Art + Architecture + Design
Staff
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Homepage: http://www.bigfigdesigngroup.com
Posts by Staff
Feral Dogs Sniff out Pollution; Robots Rule!
Feb 26th
Now this is the kind of school project that would have held my interest back in school. Did YOU ever get to do something like this?
From Inhabitat:
"Remember those trendy robotic dog toys from a couple years back? Aibo and Poo-chi and the like? Well, sadly, after 6-year-olds tire of the novelty of electronic pets who can fetch balls, bark the national anthem and do silly little dances, there is not much left in the life of a toy robotic dog. Thats why we love Natalie Jeremijenko’s awesome eco / educational / engineering / art project which teaches students how to refurbish old toy robotic dogs and give them new life – turning them into lean green pollution-sniffing machines. For the Feral Dogs project Jeremijenko has worked with numerous student groups to create packs of roving robo-dogs, which are “released” en masse into a community space to sniff out harmful VOCs, ozone, and other environmental toxins. The ‘packs’ of feral robotic dogs are designed to “patrol” sites of public interest like schools, parks, and industrial sites, in order to generate community and media attention on the issue on contaminants in the environment. Clever, cute, and fun – is this the coolest project ever or what?"
more at Inhabitiat
Matt Stiger’s Tesla Coil: Off The Hook!
Feb 23rd
Here is a 4 minute video of my friend, artist Matt Stiger’s 24 inch Tesla Coil. This dude knows his stuff! 28800 volts at aprox 25 kva…Crazy…
Oh, and check out his site HERE
Yoshihiko Satoh and the Uncanny
Feb 23rd
Check out this fantastic sculptural work by Yoshihiko Satoh. Reminds me of one of my favorite quotes recently:
"Today, there is an almost uncanny resemblance between the discourses around the status of contemporary painting and rock music. The techno-factions in both art and music have repeatedly buried the canvas and the guitar for good, and time and again both have risen from the grave, claiming that their time had not yet come, that there was still something substantial to say with and about them." –Jorg Heiser in “The Odd Couple”
Yoshihiko Satoh artworks – [via] Link.
thanks MAKE Magazine
Cartographic ephemera @ Strange Maps
Feb 23rd
Cartographic ephemera and more at Strange Maps. I’ve just spent the last hour poking around and discovered that there is a little-known East German (yes, East) island off the coast of Cuba. Fantastic!
Pic to the left is of Sannikov Land, an Arctic Phantom Island. From Strange Maps:
"In 1811, the Russian merchant and explorer Yakov Sannikov reported seeing a ‘bluish fog’ to the northeast of the New Siberian Islands. In 1886 and 1893, fellow Russian explorer Eduard Toll also sighted what many by then presumed to be an as yet undiscovered island, provisionally named ‘Sannikov Land’. Intensive searches couldn’t locate it, but Sannikov Land appeared on maps well into the first half of the 20th century."
Read about this and more, here.
Thanks to Your Daily Awesome for pointing this out.
Nietzsche on Laughter
Feb 23rd
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– Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche [photo: zachris_decolte ] |
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Roger Dickies [aka Heavyhandz] @ The Vanguard, Hollywood. 2/28/07
Feb 23rd
For all the information about the event, visit Headinghome Recordings:
Goes from 9.30pm – 2.30am The Vanguard – 6021 Hollywood Bl., Hollywood RSVP to a $5.00 list to this address headinghomersvp@yahoo.com The $5.00 list closes at 11pm, so get there early!
One of our favorite LA artists, director of the GCC Art Gallery, and kick-ass DJ, Roger Dickies–aka Heavyhandz–is throwing a bash to celebrate the release of his new 12" vinyl EP "Classique Roq Returns" Get samples here.
The Melancholy Fit Shall Fall
Feb 23rd
I’ve been in a cello mood lately. Perhaps it’s the weather forcast. Perhaps the cold that’s going around. Or maybe the fact that I’ve come to terms with not going to NYC for the Armory party [sorry Stac]. Poor me…
"“But when the melancholy fit shall fall / Sudden from heaven like a weeping cloud, / That fosters the droop-headed flowers all, / And hides the green hill in an April shroud; / Then glut thy sorrow on a morning rose." — John Keats
Regardless, here is the lovely and talented Jacqueline Du Pré performing the 1st movement of the Elgar Cello Concerto. Enjoy…
Lita Albuquerque and Andy Moses @ Peter Blake
Feb 22nd
(Left) Andy Moses, “Siren Song” (detail), 2005, Acrylic on Concave Canvas, 45 x 92 x 4.75 inches.
