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Art Exhibit M

Sneak Peek: Dress the Derby

Last night, Halley Johnson and I went to a small printing party at VINI and got a chance to see the dirty printmaking in action. There were woodblocks:

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And screen prints:

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And I even got to make my own t-shirt:

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Here it is coming out of the dryer:

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I asked Joseph how long they would stay up making prints last night, and he said, “Until we collapse. Or get too drunk.” I don’t know how many prints that amounted to in the end, but if you want one, I’m pretty sure you can get one. Come out tonight and snag yourself a one-of-a-kind derby print!

Friday, July 9th, 9 p.m. at VINI Gallery, 423 North Watkins.

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Art Exhibit M

Printin’ Dirty

The Dirty Printmakers of America are coming to your town! A printing party and fashion show is in the works this Friday at VINI Gallery.

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“We’ll have six different printmakers from across the way,” says Joseph Velasquez, veteran printmaker and one of the event’s organizers. “I’ve got a couple of people from Chicago, Minneapolis, Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee, and New York and we’re all converging there at the VINI gallery.”

Velasquez with one of his prints.

  • Velasquez with one of his prints.

They’ll be printing up the woodblocks, carved with Derby-themed designs, on t-shirts and other garments, and also on paper. The Roller Derby girls will model the printed garments at a fashion show and art exhibit, where posters and garments will be on sale, with 50% of the proceeds benefiting the Memphis Roller Derby.

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Art Exhibit M

Human Traces

Now open at the David Lusk Gallery, Tim Crowder’s “Building a Proper Wall” is a surreal—at times bleak, at times playfully ironic— look at a psychological landscape.

Playful Nature

  • Tim Crowder, oil, enamel & embroidery on paper, 22×30
  • Playful Nature

Crowder does not use human figures in these paintings, though there are traces of their existence: in the walls and fences and houses they’ve crafted. Instead of a human face for his personal experiences and feelings of alienation, Crowder opts for animals and animal shapes.

“Animals, I like them because they aren’t so specific,” says Crowder. “You paint a person and it means something different. You’ve painted a portrait or you’ve painted a type of person — either young or old, or something you may not intend to. But with animals they’re a little bit more open to interpretation.”

Free to Go

  • Tim Crowder, oil, enamel & embroidery on paper, 22×30
  • Free to Go

The exhibit runs from July 6th to July 31st at David Lusk Gallery.

David Lusk Gallery, 4540 Poplar Avenue, 767-3800, davidluskgallery.com

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Art Exhibit M

Family Time

Two exhibits opening in Memphis on Friday showcase the work of mother-daughter, father-daughter pairs.

The upcoming exhibit at Harrington Brown Gallery is “Cross Pollination” — a reference to the influence and inspiration passed between Paula Temple and her daughter, Ariel Baron-Robbins. “They both have completely different styles, but they complement each other,” says gallery owner, Rose Harrington Brown.

Gestures

  • Ariel Baron-Robbins
  • Gestures

“My daughter has a lot of large figurative work and smaller drawings,” Temple explains. “And she has some very, very new work that I’m hoping we can hang. It’s not very traditional at all— it’s a lot of composite paper pieces that drape on the wall.

Ariel Baron-Robbins with her new work at the University of Southern Florida.

  • Ariel Baron-Robbins with her new work at the University of Southern Florida.

“On my side, there’s a lot of small pieces that fit together, says Temple. “If you can conceive of each individual piece as a window pane and then grouped together like window panes would hang.” She is also displaying a series of paintings called “Cenote,” which pictures swimmers as seen from the top of a sinkhole in Mexico. “On the Yucatan Peninsula, if you look down off the edge of the sinkholes (they’re called ‘cenotes’) you see the swimmers in the bottom,” says Temple.

Cenote 2

  • Paula Temple
  • Cenote 2

“The image of the swimmers is actually very close to the ‘Icarus’ series I did. I’m using people as part of the landscape, swimming in the water or in the sky. I just love the contrast, the image of a human wanting to fly and failing.”

New Flight

  • Paula Temple
  • New Flight
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Art Exhibit M

Who Shot Rock?

Jimi Hendrix and Wilson Pickett, Prelude Club, Atlantic Records release party.

  • William “PoPsie” Randolph
  • Jimi Hendrix and Wilson Pickett, Prelude Club, Atlantic Records release party.

Gail Buckland is both the author of the book and guest curator of the exhibit, Who Shot Rock & Roll: A Photographic History 1955 to the Present, opening at the Brooks Museum tomorrow, Saturday, June 26th. Buckland is a veteran photographic historian, curator, author, and professor, and she was kind enough to answer a few of my questions about the upcoming exhibit. In addition to the exhibit opening party for members this evening, there will be a curator talk open to the public at 2 p.m. on Saturday followed by a book signing.

Why music photography in particular?

I’ve been around long enough to know that at different times, different genres are embraced into the larger history of photography. There was a time when fashion photography was not considered art, and museums would never show it. Then all of a sudden maybe 10 or 15 years ago you started seeing museums doing fashion exhibitions and having serious discussions about its importance. I go far enough back that I remember when Richard Avedon was not exhibiting in museums because he was considered a commercial photographer.

All of that is a preface to say that I recognized that there are brilliant, important photographs of musicians and of the entire musical revolution that we know of as rock and roll. Most of the attention has always been on the people who make the music. Not incorrectly— we should celebrate those people. But I felt the time had come that the people who gave rock its image also need to be acknowledged.

How do you define the relationship between rock and roll and photography?

The revolution that we know of as rock and roll was a bipartite revolution. It was sound and image. The music alone could not create the revolution. The kids were reacting to the clothes and the hairstyles and the body language. And the people who gave rock its image are very important because revolutions have to be documented to be believed. It’s the photographers who were bringing back the message that kids were going wild in mosh pits in Seattle. It was like photographing the front line and sometimes you came back with your battle scars. But especially for young people, it’s so important that there are people out there thinking like them and looking like them and loving the same music, so the image of rock is really important.

What was the relationship like between the musicians and photographers?

A lot of the photographers when they picked up their cameras they were every bit as passionate taking the photographs as any guitarist plucking his strings. This is a burning passion in them and they often felt that when they were shooting they were almost playing along with the music. This is the opposite of paparazzi. There are no stolen images in my shows. Most of these photographs were taken in collaboration and with mutual respect—no exploitation. A lot of the photographers stopped photographing when they started to be controlled by the labels — when the hair stylists and the people with clothes and the PR people became more important than just the musician and the photographer interacting and trying to do something together. It wasn’t fun anymore. What was fun was creative artists working together to come up with something.

Jagger/Leopard

  • Albert Watson, Los Angeles, 1992
  • Jagger/Leopard
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Art Exhibit M

Welcome to Exhibit M: A blog about art in Memphis

What art offers is space — a certain breathing room for the spirit.

John Updike