Niki de Saint Phalle and the West Coast

“Design Loves Art” at Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood is celebrating the work of Niki de Saint Phalle with an exhibition of works on paper and small sculptures in conjunction with Pacific Standard Time’s Performance and Public Art Festival.

Niki de Saint Phalle, Californian Diary (Order and Chaos), 1994.
© 2011 Niki Charitable Art Foundation. All rights reserved.

On the second floor of the Blue Building, curator Yann Perreau has organized an exhibit at Here is Elsewhere Gallery (Space B231) entitled “Niki de Saint Phalle & the West Coast,” which marks Saint Phalle’s first show in Los Angeles in a decade. The collection examines Saint Phalle’s relationship with the Nouveaux Réalistes (Tinguely, Spoerri, Arman) and her work in Southern California. From her “Shooting Paintings” in Malibu from 1961 to her “Black Heroes” series realized in the late 1990s in San Diego, Saint Phalle found the West Coast a unique, lifelong source of inspiration.

The exhibit runs from 26 January to 23 March 2012 at HiE @ B 231 Space in the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood (8687 Melrose Ave # G102, Blue Building, Second Floor). Learn more.
 

Large survey exhibition of multifaceted artist Niki de Saint Phalle at the Max-Ernst-Museum

ARTDAILY.ORG  14 JANUARY 2012
 
 

BRUEHL — The Max-Ernst-Museum is showing the wide-ranging oeuvre of the multifaceted artist Niki de Saint Phalle, undoubtedly one of the most important artists of the 20th century, in a large survey exhibition. Through her paintings, assemblages, shooting paintings (tirs), sculptures, and installations, this artist created a unique cosmos which established her international reputation.

Niki de Saint Phalle, born in Neuilly-sur-Seine in 1930 and died in San Diego, California, in 2002, had a defining influence on the art of her day, feminine features of which she celebrated and shaped. Like no one before her, she found a valid form for the elemental force of femininity, particularly in her Nanas.

The exhibition at the Max-Ernst-Museum provides an extensive overview of her oeuvre, from the early paintings to the late sculptures. “Play With Me,” the title both of the exhibition and of one of her first paintings, is also directed at the viewer. It is an appeal to the individual’s creativity, an invitation to make an attempt and participate in the artist’s unbridled joie de vivre. That joy was evident in all the phases of her creative life. Her oeuvre unites her interest in the originality of life and her own experiences. Niki de Saint Phalle cannot really be categorised, nor was she shy of contradictoriness. Whether she engrossed herself in sources like the tarot or Indian culture, or drew on subjective experiences, such as her childhood memories, everything flowed directly into her art and involved a broad creative spectrum. Painting, drawing and printing, the colossal but also miniature sculptures, reliefs, gardens, and also books, letters and written records, up to and including films form a unique cosmos – and the essence of her creative work.

The exhibition of more than 150 works, curated by Guido Magnaguagno, former director of the Tinguely Museum in Basel, embraces the sculptures on loan from the Niki Charitable Art Foundation in California and Paris, the Sprengel Museum in Hanover, and the Musée d’art moderne in Nice, to all of which Niki de Saint Phalle made generous donations of her works. The show also features works from numerous private and public lenders. It has been complemented, moreover, by quintessential works by Jean Tinguely, her partner of many years, and paintings by her first teacher, the still largely unknown Hugh Weiss. The presentation also involves the artist’s films, which illustrate her dream worlds and her engagement with the patriarchy, and which are frequently dealt with quite separately from her other work.

 
Art Daily

 
Image: A woman looks at the artwork “Sphinx” by French artist Niki de Saint Phalle (1930-2002) at the Max-Ernst-Museum in Bruehl, Germany. The artwork is presented in a retrospective entitled “Niki de Saint Phalle: Spiel mit mir” (Niki de Saint Phalle: Play With Me), which opens to the public from 15 January to 3 June. (EPA/OLIVER BERG)

 

“Play With Me” Opens at the Max Ernst Museum in Bruehl

ArtDaily.org writes about “Niki de Saint Phalle: Spiel Mit Mir” (Niki de Saint Phalle: Play With Me), a new survey exhibition of Niki’s work that opened on 15 January at the Max Ernst Museum in Bruehl, Germany:

“The Max Ernst Museum is showing the wide-ranging oeuvre of the multifaceted artist Niki de Saint Phalle, undoubtedly one of the most important artists of the 20th century, in a large survey exhibition. Through her paintings, assemblages, shooting paintings (tirs), sculptures, and installations, this artist created a unique cosmos which established her international reputation.

