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    Jean-Michel Basquiat was a well known plastic artist based in New York and sponsored by Andy Warhol. Music was very important in the life and work of this artist, and in 1979 he formed an experimental band with the artist and actor Vincent Gallo.

    They named the band “GRAY” as a tribute to the book of anatomy published by Henry Gray in 1950.

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    The band arises in the middle of the punk explosion of New York, but especially to a more experimental branch known as No wave.  No wave has a very industrial sound where the electric guitar is used not as a musical instrument, but as a tool that generates noise. He was also interested in the frenetic and eclectic rhythms of the seventies and eighties, like the incipient rap of the hip hop movement.

    Basquiat played the clarinet and the synthesizer and the band frequented famous venues like CBGB where Blondie and The Ramones made their debut, the Mudd Club, etc.

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    The music from “Gray” can be heard in several films including “Downtown 81,” starring Basquiat, talking about his life as an artist in New York.

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    Nerea T. Ruiz

     

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    Art for Progress (AFP) is thrilled and honored to present a night of musical improvisation featuring a one-time super group, created for this special evening to benefit AFP music and art education programs- The bill will feature Billy Martin, Nels Cline (Wilco), Marc Ribot and special guests, Brooklyn power trio Bad Faces, and AFP’s sensational student band, Big Sweater.

    The Art for Progress Band – Billy Martin, Marc Ribot, Nels Cline and Special Guests – Best known as the drummer for the avant-groove band Medeski, Martin, and Wood, Billy Martin called up some friends to join him for a one off charity event titled “Once in a Lifetime.”  When guitarist Marc Ribot, who’s released over 20 albums under his own name and has played on countless records (Robert Plant, Elvis Costello, John Mellencamp, Elton John) and Nels Cline, best known as Wilcos lead guitarist and one of Rolling Stone’s “100 greatest guitarists” accepted,  The Art for Progress Band was formed.

    Bad Faces are a Brooklyn power trio as deeply rooted in American traditional music as they are reaching for new stratospheric heights in their improvisational explorations. Led by Singer/Guitarist Barry Komitor, Manager and teacher of AFP’s music education programs and fixture on New Yorks bluegrass and rock scenes, Bad Faces rhythm section is powered by Brian Stollery, one of the best known figures in NY jam music on bass, and NY’s most exciting young jazz drummer, Ethan Kogan.

    Big Sweater is a unique blend of fresh youthful energy and classic music. They bring a hypnotic, enchanting element to blues and rock and roll to maintain a balance between the sullen walks of life and the euphoria of embarking on new ones. Elijah McCoy and Franklin Santiago share lead vocal and guitar duties, with Gabriel Calderin on drums, Greg Morello on bass and Barry Komitor on piano and keys.

    (Le) Poisson Rouge, 158 Bleeker Street, New York NY – http://lpr.com

    Advance tickets:  $15, $20 at the door, 7PM, 18+

    Art for Progress (AFP) is a 501(c) 3 non-profit arts organization committed to providing arts education programs in NYC’s underserved public schools and most impoverished communities. Through its programs, AFP provides under-served youth with dynamic artistic programming that promotes reflection and self-expression. By connecting youth with working artists, their communities and each other, we hope to transform the way they see themselves and the world around them.

    Visit www.artforprogress.org for more information.

    Special thanks to LPR, Billy Martin and all of the artists for their support.

    Net proceeds will provide much needed funds for AFP’s arts education program.

    For press inquiries, contact Frank Jackson by e-mail- frank@artforprogress.org

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    “Supporting artists while sustaining the arts for children”

  • Dear Fabian, welcome to Art For Progress. As a contemporary artist based in Northern Germany, North Friesland. What is the focus of your art?

    Hi Nerea, thanks for inviting me to this interview. I am delighted to contribute to Art for Progress. I am a sculptor focused on the human figure in the widest meaning. I try to find ways for contemporary depiction of the diverse spectrum of human expressions.

