Kiki film by Man Ray & Leger 24.04.2010

kiki is a film by Man Ray and Leger done in the 1920s. The film becomes magnifed and repeated into short sections from the film link that filters the you tube video. The music is an impressionist piece by Maurice Ravel. For an even more enhanced experience, try the link; kiki

Children’s Artwork from Berkley School District Exhibit 21.04.2010

Berkley School Distric Art Exhibit at Book Beat April 20-May 20

An exhibition of children’s artwork is now on view through May 20th, 2010 in the Book Beat Gallery. The show features talented artwork from the Berkley School district. Please let us know if you visit the exhibit and purchase any books because we are giving a portion of the proceeds to the Berkley School District while the artwork is up.  Here is a sample from the show opening on Tuesday, April 20th.

Berkley Schools Art Exhibition 2010 13.04.2010

EXHIBIT DATES: April 20-May 20, 2010

OPENING RECEPTION: Tuesday, April 20, 2010 ~ 5:30-7:00 pm

Store Hours: M-F 10 am-9 pm, Sat.  10 am-7 pm ~ Sun. 12-5 pm

VOUCHER:  Please use this flyer – valid from 4/20/10-5/20/2010 at the time of purchase and a most generous donation from the Book Beat to the Berkley School District will be made. You must print out and present this flyer at the time of purchase.

Art Dropout Lee Lozano 11.04.2010

“Information is content. Content is fiction.”– Lee Lozano, July 1971

Lozano…has spent much of the past 14 years wandering Dallas’ darker byways and skidzones, and is not an unfamiliar figure along the lower extremities of Greenville Avenue.


She is a walking secret history of the sometimes tragic late American avant-garde.

“I paint stoned.”— Lee Lozano, 29 March 1969

The fact that she is also quite mad prevents her from seeking help through any existing social-service resources.

PARTY PIECE (or PARANOIA PIECE): describe your current work to a famous but failing artist from the early 60’s. Wait to see whether he boosts any of your ideas. – Lee Lozano , Notebook March 15, 1969

“I have started to document everything because I cannot give up my love of ideas”-Lee Lozano

…the more that I learn, the more it appears that she is the missing link…to the wider societal mysteries and maladies that beguile most of us every day:  madness, homelessness, what America does to its artists and what America’s artists do to themselves.

Her father and mother died, having neglected to leave a will, in 1987 and 1990 respectively, and another six years passed before their estate was exhausted—whereupon the aging orphan faced certain eviction and possible full-time life on the streets.

–excerpts from the Lee Lozano blog site MYTHING IN ACTION

“Confinement is the near root of all my rage.” — Lee Lozano in her notebook on December 20, 1969

Lee Lozano was among the most celebrated conceptual artists of the 1960s. So why is she buried in an unmarked grave in Grand Prairie?

During the 1960s, she showed in the most prestigious of New York’s galleries and museums, until one day she decided she wanted nothing more to do with the commodification of her work. Her writings became her work; soon enough, her life became her art, around the time she decided to stop talking to women and opted to leave behind the world that once embraced her. Even now, nearly an entire decade of her life remains unaccounted for. — LEE LOZONO THE DROPOUT PIECE  article by Robert Wolonsky: Dallas Observer News

“black and white is more perfect, more beautiful, more abstract, less associational, less tiring and less pretty than color” –Lee Lozano Notebook, Aug, 1, 1968


Between the time I saw Lozano’s paintings in a barn in Pennsylvania, in 2001, and their appearance in Basel, their prices had rocketed from the low tens of thousands to nearly a million dollars…. Lozano’s rediscovery by the art world, as much as her withdrawal from it, belongs to a larger market dynamic. In the recent past, museums, galleries, critics, and auction houses have been reviving older and dead artists in earnest. Categories include the “artist’s artist” (as opposed to the collector’s artist, I suppose) who has been seen as minor but begins to look major (Mary Heilmann); the artist who enjoyed initial success but floundered when money got tight or when fashions changed (Alan Shields); the artist whose production was inconsistent or ephemeral (Tony Conrad). Not by coincidence, these rediscovered artists represent good value: Now construed as the product of integrity rather than of failure, their obscurity serves as a substitute for the obsolete category of the avant-garde; they even rival emerging artists as a source of speculative reward. As Nickas pointed out in a recent conversation, unlike the freshly minted art school graduate, the rediscovered artist comes complete with oeuvre and provenance. Katy Siegel, Free Library LEE LOZANO

“I WILL NOT CALL MYSELF AN ART WORKER BUT RATHER AN ART DREAMER AND I WILL PARTICIPATE ONLY IN A TOTAL REVOLUTION SIMULTANEOUSLY PERSONAL AND PUBLIC” – Lee Lozano Notebook, April 10, 1968

“People (in some ways) are more important than art.” –Lee Lozano September, 1969

Available now: THE NOTEBOOKS OF LEE LOZANO published by Primary Information Transiting Pop art, Feminist Expressionism, Conceptualism and Minimalism, Lee Lozano (1930–1999) sits alongside Eva Hesse and Hannah Wilke as a radical and influential model for younger generations of female artists. Lozano’s notebooks, which she approached as drawings, and which were later dismantled and sold as individual pages, became a part of her artmaking at the height of her fame in the late 1960s. Reproduced here for the first time, as an affordably-priced facsimile reprint, the three notebooks collected here, which were kept between 1967–1970, contain sketches for her Wave paintings, writings about the trajectory of her artistic process and the language pieces that she became famous for prior to her withdrawal from the art world. They thus constitute the fullest and richest document on an artist whose relevance and profile have recently seen a steady ascent.

Press Release: Artist David Barr at Book Beat April 25th 31.03.2010

Artist David Barr Talk & Book-Signing at Book Beat April 25th

Join us at Book Beat on Sunday, April 25th at 2:00 PM for a very special talk and book-signing with Detroit area artist, sculptor and author David Barr. This will be  a rare chance to meet and discuss the life work of this engaging and creative spirit, an afternoon filled with art, adventure, mystery and memory. The Book Beat is located at 26010 Greenfield in Oak Park.

“What is significant about art, is what we share as human beings.” –David Barr

transcendDavid Barr is an internationally recognized artist from the Detroit area. His most recognized work locally is his magnificent “Star Gate” sculpture situated at the front of Hart Plaza in downtown Detroit. Titled Transcending, this unique sculpture was financed through the Labor Union movement and is connected to Labor and its spirit of defiance and sacrifice.

David has recently been completing work on several books that collect his artistic and personal history. His large format art book Crossing Lines was published last year. It carries the reader to some of the world’s most intriguing, mysterious and remote locations. Filled with 180 color and black and white illustrations, the book narrates the various projects David Barr has been involved with over the past thirty years. His recent book Amercordo: (I Remember) American Style is a collection of recollections and observations from the mid-century American Midwest to Tuscany, the mid-west of Italy.

His work on the Four Corners Project, begun in 1976, spanned a full decade with installations in Greenland, Africa, Irian Jaya and Easter Island. Other geo-structurist works include Arctic Arc in Wales, Alaska, and Naukan, Russia, and Sunsweep on the US/Canada border at Campobello Island, New Brunswick, in Northwest Angle, Minnesota, and Point Roberts, Washington. Here, in his home state, David’s works can be seen at such locations as Chrysler World Headquarters (Revolution), Flint’s Bishop Airport, (Soaring), Detroit Zoo (Source), State of Michigan Historical Museum (Polaris Ring) and Meadowbrook Festival Grounds (Sunset Cube).

In 1988 David Barr was awarded the Governor’s Michigan Artist Award. In his acceptance speech he told the audience of his desire to create a Michigan Art Park – a place where artists could tell the story of our state in and through the fundamental materials of nature. That dream has become a reality in 1995 with the Michigan Legacy Art Park , located within the boundaries of Crystal Mountain on M-115 between Cadillac and Benzonia near Thompsonville.

David Barr is a graduate of Wayne State University and recipient of the WSU Distinguished Alumni Award. He served on the faculty of Macomb Community College and has received awards, including citations from the Arts Foundation of Michigan and Citizens Concerned for the Arts in Michigan. His work can also be seen at the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Flint Institute of Arts, Fort Lauderdale Museum, Portland Art Museum, Tel Aviv Museum and the University of Michigan.

The Art Instinct 03.03.2009

From a recent review in the Philly.com; Why Everyone is an Artist:

“Why do we create art and beauty? Dutton may be the best-equipped thinker in the world to explain.

An American who serves as professor of the philosophy of art at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, and founder and editor of the journal Philosophy and Literature, Dutton used to run a contest to identify wretched academic prose. He then launched and still curates artsandlettersdaily.com, an international digest of sophisticated cultural pieces that the Guardian named the “best Web site in the world.”

In short, he combines a magisterial command of the history of aesthetics back to Plato and Aristotle, a total commitment to clarity and verve in writing, and an up-to-the-minute grasp of almost every trend on the contemporary cultural scene.

Result? A philosophy of art for the ages. Dutton argues that evolutionary psychology – the school of thought with which cognitive scientists such as Steven Pinker have helped us understand the Darwinian dimensions of much social life – also explains the ubiquity of artistic activity across cultures and eons.”