“The exhibition at the Max Ernst Museum provides an extensive overview of her oeuvre, from the early paintings to the late sculptures…. The exhibition of more than 150 works, curated by Guido Magnaguagno, former director of the Tinguely Museum in Basel, embraces the sculptures on loan from the Niki Charitable Art Foundation in California and Paris, the Sprengel Museum in Hanover, and the Musée d’art moderne in Nice, to all of which Niki de Saint Phalle made generous donations of her works. The show also features works from numerous private and public lenders. It has been complemented, moreover, by quintessential works by Jean Tinguely, her partner of many years, and paintings by her first teacher, the still largely unknown Hugh Weiss.”

Niki de Saint Phalle: Spiel Mit Mir” at the Max Ernst Museum in Bruehl, Germany, will be open to the public from 15 January to 3 June 2012. Read more.
 

Pacific Standard Time Performance Art Festival Preview

L.A. WEEKLY  12 JANUARY 2012
 
 

LOS ANGELES — Is that performance art? Not an uncommon question in Los Angeles, where you might see a guy in a mud-caked bodysuit marching down Wilshire, a fleet of pink Range Rovers hauling ass through West Hollywood or a frazzled cat lady walking her pets through a corporate plaza. You look twice and wonder: Did they do that on purpose? Am I supposed to notice? So is that art?

It’s therefore fitting that the organizers behind Pacific Standard Time continue to commemorate the postwar art of the Southland by turning to the work that was done outside the studio. It’s called the Performance and Public Art Festival (January 19-29) — 11 days and more than 30 performances, including experimental music and theater, social and political protest, sculpture and installation, and old-fashioned spectacle. A bunch of them are contemporary re-enactments of works first performed by seminal California artists more than 40 years ago.

We’ve profiled five works that push the limits of performance art.

1. Best hike ever

When Santa Monica’s 18th Street Arts Center asked Lita Albuquerque to restage her 1980 work Spine of the Earth, she didn’t think the process would become a work all its own. The first time around, Albuquerque and a team of assistants were working in the El Mirage dry lake bed, using blood-red powdered pigment to create interlocking geometric shapes against the stark flats of the Mojave Desert. Unable to re-create the work outside the city, Albuquerque moved to the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook, home to a dramatic panoramic view. But when she learned the pigment would stain the steps of a beloved running trail, she replaced painting with something bigger: 500 volunteers in robes, unfurling across the landscape, not unlike a paintbrush in the desert.

What was once a desert pilgrimage has become an intervention into the humdrum of the everyday. Because it’s held in a public park, there’ll be nothing to stop a jogger from weaving through the red-robed procession. And the best view of the skydiver who kicks off the performance — a stand-in for the aerial perspective that’s key to understanding the original work — might be from a car on the Santa Monica Freeway.

And that’s cool with Albuquerque. “If the original was about utilizing the Earth as a blank canvas,” she says, “then this is about the movement of people in this extraordinary city.” Lita Albuquerque’s Spine of the Earth 2012, January 22, Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook, 6300 Hetzler Road, Culver City.

2. America’s most-watched performance art

The similarities between performance art and sports aren’t lost on the Pomona College football team. Football games are elaborate stews of choreographed routine that are meaningless without an audience. So it didn’t surprise head coach Roger Caron when two dozen players volunteered to take part in John White’s Preparation F.

“This isn’t a Division I school, where kids are here just to play football,” Caron says. “For them, it’s a part of their day-to-day lives as mild-mannered college students.”

First performed in a campus ballroom in 1971, this new performance will take place in the gym. Audiences will watch from the bleachers as the team stretches and scrimmages and, after a shamanistic intervention from an audience member, changes back into street clothes and walks offstage. By moving a football practice onto a stage, White has moved the game out of the arena of entertainment and under the critical microscope of art. It will ask the question: Why does society condone violence if it’s committed while in uniform?

