The Night of the Iguana/ new work by Will Berry

A Nashville native, Will Berry in his first show at Zeitgeist in eleven years presents a body of paintings dealing with the dynamics of light. Veiling cultural themes, his forays in abstraction with diverse motifs embark on research that uses metals –aluminum, graphite, white lead, and gold-, and are the fruition of his investigation and experiences as an expatriate living in Mexico.

Dedicated to painting, Berry stubbornly pursues his quest. Experimentation and the quest for a personal language grounded in tradition and challenging established precepts are the impulses driving his practice. Process and exercise produce a factura or formalization devoid of short cuts that uphold aesthetic rigor, an infatuation with quality and with a succinct visual discourse.

Belonging to a slew of artists understanding painting in new ways and pushing its confines to affirm the practice as a form of knowledge, Berry in his painting examines closely the corpus of Cy Twombly and Robert Ryman, certainly Rudolf Stingel , and has affinities of sorts with the creativity of such contemporaries as Kelley Walker and Rashid Johnson among other exponents of this new wave.

Withdrawn in his Universe yet aware of cultural and societal issues, Berry is selfreferential, and the work is organized in succinct series without dwelling in tautology. Inscribed in modernist classicism providing him with an exit visa to trespass –sublimely- borders that inhibit the inquiry for new pictorial languages, Berry paints for himself, articulating experiences that once resolved formally in painting, offer both a visual delight as well as a myriad of understated or obtuse webs of signification that go beyond his person.

Like the main character in the now classic Tennessee Williams play and later film by John Houston, Berry transgresses established boundaries. Formal limits, cultural frameworks, social taboos, established versions and visions of personal as well as epic histories are challenged, undermined.

Aesthetically, the defiance is the unbiased pursuit that brings together form and content, namely, the impurity of metals as a support to experiment with light but also to articulate the mixture of cultures -at times contradictory- by means of questioning his own identity. His studio practice is a laboratory to reflect on broader and more poignant issues regarding multi-cultural histories that flaunt homogeneity and univocal narratives on History.

Berry is akin to the outcast preacher of William's play who is left with little choice but to work as a tour guide for religious groups visiting Mexico; each for dissimilar reasons is defined by his engagement in a process of re-invention in a foreign yet familiar culture. Both are also emblematic of the the foreigner who feels more at home in his adopted land than in his country of birth.

To be an ex-pat may be the attempt to hide or escape one’s past, or at the other pole, to garner the critical distance needed for self-examination, the opportunity to abstract one 's self from the weight of one’s past in order to act in the present.

Like the exile or the outcast, the ex-pat maneuvers in and around multiple cultures and languages; and in Berry’s case, these include aesthetic forms that function as a cultural index. In Mexico, he has sought and still seeks selfknowledge and a critical discourse on culture.

The phrase that confers the title to the play and the film refers to an iguana tended by the cabana boys at the resort, its neck tied by a rope, At the end of the rope lies the precipice that defines and defies the process of self-exile and reinvention for both the former preacher and Berry. The end of the rope is the limit as well as origin from which new and uncharted territories can be entertained with the corresponding awareness and courage required. Analogous to the iguana, Berry places himself at the end of the rope to paint, and paint his experience and history; to paint in order to indulge in the dynamics of light and to paint to enlighten the night of history, glimpsing it thickness, it's deep zones and taboos. The light is the grammar of the series, the motifs drawn from Persian and Turkish carpet designs, Pre-Colombian signs, Old and New World Baroque patterns are the lexicon, yet both are the pretext and vehicle for painting as a form of thinking, all the while being visually seductive if not stunning.

Victor Zamudio-Taylor / Mexico City / 11 IX 13

 

VICTOR ZAMUDIO-TAYLOR is an independent writer, lecturer, and curator based in Mexico City. He writes for academic as well as lifestyle publications, has served as a curator/adviser for the Bass Museum, Miami Beach, the Jumex Foundation/ Collection, Mexico City, and is on the editorial board of ARTNEXUS.


Classes with Indeterminacies Guest Joo Won Park

Joo Won Park is offering special free classes at Fort Houston on Saturday, September 28.

Composing Soundscapes: 10:00-12:00. This class is for musicians, non-musicians, tech-savvy and luddite alike.  You will learn the fundamentals of composing music using sampled sound from the environment. Materials: Bring a recording device (portable recorder, phone, laptop, or what have you) and a playback device with good speakers. Leave your preconceptions at home.

