Thursday, October 31, 2024

Maurizio Cattelan | Comedian











Maurizio Cattelan
Comedian
Self-published, 2019
20 x 20 x 5 cm.
Edition of 3 [+ 5 AP]


Maurizio Cattelan’s work Comedian consists of a grocery store banana duct-taped to a wall, produced in an edition of three. It debuted at Paris gallery Perrotin’s booth at the Art Basel Miami fair in 2019, with a price tag of $120,000. 

It was a polarizing work, with many dismissing it as a crass prank and others defending it as a work in the tradition of Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain (Yoko Ono’s Apple from 1966 - see below - might be a better frame of reference). 

The title Comedian supports the first reading, but the fruit has also been a comedy staple since turn of the 20th century, from the practiced pratfalls of early vaudeville to the acclaimed Thomas Pynchon novel Gravity's Rainbow. For several decades, the best-selling sheet music was the 1923 Irving Cohn novelty song "Yes! We Have No Bananas"

Two vaudeville comics - both named Billy Watson - have laid claim to originating the slipping on a banana peel gag: Sliding Billy Watson (1876-1939) and Billy “Beef Trust” Watson (1852–1945). The stunt first appeared on screen in Harold Lloyd’s silent film The Flirt (1917), followed by Buster Keaton's The High Sign (1921), Charlie Chaplin’s The Pilgrim (1923) and The Battle of the Century (1927) by Laurel and Hardy. 

In the fifth episode of the TV series Arrested Development, the fruit is used to mock the super-wealthy for having no notion of the price of groceries. Matriarch Lucille Bluth admonishes her son for charging his brother for a frozen banana: “I mean it’s one banana, Michael, what could it cost, ten dollars?” Her ignorance is particularly galling given that selling bananas was part of the family business. 

“To me, Comedian was not a joke,” Cattelan clarified, “it was a sincere commentary and a reflection on what we value. At art fairs, speed and business reign, so I saw it like this: if I had to be at a fair, I could sell a banana like others sell their paintings. I could play within the system, but with my rules.”

The work was the subject of international media coverage when performance artist David Datuna snatched the banana from the wall, and proceeded to peel and eat it. He argued that his gesture was a performance in its own right, not an act of vandalism.  

Comedian featured on the cover of both New York Magazine and the New York Post, and was the subject of a book titled Beauty (and the Banana), by author Brian C. Nixon.

All three editions sold at the fair. The first two were purchased by private collectors and the third sold for an even higher price. The sum was undisclosed but is thought to be in the range of $150 000. This sale was anonymous and the buyer later donated the work to The Guggenheim museum in New York City.

One of the first two iterations is now being auctioned at Sotheby’s next month, with an estimated value of between a million and a million and a half dollars. For that price, the winning bidder will receive a roll of duct tape and single fresh banana, along with a signed certificate and installation instructions. 



















Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Gustav Metzger: Interviews with Hans Ulrich Obrist




Gustav Metzger, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Karen Marta
Gustav Metzger: Interviews with Hans Ulrich Obrist
London, UK: Hauser & Wirth Publishers, 2024
288 pp., 17 x 23.6 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


Released early last month in Europe and early next in North America, this title functions as a biography of artist and activist Gustav Metzger, told in his own words, through interviews with curator Hans Ulrich Obrist.

Metzger - the 'Auto-Destructive' artist who died in 2017 at the age of 90 - spoke with Obrist numerous times over more than two decades. There are several instances in the book in which Metzger controls the conversation, insisting that they linger longer on a topic, to provide sufficient context. There’s an urgency for the artist, as if he is anticipating the volume and is determined to get the story right. 

In the five-page Preface, Obrist credits Douglas Gordon for introducing him to Metzger’s work, recounts how difficult it was to initially track him down (he had no fixed address) and then how their friendship formed around this series of ongoing interviews. He first took Metzger out for coffee, but the artist drank only boiled water, something Obrist says he picked up from him and continues drinking today. 

