Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Monday, December 29, 2008
Monday, November 24, 2008
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Corn Head
Here's a tenuous connection, but I'm looking for an excuse to post some artwork from the band Black Moth Super Rainbow. In Pinocchio, Geppetto is teased with the nickname "Corn Head" because of his bad yellow wig. I really like the corn head on this album cover crying streams of rainbow tears. Their new picture disc features a different sort of corn head.
Pinocchio
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Roky Erickson
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Lou Reed Berlin
Here's Antony with Lou Reed singing "Candy Says" in the new concert film Berlin by Julian Schnabel.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Mike Kelley
Day Is Done is a project by the artist Mike Kelley where he finds photographs from high school yearbooks that depict extracurricular activities like mixers and plays (left photo), then reconstructs the photo using actors (right) and projects an imagined scenario onto it, complete with music that is a pastiche of the high school musical form. In one interview, Kelley cited Robert Altman's Nashville as an influence:
“I’m not a fan of Altman,” Kelley says, “but what I like about that film is that you can tell quite clearly, throughout the entire film, that he absolutely hates country music. So that was an inspiration in terms of being completely negational.”
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Paul McCarthy again
Paul McCarthy recently combined his love for creating giant inflatable sculptures with his scatalogical bent with this barn-sized piece of dog shit installed at an exhibition in Switzerland. Various news sources reported a few weeks ago that it escaped its moorings during a wind storm and blew away, knocking down a power line and smashing the window of an orphanage! The incident was certainly rich fodder for headline writers, as you can see if you google the story.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Nick Cave
I wish I'd seen him in a lush old theater, but, that's a minor complaint. This band was very good last night at the Showbox Sodo.
Monday, September 22, 2008
อภิชาติพงศ์ วีระเศรษฐกุล
Apichatpong Weerasethakul is apparently filming a project inspired by his battles with Thai censors. He was unable to show his last feature, Syndromes and a Century, in his home country because the government (which has a Cultural Surveillance Department) objected to, among other things, a scene depicting a Buddhist monk playing with a remote-controlled UFO. I saw the (uncensored) film at SIFF last year and it was awesome. Weerasethakul has started a protest movement against the Thai government's censorship of Thai film -- no joke, the official that heads up the Ministry of Culture has stated the the populace is too uneducated for art movies, and that filmmakers should be churning out simple comedies. More details available at http://www.kickthemachine.com/.
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Helios Creed
Helios Creed was great last night at the Funhouse. This will give you the general idea.
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Paul McCarthy and Santa's Village
I read that Paul McCarthy recently made a failed bid to buy Santa's Village. Too bad; he would have been an interesting proprietor. At left is a still from what is still my favorite Christmas movie, Santa Claus (1959), Mexico.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Pierre Bonnard
This summer I visited my brother in Little Rock and he took me to a museum that had a decent collection of impressionist paintings. I was particularly pleased to see a Pierre Bonnard because I had just read The Sea, by John Banville, and the protagonist is doing a study of Bonnard, who is probably the king of painting your wife in the bathtub, or about to get in the bathtub, or having just got out of the bathtub. The interesting thing is that Bonnard paints his wife as a young girl even though when she posed for him she was like seventy. Anyhow, I was just reading this interview with the painter Peter Doig, and the topic of Bonnard came up; I thought this comment was interesting:
"He somehow manages to create a space between what he is looking at and thinking about, because a lot of his work - especially when he is painting his wife - is thinking back. Somehow he is painting the space that is behind the eyes. It's as if you were lying in bed trying hard to remember what something looked like. And Bonnard managed to paint that strange state."
Monday, September 15, 2008
Masaya Nakahara
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