Wednesday, April 25, 2012

fee's LIST / through 5/1


WEDNESDAY
NYC
* Robert Irwin "Dotting the i's & Crossing the t's" @ The Pace Gallery / 32 E 57th St. Irwin's new site-conditioned installation, incorporating the gallery's upper-floor windows, is the first of a two-pronged exhibition—the second part occurs at Pace's boxier 510 W 25th St space in September. Look: anytime this sublime interventional artist unveils something NEW, it's a guaranteed must-see.

* The Weeknd @ Music Hall of Williamsburg / 66 N 6th St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford), 8p/SOLD OUT. Did you luck out and score tix to Canadian crooner The Weeknd's (né Abel Tesfaye) first proper NYC show? Or were you skeptical b/c he hadn't "performed live yet"—stateside, anyway—and you slept on it? Guess what: Tesfaye and band totally blew up Coachella. Dude can sing. You lucky ticket-holding readers: prepare to perspire tonight.

AUSTIN
* Fusebox Festival 2012 @ multiple venues. Since moving to Austin last summer, I've had to acclimatize myself to "how things work" in the South, from the gallery scene to indie film releases and local bands. The usual LIST stuff. I've been on the search for unique cultural opportunities and Fusebox Festival is definitely that, an annual gathering of international and Hill Country pan-media artists, programmed by the Austin "idea engine" Fusebox. The fest itself runs thru May 6, so check back for my picks (tagged as "Fusebox Festival"). Full schedule here. Now get to it.

* Fusebox Festival: The Coathangers (ATL) @ Fusebox Festival Hub / 1100 E 5th St, 10p/$5. Dude(tte): way to kick off this year's Fest w/ Atlanta's deliriously irreverent grrrl-punks The Coathangers, whose latest LP "Larceny and Old Lace" is girly when it needs to be but refreshingly in-your-face, too. Stoked!

TOKYO
* Makiko Tanaka "Aurora vs Portrait" @ hpgrp Tokyo / B1F 5-1-15 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku (Chiyoda/Hanzomon/Ginza Lines to Omotesando Station. The Tokyo-born artist expresses the feeling of air and the aurora over the world in a series of pencil and gesso works.

* Eikoh Hosoe @ BLD Gallery / 2-4-9 Ginza, Chuo Ward Tokyo (JR Yurakucho Station, Marunouchi Line to Ginza Station). "Killed by Roses" or "Bara-kei" is among Hosoe's most famous photo series from the early '60s, darkly erotic images of the male figure, with Yukio Mishima as model. That Mishima would later follow up those fantasies with ritual suicide in 1970 makes them that much more impactful.

* パスピエ @ Shimokitazawa GARDEN / B1F 2-4-5 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, S. Exit), 7p/2800 yen. The magnetizing Tokyo quintet PASSEPIED won me over back in December, channeling a distinctly Japanese "Twin Sister" in their heady cocktail of electronics, rock accoutrements and songbird Natsuki's soaring vox. w/ Heavenstamp

THURSDAY
NYC
* Domenico Gnoli @ Luxembourg Dayan / 64 E 77th St. Eighteen late-period creepy-ass paintings by the "Italian cult figure" Gnoli who, like his countryman Piero Manzoni, died way too young (aged 36 in 1970). 

* Jill Moser @ Lennon, Weinberg Inc / 514 W 25th St. Spare swooshes of color against arctic-frigid backdrops elevates Moser's latest series into possibly my favorite-est ever from the NY-based gestural abstraction painter. Stellar stuff, this lot. 

* Shay Kun "Be First, Be Smarter or Cheat" @ Benrimon Contemporary / 514 W 24th St 2nd Fl. Kun's evocative and vibrantly colorful landscape paintings are all somehow…wrong, somewhat off…which doesn't prevent your gaze from locking deep into 'em.

* "4 Films: Adrian Paci, Luisa Rabbia, SUPERFLEX, Su-Mei Tse" @ Peter Blum Chelsea / 526 W 29th St. Feat. Paci's "Inside the Circle", Rabbia's "Travels With Isabella", SUPERFLEX's "Modern Times Forever" and Tse's "Vertingen de la Vida" (w/ Jean-Lou Majerus).

* "Profondo Rosso/Deep Red" (dir. Dario Argento, 1975) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. An Argento-worthy giallo classic. Think music teacher (played by David Hemmings!) turned detective, creepy-ass music scores (courtesy Goblin!), and strains of general insanity! 

FRIDAY
NYC
* Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen "Theater and Installation 1985-1990" @ The Pace Gallery / 545 W 22nd St. One huge facet of the consummate NY modernist's oeuvre that I am just not that clued into: his collaborative stage performances with long-time partner van Bruggen. The exhibition includes an installation of enlarged costumes and props used in "Il Corso del Coltello (The Course of the Knife)", performed by Oldenburg and van Bruggen on the Campo dell'Arsenale in Venice, plus "The European Desktop", their 1990 installation and finale as a duo.

* "Loughelton Revisted" @ Winkleman Gallery / 621 W 27th St. The artist Barbara Bourghei curated this group exhibition, named after the namesake East Village gallery she co-founded with Amy Lipton in '86. Expect works originally exhibited at Loughelton Gallery, incl. John Baldessari, Barbara Bloom, and Annette Lemieux, plus works by artist/curators connected to the institution, like Peter Nagy (Gallery Nature Morte) and Colin deLand.

* "Opera" (dir. Dario Argento, 1987) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. What is it about opera houses that elicit bloodshed? Argento did it in "Four Flies on Gray Velvet", and he amps the intensity like a million times here by having the killer bind our heroine, pry open her eyelids w/ needles and, in a subversive twist to "A Clockwork Orange", force her to watch the murders take place! 

AUSTIN
* Fusebox Festival: Max Warsh & Vanesa Zendejas @ Sofa at Rosewood / 1319 Rosewood Ave, 7p. NY-based Warsh pairs photography to LA artist Zendejas' sculpture, as the pair investigate abstraction and built spaces. I am poring through "RUINS" (edited by Brian Dillon, part of Whitechapel Gallery's "Documents of Contemporary Art"), and find the timing of this exhibition just perfect. THRU MAY 6

* "Sympathy For Mr. Vengeance" (dir. Park Chan-wook, 2002) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 11:30p. Park may be best known in the Western filmic world for "Oldboy", the second iteration of his bracing Vengeance Trilogy, but the first chapter, "Sympathy…", is as dark and bloody, plus it's more emotive in its cunning use of off-kilter humor. Starring Shin Ha-kyun as a green-haired mute so desperate to save his dying sister that he dives deep into the black market organ trade; and a super-serious Song Kang-ho ("Thirst", "The Host") seeking closure and the title's word over his missing little daughter. ALSO SAT

TOKYO
* Saya Kubota "Melting Monster" @ Aisho Miura Arts / B1F 2-17-3 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR lines etc to Shibuya Station). The young Tsukuba graduate's developing style of singeing paper and rusting metal takes a deeper context here, as she compresses time and history in works relating to archeological finds. Sounds dope!

SATURDAY
NYC
* Sherrie Levine "A Dazzle of Zebra" @ Paula Cooper Gallery / 534 W 21st St. What in the hell does this exhibition title mean? Who knows! Something about the duality b/w the real world and Levine's set-piece installation. The cerebral meta-artist just had a phenomenal survey at the Whitney, and now she unveils new "encounters", works made of glass, bronze, or handmade paper. 

* Holton Rower "Pour Paintings" @ The Hole / 312 Bowery. This ain't your dad's AbEx pour paintings, son. This child of the psychedelic '60s creates tectonic rainbows of flowing paint and small pours of multicolored "hats" over wooden protrusions — think the aurora, distant nebulas, undersea creatures, and the best acid trip you ever had, all at once.

* Pier Paolo Calzolari "When a dreamer dies what happens to the dream? @ Marianne Boesky Gallery / 509 W 24th St and The Pace Gallery / 510 W 25th St. Pretty dope: the two galleries will be temporarily conjoined in hosting an in-depth historic exhibition of the Arte Povera artist, featuring his "activated" materials and temporal achievements. 

* "Tenebrae" (dir. Dario Argento 1982) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. Tied w/ "Phenomenon" (aka "Creepers") for my favorite '80s Argento film. This time, it's an American writer of violent horror novels tracking a razor-wielding killer whose modus operandi mimics the author's books! The whole vibe is clinically slick, like Jean-Luc Godard's "Alphaville", only a giallo!

* Jeff Mills @ (le) poisson rouge / 158 Bleecker St (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St), 11p/$15. What, so you didn't get score tix to The Weeknd, either? No sweat (yet), just put that money towards Detroit wünderkind Jeff Mills, whose furious sets of icy-cold techno will keep you moving all night.

* The Weeknd @ Bowery Ballroom / 6 Delancey St (F/JMZ to Essex/Delancey), 8p/SOLD OUT! Readers, see my effusive compliments toward Canadian crooner Abel "The Weeknd" Tesfaye" under WED. Because he rocks live.

AUSTIN
* Eleanor Friedberger (NYC) @ Frank / 407 Colorado St, 9:30p/$12. Friedberger, the beguiling songbird half of NYC psych-pop duo The Fiery Furnaces, graces my favorite gourmet hotdog joint for an evening of transcendent vox. w/ Brooklynites Hospitality

TOKYO
* Jaye Moon "Luminous" @ Gallery MOMO / 2F 6-2-6 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Toei Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station). This exhibition highlights the NY-based artist's recent Plexiglas and Legos—yes, really!—series "Mirrors", "Mondrian Corners", and "Lunchboxes".

* MoRpHO @ Shibuya Milkyway / 3F 4-7 Udagawa-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 7p/3000 yen. The busily named visual-kei electro rockers MoRpHO make Milkyway their "Theater" tonight.

* Pines Mines @ Basement Bar / B1F 5-18-1 Daizawa, Setagaya-ku (Odakyu/Keio Inokashira Line to Shimo-kitazawa Station, South Exit), 7p/2000 yen. I usually take the indie-rock or noise route when mining local live acts, but paisley-proud trio Pines Mines do a pretty fine Doors rendition, only w/ sunny coed harmonies. Hell, I'm impressed. w/ snap

* deNOISE 4 @ Super Deluxe / B1F 3-1-25 Nishi-azabu, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station), 5:30p/2800 yen. First night of a two-night sonic feast courtesy Feedback Tokyo and LUFF does TOKYO is a doozy. Local noisicians Hair Stylistics and PAIN JERK claim sets w/ the notoriously evil Rudolf Eb.Er (aka Runzelstirn und Gurglestock) + Swiss hardcore "pyro-acoustic" Dave Phillips (ex Fear of God).

* "XXX Fest" @ Heaven's Door / B1 1-33-19 Sangenjaya, Setagaya-ku (), 5p/3000 yen. "Explosive carnivorous girls!" That's the tagline for this huge lineup of grrrl-fronted and all-grrrl rock. Feat. Red Bacteria Vacuum, マジョ, Jinny Oops!, The Harpy's, ヒーヒズヒムイズム、ザリガニ$ etc. What else do you need?? 

SUNDAY
NYC
* Vlatka Horvat "Unleveling" @ Rachel Uffner Gallery / 47 Orchard St. I was WAY into Horvat's subtle intervention at MoMA PS1's 2010 Greater NY. Her debut solo exhibition at this LES gem should provide deeper insight into Horvat's processes, incl. relating figures and ground, reconfiguring objects excised from previous works in new ways, and shifting visitors' movements via installation. Very cool.

* Tom McGrath "Profiles in Fugitive Light" @ Sue Scott Gallery / 1 Rivington St. Spanking new moody, nocturnal abstract oil paintings from McGrath, whose last solo was at Mexico City's Zona Maco.

* Michael DeLucia @ Eleven Rivington / 11 Rivington St. Just off an eye-opening group show "In Practice" at Long Island City's SculptureCenter comes DeLucia's reductive housepaint-on-plywood sculpture, inaugurating Eleven Rivington's newly expanded space at 195 Chrystie St, around the corner from the tiny gallery.

