Artist Benjamin Lotan
May 28, 2009 at 11:41 am | In Art theory, Artist, Conceptual Art, Contemporary Art, Thoughts on Art, Video, performance | Leave a CommentTags: Artist Benjamin Lotan, Mapping a Path, performance, Video
Benjamin Lotan is an artist from Southern California who works in video, performance utilzing the web, as well as drawings and photography. The music is by Philip Glass. There are so many ways you can read this piece. I was first struck by the repetitive act of stripping oneself bare. As the piece progresses the saturation of the process made me think about online activities and social networking, how we reveal ourselves to others online and how meaningless it and falsely intimate it can all seem. In this context the repetitiveness of exposing oneself becomes and blur and it’s hard to establish the “original” or real figure. On Lotan’s website he mentions the phrase “distributed presence” in reference to another performance of his called “Lab play”. This idea that we can exist as “distributed” also stuck with me as I watched the above piece and it seems to be an element in the rest of his work. We multiply our existences. But in doing so raises the question: To whom does that original person exist? I think Lotan’s Pixel Width Portraits deal with this as well.
Another element that caught my attention from the title “Mapping a Path” is the notion of our tendencies as people to establish a route or path for our constructed selves and how it can diverge from the truth of our “real” selves- the part we keep covered. With regards to a mediated image- online or via film or photography- the picture of who we are is a construction of our own ideals. Here Lotan literally blurs the line between a mediated, constructed self and his naked, revealed self. At the climax of the piece is a confused mess of images that has no beginning, center or end. The only way out is to slow down the action and through sped-up, mechanical movement revert back to the covered/conceled self.
New MOMA website
March 26, 2009 at 5:36 pm | In Art theory, Education, Exhibition, Museums, Painting, Website | Leave a CommentTags: Museum of Modern Art, New media, On the Web, Redesigned MOMA site

If you haven’t seen the newly redesigned MOMA website check it out. Expansive collection online as well as a new media section, social networking access… it’s worth your time.
Art Historian TJ Clark Q&A
March 19, 2009 at 8:32 pm | In Art Criticism, Art History, Art theory, Lecture, Modern Art, Modernism, Museums | Leave a CommentTags: Lecture, NGA Mello Lectures, Picasso, Q&A, TJ Clark
I read some great essay’s by T.J. Clark as an Art History undergrad. From the introduction over at Modern Art Notes:
“Each spring the National Gallery of Art welcomes an art historian for six weeks of Sunday talks known as the Mellon Lectures. The template is straightforward: Invite a distinguished academician to spend a year researching and studying A Big Idea and then to present the resulting Big Idea(s) at the NGA over a series of spring Sundays. Previous Mellon Lecturers have included EH Gombrich, Kirk Varnedoe, Anthony Blunt, Kenneth Clark and Jacques Barzun. This year’s lecturer is TJ Clark.
Clark will present the first of his lectures, which are collectively titled “Picasso and Truth,” this Sunday at 2pm. (For the first time this year’s lectures will likely be available via podcast, but an NGA spokesperson told me that the details aren’t yet finalized.) Clark built his lectures around five paintings, the details of which we’ll get to in the second part of our Q&A. (Look for it on MAN this afternoon). Clark and I started by discussing how and why he chose his topic.”
Wes Hurd at Atelier 6000
February 23, 2009 at 4:11 am | In Art History, Art theory, Contemporary Art, Education, Modern Art, Modernism, Wes Hurd Lecture, bluetowerarts.org | Leave a CommentTags: art, Art History, Atelier 6000, Bend Oregon, Visual Arts, Visual Language of the 20th century, Wes Hurd Lecture




On February 12 Wes Hurd, BTAF founder, gave a lecture to 30 artists and arts interested people at Atelier 6000 Gallery and Print workshop in Bend, Oregon. His topic was “Understanding the Visual Languages of 20th Century Art”. BTAF offers this lecture and others to schools, colleges and other arts groups and organizations.
For more information or to request Wes for a speaking engagement please contact him at wes@bluetowerarts.org.
Also thanks to those who came out to the Jacobs Gallery opening on Friday. There was a great turnout.
Art Theory in Context
February 4, 2009 at 5:15 am | In Art Criticism, Art History, Art theory, Contemporary Art, Education, Modernism | Leave a CommentTags: Art Criticism, Art History, Art theory, diagram, Georgetown University, Martin Irvine, Modernism, postmodernism
Check out this link for a great overview of art theoretical discussions as they have developed in the 20th century. Found through Georgetown University’s website. I’ll assume it was developed by Martin Irvine. Check out his page cause he has a good bit of writings. I’ve not had time to go through it but it looks interesting.
Thanks Wes.
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