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PORN WARS: The F.B.I.s Hidden Campaign to Police Morality By David Rosen.BUSHWICK BOUNCE A fragment from Isolate Flecks: An Anatomy By Forrest Hylton.STANLEY ARONOWITZ with Gregory Smulewicz-Zucker.The Strange Case of Charles Taylor By Nicholas Jahr.Giving it All for Ron Paul By Michael Terry.Summer Means Hibernation for Coney Islands Polar Bears By Lauren Keating.CITYNOTES: A Real Relic By Theodore Hamm.
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REPORT CARD The Dumbass Factor By Liza Featherstone.OCCUPY and 350.ORGYou Come Down Here and Embrace! By Reverend Billy.Bucking Brooklyns Machine LINCOLN RESTLER with Williams Cole.
#DAVID PACKER SERIES#
Exhibiting astrolabes in the Arab world carries particular meaning given the device’s Islamic origins and importance as a tool used in finding and colonizing the New World.įinally, Packer’s series of photographs of local high-power lines and telephone poles speaks of the streaming of power and information, as well as the sad beauty of shared physical banality sometimes wrought by change. Cobbling together a poetics of functional sea-faring instruments from cast-off bric-a-brac and broken bits, the artist considers the never-ending, osmotic flow that underwrites cultural exchange. Packer’s investigation of the visual qualities of old and new technologies was extended in a series of found-object astrolabes and collages. In a region where water is scarce and oil is plentiful, the colors blue and black have particular meaning. As Packer says, “Plastic is the new ceramics.” Arranging multi-tiered groupings of these delicate white multiples-whose color, surface, and sleek irony call to mind Duchamp’s “Fountain” -on locally-made tables, Packer places one blue and one black bottle within each assembled piece. In Les Bidons, Packer has worked with Fez craftsmen to fabricate ceramic replicas of the plastic water bottles found in all Moroccan cafes. At a 2006 Kohler Residency, he fabricated five bright red, life-size V8 car engines, which were suspended from the ceiling on chains as an installation entitled The Last of the V8s this piece has been exhibited in Chicago, Sheboygan, Michigan, and Bellevue, Washington. As a master practitioner of architectural and technical ceramics, Packer speaks simultaneously of the intimate and the grandiose. She ventures thus into an edgier, but somehow still lush and lyrical, sampling of the “incommensurable narratives” described by art theorist Terry Smith in his studied definition of the contemporary.ĭavid Packer’s sculptures, drawings, and wall collages evince a wry belief in the ability of both physical presence and imagery to influence the viewer’s relationship to information-political, cultural, technological, and through these, textual. Here, Lanzetta overlaidMorrocan zellij patterns adopted from the Royal Palace in Fez (printed in a Hindi palette of deep pinks and orange), onto fragments of Diasporic mosque floor plans. In her multi-paneled silkscreen entitled “Dharma Index,” Lanzetta really hits her mark. These paintings reference the imprinted stamps used historically in China to signify and identify imperial patronage. To create many of the paintings on view in her exhibition, Reign Marks, Lanzetta employed a universal interlocking knot pattern found in Celtic, Roman, Byzantine, Chinese, and Arabic decoration, chopping, slicing, and reworking the basic knot as a formal device. In 2009, for example, she traveled throughout Syria and India in order to research the historical development of ikat weaving, both technically and visually, along the Spice Route. As Lanzetta has fed her increasingly omnivorous appetite from an ever-widening field of visual cultures, however, she has also dug deeper into these sources’ histories, exploring how form speaks to notions of aesthetics, power, and beauty. Before we can identify the origin of a motif or trope, we adopt, own, manipulate, and communicate that which we seem to seamlessly absorb-using visual impact to our own ends. Lanzetta’s paintings and prints have always asserted that imagery, design, and decoration travel effortlessly amongst countries and across periods of time. While the artists both work freely with found motifs and imagery-Western and otherwise-the ways in which they do so incorporate the historic and the contemporary with a directness that bypasses obscurantism and, at these artists’ best, the romantic. Having just returned to New York from nine months of working in Morocco, interfacing with a country that is “emerging” into the global contemporary art world, neither Packer nor Lanzetta is unaccustomed to functioning outside of his or her element, and it’s not their practice to escape. On View Le Cube, Independent Art Room March 16 – Rabat, Morocco