Saturday, August 6, 2011

Another Artists' Call, Answered

On the heels of both TAM's Telephone exhibition and Mat Gleason's related show comes another local example of distributed curating, or giving-up-control-curating, or process equals the point a-curating...

The LAT's art critic, Christopher Knight, reviewed yesterday Chain Letter, an exhibition at Bergamot Station's Shoshana Wayne Gallery through August 23.

Chain is said to have begun with Dough Harvey and Christian Cummings each emailing ten artists, requesting a work for the show, and requesting that those artists email ten other artists.

(Presumably, if they didn't email ten people, a great harm would befall those ten people. Probably a great harm written out in all capital letters, too.)

The end result? Some 1,600+ artworks in the Bergamot space. (See the Chain link above for photos.)

Beyond curatorial practices, what does all this demonstrate?

That exponents matter? TAM's one-artist-ask-one-artist-ask-one-artist-until-the-number-hits-forty-total-artists paled in volume when compared to SW's ten-artists-ask-ten-artists plan.

That artists and writers who are also curators like to shake the same-old up a bit? TAM's Max Presneill is a working artist and writes catalog and other texts. Doug Harvey is an artist and a highly-regarded art writer and critic.

Or that telephones and chain letters are nowadays quaint anachronisms or, like the telegraph, the precursors to links, retweets and hangouts?

Friday, July 22, 2011

TAM Jam The News
Farmers Markets Beat Starving Artists

In them olde days, starving artists were considered the key urban revitalization force.

Now, farmers markets are planners' manna.

News Item:

Market Watch: A bumper crop of new markets in the L.A. area:
Thousand Oaks, Hollywood and Torrance are among the new venues, adding to the competition for true straight-from-the-farm produce.
(From Los Angeles Times.)

Art Item:

From post-industrial artists’ den to condo community (From Baltimore Brew, but you know the story from all over, even if not this particular example.)

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Yes, Yes, And Absolutely

This blog received answers to the first trio of these recent Carmaggedon-related questions... (All the questions are here.)

Q: Did the reception take place?
A: Yes.

Q: If so, did attendance pale in comparison to recent well-attended TAM openings?
A: Yes.

Q: If so, did the stay-at-home honking about Carmaggedon have anything to do with numbers?
A: Absolutely.

Of course, attendance was still better than Saturday at the Getty.

Monday, July 18, 2011

TAM Greater Than Getty?

Continuing from this previous post....

Throughout both museum's histories...

On how many Saturdays has TAM's attendance been larger than the Getty's?

So long as TAM stayed open yesterday, then that answer is at least once.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Did Honking About Carmaggedon Hurt TAM Opening?

Baker's Dozen III, the latest TAM main gallery exhibition, was scheduled to open with a reception last night, July 16, 2011...

Did the reception take place?

If so, did attendance pale in comparison to recent well-attended TAM openings?

If so, did the stay-at-home honking about Carmaggedon have anything to do with numbers?

If so, does that indicate that TAM's mix-and-mingle occasions are heavily attended by people from outside the South Bay?

If so, does that indicate that a group show with forty or so artists (Telephone) will draw more people to an opening than a group show with thirteen? (Baker's.)

Even if bigger-named artists are part of the latter show? (Examples: Martin Durazo, Alexandra Grant.)

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

About TAM vs. About Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery

About TAM:

About TAM:"The Museum encourages all people to develop and increase their understanding and appreciation for modern and contemporary artwork via a variety of exhibitions offered in its two gallery spaces, as well as educational programs, artist talks, lectures, and symposia.

Through its emphasis on contemporary artistic expression in Southern California and globally, the Torrance Art Museum brings together visual artists and community members; fosters personal and civic well being by inspiring understanding and appreciation of the visual arts; promotes meaningful experiences in the arts to strengthen creative and critical thinking skills; and builds bridges between the visual arts and other disciplines in the humanities and sciences."

About LAMAG:

"The Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery Associates (LAMAGA) is a private non-profit corporation founded in 1951, whose primary mission is to promote, assist, and serve as advocates for the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery. LAMAGA provides financial, marketing, and public relations support for the Gallery’s exhibitions, publications, and educational programs. Its principle mandates have been to enhance the exhibition programs, promote visitor understanding and appreciation of art through the education program, and to insure the Gallery’s accessibility and involvement with City-wide audiences and the surrounding immigrant communities. LAMAGA supports the Gallery financially through grant writing and the administration of grant funds, personal solicitations, production and sale of exhibition catalogues, ancillary programs, and fundraising events developed with Gallery staff to compliment the exhibitions."

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

About TAM vs. About Norton Simon

About Norton Simon:

Excerpt, first sentence only: "The Norton Simon Museum is known around the world as one of the most remarkable private art collections ever assembled."

About TAM:

About TAM:"The Museum encourages all people to develop and increase their understanding and appreciation for modern and contemporary artwork via a variety of exhibitions offered in its two gallery spaces, as well as educational programs, artist talks, lectures, and symposia.

Through its emphasis on contemporary artistic expression in Southern California and globally, the Torrance Art Museum brings together visual artists and community members; fosters personal and civic well being by inspiring understanding and appreciation of the visual arts; promotes meaningful experiences in the arts to strengthen creative and critical thinking skills; and builds bridges between the visual arts and other disciplines in the humanities and sciences."

Monday, June 27, 2011

About TAM vs. About MOCA

About TAM:

About TAM:"The Museum encourages all people to develop and increase their understanding and appreciation for modern and contemporary artwork via a variety of exhibitions offered in its two gallery spaces, as well as educational programs, artist talks, lectures, and symposia.

Through its emphasis on contemporary artistic expression in Southern California and globally, the Torrance Art Museum brings together visual artists and community members; fosters personal and civic well being by inspiring understanding and appreciation of the visual arts; promotes meaningful experiences in the arts to strengthen creative and critical thinking skills; and builds bridges between the visual arts and other disciplines in the humanities and sciences."

About MOCA:

"Mission & Vision Statement: MOCA's mission is to be the defining museum of contemporary art. MOCA engages artists and audiences through an ambitious program of exhibitions, collection, education, and publication. MOCA identifies and supports the most significant and challenging art of its time, places it in historical context, and links the range of the visual arts to contemporary culture. MOCA provides leadership by actively fostering and presenting new work, emerging media, and original scholarship."

