Wednesday, August 29, 2012

fee's LIST / through 9/4


WEDNESDAY
AUSTIN
* Lightning Bolt (Providence) @ Emo's / 2015 E Riverside Dr, 8p/$15. The guerilla-rock Brians—Chippendale mauling the shit outta the kit, Gibson pummeling the bass—will decimate the newer, larger Emo's. Prepare to sweat.

TOKYO
* Satoru Aoyama "The Man-Machine (Reprise)" @ Mizuma Art Gallery / 2F 3-13 Ichigayatamachi, Shinjuku-ku (Yurakucho/Nanboku Lines to Ichigaya Station). Aoyama continues his investigation of man and machine's relationship, and that of labor, with a new series of embroidered newsprints on polyester that reference politics and societal concerns. 

THURSDAY
NYC
* Xiu Xiu + Talk Normal @ Bowery Ballroom / 6 Delancey St (F/JMZ to Essex/Delancey), 9p/$15. Xiu Xiu's combo of self-lacerating lullabies and blistering art-rock production continue to compel to this day, as kindreds Jamie Stewart and Angela Seo walk the feel bad/feel good line. Brooklyn neo No Wavers Talk Normal commence the heavy percussion and skronky guitars.

TOKYO
* Kazuhiro Ito "bridge" @ hpgrp Tokyo / B1 5-1-15 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku (JR Yamanote to Harajuku Station, Tokyo Metro Chiyoda/Ginza/Hanzomon Lines to Omotesando Station). The Fukuoka-born artist continues to redefine the possibilities of bronze sculpture, from blobs and twisting spears to meteoric figurative works. I am particularly stoked about his centerpiece "Starman Loves You" and its "Earthbound"-referencing properties.

* Group Show @ Gallery Koyanagi / 1-7-5 Ginza, Chuo-ku (Tokyo Metro Ginza/Marunouchi/Hibiya Lines to Ginza Station). Risaku Suzuki (exhilarating photography), Ataru Sato (his graphite compositions made a splash at the 2010 Gwangju Biennale), Makoto Ofune (spatial-disruption), and Kimitake Sato (twisted traditionalism) form the gallery's end-of-summer group show.

FRIDAY
NYC
* "Fargo" (dirs. Joel & Ethan Coen, 1996) midnight screening @ IFC Center / 323 Sixth Ave (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St). A jag of blood shed across a snowy field. Two thugs swing near the Twin Cities, Steve Buscemi (basically playing an overly caffeinated version of himself) and the sociopathic Peter Stormare. They're meeting the tragic figure of William H. Macy, a bottled-up storm of politeness with dark intentions. Finally, there's Frances McDormand, the "Minnesota Nice"-speaking Sherlock Holmes and linchpin to this creative crime film. ALSO SAT-SUN

* Zambri + The Suzan @ Mercury Lounge / 217 E Houston St (F to 2nd Ave), 7:30p/$10. Sisters Zambri are big on image, but it doesn't overshadow their potent mix of '80s electronic and noise-pop. Couple that with their fashion sense, and they paint a strong stage presence. w/ Brooklyn-via-Tokyo tropic-pop darlings The Suzan.

AUSTIN
* Brooke Bamford "Endless Bummer" @ Forus Gallery / 1502 W 34th St #A. Local art-lovers have seen this young Studio Art major's style already: Bamford co-designed the VAC's Center Space Project's identity. Now she leads us through the last embers of summer with an exhibition of her vivid print media.

* "Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai" (dir. Takashi Miike, 2011) @ Alamo Drafthouse S. Lamar / 1120 S Lamar. Finally! Miike's grandiose re-imagining of '62 classic "Harakiri" hits the Drafthouse, in glorious 3D.

* "Indiana Jones & the Last Crusade" (dir. Steven Spielberg, 1989) @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St. The Holy Grail, the desiccated Donovan, Dad and son Jones (Sean Connery and ol' Harrison, respectively), in glorious 70mm Alamoscope! With special screenings through next WED.

* "Memento" (dir. Christopher Nolan, 2000) midnight screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St. While the commercial geek world usurped Nolan for the Dark Knight Trilogy, before he did all that he directed a chilling, labyrinthine thriller on compromised memories and self-deception called "Memento". I caught its Austin premiere and still remember the heated, enlightening conversations it inspired. ALSO SAT

SATURDAY
NYC
* James Rosenquist "Multiverse You Are, I Am" @ Acquavella Gallery / 18 E 79th St. I remain a huge fan of this consummate American Pop master, despite his sorta funny exhibition of moving canvases from 2010. This one restores his singular vision, speeding ever forward into the cosmos, yet fully embedded with memories of the American experience. 

* Erik Parker "Bye Bye Babylon" @ Paul Kasmin Gallery / 293 10th Ave. Henri Rousseau on acid doesn't even begin to encapsulate the experience of seeing Parker's large psychedelic jungle landscapes up close. The Brooklyn-based artist celebrates his related monograph with a signing at the gallery shop around the corner, beginning at 6p.

* "Zombie Doom" (dir. Andreas Schnaas, 1999) midnight screening @ Spectacle / 124 S 3rd St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), $5. AKA "Violent Shit III: Infantry of Doom". That's about all I need to write about this German gore god Schnaas and his metal-masked avatar Karl Jr (not Carl's Junior), son of cyborg zombie Karl the Butcher, who lord over an island of ultraviolent mercenaries. Once two vengeful ninja brothers dare trespass, the only answer is a splatteriffic brawl for the ages. Violent!

TOKYO
* Ryan McGinley "Reach Out, I'm Right Here" @ Tomio Koyama Gallery / 7F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station). The young rockstar-ish artist presents perhaps the pinnacle of his oeuvre: color photographs chronicling summer road trips he took with nude models across the grand ol' US of A.

* Yuichi Hirako "The Green Pieces" @ Gallery MOMO Ryogoku / 1F 1-7-15 Kamezawa, Sumida-ku (Toei Oedo/JR Sobu Line to Ryogoku Station). Hirako's marriage of greenery sculpture with floral, figurative paintings appeared earlier this year at Copenhagen's Galleri Christoffer Egelund. Now the Okayama-born artist conjures some of that magic in Tokyo.

* Yoshihiro Kikuchi "Nullized Layers Inside the Institutional Coverups 1" @ Aisho Miura Arts / B1F 2-17-3 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station). Don't paint Kikuchi into a corner. The young Tokyo-based painter and printmaker is equally adept at creating visceral collage and highly technical inkjet abstractions.

* "Autumn Place" @ Nanzuka Underground / B1F 2-17-3 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station). Five artists with strong image-making properties constitute this group show, feat. Kohei Akiba, Hiroki Tsukuda, Julia Chiang (Brooklyn), Johannes Weiss (Berlin), and Klaus Scheckenbach (Switzerland).

* "Blindsight" @ MA2 Gallery / 3-3-8 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku (Yamanote Line to Ebisu Station). Yasushi Kurabayashi curated this perceptive group exhibition, feat. contributions from Kei Imazu, Toru Kuwakubo, Tadasuke Go, Junji Sakai, Midori Sato, Minoru Nomata, Aki Yamamoto, and Heechang Yoon, with a special project by Yasuko Iba.

* Hiroshige Fukuhara @ Ai Kowada Gallery / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Fukuhara introduces new silkscreens featuring silver leaf embossing alongside pencil and gesso compositions on panel, all featuring hyperrealized wildlife.

* Yusuke Tsuchiya "gilding" @ Kido Press, Inc / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Toei Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Very weird-ass figurative sculpture, created with terra-cotta and painted paper, from the young Chiba-born artist.

MONDAY
TOKYO
* Toru Nogawa "Sanctuary of Darkness" @ Span Art Gallery / 2-2-18 1F Ginza, Chuo-ku. (Yurakucho Line to Ginza-Itchome Station). Sumptuous oils of Gothic Lolitas and sorta domino types? Sign me up!

TUESDAY
AUSTIN
* Emily + Andy's Film Club @ Visual Arts Center Courtyard / UT Art Building, 23rd St at Trinity, 6:30p. Ahead of Emily Roysdon's multimedia survey in the VAC's Vaulted Gallery (opening Sept 21, tune back in!) comes this first iteration of her co-curated film series with art historian Andy Campbell, kicking off with two films of rock 'n roll and queer culture by G.B. Jones: "The Troublemakers" (1990) and "The Yo-Yo Gang" (1992).

* "Pieces" (dir. Juan Piquer Simón, 1982) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10:30p. THIS epitomizes '80s cult slasher classics, baby, a psycho stalking college coeds with an oversized chainsaw! If the locker room chase doesn't give you nightmares, the batshit shocker of an ending totally will! BAAASSSTAAARRRD!

TOKYO
* Koji Enokura @ Taka Ishii Gallery / 5F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Two decades of Enokura's "Documentation" prints, photographs echoing respective exhibitions throughout Japan and abroad, plus additional photographic materials from the mid-'60s through '80s. Enokura's documentation also appears at "RAUM 2012 Revision with Photographs SPACE TOTSUKA 70", at Shigeru Yokota Gallery.

* MERZBOW + Guitar Wolf @ WWW / 13-17 Udagawa-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 6:30p/3000 yen. Aural ferocity, via Nagoya jet-rockers Guitar Wolf and noise god himself MERZBOW! Decibel levels be damned! w/ VJ Rokapenis (ahem)

Friday, August 17, 2012

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

fee's LIST / through 8/14


WEDNESDAY
AUSTIN
* "Possession" (dir. Andrzej Żuławski, 1981) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 7p. Rejoice, for this deeply disturbing (and blood-drenched) divorce drama, which won lead Isabelle Adjani the Palme d'Or, sees the light of day once again! The disintegration of a marriage is at the heart of this psychological horror film, which somehow balances political undertones, splatter SFX, and superb cinematography in one unclassifiable, unforgettable cinematic package. LIST-recommended! 

THURSDAY
TOKYO
* Electric Eel Shock @ 20000 Den-atsu / B1 1-7-23 Koenji-Minami, Suginami-ku (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line to Higashi-Koenji Station, Exit 2), 6:30p/2300 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/ Mangadoron

FRIDAY
NYC
* "Eraserhead" (dir. David Lynch, 1977) midnight screening @ IFC Center / 323 Sixth Ave (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St). The sodden industrial landscape, the contrasty shadows and flagellate-like figures, the hiss of a radiator (and the woman living inside it). Very little compares to cult surrealist film like Lynch's nonpareil debut. ALSO SAT

* Little Dragon (Sweden) + Frankie Rose @ Prospect Park Bandshell / Prospect Park West & 9th St (F/G to 7th Ave), 7:30p/FREE. Celebrate Brooklyn continues with local indie mainstay Frankie Rose, mesmerizing the crowd w/ her '60's-channeling gossamer charms. Then the stage opens up for songbird Yukimi Nagano and synth-pop absolutes Little Dragon, cuing an otherworldly dance party. Show up early, kids. w/ Voices of Black

AUSTIN
* "Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry" (dir. Alison Klayman, 2011) @ Violet Crown Cinema / 434 W 2nd St. The auspicious timing behind this documentary on one of contemporary art's finest activists is just too great: Klayman met Ai back in '08 and created a short film for his photography exhibition…then came Ai's beating by Chinese police and eventual detention, which captivated and alarmed the global community. A gripping portrait of a relentless figure, never stifled by threats nor repression.

* "Carrie" (dir. Brian De Palma, 1976) midnight screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St. I am beyond stoked about the remake adaptation to Stephen King's debut published novel…which is extremely rare for me and probably has a lot to do w/ Chloe Grace Moretz as the titular figure. But decades before her came awkward Sissy Spacek, in a heart-wrenching role as the glasslike, abused high-school girl with ferocious telekinetic powers. "Carrie" has lost little to none of its original bracing cinematic power. See it on the big screen! ALSO SAT

TOKYO
* PLASTIC GIRL IN CLOSET @ Koenji High / 4-30-1 Koenji-Minami, Suginami-ku (Chuo Line to Koenji Station), 7p/2500 yen. My favorite Iwate-area dream-popstars PGIC are just bursting with twee joy, tempered by waves and waves of snarling guitar feedback — these kids are LOUD live! They're joined by 7eyes40days, who celebrate their "Blind City/Closed Mind" EP release!

SATURDAY
NYC
* Warm Up 2012: Photek (UK) @ MoMA PS1 / 22-25 Jackson Ave, Long Island City (E/M to 23rd St/Ely Ave), noon/$15. Rupert Parkes' seminal '97 LP "Modus Operandi" changed my appreciation for d'n'b—as Photek, his razor-sharp drum edits and spare, sinister soundscapes added a whole new zenith of (not totally) dancefloor-friendly drama. In his later years and increasingly progressive sound…I've fallen off. But I hear he's working on a 2K12 take on "MO", and he's still undeniably among the best beatmasters around. w/ Morgan Geist and Shlohmo (LA) (FREE for members)

AUSTIN
* Aesop Rock (San Fran) + Rob Sonic (NYC) @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 8p/$20. Ace-rizzle is among my favorite lyricists, and though he moved to Cali he still lives, breathes, and speaks NYC. He answered commercial success from the "Daylight" EP with the impenetrable, thematic "Bazooka Tooth", and now the recent, superlative "Skelethon". Rob Sonic's got the rhyme chops to hold his own with Aesop's sinuous prose. Going to be a hot night for 'heads everywhere.

* Juicy J (Memphis) @ Beauty Ballroom / 2015 E Riverside Dr, 9p/$25. So much hip-hop in the city tonight! If cerebrum-shattering soliloquies isn't your jam, Three-6 Mafia frontman Juicy J is the thing. He's still among the crunkest out there. w/ Chevy Woods and Smoke DZA

TOKYO
* "Sleep Tight" (dir. Jaume Balaguero, 2011) @ Theatre N Shibuya / 2F 24-2 Sakuragaoka-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, West Exit). A lowly, brawny concierge of a hoity-toity condo takes a severely demented liking in a sunny-dispositioned, young resident. As in, hiding under her bed, drugging her all clandestine-like, and just wait 'til her boyfriend returns…or a neighbor finds out! One of the creepier entries at 2011's Fantastic Fest.

SUNDAY
AUSTIN
* Janice Lee & Anna Joy Springer @ Tiny Park / 1101 Navasota St, 6p. The "Daughter & VRRL" book tour—featuring writer/curator Lee's "Daughter" and Springer's memoir "The Vicious Red Relic, Love"—touches down in ATX. The writers read queer literature, weird science, and other assuredly mind-expanding texts. 

TOKYO
* 住所不定無職 @ Shinjuku LOFT / 1-12-0 Kabukicho, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, Kabukicho Exit), 5p/3000 yen. Killer tune explosions! The candy color-coded cuties behind 住所不定無職 (lit. "no job nor fixed address") rock the house with their potent combo of vintage sway and garage rasp. w/ THE NEATBEATS

MONDAY
NYC
* "Drive" (dir. Nicolas Winding Refn, 2011) screening @ MoMA / 11 W 53rd St (E/M to 5th Ave/53rd St, 6 to 51st St), 8p. Call me the biggest holdout to "Drive" mania—possibly b/c I don't get the fervor for Ryan Gosling. But whatever, I saw it, and I really dug it. Take raw '80s glam and neon-lit LA with a kickass soundtrack and a decent Gosling role, as a former getaway driver trying to make good, and you've got a pretty solid picture

TUESDAY
AUSTIN
* "Alligator" (dir. Lewis Teague, 1980) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. Imagine you're a kid in industrial-town Texas, and you see a creature-feature starring a huge-ass (animatronic, but whatever, you're young!), human-devouring alligator in the sewers. You now believe all NYC sewers contain such reptiles! Yes, I realize this schlock-tastic film is set in Chicago, but as a kid all big cities look the same. Anyway, it was scary enough that I haven't seen it since.

