Art in General Production Notes

Category: News

New Commissions Artist Steve Goodman (AUDiNT) interviewed on NPR.

by artproductionnotes

On June 14th, the day after their panel discussion, The Martial Arts of Sonic Hauntology, at Eyebeam, and right before debuting their New Commissions project Dead Record Office at Art in General, NPR’s All Things Considered caught up with AUDiNT‘s Steve Goodman to talk about the exhibition, sonic warfare, and the politics of frequency. Listen to the story or read our repost below.

AUDiNT on All Things Considered

Bad Vibrations: Investigation Sound As Terror

By Sami Yenigun

I first heard of Steve Goodman as the head of Hyperdub, a London-based record label that has released work by avant-garde electronic artists like Burial, Joker and The Bug. But Goodman isn’t your average label executive. He’s a scholar, a lecturer at the University of East London and a musician who goes by the name Kode9. His new album, Black Sun, features rumbling bass lines under lyrics about a toxic world where a radioactive event has laid the land to waste. Goodman is also a DJ, and the time he has spent in the clubs of London during the last decade helped spark the global dance genre known as dubstep. But Goodman’s interest in sound extends beyond the dance floor.

“From being a DJ and playing on various good and bad sound systems, I’m very aware of the fact that sound — and music — doesn’t always create enjoyment and pleasure,” Goodman says. “Actually, sound has a very special power of creating irritation and bad vibes.”

As a scholar, Goodman studies the potential for music and sound to repel or harm listeners. On Friday, as part of a collective called AUDiNT (short for Audio Intelligence), Goodman will open an exhibition at Art In General in New York City called the Dead Record Office, which looks at various military uses of sound.

I met Goodman in a small apartment in Brooklyn, where he told me that he thinks of his work as a musician and his work as a scholar as being separate from one another but admits that elements from one inform the other. In 2009, MIT Press published his book Sonic Warfare.

“We look at everything, in the book, from the military using acoustic weaponry to the way sound is used in branding and advertising, to the way intense sound is used by various music cultures around the world to build collectivity,” Goodman explains.

His work with AUDiNT looks at the way sound has been used to aid destruction. The group takes the detailed historical research of his scholarly work and dresses it as art. The Dead Record Office exhibition offers a peek into the group’s work.

“What we’re doing is tracing or mapping these three phases of the history of acoustic weaponry,” Goodman says. “Firstly, starting with the Second World War, there was a division of the U.S. Army that was referred to as the Ghost Army. Part of what they were involved in was sonic deception, putting loud speakers in the battlefield to create a false impression. So we trace this from the Second World War to the U.S. Army in Vietnam, a division of psychological operations called Wandering Soul. This involved helicopter-mounted loudspeakers playing simulated Buddhist chants, fabricated sounds of the dead ancestors of the Viet Cong fighters speaking to them from the afterlife to try and persuade them to surrender.”

The third phase is less psychological, looking at a sound’s potential to be a more conventional weapon.

“What’s starting to emerge now,” Goodman says, “is the use of these ultrasound driven directional audio speakers.” These speakers can actually rupture eardrums from a distance.

Despite such advances in sonic technology, the old psychological tactics are still being used. Toby Heys, a fellow researcher at AUDiNT, says the U.S. military’s use of sound with prisoners at Guantanamo Bay has been well-documented.

“A lot of the detainees who were interviewed after their detainment have spoken about sonic torture as being the worst,” Heys says. “Rather than the sexual humiliation, rather than the beatings, the worst thing that they went through was the sonic torture.”

Nina Kraus, a neurobiologist at Northwestern University who studies the human auditory system, explains how sound triggers responses like fear in the human brain.

“We know that our auditory system has direct connections to our limbic system, which modulates emotions such as fear that will strengthen these neural circuits,” Kraus says. She adds that those connections are unique to each individual, so no two people will hear a sound in exactly the same way. “You know, because of the experience that a person has had throughout their lives using sound, now when any sound occurs — and in this case emotionally salient sounds — then the nervous system will respond in a way that will particularly enhance the information bearing elements of the sound.”