Sunday, June 26, 2011

About TAM vs. About SMMOA

About TAM:

About TAM:"The Museum encourages all people to develop and increase their understanding and appreciation for modern and contemporary artwork via a variety of exhibitions offered in its two gallery spaces, as well as educational programs, artist talks, lectures, and symposia.

Through its emphasis on contemporary artistic expression in Southern California and globally, the Torrance Art Museum brings together visual artists and community members; fosters personal and civic well being by inspiring understanding and appreciation of the visual arts; promotes meaningful experiences in the arts to strengthen creative and critical thinking skills; and builds bridges between the visual arts and other disciplines in the humanities and sciences."

About SMMOA:
"Mission: Through its exhibitions, education, and outreach programs, the Santa Monica Museum of Art fosters diversity, innovation, and discovery in contemporary art—local, national, and international."

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Star 69

Telephone is scheduled to close today.

The show was an experiment in deregulation, like when the courts took Ma Bell down.

This blog, for whatever its worth, wasn't impressed with the majority of the works in the show... but so what? the conceptual idea was of more interest. Any single great work in the show would be extra, like a *69 feature from a Baby Bell compared with more competition and lower rates.

Contemporary parallel: ATT / T-Mobile proposed merger.

Contemporary parallel: Mat Gleason's show.

Festival style spectacle: Adam's Telephone To Telephone Tweets.

All world tweets: About telephones.

Next TAM curatorial concept cum pragmatic crowdsource: Opening in mid-September.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Photography: Holding Its Own

Mid-exhibition run, checked in with TAM's Max Presneill for an assessment of the artists' chain-curated show, Telephone. (Closing June 25.)

The director said he's pleased with how the show turned out. Said, too, that "photography is holding its place," and "being used in a '70s conceptual way."

And said he sees in the show "a re-engagement with craft and technological prowess," noting that the videos, for instance, display high production value.

Also, the show has more drawings than he would have guessed, the artists display a greater ambition, and it would appear that "slacking is gone."

If so, what will become of Bob Dobbs?

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Six Twenty Three

Telephone's artists be told: eight foot wide maximum, height can hit ceiling. Just need room for all forty artists.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Social Investment

The current TAM exhibition, Telephone, closing June 25, relied on one artist to select the next artist to select the next artist to select the next artist and so on to appear in the show.

Love, hate, or feel indifferent about the resulting show, putting it together via this conceptual curatorial outsourcing turned out to be a smooth operation, according to TAM's chief, Max Presneill, with works arriving on time and installations including artists assisting one another.

This blog: "That's because of the social contract?"

That man: "The social investment."

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The City Seal As Art

This is the official seal of Torrance.

"Torrance," the text reads, "A Balanced City. Industrial, Residential, Commercial."

What would the seal look like if TAM was in charge of re-doing it?

What would the seal look like if artists whose works appear at TAM re-imagined it?

What would the text say if TAM's staff or visiting curators re-wrote it?

Is the blog the only one confused by the official Torrance history of its seal?

Have the past and present seals been created by a trustee and a fireman? What happened to the entries in 1966 by all the children? The current design couldn't possibly be by a kid -- unless the tot is history's most precocious urban planner.

Monday, June 20, 2011

The Rest of This Post Being Written by Feet

This is not the piece by Eric Yahnker that starts TAM's Telephone.

Six Miles By Car

Six miles, by car, from TAM: Freshia Market, home to digi toilets available for sale and the $1.50 tuna croquette.

Closer, still, a refinery.

Even closer, the swimming pool for youth sports.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Time Flies

Forty days ago, this blog wrapped up a string of posts.

We joined the hundreds and hundreds (and hundreds) of others who attended opening night of TAM's Gateway Japan show. We watched the sumo wrestlers performance / sculpture. We bought one of the $50 artworks for sale to benefit the Japanese red cross. We patronized TAM's event sponsor, Bar One.

And of course, we took in the show, doing the best we could to separate the surrounding weeks' sadness, poignancy, and the opening night revelry from the works' themselves.

Forty days later, the show is gone. Forty days later, Japan is all but out of the daily headlines -- replaced by news from Libya, Syria, Yemen, and now most of all, Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Anyone reading this know without looking elsewhere online how many of the Fukushima six nuclear reactors are fully under control now?

Forty days...

TAM runs their shows fast, like a larger venue's project room.

This so-often take-downs and set-ups taxes the institution's skeleton staff -- like flying, it's the takeoffs and landings that matter most.

But it's a boon for the South Bay and visiting public -- getting ten main shows, say, instead of three or four that the institution could get away with running.

The down side -- time be flying. Forty days. The opening seemed like yesterday. How many times did you get back?

Friday, March 25, 2011

It's A Small World -- Sumo Connections

Our old Latimes.com "The Secret City" column about the California Sumo Association: http://www.losjeremy.com/blog/archives/2004/09/the_slimmer_sid.html

The story of how TAM's sumo performance and artwork came to be, thanks in part to the CSA:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/jocelynfoye/sumo-wrestling-on-clay-a-performance-and-sculptura

The Time Between Shows
How TAM Spends the Three Week Interval Once One Exhibition Ends and a New Exhibition Opens
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this weeks-in-advance writing, scheduled to open today, March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during a ten-day period. This is the final question and answer in the series. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Again, please note that the questions and answers for this series dates back to March 6, 2011:

By now, much more information will presumably have become available regarding the six artists and one curator who were scheduled to fly from Japan to attend the Gateway opening -- and about the health and well-being of those and the other participating artists and their families.

Had the 9.0 earthquake and tsunami not hit earlier this month, the following would have been the business as usual reply at the Torrance Art Museum.


Jeremy Rosenberg: Gateway Japan comes next, opening three weeks after WNP closes... What happens during those 21 days? What other information can you share about the Gateway exhibition?

Max Presneill: One week to take down show, wrap everything and repack it into crates, ship out or deliver it, remove all signs of it.

Week 2 – we repair the walls – spackling and filling holes, repainting the walls, returning the space top pristine condition. The next show’s works start to arrive and get checked for condition, etc.

Week 3 – we install the new show. Hanging paintings, placing newly repainted pedestals out with sculptures, etc, putting title plaques up, making sure the website is updated, collecting the postcards and catalogs for the show, lighting it when hung, etc.

