Thursday, November 19, 2009

Bill Miller

A. Bill Miller: Samples from the Gridworks Collection Project Archives

November 15, 2009 – January 10, 2010

Press Release | Images | Essay | Resume

PRESS RELEASE

A. Bill Miller is currently an Associate Lecturer at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and an Instructor at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design. He lives and works in East Troy, Wisconsin. He is noted for his Gridworks Project, which comprises abstract ASCII drawings, ink drawings, animated GIFs, and video which are frequently shown in the U.S. and internationally.

Some Walls is pleased to exhibit twelve of Miller’s inkjet prints, with additional prints available for viewing. This is Miller’s first solo exhibition in California. Additional ASCII drawings can be seen on Miller’s blog, and more images, animations, and video are at his website.

A. Bill Miller’s ASCII drawings are made at the keyboard with text– characters and letters. He draws/types grid-based and grid-defying images that are surprisingly varied and dynamic, pictorial and spatial, rhythmic and dynamic. As writing has overwhelmingly moved from the pen to the keyboard and monitor, it also makes sense that drawing might make a similar move from the pencil. By making prints, Miller transports his images from the flickering, pixilated digital realm to our analog, tactile world of paper and ink. Seeing his drawings outside the monitor is an entirely different experience from online viewing; where the digital image scrolls by intangibly, the art work as object allows the viewer to see and contemplate a crisp, satisfyingly still, human-scaled image. In these prints one can fully assess Miller’s range of ideas, visual invention, and unique skill.

Some Walls is open by appointment only. To view the exhibition online please visit somewalls.com. To schedule a visit, or for more information, please contact Chris Ashley at info@somewalls.com.

IMAGES

ESSAY

A. Bill Miller makes drawings with ASCII text. What does that mean?

Just as writing has overwhelmingly moved from pen to the keyboard, it makes sense that drawing has made a similar move from the pencil to the mouse. Prior to the mouse and paint programs, however, users made computer drawings with the keyboard. In the earliest days of computers and the Internet, before image files and the Web, everything was text, and images were made using ASCII text characters[1], most often as email signatures. Anyone who has had an email account for some time has likely seen an ASCII image, but the chances of that have decreased since Web browsers began displaying JPEGs and GIF, which eventually led to the ubiquity of graphics embedded in emails. The earliest ASCII images in emails were typically relatively simple patterns of characters surrounding inspiring quotes, information about the sender, and simple graffit-like figures on the order of "Kilroy was here[2]." Eventually a kind of underground of more complex ASCII art[3] emerged, most commonly replicating photos and cartoon characters from popular culture. In the rapidly-paced history of the Internet, ASCII images, an medium over forty years old, is not merely old school, but decidedly archaic.

Little truly original art has been made with ASCII, much less images that aspire to being rich, serious, and resonant art that is visually and conceptually meaningful, has a relationship to art history, and which bears repeated viewing. Additionally, serious abstract art in ASCII is especially rare. One exception is the painter Frederick Hammersley (1919-2009), who in 1969 in Albuquerque produced a too little-known series of seventy two ASCII computer prints[4]. A more recent exception is A. Bill Miller, who in addition to his ink drawings, animated GIFs, videos, and performances, has for some time produced a varied, compelling, and growing corpus of ASCII drawings that explores a range of pictorial ideas, associative qualities, and visual complexity. Rather than ASCII being a little detour in his production, such as with Hammersley, Miller’s ASCII drawings are central to his art.

Truman Capote accused Jack Kerouac of a kind of lifeless Beat prolixity when he said about On the Road, "That’s not writing, it’s typing." Somewhat similarly, one might say that a ASCII drawing is simply typing, too. But of course, just as Capote was wrong, assumptions about what drawing is tend to be too narrow. Drawing is a peculiarly flexible word, concept, and practice; one needs merely to think of using a stick in sand, lengths of tape on a wall, or a finger against a fogged window to see the possibilities for drawing. In Miller’s hands text becomes a truly descriptive and elegant drawing medium capable of great expression, delicacy, and impact.

