READ THE WHOLE POST HERE: http://www.inc.com/howard-tullman/slow-down-it-might-save-your-business.html
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Sunday, April 28, 2013
TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST WILLIAM POWHIDA'S NEW SHOW AT CHARLIE JAMES REVIEWED IN LOS ANGELES TIMES
Review: William Powhida wryly eyes the business of art
By Holly Myers Thursday, April 25 2013
So rare
is good satire in contemporary art that its appearance - as in the newest
exhibition of William Powhida, a New York-based artist who is fast evolving
into one of its sharpest practitioners - makes one inclined to stand up and
applaud.
The
show, called "Bill by Bill," at Charlie James Gallery, combines the
motif that has become Powhida's trademark - the trompe l'oeil painting
of a sheet of paper covered in handwritten notes - with a series of artworks
conceived on the basis of unspoken but eminently recognizable formulas.
There's
"Informal Materialism" (a chunk of scrap wood and a sheet of
paint-stained canvas); "Asset Class Painting" (a trio of blurry,
colorful abstractions); "A Taxonomy of Forms on a Shelf" (a cube, a
sphere and other glazed ceramic objects lined up in a row); "A
Hypothetical Word or Phrase in Neon" (simplified, perhaps for ease of
fabrication, into an underscore or strike-through mark); and, what may be my
favorite, "A Taxidermied Animal in a Box," which is just what it
implies, complete with foam peanuts.
The
works themselves are not slapdash cracks but dutifully, even earnestly
constructed objects, largely indistinguishable from the classes of works that
they mock. At a glance, it all reads as your typical group show.
The
real pleasure lies in the trompe l'oeil notes that Powhida pairs with
each work, which detail the concept, process and cost involved in language
that playfully derides the absurdity of each of these tropes while
occasionally exposing the darker economic conditions underlying them.
Of
"DIY Informalism," a clumsy mélange of bent-up stretcher bars and
torn, paint-dripped canvas, Powhida writes: "Idea: To play around with
some studio junk and stuff from the hardware store to make a few awkward
objects
Of
"Post minimalism," a row of tall, slickly finished sculptural
columns based on economic statistics, he notes: "Idea: Have the
fabricator make some bar graphs into 'purely' formal objects. Then apply some
Kantian aesthetic logic and
What
saves the work from grating sarcasm or smart aleck cleverness - toward which
the artist has erred in the past - is a curious undertone of sincerity. Powhida
is not mean-spirited or bitter but seems genuinely driven to understand his
subject: the internal mechanisms of this peculiar social and economic
ecosystem. How does the art world work and how should we feel about that? How
much of ourselves should we reconcile to it?
He
clearly takes these questions seriously. If he didn't, his excoriation
wouldn't be nearly so funny.
Charlie James Gallery, 969 Chung
King Road, (213) 687-0844, through June 8. Closed Sunday through Tuesday. www.cjamesgallery.com
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CONGRATS TO OUR GOOD FRIEND JASON BRETT ON THE NICE "INFO JUNKIE" WRITE-UP IN CRAIN'S AND FOR THE PLUG FOR THE PERSPIRATION PRINCIPLES
Info Junkie: Jason Brett, Big Things Inc.
By Laura Bianchi April 29, 2013
Jason Brett, 59, is founder of Chicago-based Big Things Inc., which two years ago launched MashPlant.com, a digital classroom. He spent three decades as an actor, writer, producer and director. "I keep my TweetDeck running to tap into education technology trends and teacher feeds."
Local focus: "Windy City Live" (WLS-TV/Channel 7) "is an easy, breezy hour of really well-produced local television that's capable of going national." National news: "I am a CNN junkie. Anderson Cooper has become the voice and conscience of our times in the tradition of Rather and Cronkite. Not quite the gravitas, but such are the times."
Guilty pleasure: "Rock documentaries on Showtime, HBO and PBS: 'It Might Get Loud,' 'Crossfire Hurricane' and the Kennedy Center salute to Bruce Springsteen."
Favorite radio show: Temporary host Rick Kogan on WBEZ/91.5-FM's "Afternoon Shift." "He has an encyclopedic knowledge of Chicago. He's a great storyteller and student of the human condition in the great tradition of Studs Terkel."
Bookmarked blog: "Perspiration Principles" at Inc. online,
from Howard Tullman, CEO of Chicago's Tribeca Flashpoint
Academy. "It's the most sage, digestible business information
out there. Nobody knows startups better."
His bookmarked websites: "AviationWeather.gov—I'm a pilot—and NASA.gov. I have been following the Mars Curiosity rover like a Led Zeppelin groupie."
Recent fiction read: " 'After the Sucker Punch' by Lorraine Devon Wilke. It's about a young woman's forensic journey to understand her relationship with her late father."
Music on repeat: "I never get tired of listening to the Beatles."
Read more: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20130427/ISSUE03/304279986/info-junkie-jason-brett-big-things-inc#ixzz2RoBQswFP
CLAY CHRISTENSEN - INVENTOR OF DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION THEORY - HONORED AT TRIBECA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION AWARDS - IDENTIFIES 3 NEW AREAS FOR DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION
WE NEED DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION IN PARENTING
WE NEED DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION IN ELIMINATING TERRORISM
WE NEED DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION IN RELIGION
Saturday, April 27, 2013
AN AMAZING VERY SHORT FILM BY MORGAN SPURLOCK WHICH WAS SCREENED AT THE TRIBECA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION AWARDS
A HIGH SCHOOL SOPHOMORE - JACK ANDRAKA - INVENTED A TEST STRIP FOR PANCRETIC CANCER
168 TIMES FASTER
26,000 TIMES LESS EXPENSIVE (SCREW THE PHARMAS)
400 TIMES MORE SENSITIVE
WATCH THE VIDEO: http://focusforwardfilms.com/films/78/you-don-t-know-jack