Then, Show Time for the opening reception. This is about half of the job, alongside with all the media stuff and PR that we do, while also carrying out the ongoing jobs that we have to attend to every week. It is a busy and difficult 3 weeks, I can tell you, but also some of the most exciting for us at TAM.

End of the Q&A series

What Else Is On Your Mind?
Creating a Small but World-Class Series of Exhibitions
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day ten. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: What else, about anything, is on your mind to share here?

Max Presneill: We are attempting to create a small but world class series of exhibitions that will present to our audiences the most famous living artists of our day, alongside those emerging artists we feel will be too one day.

We are trying to make sure we are global in our outlook and will bring the best international work to Torrance so they too can view it and interact with it without having to fly to New York or somewhere to see it.

We are trying to cover all aspects of contemporary visual culture in our programming – including Performance Art, Sound Art, panel discussions and artist made films amongst other things. This is a very hard task but one which we are succeeding with and wish to continue.

We want EVERYONE’s support. Come by the openings, drop in to see the show, let people hear about them through word of mouth. If Torrance can present this ambitious a program and people want to see it continue then partner with us in seeing it succeed.

Coming tomorrow: Gateway Japan -- preparing for the exhibition

(Note: This post was prepared prior to the horrific earthquake and tsunami. This blog is awaiting word about how the artists and curator from Japan and their families scheduled to be part of the exhibition are doing.)

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Is Video Art Hard to Turn On?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day nine. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: I haven't mentioned the Davida Nemeroff videos of yet... Anything you'd like to point out, artistically or otherwise about this smaller show that took place at TAM alongside What's New, Pussycat?

Related: How did they function, technically? Curators have told me in the past something along the lines of, "If only I could afford better headphones..."

I've also witnessed directors and others struggling to turn shows on in the mornings... What technical challenges does a docent / volunteer-reliant institution face when presenting vids?

Max Presneill: We have an easy monitor system so that only pressing the power button does it all – starts the DVDs playing and nothing else needs doing.

Coming tommorrow: TAM's long-term goal to present small but world-class series of exhibitions.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Did What's New, Pussycat Meet Your Original Intention?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day eight. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: WNP both plays homage to the forthcoming Pacific Standard Time (or perhaps challenges PST?) as well as serves to further introduce emerging artists...

In your essay, you wrote: "Our intention then is to examine the continued relevance of those years and how they have shaped and continue to shape art here and now, as Los Angeles expands its influence as a major art city of the world, onto new generations and geographies."

Now that the show is ending / over, did you achieve your intention? How so?

Max Presneill: I think we did in that we helped contextualize the art from the past years into a current practice of interest, as well as making a significant point in the continued relevance of those originating concerns and materials.

We mostly see exhibitions out there in the world of new art using old art to contextualize itself and we managed to open that up to flow both ways -- a rare and worthwhile feat, I think.

Coming tomorrow: Was it difficult to operate the videos in an exhibition?

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Update: All Artists Well; All Art Arrived or Coming During Next 36 Hours

[Previously about Japan:

Logistics Report -- How Much of the Art is Still Stuck in Japan?

Art As Irrelevant? Museum Faces Seeming Dilemma; Cancel Show Or Not?

And:
Can This Sculpture From Japan Still Mean The Same?

And:
Japanese Artists Said To Be Uninjured

And:
Hopes, Thoughts With Japan]


We received an update Monday afternoon from TAM's director and curator, Max Presneill. He confirms that all of the Japanese artists and curators participating in the upcoming Gateway Japan exhibition are okay, and he further says that all of their artworks have either now arrived at TAM or are expected to arrive today (Tuesday) or Wednesday.

Logistics Report -- How Much of the Art Is Still Stuck in Japan?

[Previously about Japan:

Art As Irrelevant? Museum Faces Seeming Dilemma; Cancel Show Or Not?

And:
Can This Sculpture From Japan Still Mean The Same?

And:
Japanese Artists Said To Be Uninjured

And:
Hopes, Thoughts With Japan]


This blog has previously noted that even while the previous TAM main exhibition, What's New, Pussycat was still open, a telltale sign of the continuim that is a full programming schedule had already arrived -- a lone package, from Japan, still sealed, wrapped in its mailing material, sitting on a side table in the office of the TAM curator and director.

That package, as it turned out, contained the work of artist Taku Anekawa. The art was mailed from the Tokyo gallery, Nanzuka Underground.

In the time since that early March TAM office visit and last week, the work of five other Japanese artists had arrived at the museum, according to TAM's Max Presneill.

(There are fourteen artists scheduled to participate in the Gateway Japan show who reside full or part-time in Japan. The other seven artists in the show are of Japanese heritage and reside full-time in the U.S.)

The Japanese works hadn't, however, arrived via international shipping.

Instead, work by Tomoo Gokita, of Japan, had come to TAM via his Los Angeles-based gallery representation. The same is true of Kenichi Yokono. Gil Kuno lives in both the U.S. and Japan, and his work is at TAM because the artist himself left Japan for L.A. the week prior the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear reactor damage. His work was here already.

As of last week's conversation with Presneill, what would happen if not all of the Japan-based works of art were able to make it to Torrance on time, owing to the damages in infrastructure abroad and/or changes in at least short-term priorities?

Good curators and administrators alike plan for successful projects but also improvise if and as needed. Presneill was unwilling to be too hypothetical when asked for any definitive answer to the above. One option, he acknowledged, could be to give the Japanese American artists more space in the show, with a public explanation of where the previously intended works were.

We'll check in with Presneill and his team this week and see how many of the pieces have now arrived, and what -- if any -- late changes in the show may occur.

What's the Oddest Story From What's New, Pussycat?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-period. This is day seven. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: What's the oddest story or anecdote involving WNP that I wouldn't already know?

Max Presneill: The help I got from some of the artists in the show regarding getting ahold of some of the other artworks, not made by themselves, for the show. They were incredibly helpful and really went out of their way to help us acquire some of the works for WNP. Very generous of them and a side to artists often ignored -- people who don’t know any artists may think them as self-involved and thus selfish, or some other stereotype -- which is mostly untrue and that is odd.

Coming tomorrow: Did you achieve your intention in staging WNP?

