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Pedro Matos Interview

Pedro Matos Interview

Chicago based artist showing @MCA.

For the last 20 years or so there has been a bad seed growing in the Portuguese city of Lisbon. They call him Pedro Matos. Growing up he was heavily influenced by skateboarding and graffiti which was…

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Shalo P Interview

Shalo P Interview

Shalo P is a SF based audio-visual artist who recently exhibited a selection of 14 drawings at Ever Gold Gallery coinciding with the recent release of his self-published “LOVE IS SUCH A DANGEROUS GAME”. The zine, containing work created in…

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July's Oakland Murmur
Written by Theo Konrad Auer   
Thursday, 30 July 2009, 11:02am

Theo Konrad Auer ponders July's festivities and ponders the future of this first Fridays event.

I headed out this last first friday to the Art Murmur as I do nearly every first firday expecting little, but knowing each time out there's always at least two or three shows worth going to and the experience is usually a fair mix of the entertaining and educational. I had a small role in helping get the Art Murmur rolling a long way back which was documented in a blog I did for the fecal as The Eastsider, a moniker which has now been retired.

Words ad photos by Theo Konrad Auer

I didn't know what to expect this night and by no means is my account meant to be taken as comprehensive, but based on my pix there were some surprises in store as well as unusually consistent programming from Oakland's nascent art galleries for an art walk in which its party aspect often overshadows its art as has been noted many of our local critics and journalists.

First up I biked from Berkeley to Oakland's The Compound Gallery which lies next to Blankspace just south of the Oakland/Berkeley border. It's set - up is a bit similar to Swarm Gallery in Jack London Sq. as it contains artist studios which are open to the public during operating hours for its two gallery display rooms.

I must note that vibewise, this space is decidedly D.I.Y. while Swarm's leans more toward "contemporary art gallery."

One of the two shows up now "Anatomies" features work that playfully subverts the carefully curated and classified structure one finds in a museum which often contradicts the at times chaotic nature of our world. Courtesy of Adrian Van Allen, here's a carefully preserved example of "Equus mono ursus" otherwise known as the common unicorn.

At first I thought Kari Marboe's "medical narratives" were the stuff of urban legend. Pictured at left is the preserved partially digested eye (or a decent representation of it) of a Texas death row inmate who ate his own eye. According to news reports I dug up, he had previously gouged his other eye. Yes, folks, some shit you just can't make up.

Oh, and pictured at left is the preserved heart (or a decent representation of it) of man who received a transplanted heart from a suicide victim, only to kill himself twelve years later with a shotgun blast to the head. This sad story, too, is true. Crazy. Even crazier is that this guy married the donor's widow.

-links :
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSTRE50867T20090109
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23984857/

Conveniently located right next door is personal favorite Blankspace, which often shows more experimental/conceptual work and has a similar vibe to that of much missed Ego Park( albeit with a bit less raucous of an atmosphere).

This month's show "just because there are questions doesn't mean there are answers" features "... new collaborative work by Sam Lopes, Joy Fritz and Friends." This depiction of Divine of John Waters fame by Sam Lopes and Matthew Momchilov is a particular standout for me.

Post Blankspace, as I rode my bike to uptown Oakland on San Pablo - I came across this memorial to folks "...killed by homicide in Oakland this year." Longtime fecalface followers might recall that I was nearly killed in a violent mugging a few years back. It happened a block away from the Bart station where Oscar Grant was killed by a cop recently. Stop the violence, yall.

About 15 minutes later I arrive at the intersection of 23rd and Telegraph to find the street scene in full effect. 23rd street is closed for most Art Murmurs with live music and/or some sort of performance on hand and a ton of vendors set up shop selling everything and anything, sometimes chintzy and sometimes rad. There's even a fellow who will craft poems for you with words of your own suggestion on an ancient looking typewriter curbside. Here's something for all of you lovers out there on a budget.

There were some "steampunk" folks out and about.

Next I headed over the rarely open to the public Bloom Screen Printing. The few times they do these, they're can't miss events as the space will be packed with great prints on the cheap. Check this Jeff Soto on the right. Nice, huh? I am fairly sure the photo on the left is not Nat Swope's work, though Farrah Fawcett can rest in peace knowing she helped a generation of boys through their adolescence as well as a provide a great subject for Alika Cooper's paintings.

I like the proprietor's sense of humor.

Next up I went over to the consistently good and sometimes great Johannson Projects for "Back Channels" which features new works by Alisha Wheeler and Evan B. Harris.

