<body><style type="text/css"> #header { padding: 0; margin: 0; position: relative; height: 100px; background: #FFFFFF; border-bottom: 1px solid #0074C4; font: 11px 'Lucida Grande', Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif; /* Resets 1em to 10px */ color: #444; } ul.menu { margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; bottom: 0; left: 20px; width: 90%; } ul.menu li { display: inline; margin: 0; } ul.menu, ul.menu li a { padding: 5px 15px 6px; } ul.menu li a { font-size: 1em; color: white; margin: 0; background: #000000; text-decoration: none; } ul.menu li a:hover { background: #0074C4; color: white !important; text-decoration: none; } ul.menu li.current_page_item a, ul.menu li.current_page_item a:hover { color: #FFFFFF !important; background: #0074C4; text-decoration: none; } </style> <form action="../../../../../cgiproxy/nph-proxy.pl/000110A/x-proxy/start" method="post" target="_top"> <!-- Begin Publisher Code --> <script src="../../../../../publisherJS.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript"> initAdversal("b120075ce62dd78b6155ae4282225e28", true); </script> <!-- End Publisher Code --> <div id="header"> <ul class="menu"> <li class="current_page_item"><a href="http://www.allgeeks.info/" title="Blog">Blog</a></li> <li class="page_item">Myspace Train of Password stealers</li> <li class="page_item">Unblock Myspace Everywhere</li></ul> </div> <center> Location&nbsp;via&nbsp;proxy:<input name="URL" size="66" value="http://artlife.blogspot.com/2007_01_01_archive.html"><input type="submit" value="Go"> &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="../../../../../cgiproxy/nph-proxy.pl/000110A/http/artlife.blogspot" target="_top">[&nbsp;UP&nbsp;]</a> &nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="/" target="_top">[Manage&nbsp;cookies]</a> <hr> </center> </form> <iframe width="100%" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" src="../../../../../files/_blogspot_com_search_70xzbd7k8kktxzoy8szynq" id="navbar-iframe" height="30px" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0"></iframe> <div id="space-for-ie"></div>

the art life

"...it's just like saying 'the good life'".

Butterfly Aieeeee

Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Anyone who reads The Art Life regularly knows that we love movies by and about artists – even the bad ones, nay, especially the bad ones…Over the next few weeks we’ll be looking at some new art movies that have come our way such as Art School Confidential and we’ll be doing an Andy Warhol special that looks at the various actors who have played Warhol including David Bowie, Jarrod Harris, Hank Azaria and Crispin Glover, as well a great item from the archives - Warhol playing “himself” on The Love Boat. In the meantime, some news has come to hand [courtesy of the tireless Art News Blog] that there is to be a high profile Hollywood production on the life of one of the 20th Century’s most famous and notorious artists – Salvador Dali.


Say Cheese: Dali on film
 


Variety is reporting that Andrew Niccol is to helm [as they say in movie world parlance] the worryingly titled Dali and I: The Surreal Story. Based on the book by art dealer Stan Lauryssens who knew Dali and Gala Dali, the plot deals with the last years of Dali’s life when – as Variety puts it – “the surrealist painter decided to take his career in a most surreal direction.” The first and most urgent question that comes to mind when considering a Dali movie is who could possibly play him? In our minds we have cast and recast our own fantasy Dali film and keep coming back to Richard E. Grant. Although being a foot and half taller than Dali, he has the right horse face and big eyes – and we’re sure he could roll his “rrrrrrrssssssss” almost as well as the great man himself. Ewan Bremner [Spud in Trainspotting] was an inspired choice to play Dali in Surrealissimo: The Trial Of Salvador Dali, a British telemovie about Andre Breton’s failed efforts to expel Dali from the Surrealist movement [and which starred a veritable who’s-who of surreal Brit TV acting talent – Little Britain’s Matt Lucas as Buñuel, The League of Gentlemen’s Mark Gattiss as Louis Aragon, Vic Reeves as Paul Eluard, The Mighty Boosh’s Julian Barrett and Noel Fielding as assorted Surrealists and Stephen Fry as Breton]. Choosing just the right person to play Dali is half the film.

Unfortunately Variety also reports that Niccol has cast Al Pacino as Dali. Niccol wrote the-good-for-the-first-hour-shit-after-that Truman Show, directed the rather good Gattaca and then the absolutely freaking awful Simone before getting back on more decent ground with Lord of War. The director has a love of preposterously pretentious visuals, like a lame video-clip friendly version of Fellini, and has trouble keeping his actors in line. Pacino ate up the scenery in Simone and while not as bad as some his worst star turns [Scent of a Woman, City Hall etc] he is an actor whose career has been in terminal decline since the late 1980s.