AUSTIN
* Fusebox Festival: "Night Sky" @ Fusebox Festival Hub / 1100 E 5th St, 9p/$5. Church of the Friendly Ghost – the local sonic pioneering co-op whose electroacoustical voyages light up the Hill Country approx monthly – presents Alison O'Daniel's film "Night Sky", like a desert-set dance-off, set to the live musical accompaniment of Ethan Frederick Greene. Followed immediately by "So We Got That Going For Us – Which Is Nice", a half-hr of sound and movement courtesy Henna Chou, Justin Sherburne, and Lindsey Taylor. And yo: O'Daniel participated in PERFORMA11 (screening "Night Sky") and the critically acclaimed "Pacific Standard Time" at LA's Blackbox.

TOKYO
* deNOISE 5 @ Super Deluxe / B1F 3-1-25 Nishi-azabu, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station), 5:30p/2800 yen. Just to rub salt in the wound, here's night 2 of Feedback Tokyo/LUFF does TOKYO's deNOISE fest: 非常階段 (that's Hijokaidan, the legendary noise rockers!)+ HIKO (Gauze), Jim O'Rourke + Norbert Möslang, plus Dave Phillips + ASTRO (Hiroshi Hasegawa, ex CCCC). 

MONDAY
AUSTIN
* Fusebox Festival: Jenny Larson & Sterling Price-McKinney "Dream Cabinet" @ Eponymous Garden / 1202 Garden St, 10p/FREE. A site-specific video projection and choreographed show (plus, erm, haunted house), written by Price-McKinney and directed by Larson, leading the audience through an early 20th c. dreamscape.

TUESDAY
NYC
* Lucian Freud "Drawings" @ Acquavella Gallery / 18 E 79th St. The modernist figuratist's acclaimed drawing show at London's Blain/Southern (co-organized by Acquavella) now moves to NYC. The sheer range of styles and mediums here—from pencil and watercolor emotions of animals to crayon landscapes and Freud's signature gooey human studies in charcoal—well, it's all just incredible. A must-see ahead of Frieze NY.

* "Science on the back end", selected by Matthew Day Jackson @ Hauser & Wirth / 32 E 69th St. The space-tinged artist Jackson makes it clear in H&W's press release that he's not a curator—rather, he selected five artists who inspire him and left them to their own mechanics in creating this pretty neat show. Each artist gets a room: Larry Bamburg, Marc Ganzglass, Rosy Keyser, Erin Shirreff, and Nick Van Woert; each does what they want with that room. Will there be cross-chamber communication? Cross-pollination, if you will?

* Charlene Kaye @ Gramercy Theatre / 127 E 23rd St (6 to 23rd St), 8p/$10. I am bonkers proud of NYC chanteuse Charlene Kaye, who celebrates her 2nd LP "Animal Love" release party tonight. Be enamored. w/ Alicia and Theo Katzman

AUSTIN
* "Don't Go in the House" (dir. Joseph Ellison, 1980) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. I would suggest doing as the title says – only see the damn film, it's got that charm that only early '80s American horror carries. Low budget as hell, think "Psycho" with a pyromaniac, trapping PYTs in his modified incinerator/crematorium boudoir!

TOKYO
* Electric Eel Shock @ Shelter / B1 2-6-10 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, South Exit), 6:30p/2500 yen. Punk is bunk, in a tongue and cheek way, to these rip-roaring metalheads. If Motörhead were Japanese and Lemmy a mop-topped guitarist, they might look and sound a bit like Electric Eel Shock. w/ local noise-rockers Lagitagida

* SUNDAYS @ Shinjuku Marble / 2-45-2 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, Kabukicho Exit), 7p/2500 yen. SUNDAYS frontwoman Fuyumi Kobayashi is like a much cuter, female version of Iggy Pop, sashaying about the stage while shouting her vocals and flinging sweat into the mouths of adoring fans. Who's harder-core than SUNDAYS? A: in Tokyo? Nobody. w/ 青春スカトロジー

CURRENT SHOWS
AUSTIN
* "This Is It With It As It Is" @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. LA-based artist Eve Fowler created the titular work behind this four-person exhibition, a poster-sized panel of glittering, asphalt-colored letters on fluorescent yellow. The words are derived from Gertrude Stein, but the lettering design was determined by the poster-making company: so Fowler's hand in the work is more that of guiding rather than dictating. I sense a little of her in the other three showing here, all youngish cross-media Los Angeles artists who either know or have worked with Fowler in varying degrees. Probably her closest neighbor is multidisciplinary artist Math Bass, who collaborated on a performance/sculpture/photography project with Fowler at Easthampton's Fireplace Project last year – though Bass eschews her own text-derived work in favor of these sphinxlike, watery ink drawings. Their ambiguous portraiture gives up almost exactly zero, but they hint at Bass' overarching oeuvre and her upcoming performance for Fusebox (MAY 4, check back!). Likewise Barry Macgregor Smith's objects and painted banners, both taking on different modes than their initial intent. I found Dashiell Manley's two-sided framed works the linchpin to the show and the antipode to Fowler's text paintings. While Manley's contributions – painted canvas on one side, painted and smeared glass on the obverse – are covered in numerals, many of the silvery digits are flipped into their mirror images (like they're seen from the painting's opposite side) and as a result resemble roman letters. It is this breakdown or blurring of language and communication, like Bass' representational transience, that I find really super interesting.

* Leif Low-beer @ Okay Mountain / 1619 E Cesar Chavez. I was pretty stoked to hear that Brooklynite Low-beer—who I'd met at Astoria, Queen's Socrates Sculpture Park last May (his array of brightly colored objects and forms was a highlight of that group exhibition and turned notions of "public sculpture" on its ear)—was inaugurating Okay Mountain's new space. I was doubly stoked when I arrived and found one of Low-beer's beguiling arrays (I think titled "Olive pit pedestal") crowning off an exhibition including sculptural/mixed-media hybrids and works on paper. Agglomerations including painted bead-like stacks, geometric interventions and what resembles Haim Steinbach's signature "dog chew-toys" rearrange themselves depending on POV, retaining the artist's presence and hand much as his collaged drawings and spatially distorting photography. 

* "Memento Mori" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. I've been working off a mortality tip in these Austin-area galleries. First Tiny Park, now Grayduck. This group exhibition, w/ Suzanne Koett (photography), John Mulvany (painting), and Cherie Weaver (mixed media), features local talent adept at locking humanity in a historical context. Mulvany, Irish-born and Texas-based, achieves this by painting figures from the Irish Civil War as beatific spirits looming over the sun-bleached Hill Country landscape. Retaining the figures' sepia-toned palette against the vistas' blues, greens, and earth-tones—plus the ornate retablo/devotional halos crowning them—Mulvany comments on the cyclical presence of his subjects. As in: the recurrences of war and religious movements. Weaver utilizes a ton of vintage cabinet cards in her ageless works, but they tend to be linking points or jump-offs to larger or multi-part dialogues, like the almost titular "Momentum Mori" and its pools of sumi-e echoed in the photograph's checkerboard floor, or her composites on translucent unstretched linen. I first began digging Koett's photography at this Austin-area artist group show at Gallery Black Lagoon last year, thanks to her bracing "Sabbat" series. She includes works from "The Study of Aloneness" here, ghostly composites of same-looking girls levitating in a forest's fog ("Power For Power") or in a Brutalist garage ("Rejoice, We Made the Right Choice"). It's like her "twins" are the guides for this exhibition's ideas and imagery, ushering us between consciousness and unconsciousness, life and death, to contemplate our respective existences.  

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* Corinne Wasmuht @ Friedrich Petzel Gallery / 537 W 22nd St. I had a mild acid flashback when experiencing the Berlin-based artist's 2008 solo at the gallery, covered with her huge, brightly colored and varnished abstract paintings on wood. Believe me, it was a good feeling. She returns to NYC after a series of exhibitions in Berlin and Nürnberg, celebrating her catalogue "Supracity".

* Henning Bohl "Namenloses Grauen" @ Casey Kaplan Gallery / 525 W 21st St. Massive Bohl fan here, considering his discreetly engaging solo "Psyc Holo G yHe Ute" at the gallery in 2009 and Bohl's recent architectural installation at Johann König in Berlin. Here, he screws with monochromatic paintings—sorry: "conceptualizes" them—with Japanese tape dispensers shaped like doughnuts, and other things.

* Kim Dingle "still lives" @ Sperone Westwater / 257 Bowery. The Cali-born painter of compelling and creepily faceless dolly-sized figures hasn't had a solo here since 2007, and her tongue-in-cheek press release announcing that "if what is depicted makes the artist laugh then all the more fun for the artist and maybe for the viewer, too – but it is usually an accident", sounds properly beguiling.

* Michelangelo Pistoletto "Lavoro" @ Luhring Augustine / 531 W 24th St. Pistoletto staged this new series of mirror "paintings" at London's Simon Lee Gallery last autumn, which features his signature mirrors overlaid w/ elements of construction, dust, and rubble—not exactly out of place within W. Chelsea. This show will draw mad crowds (tourists love taking photos of themselves w/in a Pistoletto mirror), but you can't really miss it either, right?

* Stan Douglas "Disco Angola" @ David Zwirner / 525 W 19th St. I dug Douglas' "Midcentury Studio" installation in the gallery last year, but I think his assuming the role of a fictional photojournalist amid NYC's roiling early '70s disco underground sounds even doper. He includes works from Angola (considering saxophonist Manu Dibango's "Soul Makossa", widely considered the first disco hit) and NY, plus the historical, political and cultural moments encompassing them.

* David Lyle "Misbehaving" @ Lyons Wier Gallery / 542 W 24th St. Classic Americana imagery warped and contextualized to with contemporary influences. That's only the tip of the proverbial artistic iceberg, though, as Lyle's methodical layering and removal of oily black veneer to his "grayscale" paintings adds a startling vintage sheen.

* Jacqueline Humphries @ Greene Naftali Gallery / 508 W 26th St 8th Fl. Some of the most…damn gorgeous kinetic abstract paintings you've ever seen, washes of oil paint, drips of enamel, sometimes silver and glitter for multiple-POV effect. Humphries hasn't had a solo stateside since 2009, and she's pretty prolific, so I'm stoked about this new body of work.

* Caio Fonseca @ Paul Kasmin Gallery / 293 10th Ave. Embellishments and extraneous elements have evaporated in Fonseca's latest series of large- and intimately-scaled paintings, which remain refreshing in their bold, reductive forms.

* Ron Gorchov @ Cheim & Read / 547 W 25th St. A recent selection of concave and convex shaped paintings by this "perennially emerging artist" (so writes Robert Storr in a 1990 catalogue essay). The curved works' innate sensuality and pleasing color combinations are traits of Gorchov's signature awesomeness.

* Peter Saul @ Mary Boone Gallery / 541 W 24th St. Who'dathunk Peter Saul—he of the acid-toned, hypnagogic-subject palette of The Hairy Who—would be getting all this buzz? Yet the grandmaster of bad taste agitprop had both a stunning solo at David Nolan Gallery in 2009 and a superb career survey at Haunch of Venison in 2010. Now Mary Boone showcases new paintings by the artist, who hasn't dialed down the lurid colors nor subject matter an ounce. Considering Occupy Wall Street and other contemporary excesses, Saul has a LOT to work with.

TOKYO
* Takashi Ishida @ Taka Ishii Gallery / 5F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). This isn't quite Anthony McCall—in Ishida's "drawing with 16mm film animation"—but I am pretty totally stoked for the artist's debut solo at the gallery.

* Ikko Narahara @ Taka Ishii Photography / 2F 6-6-9 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station). A two-part exhibition of the Fukuoka-born artist, focusing on two distinct bodies of work. The show opens with Narahara's portraiture as the theme "Sights of Civilization". Beginning Apr 17, the gallery switches to photographs of the urban landscape.

* Junta Egawa "Forgetting the new world seen a while ago, and the moment of seeing again" @ eitoeiko / 32-2 Yaraicho, Shinjuku-ku (Tokyo Metro Tozen Line to Kagurazaka Station, Toei Oedo Line to Ushigome-kagurazaka Station). In the Kanagawa-born artist's third solo at the gallery, he internalizes his paintings to meditate was what lost in the Tohoku earthquake.

* Yoko Oyama "Melody of Mephisto" @ Gallery TOSEI / 5-18-20 Chuo, Nagano-ku (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line to Shin-Nakao Station, Exit 1-2). Oyama's latest series of atmospheric photographs were taken in Hungary and bear influence of Bartok, Liszt and other composers on the artist.

* Yuichi Higashionna "Apparition" @ Yumiko Chiba Associates / 2F 4-32-6 Nishi-shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku (Toei Oedo Line to Tochomae Station, JR etc to Shinjuku Station, West Exit). I credit NY's Marianne Boesky Gallery for exposing me to this mid-career Japanese artist, whose loopy, fluorescent light sculptures and refreshingly neo-Op installations have been wigging me out since 2008. He's created a mostly new array for this exhibition.

* Yu Siuan "Greenhouse-Program" @ Radium / 2-5-17 Bakurocho, Chuo-ku (JR Yamanote Line to Bakurocho Station). The Taipei-born artist echoes Belgian Surrealist master Rene Magritte in his painterly, decaying objects.

* Trevor Brown "Toy Box" @ Span Art Gallery / 2-2-18 1F Ginza, Chuo-ku. (Yurakucho Line to Ginza-Itchome Station). Cutie-pie and devious, Brown's new series of gorgeous paintings are like children's "Golden Books" illustrations w/ sinister undertones. His wife contributes some adorable stuffed teddybear poppets as HippieCoco. (ENDS SAT)

TOKYO
* Aki Yamamoto "Cut" @ Art Front Gallery / Hillside Terrace A, 29-18 Sarugakucho, Shibuya-ku (JR Lines etc to Shibuya). Yamamoto returns to the gallery with her abstract color acuity, incorporating collage into her paintings to reconstruct particular worldly observations.

* Hisami Tanaka "NOSELF" @ waitingroom / 4B 2-8-11 Ebisu-nishi, Shibuya-ku (JR Yamanote Line/Hibiya Line to Ebisu Station, West Exit). New jagged mixed-media paintings and drawings by the Kanagawa-based artist, in his debut at the gallery. I saw a little preview of Tanaka's work at waitingroom's booth at New City Art Fair in NYC, and guess what: it's dope. (ENDS SUN)

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

fee's LIST / through 4/24

WEDNESDAY
NYC
* Bad Brains + GZA @ Music Hall of Williamsburg / 66 N 6th St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford), 7p/SOLD OUT. Duh, of course this is sold out, dudes. Bad Brains' frontman HR might be pulling that blissed-out routine but don't doubt for a second these DC original punks squander any full-throttle ferocity on his smoked dub. Plus, steely Wu-Tang lyricist GZA performs "Liquid Swords", one of the pillars of East Coast hip-hop. That's right.

* Unsound Opening Night: Jenny Hval + Julia Holter + Julia Kent @ ISSUE Project Room / 110 Livingston St, Boerum Hill (45 to Borough Hall, 23 to Hoyt St, AC/F to Jay St/Metrotech), 9p/$15. The third annual Unsound Festival kicks off in a big way, in this gathering of the "J's": Norwegian avant-garde soundscaper Hval, NYC-based cellist/vocalist Kent, and LA singer-songwriter Holter.

TOKYO
* "Four Sticks" feat. unkie + about tess @ Fever / 1-1-14 Hanegi, Setagaya-ku (Odakyu Inokashira Line to Shindaita or Shimokitazawa Stations), 6p/2500 yen. Totally apt name for this night of fast and furious instrumental rock. The math-y six-piece about tees contribute two of those "sticks", and a third goes to unkie's thrash-happy drumming. w/ Aureole

THURSDAY
NYC
* Nina Yuen "The School" @ Lombard-Freid Projects / 518 W 19th St. Huge Yuen fan here, ever since her 2010 debut at the gallery enchanted me to no end. The NJ-based artist debuts a series of five recent videos as "The School", revolving around memory, childhood, and related rites of passage, incl. "Mr. President" and "Heather Who".

* Alan Michael "Back to the Docks" @ Marc Jancou Contemporary / 524 W 24th St. The Scottish artist's first NY exhibition, feat. a new series of paintings and works on paper appropriating abstract ideas.

* "Suspiria" (dir. Dario Argento, 1977) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. THE Dario Argento film (and more broadly, THE giallo film) finds the mad Italian master at his bloodiest Technicolor best. Beginning w/ a breath-catching opening gore-fest and sweeping into a tornado of Goblin-induced psychedelia w/ girls dying off one by one as their dance academy manifests a portal to a witches' coven!

AUSTIN
* Melvins (Washington) + Unsane (NYC) @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 7p/$20. Original drone-rock lords Melvins coat the 'Hawk in several layers of rumbling sludge. That's after NY's anti-fun Unsane wallop you upside the head with the most cathartic noise rock, ever. Think you're hardcore? w/ Same Sack

TOKYO
* SUNDAYS @ Shinjuku Marble / 2-45-2 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, Kabukicho Exit), 6p/2500. SUNDAYS frontwoman Fuyumi Kobayashi is like a much cuter, female version of Iggy Pop, sashaying about the stage while shouting her vocals and flinging sweat into the mouths of adoring fans. Who's harder-core than SUNDAYS? A: in Tokyo? Nobody. w/ The Homesicks

FRIDAY
NYC
* Martha Rosler "Cuba, January 1981" @ Mitchell-Innes & Nash / 534 W 26th St. The first exhibition of Rosler's vintage b&w photography series, taken during a cultural tour of Cuba organized by artist Ana Mendieta and writer/curator Lucy Lippard, presenting a crucial period in modern history. Rosler was just honored at the Brooklyn Museum's annual gala.

* "Goodbye First Love" (dir. Mia Hansen-Løve, 2011) @ IFC Center / 323 Sixth Ave (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St). Youth romance never looked so stunning, starring cutiepie Lola Créton ("Bluebeard") and shot by the amazing young director Hansen-Løve. Part of the 2011 NYFF.

* "Inferno" (dir. Dario Argento, 1980) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. What "Suspiria" started, this underappreciated supernatural "sequel" of sorts sends straight to hell, a hell full of torrential downpours, mysterious music-school students (cue the beguiling Ania Pieroni, wind and sun in her hair), possessed cats and lots of killin'!

* Unsound Fest 2012: Pole + Sun Araw Band @ (le) poisson rouge / 158 Bleecker St (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St), 6p/$15. Dude, this is MAYJAH: Stefan "Pole" Betke, the Cologne genius behind glitch-electronic trilogy "1, 2, 3" performs LIVE during Unsound Fest. Apparently he's become pretty funky now, but I'm game for whatever. Plus avant-afrobeat champs Sun Araw Band.

* Heliotropes @ The Grand Victory / 245 Grand St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), 8p/$8. I think my second or third time seeing Brooklyn all-grrrl stoner rockers Heliotropes was at Bruar Falls, now called The Grand Victory. I mean, the joint could be called "Terminal 5" and I'd still haul my ass out to see Heliotropes rock the roof off with their sludgy riffs. w/ Vagina Panther

AUSTIN
* "Oldboy" (dir. Park Chan-wook, 2003) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 11p. One of the greatest openers in contemporary cinema and THE film that put Korean auteur Park on the Western film map. Feat. a batshit side-scrolling-style action sequence involving a rangy Choi Min-sik and his trusty hammer vs. like 30 bad guys! Also feat. so many devastating plot twists, it's better I don't tell you any more. The less you know, the heavier this ultimate revenge drama hits. ALSO SAT

SATURDAY
NYC
* Brice Marden "New Paintings" @ Matthew Marks Gallery / 526 W 22nd St. Considering his measured and deliberate (OK: slow) work style, this new two-part exhibition of Marden's paintings unveils a ton of new material, all created after his traveling retrospective that commenced at MoMA in 2007. At the gallery's 502 space, Marden shows "Ru Ware Project", nine small rainwater-blue panels echoing the rarest of ancient Chinese pottery. Twelve oil-on-marble works from Hydra fill the 526 space, plus the large oil on linen work "Polke Letter", in homage to Marden's contemporary Sigmar Polke.

* "La terza madre/Mother of Tears" (dir. Dario Argento, 2007) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. Twenty-seven years after "Inferno", Argento concludes his "Three Mothers" trilogy w/ this gruesome contemporary masterpiece, unloading his dear daughter Asia as the witch's target and only threat.

* Memoryhouse (Ontario) @ Public Assembly / 70 N 6th St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford), 8p/$14. Nascent hypnopop par excellent! C'est Memoryhouse. w/ Matteah Balm

* The Suzan @ Glasslands / 289 Kent Ave, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), 8:30p/$10. I count Japanese all-girl tropic-pop band The Suzan as among the coolest, most creative acts on the local scene. Japan, let's keep 'em awhile longer, please? w/ Terry Malts

AUSTIN
* "This Is It With It As It Is" @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. The exhibition title is echoed in Eve Fowler's text painting, riffing off Gertrude Stein's "How to Write" and forming a conceptual framework of language and reference explored by Fowler and her LA-based artistic kindred. Math Bass, Dashiell Manley, and Barry Macgregor Johnston add respective ingredients to the equation, plus each contribute a performance, in conjunction with Fusebox's eponymous 2012 Festival (check back in early May for that info).

* Garbage @ La Zona Rosa / 612 W 4th St, 8p/SOLD OUT! The epic, glorious crunch of "Blood for Poppies", lead single off upcoming LP "Not Your Kind of People"—Garbage's first in six years and signaling their first live performances since 2007—caused many a darkling to swoon…or just totally get down. Because the wildly influential alt-rockers, anchored by überproducer Butch Vig and fronted by celestial contralto Shirley Manson, are totally back again.

* Curren$y @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 8p/$25. In my experience, Austin tends to have better weed than NYC—or better immediate connections unless we're talking Canada. That's a good thing when smoked-out lyricist Curren$y rolls up on his "Jet Life Tour", w/ The Jets (Smoke DZA, Fiend 4 Da Money, Corner Boy P, Trademark and Young Roddy).

TOKYO
* Yuichiro Natori @ Kido Press, Inc / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Toei Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Gorgeous, painted cut-paper animation in a charming, new video from the Tokyo artist, plus static works and sketches.

* Nana Funo @ Tomio Koyama Gallery / 7F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station). The young artist from Shizuoka includes drawing notebooks in her second solo exhibition at the gallery, plus kaleidoscopically detailed mixed media paintings of engrossing fantasy worlds.
+ Mika Ninagawa "Plant a Tree". The photographer and director (her feature film debut "Sakuran" I dug like totally) amps up the seasonal saturation.

* 「裏切りサーカス」/"Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" (dir. Thomas Alfredson, 2011) @ TOHO Cinemas Charter / 1-2-2- Yurakucho, Chiyoda-ku (Yurakucho Line to Yurakucho Station, Tokyo Metro Marunouchi/Hibiya/Ginza Lines to Ginza Station). Japanese title for the labyrinthine adaptation of John le Carré's modern espionage novel translates as "Traitor Circus", which sounds both kind of funnily to-the-point and also reveals the circa '73 codeword for British Intelligence, i.e. "the Circus". Anyway, Gary Oldman and team are awesome, no matter how dense the plot.

* 「センチメンタルヤスコ」 @ Eurospace / 1-13 Maruyama-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit). Living in the darkness of solitude in this modern age, "Sentimental Yasuko" tries to overcome loneliness via blips of love from the dudes around her. Then some bad shit goes down. Starring Azusa Okamoto, the teen idol from detective story J-drama "Strawberry Night".

* Japan Shoegazer Fest 2012 @ Koenji High / 4-30-1 Koenji-Minami, Suginami-ku (Chuo Line to Koenji Station), 12p/3500 yen. Yep, I absolutely definitely wish I were in Tokyo now for this awesome slice of regional, glorious noise. Feat. Lemon's Chair (Osaka), PLASTIC GIRL IN CLOSET (Morioka-shi), Sugardrop (Tokyo), Shojo Skip (Tokyo) +tons more.

* Who the Bitch @ Shelter / B1 2-6-10 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, South Exit), 7p/SOLD OUT! What do you expect with a night billing itself as "Who the Fuck vol. 13: WILD Bitch Party!!", with suggestions for enjoying Who the Bitch vs. FUZZY CONTROL as 1) go bonkers (at least 3x more than usual), 2) pound back drinks, and 3) get naked (body and mind).

