RESULTS TAGGED “PAUL D’AGOSTINO”

Opinion

How Bushwick Accidentally Left Brooklyn

by | 8.17.12 | 1 Comment

By Paul D’Agostino

Three or so in the morning is not, perhaps, an ideal hour to stream full-length feature films online. At least that’s how I feel about films I want to watch attentively and in their entirety.

So I’ve developed a habit of using that time frame to try out television shows I hear people talk about. This has proven fruitful, at times, for entertainment purposes. Wasteful, in a sense, for time purposes. But more the former than the latter, as I’m not very capable of watching much of anything online before I’ve truly given up on other things to do. And I’m almost completely incapable of just going to sleep instead.

Well, lately I’ve been using the rather new series Alphas as the wee hour go-to since I exhausted Downton Abbey and a couple other shows here and there. I’m enjoying it well enough, as it’s in the tradition of X-Files, reminds me a bit of Fringe, is set primarily in New York, and is typically at least sufficiently clever and amusing.

Oh, and sometimes things blow up. All these things are very good.

It also transitions from a more or less feature-length pilot episode to approximately 45-minute chunks. Quite useful for those threes in the mornings.

When I got to episode 7, anyway, “Catch and Release,” the very first moments had me hitting the pause button. For as the scene fades in, the geographic indication at the bottom reads:

BUSHWICK, NEW JERSEY

This, of course, didn’t seem to make much sense. So I looked it up. It doesn’t seem to make much sense to Google, either. And it’s not in any blunders or factoids on imdb or Netflix—not that I found at the time, at any rate. I did learn a thing or two, though, about a company called Bushwick Metals that has a plant in New Jersey. If you’re looking for punching or drilling equipment, or perhaps carbon steel beams or grating, I know just the 750,000-sf warehouse you might like to visit.

So the Jersey indication was probably just a mistake. The show’s writers should have Bell (if you watch, you know) fact-check such things from now on.

Mistake aside, the nonetheless enjoyable—perhaps even all-the-more enjoyable—episode goes on to feature a somewhat rogue ‘alpha’ character named Skylar who fabricates extraordinarily engineered contraptions out of an industrial adorned with graffiti. You know, DIY-tech-style. She has a number of tattoos and snazzy highlights. She has a bit of snark and anarchist leanings. She decries ‘the system’ while selling some of her wares to, well, ‘the system.’ Her processors and drones and other well-dreamt gizmos are really sweet, after all. We wouldn’t want them to get into the wrong hands!

Oh, and she meets one of her buyers at a Farmers’ Market in Brooklyn Heights. When they wrote that part into the script, might not they have reconsidered their placement of the ‘Wick in The Jerz?

Anyway, highly entertaining, this episode.

Give it a gander. Perhaps your building is in it. Or maybe your graffiti. Or that girl with highlights who used to live down the hall.

It’s at least one way to kill pre-dawn hours while waiting for the new season of Downton Abbey.

On that note, free Mr. Bates!

Arts and Culture

Thoughts on Bushwick Open Studios 2012

by | 6.05.12 | 2 Comments

The long version Bushwick Open Studios 2012.  The world has changed in a generative way and they are  on the forefront of defining a new American culture.

By Sean Alday

 

I think I’m going to write a story about how the common thread tying the show together was ‘ego.’
-Sean Alday

An artist without an ego is a corpse.
-Michael Kronenberg

The thing that struck me as I wandered from place to place during Bushwick Open Studios was the field day Freudian psychologists would have with the percolating ego in every direction. Some obvious, some subtle, some well-intentioned, some well-executed and some none of the above.

Let’s start with the low hanging fruit as many of us are still holding on to our printed maps. It was large, as Jason Andrew pointed out it was almost the size of the New York Times. There were over 500 studios and galleries this weekend.

“The size is warranted.”

That was my first thought. Until I looked inside.

Something had gone awry with the design. The first page made sense, even if it was a tad sloppy. My only critique would be to have limited the existing text to one page. Following that were two pages filled with what looked like a whole bunch of nothing, two full pages promoting “Seeking Spaces” and several pages of promotion.

Finally a map appears. This is what many will see first when they arrive off of the L train at the Morgan Stop and it’s telling them that four air-conditioned stops ago is where the weekend began. Except for many of them the weekend began at No Name. Which is to say 56 Bogart.

After you make your way into the building a smorgasbord of art madness ensues. Everyone is talking about everything. There are four floors and a basement. You kind of want to take your clothes off. The galleries on the first floor stop you from going through with it. But you kind of want to all weekend. The older gallery directors are wiry and spry. You can feel them reflecting a lot of energy, they are usually artists themselves. The younger gallery directors are bursting with similar energy. The world has changed in a generative way and they are all on the forefront of defining a new American culture.

