Thursday, November 05, 2009

Michael Paul Britto Solo Exhibition: November 21, 2009 -January 3, 2010



Two Solo Exhibitions
Exhibition dates: November 21, 2009 -January 3, 2010
Artists’ reception:  Saturday, November 21, 5-8pm

Smack Mellon is pleased to present Tracey Snelling’s installation Woman on the Run and Michael Paul Britto’s new video works in Society’s Children. The two artists incorporate elements of pop culture, cinema, and reality to very different ends. Snelling uses architectural elements and multimedia effects to create fictional character and scenarios full of intrigue, while Britto uses personal observation and surveillance footage to emphasize the injustices of actual occurrences.  In the tradition of a film noir femme fatale, Snelling constructs a three-dimensional narrative around an ambiguous female persona wanted for questioning in relation to a crime. The visitor becomes a player in the story, searching for the enigmatic woman. Boundaries blur between victim and violator, fact and fiction, feminism and outdated views. Britto’s harsh characters are more straightforward and urgent in both presentation and purpose, exposing pressing concerns in contemporary urban African-American culture. His video Verbal Assault shows the same actor portraying a father and son in a heated argument marked by mutual disrespect, while his video Daughters shows footage of a police officer brutally restraining a girl whose only crime is staying out past curfew.

Michael Paul Britto, Society's Children
“Much of my work is about being a person of color in America and the misconceptions and assumptions that go along with that. My art allows me to use the customary as metaphor to raise political and cultural awareness. By manipulating images taken from popular culture I aim to illicit feelings of rage, happiness, sadness and empathy to make viewers rethink mass medias’ depictions of people of color, and what is deemed as acceptable behavior by society.”
Verbal aggression has been determined to be more damaging than physical aggression. There are many sources to blame for verbal aggression including human nature, ethics, victimization, abnormal psychology, and the mass media.  In the video Verbal Assault, the role of father and son are juxtaposed to show the son’s aggression as a mirror image of his father’s. While the father cares for his son, his abusive approach contradicts his intention to help his son. Frustration is sensed from both characters as the overlapping dialogue focuses on their fears and mutual desires for acceptance and achievement.
In the video Daughters, a dashboard video-camera recording of a white police officer’s assault on a 15 year old African-American girl, is paired with John Mayer’s song “Daughters” giving a timely and important alternative meaning to the lyrics of this pop song, posing the question “will this girl love like she’s been loved?”
Born and raised in Brooklyn, NY, Michael Paul Britto received his BA from the City College of New York. His work ranges from video to digital photography, sculpture, and performance.  Britto has had residencies at the New Museum, Smack Mellon and The Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation (NYC). His work has been featured in shows at El Museo del Barrio, The Studio Museum of Harlem, The Zacheta National Gallery in Warsaw and the Victoria and Albert Museum in England. Britto has been written about in The New York Times, Art In America and the Brooklyn Rail.

