By and For: Democracy and Art

May 15th, 2011

Conseil juridique et artistique (Legal and Artistic Counsel) will be featured in the upcoming exhibition:

By and For: Democracy and Art
An exhibition organized by the Southern California Women’s Caucus for the Arts, curated by Carol A. Wells

June 11-July 3, 2011
Opening Reception: June 11, 2011, 7-10pm
Closing Reception: July 3, 2011, 2-4pm
Avenue 50 Studio, 131 North Avenue 50, Los Angeles, CA 90042

Contemporary artists address the shifting meanings of freedom and equality, censorship and civil liberties and specifically, consider the role of art in a democracy in their works.

Thirty works were selected by curator, activist and art historian Carol A. Wells, who also serves as the founder and executive director of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics.

Artists: Mariona Barkus, Ulla Barr, Yvonne Beatty, Christine Behnen, Tristan Blodgett, Christina Carroll, Audrey Chan, Bayesteh Ghaffary, Michael Graham, Leslie Gray, Karen Gutfreund, Sinan Leong Revell, Larry Lytle, Barbara Margolies, Silva Matossian, Felicia Montes, O O, Sheila Pinkel, Chris Ramos, Jeffrey Robison, Catherine Ruanne, Amy Spain and France White

I Voted for Shirley

April 5th, 2011

“I Voted for Shirley”, temporary text installation with twine at Friends of Distinction/Dan Graham, 1842 Glendale Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, December 2009 (photo credit: Audrey Chan)


Vincent invited us to think about the year 1969. He was putting together a show and performance event at our friend Aaron’s project space, Dan Graham, a call center-turned-gallery originally located where the 2 Freeway spits out onto a busy stretch of Glendale Boulevard in Echo Park. I consider the prompt. As an object and an idea, 1969 has been refracted to me through movies now available streaming online, via my mother’s memories of dancing to American pop as a Taiwanese co-ed, and through Wikipedia pages that chronicle nameable things as networks of linked crumbs to be followed on divergent paths through high-bandwidth woods. Time slips and stutters as it turns into histories.

Yes we can.

It was November 2009, the one-year anniversary of the historic day that changed the complexion of power in our proud nation. My thoughts turned to Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm, elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1968, representing New York’s 12th congressional district, which included parts of Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. Some of her legislative initiatives included: fighting for domestic workers’ right to a minimum wage, opposing the Vietnam War and the draft, improving opportunities in inner cities, and seeking reductions in military spending. Road pavers allow us to walk on the back of their labor. We have only to stop the bulldozers that nip at their heels.

Surely we must.

In 1972, Shirley ran for President of the United States. Her campaign slogan—Unbought and Unbossed—set forth principles that challenge the traditional narrative of political ethics. She was a black woman who did not believe that either of those simple facts precluded her from seeking high office. Her spirited campaign led her to the Democratic National Convention, where she won 152 votes from delegates. The National Organization of Women, then led by Gloria and Betty, initially backed Shirley but ultimately threw their support to Senator George McGovern. He was deemed to be a safer bet given her “hopeless odds” (Shirley’s own words).

No we can’t.

Republican Richard Nixon was the victor that year by a landslide. Call up the picture in your mind of Tricky Dick stepping out of a plane wagging V’s to the press corps and you can start to feel the crushing vacuum of the status quo. It is where we live now. Now picture Shirley stepping onto that same tarmac, her chin held high and her pursed lips bursting into a wide, satisfied grin. Close your eyes slowly and you will feel the mild breeze of a real future as it gently blows by your cheek. Open your eyes and blink back the fact that history is never so easy. Shirley survived three assassination attempts during the campaign.

Maybe we could.

In 2008, I voted for a Shirley in my own time. As history will tell from this point forward, Barack Hussein Obama was elected President of the United States on November 4, 2008. Forty years after stately Shirley stepped into in her very own office on Capitol Hill in 1969, Barack was inaugurated and took his seat in the Oval Office. He rode into office on a wave of adulation, buoyed by a splintered opposition and a shell-shocked public. We voted for Barack, sick of the broken war, the Orwellian doublespeak and bullying talking heads, coldly rational torture documents, our self-financed bankruptcy…the bought and bossed bullshit of the Bush status quo. We’re still living in it, this house of cards that has been burning before and since our hero’s arrival.

Yes we will.