Peter Hopkins is filming a Bollywood Soap Opera with several of Emtee’s alter egos. Brendan Carney is considering his printmaking business with you. Marco Antonini will talk you through NURTUREart’s maze of videos. John Holt will draw you to C.C.C.P. by both of you haven taken a chance. Nathaniel Lieb will explain that life is fairly simple to complicate.

Once you’ve talked to a few people and get a sense of where to go, you may have spent two to three hours in 56 Bogart. So you might wander down to 117 Grattan where Austin Thomas had curated a show in Sharon Butler’s new studio. Good pieces by Larry Greenberg were found here. I spoke with a friend for a few moments and then wandered around the room, three drawings of incense smoke stood out for the artist’s choice of color. Next to her studio was Jae Song showing dual projections of a conversation between reflections. A building with open spaces on each floor, this will become de rigueur for your explorations.

Next stop seems to be Brooklyn Fireproof. Off the top of my head Holly Shen Claves, Matthew Brennan, Sarah Nelson Wright and Gili Levy were hosting people. The bar was ready for happy hour and the chefs were preparing to enter their zone.

The serendipity of curiosity worked well this weekend. If you’ve stepped into the unexpected places on your route then you’re starting to get a sense of how many artists are in this neighborhood. If you think about how much energy is going in to every single thing to make this happen, the map fades away and you are on your way.

You arrive at The Active Space on 566 Johnson. First of all there is the gallery itself. Deborah Brown made a huge leap in the past year. It felt like the world she painted became less romantic and more urgent. The landscapes matured in the right way and devolved in sublime manners. Looking at the card table makes you realize that her projects are all over. Remember to congratulate Ashley Zelinskie on her curation of this excellent show.

Katarina Hybenova is exhibiting the “Vegan Pizza Party” and the title piece is like a sculpture of a flashing .gif file. Turn around James George has taken pictures of the way a computer might see you. The studios around are fun and full of different kinds of approaches to art from J.R. Larson’s wooden bones on canvas to Cathy Choi’s tasteful resin on canvas works. This building is sunny and the name reflects what it feels like.

There’s the Onderdonk House up the road on Flushing. The Sculpture Garden show is in the expansive backyard. You can get a view of the skyline from the top of the hill and remember that you’re in New York City. There’s a home at the bottom of the hill built in 1709 where a band called Pass Kontrol is the real live session band for an ensemble of performances that can include you.

Head to 1717 Troutman for a wild session of studio hopping. Glass portraits, video, music, and paintings to say the least. Don’t forget to swing into galleries Parallel Art Space and Regina Rex. It was my first time in the building and I felt it. There was good energy touched with enough anarchy and bohemianism to keep the galleries from resting on their laurels. By the way, I’ve seen Rob de Oude’s small works before, but I was blown away by the large pieces in his and Enrico Gomez’s shared studio. There was a wall showcasing the evolution of the simultaneously-linear-and-swirling pieces.

From there I went to Wyckoff Avenue. If you’re hungry there are two good options: wait for a table at the Northeast Kingdom or wait at the tortilla factory and restaurant. Afterwards, it may be time for an iced coffee. Just to top off the great weather (including the quick rain shower on Sunday) stop by the Wyckoff Starr where Paul Rome and Roarke Menzies were set up on the sidewalk doling out coffee and water. If you go inside have a Grasshopper.

There is a studio belonging to an interesting artist named Myles Bennett. His painted canvases hung like shawls without a mannequin. This place reminded me of why it’s good to talk to the artist. He made these pieces to be worn, there was a look book, and there were canvases stitched into abstract figures of what it would look like to wear them.

Down to Norte Maar for original collages of Pass Kontrol posters by Oliver Ralli. Two that stuck out were a Warhol and Basquiat imagined conversation and a “Cut a hit record with Pass Kontrol” flier from Bushwick Open Studios past.

If you were even slightly cynical about Bushwick art before the weekend began, after that show it was hard to maintain that irony.

When I wasn’t running around I was around the corner at my space 950 Hart Gallery for our final gallery exhibition. We made a lot of new friends, sold some prints and wrote the showing artist’s names on the wall.