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* "The Nature of Disappearance", curated by Dr. Dieter Buchhart @ Marianne Boesky Gallery / 509 W 24th St. The gallery produced a stunning advert for this group exhibition, an image of participating artist Mathias Kessler's wonderful aquarium diorama "Nowhere to Be Found", feat. a human skull slowly consumed by a flourishing coral ecosystem. In a subtle gesture, he reclaimed the ubiquitous art-world symbol—the skull—from post-Warholian emo-trendiness and Damien Hirst glitz. That alone receives my highest praise to see this unmissable exhibition. But beyond this, all the artists here are interested in the material integrity of their works and the possibilities of total loss from their respective experimentation and transgressive practices. Feat. Yoko Ono, Joseph Beuys, Robert Smithson, Bas Jan Ader, Dieter Roth, Gustav Metzger, Félix Gonzalez-Torres, and Kessler.

* "Painting is History" @ Winkleman Gallery / 621 W 27th St. O RLY? I ask myself at this cheeky titling. Edward Winkleman himself, along w/ Jay Grimm, curated this intriguing group show, feat. six artists who use traditional painterly techniques in representing historical events. Don't expect to be bored, though, considering Charles Browning's raw imagery and Valerie Hegarty's cheeky alterations.

* "Size Matters" @ DODGEgallery / 15 Rivington St. Artists comfortable w/ shifting scales within their respective practices. Some of this sounds tongue-in-cheek, like Rebecca Chamberlain presenting simultaneously her largest work (a 5ft-tall diptych) and smallest (a 12-inch double-sided plinth), but her adaptability within architecture and that of her peers Ted Gahl, Cassie Ralhl, Matt Rich, and Michael Zelehoski, sounds dope to me. (ENDS FRI)

AUSTIN
* "Manscape: Male as Subject and Object", curated by Christopher Eamon @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces. There is a disclaimer on the gallery door noting that this group show "may not be suitable to all viewers". Sounds like my kind of show! But seriously, Eamon pulls off a thoughtful dissection of traditional male imagery and hierarchy in art via three young and compelling female artists (Mariah Robertson, Michele Abeles, and Adina Popescu) and tempered by a less-known male some 25 years their senior (John Massey). Photography is the focal point here: Robertson's two-pronged visual assertion of lone phalluses infringing onto optical illusion backdrops and Abeles' stealthy still-lifes (in one, she makes a compelling critical portrait of blue-drenched objectifier Yves Klein). Popescu gives her male subject a face (in her video "Jeremiah", screened earlier this year in "Blind Cut" at Marlborough Chelsea in NYC), but his voice is really her own words, a dialogue on consumption. Massey is not simply counterbalance here as the sole male artist and older figure. I wonder what the exhibition would be like without him. His contribution, a sensitive gaze into his own head and thoughts via his "Studio Projections" photographs (involving a maquette of Massey's studio and projections of images rephotographed from newspapers in the '70s), gives a vulnerability to this male artist via the admitted failures of depicted male-headed modernist activities. Back to the women: are they striving for the same sort of utopian goals in their respective truncations and takedowns of male imagery? I think when you take these works into the greater contexts of their respective oeuvres—like Robertson's darkroom experimentation and Abeles' continually groundbreaking compositional techniques—then the answer is not so clear. At the very least, I do not see these artists' progresses "destined for failure" like Massey's mining of decades' old modernism. 

TOKYO
* Hiroko Okada "No Dress Code" @ Mizuma Art Gallery / 2F 3-13 Ichigayatamachi, Shinjuku-ku (Yurakucho/Nanboku Lines to Ichigaya Station). Okada reinterprets the "human-painting relationship" via photorealistic renderings of…underwear! Expect a multimedia installation related to her continued pointed takedowns of hypercommodified society. (ENDS SAT)

TOKYO
* Michiko Sago + Shoko Matsumiya "Harmony" @ MA2 Gallery / 3-3-8 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku (Yamanote Line to Ebisu Station). The gallery creates a dialogue b/w two young artisans: Matsumiya's brilliant, organic glassworks and Sago's contemporary ceramic forms. (ENDS SUN)

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

fee's LIST / through 8/7


WEDNESDAY
TOKYO
* Yoshiro Takeuchi @ hpgrp Tokyo / B1 5-1-15 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku (JR Yamanote to Harajuku Station, Tokyo Metro Chiyoda/Ginza/Hanzomon Lines to Omotesando Station). Takeuchi returns to the gallery with two years' worth of new paintings, beguiling and minimalist pools of color surrounded by almost ornate ribboned borders.

THURSDAY
AUSTIN
* Dirty Projectors (Brooklyn) @ Emo's / 2015 E Riverside Dr, 9p/$22. Confession: I know Dirty Projectors for the girls' wordless harmonizing over "A Peace of Light" (on The Roots' wonderful "How I Got Over" LP), that and "Stillness is the Move". Not Dave Longstreth's decade-long, multilayered project and pretty kick-ass live band. That's changing w/ new LP "Swing Lo Magellan". Call me what I am, a johnny-come-super-lately, but I dig it: astute and emotive, almost totally genre-less. w/ Wye Oak

TOKYO
* Ryoichi Saito 「如是」 @ Gallery TOSEI / 5-18-20 Chuo, Nagano-ku (Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line to Shin-Nakao Station, Exit 1-2). "Nyoze" is a Buddhist term roughly translating to "like this", as an opener to a sutra. It's a good indicator of the Tokyo-based photographer's new show, ephemeral and luscious gelatin silver prints of floodplains, mirrored lakes, and weathered plains.

* Hiroko Osugi @ Art Front Gallery / Hillside Terrace A, 29-18 Sarugakucho, Shibuya-ku (JR Lines etc to Shibuya). The Fukuoka-born shod master delights in her continued prowess with ink and calligraphy as a contemporary art form.

FRIDAY
NYC
* "Hausu" (dir. Nobuhiko Obayashi, 1977) midnight screening @ IFC Center / 323 Sixth Ave (ACE/BDFM to W 4th St). The now almost-monthly late-night screenings of this spastic art-house horror classic returns! Think black cats are the only harbingers of evil? You haven't met Auntie's Himalayan! With enough painted landscapes, in-camera FX, fight-sequence theme-songs and cute girls to overwhelm even the most discerning crowd. See it on the big screen, again! ALSO SAT

SATURDAY
TOKYO
* "Another" (dir. Takeshi Furusawa, 2012) @ TOHO Cinemas Roppongi Hills / 6-10-2 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Toei Oedo/Hibiya Lines to Roppongi Station). "Another" began as a mystery horror novel, then a serialized manga, then a recent 12-part TV anime series. Thank you, Japan, for your thoroughness! I really dig this: it's a middle-school drama where young dude and his eerie, doll-like classmate (played by mop-topped cutie Ai Hashimoto, who was the titular villain in "Sadako 3D") investigate the senseless, violent murders of their classmates.

* nisennenmondai @ clubasia / 1-8 Maruyama-cho, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit), 11p/3500 yen. Tokyo's all-female, instrumental krautrock champs just clobber the hell out of clubasia. Think rubber-band basslines that slap against your spinal column, searing guitar loops, and Sayaka's ferocious spitfire drumming.

* tokyoDOLORES "Bionic Trigger" Summer Showcase @ Differ Ariake / 1-3-25 Ariake, Koto-ku (Rinkai Line to Kokusai-Tenjijo Station), 4p/4000 yen. Earlier this year, Japan's premiere pole-dance team tokyoDOLORES defended Italy from a deep-space viral terror. Led by Cay Izumi, the girls must now defend Japan against certain danger! 

SUNDAY
AUSTIN
* "Possession" (dir. Andrzej Żuławski, 1981) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 7p. Rejoice, for this deeply disturbing (and blood-drenched) divorce drama, which won lead Isabelle Adjani the Palme d'Or, sees the light of day once again! The disintegration of a marriage is at the heart of this psychological horror film, which somehow balances political undertones, splatter SFX, and superb cinematography in one unclassifiable, unforgettable cinematic package. LIST-recommended! ALSO MON

MONDAY
TOKYO
* Yuuji Kaida "KAIJU" @ Span Art Gallery / 2-2-18 1F Ginza, Chuo-ku. (Yurakucho Line to Ginza-Itchome Station). You need not be a geek to know Kaida, aka Japan's "monster painter" and top-notch fantasy illustrator. He's responsible for contributing artwork to Godzilla, Transformers, Gundam, and decades of general mind-blowing monster design.

