Published December 30, 2009 by aanews

www.teeers.com

17942_228701672961_624167961_3101397_5935522_n.jpeg

Clément, Odilon and Victor.

www.chrisplytas.com

Published December 28, 2009 by aanews

bookriley.jpg

T.jpghe book is about war, its effects upon Riley, who served as an Army nurse at Abu Ghraib prison from 2004–2005, his relationship to thousands of his combat photos and the intricacies of memory surrounding the trauma of war. The book is the site of the artwork.

Riley has a unique relationship to his photographs from Abu Ghraib. While in Iraq, the camera operated as a form of prosthetic device for Riley — an extension of the body that recorded events his memory suppressed. There are photographs that he doesn’t recall taking, nor does he remember the event itself. Other times, he used the camera to “store” overwhelming experiences to sort out later. Instigated by his photos, Riley and I spent three years discussing memory and the war’s effects on him.

If the camera was an important apparatus for Riley in combat, what are the roles of the resulting photos — this post-traumatic evidence? The book explores that question. Photos of red gaping flesh blend with drab army colored clothing. “Sometimes I feel like this was somebody else’s experience, and I’m trying to put the pieces together after the fact,” Riley reflects. “Photos provide the chain of events that lead your mind into a state where it is okay to kill somebody. If you don’t remember the sequence of events that took you there, you can believe you were a monster.”

These particular pages are different sized, some shorter than others. They are designed to mimic the nature of memories — overlapping and intersecting.

Currently the artwork is an object in your hand — organized, mobile, tactile. As a book, the work has potential to disseminate through a large population, yet it is tangible and stable — unlike the digital information and traumatic memories from which it came.

The book is meant for many audiences. On the one hand, this book is engaged in an intellectual discussion surrounding war imagery by returning soldiers. This project is part of a larger conversation about socially engaged art practices and events. Educators in art, politics, and conflict mediation can use the book. On the topic of traumatic memory, the book has a home in the health and healing community. Perhaps most importantly, this book is an invitation to everyday U.S. citizens, including war veterans, family and friends, to speak and share openly with each other about their experiences of the war.

Riley and his Story.

The book for sale at onestar press.

Capture_d_____cran_2009_12_28____09.12.45.png

The Classroom is curated by David Senior, Museum of Modern Art Library.

***

F.jpgirst of all, I want to thank the NYABF and AA Bronson, assisted by the Printed Matter team for giving us the opportunity to present OBJECT by Haim Steinbach published by Three Star Books.

I also want to thank Haim for being present tonight and letting me introduce OBJECT in my own words and interpretation. But be reassured the artist will correct me in a few minutes…

My name is Christophe Boutin and along with Cornelia Lauf and Melanie Scarciglia I am one of the three founding members of Three Star Books.

Three Star Books is dedicated to publishing books by artists. There are as many ways to define an artist’s book as there are publishers.

Three Star Books was founded 3 years ago and has published numerous projects among them: Die More Die Better Die Again by Maurizio Cattelan, FETISH by HEIMO Zobernig, ULTIMO BAGAGLIO by Hubert Damish and Ken Lum, HOLY SILENCE by Tobias Rehberger. Our Predecessor company, Two Star Books:A BOOK OF COVERS by Liam Gillick and the Paris designers M/M.

In an era where the INTERNET is the most powerful information dissemination tool, I am convinced that OBJECT by Haim Steinbach is the perfect example of what I consider to be the only type of book that has the right to be printed.

Of course this is a strong statement, but let me explain.

OBJECT is not only a book, it is also an OBJECT.
OBJECT will not inform you about the artist, since the book itself is a WORK by the artist.
OBJECT will inform you about the artist because it is a WORK by Haim Steinbach.

For those who are familiar with the activity of  Haim Steinbach, OBJECT is a bible that groups images of some of the objects that the artist has / is or may use in the future for his delicate and precise installations and sculptures.