An ASCII drawing is basically a text document, a grid-based field of horizontally and vertically distributed characters and spaces. Of course, the grid is thought of as the epitome of modernist structure. Land is often subdivided in grid-like plots, as are cities and suburbs. Newspapers and magazines layouts are grid-based, and ledgers and databases, too. The grid in modern and contemporary art is practically a cliché, supposedly representing or alluding to reason and order, ideal and purity. But Miller manages to draw/type grid-bound images that are firmly grid-defying. The grid is shifted, tweaked, and twisted line by line into surprisingly compositions that are pictorial and spatial, rhythmic and dynamic, varied and engaging.

Still, when normally confronted with text we want to read it, scanning from left to right, in an effort to make sense and understand the characters before us. But Miller’s relatively small visual vocabulary of dashes, underscores, forward and back slashes, equals and plus signs, resist literary reading. The thing to be read, or rather, seen, is an image. Our curiosity about the phonetics of the keyboard symbols may remain, like Concrete Poetry, and it is possible that this adds a layer of experience, meaning, flavor, or color to Miller’s drawing, But ultimately, any kind of lingual relationship or interpretation is resisted. What remains is strictly visual: verticals, horizontals, and diagonals; pattern and interruption; density and empty space; line and form; structure and flow.

Naturally, Miller frequently posts his ASCII drawings on his blog[5]; it might seem logical that art in this medium remains solely within an environment where it can be easily requested and delivered to a Web browser for viewing on anyone’s monitor. But Miller takes an important next step: by making prints, he transports his images from the flickering and pixilated digital realm into our analog, tactile world, reified in paper and ink. Seeing his drawings outside the monitor is a markedly different and important experience; while digital images scroll by almost intangibly in daily rushes of groups and fragments framed by the browser window and the monitor, the art work as a standalone, real object allows the viewer to see and contemplate a crisp, satisfyingly still, human-scaled imag. Hanging a group of prints on a wall allows for comparison and contrast. In these prints, seen in our space of light, air, distance, and intimacy, we note each image’s graphic quality, presence, and associative qualities, and the fully assess Miller’s range of ideas, visual invention, and unique skill.

For example:

  • 0178 is a spare, rugged landscape of filled and empty spaces defined by horizontal and vertical lines: a crusty trunk; an arid rippling mirage hundreds in the distance; a secret entry; two structures, one close and one far away..
  • 0134 alludes to where floor meets wall: conveyor belt-like torrent of slashes and pipes flow parallel to the floor, bend, turn, and seep back at the bottom of the baseboard, while another stream of slashes and pipes pour down the wall, run across the floor, and skitter, bounce, and drop off into the foreground.
  • gridworks2000-blogdrawings-collage-01 lays out an elaborate design for a secret weapon or spacecraft; diagrams a sophisticated home entertainment system; outlines a very complicated family tree; captures a dense supply chain or business practice.
  • gridworks2000-blogdrawings-collage33 is an accumulation of dashes, slashes, and pipes made by capturing a drawing, creating several layers of the same drawing Photoshop, coloring the text, and misregistering the layers to produce: an ecstatic red and blue Tron-like schematic; an atomic or celestial starburst; a decorated chamber with a center aisle that initiates must walk towards a powerful, light-filled enlightenment.
  • gridworks2000-blogdrawings-collage38 is a side view of a Tibetan sand painting; a vibrating cross-section of a multi-storied building; a saturated, hairy, pulsating, organic, energy-producing machine churning at maximum production.

And so on. The descriptions above are little tastes of what these images make possible, yet there is still more to discover.

The ASCII drawings are an important component of Miller’s Gridworks Project, and it is interesting to widen our view of this project by looking at another component, his ink drawings, which also incorporate multiple approaches to the grid. Hand drawn, the ink drawings introduce even more variations through wobbly and wonky, fast and slow lines, all doing their part to work with and go beyond the grid. While not restricted to the columns and rows of text, the ink drawings are evidence of Miller’s overall vision, project, and consistency. Scanned and printed at the same scale of his ASCII prints, the ink drawings confirm the broad scope and deliberateness of Miller’s work.