Down to Starr Street and stop at quite a few places along the way. The first stop was the huge warehouse with Julie Torres’s cooperative show ALLTOGETHERNOW and another several rooms of art. I could not figure out who was behind each room but there was always something around the corner. Mind your eyes and loose clothing; sculptures are coming out of the wall. From there it was off to the building that houses the Bushwick Starr. A collective that showed work featuring Christina De Roos and sculptures made with tenacity out of milk cartons and canvas. I even spotted a former roommate in one of the photographs. I recognized him looking right at home naked in the midst of a throng of moving people.

I stopped at Olivia Swisher’s home. She stood at the refrigerator with the door wide open when I walked in. I was puzzled. She offered me a beer and a series of poems by Chiara Di Lello written on eggs and milk cartons and packages of butter. I read everything in her fridge.

On Bushwick Basel, that was a name game and many people fell for it hook, line and sinker. But let me say that I enjoyed visiting NURTUREart, AIRPLANE, Studio 10, and Storefront Bushwick’s booth in that order. Norte Maar’s booth had a collage that summed up everything that I felt: “I am having such a good summer.”

Up to Wilson, past Miles and Cain’s Tavern. Two drinking spots with unique flavors that both appeal to me. I stopped at Storefront Bushwick to see what was happening. In the project space I saw celestial patterns by Paula Overbay and two new pieces by Matthew Mahler. This made me reflective as one of his older, angular pieces hung in my gallery. He is cornering his style, this is a part of the artist’s hunt.

From there I went to the arena that spoke to me more than anything else this weekend. It began in English Kills. First of all, Chris Harding puts on some of the best new exhibitions in this city. This show was no exception. David Pappaceno’s sculptures were arranged to give you a center of gravity and the bases were excellently arranged. The wall was a mind warp of colorful patterns and frames enclosing drawings similar to the sculptures. And don’t miss the paintings in the next room. Influences that are maturing shine through the originality of the compositions.

Across the street Don Pablo Pedro sat cross legged and conducted a court of Bacchus. His work is quite good. I hope that you didn’t miss the Dirty Little Cunt.

Next door I found myself in awe of Jim Herbert’s enormous paintings. I climbed to the second level for a different perspective. I can’t wait to see what he unveils for the next solo show. These pieces need light and their own company.

From there you’ll stroll up to Bush Gardens for a view of Centotto’s “Charting the Not” curated by Paul D’Agostino. Here you’ll run into Austin Thomas’s work and Gili Levy’s for the fourth or fifth time. Next door is Tim Kent’s studio. There was a piece entitled “Leviathan” made with charcoal and paper that I had been wanting to see for a long time. This studio did not disappoint. It’s hard to appreciate the masterful technique of his paintings of European Homes online. It’s instant gratification in person.

After all of that, I was a bit tired and went home to nurse a whiskey bottle and feel good about the world.

If the trend continues I’ll have to be fitter than Jason Andrew and his dog combined to see everything next year. In the meantime I’m keeping my eye on you Bushwick. Stay classy.

Arts and Culture

…and Ballet Meets Neuroscience

by | 4.10.12 | 1 Comment

By Katarina Hybenova

Bushwick-based non-profit for collaborative arts, Norte Maar, is currently finishing their works on a new ballet, The Brodmann Areas. New ballet explores the relationship between human brain and human mind; ventures into neuroscience and delves into it through dance. Loyal to its mission to collaborate across the arts, Norte Maar’s Jason Andrew (production) and Julia Gleich (choreography) invited several visual and sound artists to contribute their ideas and their art. As a result of the broad collaboration, The Brodmann Areas is a gracious hybrid between dance, video and sound art.  Julia Gleich told us that the concept of the ballet was born through the talks with several Bushwick artists that included Paul D’Agostino, Roarke Menzies, Andrew Hurst, Audra and Margo Wolowiec, Dennis Pelli, Lawrence Swan among others, and naturally Jason Andrew. The ballet is musically produced by composer Ryan Francis.

On Friday morning, I attended the rehearsal of the ballet in progress at the Center for Perfomance Research in Williamsburg in an attempt to capture its essence and several photographs. The dance was beautiful, and to observe Julia Gleich’s collaborative approach to creation of choreography is always fascinating.

The Brodmann Areas is a unique collaborative endeavor created from Bushwick that should not be missed on your social diary!  The ballet premiers this Thursday, April 12 at 7:30pm at the Center for Performance Research and will continue through Sunday. The tickets are only $25 ($20 if you’re a student or a senior) and can be purchased here.

 

 

 

 

 

In the Hood

Top 5 Bushwick Events This Week

by | 4.04.12 | 0 Comments

Every new week in Bushwick is a reason to celebrate: we have a bunch of awesome events organized by creative Bushwick folks coming up. But before we walk you through the five of them we like the most this week, please enjoy the opportunity to listen to this this one-man a cappella multitrack version of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles theme song….

