BOOK OF ROCKS, FLOWERS AND BIRDS, COUNTER CARTOGRAPHIES &
PRECIOUS HORSHES: Mixed Media Group Exhibition + Video by David Webber
Through Nov. 7
The Front, 4100 St. Claude Ave., 920-3980; www.nolafront.org
Inside Art New Orleans Inside Art New Orleans Inside Art New Orleans
For his fervent private collectors, James Turrell's celestial skyspaces are an exercise in blind faith. He regards them as test runs for his life's work in the Arizona desert. Somehow, everyone's happy. With his long white beard and measured manner of speech, he cultivates the image of a cosmic cowboy. It’s an effective tool in his campaign to seduce patrons and collectors into what he describes as “another kind of seeing,” and serve his higher calling: the Roden Crater Project... More
by Brianna Smyk
In 2007, Banksy focused his social commentary on New Orleans, when he painted a series of street art pieces around the city. These pieces marked the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and attempted to refocus national awareness on New Orleans. Now, four years later, some of the pieces have been painted over, while plexiglass coverings protect others. These plexiglass coverings broach a discussion about the ephemeral nature of street art. It originally is created to be temporary, but in the wake of its increasing popularity (due to its high selling prices in auction houses and galleries, as well as its inclusion in recent museum exhibitions), people are finding better ways to preserve street art. But that is a conversation for you to have during your own tour. More>>
The texts and images on the back of Tibetan art objects reveal clues to their meaning, function, and historical context. Here both sides of a select group of paintings, sculptures, and initiation cards will be explored in detail. Chosen for their beauty, content and the complexity of their backs, these works of art dating from the 13th to the 19th century illuminate the many uses of the other side in Tibetan culture. More>>
subjects. More recently, he reduced his palate to black, white and gray in works like EVOKING THE ORISHAS, left, which conveys the incantatory rhythms of a voodoo ritual. In art as in life, Willie Birch is a populist who celebrates the transcendent spirit of even his most prosaic subjects.
BACK BAY BILOXI, where staccato forms convey the primal rhythms of places where nature is strong and the natives are necessarily tough and resilient. ~Bookhardt
Listen to Sister Gertrude Morgan on NPR: More>>
This large exhibition of objects and photographs from Tulane University's George Pepper Native American Archive—available for public viewing for the first time since 1926—came about almost accidentally. Stored for decades in Tulane’s Dinwiddie Hall, it was available only to researchers, which is how Cristin Nunez, a graduate student at the time, came upon it while researching her thesis. Serendipitously, she was also interning with NOMA Curator Paul Tarver and, long story short, one thing led to another. While these 150 Pueblo and Navajo artifacts are mostly what one might expect in a Southwest Indian collection, they are enhanced by the effective use of 140 photographs, some taken by ethnologist George Pepper and his associates, depicting the natives of what was still a remote and exotic land when they were active there a century ago. When the camera was turned on them, it revealed motley characters not unlike Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones, below. But the most dramatic are the hand-tinted magic lantern slides taken by the contemporaneous itinerant bicycle-riding photographer, Sumner Matteson. Rendered as large prints of ceremonies like the Hopi Rain Dance with live rattlesnakes, and portraits such as his HOPI MAIDEN, above, they really bring the show to life and underscore its otherworldly mystique.
Pepper also produced tinted lantern slides, the 19th century’s version of digital images, but even his photo of a Hopi snake priest with his quarry provides a more detached, documentary perspective. The snake ceremony itself featured painted warriors with serpents and ritual devices as we see in Matteson’s SNAKE PRIESTS TWIRLING BULL ROARERS, above left, and it is his photographs that provide the more complete picture of Hopi and Pueblo Indian life, and their close relationship with the mesas
where they built their settlements. Pepper did pioneering work among the Navajo, and his portraits of them offer much insight into what is really a very different culture, while providing counterpoint to the mysterious Hopi who, then as now, tended to steal the show. ~Bookhardt