For a child raised in an urban environment, the sound of an ice cream truck might trigger a desire for sweets, while those who have never been around a vendor on wheels may find the looping melodies an annoyance. Heys says that the U.S. troops have employed an exaggerated version of this idea in Afghanistan.

“Before they embark in conflict they cleanse the area, but it’s like this cultural cleansing,” Heys says. “They’re playing heavy metal music, they’re playing rap music, they’re playing country music.”

Depending on your cultural experiences, the booming bass lines of Kode9′s music may sound either threatening or inviting. But as Goodman says, that’s exactly what interests him about sound.

“There’s a political dimension to sound and music that people often ignore that I call in the first book the politics of frequency,” he explains. “The way certain frequencies change the way you feel the way they resonate with different parts of your body, tapping into physiological and psychological dimensions of your experience. I’m looking to open up that other dimension, to get people thinking about music and sonic culture.”

People often celebrate the healing power of music; it can distract us and put us at ease. But Goodman’s work demonstrates that music can be something more than just a pleasantry, and that it’s worth trying to understand the full scope of its power, even if it hurts.

Chinese Take Out on NY1

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NY1′s celebration of Asian American Heritage Week continues in Chinatown, where several Chinese restaurants and contemporary artists are creating a unique cultural exchange in a project that is up through July. NY1′s Arts reporter Stephanie Simon filed the following report. Watch the video footage here


Of course, there’s plenty of great takeout in Chinatown, but artist Jason Bailor Losh is adding a whole new flavor with his art project “Chinese Take Out.” He asked Chinatown restaurants to give him objects from their establishments, in exchange for new works of art.

The objects that were “taken out” are now on view at the Art In General gallery on Walker Street.

“You’ll see a lot of objects that are fairly cliche and represent things that you’d probably see in a Chinese restaurant all the time, and you may ask yourself, ‘Why are we showing them in the gallery space?’ It’s because they’re culturally revelent and they have a significance to the locations and they mean something to those locations,” says Losh. “It could be about feng shui, it could be about bringing prosperity to their businesses, and as an average viewer and attendee of these restaurants, we just walk by. We see things and we don’t pay attention to it.”

At Old Shanghai Deluxe restaurant, co-owner Yu Lin Zhu gave a traditional Chinese landscape for a contemporary photograph of a tree by a house by artist Lucas Blalock.

“I think a cultural exchange between Chinese traditional art and Western modern art has a lot of significance for our costumers and also for myself,” says Zhu through an interpreter. “I am myself also a lover of photography.”

The photograph, which places a flat, white outline around the tree, is especially welcome in Old Shanghai Deluxe.

“This piece uses this technique that comes from the film era in photography, where if you want to remove an object from its surroundings, say lipstick in a lipstick ad, you would need to sort of paint around it with a white-out material, and then it would allow you to be able to print it just sort of separate from its background,” says Blalock. “But this idea can be transferred or sent from one context to another without much change.”

When Losh was picking restaurants for the projects, he wasn’t just interested in decor, but was also interested in good food. Even thought the project is called “Chinese Take Out,” it actually encourages people to eat in and take in their surroundings.

Kelly Crow writes about Chinese Take Out in today’s Wall Street Journal.

by artproductionnotes

In Chinatown, Trading Heirlooms for Fine Art

A new exhibit has turned Chinatown into an artistic scavenger hunt. For its latest show, “Chinese Take Out,” the nonprofit group Art in General has embedded pieces by such contemporary artists as Martin Basher and Lucas Blalock inside seven Chinese restaurants across the neighborhood. At the same time, the group is displaying some of those eateries’ decorative objects—from Buddha figurines to a jade dragon boat—in its white-box gallery on Walker Street nearby.