When Haim was invited to develop a project at TSB he quickly came up with the idea of having a collection of some of the items that surround him to be photographed and assembled in a BOOK.

The whole book would be punched with a hole.

I then flew to NY to organize the shooting session of the objects at HS studio. During the two days of photographing, with the help of Zerek Kempf, Haim’s assistant and artist, we set up a packshot photo studio to photograph the 200 objects that were carefully selected by the artist.

After the images were brought back and prepared for reproduction in our Paris offices, a second trip to NY was scheduled in order for Haim to finalize his choice of the objects that were to be reproduced for the book.

Haim decided that the book should be in the form of a large kid’s book of 64 pages. OBJECT is also dedicated to Haim’s son River who just turned 5 this week.

All production files were ready to go to the printer when, as usual when concept meets reality, complications ensued.  How are would we punch such a deep hole? After numerous printers and binders conducted tests, a printer in China came up with the solution of creating a double metal tool that would punch the entire book from both sides.

Given the book’s size, our Chinese printer, IMAGO, worried about liability and so insisted that either OJECT carry a warning that it was dangerous to children under six years of age or else that we sign a release, specifying that IMAGO would not be liable for any injuries to children under six years old. In order to preserve the integrity of OBJECT, we signed the release.

As you can see, the name of the artist is printed only on page 63, at the colophon. Instead of the names of the artist and publisher, on the book’s spine is an image of one of the objects that the artist seems to like the most: a KONG DOG CHEW.

The images reproduced in the book are, as Daniel Buren would state, SOUVENIR IMAGES. The big hole in the middle of the book, obliterating the objects, makes us understand that, even though they are reproduced with high quality printing, the presence of the objects, photographed and reproduced within this volume, is MISSING.  These observations also remind me of the captions used below paintings in The STUDIO MAGAZINE a hundred and ten years ago that stated “reproduced after a photograph,” followed by the name of the photographer.

OBJECT was then printed in 4 colors, the printed sheets were varnished, and then mounted on cardboard and finally bound.

THEN, at the specific moment that the hole was punched , OBJECT became a work of art by Haim Steinbach.

Thank you.

Christophe Boutin

Published December 26, 2009 by aanews

 alain.jpg

Photo: Florian Kleinefenn
 

“Until the Fall

T.jpgen paintings by Alain Séchas. ” Ten vertical formats. Nothing else. No sculpture, no technology, no sound.

And no cats either, no Martians. No Couéism.

Acrylic paint on paper meticulously mounted on canvas. The white edge of the paper is visible. So is the canvas.

So, painting. Very colourful paintings. Interlacings in which the form chases its tail until it’s out of breath. Detailed painting, dense and devious. Images in which, at first glance, nothing seems preconceived or premeditated. Rather, a loss of control with gesture oscillating between virtuosity and awkwardness, between tension and release: a vertical journey not lacking in gravity. So, ten paintings, and ten unlikely titles. Ten titles that will no doubt keep changing until the last minute. Ten titles rather than “untitleds,” but titles taken after the event. After the event of painting, it goes without saying.

Ten titles however, that, as I write, help me find my way. I can refer to them in order to understand something. Séchas didn’t get us used to abstraction. Ten titles that go walkabout: Porte d’Italie, Mexico, Cardinaux and Hurons. And others I won’t mention. See for yourself. Ten titles that induce you to seek analogies between what they evoke and what you can see. That’s not easy when this really isn’t figurative and, on top of it all, if they change the moment you’re on to something. If our thoughts are vague and we make mistakes and get confused, I guess that must be just fine with Séchas.

Ten paintings executed on paper taped to the studio wall. Painted fairly fast, “depending on the degree of success,” says Séchas. But then what is the “success” of a work of art nowadays? When does the thing start to hold together? When do you move on to the next one?

Ten paintings whose speed of execution was no doubt variable, perhaps inconsistent. Different, at any rate, from that of the artist’s sculptures; closer, no doubt, to that of some of this drawings.