Hans Obrist is an infamous workaholic, and particularly prolific when it comes to conversation. A New Yorker article from a decade ago estimated that he had already conducted twenty-four hundred hours of interviews: during studio visits, on airplanes, walking down the street. He brings three digital recorders with him to every interview, to ensure no conversation is lost.  

A small sampling of the artists he has spoken with includes Marina Abramovic, John Baldessari, J. G. Ballard, Björk, Lee Bul, Christian Boltanski, Danial Buren, Christo, Douglas Coupland, Robert Crumb, Merce Cunningham, Tacita Dean, Thomas Demand, Gibert and George, Zaha Hadid, Richard Hamilton, Koo Jeong-A, Miranda July, Jeff Koons, Doris Lessing, Arto Lindsay, Katja Novitskova, Yoko Ono, Rosemarie Trockel, Ai Wei Wei, Emmett Williams, and Hans-Peter Feldmann (who answered Obrist’s inquiries with images). Obrist has published upwards of fifty books of these interviews, including an earlier title on Metzger. 

The reverence the renowned curator has for his interviewee is clear from his knowledge of the work and his curiosity about the backstory. "Every word of these interviews,” he writes in the preface, "is a moment I hold near to my heart.”

The conversations in Gustav Metzger: Interviews with Hans Ulrich Obrist are presented chronologically at first, always careful to frame early stories in the context of Metzger’s later work, and typically in relation to the subject of Destruction. 

“Auto-destructive art is an attempt to deal rationally with a society that appears to be lunatic,” Metzger explains early on, citing the influence of Dada and and Russian revolutionary art from 1910 to 1920. 

At the age of twelve, Gustav Metzger was living in Nuremberg and was told by his mother to rush to the synagogue and bring home his father. “So I went and asked someone to send him out for me,” he explains, “and when they did he was stopped by some Nazis in the street, and they took him away.”

So, even before his teens, the artist was overwhelmed with guilt at having unwittingly sent his father to his death, and traumatized by seeing his sisters marched off at the same time. Most of his family perished at the hands of the Nazis, but he and his brother were sent by boat to England, as part of the Kinderstransport, in 1939.

At sixteen, he wanted to become a composer but was daunted by the prospect of having to learn “at least fifteen instruments” during the war, so took a job at a furniture factory. Here a co-worker (a "keen Trotskyite") introduced him to left wing politics, loaning him books on Marx and Lenin. 

Determined to work as an artist, he reached out to Henry Moore, proposing himself as a studio assistant. Moore met with Metzger, but couldn’t offer the young enthusiast any work, as he was waiting for his former assistant to return from the army. Instead, the acclaimed sculptor suggested that he attend art school.

He visited the Slade School of Fine Art to determine if it would be a good fit, and a fortuitous meeting with a student in a staircase dissuaded him. Metzger was told “Don’t come here, it’s a rotten school. Find somewhere else.” The advice came from someone who would eventually become one of the institute’s most famous alumni, a Pop Art pioneer and knighted by Queen Elizabeth. "He didn’t know who I was, and I didn’t know who he was - we were both young people - but I realized later that it had been the Scottish artist and sculptor Eduardo Paolozzi." 

Metzger ended up taking classes at the Cambridge School of London in 1946, and later (with a grant from the Jewish Community in the UK) attended the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. He subsequently attended painter David Bomberg’s classes in the early fifties at Borough Polytechnic in London. 

By the end of the decade, Metzger began to develop his theory of Auto-Destruction, and to produce art works by pouring acid onto nylon. 

Developed by the multi-national chemical company Dupont, nylon was first introduced at the 1939 New York World's Fair as a new synthetic material for women’s stockings, selling sixty-four million pairs the following year. Shortly afterwards, most nylon production was diverted to military use during World War II, for parachutes, parachute cord and flak jackets. Metzger would likely have enjoyed the connotations of a material used for both fetishized commercial consumption and wartime destruction.