More examples:

  • gridworks2000-0028 contains an aerial and a street view of a rickety sidewalk or fence, which puts the viewer at a distance over which we view an urban street where a large Buckminster Fuller-like public structure looms over the floor plan of a domestic building of individual but inter-connected units.
  • gridworks2000-0011 shows a radial array of dots exploding beyond a rectangular boundary which fails to contain them; an aerial plan for crops; a diagram for irrigation or digging a network of tunnels; a unraveling crocheted ziggurat tipped over on its side.
  • gridfont5-mobydick_page_001 is a dense build up of open and closed rectangles form paragraphs of unexplainable code; an unplanned but organically ordered urban development; decomposing language, crumbling and falling apart leaving all meaning lost; the electric hum of energy coursing through uncountable channels, dwellings, and appliances.

Despite Miller’s spare chosen media and deceptively simple vocabulary, observations and associations like those above are possible because his drawings are knowingly crafted and visual; the conceptual aspects of his work are subservient to the visual aspects: seeing before ideas, ideas supporting seeing. Drawing is a primary act, a foundation, proof of concept, execution, and value. It is fortunate that Miller has found a medium that he can push beyond what it was intended to do, that is relevant and meaningful in contemporary art practice, and with which he can thrive and connect to the other branches of his oeuvre.

Chris Ashley
Oakland, CA
November 2009

[1] American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII.
[2] Kilroy was here. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilroy_was_here
[3] ASCII art. Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII_art
[4] Frederick Hammersley’s computer prints. Artnet.
http://www.artnet.com/Galleries/Artwork_Detail.asp?G=&gid=563&which=&ViewArtistBy=&aid=7751&wid=424639071&source=artist&rta
[5] http://gridworks1.blogspot.com/.
http://gridworks1.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Incident Report


Home | Project Archive | Hudson Viewing Station | Reports | Links | Contact | Auxiliary
INCIDENT REPORT is an experimental viewing station for visual projects, located in Hudson, NY
We are a model of portability, non-site, no-budget and low-maintenance. We offer an interface between the many publics of the street, and the concepts and issues generated by artists and social thinkers in a wide yet coherent spectrum.
INCIDENT REPORT can generate new relationships with intuitive knowledge, visual intelligence, social cognition. We engage in formally arranged projects, as well as improvised situations. We are always open.

INCIDENT No. 28:
MICHAEL BALLOU, Go-Go Mobile
November 16- December 16, 2009
For more information, contact: officer@incidentreport.info
click the image below to view details of the current installation

MB3.jpg













Viewing Station: 348 Warren Street Hudson, New York 12534 officer@incident.info

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Interview with Ballou

INTERVIEW: Mike Ballou

On Monday, October 26 a giant cow head appeared atop Diner, a restaurant at the intersection of Broadway and Berry in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Moo-Moo the Giant Cow Head is a large sculptural portrait by artist Mike Ballou of one of the grass-fed upstate New York cows that are used in Diner’s dishes. I met up with Mike and German artist Hans Winkler (see ZING #15) at Diner to discuss this absurdity.


Brandon Johnson: We’ll just talk about that big cow head on top of Diner and see where it take us. So, why’s it there?

Mike Ballou: I became interested in Diner as a social venue. A lot of it was function and I wanted to do something that played with their sensibility. So, I went to the farm where they get some of their livestock and took pictures.

B: Did you know the guy who owns Diner?

M: Yeah, actually, I met Andrew [Tarlow] 8 years ago? It was this hysterical trip to Stockholm and we had this insane layover. I mean we were laid over for 14 hours and I had been traveling so much that year that I said “I’m not staying inside this fuckin’ airport. Anybody wanna come with me? I’m going outside.” It was May or early June in Stockholm, so it was light forever. Andrew and I ended up in the middle of this traffic median and there was this grassy patch with dandelions and we ended up making flower leis for one another. I kept talking in this pirate voice, saying, “Argg, you’ve been ruining the neighborhood, turning all yuppyfied, haven’t ya? Serving all your fancy food with pretty girls. Think you’re fancy do ya?”

continue

Found at zing chat

Saturday, November 7, 2009

LES


Erin Shirreff at Lisa Cooley
James Turrell's Roden Crater

Stairway Reena Spaulings closed till mid- Dec.
http://www.reenaspaulings.com/
http://www.tommoody.us/archives/2009/11/06/reena-spaulings/

Paddy Johnson looking at Jonas Mekas at James Fuentes
Destruction Quartet
October 28 - November 22, 2009


Canada: extended Michael Williams: "Uncle Big" through November 22, 2009.