White’s performance precedes Judy Chicago’s A Butterfly for Pomona, a pyrotechnic display inspired by her fireworks performances of the 1970s, Atmospheres, to be held on the football field. Curator Rebecca McGrew says the pairing is coincidental but wrought with dramatic irony: taking the team off the field before creating the illusion of blowing it up. John White’s Preparation F and Judy Chicago’s A Butterfly for Pomona, January 21, Pomona College, Memorial Gymnasium, 333 N. College Avenue, Claremont.

3. Painting with a 12-gauge

In the early 1960s, L.A. was taking the piss out of action painting, the solitary practice of splattering paint all over a canvas. Behind a beatnik hangout on the Sunset Strip, the glamorous French émigré Niki de Saint Phalle hung bladders of paint and King Kong masks on a wooden canvas and shot it up with pals like John Cage and Jane Fonda. She called these communal paintings tirs — French for “gunshot.”

Meanwhile, in a studio in Pasadena, Richard Jackson was emptying buckets of paint and canvases into a washing machine. He dreamed of painting with a Cessna 150 for a brush.

Today staged violence is no cakewalk. For safety reasons, the re-enactment of Saint Phalle’s tirs will be invitation-only, held at an undisclosed outdoor shooting range in the foothills. “I’m open to reinterpretation,” says curator Yael Lipschutz, “but to do this with stuntmen or fake guns seems silly.”

And Armory Center curators had to promise Pasadena officials they’d keep spectators hundreds of feet away when Jackson flies and crashes a 15-foot model airplane, loaded with paint, into an enormous concrete wall in Arroyo Seco’s Brookside Park. “From very early in his career,” says curator Irene Tsatsos, “Richard’s been pushing the idea of how a painting can be made.” His brand of deliriousness might be up to code, but it’s still your best bet for catching a whiff of neo-dada funk. Niki de Saint Phalle’s Tirs: Reloaded, January 22, invitation only. Richard Jackson’s Accidents in Abstract Painting, January 22, Brookside Park, 360 N. Arroyo Boulevard, Pasadena.

4. Feminism via Twitter

To hear Suzanne Lacy talk about it, staging Three Weeks in May — her 1977 attempt to tackle issues of sexual violence in L.A. with visual art — was like running a grassroots political campaign. Small groups got together to discuss what couldn’t be said in public. Demonstrations and community organizing raised awareness.

For her reconceptualization of the project, now called Three Weeks in January, Lacy, inspired by the Obama campaign, has added another tool: social media. Like the original work, she is hosting demonstrations, classes and public forums around the city and stenciling the word rape on locations reported to LAPD on a map outside its downtown headquarters. But Lacy also is facilitating online forums and updating the map with data from Twitter.

“Over 30 years later, we can no longer say that rape is unspoken, nor that services and policies do not exist,” Lacy says. “But in terms of conversation and awareness, can something like a Twitter feed really compare to going door-to-door, or occupying public space?” Suzanne Lacy’s Three Weeks in January, January 12-February 1. Candlelight vigil January 27, 7 p.m., Los Angeles Police Department, 100 W. First Street, downtown.

5. Musical hotel fun house

On the final night of the festival, experimental music collective Society for the Activation of Social Space Through Art and Soundcalls (SASSAS) will create a museum called the Welcome Inn Time Machine. The rooms of a homely motel in Eagle Rock will be transformed into what SASSAS curator Cindy Bernard calls “galaxies of work” — spaces that visually and sonically evoke the landmark music of the PST era. You might catch an all-star fusion combo ripping up a late-’50s Ornette Coleman musical score. Wander into another room to subject yourself to the laborious detuning and screeching of a violin, like a performance from conceptual artist Bruce Nauman in 1969. Or call a number to hear Robert Wilhite, locked in a room on the other side of the motel, performing a telephone concert written in 1975.

PST’s festival celebrates 40 years of art vanishing without a trace, and what better way to capture that than in an ephemeral hotel fun house? As Bernard notes, “There’s all kinds of one-night things that happen in hotels all the time.” SASSAS’s Welcome Inn Time Machine, January 29, Welcome Inn, 1840 Colorado Boulevard, Eagle Rock.

For more events and information, visit pacificstandardtimefestival.org.
 