I look at these works. If I didn’t know who the author was I would find them jaunty and lively, almost joyous and light-hearted. Big colourful masses, strapwork, consummate skill: the man has technique. He has a deft hand. So it was Séchas who did that? What’s going on? I wonder. What is he getting at?

Here and there vaguely narrative elements emerge, close to things I know: eyes, ovoid forms, unlikely mandibles. But gone is the grammar of the earlier works, which are always somewhat restrained and subtle. Is Séchas letting go? Is he losing that caustic, deadpan humour of his? All that is effaced, erased, liquefied, so much so that I just don’t know what these paintings are saying to me? No witticisms, no caricatures.

Ridding oneself of one’s accomplishments. Unlearning, both for oneself and for whoever is looking. Not reassuring him with what, over the years and at the shows, he had learned to recognise, but instead placing him before what Roland Barthes called “the terror of uncertain signs.”

It’s true, I’m uncomfortable. It can’t be easy to forget a skill. And it is just as difficult to try and talk about it. I keep looking. There must be some Séchas under all this.Besides, I am not writing just to talk about this past, but to address the present. Exactly. I like these paintings a lot. In fact I wonder if another thing I like isn’t the fact that they make me uncomfortable and go against what I already know about Séchas’s work. Or what I think I know. Séchas is not easy. His work is often reduced to smooth, simple images. Séchas often has the violence of smoothness.

But there’s none of that here. It is both rough and lively. Full of denials and nonsense, full of signs forming and coming apart, seemingly put to the test by painting, negotiating or becoming diluted. Signs with the semantic fidgets, signs that slip and skate and sweat. It’s a physical thing.I think of Mercier and Camier. I love them, those two. Their goal is not precise. “All we have to do is press forward.” And I think to myself that something similar must be going on here. Something far from gratuitous word games, and the desire that the practice of painting should become a way of revealing what is at stake by its very absurdity. Here there are lines that jump, holes, resumptions and affirmations that suddenly switch to contradictions.

In Malone Dies, Beckett writes: “And each one has his reasons, while wondering from time to time what they are worth, and if they are the true ones, for going where he is going rather than somewhere else.” There must be something of that in the pictures that Séchas is painting these days – standing up, facing himself with his back to what he has done. Yes, that’s it. Painting so as not to get backache. Until the fall comes.

Bernard Blistène, December 2009

From the press release

December 12, 2009 – January 23, 2010 Galerie Chantal Crousel

Check Alain Séchas at onestar press here.

Published December 25, 2009 by aanews

 florian.jpg

Photo : Nicholas Robinson Gallery

Image_6.pngInterieurs’ an exhibition of Florian Süssmayr’s paintings and a collaboration (with Martin Wöhrl) at Nicholas Robinson Gallery NYC offered a tempered collection of pictures whose subject is the historic past where shifts in culture play out through the lives of an individual and their social circle situated in the right time (early 80’s) and right place (wherever). These unseen transitions in the development of self register within a social milieu distanced now through time, but that pictorially retains the feverish pulse of youth.

Süssmayr is a history painter, working in oil often within a spectrum of dried blood browns, translating print images onto canvas either by eye-to hand reproduction, or by the assistance of projector in which an image may be traced in the manner of Andy Warhol’s work. Warhol, like Robert Rauschenberg (earlier) and later Gerhard Richter and Richard Hamilton occasionally chose topical subject matter that was political in nature. Warhol’s ‘Race Riot’ (1964) and Richter’s ‘October 18, 1977’ (1988) series are among the masterworks of art’s engagement with real world events. Richter is of particular importance to Sussmyr in as both a representational painter and in his elevation of forensic details in the rendering of reproductions. Richter’s manually blurred ‘photorealist’ techniques resembled a poorly televised picture, rescuing 80’s European painting from lurid neo-expressionism whose novelty did not survive the decade. Süssmayr recognizes that the ‘mute witnesses’ to events are relegated to the background and marginalia of the big subject. These are part of the dingey period décor which found renewal in this era of celebration of the abject. Punk was ‘flowers in the dustbin’, the response to the empty promises that the utopian 60’s failed to deliver on throughout the oil shocks, recession, and vacuous forms of escapism of the ‘Me Decade’. In modestly scaled paintings (all ’09) like‘Interieur-Curtain’, ‘Excess bar’, and ‘Carpet’ Süssmayr’s camera searches the curtains, tiled walls and floors for absolutely nothing and finds absolutely everything. The ornamentation, faux-primitive patterns, and designs are versions of versions, long distanced from their folkloric origins-empty signs awaiting redeployment. Melancholia pervades the bleak gaiety of ‘Mirror Ball’- an instant party in the flick of a switch and a fragmented memorial to whatever scenes of abandonment it may have witnessed.