* Miila and the Geeks @ Shibuya HOME / B1F 1-10-7 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Miyamasuzaka Exit), 11p/2000 yen. After like a solid year of touring in support of slightly sinister, garage-rock debut "New Age", the lovable indie-pop trio Miila and the Geeks are baaaack! Singer/songwriter Moe Wadaka's group (she's Miila, saxophonist Komori and drummer Ajima the geeks), are a triumph for the indie scene, plus Moe's behind the band's fractured lovely music videos. w/ Moscow Club

* DODDODO @ Basement Bar / B1F 5-18-1 Daizawa, Setagaya-ku (Odakyu/Keio Inokashira Line to Shimo-kitazawa Station, South Exit), 6:30p/2500 yen. What's iller than Kansai noise-sprite Namin Haku, aka DODDODO? A: almost nothing, but the addition of consummate spaz-rockers Zoobombs comes close!

SUNDAY
NYC
* "Towards a Warm Math" @ On Stellar Rays / 133 Orchard St. The title riffs off exhibiting artist Lucas Blalock's book and hints at what's in store: works that mingle mathematics and science with ooey-gooey humanism and personal effects. Feat. Brody Condon, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Ionel Talpazan, Guy de Cointet, Barbara Kasten, the mighty Yayoi Kusama, and more.

AUSTIN
* Shabazz Palaces (Seattle) + !!! (Cali) @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 6:30p/$14. Bicoastal funk-bop ensemble !!!—Chk Chk Chk to you newbies—lead the Hill Country's sweatiest dance-off, w/ short-shorts-clad Nic Offer and (hopefully!) Light Asylum's Shannon Funchess directing the action. Seattle hip-hop collective Shabazz Palaces headline, led by Ishmael Butler (aka "Butterfly", one esteemed third of next-level rappers Digable Planets) and multi-instrumentalist Tendai "Baba" Maraire. w/ 10yr

TOKYO
* "Makoto Aida's World" @ Mori Art Museum / Roppongi Hills Mori Tower (53F), 6-10-1 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station), 3p/FREE. In expectation for Nov's surely bonkers career retrospective of Japanese contemporary art's most subversive—think the anti-pop Murakami—the museum stages a three-part seminar on Aida-san, feat. a talk by Mori curator Mami Kataoka; Tetsuya Ozaki (editor-in-chief of "REALTOKYO") leads a wild discussion on Aida's work w/ Mariko Asabuki (author of "KITOTOWA" and winner of the 144th Akutagawa Prize), Eiichiro Kokubo (Division of Theoretical Astronomy at National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), and Nameko Shinsan (media activist, columnist, and manga artist); finally an overview of the "Makoto Aida: Heisei-kanjin Project".

* FEVER 3rd Anniversary, feat. TADZIO, Shinji Masuko etc @ Fever / 1-1-14 Hanegi, Setagaya-ku (Odakyu Inokashira Line to Shindaita or Shimokitazawa Stations), 7p/3000 yen. The two PYTs who play as TADZIO unleash some of Tokyo's most ferocious noise-rock. Don't underestimate 'em. Plus the charismatic Shinji Masuko (of Boredoms!) and the Floating Guitar Orchestra. w/ Live Loves

MONDAY
NYC
* Lotte Van den Audenaeren "Potentialis" @ Moore St Market / 110 Moore St, Bushwick (L to Montrose, JM to Flushing), 5:30p. The engaging Belgian multimedia artist, completing her ISCP residency this May, unveils her most recent site-specific urban intervention. She leads a walkthrough at 5:30p, followed by a roundtable discussion.

* "Sound of my Voice" (dir. Zal Batmanglij, 2011) @ reRun Theatre / 147 Front St, DUMBO (F to York St, AC to High St), 7p/FREE (arrive early!). Pretty neat: straight off Sundance and SXSW comes this contemporary cultish infiltration by lovably nerdy couple Peter & Lorna…only once inside, the otherworldliness of the group—and particularly charismatic young leader Maggie (Brit Marling)—could prove to be their undoing. Marling, who cowrote the film, attends this preview screening w/ dir. Batmanglij for a Q&A.

TUESDAY
NYC
* Nite Jewel @ Bowery Ballroom / 6 Delancey St (F/JMZ to Essex/Delancey), 7:30p/$15. I've been digging the gauzy pop refrains of Nite Jewel (né Ramona Gonzalez) since her 2010 EP "Am I Real?"—and her spanking new LP "One Second of Love" totally affirms that. w/ Mac deMarco

AUSTIN
* "The Abominable Dr. Phibes" (dir. Robert Fuest, 1971) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. The late, great Vincent Price plays a severely disfigured genius enacting revenge on the doctors he believes killed his hot wife—via the "Ten Plagues of Egypt" method! Like: a mechanical frog mask, ice machine, and a "Hostel"-worthy death by locusts. So I ask you: "Are you…ready…for Dr. Phibes?"

CURRENT SHOWS
AUSTIN
* Leif Low-beer @ Okay Mountain / 1619 E Cesar Chavez. I was pretty stoked to hear that Brooklynite Low-beer—who I'd met at Astoria, Queen's Socrates Sculpture Park last May (his array of brightly colored objects and forms was a highlight of that group exhibition and turned notions of "public sculpture" on its ear)—was inaugurating Okay Mountain's new space. I was doubly stoked when I arrived and found one of Low-beer's beguiling arrays (I think titled "Olive pit pedestal") crowning off an exhibition including sculptural/mixed-media hybrids and works on paper. Agglomerations including painted bead-like stacks, geometric interventions and what resembles Haim Steinbach's signature "dog chew-toys" rearrange themselves depending on POV, retaining the artist's presence and hand much as his collaged drawings and spatially distorting photography.

* "Memento Mori" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. I've been working off a mortality tip in these Austin-area galleries. First Tiny Park, now Grayduck. This group exhibition, w/ Suzanne Koett (photography), John Mulvany (painting), and Cherie Weaver (mixed media), features local talent adept at locking humanity in a historical context. Mulvany, Irish-born and Texas-based, achieves this by painting figures from the Irish Civil War as beatific spirits looming over the sun-bleached Hill Country landscape. Retaining the figures' sepia-toned palette against the vistas' blues, greens, and earth-tones—plus the ornate retablo/devotional halos crowning them—Mulvany comments on the cyclical presence of his subjects. As in: the recurrences of war and religious movements. Weaver utilizes a ton of vintage cabinet cards in her ageless works, but they tend to be linking points or jump-offs to larger or multi-part dialogues, like the almost titular "Momentum Mori" and its pools of sumi-e echoed in the photograph's checkerboard floor, or her composites on translucent unstretched linen. I first began digging Koett's photography at this Austin-area artist group show at Gallery Black Lagoon last year, thanks to her bracing "Sabbat" series. She includes works from "The Study of Aloneness" here, ghostly composites of same-looking girls levitating in a forest's fog ("Power For Power") or in a Brutalist garage ("Rejoice, We Made the Right Choice"). It's like her "twins" are the guides for this exhibition's ideas and imagery, ushering us between consciousness and unconsciousness, life and death, to contemplate our respective existences.

* Holly Wilson "It's a Thin Line" @ Wally Workman Gallery / 1202 W Sixth St. My favorite part of this Oklahoma-based artist's solo exhibition was her molding of shiny encaustic on painted birch panels, blending the cast-bronze long-limbed sprites that recur elsewhere in the show w/ 2D space in a really stunning sculpture-painting hybrid. Elsewhere, the bird-masked girls (or sometimes boys) perched on carved poplar and red oak are handsome in their inherent vulnerabilities.

* Sarah Milbrath "Territory" @ Forus Gallery / 608 W 51st St. Pair domestic animals with their respective understandings of personal boundaries and invisible borders, and you have a very conscious, very cute photography show by the Austin-based artist. Milbrath's own connection with her subjects adds a whole 'nother layer to this series, as her nearness could elicit a dog's mournful gaze or a cat's wary stare—then she clicks the shutter.

* Conrad Bakker "Untitled Project: RECORD SHOP [45s] @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. I visited Tokyo indie gallery eitoeiko during New City Art Fair in NYC and noted they were showing artist Masaru Aikawa, whose signature style includes hand-painting CD-sized squares of canvas to expertly replicate CD artwork, only in obviously painterly style. Bakker is also re-presenting music as art, in this case rough-hewn wooden "45's" painted to mimic album jackets, but his execution feels uniquely Bakker-ish. Meaning: he doesn't go as far as Aikawa in the trompe-l'oeil effect, so his artwork, while clearly resembling LPs (Depeche Mode and Phil Collins here, Bob Marley and Joni Mitchell there), more accurately look like little paintings, down to their respective quirky, handmade essences.

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* Fred Sandback "Decades" @ David Zwirner / 519 W 19th St. A really fine survey of Sandback's long career of spatial interventions spanning three decades of work. His "Untitled (Sculptural Study, Four-part Mikado Construction)" features four aqua acrylic yarns zigzagging across half the front gallery, while the Kerf-cut Plexiglas "Untitled" emulates his linear sculptures while remaining fully 2D. The even crazier "16 Variations of 2 Diagonal Lines" explores front and back galleries with opposing pinkie-thick bands of yellow yarn, boring through walls and careening through diagonal space. An artist's book and selection of drawings fill out the show.

* Douglas Huebler "Crocodile Tears" @ Paula Cooper Gallery / 521 W 21st St. I went into this sorta Existentialist show from the Estate of Huebler knowing little about the man except that he paired text and images with panache. I left with a solid appreciation of his "Variable Piece"—a project to "photographically document the existence of everyone alive"—that slid between conceptual reconfigurations of Magritte, Cézanne, Gauguin and Mondrian with photography and Huebler's own text.

* Paul Graham "The Present" @ The Pace Gallery / 545 W 22nd St. Pace debuts the NY-based British photographer's latest body of work, his first exhibition in the States since 2009. "The Present" includes diptych and triptych photographic works, highlighting serendipitous moments of a city constantly in motion. A new monograph, published by MACK, accompanies the exhibition.

* Liz Magic Laser @ Derek Eller Gallery / 615 W 27th St. Were you cool enough to catch Laser's Performa-commissioned video "I Feel Your Pain", performed, filmed and edited live in the midst of a theatre audience during last year's Performa 11? The end result is featured here, alongside the live performance "The Digital Face", which became a two-channel slide projection in the gallery.

TOKYO
* Hitomi Motoki "The fantasy bedroom-Girl and Foretaste-" @ Gallery MOMO / 2F 6-2-6 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Toei Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station). Motoki conjures a dreamworld of absurdity and nostalgia in her figurative carved-wood sculpture and installation. (ENDS SAT)

NYC
* The Generational: "The Ungovernables" @ New Museum / 235 Bowery (F to 2nd Ave, 6 to Spring St). Eungie Joo curated a superb iteration of the New Museum's Generational triennial. Stoked as I was for the 2009 inaugural, cheekily coined "Younger Than Jesus", it was so in-your-face that it left little deep meanings after I left the exhibition. Not so with "The Ungovernables", a panoply of 34 artists, groups and temporary collectives who are all about as young as Jesus and most have never exhibited "here" before. Here meaning in the U.S., so this is an awesome gaze into the greater art-making world, with its complicated cultural surroundings—take the artist-led initiative Invisible Borders Trans-African Photography Project for one, Tel Aviv-based performative research group Public Movement as another. Lebanese artist Hassan Khan's booming, swaying video installation "Jewel", of a dance-off b/w two Middle Eastern men; Mounira Al Solh's wall of figurative drawings executed in the guise of a male; and Jose Antonio Vega Macotela's temporal "Time Exchanges" with inmates each comment on identity and relation, as does Pilvi Takala's impassive takedown of a Helsinki office-space—and all this is on just the 2nd fl. Julia Dault's delicate rolled Plexi and Slavs & Tatars' "Prayway" rug with rice-burner fluorescents are some of the 3rd Fl's most eye-catching. And on the 4th fl, even the artists who have shown "here" bring a multifaceted experience of moving through contemporary society, like Danh Vo's "WE THE PEOPLE", a deconstructed part of the Statue of Liberty, fabricated with pounded copper sheets in China and installed like parts of a massive candy wrapper; or Londoner Lynette Yiadom-Boakye's haunting portraiture paintings of figures existing not in reality, though their enlivening gaze won't leave us alone. And there's Adrian Villar Rojas' much-buzzed modular behemoth "A person loved me", rendered on-site in fragile clay as artifact and beautiful artwork formed by minimal resources and expert teamwork. You'll want to excavate further, to really know these artists, their backgrounds and current concerns and approaches. (ENDS SUN)

NYC
* E.V. Day & Kembra Pfahler "GIVERNY" @ The Hole / 312 Bowery. So beyond the gorgeous photographs by Day (taken at an artist residency at Giverny) feat. Pfahler in her Karen Black getup posing amid waterlilies and Japanese foot-bridges is the artworks' surrounding installation: a recreation of Monet's Giverny garden, replete w/ aforementioned waterlilies and Japanese foot-bridge. Damn awesome. (ENDS TUE)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

fee's LIST / through 4/17

WEDNESDAY
NYC
* Charles Atlas "Ocean" screening @ Whitney Museum / 945 Madison Ave (6 to 77th St), 2/4p. Have you seen Atlas' video installation inaugurating Luhring Augustine's Bushwick gallery? This one is totally different!: a feature-length recording of Merce Cunningham's ambitious public performance "Ocean" (1994), set at the bottom of Minnesota's Rainbow Granite Quarry and involving a 150-piece orchestra, Cunningham's dance company, and some 4,500 audience members. Atlas filmed three performances from this production, among the final living record of Cunningham's work. ALSO THU 12/4p, SAT 12/2p, SUN 2/4p.