Maybe Pacino’s trademark over acting would suit Dali but there may already be another fatal flaw in this proposed film. Dali didn’t actually do all that much in his life. True, many bizarre and picturesque things happened around him and while he was a larger than life personality he was a mostly passive presence in his own life – not exactly the stuff of the proactive Hollywood character part. Dali spent most of his time sitting in his studio painting only making the occasional foray out to indulge his masturbatory fantasises of watching hired couples having anal sex for his amusement. The real excitement in the story of Dali is actually in the exploits of his wife Gala, the greatest artist’s wife who ever lived. Tim McGrik’s biography Wicked Lady – Salvador Dali’s Muse – now unfortunately out of print – reads like a cross between Who Weekly and Story of the Eye – a rollicking true life adventure of a 17 year old Gala meeting her husband-to-be Paul Eluard in a sanitarium in Russia in 1917. As the revolution broke out, Eluard returned to Paris but Gala followed him across worn torn Europe to be with her true love. After marrying him – and sleeping with all his mates – Gala dropped Eluard when she met Dali and soon became the architect of his enormously successful career. Although married for the rest of their lives Dali and Gala’s sex life was non existent as she preferred younger men - and so did he – although Dali never again consummated his homosexuality after he betrayed his former lover Garcia Lorca to the Spanish fascists. Later in her life Gala had flings in New York, first with the bloke who played Jesus in Jesus Christ Superstar – then a bum she found on The Bowery who looked just like him. Gala had Dali build her a ‘castle’ at
Pubol but had to ask permission to visit. This to our minds is the story of to make, not the melting watches and the propped up giraffes, being just so much decoration in the life of one of the most unpleasant characters in art.

Labels: , ,

Well Fancy That #1

Monday, January 29, 2007
I remember seeing Mental As Anything play at Sydney University in the early 1980s. The support band that night was a little-known group called INXS, who seemed turgid and nondescript, with an awful poseur as a lead singer. Perhaps that's the reason INXS went on to international success, while Mental As Anything remained local heroes. In the music industry there seems to be a fundamental split between those who are actively seeking the big time and those who are in it for the music and perhaps for the fun.

John McDonald, Mombassa as Anything, The Sydney Morning Herald, January 26, 2007.

Labels: ,

Australia, Australia, Australia…

The Australia Day Honours announced on Friday celebrate everything this country is about – fairness, honesty, having a go, mateship… and shitting it in at the last second. Who better personifies everything our great nation has come to stand for than Steven Bradbury, gold medal winning skater at the 2002 Salt Lake Winter Olympic Games? Honoured with a Medal of the Order of Australia for “services to sport” Bradbury is a bloke after our own hearts having won his gold in Salt Lake City by being the last man standing after the rest of the field were taken out in a freak collision. It might have actually meant something if Bradbury had even been trying, but as the great man said himself:

I was the oldest bloke in the field and I knew that skating four races back to back, I wasn't going to have any petrol left in the tank. So there was no point in getting there and mixing it up because I was going to be in last place anyway. So I might as well stay out of the way and be in last place and hope that some people get tangled up.


Fuckin’ yay.

 


In completely unrelated news, the visual arts were recognised in the Australia Day honours, but unlike sportspeople who are recognised simply for doing, visual arts tends to be recognised for making art visible rather than by actually making it. Janet Holmes a Court therefore as awarded a Companion of The Order of Australia [AC] for being a patron of the arts, lobbying for free-to-air children’s TV and “supporting victims of torture and trauma”. She also has her own eponymous art gallery in Perth which is a very nice air conditioned place with many fine works of art to rival the collections of the East Coast. Arise Madame Holmes a Court! [Fun Janet fact: the great lady’s assistant will not pass on faxes or emails that contain spelling mistakes or bad grammar as she is a busy woman and cannot abide such things!] In a similar vein, Guido Belgiorno-Nettis was awarded an Order of Australia [AM] for building infrastructure projects as head of his late father’s company Transfield Holdings. He also has something to do with the arts too, some sort of show that’s on every couple of years, but we’re not sure if that’s all that significant.

