02 March 2009

Brent Birnbaum
donthaveacowboypowwow
@BUIA gallery




IN PROGRESS!
A Poster for Brent Birnbaum's May 2009 Exhibition at BUIA Gallery in NYC. The painting is pretty much done. The show will be in May 2009.

UPDATE:SHOW CANCELLED Unfortunately BUIA Gallery is the latest victim of the current financial meltdown and has been forced to close. So I regret to report Brent's show is on hold for now. I am sure this will only be a temporary setback for Greenpoint's best dressed urban folk artist. However, this unfortunate and unanticipated hick up must mean that the project protocols will be amended to determine what happens to a poster if it is produced, but the show never happens...

01 March 2009

William Powhida
Sell Out: The Bastard Tour
@ Platform Gallery


During July of 2008 I made the second poster in the project for William Powhida's September 2008 exhibition at Platform Gallery in Seattle, Washington. The premise of the exhibition was that Powhida had become disillusioned with art and had reinvented himself as a dionysian, but extremely self-aware, rock star. Naturally William and I agreed the poster should reference rock concert tour posters. Below is a photograph of the reproduced poster in installation somewhere in Seattle:



Powhida is a really facinating artist who i met through Jens-Peter Brask several years ago. In New York you can find his work at Schroeder Romero Gallery. Along with making a poster for his exhibition I convinced him to let Amanda Browder and I interview him for Bad at Sports. From William's website:

William Powhida (b. 1976, New York) is a GENIUS artist and BRILLIANT critic living and working in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.  He studied painting at Syracuse University where he easily received his B.F.A with honors and received his M.F.A. from the famed (cheap) Hunter College program in New York City. Getting a honors there was even easier.

Powhida has become an international art sello...SENSATION exhibiting in New York, Seattle, Miami, Los Angeles, London, Madrid, and Belgium. His new show, A Study For Sofia Coppola's Film 'Powhida' will be on view at Haines Gallery in San Francisco November 14th through December 22nd. You should check it out. He has exclusive West Coast representation with Platform Gallery in Seattle, and is looking for an international dealer. His amazing work has been exhibited at Pulse, Aqua Art, Scope (sorry), and Year_06. After years of toiling away in Brooklyn the artist has finally stepped into the market ready to be commodified and assimilated. He wants it to happen as quickly as possible so he can be chewed up and spit out into retirement with a pile of money.

His work involves drawing projects based on memory and socially transformative narrative such as his large scale drawing of everyone the artist has ever met and "letters" to collectors, artists, and dealers requesting the impossible.  His art also edges into performance and video including his entry "Critical Confessional" for the International Art Market 5 at Parker's Box. His artistic projects have transcended the material to absord the artist himself. Also, he has hexed Zach Feuer and it appears to be working.
Powhida was a regular contributor to The Brooklyn Rail for over three years and has contributed to Artnet.com, Circa, and Permission magazines.  Some of the artists he has reviewed include Tim Hawkinson, Bjorn Melhus, Assume Vivid Astro Focus, Guy Richards Smit, Jim Torok, Julianne Swartz, Kevin and Jennifer McCoy and his enemy, Jules DeBalincourt.

Currently, the artist is suffering a malaise brought on by bouts of crushing doubt about the ability of the market to cope with his rash of provocations and insinuations. When it goes south, so will he. Most likely, you'll be able to find him somewhere in South America selling paintings of the ocean to tourists.




For Sell Out: The Bastard Tour Powhida recorded an album and played an ill fated concert at the gallery in Seattle. The exhibition also included the stage where Powhida and his backing band performed, a group of paintings that reflected cynically on his rock'n'roll fantasy, various versions of the album cover art, set list, song titles and other rock detritus.













Above are a few installation shots. The exhibition is reviewed here. Below is the painting that William gave to me in return - it is fantastic.




Amanda Browder
Cyclone
@ Green Lantern


The first poster I did was for the dynamic and versitile Amanda Browder. Amanda's work ranges from 2D work, to sculptor and installation and also performance. Who knows, maybe she has done video as well? She has also done projects and residencies all over the place with her collaborator Stewart Keeler. She is also famous for bringing personality to the Bad at Sports podcast and her extremely fashionable eye wear.

The poster painting that I made was for Amanda's May/June 2008 exhibition at the Green Lantern Gallery in Chicago. Above is a picture of a reproduction of my poster painting installed somewhere on the streets of Chicago. I am not quite sure how many posters actually got put up as while Amanda sent me quite a few photographs of street shots of the posters, upon close inspection it seems they may have all been the same poster from different angles. I choose to believe that the windy city was plastered in Amanda Browder Cyclone posters.



Above is the Green Lantern from the outside and you can see Amanda's crazy-massive-stuffed-cyclone through the window. This is a great sculpture, not only because it is such a cool and fun object, but also because it reminds me so much of Miss. Browder herself - she is a whirlwind of energy and excitment, but without all the unfortunate devastation of a natural disaster. Amanda is the cartoon cyclone. I love this view of the piece - it is like you are a voyeur looking into a cartoon world.



Below is another one of the sculptures from the exhibition. Amanda and I have not concluded this phase of the project as we have not managed to find time to make the trade yet. I have been secretly hoping that she will offer this wonderful stuffer baboon - it is far to significant a piece for my poster, but some day when I have children I think they would really go nuts for this one.






It's Our Pleasure to Serve You

Below is a poster that Jon Kalish helped me make for my May 2008 exhibition called Mr. Hangover at Leo Koenig Inc. The image in the poster is from a painting that I made for the exhibition, and part of a larger installation of 22 paintings on paper that were intended to suggest street posters.
The poster was printed and wheat pasted all over the west side of Manhattan for a few weeks leading up to the exhibition. If it was to function properly as an advertisement for my exhibition, I probably should have included more information, such as my name, on the poster. But I intended the poster as a piece of art unto itself, and so I wanted it to be enigmatic - a street poster that didn't quite manage to serve its purpose as an advertisement for my exhibition. Besides, I thought that the poster looked so clean and beautiful with limited information, the function had to be sacrificed for the formal concerns of the art object.
Later when I had a chance to reflect on this first iteration of the poster project, I decided that the most interesting aspect of this project had been the desemination of the art work. In fact I would be interested in creating works that were functional, and required reproduction and distribution in order to be completed. Having been a fan of Martin Kippenberger since my school days, I was aware that he had commissioned colleagues to create some of his exhibition posters. Artist such as Christopher Wool, Jeff Koons, Laurence Weiner, Mike Kelly, A.R. Penck and many others participated in the project. I always liked this idea, and decided that I could reverse engineer the project. I would ask my own colleagues to allow me to make exhibition posters for their shows in exchange for artwork. The poster painting that I would produce would have to be reproduced as a poster or flyer for the exhibition, and be used by the gallery as promotional material for the exhibition. The trade would be for anything that the artist decides to give me, provided it is included in the exhibition as a work of art.

I hope to produce poster paintings for a number of artist over the course of a decade or so. The final stage of the project will be to organize an exhibition of all the posters that I have made to be displayed along with the art pieces with which they were exchanged.

This blog is intended to track the progress of the Poster Project.