* "L'uccello dale plume di cristallo/The Bird with the Crystal Plumage" (dir. Dario Argento, 1970) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. All Argento, all the time! The MAD Museum's eye-dilating fest on the brutally creative film family continues w/ giallo maestro Dario Argento's directorial debut. And no matter how spacey ("Four Flies on Grey Velvet") or weak ("The Mother of Tears") he got, no matter how many other directors copied those black leather gloves and sharp objects, there will always be "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage"—stalked women, sadomasochism, and visionary cinematography.

* The Aislers Set + Pipas + Bridget St John @ Bell House / 149 7th St, Gowanus (F/G/R to 9th St/4th Ave), 7p/SOLD OUT!. For the love of pop! The classic (i.e. circa '92) indie-pop 'zine "chickfactor" turns 20 and they're throwing a mega-massive three-night residency at Bell House, feat. legendary and local bands. Night two is a biggie: Bay Area combo The Aislers Set headline, plus chickfactor-approved duo Pipas (from both sides of "the Pond"), and Brit folk-pop artist Bridget St John.

AUSTIN
* "Breathless" (dir. Jean-Luc Godard, 1960) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 7p. There's never been an American in Paris film quite like JLG's Nouvelle Vague forerunner, pairing wide-eyed Jean Seberg w/ rakish Bogart wannabe Jean-Paul Belmondo, played out in truly cutting-edge jump-cuts as they evade the police until, like the film's title, "a bout de souffle".

* Real Estate (NJ) @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 7:30p/$15. In the wave of surf-rock that crashed into the northeast a few years back, no one played it sunnier or smarter than Ridgewood four-piece Real Estate. Which is why they're still around today, and better than ever. w/ The Twerps

TOKYO
* Eikoh Hosoe @ BLD Gallery / 2-4-9 Ginza, Chuo Ward Tokyo (JR Yurakucho Station, Marunouchi Line to Ginza Station). Part 5 and the penultimate installment of the gallery's season-long series on the modernist photographer focuses on Hosoe's portraiture.

* Naoko Majima "Fey" @ Mizuma Art Gallery / 2F 3-13 Ichigayatamachi, Shinjuku-ku (Yurakucho/Nanboku Lines to Ichigaya Station). A milestone exhibition for the mid-career artist, whose large-scale, ominous drawings took on a renewed vitality in the wake of last year's devastating Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. She pairs these works with new sculptures.

* tokyoDOLORES 「赤頭巾」/"Dear my red hunter" @ Atelier Fontaine / 5-13-13 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station), 6&8p/4000 yen. Actress and dancer Cay Izumi leads her contemporary dance troupe tokyoDOLORES in a retelling of "Little Red Riding Hood" that puts the psychological realm of human darkness front and center. Mesmerizing and very sexy. ALSO THURS

THURSDAY
NYC
* Honey Bunch + Stevie Jackson (Belle & Sebastian) + The Softies @ Bell House / 149 7th St, Gowanus (F/G/R to 9th St/4th Ave), 7p/SOLD OUT! For the love of pop! The classic (i.e. circa '92) indie-pop 'zine "chickfactor" turns 20 and they're throwing a mega-massive three-night residency at Bell House, feat. legendary and local bands. The final night goes off w/ a velvet-wrapped bang, courtesy early Slumberland band Honey Bunch, Londoners The Pines (feat. chickfactor co-founder/Black Tambourine singer Pam Berry), self-titular The Softies and Belle & Sebastian's Stevie Jackson (the guy who wrote a song called "chickfactor").

AUSTIN
* Rebecca Jane Rodriguez & Dustin Kilgore "Sacred Land Grab" @ Co-Lab / 613 Allen St, 8p. The artists host a Super 8 video installation and two-channel slideshow that blend footage of the American West with ambient audio for a self-reflective road trip.

TOKYO
* Oreskaband @ Club Quattro / 5F 32-13 Udagawa-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station), 7p/2800 yen. A Kansai-area all-grrrl ska band sounds right up my alley, and Oreskaband are super dope, too. They perform a sorta-rare local show before heading back west for a bunch of dates. Don't miss it!

FRIDAY
NYC
* Joanna Malinowska "Fieldwork" @ Whitney Museum / 945 Madison Ave (6 to 77th St), 7:30p. The Polish-born artist's contribution to this year's Biennial relates around American Indian Movement activist Leonard Peltier (a "smuggled in" canvas), plus a video installation of the artist juxtaposing indigenous culture with art via some "chic de yucca" elixir. Her performance this evening, in collaboration w/ NY's Hungry March Band, examines de-contextualized rituals, from transcendentalism to the Native American Ghost Dance.

* "Il gatto a nove code/The Cat o' Nine Tails" (dir. Dario Argento, 1971) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. Rejoice! The MAD Museum is smartly showing the full edit of Argento's second directorial effort, which has less to do w/ whips and felines than NINE leads used by a journalist and "puzzle solver" to catch a knifer of women.

* Black Pus @ Death By Audio / 49 S 2nd St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), 8p/$7. Brian Chippendale, the kinetic half of local trash lords Lightning Bolt, once again decimates my favorite indie Brooklyn venue under his noisier personal, Black Pus. How one guy in a knit mask can cause that much devastation on a tricked-out drumkit is anyone's guess…but Chippendale brings it every damn time. w/ Mounds & Alien Whale (both ex-usaisamonster)

AUSTIN
* "Cabin in the Woods" (dir. Drew Goddard, 2011) @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St. Ever since last December, I've been hearing how dope this film is, how it's a gamechanger in the horror realm, one of THE BEST American horror films in a long while. So I've done my best to block out every/single/trailer/image/review/Q&A whatever and go into this chiller totally fresh. I cannot wait any longer.

* "The Kid with a Bike" (dirs. les freres Dardenne, 2011) @ Violet Crown Cinema / 434 W 2nd St. They should subhed this "starring Cécile de France" and BAM I'm there. But really, this 2011 Cannes Film Festival Grand Prix winner is a delightful turn for Belgian bros Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne. It could almost be a decade sequel to their heart-wrenching film "L'enfant", w/ the abandoned baby now a preteen boy befriending sweet Cécile.

* "Juan of the Dead" (dir. Alejandro Brugués, 2011) @ Alamo Drafthouse Village / 2700 W Anderson Ln, 10p. Fantastic Fest 2011 favorite from a right-likable director, this isn't just Cuba's first proper horror film, it's also a damn fine tale of zombies! If you're thinking "Shaun of the Dead", you're mostly right: that level of creative humor and disgusting wit.

TOKYO
* Aki Yamamoto "Cut" @ Art Front Gallery / Hillside Terrace A, 29-18 Sarugakucho, Shibuya-ku (JR Lines etc to Shibuya). Yamamoto returns to the gallery with her abstract color acuity, incorporating collage into her paintings to reconstruct particular worldly observations.

SATURDAY
NYC
* "Bad Girls of 2012", organized by Jamie Sterns @ Interstate Projects / 56 Bogart St, E. Williamsburg (L to Morgan). What does it mean to be a "bad girl" in contemporary art? Marcia Tucker (New Museum founder/director) organized the original "Bad Girls" exhibition in '94. Now Sterns takes it on, culling eight bleeding-edge talents, incl. Croatian-born duo Dora + Maja, painter Denise Kupferschmidt, and LIST-favorite (and participant in MoMA PS1's "Greater NY") Amy Yao.

* Ernesto Neto @ Tanya Bonakdar Gallery / 521 W 21st St. The Brazilian artist achieves the most beguiling atmospheres via "just" crocheted netting and spices, transforming dull white-boxes into exciting, emotive environments. He has free reign over both floors of Bonkadar's gallery this time and puts them to good use: via a monumental installation on the ground floor, a bridgelike structure that visitors can climb inside, and biomorphic interventions on the stairs and second floor.

* Mike Kelley: video tribute @ DIA Art Foundation / 541 W 22nd St (CE to 23rd St), 10a-10p. Clear your schedules, art-lovers: DIA and Electronic Arts Intermix organized a 12-hour tribute to the late, great artist, feat. screenings of his seminal films incl. "The Banana Man" (1983), "Heidi" (1992, w/ Paul McCarthy), personal favorite "Day is Done, Part 1" (2005-6) and recent work "A Voyage of Growth and Discovery" (2011, in collab w/ Michael Smith).

* "Quattro mosche di velluto grigio/Four Flies on Gray Velvet" (dir. Dario Argento, 1971) screening @ MAD Museum / 2 Columbus Circle (CE/123 to 59th St/Columbus Circle), 7p. Among Argento's most batshit films—and that's saying something—is this bloody web of blackmail, masked assassins, and a truly stunning slo-mo car crash (and that's not counting the "image caught in the retina" plot device).

* Miguel Migs + Mark Farina @ (le) poisson rouge / 158 Bleecker St (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St), 11p/$20. OK so this is like taking it back to '02, but you pair Migs' sun-drenched deep-house jams (see "Colorful You") and Farina's smoked-out "mushroom jazz" (see titular series), you'll have a damn good time.

AUSTIN
* Leif Low-beer @ Okay Mountain / 1619 E Cesar Chavez. The artist collective reopens its doors to a Brookynite, the supremely mind-blowing Low-beer (I've seen his work in Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens), who contributes new collaged drawings, sculpture, and photography to this exhibition.

* Frankie Rose (Brooklyn) + DIVE (Brooklyn) @ Red 7 / 611 E 7th St, 9p/$10. Brooklyn's indie-rock mainstay Miss Frankie Rose traded drumsticks for the mic, but luckily her charisma and knockout songbird vox followed her. Her second LP "Interstellar" is starry-eyed cool and just gorgeous to hear. She's joined by Beach Fossils' guitarist Cole Smith's young psych-rock outfit DIVE, who are just doing everything right and have an LP on the way.

* The Pharcyde (LA) @ Beauty Ballroom / 2015 E Riverside Dr, 9p/$25. South Central alt-rap all-stars The Pharcyde reunited! Meaning both charismatic Tre (aka Slimkid3) AND storyteller Fatlip. Gonna be a bizarre ride indeed. w/ ZEALE

* Artificial Music Machine 10th Anniversary party #2 @ Space Tower / 3410 E. Pennsylvania Ave, 7p/FREE. The local alt-electronic label celebrates a decade of drone and ambience, w/ live sets by Thomas Fang, Daze of Heaven, Smokey Emery, Spagirus, and R. Lee Dockery, w/ special guests.

TOKYO
* Mats Gustafson "Trees and Rocks" @ MA2 Gallery / 3-3-8 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku (Yamanote Line to Ebisu Station). Not to be confused w/ Mats GUSTAFSSON, the futuristic sax player, this is the NY-based Swedish artist Gustafson, whose cool palette and silky figurative style contribute a scintillating mono-no-aware to the Tokyo gallery.

* TETTA "incloud" @ Gallery MOMO Ryogoku / 1F 1-7-15 Kamezawa, Sumida-ku (Toei Oedo/JR Sobu Line to Ryogoku Station). The Kanagawa-born artist presents a contemporary take on Kannon imagery and Buddhism in this series of ink and oils on plywood.

