite work of hers, as it relates closely to my own artistic practice. This performative sculpture, titled ‘timeline,’ (from 2005) begins with the monolithic elephant in an upright position, with Müller situated calmly cross-legged within. Lit by natural and powered light, she gives a sense of a living spirit and awareness to the animal. Later on, audiences are exposed to the work in an entirely opposing state; she lays the gentle beast on its side, and evokes it sleeping or perishing− ‘an elephant in a quiet, dark space, motionless, awe inspiring yet also arousing our sympathy.’
 




Check out some of the stunning art, and if you’re in Bern, Switzerland, be sure to go see her show ‘Wild at Heart,’ which opened on November 2nd at the Zone Contemporaine Oliver Fahrni.

I can’t help but wonder what she’s thinking about when she’s inside her sculptures! What do you think? Share your thoughts below!

- Katerina Pravdivaia 

Sources: 
"Victorine Mueller." infecting the city. N.p.. Web. 8 Nov 2012. <http://www.infectingthecity.com/2012/artists/victorine-muller>.
. N.p.. Web. 8 Nov 2012. <http://www.infectingthecity.com/2012/artists/victorine-muller>.
Laura, DB. "art." designboom. N.p., 25 2012. Web. 8 Nov 2012. <http://www.designboom.com/art/performance-art-meets-inflated-sculptures-by-victorine-muller/>.

Solicitous in Sackville

So as some of us may feel, this week was a bust creatively. I’m in a rut of sorts, I spent weeks just making so many things and this week, especially after the crits, I’m just done. I wasn’t happy with certain things and a few just seemed to not be working out like I had planned. Of course I am happy with certain things, just as a whole I feel uninspired. Right now I am not motivated to make anything. Maybe it’s a rut from being dumped, or possibly drinking a bit too much lately, which could also stem from getting dumped or just stress in general, maybe just over thinking content and not being able to move forward with any concrete ideas. I don’t know what it is but its making me even more stressed. I worry that I won’t be living up to my own expectations, which for me are ALWAYS too high. I want to make things and be happy, but to do that I don’t know whether to go to grad school, or apply for residencies or take a year off and just work at the hospital again and make art and maybe get into the gallery scene in Ottawa. 

With grad school I don’t know if I’m ready for that type of environment yet, I don’t even know if I’m good enough to get in. I have shit all to put on my CVxcept for a piece that I submitted to the Sweetest Little Thing silent auction which my mother bought and an honorable mention for the Fine Arts Department sculpture prize, which is pretty much just saying you were the first loser. I’ve never had a show and have nothing to entice people to accept me into their schools. My artist statement is a bore and I’m not sure my art is good enough to compete against soooo many other applicants, I don’t even know if I’ll be able to get a damn Struts show.

Residencies seem a bit more reasonable for me at the moment but again the issue of competition and my lacking requirements come up. I also don’t think my parents will think it’s beneficial to be put up in a place to work on art, not be paid and that isn’t affiliated with an “educational” institution. Another thing that doesn’t make me seem a good candidate for any of these thing is that I don’t have a very solid body of work. I have a whole crap ton of “half projects”, a few paintings here, some drawings there but not much that relates to one another or even very much that I would like to explore and expand upon. 

I’m probably over thinking things and overreacting but I needed to take out my doubts in a different place then my art. So I’ve just poured all of my worries and frustrations onto the internet and frankly I’m embarrassed. I would like to get some discussions going and maybe some worries other people have about being in art school and what awaits them afterwards? 

 - Elizabeth Bissonnette

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

You Can't Get Pregnant Your First Time




Carson Isenor. While the name alone may simply conjure images of "honourable mention" beauty queens and misinformed adolescent angst, viewed in the pulsating neon of the Struts sandwich-board, the words carry a certain grim reverence.

Isenor's work is best described a juxtaposition between the minute and the large; the calm gestures that inform the composition certainly reflect the stillness-- perhaps even the banality-- of the natural world, without ever falling victim to the twin-pratfalls (some would say, mammoths) of over-idealizing or teetering into the realm of critical excess. Isenor-- and I will use this word with great reverence-- composes form in a way that implicates the viewer as the subject: the framing of objects (for example, trees) places one in the middle of a scene, without the cinematic-scope that has become the (arguably passé)  hallmark of the landscape canon. The passive act of viewing shifts in to the active role of participating; one is not simply viewing an Isenor work, one is participating in a sensual, shared experience. As such, one encounters Isenor's work as one would encounter the natural world: in too deep.