The punks made music and style but not art. New York artist’s moonlighted in bands, but lost interest preferring the upscale comforts of ‘downtown’ bohemia, i.e., real estate. But youth culture’s embrace of creating by destroying has found new currency in the proliferation of assemblage and collage. Primarily through the incendiary Jamie Reid’s agitprop of the 70’s, the collage, that art form beloved by the perpetual adolescent obsessive, remains this period’s (punk/new wave) signature style as art noveaux was for the hippies. Except for in ‘Self Portrait’, whose stacked composition recalls 60’s Warhol, Süssmayr avoids the use of collage as a nostalgic signifier of authenticity, a trope exhausted by local art boom figures who blurred art and life with tragic consequences. Identifiable cult figures reside only the margins of Süssmayr’s art-the two guys in ‘Interieur’(s) look like they might be Ramones and in ‘Self Portrait’ I recognize Richard Hell’s personage in the upper left-hand corner. Süssmayr repeatedly chooses ennui over fanboy reenactment’s such as Banks Violette’s early videos that successfully transferred the aura of Ian Curtis, doomed lead singer of Joy Division onto his own product. One wonders how those who attain such adoration survive outliving their moment; some not too badly-Richard Hell (according to his website) is a busy literary figure and Patti Smith entertains select audiences of big spenders at events like Miami Basel.
Euro-punks scared me, having gotten a close look of my own in mid to late 70’s travels to London, Milan, Belfast, and Paris. The haunted European capitals cast darker shadows than the dive bars along Bowery populated mostly by perpetually uncool ‘bridge and tunnel’ suburban kids. Last century’s history informs a painting like Süssmayr’s ‘Floor’ where the pattern of bricks appear one step away from formation into an outlawed fascist symbol-no surface is innocent through Sussmyr’s lens. Europunks were nihilistic ‘stormhippies’ and youth culture aficionado’s like Dan Graham took great measures to distinguish ‘them’ from ‘us’ in exposing a puritanical American transcendentalist ritualism in the burgeoning hardcore scene as proposed in his ‘Rock My Religion’ video (1982-4). Graham correctly noted this music’s separation of the sexes, unlike 70’s Disco where everyone gay or straight was on the dance floor. Once again, ‘Mirror Ball’ celebrates this. Süssmayr’s men embrace and bond while his women pose.
Do ‘disenfranchised’ youth play a role in the empty unkempt bedrooms or dining halls? Where are they? Attending class? Dancing? Starting a White Riot? Anti- intellectualism and vacancy was prized by the blank generation-but paintings (or photographs) are never truly empty from conditions of light, grain, shadow, glare and other incident. Two bright monochromes ‘Stachus Untergeschoss V-IV’ could attract something beside our gaze to disrupt their surfaces; most probably the unschooled line of the graffiti writer who simultaneously defaces and claims any flat space. Few artists other than Gilbert and George in their great photo assemblages of 1977 (in black, white, and red) took note of urban subculture’s writing on the wall; ‘ARE YOU ANGRY OR ARE YOU BORING?’
Downstairs in the gallery Süssmayr and a collaborator Martin Wohrl construct a pictorial environment that begs our participation in the form of writing upon the wall with a supply of black markers (I wrote something). Like early, funky Rauschenberg or the smoother Cy Twombly, Süssmayr and Wöhrl invite the ‘street’ into the white cube. Wöhrl’s makeshift benches open up a welcome space for rest and contemplation-if a punk Rothko Chapel was ever proposed, Florian Süssmayr should be high on any list for the commission.