* 昭和な夜 @ Bar 9259 / 2F 1-1-2 Okubo, Shinjuku-ku (Fukutoshin/Toei Oedo Lines to Higashi-shinjuku Station), 11p. Get past front-door security and you'll be ushered into this fetish bar's take on the glorious Shojo Period, meaning the Swingin' '20s through, uh, Japanese Nationalism and the 2nd World War, up into prosperity and the postwar bubble economy in the '80s. Expect excess, decadence, and deviance, w/ special guests Aloe (of pole-dancing artisans tokyoDOLORES and go-go girls Nasty Cats) and AV actress and stripper Miho Wakabayashi. Tantalized much??

* CAUCUS @ Minami-ikebukuro Music.Org / B2 1-20-11 Minami-ikebukuro,Toshima-ku (JR Yamanote/Tokyo Metro lines to Ikebukuro Station, West Exit), 7p/2000 yen. A night of primo dream-pop. I'm smitten w/ Tokyo darlings CAUCUS ever since I saw 'em at NYC Popfest 2011 (the sole Japanese band there, though they share members w/ Smilelove) and their prowess for catchy indie-pop spans both covering intriguing underground '90s acts (Rocketship) and their own unique arrangements. w/ Hello Hawk

* SUNDAYS @ Shinjuku Marble / 2-45-2 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, Kabukicho Exit), 6p/2500. SUNDAYS frontwoman Fuyumi Kobayashi is like a much cuter, female version of Iggy Pop, sashaying about the stage while shouting her vocals and flinging sweat into the mouths of adoring fans. Who's harder-core than SUNDAYS? A: in Tokyo? Nobody. w/ toitoitoi & Menoz

SUNDAY
NYC
* Sylvia Kastel + Ninni Morgia, Marcia Bassett @ 285 Kent Ave, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), 8p/$10. Local free-rock guitarist Morgia and avant synth goddess Kastel pair beautiful sonics together and in their "two couples" collabs w/ neo-Dadaists Mama Baer and Kommissar Hjuler. Marcia Bassett is a former member of psychedelic noisicians Double Leopards. w/ Licker (Pengo)

TOKYO
* RECORIDE @ Shibuya Glad / 3F 2--21-7 Dogenzaka, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 6:30/3000 yen. Celebrate gritty '80s style in local electroclash punks RECORIDE's debut LP release party! The lead video for track 「星屑のmp3」 (uh, "stardust mp3") is so untrendy that it's actually super-cool and sexy.

* BORZOIQ @ Shibuya Milkyway / 3F 4-7 Udagawa-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 6p/3500 yen. BORZOIQ is a local supergroup of sorts, comprised of members from local indie-rock mainstays TRICERATOPS and Jake stone garage, and anchored by Mellowhead guitarist Motoaki Fukanuma and vocalist/force-of-nature Lucy. Their debut LP release party coincides w/ RECORIDE's and you gotta ask yourself: do you want melodic alt-rock that cuts deep? If so, BORZOIQ is the answer.

* 住所不定無職 @ Shibuya O-Nest / 6F 2-3 Maruyama-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 6:30p/3200 yen. "Sound and Smile Chemistry" is the name of this showcase. You put art-rock grrrls 住所不定無職 (lit. "No job nor permanent address") on that roster, and I'll believe it! w/ THIS IS PANIC and WEEKEND

MONDAY
NYC
* Asobi Seksu @ Highline Ballroom / 431 W 16th St (ACE to 8th Ave), 8p/$30. The 5th Annual Roe on the Rocks Benefit for Planned Parenthood of NYC, with local dream-pop darlings Asobi Seksu headlining. It's a good thing in so many ways.

TUESDAY
NYC
* Atari Teenage Riot @ Highline Ballroom / 431 W 16th St (ACE to 8th Ave), 8p/$25. 1-2-3-4! Digital hardcore—ATR's signature blend of roiling sonics and shout-and-response vocals—made a lot of anarchic sense 15 years ago. And yet, with last year's LP "Is This Hyperreal?" and the surrounding economic and social climate, they prove they're as relevant as ever. Plus, noisician-turned-frontwoman Nic Endo can scream AND sing. w/ Otto Von Schirach

AUSTIN
* "Two Ships Passing: w/ David Heymann" @ Visual Arts Center / UT Art Building, 23rd St at Trinity, 6:30p. Pastelegram collaborates w/ the VAC in organizing this conversation w/ architect and professor Heymann, on thinking about and reacting to landscapes.

* "The Incubus" (dir. John Hough, 1982) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. A demon that rapes women. If you've seen Hough's harrowing "The Legend of Hell House" you /might/ be negligibly prepared for this lurid film. Though if you go into it knowing only Hough's Disney stuff ("Escape to Witch Mountain" and its inconceivable sequel), then you're totally on your own.

* Chairlift (NY) + Nite Jewel (Cali) @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 6:30p/$12. You might not peg me for a Chairlift fan—their particular brand of Brooklyn indie-pop skews from my general listening habits—but I dig their second LP "Something" w/o embarrassment. It's fun to be upbeat! Plus I've been into singer-songwriter Ramona Gonzalez, aka Nite Jewel, since her 2010 EP "Am I Real?". A: she totally is.

TOKYO
* Trevor Brown "Toy Box" @ Span Art Gallery / 2-2-18 1F Ginza, Chuo-ku. (Yurakucho Line to Ginza-Itchome Station). Cutie-pie and devious, Brown's new series of gorgeous paintings are like children's "Golden Books" illustrations w/ sinister undertones. His wife contributes some adorable stuffed teddybear poppets as HippieCoco.

* Lagitagida @ Shibuya O-Nest / 6F 2-3 Maruyama-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 7:30p/2500 yen. Local instrumental noise-rock quartet Lagitagida fried my braincells during SXSW, and you bet they bring that same intensity to the home crowd. w/ fresh!

CURRENT SHOWS
AUSTIN
* "Memento Mori" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. I've been working off a mortality tip in these Austin-area galleries. First Tiny Park, now Grayduck. This group exhibition, w/ Suzanne Koett (photography), John Mulvany (painting), and Cherie Weaver (mixed media), features local talent adept at locking humanity in a historical context. Mulvany, Irish-born and Texas-based, achieves this by painting figures from the Irish Civil War as beatific spirits looming over the sun-bleached Hill Country landscape. Retaining the figures' sepia-toned palette against the vistas' blues, greens, and earth-tones—plus the ornate retablo/devotional halos crowning them—Mulvany comments on the cyclical presence of his subjects. As in: the recurrences of war and religious movements. Weaver utilizes a ton of vintage cabinet cards in her ageless works, but they tend to be linking points or jump-offs to larger or multi-part dialogues, like the almost titular "Momentum Mori" and its pools of sumi-e echoed in the photograph's checkerboard floor, or her composites on translucent unstretched linen. I first began digging Koett's photography at this Austin-area artist group show at Gallery Black Lagoon last year, thanks to her bracing "Sabbat" series. She includes works from "The Study of Aloneness" here, ghostly composites of same-looking girls levitating in a forest's fog ("Power For Power") or in a Brutalist garage ("Rejoice, We Made the Right Choice"). It's like her "twins" are the guides for this exhibition's ideas and imagery, ushering us between consciousness and unconsciousness, life and death, to contemplate our respective existences.

* Sarah Milbrath "Territory" @ Forus Gallery / 608 W 51st St. Pair domestic animals with their respective understandings of personal boundaries and invisible borders, and you have a very conscious, very cute photography show by the Austin-based artist. Milbrath's own connection with her subjects adds a whole 'nother layer to this series, as her nearness could elicit a dog's mournful gaze or a cat's wary stare—then she clicks the shutter.

* Conrad Bakker "Untitled Project: RECORD SHOP [45s] @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. I visited Tokyo indie gallery eitoeiko during New City Art Fair in NYC and noted they were showing artist Masaru Aikawa, whose signature style includes hand-painting CD-sized squares of canvas to expertly replicate CD artwork, only in obviously painterly style. Bakker is also re-presenting music as art, in this case rough-hewn wooden "45's" painted to mimic album jackets, but his execution feels uniquely Bakker-ish. Meaning: he doesn't go as far as Aikawa in the trompe-l'oeil effect, so his artwork, while clearly resembling LPs (Depeche Mode and Phil Collins here, Bob Marley and Joni Mitchell there), more accurately look like little paintings, down to their respective quirky, handmade essences.

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* Terry Winters "Cricket Music, Tessellation Figures, & Notebook" @ Matthew Marks Gallery / 522 W 22nd St. Confession: I missed Winters' stateside debut of his layered found-photo collages, nearly a decade's worth of work at MM's tiny boutique gallery on 22nd. The reason is b/c I was totally immersed in Winters' massive kaleidoscopic new paintings, Some are watery worlds, others vaguely cosmic, a bit like Jim Rosenquist's more "Water Planet" stuff but less representational. Winters' palette is dazzling and his technique beautiful without reducing to pure decoration.

* Anne Truitt "Drawings" @ Matthew Marks Gallery / 523 W 24th St. The gallery mounted a wonderful retrospective of Truitt's serene, totem-like sculpture two years ago (one my 2010 favorites). They continue the awesomeness w/ four decades of her drawings, a vital part of her daily creative activity. Some of these do resemble her gentle monoliths, but others are fields of brilliant tonal shifts or a single growing line across a white expanse. Pretty awesome.

* Mounir Fatmi "Oriental Accident" @ Lombard-Freid Projects / 518 W 19th St. Exhibition as noise show, Fatmi's second solo at the gallery is INTENSE. He pairs recordings from Maghreb during the Arab Spring in speakers sprinkled with nails and embedded into a Persian rug. Sonic squalls recur in "Modern times, a History of the Machine", a video projection in the side gallery that morphs Arabic calligraphy into a kinetic Duchamp-ian affair. Even Fatmi's static pieces threaten to attack, whether bas-reliefs of the number zero composed of coaxial antenna cables or lace loops drenched in oily black paint.

* "I Know This But You Feel Different", curated by Shara Hughes and Meredith James @ Marc Jancou Contemporary / 524 W 24th St. A pretty superb group show inspiring dialogue on interior spaces. Hughes' own large painting "My Head's Really Not In This" locks the whole idea together as she contorts and flattens multi-planar space with gusto, pairing the experience with a vivid color palette. But there's much other awesomeness as well, beginning with Hughes' oil-on-paper drawings and extending to highly textural oil on linen paintings by Clare Grill and a nook installation by Miles Huston and Jacques Louis Vidal. Jesse Greenberg's visceral homemade objects and Jacob Robichaux's deconstructed remnants keep the show's tone loose and compelling.

AUSTIN
* Tom Molloy "New World" @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. Molloy strips away the noise and distractions in his historically leaning or contemporarily relevant bodies of work—oftentimes by incredibly meticulous practices—leaving a sort-of podium for us to contemplate, discuss, argue. While he's not explicitly putting his own politics behind the dozens of thrift-store framed Internet-culled b&w images of male world leaders pressing the flesh in "Shake", the works circuitous nature and site-specific installation—where "Hussein/Mubarak" slides into "Mubarak/Bush" and "Bush/Putin", until we're back at "Hussein" again—, plus the fact these nonchronological shots span from 9-11 to the Arab Spring, naturally presents some theories. How these men are friends one minute, wheeling and dealing the next, and sworn enemies separated by several frames of their "friends" after that. Molloy's nine-part titular work features nine different LP sleeves of Dvorák's "New World Symphony", the texts painted over (Molloy's analogue to Photoshop, he said) to show only benign, sunny images of the Western frontier. That "incredibly meticulous practices" bit I alluded to earlier is most clear in "Somewhere", Molloy's hand-painted sheet music to the "Wizard of Oz"'s sweetly optimistic anthem, a work that began with a black sheet of paper and lots and lots of carefully applied white gouache.