Tony Bond was awarded an OAM for “stimulating debate and public understanding of contemporary international art” through his work as a curator at the Art Gallery of NSW. Not many curators in Australia deserve an actual award for their work but Bond certainly does, and especially so considering the amount of crap he’s had to put up with for the last couple of decades for stimulating the “debate”. The current conspiracy theory is that The Esteemed Critic nominated Bond as some sort of fiendish “so crazy it may just work” ploy but it seems to have backfired terribly. Arise Sir Tony! Across town at the College of Fine Arts two staff members have been awarded OAM’s – Professors Elizabeth Ashburn and Peter Pinson Ashburn for “service to the visual arts, contemporary Australian art, education and the community” and Pinson for “service to the visual arts and as an educator, painter and writer and through contributions to arts organisations.”

The only actual artist we are aware if receiving an award is Denise Green who was awarded an AM for “services to the arts, particularly abstract painting and promoting Australian art and artists." How does someone who has lived in New York since 1966 manage to promote Australian art and artists? It all became clear when we remembered what a nice wicket Green is on, touring US Embassies promoting her book Metonymy In Contemporary Art: An Approach To Art Criticism and Modes of Creativity by Australian Aboriginal and Indian Thought. We have to confess to not having read her book but it’s on our “to read” pile just under The Great War, that new Andrew McGahan and the 2007 Guinness Book of World Records left over from Xmas. Since Green has been doing a great job perhaps Alexander Downer had a word to someone?

Labels: , ,

While You Were Out

Tuesday, January 23, 2007
The December-January period is a great time for getting ready for the rest of the year. After lying on a beach for a few weeks you start to get a bit twitchy about all the things you meant to do over the break – get your office sorted out, launch a new artist run gallery or perhaps start a new web site. By the second week of January with the start of all those ‘Back to School’ specials you start to realise you’ve let things slide. Time for action and a few emails!

Miss Hannah Furmage wrote to us to let us know that she’s launched a web site that records her recent projects. It’s fine design job that cheekily includes quotes from a range of people including a not-the-most-flattering quote from this blog. We told Furmage we liked her site and that we’ve now included it on our list of artist sites. Furmage replied: “I am delighted to be considered for your list of links. Particularly because according to the visitor counter on my website - there have been only 2 hapless visitors to my site since its conception 2 weeks ago. Most depressing, especially as I know that 1 of them was my mum.” We encourage all our readers to visit to get those stats up.



The Baker-McMullan Art-Making Juggernaut is a juggernaut we hadn’t heard of before, the whole race track of the art world being crowded with similar sized vehicles jockeying for pole position. It turns out that this particular project is the collaborative work of Tom McMullan and Tillie Baker [BFA (Hons) 2004], two hard working individuals with many irons in many fires. Tillie wrote to us asking if we could mention their latest venture, an exhibition they are staging at Blanco Negro, a single image that is a gigantic picture of a telephone they did as a backdrop for a band called Red Riders to use in a but which they are now showing in its own right because it looks good and it is cool. The show opens on February 14 and is confusingly called November 18. For further explanation you can read about the show on Tillie’s rather lovely designed web site.

Labels: , ,

The Summer Wind Came Blowing In...

The hot summer wind can make things seem awfully confused. There have been several persistent rumours and weird news items doing the rounds of the art world.

A fun rumour for 2007 was that Gallery Barry Keldoulis was moving to brand new premises. This seemed plausible considering the high profile successes of a number of the gallery artists [TV profiles, permanent collection purchases, art awards etc] and the fact that GBK is one of just two decent galleries in the beleaguered Danks Street art warehouse. With old gallery slots being given over to antique shops and hire spaces, the place is looking increasingly bleak. Moving might be a wise move but it turns out that GBK is staying put. Rumour scotched.

A weird news item was the shock horror story that the Citigroup Australian Portrait Prize [a.k.a. The Photographic Archibald] has been dropped from the Archibald/Wynne/Sulman prize extravaganza. After just four years and a huge amount of public interest in the photography prize, it seemed bizarre that the gallery would wield the axe, but it all had to do with programing:

“The Art Gallery of New South Wales has reluctantly decided not to present the Citigroup Photographic Portrait Prize in 2007. This was a difficult decision as the Prize has been a popular event at the Gallery since it’s inception in 2003.However, it has proved necessary to reduce the number of exhibitions in the Gallery’s programme and this has included discontinuing the Photographic Portrait Prize.”


