7/16/2014

1967 Alison Knowles

Once she had the invitation to go to tea. She arrived at his door with eleven color swatches in her attaché case and the kindest smile on her face. She found a thin cloud of smoke floating above the open door; in no time the room was filled with people. Hands holding trays went high atop their heads. She kept herself in constant movement. She noted, order had become play.
So now about the color swatch: it was for him to select exactly the hue or tint of red-orange and blue that he wanted to have for the print that she was going to silkscreen later. Eleven times she had made a red circle on black Color-aid paper but in different intensities and each time overlapped it with a blue. There was Torch Red, Flame, Bittersweet. He chose one. The color swatch went on the windowsill and the ones he had not selected went back into her case. She thought, even though all is proceeding as foreseen, there must have been an irregularity somewhere along the way.
So the tea party proceeded and at some point his wife got up to go to the window, perhaps she wanted to open it. She looked down onto the windowsill and there was the color swatch, left out, designating his choice. She held it up and said, “When did you do this?” He got up from the table, walked over to the window, toward the fluttering paper and said, “Give me a pencil.” He signed the color swatch. He put the pencil down. After all he did not return to the table as he had left for the window.
Here the curtain falls vertically and the question is now, what is that? Is that a work of art? Is that something that helps in the methodology of doing the print? Is it one of his numerous rounds acted out in the moment?
The artifacts, in their arrangement, as they stood, showed a general affinity of opinions. They seemed neither unsettling nor distracting. Only the attaché case felt unnaturally heavy as she picked it up on the way out. Everything seemed fine. Nothing is wrong. And in the end there will be time.



Above: 10th Street, New York, 1967. Alison Knowles and Marcel Duchamp looking at color swatches, produced in connection with the silkscreen edition accompanying the cooperation on the Emmett Williams publication Sweethearts with Something Else Press in 1967.

6/04/2014

Vier "Hands" und Floralozone

Michael Part, 2003-2006

Hand 21

1 – Andy Partridge and Harold Budd, Hand 21
2 – Andy Partridge and Harold Budd, Missing Pieces of the Game of Salt and Onyx
3 – Jacob Kirkegaard, Labyrinthitis II
4 – Ø, Olematon
5 – John Hughes Daydream, Drinking Gasoline
6 – John Hughes Daydream, Terrible Things
7 – Heat Wave, Oakland, Slowmotion

Hand 22

1 – Andy Partridge and Harold Budd, Hand 22
2 – Delia Gonzalez and Gavin Russom, Rise
3 – James Murphy and Tim Goldsworthy, Rise Remix

Hand 20

1 – Andy Partridge and Harold Budd, Hand 20
2 – Moby, Is That You Mo-Dean Remix (Herparella)
3 – Mike Harding, Broken Rain
4 – People Like Us, In the Waking
5 – Jana Winderen, Mae Taeng
6 – J.O.Y., Sunplus A – Sunplus
7 – Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, War
8 – Roboterwerke, Rockbots (Stevie Kotey Edit)
9 – Moebius & Plank, Conditionierer

Hand 19

1 – Andy Partridge and Harold Budd, Hand 19
2 – Kraftwerk, Ohm Sweet Ohm
3 – Henrik Håkansson, Central Park
4 – A. Burger, Device C
5 – Henrik Håkansson, Central Park
6 – Penguin Cafe Orchestra, Sketch
7 – Martin Rev, My Strange World
8 – Moondog, Oasis
9 – Tin Man, Constant Confusion
10 – Virgo Four, Deep Blue
11 – Shed, Keep Time
12 – Ø, S-Bahn
13 – Kraftwerk, Klingklang
14 – Kelan Phil Cohran and Legacy, The Dogon
15 – Arthur Russell, Make 1, 2 (Gem Spa Dub)
16 – Starship Commander Woo Woo, Master Ship

Playlist in colaboration with Michael Part for Four Hands and Floralozone, Wellwellwell and Fluc, Vienna, 2014

11/26/2013

Composition as Explanation

Part 1, November 12, 2013
Hacked IKEA furniture | Elisabeth Kihlström, Nobody is doing nothing Nobody is doing nothing

Part 2, November 19, 2013
Mühlbauer, M13518 Kuno Adam | Michael Part, Nr. 88.11

Part 3, November 26, 2013
Tin Man (Johannes Auvinen), Vienna Blue | William Wegman, Blue Period


"There is singularly nothing that makes a difference a difference in beginning and in the middle and in ending except that each generation has something different at which they are all looking. By this I mean so simply that anybody knows it that composition is the difference which makes each and all of them then different from other generations and this is what makes everything different otherwise they are all alike and everybody knows it because everybody says it."

Gertrude Stein, “Composition as Explanation“, 1925

9/16/2013

2006 Lanvin

Clear and light colors have always been a Lanvin trademark. One within Jeanne Lavins' palette is a green inspired by Diego Velázquez' paintings. For her only daughters wedding to the Count de Polignac in 1925 she came up with a powdery pink which she subsequently included into her collections and labeled Polignac. And her copy of the blue which Fra Angelico used in his fresco for the Niccoline Chapel became the designer's true signature color. Today many years after Madame Lavins' passing Lanvin still exists. It is named the oldest French fashion house, dating back to 1905. Michele Obama was photographed in Lanvin sneakers while volunteering at the food bank (2009), Lanvin became guest designer for one collection at H&M (2010) and the official producer of the London-based football club Arsenal FC (2013). In 2006 by than artistic director Alber Elbaz introduced a new packaging for the line which supposedly features a bright pastel hue version of Madame's favorite blue, which outgrew the blues in Angelico's fresco into a bubble-gum-soft-serve-forget-me-not-flower-baby-blue matched with a stark black silk ribbon.

