Last outdoor run of the year: Struggling a bit, but still holding up (a tree) photo by Dick Bennett |
Finishing the Dunkin' Run 5k in 28:19 photo by Joe Putrock |
Things seen and heard on the Capital Region art scene and beyond
Last outdoor run of the year: Struggling a bit, but still holding up (a tree) photo by Dick Bennett |
Finishing the Dunkin' Run 5k in 28:19 photo by Joe Putrock |
It is with great sadness that I report on the recent death
of a dear friend, the world-class ceramic artist and Udu drum maker Frank
Giorgini, of Freehold, NY. He was 75 years old and had been undergoing treatment for cancer.
Frank and I first met in the mid-1980s when we both were
teaching classes at the Harmanus Bleecker Center in Albany under the auspices
of the Albany Institute of History & Art and the inimitable guidance of
Monica Miller (also a wonderful artist). One of my favorite memories of that
time was when we shared a two-person show at the Bleecker Center that featured Frank’s
Udu drums and my photographs, all of it dusky and formal, a lovely pairing of
sculpture and black-and-white pictures.
Frank was probably best known for his handmade and
commercially manufactured clay pot drums, which are treasured by percussionists
all over the world for their unique, earthy sounds and robust shapes, some
exquisite examples of which are held in the permanent collection of musical
instruments at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Frank used to
proudly state that he was the only living person whose product was in that
collection, though I suppose other living artists’ instruments may have been
added after the fact. If not, then there are now none who can make that
claim.
But Frank had equal impact in many other aspects of ceramic
production, both in the commercial realm as a tile maker and in the fine art
realm – though, in his case, the line between the two was fuzzy at best. Many
will recognize his tile and mosaic installation in the Whitehall Street station
of the Brooklyn BMT subway line, which was commissioned and installed in 2000.
Entitled Passages, it traces the
history of Manhattan backward in time using numerous airborne gulls as a
unifying element (you can see many pictures of it here).
A detail from Passages photo by Warren Sze |
Most artists, no matter how talented, need something more in
order to be successful – whether it’s a lucky break, an enthusiastic patron, or
a trust fund. In Frank’s case, it was his congenial personality. Everyone liked
Frank, and I can imagine no one who would have turned down an opportunity to
work with him or support his vision.
One way he shared that vision was through teaching. He
published books and instructional videos on tile making, and worked as an
adjunct professor at Parsons design school in New York. Probably most important
to Frank were the summer workshops he held at his Catskills home and studio for
people of all ages and abilities who wanted to spend a little time in the
country and learn how to build and fire an Udu drum.
Those two-weekend-long instructional experiences took place around Frank’s birthday, and always culminated in a grand potluck supper followed by a Bacchanalian bonfire, which naturally would be ringed by a large, happy throng of Udu-playing revelers. Though I never made an Udu drum, I stoked that fire nearly every year for decades, and danced around it with the best of them. Those Udu Fests will surely be among the most vivid – if slightly blurred – memories for many of Frank’s friends and fans.
Frank also was the proprietor, along with his partner, the
great chef Ana Sporer, of Ruby’s Hotel, a delightful garden-to-table restaurant
in Freehold that is expected to return to serving dinners after a period of mourning.
As bartender and host at Ruby’s, Frank welcomed guests with his consistent good
humor and, after dinner, he often shared a taste of his homemade limoncello, created
using a recipe from his Italian ancestors, and as strong as it was sweet.
Above the restaurant was a gallery where, for many years, Frank
mounted excellent shows of the best regional artists. The gallery was named in
memory of another Frank, a close friend of the restaurant’s family and a supremely
talented artist himself, who died way too young just before he was to have been
the exhibition space’s inaugural director. I hope that the Broderick Gallery,
too, will resume activities after a time, in loving memory of both Franks and
their dedication to the joy of making and experiencing great art.
That and so much more remains as the legacy of one very fine
person who also happened to be a brilliant artist, and a beloved friend to many.
The world was a better place with Frank Giorgini in it. May he rest in peace.
Note: If you’d like to get a taste of the amazing sound of the Udu drum, check out this extraordinary improvisation by Jacob Cole, a former workshop participant who posted it in Frank’s memory.
Ana and Frank at Ruby's |
Photography 101 will be on display through May 28 in The Artists' Space Gallery at The National Bottle Museum |
The indefatigable Fred Neudoerffer has organized a collection of many well-known shooters for an old-school display of straight photography in The Artists' Space Gallery at The National Bottle Museum in Ballston Spa that opens today.
I am among the 18 artists included, and am happy to be in their company in this lovely space (the above image, provided by Fred, shows three of my submissions just to the left of the framed poster).
There will be a reception for the artists from 5-7:30 pm on Friday, May 6. Come celebrate with us!