The photograph that accompanies this text is documentation of the artwork that I made for Vincent’s show. My mother, Susy, and I made the installation together using a box of twine that we bought from Home Depot. For the performance we stood on opposite sides of the grating as we “embroidered” the façade of the space with the crudely-scrawled message for passing motorists. She later remarked that while she waited for me to pass the twine back to her, she was observing all the “beautiful, smoking people”—artists and artists’ friends and art watchers—who were milling about, time traveling to a resurrected ghost of 1969 through objects and actions in an ordinary time called 2009.

Yes we did.

– Audrey Chan, Los Angeles, 2011

Exquisite Acts & Everyday Rebellions: 2007 CalArts Feminist Art Symposium

March 18th, 2011

FULL-LENGTH VIDEO DOCUMENTATION:


Introduction by Leslie Dick and presentation of “c. 7,500″


Panel discussion with Elana Mann (moderator), Andrea Fraser, Catherine Lord, and Mary Kelly


Panel discussion with Theresa Masangkay (moderator), María Cruz, Chitra Ganesh, Faith Wilding, and Emily Roysdon


Panel discussion with Martha Rosler, Dorit Cypis, Andrea Bowers, and Audrey Chan (moderator)

Exquisite Acts & Everyday Rebellions: 2007 CalArts Feminist Art Symposium was a student-organized project that took place at California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, California in March 2007. For more information, please visit: exquisiteacts.org.

Video credits:
Cameras - Adam Feldmeth, Nicholas Grider
Video Editor - Audrey Chan
Sound - Emery Martin

Manuscripts FAQ

February 19th, 2011

As part of my work as a gallery teacher at the J. Paul Getty Museum, I wrote a post for The Getty Iris blog about visitors’ questions regarding the exhibition Imagining the Past in France, 1250-1500, which featured a deluxe selection of French historical illuminated manuscripts. In my opinion, it never hurts to know a little something about parchment making, the Hundred Years’ War, and medieval narrative strategies.

Read it here: “Did Parchment Smell? Your Manuscript Questions, Answered”

The Trial of the Duke of Alençon, Jean Fouquet, about 1459-60. In Concerning the Fates of Illustrious Men and Women (Des cas des nobles hommes et femmes; original text in Latin); Giovanni Boccaccio, author; Laurent de Premierfait, translator. Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich. Ms. Cod. Gall. 6, fol. 2v

DAN GRAHAM @ Art Los Angeles Contemporary

January 25th, 2011

I Voted for Shirley, photograph and twine, edition of 5, 2009-11

DAN GRAHAM, a project space run by artist Aaron Wrinkle, is participating in the Art Los Angeles Contemporary fair from January 27-30, 2011. The booth will feature limited editions by artists who have created projects at DAN GRAHAM’s Echo Park and Chinatown locations since 2009. My contribution is a limited edition of photo prints of my installation “I Voted for Shirley” that was created for “1969,” an evening of performances organized by artist Vincent Ramos. The homage to Shirley Chisholm’s election to the U.S. House of Representatives was rendered in twine on Glendale Boulevard with the assistance of my mother. The edition includes a bundle of the same twine, to be used as desired.

DAN GRAHAM booth
Art Los Angeles Contemporary
The Barker Hangar
3021 Airport Avenue
Santa Monica, CA 90405
January 27-30, 2011

Collective Show LA

January 25th, 2011

Photo credit: Elana Mann

I recently participated in Collective Show LA, an exhibition featuring artist-run spaces and projects in Los Angeles. Accompanied by special guest Jennifer Li, I performed a gallery-centric version of “Counts of 8,” a tap dance demo first created for A Day in LA: Washington Boulevard Art Concert in 2009. The Los Angeles Road Concert series is organized by Stephen van Dyck.

COLLECTIVE SHOW LOS ANGELES

Collective Show is pleased to present “Collective Show Los Angeles 2011,” an artist-organized exhibition of contemporary art groups recently established in Los Angeles. This collaboratively curated “group show of group shows” features artist-run spaces and projects formed in the past five years. Over 20 groups will exhibit artwork, publications and posters during the show at a newly renovated space in Chinatown. Screenings, performances and talks will take place during the exhibition. A catalogue will accompany the exhibition and PDFs will be available online after the show.