Much like Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain (a gesture which would’ve faded into obscurity had he not published his own periodical where he could write about the piece under a pseudonym), Metzger’s Auto-Destructive art works were likely less influential than his manifestos and other writings on the subject. 

Metzger worked with Mario Amaya, the editor of Art And Artists magazine, to create an issue dedicated to the subject of Auto-Destructive [see below]. Released in August of 1966, the issue featured images of the Nylon works and some of the artist’s writings. It also served as a promotional vehicle for Metzger’s watershed moment: The Destruction in Art Symposium.

DIAS, as it became known, was a gathering of international artists, poets, composers and scientists to speak or present art works on the subject of Destruction in Art. It took place between the 9th and 11th of September, in 1966, at the Africa Centre in Covent Garden, London. 

The event featured papers, performances, actions and events by Metzger, Günter Brus, Henri Chopin, Al Hansen, Juan Hidalgo, John Latham, Otto Mühl, Hermann Nitsch, Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Robin Page, Wolf Vostell, and many others. Several of the works were controversial, and the event attracted international media. The Art And Artists issue from two months prior had teased the possibility that guitarist “Pete Townshend of the WHO group will give a talk, and the WHO itself may take part in a concert”. Neither happened. 

When Obrist brings up Townshend, Metzger changes the subject to Yoko Ono. He obviously has enormous respect for her, and played a very pivotal role in her life. Ono came to London to participate, and was the only female artist to present a paper at the symposium. Composer Annae Lockwood was at DIAS, setting a piano ablaze, but the event was otherwise an entirely masculine affair. 

Ono gave a brilliant (and somewhat skeptical) talk, and performed a few works, including her classic Cut Piece, in which she kneels on the stage in her best dress next to a pair of scissors. The audience is invited to come and cut off a piece of her clothing and take it away with them. It went on to become one of the most legendary works of Performance Art. 

John Dunbar, the co-founder of Indica Gallery, attended the Destruction In Art Symposium and saw Ono perform. He invited her to produce an exhibition for the gallery, and less than two months later Ono met John Lennon at a preview, a day before the opening. 

Her simple back-cover-blurb for the book reads: "Gustav Metzger was an incredible artist. His energy changed the world.”

The promise of a rock star at the event was not deliberately deceptive. In the early sixties, Pete Townshend had been a student at Ealing College of Art, where he attended lectures by Metzger. In his 2013 book Who I Am: A Memoir, he wrote “Encouraged by the work of Gustav Metzger, the pioneer of auto-destructive art, I secretly planned to completely destroy my guitar [on stage] if the moment seemed right.” Rolling Stone magazine characterized the action as one of “50 moments that changed Rock and Roll”, influencing countless other guitarists, from Jimi Hendrix to The Clash to Kurt Cobain. 

Later in the book, Metzger reveals that he had hoped to have The Who perform at DIAS, but the band’s management dissuaded them. He then discusses some light show work he did for Cream and Pink Floyd. One could write an entire volume about the contemporary artists who ended up as footnotes in the history of pop music.

In addition to Ono’s endorsement, the back cover of the book includes a testimonial from Marina Abramović. She writes "Good art has to have many layers of meaning, so that every century can use it as needed at the time. Gustav Metzger’s art has many layers, but the most important is his ability to predict the future of mankind. This is why he is so relevant and important today.”

From his pioneering development of the concept of destruction in art (preceded only, really, by Jean Tinguely) to his Art Strike of the late seventies, to his campaigns for environmental awareness, Metzger was often far ahead of his time. More books about the artist and his work have been published in the seven years since his death than in his entire lifetime and long career. 

It’s possible that he felt this in tangible ways. “Hopefully somebody who is out there, listening, waiting, may respond to this cry of mine,” he tells Obrist. 