Tim Maul 12/09

Check Florian Süssmayr book at onestar press here.

49VE8748a_rs2.jpgFrom left to right: Twinkle Twinkle Little Star curators: Anna Klossowski, Charlotte Morel, Louise Grislain and onestar press’s co founder’s: Mélanie Scarciglia and Christophe Boutin. (Photo: Chris Plytas)tshow1.jpgtshow5.jpgtshow4.jpgtshow3.jpgtshow2.jpg

TWINKLE_INITATION.jpg

Une sélection de multiples de la collection onestar press
proposée par Anna Klossowski, Louise Grislain et Charlotte Morel

Marina Abramovic • John Armleder Lisa Anne Auerbach • Lewis Baltz Pierre Bismuth • Stefan Brecht Claude Closky • Liz Cohen • Ryan Gander • Pamela Golden • Jamelie Hassan • Jonas Mekas • Aleksandra Mir • Jonathan Monk • François Morellet • Sam Samore • Hans Schabus • Alain Séchas • A.L. Steiner Annika Ström • Taroop & Glabel Stephen Vitiello • Luca Vitone

TWINKLE TWINKLE LITTLE STAR est le fruit d’un regard retrospectif porté par trois jeunes commissaires sur dix années de production de livres d’artistes et d’œuvres en tirage limité par onestar press. TWINKLE TWINKLE LITTLE STAR se présente comme un accrochage double, faisant cohabiter le temps du plaisir, de la vision des œuvres, et celui de la lecture. Le choix rassemble une constellation de vingt-trois artistes. Il porte d’une part sur les oeuvres de créateurs bien connus et souvent exposés chez qui le multiple constitue une manière d’écart par rapport à leurs pratiques habituelles. Leur œuvre est renouvelé par les problématiques spécifiques au multiple : reproductibilité, dé-réification, et leur corollaire de démocratisation de l’œuvre d’art. Il convoque, d’autre part des artistes plus rarement présentés exploitant d’autres qualités intrinsèques de l’œuvre multiple : coût relatif et légereté des moyens de production.

Les tribulations de Siegfried mises en scène par Alain Séchas dans la jungle psychanalytique de Jurassic Pork II, amorcent l’exposition. De leur côté, Marina Abramovic comme Lewis Baltz opèrent un retour dans les strates profondes de leur histoire personnelle. La suite de la sélection introduit différentes stratégies de torsion subtile du réel : par dissimulation d’une fiction dans la page d’une encyclopédie chez Ryan Gander, par prélèvement et décontextualisation de coupures de presse chez Taroop & Glabel ou encore par captation et amplification de sons imperceptibles dans l’œuvre de Stephen Vitiello. L’accrochage convoque ensuite le hasard comme moteur de la création à travers les jets de dés ou d’angles de Sam Samore et François Morellet. Déclinant une autre forme du refus de l’intentionnalité et de la position démiurgique de l’artiste, Aleksandra Mir, Claude Closky et Luca Vitone ancrent leur réflexion de façon commune autour de la question du trait et du dessin. Le livre de coloriage de Closky ou la simple feuille blanche signée par Mir invitent leurs propriétaires à un moment d’expression décomplexée, tandis que Vitone conserve précieusement les plans griffonés par des inconnus au cours de ses déambulations urbaines. Les œuvres d’ Annika Ström et Lisa Anne Auerbach traduisent aussi un intérêt pour les formes dérisoires, qu’elles soient celles des petites échoppes, survivant dans le contexte du commerce mondialisé, photographiées par Auerbach, ou des interpellations vouées à rester sans réponse que Ström transcrit sur un mode parodiant l’expressivité du geste pictural. Coming Soon de Pierre Bismuth suspend un temps l’accrochage, comme pour annoncer l’exposition prochaine de Jonathan Monk. Face à eux, deux figures proposent le bricolage comme modèle de la création : Hans Schabus montre dans sa vidéo la reconstitution de son atelier au sein d’un espace d’exposition, tandis que Liz Cohen fait, par l’inventaire photographique de ses outils de prédilection, le portrait métonymique du garage dans lequel elle “customise” une Trabant.

