Friday, February 25, 2011

Thursday, February 24, 2011

A KICK IN THE KUNST: KUNST KICKERS TO SONS


My Kunst Kickers, exhibited at Rossella Junck Berlin in 2008, are now part of the SONS / Shoes Or No Shoes Collection in Belgium.  SONS Website.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Assembling: Adventures In A Box






































Fritz Sauter is currently assembling the various elements, prints, collages, drawings and unusual objects for the boxed edition: Adventures In A Box.  We hope to have them finished and online for sale within the next two weeks.  If you are interested, please contact: ADVENTURES.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Fragen Sie Ihren Kunstler / Ask Your Artist

Fragen Sie Ihren Kunstler buttons for the limited edition Adventures In A Box, a project I produced with artist Fritz Sauter in Schaffhausen, Switzerland.  Some 15 different elements – letter press prints, gold records, unusual objects, collage works, rubber stamp prints among other works – are included in the box. Only 22 boxes will be available for purchase. Curious? Contact me.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

NICEPICTURE: LETTER PRESS PRINT

NICEPICTURE, a letter press print is one of some 15 different works for ADVENTURES IN A BOX, a collaborative edition produced with Fritz Sauter in Schaffhausen, Switzerland.

The print, made from a carved cork block, was produced in an edition of 24 with an artist proof, and several printer's proofs.

Some 18 box editions will be made available.

Letter press, rubber stamp, collage, objects and other works on a variety of fine art papers comprise the edition. Text and image come together in this unusual mixture of German and English words and pictures.


The works were all conceived and produced over a period of one week in mid-January, 2011.

ADVENTURES IN A BOX project was supported by the City of Schaffhausen, Switzerland. The edition will be priced shortly.  For information: ADVENTURES IN A BOX.

If you would be interested in a separate NICEPICTURE print, please contact: NICEPICTURE.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Print Contest Radio Rasa: Schaffhausen, Switzerland

The wonderful rockers at Radio Rasa in Schaffhausen, Switzerland  – next door to Fritz Sauter's Studio – are offering three of my FUCK YOU & YOUR POLITICS letter press prints to the 11th, 22nd and 33rd e mailers to the station.  Free.

Produced by Fritz Sauter as part of our edition: Adventures in a Box, we thought the nice people at Radio Rasa might enjoy this piece about the language of politics. Tune in to this excellent alternative music station and say hello to Christian and Phillip.

An edition of FY&YP of 75 is now available. 

Friday, January 14, 2011

What I Like

What I like: Scuff marks on the floor, skid marks on the street, torn and wet discarded children's drawings, piles of old abandoned magazines, aged advertisements for cakes and cars or shaving lotion, the stack of Hebrew grammar books from the 1940s I once found tossed in the middle of a Tel Aviv street, perfectly-made objects that have no apparent use, empty cigar boxes, blocks of beeswax, rusted bits of torn metal, logos for companies that no longer exist, typography, doodles, footprints, cyphers (and ciphers), the artworks of Joseph Cornell, Jasper Johns and Ray Johnson in that order, the possibilities of sandpaper, steel wool and a year's weather on one of my canvases, the act of finding something completely unwanted (and apparently useless), taking it home, applying some glue or paint, a bit of cutting and shaping, and marrying it with some other orphaned bit of the world and witnessing this Pinocchio-like Lazarus rise to let me know what I might need to know. I like spelling with scissors, my handbook of everything, the collage of people doing what they do (often nothing)...and working whatever little magic I have to refashion the unmistakable into something mysterious.  One of each of everything.

What I don't like:  Loud yabbering about the obvious.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Thursday, December 16, 2010

The Paris Correspondence School : Mail Art Cadvre Exquis Opens 16 December 2010 Galerie Sparts

The MAIL ART 2010 exhibition is this year's answer to unpaid bills, junk mail and the Tapis D'Orient flyers that litter your hallways.

The artists involved have long irritated post office workers, mailmen and women, and in general created havoc where the postal system is concerned. And not only in France, but world wide. (Me, too). 

Click here to see the artist list.

A strange and wonderful mail art cadavre exquis, organized by Christian Balmier, where four artists work on a piece in a round, some 25 examples of this surrealist game will be on view at beginning Thursday, December 16, 2010 at Galerie SPARTS  41, rue de Seine - 75006 PARIS.


