Stone from Strange Mountain
Lina Persson and Ulrika Gomm
September 27th, 2011 § 0
Lina Persson and Ulrika Gomm
September 20th, 2011 § 0
John Duncan
Icons Jigsaw Puzzles
29 September – 23 October 2011
Opening September 29 at 4-8pm
NB: Quote: “All forms of my work are created to raise questions, to find out everything I can about who I am without fear or judgment, and to encourage you to do the same”. Can you evaluate the above quote in relation to the ICONS?
JD: It could be seen as a comment on how little we know, or want to know, about our own origins.
NB: Can you evaluate on the symbolic value embedded in the word Icon (connotations of religious works of art / worshiping and in the modern sense)
JD: I see all of those aspects in these images.
NB: Art and sex is a subject that is well represented in the history of art. Are these works in essence about sex/sexuality? And if so, where does these works sit within that particular canon?
JD: They’re about assembled knowledge with essential details that are missing.
NB: In what way, if at all, do you place these works within a feminist perspective?
JD: I don’t even try, or care to. I like to believe that these, and in fact all my works, have a far broader perspective than a feminist point of view could possibly include.
NB: Why have you chosen to represent the female gender and not the male?
JD: I am fascinated by the vagina as the source for us all, many of whose processes remain beyond our comprehension. The same could be said for the male gender, of course, but I live with that so it’s less of a mystery — and I explored it quite a bit in my early work.
NB: What about the women photographed, is it significant for you who they are, and how did you describe the project to them?
JD: Their identities make no difference. In the process of photographing them, it was interesting to see that each woman’s vagina, at least these images of them, seemed to convey the opposite to their personalities. On their own, the images have a presence that needs no further explanation.
NB: Could you describe how these “objects” were made?
JD: Several friends and acquaintances were told about the original project and asked to model for it. The photos were shot on infrared film, to read heat from the body as light. The originals are 3m x 4m, accompanied by drawings of them made with my blood on heavy paper.
NB: Is there any specific part of the process of making these “objects” that stands out to you, as specifically relevant? And could you describe the importance of the materials used?
JD: The most relevant aspect of the Jigsaw Puzzles is that, despite decades of intimate contact, I seem to know less now than ever about the makeup of the feminine character. Evidence is overwhelming that I am in no way unique in that.
September 17th, 2011 § 0
September 17th, 2011 § 0
Ulrika Gomm, Ivana Franke, Julieta Aranda, Carl Michael von Hausswolff, Lovisa Ringborg, Aids-3D (Kosmas & Keller)
September 4th, 2011 § 0
BLIND DATE will be included in After Shelley Duvall ’72 (Frogs on the highwire) curated by Bjarne Melgaard, opening 16 September at Maccarone Gallery, New York NY. I will attend the opening.
After Shelley Duvall ’72
(Frogs on the High Line)
Curated by Bjarne Melgaard
September 16 – October 22, 2011
Opening: Friday, September 16, 6-8 pm
Performance by
Fabienne Audéoud and John Russell
Friday September 16, 8:00 pm
featuring
Anonymous Three:
Anonymous Three Selects Omar Harvey
Fabienne Audéoud and John Russell
Michael Alig
Alissa Bennett
Sverre Bjertnes
Big Fat Black Cock, Inc.
Carly Busta
William L. Copley
John Duncan
John Kelsey
Richard Kern
Michael Bernard Loggins
Lydia Lunch
John Patrick McKenzie
Dwight Mackintosh
Bjarne Melgaard
Marlon Mullen
William Pope.L
Seth Shapiro
Estate of Martin Wong
Maccarone
630 Greenwich Street NY, NY 10014
tel 212 431 4977