Edited by Karen Marta, Gustav Metzger: Interviews with Hans Ulrich Obrist is a handsomely produced,  richly illustrated publication, augmented with a comprehensive chronology. It serves as a great introduction to Metzger’s work and a an excellent resource for those interested in the subject of Destruction in Art (I wish I had it last month when I gave a three hour lecture on the subject). 

The exhibition Gustav Metzger. And Then Came the Environment opened at Hauser & Wirth Downtown Los Angeles on the 13th of September and continues through to January 5th, 2025. 











Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Playing Cards












Playing Cards by Tauba Auerbach, The Haas Brothers, Karen Azoulay, George Maciunas, Micah Lexier, Cathy Opie, Jean Dubuffet, Marshall McLuhan, Richard McGuire, Alicia Nauta and Ben Vautier.



Monday, October 28, 2024

Happy Birthday to Art Metropole







"Today Art Metropole turns 50.

Since taking on the position of Executive Director earlier this year, I have been reflecting on the immense history of the organization and the many artists we have worked with over the past 50 years.

Established in 1974 by General Idea in their Yonge St. location, Art Metropole was founded as “a collection agency devoted to the documentation, archiving, and distribution of all of the images . . . taking over and diversifying the functions of reflection and connection” (FILE Editorial, 1973).

Art Met has lived through so many different locations, eras, and activities, but has always found stability in our community.

Today we remain focused on publishing, promoting, exhibiting, archiving, and distributing artists’ books, multiples, and other related media. Our non-profit shop, which has featured over 16,000 unique inventory items, is an essential service to artists – and is the oldest and longest-running artist-run bookstore in the world.  

This summer, we held an exhibition titled 50/50, which highlighted our history through 50 selected editions published by Art Metropole since 1974. This fall, we launched Reactivating the Archive, a lecture series where we're inviting artists and curators to respond to a work from our archive or collection, in a sort of expanded restaging of the 1989-1995 Activating the Archive series. In the coming year, we will be working towards new exhibitions that engage with our shop’s extensive inventory, special presentations at international art and book fairs, a new series of artists’ books with commissioned texts, and many more programs– all to support the work of artists.

I would love to see you at the upcoming 50th Anniversary Party and fundraiser, generously hosted by East Room, on November 8. Your support will allow us to continue to publish and distribute the work of artists for years to come."

–Blair Swann, Executive Director





Sunday, October 27, 2024

Sonic Youth, Raymond Pettibon | (Over) Kill Yr Idols









Sonic Youth [Raymond Pettibon]
(Over) Kill Yr Idols
Newtonville, USA: Forced Exposure, 1985
17.8 × 18.4 cm.
Edition of 1246


An early 7" single recorded live in Berlin in 1983 and released alongside the Forced Exposure magazine #7/8, and made available to Forced Exposure subscribers. The A-side features "Making a Nature Scene” and it is backed with "I Killed Christgau with My Big Fuckin' Dick."

The latter song name-checks Village Voice music critic Robert Christgau, who gave the band’s debut record a C rating, and wrote: 

"You may not think Glenn Branca's proteges are a rock and roll band, but after all, why else would they essay a lyric like "Fucking youth/Working youth"? At their worst they sound like Polyrock mainlining metronome, at their best like one of Branca's early drafts. The best never last long enough. Not for nothing is the sonic grown-up so attached to phony grandeur.”

The band responded with Kill Yr Idols, and the lyrics "I don't know why/You want to impress Christgau/Ah, let that shit die/And find a new goal”.

The critic responded in his next review: "Idolization is for rock stars, even rock stars manqué like these impotent bohos–critics just want a little respect. So if it’s not too hypersensitive of me, I wasn’t flattered to hear my name pronounced right, not on this particular title track…"

Sonic Youth replied by renaming the track “I Killed Christgau with My Big Fuckin' Dick” on this seven inch. He came around with his later reviews, giving virtually every album that followed an A: Starpower, Sister, Daydream Nation, Goo, Dirty, Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star, Screaming Fields of Sonic Love, Washing Machine, A Thousand Leaves, NYC Ghosts and Flowers, Sonic Nurse, Rather Ripped, and The Eternal.

