Monday, April 27, 2009

Spring Studio Stroll

It’s called the Spring Studio Stroll, but I’m exhausted and frustrated. It was no stroll, but a marathon.

I started out a half hour after the doors opened at 11 a.m. Sunday and by 5:50 p.m., had finished visiting the last four venues missed on Friday night. But, I was racing and unhappy knowing I was missing a lot of worthwhile work and wanting to just enjoy. Argh.

The morning started at Art Explosion’s 744 Alabama St. location. Ah, wait a minute—just looking back at my notes and calling up an image of Ehren Elizabeth Reed’s 21 Moments of Indecision puts me in a better mood. It’s a 22” X 16 “ by 2.5” collage of cutout paper-doll figures.

It’s as delightful as her thread paintings, an “investigation of interpersonal relationships and how they are affected by technology.”

There was a lot of young energy in the building including Elizabeth Deters’s Femme Maison Houses and Andrea Slattery’s video installations. The latter show women performing simple tasks—making butterball cookies, crocheting, cross stitching—to produce what Slattery calls a kinetic meditative sculpture. See, this takes time.

Louise Bourgeois’s late 1940s series Femme Maison inspired Deter’s work. In Bourgeois’s time, women were trapped by their homes and Deter said she wanted to revisit that relationship

Down the hall, was Christopher Gonzalez-Crane’s Macondo will Never Leave Me. The acrylic, ink and pen painting has a Chagall playfulness; one fit for the town where the magical realism of Gabriel García Marquez took hold.

Anthony Augustin Papini, works in oil to paint animals, packed highways, and from his days in Santa Cruz a local bar at 1:30 a.m. The paintings are dark, intense, effective.

Also worth mentioning—and there were most likely many others—
Charles Kruger, who teaches high school in Richmond, Tony Maridakis, who has a series that started with a wire sculpture and from there moved to lines; Colleen Stockman, who does “anatomical landscapes” considering where our bodies “meet the landscape.” There was also Karen Slovak’s Barbershop oil and some cool jewelry that I had no time to look at seriously.

But let’s leave Art Explosion with the same playful sense I had on entering—with Steven Weinberg and Casey Scienzka’s Telephone and Soup Ongoing Projects. Missionites might know their shitty kitty series, but there’s more to like: Casey’s collages, Steven’s illustrations and more.

On to Project Artaud at 499 Alabama St. and its recently refurbished spectacularly light Theater Gallery. The live/work cooperative that’s been around since 1971 was full of photography, riffs on photos, printing and painting.

Ricky Weisbroth’s monotypes, linocuts and photo etchings were all lovely. I especially liked a 32” by 18” monotype, The Lightness of Being, and a photo etching of an the old woman in Peru.

Upstairs, Laurie Anderson’s series of ink, oil and gauche pieces were mixed with the found objects that inspired them. The book designer considers different uses for an object. Shapes, textures and ideas repeat through the pieces. I wanted more time with them.

Again, more photography—notably some conceptual work by Luis Delgado—and many others including a series of gouache on paper work by Kenneth Cooper.

At 1890 Bryant Studios, there was Chris Leib’s oil and canvas Breakfast. I wanted to take it home. Nowadays he’s working on a new narrative figure series that considers aesthetics.

Onto Michelle King’s finely executed paint and ink on aluminum nature studies, and her nearly transparent acrylics suggesting trees or other landscapes.

Jennifer Bloomer’s mixed media portraits of children or women against newspapers also stood out. I wanted to go back and see them again, but there wasn’t time. Her oil and graphite series Roads, has also stayed with me. They made me remember car trips with the kids and especially one in which we drove too late through the impossibly dark and forested roads of North Carolina.

My last stop was to see the big bold works by Catherine Mackey – the Loading Bays at Hunter’s Point featured on her card, but also her Salon and others.

We took a quick break at the Coffee Bar—excellent steak sandwiches, according to my husband and daughter. Ditto on the tomato soup. BTW, I forgot to mention the Universal Café in Friday’s post. It’s one of my long-standing favorite places.

Revived, we went to the final venue — Art Explosion at 2425 17th St near Potrero Ave. Immediately, I noticed Georgianne Fastaia’s large, evocative oils, part of a series celebrating the Orishas. Ah, an immigrant’s point of view, I thought. Yes, from Brooklyn, she said.

I also loved Kirsten Tradowsky’s water colors and oils; some looking like illustrations from 1950s elementary school textbooks; Carmen de la Mano’s Tocame series of landscapes in which she paints with plaster, covers it with wax and yes, you can touch it; and Angie Renfro’s Bees and Gabrielle Gambos’s Feral Children.

I ended with Megan Brady’s delightful collages that pay homage to the late Ray Johnson and his development of mail art—work sent to friends that can be sent on and on. Brady’s work inspires as well, and she asked those who dropped by to put their address on a piece of her work for later mailing. It was impossible to resist the chance to be part of her project.

Brady had not heard of Michael Kimmelman’s delightful book, the Accidental Masterpiece, in which he writes about Johnson and other unlikely masters. It’s perfect, however, for anyone who wants to extend the pleasure of seeing Mission District artists in their studios.

From missionlocal.org

Actor Sam Huntington: Photo and News

  • sam huntington photo to portrait?Sam was born 27 years ago in New Hampshire. 
  • His mother's name is Christine Stabile

MOVES

Huntington's first role was in the 1996 television movie Harvest of Fire, which starred Lolita Davidovich. He then appeared opposite Tim Allen in Disney's Jungle 2 Jungle the following year. Roles in the films Detroit Rock City, Not Another Teen Movie, Rolling Kansas, Home of Phobia, In Enemy Hands and River's End followed, alongside guest appearances on CSI: Miami, CSI: NY, Law & Order, and Veronica Mars. 

He was also in the History Channel documentary The States when it covered New Hampshire. 

He is sometimes confused with actor Paul Dano and vice versa.

Most recently, Huntington starred as Jimmy Olsen in Bryan Singer's Superman Returns. His next film is the comedy Fanboys.

From Wikipedia, 2009

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Sam Huntington (Superman Returns) will star in ABC's upcoming comedy series "Cavemen," which is undergoing some retooling, says The Hollywood Reporter.

Huntington will play a new caveman character, Andy, who is the younger brother of Joel (Bill English). Andy, who lives in their small hometown, comes to Atlanta to visit his brother after breaking up with his girlfriend. 

Andy will replace Jamie, Joel's easygoing little brother character played in the pilot by Dash Mihok.

Inspired by the popular Geico insurance commercials, "Cavemen" will continue to revolve around three modern cavemen -- Joel, Joel's younger brother and Joel's cynical best friend Nick (Nick Kroll) -- as they struggle to fit in the human-dominated society.

From Comingsoon.net, July 2007.

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Jimmy Olsen has followed Clark Kent into the night. Sam Huntington, who played Jimmy Olsen in the 2006's "Superman Returns," is reuniting with the titular character Brandon Routh to star in a new comic book-based film.

"Dead of Night," based on the best-selling Italian comic book series by Tiziano Sclavi, will star Routh as Dylan Dog, a private investigator drawn into the world of vampires, werewolves and the undead.

From icelebz.com, March 2009

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Personal quote about Fanboys (2009)

"I really like the trash chute," Huntington said. "I've been saying all day my favorite scene is the trash chute scene, the trash compactor scene. I think that's just really funny. I love that reference because that's, to me, one of the scenes that sticks out so much from Star Wars. The fact that we got to kind of recreate that, and the way it looks, the way the set was dressed, just down to everything I think was just really funny."

From Canmag.com, 2009

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