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    Timothy Morton blogs Ajay Kurian’s exhibition, opening July 16

    Timothy Morton blogs Ajay Kurian’s exhibition, opening July 16

     
  2. Daniel Gordon, “Revolving Portrait” now on Triple Canopy

    Daniel Gordon, “Revolving Portrait” now on Triple Canopy

     
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  4. Callicoon Fine Arts at the Dallas Art Fair, April 7 to 10 with works by Ben Berlow, Nicholas Buffon, Glen Fogel, Daniel Gordon, Carol Hepper, Benjamin Kress, Ajay Kurian, Dave Miko and Simone Shubuck.

     
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    Glen Fogel, “With Me… You” reviewed in Artforum April 2011 issue. Click image to enlarge.

    Glen Fogel, “With Me… You” reviewed in Artforum April 2011 issue. Click image to enlarge.

     
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    ArtReview, Issue 49, April 2011. Participant Inc, New York 23 January – 27 FebruaryBy David Everitt HoweGlen Fogel has proved particularly adept at interpolating personal narrative into the messy politics of media culture. For his 2009 installation Art from Kansas City, he appropriated male escort Mike Jones’s memoir of his relationship with evangelical icon Ted Haggard. Blacking out the majority of the text, Fogel inserted his name in lieu of the author’s, and left uncensored sentences containing the word ‘Art’ – Haggard’s pseudonym – turning it into a tidy, efficient pun parodying an artist’s inherently compromised political position. Such slippages of the self took another turn with Glen from Colorado (2009). Featuring the name ‘Glen’ spelled out Dan Flavin-like in bare white fluorescent lights, the work pulsed as text-to-speech software read out, in an alien computer voice, the contents of personal letters written to Fogel. Similar convolutions return with his first solo exhibition in New York, With Me… You, at Participant Inc, where the artist’s private correspondence makes another notable appearance. Written to him variously by friends and more-than-friends, the intimate letters are blown up as very large trompe l’oeil paintings, as if they were literally smoothed out… wrinkles, red stains and all. They read like a soap opera script, or perhaps something scribbled by hand in high school.From Jamie, August 20 (2010) exclaims, ‘Glen Fogel, what magic and enchantment that name is to me’. While from a slightly different angle, From Jess, September 30, 1994 (2010) reads, ‘You were just a heartless, selfish, immature wannabe’. And as if in some sort of awkward adolescent three-way, each letter’s author refers to the others by name. Or at least, some kind of name; in another nice trick, Fogel supplants real names with fake doubles, to protect identities. Propriety is again obfuscated by its cliquey, coded other. Delightful as these are to read, though, the letters gain little when roped into a painterly discourse – unless, in their almost Duchampian absurdity, they’re meant to challenge that dusty myth of the artist-as-genius. Perhaps more nuanced, and less self-conscious, is Fogel’s spectacular five-channel video installation With Me… You (2011), which features five slowly rotating wedding rings projected side-by-side. Nearly as tall as the ceiling and occupying almost all the wall space, the work’s epic scale is both stunning and a bit frightening. Evoking the Home Shopping Network’s rotating ring displays, the objects are washed now and then in pleasing monochromatic tones. Glistening as they turn, the rings shine in that familiar TV way: exaggerated, with hyperreal twinkles. Though they look brand new, they all come from Fogel’s immediate family members: he spent several months gathering them from his sisters, mother and grandmother. Belonging to a sort of irreplaceable family history, value is thus displaced from something priced to something defiantly priceless. Nearly interchangeable as objects, the rings hover, like much of his work, between proper names – that is, between sign and symbol, object and metaphor – never fully possessed. 

    ArtReview, Issue 49, April 2011. 
    Participant Inc, New York 
    23 January – 27 February

    By David Everitt Howe

    Glen Fogel has proved particularly adept at interpolating personal narrative into the messy politics of media culture. For his 2009 installation Art from Kansas City, he appropriated male escort Mike Jones’s memoir of his relationship with evangelical icon Ted Haggard. Blacking out the majority of the text, Fogel inserted his name in lieu of the author’s, and left uncensored sentences containing the word ‘Art’ – Haggard’s pseudonym – turning it into a tidy, efficient pun parodying an artist’s inherently compromised political position. Such slippages of the self took another turn with Glen from Colorado (2009). Featuring the name ‘Glen’ spelled out Dan Flavin-like in bare white fluorescent lights, the work pulsed as text-to-speech software read out, in an alien computer voice, the contents of personal letters written to Fogel. 