    Having studied Fine Art Sculpture in Vienna, where modelling the human body has a long tradition – the so called “Wiener Schule,” I ​further worked in this direction in London, where I did my masters. I started to introduce new materials, inflatables and other ephemeral objects, as base bodies for my figurative constructions. When depicting an entire human figure,  at some point you always need to decide whether or how much you show its gender. If you disregard it – partially or completely – you enter the world in-between genders. For the last five years in particular, I have  been focusing on “Liquid Gender” and the liquidity of gender aspects in general.

    I have noted that you chose the term “Liquid Gender” as a name for your recent exhibition in Barcelona. Can you please explain this choice.

    “Liquid Gender” was indeed the title of the 2016 solo show, curated by Caterina Tomeo, at the end of a five-week residency at Espronceda (Centre for Art and Culture) in Barcelona. The central piece was a 2-channel video installation around my large-scale MENINA bronze series: A video of my MENINA | 7, set  in the North-friesian Landscape, was contrasted with the actually exhibited bronze MENINA | 3 backgrounded by a cityscape of Barcelona;  the whole was combined with the specially designed sound installation “Emotional Decryption” by the Italian Composer Francesco Giannico – a 6-channel sound installation audible partly in the exhibition space and partly through WIFI headphones.

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    Image 1: Fabian Vogler, MENINA | 3 (2013-2016, bronze, 140 x 92,5 x 48 cm) as part of the video installation “Liquid Gender”

    Why are you so interested in that topic?

    Whilst I have, personally, been assigned “male” at birth and I am living a rather “traditional” ​family ​life, with my wife and our two children. I have always felt uneasy about gender stereotypes; in other words, I have neither found the basic binary concept of two totally distinct genders nor the customary generalizations about their respective characteristics and roles convincing.

    ​At the age of 35, I heard a lecture by German psychologist Katinka Schweizer on “Gender Identities;” only then I learned that some people are intersex – e.g. come to live with ambiguous genitalia – and furthermore that every person as a fetus is intersex up to the seventh or even twelfth week of development. I was flabbergasted to have never heard about this during my entire school education, nor during my later academic studies (and I keep on wondering why).

    ​What I learned then, gave a new meaning to a​n earlier​ statement by Gerda Fassel, my teacher during my studies at the University for Applied Arts in Vienna, who had asserted that, as far as shapes were concerned, male and female in their primary genitalia are very much alike. The main difference being the extent to which the genitalia are pointing inwards or outwards or, put differently, the grade of their concavity or convexity.

    In my view, the manifold expressions of intersex, which I have since become aware of, are physical proof of the misguided binary gender construct; this even more so, as the primary genitalia are only one aspect of gender identity. There is also the gonadal, chromosomal and hormonal gender that form us. Gaining an understanding of all this – and it took me quite a while to overcome my implanted conditioning in respect of the gender dichotomy – has significantly changed my outlook on the human figure, the main object of my work as a sculptor.

    Where does the concept of Liquid Gender come from?

    The term was, to my knowledge, coined –  in 2013 – by German sociologist Volkmar Sigusch to describe the fact that for many human beings, in contrast to the fixed assignment in their birth certificates, gender tends to be, in varying degrees, subject to changes in the course of different phases of the individual’s life span. I find it a particularly meaningful and even catchy term.

    It seems that you are devoting a lot of energy to the subject if Liquid Gender, Fabian.

    Yes, in parallel with my ongoing sculpting work, during the last three years I have devoted quite some effort to the trans-disciplinary publication “Die Schönheiten des Geschlechts. Intersex im Dialog“ (The Beauties of Sexes/Genders. Intersex in Dialogue); this was an exceedingly stimulating and challenging project in close cooperation with Katinka Schweizer, of University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE).

    By the way, one of our many contributing co-authors is Volkmar Sigusch, the creator of the term Liquid Gender.

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    Image 2: Book Cover “Die Schönheiten des Geschlechts. Intersex im Dialog“ (The Beauties of Sexes/Genders. Intersex in Dialogue) – edited by Katinka Schweizer und Fabian Vogler, Campus Verlag (Frankfurt/New York), 424 pages with over 200 color images, Hardcover – release date 12th April 2018

    Explain to us what this book is about?

    Katinka Schweizer and I were united in the determination to bring together a variety of acknowledged academics, from different sciences, and of experienced practitioners who would be prepared to contribute their respective experiences, informed views as well as academic insights to a profound joint publication; and we wanted to combine these written contributions with a selection of recent artistic expressions on the subject matter.

    The idea of this art|book|project is to combine a variety of scientific and practical perspectives with fine arts, thus providing a source of deeper and more faceted knowledge about intersex and gender for a wider audience of people who so far have not had a meaningfully differentiated access to the subject.

    Do you often work together with other artists?

    I enjoy the energizing factor in cooperating with people in general, and with other artists in particular. I always have the feeling that working together is not adding but rather multiplying forces. And from a social point of view you approach a person on a very special level. You get the chance to see your work interpreted through the senses of someone else – very often a precious gift that can give great progress to reflecting one´s own work in new ways.

    My earliest multidisciplinary experiment has been my finishing masters project in London: “Octave Stance” in cooperation with Dominic Murcott from the Trintity College of Music London and Tony Thatcher from LABAN London. I had the idea to find 8 musical compositions for my 8 curated sculptures. This idea was developed further during the process to also include 8 dedicated dance performances. “Octave stance” ultimately took place in 2008, in the profaned Chapel Dilston Grove, with dance performances between and around my sculptures, to the dedicated music played live by its respective compositors – a highly emotional experience for me.

    Back in Germany, in 2014 I joined forces with two artists from other disciplines, namely the classical ballet dancer Tanja Probst (Landestheater Schleswig-Holstein) and the piano and synthesizer composer Rudolf Kitzelmann; the result was a live performance on the stage of the NCC Husum during the Kultur21Festival with my sculptures captured in projected clips.

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    Image 3: Venus replicas together with a photo of Menina | 1

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    Image 4: Inter*Venus | 2 in Tonkwa Karoo National Park in South Africa

    Your sculptures look very archaic, … but you often bring them into today’s life. They travel the world! Right?

    Bronze has always been my material of choice, because of its specific qualities: it is durable and at the same time I can make it emanate a kind of warmth which I find particularly appropriate to the human body. In my works, I pay a lot of attention to surface detail, an important aspect of which patina is. The almost infinite variety of possible patinas allows me to create very different appearances: Depending on how you treat it, the patina changes or rather “develops” over time under the eyes of its owner – a unique characteristic.

    Still bronze has a long tradition which l like to question by setting it into unaccustomed realms. That is why I started documenting some of my sculptures not in the usual white cubic setting in city- or landscapes. “Gerwin” was the first to travel the Brussels (Belgium) with me, and thereafter “Dittmar’s brother”started accompanying me on my jouneys to exhibitions and conferences – the so called “Dittmar’s Brothers’ Travels”. (It is a reference to the Austrian photographer Willi Puchner who, in 1992, traveled the world with two plastic penguins, which was then adapted as part of the fabulous movie “Le fabuleux destin d’Amélie Poulian” by Jean-Pierre Jeunet in 2001.)

    Dittmar’s brothers have so far been in over 30 locations around Europe, the United States, Israel, and the Emirates with me – sometimes accompanied by artist colleagues (e.g. François de Rivoyre in the city of Leipzig, Germany) or sometimes even traveling on “its own” accompanying friends to New Zeeland and Russia (psychologist Viktoria Märker) or to Japan (video artist Bianca Kennedy).

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    Image 5: Dittmar at Burning Man 2015 in Nevada, USA

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    Image 6: Dittmar’s Brother in Dubai (UAE), 2017

    In 2017, Bianca Kennedy and I united to jointly produce the stop motion animation LIMBO WEEKS (8:09min). Creating little film sets for this purpose was a great experience for me, stimulating me to also think about new ways of presenting some of my own work. The film has been touring around film festivals around Europe for the past year with quite some success, winning the Grand Prix at the Transmission Film Festival (Kassel, Karlsruhe and Warsaw) and as best movie at the Berlin Experimental Filmfestival (Category: Berlin Originals).

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    Image 7: Film still of Limbo Weeks

    Where do you showcase your work?

    So far, I have shown my work internationally in many parts of Europe, as well as nationally – through a locally situated gallery, Galerie Lüth in Husum (Germany) close to my studio. I enjoy the wide variety of opportunities arising from the connections between working and showcasing. Exhibitions have often led to invitations to give workshops at universities and schools, or to participate in symposiums like in Denmark or Switzerland. Recently, in Barcelona, I was invited to even organize a symposium (INTER_WE | an Arts Symposium on Gender Liquidity – www.inter-we.com) at the Design Museum in cooperation with the curator Valentina Casacchia ans Espronceda, giving book presentations and talks at conferences.

    Stays as “artist in residence” have proven to be great opportunities to leave the “safe” environment of the own studio and to get in contact with stimulating new people. Furthermore, residencies as well as exhibitions abroad are giving me the welcome opportunity to travel whilst working, and I like to combine these journeys to further extend the photo series pertinent to my works; in a way, they make me see the world through the eyes of my sculptures.

    What is the inspiration for your art works?

    Some key inspirations for my sculptural work have come from ethnological collections. The most prominent examples are prehistoric Venus depictions such as the “Venus of Willendorf” or the “Venus von Hohle Fels” that are up to 40.000 years of age; these fascinate me a lot, because of the expressed liberty of designing the human body in search for “super forms” depicting contemporary human entities. Like time capsules they freeze facets of mankind of a certain distant period thus making me ask myself how we would need to sculpt the human body today in order to give excavators in another 40.000 years a meaningful insight into important characteristics of our time.

    My Meninas have been inspired by “Las Meninas” by Diego Velazquez, of course, and by the cycle of 60 paintings created by P. Picasso, which I came along during my first Artist Residence in Barcelona in the Picasso Museum in 2013. Already during my studies in Vienna, I had been sketching in front of Velazquez singular portraits of Infantin Margaritha which are on display in the “Kunsthistorische Museum Wien”, completely absorbed and fascinated by the great inventory of the Renaissance and Baroque fashion – in my view the most daring phase in western art history for developing a style of its own, inventing the proportions of the human body further than the buff mimetic copying of nature.

    And your work process?

    After having had a broad classical education in the traditional sculpting, modelling and casting techniques during my studies in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Spain), Flensburg (Germany) and especially Vienna (Austria), Then I discovered inflatable objects such as balloons and rubber tubes during my time in London. Deformation and fragmentation are important aspects of destroying the boring perfection of the technicality of the balloon. It needs to be pushed back in its immaculate expansion. I have thus, through many years, developed special techniques of re-shaping the balloon, deforming it to reflect my intentions. Recently, I have additionally introduced waste objects and customary shapes of everyday use into my repertoire.

    FVogler Img8Image 8: Fabian Vogler at his studio in Bargum, North Friesland, Germany.

     

    –Nerea T. Ruiz

  • Alex is a continuing student of philosophy and emerging artist. He seeks to address contemporary social issues and philosophical questions through symbolism in dynamic visual works.

    Philosophical underpinnings are tied to Phenomenology, Existentialism, Post-, and Anti-Post-Modern thinkers. Alex has also begun to explore mythical symbolisms.

    The evolution of Alex’s work follows from an early introduction to Art History, Art Historical references in the works are found in the clavicle, harkening back to Gothic representations of the skull, connected to our understanding of human mortality. Hearts, from Keith Herring, representing an emotional and communal offering. The underside of feet, turned into the over the shoulder view of figures, referencing the irreverence of the Impressionists. Among other more personal stories.

    Although much of the work illustrates concepts in the abstract, there are also layers of meaning that are at once personal and then again more thematic, sometimes not signifying the same story in any given image, and sometimes coinciding with those general themes.

    Another philosophical feature of Alex’s work is found in the geometries of the icosahedron or hypercube, each instantiation or general form representing another view of our social and physical realities.

    Alex seeks to continue exploring these themes, while also remaining politically prescient. For a fuller explanation of the philosophical tones of his work, feel free to inquire for a full Artist’s Statement.

    If you’re interested in contacting Alex, his e-mail address is unger.alex@gmail.com.

  • Keith Green Overhead

    Courtesy of Paladin

    They Remain, Philip Gelatt’s adaptation of Laird Barron’s short story “–3–,” is a mysterious, slow-building thriller, as disquieting as it is visually striking. With an unsettling electronic score to match Sean Kirby’s stark, atmospheric cinematography, the film is haunting and hallucinogenic, with no straightforward answers and a somewhat open-ended resolution. Anyone looking for a tidy narrative or classic horror story won’t find it here.

    The story concerns two young scientists, Keith and Jessica (William Jackson Harper and Rebecca Henderson, both very good), who have been sent to investigate a secluded wooded area to find an explanation for inexplicable changes in animal behavior. They are both aware that the area was once the site of a massacre by a Manson-like cult; in Jessica’s case, the subject is an admitted obsession. Aside from being told that the mission “could make you famous,” they’re not altogether clear on the motives of their shadowy corporate employer. As the days go on and they experience increasingly disturbing phenomena, their relationship becomes fraught, veering from wary professionalism to paranoia and worse.

    Camped out in a triad of high-tech geodesic domes housing a lab and sleeping quarters, Keith and Jessica at first banter philosophically about the mission and the area’s history, as they get to know each other. During the day, he goes out exploring and sets up several cameras in the woods; Jessica runs tests on specimens he brings back, but the results are frustratingly inconclusive.

    Jessica with glasses

    Courtesy of Paladin

    Soon she becomes suspicious, accusing him of knocking on the hatch at night to scare her. She ventures outside and reports bizarre insect activity as well as strange voices. Initially, Keith is the voice of reason, attributing her experiences to various natural causes.

    Meanwhile we glimpse flashbacks of young people — ostensibly cult members — frolicking in the woods, as Keith wakes up from a series of intense nightmares. The often-malfunctioning cameras begin picking up increasingly violent images, unless these too are nightmares. Nothing is clear, adding to the general feeling of disorientation.

    After Keith and Jessica find a buried cache of human bones, a guy from the corporation helicopters to take the specimens back for testing. Suspiciously casual, he laughingly tells of the terrible plight of a CSI team that previously investigated the site. Not a good sign.

    They Remain Domes

    Courtesy of Paladin

    Things really get weird after Jessica finds a strange artifact in a cave. She and Keith have fevered sex and his dreams/hallucinations increase. One night he hears loud knocking on their hatch and loud whispering outside, but the cameras catch nothing.  Now he becomes the freaked-out one, accusing Jessica of lying about her activities during the day. He requests an immediate evacuation, to no avail.

    As Keith’s paranoia mounts, so does the film’s tension. An inevitable violent confrontation leads to a final scene that leaves us wondering what exactly has happened here. The film is obviously meant to be loose and impressionistic and it certainly does succeed at setting a beautifully rendered ambience,  but it might have benefited from a slightly tighter narrative.

    For those, however,  who prefer an artfully impressionistic creep-out to a classic scary movie, They Remain should more than do the trick.

    They Remain opens on Friday, March 2, at Village East Cinema.

    Marina Zogbi