philadelphia weekly
July 25, 2008 newsletter sign-up  |  user log-in  |  search:  
rss
home
top story
news & opinion
letters
a & e
screen
movie showtimes
tv listings
food
music
online extras
archives
blogs
podcasts
photos
video
listings
menu guide
happy hour
guide
classifieds
real estate
open house
directory
submit an ad
good stuff
pw sponsored events
about us /
contact
advertising


last week's issue
email   print   rss             
archives 2008 » may. 14th  
  

 SUMMER GUIDE

Digital divides: Artists Charlotta Westergren (top) and Joe Boruchow bring it back to basics.
Art Roundup

Silhouettes and drawings rule the new school.

by Roberta Fallon





Philadelphia’s art scene doesn’t take summer vacation anymore.

Miguel Luciano’s identity-fueled works at Taller Puertorriqueño use exaggerated stereotypes to poke fun at bromides about Puerto Rican identity. Luciano, a New York-based artist, turns Taller’s galleries into an interactive playroom with sculptures (including a slot machine) that let people “play” with their own identities. Last year I saw a show of Luciano’s at the Cue Art Foundation in Chelsea, and this hot young artist’s paintings—parodies of ads for KFC and McDonald’s (picture a triumphant Ronald McDonald as a conquistador slaying natives)—were outrageous and right on target. Luciano’s Pure Plantainium necklace on a chain turns the stereotype of macho gold chain-wearing hoods into a wonderful mock-heroic embrace of Puerto Rican culture and cultural stereotypes.

Wexler Gallery’s “(In)Between” is a juicy little show about pleasure and death. Check out Damien Hirst’s toothless silver skull sculpture, a Philadelphia gallery coup that brings the British phenom’s high-end and much-talked-about objects to town for probably the first time. Beyond the skull (there’s also a Hirst silver heart sculpture and a print of the legendary diamond-encrusted skull), this art’s all about life being pleasurable. Short, sweet, then over.

Joe Boruchow’s cut paper narratives in black-and-white are perfect noir—their content and craftsmanship is astonishing. Randall Sellers’ new oil paintings are mini fantasy worlds. Known for microcosmic graphite drawings of people amid scenes of ruined architecture and weeds, Sellers proves his painterly side as graceful accompaniment to his paper works. Paul Adelaide shows forlorn limbless ceramic and stitched-leather animals, while Tim Tate chimes in with tiny videos under glass vitrines. The show also features Anne Siems’ mannerist paintings and Dirk Staschke’s sculptural gargoyles.

Speaking of cut paper, Philadelphia Art Alliance’s second floor surrenders to the pulpy planes starting June 19 with “Paper[space],” an eight-artist show in which some of our best local practitioners flash their craft for cutting, twisting and fashioning paper into objects of art. Hunter Stabler, whose lacey, intricately patterned works feature gothic symbolism and mandalas, and Natasha Bowdoin, who paints and places words on ornate cut paper constructions, will provide youthful energy and angst. Nami Yamamoto’s taxonomic arrays of cut paper leaves marries Victoriana with a modern feeling of embattled and endangered nature. Others in the show are Jin Lee, Leslie Mutchler, Donna Ruff, Dawn Gavin and Sarah Julig. Also at the Art Alliance, new works by Jolynn Krystosek in carved wax, cut paper and other materials that complement the show upstairs.

Meanwhile, there’s even more cut paper this summer at Bambi Gallery in a group show “Welcome to My World,” opening June 6. Philadelphia expat Bill Lohre (based in New York now) brings cut-paper fairytale constructions where damsels in distress definitely don’t get helped by Sir Galahad. Other works in the show include Marie DesMarais’ metal, glass and plastic abstracts, Joshua Erb’s Holga photos and collaborations with gallerist Candace Karch.

These shows make you want to run home and paint or draw. Ann Seidman’s lush and dreamy abstract paintings at Schmidt-Dean evoke crowds at the beach, hot air balloons over the Schuylkill and flocks of kites on Belmont Plateau. At Gallery Joe, Samantha Simpson’s ballpoint pen posters are like ornate circus posters whose themes flirt with life’s little truisms. Rachel Perry Welty brings a video piece to the gallery—a first for Joe.

“The Drawing Narrative” at Jaskey/Tower, curated by Rob Matthews and Matt Fisher, has magical pencil pieces by seven artists in one cool, cement-floored room.

Also check PMA’s print show “Curious and Commonplace,” opening May 31, a roundup of more than 80 antique posters from the museum’s collection of European popular prints from the 1800s. This show is especially topical at a time when contemporary art is more entwined than ever with popular culture and vice versa. Be sure to see PAFA’s “Spot Check,” the Morris Gallery show with recent acquisitions of works by emerging artists—many of them local—like Astrid Bowlby, Huston Ripley, Joy Feasley and Jane Irish. This beautifully installed show demonstrates how the institution’s been beefing up its collection.