At Excellent Pork Chop House on Doyers Street, artist Vincent Como has installed a trio of minimalist wooden cubes inside a wall-mounted light box lined with Buddha figurines and kitsch dolls. The swap aims to allow art lovers, armed with maps, to burrow deeper into a neighborhood that is culturally rich yet seemingly insular, said artist Jason Bailer Losh, who conceived the project four years ago. Mr. Losh said he asked each of the participating Chinatown restaurateurs to lend him an object that symbolized their cultural identity or offered a glimpse into the lives they’re leading in New York. He asked the same of his 10 participating artists, and the results are revealing.

Chen Wei, who owns Old Shanghai Deluxe on Mott Street, handed over a bucolic landscape depicting mountains beside a seaside port bobbing with dragon boats. In its place now hangs Mr. Blalock’s color photograph of a suburban yard in California. The photographer is planning to move to that state shortly. 88 Palace, an East Broadway dining hall, gave over a toaster-sized porcelain figure of Buddha as well as one of its light-box landscapes of Hong Kong. In exchange, artist Ted Riederer, whose work has been exhibited at MoMA P.S.1, gathered a group of Chinatown musicians and recorded a group performance that now plays on a Victrola near the restaurant’s entry. New Zealand-born Mr. Basher, who has exhibited in galleries like New York’s Exit Art, tackled 88 Palace’s light box by creating a transparency-style image that splices together photographs of everyday images like a sunset, a cocktail glass and a luxury watch.

One of the most poignant pieces pops up at Excellent Pork Chop House on Doyers Street, where artist Vincent Como has installed a trio of minimalist wooden cubes on a shelf lined with Buddha figurines and kitsch dolls. Mr. Losh said the cubes symbolize how “out of place” Mr. Como felt growing up in rural Pennsylvania. Mr. Losh added that it took some time to convince some of the restaurant owners to display the edgier pieces, but he added that most of the participants were curious to see how the pairings matched up between owner and artist. A Brooklyn resident who has studied in Beijing, Mr. Losh is known for creating art that explores his own cultural heritage. In his native Iowa, he once took a series of photographs of houses that his carpenter father had built over 50 years, many located in small towns that have since been largely abandoned or fallen into decay. Three years ago in Long Island City’s Socrates Sculpture Park, he slathered gold paint on a Pontiac Trans Am, his boyhood car crush, and placed it atop a towering pedestal, like a sports trophy.

Eddie Chen, a senior advisor at the Lin Sing Association, a local community center, said Mr. Losh’s work also resonates in Chinatown, where people similarly grapple with notions of identity and home. After meeting the artist a few months ago, Mr. Chen said he even encouraged several restaurant owners to join in. “In this community, people don’t often work with outsiders, but we can all learn a thing or two about art.”

The “Chinatown Take Out” project is up through July 2.

Write to Kelly Crow at kelly.crow@wsj.com and read the original article at the Wall Street Journal here

Artforum Critics Picks: Emily Roysdon

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Emily Roysdon. Positions. Installation view, Art in General, 2011.

For “Positions,” her debut solo exhibition in New York, writer, artist, and curator Emily Roysdon brings together three independently commissioned projects produced over the last six months. Multifaceted and intermingled, the works activate what Art in General deems a “dialectic consideration of language, choreography, and political representation.” Viewers are immediately let in on the discourse via three Constructivist-esque posters (designed with Studio SM) delineating the conceptual and iconographic DNA of each project.

The cumulative core is Roysdon’s investigation into how people move politically, socially, and aesthetically. Engaging deeply in collaboration, she is developing a vocabulary of human gestures that serve as building blocks toward her philosophy of imaginative political representation that visualizes a new order of resistance and improvisation. These gestures are depicted in the gallery via images silk-screened on square panels (If I Don’t Move Can You Hear Me?, 2010) and affixed to the walls and floor directly (Positions, 2011). In the latter, screenprints of artist Celeste Dupuy-Spencer––her body frozen and multiplied in a lexicon of poses––are presented in a sort of tablature that reads like Muybridgean inversions; movement is hypothesized rather than broken down.

