Archive for the ‘Interview’ Category

Keeping Time with Tom Sachs

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Tom Sachs at his studio, Photograph by The Selby

Tom Sachs, Photograph by The Selby

After a few years of tinkering in his studio, Tom Sachs has resurfaced with a new show entitled Work at New York’s Sperone Westwater gallery filling three floors with art exploring as many creative tangents: a series of pyrographic works, using a wood burning-etching technique; a foamcore crafted collection based on Sevres porcelain; and a series that pays homage to James Brown, with a JB listening station, his Last Supper packed in a microwave, and a framed array of JB’s hair products.

Sachs had cited James Brown’s work ethic as an inspiration for the show, so I took him to task for being late for our meeting and disappointing Brown’s high standards for punctuality.

“When Brown fined his workers for being late it was contributing to a culture of punctuality,” explained Sachs in defense of the Hardest Working Man in Show Business. “He fined them for missing a beat, he used punctuality as a percussive element: to be on time, to keep time; not miss a beat.”

Sachs runs his Vulcan smithy of  tinkerers like a boot camp, with red beans and rice every Monday. “Rather than a prison fantasy it’s more a utopian fantasy. More Amish.  You can leave,” he forewarns me,  “but you might find that the outside world may not be as inviting.”

Tom Sachs 'Please, Please, Please', 2011 mixed media 64 x 22 x 14 inches

Tom Sachs' tribute to James Brown: © Tom Sachs 'Please, Please, Please', 2011 mixed media 64 x 22 x 14 inches 162,6 x 55,9 x 35,6 cm overall Courtesy Sperone Westwater Gallery

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A Mudbath with Marilyn Minter

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Marilyn Minter, Cheshire (Wangechi) - 2011

Marilyn Minter, Cheshire (Wangechi) - 2011 enamel on metal - 60 x 96 inches (152.4 x 243.8 cm) , Courtesy of Salon 94 gallery


Sublime soapy bubbles of goo slide down baby, frolicking in a playpen of silver slime. The slow-motion video, shot with a Fantom, plays at Salon 94’s exhibition of Marilyn Minter’s latest works, coming at the ‘heels’ of her last series of slippery stilettos and video project Green Pink Caviar. The baby’s atavistic slide into pleasure is impulsive and contagious, and implicates our adult world of sophistication and restraint.

In Cheshire Minter does an extreme close-up of grinning teeth that would delight any dentist with a desire for detail. I asked Minter about her use of close-ups, which left no narrative clues as to gender, and she said she liked the implied mystery and the multi-readings this made possible.

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The Manufactured Earth

Friday, November 11th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Monegros County, Aragon, Spain 2010 Chromogenic Color Print 60 x 80 inches Edition 2/3 photographed by Edward Burtynsky

Monegros County, Aragon, Spain 2010 Chromogenic Color Print 60 x 80 inches Edition 2/3 photographed by Edward Burtynsky

Edward Burtynsky’s photographs of mines, quarries, oil fields, ships and airplane graveyards have transformed landscapes of devastation into a thing of beauty. His new photographic series depicts the earth from above, abstracting the terraced farming practices of Spain into a Kandinsky-like painted canvas.

Burtynsky is passionate about the environment, but his work attempts to frame the truth without judgment. Burtynsky spoke in general to me about the farming practices he’s photographed, citing that a country like China had been largely agrarian in the past. “80% used to be involved in growing food for the rest. Now with mechanical advantages…a tractor can create precise patterns with ploughing on gps.”

Burtynsky explained that only a tiny segment of the population, just about 2% in the USA, is now responsible for feeding the rest of the country, my assumption being that the rest of us are in media or finance busy manufacturing paper money… For my more detailed interview with Burtynsky, read here.

Monegros County, Aragon, Spain 2010 Chromogenic Color Print 48 x 64 inches Edition 1/6 photographed by Edward Burtynsky

Monegros County, Aragon, Spain 2010 Chromogenic Color Print 48 x 64 inches Edition 1/6 photographed by Edward Burtynsky

For more images of Edward Burtynsky’s Dryland Farming photographs click here

The Art of Being Looked At: A Conversation with Charlotte Rampling

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Charlotte Rampling: photograph for SPREAD by Kareem Black, 2011

Charlotte Rampling: photograph for SPREAD by Kareem Black, 2011

“Being ready at 9am in any country…” sighed Charlotte Rampling, smartly turned out in a black suit after a late night of revelry in the West Village. ‘The Look,’ had just premiered the night before in New York and Gabriel Byrne had popped out to greet her after the show. Byrne recalled how he’d sweated over how to impress her while on a first stroll through Central Park together, and seeing a night guardsman walk past, had quipped, “Ah, Night Porter!” Rampling had ignored his remark and had kept walking.

