Laughing Squid NYC Drinkup on April 19th at Lolita Bar
I’ll be somewhere halfway between Philadelphia and Paris when this happens, but I’d expect a pretty entertaining cross-section of artists, tech entrepreneurs, and bloggers…
Men Work Harder Than Women in Courtship
Just as funny as the study itself is Ms. Jaramillo’s bemused observation that she “never imagined that they tried so hard”…
There’s Been Lots of Talk about The New Bolt
Whatever Greyhound’s new bus line offers, I don’t think it can be worse than the Chinatown bus I’ve been using to travel between New York and Philly for the past 6 years…
Despite having a tiny space compared to the number of people standing outside, Swiss Institute pulled off a fairly quiet and unique anti-Armory type show on the 28th of March. Going along with the theme of the evening, I thought it would be unfair to use a flash if the artists themselves weren’t allowed natural or electric light. Turns out I should have allowed for a slightly longer exposure. Whoops.
Also in one of the more poorly-played moments of the evening, I excused myself from a conversation with an artist exhibiting that night to return a missed call from a potential employer. Of course, as soon as I called I was told that I had misread the recent calls screen on my phone; I was the one who had accidentally dialed said potential employer from my pocket in the first place. Between the embarrassing phone call and the conversation unfortunately cut short, I don’t think I’ve failed so hard in recent memory. Double whoops.
The rest of the very few pictures I took at the Dark Fair that night are here.
And some pictures from The Armory Show that afternoon are here.
That party, June’s Paper Rad feat. Cory Arcangel, was a confluence of pretty much everything that could go wrong at an art museum party. The crux of the problem was that the majority of the event’s open hours were occupied with a cross-media performance which, between my love of glitch music and affection for interactive entertainment not to mention deconstruction thereof, I should have loved. Instead, I spent the whole time wondering how much longer I should stay to justify the $12 I spent on the ticket.
I can even guarantee my memory of the event wasn’t skewed by liquor because I only stayed at the party for about an hour and a half, not nearly long enough to get through the two hour line to the open bar. I think they might have actually been muddling mojitos up there.
I feel a touch bad for opening with the reasons the Paper Rad event went so badly, but it only highlights exactly how awesome the Color Chart party was. There was no line to get in and no line at the (downstairs back-corner) bar, the music ran the perfect mix of vocal and tech house, and there were a ton of people on the dance floor from when I walked in until I walked out at the end.
The exhibition felt a bit like it was thrown together from scattered parts of the permanent collection more as an attempt to draw in viewers than to make a serious argument, but a few different works did stand out enough for me to come back later. Besides, on a Saturday night the gallery was more of a cooling down area from the overheated dancefloor than anything else.
Whatever happened in the months between these two parties, MoMA has definitely got their issues figured out. Last June I walked out of the museum swearing I’d never return to a MoMA party held outside of P.S.1. After breaking that promise and coming back in March, I can’t wait for the next one.
Update: I’ve realized that when I’m writing I default to two-dollar words as I grow more and more tired. “Crux,” “confluence,” and “deconstruction” all in one paragraph? That’s just obnoxious.