Showing posts with label Brooklyn Artists Gym. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brooklyn Artists Gym. Show all posts

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Beyond Warhol




Mel Smothers' versus Andy Warhol's

Andy Warhol wasn’t much of a bird watcher. The iconic pop artist had a house out on Long Island — the closest thing we have to the county here — that was used mainly for parties.

For Bushwick-based artist Mel Smothers, that facet has inspired him to conduct a (metaphorical) dialogue with the pop icon in his series, “Dear Andy: Postcards from Montauk.”

In his paintings, the artist, and nature lover, has been communing with Warhol, traveling to the artist’s eastern aerie and reporting back what he sees. In a direct link to the artist, he is using as the basis for his paintings a takeoff of Warhol’s iconic portrait of Mao, but painting over in a similar vein to Robert Rauschenberg erasing the Andy Warhol of his day — Willem de Kooning.

There are hundreds of these paintings, with slight variations from one to the next, with laughing gulls and abstract lilies painted over the image of the Red Chinese leader.
“I’m using a visual image that Andy was famous for, which it was rumored he had assistants print 3,000 copies of,” said Smothers. “And I’m doing it with a paint and brush.”

One such painting — the 25th in his series — will be on display this month in the exhibition, “Beyond Warhol in the 21st Century: A Post-Pop MetaRomantic Retrofit,” running at the Brooklyn Artists Gym Gallery in Gowanus opening tomorrow.

The exhibition, fresh off a run in Chicago, features the work of four artists, like Smothers, who react consciously to the work of Warhol.The timing couldn’t be better — a major retrospective of the pop icon himself is opening at the Brooklyn Museum only a week after BAG’s opening.

“There’s such a close connection between what we’re doing and what they’re exhibiting at the Brooklyn Museum,” said Robert Furman, the curator of “Beyond Warhol” who sought out a Brooklyn gallery to exhibit the show timed with the Brooklyn Museum show. “It was such kismet. I couldn’t believe it.”

Beyond Smothers, there are Furman’s own pieces in the show — a mix of video and sculpture that find a kinship in other pop icons, including Marilyn Monroe. Photographer Peggy Roberts’s series of storefront photos reference Warhol’s days as a window display designers — surrealistic dream-like pieces that capture reflections from the street. And lastly, Pindar Van Arman takes Warhol’s desire to “paint like a machine” to heart — he uses a programmed robot to paint his pieces, which, like Warhol’s, tend towards portraiture.

While Van Arman embraces this machination of the art process, it is something Smothers reacts to strongly in his own paintings.

“On the East Coast, there’s the phenomena of the artist who doesn’t even do his own paintings,” said Smothers. “I really love painting, and that’s my dialogue with Andy Warhol: Is the pop artist just a machine? Or is pop art really about painting? What is pop art?”

“Beyond Warhol in the 21st Century: A Post-Pop MetaRomantic Retrofit” at BAG Gallery [168 Seventh St. between Second and Third avenues in Gowanus, (718) 858-9069], June 11-28 with an opening night party from 6-10 pm. For info, visit
www.brooklynartistsgym.com.

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Thursday, February 4, 2010

The anti-Valentine's Day parties

There’s not just good eating in the borough this Valentine’s Day. Check out the events below for some special love-themed events in Brooklyn, some traditional, some not (murder ballads, anyone?).


Anti-Valentine’s Day reading
Feb. 11, 7 p.m., free
37 Main St., DUMBO
718-666-3049

Featuring the editor of “It’s Not You, It’s Me; The Poetry of Breakup,” an anthology of ruptured romance featuring contributions from National Book Award finalist Kim Addonizio, bestselling author Denis Johnson, and former poet laureate Mark Strand.

Valentine’s Day cocktail party
Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m., $5
126 Franklin St., Greenpoint
718-383-0096

Take a trip to the 1950s, as Time Table presents a cocktail party featuring aphrodisiac food and drink from the 1952 book, “Venus in the Kitchen: Or Love’s Cookery Book.” Feel free to dress the part.

BAGGAGE Claim
Feb. 14, 6 p.m., free
Brooklyn Artists Gym
168 7th St., Gowanus
718-858-9069

Help BAG build a temporary museum with the evidence of love gone by. Bring your mix tapes, hoodies, love letters, crappy jewelry and all forms of bad gifts, and exchange them for new items. You never wore that tee-shirt anyway.

Pete n Jenny’s Cheap Date Valentine’s Day Cabaret
Feb. 14, 7 p.m., $10
315 Columbia St., Red Hook
718-395-3214

This annual cabaret features something for everyone: love songs, murder ballads, burlesque dancers, comedy, poetry, trivia, magic and a kissing booth. Bring, or find, someone to kiss.

I Heart Brooklyn Party
Feb. 14, 3-7 p.m., free
80 Hanson Pl., Downtown Brooklyn
718-230-0492

Show your love for Brooklyn this Valentine’s Day, as the museum presents an afternoon of readings by Brooklyn-based poets, followed by a DJ Set featuring hits by Brooklyn’s illustrious musical artists. It’ll be OK to dance by yourself.

Get Your Heart On!
Feb. 14, 8 p.m., free
195 Morgan Ave., Bushwick
718-715-4961
Moviehouse presents three-minute romantic movies that include these three criterion: a reference to at least one of the three wise monkeys (see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil), a celebrity death, and something uncontrollable. How romantic.
Aphrodisiacs and Amor
Feb. 14, 5-7:30 p.m., $65 per couple
SHAG
108 Roebling St., Williamsburg
347-721-3302

SHAG, a fine art gallery and seller of sex toys, hosts a provocative dinner with Nuevo Latino Chef Alex Garcia, who will tease and tantalize the taste buds with a course in aphrodisiacs for couples, who will enjoy their meal blindfolded.

The Rejection Show Valentine’s Day Heartbreak Haven
Feb. 14, 8 p.m., $10
The Bell House
149 7th St., Gowanus
718-643-6510

This one’s for the rejected: comedy series The Rejection Show celebrates Valentine’s Day with an evening of its best breakup, heartbreak and love-related stories, with performances from Jon Friedman (pictured above), Eliza Skinner, Max Silvestri, Sara Schaefer, Gabe Liedman, Gabe Delahaye, Edith Zimmerman, and more, as well as music from The Defibulators, who’s always ready for a party. Despite the theme, all – even happy couples – are welcome. Just don’t be too showy about it.

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