Meanwhile, PAFA just hired a new contemporary art curator, Julien Robson, a Scottish-born art historian with an interest in Duchamp. Art is rumbling along very Duchampian paths these days, so let’s get set to see what paths Robson’s got in mind.


 
blog comments powered by Disqus

 
 PW Recommends
sponsored by
fri sat sun mon tue wed thu
 fri 7/25 6 events 

Joe Magnarelli
8pm. $10. Ortlieb's Jazzhaus, 847 N. Third St. 215.922.1035. www.ortliebsjazzhaus.com

 
Violens
8pm. $15. With Mgmt + Amazing Baby. Starlight Ballroom, 460 N. Ninth St. 215.769.1530. www.r5productions.com

 
Velo+City: The Social History of the Bicycle
10am-7pm. Free. Lisa M. Reisman et Cie, 1714 Rittenhouse Square St. 215.735.2781, www.lisart.com
daily – ends 8/14

 
Dharma Talk - Make it simple: Practical advice for everyday practice
7:30pm. $10. Philadelphia Ethical Society, 1906 Rittenhouse Square. 215.735.3456. www.phathue.com

 
Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 
"Bitmap: As Good As It Gets"
4pm. Free. Through July 25. Leonard Pearlstein Gallery, Nesbitt Hall, 33rd and Market sts. 215.895.2548. www.drexel.edu
daily – ends 7/25

 sat 7/26 7 events 

Failcamp
10am. Free. Independents Hall, 32 Strawberry St. www.indyhall.com

 
Tall Firs
$8. With Kurt Vile + National Eye. M Room, 15 W. Girard Ave. 215.739.5577. www.themanhattanroom.com

 
Mark Knopfler
8pm. $39.50-$69.50. With Jesca Hoop. Mann Center for the Performing Arts, 5201 Parkside Ave. 215.893.1999. www.manncenter.org

 
Ruder Than You
8pm. $10. With Game Plan 4 Focus + Government Cheaze. Johnny Brenda's, 1201 Frankford Ave. 215.739.9684. www.johnnybrendas.com

 
Encaustic and Mixed Media
$160. Yo Darkroom. 113 N. 23rd Street. 215.789.9032. www.yodarkroom.com
daily – ends 7/27

 
Velo+City: The Social History of the Bicycle
10am-7pm. Free. Lisa M. Reisman et Cie, 1714 Rittenhouse Square St. 215.735.2781, www.lisart.com
daily – ends 8/14

 
Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 sun 7/27 5 events 

Pony Pants
With Tilly & the Wall + Ruby Suns. 7:30pm. $12. First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St. www.r5productions.com

 
Matt Costa
8pm. $18. With Sera Cahoone. Theater of Living Arts, 334 South St. 215.922.1011. www.livenation.com

 
Encaustic and Mixed Media
$160. Yo Darkroom. 113 N. 23rd Street. 215.789.9032. www.yodarkroom.com
daily – ends 7/27

 
Velo+City: The Social History of the Bicycle
10am-7pm. Free. Lisa M. Reisman et Cie, 1714 Rittenhouse Square St. 215.735.2781, www.lisart.com
daily – ends 8/14

 
Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 mon 7/28 4 events 

Jimmie Dale Gilmore
7:30 pm. $30-$40. World Cafe Live, 3025 Walnut St. www.worldcafelive.com

 
Encaustic and Mixed Media
$160. Yo Darkroom. 113 N. 23rd Street. 215.789.9032. www.yodarkroom.com
daily – ends 7/27

 
Velo+City: The Social History of the Bicycle
10am-7pm. Free. Lisa M. Reisman et Cie, 1714 Rittenhouse Square St. 215.735.2781, www.lisart.com
daily – ends 8/14

 
Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 tue 7/29 4 events 

Djuna Wojton: Get to Know Tarot
7pm. Germ Books, 2005 Frankford Ave. www.germbooks.com

 
Encaustic and Mixed Media
$160. Yo Darkroom. 113 N. 23rd Street. 215.789.9032. www.yodarkroom.com
daily – ends 7/27

 
Velo+City: The Social History of the Bicycle
10am-7pm. Free. Lisa M. Reisman et Cie, 1714 Rittenhouse Square St. 215.735.2781, www.lisart.com
daily – ends 8/14

 
Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 wed 7/30 1 event 

Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 thu 7/31 1 event 

Hunter Stabler: "Thanks to Mom and Dad"
Through Aug. 3. Free. Pageant Gallery, 607 Bainbridge St. 215.925.1535. www.pageantsoloveev.com
daily – ends 8/3

 PW Online Extras
Features  
7 articles 

Par for the Curse
Can the Philadelphia Soul break the spell?
7/24

 
Book Notes
Two newish bios paint vivid portraits of Cro-Mag John Joseph and Cockney Reject Jeff Turner.
7/24

 
Singing in the Pane
Why aren't there more musical TV shows?
7/24 – pop tart

 
Severing Ties
Ex-City Paper editor spills ink into slash fiction.
7/24

 
Picnic in the Dark
Don't mind me, I'll just sit on this grass alone, without God. I'll be fine.
7/23 – in extremis

 
They've Got Spunk
And other priceless double entrendres from the Homewreckers Ball.
7/22

 
Nutter About Bicycles
The mayor supports green transportation.
7/22 – green's anatomy


 
r1
 
 
r2
 
 
r3
 
home | archives | listings | classifieds | submit an ad | good stuff | about us/contact | advertising
©2007 Review Publishing     Privacy Policy