When asked about the meaning of the exhibition's vague title, Isenor was hesitant; he shuffled his feet, he grinned, he wiped sweat from his brow: this was man naked in his modesty. Isenor neglected to divulge his inspiration, though one must speculate that its inspiration derives from the lines of a 1754 poem by notorious bigot and French man-of-letters Christo Bonsoir:

I sit with my jaw slack,
as the clouds roll,
from the forest into His arms;
I am reborn, in too deep. (Bonsoir, 153) [trans. Albert Piscoli]

This is not the first time Isenor has alluded the Bonsoir text-- in his 2009 auto-biography Paint By Numbers, Isenor notes:

After my brother Jimmy died, I really felt like I was in over my head, like I was in too deep. [Isenor, 144]

Isenor-- certainly not a vocal man in regards to his works-- has never specifically cited the Bonsoir poem in any of his brief public statements (nor in the aforementioned biography), though in a speech given in a third year printmaking critique, Isenor suggested a particular reverence for Rococo artist Jacques Dupont, a pupil of Jean-Honoré Fragonard, perhaps most famous for 1777 work Femme Nue (or, Naked Woman); Dupont was often suspected of having an affair with Bonsoir, and Bonsoir is in fact depicted in a highly-erotic fashion in Dupont's 1778 Homme Nu (or, Naked Man).

Detractors of Isenor's work frequently cite his overly-academic approach to image-making as "inauthentic" and detrimental to the form of the work itself. Historian and art-critic P.P. Ballard once published an inflammatory retaliation to Isenor's life-size canoe woodblock print in A.R.T. Quarterly, a now-defunct art-journal:

[...] this is probably the most phallic work I have ever had the displeasure of viewing. Isenor's insistence on forcing the viewer to act as subject is irrelevant, clichéd, and by any standard, quite pathetic. I would certainly love to have a copy of his canoe print, so that I could use it as firewood. (Ballard, 12)

Likewise, Isenor's colleague Graham Ereaux sings a similar tune in his most recent publication, Thoughts On Art:

Most of Isenor's work is really [terrible]; his use of colour is [shitty] and I really [hate] this work... I really think that guy should [leave town].  (Ereaux, 20-21)

Certainly, much of this critique will ring true to those familiar with Isenor's work: the ironic juxtaposition of large, frameless landscapes placed conspicuously beside one another certainly highlights the white-cube as an inappropriate venue for discussing a painting, a process that is frequently deemed to be a cathartic, emotional release for its producers. And perhaps, as a purely academic exercise, some of Isenor's work falls flat: dissections of the gallery-as-institution have certainly been popular for quite some time, and inevitably a question of relevance lingers in the air. But for this talented up-and-comer, it would seem that institutional-critique might be the least of his concerns: pseudo-academic-circle-jerks aside, Isenor's work really does place the viewer in the middle of the scene, regardless of its intellectual implications. As such, the work is entirely successful on two levels: as a profound technical exercise (with traditional Isenor hallmarks, including a suitably warm, earthy palate) and as a invitation into a verdant and authentic natural world. Though it is some of the most visually striking work of this generation, as an institutional-critique, it falls somewhat flat.

In the realm of critical and theoretical discussion, awesomeness generally takes a back seat to formal academic waxing on structure, syntax and style ("The Deadly Three"); if there was ever an occasion to celebrate the dank in contemporary painting, it is now. Isenor's paintings manage to effectively communicate the placidity of rural life, without fetishizing or demeaning the culture; they really make me want to walk in the woods and huff propane (in the best way possible).

I would hope to avoid the reduction of Isenor's work into an act of sensationalistic appraisal-- touting the artist as the "next big thing" in Canadian art seems a tad extravagant-- but if there is any individual with the sheer audacity to change how a stilted and self-conscious public-at-large responds to great works, it is this enigmatic, modest, wide-eyed cherub of a man.