The view from inside Alisha Wheeler's cave installation.

Evan B. Harris art.

In the galleries that lie in the close vicinity of Telegraph and 23rd, Adam Hatch's eponymously named space that took over where Ego Park left off usually runs a close second to Johannson Projects in terms of consistency of the art presented. Here's some quite rather topical work by one time fellow fecalface blogger Porous Walker. Rest In Peace, Michael Jackson.

Porous Walker detail.

Mark Inglis Taylor art.

The crowd at Hatch Gallery.

Next door to Hatch, is Fort Gallery, which has had a decidedly uneven run of shows - quality wise - since its opening last fall and has now recently subdivided into spaces reserved for art and live performance - local illustrator Jon Carling keeps a 'permanent' open studio there where has been doing surprisingly brisk business for an art market in downturn. Link to old Oakbook article I did on Fort Gallery:
http://www.theoakbook.com/MoreDetail.aspx?Aid=2701&CatId=14

Jon Carling Art

While Mr. Carling has been selling work...from what I gather Fort Gallery has been making more money from music shows than from the selling of art. It has been reported to me by local artist Obi Kaufmann that the space is being shut down due to a recent incidence of violence at one of its music shows. I tracked down a witness to the fracas and here's what went down in local activist and musician Max Allstadt's own words,

"What happened at FORT was the kind of random violence that can happen anywhere. A guy in his late 30's, a guy from San Francisco: he was the culprit, not some young partying kids. He seemed a little nuts. He showed up and was randomly insulting people and making nasty sexual comments to women. When he was firmly asked to leave by two of the guests, he beckoned them to a dark corner, pulled a knife and started slashing. That's not a party getting unruly, that's just one guy going nuts. I didn't step in until after he slashed my drummer's hand badly enough that it was squirting blood.

I started throwing stuff at him, screaming "drop the knife" over and over again. I finally hit him in the head with a shovel, and he was dazed enough for the women at the party to get in between us and get him out of the gallery. That was fine with me. Once he committed assault with a deadly weapon, He needed to be disarmed, subdued or gone. He was gone, so for me it was over. Until the cops showed up and cuffed me. I was let go when the police got confirmation from all the people who saw the dude with the knife.

However, because the cops got involved, it turned out that FORT had no permit for live music, so their landlord told them to stop having shows. My understanding is that in this economy, they were having trouble selling enough art to make ends meet, so they're closing."

Post Fort Gallery, I made my way over to a few other galleries, but alas I failed to take any photos of the work I saw there. After all the arting I set out with a friend to pick up my bike and found the most diverse assortment of characters ever in evidence at an Art Murmur.

A crowd of hipsters, local folks and even a few leather daddies were dancing it up - some drinks in hand - to a dj who had a high powered speaker system set up along the sidewalk. It was the wildest, most spontaneous dance party I have seen in quite some time. My friends and I could not resist joining in and staying. Who doesn't want to dance with cute girls? C'mon now.

At one point someone set a fire in the middle of Telegraph Avenue. Eventually folks spilled into the street dancing and blocking traffic as if this event was Critical Shake That Ass. It was rather beautiful and it took the cops an hour and a half to show up and shut it down.

Due to the profuse amounts of open alcohol containers and what I suspect was a lack of proper permitting on the sidewalks adjoining 23rd street, Adam Hatch who has been in charge of Art Murmur street closures is putting a close to that particular aspect of the monthly first friday event for the forseeable future citing safety issues - also noting that it has been beginning to drive away collectors. "The street closure has consumed the initial reason we started it, to promote art. Now the sheer density of people has made it unenjoyable." I wonder how much the incident at Fort Gallery contributed to all this. That said, all this has happened before and I hope will not happen again.

Art spaces get shut down seemingly every other month. I even co - curated an art show "resurrecting" several such spaces. What's the solution? There's no one "fix - all", but it is clear to me that Oakland needs an entertainment commission much like there is in New York or San Francisco. Max Allstadt has advocated for such a commisson and I think it's fitting, that he get the last word: "If there had been an inexpensive special event permit process in Oakland, this mess might not have been nearly as bad. FORT had a locked gate that night. If it had been open, either the jackass with the knife or the people he attacked might have felt able to flee instead of fight. If there was a special event permit process, it probably would include guidelines about exits that business owners would know to follow.