Among the artists involved:  

Jean-Michel ALBEROLA, Jean-Paul ALBINET, Christian BALMIER, BEN VAUTIER, Yvon BOHERS, Alain BRESSON, José-Garcia CORDERO, Charlélie COUTURE, Henri CUECO, Pierre DESSONS, Hervé DI ROSA, Philippe DRUILLET, Yann DUGAIN, Marc GIAI-MINIET, Gérard GUYOMARD, Abraham HADAD, Michel HERGIBO, Michel HOSSZÙ, Pierre JOINUL, Eliane LARUS, Gérard LE CLOAREC, Yves LÉVÊQUE, LJUBA, Fédérica MATTA, Jérôme MESNAGER, Ricardo MOSNER, Mehdi QOTBI, RABA, Matthew ROSE, Sélim SAIAH, Sacha SOSNO, Roland TRUC, Béatrice TURQUAND D'AUZAY, Michel TYSZBLAT, Vladimir VELICKOVIC, Jacques VIMARD and William WILSON.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Paris Relax : Japan

Beautiful article on my work from Japanese writer and health/body advisor, Chico Shigeta: Paris Relax.

She discusses my Rubens Rounding Third Baseball Stamps and other projects... Read Japanese?

http://parisrelax.exblog.jp/12444347/

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

BOY'S LIFE : The Book

Some years ago I came upon this old French ledger book and decided to turn it into another of my books.  BOYS' LIFE.

I cut and pasted and painted and glue and tore and gouged and turned the pages to work on another spread.  The entire process took me about a week and a half and the result is a heavily glued and painted and collaged and tells a non-narrative story of how a boy ventures out into the world and encounters God, love, sex, friendship and drunk driving.

The book contains 48 spreads.  I have exhibited it only once, in Miami, in 2005.

There is quite a bit of text in BOY'S LIFE, but it doesn't borrow from the magazine of the same name at all. Some might remember BOYS LIFE as the Boy Scout magazine that circulated widely in the 60s and early 70s detailing the true life adventure stories, and quite a few fictional stories about boys working the wilderness, or figuring out how to make a buck (cutting lawns, cleaning out garages, shoveling snow or doing good deeds).  There was plenty too about making things (motorized noise for your bike – a playing card and clothespin) and plenty to buy – knives, radio kits, bikes, boots, tents, seeds (another money making venture kit). I loved the optimism of these magazines and since my boyhood was not as positive as those who played in the pages of these publications, my book is more like a manual that really doesn't help anyone to anything.

The texts are coded in simple way and combined with images fill out the young boy's dream of making himself more real. You'll find a number of dogs, birds, letters, photographs and abstractions here (his death dream), along with a somewhat double image of many pieces like the pages above.

Contact me for information on this or my other books.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

A PERFECT FRIEND : PRINTS FOR SALE

A Perfect Friend, a series of 1930s surrealist-inspired collage works I produced in 2003, then turned into large format (76 x 56 cm) prints on fine Arches paper (edition: 3, although only a single print was produced at the time), are available at Janet Miller's Soma Gallery.

There are approximately 30 prints remaining from the prints made at the University of Nebraska Omaha, under the guidance of master printer Garry Day.

Each print is packaged with a foam core back and plastic protection wrap, ready to frame. You can order them direct from Janet Miller; many of these prints are viewable on my main web site.

Price per print: $500.

These print works have been exhibited in Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, New York, Washington D.C.  A complete book of all A Perfect Friend prints should be out soon.

Monday, November 22, 2010

ART SALES: NEW WORKS (WHERE DOES IT ITCH?)

Recently launched, Art Works, offers a range of new works, older works, artist proofs, stamp sheets, and terribly unusual objects for sale.

New: More than 120 collage works on paper from the series Where Does It Itch?

Each piece is 125 € and includes postage anywhere in the world.

Visit the site, click here.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

(Hanging) Toy Art : MUBE Brazil






































My entry for this Toy Art project at MUBE in São Paulo, Brazil was not to play with it but to hang it, darn it. 

He looks like Felix the Cat and Felix is in a fix he can't get out of...today.

Background is my Flutterbys collage, 2010. The Exhibition opens in Feburary, 2010 and is curated by Angela Ferrara.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Chez Gisèle

Simone de Beauvoir, 1952. Photo by Gisèle Freund

Gisèle Freund (1912-2000), the famed German-born French photographer lived above me for many years in Paris.

Freund photographed James Joyce at Sylvia Beach's bookstore (now Shakespeare & Company), just after the publication of Ulysses, spending a day with the author. She subsequently photographed the Parisian surrealists and literary lights of the 1930s and early 1940s.  She fled France when the Nazis invaded and headed to South America, Central America and Mexico where she met the leading writers and artists of that time including Jorge Luis Borges, José Clement Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueros and Diego Rivera among many others.

Her life is told in the photographs she made, and she made thousands of them, essentially documenting 20th century modernism and its leading lights. 