Later Byrne had asked, but wasn’t that funny?

“You don’t know how many fucking times people have said that to me,” Rampling had replied.

Paul Auster and Charlotte Rampling in a scene from Angelina Maccarone's documentary CHARLOTTE RAMPLING: THE LOOK

Paul Auster and Charlotte Rampling in a scene from Angelina Maccarone's documentary CHARLOTTE RAMPLING: THE LOOK. Credit: Kino Lorber/Les films d'ici


Charlotte Rampling’s films do not flash across neon-lit marquees in middle America, but her carefully culled oeuvre (“Sort of my artistic choice…a way of living, of evolving for me,” she tells me) has garnered a cult of swooning devotees who admire her courage in picking unconventional roles spanning four decades of cinema.

More prolific than ever, she has recently starred in Lemming, Swimming Pool, Heading South, playing conflicted, reclusive roles or evil, camp cameos, like in the sci fi flick Babylon A.D. She has also appeared in a Marc Jacobs fashion shoot, in an extended love fest with photographer Juergen Teller who played nude antics over a piano and gleefully peed into a flowerpot while Rampling, curled in bed, indulgently looked on. All the excavation and over-blown analysis into her enigma seems redundant when she is, more evidently, an artist committed to questing in life. While “The Look” is a bio-pic, featuring conversations with friends, it is tamer and less confrontational than past roles that explore darker aspects of her nature, revealing instead, a more contented side.

Charlotte Rampling photographed by Kareem Black, 2011

Charlotte Rampling photographed by Kareem Black, 2011 © Kareem Black

We share a couch near a lovely blazing fireplace at a lounge in Soho. I tell her that I wished she’d included a conversation with a younger woman, beautiful and successful as she had been when young, to create a tenser dynamic. Rampling fixes me with her hooded leopard gaze, “Hmm. I didn’t think of it…but it could have been good.” It was a bit early to talk about love, aging and mortality at breakfast, but I struggled to get past the platitudes.

KL: What about a crossover artist like Tilda Swinton?

CR: I don’t know her, though I’ve met her once. She’s certainly someone I would identify with; we are on the same sort of path. I feel in some ways she’s stronger than me, able to take on certain things I can’t take on.

KL: When you’re born beautiful you aren’t expected to do much more in life…

CR: It’s already enormous. What beauty brings is huge. It brings great privilege, great power and potential to do many things. If you are beautiful, doors open for you; people smile at you; you are accepted in places where others aren’t. So the relationship that people have with beauty, in a sense, is almost deforming.

Read more of the interview with Charlotte Rampling

A Mass Hanging at the Guggenheim

Friday, November 4th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Maurizio Cattelan, Guggenheim Museum New York, 2011

Maurizio Cattelan, Guggenheim Museum New York, 2011

Tragicomic poet-prankster Maurizio Cattelan has turned the Guggenheim’s rotunda into a hanging carousel of colorful characters, effigies, surrogates and stuffed dead things that dangle from their gallows in chaotic companionship. Cattelan has also announced his retirement and, in this final exhibition, his magnum opus, he unites ‘All’ his lively, eccentric offspring, staging the ultimate mass execution.

Nancy Spector, the chief curator of the Guggenheim Museum in New York, worked with Cattelan in putting the show together. I asked Spector if the artist’s use of taxidermy was to inspire empathy in his audience. “Absolutely, the animals are anthropomorphic and they are self-portraits and surrogates of him, they have a humanizing quality, if you think of Aesop’s fables – where there is usually a moral to the story – it is very much on that level.”

“Where does he get the animals from?” I asked, imagining him picking through the dead pigeons piling up in Venice’s Piazza San Marco.

Installation View - Maurizio Cattelan, Guggenheim Museum New York, 2011, ©K.Lala

Installation View - Maurizio Cattelan, Guggenheim Museum New York, 2011

Read more of the chat with Nancy Spector

Animal Sacrifices: Martin Wittfooth

Friday, October 28th, 2011
© Martin Wittfooth - Pieta 2011, Oil on canvas  50 x 30 in / 127 x 76.2 cm

© Martin Wittfooth - Pieta 2011, Oil on canvas 50 x 30 in / 127 x 76.2 cm

In his first solo show in New York entitled The Passions Martin Wittfooth’s explores martyrdom and sainthood using animals as subjects to symbolically represent acts of violent self-sacrifice and destruction practiced on the basis of ideological or institutionalized beliefs.

The series also obliquely references the suicide bombings, acts of self-immolation, blind devotion and religious fervor prevalent even in modern societies – as exemplified by Islamic jihad and followers of biblical Rapture – practices which appear absurdly arcane, parochial and even ridiculous when distanced and abstracted through the satirical lens of an anthropomorphized species.