It's important to remember that every other business owner on that block is completely above board, totally legit, and experienced. 23rd Street has been a huge asset to the neighborhood. One knife weilding nutjob [is] not a reason to dial down the fun. It was an isolated incident and it's very much over. I hope Art Murmur can keep moving forward and keep being safe, fun and beneficial."

------------------------------------------------------------------

Link to video with interviews with Dead Spaces curators Theo Konrad Auer, Adam Hatch and Derek Weisberg. The show resurrected Liminal, the Auto Art Gallery and Boontling Gallery among many others that died before their time:

http://www.theoakbook.com/MoreDetail.aspx?Aid=2560&CatId=14

Words ad photos by Theo Konrad Auer

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SF Weekly's Nice Coverage
Monday, 06 September 2010, 11:54am

Thanks to the SF Weekly for the nice write up on our 10 Year Anniversay Show opening on Friday!

It’s strange that it took years for the visual art world to establish its online voice. Despite a plethora of image-sharing services such as Flickr, Tumblr, and ffffound, sites that meaningfully document the art scene have been few and far between. Over the past decade, San Francisco’s Fecal Face has risen to the top of the heap, providing the art community with its very own Pitchfork or Gawker Media through consistently strong news coverage, a dependable calendar, and tart criticism. -read on

 

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Wednesday, 16 June 2010, 5:39pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It's an After Fecal Party!
Wednesday, 01 September 2010, 1:52pm

RSVP 4 THE FECAL FACE SHOW & *AFTER PARTY* <-- It's been 10 freakin' years. After the art show ends at the Luggage Store we're going to party with 3 great San Francisco bands and one classic DJ. An $8 donation (no one turned away for lack of funds) gets you a raffle ticket and a chance to win original artwork and clothing donated by Upper Playground!

Live Music from:
Kelley Stoltz
Sonny Smith
Ty Segall
&DJ Ted Shred

 

Kelly Tunstall @Giant Robot NYC
Saturday, 04 September 2010, 1:08pm

Kelly Tunstall & Susie Ghahremani tonight, Saturday, in NYC @Giant Robot. Meant to tell you guys sooner. Preview. September 4, 6:30 - 10:00 p.m. Giant Robot Gallery 437 East 9th Street Between 1st Ave. & Ave. A, in the East Village New York, New York 10009 (212) 674-GRNY (4769) | grny.net

 

Don Porcella @Alphonse Berber Projects
Wednesday, 01 September 2010, 10:11am

Brooklyn based Don Porcella emailed over a few photos from his current show featuring his unique pipe cleaner sculptures @Alphonse Berber Projects here in SF (575 Sutter St.). The show Nature Boy runs through 10/2.

 

Bear Flag Wine
Saturday, 28 August 2010, 10:50am

Thanks to Bear Flag Wine who will be providing complimentary wine for the Fecal Face 10 Year Anniversary Show opening up on Sept 10th @The Luggage Store in San Francisco. The stuff is damn tasty.

 

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: THE RADIANT CHILD
Monday, 30 August 2010, 3:46pm

Opening up this Friday @Lumiere Theater on California @Polk here in SF and is also opening in Berkely as well. More dates and cities.

The meteoric rise and fall of Jean-Michel Basquiat, born 1960. In the crime-ridden NYC of the 1970s, he covers the city with the graffiti tag SAMO. In 1981 he puts paint on canvas for the first time, and by 1983 he is an artist with “rock star status.” In 1985 he and Andy Warhol become close friends and painting collaborators, but they part ways and Warhol dies suddenly in 1987. Basquiat’s heroin addiction worsens, and he dies of an overdose in 1988. The artist was 25 years old at the height of his career, and today his canvases sell for more than a million dollars. With compassion and insight, Tamra Davis details the mysteries that surround this charismatic young man, an artist of enormous talent whose fortunes mirrored the rollercoaster quality of the downtown scene he seemed to embody.

 

David Lyle Paintings
Thursday, 26 August 2010, 2:13pm

Wanna thank NYC based painter David Lyle for sending us this fantastic print. David's paintings are inspired from found photographs. He "feels that to find a lost photo and paint it, allows the photo and the memory to have a second life." We've been fans of his work for some time now. ~check some

 

The Vapor Room
Wednesday, 25 August 2010, 12:23pm

Wanna thank marijuana dispensary The Vapor Room for being a sponsor of our 10 year anniversary show opening up on Sept 10th here in San Francisco. Funny because we don't even smoke pot here at Fecal Face, but if we did, The Vapor Room would be our jam.

