Because memories are fragile and easily distorted, Lynne Yamamoto casts hers as solids, in marble, slip ceramic and thick black thread. She grew up in Hawaii with no artists in her family save for a grandfather, who wouldn’t have called himself one. In his shed in his spare time, he carved dolls that carried his understanding of his cultural heritage.
What Do-Ho Suh floats, Yamamoto makes as heavy as a tomb.
Currently at Greg Kucera: GRANDFATHER’S SHED, 2008-10
Lāna’i City, Island of Lāna’i
Digitally carved and hand finished marble
Hawaii is a symbol of an easy life, with fish crowding the seas and fruits ripe for the plucking, and yet, following World War II, canned goods became a staple, particularly (and inexplicably) Spam. Yamamoto’s rendering in vitreous china gives the cans the purity of Communion wafers.
PROVISIONS, POST-WAR, Pacific Asia and U.S. (Sardine), 2007-10
Vitreous china
PROVISIONS, POST-WAR, Pacific Asia and U.S. (Spam), 2007-10
Vitreous china
Just as human immigrants came to the island in waves, displacing the first peoples, insects immigrated with them, pushing the original occupants out of their niches. Yamamoto’s work is so beautifully crafted and physically recessive, it hides as much as it reveals. The exception is her embroidery on found doilies, which she displays from the back side, with black knots providing the relish of a coarse vitality: Dollies undone.
INSECT IMMIGRANTS, AFTER ZIMMERMAN (1948), 2009-10
Embroidery on found doilies
Camamponotus maculates (carpenter ant)
Through Oct. 2.

Using synthetic paints, his colors have a digital glow. Their edges are vague, as if their focus
Much has been made of Bavington’s methods – the match between color and sound a deadpan echo of Kandinsky’s early 20th Century efforts
Through Oct. 2.
And I thought of the video tribute to
Cook and Bishop are too young to have used or even seen a typewriter eraser. By the time they were old enough to correct a text, they let their pudgy fingers do the walking and press delete…To somebody who has never seen the original model, Claes Oldenburg’s eraser looks like an odd abstraction, maybe an orange wheel attached to a beat-up broom. (





Yoko Ono, 

From Gala,
From
From EllenL, Todd Simeone’s Record Cover in a Flash (Air Supply), 2006
From Jill, Dave Muller’s
From Netherzone, 





Detail:
Reducing men’s ties to knots (even floral knots), is (however sweetly) an emasculation of the male. Glowen’s insistence on the feminine, however, is less a critique of the male than a celebration of a certain kind of woman who is anonymous inside a female sphere: the career-waitress at a cheap diner, the divorcee who picks up her morning paper wearing pom-poms on her slippers, the hat check girl at the roller rink. Be they ever so humble, they dress up.
or Sherrie Levine,
Glowen has more in common with Nancy Drew –
Surrounded by fake flowers and wearing glitter eyeliner, girly-girls don’t care what you think. Feminists didn’t embrace the type until transvestites had, which means that in these bodies of work, Drew and Glowen derive not from female sources, but male ones.
I have high hopes for
Warashina:
Takamori: