Sunday, January 29, 2012

KeroWACKED Press Release



ActivistArtistA Logo

ActivistArtistA's KeroWACKED! Art & Music Marathon!

ActivistArtistA's KeroWACK: Homage to JacK Multi-Media Marathon is an all day Mini-Music/Art Event . Sunday, February 26, 2012, The District comes alive with a cornucopia of sounds and visual art.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE





PRLog (Press Release) - Jan 29, 2012 -
ActivistArtistA's KeroWACKED: Homage to Jack is a Music and Arts Festival with undertones of the richness of the 60's Beat Generation.  Live Poetry how you haven't see it before, automatic writing, live painting, live bands and DJ's set the stage for this unique South Florida Experience.
Live Music include the unique sounds of Mike Mineo, Teri Catlin, and Waveframe.  Rock , Country Western, Jazz, and even House Music will be performed by your favorite bands and spin masters including: Duncan Beats, The M(e)yers Trilogy, and The Loxahatchee Sinners, Behold the Wolf, Steve Minotti and others! Rap, House, and Hip-Hop,Trance and New School Beats by LMNOP and Al KUSH and DJ's Shayne Pilpel, Brock Lambert, Alex de Marchi and {in Boxes}.
Live Painting and Performance Art by Alan Burgess, Roly Chang Barrero, Lea Vendetta, Jamall Clark, Andrew Ackerman.
Street Artists and Muralist will be installing work on Roly Chang Barrero's ongoing Bay Gate's Project! (Chan Shepherd, Paul Caprio and others will be painting throughout the day)
At the ActivistArtistA Gallery, paintings and sculptures by Lorraine Marks, Kim Fay, Joshua von Nonn, Kris Delgado, Alexia Hemingway, Paul Slater, and Thomas McAvoy are just a few of the recognized local artists joining the KeroWACKED Experience.


Joshua von Nonn
"KeroWACKED: Homage to Jack"
 
Watching Josh paint, you’re immediately struck by how quickly the look of a piece can change, how seemingly unafraid he is to paint over forms that only took shape days or hours ago. Not satisfied with a result that seems merely good, or that other people like, Josh pushes on, risking the good and the likable, until the dialectic of paint-then-paint-over reaches a crisis point where the whole thing seems palpably wrong, unrealized. That moment ups the stakes and sets the stage for a confrontation where what happens next finally matters enough – where Josh can now find out whether this piece will be worth anything to him. The impasse could grind on long enough to divert his attention to other works, but when the built up static electricity rumbles to a spark and there’s enough energy to overcome the standoff, a real cathexis transpires and the painting is invested with all the feeling and meanings latent in that struggle and its resolution. The painting may still be about other things as well, and it may carry over many of the elements that were there before, but it now conducts a new charge – courage.
Andrew Ackerman
"KeroWACKED: Homage to Jack"

"Lovers embrace in outer space. Two sensual beings are intertwined in pure bliss. These green entities defy gravity as their bodies become part of a puzzle of sensuous shape and design. Rarely are we spectators to an other-worldly romance such as this."

Andrew Ackerman is a Brooklyn born abstract painter. Ackerman's work is a fusion of graffiti art, Pop art, abstract expressionism and calligraphy. His mysterious but playful painting style has been featured on the pages Wemerge Magazine and his exhibitions include MultiVersal: Art Basel 2011. 
Valyn Calhoun
"KeroWACKED: Homage to Jack"

Valyn Calhoun is an emerging artist/photographer based in South Florida, graduated from AIU with a BFA in Visual Communications.

 "I am fascinated by art and photography is my lifeblood. I would do anything for my craft. I currently own my own photography company, ValynRuinedMyLife.com and focus on fashion, nightlife, portraits and commissions."

This is Valyn's second invitaion to display his photography at ActivistArtistA
"Shadow Play" was installed duing the "Pre-Opening Exhibition." 

Saturday, January 28, 2012

New Times Review: 20 years ago!



Recently bumping into an old friend, we began to chat about the "old days," we had a good laugh and recalled good-times.  Then we talked about the future. A future that included the possibility of creating something special for this generation.  The basic formula is there, people's desires don't change to much, we still like art, we still like to dress up, we still want to be part of, not apart from.

I trust that in time ActivistArtistA will remain dynamic enough to embrace this generation, and the next, while borrowing from the last few decades-all that was good, leaving the rest behind,

Yesterday the News Times reviewed ActivistArtistA's Art Walk 2012. Mickie Centrone wrote a very complimentary article, as always, we are grateful for the press.  I have never discounted the power of the press to engage, challenge, and provoke thought-in this we share common goals.  

Below is reprint of an article published almost exactly 20 years ago.
 New Times was there, as it is now.