    Similar convolutions return with his first solo exhibition in New York, With Me… You, at Participant Inc, where the artist’s private correspondence makes another notable appearance. Written to him variously by friends and more-than-friends, the intimate letters are blown up as very large trompe l’oeil paintings, as if they were literally smoothed out… wrinkles, red stains and all. They read like a soap opera script, or perhaps something scribbled by hand in high school.From Jamie, August 20 (2010) exclaims, ‘Glen Fogel, what magic and enchantment that name is to me’. While from a slightly different angle, From Jess, September 30, 1994 (2010) reads, ‘You were just a heartless, selfish, immature wannabe’. And as if in some sort of awkward adolescent three-way, each letter’s author refers to the others by name. Or at least, some kind of name; in another nice trick, Fogel supplants real names with fake doubles, to protect identities. Propriety is again obfuscated by its cliquey, coded other. Delightful as these are to read, though, the letters gain little when roped into a painterly discourse – unless, in their almost Duchampian absurdity, they’re meant to challenge that dusty myth of the artist-as-genius. 

    Perhaps more nuanced, and less self-conscious, is Fogel’s spectacular five-channel video installation With Me… You (2011), which features five slowly rotating wedding rings projected side-by-side. Nearly as tall as the ceiling and occupying almost all the wall space, the work’s epic scale is both stunning and a bit frightening. Evoking the Home Shopping Network’s rotating ring displays, the objects are washed now and then in pleasing monochromatic tones. Glistening as they turn, the rings shine in that familiar TV way: exaggerated, with hyperreal twinkles. Though they look brand new, they all come from Fogel’s immediate family members: he spent several months gathering them from his sisters, mother and grandmother. Belonging to a sort of irreplaceable family history, value is thus displaced from something priced to something defiantly priceless. Nearly interchangeable as objects, the rings hover, like much of his work, between proper names – that is, between sign and symbol, object and metaphor – never fully possessed. 

     
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    Photo by Etienne Frossard; courtesy Moving Image Art Fair, New York
LINK to story on artinfo.com

    Photo by Etienne Frossard; courtesy Moving Image Art Fair, New York

    LINK to story on artinfo.com

     
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    Glen Fogel, “With Me … You” reviewed in today’s the New York Times by Holland Cotter.

    Glen Fogel, “With Me … You” reviewed in today’s the New York Times by Holland Cotter.

     
  9. Glen Fogel’s “With Me … You” (single channel), is currently playing at YAMA, a 6 x 9 meter screen that sits atop the Marmara Pera Hotel in Istanbul, Turkey

    Glen Fogel’s “With Me … You” (single channel), is currently playing at YAMA, a 6 x 9 meter screen that sits atop the Marmara Pera Hotel in Istanbul, Turkey

     
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    Glen Fogel, “With Me …  You”, reviewed in The New Yorker. Up at Participant Inc, 253 East Houston Street, until February 27

    Glen Fogel, “With Me …  You”, reviewed in The New Yorker. Up at Participant Inc, 253 East Houston Street, until February 27

     
  11. Glen Fogel, “With Me … You”, reviewed by Lumi Tan, Kaleidoscope Blog! Click to read and view installation photos

    Glen Fogel, “With Me … You”, reviewed by Lumi Tan, Kaleidoscope Blog! Click to read and view installation photos

     
  12. Glen Fogel’s “With Me … You” at Participant Inc Hot Pick in Time Out New York

    Glen Fogel’s “With Me … You” at Participant Inc Hot Pick in Time Out New York

     
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    Dave Miko  & Tom Thayer, “New World Pig” at the Kitchen reviewed in The New Yorker.

    Dave Miko  & Tom Thayer, “New World Pig” at the Kitchen reviewed in The New Yorker.

     
  14. Dave Miko / Tom Thayer collaboration, “New World Pig” currently at The Kitchen reviewed by Ben Davis on artinfo.com

    Photos by David Allison, courtesy the Kitchen

     
  15. Glen Fogel’s “With Me … You” selected by Doug McClemont among his top 10 New York shows.

    Glen Fogel, With Me…You at Participant Inc.
    Through February 27th
    www.participantinc.org

    Fogel, who often works with text on video, is a brilliant alchemist of life’s wishes and setbacks. His current exhibition consists of a new five-channel video installation and large-scale paintings of letters written to the artist. The wedding rings of family members are subjects of this singular show. Link to the full story on Saatchi Online Magazine