9/05/2013

Blaue Blume

"Salvia, lavender, hollyhock, scabiosa"
on painting zwei – Ludwig Kittinger, Constanze Schweiger. Photograph: Thomas Ries (detail)

Sich ganz dem Zufall überlassen. Von oben betrachtet werden zahllose Bestimmungen sichtbar, gestreut über einen offenen Grundriss. Kornblume im Feld. Rittersporn. Heliotrop oder Aster. Zurücktreten, die Ärmel hochkrempeln, nach einer Zigarette greifen. Hier also, mitten im Grün, ein kleines Blau. Immergrün. Alles, was zwischen den einzelnen Farbpunkten liegt, verschwindet. Blassblaue Wegwarte, in dem Bereich wo Kiesel, Sand und Wiese ineinander übergehen. An so einer Stelle bücken und die Schnürsenkel richten. Tollkirschenblüte. In ihrer unmittelbaren Nähe steht die Trichterwinde. Vorstellungen und Eindrücke mischen sich, seine eigenen Gesten gehören ihm nicht mehr. Linsenblüte, zusammen mit Salbei und Indigolupine in einem bunten Sack. Alles in einem, so entsteht eine Verbindung. Nachts. Schwarz schluckt Blau. Eigentlich fühlt er sich nirgendwo zu Hause. Vergissmeinnicht, draussen am Zaun vor dem Garten. Im Garten blaue Hortensien. Hier wird Blau durch die Zugabe von Alaun und Essig an den Boden provoziert; frostig, fern und klar zu erkennen. 
  Am Morgen dann werden Iris und Hyazinthen aus dem Kühlraum in die Auslage gestellt. Gleich unterhalb eine Ritze im Asphalt, in die alles verschwinden und aus der alles wieder auftauchen, zu Pulver vermahlen und in eine festumrissene Form gebracht werden kann.
  Und so beschreibt Novalis in Blüthenstaub (1802) seine Vorstellung von Zukunft: „Vor der Abstraktion ist alles eins, aber eins wie Chaos; nach der Abstraktion ist wieder alles vereinigt, aber diese Vereinigung ist eine freie Verbindung selbständiger, selbstbestimmter Wesen.“ 

6/23/2013

Sommerfestset

Henrik Håkansson's New York from 2011


Remember full moon alternating with new moon in a period of four days. One dope-drunk with a donkey's head chases the juice of the flower. Dewdrops show like liquid pearls through haze guarded by the dark pounding forces from the strange world within a forest.

1 - Henrik Håkansson, New York (A), A Better Tomorrow Records 2011
2 - A. Burger, The Transducer (A3), Craft Records 1996
3 - Penguin Cafe Orchestra, Signs of Life (B2), Virgin 1987
4 - Martin Rev, Strangeworld (A1), PUU 2000
5 - Moondog and his Friends (A2), Honest Jon‘s Records 2005 (original release on Epic 1953)
6 - Tin Man, Cool Wave (A1), Cheap Records 2009
7 - Virgo Four, Resurrection (F2), Rush Hour Recordings 2011
8 - Shed, The Traveller (A2), Ostgut Ton 2010
9 - Ø, Oleva (A2), Sähkö Recordings 2008
10 - Kraftwerk, Doppelalbum (C1), Phillips 1976
11 - Kelan Phil Cohran and Legacy, African Skies  (B1), Captcha Records 2010
12 - Arthur Russell, Let's Go Swimming (B2), Audika 2011 (original release on Logarhythm 1986)
13 - Personal Space, Electronic Soul 1974-1984 (C2), Chocolate Industries 2012
14 - Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, Architecture & Morality (A2), Dindisc 1981
15 - Danza Meccanica, Italian Synth Wave Vol. 2 1981-1987 (B3), Mannequin 2012
16 - Historical Archives Volume 1 (B), Members Only 2006
17 - Chris & Cosey, Trance (A4), Conspiracy International 2010
18 - Tom Trago, Iris In Dub (A2), Rush Hour Recordings 2011
19 - Benzo, The Dust/The Tapes: Mania Remixes (C2), Sex Tags Mania/Laton 2009
20 - Chris & Cosey, Heartbeat (A3), Conspiracy International 2010
21 - Factory Floor, Two Different Ways (B), DFA 2011
22 - Ron Hardy, Rdy #2 (A1), Not on Label 2009
23 - Wunderwerke, Selected Werks Vol. 1 (D2), Wunderwerke 2012
24 - Boards of Canada, Tomorrow's Harvest (B2), Warp Records 2013
25 - François de Roubaix, L'Antarctique & Autres Séances Électroniques Rue De Courcelles (B2), WéMè Records 2009
26 - Theo Parrish, Sound Sculptures Volume 1 (SS28 B1), Sound Signature 2007
27 - Drexciya, Harnessed the Storm (D), Tresor 2002

Playlist for 21er Haus Sommerfest, Vienna, 2013

5/01/2013

2013 William Wegman


William Wegmann for ACNE Studios Spring/Summer Campaign 2013