 - Richard L. Maloney

Carson Isenor's 'In too deep' was on display from September 12-25, 2012, at START Gallery - located at 7 Lorne Street in Sackville, NB.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Facul-excellent-to-a-TEE

If you haven't been to the Owens Art Gallery in Sackville, NB yet this year, what is a better time than now? Fly, bike, walk your way over to the most historical and important building on the campus of Mount Allison University to see some of the most recent work of Fine Arts faculty and technicians in one encompassing show Ornamental Branch.  

The show is located on the second floor of the gallery, where the Owens has its annual cake walk. It is the “white box” which you would expect a gallery of contemporary art to be, but the faculty and technician show has been currated to the tee in this space.  Overall the artwork is equally represented and well balanced in the space, this extends to the floor and walls where artwork is displayed.  There seems to be a theme via symmetry and work which mirrors each other by presentation and by representation. The first words which come to mind are “diverse”, “tactile” and “tangible” and the spattering of color in the show couldn't be better played. As you enter the room there are four black and white photographs by Thaddeus Holownia which contrast nicely on the same wall as Jerry Ropson's coloured and spherically formed “Retired Paintings”.  More highlights of the show include Karen Stentaford’s series “Raw wool”, which consists of eight large and incredibly stunning portraits of the raw wool. They are a 'must see' of the show.  Nearby Dan Steeves has a couple etchings displayed on the wall and a series of etchings paired wih a printed book of poetry under a veneer, which is both worth seeing and reading. 


Immense sculptures by Paul Griffin hang from the celing and roll on wheels. One is mostly red  the other charcol black, more I will not give away. Two more sculptures which occupy equal the amount of space and capacity are by Adriana Kuiper and Leah Garnett. Adriana calls hers “Plug” and Leah's is called “I have five wooden senses a sixth like water”. Each is as clever, as the title. Leah also has two drawings up which echo her sculpture and beside Jerry's “Tired painting” hung on the wall reflects upon his other work in the show.  

Erik Edson a printmaker in the department, has two canvases up which pay close attention to textile prints. Next to these Chris Down has a painting of his painting class, “FINA-3311-A W/12” which portrays recognisable faces of fourth year BFAs. 

Last but not the very least of works to see, are Ryan Suter's “ink-jet prints” which should stop anyone in their tracks to look closer as to an image which appears in the middle of the familar rich black ink, and leaning up against the adjacent wall are two sizable paintings by Jon Claytor.
(That's all for now folks)

- Van Ran, Certified Badass


You Can Tell I Went to School on a Small Yellow Bus

Hello and welcome! This is Duckstaposition, a blog run for and by the Mount Allison Fine Arts department graduating (hopefully) class of 2013.

One of the requirements of a BFA at Mt. A, for those not in the know, is the completion of a Seminar course in the fall semester of our final, fourth year. Google, the finest of latter day prophets, tells us that a seminar is defined in this way:

sem·i·nar/ˈseməˌnär/

Noun:
  1. A conference or other meeting for discussion or training.
  2. A class at a college or university in which a topic is discussed by a teacher and a small group of students.
So what we do is discuss. What we discuss is a little harder to define and pin down, but it runs the gamut from the contemporary art world to our own artistic practices, and a bunch of strange minutia in between.

Hopefully Duckstaposition can be an outlet to both further the discussions we foster in class and bring other people (the ~*internet*~) to them, to engage and insert new voices. Or maybe nobody will read this and it will fall into the cavernous pit that is the blogosphere. Either way, maintaining this blog has been required of us by our fearless leader Jerry Ropson, so we have to do it.

That aside, however, I really think that this blog is a great opportunity for us. To write down what we sometimes fail to articulate in class, to share ideas, to talk about Madonna or just to engage in this POST-POSTMODERN (to be defined shortly - I'm looking at you, Jamie Fagan) world.

So, if you're reading this, thanks! You have just legitimised us. Nice. Let us know what you think, and I know that at least half of us* apologise for our silly, Sackville-centric, duck-themed name.

- Claire, BLOGMASTER Ph. D

*I am not one of that half - I think it's awesome and I also think "APOLOGISE FOR NOTHING", which is a thing that I remind myself several times a day.