* PJ Raval + Nick Brown @ Tiny Park / 607 1/2 Genard St. Fleeting moments of our collective mortality, captured on canvas and animated on film. Austin-based filmmaker Raval eschews his notable collabs w/ local performance artist and "drag terrorist" CHRISTEENE (like the music video "Fix My Dick", part of UT VAC's "Queer State(s)" exhibition) in favor of three early, experimental videos. "Clean" goes from jittery, wince-worthy toothbrushing to kinetic, croaking bandaids that eventually cover the titular neat-freak, while "NET06" is a flickering slice of noise recalling Hans Richter and Dadaist visual arts. LA-based painter Brown looks like Troy Sanders from Mastodon and he creates a mean, visceral canvas, too. Beyond the beauty of these impasto creations is an ephemeral moment—the twin-edged bloodshed and psychedelia within a field of "Poppies", the discomfiting sleep of "South Pacific"—frozen in time. His fiery red pastel drawings are as strong as the paintings and reflect Brown's printmaking background, as etched marks couple with negative space and smears of pastel to conjure very realistic, occasionally harrowing scenes of natural demise. A very moving show within such a cute, boutique gallery.
(ENDS SAT)

TOKYO
* Etsuko Taniguchi "light" @ hpgrp Tokyo / B1F 5-1-15 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku (Chiyoda/Hanzomon/Ginza Lines to Omotesando Station). Taniguchi creates a disarming illumination in her nightlife cityscapes but cutting into lacquered canvases and then painting them over in acrylic. (ENDS SUN)

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

fee's LIST / through 4/10

WEDNESDAY
NYC
* "Funky Forest: The First Contact" (dirs. Katsuhito Ishii, Shunichiro Miki, Hijimine Ishimine, 2005) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (F/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 4p. So for the following week+, MoMA is giving Cindy Sherman (who has a fab retrospective on the 6th Fl, see under CURRENT SHOWS) "Carte Blanche" to select films that "informed her artistic practice". Luckily she's into the more bonkers stuff! Just picture it: 150 minutes of Japanese Youtube videos daisy-chained into a cerebrum-melting visual riot of sci-fi, hot-springs, cute girls, and anime! "Funky Forest" is tons more than that, and technically it has a plot—an absolutely adorable, tentative love story b/w young prof and student—but who cares when you've got a high-school girl sticking a cable in her navel to conjure a mini sushi-chef alien or a beachside dance-off b/w Ryo Kase (in a tracksuit) and various animated challengers? See you on the other side!

* The Naked and Famous @ Terminal 5 / 610 W 56th St (1/AC/BD to Columbus Circle), 7p/SOLD OUT. Kiwi cuties The Naked and Famous are wrapping up their final tour for starry-pop debut "Passive Me, Aggressive You". Hopefully this means they will to the studio Down Under tout de suite.

AUSTIN
* "Barbed Wire Dolls" (dir. Jesus Franco, 1976) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 9:40p. A batshit insane gem from the power couple of '70s sexploitation, courtesy Franco and his wife/muse/lead Lina Romay. Of particular note, in this cut from Franco's "women in prison" cycle, Romay is jailed for killing her father (played by, uh, Franco!) who tried to rape her.

TOKYO
* "Before and After Superflat" talk @ NADiff A/P/A/R/T / 1F 1-18-4 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku (JR Yamanote Line/HIbiya Line to Ebisu Station, East exit), 6:30p. Adrian Favell, author of "Before and After Superflat: A Short History of Japanese Contemporary Art 1990-2011" leads a discussion on the publication and contemporary trends, alongside artists Hideki Nakazawa, Midori Mitamura, Satoru Aoyama, and art writer Chie Sumiyoshi.

THURSDAY
NYC
* Kim Dingle "still lives" @ Sperone Westwater / 257 Bowery. The Cali-born painter of compelling and creepily faceless dolly-sized figures hasn't had a solo here since 2007, and her tongue-in-cheek press release announcing that "if what is depicted makes the artist laugh then all the more fun for the artist and maybe for the viewer, too – but it is usually an accident", sounds properly beguiling.

* Nick Nowicki @ Ana Cristea Gallery / 521 W 26th St. The first stateside solo exhibition from London-based Nowicki features unstretched linen and paper covered in lyrically composed figures, hinting at their respective "human contact".

* Anne Collier @ Anton Kern Gallery / 532 W 20th St. After a full 2011 of international group exhibitions (incl "Singular Visions" at the Whitney, "Anti-Photography" in Essex UK, and "The Techniques and Aesthetic of Appropriation" at Kunsthaus Bregenz in Austria), Collier returns to the gallery w/ her makes-you-look-twice prints. Plus, she was commissioned to do a billboard for the High Line art series.

* David Lyle "Misbehaving" @ Lyons Wier Gallery / 542 W 24th St. Classic Americana imagery warped and contextualized to with contemporary influences. That's only the tip of the proverbial artistic iceberg, though, as Lyle's methodical layering and removal of oily black veneer to his "grayscale" paintings adds a startling vintage sheen.

* Taylor Davis @ DODGEgallery / 15 Rivington St. This sounds dope: Davis, who is equally adept in 2- and 3D art that showcases her knack for incorporating text and color, celebrates her debut at the gallery. She has shown extensively elsewhere (including the Whitney Museum), and I am stoked to see how she utilizes the two-floor gallery setting for this new body of work.

* "Inland Empire" (dir. David Lynch, 2006) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (F/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 4:15p. If you've recovered from "Funky Forest" (see WED), and yearn to be further plunged into a cinematic rabbit-hole, silvery rooster-coiffed renaissance man Lynch has your answer! Three hours of Hollywood Boulevard grime, Polish film-noir and bizarro choreographed dance sequences by prostitutes!

* The New Monuments + Marcia Bassett & Samara Lubelski + Lasse Marhaug @ ISSUE Project Room / 110 Livingston St, Boerum Hill (45 to Borough Hall, 23 to Hoyt St, AC/F to Jay St/Metrotech), 8p/$10. Have you checked out ISSUE's new-ish digs? Tonight's a solid intro: Norwegian noisician Marhaug, drone/folk duo Bassett (of Double Leopards/Purple Haze) and Lubelski, culminating w/ industrialscape improv trio The New Monuments (C. Spencer Yeh, Ben hall, and Don Dietrich)!

AUSTIN
* Sarah Milbrath "Territory" @ Forus Gallery / 608 W 51st St. Pair domestic animals with their respective understandings of personal boundaries and invisible borders, and you have a very conscious, very cute photography show by the Austin-based artist.

TOKYO
* 「ニッポン最先端」 feat. TRIPPPLE NIPPPLES @ Shinjuku MARZ / B1F 2-45-1 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, East Exit), 7p/1500 yen. The sixth installment of "Most Bleeding Edge Japan" doesn't let up, w/ Yuka, Qrea and Nabe of Tokyo performance art-punk collective TRIPPPLE NIPPPLES covering the place in feathers, washable fake blood, and/or gold-leaf—or whatever they've concocted for tonight. Plus スカートの中 (uh "inside the skirt"?) and THIS IS PANIC

FRIDAY
NYC
* Valentin Carron @ 303 Gallery / 547 W 21st St. Carron includes a human-scale "stone" cube (composed of polystyrene), achromatic stained glass and other new sculpture in his focus on neo-occultism and a historical arc of physiological reaction.

* "Profondo Rosso/Deep Red" (dir. Dario Argento, 1975) midnight screening @ Nitehawk Cinema / 136 Metropolitan Ave, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy). MAD Museum's Argento family retrospective "Il Cinema Nel Sangue" powers on, and now Williamsburg indie theatre Nitehawk gets in on the akshun, screening this Dario-style giallo classic. Think music teacher (played by David Hemmings!) turned detective, creepy-ass music scores (courtesy Goblin!), and strains of general insanity! ALSO SAT

* "Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles" (dir. Chantal Akerman, 1976) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (F/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 8p. Bravo to Cindy Sherman for choosing some of the bonkers-est films I can think of (and have seen!) for her "Carte Blanche" series. Case in point w/ Akerman's acclaimed union of feminism and anti-illusionism, a practically realtime telling of a single mother's daily routine: caring for her son, cleaning, cooking, errands, and prostituting herself to make ends meet! The time-stretching only makes Dielman's situation that much more oppressive and the denouement that much more explosive.

AUSTIN
* "Memento Mori" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. I've been working off a mortality tip in these Austin-area galleries. First Tiny Park (see my review of PJ Raval and Nick Brown's art there under CURRENT SHOWS), now Grayduck. This group exhibition, w/ Suzanne Koett (photography), John Mulvany (painting), and Cherie Weaver (mixed media), features local talent adept at reminding ourselves of our own respective existences, and related historical connotations.

* "Fire Walk With Me" (dir. David Lynch, 1992) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 11:30p. Prologue and epilogue to Lynch's daring early '90s TV series "Twin Peaks", of young Laura Palmer's murder in a sleepy (and increasingly surrealist) Washington town. Not only does Kyle MacLachlan return as coffee-loving "Special Agent Dale Cooper", but we also get new roles by Kiefer Sutherland and, incredibly, David Bowie. Oh but it's grim, too, and probably incomprehensible if you've never seen a "Twin Peaks" episode. ALSO SAT

* Chain and the Gang (DC) + Kingdom of Suicide Lovers @ Frank / 407 Colorado, 9:30p/$8. Hyper-intellectual wordsmith Ian Svenonius leads DC misfits Chain and the Gang on an upbeat rock groove-fest. Locals Kingdom of Suicide Lovers contribute a hip-swaying noise-punk vibe that wouldn't be out of place in my favorite Brooklyn venues. w/ Franny and Zooey

* Pure X @ Red 7 / 611 E 7th St, 9p/$8. Shoegaze-tinged garage-rock, Austin style. That's trio Pure X (né Pure Ecstasy, before last year's syrupy wonderful "Pleasure" debuted), smoked-out surf and freak psychedelia. w/ God's Gun

TOKYO
* Yoko Oyama "Melody of Mephisto" @ Gallery TOSEI / 5-18-20 Chuo, Nagano-ku (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line to Shin-Nakao Station, Exit 1-2). Oyama's latest series of atmospheric photographs were taken in Hungary and bear influence of Bartok, Liszt and other composers on the artist.

* Yuichi Higashionna "Apparition" @ Yumiko Chiba Associates / 2F 4-32-6 Nishi-shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku (Toei Oedo Line to Tochomae Station, JR etc to Shinjuku Station, West Exit). I credit NY's Marianne Boesky Gallery for exposing me to this mid-career Japanese artist, whose loopy, fluorescent light sculptures and refreshingly neo-Op installations have been wigging me out since 2008. He's created a mostly new array for this exhibition.

* Yu Siuan "Greenhouse-Program" @ Radium / 2-5-17 Bakurocho, Chuo-ku (JR Yamanote Line to Bakurocho Station). The Taipei-born artist echoes Belgian Surrealist master Rene Magritte in his painterly, decaying objects.

SATURDAY
NYC
* EVOL "Repeat Offender" @ Jonathan LeVine Gallery / 529 W 20th St 9th Fl. I got tuned into Berlin-based artist EVOL's transcendent interventions—meticulously layered stencils on used cardboard, morphing them into startlingly realistic street scenes—at VOLTA NY 2010. Then LeVine picked him up for one of their legendary summer group shows in 2010. Now they stage EVOL's debut solo stateside exhibition! Mad stoked.

* "Funny Games" (dir. Michael Haneke, 1997) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (F/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 5p. Mannnnnn….people didn't know WHAT to think when Haneke unveiled this predecessor to the millennium's "torture porn" genre. Mind you, he'd done "Benny's Video", so his potential for filmic cruelty was in place, but this almost realtime home invasion by two silver-tongued twits is just brutal in its deadpan delivery.

AUSTIN
* Paul McLean "NO MAS: Occupational Art School" @ Co-Lab Projects / 613 Allen St. Despite this new media acuity and Occupy with Art co-organizer's densely written press release, what I believe McLean is doing is working in situ, drawing from mythology and contemporary social concerns (i.e. Occupy Wall Street and the 99% art world), interacting with visitors in crafting new works.

TOKYO
* "KOTOKO" (dir. Shinya Tsukamoto, 2012) @ Theatre Shinjuku / 3-14-20 Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi/Fukutoshin/Shinjuku Lines to Shinjuku-sanchome Station). Compelling trauma for the eyes and ears, and quite potentially Tsukamoto's most unrelentingly aggressive film yet. His intimate depiction of J-Pop star Cocco as the titular single-mother character, losing her grip on reality and custody of her baby son, is VERY tough to stand. Plus he's using full color now, to glorious and very bloody effect. It's a cathartic view, maybe, but don't say I didn't warn you.

