Tag: installation

  • Mike Kelley’s Dogs

     

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    Deodorized Central Mass with Satellites, 1991-1999

    Contemporary artist Mike Kelley died on Wednesday of an apparent suicide.  He was 57.  Holland Cotter of The New York Times writes of the different aspects of Kelley’s work:

    “On one level, the pieces were sardonic send-ups of aesthetic trends like Minimalism, which Mr. Kelley despised as elitist. On another, they took aim at the strain of too-easy sentimentality he found repellent in popular culture. At yet another level, these pieces, with their martyred dolls and ruined promise of warmth, were innocence-and-experience metaphors, suggesting the trauma of hurt and loss that underlay the juvenile delinquent antics that surrounded them.”

    When I first moved to Los Angeles in 1989, my roomate’s boyfriend went to CalArts, where Kelley studied in the late 70s with teachers, John Baldessari, Laurie Anderson, and Douglas Huebler, and we hung out on campus and at various studios around town.  At the time, everyone was making art like Kelley’s.  His flea market, stuffed animal, scatological style wasn’t merely influential.   It was just what you did.  Here are a few of his dogs.

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    The Territorial Hound, 1984 (courtesy MoMA)

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    Arena #10 (Dogs), 1990, via The L Magazine

    Mike Kelley’s NYT obituary by Holland Cotter is here.

  • Love it! Bite it! by Liu Wei: Saatchi’s Revolution Continues

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    A gallery assistant views Love It! Bite It!  photo by Clara Molden

    In 2005, Charles Saatchi shut down his gallery and purged his collection of the YBAs (Young British Artists) he groomed into art superstars.  This Thursday, he premieres his new protégés, the YCAs or Young Chinese Artists, at his new four-story gallery in London’s Duke of York Headquarters.  It is the largest free-entry contemporary art gallery in the private hands, and there is tremendous excitement about Saatchi’s latest finds.

    What excited me is that the inaugural show, The Revolution Continues: New Art from China, contains one of the most remarkable pieces of dog art I have ever seen: Liu Wei’s Love It!  Bite It!  It is a massive imagined city that includes the “tastiest bits” of Western Civilization, including the Coliseum, the Guggenheim, and the UN, made entirely of dog chews.

    Described as a “parody of grotesque consumption…[and] created with painstaking detail.”  There is something so incredibly prescient about this piece.   Behold the intricacy of the structures, and then consider our global markets disintegrating, devoured by insatiable greed.  The same way a pack of dogs would devour Wei’s installation if they were let loose in the gallery.  It’s downright primal, all too real, and simply brilliant!

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    Click on image for larger view + blow your mind.

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    Visit the Saatchi Gallery online for more information.