© Martin Wittfooth,  Angel 2009, 30" x 30" Oil on Panel

Work from an earlier series, Angel 2009, 30 inches x 30 inches Oil on Panel © Martin Wittfooth


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Jake OR Dinos Chapman: Going it Alone

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011
Jake and Dinos Chapman - One Day You Will No Longer Be Loved

Jake and Dinos Chapman - Detail from - One Day You Will No Longer Be Loved

Jake and Dinos Chapman recently showed at White Cube in London in their first ‘non-collaborative’ show, where each worked separately on works isolated in their studios bringing their art together in the final stage of the exhibition: much like the working method of ‘exquisite corpse’ – the Surrealist game where each contributor adds his part to a drawing without revealing his artistic input to the other.

Their interest in shocking their audiences with puerile and playful provocations against bourgeois culture is evident in their sticking genitals on childrens’ and adults’ bodies in inappropriate places: In an interview with curator Norman Rosenthal at 92Y, Jake Chapman said, “Victoria Miro [their gallerist at the time] was a lovely demure bourgeois woman… Our interest was stimulation…we learned that if we called a sculpture ‘fuckface,’ it attained value – you could hear Victoria on the phone talking to some collector saying, “Yes, I can do you a fuckface, or a two-faced cunt.” We were interested in how far we could affect, invade bourgeois language…”

© Jake & Dinos Chapman – God does not love you O.M.F.G., White Cube gallery

© Jake & Dinos Chapman – God does not love you O.M.F.G., White Cube gallery

Jake Chapman, artist, © Kisa Lala

Artist Jake Chapman, © Kisa Lala

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Reimagining Bruegel: Lech Majewski’s The Mill and the Cross

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

By Kiša Lala

Film still from The Mill and the Cross, 2011 Directed by Lech Majewski

Film still from The Mill and the Cross, 2011 Directed by Lech Majewski - Credit: Kino Lorber, Inc.

Some time ago as part of my long fascination with Venetian culture, I came across Lech Majewski’s impassioned film, The Garden of Earthly Delights, a doomed love story told through meditative and erotic enactments of Bosch’s painting, a contemporary vision of Visconti’s Death in Venice, shot in that fabled floating city, which the Polish filmmaker now calls home.

An accomplished artist and composer, Majewski, also wrote and co-produced Basquiat, directed later by his friend Julian Schnabel. His new feature film, The Mill and the Cross with Rutger Hauer, Michael York, and Charlotte Rampling playing Mary, is an elaborately layered, computer-generated tableaux of another classic, Pieter Bruegel’s 1564, The Way to Calvary – a composite of multiple light sources and seven different perspectives that Breugel had used to trick the eye.

In the painting, Jesus’s crucifixion becomes marginalized by a vista of colourful onlookers, bread-sellers, squabbling hawkers, inquisitors and their victims strapped to Catherine-wheels, all strewn across the landscape. A windmill perched on a high crag casts an all-seeing messianic gaze over the landscape, its lazy blades turning the cogs of time.

Charlotte Rampling - Film still from The Mill and the Cross, 2011 Directed by Lech Majewski - Credit: Kino Lorber, Inc.

Charlotte Rampling - Film still from The Mill and the Cross, 2011 Directed by Lech Majewski - Credit: Kino Lorber, Inc.

During our conversation Majewski and I chatted about animal suicides, latent cruelty, and the art of animating paintings.

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Unearthed – Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow

Monday, August 1st, 2011
Film still from Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, 2010 Directed by Sophie Fiennes.

Film still from Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, 2010 Directed by Sophie Fiennes.

Sophie Fiennes’ film Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, is a meditative and mostly wordless portrait of Anselm Kiefer’s studio in Barjac in France. Keifer left his native Germany in 1993 and took over a derelict silk factory, La Ribaute, in the South of France. It was an industrial landscape surrounded by woods, which Kiefer transformed by excavating subterranean passages, caverns and tunnels to create an ever-evolving architectural space.

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The Future of Tradition: Cobra Guitars

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

By Aaron Barr

Photo by Jim Wright

East Village, New York City, NY  – Walking down a set of concrete steps and stepping into a small shop, you’ll find guitars hanging like trophies and vintage amplifiers leaning patiently against the walls. Cans of paint and various tools give the appearance of usefulness, and a friendly face greets you as you walk through the door.

That’s Jimmy Carbonetti. Born on New York City’s Roosevelt Island, he has found his true calling creating handmade, one-of-a-kind guitars. They are marvelous pieces that are both form and function, pushed to their limits; equal parts precious museum and gritty dive bar.

Jimmy wears this craftsman role quite well and pairs it with a passion for playing music, identifying with iconoclasts before him like Ronnie Wood, John Entwistle, and George Harrison; artists that made their solemn vows to music and kept them through life’s many ups and down.

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