Swelter

This is a reprint 
http://www.miaminewtimes.com/1992-02-05/news/swelter/

Performance art. It's brilliant, irritating, verging on the psychotic, irony-clogged stuff that neatly dissects the angst of the modern metropolis. Or maybe it's just television: Short, brutish, nasty, lots of jump cuts, kind of like real life but with better production values. It's Laurie, it's Mary, it's celebrity parties as guerrilla theater, performance pieces whose sole artistic function is to provoke envy and nausea. Clubs that open and close in milliseconds, nights that go awry, a devotion to personality as art form that would have shamed Oscar Wilde.
It's places where worlds collide. Miami Mensual's Richard "Mr. Wonderful" Perez-Feria, this week's winner of the glamarati-bearing-celebrities awards, on the La Dolce Vida beat with Gloria EstefanJoan Collins, and of all people, Edward Villella, whooping it up at Victor's Cafe. Better yet, yacht cruises and late-night Burger King take-out with Hollywood mogul David Geffen andKevin Sessums of Vanity Fair. Other celeb worlds, like serious actors James SpaderRobert DeNiro, and Johnny Depp happily stomping around the Beach. Lee Radziwill, in the shadows of mega-glamour, having dinner at The Strand. Designer Gianni Versace, back again for moreWarsaw high jinks. Ivana Trump at the Doral Saturnia, surgically superior, pleasant enough even when surrounded by the less rich.
Former downtown cult figure Laurie Anderson moving way uptown, being feted amid the mega-Eighties splendors of the International Place sky lobby, the world spread out prettily below. Her Miami Light Project performance earlier at Gusman an interesting counterpoint to General H. Norman Schwarzkopf wowing the Temple Emanu-El troops at TOPA, with lots of insights about the Gulf War ("It was a cut-rate video production that was almost as dangerous to win as it would have been to lose") and everything else. The culturati nation trekking out for the summit gathering - people like new music impresario Steve NestorMitch Kaplan of Books & Books, publicist Charlie Cinnamon - also getting a heavy dollop of Anderson's easily digestible songs and videos, as well as fey-beyond-belief patter: "The laugh track, the Greek chorus of American life.... Is it `artistic attitudes presented in an unappetizing manner?' With Bush, it's like nothing is important and everything you ever worried about is happening on Mars...a Fellini party that's gone horribly, tragically wrong."
Fortunately , nothing went horribly wrong at Acting Out: Seven Unspeakable Acts - the debut of the Island Club's new Wednesday-only performance art series "Lower East Side of the Beach" - and there were just enough jokes and psychoses. Master of ceremonies Matthew Owens, simulating a clown corpse, working the death-humor angle: "There's nothing more attractive than a disaster." Producer Joanne Butcher, wrapped in paper, beating on drums, engaged in Silence/Speech/Writing. An unappetizing artistic attitude screaming, "I want to murder what's already dead." Erotic dancer Rick Cockerell. 
Roly Chang-Barrero doing a heartfelt reading from the work of Reinaldo Arenas. The Goods, rock band/performance artists, presenting Five Steps to Getting Signed: An Operatic Parable About Patience. Club regular Yoda looking confused. My number-one fan on a downtown frolic, posing the impossible existential question: "What are you doing here?" Overseeing it all, the very likable Island Club co-owner, Tom Bellucci: "South Beach just never stops. There's no real season here like the Hamptons. The party goes on all year long. I'll tell you, it really tests the mettle of people."
Fave rave and performance art pro Mary Luft, of Tigertail Productions, presenting a selection from "Passarela," part of her Stories from Miami and South America. Readings from real immigration forms, tales of life in our fair hemisphere: "Of all the things I've lost in my life, it's my mind I miss the most.... In Brazil the people are poor and beautiful, and art is everywhere. Living in Miami has taught me that art is meaningless and people won't come if it's in the wrong neighborhood."
And more art/nonart mettle-testers happening all the time, in all the right and wrong neighborhoods. A dinner at Northern Trust Bank to kick off the 30th annual Miracle Ball for theSt. Jude's Children's Research Hospital - Anthony Abraham, singer Julie Budd, et al. - coming to a ballroom near you February 15. Another new Miami City Ballet production. The unveiling of Mariana's, "Miami Beach's Most Intimate New Restaurant," last week. The grand opening of the aptly named Gallery of the Unknown Artists last Friday night. A kickoff party at Barocco Beach restaurant on the same night for the Miami Chapter of the City of Hope National AIDS Research Center, which will be taking part in the upcoming nationwide exercise party, the Workout for Hope '92 benefit. Aerobics against AIDS: push, push, stretch those thighs. The right people stretching: local chairperson Cheryl Patella, committee member Sherri Krassner, national chairperson Kirk Prais. Weird kind of modern symmetry to the whole thing.
In the fashionable world, the first semi-symmetrical Avenue A party of the season at Les Violins. Miami Rocks Vol. 4. The Thursday-only party "4AD" at the Patio on Eighth Street. Something called "Metro" club in Fort Lauderdale - "live kickboxing, four ladies nites," and God knows what else. "A Kick Off Jam for Jamaikin Me Krazy Night" at the Roxy, also in Fort Lauderdale. Ah, Broward County. "Bohemian Artist Night" at Sencle's on Mondays, dinner for five dollars and exhibitions by artists like Fernando Sucre and JP Pelletier-Troupet, and upcoming, Carlos Alves. "Cocktails and conversation with Interview magazine's Patrick McMullan," at the World Gallery, tomorrow night. The Ninth Miami Film Festival, opening February 7 with the Mambo Kings. And a juicy tidbit just out on the lesbo hot line - a female club-owner getting involved with her partner's ex-wife and being forced out.
Openings and closings, like the rapid semi-rise and ugly fall of 32 Grand in Coconut Grove. Ex-bartender Mark J. Vander Sande, among others, not happy about being owed back pay, writing an open letter/press release to partners Jimmy Asher of the Asher Insurance GroupBarney Kaufmanof Premier Films, Steve Kraus of International Cinema, Richard Abel of the Tropics HotelPeter Polo, and attorney Mark Singer. Real personal and real irate: "We do not take the fall if your business suffers.... Jimmy Asher told me, `I don't care.... This is a pimple on my ass, people take chances....' You are in violation of federal law." The other side not real happy either, according to Mark Singer: "Some money was missing and some staff was let go. These things happen in the bar and restaurant business." It's real life, not performance art, messy and not shapely at all. The kind of situation that calls for tough culture, like The Goods, with just the right dose of post-Sid Viciousness: "You Make Me Sick - Fuck you!