A petition was circulated urging the Art Gallery of NSW to ‘save’ the prize and a staggering 480 signatures were added to form letters fired off in outrage. But the CAPP has now been saved – it’s been moved to Canberra and the National Portrait Gallery, the first competition to be staged in 2008.

Anyone fancying a job in Queensland might consider applying for the directorship of the Queensland Art Gallery. Advertised in The Oz and The Courier Mail, applications must be in by February 7. Rumours persist that Elizabeth Ann Macgregor, director of Sydney’s pocket sized Museum of Contemporary Art, is the hot favourite for the job, a task which oversees the running of both the Queensland Art Gallery and the brand spanking new Gallery of Modern Art. Essential qualifications include:

- extensive knowledge and understanding of the visual arts and contemporary museum practice both within Australia and internationally;
- a record of successful leadership and the management of human and financial resources in a relevant arts institution;
- exemplary interpersonal and communication skills, together with the ability to build productive relationships with art museum directors both nationally and internationally, the Queensland Government, Arts Queensland, the corporate sector and individual arts benefactors;
- enthusiasm and creativity;
- the international reputation, credibility and networks to enable the Gallery to source outstanding exhibitions from around the world, and
- respected scholarship in a field relevant to the Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art.


Macgregor must be a shoe-in.

The last odd story of the summer wasn’t so much a story as an event – the passing of renowned collector and art world philanthropist, the 78 year old James Agapitos. The Sydney Morning Herald turned to Bruce James to write the Agapitos obituary, a heart felt tribute to a friend and former employer. James wrote the book Australian Surrealism for Beagle Press, a handsome tome about the Agapitos/Wilson collection of Australian Surrealist painting.

This was a collection that James had assisted Agapitos and partner Ray Wilson in putting together and although this fact wasn’t mentioned in the obit, it was James’s purple prose that turned quite a few heads:

Some write eternity on the pavement. Others engrave it in hearts. Perhaps Agapitos's only thwarted ambition was to be a builder. The monumentalism of the Greeks ran in his veins. The collection of Australian surrealist art which bears his name is a structure filled with claustrophobic spaces, eye-popping perspectives and design ideas to set the teeth, and the imagination, on edge. A temple. A folly. A tomb. The house of surrealism gave Agapitos entre to the art world. It proved his natural element. He brought to this place of monsters and mumbo-jumbo far more than he took, though he took a great deal: pleasure, esteem, satisfaction, respect and an almost alarming tally of neglected masterpieces.


James mentioned in the obit that Agapitos could be a cranky old bugger and noted that his depressive moods were multicoloured:

Yet was any major player in the rainbow-coloured realm of art so prone to blackness? Agapitos nudged nihilism. Even so, like El Greco's, his black was lit within by indigos, ultramarines, burnt sienna and the ineradicable ink of numberless Aegean squid.


James’s solid work reminded us of the guilty pleasures of reading his art reviews back when he was the SMH’s art critic. Since then his writing seems to have, er... matured away from the spotlight of weekly reviews. We were not alone in noting the fecundity of his prose. As Rosemary O’Brien noted in her letter to the SMH:

Peter Roebuck, all hands [both of them] to the wheel, the title of the Herald’s most flowery writer of overwrought but oh so ornate phraseology has been wrested [temporarily I trust] from your grasp. Reading the positive obituary for James Agapitos by Bruce James had me reaching for my horticultural dictionary.

Labels: , , ,

While You Were Out II

It's that time of year when there's so little real news that all sorts of crazy projects can make their way into the mainstream media. All you need is a press release.

The Sydney Morning Herald in its venerable and highly regarded news section Stay in Touch is reporting the strange case of Woolongong 'student' Nicael Holt who is selling his indentity on E-bay. Along with his name, his friends family and other relationships, Holt claims to be selling everything that makes him who he is. The erstwhile student then plans to travel the world sans identity on the proceeds and perhaps work a few bar jobs in Barcelona trading collecting glasses for food and accomodation.

It's a nice sounding idea until you realise hat it's also completely unoriginal. UK artist Michael Landy destroyed all his possessions in a work called Break Down where he had everything he owned ground into dust and recycled. Landy performed the whole thing in an empty Oxford Street London shop front, attracting the same kind of suspicious publicity Holt is getting today. Part of the problem is that when artists start performing acts of such sheer obviousness the mainstream media get sucked in while being similtaneously dismissive of your efforts. Landy and Holt have enough nous on how to play the media, but not quite enough to have a decent idea to go with it. Another irony is the possibility that while Holt is traveling the world he might just run into other identity-free individuals...