The cover illustration is by Raymond Pettibon, whose work would later grace the cover of the band’s major label debut, Goo. The cover text reads "I was on acid when I drew this."

Between ten and twenty test pressing copies have covers fully hand-coloured by Thurston Moore and a significant proportion of all copies feature some hand colouring.





Friday, October 25, 2024

In the mail

 


Coming Soon: Posts about Jason Rhoades, Rita McKeough, Gustav Metzger, William Anastasi, Rob Kovitz, and Nicole Eisenman. 


Thursday, October 24, 2024

Angela Bulloch | The Wired Salutation 3 Of 3






Angela Bulloch
The Wired Salutation 3 Of 3
Berlin, Germany: ABCDLP, 2014
12” vinyl record
Edition of 1000


Released ten years ago today, this single-sided 45 rpm, 12” red vinyl disk documents a live performance by visual artist Angella Bulloch and musician and author David Grubbs (Gastr del Sol, the Red Krayola, Codeine, etc.) at Hebbel am Ufer Theater, August 18, 2013, Berlin. The works are composed and performed by Bulloch, Grubbs, Andrea Belfi, and Stefano Pilia. 

It’s available directly from the artist, for 14.99 €, here. The coloured vinyl disk is accompanied by a download code.




Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Art By Telephone









[Various]
Art By Telephone
Chicago, USA: Museum Of Contemporary Art, 1969
33 rpm, 12" vinyl record, gatefold sleeve
Edition size unknown


The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago opened it's doors in 1967 and planned an exhibition for the following year which would highlight the then-nascent trend towards conceptualization in art. Artists from around the world were invited to participate, not by shipping art works or traveling to produce them in situ, but rather by providing instructions over the telephone, with the works fabricated locally. The curation eschewed blueprints, sketches and written descriptions, aiming to focus entirely on verbal exchanges over the telephone. 

The show took its inspiration from Laszlo Moholy-Nagy's "telephone pictures" from 1922, which were created by the artist dictating instructions over the phone to a manufacturer. The works are often cited in the history of conceptual art as a key moment that emphasized an artist's ideas over personal craftsmanship. 

The exhibition was dedicated to Marcel Duchamp (who died the year prior) and John Cage (who declined to participate). Many, if not most, of the artists who did accept the museum’s invitation, were influenced by one or both in some way, accepting the idea of process and experience over finished object.

Artists exhibited in Art by Telephone included: Siah Armajani, Arman, Richard Artschwager, John Baldessari, Iain Baxter, Mel Bochner, George Brecht, Jack Burnham, James Lee Byars, Robert H. Cumming, Francois Dallegret, Jan Dibbets, John Giorno, Robert Grosvenor, Hans Haacke, Richard Hamilton, Dick Higgins, Davi Det Hompson, Robert Huot, Alain Jacquet, Ed Keinholz, Joseph Kosuth, Les Levine, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Claes Oldenburg, Dennis Oppenheim, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, Guenther Uecker, Stan VanDerBeek, Bernar Venet, Frank Lincoln Viner, Wolf Vostell, William Wegman, and William T. Wiley.



Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Rodney Graham







The above setlist was hastily scrawled on the back of the photocopied promotional flyers for a 2004 concert that I helped to present. I don’t believe Graham designed it himself, it was likely a colleague of mine at Art Metropole (Jordan Sonenberg?). 

Graham performed music throughout his career, despite stage fright that often led to him vomiting just prior to performance. 

Graham died on this day, two years ago, at the age of 73. 


