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dayton is not in ohio » Family

Readymade Artist

“Look papa, it’s Duchamp’s fountain!”

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Fountain, Marcel Duchamp, 1917. Duchamp signed the work with the pseudonym R. Mutt.

These were the words of Anna, my 3 1/2 year-old, as we entered a men’s restroom at McDonald’s today. She’d learned about Duchamp’s famous work in a children’s book, which I had then shown her in one of my art history texts. It’s a joy to have a kid who identifies famous modernist artworks, openly (and mistakenly) attributes all Baroque orchestral music to Bach, and distinguishes between ballet, modern, and jazz dance.

Slowing to a halt…

My excuse for not blogging much recently? Frankly? There’s not much to write about… I’m recharging, regarding art, so that just means letting things happen. I have no job, and the most work I have to do is pick up the rest of my stuff from my studio at school. That can leave one in a melancholy mood, to say the least. Here are a few quick news items:

1) Karen had auditioned in the early spring with Hubbard Street Dance Company, and last week they informed her that they want her in the company. If you’re not informed about dance, then you can have no idea how huge this news is, so I’ll forgo all of the pro sports and astronaut analogies. Here’s an excerpt from the website:

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, under the dynamic leadership of Artistic Director Jim Vincent, is celebrating 30 years as one of the most renowned dance institutions in the world, performing annually for more than 100,000 people. Critically acclaimed for its exuberant, athletic and innovative repertoire, the company features dancers who display unparalleled versatility and virtuosity in performances that inspire, challenge and engage audiences worldwide.

Aww, yeah… That’s my lady!

2) I’m still waiting to hear back about the teaching position I interviewed for. The interview was enjoyable, and I really love the school, but it’s out of my hands now.

Rundown

– Thanks, to those who have left kind comments on my previous post about my thesis installation! All is well, and my thesis defense/final critique went well. I was given plenty to process by the crit, nothing overly bad (I know some folks that had nightmare crits). I wasn’t showered with sunshiny praise, or attacked — just constructive criticism and feedback, which is helpful. A few folks asked about the title, which is Seasons Such as These, taken from a famous monologue, and favorite of mine, in Shakespeare’s King Lear.

The thrust and motivation for the piece was driven by the original installation of the tower, with surveillance cameras mounted on top to grant me a view of the outside world from my studio. My early critiques were focused on the cameras and the implications of surveillance. These were very good critiques and had me thinking of the nature of the tower’s being, and its read as an artwork, wrapped up in the structure’s function. There was little to no attention paid to the form itself. I, being interested in form and structure, was a bit dissatisfied with this. The solution to reinvigorating the tower formally was removing the tower’s function. By toppling the tower I hoped to push an engagement of the tower as an object, and also raise some questions related to being, and purpose. A long time ago (my sophomore year of college) I was part of a formal debate surrounding a paper that a friend wrote, arguing that a wristwatch which no longer told the time was not watch. I disagreed (still do), but it was that conversation that first got me interested in philosophy.

– I finished my final day as a Teaching Assistant yesterday. This was the end of my official career at the School of the Art Institute. All that I have to do, from this point on, is clean out my studio. It’s been very a good education. That might be it for my formal education, which makes me a little melancholy.

–I have applied for a teaching position here in Chicago, and I have an interview for that next week, so I’ll update the blog on that as I have news.

–In the “news of the strange,” I discovered that I was mentioned in an article in the Dayton Daily News of Dayton, Ohio, as a Dayton-Chicago Connection. Kinda funny. Now, do I put that in my vita?

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– I have a couple of friends in a drawing show in Philly at Jenny Jaskey Gallery. The Drawing Narrative opened last night. It was curated by Rob Matthews. Rubens Ghenov is one of the Church Studios artists, Rob and Rubens were in The Strange Place, and Jenny is a friend as well. Rubens is detonating. He just got into the grad painting and drawing program at the Rhode Island School of Design (ranked #1 in the latest US News grad rankings), and he had a pretty awesome video profile done for Studioscopic by David Kessler, a Philly-based artist and video producer. Studioscopic simply presents artists in their studios, talking about their work. Rubens gives a nice shout-out to the Church Studios. Thanks, bro’.