When she passed away in Paris in March 2000, many of her objects were put out on the street, among them the name cards for the slides she shot.  Around the same time the door buzzer to our building was changed and I acquired the old one, reinserting some of the subjects Freund photographed Assemblage constructed out of the former door buzzer of my apartment house in Paris. Click on the work, Chez Gisèle to see who lives on the 5th floor.

This work (Chez Gisèle) is available for purchase.  Contact for info.

Friday, November 5, 2010

YOU → ME At Yep & Youp Gallery Paris

A certain number of my YOU–>ME silkscreen prints are now available at Yep & Youp Gallery, 57 Rue Daguerre 75014 Paris.  The edition is limited to 100 with about 20 artist proofs.

Yep & Youp Gallery is a small boutique catering to children with hand made toys and furnishings.  It's a great little place, just south of Montparnasse.

The print is available from Yep & Youp for 100 euros. Click on the images to enlarge.

Also available from Keep Calm Gallery.


Thursday, November 4, 2010

Amelia's Magazine : Interview

Interview by Kat Phan Amelia's Magazine (UK) on Scared But Fresh, A Book About Death and Spelling With Scissors: Amelia's Magazine.

Excerpt: Matthew’s most recent project, Scared But Fresh, is a dislocated love story exploring the sense and non-sense, which I was lucky enough to catch at Orange Dot Gallery, a lovely new exhibition space in the heart of Bloomsbury. By his own admission, Matthew is interested in ‘creating works to see them for himself’ but as a by-product of his imagination, his mesmerising creations prompt the viewer to garner thoughts of their own. ...
 
How old were you when you realised you wanted to be an artist?
I couldn’t have been more than six years old when my mother and aunt dragged me to The Brooklyn Museum to see Van Gogh. The lines went around the block and I couldn’t understand what the fuss was about; I was hungry, my feet hurt and being small, I was suffocating in this cloud of wool coats. Once inside the galleries, however, I caught my first glimpse of what has proven to be a very nourishing world… I stayed close to my mother and aunt for about 10 minutes but soon enough got lost (purposely) and quietly pushed my way through the crowds to get up close to Van Gogh’s brilliant colors, these vibrating landscapes – in particular, the painting he produced in the Arlesian sun, Almond Branches in Bloom (1890). It turned out to be one of the pieces he produced the year he died of a self-inflicted gun shot wound. I never forgot the color and intelligence behind this painting, and I slowly began to look for this “art experience” on my own.
 


READ MORE, CLICK HERE.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Paintings: Silkscreen Edition Text Works

Recently, my silkscreen edition Paintings, sold at auction. The series from 1999, is an edition of 13 with three artist proof sets. Ink on Paper. Sheet measuring 30" by 22 1/2".

The series is comprised of enlarged museum post card legends (captions) and include "works" by Rembrandt, Munch, Giotto, Morandi, Vermeer and other masters. 

These works stem from an ongoing interest in "word as image," and the texts in various languages intimate a range of meanings (images) to differing language speakers.  The "names" of these paintings, translated by someone, presumably in a large museum or indeed, in a post card (printing) facility, are rife with typographical errors, and grammatical mistakes. The translations themselves are quite a bit off, due, one can assume, to the "unofficial" nature of the translations and the business approach to pumping out product...for museum goers.

The pieces – silkscreen on fine art paper - also tell the story of a kind of image removal, as the original texts lifted from post card captions, enlarged several times on common photocopiers, then turned into a positive (black) film, then transferred to screen, and finally printed tell a story of how texts (and images) are subtly transformed through printing.

This series is permanently installed in the Boca Raton Museum of Fine Art, Boca Raton, Florida.

Click on the essay (right) by Chris Mooney to enlarge and read.

There are several sets still available.  (There is one framed set in Paris; the others are unframed). Price: 3500 euros (7 prints) unframed.

Contact me if you are interested in purchasing a set.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Thursday, October 28, 2010

SCARED BUT FRESH LAST DAYS



Scared But Fresh runs through October 30 at The Orange Dot Gallery in London. More than 50 collage works on canvas, board and paper, plus terribly unusual objects and the series America, 12 works on paper that pretty much sum up the American story.

The gallery is open all day Saturday, October 30.  Address: 54 Tavistock Place, London.  Tube: Russell Square.

Some press links from the exhibition:

IDOL MAGAZINE.
JOTTA MAGAZINE.
LIVING PROOF MAGAZINE.
CURATED MAGAZINE.

Photos: Japanese art lovers take a seat under the YOU–>ME silkscreen print.  The print is available for £100, unframed.