At center is Sense and Sense, 2010, a video diptych and photographic installation produced with performance artist MPA in Sergels Torg––Stockholm’s iconic public square and designated site for planned protests. Shot from fixed points above the plaza, camera 1 captures MPA laboriously inching on her side along the ground in an intensely controlled adagio-pantomime of walking at full gait. Camera 2 pulls back to reveal the scale of the square she’s barely traversing, as well as the (un)choreographed movements of passersby, quickly cutting paths across the frame. Viewed in the afterimage of the recent Egyptian revolution––staged and won from Tahrir Square––Roysdon’s insistent imagining (and imaging) of the impossible seems all the more tenable, and imperative, in the arena of aesthetic and social critique.

Corrine Fitzpatrick

Read the review on Artforum here

Art in General presents a guest lecture with Maria Lind

by artproductionnotes

In conjunction with Emily Roysdon’s exhibition, Positions, Art in General is pleased to present a discussion with renowned curator and writer, Maria Lind.

Sunday, April 10, 2pm

6th Floor Galleries, Art in General

Lind, who currently serves as the Director of Tensta Konsthall in Stockholm, has worked closely with Emily Roysdon over the past several years, most recently including her work in the exhibition, Abstract Possible, which is currently on view at the Museo Tamayo in Mexico City.

On the occasion of Roysdon’s exhibition at Art in General, Maria Lind will speak on the subject of movement and its relationship to resistance in contemporary art practice. This talk will be followed by a Q & A with the artist.

Maria Lind is currently the Director of Tensta Konsthall in Stockholm. She was the director of the graduate program at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, from 2008 to 2010. She was formerly Director of Iaspis in Stockholm (2005 to 2007) and Director of Kunstverein München (2002-2004). From 1997 to 2001, Lind was curator at Moderna Museet in Stockholm, where she was responsible for Moderna Museet Projekt. She was also co-curator of Manifesta 2 in 1998.  Lind has contributed widely to magazines, publications, and numerous exhibition catalogues, and her book of critical writing, Selected Maria Lind Writing, was recently published by Sternberg Press. She was the 2009 recipient of the Walter Hopps Award for Curatorial Achievement.

Emily Roysdon is an interdisciplinary artist and writer. Roysdon completed the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 2001 and an Interdisciplinary MFA at UCLA in 2006. In 2008 she was a resident at the International Artists Studio Program in Sweden (IASPIS). Her work has been shown at the 2010 Whitney Biennial,;Greater NY at PS1; Manifesta 8; Bucharest Biennale 4;  Participant, Inc. (NY); Generali Foundation (Vienna); New Museum (NY); and the Power Plant (Toronto). Recent solo shows include Konsthall C in Stockholm and a Matrix commission from the Berkeley Art Museum. Her videos have been screened widely, most recently at the Berlinale and the Images Festival (Toronto). Her writings have been published in numerous books and magazines, including the Journal of Aesthetics and Protest, Zehar, C Magazine, and Women & Performance: a Journal of Feminist Theory. Roysdon is a recipient of the Rema Hort Mann Foundation Award (2010) and a contributing member with the band MEN. She recently developed the concept “ecstatic resistance” to talk about the impossible and imaginary in politics. The concept debuted with simultaneous shows at Grand Arts in Kansas City, and X Initiative in New York in 2010.

For More Information on the exhibition Positions, please visit: http://www.artingeneral.org/exhibitions/506

Ohad Meromi Rehearsal Schedule + Links

by artproductionnotes

If you read about Rehearsal Sculpture before the new year started, you may have wondered what the “off-hours rehearsals” were. If you’re in the neighborhood on any of the dates listed, you can participate in one and find out what they are about by being directed by Meromi or one of his invited collaborators.

To participate please email courtenay@artingeneral.org with your information and a preferred date, using “Meromi Rehearsal” as your subject line. Please note that attendance requires participation, but don’t let stage fright deter you, as that also means there is no audience.