COLLECTIVE SHOW LOS ANGELES 2011
LOCATION 995, 997 North Hill Street Los Angeles CA 90012
RECEPTION Thursday, January 20, 2011, 6-9pm
EXHIBITION Friday through Sunday, January 21-23, 2011, 12-6 pm & Thursday through Sunday, January 27-30, 2011, 12-6 pm

LOS ANGELES 2011 PARTICIPATING GROUPS
323 Projects, Actual Size Los Angeles, Adrian Piper Gallery, ART2102 of Los Angeles, ACP (Artist Curated Projects), CANAL, Commonwealth and Council, CUBO, Dan Graham, Darin Klein & Friends, Eighteen Thirty Collaborations (ETC), Electronic Disturbance Theater 2.0 *particle group* b.a.n.g. lab, Elephant, The Elysian Park Museum of Art, Eternal Telethon, Human Resources, JMOCA (Justin’s Museum of Contemporary Art), LA Pedestrians, Los Angeles Road Concerts, MATERIAL, Monte Vista, [name], NIGHT GALLERY, Open Arms, Public Address, Public Fiction, The Public School, Silvershed, Statler Waldorf Gallery, Summercamp’s Projectproject, Workspace, WPA, and upcoming Collective Show hosts: Ditch Projects (Oregon) GIBSMIR-Family (Zurich) and Secondhome Projects (Berlin)

Collective Show

Collective Show LA

Collective Show Blog

PDL Live in Echo Park!

January 6th, 2011

I’ll be singing backup dolphin for Ponce de Leon’s “The Island of Florida” live record release party at Origami Records in Echo Park on January 15, 2011 @ 7 PM. Ponce de Leon is John Hogan (Ponce), Dave Reich, Carrie Collins, myself, and many talented others. Come support the lost art of vinyl and post-colonial revisionist dolphin party rock opera!

Artists at Work: Mark Manders, Afterall Online

December 7th, 2010

Mark Manders, Ramble Room Chair, 2010. Installation view, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2010

The works of Dutch artist Mark Manders present a number of possibilities for viewers. On a material level, his sculptures and installations appear as carefully constructed assemblages of furniture, human and animal figures, newspapers, networks of welded metal piping, tea bags and other ephemera of daily life found in his studio and on the street. They are conceived as artefacts that would be found in the rooms of his Self-Portrait as a Building (1986-ongoing), an ever-expanding parallel super-structure created by a fictional alter ego whose artistic production and obsessions inform Manders’s own, while never fully converging as a true autobiography. Manders’s sculptures can also be read as poems that have been freed from the strictures of language and whose concrete physicality belies traces of ghostly afterimages and waking dreams. Having made a decisive turn from poetry to art when he was a young man, Manders’s inventive relationship with language is also revealed in the poetic and precise manner in which he describes his artistic practice. An exhibition of his recent sculptures, ‘Parallel Occurrences/Documented Assignments’, is currently on view at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, and will travel to the Aspen Art Museum, the Walker Art Center and the Dallas Museum of Art.

Read the interview “Artists at Work: Mark Manders” by Audrey Chan at http://www.afterall.org/online/artists-at-work-mark-manders.

PROJECT UPDATES: Conseil juridique et artistique (Legal and Artistic Counsel)

November 23rd, 2010

Political cartoon of Louis XIV, unknown artist

Please visit http://audreychan.net/conseil-juridique-et-artistique/ to check out recently-posted project updates:

Homage to Russ Feingold

November 18th, 2010

As my contribution to Outpost for Contemporary Art’s Monster Drawing Rally 2010, I decided to make an homage to Russ Feingold, the legendary Democratic Senator from Wisconsin who was defeated during this year’s mid-term Congressional elections. During his 17 years in office, he fought for campaign finance reform, opposed the war in Iraq, and voted against the TARP bailout of the banking industry, amongst other initiatives. (Photo: Emery Martin)

Brush and ink-work in progress. (Photo: Emery Martin)

Feingold was also known for his Listening Sessions, open meetings that he held in each of Wisconsin’s 72 counties every year where he listened to people’s concerns and answered their questions. (Image courtesy of feingold.senate.gov)

The finished drawing, featuring inscriptions of Wisconsin’s counties. (Photo: Emery Martin)

The drawing was purchased by fellow artist - and art collector - John Burtle. Thanks John! (Photo: Audrey Chan)