Monday, March 21, 2011

Regrets? Would You Do Anything Differently?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day six. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: Any regrets regarding this show? Anything you'd do differently even given the same budget and staff size?

Max Presneill: If one spends 6 weeks living with a show there are invariably other artists that come to mind who would have been perfect to include. Not exactly a regret but something to be learned. Differently – there usually are things but those will remain with me alone, J.

Coming tomorrow: What's the oddest story involving What's New, Pussycat?

Art as Irrelevent?
Museum Faces Seeming Dilemma;
Cancel Japan Show Or Not?

[Previously:
Can This Sculpture From Japan Still Mean The Same?

And:
Japanese Artists Said To Be Uninjured

And:
Hopes, Thoughts With Japan]


In the earliest days following the cataclysmic earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear reactor damage to all hit Japan, the Torrance Art Museum faced a seeming dilemma -- to cancel or to at least postpone the scheduled Gateway Japan exhibition, or to open and exhibit the show beginning March 26, 2011 as had been long-since planned.

The show was and still is to feature the artworks of fourteen full- or part-time residents of Japan, along with two Japanese co-curators.

Well, it turns out that seeming dilemma wasn't really a dilemma at all.

Assuming that the facts on the ground don't much change -- a significant assumption -- then TAM will proceed with the show as planned, with an added opening day fundraiser for the Japanese Red Cross.

A week or so ago, TAM's curator and director Max Presneill received an email from Ei Kibukawa, one of the two Tokyo gallerists who have become Presneill's co-curators for Gateway. In addition to providing this update on his and his family's safety as well as the situation in Tokyo and to the northeast, Kibukawa announced the redoubled intention of he and the artists in his circle to still come to Torrance for the show's opening.

Kibukawa said that the disasters make for a bleak immediate outlook for artists and art professionals in his nation. "I am afraid," Kibukawa wrote, "that it will be difficult to live by art business in Japan."

The gallerist goes on to say that Gateway is therefore "very good timing."

And as noted here, Kibukawa and the show's other co-curator, Yuko Wakaume, both in separate emails pushed for a philanthropic component to Gateway.

Wakaume wrote in part: "Artists [living] in Japan, they would like to do something for the sufferers..."

TAM's Presneill and newly hired TAM Assistant Curator Jason Ramos were already by that time discussing options. When Wakaume emailed to say she and the artists she knows in the show were intending to bring small artworks to donate for a charity sale, Presneill and Ramos et al. put the details together towards making that happen.

But as for the show itself, in a conversation in the days following the earthquake and tsunami, Presneill -- also an artist himself -- expressed undiluted confidence that his fellow painters and sculptors and otherwise would desire the show to go on.

"I know artists," Presneill said. "They aren't going to say that because of disaster we should give up the thing we most care about in the world."

He was referring to their art practices in general there, and not specifically to the TAM show. (And again, this comment was based on the still-standing initial information that all the artists and their families were safe and uninjured.)

Regarding the TAM show, Presneill asked and answered his own rhetorical question. "What does it matter if we're going to do it?" he said of the show. "On one hand it doesn't matter. On the other hand, of course it matters, and perhaps it matters even more."

Art and creative endeavors, Presneill said, make us fundamentally human. And in time of crises, the need to strive on with hope is particular vital.

"That momentum forward," Presneill said us crucial, "even in the face of whatever gets in their way -- people will create."

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Can This Sculpture From Japan Still Mean The Same?


[Previous: Japanese Artists Said to be Uninjured]


In this earlier post-earthquake and tsunami post, Thoughts, Hopes With Japan, we wrote in part:
...The list of those artists is on the museum's home page, along with images of the artists' works -- some of which appear particularly more poignant in light of cataclysmic events....

The image from the forthcoming TAM exhibition, Gateway Japan that most clearly fits the above description is the sculpture by Akihiro Yasugi. That image is reproduced here in this post.

Yasugi is one of the Japanese artists affiliated with Yuko Wakaume, co-curator of the Gateway show. Yasugi was originally scheduled to come to Torrance to attend the opening reception. Our understanding through TAM is that's still anticipated to happen.

We asked TAM director and curator Max Presneill if, post disaster, he reads any of the pieces by Japanese artists in the show differently now than he did previously.

Yes, Presneill said, citing Yasugi's piece and Akira Shikiya's 'climbing men' piece as two primary examples. Presneill is an artist as well as a museum professional, and that informs the cautioning that he then provided.

Feel whatever you feel, Presneill essentially said, regarding any work of art. But don't mistake pathos or any observation or emotion drawn from current events or otherwise for the original intent of the artist.

"We can look at this in the light of events," Presneill said, "and that can affect how we see the work. But this is all in retrospect -- to assume that onto a work is unfair."

Or: "If the artist wasn't talking about earthquakes, then its an invention by us."

And: "That interpretation would be about our needs."


Image via Torrance Art Museum web site

Is it Easier to Install or Deinstall an Exhibition?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day five. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: Is it physically easier to set up an exhibition or to break one down?

Max Presneill: Easier to take down – and faster.

Coming tomorrow: Any regrets regarding What's New, Pussycat?

Saturday, March 19, 2011

What's the Greatest Compliment and the Greatest Insult The Last Show Received
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day four. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: What's the greatest compliment you've received during this show -- and what's the worst insult?

Max Presneill: A ‘thank you’ from the artists when they say why they liked it (and it is accurate rather than just flattering) is the biggest compliment for me personally. The biggest insult was someone saying it is easy to do big shows like this one - maybe an accidental compliment.

Coming tomorrow: It is physically easier to install or to deinstall an exhibition?

Friday, March 18, 2011

Why Do TAM Exhibitions Last For Six Weeks?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer each day during an eleven-day period. This is day three. Scroll down the blog to see past related posts.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: What factors go into deciding the duration of this -- or any -- TAM exhibition? Why six weeks or so in this case?

Max Presneill: We look at how many shows we can do in a year, what shows we really want to do, the time it will take to deinstall one, prep the spaces back into a ‘new’ condition and then install the next show (we have a 3-week turnaround time which is very fast for a museum), making sure that the run of each is long enough so that anyone who wants to see it has time enough to get around to doing so. We do not keep them up as long as some museums because we feel that those who are interested have probably seen it by the end of a show and that our audience is by then looking forward to our next opening, or so I hope, J.