Tracey Snelling, Woman on the Run
“Woman on The Run is an installation that intricately mixes architecture, scale modeling, video, photography and 3-D story telling with a heady dose of Hollywood glamour and Hitchcock-like built-in suspense. A multimedia project, Woman on the Run explores a fragmented narrative about a fated woman. The main character, a combination of heroines and femme fatales from 1950’s and 1960’s film noir is trying to escape her fate. A crime has taken place, and she is wanted for questioning. Throughout the installation, different clues are given about what might have happened and who the woman is. Is she the victim, or the perpetrator? A study in feminism or an example of outdated ideas?
An alternate world of shrunken buildings, neon signs, and a life size motel offer a selection of clues that conspire to initially draw the viewer to the action and then help them thread together the disconnected story that just happened. The viewer quickly becomes a witness and to some extent an actor within the story, often assuming the role of a detective. Video plays in windows and conversations can be overheard. Reality becomes based more in perception than in absolutes. The blacks and whites of life shift to grey, and the truth becomes shrouded in mystery.
I have been interested in the idea of reality being something that continually changes, due to perception and according to an individual’s ideals and own subjectivity. I explore this viewpoint through shifting scale and presenting a particular subject in a myriad of ways. A large building can inspire a small sculpture of that building, which in turns becomes a photograph and eventually gets incorporated into another piece of art. Video is often placed in the sculptures – usually of people, sometimes doing mundane activities, repeated continually. Other times the characters might remain the same but the actions that are repeated change slightly and contradict each other. Influences in my work are heavily anchored in Americana and fed by post-war US popular culture from literature to cinema, while my work consistently and simultaneously celebrates, demystifies and re-interprets those cultural clichés with the view to making them both timeless and fresh.”
Tracey Snelling is an internationally exhibiting artist living and working in Oakland, California. She graduated with a BFA in Art Studio from The University of New Mexico in 1996. She explores reality and scale through sculpture, photography, and video.  Her works are featured in numerous collections, including the Baltimore Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, de Saisset Museum, and The West Collection, Pennsylvania. Her work has been exhibited internationally, including Gemeentemuseum Helmond in the Netherlands, Selfridges in London, solo exhibitions in Brussels, Amsterdam, London, and Miami, and at Art Basel. She recently returned from a 4 month art residency and solo exhibition in Beijing.

This exhibition is made possible with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency, and with generous support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Greenwall Foundation, Jerome Foundation and Smack Mellon’s Members.  Smack Mellon also receives generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Recovery Act, Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, City Council Member David Yassky and the New York City Council, Bloomberg, Brooklyn Arts Council JPMorgan Chase Regrant Program, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Goldman, Sachs & Co., Google, The Greenwich Collection Ltd., Helena Rubinstein Foundation, Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation Inc., The Robert Lehman Foundation, Tides Foundation, advised by Lambent Foundation, and William Talbott Hillman Foundation. 
Woman on the Run was funded in part by San Pablo Arts District Fund, Galerie Urs Meile, EAmmune, Osborne Samuel Gallery, Aeroplastics Contemporary, Pan American Art Projects and Jane Wattenberg.
Space for Smack Mellon’s programs is generously provided by the Walentas Family and Two Trees Management.
 

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An Exhibition of Media Art Based on Popular Song


An Exhibition of Media Art Based on Popular Song

October 30 - November 21, 2009
Opening Reception, Friday, November 6, 5-8pm
The Artlab, John Labatts Visual Arts Centre,
The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
Since the earliest years of rock and roll, artists have used popular music and the materials of popular music culture to explore issues of celebrity, sexual politics, cultural and sub-cultural identity, the influence of mass media on human emotion, and the displacement of spiritual desire within modernity. Variously expressive of homage, envy, obsession, or ideological critique, artworks that incorporate the images and materials of popular music bear witness to the powerful role it plays in defining contemporary culture and its desires.
This exhibition explores the use that artists have made of the popular song to reflect on its format, its contents, its mythologies and the emotions it engages.
SONGSHOW explores a particular form of imitation that is neither derivative nor disconnected: more embrace than impersonation. It is an exhibition that looks at the way in which artists distill from popular songs something that cannot be reduced to reference but instead reconnects us with the special powers a song possesses once it has become caked with memories of local legend, mythic celebrity and misadventure.
curators:
Kathleen Pirrie Adams
Daniela Sneppova




SONGSHOW is an exhibition of eight artworks which each subject a particular song to a wild (but discerning) transformation. With something of the original still intact, each artwork moves the associations and affect of the song onto new terrain. Led Zepplin is played against the iconic landscape of the West Coast and at the foot of the stairs of St. Paul’s Cathedral; Britney Spears lands in the antebellum cotton fields and Prince in a Glasgow bed-sit.

The Artists: Anti-Cool in collaboration with Duchess Says, Japan, Canada. Beagles and Ramsey, Scotland. Candice Breitz, Germany. Michael Paul Britto, USA. Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, Canada. Jeroen Offerman, Netherlands. Steina and Woody Vasulka, USA.
This Exhibition is made possible with the generous support of the Ontario Arts Council, The Canada Council, The Visual Arts Department of the University of Western Ontario, The Faculty of Arts and The Faculty of Information and Media Studies at the University of Western Ontario, and New Media, School of Image Arts at Ryerson University. Special thanks to Susan Edelstein and the Artlab committee and Patrick Mahon.


