BALSE NEWSLETTER 043

 

curation that is life

choice that is in your hands

or is it so?

all an illusion?

時が震える

月が消えてく

time wavers, and moon disappear









Two weeks, at Balse.

Getting closer to people, you have to, in a way immerse yourself, trust, vulnerability, authenticity - Boogie , in black & white, direct emotional connection.

Create your own

When forgotten Paris techno texture, reminds you, forever, profoundly moving.


A.L.I.S.O.N, VIQ & Krosia - Trifecta



brush marks, vibrancy, interaction. figures, multiple figures. no rules, repurposed. composed, staged, extraction, familiarity. placed. not portrtaits of poeple, human body, essence. anatomy.


\

endurance, resilience

/

as birds chirp,

sense of time. purpose, unanticipated.

no body was there to harvest them.

puzzle

sculpture

fragility

continuing to think non-places, because reality is not enough. The reverse. The territory of imagination. More than ever.

listen Jancen


]][[You Make Me]][[


till next time.

Charles A. Balse

 

 
 

Words of Wisdom

 


Where, until relatively recently, these aspects of art history were viewed as stable factors, it is now increasingly likely to be stressed that this is not correct at all. An artist's thinking evolves, and it is safe to assume that even Rembrandt and Poussin had days when they achieved very little. People are fallible, after all. Furthermore, a work of art is a record of its history: paint discolours, restoration alters the physical condition. It was discovered only recently, for example, that the Ghent Altarpiece, one of the most innovative paintings in Western art, had as much as 50-70% of its surface overpainted in the sixteenth century. For hundreds of years, countless thousands of people had been admiring the handiwork of a sixteenth-century master with a little Van Eyck thrown in for good measure. The perception of an image is not a stable factor either: everyone brings their personal baggage with them and looks at things with their own specific pattern of expectations. The period eye', as the renowned art historian Michael Baxandall called it, simply cannot be reconstructed in its entirety. In response, a third viewpoint was added to the traditional pairing of iconography and iconology, namely that of semiotics. Through cross-fertilisation with linguistics and the social sciences, which had analysed communication models for much longer, the understanding has grown that meaning is not only provided by the sender (the artist) of a message (the artwork), but that the recipient (the viewer of the artwork) adds meaning too. The brain invariably makes associations and these are similar for everyone but also distinctly individual. When two Europeans see an image of Christ, a non-believer will respond to it emotionally and cognitively in a very different way to a devout Catholic. A strict Protestant with an aversion to idolatry' will view it in another way again.


The challenge when seeking a good understanding of style and iconography (or of form and content) is to grasp the interaction between the two and its constant instability. Why do we see what we see and why do we interpret it the way we do? The way people respond to an image is highly sensitive to shifts and sudden ruptures in context. A photograph of the twin towers of the World Trade Center had an entirely different significance for New Yorkers (and not only them) the day before 11 September 2001 (9/11) than it did the day after. Art historians have not always taken account of this phenomenon.


A New history of western art Page 362



At the heart of the anorexia of artistic avoidance is the denial of process. We like to focus on having learned a skill or on having made an artwork. This attention to final form ignores the fact that creativity lies not in the done but in doing. "I am writing a screenplay" is infinitely more interesting to the soul than "I have written a screenplay," which pleases the ego. "I am in an acting class" is infinitely more interesting than "I took an acting class a few years ago.  In a sense, no creative act is ever finished. You can't learn to act because there is always more to learn. Arguably, you cannot even direct a film because you will always be redirecting it, even years later. You will know then what you might have done and what you will do next if you keep working.

This doesn't mean that the work accomplished is worthless. Far from it. It simply means that doing the work points the way to new and better work to be done. Focused on process, our creative life retains a sense of ac-venture. Focused on product, the same creative life can feel foolish or barren. We inherit the obsession with product and the idea that art produces finished product from our consumer-oriented society. This focus creates a great deal of creative block. We, as working artists, may want to explore a new artistic area, but we don't see where it will get us. We wonder if it will be good for our career. Fixated on the need to have something to show for our labors, we often deny our curiosities. Every time we do this, we are blocked.



The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron page 139




Martine Syms Total

Lafayette Anticipations – Fondation Galeries Lafayette, Paris

Exhibition from 16 Oct 2024 to 09 Feb 2025

Report by Emma de Felice







Main Studies

 
 

APPENDIX:


INZO, Mersiv - Digital Night Drive

Röyksopp - Dandelion Pleasantries - Nebulous Nights


INZO - Overthinker (Unofficial 4K Laser Show)



Todd Terje - Ragysh ( Douce Roller Disco Remix )


The Orb - Ripples


PREMIERE:. Ricardo Baez - My Thursday Night [Live at Robert Johnson]


Mach Loop Brother Nebula


Alan Abrahams - Terminus (Preview)


Terminus Alan Abrahams

  • Away from being, our soul



Try Alan Abrahams

  • Move on, let’s try



Oklou - blade bird | NTS Session


  • Getting hurt


Altinbas - Venus Ballroom


Discovery Zone - QW4NTOHMW3B (Official Video)


Altinbas - Psychosphere [TOKEN131]


EVERYTHING NEW - Carly Gibert


Nokia Angel - Stay Cold


NOTION - TEMPORARY FRIENDS (feat. Charlotte Plank) (Official Music Video)


Mdou Moctar - à la brousse !