Coming tomorrow: What's the greatest compliment and greatest insult you've received during What's New, Pussycat?

Thursday, March 17, 2011

How TAM decides what artwork goes where?
Should Kristin Klosterman's piece be alone?
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer during an-eleven day period. This is day two. See the post above for day one.

Here's today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: The Kristin Klosterman piece -- before the show opened, you were discussing with artists and your staff and volunteers whether or not to try and fit a second artwork in that specially-built room your team prepared as a four-walled space within the larger gallery space.

You decided not to house that additional artwork there, I gather. What happened to that other work? And are you happy with the decision?

(Full disclosure, that's my second-favorite piece in the show, after the Claudia Morse code work -- think the Klosterman looks perfect as is.)

Max Presneill: It actually was a collaboration between Kristin and Laddie John Dill. He placed his neon tubes in sand on the floor – it was these elements that lit up the paintings of Kristin. We decided that only their joint project would be featured in that space so as to avoid any confusion about the collab work and to allow a perceptual experience that was not interfered with by other works.

Tomorrow: What factors go into deciding the duration of this -- or any -- TAM exhibition? Why six weeks in this case?

Details About TAM Japan Fundraiser

[Previous: Japanese Artists Said To Be Uninjured]

Here is the email call for artists and the public regarding the just-organized fundraiser coinciding with the opening reception of the still-happening Gateway Japan show on March 26.

The idea originated in an email from one of show's Japanese co-curators, who said artists in her circle coming for the show would bring small artworks to donate for charitable sale.

Picking up on that idea, TAM's text follows:

“An easy give and take” (quoted from Jackson Pollock)

A fundraiser event for the Japanese Red Cross

Saturday 26th March, 12 noon – 9pm at the Torrance Art Museum

Calling ALL artists

On Saturday 26th March the Torrance Art Museum will place tables out in the patio area and ask that artists who wish to support the relief efforts for Japan bring a small artwork to donate. We will ask $50, cash only, for ALL artworks - all of the funds raised to be donated to the Japanese Red Cross.

Works can be delivered to the museum from 12 noon onwards and will be available to buy at any time, with anything sold removed there and then by buyer. The fundraiser will continue throughout the Opening Reception, from 6-9pm, of the exhibition Gateway Japan – an exhibition of Japanese and Japanese American artists (details below).

FOR THE PUBLIC

Please come and show your support, meet the artists who have flown in from Tokyo for this event as well as our local artists and the artists who are donating to this event - and for the small amount of $50 walk away with an original work of art, see a real Sumo Wrestling bout, meet some great artists, and knowing that a great cause was served too.

Any unsold works will be placed online for sale after the opening reception on a dedicated website.

More information is available at www.torranceartmuseum.com

PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO ANYONE AND EVERYONE

The Time Between Shows -- Part IV
SMMOA's Lisa Melandri

Here's another entry in our continuing series of asking museum and gallery curators and directors about how they feel about, and experience, the time between shows -- the period following the public end of one exhibition and the public opening of the next.

[Previous: curators; a preparator; photos.]

"I think that there is often a sadness at seeing something go that you enjoyed and worked on for so long but it is a quick reaction because you are really focused and sometimes anxious about the logistical concerns of the 'next one'— the crates arriving on time, the installation going smoothly, and then the thrill of seeing all the work out and in the same place. A little sadness gives way to an extraordinary amount of excitement and expectation."

-- Lisa Melandri, Deputy Director for Exhibitions and Programs, Santa Monica Museum of Art

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Japanese Artists Said To Be Uninjured

[Previous: Hopes, Thoughts With Japan]

Sixteen full or part-time residents of Japan are scheduled to participate in the Torrance Art Museum's upcoming exhibition.

All sixteen of those people are apparently accounted for and uninjured following the catastrophic 9.0 earthquake and subsequent tsunami that hit the island nation.

That's the news, relayed second-hand, thanks to TAM director and curator Max Presneill's email exchanges with two Tokyo gallery directors who are in touch with the various artists.

Presneill has corresponded with Ei Kibukawa, who runs the Eitoeiko gallery in Tokyo, and Yuko Wakaume, who is Presneill's co-curator for the forthcoming TAM Gateway Japan show.

Kibukawa and Wakaume's emails speak to the devastation to the northeast, as well as the limited power, gas, water, phone service, and public transportation in Tokyo. One of the pair notes feeling a "BIG" -- in all caps -- aftershock while or perhaps just prior to corresponding.

Kibukawa and Wakaume's emails both mention the nuclear crisis -- which has worsened since.

As of the time of their emails, each of the pair still plan on coming to Torrance for the opening reception. Each clearly expects the exhibition to still take place, indicate how it could be cathartic, and request that it be charitable.

The Museum is already planning a special art sale towards the latter -- and also posted a banner on its website homepage advising how to text money for eathquake relief.

Originally, as many as eight of the twelve year-round Japanese resident artists were expected to come to Torrance for the opening.

Kibukawa's email indicates that he will still be bringing the artists in his circle -- either three or four people. Wakaume was -- and still is -- anticipated to travel with three or four others.

More information will be posted here as it becomes available; all of this is clearly subject to change.

The fourteen full or part-time Japanese residents in the Gateway exhibition line-up are:

Masura Aikawa
Taku Anekawa
Shusuke Ao
Shingo Francis (lives in Japan and U.S.)
Tomoo Gokita
Yuki Hashimoto
Minako Kumagai
Gil Kuno (lives in Japan and U.S.)
Satoshi Saegusa
Keiko Sakamotoo
Akira Shikiya
Akihiro Yasugi
Kenichi Yokono
Yuki Yoshida

Was TAM's Exhibition A Success?
And How Is Success Here Judged
Today's Question for TAM's Max Presneill

TAM's exhibition, What's New, Pussycat? closed March 6, 2011. TAM's next exhibition, Gateway Japan, is as of this writing, scheduled to open March 26, 2011. (Hopes and thoughts.)

During The Time Between Shows (see this link for more information, please
http://writer.torranceartmuseum.com/2011/03/time-between-shows-part-ii.html
), this blog checked in with TAM's curator and director Max Presneill.

We'll be presenting one question and one answer during an eleven-day period.