#1  Screening of Jason + the Argonauts @ NURTUREart (Wednesday, 7-9pm)

On Wednesday night, a Bushwick non-profit organization based in 56 Bogart building, NURTUREart, will be screening some classics to accompany the current art exhibition Argo of Anna Carossa. The 1963 film Jason and the Argonauts was directed by Don Chaffey. Don’t miss this cult film based on Greek mythology and the ’60s special effects. Moreover, the admission is free!

#2 Theriomorphous Entourage Art Opening @ Centotto (Friday, 7-10pm)

So @KaileeAyyar told us on Twitter that she just moved to the neighborhood and asked us about the first thing she should do.  And we said go to Centotto on Friday! Centotto, my dear friends, is a legendary apartment gallery run by Paul D’Agostino, a sophisticated curator who like likes to explore interesting concepts, usually following from a piece of good reading. This Friday, Centotto will open an art show consisting of 12 men exploring the beasts within.

#3 Poetry reading @ Paper Swan Loft (Friday, 7-9pm)

While on Moore Street for Centotto opening, check out another great loft right in the building next door, Paper Swan Loft. Paper Swan Loft belongs to the collective of musicians, filmmakers and artists from Bushwick,who are, this Friday night, hosting poets Matthew Zingg, Gina Mobilio, Mike Lala,  Julie Kantor. The nights at Paper Swan Loft are always a really really pleasant experience, after which you won’t be able to hide a (rather silly) smile on your face for days. Aaah…

#4 BOS Mixer @ little skips (Thursday, 8-10pm)

Bushwick Open Studios 2012 mixer no. 2 will be held at popular coffee shop Little Skips this Thursday! The most compelling reasons why you should attend are: 1) you need to attend at least one of the mixers to receive a registration code for your studio participation at BOS; 2) BOS mixers are always FUN!; 3) Little Skips is undergoing an interesting reconstruction and is being turned into even cuter place it already is.

#5 Cafe Ghia 1st Birthday (Saturday, 9pm)

Cafe Ghia opened only one year ago, but instantly became one of the most popular spots in the neighborhood. Delicious food, great selction of wine and beer, friendly staff- all that participated to the fact that Bushwick loves Ghia, and we won’t miss their birthday party!

 

Complete event listings for this week can be found here.

Arts and Culture

10 Amazing Bushwick Collage Artists

by | 3.28.12 | 4 Comments

By Katarina Hybenova

“Bushwick collage is not only popular, but increasingly amazing!” This was my conclusion recently made after numerous art-exploring adventures in Bushwick.  Collage being a combination of elements from different sources reflects the time we live in so accurately. Magazines, postcards, fliers… Stimuli coming at us from every direction, combined with artists’ own imaginary world reflect everyday subconscious battle with overload of impulses. While some artists work with physical elements and cut outs, others work with images compiled exclusively from the Internet, and create collages in Photoshop. I believe that this speaks loud about the spirit of the time, and the vanishing importance of print and physical objects in favor of the Internet…

Here is a selection of 10 extraordinary artists from the Bushwick area who work in collage listed in alphabetical order.

#1 Nate Anspaugh

photo via nateanspaugh.com

Nate Anspaugh lives and works in Ridgewood. A large part of his body of works is formed by poster collage. He scrapes of posters from the walls as if he was taking parts of the city home with him. Afterwards, he layers them frantically creating abstract objects, a collage of city impressions…

#2 Paul D’Agostino 

Photo via nortemaar.org

One of the number of the activities of Paul D’Agostino, a Bushwick’s renaissance man, is collage making. Almost forgotten memories, narratives and concepts are common to Paul’s works. Paul uses old postcards, cut outs from the magazines, advertising fliers, newspaper articles, or headlines…

#3 Andrew Hurst

Photo via storefrontbk.com

Collage and assamblage is the medium of Andrew Hurst. This sophisticated Bushwick artists creates imaginary worlds frequently balancing on the edge of the dark side.

#4 Kenna Kindig

Photo by Sean Alday

Kenna Kinding is a young artist who in addition to typical cut outs and drawing uses also artificial hair. Her imaginary worlds are altered consciously with borrowed elements from elsewhere, such as a typical manga eye on a character in her piece.

#5 Ken Kocses

photo via bushwickgallery.com

Ken Kocses, a Ridgewood-based artist combines drawings and collage. Characters from the 1990s TV shows, basketball stars, kid commercials – Ken’s pieces are full of pop culture references. He searches the Internet for images from the decade to print them and glue them onto his trippy drawings.

#6 Ellen Letcher

Ellen Letcher’s minimalism and brutality combined with tenderness are striking. She combines cut outs from (fashion) magazines with paint, result of which are intensely unsettling pieces.

#7 JP Marin

Photo via JP Marin's facebook

 JP Marin’s collage art is a trippy journey of the Internet. As a reflection of the stream of JP’s consciousness feel also his collages. He uses quirky, odd elements; his collage art is full of pop cultural references and insider jokes.

#8 Kevin Regan

infinite_ron2_sm

Photo via Kevin Regan's flickr.

A journey through Kevin Regan’s body of work is adventurous, and if you set for it, you will most likely feel like a kid discovering new fantasy worlds. I personally enjoy his sense of humor and self-irony, which are leaking through  his narratives.

#9  Austin Thomas

Austin Thomas lives and works in Manhattan, but her numerous Bushwick activities, from exhibiting, curating, mentoring to supporting the community, qualify her for a honorary title of a Bushwick artist (at the very least). Her gentle collage pieces are an exquisite gate to her dreamy worlds. She frequently uses subtle shapes, pale colors, using mostly paper, her collage pieces belong to the most important of the list.

#10 Vahge

photo via Vahge's Facebook

Vahge is a Bushwick-based self-taught collage artist, which is pretty much absolutely amazing. She works in small scale with a surgeon-like precision. Her objects are usually women placed between romantic and unsettling reality.

Editor's Pick

5 Things to Do This Week (to get involved in the community)

by | 1.30.12 | 0 Comments

We are entering February this week, folks. And as the winter slowly proceeds, let’s look at how you can get involved in the community of Bushwick on various levels. Among other things, let’s not forget that we are not done with #OWS yet, and Bushwick is a large hub for important events. Here is how you can get involved in Bushwick community:

#1 Bushwick General Assembly @ Kave (Wednesday, 7pm)

Bushwick General Assembly is a community organization dedicated to the enrichment and preservation of Bushwick. It is a part of the Occupy Brooklyn movement, and if you caught yourself fretting about the recent development of Bushwick using the “G” word at least 5 times in the past 3 days, we suggest you come to Kave in The Loom on Wednesday, and actually talk about what you can do to create socially sustainable environment in Bushwick.

RSVP on FB

#2 Welcome to The Occupation @ Brooklyn Fire Proof (Wednesday, 8:30pm)

To accompany the #ows movement, Brooklyn Fire Proof is hosting an interesting film series, which focuses on ’80s-90s cautionary tales: movies from the margin, standing in the long shadow of Reagan and Thatcher. Their common vision is that of everyday life tortured into goose-step with an expensive and sophisticated police state and cheap and vulgar consumer goods. Alternating between B-movie blockbusters and indies, the worlds of REPO MAN and ROBOCOP, the films expose possible results of the dysfunctional relationship between a people and their government.

web

#3 Bushwick Review Presents: Thee Keepers ov Love @ Body Actualized (Saturday, 4-7pm)

Bushwick Review is a quarterly printed publication that features short stories, essays, poetry, photography, recipes, paintings, drawings, plays, comics, and basically anything that can be printed on a black-and-white page. It is also a growing community of creative people. On Saturday, Bushwick Review will bring readings of 11 writers. Also check out new yoga spot in the neighborhood, Body Actualized.

RSVP on FB

#4 Paul D’Agostino @ Norte Maar (Friday, 6-9pm)

Many know Paul D’Agostino as a Bushwick pioneer who opened Centotto, a gallery at his loft at Moore St. Many know Paul as a highly sophisticated curator and the community supporter. Many know Paul as a professor of Italian language and literature at Brooklyn College, and many know Paul as a contributor to The L Magazine. However, not enough people know that Paul D’Agostino is also an extremely talented artist himself… Come to look at the art and listen to the writings of one of the people who made this neighborhood a great spot on Earth. This Friday at Norte Maar.

RSVP on FB

#5 First Friday @ The Loom (Friday, 7:30-11pm)

The Loom Gallery is featuring a regular 1st Friday of the month exhibition. This month, The Loom Gallery will present Billy Hahn’s most recent paintings, drawings, collages, and installation. SAGOPALM – a band that is allegedly known for melting faces, making young girls tear up, and mapping out a new diagram to the distant stars – will perform. 1st Fridays at the Loom are always a nice occasion to hang out with your neighbors and to meet other members of the Bushwick community.

RSVP on FB