Artist

Opening Tonight: Naomi Fisher, The Brave Keep Undefiled A Wisdom Of Their Own

Miami to New York! Tonight Miami native and friend is coming up for her opening at Leo Koenig. I'll be there and many others. Also, as mentioned in a previous post, Leo Koenig is having some sort of art pot luck next door.

Leo Koenig, Inc.
545 West 23rd Street, 212-334-9255
Chelsea
Leo Koening website

September 18 - October 24, 2009
Opening: Friday, September 18, 6 - 8 PM

Leo Koenig Inc. is delighted to present a solo exhibition by Naomi Fisher entitled "The Brave Keep Undefiled Wisdom of Their Own." With this exhibition, Fisher strives to explore the reciprocal relationship between the force of nature and its tendency towards chaos as it stands in opposition to the order and structure of civilization and culture. It is an investigation through movement, landscape costume and adornment.

Figuring most significantly in this new series of photographs, videos and drawings, are the women depicted in the images. Some of these women have been photographed by the artist for over a decade, and are all trained dancers and performers whose personal visions parallel those of Ms. Fisher's. Other intrinsic elements of inspiration for the exhibition came from the location (Oleta State Park), and a chance happening of what can only be described as the "Garage Sale of a Lifetime" where the artist stumbled upon the sale of the contents of an unpaid storage unit in Miami. There, Fisher amassed 3 garbage bags full of clothes that ended up containing vintage Versace.

"Camp Primitivo" was the name which was given to Fisher's "bubble world," and leopard print was their uniform. Oleta State Park, is on an island in Biscayne Bay between North Miami Beach and the City of Miami. Truly hidden in plain site, the park has miles of mangroves, forests and beaches nestled between metropolis and ocean. Life there was basic, food, beach, insect repellent, sleep, cook dinner over a campfire, drink, dance, thunderstorm, scream, repeat. The resulting images convey an atmosphere of spontaneous expression tinged with just a bit of mystery. The women, clad in their leopard-print and sequined outfits, exude an impulsive and unguarded playfulness, while at the same time leaving the viewer with the feeling that they might never really know the whole story.

Growing up in Miami and traveling abroad while her botanist father collected and studied tropical plants has given Ms. Fisher a unique perspective to recontextualize the modernist fascination with the tropics and the "wild" women for whom the jungle is their natural habitat. The images in this exhibition are a culmination of a project where the artist invited four women to camp with her and shoot for 9 days straight. The intimacy is apparent in the images. For the duration of the project each performer was able to tap into a reservoir of darkness and emotion which was effortlessly communicated with humor and abandon. Likewise, the artist's direction became an intuitive, and organic process. This seamless reciprocal gesture could only be the result of years of familiarity and collaboration.

Naomi Fisher is an artist born and raised in Miami. Fisher has exhibited internationally in such venues as the Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Pinchuk Art Center, Kiev; Halle fur Kunst, Luneburg; Kemper Museum, Kansas City; Kunsthalle Wein, Vienna; Kunsthaus Baselland, Basel; Deste Foundation, Athens; and the New Museum, NY. Fisher graduated summa cum laude with a BFA in Photography from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 1998, and is a recipient of a 2008 Knight Arts Challenge Grant from the John and James L. Knight Foundation. She also co-founded and jointly runs the Bas Fisher Invitational, an artist run alternative art space in Miami.

The artist would like to thank Jacqueline Fritz, Nancy Garcia, Jessie Gold, Elizabeth Hart, and Nikki Rollason for their inspiring performances.

Upcoming Fall 2009 New York Art openings... (updated x2)

These are the openings that I am excited to see coming soon. I will update this post for the remainder of the fall with new shows coming soon. I hope to go to as many of the opening as possible but if I post it here I will at least attend the show if a can't make opening night.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Group Show: OFF THE GRID: LUIS MALLO, ANDREW A. LUCAS, MICHEL CAMPEAU, AND TROY PAIVA
at KUMUKUMU Gallery

OPENING RECEPTION: SEPTEMBER 9, 6-8 PM
On View: September 9 - October 1, 2009
42 Rivington Street

Hey, Hot Shot! 2009 First Edition
Photographs by Michelle Arcila, Daniel Cheek, Mike Sinclair, Parsley Steinweiss and Kurt Tong.

Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 9, 6-8 PM
On View: September 10th - September 19th, 2009
6 Spring Street

Carter, And Within Area Although, Salon 94 Freemans
Opening Reception: September 9, 6-8 PM
On View: September 9 - October 24, 2009
1 Freeman Ally

Zipora Fried, Trust Me. Be Careful, On Stellar Rays
Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 9, 6-8 PM
On View: September 9 - October 25, 2009
133 Orchard Street

Genesis BREYER P-ORRIDGE, 30 YEARS OF BEING CUT UP, INVISIBLE-EXPORTS
Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 9, 6-8 PM
On View: September 9 - October 18, 2009
14A Orchard Street

Colin Dodgson, Just because it's in your head, doesn't mean its not real.
Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 9, 6-9 PM
243 Broome Street (Corner of Ludlow)

Grace Kim, Under the Glass Bell, A Dream, Melanie Flood Projects
Opening Reception: Wednesday, September 9, 7-10 PM
On View: September 9th - October 7th, 2009
186 Washington Avenue, Brooklyn, New York

Thursday, September 10, 2009

First off is my thesis advisor at SVA. I saw some of this while in progress at his studio and I'm looking forward to seeing it finished and installed in the gallery.

Simen Johan, Until the Kingdom Comes, Yossi Milo Gallery
Artist's Reception: Thursday, September 10, 2009, 6 - 8 pm
On View: September 10, 2009 -October 31, 2009
525 West 25th Street

Anthony Pearson, Marianne Boesky Gallery
Opening reception Thursday, September 10, 2009, 6 - 8 pm
On View: September 11 - October 10, 2009
509 West 24th Street

Juergen Teller: Paradis, Lehmann Maupin Gallery
Opening Reception: Thursday, 10 September 6 - 8 PM
On View: 10 September - 17 October, 2009
540 West 26th Street, New York

Nicholas Nixon, Old Home, New Pictures, Pace/Macgill
Opening Reception: ???
On View: September 10 - October 24, 2009
32 East 57th Street

Chris Ofili, Afro Margin. David Zwirner
Opening reception September 10, 6 – 8pm
On View: September 10 – October 24, 2009
525 West 19th Street

Nicolai Howalt, Car Crash Studies, Bruce Silverstein
Todd Hido, A Road Divided, Bruce Silverstein
Opening reception: Thursday, September 10th, 6 - 8 pm
On View: September 09 - October 24, 2009
535 West 24th Street

Nature as Artifice: New Dutch Landscape in Photography and Video Art, Aperture Foundation Gallery
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 10, 6 - 8 pm
On View: September 10 – October 15, 2009
547 West 27th Street, 4th Floor

Amy Stein, Domesticated, Clamp Art
Opening reception September 10, 6 – 8 pm
On View: September 10 – October 31, 2009
521-531 West 25th Street

Jason Hanasik, He Opened Up Somewhere Along the Eastern Shore, Kris Graves Projects
Opening Reception: Thursday, 10 September 6 - 9 PM
On View: September 10 - October 10, 2009

The Open, Deitch Projects LIC
Opening Septermber 10th 6 - 10 PM
On View: September 10 - October 25, 2009
4-40 44th Drive, Long Island City

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Tim Davis, The New Antiquity, Greenberg Van Doren Gallery
Opening Reception Brunch: Saturday, September 12, 2009 11 am – 4 pm
On View: September 10 - October 24, 2009
730 Fifth Ave., at 57th Street

Hans-Peter Feldman, 303 Gallery
Opening Reception: Saturday , September 12 2009 6-8 PM
On View: September 12 - October 17 2009
547 W 21 Street

WOOD, A sculpture show featuring: Carol Bove, David Lamelas, Corey McCorkle, Oscar Tuazon + Eli Hansen Kaari Upson
at Maccarone Gallery

Opening Reception: Saturday, September 12th from 6-8 PM
On View: September 12 - October 24th, 2009
630 Greenwich Street

suburbia gone wild by Martin Adolfsson

Martin Adolfsson, St. Andrews Manor, Shanghai, China

I'm digging Martin Adolfsson's work. Especially his Suburbia Gone Wild. I enjoy how at first I thought these were rather typical suburban landscape pictures that have been popular for some time now and then you notice that this isn't America's suburbia. This is the world copying America's bad habits and bad example and its frightening.

I think I even found the real estate listing here: http://www.newportchina.com/propertyinfo.php?pr=0.07607&hid=2699&uid=29463

From Martin Adolfsson's statement:

Within the past two decades we've seen a huge shift in the balance of economic power. Countries that didn't have a middle class 20 years ago have seen a rapid transformation from an agricultural economy to an industrial based economy so much so that a sizable percentage of the population now belongs to the middle class. How does that affect the social groups who have been able to benefit the most from the economic boom? How does that influence one's identity when the change is so rapid? What happens to the native culture amidst the economic influence of international status?

I've chosen to put my focus on the model homes built in recently constructed suburbs for the newly minted upper middle class. These full-scale replicas act as giant shopping windows decorated with a ready to buy lifestyle for the homebuyer. When the projects is finished I will have depicted model homes in 7 suburbs spread across the rising economies of the world. By omitting geographical and national traces I want to create a strong visual narrative between the suburbs. The similarities interest me more then the national and cultural differences. My intentions are to create a visual narrative that takes the viewer in front of the scenes of a new global movement.

A project by Martin Adolfsson http://www.martinadolfsson.com