Friday, January 27, 2012

New Times: Review

Photo courtesy of ActivistArtistA Galley by R.Barrero 

ART WALK EVERY 4th Thusday!

ActivistArtistA's Art Walk in Boynton Beach Flourishes


alexiahemingway_selfclickerdrawing.jpg
Selfclicker drawing by Alexia Hemingway
Two of the KeroWACKED crew: Lea Vendetta and Rolando Chang Barrero A review of the ActivistArtistA's Art Walk at the Boynton Beach Arts District, AKA the District in Boynton Beach.


Last summer, the warehouses off Industrial Avenue in Boynton Beach were full of machine parts, but now, they're full of art.

To get to them, head to the street called Industrial Avenue off the I-95 ramp. If you're heading from any exit south of Boynton Beach, you keep going west. But just one light.

Although a couple of high-end galleries have been there since the mid-'80s, the ActivistArtistA's Art Walk is in its infancy. You can tell already that this baby is going to be real special.
First off, there is the Bay Gates Project: An artist will paint each gate, and then after a year, a new artist will get that movable barrier. Here's the beautiful work of Chan Shepard:
BayGatesproject.jpg
Gate done by Chan Shepard

The spirit has changed since Rolando Chang Barrero moved up from South Beach and turned his studio there into a gallery. He shortened the Boynton Beach Arts District title to "the District," and a crew was born: Beside him, the KeroWACKED Crew is Lea Vendetta, Andrew Ackerman, Alexia Hemingway, and Chan Shepard.

district_rolando.jpg
Courtesy of ActivistArtistA.com
Rolando Chang Barrero.

Here, in what he charmingly referred to as an art enclave, he enjoys the freedom of not having to deal with galleries. Unlike galleries, all artists who come to him do not have to pay a submission fee. "To get juried," he said when talking about how artists have to pay to land wall space. "When have you ever heard that happening to a musician or anyone in the other arts?"

Upon entering the yard in front of Neighborhood Gallery; Fine Art Appraisers, large paintings are propped on forklifts. And artists all the way from Wynwood came up to show their work. Actually, many artists now with studios located in Miami have planned to make the move up. Because as one artist who lives in Delray Beach but has a studio in Miami said: "Now, I got something in my backyard?" Shiiiit. About 500 people rolled through since 5:30 p.m.

Joining Neighborhood Gallery and Denny Reed Art Works are the warehouses in the middle, the Bay Gates. In between the Bay Gates, there is a large concreted ground, where we expect plenty of dancing to take place at KeroWACKED! Homage to Jack on February 26. That's a 12-hour minifestival of nine bands, poetry readings, and art -- all dedicated to Jack Kerouac. The word sweet doesn't suffice.

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http://www.voiceplaces.com/art-walk-2012-broward-palm-beach-1700204-e/