Intro to Music Coding with SuperCollider: 1:00-3:00.   In this workshop/demo, instructor Joo Won Park will go over the basics of coding sound with SuperCollider. SuperCollider is one of the most powerful and versatile sound synthesis freeware available for electronic music composers. It is a tool to understand fundamental digital signal processing techniques as well as a platform to experiment with new compositional and synthesis ideas. SuperCollider can be used to build interactive performance systems and generate algorithmic compositions. To get the maximum benefit from the workshop, please download SuperCollider at www.audiosynth.com to your laptop. The program is available for PC, Mac, and Linux.  This class is for electronic musicians, sound artists, music-oriented programmers, and music technology enthusiasts.

Fort Houston is located around the corner from Zeitgeist at 500 Houston St in Nashville. Visit http://forthouston.com/ for more info.

 

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More Love

October 5 - November 2, 2013/ 516 Hagan Street, Suite #200

Cheekwood will join Nashville’s burgeoning arts district in the Wedgewood-Houston neighborhood with a Pop-Up Gallery during Artober Nashville, a month-long celebration of arts and culture in the city.

The special off-site gallery will feature a selection of contemporary art  from Cheekwood’s ground breaking fall exhibition entitled More Love: Art, Politics and Sharing since the 1990s, organized by independent curator Claire Schneider for the Ackland Art Museum in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The Pop-Up Gallery will feature seven   artists included in More Love exploring human connection and individuality in the age of Facebook friends and Skype calls.

“We’re proud to be participating in Artober with a Pop-Up Gallery for a second year, following an overwhelmingly positive experience in 2012,” said Jochen Wierich, Curator of Art, at Cheekwood. “Not only is this a wonderful opportunity for us to showcase the More Love exhibition outside of the Cheekwood estate, it’s a chance for us to demonstrate our support for community arts during Artober. We’re thrilled to play an active role in Nashville’s thriving art scene.”

The Pop-Up Gallery will include works by Felix Gonzalez-Torres, considered the Andy Warhol of his generation and one of the most important artists working today. This temporary exhibition will also feature work from preeminent video artists Hadassa Goldvicty & Anat Vovnoboy; video and installation artist Mona Hatoum; interactive artist Chris Barr and sculpture and installation artist Julianne Swartz.

There will be a special project by socially engaged multidisciplinary artist Gregory Sale.  Sale will visit Nashville in September to begin work with community groups on Love for Love, a new iteration of his Love Buttons series. This artwork engages the voices of those less often heard – that is, voices of individuals who are more often on the receiving end of a community’s generosity and social programs, at the food bank, at the homeless shelter, in prison, or in an English-as-a-second-language class. Sale and his local collaborators will organize a community wall drawing for the Pop Up Gallery that invites gallery viewers to contribute short love poems and evocative bits of language about love.

Indeterminacies: Joo Won Park/John Latartara

Friday Evening September 27, 7:00PM

please join us as Indeterminacies kicks off the fall season with Joo Won Park.

Joo Won Park (b.1980) wants to make everyday sound beautiful and strange so that everyday becomes beautiful and strange. He performs live with toys, kitchenware, vegetables, umbrellas, and other non-musical objects by digitally processing their sounds. He also produces pieces made with with field recordings, sine waves, and any other sources that he can record or synthesize. Joo Won draws inspirations from listening Florida swamps, Philadelphia skyscrapers, his 2-year-old son's play, and other soundscapes.

Internationally recognized performer/composer John Latartara moderates a discussion. 

http://thekey.xpn.org/aatk/files/2013/02/pic3-620x460.jpg

a moving sound/6PM

Wednesday September 25, 2013

join us as zeitgeist hosts Taiwan-based music and dance ensemble, A Moving Sound, Wednesday evening September 25 at 6:00PM for an intimate preview for their Great Performances appearance at Vanderbilt's Langford auditorium. this gallery performance is free and open to the public. Tickets for the Thursday evening performance at Ingram Hall are available here.

Patrick DeGuira at Frist Center for the Visual Arts

Patrick DeGuira at Frist Center for the Visual Arts

August 30, 2013–February 2, 2014 | Exhibition

Abstractometry

Conte Community Arts Gallery

Related Programs

This exhibition will feature eight Nashville-area artists who employ geometry to signify the role of technology, architecture, language, and design in shaping our lives. The title refers to the measurement or delineation of abstract thought, necessary for the articulation of any system of constructing meaning.