 


Speaking of nous, Melbourne artist [and occasional friend of The Art Life] Mary Lou Pavlovic has a new project. After her sky writing performance, her footy poster work and National Gallery of Victoria protests, we frankly wondered what she would come up with next. Pavlovic has foxed us again by using the pages of Australian Art Collector as the latest venue for her traveling 'art museum without walls'. AAC now runs to several hundred pages, jammed packed with ads for virtually every gallery in the country. Pavlovic has bought herself a page for her exhibition up the front of the magazine and the cryptic image of the artist with a rat in her gob [and a fetching wig on her head] is a startling reminder that the magazine reaches all levels of the art industry. We at first thought that the image was actually a parody of Patrina Hicks's Shenae and Jade [currently on the cover of the latest Photofile and it's Animal theme issue and which can be seen here] but we was wrong. It's much more than that:

The PavModern Museum is pleased to announce the launch of a new artwork placed in the latest edition of Australian Art Collector Magazine. This is the Fifty Most Collectable Australian Artists 2007(issue 39 Jan - March 2007).

The work is the latest in a series of guerilla style artworks/events commenting on the artworld that is increasingly deployed by PavModern.

It appears in the place of a full page colour advertisement. Artist Mary Lou Pavlovic is dressed in what easily passes as the garb of a corporate cultural gate keeper. This art woman stares sedately out at the viewer - the only problem though is that a big rat protrudes from her mouth.

The work is an artists comment about outside systems that place value on artists and their work, on artworld hierarchies, dodgy art world politics (that were highlighted in the media last year at the National Gallery Victoria) and whether what we are told is of value financially equates with intellectual and creative values.

It's intended to cost $18.95 - the cost of the art mag.

It's an attempt to define a space where these sorts of issues can be raised.

PavModern is Melbourne artist Mary Lou Pavlovic's museum without walls. Other projects have included The Commonwealth Games Series - artworks and performances staged outside several of Melbourne's leading art venues. These questioned the relationship between art, sport and exhibitions. Also the 2004 Jake Chapman Lecture tour inspired by the National Gallery Australia's refusal to take the " Sensation" art exhibition which Jake Chapman's work was a part of. PavModern also organised the 2002 Matthew Collings Lecture Tour.

Labels: ,

The Art Life Range of Products

Monday, January 22, 2007



Welcome to The Art Life in 2007, a blog about the contemporary art world. We kicked off in 2004 and we today mark the beginning of our fourth year with a few changes. For those of you who like the fun flavours of Classic Art Life we’re happy to advise that most of the features you’ve come to love are still here – reviews of shows in Sydney and elsewhere, fun polls, snazzy multimedia ‘offerings’ …and who could possibly live without the joy of anonymous comments!!?

But for those of you with a penchant for something new, something a little sexy, we proudly introduce Art Life Ultra Lite. It’s just like regular blogging, only faster – short easy-to-read snippets for busy people on the go who want full flavoured enjoyment, but who worry about extra calories. Ultra Lite will help to keep you informed without the fat.

Meanwhile the super exciting Art Life Club Global will introduce bold new international content for people interested in art that comes from far away places such as London, New York, Paris and Tokyo. And if all that wasn’t enough there’s Art Life Media Diary a behind-the-scenes look at how a three part TV documentary gets made. It’s educational!

We've addded "labels" to each of our posts, so you can look back through the archive and search for posts by catgeory and subject. Our minions are currently working behind the scenes and have already added lables to more than half of our archive.

And to top it off, glace cherry style, stay tuned for the imminent return of The Art Life Podcast.

You're no doubt thinking "Sure, I've seen other blogs offer these so-called 'improvements' but in the end they've always let me down - how can I be sure The Art Life will keep their promises?" That's where our Guarantee of Service comes in... We're offering our loyal readers a Money Back Guarantee . For every dollar you spend on The Art Life, you earn loyalty points that can then be converted into spending tokens in our Art Life Gift Shop or kept in our Art Life Bank for copnversion into RLF [Real Life Money] at a later date. It's entirely up to you how you use your points or tokens, but we guarantee that unless you're 100% satisfied with your purchase, we'll refund your purchase, no questions asked. Simply call our 24 hour hotline, provide the product code and we'll EXPRESS SHIP a coupon with a full refund. It's that simple.

Please enjoy!

Labels:

Black Hole Sun

Wednesday, January 03, 2007
 
The Art Life returns January 22

Labels: