Friday, October 28, 2011

Dancing with Carl Andre

Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art - The Language of Less (Then and Now) exhibit

As visitors curiously glide through each sectioned room of the Museum of Contemporary Art’s new exhibition, “The Language of Less (Then and Now)” (showing now – 4/8/12), spotlights from above shine brightly on to each minimalist art piece, reminding the viewer to, “yes, look at me.”  While head tilting their thoughts and whispering a critique or two about the piece to a friend next to them, a very low-key six by six checkerboard of sheet and gun metal grey squares lays casually in the middle of the room.  Without a spotlight, the sweet floor-flower remains confident as each hopeful date passes her up for the sassy criss-cross neon lights or the voluptuous stack of green blocks in the corner.  When accidentally stepped on, visitors’ frantically look up in hope that the watchful eyes of the chaperone didn’t see and if they did, wave apologetically and move on.  If further flirting took place, the viewer would have discovered a name, “Zinc-Lead Plain” and brief background of the 1969 piece, where artist Carl Andre encourages visitors to participate and dance on his gal, in order to “feel the different densities of metal through our feet”.  Sadly not many suitors take notice and continually waltz around the camouflage squares, making their way to the next room of easy spotlight pieces.


"Zinc-Lead Plain"


Son of a marine craftsman, Andre attributed his love for natural materials through his upbringing in Quincy, Massachusetts.  Growing up near navy shipyards, Andre fondly remembers the “rusting acres of steel plates” which laid out “under the rain and sun.”  It was Andre’s curious intrigue of his own surroundings that lead him to appreciate the simple lines and shapes of industrial materials such as hard steel and stoic lumbers of wood.  His interest in art grew when he attended the Phillip Academy in Andover, Massachusetts through a scholarship in 1951.  It was there that Andre discovered the “joys of making art” and received his only noted formal art training.  After traveling through Europe in 1954 and joining the United States Army Intelligence soon after, Andre nestled in New York where he began creating wooden “cut” sculptures influenced by artist Constantin Brancusi and former Academy classmate, Frank Stella.  Stella, another leading figure in the Minimal art movement, who shared studio space with Andre is noted to have said to Andre as he began removing hunks of wood from his art sculpture, “Carl, that’s sculpture too.”  And the rest, as they say, is history.  A self-proclaimed “matterist”, Carl Andre based his artwork on positioning his available materials of bricks, wood and steel within a particular “place”.  A “place” which helps “make the general environment more conspicuous”, arranging the artwork within the area so as to bring out the “quality of the environment” and the “work which has been done” within.  In 1964 Andre created the controversial Equivalent VIII which consisted of eight rectangular sculptures laid out on the floor, each made up of 120 bricks.  Some called it an “insouciant masterpiece” while others said a “pile of bricks”, yet all eagerly wanted to learn and understand more.


Equivalent VIII (http://art.yorkshire.com/media/33974/andrehuddersfield.jpg)


In an interview of May 1995, Andre remembers a discussion he had with abstract painter Ad Reinhardt as they were jokingly teasing each other about whose medium is better than the other.  “Sculpture is what you trip over when you back away from a painting to look at it.”  said Reinhardt playfully, and Andre quickly replied, “Well, when you turn the lights out, the paintings disappears, but you still trip over the sculpture.”  Andre wanted people to appreciate the beauty and make up of materials with as much admiration as how they see the colors in a painting.  His cool and collected “Zinc-Lead Plain” embodies the spirit, if not viewed on purpose she is there to at least step on and apologize soon after…whichever one comes first.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Jazz Professor remembers Miles Davis


*personal photo

Under rows of warm caramel colored chandeliers and portraits of DePaul University’s past Presidents, the audience of nearly eighty North-faced jackets and suits in the Courtelyou Commons, stare curiously back at a slide-show picture of Miles Davis.  Standing on the podium next to the screen is Dr. John Szwed, author of the 2002 biography “Miles Davis:  The Jazz Musician as Dandy” and Acting Director of the Center for Jazz Studies at Columbia University, who turns his head to the left and informs the audience the picture is a typical shot of Mr. Davis.  During a time when most jazz album covers hardly showed a face to the instrument player, Davis sits casually slumped in his chair while holding his trumpet rockingly over his thigh, staring fearlessly back at the person holding the album, “Milestones….Miles Davis”.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51gUi2%2BSc8L._SL500_AA300_.jpg 


He was a man who knew how to “break the rules”, says Szwed smiling as he went on to show many more pictures and videos of Davis’ misinterpreted behavior.  From quirky note changes on familiar songs, to literally “turning his back” on the audience, Szwed commended Davis not only as the “Prince of Darkness” but an eccentric, lonely, and one of the most misunderstood artists of all time.

http://images.indiebound.com/835/859/9780684859835.jpg


“Has anyone seen the movie, ‘On the Waterfront’?” asks Szwed to the audience of mostly early to late 20’s with just a sprinkle of head nods smiling back at him.  He goes on explain his favorite “cool” scene in the movie of Marlon Brando putting on one of actress Eva Marie Saint’s gloves’ after she accidentally drops it on the ground while remaining in character, reminding him of Davis’ demeanor on stage.  “What person could do that and get away with it?  No one.” said Szwed.  Davis constantly refused to assimilate to, predominantly white, audience’s expectations of his performance on stage, purposefully to “treat whites how they treated blacks in servitude positions”.  Sporting his double-breasted silk lined suits and “clean as a freakin whitsle” shoes, Davis, said Szwed, let it be known to everyone watching that he will never “disappear into white society”.

http://www.loc.gov/folklife/events/images/JohnSzwed.jpg


“I think Dr. Szwed is doing some of the most important, accessible, elegant, and sophisticated work in the field today,” says Professor Jonathan Gross, DePaul University’s Humanities Center Director, who was inspired to invite Szwed because of his “creativity in narratives.”  “I prefer his work to others who write on music because I find it more objective, scientific, and informed.”


Last month marked the 20th anniversary of Miles Davis’ death, which, even to this day, his legend still lingers on fictional stories that Szwed emphasizes, if any are true, were done purposefully.  A trick that many artists today, such as Lady Gaga’s recent eye-brow raising performance for President Bill Clinton’s 65th birthday, only hope to gain publicity that’s as highly practiced and emulated.  But because he remained reserved about his past and didn’t care to acknowledge the celebritism of his own creation, blanks were open enough to be filled with such sensational rumors.

“As a classically trained artist, Davis wanted to present jazz music the way the art form was supposed to be done, with respect.”  Said Szwed as he pointed to a video shot of Davis standing motionless while playing his trumpet.  A perfect portrait of a man who just wanted to play music, never caring to notice the obsessive eyes glaring back at him of those who yearned for more despite his “artistic temperament”.







Thursday, October 13, 2011

8-year-old's Rendition of "Super Bass"



“Do you know what you’re singing about?” asks Ellen Degeneres to 8-year-old Sophia Grace Brownlee, a recent YouTube sensation who raps and sings to Nicki Minaj’s hit single, “Super Bass”.     

“No,” says Sophia with a smile while sitting next to her cousin and “back-up” dancer 5-year-old Rosie.  “We just love pink!”


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odhUPMYXpX4


Wearing their signature pink tutus and tiara crowns, Sophia croons and hand motions out lyrics that would make Mariah Carey jealous. The audience of “The Ellen Degeneres Show” eat it up as the duo sashays an acappella rendition of “Super Bass”.

With countless hits on YouTube (7.9 million and counting) of the pair dancing and singing in the living-room of their Essex - England home, many concerned parents squeamishly squirm to hearing lewd lyrics, from dealing “coke” to being a “ho”, come out of a child who can’t even recite her times tables.

