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Art Parlor Unmasked

Cat’s out of the bag! Some of you have already guessed who I am (there have been some fabulously funny wrong guesses too).

My last post at the end of August coincides with my taking over The Valley Arts Newsletter (previously known as “The Arts Newsletter Experiment”). This blog got neglected while I got up-to-speed managing and publishing the newletter. The newsletter is still evolving, and it seemed to be a good fit to roll the blog in with it.

I’ve missed blogging about art, and am happy to revive The Art Parlor. It was originally started as a way to challenge myself to go see a lot of local art, and small attempt to make up for the lack of local coverage of local art and artists. Local art reviews were few and far between. It was surprising to me that our largest local newspaper, had a food critic, a music critic, even a beer critic, but no art critic. Why not? In an area that has so much art going on, why not?

I thought the anonymity would be fun, and leave me free to write uninhibited. I wanted a way to write about art in a semi-critical way, without reference to myself or getting too personal. Trying for a perhaps more honest style of writing. Using “we” got a bit tiresome though :) (plans had also been in the works for this to be a small collective of “art critics,” but that never materialized. Perhaps this may still happen?).

Over a decade ago, I reluctantly returned to the Valley from London, a city that is incredibly rich with art and immensely supportive of the arts. I slowly realized that the Pioneer Valley is full of art, but so much of it is hidden.

This has been changing in the past couple years, as municipalities realize the importance of the creative economy for economic revitalization, and as more artists and creative people move to our beautiful Valley. We now have monthly art walks in three towns, some exciting new galleries and art spaces, but still a lack of visiblity and media coverage. (I’ve always wondered why something as subjective as sports dominates news media. Why not the arts?). I love that there is so much art happening here, and so many amazingly-talented artists! Let’s tell the world!

This blog is not just for artists and art-makers. As the newsletter aims to spread the news of local art to everyone in the Valley (and beyond), I hope this blog will stimulate and help facilitate more discussion about the arts.

So… more posts, more art reviews/discussion/etc, and maybe I’ll even show you some of my own work…

p.s. I’ve updated the links list, added some news ones, deleted some broken ones. Let me know if you have a link you’d like to add. I’m adding a page to this blog to list local artist websites, it’s going to be a big list, so send me links! (can you tell by now that I’m a inveterate list-maker?) It will be nice to have a comprehensive list of local artists and hopefully this will add some more traffic to their websites too.

But is it Art?

The British Museum announced that a solid-gold staute of model Kate Moss by artist Marc Quinn will be part of the exhibit Statuephilia, which opens October 4th at the museum.

From BBC News:

A £1.5m solid gold sculpture has been made of supermodel Kate Moss as part of a British Museum exhibition.

Entitled Siren, the 50kg statue was made by Marc Quinn, who described Moss as “the ideal beauty of the moment”.

From the museum’s press release:

Marc Quinn’s solid gold statue, Siren, of supermodel Kate Moss – icon of contemporary beauty and Aphrodite of our times – will find fitting setting at the centre of the Nereid Gallery, interacting with the great Greek beauties that surround it. Quinn’s work is the largest gold statue since Ancient Egypt and will premiere at the Museum.

The museum has released a teaser close-up photo. The statue will be unveiled to the public when the exhibit opens on October 4th.

FYI: £1.5m = $2.8m USD

Art note: Marc Quinn is a “Young British Artist,” a group of conceptual artists who first came to public prominence at the Saatchi Gallery’s 1992 exhibit, Young British Artists. The YBAs often challenge the public perception of art with the controversial art pieces, such as Quinn’s Head, a sculpture made of the artist’s own blood, and Damien Hirst’s animal installations.

Studio Moving Sale in Easthampton, August 29-30

We got this via email today from artist Justin Brown, an artist at Eastworks:

I am moving out of my studio at Eastworks at the end of this month and I have a ton of stuff to get rid of. I plan on being in the studio this Friday 8/29 and Saturday 8/30 from 11-2. I’ll have a bunch of stuff for sale including shelving(ranging from very large to small), tables and misc surfaces, a portable set-up that is great for craft/art shows, a ton of fabric, lots of stuff for that mixed-media side of you and a bunch more too plentiful to list. A good amount will be free too! There will even be some cheap paintings!

