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Brion Gysin

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This August, five groups of Teen Reviewers and Critics (TRaC) ventured out into New York City to take in some culture.  After attending a Thursday performance, everyone wrote reviews, then reconvened the following Tuesday for a discussion and workshop.  Our work is published here in the first of a five part series featuring writing from the Summer TRaC!

Summer TRaC Session 4 visited the New Museum to see exhibits featuring Rivane Neuenschwander, Brion Gysin and Amy Granat.  Check out the excerpts and full reviews below….

“When you look at a bubble, you think it’s just a freaking bubble, but if you look at it long enough you begin to think of it as more, you give it a personality of some kind, it becomes a part of you.” – Cynthia Dunston

Read CYNTHIA’s full review.

“Hanging from the ceiling were buckets filled with water that had a little small dropper on the bottom.  It was called “Rain Rains.”  […] If you stood in the middle of it, you could hear all the buckets dripping water at different times.  […] like you were in a shed with holes on the roof.  Each droplet would maybe fall into pans, bowls or whatever you could find to store the water.” – Joleyne Herrera

Read JOLEYNE’s full review.

“[...] “Involuntary Sculptures,” displays of little “creations” made absentmindedly by people during conversations at restaurants.  It was so simple—bent straws, cherry pits on a napkin—but it just went to show that art is sometimes totally unintentional.” – Rebecca Seidel

Read REBECCA’s full review.

“Granat’s “Light 3 Ways” is a video projection showing different ways light can be perceived accompanied a sound piece.  […] trying to watch the projections, listen to the sounds, and read the description of the artist and piece in a narrow corridor where people are passing by makes it difficult to focus on the piece for a long length of time.” – Hyesun Yi

Read HYESUN’s full review.

“The title piece of the exhibit – the Dream Machine itself – is a cylinder of flashing light meant to be experienced by kneeling six to eight inches in front of it with closed eyes and listening to a song he selected through the iPod audio guide.  It’s a rather psychedelic experience […]  To me, though, it was very calming – I was ensconced in a moment of peacefulness that I had not anticipated.” – Lily Shoretz

Read LILY’s full review.

“Blank canvases and barren sculpture populate much of the modern art circuit—it is refreshing to see a piece that is serious in execution, but does not take itself seriously.  [...] While methodical and unequivocal, it lacks the constriction common in avant-garde, Dada works.  This non-rigid approach, however, does not imply interactivity.” – Sharon Mizrahi

Read SHARON’s full review.

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Bryon Gysin with Dreamachine at Musée des Art Décoratifs, Paris, 1962. The first U.S. retrospective of Gysin's work is exhibited at the New Museum until October 3rd.

I have a complex relationship with contemporary art.  Experiencing it is like falling in love with a complicated, tortured soul, the quintessential “artist” type.  I love it, and I am fascinated by it –in fact, I’ve spent this past summer absorbed in it as a participant in the MoMA In the Making program– yet I am, to say the least, perplexed by it.  Some of my friends find it pretentious and indulgent.  It confuses me, and at times I wonder why I even bother with it.  But sometimes I have experiences that remind me why I am drawn to it in the first place.

My visit to The New Museum was one such event.  I must admit, entering Brion Gysin‘s Dream Machine exhibit was daunting.  [click to continue….]

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Rivane Neuenschwander, A Day Like Any Other, 2008.

I went to the New Museum for the first time ever with a thought that it would be like regular museums, filled with rare paintings from the past.  However, as I stepped in this building, which reminded me of a decorative cake, a different mood entered my mind.  It was a very open space with white walls.  Up ahead, there was a room of different colored strands.  It was amazing to see that.  For a museum, my first impression was a good one.  Even the elevator gave you a good vibe.

When you look at these pieces of art, you may say something like ‘No way, this is unbelievable!’  The response to that is on the front of the building.  Hell, Yes! [click to continue….]

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Rivane Neuenschwander, A Day Like Any Other, 2008.

When I emerged from the New Museum on Thursday night, I had a wish around my wrist, pages of scribbled observations, and a moderate case of sensory overload.

I had just experienced vast collections of work by two artists: Rivane Neuenschwander and Bryon Gysin.  Although the two exhibits are light-years apart in mindset and in subject matter, both really hit home.

Neuenschwander is a Brazilian artist whose work is all over the place.  I learned right away that viewing her art is secondary to participating in it.  The lobby exhibit, “I Wish Your Wish,” invites you to choose a ribbon from the thousands hanging on the wall—each with a different wish printed on it—and to replace it with your own written wish.  [click to continue….]

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Trance

by Hyesun Yi on August 20, 2010

in Teen Reviews,Visual Arts

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Bryon Gysin with Dreamachine at Musée des Art Décoratifs, Paris, 1962. The first U.S. retrospective of Gysin's work is exhibited at the New Museum until October 3rd.

In the New Museum there are two exhibitions — Brion Gysin: Dream Machine and Amy Granat: Light 3 Ways.  Granat’s “Light 3 Ways” is a video projection showing different ways light can be perceived accompanied a sound piece.  The pieces look like black strands dancing on a white background.  However, trying to watch the projections, listen to the sounds, and read the description of the artist and piece in a narrow corridor where people are passing by makes it difficult to focus on the piece for a long length of time.

Gysin used dream-like effects.  The “Dream Machine” is a suitable title for the exhibition.  The machine is located in a small dark room with cushions around it.  It is a spinning metal cylinder from which light flickers out of from cut-outs in the side.  [click to continue….]

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Brion Gysin with Dreamachine at Musée des Art Décoratifs, Paris, 1962. The first U.S. retrospective of Gysin's work is exhibited at the New Museum until October 3rd.

Art has long been manipulated and stretched to its limits by faux-enigmatic artists and their absurd creations.  Brion Gysin’s skill and artistic tact offers an invigorating contrast to the pompousness that is becoming the status quo for new artwork.  Gysin detaches himself from his works, producing modern art in its most organic and unpretentious form.  Likewise, his pieces embody a harmonious union of stoic precision and nonsensical Dadaist qualities.

The Cut Ups is Gysin’s most poignant work—its primitive obscurity beckons to anyone nearby and slowly reveals a twisted, mesmeric core.  True to name, the work is a fusion of four separate films.  [click to continue….]

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Gold Byars.

Surely, you think, the Spellcheck on my computer is dysfunctional, offering yet another series of quirky alternatives to the simple word of “bars”. And, with that thought, several images spring to mind: perhaps the portly, black-hatted businessman grabbing those shimmering liquid-sunrise blocks and hoarding them, grasping at material objects with a wild look of desire in his beady eyes. Think again. [click to continue….]

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