********
Née en 1984, Charlotte Morel est historienne d’art spécialisée en photographie contemporaine. Elle consacre ses deux années de master à l’étude de la réception critique de l’œuvre de Bernd et Hilla Becher, puis à la série de photographies réalisée par Christian Milovanoff dans le cadre de la Mission Photographique de la DATAR (1984-1989).

Née en 1985, Anna Klossowski est historienne d’art contemporain. Dans le cadre de sa maîtrise, elle a notamment travaillé à Londres sur les Mud Works de Richard Long.

Née en 1981, Louise Grislain, après des études d’architecture, se consacre à l’histoire de l’art et plus particulièrement à la question du dessin dadaïste. Elle est l’auteur d’articles parus dans Le Journal des Arts et sur le site paris-art.com.

Toutes trois sont issues de la promotion 2009 du Master 2 professionnel L’art contemporain et son exposition de la Sorbonne Paris-IV. Dans ce cadre elles ont participé au commissariat collectif de l’exposition Dispersions au Mac/Val, musée d’art contemporain du Val-de-Marne à Vitry.

Opening le 11 décembre 2009 – 18h – 21h
11 décembre 2009 au 9 janvier 2010
11h -18h du lundi au vendredi et samedi sur rendez-vous
onestar press
49, rue Albert*
75013 Paris
info@onestarpress.com

Cliquez ici pour le dossier de presse et la liste des œuvres

*onestar press / Three Star Books nouvelle adresse et showroom – www.onestarpress.com

After_Images_1.jpg

After-Images-2_1.jpg

D.jpgvorak Sec Contemporary is pleased to present After Images, a solo exhibition and European debut of New York-based artist Sean Micka. The exhibition is the second show in the gallery’s new exhibition program primarily focused on presenting young and emerging talent from the New York City art scene.

After Images explores the space between contrasting models of painting and sculpture by combining elements of each into its formal display. Monochrome, still life, and striped stereoscopic paintings sit alongside the found objects, such as archived printed matter, books and striped fabric, they borrow inspiration from. In his paintings, Micka experiments with the idea of his works as sculptural objects, purposefully employing techniques that draw attention to the material support of the canvas and its geometric shape. Presenting a disciplined approach to form, composition, and display, his work often oscillates between representation and abstraction and in doing so questions the relationship between the two. “After Images is an exercise in working through the radically disparate aesthetics of the image, its after effects and its seemingly infinite albeit sometimes entropic permutations,” says the artist.

After_Images_3.jpg

Sean Micka graduated from the Art Institute of Boston with a Bachelor in Fine Arts. He has had solo exhibitions at the Judi Rotenberg gallery in Boston, Mass; and the Art Institute of Boston; and group exhibitions at the Pigman Gallery in San Francisco; the Barbara Krakow Gallery in Boston; and The Art Gallery of Knoxville in Tennessee.  In 2007, his works were chosen to be featured in New American Paintings, Vol. # 62by the juror Bill Arning. He has a forthcoming book with Onestar Press in Paris. Sean Micka lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

 http://dvoraksec.com/

steinbach_490.jpg

steinbach_491.jpg

steinbach_492.jpg

steinbach_493.jpg

steinbach_494.jpg

onestar press / Three Star Books
49, rue Albert Paris 75013 France

By appointment only.