Megan and Murray McMillan
are artists in Boston/Providence.

Portfolio
ArtNews
YouTube
Flickr
MySpace
About
Email


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.


All images by Megan or Murray McMillan unless otherwise noted.

Lauren Bon at Ace

Bon1
Lauren Bon, Bees and Meat, 2007

Bon2
Lauren Bon, Bees and Meat, 2007

Bon3
Lauren Bon, Bees and Meat, 2007

Bon4
Lauren Bon, Bees and Meat, 2007

Bon5
Lauren Bon, Bees and Meat, 2007

On view through March 2008 at Ace Gallery in Los Angeles, Lauren Bon's Bees and Meat should not be missed. Lauren Bon is the artist behind Not a Cornfield, a large installation of an actual cornfield in downtown LA. Bees and Meat is her first body of new work since Cornfield. We got a chance to hear Lauren Bon speak and love her playful (and at times spooky) pursuits.

Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA

Burden1
Urban Light, 2005, Chris Burden

Koons1
Tulips, 1995-2004, Jeff Koons

Ray1
Firetruck, 1993, Charles Ray

The L.A. County Museum of Art used to be a hard nut to crack: a huge complex of windowless concrete where the front entrance was never clearly defined and the hodgepodge of its various buildings had no clear order. Although I've been to the museum countless times, I never once have had the sense that I'd gotten a comprehensive overview of everything that's there.

Now that the new Broad Contemporary Art Museum is open on LACMA's sprawling campus (is it considered part of LACMA itself? I'm unclear on that), I was curious to see how the Renzo Piano building full of Eli Broad's consistently cheerful and LA-centric loaner collection might change the experience of the museum as a whole. And, well, now it's definitely clear what is considered the main entrance. Chris Burden's light-posts, Charles Ray's great riff on the old Ruscha's LACMA-is-burning gag, and the first of the many, many Koons pieces that dominate Broad's collection surround a portico with the ticket counter that is now sandwiched between the old museum and the new.

As far as the rest of LACMA goes, I'm concerned that it will be a challenge to get patrons back over to the main campus now that a firetruck and shiny tulips point the way to Piano's gigantic escalator to the third floor of Broad's flashy storage house.

And it is most definitely Mr. Broad's museum: each floor is stamped with a gaudy glass plaque near the elevator featuring a stock photo of the Mr. and Mrs. and a carefully worded explanation of the tenuous state of the collections' ownership. Reading between the lines, even with no background information (like one person in our party), it is easy to parse out the institutional tug-of-war between Broad and the museums of Los Angeles in that paragraph of text.

There are some odd features of this museum: it's a top-down affair, with the escalator ferrying patrons to the third floor and straight into an altar to Jeff Koons. The over-sized elevator, which descends through Barbara Kruger text, has a hastily added bar that cordons off the majority of the floor space, because it can't handle the weight if as many people as will fit in the elevator all pile in together. The first floor is poorly lit and just a couple of Serras, and by the time you've reached the bottom, it's about as anti-climatic as Richard Serra could possibly get.

But the collection, of course, is the art equivalent of walking through the pages of the Oscar issue of People magazine: it's an all-star extravaganza and everything is dressed up to its show-stopping best. Basketballs? Check. Michael Jackson and Chimp? Check. Silver Mozart? Cindy's circus? Hirst's butterflies? Check, check, check. It's all there, flooded in the natural sunlight that made California an artist's haven in the first place.

I guess I'd have to say in that somehow it all works: like some twisted strange starry-eyed soap-opera befitting Hollywood.

The Listening Array Invitation

Thelisteningarrayinvite
The Listening Array, 2008, Megan and Murray McMillan: a photo, video, and installation exhibition

Here's the image for the show invitation. We leave for LA on Feb 22 and when we get there, we'll build the installation that houses the video on site. There will be a public lecture on Wed, Feb 27 and the opening is on Thurs, Feb 28 at Whittier College.

This is the first time we'll have been back to LA since we moved out east, and it's going to be so great to see people, sunshine, trees that bloom. Here, now: it's snowing.

Prada Does It Again

Prada1_1

Prada2_1

Prada3

Prada4

Prada5

Prada6_2

I took a break from packing to check out the Waist Down exhibit at the Prada Epicenter on Rodeo Drive, and I'm so glad I did. The show consists of 100 vintage and new skirts by Miuccia Prada, with the exhibition designed by Amo, in the Rem Koolhaas designed store.

Skirts become organic objects vacuum-sealed in bags and hung on translucent walls; skirts animated in twirled motion and short kicks; skirts camouflaged into the material they sprang from; skirts sunk into pod-like recesses in the floor; skirts as bean bags; as flowers; as sea anemone; as ghosts; as relics; as specimens.

Prada excels at the seamless marriage of art and commerce, without compromising the integrity of either. It's hard not to be a fan of a company that mocks itself wittily in Marfa, Texas, while consistantly showcasing the very best designers and architects, not the least bit afraid of good design competing against the Prada collection. Last summer, I popped in the Prada store in NYC to see the 2x4 designed interior. A few weeks later, I saw the exact same work in an exhibition at SFMOMA. That's Prada for you.

Waist Down is on view at the Prada Epicenter on Rodeo Drive through Aug. 27.

Open Studio this Saturday

We're having an open studio this Saturday. Email us for sales info or directions. Here is a sample of some of the works available:

1
1, wood model with crate

2
2, wood model with crate

3
3, wood model

4
4, framed print

5
5, print

6
6, print

7
7, print

8
8, print

9
9, print

10
10, print

11
11, framed print

12
12, framed print

13
13, framed print

14
14, print

15
15, print

16
16, print

17
17, framed and unframed print

18
18, framed and unframed print

19
19, print

20
20, framed print

21
21, framed print

22
22, print

23
23, print

24
24, framed print

25
25, print

26
26, cyanotype

Robert Rauschenberg at MOCA

Robert
Robert Rauschenberg, Museum Installation View, 2006 [source]


Yes.


Jesper Just at Hammer

Just1
Jesper Just, No Man is an Island, Still from DVD, 2004 [source]

Just2
Jesper Just, Bliss & Heaven, Still from DVD, 2004 [source]

Jesper Just's video exhibition is another current must-see show at UCLA's Armand Hammer Museum. It is currently showing next to the Elliot Hundley sculpture exhibit, creating a two fisted attack that will leave you on the floor. Just's works are highly polished, yet maintain a poetic sensibility through singing [!] and tightly restrained choreography, that will float you. This is video art you won't mind sitting through.

Elliott Hundley at Hammer

Elliot_hundley_hyacinth1
Elliot Hundley, Hyacinth, 2006 [source]

Elliot_hundley_hyacinth2
Elliot Hundley, Hyacinth detail, 2006 [source]

One of the best sculpture shows I've seen this year, Elliott Hundley's delicate works at Hammer's Vault Gallery are magical. This is a show not to miss--oh: and Hammer's Societe Anonyme: Modernism in America is good too, but the destination is the Vault and Jesper Just's inspiring video works next door, which we'll write about tomorrow.

Conceptual Americana

Johns19584201
Jasper Johns, Three Flags, 1958 [source].

The thing about Jasper Johns's flag images is that they are so conceptually acute that they swing right back around the curve and into the mainstream just as easy as American pie.

Image437

I can't help but think that Johns would be pleased to find his Three Flags behind the counter at a Dennys.

The Black Rider: through June 11, Ahmanson Theatre

Rider

The fact that it's a collaboration between Tom Waits, Robert Wilson and William S. Burroughs is reason enough to see The Black Rider, playing at the Ahmanson Theatre through June 11.

The music is vintage, undeniably good, Waits; the writing is bizarre Burroughs at his best, and Robert Wilson, as regular readers might remember, is one of our favorite performance artists. My only slight hesitation in recommending this work is the datedness of the visuals and lighting. It's a revival from 1990, and it shows. If you approach the work from a historical perspective, though, rather than as seeing it as cutting edge theater, you won't be disappointed.

During intermission we overheard someone ask, "is this what you'd call avant-garde theater?"

No, madam, it is veritable convention these days. But don't let that spoil it for you: just like you won't go to the upcoming Rauchenberg retrospective to see the direction contemporary art is going (except in a potentially influential revival sort of way), don't go to The Black Rider to see where theater is going, but to see the path that led us to where it is now.

Click here for videos and MP3s from The Black Rider.