Monday, September 21, 2009

"The Importance of Being Authentic" Video Screening, Panel Discussion, and Closing Reception Saturday, September 26, 2009 2-6pm


Last Day of E10
Aljira Emerge 10 Exhibition

Video Screening, Panel Discussion, and Closing Reception
Saturday, September 26, 2009
2-6pm

"The Importance of Being Authentic"
Video Screening and Panel Discussion: 2-4pm
E10 Artists: Michael Paul Britto, Brendan Fernandes, Roxana Perez-Mendez, and Jaye Rhee
Moderator: Guest Curator Sara Reisman

Do you think authenticity is important to the visual arts? If art provides the possibility for imagination, how can creativity and authenticity be reconciled?

Join E10: Aljira Emerge Exhibition Guest Curator Sara Reisman and E10 artists Michael Paul Britto, Brendan Fernandes, Roxana Perez-Mendez, and Jaye Rhee for an opportunity to view recent videos and performances on video not in the current exhibition and participate in a lively dialog.

E10 Closing Reception: 4-6pm
Light refreshments
Music by resident DJ Curator and surprise guests

(Image, top left: Roxana Perez-Mendez, Mi y Mi Gente, 2009, Model truck, digital video player, and mixed media (detail), Dimensions variable

Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art, is located at:

591 Broad Street
Newark, NJ 07102-4403

Tel: 973-622-1600
Fax: 973-622-6526
TTY 1-800-852-7699
E: info@aljira.org

Gallery Hours

Wednesday - Friday
12pm - 6pm

Saturday
11am - 4pm

Directions to Aljira

BY RAIL

From Manhattan: Take the PATH train to Newark Penn Station or New Jersey Transit from New York Penn Station to Newark Penn Station.

From within New Jersey: New Jersey Transit buses and trains to Newark Penn Station are available from various locations in the surrounding region. For schedule and fare information call (800) 772-2222.

Aljira is about a 10 minute walk from Penn Station. Exit the station by the doors labeled Raymond Plaza West. You will be on Raymond Boulevard. Walk west to Broad Street, cross the street and turn right. Walk approximately 3 blocks, Aljira is located in the next block on the left.

BY CAR

Garden State Parkway North or South: Take exit 145 to Route 280 East towards Newark & Harrison. Once on Route 280, stay in the right lane and continue to exit 14 for Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Take the exit to bottom of ramp and turn right onto King Boulevard. Take King Boulevard to Central Avenue. (St. Michael’s Hospital complex will be on your left). Turn left onto Central Avenue. Turn right at the fourth traffic light onto Broad Street. Aljira is on the right in the next block.

NJ Turnpike: Take Exit 15W to Route 280 West. Go over the drawbridge and exit at 15A. At the light, turn left onto Broad Street. Continue on Broad Street for about 3/4 of a mile. Aljira will be on the right just past Central Avenue.

Route 21: Route 21 becomes McCarter Highway in Newark.

Traveling North: At the junction of McCarter Highway and Raymond Boulevard, turn left onto Raymond Boulevard. Stay on Raymond Boulevard to Washington Street (two blocks past Broad Street). Continue on Washington to Central Avenue and turn right on Central Avenue. Turn right at the second light onto Broad Street. Aljira is located in the next block on the right.

Traveling South: Make a right turn onto Bridge Street. At the traffic light, turn left onto Broad Street. Aljira is located on the right past Central Avenue (before New Street).

Holland Tunnel: Routes 1& 9 South (Pulaski Skyway): five miles from the Tunnel, take the exit to Newark and the Oranges, onto Raymond Boulevard.

