14 December 2007
10 December 2007
28 November 2007
14 November 2007
Guerrilla Gourmet
i started a new gourmet kind of like Maria's except mine is called ghetto gourmet and this is how it works. you invite me to your house for tea, or a coffee if you can make a latté machiatto the way they do in germany. but then i say "i'm hungry" and you say "hmmm" and then i say "actually, i'm really hungry. don't you have anything to eat?" and since you're hosting, and i'm not, you oblige to cook me something but i say "better make it gourmet. i don't want beans straight up or anything like that. get gourmet on it, alright? put capers in it, maybe? or sprinkle fresh herbs on top. but if you really want to impress me, it not only has to look good, it better taste incredible?" and then i smile my wicked smile and you can't resist and while you're cooking up a feast i tell you that "you're my best friend ever" and "i'm going out for a cigarette, but yo, what do you got for dessert?" your jaw drops, but i don't see it drop, i'm half way outside, smoke dangling.
serious enquiries only.
photo: maria in the foreground cooking chocolate edibles, tonik, 2006
11 November 2007
Skateboarding
I learned from a good source yesterday that, supposedly, Art|Basel| Miami Beach version 2007 will feature a skateboard park on Miami Beach designed and artified by Ryan McGinness, supposedly... and then I get the above video linked to me in email today, from millo... Geoff McFetridge gets us in the mood. I'm not a huge fan of Geoff's, but that video is capital L Lovely. My favourite part is when the pupilless iris falls out of the eye. That's smart.
Bonus Beat
08 November 2007
Genius of Love
"Fun, natural, fun." - Tom Tom Club
The video edits out a verse from the original, oft sampled, song:
All the weekend
Boyfriend was missing
I surely miss him
The way he'd hold me in his warm arms
We went insane when we took cocaine.
Big thanks to Zoe for hipping me to this.
24 October 2007
16 October 2007
Kasia Korczak & Payam Sharifi / Slavs & Tatars
Everything about Slavs & Tatars by Kasia Korczak and Payam Sharifi is so right I smile and think, it's okay that gltss is pretty much a memory... we aren't alone after all.
13 October 2007
11 October 2007
Justice "D.A.N.C.E." on Jimmy Kimmel Live 10-9-07
i don't know who these cats are, but they are doing it. -millo g
09 October 2007
08 October 2007
03 October 2007
24 August 2007
The Shared Values of Lil' Wayne and Zbigniew Herbert
Camillo linked me to this insightful comparison between rap and poetry. The ending is the best part but it only makes sense if you read the whole thing.
22 August 2007
I got an A+ in Art and You can too.
Hi,
I'm launching a book at Art Metropole on September 13th, 2007 @ 7pm-10pm. I hope you can make it. I haven't seen you in so long. Here's some more information about it:
I got an A+ in Art and You can too. by Tonik
Specifically published for the art student, this guide, full of explanatory text and pictures, delves into exposing how art school operates and how and why students should address the system. Written in a clear and jargon free prose, it elucidates a cheat sheet for the naïve, lazy, artless or keen student; complete with a glossary and chapters concerning “What is higher learning?” and “Good Art vs Good Grades.” Tonik sums up the book thus:
“School is indoctrinated smoke and mirrors, man. All you gotta do is check the world these institutions are creating. Weed beer guns AIDS? What happened to bread, peace, work, dignity? It’s the new millennium! This is a manifesto kind of, but more so, I had to right it. If not me, then who? If not now, then when?"
A special edition of 77 accompanies this release.
Born in Poland, part French, tall, white, ugly and raised in the jungle... Tonik's art investigates the pneumatic romance between everything and nothing at all. His work is represented by Art Metropole, Toronto and Printed Matter, New York. Tonik is looking forward to going back to Europe in the autumn of 2007.