  • Electric guitar, desert music, peace and happiness


Jade City Dub Phizix - drum n’ bass


Crimson dubphizix - drum n’ bass


More Than That dubphizix - drum n’ bass


Cloth – Golden 

  • Somewhere, someone


Felt (rEDOLENT Remix) - Cloth - Felt (rEDOLENT Remix)


VIQ - nothing is real


VIQ - ghost VIQ


frvrhollow - how do you let go


Billie Toppy (live) Men I Trust


Glazyhaze - Nirvana (Official Video)


A.L.I.S.O.N, VIQ & Krosia - Trifecta [Full Album]


Your Space Reflects Who You Are.

  • Create your own


The Street Photographer Who Finds Beauty Where No One Looks!


The Forgotten Techno Sound of Paris


Breakages and Distortion: George Rouy and Ben Luke in Conversation


Imre Van Opstal and the Batsheva Dance Company explore human resilience through dance


In Kyiv, Ukrainian photographer Vic Bákin lenses youth and queer subcultures, and the scars of war


ユリイカ from NF OFFLINE


Fred again.. & SOAK - just stand there (15th August 2024)


MARC AUGE'S NON PLACES mindflowers


Reality Is Not Enough


Sascha Funke - Blaupunkt - Kompakt


Jancen - Dub Dissonance [FIGUREX47]


Jancen - F Track [FIGUREX47] Acidalia


Jancen - Maze Chase [FIGUREX47] Acidalia


You Make Me feat. Ashar Khan


The Street Photographer Documenting Life’s Other Side.




 



ClassicAsobi recommends

This section features content recommended from the NYC based ClassicAsobi and his team, specializing in classical music.



ekmeles: Stockhausen's Stimmung

Hagen Quartet's last session in New York

Frei aber froh, Marlboro Musicians at Weill Recital Hall

Scandinavian Trouvères, Concerto Copenhagen and Lars Ulrik Mortensen's DNA








 

 

COMING UP



Moonbliss Riverdream -
Kim DeJesus

January 25 to March 8, 2025
Vielmetter Los Angeles

Charlie Engelman

Pith
February 18 - March 29
Chateau Shatto, Los Angeles

Mark Yang - Space, Cryptic Aperture

Feb 18 - March 22
VSF, Los Angeles

Frieze Los Angeles

20 – 23 February 2025

Santa Monica Airport

Atmosphere of Sound: Sonic Art in Times of Climate Disruption

September 14, 2025 - May 31, 2025

UCLA Art|Sci Center presented at CAP UCLA

PST ART: Art & Science Collide

GETTY CENTER, LA

A landmark regional event that explores the intersections of art and science, both past and present

Kelly Akashi

Los Angeles, 31 January – 29 March 2025

Lisson Gallery, Los Angeles

Tau Lewis: Spirit Level

February 13—March 29, 2025
David Zwirner, Los Angeles

Lisa Yuskavage

February 18—April 12, 2025
David Zwirner, Los Angeles

Kyle Dunn: Devil in the Daytime

February 8 - March 29, 2025

Gallery II

Nate Lewis

February 8 — March 29, 2025

Gallery III

VIELMETTER, Los Angeles

Bruce Nauman

Pasadena Years

19 February - 26 April 2025
Marian Goodman, LA

Toba Khedoori at Gemini G.E.L.

February 22 - May 2, 2025

George Rouy

The Bleed, Part II

8 February – 1 June 2025

Hauser & Wirth - Downtown Los Angeles

Georgia Gardner Gray
CHRYSALIS

March 1 – 29, 2025
Regen Projects

Our Voices, Our Getty: Reflecting on Manuscripts
Exploring the Alps

Feb 4–Apr 27, 2025

Getty Center

Nina Chanel Abney: Winging It

Nina Chanel Abney: Winging ItFebruary 15–April 26, 2025

Jeffrey Deitch, 925 N. Orange Drive, Los Angeles

Alta / a Human Atlas of a City of Angels

January 13, 2025- Apr 27, 2025

Library Foundation of Los Angeles and Los Angeles Public Library

630 West 5th Street, Los Angeles

Out of the Ordinary: Uncommon Materials, Marks, and Matrices

Dec 21, 2024 – Apr 6, 2025

Hammer

Ritual Expressions: African Adornment from the Permanent Collection

Feb 23–Jul 6, 2025
LACMA

Imagining Black Diasporas: 21st-Century Art and Poetics

Dec 15, 2024–Aug 3, 2025

LACMA, Los Angeles