Penny Dreadful by Nina Chanel Abney is among works by 59 artists at The School |
I won't have time myself to review the show, which will end on April 30, but I wanted to pass along Bill's endorsement before its too late.
The show is a re-examination of a prior exhibition mounted by The School in 2005 that highlighted Black Power-related materials from the gallery's collection, and features the work of 59 significant artists, including photographs by prominent journalists. The School is a vast, pristine space, and admission is free - but it is only open one day a week, Saturday, from 11 to 6, so plan accordingly.
Adrien Brody, center, joins a stellar cast in Wes Anderson's film The French Dispatch |
Benedict Cumberbatch is a strong Oscar contender for his performance in The Power of the Dog |
Penelope Cruz in Parallel Mothers: Still mesmerizing after all these years |
Newcomers Alanna Haim and Cooper Hoffman are both terrific in Licorice Pizza |
Hidetoshi Nishijima and Toko Miura star in Ryusuke Hamaguchi's Drive My Car |
Still Life (aka White Jug), c.1950, color lithograph all works by Robert Blackburn |
Girl in Red, 1950, color lithograph |
In fact, he succeeded at both, by establishing printmaking workshops that forever changed the way postwar artists used those media, thereby significantly affecting the trajectory of contemporary art, and producing numerous powerful original works in the same media on his own time. Many viewers will be thrilled to see prints here by artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, Charles White, and Grace Hartigan - and those are great! - but I'll focus my comments on Blackburn's work, which makes up about half the show.
Refugees (aka People in a Boat), 1938, lithograph |
Little One, 1960s-1971, lithograph |
Woodscape, 1984, color woodcut |
Blue Things, c. 1963–1970, color woodcut |
Works by, from left, Royal Brown, Naomi Lewis, and Benjamin Jose are part of refract at Albany Center Gallery. photos provided |
Owen Barensfeld's Is It big Enough? combines images to make a statement |
From left, works by Trevor Wilson, Owen Barensfeld, Benjamin Jose, and Royal Brown are part of refract |
The New Natural, oil and acrylic ink on pieced and sewn muslin, 2021 |
We are living in a time when it seems impossible to be
hopeful – yet that is in a sense our only
hope. Occhiogrosso understands this, and while her artistic practice remains
primarily a rigorous pursuit of the purely visual, with regular forays into the
topical (examples include feminism, global warming, and the pandemic), the results
are clearly meant to uplift.
Migration, acrylic paint and ink on sewn cotton, 2017 |
Not a retrospective, Surfacing
is comprised mainly of recent works, and seems to want to be about
re-emerging from the isolation of the pandemic. If so, then it reveals a rather
glorious private world of shimmering shapes and radiant colors – hardly the
doom and gloom one might expect from an artist stuck inside for a couple of years.
Cascade, oil and acrylic on pieced and sewn polyester, 2019 |
In this way, Occhiogrosso allows randomness and intuition into the mix, forming a means of abstraction that doesn't depend entirely on self-expression. It's a process that works perfectly for an artist who, on one hand, entertains doubts (don't we all?) and, on the other hand, has clear ideas about what she wants to make, and a fierce commitment to working toward those goals.
Inside Out, oil and acrylic on pieced and sewn muslin, 2020 |
Additionally, Occhiogrosso addresses universal and personal concerns in her two accordion books, one of which elegantly depicts a flooded urban world with parallel colored-pencil lines, while the other represents the details of a domestic interior in sketchy black ink (both very skillfully drawn, I might add).
Altogether, the show is a must-see for fans of local art - Occhiogrosso is a native of Niskayuna, currently living in Troy - and just a real treat for anyone who may feel a bit deprived of color and joy in the midst of winter, or in the grip of a (let's hope) post-pandemic haze.
Surfacing will remain on view at the ACCR through March 11; the gallery is open every day but Sunday, including Tuesday through Thursday evenings till 7.
Morgan Avenue, pen on accordion sketchbook, 2020 |
Hidetoshi Nishijima and Toko Miura star in Ryusuke Hamaguchi's Drive My Car. |
One thing I like about Japanese director Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car is that it asks a lot of questions. Is this movie about love, death, family history, or life itself?
I think the creative process is the hub of the wheel in this film, around which all other themes revolve. The main character, stage actor, and theater director YÅ«suke is, above all, an artist, and the film spends a great deal of time exploring his creative process, strange though the process may be.
I like how the narrative represents the power of art to comfort us amid the stress of living our lives. Even the stoic driver is ultimately moved by this power, though at the same time it nearly tears YÅ«suke apart – certainly a valid point regarding art.
Few films or stories can bring those concepts home the way this one did for me.
To read the rest, click here.