– Finally, I’m excited to be able to post a little bit of Karen dancing. Most friends know Karen dances, but very few have ever seen her do it. I think this is the first time that we have ever had any decently shot video of her doing what she does. Here she’s working with a small company here in Oak Park, performing the work of Ron deJesus:

Anna Castleman: New Paintings at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Here are a few images from Anna’s little exhibition at the Art Institute. Karen and I planned a little opening for her, and while none of her little friends were able to come, we had a nice time as a family. All of these painting were done on paper scavenged from a Felix Gonzalez Torres stacked paper work, and most were created using Crayola washable paints. On Mondays, when Anna is with me at the studio, I hang her a sheet of paper. She tells me which colors to dish out onto her plywood pallete and what brush she wants. I encourage her to experiment… some are done with her fingers and hands, and she’s done a couple with plastic bag covered feet and shoes. She often asks for music. Sometimes she is very active and aggressive, sometimes more methodical and cerebral. I just enjoy watching her go. Bottom line is Anna really enjoys painting and this has been a fun project to work on as father and daughter.

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Castlemans Storm Chicago, ABC Dominates Sweeps Week In Nation’s Third Largest TV Market.

In a recent post I mentioned that my parents were on an American Airlines plane whose engine caught fire and almost crashed. When they finally arrived in Chicago the news crews were waiting to interview passengers. Well the ABC affiliate in Chi-Town decided to do a little vignette on my folk’s reunion with their granddaughter.

Now, usually the excitement surrounding being ‘on the news’ amounts to a whopping 1.3 seconds of screen time, and turns the family gathering around the TV into an inevitably anti-climatic moment. There’s a pause for a moment, then someone says something nice about it, but no one says how really disappointing it can be to have minutes of interview time turned into a one word quip. Who’s to complain? It’s better than nothing. I had prepared myself for a flash of screen time for Anna and the folks…

And speaking of disappointingly brief exposure, if you look really closely, there’s a part where I’m on my cell phone and you can briefly see one half of a Rob Matthews drawing on the wall behind me…

Close To Home

My parents were coming to visit us in Chicago today. They were on this plane.

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I think they’re gonna drive.

News in General: School, Philly Artblog, Show in Jersey

First, about the show in New Jersey. I have a few tickets left for the opening of the fall-winter exhibitions at Grounds for Sculpture/International Sculpture Center, in Hamilton, NJ. This is close to Philly and Princeton. A nice trip for committed New Yorkers. I have one piece in a show of student work… I think it should be a good show. I know there is a Virginia Commonwealth University student in there and sculpture at VCU rawks pretty hard at sculpturing.

The opening is Saturday, October 6, 2 - 6pm. I have no idea what to do at a four-hour opening. I have no idea what to do at openings regardless. The opening is not public, so if you want to go you must have one of my invitations. If you want one, email me your address and I’ll send it out: mail (at) daytonc (dot) com… You also have to RSVP, and the ticket is good for you and a guest. It’s officially dubbed a “private cocktail reception” and I’m not positive what that means, but I think it entails free drinks, and guilt if you don’t tip the bartender. I know, because I went to something like this for Tim Hawkinson in L.A. It was fun, and I’m still guilty. Seriously, any of you that are given to leaving comments on my blog that know anything about this (Who’s had a museum opening? Ben? Rob?) please tell me what to wear, and where I can buy it.

School is great, but the Castlemans in Illinois are a very busy family. This is why I have neglected the blog.