If you’re not in the area but you still want to know about the project, you can read about it on our website, in The New Yorker, in the artist’s words on Artforum.com, or two of the previews on Archetizer and TimesSquare.com

Exhibition Open hours:
Tuesday 12:00 pm-4:00 pm
Wednesday to Saturday, 12:00 pm-6:00 pm

Tuesday Rehearsal Schedule
(Rehearsals start promptly at 6:30 and run for 1 hour and 30 minutes)

Jan 18th – Pivotal Points in Parallel Growth (with Anna Craycroft)
Feb 1st – Triple Prismatic Smoke (with Halsey Rodman)
Feb 15th – Movement for Collage #12 (with Molly Smith)
Feb 22nd – “Of ants and crucifies… re-animating the excised!” (with The Museum of Commerce)
March 1st – Natural Spirit (with Ohad Meromi)

Luis Jacob: Without Persons in the Toronto Star

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A nice piece from Jacob’s hometown, by Murray Whyte. A teaser from the full article:

Luis Jacob at Art in General

Murray Whyte/Toronto Star

NEW YORK—On a narrow block south of Canal Street in what must be one of the last bastions of urban grit in an ever-glossifying Lower Manhattan, Luis Jacob was in his element recently, greeting a growing throng of admirers with a gentle touch of the hand, a hug, a smile.

For Jacob, a Toronto-based artist who is 39, but with his lithe frame, olive skin and almond eyes, seems much younger, it was a moment to savour.

It was the September opening of his show Without Persons at Art in General, one of New York’s vanguard independent galleries, and a comfort zone for an artist whose commitment to ground-level art making has been a hallmark of his career.

Opening Tonight, 9/16!

by artproductionnotes

Join us tonight from 6-8 pm for the opening celebration for two great new exhibitions that launch our exhibition year. Luis Jacob: Without Persons is a multimedia exhibition on the sixth floor, the artist’s first solo show in the U.S. The library and reading room General Public Library, in the first floor storefront gallery, is an ambitious project with a website that you can use even after the life of the exhibition, www.generalpubliclibrary.info.

Upcoming Artist: Brendan Fernandes

by elizafrench

Brendan Fernandes first exhibited at Art in General as part of 2009′s Mobile Archive, which included his video work FOE.  The artist has been gaining widespread recognition and was announced as a Sobey Award Finalist in June. Fernandes will return to Art in General this fall season,  with a New Commissions project on view from December 10, 2010 through February 12, 2011.

Even major general interest publications have taken an interest in the Canadian-Kenyan artist. Toronto’s The Star just published a profile of Fernandes on August 1, 2010.  The article also discusses Fernandes ‘s upcoming project at Art in General. Last month, Canada’s  National Post interviewed him about his current exhibition, Until We Fearless, at the Art Gallery of Hamilton. The Globe and Mail published a review of the show in a profile of art offerings in Hamilton.

Hans Poppe’s blog and Residency Unlimited also recently published interviews with the artist.

In New York, you can see Fernandes’ work at The Studio Museum in Harlem, on view as part of Harlem Postcards until October 24.

http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/article/842925–art-world-likes-where-he-s-coming-from#article

Openings This Week and Next

by artproductionnotes

Join us in Brooklyn on Saturday, June 3, from 2-5 pm as we celebrate the opening of the newest Art in General New Commission, Kambui Olujimi’s Wayward North. The exhibition will be at 81 Front Street in Dumbo from June 5 through July 1, with regular gallery hours of 12-6 Tuesday through Saturday, or by appointment (email info@artingeneral.org to make an appointment).

Here at 79 Walker we will open two new shows on Friday, June 11 from 6 to 8. In the Storefront Project Space will be the second iteration of our Intersections program with Mostly Shadows, the first collaboration of Joyce Kim and Carlos Roque. On the sixth floor we are happy to host the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program Exhibition, with works from all of the participants in the 2009-2010 Studio Program.

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