Today's question and answer --


Jeremy Rosenberg: How was What's New, Pussycat? received? And what are useful criteria for deciding how any show has been received? Does quantity of attendees matter? Quality of critical reviews? Volume of tweets? Reaction of the artists involved?

Max Presneill: WNP was a big one -- in reputations of the artists involved, in the amount of buzz and attention. We had a really big opening and the number of visitors was high over the entire run. I don’t know what the exact figures were (they are being tallied up now) but they were very good. Of course sheer numbers does not tell you if a show was good or not. Nor does the amount of reviews or tweets, etc.

For me the criteria of the quality of an exhibition is a more subtle affair – ones own judgment, those of ones peers too, both count. It is a critical evaluation a bit like how anyone can tell when furniture is well laid out in a room (for the install), well lit, etc. In some ways it is a success if people like it and do not even notice the hand of the curator -- if things just seem to be well placed, the flow through the space is smooth, the works lit so you don’t even pay that attention and most importantly of all, if the theme is strong enough to encourage conversations about the show and the works selected for it create an engaging experience. The artists themselves are often the harshest critics of these matters so having them happy is a big plus too.

Tomorrow: Kristin Klosterman and Laddie John Dill.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

The Time Between Shows -- Part III
The Preparator's View

Last week, we heard from seven art and culture museum and gallery curators and directors about how they feel about and experience the time between shows -- the period following the public end of one exhibition and the public opening of the next.

Today, we present a preparator's view of that same period.

Here's the link back to what the curators and directors said.

And here's what Matt Driggs, an L.A.-based artist, curator, and accomplished preparator, says:

"As most of the people that have written on this subject are on the curating side
of the "between exhibitions," I will speak to my experience as Chief Prepartor
and Exhibition Designer at the USC Fisher Museum of Art.

"The Fisher is a small-to-medium sized institution perhaps a little bit bigger than the Torrance Museum. At the Museum, between shows it was all hands on deck - the preparators, curator, educator, receptionist and even the director could be called on to perform a task (though the director was usually the last person you would ask
for help).

"An exhibit would end -- the old artwork was taken down, placed in crates, packed
and shipped out -- walls were torn down, new walls put up - mudded and painted,
and new crates were shipped in for the upcoming exhibition.

"Curators became registrars - white gloves placed on hands to remove the artwork from the crates (as not to mark up the object) and every nook and cranny of the artwork checked for scratches, nicks or marks. If there was an aberration on the painting or sculpture, it is marked down on the condition report to provide proof that the Museum was not liable for its damage.

"When there was a small exhibit at the Fisher, I would perform 90% percent of the
installation work. If there was an elaborate installation for an exhibit, I
could be in need for up to seven [additional] preparators to install and handle artwork. During these busy times I would act more as facilitator than workhorse, moving with each of the workers and stopping to help them when a difficult task would come up.

"During my time at the Museum I could had scrubbed the floor with little more than a toothbrush and the next minute (after a hand wash and some white gloves) moved and installed a painting well worth over a million dollars."

-- Matt Driggs, former Exhibition Designer and Chief Preparator at the USC Fisher Museum and former Curator at Edward Giardina Contemporary Art and Raid Projects.

Again:

Here's the link back to what the curators and directors said.

And here are a few photos from the time currently at TAM between shows.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Thoughts, Hopes With Japan

Like people everywhere, our thoughts and hopes are with the people of Japan, and the Japanese diaspora.

The Torrance Art Museum's next scheduled exhibition is titled, Gateway Japan, and is to feature the works of 21 artists who are either from Japan, or of Japanese heritage.

The list of those artists is on the museum's home page, along with images of the artists' works -- some of which appear particularly more poignant in light of cataclysmic events.

At least six of the Japanese artists, and the Japanese co-curator of the show, had been scheduled to travel to Torrance and attend the Gateway opening reception.

A box from one of the artists had already arrived at the museum.

We'll check in now with TAM's director to see if he's heard from any of the seven. More here when we learn more.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Time Between Shows - Part II

As noted in our previous post, this blog emailed the following question to Max Presneill, TAM's director and curator:

"What's New, Pussycat, closes March 5. Are the final few days of a show -- particularly one you co-curated -- exciting? Sad? Bittersweet?"

Presneill's emailed reply:

"By the time the close of a show arrives we are already way into the next exhibition – arranging shipping, getting the catalog together and that sort of thing. We have moved on from that particular relationship and are courting the next one, ha, ha."

How would Presneill's response compare with that of fellow art and culture professionals in and around Los Angeles?

We checked in with a handful of those folks this week, asking about their own experiences between shows they've put together or overseen.

The below are among the texted and emailed replies:

**

"To me it was like a Saturday... A restful period between work periods."

-- Adolfo V. Nodal, curator, gallery and museum director

**

"I like the time between shows -- one of my favorite things about it is the potential inherent within the empty yet charged space."

-- Irene Tsatsos, Director of Gallery Programs, The Armory Center for the Arts

**

"It only looks like a breathing space from outside, usually it's a hectic time -- the exhibition may be closed as far as the public is concerned, but the logistics of deinstallation and reinstallation then arise -- getting stuff off the walls/floor, packed up, stored or returned/picked up; patching and painting walls, even moving them; collecting unpacking and installing new work. To say nothing of the PR, website update, writing and printing labels, catalogs etc. And of course conceptualizing and designing new exhibitions.

"There's a great book called "Art Worlds" by Howard Becker, from the `80s which unpacks some of the people and tasks involved with the intention of demonstrating that work is not the product of a single artist but everyone who supports the work's production and display, from canvas weavers to security staff; the action of a multiplicity not a singular individual, in other words.

"When I was co-directing Raid [Projects] with Max [Presneill] we did a new exhibition every month, that was a conveyor belt of action that never stopped. Maybe the first or second week of the exhibition were times of a slight lull -- but that might just have been the result of collapse due to exhaustion."

-- Janet Owen Driggs, curator, writer, former co-director of Raid Projects

**

"At the Studio [for Southern California History] the period in between exhibits usually is a scurrying period of cleaning and whitewashing. It is often a period of cleansing and the last time we did it in between Law & Disorder and Love is Living Large there was a great excitement waiting for the new exhibit. I normally am too exhausted to really think about it. However, I am usually so sick of an exhibit by the time it goes down that to have it go away is a fantastic feeling of accomplishment."

