Bless

January 31, 2011 by Jeremiah

BEN RUSSELL presents
BEN RUSSELL : BLESS

SANDY KAYE ALLEN
DAYTON CASTLEMAN
DEREK CHAN
JUDY LEDGERWOOD
DAVID WOJNAROWICZ

1716 S Morgan #2F Chicago, IL 60608
February 5, 2011 - March 12, 2011
Opening reception: Saturday 6-9 pm, February 5th, 2011Private viewings by appointment*
*The performance by Sandy Allen will begin at 8:00pm during the opening reception.

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ABOUT THE SHOW:
Gesundheit!  It seems that you’ve still got the sniffles, Friend, and what with the winter of our discontent snowing down upon us again and again and again, it’s clear that you need something more than a box of Kleenex to lift your spirits.  And so, without further ado, we’re taking the “BLESS” out of “God BLESS you” and putting it back into BEN RUSSELL.  In preparation for such an historic event, we had an Orthodox priest sprinkle holy water in the screening room, got some German Pagans to mark the snow in the sculpture garden with goat’s blood, asked our Jewish ex-girlfriend to recite prayers while lighting the Shabbat candles in the exhibition space, and took part in a gang initiation rite in the kitchen where we were punched really hard in the forehead.

After all, art is BLESSing (which, coincidentally, is also the term for a group of unicorns) - art is brightness, art is hope, art is buoyancy of spirit in the Newest Year.  In the year of our (land)lord 2011, we’ve assembled an array of minor altars upon which to worship and be worshiped - we’ve erected a selfless monument by which to orient ourselves in the darkness, a beacon of positive communication (CASTLEMAN) with which we can broadcast our message to the worldBEN RUSSELL : BLESS is self-realization through rigor and ritual, it is a document of time-in-space, re-spaced (CHAN); it is sage incense and Cherokee flatbread and self-taught customs derived from a disappearing culture (ALLEN); it is an inquiry into Painting and Form and the very real possibilities of a center that has expanded outward from itself (LEDGERWOOD). Last but certainly not least, BEN RUSSELL : BLESS is a video-shout-in-triplicate, a protest against social and spiritual conservatism, a conversation that we simply cannot allow to become familiar (WOJNAROWICZ).

We are BLESS, we are future, we are now - take our hands and join us, let the light of Art shine upon us all.

Astrid Krogh

January 27, 2011 by Jeremiah

Tekstildesigner Astrid Krogh
twinkle-1

(link via @kkwalker)

The Profiles: Plural by MMP

January 27, 2011 by Jeremiah

We recently had the pleasure of having Gus of MiddleMindProject visit us for a day in the studio to shoot another short video for his “The Profiles” series.
Check out our video and all the other great videos here.

Plural : Profile from middle mind project on Vimeo.

gussmall

Calango – Typogami

January 27, 2011 by Jeremiah

Another animated typeface by Calango. Watch it in motion here.

typogami

Letha Wilson

January 27, 2011 by Jeremiah

Letha Projects

pinkcairn

(link via @cdschreck)

From the Studio: Bradley Lecture Series / Object Aesthetics 01

January 14, 2011 by Jeremiah

bradley spring

1_orangeBench_web

Twice Removed @Golden Age

January 14, 2011 by Jeremiah

Submission’s to be received by January 18th.

TwiceRemovedCard_540

Golden Age

CounterPrint

January 11, 2011 by Jeremiah

Shop at CounterPrint

counterprint

Type(Lettering)Force 2

January 11, 2011 by Jeremiah

photo by Kyle LaMere

TYPEFORCE: The annual showcase of emerging typographic artists in Chicago

Typeforce 2 is now accepting submissions through January 28. For submission information and more, go to: http://www.facebook.com/typeforce
To join in the conversation: click here

Clip/Stamp/Fold

January 3, 2011 by Seth

THE RADICAL ARCHITECTURE OF LITTLE MAGAZINES 196X–197X

CSF-book

An explosion of architectural little magazines in the 1960s and 1970s instigated a radical transformation in architectural culture with the architecture of the magazines acting as the site of innovation and debate. Clip/Stamp/Fold: The Radical Architecture of Little Magazines 196X – 197X takes stock of seventy little magazines from this period, which were published in over a dozen cities.

Available from Actar