Thursday, November 5, 2009

Quick Art Update

After successfully completing my installation for the "Closet Box" gallery at Box 13, I am on to the next project and a fresh series of soft sculptures. These will be based off of drawings that I made over the summer of furry monsters in cages. My friend Katie Geha liked them enough to give me a show at her gallery SOFA in March! In addition to working with some new ideas and forms, I have started including wire in these with the intention of developing a stop motion animation. My heart is truly a-flutter at the prospect.

My current art-resolution is to become more technologically proficient, so expect a real website, photoshop mastery and dazzling video art from me in the... (let's be generous) next year or so.

I leave you with a couple new art crushes:


Sunday, August 9, 2009

Back

Well, I'll bet you didn't think you'd be hearing from me in this particular venue again, seeing as I have been a bad blogger-mommy for months. Oh I've been around, I've been doing stuff (or kinda yeah), but I've also been grappling with the fact that I no longer exist in the sweet anonymity of undergraduate-hood wherein I can be assured that the only people looking at my blog are friends and family. I live in a city now. I sit in a window box at the bookstore talking to people about art, on the best days. I am proud to be a part of an art community that requires give and take, and I am happy that I have ways to reach out to artists and arts writers and organizers outside of my community. Perhaps all of this outward growth that is afforded to me should also come with a little thought and effort on my part. I.e., since this blog is the first thing that pops up when my name is googled, maybe, baby, I should be more careful with what I post here.

This is not to say that I want to get all self important with myself, it's just that I am reconsidering the whole sharing intimate thoughts and feelings with the Internet thing. That in itself is a hard decision for me because I have been in the habit of keeping an online journal for nearly ten years now. It's an important outlet for self-reflection for me, and I value the ability to keep up with friends this way. I cannot facebook status update you into my life, nor can I even iphone photo flickr upload you into my days. So I guess just sitting here writing this I have answered my own question: time to start a new journal. I will continue to post announcements and the odd picture or link here until I get myself a real website, and I will start a new journal that will be a little more private. Hooray. You have just witnessed writing as a process of self discovery, which is something that is not going to stop being important to me.

Change pledged, I will still go forward with updating this one last time.

Let's see... the show at Colab went off with resounding success. I feel that Carling, Lauren and I entered into a true collaboration this time around, planning our project together from the very beginning. This kind of closeness in making is so precious to me. It's as though we can see ahead to what the others will do before we can comprehend our own work. There were numerous instances when I was struggling with a decision that one of my collaborators could see the answer to clearly, and days or weeks (or moments) of indecision would melt away as felt I had been dropped right back on track. That synchronicity was compounded by the sense that we were all slaves to each other. No longer being in school, it can be hard for me to push myself to do things just for me, but it is easy and fulfilling to work hard for my partners, especially when facing the evidence of their hard work.

So, we did it! We each on our own made the work for the show, occasionally meeting to check in and edit each other. In the couple weeks leading up to install I also started inviting people into my studio/bedroom to get their thoughts on the entire body of soft sculptures that I have been working on since February. (This was fun! and probably the subject for a whole different post.) Then, the week of the opening we spent three sweltering days in un-a-conned Colab installing in a mood of mania, glee, discovery and contemplation. I wove a giant red web from the rafters into the space and suspended my sculptures in the netting. The webs and sculptures were anchored into two large wooden spools that Aldo helped me make. The whole process of becoming more physical with my art, using big saws and pneumatic tools in the wood shop and running up and down a ladder while weaving my whole body through red strings, not to mention taking entire days to do nothing but construct it, made me realize all over again how much I love being an "artist." I say this because I have fallen into the role of gallery worker, cataloger, coordinator, of ardent fan, champion, helper and sometimes junior-curator - all great ways to be involved in art, but I should remind myself that "artist" makes me feel the most that I am doing what I should.

The opening (and only night the show was on view) went wonderfully. I was overwhelmed by the number of people that came to see the installation, to support us and to talk to us. Again, I feel so lucky to be a part of the Austin art community and to have such nice friends who were willing to make the trek over to a little, literal hot-spot on the east side of town during a month when the temperatures were in the 100s every day. The response and feedback were great. You can see photos from the night and a few installation shots here.

a snippet of the installation

the happy artists (polaroid taken by Zoe)

After Cat's Cradle was over I got a little of the post-show blues. We had accomplished what we set out to do, it was my biggest goal for the summer, and in the void after that going back to my life as usual seemed a little dull. On top of relinquishing the fun and constant companionship of our art playtime, I also had to face up to the nasty summer cold that I had caught and been in denial about the week of installation. The very next weekend was also the date of my grandfather's wedding in Dallas, which was a very important event psychologically for my little family unit and a big deal to me, as I have always been a grandpa's girl. In addition to all the ways that he has shown me to be (slow and methodical, jovial, intellectually curious), my grandfather has taught me to live for the present, and how to have a generous spirit that reaches out to many friends while keeping what is most special for those who are closest. To see him get married and be so full of love and happiness was daunting in a way. THERE, he seemed to say, don't stop living for a minute. My new found torpor was brought into sharp contrast, and I didn't know any better what I was or wasn't doing with my life.

And I guess there's no real way for me to get an exact grip on the future because I dislike living on a plan. Plus, over-analyzing my schemes and dreams is not exactly what loving the present is all about. What I have concluded after giving it much thought is that I need to stay proactive. I want to travel more and find residencies that will help me do that. I want to look more intently towards graduate school and a career in teaching because ultimately I don't think I can resist the soft warm embrace of academia. I have to admit it to myself: I love school. Also, I would love to teach art. In the meantime I should recognize that where I am now and being a part of Domy is great, and I should embrace it just as much as I did when I started.