--Sharon Sekhon, Founder & Executive Director, the Studio for Southern California History

**

"In my experience that period is when I have felt a nice concentration of creative energy. The sense of possibility in the new presentation is still felt because it is still being realized and the type of questions that run through your mind are will it live up to my expectations? will the artist be able to actualize their ideas? how will everything look installed?"

-- Name Withheld, director of an arts and culture organization

**

"The period between exhibitions is full of hustle and bustle. It feels like there are a million and one things to accomplish, and all while we are winding down the previous exhibition! Has all the art been received yet, when is it being installed? Are the press kits finished, post card, catalog, website, is the gallery prep done? It's all very exciting!"

-- Colton Stenke, former Assistant Curator, Torrance Art Museum

The Time Between Shows

This blog emailed the following question to Max Presneill, TAM's director and curator:

"What's New, Pussycat, closes March 5. Are the final few days of a show -- particularly one you co-curated -- exciting? Sad? Bittersweet?"

Presneill's email reply:

"By the time the close of a show arrives we are already way into the next exhibition – arranging shipping, getting the catalog together and that sort of thing. We have moved on from that particular relationship and are courting the next one, ha, ha."

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Exhibition Breakdown

What goes up, must come down....

Photos shot a couple of days after the conclusion of What's New, Pussycat?





Eavesdropping

Eavesdropping at the museum:

Man: You smell really nice.

Woman: Thank you. People always say that.

Man: Well, you do.

Woman: I don't know why. I smoke. I don't wash my clothes that often.

Man: Hmm.

Woman: I do use cocoa butter in my hair.

Man: That must be it.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

First Sign of Spring

If the First Sign of Spring is Bears Awakening From Slumber, then the first sign of a new exhibition is a box bearing art, still sealed, newly arrived from Japan, sitting on a side table in a museum director's office.

TAM's next show, Gateway Japan, opens later this month.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Alpine Village: An Art Review

Alpine Village
An Art Review

Take the 110 South towards TAM, exit at Torrance Boulevard.

What’s the can’t miss banner at the bottom of the off-ramp?

“Alpine Village.”

There’s also some accompanying text about a $19.95 champagne brunch, or something like that.

Here’s the web buzz on the Village.

And the joint’s own website, decorated pre-St.Patrick’s day with shamrocks, lays claim to being home to both Oktoberfest and weekly salsa classes. Eurozone, baby.

That Alpine sign got WIR thinking about food and the world’s great museums….

Go to the Met in New York and you’ll sit on those concrete front steps eating a hot dog or a pretzel from a cart. (Alas, health department, no more potato knishes?)

Go to the National Gallery in D.C. and sit in the European sophisticate espresso bar / fruit tart café, near where the water pours down.

As noted here, go to the Ufizzi and consume a flavor of gelato for each block along the way.

The Getty has a decent, affordable cafeteria with those killer sunset ocean views, too. Get the soup and one of those airplane bottles of wine, right?

We’ll stop here for the moment, but a question hangs…

Why is it that areas around art galleries tend to be lousy with restaurants, but museums tend to have push carts, food trucks, or their own joints?

Is it zoning? Size? Fear that if my man TiGeorges’ Chicken restaurant catches fire it’ll burn down The Temple of Dendur?

Or is it is simple as that museums are their own destination – often for tourists and school kids? Whereas high end galleries cater to the wealthy who can afford to pay for a fine meal to go along with the Rauschenberg they just acquired?

Or that to visit a gallery is free, while a museum trip for a couple or family of four can bust the billfold, leaving little left over except to go to the McDonald’s that is shamefully incorporated into the Air & Space Museum in D.C., or the California Science Center in L.A.’s Exposition Park?

(On second thought, fast food at science and technology museums does make sense.)

Anyway, the Torrance Civic Center has vending machines; TAM has a staff break room.

Here’s to Alpine Village opening an annex on the sculpture patio.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Art as Everyday


A screen grab of City of Torrance official tweets, demonstrating the interplay here between city, art, and service.

From an outsider's point-of-view, at least, being included matter-of-factly in tweets like the above could help further popularize and demystify what goes on at cultural institutions.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

MeetUp at TAM? They did.
Plus, Tom Jones and more from the World Wide Web.

MeetUp at TAM? Looks like these four women did.

Search "What's New Pussycat Torrance" and two clicks brings a surfer to, "BaldessariYourLife."

(The first click was here.)

And, before the Pussycat exhibition concludes March 5, here's a YouTube link to some singer.

Monday, February 14, 2011

How TAM Differs From The Uffizi

How does TAM differ from the Uffizi Gallery, in Florence, Italy?

The Uffizi is one of the institutions participating in Google's Art Project.*

Art Project uses the technology behind Google Street to allow users to cruise around and inside certain works of art.

London's Tate, St, Pete's Hermitage, and NYC's Guggenheim are among the other museums that participated in the elite launch.

TAM, which does not have a permanent collection for Google to scan, was therefore not eligible for participation.

Here, however, is the link to Street View's look at the exterior of the museum.

*Also, the Uffizi has longer entrance lines and better access to gelato.

Friday, February 11, 2011

'Never Feed or Attempt to Tame...'

By popular demand, following up on the previous post's coyote reference...

How many, if any, of the following nine guidelines "to avoid problems with coyotes" also apply to dealing with artists?

This blog awaits reply.

*Never feed or attempt to tame coyotes.

*Do not leave small children or pets outside unattended.

*Install motion-sensing lighting around the house.

*Trim ground-level shrubbery to reduce hiding places.

*Put garbage in tightly closed containers.

*Remove sources of pet food and water.

*Pick up fallen fruit and cover compost piles.

*If followed by a coyote, make loud noises. If this fails, throw rocks in the animal's direction.

*Ask your neighbors to follow these tips.

Source: Torrance Coyote Safety Advisement

Ephemera Collected at Civic Center

The Torrance Civic Center is home to an art museum, art and dance classroom / studio spaces, koi pond, police station, theater, television station, city hall, parking lots, and we're probably missing a couple of edifices here.

To wander the CC grounds, then, is to have the opportunity to collect all sorts of ephemera.

