Welcome to YLOAN.COM
yloan.com » misc » Volta Ny 2012 Zap! Sizzle! Pop! By Walter Robinson
Gadgets and Gizmos misc Design Bankruptcy Licenses performance choices memorabilia bargain carriage tour medical insurance data

Volta Ny 2012 Zap! Sizzle! Pop! By Walter Robinson

Ive said it before and Ill say it again

Ive said it before and Ill say it again. Art fairs are fun. A new artwork here, a charming person there, its a flaneurs delight, at least at the beginning, before everyone gets tired. That cranky skepticism that characterizes the official critical attitude of so many critics and reporters, thats not for me. At least at the beginning, before I get tired.

Take yesterdays VIP preview of Volta NY, Mar. 8-11, 2012, with 50 dealers all ready in their booths, arranged in what has fondly been called the circles of hell. One booth, one artist, one dealer, one city somewhere on the globe --

what could be simpler, what could be more all-encompassing? This brilliant equation makes art-fair cacophony fade into an easily grokked minimalist 1 + 1 + 1 + 1.

The art-fair visitor is yin, while the art dealers are yang. The visitor is in a hurry, rushing from booth to booth, or from fair to fair. The dealers are static and waiting, since they are stuck in their booths for hour after hour, day after day.


My visit to Volta NY this year was perfectly short, a mere 90 minutes. But I wasnt so much working as doing social media, specifically, taking pictures and immediately posting them to Instagram, the popular new photo-sharing

app for smartphones -- you cant see the pix online, only on the phone. The feed is linked to the Artnet Newswire twitter account, where the pictures and their captions also appeared. I managed to post seven jpgs in an hour and a

half. Busy.

Instagram is a cool connection, but its a strange way to look at art. Half the time you stand there, frozen in traffic, zoned in on the digital device -- its an increasingly common sight -- while the real world swirls around you. You may

be conducting a distracted conversation, probably with the subject of your Instagram, possibly on the topic of Instagram itself. Its the essence of multitasking, awkward pauses filled with waiting for the phone to do its thing.

This behavior is pretty much acceptable, at least so far. I had a long conversation with the Dsseldorf gallery owner Christa Schuebbe, who founded her gallery in 1975 -- 37 years ago -- and seemed almost joyful about working

with young artists. Next up for her is Art Hong Kong, May 17-20, 2012, her fifth time, where last year she sold out her entire booth.

She lives on a farm in the country with her husband, who is not in the arts, and I was invited to visit, even though wed met only moments before. In her booth was a group of five life-sized sculptures of golfers made entirely from

Chinese fireworks by Carl Emanuel Wolff, along with an axle complete with two wheels, which gave the ensemble its name, Axis of Evil, a quotation from George W. Bush. The price for one figure is 36,000.

The whole time all this was being conveyed to me I was poking at my iPhones typewriter interface with my finger, in order to post the two jpgs that accompany this text. Similar feats of digital dexterity -- and I do believe that is a

pun -- were accomplished in other booths.

There was Circa art fair founder Roberto Nieves Rica gallery from San Juan (Rica means fun, he said), which is showing some sculptures of twisted girders made from papier-mch by artist Jorge Diaz-Torres. He also had crafted

a full-scale model of a dispenser for bags of ice, protected by black metal bars that are a commonplace in Puerto Rico. With hielo kept under lock and key, the sculpture is a good metaphor for the art market. Its a bargain at

$10,000.

And then there was the crew from Melbourne, including Sutton Gallery director Elizabeth McDowell -- Let me know if you have any questions! -- and artist Stephen Bush, whose paintings of racehorses, done with oil and

sign-painters enamel at a Greene Street studio in SoHo kept by the Australian government for artist residencies, are a good subject for art, considering all the predecessors.

But Instagram is about sharing, and it provides some gratification to see 40 or 60 likes for each picture -- Artnets Instagram has 6,000 followers so far -- providing a kind of feedback for art critics. It also provides a handy gauge of

what is popular. My best effort had little to do with any art-critical function, Im moderately sad to say. My most liked image was a close-up of four heavy silver skull rings on the hand of Jimi Dams, proprietor of Envoy Enterprises on


Chrystie Street.

One image I failed to Instagram -- maybe I can upload it a little later -- was a painting in his booth by Erika Keck, who had made a small portrait with some utterly horrific jagged abstraction where the face should be. An

eye-catching, unique work by a hot artist at a hip gallery, it was priced at a reasonable $3,500. Naturally, it had already been sold.

by: aarenbrowns
Improving Your Eyesight In Los Angeles Payment Gateways: Common Eway Magento Developers Armory Show 2012 By Rachel Corbett Pontiac Cars-not A Good Time To Buy Them Now Cost Effective Use Of Crm A Reliable Tax Preparer How The Outdoor Lighting Or Indoor Lighting Have Something In Common Are Professional Resume Writers Worth It? Best Deal Offers Of Property In Kolkata Private Eyes Benefits Of Getting A Personal Trainer Should You Outsource Managed Document Review Clean The Most Happening Place By Installing Bins
print
www.yloan.com guest:  register | login | search IP(216.73.216.127) California / Anaheim Processed in 0.018083 second(s), 7 queries , Gzip enabled , discuz 5.5 through PHP 8.3.9 , debug code: 50 , 5005, 85,
Volta Ny 2012 Zap! Sizzle! Pop! By Walter Robinson Anaheim