Eastworks, Suite 256
116 Pleasant St
Easthampton, MA
www.eastworks.com

Call for Entries in Easthampton: Competition for Public Benches and Trash Receptacles

The Williston Northampton School in Easthampton has just announced a call for entries: “Competition for Public Benches and Trash Receptacles.”

The school is planning a new public garden at the corner of Union and Railroad Streets, in the center of town. The Manhan Rail Trail will border one side of the garden. This will be a beautiful addition to Easthampton’s downtown, and bravo to Williston for planning this new park and sponsoring this competition. This is a wonderful public art project.

From the press release:

The Williston Northampton School seeks submissions of uniquely designed outdoor furniture to decorate a new public garden adjacent to the school’s campus. The Manhan Rail Trail, a popular bicycle path, will run alongside the garden. Other borders are the town’s former train station, a commercial street, and a side street.

The plan calls for a garden with winding paths, shade trees, flower beds, and opportunities for visitors to stop and sit. $40,000 is available for benches and trash receptacles. The criteria for the competition will be based on aesthetics, cost, safety, and durability. There are no restrictions on materials. Metal, wood, stone, concrete, and plastic will all be considered. Awards for a bench range from $6,000 – $10,000 and the award for a trash receptacle is $3,000 -$5,000.

Submission deadline in November 15.

Anne d’Harnoncourt

Anne d’Harnoncourt, Director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, died on Sunday. d’Harnoncourt was important in the art world not only for her scholarship and impressive long list of acheivements, but also as the second woman to serve as director of a major American art museum (the first was her predecessor, Jean Sutherland Boggs).

Skinner Museum Photographs by James Gerht

Easthampton-based photographer James Gerht left a comment on our post about Local Historical Museums, where we’d mentioned that the Skinner Museum in South Hadley is one of our favorite small museums. It’s filled with so many weird and wonderful things.

Gerht commented that the Skinner Museum is one of his favorite places to photograph, and he’s posted an online gallery with some lovely black & white photos, like the one below:

Be sure to visit Gerht’s website; his photography work is beautiful – we especially like his large format photographs.

image credit & copyright: James Gerht

Easthampton’s Cottage Street Mural Finished

We had posted about this a few months back, when the winner of the Easthampton City Arts mural competition was announced. Tom Pappalardo and friends completed the mural in two days, and it looks fantastic. It’s located on the side of Whiskerz Pub, next to the public parking lot. Pappalardo has posted photos of the mural from conception to completion on Flickr (the photo below is from that Flicker set).

We think it’s a great addition to Cottage Street, and love to see so much public art happening in this once-sleepy old mill town.

There are plans for an official “unveiling” of the mural on June 20th, according to the Easthampton City Arts’ blog.

R.I.P. Robert Rauschenberg

Robert Rauschenberg died last night. One of the great 20th-century artists. A huge loss for art.

Gothamist ended their news story about his death with this great quote:

[Rauschenberg] once said, “I think you’re born an artist or not. I couldn’t have learned it. And I hope I never do because knowing more only encourages your limitations.”
 

2 Furlong Piece by Robert Rauschenberg at MassMoCA, 1999-2000
Locally, he exhibited a huge piece at MassMoCA, in 1999, 2 Furlong Piece (shown above), an enormous quarter-mile long work-in-progress that lined the walls of MassMoCA’s largest gallery.

Is that a …..bikini?

Anonymous art has found its way to Easthampton!   While we were wandering the streets checking out Art Walk Easthampton last night, we came across this.  It reminded us of the famous tree sweater in Seattle,  but tailored for warmer weather.  We were really excited to discover this little display, among a lot of other really cool art on Art Walk. 
huh?
 It’s in front of Mt. Tom’s Homemade Ice Cream on Cottage Street.

UPDATE:  5/13/08 — we are pleased to report that the tree bikini is still there….neither molested nor vandalized.  We thought for sure it would be stuffed with kleenex or something…

Local Performance Art

There was a bit of spontaneous performance art in downtown Northampton yesterday recorded by fab local blogger, In the Valley. Happenings like this are one of the reasons we love this area so much.

Anyone have any idea who the performers are?