Kinda Fun-

Monday, November 2, 2009

Eva Mantell

Eva Mantell's work is "poetry rescued from the scrap heap. The frozen moment of delicate disintegration and buoyant blow-away is phenomenally observed and mystifyingly captured. Ephemeral states of matter wrought from the basest materials; divinations from the dregs of coffee cups."

-Adam McGovern



pictured "dose" 2009, paper coffee cups, wax

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Sebastian Buerkner


screenshot


Now Showing: Sebastian Buerkner
23rd September - 13th October 2009

“Buerkner is one of the most innovative artists working with animation today.”
The Showroom

tank.tv is pleased to exhibit a solo show from Sebastian Buerkner which will transform www.tank.tv and present fourteen of his works.

Sebastian Buerkner's animations offer poly-sensorial experiences, subtly set in situations at the edge of dreaming and waking. His sophisticated audio-visual language which encorporates controlled muddles of strobe lights, flashy colours and vectorial shapes engage forensically with ideas of time, space, speed, colour and weight.

Sebastian Buerkner studied painting in Germany before moving to London to complete an MA at Chelsea College of Art & Design in 2002, where he was awarded a Fellowship Residency the following year. His work has been exhibited in several group and solo shows internationally including at Tramway in February 2009 and in the NKV Wiesbaden in March 2009. Since 2004 his practice has shifted exclusively to animation. He has had solo exhibitions in London including LUX at Lounge Gallery in 2006, the Whitechapel Project Space in 2007 and The Showroom in 2008.

Sebastian’s work will be shown on www.tank.tv from the 23rd September - 13th October 2009.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Health Care Video Challenge

(note: the challenge specifies 30 seconds making my video to long to win, the pauses hopefully add to it's urgency - the expense being a winner for me sacrificed, so it can be a winner for us all.)
In many ways, the fight for health insurance reform comes down to a battle over information. The more people know about how broken the system is and the President's plan to fix it, the more they want change. But there are an awful lot of lies to cut through, and a whole lot of truth to get out.

So today, we're proud to announce a powerful new way for you to help: Organizing for America's Health Reform Video Challenge.

This is your chance -- you ingenious, insightful, funny people out there -- to make a 30-second ad telling the story about why the status quo has got to go, or explaining how the Obama plan will ensure we get the secure, quality care we need without breaking the budget.

The top submissions will be voted on by the public and a panel of experts, with the winning ad aired on national television. This is your opportunity to add your voice and creativity to the debate, get some great exposure for your work, and make a huge difference.

Click here to get started.

No experience is needed -- if you have an idea, we want you to give it a shot. And if you know someone who is especially handy with a camera, please forward this note along right away. Just make sure you submit your ad by October 18th.

Your video could be as simple as you talking straight into the camera, as complex as a full-blown production with a script and special effects, or anything in between.

We're looking for serious videos: You can tell your personal story about how the broken health insurance system has affected you. You can illustrate the big picture about what's wrong now and how the President's plan will help with animations, charts, and facts.

We're looking for funny videos: You can parody those trying to scare us into inaction (between the lying pundits and the insurance company spin doctors, they've given us some good stuff to work with).

And we're looking for new ideas we never would have thought of but we know will blow us all away.

We know that compelling videos can touch people in a way that words alone simply cannot. The messages that regular people put together will make a bigger difference than any false smears or slick ads the other side can dream up. And who knows -- your creative, powerful, or touching video could help tip the balance in favor of health reform.

