Archive for 2009

All Eyes En Men

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Smiling Through: Nicole Eisenman, "Whatever Guy," 2009
Smiling Through: Nicole Eisenman, "Whatever Guy," 2009 (sideways detail)

If Nicole Eisenman spends so much time at beer gardens and dinner parties, then when does she reserve the peace and quiet studio time needed to toil over these moody, mysterious, playful, unsettling, and hilarious pictures?  Her palette seems uncaged, but the handling is not reckless.  Even when she dispenses oozy snakes of buttery paint to enhance (or corrupt) the placid surface, she is still restricted to roped-off zones of canvas, like a rowdy child penned in a playground.

Beer Garden with Ash, 2009
Beer Garden with Ash, 2009

How does she cultivate that rambunctious style, as jarring and enviable as an early bloomer, while simultaneously revealing a quiet admiration of art history – and pulling it off so effortlessly?  She swipes historical styles and movements while poking them and shooting rubber bands their way.

The Triumph of Poverty, 2009 (detail)
The Triumph of Poverty, 2009 (detail)

Bruegel imbroglio
Bruegel imbroglio

But these are love taps.  She knows that by giving history a wedgie, she preserves history by stirring it; it’s like pinching to prove wakefulness.

svablogeisenmanbed
NE: Night Studio, 2009

Courbet, "The Sleepers," 1866
Courbet, "The Sleepers," 1866

Speaking of love: these paintings’ titles, settings, and likenesses tell us how much of this work is based in autobiography and personal life.

Beer Garden with Ulrike and Celeste, 2009 (detail)
Hello Nurse: Beer Garden with Ulrike and Celeste, 2009 (detail)

But first: Tim Davis once identified Nicole as “our Daumier.”  Just as 19th-century French painters haunted the Paris cafes to sip absinthe, Nicole’s contemporaries hang out at Williamsburg bars for a few rounds of frothy beer.  She captures the shifting congregation like the creeping timelapse of an Impressionist landscape.  The surrounding crowd dissolves into monochrome figures, passing shadows, huddled groups, cameos of mask-like visages, and detailed likenesses in varying degrees of pertinence.  Nicole intimates the din and density of a crowded patio, instead of settling for an indexical panorama of one.

Beer Garden with Ash, 2009
Beer Garden with Ash, 2009

So one assumes that the “rendered” faces in the crowd are candid portraits of close friends and family, given that many of the paintings’ titles are on a first-name basis with their subjects.  For example, Beer Garden with Ulrike and Celeste probably stars artists Celeste Dupuy-Spencer and Ulrike Mueller, the latter an editor of the lesbian journal and collective LTTR.

Jörg Immendorff, Cafe Deutschland IV
Jörg Immendorff, Cafe Deutschland IV

There’s even an arresting gaze from a glowing stud.  Thumbing his Blackberry, he isn’t that guy obliviously hunched over his device while everyone else is talking and laughing together; instead, his piercing blue eyes shoot laser beams across the gallery and rivet us in place as we cross by.  (I hope they will soon zap the noisy gallery attendant behind the counter.  I mean, I’m trying to concentrate here!)

Get a room, blue guy
Get a room, blue guy

So what gives with all the weird sex?  Sometimes a Cigar is Just a Cigar, but those bottles are so…erect.  And abundant.  Just look at the silhouette guy having a Green Door moment.  I’m not the first to point out that many people stroke, peel, and clutch their beer bottle when sexually frustrated.  So what do painters do?

Or are you just happy to see me?
Or are you just happy to see me?

The Triumph of Poverty is a phallocentric dystopia, as flummoxed by renegade potency as Uganda. First, there’s the sad-looking salesman, leaning against the car, his pockets emptied and inverted.  His right-hand pocket aligns with his crotch and hangs like a deflated balloon or post-Bunnicula drained squash.  And then how about this blind lemon-colored man leading a chain of sightless peasants?  Obviously, his arse is turned forward (or backward), but his eye socket seems to be a peculiarly puckered orifice.

Two-faced
Two-faced

There’s something wrong with the men here, and I can’t deny the ways the painting reminded me of the foresaken decade we lost to the straight-shootin’ Bush administration.

Frederic Remington, "Sunday Morning Toilet on the Ranch," 1885
Frederic Remington, "Sunday Morning Toilet on the Ranch," 1885

The women, on the other hand, are mightily functional.  There’s even a distribution of labor among these independent matriarchs.  Compare the study for Winter Solstice 2012 Dinner Party with the finished version.

(l-r)
(l-r)

(r-l)
(r-l)

In Nicole Eisenman’s world, a woman needs a man like Julia Fish needs a bicycle.

But I think Nicole just needs her books, her beer, and her buddies.

Leo Koenig's butt?

I Made You Out of Clay

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Happy Holidays from John Armleder!

and from me, too.

Ppl are People

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Some highlights from the wave of mutilated figures stomping through Art Basel Miami Beach!

Robert Longo, Corporate Wars, 1982
Robert Longo, Corporate Wars, 1982

 

What a relief!
What a relief!

 

Liz Craft @ Marianne Boesky
Liz Craft @ Marianne Boesky

 

Matthew Monahan @ Anton Kern
Matthew Monahan @ Anton Kern

 

David Altmejd at Andrea Rosen
David Altmejd at Andrea Rosen

All Yesterday’s Parties

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

James Franco was there! Where’s my camera? Battery is dead! Quick, help me MacGyve a camera using some girl’s compact mirror and a Heineken bottle! Results are fuzzy, but better than nothing…

Sharp-dressed man Klaus Biesenbach threw a private bash at the Raleigh Hotel to celebrate his new assignment as Director of PS1. As the silver-haired don ushered around his Pineapple Puffin’ Silver-Screen Sensation – mutual fans of each other – the surrounding starstruck aesthetes whispered to each other about Franco: “Is he or isn’t he?” Nobody knew for sure, and those kissing scenes in Milk were just fiction – right? And who will he kiss in the upcoming Howl film? (Insert “beard” pun here…)

(l-r) James Franco confers with Klaus Biesenbach
(l-r) James Franco confers with Klaus Biesenbach

Video artist/ soap opera auteur/ cocoa cabaret/ Guggenheim fellow Kalup Linzy did her best to rock the mic – in a wig and onesie, she worked it – despite the distracting technical difficulties that cut the mic every few seconds. Still, nothing could cut that look. “Nice package,” someone murmured. (“What did you say, James?”)

Package delivered: Kalup Linzy performs at The Raleigh
Package delivered: Kalup Linzy performs at The Raleigh

And Ryan McNamara seized the night with a Saint-Theresa reverie that entailed gazing misty eyed to the heavens, and then waving and gyrating frenetically through the crowd, pelvic-thrusting and air-humping with a dramatic (and shiny-faced) climax perched on the windowsill, grinding against the glass pane. Keen eyes might have noticed that he was wearing two left shoes, one of which lingered long after the party ended. Maybe it’s still there.

My Left Foot: Ryan McNamara's shoe(less)
My Left Foot: Ryan McNamara

Square Peg

Sunday, December 6th, 2009


Here is Matt Nasser, Director of La Mama La Galleria on Daphne Fitzpatrick at NADA Art Fair:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiTBFsS1g1w