Sunday, October 20, 2024

Jean Dupuy | Anagrammes





Jean Dupuy
Anagrammes
Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, France: Les Disques En Rotin Réunis, 2016
12” vinyl LP
Edition of 300

Recorded on May 18th, 2015, by Diane Blondeau with Dupuy reading his texts over two sides, both called Anagrammes.



Saturday, October 19, 2024

Art Metropole Fall Sale




This weekend, Art Metropole is hosting an In-Store Sale offering deep discounts, including: 

70% off back-issue periodicals
40% off zines
10% off hardcover books
20% off posters
20% off multiples
and up to 50% off select Art Metropole publications

Visit www.artmetropole.com for more information. 


Friday, October 18, 2024

Paige Gratland | Celebrity Lezbian Fist






Paige Gratland
Celebrity Lezbian Fist 
Toronto, Canada: P.G. Thing Co., 2008
24 x 13 x 13 cm.
Edition of 25 numbered copies


Yesterday I visited Adriana Kuiper’s sculpture class and a student was casting her pink rabbit vibrator in silicon, reminding me of this Paige Gratland project from 2008. 

Celebrity Lezbian Fists are a series of  silicone fists cast from the hands of queer cultural icons. 

Working under the name P.G. THING CO. (a nod to Iain and Ingrid Baxter’s N.E.Thing Co.), Gratland takes super-groupie Cynthia Plaster Claster’s notorious casting of rock star cocks (most notably Jimi Hendrix, see below) as her starting point, but replaces the phallus with the raised, clenched fist. The resulting works become both a symbol of solidarity & defiance in the face of oppression, and a fully functioning sex toy. 

The fists are produced in an edition of 25 each, cast in colours chosen by each participant. The artists, activists, athletes, academics, poets, musicians, and filmmakers who took part include: 

JD Samson, is an American musician, producer, songwriter and DJ and member of the bands Le Tigre  and MEN.  Le Tigre’s song "Nanny Nanny Boo Boo" includes a shout-out to C.P. Caster. Additionally, both KISS and Jim Croce have written songs about her practice ("Plaster Caster", and "Five Short Minutes", respectively).

Phranc is a singer and activist who I saw open for Morrissey many years ago. She came onto the stage alone with her guitar and introduced herself as an “all-American Jewish lesbian folksinger”.

Savoy Howe is a boxer and coach who founded Newsgirls, a women's only boxing club that ran almost a quarter of a century before closing during Covid. 

Cathy Opie is a celebrated artist, photographer and educator (see her notorious Dyke Deck playing cards, here). 

Eileen Myles is a poet and author of more than twenty volumes of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, libretti, plays, and performance pieces. Novelist Dennis Cooper described them as "one of the savviest and most restless intellects in contemporary literature."

Harmony Hammond is an artist, activist, curator, writer and co-founder of the A.I.R. Gallery, the first women's cooperative art gallery in the United States.  

Cheryl Dunye is a Liberian-American film director, producer, screenwriter, editor and actress. She was the first out black lesbian to ever direct a feature film (The Watermelon Woman, 1996) and runs the Oakland-basaed production company Jingletown Films. 

Jack Halberstam is an American academic and author whose work focuses on queer and transgender identities in popular culture. Halberstam is a professor at the Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Columbia University. His best known book is Female Masculinity (1998).  

G. B. Jones is an artist, filmmaker, and musician, who will be best known here as the co-creater (with Bruce LaBruce) of the queer punk fanzine The J.D.s

Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan are a Canadian performance art duo who often perform as The Lesbian Rangers. Their video for What Does a Lesbian Look Like?, received regular airplay on MuchMusic in 1990’s and was featured on the spoken word poetry compilation album Word Up, alongside John Giorno, Jill Watson, Clifton Joseph and Judy Radul. 


Celebrity Lezbian Fists were launched at Art Metropole in 2008, and are still available there, for $250 each. Proceeds from the sale of “Celebrity Lezbian Fists” will be donated to The Triangle Program; Canada’s only classroom for LGBTTI2QQAP Youth