(Right) Lita Albuquerque, “Auric Field Gold with Blue,” 2006, Pigment and Gold Leaf, 18 x 18 inches.
The fabulous Lita Albuquerque is showing next month at Peter Blake Gallery along with artist Andy Moses. Albuquerque’s new show comes on the heels of the group show she participated in, "Grey Matter", also at Peter Blake, which included favs like Daniel Mendel-Black and James Hayward. If you find yourself in LA next month, don’t miss it!
From the press release:
LITA ALBUQUERQUE AND ANDY MOSES
March 1 – 29, 2007
Opening Reception: Sunday, March 4, 4 – 7pm, Lecture by Lita Albuquerque at 4pm

Peter Blake Gallery
326 North Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach, CA 92651
Contact: Peter Blake
(949) 376-9994, fax (949) 376-3471
Email: peterblakegallery@mac.com
Website: http://www.peterblakegallery.com
Hours: Sunday – Wednesday, 11am – 4pm; Thursday – Saturday, 11am – 7pm
Alaskan Mystery; Glitch Toponymy
Feb 22nd
For those of us suspicious of all organizations over the size of three, this post from things should prove fruitful. I’ve already wasted a good hour digging around these links:
From things:
"What exactly is the above? Located at a Latitude of 62°10’24.38"N and a Longitute of 141° 8’55.35"W, somewhere in Alaska, it joins a long list of blurred and distorted locations. For example, this blurry box in Russia. Sadly, it looks like it’s just missing data / Toponymy, a weblog / Shining Silence, a repository for various things, like the Captain Beefheart Page, Home Page Replica, a collection of BeOS applications (more about BeOS, even more at this GUI gallery, including the gruesome Microsoft Bob) and the Alphabet Project.
Get the rest here.
Stop Thief! Damien Hirst v. Lori Precious
Feb 22nd
We love a good controversy around here and there is a rip-snorter going on in LA tonight. Damien Hirst is showing his latest incarnation of butterflies on canvas at Gagosian, and LA aritst Lori Precious is crying foul.
As Precious sees it, Hirst has stolen her idea and now quite a few of her fans (and Hirst-bashers) have come out in support of her claim. Here’s what she posted on Supertouchblog:
"THIS WORK IS EXACTLY LIKE THE WORK I HAVE BEEN DOING FOR THE LAST 14 YEARS OF MY LIFE!
LOOK AT MY WEBSITE: WWW.LORIPRECIOUS.COM. IF YOU ARE AN ARTIST, OR ANYONE WHO CARES ABOUT CREATIVE INDIVIDUALITY, PLEASE SPEAK OUT AGAINST DAMIEN HIRST TO ANYONE WHO WILL LISTEN! LORI PRECIOUS (WHO DOES ALL HER OWN WORK, WITH NO ASSISTANTS)
Unsettling use of the third person aside, yes, I thought, I do care about "creative individuality" and so I thought I’d take a look at Precious’s work. Here is the most accurate side by side comparison of the works in question that I could get from sources on the web, Hirst on left, Precious on right, to scale, almost:
Hirst’s piece: The Explosion – Exalted, 2006
Butterflies and household gloss on canvas, 84 inches diameter (213.4 cm)
Precious’ piece: detail All the Living and the Dead, 2005 Butterflies and stainless steel. 32 inches diameter.
Similar? Clearly. But theft? That’s not so clear.
As you may have guessed, many bloggers have seized on the opportunity to slam Hirst (there is no shortage of unknown, under-employed artists blogging when they should be in the studio cultivating their ‘creative individuality’), and while I have never considered myself a Hirst cheerleader, it might be worth taking a quick look at a few facts.
Timeline or Something’s in the Air
In 1991 his first solo exhibition, In and Out of Love, which included his now infamous live butterflies emerging from, and dying on canvas, was held at the Woodstock Street Gallery in London; he also had a solo exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and the Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery in Paris. (I remember seeing a version of this in LA at what was then the Temporary Contemporary, MoCA in 2001.)