A city presents itself to its residents and the outside world through distinct, if often subtle signs and codes. One of the visual signifiers of Nashville is found in its graphics—record album art, Hatch Show Print, neon on lower Broadway—which convey to residents and visitors alike the traditions and excitement of Music City. This exhibition acknowledges the value of thus constructing an identity through graphic means. At the same time, it offers new types of imaging that represent an unfolding aspect of Nashville’s identity as it becomes increasingly expansive as a creative community.

Artists in the exhibition include Alex Blau, Patrick DeGuira, Warren Greene, Ron Lambert, James Perrin, Christopher Roberson, Terry Thacker, and Amelia Winger-Bearskin.

This exhibition was organized by the Frist Center for the Visual Arts.

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Vesna Pavlovic

Vesna Pavlovic

Vesna Pavlović
Pictures we expected to take  // Imágenes que esperábamos tomar
Centro Cultural de la Memoria Haroldo Conti
September 7- November 3, 2013
Opening: September 7, 17 HS
Buenos Aires, Argentina

 

More info: http://www.derhuman.jus.gov.ar/conti/2013/09/av-imagenes-que-esperabamos-tomar.shtml

Vesna Pavlović
Art of Sport
Curated by Craig Smith and Sean Donaher
CEPA Gallery
September 20 - November 23, 2013
Buffalo, NY

More info: http://www.cepagallery.org/

Vesna Pavlović
Fabrics of Socialism
whitespace gallery
October 18-November 30, 2013
Atlanta, GA

More info: http://whitespace814.com/

Vesna Pavlović
Arquivo Vivo  // Alive Archive
Curated by Priscila Arantes
Paço das Artes
October 1- December, 2013
São Paulo, Brazil

More info: http://www.pacodasartes.org.br/

Vesna Pavlović
Looking for Images
window (re-production / re-presentation)
September 2-30, 2013
Asheville, NC

More info: http://us2.campaign-archive2.com/?u=4d6993b9ab3186daeb4db12a8&id=80ba879d9a&e=367b6c8185

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Lars Strandh

Lars Strandh

Lars announces the following upcoming show and art fair:

"THE ASSEMBLANCE OF PRESENCE"

New work by Russell Maltz, John Monteith, Lars Strandh and Mark Williams

Galerie Wenger, Zurich

August 31 – November 9, 2013 
Opening reception: Saturday, August 31, 2013, 3pm – 6pm 
The artists will be present

http://www.galeriewenger.com/de/

 ***

Radial Art Contemporain, Strasbourg, represents me at

Art Copenhagen 2013

Till Augustin - fredd Croizer
Bernard Langenstein - Lars Strandh

August 30  - September 1 

http://radial-gallery.eu/

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Ward Schumaker

Ward Schumaker

An article from 8/22/13 San Francisco Chronicle about two of Ward's shows currently at Dominican University, and upcoming at Jack Fischer's new space in San Francisco.

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First Saturdays @ Wedgewood/Houston

Join us in the Wedgewood/Houston neighborhood this Saturday night for: Porch hangs, Fort Houston tours, Pandora's box, One Amazing Darlin', Sound Installations and (mostly) local artists and the materials they work with at Zeitgeist. Uber-Tuber food truck will also be parked outside Ground Floor Gallery. This free and walkable event is kicking off Saturday August 3 at 5:30.

Among those participating are:
CLEFT STUDIOS
FORT HOUSTON
GROUND FLOOR GALLERY
OVVIO ARTE
SNAP
TRACK ONE
ZEITGEIST 

Free parking is available at Fort Houston, Zeitgeist and the Chestnut Building; guides from Fort Houston will help navigate the area.

joint project 2

Pop-up hosted by Susan Sherrick and Libby Callaway features photography from:

Caroline Allison, Yve Assad, William Claxton, Bruce Davidson, Barry Feinstein, Allen Ginsberg, Mikael Kennedy, Leon Levinstein, Danny Lyon, Jim McGuire, Joel Meyerowitz, Heidi Ross, Phil Stern, William Stewart, Dennis Stock, Scott G. Toepfer, and Joshua Black Wilkins

156 Hagan Street, suite 102

Friday, June 14 Gallery and Filth Mart store, 11 am - 9 pm Yakitori dinner by Otaku South, 6-9 pm Live music from Kings of the F**king Sea, 8 pm      

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Brady Haston at Printzero in Seattle

Seattle Studio PrintZero Studios opened up its first studio space in 2008, providing a collaborative studio environment for local artists and printmakers. Located in Seattle’s Georgetown area, the studio hosts exhibitions and serves as an anchor to south Seattle’s printmaking community. PrintZero Studios has facilities for etching, lithography, screenprint and relief printing.

     

website