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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Medals of Dishonour Exhibition @ British Museum

Chora's Felicity Powell -- part of the family behind Crystal Ship -- is the co-curator of, as well as a participating artist in, Medals of Dishonour.

MoD is the title of a forthcoming exhibition scheduled to take place at the British Museum, in London, England, from June 25-September 27, 2009

From the Medals of Dishonour web page:

Medals are best known for celebrating important figures or heroic deeds, but this unique exhibition features medals that condemn their subjects. The display exposes the long and rich tradition of this darker side of medals.

The first part of the exhibition focuses on the Museum’s collection of satirical and political medals from the 16th to the 20th centuries. Subjects range from the sombre and the bizarre to the scatological and the humorous, and the medals will be placed in context through the use of contemporary prints and drawings. Two of US sculptor David Smith's influential Medals for Dishonor of the 1930s (from which the exhibition borrows its title) are included, along with a little-known medal by Marcel Duchamp.

The second part of the exhibition features medals recently commissioned from leading contemporary artists Jake and Dinos Chapman, William Kentridge, Grayson Perry, Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, Richard Hamilton, Mona Hatoum, Ellen Gallagher, Langlands and Bell, Cornelia Parker, Michael Landy, Yun-Fei Ji, Steve Bell and Felicity Powell.

The subjects they depict are wide-ranging, from the war in Iraq and consumerism to ASBOs and the environment. The new medals have been commissioned by the British Art Medal Trust, a registered charity dedicated to the making and study of medals. The Trust has presented an example of each of the newly commissioned medals to the British Museum for its permanent collection.


Support for the exhibition is provided by Chora.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Chora Prints '08 Participant Sandow Birk To Give Farmlab Public Salon on Friday, April 3, 2009 @ Noon


Screening of the film, "Dante's Inferno" -- With a discussion with artist, art director, writer, and producer Sandow Birk


About the Salon

The Salon Series today screens the film, "Dante's Inferno."

From the film's website: Melding the seemingly disparate traditions of apocalyptic live-action graphic novel and charming Victoria-era toy theater, Dante’s Inferno is a subversive, darkly satirical update of the original 14th century literary classic. Retold with the use of intricately hand-drawn paper puppets and miniature sets, and without the use of CGI effects, this unusual travelogue takes viewers on a tour of hell. And what we find there, looks a lot like the modern world.

Sporting a hoodie and a hang-over from the previous night’s debauchery, Dante (voiced by Dermot Mulroney) wakes to find he is lost — physically and metaphorically — in a strange part of town. He asks the first guy he sees for some help: The ancient Roman poet Virgil (voiced by James Cromwell), wearing a mullet and what looks like a brown bathrobe. Having no one else to turn to, Dante’s quickly convinced that his only means for survival is to follow Virgil voyage down, down through the depths of Hell.

The pair cross into the underworld and there Virgil shows Dante the underbelly of the Inferno, which closely resembles the decayed landscape of modern urban life. Dante and Virgil’s chronicles are set against a familiar backdrop of used car lots, strip malls, gated communities, airport security checks, and the U.S. Capitol. Here, hot tubs simmer with sinners, and the river Styx is engorged with sewage swimmers.

Also familiar is the contemporary cast of presidents, politicians, popes and pop-culture icons sentenced to eternal suffering of the most cruel and unusual kind: Heads sewn on backwards, bodies wrenched in half, never-ending blowjobs, dancing to techno for eternity, and last, but certainly not least, an inside look at Lucifer himself, from the point of view of a fondue-dunked human appetizer. Each creatively horrific penance suits the crime, and the soul who perpetrated it.

As Dante spirals through the nine circles of hell, he comes to understand the underworld’s merciless machinery of punishment, emerging a new man destined to change the course of his life. But not, of course, the brand of his beer.