So, I am hopeful that my month of taking a break from my own art is over, and I am ready to resume the level of activity in general that keeps me humming. Over and out.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Announcing Cat's Cradle

Colab is a community-oriented art space in East Austin that is allowing Carling, Lauren and me to put on a show in July. Thank you, Colab! We are going to make us a big installation. The more we flex our collaborative descision-making muscles and our art-making planning skills muscles (what?), the more we seem to be able to accomplish together. It's a "productive" way to spend a summer. I hope you can make it to the opening because that will be the only night to see it!



Cat’s Cradle
A Collaborative Installation by Carling Hale, Lauren Cardenas and Alison Kuo


Installation: Saturday, July 11, 7-11PM


The impetus for this project came from a moment of spontaneous play between friends that we happened to document a couple of years ago. Lauren and Alison were twirling around a cigarette butt that had become entangled in some art materials during a party, when we suddenly became involved in an intense, freeform game of cat’s cradle. Carling took a few photos, and the memory of the experience stuck with all of us. Like anyone else, we were just amusing ourselves by making a little sculpture toy out of the flotsam in our environment. What we have decided to do is elaborate on our experiment by recreating it, shooting photographs of our performance, and then using those images to draw, stitch, stretch, weave and sculpt our ideas into the gallery space.

We have been helping one another to make art for years, and have habitually used our collaboration as a way to alleviate the seriousness of personal art making while also pushing each other to try new approaches to our respective media. We hope to extend that spirit of useful play to the people who come to visit our installation at Colab.

Carling, Lauren and Alison graduated together from Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas with BAs in Studio Art, and are currently living and making art in Austin. Two of us have cats. Visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/myguerrilla/sets/72157619747312206/ to see images of our previous collaborative work.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Happy One Year of Domy/ Every week I break my glasses a little more

Today was the anniversary of our grand opening in Austin (6/7/08). This means that I have had a little over a year of this crazy lifestyle, well, this ever-morphing "lifestyle" of living in a city that supports such a richness and diversity of DIY arts culture. One year of freedom from being under the institutional thumb of school. One year of BOOKS. One year of great tacos and great friends, new and old (friends, not the tacos). Pretty much one year of trying hard, doing everything, and seeing what happens as life whisks me along to the next thing. I am so tired. BUT, I am not longer in a hermiting phase (see: March-April sewing frenzy), and so I'm gonna keep on going.

A week:
Sunday - Returned from Monofonus@Domy art road trip to Houston, hung out at Testsite for Sheila Pepe's installation of knit and crocheted webs, cooked for the week, and made cat toys for Monty with Pat's little girl Eleanor (they were staying with us).

Monday - Okay maybe did nothing. I don't remember? We danced to Iron Man. I sewed.

Tuesday - Back to work. Had a fun meeting/hangout time with three artists who are going to do fantastic things in the gallery in September. Decided to do a Feminist Art Lock-in for sure, hopefully in an elementary school gymnasium where we could draw on the floor with hair mousse and light it on fire.

Wednesday - Played music with Travis and Mollie after work. Used drums, electric organ, xylophone, harmonium, tuning fork, tree stump.

Thursday - Tried to go see Fingers Feel Them Exploring You and ended up at one of my favorite Austin places, Lala's Lil' Nugget, instead. Worked on some sculpture.

Friday - Productive art meeting with Lauren for the installation that we will do with Carling July 11th at Colab. Wore the orange beard that I made with felt and feathers to a monster party in the Okay Mtn backyard. It was being filmed for a Blanton Workspace by Jim Drain. Jumped around on a pile of mattresses with friends and generally enjoyed the temporary autonomous zone, even the part after when I had to wash the flour, grass, dust, sweat and beer out of my hair.

Saturday - Saw some good art and several good friends who just got back into town.

Sunday - Back to Testsite to knit functional items out of Sheila's installation. Saw Metropolis with a new score performed live. Swooned and chewed on my fingers a few times. Met up with my Domies people, and Dan, our boss, treated us to dinner at a food trailer place where we gathered around a picnic table and talked about the pleasantries of Austin living. Went to free-time at Barton Springs and laid in the grass. Talked to my sister who is very far away for an hour on the phone. Wrote this list so I could remember it later. Goodness.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Two great songs and one awful






(Mollie and I have started a fake band and this will be one of our numbers.)

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Recent plush

This is what I have been not leaving my house for on the weekends:





Thursday, April 30, 2009

Hey bros,

I'd like to write you a blog-or-two, but I'm afraid that any interaction with the computer that does not involve the delivery of amusing shapes and sounds to my senses is making me feel gross at the moment. My body decided to be allergic to work today. Despite my embarrassment at being such a wimp, I didn't mind spending daylight hours in bed sewing (thanks, thrifted tv-tray!) and napping and catching up on my programs. In fact, I know I need to take "me time" more seriously, and as Mollie pointed out, the first step to this is wearing my dancing bear pajamas all day. Done. A sweet sentiment from my boss: "ah, the loss of invincibility."

The theme of this month(s) is Transitions. Will they be graceful? Will the ride be bumpy? Will I get my shit together anytime soon? If I actually had a moment of stillness would I even like that? So many questions. Now I feel nauseous. Adios.