The 9th Street Show - The Rise of Legends

New York City in the 1950’s was a pretty remarkable place. After WWII the city was a relative shell comprised of dilapidated buildings and neglected neighborhoods, with most people opting to live in the suburbs far away from the potential military target. Living and working amongst the derelict buildings was a group of young pioneer artists, bursting with intellect and creativity, yet struggling to have a voice in the art world. 9th St Show InviteIn 1951, art dealer Leo Castelli and a group of these young New York City artists joined forces to create the infamous 9Th St Show, a self-funded exhibition that in many ways changed the course of art history forever. Europe was losing its edge and what was relevant, current and exciting was happening in America’s own back yard, despite being overlooked by the local art scene. At that time, there was only a small number of galleries in Manhattan, all were clustered around 57th street and all dealed primarily in European art. The collective rented an abandoned antique store at 60, East 9th Street for $40 and together put on a ground-breaking exhibition that ‘appropriated a visibility that American Society had denied them for so long’. The Abstract Expressionist Movement burst onto the scene and caught the attention of not only critics but the culture at large. These artists ultimately became some of the most celebrated and valued of all time. One of the youngest exhibitors in the 9th Street show was TW Fine Art’s Michael Goldberg. At that time Michael Goldberg had changed his name to Michael Stuart to avoid the association with his aristocratic family and his father. Goldberg told stories of taxis lining up down the street with crowds of people amassing outside the space on opening night. The New York Times labeled it an ‘uncommon exhibit of the New York avant-garde spectacularly coming together’. Over the next 50 years the focus of the art world would shift from Europe to America and today there are over 1500 galleries in Manhattan alone. People have returned to the city. The end of the Cold War boosted people’s confidence in the safety of the metropolis and slowly but surely people began to gentrify the forgotten neighborhoods to create the New York City of today. It’s unheard of for artists to be able to rent an exhibition space for $40 anymore – the thought makes today’s artists green with envy! The creative community that existed in those days is now geographically dispersed since Manhattan is for the most part unaffordable for the young avant-garde - the artist interested in the art and not the sale. Goldberg used to loathe walking through Chelsea (the modern art hub) “I fucking hate Chelsea, the content of the work is money no matter what it masquerades as”. In many ways, what he said is true – Mike was about art, not the money that came from today’s art celebrity culture. “I consider myself an old-fashioned modernist in that I think painting can change the world. And the desperation is about the fact that I know it can’t.” Our own artist collective now lives all across the world although our roots are in New York City, where we all gathered as students, mentors and young artists. The Internet serves as our club and although separated by geographical distance, our bonds are strong and our art has been globalized in a manner that in many ways may now represent the future trajectory of the art world.     David Byrne Sculpture  

Generative Art - Rule Based Drawing & Painting

DRAWING ALGORITHM: Begin with 1cm horizontal line drawn in 7 colors, stacked vertically in top left corner. Move horizontally & follow with 1cm vertical line in 7 colors, stacked horizontally. Move horizontally & follow with 1cm horizontal line in 7 colors stacked vertically.   Move Vertically & follow with 1cm vertical line in 7 colors stacked horizontally & REPEAT [divider] BB-003 This simple (albeit made up) example of a visual algorithm shows how an image can be created using the same self-imposed, predetermined sets of rules or algorithms used in the mathematical calculations that drive things like computer programs. When combined with an artist’s hand and a certain amount of unpredictability, generative art can produce some stunning results. TWFA’s Briony Barr has collaborated with physicist Andrew Melatos in Drawing on Complexity, an initiative that creates ‘art experiments’ in the form of large-scale, rule based floor drawings made by groups of participants using colored electrical (PVC) tape. Barr and Melatos invite external participants to create a drawing based on a set of devised rules. The artists do not direct the drawing process, instead they let the participants (agents) create the artwork just as much as the rules they are following. Over time, the interactions between the agents and the rules accumulate to create ripple effects that feed back into the artwork (or system) changing it's course. This happens over and over again, making the drawing complex and unpredictable. The artists document their work in time lapsed video with a written account of the project that is then uploaded to their website. This month the pair coordinate Drawing/Undrawing at NGV community hall in Melbourne. Stay tuned for future projects and be sure to check it out and contribute! Below is the pairs documentation for Experiment #4 at the National Museum of Modern & Contemporary Art in Seoul. [divider] Experiment #4 Duration: 5 hours Agents: 24 Size: 12 x 12 m Location: The National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, South Korea Date: 2013 The drawing was structured using an underlying pencil grid, providing two ways for the different agents to move around; on top of the lines articulating the grid (S1) or inside each grid square (S2). In phase one of the drawing, we allowed agents to have only four ‘children’ (four collaborations) before moving on. In phase two, agents working together were allowed to combine their genetic material as many times as they wanted. This rule variation resulted in many agent duos choosing to have rather a lot of ‘children’. In almost every drawing experiment we see this tendency towards the most efficient way of doing something. In the case of Experiment #4, working as a couple over a longer period of time, repeating the same act, means better strategies can be developed for getting things done (i.e. making a collaborative drawing). This is common sense and also a fundamental tendency of nature; to take the most energy efficient route. Screen Shot 2014-04-25 at 4.53.17 PM Screen Shot 2014-04-25 at 4.53.00 PM

MasDeco Market

MasDeco Market is a unique design fair that showcases everything from furniture to fine art. Created in 2012 by Chilean newspaper La Tercera, MasDeco invites young designers and artists to exhibit their work in a trade show environment. On April 23rd the fifth installment of MasDeco Market begins at Centro Cultural Estación Mapocho, Plaza de la Cultura in Santiago Chile. This year TWFA's Bernadita Castillo will be participating and exhibiting recent work.    

MoCa TV Presents - Awkward x 2

Awkward x 2 is a collaborative project between artists Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe and Rebecca Norton. The artists work alternately on each piece, going back and forth with the artwork, building upon each others composition to create a visual hybrid. The Museum of Contemporary Art in California (MoCa) recently featured the artists work on MoCa TV. To browse these works in print, visit Rebecca Norton or Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe's page at twfineart.com. [divider] MoCa TV - Published on Jan 18, 2013  Painters Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe and Rebecca Norton try to make work that they can't predict, superimposing grids in their collaborative paintings to create a third image whose existence hovers between each painter's marks. In this unconventional artist talk, Gilbert-Rolfe and Norton discuss the various facets of their work, from conception to execution. Mapping irregular spaces onto the canvas is a way for the painters to generate an unfamiliar, yet controlled zones of movement animated by geometry. Colors are then added to the gridded spaces, releasing forces already present in the painting's structure. Referring to the weightless movement of the animated cartoon image, Gilbert-Rolfe and Norton's colorful collaborative paintings are full of physics: speed, mass, light, and math. Key to their process is the notion of going against expectations. As Rolfe-Norton explains,"Good art cuts across art history by not fulfilling its expectations, but instead doing something else." Filmed by Stephen Pagano and Tom Salvaggio. Edited by Stephen Pagano VIEW @ MoCa TV

Cultural Flanerie - Arts & Culture Blog

We are all about breaking down the traditional gallery/museum experience of art. Live with it, react to it and don't be afraid to have an opinion. The Cultural Flanerie is a BLOG written by TWFA's partner & good friend Carrie McCarthy. It is a wonderful 'wander through the arts and minds of others' in a manner that is frank, witty, honest and without pretense. Screen Shot 2014-04-12 at 9.34.14 AM