Lori Precious has posted: The idea came to me in 1992, after years of photographing stained-glass windows and also of collecting butterflies. I was on a trip to Paris visiting churches and cathedrals, and I was in the St. Chapelle Catherdral and it was there I had a vision of the windows done entirely in butterfly wings.
But of course, these two are not the only, nor were they the first, to use butterflies as a medium.
Medium; The Message it is Not
Butterfly wings are the ‘materials’ in question. Obviously there is no rule/law, real or implied, which prohibits one artist from using the same materials as another. The field of painting would have dried-up, so to speak, had this been the case.
As a quick primer–random and unscientific–on artists using butterflies in art from 1860 to today, here are just a few examples:
John Hampson, circa 1860.
Joseph Cornell, 1930.
Jean Dubuffet, 1953.
(unknown artist, discovered on Flickr; "Museum of Modern Art, Montreal, May 5, 2005) If you know the artist, can you Email me, please?
Need more, from folk, to design, to? Here, here, here, and here.
Content or It’s Not Really About the Butterflies, Right?
In fairness, I will not present what I think each artist is up to. I will let them do the talking this time.
Lori Precious says this of her work on her her website;
"Inset into these stainless steel structures are re-creations of stained glass windows made entirely of butterfly wings. The fragile beauty and death of the butterflies has, once again, metamorphosed into these images of guarded faith. My work is made from this intangible, perhaps irrational faith that acts as protection from both real threat and a shapeless fear. While the structure guards a fragile interior, it also reveals an isolated, luminous beauty that is a scar of sorts, a point of vulnerability and exposure."
Damien Hirst said this of his work in the LATimes;
""They’re macabre," Hirst observes, sounding not at all displeased. "The beauty of the geometry is more than you expect — and then you realize that a lot of butterflies died to make it like that. So you are aware of the sort of tragedy…People shake my hand recently and say: ‘Wow — you’ve found God,’ " Hirst says with a chuckle. "Well, I haven’t, really. I would say that I don’t believe in God, at the end of the day. With the butterflies, it looks religious, but it’s kind of a byproduct, an accident…I think everything’s in a bit of a crisis," he says. "I’m drawn to things that fail, and that kind of old religious thing, the idea of the soul — it’s a security blanket that’s been around for a long time."
Critically speaking, the two approaches could not be more dissimilar. But I said I was not going to comment, so I’ll shut up.
Form or How to Make a Circle
Are they "mandalas" or "stained glass windows"? Do we really need to go into the history of the Mandala or the gothic arch? Or stained glass for that matter. Ms. Precious has been working with these motifs since around 1992. Hirst first worked with butterflies in 1991. Hirst’s first circular painting surfaced in the late nineties, I believe, and has been a recurring motif since then in works from the Birthday Card Suite, to the Spot Paintings and the Spin Paintings.
So what do we make of all this? Precious was first with the stained glass thing, and Hirst first with the butterfly thing. Has the absurdity set in yet? Just a few minutes surfing the web produced these wonderful images. (roll over each for details)
And so it Goes…
In my view, the case is open and shut, sadly–I was hoping for a good fight. Artists, like other creative types, often have similar ideas at the same time. Witness the yearly line-up of films, books and television shows that get released and experience more uncanny ‘coincidences’ than you might think possible. Sorry folks, but that is the way of the world. The controversy will continue, regardless, and while a less generous critic might congratulate Ms. Precious on her ability to coordinate a publicity stunt that will certainly gain her more fans than ever, I actually think she honestly feels she has been wronged. That is regrettable (particularly for a fellow Art Center alum).
Let me add, for my friend at Artforum Talkback; I am assuming no ill intent from either artist.
Mat Gleason over at Coagula has said:
"Comparing two works of art by different artists is often difficult to tell, and the eccentric personalities of artists usually make me shy away from reporting on these stories, as they are fraught with personal feelings and conflicting dates, intentions, etc.; plus there is always that endless need for validation and recognition along with the occasional palpable desire for revenge that is never going to be satiated in the lifetime of the average artist."
Well said, Mat (though he does not, in the end, agree with my conclusion–2/22/07:10:33PM).
In the end, the squabbling will recede into the background and we will be left with the works themselves. Go see them both. It’ll be worth it. And then see more, and then some more after that.
–Daniel


















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