So go get started today!

http://my.barackobama.com/videochallenge

I can't wait to see what you come up with,

Natalie

Natalie Foster
New Media Director

Monday, September 21, 2009

Big Gulp

Kathy Butterly
Chie Fueki
at ShoshanaWayne

Monday, September 14, 2009

Jane Fine


Jane Fine

Blockbuster, 2009
Acrylic and Ink on Canvas, 32 x 50 inches

http://www.pierogi2000.com/flatfile/finejane.html

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Santalopes

performance 9/11/09

gallery 2

“She Who Destroys the Light" is Carol ‘Riot’ Kane’s gothic cathedral of an exhibition, with rock stars as saints. Fandom is usually insipid. Here, it's a monumental cosmology, fully realized.

Read more

“The Sweetest Thing” is Andrew Erdos’s joyously ridiculous, NC-17 melange of photos, video, sculpture and performance. Santalopes are everywhere. Visitors will encounter a giant Santalope gingerbread house, a video of Santalope sex on a deserted Australian beach, Mrs. Santalope’s live North Pole dance—and her unabashed girl-on-girl eroticism—Santalopes at the Great Wall of China, Santalopes in glass, and lots and lots of candy.

What is a Santalope?

Friday, September 11, 2009

Spaced Out

Spaced Out / On Time

Joan Brown

Sadie Laska
Chris Martin
Katherine Bernhardt
Otis Houston Jr.
Dona Nelson
Agathe Snow

September 11 - October 11, 2009
Opening reception: Friday, September 11, from 6:30 to 8:30 PM

"It’s amazing what you can do when you don't listen to what 'they' say." - Otis Houston Jr. (A.K.A. Black Cherokee)

"Baby, I'm not always there when you call, but I'm always on time. And I gave you my all, now baby be mine!" - Ashanti / Ja Rule

Damn you time! And the warships of fashion. I will be my own timekeeper and that way always ready! Be mine! Get physical. Get spaced out. Dismantled this place. Lost in thought and color, and stain, and mess, in construction, in color, in time, ON TIME. Lets get lost! These artists are not afraid to go way over there. Their art is the tether that allows for the trip. The artist can to lose it, to forget it, get beyond and through and away and follow objects back down to the ground, like a breadcrumb trail. The art is the evidence, the result and the fact of these explorations. No matter how far they go, these things are back here on time. We are lucky to have them all together, now in one place.

These artists make us bigger and braver people. Some of this work we know intimately. As students and colleagues of Dona Nelson, we have been intimately influenced (startled, intrigued, entranced) by her painting for over a decade. For ten years we have commuted past Otis Houston's studio and stage under the Triborough Bridge. His daily practice teaches us what art is suppose to be. Five years ago, Agathe brought potatoes in a spare tire nest to CANADA. To this day she continues to make free sculpture for the next Pepsi generation. Come meet me in the belly of your Whale! Ms. Lily Ludlow introduced us to Sadie Laska who is a drummer and a painter. Her intensely physical paintings in sand and goo are made with brush, stick and sponge. They are from the streets: tar and gum. Cave with the lights off, drip drop. Katherine Bernhardt (who introduced us to Chris Martin) can't be stopped still. Her strong and vulnerable paintings keep the faith (an now keep the time too). Make it! ! Make it YEs YEs! Joe Bradley asked us to look at the paintings of Joan Brown: where pattern meets painting and spirit is clearly in gear. We haven't been the same since. Her insistence is on her own way, which reminds us of Chris Martin who paints whatever he likes better than most. His works are funk driven and lost and full of painting explored. Close your eyes and let's go, keep digging, deep earth mining. Dig deeper, fry higher. Be Brave!

"If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, and yet make allowance for their doubting too! If you can wait and not be tired by waiting or being lied about, don't deal in lies! Or being hated, don't give way to hating, and yet don't look too good nor talk too wise! If you can meet with triumph or disaster and treat those two impostors just the same!" - Dr. Bronner

CANADA is located at 55 Chrystie Street between Hester and Canal Streets in New York City. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 12 to 6 PM. For more information, please contact the gallery at 212-925-4631 or at gallery@canadanewyork.com