Stay on Raymond Boulevard to Washington Street (two blocks past Broad Street) Continute on Washington to Central Avenue and turn right on Central. Turn right at the second light onto Broad Street. Aljira is located in the next block on the right.

Lincoln Tunnel: Follow signs to New Jersey Turnpike South. Take Exit 15W to Route 280 West. Go over the drawbridge and exit at 15A. At the light, turn left onto Broad Street. Continue on Broad Street for about 3/4 of a mile. Aljira will be on the right just past Central Avenue.

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

ARTslant NY : Stereo Types by Yaelle Amir




Stereo Types
by Yaelle Amir


Group Show
Number 35 Gallery
39 Essex Street, New York, NY 10002
July 17, 2009 - August 15, 2009

The summer exhibition on view at Number 35 introduces the work of three fairly unknown New York artists in a thought provoking arrangement. The joining of Michael Paul Britto, Carlos Sandoval de Leon, and Diane Wah’s oeuvres generates a reciprocal dialogue that ultimately serves to strengthen the individual projects.



Wah’s black and white photographs present close up views of seductive women and men in intimate settings. The sexual tension that arises from her images is reinforced by the titles of the works, I Fall in Love Too Easily (2009) and In a Sentimental Mood (2009), which evoke familiar jazz references. The direct gaze of Wah’s subjects hints to recognition of power—while the female portraits present a strong sense of self-awareness, the men appear as if surrendering to their desire.



In his video and vinyl on mirror works, Britto challenges the viewer to reflect on their reaction to the use of the ‘N word.’ Although perceived mostly as a derogatory term, it is extensively incorporated into hip-hop culture. In the two-channel video and mirror plaques What Up Nigga! What Up Son! (2009), Britto introduces the inter-changeable usage of this word in black culture. In the video, Britto repeats the two title-phrases in a seemingly infinite loop. In placing these sayings side by side, he tests the viewers’ reactions, bias, and associations towards this loaded term.



Sandoval de Leon’s sculpture P+P (2009) is composed of mundane, yet socially charged objects and raw materials. Made of bulletproof plastic, the tall rectangular structure contains used bar soap, empty bottles of shampoo and conditioner, and a “stash” book. Together, these components allude to a deserted hideout or a temporary environment. Providing the viewers with associative everyday items, Sandoval de Leon relies on their imagination to find personal and cultural significance in his work.

These three artists share an urge to dissect the structure of our society in building upon personal and familiar elements, such as jazz, hip-hop, and raw materials. In so doing, the viewers are able to acknowledge and confront their own sentiments on the contentious subjects of race, appropriation, power dynamics, and our culture’s unrelenting detritus.

Images: Michael Paul Britto, What Up Nigga! What Up Son! (2009); Carlos Sandoval de Leon, P+P (2009); Diane Wah, In a Sentimental Mood (2009). Courtesy of the artists and Number 35.

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Monday, July 27, 2009

One Size Fits All!


One Size Fits All is an ongoing roving art project that exhibits and sells t-shirts made by artists:

Agata Bebecka
Michael Paul Britto
CHANDI
Brendan Fernandes
Isca Greenfield-Sanders
Brent Harada
Donna Huanca & Domokos
Akiko Ichikawa
Tony Ingrisano
Adrian Kondratowicz
Caitlin Maisley
Haley Mellin
Chris Oh
Rachel Salomon
Jenny Salomon for LOUC
Nichole Van Beek & Yadir Quintana

Installation by James O'Meara

Our inaugural exhibition will take place this
August at:

On Stellar Rays
133 Orchard Street
New York NY 10002


onstellarrays.com

July 30th - August 22nd
Gallery Hours:
Wed - Sat, 12 - 7

Opening:
Thurs July 30th, 6-9

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

E10: Aljira Emerge 10 Exhibition


July 25th, 2009 - September 26th, 2009
E10: Aljira Emerge 10 Exhibition

Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art invites you to E10. Join us for the opening of this fresh group exhibition that is the culmination of Aljira Emerge, the highly acclaimed, annual strategic career management and exhibition program for emerging artists. E10 features new and recent works by a dynamic group of 22 artists of diverse backgrounds who successfully completed last year's competitive program. This exhibition is on view through September 26, 2009.

