Thursday, June 26, 2008

Open your mouth and say HAA. . . I mean AAH



Kathy Kelley and Michael Henderson's collaboration at Space 125

(sound by squirrels)

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Cohesive Discord was a huge delight


The bunnies and squirrels were a delight highlight for everyone


Whit's delightful monstrosity



Whit explains things to our BOX amigos


Flame on!


The Eater was like being embedded in a Dr. Seuss story gone wrong
but with the joy of childhood in full swing (or tilt)

Friday, June 20, 2008

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Cohes!ve Discord opening Thursday, June 19 from 6-8 pm

@ space125gallery at Houston Arts Alliance

June 19 to August 08, 2008
OPENING RECEPTION : Thursday, June 19, 2008, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.

Cohesive Discord
Join space125gallery as we host Cohesive Discord, a site-specific installation featuring eleven artists from BOX 13 ArtSpace. Participating artists have created site-specific works that pensively engulf & personify space125gallery. Each artist has individually worked in his or her medium of expertise but within their collaborative teams has articulated his/her work in an unexpected way. This is the first time BOX 13 artists will be exhibiting collectively in Houston. The exhibit opens on June 19 and will remain on view through August 8, 2008.

Participating artists include: Anila Quayyum Agha, Elaine Bradford, Teresa O'Connor, Lisa Marie Godfrey, Woody Golden, Michael Henderson, Kathy Kelley, Jennie Nuttal, Whitney Riley, Mat Wolff and David Waddell

BROWN BAG ARTIST TOUR/TALK WITH
Elaine Bradford, David Waddell and Kathy Kelley
Tuesday, July 1 noon to 1
Bring your own lunch to space125gallery

3201 Allen Parkway (map)
Houston, TX 77019

Created to promote dialogue amongst artists and viewers. Please reply if you are planning to attend this event by contacting crystal@haatx.com

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Weather Report


Today is the first day of the 2008 hurricane season but Arthur showed up a day early like a willful baby. Yesterday it was a tropical storm, now it’s a tropical depression, and since it’s crossing high terrain in Mexico, it may be downgraded to a remnant by the time it gets in the Gulf. We need some rain but I’m definitely not ready for psychotic window taping or contemplating how to wrangle a herd of cats in an evacuation situation. I don’t know where my batteries are and the pantry would make for some pretty weird eats if power were out. So note to self and fellow boxers - we’re supposed to be gettin’ prepared now.

This might seem out of place on an art blog, but I also still have Lucy Lippard’s May Rothko Chapel/Menil lecture, “Art and Environment”, on my mind. This lecture/slide show was somehow inspiring and messed-up disturbing at the same time. It also had, from my perspective, really low attendance for a Menil lecture. I’ve been frustrated about that on multiple levels but especially since I would have loved to discuss it with other folks who went.

She gave a sharp, sobering introduction that included the jaded but undeniably realistic assertion that art could not directly effect change in the world. Then she introduced work from the 09-12/2007 show she curated at the Bolder Museum of Colorado in collaboration with EcoArts called “Weather Report: Art and Climate Change”, which comprised the majority of the presentation.

From the BMOCA web site: This exhibit partners the art and scientific communities to create a visual dialogue surrounding climate change. Historically, visual arts play a central role in attracting, inspiring, educating and motivating audiences. "Weather Report: Art and Climate Change" will exhibit artwork, in the museum and our partnering venues, and in outdoor site specific locations throughout Boulder, that will activate personal and public change.

Our collaborating partner EcoArts is a new effort bringing together scientists, environmentalists, and performing and visual artists - along with producers, presenters, scholars, spiritual leaders, policy makers, educators, businesses, and people from all walks of life - to use the arts to inspire new awareness of, discussion about, and action on environmental issues, with new possibilities for envisioning a sustainable future. Its programming principles are artistic excellence, scientific accuracy, environmental effectiveness, ethical practice, and whenever possible, presenting activities that strive to follow ‘the middle way’ of being either non-partisan or bi-partisan to reach the widest audience possible
.”

I am also green –with envy – about the whole pairing of artists-with-scientist thing. I need some super geeky scientist friends to help me with my mystery science for artistic good! I’m ordering the catalog for this show today, so if fellow boxers want to check it out, let me know…

And just a little shout out to the BBAP – two of the quotes from my crappy and questionable lecture notes included “public works confront people in the street, unaware. They are harder to conceive and execute but they have the opportunity to surprise” and “women are far more likely to make effective public art.”