CURRENT SHOWS
AUSTIN
* "Tamed Territory" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. I see three levels of abstraction, or tweaking of reality, in this group show, focused on animals and their environments. Areca Roe uses the zoo as backdrop to her photographs, manufactured dioramas of "realistic spaces" for their animal inhabitants. Calder Kamin's ceramics tread the spectrum of pure kitsch—candy-colored and nostalgic, Koons-like—and disturbing, for even her sculpted roadkill appears cute under gloss and glaze. Casey Polachek's smallish-scale paintings (besides one rendering of a mammoth puppy frolicking in the snow) appear ostensibly the most lifelike, but in fact Polachek extracted elements from multiple photographs and studies—like painterly, analogue Photoshop—to execute his scenes. They have little to no semblance with reality beyond memory and imagination, yet his compositions are convincingly real. 

* "Manscape: Male as Subject and Object", curated by Christopher Eamon @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces. There is a disclaimer on the gallery door noting that this group show "may not be suitable to all viewers". Sounds like my kind of show! But seriously, Eamon pulls off a thoughtful dissection of traditional male imagery and hierarchy in art via three young and compelling female artists (Mariah Robertson, Michele Abeles, and Adina Popescu) and tempered by a less-known male some 25 years their senior (John Massey). Photography is the focal point here: Robertson's two-pronged visual assertion of lone phalluses infringing onto optical illusion backdrops and Abeles' stealthy still-lifes (in one, she makes a compelling critical portrait of blue-drenched objectifier Yves Klein). Popescu gives her male subject a face (in her video "Jeremiah", screened earlier this year in "Blind Cut" at Marlborough Chelsea in NYC), but his voice is really her own words, a dialogue on consumption. Massey is not simply counterbalance here as the sole male artist and older figure. I wonder what the exhibition would be like without him. His contribution, a sensitive gaze into his own head and thoughts via his "Studio Projections" photographs (involving a maquette of Massey's studio and projections of images rephotographed from newspapers in the '70s), gives a vulnerability to this male artist via the admitted failures of depicted male-headed modernist activities. Back to the women: are they striving for the same sort of utopian goals in their respective truncations and takedowns of male imagery? I think when you take these works into the greater contexts of their respective oeuvres—like Robertson's darkroom experimentation and Abeles' continually groundbreaking compositional techniques—then the answer is not so clear. At the very least, I do not see these artists' progresses "destined for failure" like Massey's mining of decades' old modernism. 

* Colin Doyle "An Inquiry Concerning" @ Courtyard Garden, AT&T Center / 1900 University Ave, 2nd Fl. This handsome photography presentation by young Austin-based artist Doyle left me hungry for more. And that was after staring for like an hour at the five well-sized prints, each focusing crisply on a single object or several related elements on a non-fussy, usually monochrome backdrop. I felt an intriguing kinship b/w Doyle's compositions and those of camera-geek Christopher Williams, some 30 years Doyle's senior. Both capture the purportedly mundane or banal, boosting that image into something quite beautiful and thought-provoking. Though Williams gets a bit funny sometimes with his bisected cameras and lengthy titles, while Doyle features only one funny print of five, "Picture For Maggie", the oldest work in the show. Compare this— the red funnel, enlarged to bucket proportions and topped off with white powder, floating tuliplike on a just-there clear test-tube—to "Three Lines", both a gigantic staple and three finger-sized black lines forming a most elementary shape. The former feels almost excessive and flashy now, yet it is practically as elegant as can be. Ditto "Six Bricks", a Carl Andre-style array that speaks both to preschool-age counting exercises and my favorite style of Minimalism. Couple these with the blinged-out "Triangle" and the graceful curves and bright colors of "Sum Sum" (refrigerator magnets?), and you have a whole reductive visual language. You might be surprised at how long you spend looking at them.

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* "Wish You Were Here" @ Ana Cristea Gallery / 521 W 26th St. Nobody in NYC is showing young E. European talent like Ana Cristea. Case in point: laddish Andrej Dubravsky, whose murkily titillating scenes I first discovered via Prague's Jiri Svestka Gallery. Or the jewellike subversion by Oana Farcas (seen her in Copenhagen's LARMgalleri). Their elder Gideon Kiefer rounds out the lot with his subtly surreal scenes. Recommended! 

TOKYO
* Yuki Tawada "Burnt Photographs" @ Taro Nasu Gallery / 1-2-11 Higashi-kanda, Chiyoda-ku (Sobu Line to Bakurocho Station). The Shizuoka-born artist returns to the gallery with a truly transformative solo exhibition. She burns inkjet prints and paints them in acrylic, creating a new image phoenix-like from the gnarly, ashen remains of its previous state. Much emotional involvement and sense of place occurs here.

* Katsumi Hayakawa "PHASE III" @ Gallery MOMO / 2F 6-2-6 Roppongi, Minato-ku (Hibiya/Toei Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station). Intricate, gridlike paper structures emulating mathematical formulas, superconductor circuits, futuristic city-plans straight outta "Neuromancer" and a whole helluva lotto other cool stuff.

* Ine Izumi @ Taimatz / 1-2-11 Higashi-Kanda, Chiyoda-ku (JR Sobu Line to Bakurocho Station, Toei-Shinjuku Line to Bakuro-Yokoyama Station). I'm totally a fan of Izumi's thoughtful, delicate ink and acrylic renderings of the mundane, ornamental, and dreamlike. (ENDS SAT)

TOKYO
* Yutokutaishi Akiyama @ Aisho Miura Arts / B1F 2-17-3 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station). The performance artist, who gained nationwide fame in the '70s by running in the Tokyo gubernatorial election under "politics to be pop art", unveils a new performance work plus Buriki sculpture.

* Keiichi Tanaami @ Nanzuka Underground / B1F 2-17-3 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station). Tanaami is one of Japan's strongest answers to classic Pop art — think more the acid-toned Chicago school than NYC — which he's been producing since the '60s. This exhibition traces his creative and subversive illustrated history, plus includes a new digital animation. (ENDS SUN)

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

fee's LIST / through 7/24


WEDNESDAY
NYC
* "Ghosts in the Machine" @ New Museum / 235 Bowery (F to 2nd Ave, 6 to Spring St). A three-floor tackling of technology and machines in art. Co-curators Massimiliano Gioni (who in his spare time is organizing the 55th Venice Biennale!) and Gary Carrion-Murayari wisely go historic, featuring Hans Haacke, Otto Piene, Robert Breer, Gego and constructions by Emery Blagdon, amid others. The scientific approach to perceptual abstraction—i.e. Op Art—sounds, well, I'll give it a chance, and it includes Victor Vasarely, Richard Anuskiewicz, the mighty Bridget Riley and others. Plus a contemporary take on technological advances, via thought-provoking artists like Christopher Williams and Henrik Olesen.

* Otto Piene in conversation w/ Massimiliano Gioni @ New Museum / 235 Bowery (F to 2nd Ave, 6 to Spring St), 7p. Even cooler: the German kineticist and founder of the group ZERO talks about the interconnectivity of his art with technology and nature to Gioni, "Ghosts in the Machine" co-curator and Associate Director and Director of Special Exhibitions at the New Museum.

* Japan Cuts 2012 at Japan Society / 333 E 47th St (E/M to 53rd/5th Ave, 6 to 51st St). Crazy-ass contemporary Japanese cinema felt a bit lacking in this year's NYAFF? Don't you worry, friends, they're all here in the bonkers 2012 edition of Japan Cuts. Read on for my picks (just look for the Japan Cuts 2012 slug):

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Girls for Keeps" (dir. Yoshihiro Fukagawa, 2011) at 7:30p. In last week's screening of "Love Strikes!" I opined 'whatever happened to Kumiko Aso?' Well, she's in this film too, a beyond glamourous Japanese equivalent of "Sex and the City" whose original title is "Girl" but more closely means "Super-Stylish—and Possibly Very Materialistic—Girl".

AUSTIN
* "The Fifth Element" (dir. Luc Besson, 1997) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 7p. Sci-fi with HUMOR…what a rare concept! Park Bruce Willis (playing basically himself) behind a flying taxi, give him a huge-ass gun and a hot alien dame (Milla Jovovich as redhead), then send him off to defeat a roiling dark-matter planet of pure evil. And that ain't even the Cliffs Notes version to this awesome, sexy action romp.