E10 presents works ranging from painting and sculpture to video and installation by the following artists living and working in New Jersey, New York, and Philadelphia: Fariba Alam, Toby Barnes, Michael Paul Britto, Cecile Chong, Priscila De Carvalho, Brendan Fernandes, Sheree Hovsepian, Gisela Insuaste, Sandra Lee, Diego Medina, Lisette Morel, Nyeema Morgan, Kymia Nawabi, Jung Eun Park, Roxana Perez-Mendez, Jaye Rhee, Jose Ruiz, Jennifer Salomon, Miranda Small, Germán Tagle, Joseph Waks, and Noelle Lorraine Williams. This year, we welcome as our Guest Curator Sara Reisman, Director of Percent for Art, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

Opening Reception:
Saturday, July 25, 2009

http://WWW.ALJIRA.ORG

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Number 35 Presents: Michael Paul Britto, Carlos Sandoval De Leon & Diane Wah


Michael Paul Britto
Carlos Sandoval De Leon
Diane Wah

July 17 - August 15, 2009
Opening reception, Friday, July 17th, 6-8 pm
Number 35 is pleased to present works by New York-based artists Michael Paul Britto, Carlos Sandoval de Leon and Diane Wah.

Born and bred in Brooklyn, Michael Paul Britto began his career as a child, making television shows to amuse his family, with his aunt's VHS camera. Completely self taught and trained in desktop editing and imaging, he shoots his own material, edits at home and manipulates the images he collects on his personal computer. Britto's works range from narrative, documentaries and experimental videos, digital photography, sculpture, and performance.

Carlos Sandoval de Leon's work intends to re-charge generic symbols found in everyday commodities. Juxtaposing objects to create double entendres that operate in and out of social environments.

Diane Wah is a Haitian-American artist from Queens, NY. Wah stumbled into visual art and is now an interdisciplinary maker of popular culture. Working in various mediums, fusing elements of photography, sculpture, printmaking and graphic design, she creates interesting, witty, political and always funny alterna-narratives.

Summer gallery hours are Wednesday - Saturday, 12 - 6 pm and by appointment. For more information, please contact Cindy Rucker at 212-388-9311 or cindy@numberthirtyfive.com.

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Friday, July 03, 2009

Gas Station 145

video

A time lapse view from my bedroom window on 145th street in Harlem, New York.

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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Racism: An American Family Value July 8, 2009 - September 12, 2009


Racism: An American Family Value
July 8, 2009 - September 12, 2009

Organized by: Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr., Artist, Teacher, and Independent Curator; and Alexander Campos, Executive Director of The Center for Book Arts.

This exhibition investigates how visual artists have used the printed word in their artistic practice to address one of the country's oldest and most challenging social problems. Mixing humor with subversive symbolism, the art exhibited reveals the vast reach of contemporary book art as practiced by a wide spectrum of American culture.

Artworks included by: Manuel Acevedo, Tomie Arai, Jamil Azim, Karen Baldner, Ben Blount, Michael Paul Britto, Josely Carvalho, Irene Chan, Maureen Cummins, Ken Gonzoles-Day, Rory Golden, Caren Heft, Barbara Henry, Jayson Keeling, Maureen Kelleher, Glenn Ligon, Miguel Luciano, Jason Lujan, Clifton Meador, Douglas Miles/Apache Skateboards, Shervone Neckles, Jessica Peterson, Adrian Piper, Rosae Reeder, Lisa Beth Robinson, Karina Skvirsky, Danny Tisdale, Kara Walker, Shu-Ju Wang, Carrie Mae Weems, and Lynne Yamamoto.

Film Night: Proceed and Be Bold! Feature Documentary on Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr. Wednesday, August 5, 6:30 pm

Gallery Opening Hours:
Monday to Friday, 10am-6pm
Saturday, 10am-4pm
Admission to the galleries is free.

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