September 2007

MASS MOCA: Spencer Finch exhibition and fun Berkshires weekend

Spencer Finch installation (Sunlight in an Empty Room, passing cloud for Emily Dickenson)

Spencer Finch (Candlelight)

MASS Moca exterior and sign

Our weekend in the Berkshires was splendid! We rented a little house with some friends, went hiking, cooked great meals, drank wine and whiskey, and visited MASS Moca, a modern art museum in a converted factory in the Northern Berkshires. The space itself is worth a visit with its exposed brick walls, high ceilings, and industrial feel.

My favorite work was by Brooklyn artist Spencer Finch who explores how people perceive lights effect on an object’s color, the boundaries of the human field of vision, and the influence of language, memory, and the subconscious.

His works re-create specific light conditions experienced at a different place and time. Above are photos I took of two Spencer Finch installations, “Sunlight In An Empty Room (Passing Cloud For Emily Dickinson, 2004)� and “Candlelight (2007)� at Mass Moca (here’s more info).

Below are some other pictures from the trip.

Berkshires weekend photographs

Fed Up

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eating food-photo-page-image.jpg

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I love food! I love cooking it, eating it, seeing it, photographing it, and painting it. For most of us food is a very emotional topic. Many people can describe their sordid and often painful relationship with eating. I try to grapple with that in my work. There are more from this series on my site.

Here are some more of my food photographs on flickr.

*I think I’m going to leave this post up for the weekend. Monday I’ll post photos from my trip to Mass Moca contemporary art museum in North Adams Massachussettes. I love the Berkshires!

Gary Hume: American Tan (paintings)

Gary Hume: American Tan (paintings)

45-year-old Gary Hume a British post-pop painter, paints glossy ambiguous images on aluminum. His recent show at White Cube in London, features extremely cropped images of cheerleaders mid twirl, leap, and split.

It takes your eye a moment to recognize the body parts within the flat swaths of color, line and form. Thus, they become enigmatic, distilled down to their essential details causing the viewer to furrow their brow in concentration trying to decipher not only the pose and limb but also the tension of who and what we are looking at.

A cheerleader is so familiar and such a part of our visual lexicon but Hume imbues each figure with mystery, decontextualizing them while at the same time taking away the usual objectification of the female subject on his sleek aluminum surface.

Here’s a comprehensive article about the show and Gary Hume that fellow art lover/blogger Mike sent my way knowing I’d dig. Thanks Mike!

Bauble bauble toil and trouble

bauble bauble toil and trouble

I’m loving these gorgous Madame Fortuna necklaces on Etsy and many other fine boutiques around the country. They’re a far more sophisticated take on the old school charm necklace I used to wear with the mini plastic toothpaste tube and mini key (that you could clip onto the hot magenta plastic chain) from my childhood in the 80’s.

The ring and earrings from Erie Basin in Red Hook, Brooklyn (online shopping available) are so lovely and antique looking.

Hat Simulation

Hat-Simulation.jpgBarbara Feinman Millinery on the Lower Eastside of Manhattan. Never fear out of towners you can shop online for yourself or your chic lady friend!

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