* "The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave" (dir. Emilio Miraglia, 1971) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10:15p. Lord Alan Cunningham is so disturbed by his disloyal dead wife that he begins torturing sexy redheads in his castle's S&M dungeon! Replete w/ a psychedelic soundtrack!

THURSDAY
NYC
* Heliotropes @ Union Pool / 484 Union Ave, Williamsburg (L/G to Lorimer), 9p/$10. Brooklyn's fiercest doom-pop foursome Heliotropes have the indie winds at their backs. From early ripping sets that produced the rumbling and yowling cohesion of "Holy Cross" and "True Love's Knot", to the psychedelic enchantment of new single "Moonlite", a headlining set benefiting Russian riot-grrrls Pussy Riot and an upcoming show at 92Y Tribeca supporting the BrooklynVegan photo exhibition this August. Yeah, I'm a huge fan, and a friend of these rockin' ladies. Their set tonight hints at new songs. w/ The Phantom Family Halo 

TOKYO
* 日本マドンナ @ Shinjuku Red Cloth / B1 6-28-12 Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku (JR etc to Shinjuku Station, East Exit, Toei Oedo/Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Lines to Higashi-Shinjuku Station), 7p/2300 yen. Three young riot-grrrls who look like juvenile delinquents but follow the rules of rocking out HARD. Meet "Nippon Madonna".

FRIDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "The Woodsman and the Rain" (dir. Shuichi Okita, 2011) at 7p. Ah, Koji Yakusho, he's a superlative actor. Got the charisma of George Clooney and the action chops of Bruce Willis. Japan Society pays homage to this total badass, and "The Woodsman and the Rain" begins the Yakusho focus. In it, he plays…a lumberjack! A lumberjack caught up in the on-site shooting of a zombie film! Too awesome. w/ Koji Yakusho in attendance!

AUSTIN
* "Tamed Territory" @ Grayduck Gallery / 608 W Monroe Dr. The focus of this gallery's summer show is animals and their environments, feat. paintings by Casey Polacheck, photography by Areca Roe, and—rather intriguingly—animal ceramics by Calder Kamin.

* "The Dark Knight Rises" (dir. Christopher Nolan, 2012) @ Alamo Drafthouse S Lamar / 1120 S Lamar. I put off thinking about this one for a long time—hey, I had "Prometheus" consuming my full anticipation!—but now the final chapter of Nolan's darker take on Batman comes to an end, and it's looking like a good one. I'll admit: I read "Knightfall" back in the mid-'90s, so I'm super-stoked to see Batman finally go toe-to-toe w/ Tom "Bane" Hardy. 

* Kingdom of Suicide Lovers @ Mohawk / 912 Red River, 9p/$8. KOSL unleash addictively groovy noise-rock licks tempered by woozy coed harmonizing. If you told me they were from NYC circa 1992 vs Austin TX, I'd believe you. w/ Nervous Curtains 

TOKYO
* キノコホテル @ Koenji High / 4-30-1 Koenji-Minami, Suginami-ku (Chuo Line to Koenji Station), 7p/3300 yen. "Group Sounds" (think Japanese Beatles) live on in the all-female Tokyo-area garage-rockers Kinoco Hotel, whose perfect uniforms and hair-dos are equalled by their mega-fuzzy riffs and vintage organ lines. Tiny venue High should be extra cozy tonight.

* パスピエ @ Shimokitazawa GARDEN / B1F 2-4-5 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, South Exit), 7p/1500 yen Tokyo electro-pop darlings パスピエ (Passepied) channel Brooklynites Twin Sister with a hazy, nocturnal gloss. w/ FLiP

SATURDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "Chronicle of my Mother" (dir. Masato Harada, 2011) at 6p. A sensitive look at family life, filtered through the greats like Yasujiro Ozu. Koji Yakusho plays a hard-ass dad coming to terms w/ his elderly mother's growing dementia. w/ Yakusho in attendance!

* Japan Cuts 2012: "13 Assassins" (dir. Takashi Miike, 2010) at 8:20p. Miike adapts Eiichi Kudo's '63 original into a sprawling nonstop fight-scene, with stalwart actor Koji Yakusho leading his ragtag band of samurai against the decadent masses. They're destined to lose, but not before decapitating a whole mess of bad guys! w/ Yakusho in attendance!

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Cure" (dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa, 1997) at 11p. Hands down one of the scariest films I've ever seen, pure psychological dread starring Koji Yakusho (a frequent Kurosawa collaborator) as a grizzled gumshoe facing off w/ a psychic psycho. w/ Yakusho in attendance!

* Prurient @ Saint Vitus / 1120 Manhattan Ave, Greenpoint (G to Greenpoint, 7 to Vernon Blvd/Jackson Ave), midnight/$10. Oh mother. Dominick Fernow is really nice dude, seriously, but when he removes his shirt (probably) and grabs like three microphones (totally), he's full-on noisician Prurient, among the loudest, most aggressive acts I've ever witnessed firsthand. Don't let the synth-heavy "Bermuda Drain" confuse you: he's liable to bury all that under shrill feedback and charming titles like "Cocaine Death".

* Warm Up 2012: Matthew Dear (DJ set) @ MoMA PS1 / 22-25 Jackson Ave, Long Island City (E/M to 23rd St/Ely Ave), 2p/$15 (FREE for members). Ghostly guru Matthew Dear is "only" DJing Warm Up, but considering the microhouse crooner's got a new LP on the way (with autumn dates to follow), maybe he'll debut some heavy stuff? "Her Fantasy" is pretty sweet. w/ Sepalcure (Berlin/NYC) and Le1f (NYC)

AUSTIN
* The Sour Notes @ Red 7 / 611 E 7th St, 7p/$7. Austin indie-rock powerhouse collective The Sour Notes kick off their 2012 tour "The Endless Sour" by playing a massive two-stage showcase, also feat. local dudes Royal Forest, Knifight, Jess Williamson, Little Brave, and many others.

TOKYO
* Futoshi Miyagi "American Boyfriend" @ Ai Kowada Gallery / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Miyagi injects his Okinawan heritage and gay identity in this semi-narrative exhibition, utilizing traditional dyeing and stenciling to manipulate his photography.

* "Killer Motel" (dir. Kazuya Ozawa, 2012) @ TOLLYWOOD / 2F 5-32-5 Kitazawa, Setagaya-ku (Keio Inokashira Line to Shimokitazawa Station, South Exit). Considering "Robogeisha" producer Akira Yamaguchi has his hands in this blood-drenched chiller, a decidedly Japanese take on the slasher film.

* 灼熱の肌"A Burning Hot Summer" (dir. Philippe Garrel, 2012) @ Imageforum / 2-10-2 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, East Exit). Reasons to see this: 1) the latest searing drama from French auteur Garrel, 2) his brooding, oft-acting son Louis is the lead, 3) Monica Bellucci plays Louis' wife (what the hell?) and 4) John Cale scored the film. Summer just got a helluva lot hotter, kids.

* "Iron Girl" (dir. Masatoshi Nagamine, 2012) @ Ginza Cinepathos / 4-8-7 Ginza, Chuo-ku (Ginza/Hibiya/Marunouchi Lines to Ginza Station). Maybe you caught "Female Prisoner No. 701: Sasori", one of a series of Japanese-style "Women in Cages" sexploitation films. If you did, or if that title/theme even piques your sicko curiosity (hey, own up!), you'll be happy to know "Sasori"'s star, AV idol Kirara Asuka, plays the titular superheroine in "Iron Girl". She wears a powered-up (figure-accenting) suit and kicks lots of ass. Co-starring a bunch of gravure idols like Rina Akiyama.