Parallel Mothers is a great movie, by the way, with plot twists, first-rate acting, a deeply felt perspective on the legacy of conflict, and the wonderful, colorful Spanish settings that Almodóvar always delivers. But we left the theater feeling a bit depressed by the experience. And it didn't help to see from the street that the drinks establishment next door was chock full of patrons.
With everyone streaming at home from a hundred platforms, spooked by the Omicron variant, and just plain self-absorbed, it's hard to have much hope for the future of the small movie theaters that dependably screen the sort of movies we love: independent, foreign, plot-driven, devoid of car chases and explosions.I've chosen to have none of the home-based means by which the majority of us now enjoy films. No cable, no Netflix, no Amazon Prime - just antenna-fed TV and DVDs from the library, augmented by online rentals from Kino Lorber, a foreign-film distributor that fills the gaps left by the Spectrum. That leaves plenty of money in the budget to pay for tickets.
Currently, the Spectrum (an eight-screener on a main thoroughfare in the city) is showing several new releases that will contend for Oscars, including Licorice Pizza, Drive My Car, The Tragedy of Macbeth, and Nightmare Alley. I hope to see all of those before they leave the big screen, and will make an extra effort to do so.Going out to a movie still fills me with anticipation, freshens my step, and then fulfils that latent desire to be enveloped in the dark, alone or with friends, wrapped up in a story, with brilliant images, resonant sounds, and anonymous fellow theatergoers who sometimes have a word or two of comment during the credits.
I used to regularly run into friends at the Spectrum, and even made a new friend on occasion as we paused in the lobby to share our responses to a good film. Now, it's usually just the staff, who somehow still have jobs, but these days clearly seem to have not enough to do.The Spectrum is part of a national chain (Landmark), which has theaters all over the United States, most of them in far larger markets than ours. I suppose those venues are making enough money to help keep this one open. But it's not something I would want to count on for long. So, please, if you value the presence of a great independent movie theater in your region, and wouldn't want to see it close, get up off the couch, grab a coat and the keys, and go support it. You'll be glad you did.Note: I'm in Albany, so the Spectrum on Delaware Avenue is my go-to cinema - but there are several other small, independent movie theaters in the Capital Region that equally deserve your support, including the Criterion in Saratoga Springs and the Movieland 6 in Schenectady, both of which are owned by Bow Tie Cinemas, a national chain with 38 venues - coincidentally, the same number as Landmark.
Henry Klimowicz - Large Collections of Like a Lichen #2 cardboard and glue 2021 |
Organized by staff at Russell Sage College's Opalka Gallery, Pieced Together features 11 artists united by the theme of assemblage, an often overlooked art form that came into its own during the height of Modernism, in particular among Dadaists, often in the unassuming clothing of paper collage. Most of the work in this show follows fairly closely in that tradition, while some of it feels more connected to later periods of contemporary art that grew out of Modernism.
Altogether, this is a particularly lively collection of very accomplished work by well-established local favorites and a few relative newcomers, including one recent Sage graduate, Chloe Harrison, whose delicate matboard constructions show promise, while confirming her self-described fledgling status.
Beth Humphrey - Mutual Aid, 2020 spray paint, gouache, crayon, film on paper |
Paula Drysdale Frazell - Nap Time, 2015 acrylic paint and fabric on canvas |
Juan Hinojosa - Lava, 2020 mixed media on panel with plastic, soda can, wall paper, jewelry, ribbon |
Michael Oatman - three examples from the collage series A Boy's History of the World in 26 Volumes (+1), 1983 photo by Michael Oatman |
There are a few good choices in the region that will end soon, including a great opportunity to take advantage of free admission at a world-renowned museum.
Return 2 Earth 2017, mixed media by Alisa Sikellianos-Carter |
Two shows that will end on Jan. 14 also feature a great many regional artists: Gallery Mixtape, Vol. 1 at Collectiveffort in Troy, where a selection of BIPOC artists are showcased, and the Annual Members' Show at Albany Center Gallery. Well over 100 artists (myself among them) present one piece each at ACG, making for a super-eclectic viewing experience that is always popular with viewers.
An example of 20th-century Japanese printmaking at The Clark |
Perhaps most intriguing, an exhibition of 20th-century Japanese prints from the museum's collection will remain on view at The Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Mass., through Jan. 30 - and admission to the museum will be free for the entire month. Competing Currents promises to be a highly pleasurable lesson on a unique corner of recent art history.
So, go forth and see some art! It will make a great beginning to your 2022.
Add note: This just in from the Albany Institute of History & Art - Fashionable Frocks of the 1920s, a fancy and fun romp among the clothing styles of the flapper era, has been extended through Jan. 9.
The Annual Members' Show at Albany Center Gallery is always a crowd-pleaser photo by Daniel Joyce |