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Process book meeting #2, 7-16

AGallagher @ July 17, 2010
We discussed book layout options, the contents of the book, possible font choices, folio styles, elements of humor, and pumpkin muffies at this meeting. We had a few more "essays" to assign and hopefully we'll see some of those coming in soon. Next meeting will be held on Monday 7-19 at the Panera on the Plaza from 7-8p.

On the Job: Day 26, 7-16

AGallagher @ July 16, 2010
I thought I took far more photos than I did today... I only took one picture haha. The box that Micah and I have been working in should, if everything goes as planned, be done on Monday which is pretty exciting. We got a second coat of Weak Sauce down and got a first coat of Thirteen and a Half Lives of Captain Blueberry down along the bottom. The second coat of the blue and some minor touchups along the tape lines should allow us to call it quits! 

Lance interviewed me today (video is now below). Lance and I also decided it would be fun to start interviewing some of the Kuaffman Center constructions workers and we'd like to start showcasing an interview with one of them once a week. Our Construction Worker of the Week (CWotW) this week is a carpenter named Jake. He's a real cool guy and you'll like his interview! BTW- Lance took the video footage today, which is why the video is shaped the wait it is. -rolls eyes- Way to go Lance. Haha! 

Weak Sauce:
Kauffman Center: Weak Sauce from Abby Gallagher on Vimeo.

CWotW:
Kauffman Center: Construction Worker of the Week #1 from Abby Gallagher on Vimeo.

Sixteen!

AGallagher @ July 15, 2010
Sixteen followers, we've grown by two in the past 24 hours. This is incredible. Thanks to those of you spreading the word about our blog, it gets us all really excited to see interest growing in our project! Thanks for joining us on our journey!

Hott Sheets at Wonder Fair

Paul Shortt @


I was passes along this review of a show at Wonder Fair and thought everyone else would find it interesting.

Hott Sheets
Wonder Fair
Lawrence, KS
June 25 – July 25

Pricing the “Cool”
Matt Jacobs


Hott Sheets has all the ingredients to be a cool exhibition: it’s in a cool gallery, in a cool location, with a bunch of cool work. But what exactly is the value of all this cool? This is where Hott Sheets goes further to explore and exploit the pricing process of contemporary art. Falling in sync with the gallery-as-laboratory trend (see The Whitney Museum’s recent experiment to stay open for 72 hours), Wonder Fair presents an exhibition that aims to determine the value of value making in the art world. Selected artists from Kansas City and Lawrence purchased specifically printed paper (complete with the Wonder Fair insignia) from the gallery at a cost of $3 per sheet. With size limitations already in place, the artist then created pieces on or with this paper and returned them to the gallery where they were processed through Wonder Fair’s “value assessment methodology form” to determine a price. Complete with a systematic color and medium breakdown, this form also tallies the trendy-ness of each work by classifying them into themes such as: ‘pretty as possible’ or ‘meditation nation’ and subject categories like, olde timey, gross out, rainbows, and tiny marks. The result is a simultaneous displaying of both original artwork and its pricing form in a single horizontal row. Viewers are left to investigate both the work itself as well as the steps taken to determine it’s monetary value. Until now we have been left with a wall tag and a price, Hott Sheets attempts to explain some of the mystery behind this number by presenting a simple (if not always fair) system for pricing each work.

Whether a reflection of the artists included or a testament to its creative theme,
the most engaging part of Hott Sheets is resolving the pricing technique with each work. Although the system is simple and democratic, viewers will probably find themselves scrutinizing the logic of the “value assessment” form to see if they agree. Frustrations with over-pricing and under-pricing as well as searching for the most/least expensive works are all part of Hott Sheets tongue-in-cheek critique of the contemporary art market. Subversive tactics like this are abundant in the framework of Hott Sheets. The exhibition has been put together as a kind of game in which the gallery staff act as ring-leaders, picking artists, supplying them with materials, setting the rules, and ultimately determining the value of each artist’s efforts. Some artists have followed these rules closely, making safe, small vignette collages from old magazines, and others, such as Tim Dwyer chose shred his paper and display it in a plastic bag as a retaliatory gesture to the “rules of the show.” Dwyer’s bagged work was then classified under the trend “drugs” as a kind of one-up from the gallery. This playful banter between artist and institution creates a pseudo-political environment that is both funny and making fun. The joke here is twofold: aside from the critique of art market economics, Hott Sheets also points a finger at “trendy” two-dimensional work. In fact, works qualifying for too many of the trend or theme categories were actually docked in price. If the goal of the game is to have the most expensive piece, then works that are too “cool” will inevitably lose. Here we see a refreshing example of a gallery’s awareness that it exhibits a certain “type” of work. Featuring a recent ‘Group Solo Show’ by notoriously cool Austin-based collective, Okay Mountain, Wonder Fair seems fully aware that is a hothouse for contemporary trends. A majority of their space also houses a merchandise shop chalk full of handmade T-shirts,zines, postcards, and other goodies (including a Hott Sheets “home art making and value assessment kit”). With Hott Sheets, Wonder Fair both accepts and exploits the genre
they exhibit.

Rather than following any scientific method, Wonder Fair claims their exhibition
“is a tongue-in-cheek critique, partially directed toward ourselves and our inability to understand the complexities of the Art Market, and partially directed at the Art Market for being so confounding,” according to the exhibition text. By admitting to their lack of understanding Hott Sheets deconstructs the facade of expertise so common to the art world, and replaces it with a sincere best effort. Some things we will never fully understand, maybe the global art market is one of them. Hott Sheets is an honest and often times funny attempt to make sense of this place. In addition to assigning monetary value to a collection of cool prints and drawings, this exhibition also presents them in a context where they can be investigated conceptually. This is yet another refreshing aspect of Hott Sheets: pieces that may be “cool–looking” but conceptually lacking can at least be seen within the overarching theme of the exhibition. Part lighthearted jest, part insult to artist, and part subversive critique of the art market, Hott Sheets is a cleverly conceived game that blurs the lines of who’s playing whom. Starting out with a bang, hopefully Wonder Fair can maintain this balance of playful critique and underlying agenda in future exhibitions.


On the Job: Day 25, 7-15

AGallagher @
Day 25. Took some more video today- an interview with Todd and Blake and a bit of tomfoolery. We got the second coat of Nuclear Winter on the walls, as well as a bit of Grimace Fur purple and the Huge teal stripe that Lance has named Weak Sauce. Sweet.


My Missouri Bank Artboard’s Up Now

Paul Shortt @
On view now in Downtown Kansas City.

On the Job: Day 24, 7-14

AGallagher @ July 14, 2010
Hey, lookie there! We have 15 followers to date! That's amazing! Woo! Tell your friends!

Okay, enough of that, on to the good stuff. Uhm........... we're still painting. Ha. No really, we still are. Micah helped me out in my bay today. We got Sick Casper (green) done yesterday and we painted with a very pale green-yellow-white today that Micah dubbed "Nuclear Winter" which I found pretty and appropriate. Didn't take many photos today, but I took a bit of video of Micah talking about the day.


Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts: Micah Interview from Abby Gallagher on Vimeo.

TOKYOPOP at KCAI

lizvsquare @
Will one of our degree students be the next 'America's Greatest Otaku?'






Kauffman Center Blog

jamie @
You can follow the painting progress of the Kauffman Center Mural on their team blog here.

KCAI Visual Advocacy Video

jamie @
Check out this new video featured on the kcai.edu homepage about the g.d. department's visual advocacy studio. The video was made by recent graduate, Gerg Kaufman.

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