* Miila and the Geeks @ Heaven's Door / 1-33-19 Sangen-jaya, Setagaya-ku (Den-en-toshi Line to Sangen-jaya Station), 7p/2500 yen. Tokyo singer/songwriter Moe Wadaka's incredible, indie-pop trio Miila and the Geeks (she's Miila, saxophonist Komori and drummer Ajima the geeks), whose slightly sinister, garage-rock debut "New Age" is a triumph for the indie scene. Plus Moe's behind the band's fractured lovely music videos. w/ Grayson Gilmour (New Zealand)

SUNDAY
NYC
* "Surreal Performances with Photo-Projections, Words, and Voice" @ Tribes Gallery / 285 E 3rd St, 2nd Fl, 5p. Barbara Rosenthal curated this multilayered jaunt into the subconscious, starring contemporary NYC Surrealist artist/writers producing words and sounds against large-screen projections. Plankhead, Dean Ebben, Peter Grzybowski, Heide Hatry, and Rosenthal will each participate. Open your minds and dive in.

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Love Strikes!" (dir. Hitoshi Ohne, 2011) at 1p. You have to be under 25 to understand the Japanese title, "Moteki", i.e. "unexplained romantic popularity with the opposite sex". Thus is the wave that crashes over nerdish pop culture writer Yukiyo (Mirai Moriyama), who unexpectedly befriends mega-cutie Miyuki (Masami Nagasawa). So the only natural thing happens: all these other hotties start digging him too, incl. Kumiko Aso (HELLO, where has she been??), Riisa Naka, Yoko Maki, and more. Rom-com to the max, baby.

TOKYO
* パスピエ + 快速東京  @ Shibuya LUSH / B1 1-10-7 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, East Exit), 6:30p/2300 yen. Dreamy electro-pop Tokyoites play ANOTHER show (see FRI), meaning I'm in heaven. Interesting contrast tonight, though, as they precede local spazz-rockers 快速東京, which is half the fun of these "Beat Happening" showcases.

MONDAY
AUSTIN
* "The Eurythmics Live" (dir. Geoff Wonfor, 1997) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10:30p. A child of the '80s like yours truly cannot miss this Music Monday screening, a 35mm print of synth-pop legends The Eurythmics live in concert during their "Revenge Tour" in February '87.

TUESDAY
AUSTIN
* "Q: The Winged Serpent" (dir. Larry Cohen, 1982) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz, 320 E Sixth St, 10:45p. A batshit bonkers monster movie about the mythical Quetzalcoatl roosting atop the Chrysler Building sounds unfathomable in the directorial hands of anyone besides the true mayhem-master Larry "It's Alive" Cohen. Makes me miss the Big Apple that much more.

TOKYO
* COH @ SuperDeluxe / B1F 3-1-25 Nishi-Azabu, Minato-ku (Hanzomon/Toei Oedo Lines to Roppongi Station), 8p/2000 yen. Consider what your getting into when facing a COH (né Ivan Pavlov) show: the sound engineer's debut on Raster-Noton was called "Enter Tinnitus". That said, the Sweden-based producer's retooling of Cosey Fanni Tutti ("COH Plays Cosey") and last year's wonderful "IIRON" LP promise a glacial, mesmerizing set tonight. Decibels be damned! w/ VOVIVAV & Shotaro Hirata

CLOSING SOON
AUSTIN
* "Texas Prize 2012": Jamal Cyrus, Will Henry, Jeff Williams @ AMOA-Arthouse / 700 Congress. Texas-based professionals nominated these three contemporary artists for an exhibition, then another panel of jurors pick one for a significant award. Cat's out the bag: Williams won it, for a dripping, unnerving site-specific installation on the museum's second floor, combining Central Texas fossils with industrial objects and the light smell of unseen—or absent—chemicals. Like I wrote in my earlier LIST, I was pulling for Cyrus, for his outstanding work at the New Museum's "Alpha's Bet Is Not Over Yet" and the literary workshop "Book Club" at Project Room Houses in Houston, TX's Third Ward (w/ collaborator Steffani Jemison). His large installation of animal hide-covered objects, stereo equipment, and electronics is echoed in a video performance where he douses a tenor saxophone in batter, deep-fries it, and points microphones at the process. Noisily good, but then I'm into Merzbow (see MON, NYC). Henry's rather quiet paintings of landscapes in wrong colors all hang downstairs (I mostly understand why the museum didn't incorporate the three artists) and are all the more silent paired with Cyrus and Williams' work.

TOKYO
* Takuma Nakahira "Circulation: Date, Place Events" @ BLD Gallery / 2-4-9 Ginza, Chuo Ward Tokyo (JR Yurakucho Station, Marunouchi Line to Ginza Station). Nakahira's series from the 7th Paris Biennale in 1971, where he represented Japan,    are restaged here for the first time, reflecting his youthful vivacity along the lines of peer and modernist photographer Daido Moriyama. (ENDS SUN)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

fee's LIST / through 7/17


WEDNESDAY
NYC
* "Blasting Voice" @ The Suzanne Geiss Company / 136 Grand St. As the title sort of precludes, this group exhibition is performance-driven and features a tricked out sound system. Ashland Mines developed the stage and concept while Mevin McGarry and Isabel Venero organized some two dozen artists, each performing variations of amplified poetic concepts nightly. The talent here is great and vast, incl. Wu Tsang, Math Bass, James Ferraro, and TV on the Radio's Kyp Malone throughout the exhibition's run.

* "Painting is History" @ Winkleman Gallery / 621 W 27th St. O RLY? I ask myself at this cheeky titling. Edward Winkleman himself, along w/ Jay Grimm, curated this intriguing group show, feat. six artists who use traditional painterly techniques in representing historical events. Don't expect to be bored, though, considering Charles Browning's raw imagery and Valerie Hegarty's cheeky alterations.

* Future Islands (Baltimore) + Darlings @ Death By Audio / 49 S 2nd St, Williamsburg (L to Bedford, JM to Marcy), 8p/$10. I've been koo-koo for Brooklyn lo-fi rockers Darlings since 2007 and their pop-punk LP "Yeah I Know". Their singsong coed harmonies shine through last year's high-fivable EP "Warma". They set the stage for Future Islands and force-of-nature vocalist Samuel T. Herring.

TOKYO
* Hiroko Okada "No Dress Code" @ Mizuma Art Gallery / 2F 3-13 Ichigayatamachi, Shinjuku-ku (Yurakucho/Nanboku Lines to Ichigaya Station). Okada reinterprets the "human-painting relationship" via photorealistic renderings of…underwear! Expect a multimedia installation related to her continued pointed takedowns of hypercommodified society.

THURSDAY
NYC
* Yayoi Kusama @ Whitney Museum / 945 Madison Ave (6 to 75th St). Finally. A proper retrospective for the superlative Japanese artist, whose diverse media—paintings, video, installation, sculpture etc—defy easy categorization yet are simultaneously unmistakably HERS. Kusama's hallucinatory "infinity nets", her mirrored kinetic carpets and immersive soft-sculpture apparatuses. And pumpkins. Revel in this most prominent of Japanese contemporary artists who left a deep impression on the global art scene. Plus: don't miss Kusama's disorienting "Fireflies on the Water", a truly transporting chamber of hanging lights, mirrors, and water, installed in the museum's lobby gallery.

* "Post-Op" @ Mixed Greens / 531 W 26th St. Winner of "best summer group show title" comes this thoughtful, eye-crossing exhibition. Eight contemporary artists advancing new concepts in visual illusion, incl. Rachel Beach, Suzanne Song, Rebecca Ward, and Emilio Gomariz.

* Japan Cuts 2012 at Japan Society / 333 E 47th St (E/M to 53rd/5th Ave, 6 to 51st St). Crazy-ass contemporary Japanese cinema felt a bit lacking in this year's NYAFF? Don't you worry, friends, they're all here in the bonkers 2012 edition of Japan Cuts. Read on for my picks (just look for the Japan Cuts 2012 slug):

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Smuggler" (dir. Katsuhito Ishii, 2011) at 8:15p. Ishii's latest brings him back to his gonzo Yakuza world of "Party 7" (think "Dick Tracy" on uppers); as in, it's just as colorful and off-kilter humorous, but it's also Ishii's darkest, most brutal work, too. The ensemble cast — good guy and suffering actor Kinuta (Satoshi Tsumabuki); weathered ex?-thug Jo (Ishii regular Masatoshi Nagase); razor-sharp cute Chiharu (Hikari Mitsushima); deranged Verebrae (Masanobu Ando) — are in top form.