 
— Sam Bloch, LA Weekly

Image: The Pomona College football team scrimmaged in a campus ballroom for artist John White’s 1971 performance Preparation F, being re-created this month.

 

Painting With a 12-Gauge

In the current LA Weekly, Sam Bloch offers a “Pacific Standard Time Performance Art Festival Preview,” with a flashback to the 1960s and a flash-forward to the upcoming PST event in Los Angeles on January 22:

“In the early 1960s, L.A. was taking the piss out of action painting, the solitary practice of splattering paint all over a canvas. Behind a beatnik hangout on the Sunset Strip, the glamorous French émigré Niki de Saint Phalle hung bladders of paint and King Kong masks on a wooden canvas and shot it up with pals like John Cage and Jane Fonda. She called these communal paintings tirs — French for ‘gunshot.’ …

“Today staged violence is no cakewalk. For safety reasons, the re-enactment of Saint Phalle’s tirs will be invitation-only, held at an undisclosed outdoor shooting range in the foothills. ‘I’m open to reinterpretation,’ says curator Yael Lipschutz, ‘but to do this with stuntmen or fake guns seems silly.’ (Niki de Saint Phalle’s Tirs: Reloaded, January 22, invitation only.) Read more.
 

Gallery of Modern Art’s ‘Unprecedented’ Niki de Saint Phalle Haul to Entertain Glasgow

CULTURE24  10 JANUARY 2012
 
 

GLASGOW — An “unprecedented” donation has allowed the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art to receive 15 works by larger-than-life French artist Niki de Saint Phalle, complementing four of her existing sculptures and installations in the most significant bequest of modern art ever given to the city’s collection.

A print, wallpaper, rare archive material and sculptures in Saint Phalle’s typically colourful style are among the works arriving following a deal between the Contemporary Art Society and Eric and Jean Cass. They are expected to form an exhibition at the end of 2013.

Blessed with an incredible imagination, Saint Phalle is best known for her legacy of huge public sculptures, which include a winged Sun God on the campus of the University of California, L’Ange Protecteur in the hall of Zurich’s railway station, the monumental Cyclop in her native country and a black and white Golum creature whose hat-trick of blood red tongues act as play slides in Jerusalem.

She was interested in exploring the roles of women in society, frequently designing dolls and depictions of social change such as Miss Black Power at the Hakone Open Air Museum.

Her playfulness and revolutionary edge may have reflected her own background, having left a reputedly conservative family behind, embarked on a teenage modelling career which saw her on the cover of French Vogue, and departed for Massachusetts with her husband at the age of 18.

Easily the most flamboyant expression of Saint Phalle’s designs lies in her Tarot Garden in Tuscany, a riot of enormous sculptures where giant red lips, teetering black and white scales, towering mosaic emperors and trees of life adorn a hill based on the 22 trump cards of the Tarot. She spent 20 years creating it before her death in 2002.

“This extraordinary and generous donation is unprecedented for the gallery,” said Gordon Matheson, the Leader of Glasgow City Council.

“It’s hard to properly express just how grateful we are. These works are unique and beautiful and will captivate and thrill our visitors.”
 

 
Culture24
 

Image 1: Niki de Saint Phalle, Monkey and Child, Photo © Douglas Atfield

Image 2: Niki de Saint Phalle, Chaise à Serpents (detail), Photo © Douglas Atfield

 

‘Unprecedented’ Gift to Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art

Culture24 has written a glowing account of the recent gift by Eric and Jean Cass of 15 works by Niki de Saint Phalle to the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art:

“An ‘unprecedented’ donation has allowed the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art to receive 15 works by larger-than-life French artist Niki de Saint Phalle, complementing four of her existing sculptures and installations in the most significant bequest of modern art ever given to the city’s collection.

“A print, wallpaper, rare archive material and sculptures in Saint Phalle’s typically colourful style are among the works arriving following a deal between the Contemporary Art Society and Eric and Jean Cass. They are expected to form an exhibition at the end of 2013. […]

“‘This extraordinary and generous donation is unprecedented for the gallery,’ said Gordon Matheson, the Leader of Glasgow City Council. ‘It’s hard to properly express just how grateful we are. These works are unique and beautiful and will captivate and thrill our visitors.'” Read more.