March 9, 2011

#itsscientificallyproven at the Miami Art Fairs

by J. Knox
Part of the Series ' Unknown Creatures" by Shen Shoamin at 2010's Art Miami, Photograph J. Knox.
Contemporary art is not supposed to function like the fashion world, with seasonal trends that shoot to popularity only to become outdated just as quickly. But as I walked through row upon row of dealers and their most salable art at Art Basel Miami and the slew of ancillary art fairs this past December, it was impossible not to focus on emerging micro-trends. Three or more instances of a theme, medium or subject matter and I become adamant in my declaration, “we’ve got an art fad on our hands, people.” In 2009 the surge in Michael Jackson art was undeniable (David LaChapelle led the charge, of course. LaChapelle: please don’t sue me for saying this). This year I was sure that glass and mirrors quietly rose to popularity; Hreinn Fridfinnsson’s Untitled, 2009' and Josepha Gasch-Muche’s layered glass ‘paintings’ were exemplars (the declaration of which, admittedly, was likely influenced by Michelangelo Pistoletto’s participation in an Art Basel Conversations panel, and his ‘Broken Mirror Painting’ on display at the Margulies Collection). This trend hunting becomes so all-encompassing, such a palpable bi-product of the art fair machine, that it takes a rare jolt of thoughtfulness to shake me out of it.  

That jolt came last December in the form of delicately assembled skeletons made from bones, bone meal and glue in the ‘Unknown Creatures’ series by the artist Shen Shaomin. Shaomin creates imagined fossils: the skull of a woodland creature is fused with a long, articulated torso; humanoid hands cap off whip-like pincers; a web of bones radiates out from the spine of a tiny tetrapod. The exhibition of these sculptures appropriates  the vernacular of a natural history museum, a pleasant counterbalance to the gallery paradigm. The booth attendant told me the artist had intended to raise questions about the consequences of GMOs. I found myself asking a myriad of other questions, like, for instance, (and forgive me as the scientist within emerges) what does this work suggest about scientific command and our construction of truth?

There is a simple authority in a fossilized skeleton, it provides the most direct and observable evidence of an animal’s historic existence. Shaomin captures that familiar idiom of a natural history museum, but the animals he presents are categorically false. He essentially shows us how easy it is to assume the syntax of expertise without the substance. And while known errors in fossil reconstruction are somewhat rare, Shaomin’s work brings to mind the Piltdown Man, possibly the world’s greatest scientific hoax, in which Charles Dawson (the collector, not to be confused with Charles Darwin, who is coincidentally thematically relevant to the story), announced in 1912 the discovery of a skeletal ‘missing link’ between apes and humans. 40 years later, after vigorous debate, the Piltdown Man was determined to be the jawbone of an organutan combined with the skull of a man; ‘liar, liar, pants on fire’ accusations ensued.  

What’s at stake here is the ease with which someone can mimic institutional authority. How confident are we in the accuracy of current bodies of institutional knowledge? In some cases there may be no way to assess this, for the very methodology of inquiry and discourse may be flawed. A recently published article in the New Yorker suggests that the empirical method, that is, the process of data collection and analysis that underpins the majority of scientific discovery throughout history, is inherently riddled with human bias. Some scientists are responding to by trying to uncover why this bias occurs. Shaomin’s work blurs the line between institutional authority, imagination, ecopolitical statement, historical artifact and our perceived future. Which brings me to my last, somewhat unrelated point, that the ‘Unknown Creatures’ series also loops time by presenting a vision of the future in a historical artifact; but I will save that discussion for another day. ;)

Shen Shaomin is represented by Eli Klein Fine Art, a New York gallery that focuses on contemporary Chinese art. Shaomin’s work was shown in Miami this past year at both the Art Miami and Art Asia fairs, and as you can probably tell, I appreciated getting a second look.

*At the time of this article’s naming (Feb 20), #itsscientificallyproven was at a trending high on twitter. #godilovecoincidences.

February 28, 2011

The Forecast is HOPE


Marie Tomeoki, Unprepared in Wellyboots, Mixed Media
Marie Tomeoki started her artistic career as a professional, classical 
ballet dancer training throughout Japan to the USA and Canada. 
She studied Psychology and Dance at York University in Toronto and 
has since embarked on a career moving towards the visual fine arts, 
with a mission to highlight mental health awareness; having 
experienced mental illness all her life.

The artist states:“Throughout history there have been many 
artists afflicted with mental illnesses, and I am another one of 
them; I suffered all my life with chronic depression, major anxiety 
disorders, as well as my devastating experience with severe 
anorexia and bulimia which I have worked hard to recover 
completely from (which is exceptionally rare).  I have experienced
the countless Emergency Room visits, hospital stays, the Intensive
Psychiatric Assessment Units, Psychiatric Emergency Rooms, 
inpatient and outpatient programs, treatment facilities, groups, 
the professionals, the other patients some of whom I've made great 
connections, the mountain of medications, and the ICU for those
times my suicide attempts were near fatal.”  
She adds, “I do not want to talk about the darkness whilst in the
struggles and depths of my mental illnesses as I believe we've 
all experienced in some form what these times feel like, and 'know'.
But I do want to and need to talk of and spread the word of all
the efforts I have taken to prepare, dig, crawl, and climb (through
the mud) my way out of and to where I am today; alive, proud of
who I am as an individual, hopeful, believing, grateful, and totally 
embracing and fascinated by everyone and thing in the world. One
step, one moment at a time, anything is possible.  I will spread the
word and share my life stories to support, teach, and help anyone
and everyone who has been touched by the world of mental health.”  
“This is my purpose in life: I've known it deep inside for a long 
time coming.”

The Canada Post Foundation for Mental Health Competition was
established in 2008.  Since then, each year a stamp has been 
created for mental health awareness; the sale of those stamps 
from 2008 to 2010 has raised nearly one million Canadian dollars
for the foundation.


For the 2011 stamp design, 315 submissions were sent to the 
foundation between November 2010 and January 10th, 2011.  
Marie’s "Forecast Hope" was selected as a finalist on February 13th,
after an initial Internet voting competition with half-million hits,
followed by another 19 selections by a panel of judges.
  
From now to March 14th, anybody can cast one vote per day,
with further points awarded by adding a Facebook / Twitter link
via the site, please show your support by voting for Marie's design
here:  
http://www.deliverhope.ca/gallery-entry.php?id=121

Marie Tomeoki’s work has been shown within the Toronto community,
with gallery exhibitions in New York, Italy and soon to be shown 
in Los Angeles.  Her art has generated extensive interest, with 
works purchased by the likes of a film director and family collectors.

Visit the artist website here: www.marietomeoki.com
View her blog here: http://beingmariet.blogspot.com


February 2, 2011

Welcome to our first blog post!

Back in 1995, artist-run centre Gallery 1313 published Artery, a small newspaper featuring articles, reviews and essays about art and culture in Toronto and beyond. With over 50,000 issues to it's name, Artery provided a forum for emerging and established writers.

Today, we are welcoming readers and writers to our new format.

You are invited to contribute your opinions, interviews, reviews about visual arts and/or the Toronto art community to our site. Feature articles should be 200 to 300 words or less. Pictures are encouraged yet please site their source or their photographer. Your article may be edited for length. Please submit to: g1313artery@gmail.com