AUSTIN
* "Neighborhood 3: Requisition of Doom" (writer: Jennifer Haley) @ Blue Theatre / 916 Springdale Rd, 8p/$12-20. Like "The Twilight Zone" for the "Resident Evil" generation, feat. four teenagers trying to escape their suburban hellhole from an onslaught of zombies!

FRIDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "Hard Romanticker" (dir. Gu Su-yeon, 2011) at 6:30p. Shota Matsuda plays a blond-coiffed, porn-stached zainichi thug-wannabe cracking skulls and hurling insults around the local hoods in a seaside town. It's also a semi-autobiographical account of director Gu's own rough youth as a Korean delinquent in working-class Japan.

* Japan Cuts 2012: "The Atrocity Exhibition", feat. "Let's Make the Teacher Have a Miscarriage Club" (dir. Eisuke Naito, 2012), "Henge" (dir. Hajime Ohata, 2012) and "The Big Gun" (dir. Hajime Ohata, 2008) at 8:40p. Prepare for a batshit trio of zero-budget psycho shorts that blend splatterpunk and topical scenarios in one boiling cinematic nabe-pot. Naito's HD short film basically sells itself: a band of beastly junior high girls entrapping their pregnant prof. Ohata's "Henge" (lit. "Goblin" or "Changeling") is like Franz Kafka's "Metamorphosis" crossed w/ Shinya Tsukamoto's "Tetsuo", while his debut short "The Big Gun" is just that, an iron-worker conned by the mob to make guns for them, so he crafts a huge-ass one in retaliation. 

AUSTIN
* Peelander-Yellow @ Guzu Gallery / 5000 N Lamar Blvd, 8p. A high-energy, wicked-times block-print exhibition by that fantastic punk-rocker also known as Kengo Hioki, frontman for Peelander-Z. And if you see him w/ that scratched and stickered up guitar, it might be an opening reception performance! Taco, taco, taco, taco, taco say YEAH. 

* "Beasts of the Southern Wild" (dir. Benh Zeitlin, 2012) @ Alamo Drafthouse S Lamar / 1120 S Lamar. This 2012 Sundance winner sounds truly magical, the strained realities of a marooned "New Orleans" community in an uncertain near future as refracted in the gaze of a precocious little girl, who discovers paradise amid the brambles. 

* "Friday the 13th part III in 3D" (dir. Steve Miner, 1982) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse S Lamar / 1120 S Lamar, 7p. Plenty of the Drafthouse's Summer of 1982 series has caught my attention, but admittedly few films play to my priorities like this slasher classic, screened like it should be in glorious 3D.

* "The Fifth Element" (dir. Luc Besson, 1997) midnight screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St. Sci-fi with HUMOR…what a rare concept! Park Bruce Willis (playing basically himself) behind a flying taxi, give him a huge-ass gun and a hot alien dame (Milla Jovovich as redhead), then send him off to defeat a roiling dark-matter planet of pure evil. And that ain't even the Cliffs Notes version to this awesome, sexy action romp. ALSO SAT

TOKYO
* Kazumasa Noguchi "Synthetic Garden" @ Art Front Gallery / Hillside Terrace A, 29-18 Sarugakucho, Shibuya-ku (JR Lines etc to Shibuya). Op-tastic art exposing surfaces and framework, whether on wood panels or the gallery walls themselves, reflecting Noguchi's background in architecture and his modus in approaching artwork.

* Ine Izumi @ Taimatz / 1-2-11 Higashi-Kanda, Chiyoda-ku (JR Sobu Line to Bakurocho Station, Toei-Shinjuku Line to Bakuro-Yokoyama Station). I'm totally a fan of Izumi's thoughtful, delicate ink and acrylic renderings of the mundane, ornamental, and dreamlike.

* Zombie Lolita 11th anniversary "Alice in Dead" @ Heaven's Door / 1-33-19 Sangen-jaya, Setagaya-ku (Den-en-toshi Line to Sangen-jaya Station), 7p/2800 yen. Take two things I dig: zombies and "lolita", and you get the bizarrely Japanese pop-idol group Zombie Lolita, feat. a bunch of cute girls in sailor suits and horror makeup playing thrash metal. 

SATURDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "Tokyo Playboy Club" (dir. Yosuke Okuda, 2011) at 3:15p. Despite the glittery name, this violent and off-kilter humorous look at Tokyo's shadowy underworld has earned serious acclaim since its Busan Film Fest premier, incl. that of young director Okuda. Think Quentin Tarentino crossed w/ Kinji Fukusaku, w/ a grinding guitar soundtrack and hardboiled dudes Nao Omori and Ken Mitsuishi (in one of his most frenetic roles yet) balanced by cutie Asami Usuda.

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Love Strikes!" (dir. Hitoshi Ohne, 2011) at 7:15p. You have to be under 25 to understand the Japanese title, "Moteki", i.e. "unexplained romantic popularity with the opposite sex". Thus is the wave that crashes over nerdish pop culture writer Yukiyo (Mirai Moriyama), who unexpectedly befriends mega-cutie Miyuki (Masami Nagasawa, who attends tonight's screening!!!). So the only natural thing happens: all these other hotties start digging him too, incl. Kumiko Aso (HELLO, where has she been??), Riisa Naka, Yoko Maki, and more. Rom-com to the max, baby.

AUSTIN
* Jamal Cyrus "Ancestor" @ AMOA-Arthouse / 700 Congress Ave, 7p. Texas Prize 2012 finalist Cyrus stages one final performance w/in his installation at the Jones Center, an audio-visual feast w/ movement in collaboration with Autumn Knight and Megan Jackson. Yeah, I'm a fan.

* Mikaylah Bowman "La Fille Qui Ment" @ Red Space Gallery / 1203 W 49th St #B. Lit. "The Girl Who Lies", Bowman's latest series of performative photography, furthering her investigation of self and memory, with a related installation.

* Peelander-Z @ Red 7 / 611 E 7th St, 9p. The color-coded Japanese art-punks are a frequent local presence, despite hailing from Planet Peelander (aka East Village NYC). Expect sing-alongs involving tacos, sunglasses, and dudes named "Mike". w/ Ghost Knife and Biters

TOKYO
* Michiko Sago + Shoko Matsumiya "Harmony" @ MA2 Gallery / 3-3-8 Ebisu, Shibuya-ku (Yamanote Line to Ebisu Station). The gallery creates a dialogue b/w two young artisans: Matsumiya's brilliant, organic glassworks and Sago's contemporary ceramic forms.

* Print Show vol 7 @ Kido Press, Inc / 6F 1-3-2 Kiyosumi, Koto-ku (Hanzomon/Toei Oedo Lines to Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station). Main draw for me in this seventh edition of the gallery's gathering of unique-edition prints is Kumi Machida, whose contemporary take on traditional "nihonga" style artwork (coupled w/ some VERY surreal imagery) is just marvelous. Plus: O Jun, Atsushi Suwa, Tokuro Sakamoto, and Wisut Ponnimit.

* "Shark Night 3D" (dir. David R. Ellis, 2011) @ TOHO Cinema Nichigeki / 2-5-1 Yurakucho, Chiyoda-ku (Yurakucho Line to Yurakucho Station, Tokyo Metro Marunouchi/Hibiya/Ginza Lines to Ginza Station). An absolutely fascinating and bloodthirsty film about snobbish PYTs (led by cutie Sara Paxton) attacked in creative ways by a variety of sharks controlled by those backwoods good ol' boys.

* ピラニアリターンズ」 (dir. John Gulager, 2012) @ HT Cinema / 7F 1-23-16 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku (JR etc to Shibuya Station, Hachiko Exit). AKA "Piranha 3DD" (what, breast-implant jokes don't translate?), which should've been as dope as the extra-gory, Alexandre Aja-directed revamp….only it's not. But hell, it's still mutated piranha wreaking havoc on plasticine women and Ken doll-looking dudes, and David Hasselhoff plays a lifeguard.

