Friday, August 21, 2009

Is Summer over yet???


Unfortunately, I missed the opening of this show last weekend, but I hear that it’s still definitely worth a visit, especially if this recession has you reeling…

Brooklyn Bailout Burlesque

Show runs till August 30th, 2009

The art world, global companies, complex societies and every

small individual all have one problem in common: how to deal with

the crisis. When money goes wrong nothing goes right. Many in

the high society of art dreamt the dream of instant success and

big overnight money, but the awakening was rough and most of

the ambitious collectors had gone with the wind. So how can one

stay in a market that barely exists in this time, where money

displays a rather strange behaviour.

Jim Avignon, Brooklyn-Berlin based artist, musician and hopeless

bohemian curated a show with 7 young artists from Brooklyn and

Europe,which might have some answers for you. They throw their

skills together and create a panorama, where strange and funny

characters inhabit a peculiar zone somewhere between realist

figuration. cartoons, messageboard-doodling and pure fantasy.

Expect everything from unsentimental portraits, vibrant colors,

playful items contemporary weirdness with a good old

anti-establishment vibe.

Between high art and crumbling economy there is a common

ground for inexpensive works, keenly tailored for broad appeal.

The show must go on.

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The great communal fun that is the Central Park Summer Film Festival returns August 18 to 22. And the 19th is likely to be the biggest blast of all: That's the evening for Gordon Parks's 1971 Shaft. Yes, the characters are cardboardy archetypes, but the wealth and depth of New York location shots—especially in Times Square and the ratty old Village, both of which look absolutely awful—provide way more hits of pleasure than you may remember. Add to that Richard Roundtree and his impressive assortment of turtlenecks, plus, of course, the Über-funky Isaac Hayes theme music, and you've got a groovy evening on your hands. — Christopher Bonanos from NYMag

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Also, since the weather maybe will give us a little bit of a break this weekend, you should go see Roxy Paine on the roof of the Met – it closes October 25

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