There are 2 other books being launched by my publisher on the same evening:
Sonority of Words by Katie Bond Pretti
Sonority of Words, consists of three chapters designed to develop a narrative as the drawings progress from beginning to end. Though not containing any literal message, the lines and shapes which form each drawing direct the viewer through a sequence of events. Similar to way in which the letter-symbol elements of sound poetry necessitate that the viewer forms their own associations, this story depends upon handmade marks to express dynamics and intonation. The format of the book echoes the linear theme featuring fold-outs to accommodate larger and continuous images, while its scale maintains intimacy.
A special hand-coloured version will be released in a limited edition.
Born July 6, 1980, graduated OCAD 2004, Katie Bond Pretti is a Toronto based artist who is interested in the ability to employ the formal concerns of line and colour to achieve narrative in semi-abstracted form. Pretti is represented in Toronto by LE Gallery. Her works in ink, oil, and graphite have been exhibited at Gallerie Simon Blais in Montreal, Lehmann Leskiw Fine Art in Toronto, and Bjornson Kajiwara in Vancouver.
A Report by Alex Durlak
A Report is a response to a report written in 1978 by the Advisory Arts Panel to the Canada Council entitled The Future of the Canada Council. The government-subsidized publication features an introduction originally written in a concrete poetry style explaining the importance of art in society. Alex Durlak has created a new layout for the text using the introduction to both critique the challenges of contemporary artistic practices and to reinvest the ideals held by the late-70's artistic community. Written in both French and English, this new rendition features colourful typographic layouts and will be printed and bound entirely by the artist.
Alex Durlak is a Toronto based artist and musician, best known for his contributions to the music community spanning over a decade. His parallel artistic practice strongly focuses on the graphic arts, including typography, printmaking and book design. Durlak is the proprietor of Standard Form Printing and Publishing.
About the press
Standard Form Printing & Publishing is a Toronto based press that is growing out of a cross-pollinated fine art and indie music scene in Toronto. It is a young press interested in working with artists within the vanguard of Canada's flourishing art scene and its catalogue is printed entirely in-house.
I hope to see your smile. :)
03 August 2007
Summer heat hello...
It's hell hot in Toronto and it's so perfect.
Damien Hirst's chair, above, a part of Deckchair Dreams, is kind of schlocky as far as Art goes. But then you read what he says about it... "It’s supposed to represent a summer's day and I chose the pink for girls and the blue for boys," and you kind of have to love that.
I've been loving Fabolous and Neyo's Make me better lately. Also, I've been on a bit of a throwback kick and really loving Simon Says (a gltss favourite) a lot these past few days. I'd never seen the video before today, it's not epic as a video, imho; but the music alone... Godzilla's theme song as a loop? Brilliant.
If you don't know how to write a thank you note, now you know. Thank me later.
I need something to drink and some lunch.
Wassup over there? Been too loooooooooooooooooooooong!
18 July 2007
Fela Kuti, Black President
You gotta love part 2 opening up with an impromptu version of Authority Stealing. That's gold.
10 July 2007
08 July 2007
01 July 2007
This is Canada
Rockonski is pleased to issue This is Canada, a new poster project by artist Tonik Wojtyra. Available for pick up from the artist's studio for $1.40 or simply spot them on the street if you're in Toronto. If you're not in Toronto, posters may be purchased for $1.40 plus the cost of shipping and handling.
Note: With the exception of Canadian embassies or consulates, This is Canada posters will not be shipped to addresses outside of Canada.
For more information contact - i@rockonski.com or 416-879-5077
xxx
29 June 2007
21 June 2007
Uniting Europe
On the eve of a potentially new constitution, Poland is showing why it's important. The best nugget of gold comes from Mariusz Muszynski, commissioner for Polish-German relations in the Polish Foreign Ministry, who says: Why should Poland agree to a decrease in its influence? We aren't idiots. Anyone surprised by the fact that we would like to increase our influence should not be engaged in politics.
I miss Europe.