* "WET DREAM: ReBORN Special" w/ RITUALS @ Aisotope Lounge / 1F 2-12-16 Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku, 9p/3000 yen. Why would I send you off to a venue known for its "Banana Fridays"? Because tonight is fetish night, sporting punk-goth brand RITUALS and feat. a slinky dance-off from Nasty Cats, aka Aloe and Nancy of tokyoDOLORES! Plus the full roster of Nightmare/Torture Garden DJs, incl. ME:CA, Rinko, and Zil. Partying in Ni-Chome is fun!

SUNDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "Ace Attorney" (dir. Takashi Miike, 2012) at 1:30p. The video game-style hairdos transferred from Capcom's gonzo courtroom module "Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney" to this Japanese box-office blockbuster. Expect caffeinated jump-cuts and frenzied dialogue as young prosecutors and holographic mediums duel to the death — nahh, not totally that, but it's still bonkers.

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Tormented" (dir. Takashi Shimizu, 2011) at 4:15p. Alice in Wonderland. Rabbit demon. Hikari Mitsushima. Everything I've seen about this film thus far, tiny measured doses of surreally creepy film clips, have freaked me the hell out…which includes scenes of Mitsushima in her absolute most distressed. While the title lacks the spirit of the Japanese original ("Rabbit Horror", in phonetic English) AND this isn't screening in blood-curdling 3D like it should, but it'll still give you plenty of nightmares.

* Japan Cuts 2012: "Chips" (dir. Yoshihiro Nakamura, 2012) at 8p. Nakamura serves up a bittersweet slice-of-life in post-tsunami Sendai, japan, revolving around the intersecting existences of a baseball player and a burglar.  

AUSTIN
* "Masters of the Universe" (dir. Gary Goddard, 1987) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 7p. As a kid of the '80s, my playtime revolved around He-Man and other toys of the Eternia universe. Imagine my delight when "they" made a He-Man film! Imagine my disappointment when that meant a spray-tanned Dolph Lundgren as He-Man and a heavily SFXed Frank Langella (like in old-lady makeup) as sworn foe Skeletor! Imagine further the inclusion of weak-ass character Gwildor who had way too big a role, plus the absurd amount of screen-time devoted to, uh, these two TEENAGERS (incl a young Courtney Cox!)…who accidentally swipe the Key to Earth b/c they mistook it for a "Japanese synthesizer"! Hell, it was the '80s then, and this bonkers flop quantifies what made that decade so special.

MONDAY
TOKYO
* "White Agenda" @ Warehouse702 / B1F 1-4-5 Azabu-Juban, Minato-ku (Toei Oedo Line to Azabu-Juban Station, Exit 7), 3p-10p/3000 yen. It's not often that I happen across mid-afternoon fetish parties, but the chilled-out nature of "White Agenda" seems something extra special. Feat. the "White Fascination Girls", aka Aloe and Nancy of Nasty Cats plus some Japan Pole Dance girls, rope performers, and White Queens (Margarette and Lady-J, both of The Ring), plus DJs (helmed by Toru Takeda) and a VIP lounge for women only.

TUESDAY
NYC
* Japan Cuts 2012: "Zombie Ass" (dir. Noboru Iguchi, 2011) at 7:30p. An epic of epic epicness, straight from the bowels of post-NOTLD cinema and thoroughly doused in Iguchi's deviant world of scat zombies, anal alien parasites…and lotsa cute girls. I loved the world premiere (at 2011 Fantastic Fest) so much that I saw the damn film twice, it's that great. 

* Best Coast @ Terminal 5 / 610 W 56th St (1/AC/BD to Columbus Circle), 7p/$25. Bethany Cosentino & crew banish much of their debut fuzzy reverb for hard-hitting (dare I say "folksy"?) melodies. But this being Best Coast, that Cali sunshine permeates everything. w/ DIIV

AUSTIN
* "Halloween III: Season of the Witch" (dir. Tommy Lee Wallace, 1982) screening @ Alamo Drafthouse Ritz / 320 E Sixth St, 10p. In this oddity to the "Halloween" franchise, who needs Michael Myers when you have Silver Shamrock jack-o'-lantern masks that nuke kids' heads? Even the signature piano melody is eschewed by an '80s-friendly synthesizer! Now it's up to Tom "Maniac Cop" Atkins to stop the evil corporation behind all this mayhem!

CURRENT SHOWS
AUSTIN
* "Greatest Hits" @ Tiny Park  / 1101 Navasota St. Tiny Park achieved some very big things in their first year as an apartment gallery, curating three thoughtful two-artist shows feat. such talent as local heroes Miguel Aragon (winner of Austin Critics' Table Outstanding Artist, who also had a major solo exhibition at Austin's Mexic-Arte Museum) and Leah Haney (solo museum exhibition at AMOA-Arthouse this past spring), plus Chicago's Deborah Stratman (2004 Whitney Biennial) and LA-based painter and printmaker Nick Brown — plus a laudable drawing annual. Now they've relocated to a high-ceilinged commercial gallery space, filling it with some of the best-of from their past exhibitions. The reconfiguring works to Tiny Park's advantage, as it's less of a "been there, seen that" than a very concrete adjustment of scale and space. Brown's massive canvases and Aragon's large-scale media aren't so squeezed for room here, though they retain their respective impacts. It's a solid group show. This fall, Tiny Park must throw caution to the wind, using the potential for experimentation to go full-bore and, trusting their instincts, leave an even deeper impression on the local gallery scene. Consider me super stoked for what is to come.

* "Manscape: Male as Subject and Object", curated by Christopher Eamon @ Lora Reynolds Gallery / 360 Nueces. There is a disclaimer on the gallery door noting that this group show "may not be suitable to all viewers". Sounds like my kind of show! But seriously, Eamon pulls off a thoughtful dissection of traditional male imagery and hierarchy in art via three young and compelling female artists (Mariah Robertson, Michele Abeles, and Adina Popescu) and tempered by a less-known male some 25 years their senior (John Massey). Photography is the focal point here: Robertson's two-pronged visual assertion of lone phalluses infringing onto optical illusion backdrops and Abeles' stealthy still-lifes (in one, she makes a compelling critical portrait of blue-drenched objectifier Yves Klein). Popescu gives her male subject a face (in her video "Jeremiah", screened earlier this year in "Blind Cut" at Marlborough Chelsea in NYC), but his voice is really her own words, a dialogue on consumption. Massey is not simply counterbalance here as the sole male artist and older figure. I wonder what the exhibition would be like without him. His contribution, a sensitive gaze into his own head and thoughts via his "Studio Projections" photographs (involving a maquette of Massey's studio and projections of images rephotographed from newspapers in the '70s), gives a vulnerability to this male artist via the admitted failures of depicted male-headed modernist activities. Back to the women: are they striving for the same sort of utopian goals in their respective truncations and takedowns of male imagery? I think when you take these works into the greater contexts of their respective oeuvres—like Robertson's darkroom experimentation and Abeles' continually groundbreaking compositional techniques—then the answer is not so clear. At the very least, I do not see these artists' progresses "destined for failure" like Massey's mining of decades' old modernism. 

CLOSING SOON
NYC
* Carl Andre/John Wesley "Serial Forms" @ Mitchell-Innes & Nash / 534 W 26th St. This ain't the first time I've encountered an intriguing pairing w/ cartoonishly idiosyncratic painter Wesley – that'd be "Jo & John", Matthew Marks' primo "dialogue" b/w Wesley and his ultra-minimalist partner Jo Baer, back in 2010. But I unabashedly love Andre's systemic sculpture and am pretty stoked to see the visual analogy posited by the gallery b/w his heavy metal and Wesley's equally flat paintings. (ENDS SAT)

* Charles Atlas "The Illusion of Democracy" @ Luhring Augustine Bushwick / 25 Knickerbocker Ave, Bushwick (L to Morgan). Bushwick has a teeming, fertile art-scene, full of creatives and creative gallery spaces. Now W. Chelsea powerhouse Luhring Augustine states its claim in a new space w/ a brilliant exhibition, the American post-punk video artist Charles Atlas, who despite participating in the upcoming Whitney Biennial hasn't shown locally in a long while. The exhibition feat. two video installations never seen before in NYC, "Painting by Numbers" (2008) and "Plato's Alley" (2009), plus a new large-scale video work created specifically for this show and space. (ENDS SUN)