Sunday, August 15, 2010

art that pops the brain: fearniture


art that pops the brain: fearniture

Joseph Wolf Grazi is not the first person to create furniture as art, but he does succeed in combining a new sophistication and confidence mixed with psychological influences. When first acquainted with the chair it becomes a matter of questioning yourself. The self is subject to either alienation of the chair (refusal to sit) or one can make the decision to be part and parcel of the art; almost as if you and the artist are forming a trusting relationship. You need to inherently trust the craftsmanship of the artist when sitting because if not the fear that you may collapse upon the needles within the plexiglass takes over your thoughts.

It is the second chair built by Joseph Grazi and serves to the viewer as a functional piece of furniture, but also a sculpture in the round. Evocative in nature, it encompasses the idea of emplacement–it affects the viewer through a total context: mind, body, and place. What the piece is able to do is evoke different reactions, which mostly depends on the personality type. If we are predisposed to fears than fearing comes organically. However, if one considers themselves more adventurous then the task of sitting becomes exhilarating. Art holds a power over our own psychological vicissitudes of self definition: we are all performing in front of an audience and apparatus.

As you walk up to the chair you first examine the 76 syringes that fill the plexiglass. You ask yourself several questions: Am I supposed to sit on this? Wait–how does an artist get a hold of 76 syringes? And as you walk around the chair and the angles and perspectives change you realize that no view is exactly the same. Gothic in stature, as you sit in the chair you feel as if you were sitting at a royal family’s dinner table, but atop syringes and plexiglass rather than rich-carved mahogany. It all comes down to being glamorous. Brigitte Weingart puts it eloquently: “Glamour is aura.” Glamour is beauty, fascination, strategies used to create an optical deception and, in terms of etymology, it can serve as an unexpected source of encouragement.

Given the transparency of the material and where the chair is placed, the aesthetic is manipulated based on its surrounding environment. The dynamism of the chair provides many distractions that lead the viewer away from the element that is trying to pull you in: “Would you like to have a seat?;” this is the psychologically-driven moment that I’ve observed first hand. Those being asked the question are left in limbo; either they take a seat (and find it pleasurable and comfortable) or they refuse. If one chooses the latter it is mostly out of fear and, thus, “fearniture” has affected this individual.
What exactly is “art that pops the brain”? It makes one think about the conversation that exists in art. The chair is perfect example because not only is it provocative it may very well scare the shit out of you. It’s not a matter of knowing a time period, it is more about the internal conversation between the chair and you. It’s only a chair; we sit in them everyday. So, have a seat or not.

Joseph Wolf Grazi’s “Fearniture” is currently on view in three different locations: Chelsea Art Museum through September 2nd; Damon Dash’s ART IS opening reception on August 18th; and Volume Black Gallery on August 20th.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

new project



without a tv and copious amounts of money i decided to make a project that requires little money spent on art supplies and one utilizes items that i can find in my apartment. i woke up yesterday morning and thought of this for some reason. perhaps, it is related to a dream i had before i woke up.

i am folding origami using brown grocery bags from trader joe's and whole foods that we have in the cabinets under our sink. i like the texture of paper and how the cranes come out---it is a bit different if you were using paper made specifically for origami, a little more sturdy. it is a process piece. so, eventually they will be spray painted different colors (when it is nice enough to utilize the roof). however, i have not decided on the color scheme. once the paper is folded and painted, i will then begin to conceptualize what i want the final paper sculpture to look like, which will be composed of all these paper cranes.

i'll keep you posted as the project progresses, but for now it will probably just be a shitload of paper folding.

Friday, February 19, 2010

josh keyes

a few weeks ago i headed down to jonathan levine's gallery in chelsea to check out josh keye's show. his show sold out. i must say he is one of my favorite artists right now. his technical style coupled with contemporary social and environmental issues makes for a lasting presence in the art world. perhaps we'll see some of his stuff in the museum circuit in a few years?


josh keyes talks to juxtapoz magazine.

oh, canada.





i recently trekked up to canada to see a very good friend of mine from college, that is, ms. anela dujsic. here are a couple of cell phone photos that document my trip.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

thanksgiving.

the other day i asked my student, "how was your thanksgiving?" he replied, "oh...it was good. i got a ten dollar haircut at supercuts, 900 dollar guccis, and a tattoo on my ass that says 'rip tupac shakur."

"what an eventful weekend."

Monday, August 31, 2009

The Garden

simply amazing. this documentary should be the next on your queue.


Thursday, August 27, 2009

tediousness, etc.




i made this cd cover for shawn stidem's ep that comes out on september 1st:

doc loc; thank you, prometheus.

only 100 will be made
all individually numbered
and each cd has unique artwork on the cases by local artists:

robin hollis
christina entcheva
shane gertner
adam cutrone
larry mcallister II
ryan gutierrez
justine bienkowski

and more!

it is one of the three i'm makin.

this one required patience and lots of glue---which also left me trying to figure out how to get this permanent glue off my hands.

DOCLOC MUSIC