Found pamphlets and print-outs from a recent trip:

*Torrance Theatre Company 2010-2011 Season program list;

*Protecting Your Private Information: National Crime Prevention Program brochure;

*Torrance Art Museum 2011 Exhibition Schedule oversized postcard;

*What's New, Pussycat? oversized postcard;

*Torrance Cultural Arts Foundation Presents A World of Entertainment 2010-11 glossy program list;

*ArtScene: The Monthly Digest to Art in Southern California;

*Artful Days! Lecture series list;

*City of Torrance: A Guide for Citizens Personnel Complaint Procedure;

*City of Torrance, Police Department: Personnel Complaint;

*Carjacking: You Can Make Yourself Less Vulnerable To This Kind of Car Theft brochure;

*Do You Love Art? Volunteer at The Torrance Art Museum! one-sheet;

*Neighborhood Watch Newsletter: January to March 2011, Volume 48;

*Torrance: Coyote Safety Advisement one-sheet.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

To Eat The Grapefruit, Or Not

It's one of the great conundrums of contemporary art:

When during a performance, the performer, clad in boxers, a robe, and mouse ears, removes grapefruit from the torso of a mannequin mouse-human hybrid rag doll, and opens up the grapefruit, and hops around in a crouching position, offering pieces of the grapefruit to members of the opening reception audience who have formed a haphazard circle around the performance, do the audience members accept the grapefruit, and if so do they eat the grapefruit, and if they do, or if they do not, then in what ways have they changed or become in part of the performance?

Viva Brian Getnick, from the What's New, Pussycat opening.

Why Sixty Inches?

Claudia Parducci's piece is the star of the current TAM show, What's New, Pussycat.

This blog doesn't want to give away too much more about the piece -- please, go see it in person for yourself.

When you're there, keep in mind not just what went into Parducci creating the work, but also the curatorial decision to include the work in the show as well as the crucial decision where to hang the work. Parducci's piece is given -- much deserved -- prominence in the exhibition.

Also keep in mind the work done in the days before the exhibition opened, by the volunteer installers who came to TAM at director Max Presneill's request.

Padrucci's work includes nearly two dozen separate elements. Each had to be adroitly hung. During installation week, Presneill huddled with his volunteers to decide how, and where, to center the overall piece.

Presneill said the middle of the work should be sixty inches off the ground.

Later, he explained that that's at the high-end of the museum and gallery norm, which can be as low as 54-inches.

Related: Here's a link to a discussion, in part, about eye-level being 63-inches.

And: Eye-level is such an important behind-the-scenes topic in the fine art world that the group blog produced by the Smithsonian Institute is called... "Eye Level."

Friday, January 21, 2011

Words About Sounds During Set-Up

This week, the folks at TAM have been receiving, uncrating, and installing the upcoming exhibition, "What's New, Pussycat." The show opens Saturday, January 22, 2011.

Audible, Tuesday midday:

*The whizz whirl of a cordless power drill, uncrating;

*The swish slurp of a paint roller, whitening temporary walls;

*The clang clatter of a metal tool, falling to hard floor;

*The scrape and drag and hop of a ladder, sliding and jumping rightward;

*The sloop riptt of tape being sliced open;

*The pafft of a cardboard box flopping to the floor;

*The kabash of a wooden crate being set down;

*The "I'll hold and you hammer,";

*The "That's how it's done";

*The hee-saw, hee-saw sanding of a small rectangle on the floor;

*The rrrr of a hydraulic lift of a delivery truck ramp;

*The zzzt of the same on a forklift;

*The clomp clomp of a power-walking museum staffer;

*The audible - sigh - of a museum boss;

*The pop! of a lone bubble wrap;

*The silence of 3,000 pounds of sand.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Handle With Care

This week, the folks at TAM have been receiving, uncrating, and installing the upcoming exhibition, "What's New, Pussycat." The show opens Saturday, January 22, 2011.

Text on sticker on backside of an artwork, or perhaps on part of work's crate:

"Handling instructions:

*Please handle with care. Surface is extremely delicate.

*Painting should be transported and stored in specialty made crates without anything touching the surface of the painting.

*Paintings can be temporarily wrapped in very loose plastic, but only for short periods of time and not in warm weather (over 80 degrees).

*Only wrap in plastic that has no creases (NO GLASSINE!)

*Only use bubble face out and then only over clear plastic and wrap very loosely.

*Only use cardboard on outside of bubble wrap.

*The surface of the painting should never be touched. This can be lightly dusted with a super fine lens cleaning cloth."

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Like A Koi In The Pond


So, why does the Torrance Art Museum need a writer-in-residence? That's like asking, why does a pond need koi? Or why does a parking lot need painted lines?

TAM, according to its website, "promotes meaningful experiences in the arts to strengthen creative and critical thinking skills; and builds bridges between the visual arts and other disciplines in the humanities and sciences."

The W-I-R post fits somewhere in the above; better still, that excerpt demonstrates that someone involved with TAM cares about semi-colons. That's a huge plus for any org considering offering a W-I-R program.

The best-known writer-in-residence project these past couple of years was Alain de Botton's gig at Heathrow Airport. The author and philosopher set up for seven days a desk in that behemoth London facility's departures lounge and produced a short, well-received book about the experience.

De Botton was paid by the airport's umbrella authority and a p.r. firm came up with the idea. The book was distributed free-of-charge to airport users. Anyone interested in funding such an arrangement for TAM? If so, then please contact the museum or this blog.

De Botton has said repeatedly that he was left alone as promised and wrote whatever he pleased. (Although the photographer's shots that accompanied de Botton's text were screened prior to publication for security reasons.) The former, at least, will apply to TAM's writer-in-residence program.

Curator Max Presnelli and his team have offered access to behind-the-scene meetings, as well as to occasions such as the days after an exhibition concludes, and works come off the walls, and artists come by to gather up their pieces. 

One of TAM's goals, presumably, is to demystify what goes on over at 3320 Civic Center Drive. The museum is also treating the written word as art – long an established art world tradition.This blog will delve deeper into the much of the above, and more, over the following months. 

This blog will also aim to be of some small assistance to TAM-goers. Alan de Botton was asked during his airport stint that eternal, vital question – where are the bathrooms?

At TAM, we understand, they're down the hall, to the left.