About the Salon Presenter

Sandow Birk:
Art Director, Writer, Producer
Raised on the beaches of Southern California and currently living and working in Los Angeles, Sandow Birk is a product of California culture. With an emphasis on social issues, frequent themes of his past work have included daily life in L.A.’s barrios, inner city violence, graffiti, various political issues, surfing, and skateboarding. His work has been shown extensively throughout the U.S. He was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1996, and a Fulbright Fellow to Rio de Janeiro for 1997. In 1999 he was awarded a Getty Fellowship for painting. Birk’s epic, pseudo-historical series of the “The Great War of the Californias”, in which Los Angeles and San Francisco wage all out war for control of the Golden State, was featured at the Laguna Art Museum in 2000. His latest project, a rewriting (with co-author Marcus Sanders) and illustrating of Dante’s The Divine Comedy set in contemporary urban America has culminated in three books, currently out from Chronicle Books: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. An exhibition of the project was organized by the San Jose Museum of Art in 2005.

Sean Meredith: Director, Writer, Producer, Editor
Born and raised in New Jersey, Sean Meredith studied film at Emerson College in Boston. His senior film won the school’s Evvy Award for Best 16mm Film. After toiling away the years as a vintage dishware expert, he has finished directing his first feature film, “Dante’s Inferno.” He directed and produced the 2003 film “In Smog and Thunder: The Great War of the Californias.” After premiering at Slamdance in 2003, the California Civil War mockumentary went on to play at twenty film festivals. It was released on DVD in 2004 and had it’s broadcast premiere in 2005.


Image courtesy Sandow Birk

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Neon Sign, Chora Prints Legacy

video

Above: Do Nothing.

By Qingyun Ma, presented to the Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI).

Installed March, 2009, Under Spring.

See Ma's print that preceded the neon, and was part of Chora Prints 2008: New Political Posters from TJ2LA.


Metabolic Studio FlipVideo

Monday, February 16, 2009

Chora Prints 2008 Exhibition Has Closed
(Prints Still Available Via Website)

The Chora Prints 2008 exhibition at Metabolic Studio, in Los Angeles, has concluded, as of Friday night, February 13, 2009.

Great thanks to everyone who participated in the project, and who came to see the work in-person, both in Los Angeles, and previously, in Tijuana.

Prints remain available for purchase via the www.chora.info website.

And visitors to the Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI) are welcome to ask any team members for a look inside the print drawers.

Thanks, too to Richard Montoya, of Culture Clash, and to Auntie Sam, our patriotic stilt walker, for selecting the winner last Friday of the Chora Prints 2008 raffle.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Chora Prints 2008 Exhibition Closes Friday

This is Final Week to Enter Raffle to Win Box Suite of Prints


Metabolic Studio's exhibition of the Chora Prints 2008 project concludes this coming Friday, February 13, 2009.

Also concluding this week: the chance to win a complete handmade box suite of all 22 prints in the project.

The drawing of the winning raffle ticket for the suite will be held Friday morning, February 13, 2009 @ 8am during the Optimists' Breakfast.

Purchase one or more prints prior to that date and time, and you'll be entered in the raffle.

Prints can be purchased this week at the Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI), located here, or online, by visiting the Chora Prints 2008 website's "purchase" page and following the links.

The raffle winner need not be present Friday morning, as long as the Chora team has your contact information on file to let you know you've won.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Chora Prints 2008 Has Booth At Los Angeles Art Show

The Chora Prints 2008 project has a booth at this week's Los Angeles Art Show, running through Sunday afternoon, January 25, 2009, at the Convention Center, in downtown Los Angeles.

If you're heading to the show, please stop by and visit the Chora team in the non-profits section, booth number NP-63.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Happy Holidays & New Year
Chora Open By Appt. Only December 25-January 4

Dear Friends,

The Metabolic Studio -- Chora and Farmlab included -- will be open to the public by telephone appointment only** from Wednesday evening, December 24, 2008, through Monday morning, January 5, 2009.

The Chora Prints 2008 installation reopens Jan. 5 @ 10am.

On behalf of everyone here, here's wishing you and yours a great holiday season and a happy new year!

Sincerely,
The Chora Team
323 226 1158