 

You're So Stencil
Wednesday, 25 August 2010, 2:11pm

Street art is all the rage. No original ideas? No problem. You're So Stencil is for you. We take a look inside.

 

 

 




+SF
:: Suggestions of a Life Being Lived - Thu
:: Coalition on Homelessness Art Auction '10 - Thu
:: Nellie King Solomon at Brian Gross Fine.. - Thu
:: Pato Hebert: Inordinate Coordinates - O.. - Thu
:: DANIEL HIGGS/KYLE RANSON (Morph Traits).. - Thu
:: Josh Podoll @ PING PONG GALLERY - Thu
:: Artists Leading Artists Panel Discussion - Thu
:: O Zone at OMCA new extended hours 2nd F.. - Fri
:: DATE CHANGE: Pato Hebert: Inordinate Co.. - Fri
:: CLIFF HENGST + WAYNE SMITH: Solo Exhibi.. - Fri
:: FECAL FACE 10yr. SHOW @THE LUGGAGE STORE - Fri
:: Buff Monster Playing Cards Release Part.. - Fri
:: Film Screening: House of Bamboo @Pacifi.. - Fri
:: None of the Above - Art Show - Fri
:: The Classics @ 1:AM Gallery - Fri
:: Between Lived Experiences, A talk and d.. - Fri
:: My Heart Beats For The Graphic Art Wor.. - Fri
:: Market SF weekly artist market - Sat
:: California Futures: A Discussion of Won.. - Sat
:: Perfect: A Solo Show by Allie Pohl - Sat
:: Compound Eyes on the World: new work by.. - Sat
:: Group Mixed Media Exhibition - Sat
:: The Art of Collaboration: A Conversatio.. - Sat
:: Anoka Faruqee: The Longest Day of the Year - Sat
:: Heartbeats - Rive Nestor - Sat
:: Marietta Hoferer: Drawings - Sat
:: Meghan Gordon @ Michael Rosenthal Gallery - Sat
:: Steven Wolf Fine Arts **New Location**,.. - Sat
:: Temporality: A Discussion of Social Mea.. - Sat
:: Greg Lamarche & Aaron Noble @ Guerrero .. - Sat
:: Introductions 2010 @Root Division - Sat
:: Mileux Sonores: Sound and Imaginary Space - Sat
:: Tomorrow is Never Promised exhibition b.. - Sat
:: TRUE ART exhibit - Sat
:: We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Ar.. - Sat
:: L@TE: Friday Nights @ BAM/PFA: Beginnin.. - Sat
:: Constructed Landscapes: Mark Baugh-Sasa.. - Sat
:: OLD CROW TATTOO AND GALLERY presents "P.. - Sat
:: PPC Grand Opening Show - Sat
:: Open House & Free Family Dance Event - Sat
:: Oakland Museum of California presents M.. - Sat
:: Star Wars: The Clone Wars Weekend @ Zeum - Sat

+NYC
:: ...still counting... - Thu
:: Dave Kinsey - New Works - Thu
:: David Chang, Color in Memory - Thu
:: Kwon Kisoo Exhibition Reception - Thu
:: Things to Come - Thu
:: Object Hood - Thu
:: CloseUp: Small works - Fri
:: Shards: Solo Exhibition Featuring the W.. - Fri
:: Blow Up: Hanuka, Shimizu, Weber - Fri
:: A State of Flux - Sun

+LA
:: ALIVE - Thu
:: Warm Fuzzies - Fri
:: Bay to LA - Sat
:: NOW I REMEMBER: Neck Face. Jerry Hsu . .. - Sat
:: steve roden: in between, a 20 year survey - Sat
:: Sweet Streets II & Harajuku Kawaii Expe.. - Sat

FULL CALENDARS: BAY AREA | NYC | LA

 


 

 

  
 *Tag your Flickr photos: FECALFACE

 


Can't even see the register at Blic.
-as of 3pm

 

 


 

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Part 2 of Life and Work on a Containership: The Last Leg of a Long Journey


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Filippo Minelli "Contradictions" Series


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Kevin Hayes - Mini Interview


Jeremy Fish - 10yrs of Fecal Face


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One Way or Another VII (Part II)


David Choe - 10yrs of Fecal Face


David Choong Lee at LeBasse Projects


High 5s: Our Trip Up the Petaluma River


ClipODay: Skate & Create


'02 Fecal Face Show: Chris Duncan & Mat O'Brien


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