* 「別離」/"A Separation" (dir. Asghar Farhadi, 2011) @ Le Cinema / 2-24-1 Dogenzaka, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit). Thing to keep in mind during Farhadi's bracing drama between an Iranian middle-class couple, very religious, lower-class caretakers, double-talk and bouts of explosive anger is the divorcing family at its core, and the smart teen girl caught in the middle of her parents' "separation". It's clear why this won the 2012 Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.

* TsushiMaMire @ Shimokitazawa GARDEN / B1F 2-4-5 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, S. Exit), 6:30p/3300 yen. The final date of Chiba grrrl-punk cuties TsushiMaMire's "SHOCKING" solo tour 2012. You can't imagine how I wish I were in Tokyo for this.

* Tokyo Dark Castle vs RITUALS The Head Shop @ Shinjuku MARZ / B1F 2-45-1 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, East Exit), midnight/3500 yen. This late-night mashup is always an "out-there" trip. Feat. RITUALS by KENZO-A fashion show (w/ models Aloe & Nancy from tokyoDOLORES/Nasty Cats, plus many others), Tokyo visual-kei band Gabriels Stiletto (feat. DJ KENZO-A), French performance/art-rock group Dead Sexy Inc. & more deviance.

MONDAY
NYC
* "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" (dir. Tobe Hooper, 1974) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (F/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 4:30p. The film geek in me wonders if they're screening this in 35mm, but the general film lover in me urges you to SEE THIS AT ALL COSTS. "Chain Saw" is the original slasher film, the original f-ed up family of murderers tale, eons scarier and more satisfying than its many, many sequels and derivatives. And maybe it'll draw a few inklings into why Cindy Sherman filmed "Office Killer".

TOKYO
* Dustin Wong + nisennenmondai @ Shibuya O-Nest / 6F 2-3 Maruyama-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 7:30p/3000 yen. The LP release party for Dustin Wong's "Dreams Say, View, Create, Shadow Leads" just got a million times more nuts thanks to Tokyo math-rock grrrls nisennenmondai, who will rhythmically whup your ass. w/ mma (Aya Oshida, Mirei Hattori, and Takako Minekawa)

TUESDAY
NYC
* Black Tambourine + Small Factory + Versus + The Lois Plus @ Bell House / 149 7th St, Gowanus (F/G/R to 9th St/4th Ave), 7p/SOLD OUT! For the love of pop! The classic (i.e. circa '92) indie-pop 'zine "chickfactor" turns 20 and they're throwing a mega-massive three-night residency at Bell House, feat. legendary and local bands. Think Popfest but w/ historical resonance. They don't get much more high profile than extra-fuzzy quartet Black Tambourine, among the earliest in Slumberland's contingent, who despite disbanding early on influenced legions of raw-edged dreamers (incl. personal faves The Pains of Being Pure at Heart), plus formed Velocity Girl, Magpies, Bye!, and…the 'zine "chickfactor". Black Tambourine regroup to headline this extra-special opening night, alongside NYC's Versus, Providence's Small Factory (first show since '95!), The Lois Plus (aka Olympia's Lois Maffeo w/ Heavenly guitarist Peter Morntchiloff). MAYJAH.

AUSTIN
* "Sleepaway Camp" (dir. Robert Hiltzik, 1983) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. Damn…this has gotta be among the most iconic "coming of age" teen slasher films ever, from its surreal opening minutes to 90 minutes of creative bloodshed and a truly bonkers conclusion. The less you know, the better—and the more destructively shocking. Have fun!

TOKYO
* Hair Stylistics @ SPROUT Curation / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Toei Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station), 7p/1000 yen. The wonderful gallery bloc adjacent to the Sumida River has been hosting "Japanese charismatic noise musician" Masaya Nakahara's (aka Violent Onsen Geisha/Hair Stylistics) latest exhibition of works on paper, towards his upcoming monograph. To cap off the show, Nakahara teams w/ avant-turntablist Toshio Kajiwara and choreographer/dancer Yoko Higashino in an evening performance.

CURRENT SHOWS
NYC
* Cindy Sherman @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (E/M to 5th Ave/53rd, 6 to 51st). A great element of Sherman's fine career retrospective is its nonchronological arrangements. For though the exhibition flows in groupings of key series–beginning with the wonderful, breakthrough "Untitled Film Stills" from the late '70s (and showing the American Sherman as a convincingly Felllni-esque ingenue)–there are intriguing temporal juxtapositions throughout. Meaning a few prints from the early '80s hung amid Sherman's millenial "Clowns" and still reverberating with energy and beauty. Though technology has changed, her "Erotic Centerfolds" and brilliant "History Portraits" (the latter hung salon-style in a burgundy-walled room, and featuring a few male roles) retain as much impact as her 2008 "Society Portraits" and the show-stopping mural installed outside the exhibition proper. Sherman has more creativity in her left pinkie than most artists' their entire oeuvres (not naming names) and she's got a helluva lot left.

* Whitney Biennial @ Whitney Museum / 945 Madison Ave (6 to 77th St). My take-away thoughts from the 2012 iteration of the Whitney's unavoidably must-see biennial is "this is a very pretty, very safe show". If you reside in NYC, then you've got the advantage, as like 33% of the exhibiting artists contribute performances or films throughout the Biennial's several-month run. Which means those of us lot who can only see the show once will miss a cool third of what's good. We must rely on what's hanging on the walls, what's displayed over two and a half floors of Whitney, knowing well that we aren't getting the whole picture by any means. What IS there is very pretty, and creatively installed for the most part. Richard Hawkins' Francis Bacon-esque paintings recur on two walls of the 2nd fl, accompanying a Kai Althoff installation of paintings on a silk curtain bisecting the gallery and K8 Hardy's brutal prints of shoes and cropped figures. It's here that three of the strongest elements of the Biennial reside: LaToya Ruby Frazier's wonderful array of prints that address a Levis ad campaign that appropriated images of her hometown of Braddock, Pennsylvania; an intimate room of outsider artist Forrest Bess' paintings and life-story, curated by Robert Gober; and Werner Herzog's museum debut with the soul-stirring film "Heresay of the Soul". Andrew Masullo's small-scale, sunny abstract paintings brighten up the third floor, which adds a bit of creative impulse from Nick Mauss' installation "Concern, Crush, Desire". All in all, it's fine, totally, but if I hadn't encountered the Frazier (or the Herzog, really) I don't think I would have been moved nearly as deeply.

* John Chamberlain "Choices" @ Guggenheim / 1071 Fifth Ave (456 to 86th St). Moving Chamberlain's very new monolith "C'ESTZESTY", a finger of painted and chromium-plated steel and stainless soaring nearly 20 vertical feet, outside the Guggenheim proper was a wonderful decision, as this skyscraper dwarfed uncomfortably its previous occupation within the Gagosian's mammoth 24th St gallery space. Here it breathes, gleaming in the early-spring sunlight. It is one of many successful instances in a superb sendoff to the American sculptor, who passed away just months before this career retrospective opened to the public. Inside, Chamberlain's ginormous aluminum twist "SPHINXGRIN TWO" holds court in the rotunda, while battered and discolored works from decades' previous begin the exhilarating run up the Gugg's ramps. Some remarkable collages and reliefs mix with early masterpieces like "Hillbilly Galoot" (1960, a crouching red beetle) and "Miss Lucy Pink" (1962, like a rose rendered in steel). Small-scale auto-origami recurs as well, playing off the galvanized steel "Ultima Thule" and some curious, slippery mineral-coated polymer resin pieces. The human-scale array "The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea" (like Picasso's "Musicians" re-imagined as Transformers) and the soda-straws of "Whirled Peas" (1991) prepare our eyes for the final thrust, Chamberlain's drive into chrome-love (which figured into that Gagosian show and his very last works), but the shiny shavings atop "HAWKFLIESAGAIN" (2010), with its mottled old-school base, tie the whole experience together.

* Fred Sandback "Decades" @ David Zwirner / 519 W 19th St. A really fine survey of Sandback's long career of spatial interventions spanning three decades of work. His "Untitled (Sculptural Study, Four-part Mikado Construction)" features four aqua acrylic yarns zigzagging across half the front gallery, while the Kerf-cut Plexiglas "Untitled" emulates his linear sculptures while remaining fully 2D. The even crazier "16 Variations of 2 Diagonal Lines" explores front and back galleries with opposing pinkie-thick bands of yellow yarn, boring through walls and careening through diagonal space. An artist's book and selection of drawings fill out the show.

AUSTIN
* PJ Raval + Nick Brown @ Tiny Park / 607 1/2 Genard St. Fleeting moments of our collective mortality, captured on canvas and animated on film. Austin-based filmmaker Raval eschews his notable collabs w/ local performance artist and "drag terrorist" CHRISTEENE (like the music video "Fix My Dick", part of UT VAC's "Queer State(s)" exhibition) in favor of three early, experimental videos. "Clean" goes from jittery, wince-worthy toothbrushing to kinetic, croaking bandaids that eventually cover the titular neat-freak, while "NET06" is a flickering slice of noise recalling Hans Richter and Dadaist visual arts. LA-based painter Brown looks like Troy Sanders from Mastodon and he creates a mean, visceral canvas, too. Beyond the beauty of these impasto creations is an ephemeral moment—the twin-edged bloodshed and psychedelia within a field of "Poppies", the discomfiting sleep of "South Pacific"—frozen in time. His fiery red pastel drawings are as strong as the paintings and reflect Brown's printmaking background, as etched marks couple with negative space and smears of pastel to conjure very realistic, occasionally harrowing scenes of natural demise. A very moving show within such a cute, boutique gallery.

* Conrad Bakker "Untitled Project: RECORD SHOP [45s] @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces St. I visited Tokyo indie gallery eitoeiko during New City Art Fair in NYC and noted they were showing artist Masaru Aikawa, whose signature style includes hand-painting CD-sized squares of canvas to expertly replicate CD artwork, only in obviously painterly style. Bakker is also re-presenting music as art, in this case rough-hewn wooden "45's" painted to mimic album jackets, but his execution feels uniquely Bakker-ish. Meaning: he doesn't go as far as Aikawa in the trompe-l'oeil effect, so his artwork, while clearly resembling LPs (Depeche Mode and Phil Collins here, Bob Marley and Joni Mitchell there), more accurately look like little paintings, down to their respective quirky, handmade essences.

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* Georg Baselitz @ Gagosian / 522 W 21st St. The superlative German artist revisits aspects of his own history, but in paintings larger than he's ever created before: huge figures painted in bold colors against a shifting, constrast-y backdrop. Baselitz adds a rough-hewn wood and bronze-cast sculpture to this exhibition of new works, but my eyes were locked alone on those massive paintings, with their electric, Egon Schiele-like emotive personalities.

* Roy Lichtenstein "Landscapes in the Chinese Style" @ Gagosian / 555 W 24th St. I wasn't in town for the blessedly polarizing spectacle that was Damien Hirst's dots, but I love the chilled-out vibe emanating from Lichtenstein's minimalist, pastel-toned landscapes. They feature a bunch of atypical Lichtenstein-ian elements—a horizontal smear of grey-blue paint in "Small Landscape"; sponged-on foliage in "Landscape with Scholar's Rock"—that echo the traditional Chinese style. There is very little Pop here, and the vertical scroll-like "Landscape with Cliff" almost does away with Lichtenstein's signature Benday dots altogether. I'm not complaining here: these are lovely paintings, and like the aforementioned "Scholar's Rock" (whose meandering gauzy white conveys more physicality and emotion than the artist's more famous comic-inspired works) inspire deep contemplation.

* Charles Long + Nicole Wermers @ Tanya Bonakdar Gallery / 521 W 21st St. Long continues to twist and elasticize the boundaries of sculpture, in his ninth solo at the gallery. Think organic, semi-translucent resiny drips, a cooler, alienesque echo of his previous works that more closely resembled supersized bird droppings. Upstairs, Wermers accents with a photo series from the Rodin Museum in Paris, contrasted with her own modernist sculpture. It's terribly subtle but works in concert w/ Long's quieter, compelling sculpture. (ENDS SAT)