Technology today filled with iPods, smart phones, and YouTube instant replays has created an evolution of highly accessible music causing the Parents Music Resource Center, a non-profit organization created in 1985 who’s responsible for mandating the Parental Advisory Label on albums deemed “objectionable”, to wave a reluctant white flag.

“It's no surprise that Sophia is doing Super Bass, since it's played on every Top 40 radio station in the country.”  Says Kutmaster Spaz, a D.J. mix reporter for Billboard Magazine (www.djspaz.com).  And though Minaj’s 2010 hit album “Pink Friday”, which features the song “Super Bass” and showcases the Parental Advisory Label on the cover, Spaz believes children are easily exposed to the music through friends or popular radio stations whom are obligated to play a hit song.

“Songs are popular, but some just don’t realize what the lyrics are about.”  Says Jon Balauro, a Los Angeles D.J. who regularly plays hit dance songs that have controversial lyrics.  Billboard’s current number three song, “Pumped Up Kicks” is especially concerning for him, which is about “troubled youth with homicidal thoughts.”

Concerned parent, 34-year-old Kristie Kutaka from Kahaluu - Hawai‘i suggests radio stations should “start rating their music”, claiming she as a hard time “monitoring” what her children listen to.

Keala Beyer, mother of three from Portland - Oregon doesn’t believe in sheltering her children from any type of music, however is afraid they will believe the lyrics are “normal” and “acceptable” behavior.  

“It’s definitely a sign of the times, and parents just need to use these times as teachable moments,” says Dr. Mia Moody-Ramirez, an assistant professor of journalism at Baylor University who recently conducted an analysis on rap artists’ lyrics.  “Young girls especially need to understand the images on TV and the lyrics to songs, it’s mostly about selling records.”


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9573kGBtuE


Earlier this year Nicki Minaj was quoted by British tabloid “The Sun” saying she “cringes” when she hears little girls singing along to her songs.  And after viewing the YouTube video of the tutu wearing duo, she quickly insisted on meeting them, and did so on “Ellen” calling Sophia a “superstar” yet quickly emphasizing to “put your books first, and singing second.”             


Friday, October 7, 2011

What's Your Number Review



“He recognized my vagina.”  Said Ally Darling (Anna Faris), a loved-starved and desperate single gal, describing another failed date through her backwards quest in finding true love.  All because “Marie Claire” magazine conducted a “study” revealing “96% of women with twenty or more lovers…can’t find a husband.”  As vulnerable as she is impressionable Ally then creates, yet quickly breaks, her celibacy the very next day leaving only to search through past lovers of magicians, gynecologists, and puppeteers galore.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9stplJF1ek


Toasting to “better decision making” in the beginning of her quest, the actions she chooses thereafter secede her outlook.  “What’s Your Number” exhaustively reinforces Ally’s need to find the “one” in order to be happy.  Even the trek up the stairs to her apartment after every bad date, maybe used for artistic reasons, seem to represent her long journey only to be rescued by her devilishly handsome neighbor Colin.  Her preoccupation with finding a soul mate trumps and disregards her own self, depicting her character to be appear more naïve than wanted or expected.



With it’s comparison to Kristen Wiig’s 2011 hit “Bridesmaids”, besides the eerily opening shots of each movie being similar (both Wiig and Faris’s characters put on make-up before their emotionally detached FTF’s wake up), “What’s Your Number” doesn’t quite add up to it’s competition.  Though Faris’s fake accents and comedic timing’s are hilarious and endearing, when needed to produce a serious and angry persona, it’s a bit awkward with her whispy voice and haunting flashbacks of her in “Scary Movie” I, II, III and IV.



Yet despite the raunchy overworked humor towards male and female genitalia and glimpses of one too many butt cracks, “What’s Your Number” has some quirky tales that will get your girlfriends giggling to the true “numbers” once whispered secretively in the ladies bathroom.

2/4 stars