Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
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Xandra Eden’s 10 for 2004 (in no particular order)
1. Mike Kelley, The Uncanny, MUMOK, Vienna and Tate Liverpool
http://www.tate.org.uk/international/kelley.htm
2. Scott Lyall, The Canon Copiers, Susan Hobbs Gallery, Toronto
3. Gelatin, Meyer Kainer Gallery, Vienna
4. Jane Jacobs, Dark Age Ahead
http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?1400062322
5. Reverend Billy, XSPACE, 7a-11d Performance Art Festival
http://www.revbilly.com/
6. Maura Doyle, There's a New Boulder in Town + Toronto's Erratic Boulders - Downtown Map, Toronto Sculpture Garden
http://www.torontosculpturegarden.com/currentexhibit.htm
7. Darren O’Donnell, A Suicide-Site Guide to the City, Toronto/Vancouver/Edinburgh
http://www.buddiesinbadtimestheatre.com/events/show.cfm?i_key=27
8. Olafur Eliasson, The Weather Project, Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/eliasson/
9. Tone Nielsen & Morten Goll, Niagara Falls Artist Host Program, Mercer Union, Toronto
http://www.mercerunion.org
10. Rodney Graham, Rheinmetall/Victoria 8, 303 Gallery, New York
http://www.303gallery.com/artists/graham/index.html
Rob Cruickshank is installing work at Fly Gallery this weekend. I've seen a tantalizing blue spiral in mpeg preview form, and I'm looking forward to the real thing. I very much liked the piece Rob and Sarah Peebles did this summer, and of course if you don't regularly check his blog, Endless Parade of Excellence, then you are working far far too hard and really ought to adjust your priorities. Fly is operated by Tanya Read (see post below) and fellow artist Scott Caruthers. It's a walk-by window display on Queen West, between The Drake Hotel and the Gladstone Hotel, north side. If you are in Toronto, go by Fly in January and take a look.
NB: Let me declare up front that Rob, Tanya, and Scott are all friends of mine, and I will be showing at Fly Gallery myself in April. More posts about artists I've never met coming soon in 2005.
There's a great big story about Mr. Nobody in the Globe today! Gary Michael Dault did a good job filling in the back story on the enigmatic little guy, and there's some nice quotes from Tanya Read, Mr. Nobody's Frankenstein-like creator.
[Mr. Nobody's appeal] has a lot to do with his existential determination, in the way he just keeps going, persisting in the face of futility.Last spring I wrote a short exhibition essay for Tanya Read's show at Truck Gallery in Calgary. Here's a quote:
Recently, Mr. Nobody has acquired an Ignatz mouse, a yin for his yang, a perfect foil. In the film Juggernaut, a monstrous ball appears with dots that might be eyes, mouth, snout or belly but never quite resolving into form, an indominatable abstraction that rolls over Mr. Nobody and leaves him flat and blinking.You can watch Juggernaut online here at the Mr. Nobody website. NB: I also made a wee post on Mr. Nobody here back in May.
Kristin Lucas's top ten art picks for 2004
(listed in the order that she witnessed them)
1. Tom Moody online
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/tommoody/
2. Joe McKay's "Accidental MPegs". VertexList, Brooklyn, NY. January.
3. Paper Rad at Foxy Production, NY. April - May.
http://www.foxyproduction.com/ExhibitionPaperRad.html
4. Lisa Choinacky's "My Bodyguard". A drawing of a person about to take off on a motorcycle. Riding double is blue bear. Also her encaustic paintings of album covers. I bought "The Pretenders." Both works on presented by Fresh Up Club in Austin, TX. February and April.
5. Wangeshi Mutu, collage work
The Altoids Collection tour at ArtHouse Texas in Austin, TX. April. http://www.africana.com/articles/qa/ar20030305mutu.asp
6. Jude Tallichet's "It's All Good" from "Treble" exhibtion at Sculpture Center, NY. Curated by Regine Basha. May.
A pink and white pearl drum set hung upside down from the ceiling like a chandelier.
http://www.sculpture-center.org/pe_treble_img1.html
(roll over the images to 'no. 15' though not a great pic)
7. 2nd Grade Toy Inventions at Creative Research Laboratory in Austin, TX. "Now and Tomorrow" exhibition. June.
The Education Program of CRL in Austin worked with school teachers who then conducted art projects with students pre-kindergarden to 12th grade. My favorite was the 2nd grade project. They invented thier own toys, and exhibited them as if they were pitching them: a drawing, clay model, and a marketing profile outlining materials, noise, how to use it, age req., special effects, cost). My favorite toy was titled "Monkey". According to the available information, you throw it and it screams.
From the Austin Chronicle: "Alfred Galvan's Discoman, a blue and gold doll bursting with disco magic, is designed to be made of "plastic and solid gold" and sold for $4,000 under the slogan "Little Children Out of Site.""
8. The Infinite Fill Show at Foxy Production, NY.
My favorite works were Michael Bell-Smith's animation and Ryan Compton's hand-drawn sneakers on a brick wall pattern. July - Aug.
http://www.foxyproduction.com/Infinite.htm
9. Scott Hewicker's napkin drawings of cats with laser eyes. I keep finding them lying around abandonned. San Francisco, CA. Beginning in October.
10. Jovi Schnell at The Luggage Store Gallery in San Francisco, CA. November.
LM's top ten (in no particular order)
1. Cafka.04 or any year! Everything you want to see in a group show in a Civic centre, excited artists and an excited public.
http://www.contemporaryartforum.ca/main/main.html
2. Wade - Another terrific group project, and I agree with Sally that the misanthropic Gene Threndyle did a marvellous piece.
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/sallymckay/?28096
3. Daniel Barrow "The face of Everything" closing night at Images Festival.
His own web site is: http://www.danielbarrow.com
4. Kate Wilson's "Cool Lustre" at Katharine Mulherin (I like the greasy paintings the best!)
http://168.144.171.147/kmart/exhibitions/a_artist.asp?id=167
Her listing on the CCCA site is: http://www.ccca.ca/artists/artist_info.html?languagePref=en&link_id=5492&artist=Kate+Wilson
5. David Shrigley's transit posters up around Toronto during the Contact festival.
His own web site is: http://www.davidshrigley.com/
6. John Dickson's "Cold War" at Cambridge galleries http://www.cambridgegalleries.ca/cambridge.taf?section=2
(probably because I saw "Das Boot" seven times and cried when the Kursk sunk.)
7. Julie Voyce at AGYU
http://www.yorku.ca/agyu/exhibitions/wiflfag.html
8. 640 480 video embroidery machine at Zsa Zsa
http://www.640480.com
9. Fastwurms with Michael Barker at Zsa Zsa, loved the wood grained mac-tac pirate ship wall and loved Andrew Harwood's moving role in the video as man-dressed-as-a-pirate-waving-a-phoney-sword-and-yelling-aaaaarrrrrrgggggggg
10. Going to the local video store, just looking to rent some fluffy movie with costumes, and picking up Alexander Sokurov's "Russian Ark", watched it three times that evening, once with the commentary, then watched the "making of...", then brought it over to a friend's house and watched it again, (but probably spoiled the whole experience for her, since I wouldn't shut up about it.)