12 June 2007
02 June 2007
27 April 2007
19 April 2007
18 April 2007
17 April 2007
The Future of Art Fairs
Trying to dissolve the mathematics of taxes in my mind I went to youtube and searched General Idea and found only 1 relevant but excellent video. And then from the same user, I bumped into the above video after reading an article about the Frankfurt Art Fair the other day and the way Michael Neff, its director is rethinking what a fair is, how it functions and what it looks like. The German accents are stellar.
16 April 2007
1977 vs Nineteen Seventy Seven
It turns out that reading online is easier if you just give numbers straight up as numerals versus spelling them out. Is it just another indicator that we're getting dumber as a whole? I don't think so, we live in information deluge... most of would prefer that 1 minute highlight reel version of 30 minute news broadcast. And if you got an email going over 50 words? Give me a call. Gotta write it though? If you really want me to take it seriously? Write a letter. I like real mail.
14 April 2007
2 sides, 2 different coins
With Tony Blair speaking frank nonsense this week, it's refreshing to watch the Wu spin a masterpiece about it from the other side. It's like we're on earth, and they're on the moon.
09 April 2007
RIP Sol Lewitt
The artist who coined "conceptual art" to describe his work and who co-founded Printed Matter amongst other achievements, is dead.
It's a new day.
It's a new day.
04 April 2007
4 great songs for April 4th
especially if you're into something else for today.
thanks to nichola-feldmann kiss and max dean for putting me on to this.
03 April 2007
3 gems for April 3rd
1. Tom Burckhardt and his cardboard and india ink studio is amazing and some of his painting is kind of tight too.
2. The graphics of Eric Nitsche (1908-1998)
3. Max Dean's Chair
Bonus Beat:
Rirkrit Tiravanija is at OCAD tomorrow giving a lecture.
02 April 2007
And oh yeah...
Looks fantastic. And the official website is awesome looking too.
Why is coke illegal?
In America, where racism is a omnipresent, it came down to racial fears.
20 March 2007
A new take
17 March 2007
Flows on top of flows...
200 carats in my b-boy pose, my milkshake sells way better than yours. And I only have Yoko Ono to beat? Winning is gonna be easier than defeat.
12 March 2007
Granola Art
The online urbandictionary defines the colloquial adjective “Granola” as:
A person who dresses like a hippy, eats natural foods (granola), and is usually a Liberal, but in all other ways is a typical middle class white person, and is likely to revert back to being straight when they finish college.
eg. Did you see that granola chick at the farmer's market buying bean sprouts? Yeah, her new Volvo was parked next to me.
The other straightforward definition of a person deemed to be granola is simply hippie. One can be slurred for granola leanings for a myriad of reasons. But to be called granola is typically to be insulted or at least belittled. It is a term of judgmental derision that as an artist I am redeeming and applying it to an early 21st century postmodern art aesthetic: An unorganized, multifarious, raw and youthful movement rooted to hippies; it’s roots are important because granola’s main practitioners are a strain of hipster; the hip root that both lends itself to hippie and hipster is not an accident. The hippie concern for bright colored clothing, a stress for self expression, and the rebellion against the more conservative standards and values of mainstream society is well reflected in the hipsters concerns brightly colored 80s influenced clothing, independent music and culture and a stress on self expression.
In the visual arts the aesthetic of granola is primarily driven it’s formal qualities that are hugely influenced by cartoons and comic books. Granola arts practitioners such as Seth Scriver, David Shrigley, Jason McLean, Maura Doyle, Paper Rad, Dearraindrop, Kineko Ivic et al. all share some of the same things: bright colors, weird and strange and youthful subject matter, a gross fascination with childhood nostalgia, disregard for modernist influenced ‘good taste’, a strange breed of expressionism and perhaps the most damaging of all: the seeming lack any sort of intellectual rigor. Above all their target is the depth of the imagination: that deep and cavernous interior world that parents and teachers cannot penetrate and is deeply rooted to expressionism of the 20th century.
Honestly, at first I was just looking at bad art. I saw this art as lacking a certain level of quality that for me has been deemed a high quality, an art worthy of not hanging on gallery walls but art worthy of hanging on the National Gallery’s walls. Sometimes what I notice is that this art is no more than a doodle: in the case of Jason McLean’s cartoons, his art is just that… a doodle. Dearraindrop composes forms that are piled on with neon pinks and day-glo greens and the deliberately fluid drawn line that is supposedly liberating this art from modernist stodginess, it at once pins this runniness in the milk between the honey and the oatmeal and the organic flax of: Granola.
I remember seeing Maura Doyle’s and Annie Dunning's Lucky Stick for the first time. A twig with a piece of yarn and a small sign announcing that the stick is unlike the other sticks from the urban park it was found, this one chosen by the artist is lucky. The gesture of the Lucky Stick is childlike and rooted in nostalgia for childhood and naivety. One can pretend to hear a child in the park catching mummy's attention "I got a lucky stick! I got a luucky stiiiiiiick." Similarly, Paul Butler’s relational collage parties that bring people together to make art and to have fun together are an extension of kindergarten art class and absolutely not modeled after Fine Art crits with theory based professors. The latter is eschewed. Instant Coffee’s relational events do a similar thing. Bright, loud, lurid and fun are the keys and “professionalism” is seen as a threat: to be professional means buying into a system of quality that represents an old guard and it's rules that make the gallery a boring place and space. Granola art practitioners, it would seem, would be happy to be coddled back to the comfort of grandma’s kitchen table with some fresh paper and a set of fresh pencil crayons for a session of consilidated enjoyment. Before we fall in to the tired argument of ‘my kid could do that in 5 minutes’ let me make something clear: I don't think any could do it. I don’t dislike Granola Art. I don’t think it’s bad art.
In fact, the more I happen to see it, the more fond I become of it and the better I appreciate and understand it. I still don’t very much like it but then art is not always about liking disliking. More than anything it has been a personal challenge to my own perceived ideas and because it's challenging it holds merit. Art, art criticism and art history is about currents and placing them within some sort of framework that can help us understand the world around us, who we are and where we are and how all of it fits together. So what’s happening? Why are young, well educated artists, in rich 1st world countries choosing to focus their attention on faux naive pursuits of the pencil, brush, space and related experiments? That’s what I’m wondering.
In Toronto, I can place the influence of Kensington Market as important. The place is a geographical oddity in the midst of a modern global center. Hippies to left, hippies to the right, and more hippies per square meter than I've ever witnessed. The proliferation of organic produce, cheap eats, "bohemia", and the Anarchist Free School are big influences. But it doesn't really account for granola's American reach, unless we say that Toronto is influencing Paper Rad and dearraindrop. Perhaps it's not too outlandish.
26 February 2007
The (biblical) painting of Nicolas Poussin
c. 1634
Oil on canvas, Iaid down on board, 154 x 214 cm
National Gallery, London
1637
Oil on canvas, 147 x 198,5 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
1649
Oil on canvas, 101 x 150 cm
Musée du Louvre, Paris
1650
Oil on canvas, 57 x 40 cm
Musée du Louvre, Paris
It's amazing how composed Mary is in that last picture. It's amazing to think that people had no "rich" media to immerse themselves within; no internet, no camera on their cellphones, no video ipods, flat-screens. Painting was it. These paintings are full of narrative much like films are today, rich in color like films and full of information and content. Today's media mix today grants us all this and more except one thing that somehow can't be taken from painting: stillness. Modern media hums but even modern paintings sit even. The temper of composure remains in painting, as well as much sculpture, but it's only painting that can force a direct relation to the richness of film. I suppose film makers operate more like sculptors, working in the 3rd, and their end result is paint like with the added layer of sound and the 4th dimension. A wonderfully rich conflation. But then why the current rise and interest in painting again? Does sound and time play itself out in the perception of painting somehow that other media don't? Or is the noiseless calm of painting somehow one of culture's last refuges from our deluge of news, information, entertainment, and social clatter?
Images: Web Gallery of Art
24 February 2007
23 February 2007
The Painting of Mustafa Maluka
Is it just me, or does this dude seem to be painting cadavers? I haven't read his blog much so I can't read them properly. Nevertheless I like the juxtaposition of flat, bright color and the work up "skin" tonalities.
Link: mustafamaluka.com
Images: Michael Stevenson
20 February 2007
The art of Alfredo Martinez
Images: The Proposition
30 January 2007
Ryszard Kapuściński, RIP
At a certain point, Kapuściński, was Poland's only foreign correspondent and was responsible for 50 countries. An amazing writer who can make you giggle the water up your nose and has a such a keen eye for description that can completely creep you out. I'll have to get reading more of his work...
Everything you wanted to know.
Everything you wanted to know.
29 January 2007
Canadian Diaspora and Art: Tonight!
**Should I Stay or Should I Go? Canadian Artists in the Diaspora**
*Alissa Firth-Eagland, Pierre Tremblay, Gareth Long, Will Kwan, Stephen
Fakiyesi*
Panel Discussion: *Monday, January 29, 2007 at 6pm*
Justina M. Barnicke Gallery, Hart House, University of Toronto
A panel discussion on the migration of Canadian visual artists into the international context. The discussion will focus on the effects of international residency opportunities and graduate programmes, artdealership in art market cities, and consider national representation through expatriot artists at major art events and biennials. The relationship between economic and cultural migration will be addressed to gauge the position and options available to Canadian visual artists and students.
*Panelists:*
*Alissa Firth-Eagland *has initiated artistic and curatorial partnerships between Scandinavia and Canada. She recently completed a curatorial residency at the Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art. In 2007, she will present Finnish and Swedish video works at the 20th Images Film and Video Festival in Toronto.
*Pierre Tremblay *is a coordinator of le Fresnoy, a postgraduate residency in Tourcoing, France. He currently teaches in the Image Arts Department of Ryerson University, Toronto and has previously taught at Parsons School of
Design in Paris.
*Gareth Long *is currently completing his MA in Fine Art at Yale University. Exploring the formal space between video and sculpture has been a focus of his independent work and projects with the 640 480 collective. He has translated video in books and lenticular photographic prints.
*Will Kwan *is the Snider Lecturer in Humanities at University of Toronto-Scarborough. His work is included in the 2007 Biennale de Montréal and was recently a resident researcher at the Jan van Eyck Academie in Maastricht, Holland. He has presented work at the 2003 Venice Biennale.
*Stephen Fakiyesi *will be included in AAHLuminex show at the Art Gallery of Mississauga and is collaborating on a childrens book. He recently completed his MA in Fine Art at the University of California-Los Angeles where he focussed on print making.
The panel will be moderated by *Tejpal S. Ajji*, curator in residence at the Justina M. Barnicke Gallery.
--
Afterall, it's a small place.
25 January 2007
23 January 2007
The New Leipzig School
This New York Times article, though about a year old, details the rise of European painting in the German city of Leipzig. Hailed as the first significant art movement of the 21st century, the painters led by Neo Rauch have taken quite a traditional approach to painting and in doing so have created something new and fresh. Or at least the art world thinks so. I have mixed feelings. Though ever since seeing Tim Eitel's work, I've been quite seduced by it. Austere, quiet and dreary - it has a specific type of Eastern European poetic that rhymes just right.
Image: Tim Eitel's Liegender courtesy of Eigen + Art
22 January 2007
Comet McNaught
The brightest comet ever can be easily seen be the naked eye especially by those in the southern hemisphere. Check the wiki page for instructions how to see it for yourself.
Photo: Wikipedia
18 January 2007
11 January 2007
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