Anna goes to preschool twice a week at our church. Karen teaches college and other stuff. I go to grad school. Anna’s actually in grad school as well, and currently working on a series of acrylic paintings on paper pilfered daily from, you guessed it, Felix Gonzalez Torres. They’re really fantastic and she’s already gotten an offer for a trade. I’m ‘corking’ baseball bats with steel and Vaseline and crushed fluorescent (ha! I spelled that right the first try!) bulbs and felt and other stuff… Nine bats total, completely indistinguishable except for their weight… labels with what they happen to be corked with and hanging on a custom made steel bat rack. Title: If you’re not cheating, you’re not trying.

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I just had the idea to wear a custom made “I made Richard Serra cry” T-shirt to the Jersey opening…

Finally, check out this video about Susan Hagen’s installation at Eastern State Pen on the Philly Artblog. Roberta and Libby mention my installation at Eastern State in passing. They crack me up. They also keep us ex-patriots in touch with what’s happening in the Ill-adelph. That last word was very Rubens-like. Wow.

Phillies lost 12 - 0 tonight.

66 degrees and clear in Chicago.

Sorry for no pictures.

Goodnight.

Presbyterian Disaster Relief Video

Here’s a great video about the work the Presbyterian Church (USA) has been doing in Louisiana and Mississippi after Katrina. That muscular, handsome guy about a minute into the video that shares my last name is the body double for my brother, Scott.

Karen’s New Job!

Today is the first day of Karen’s new job teaching at Loyola University! I’m just really proud of my honey!

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Karen warming up at the State Theatre of Melbourne, Australia.

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Karen doing the “bird” in front of the theatre in Melbourne. The crazy looking man above her is the Momix poster.

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Karen doing the bird near sunset along the Great Ocean Road in southern Australia.

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(This last one isn’t Karen… but this is what it looks like in performance…)

News in General

First of all, it’s finally warmed up a bit here in Chicago. By warm, I mean low 90s, which, by comparison to where I grew up (New Orleans), is like a nice late fall day. It’s really not hot at all, y’all. I think it’s appropriate to pay homage to Chicago summer weather to atone for my snide attacks this winter (1, 2). It has been, by far, the most comfortable summer of my life. Frankly, I think it makes the winters worth enduring.

Work is going well for me, although between my working and Karen dancing I have very little time to spend in the studio. I’m OK with this, actually. Summer has always been a slow time for me regarding production of work, but I tend to do a bit of the important reading and thinking that make fall and winter my most productive seasons. One very exciting part of my summer job has been learning to use some of the advanced fabrication equipment at the school. Had I not taken this job, I would have had to take a class to learn some of these things — and probably not as thoroughly. I actually conducted a CNC orientation yesterday. Here’s the machine we use. To know it well enough to teach it is very exciting. And I’m getting paid!

Karen is out of town right now, for a dance workshop in Houston. Karen’s folks are here while she’s gone. It’s a great exchange: they get to spend lots of time with Anna, and I get to retain my sanity. I can remember how difficult it was surviving without Karen while she was traveling with Momix, and I’m happy that Anna is spared being subjected to life as the daughter of a bachelor, if even for one week. She does like mac and cheese and “Ronald Donald,” but no healthy, growing kid deserves cuisine like that for an entire week. She already generally looks a bit like Ronald McDonald when I get her dressed. That is, like a clown. A final note on having help this week: I’m a pretty good craftsman, and I can build, or learn to build/fabricate most things while working pretty naturally with a variety of materials, but I think God created long, silky hair to keep folks like me very humble. I have NO idea how the women in this family install a hair clip so that it won’t fall out within five minutes. I’m in awe, and I’m grateful Grammy is around!

Sometimes I second-guess my frequent sports posts. (how’s that for a non sequitur…) I think that perhaps it’s not good to follow a sports team so closely. Professional sports really is a fantasy world. That’s why I can’t wait for college football season. Seriously, my main reservation about following sports is the time it takes up to listen, watch and to read about. If I spent all of that time reading good literature, exploring the library, and doing other kinds of research, I’d probably be better off as an artist. To tell you the truth, I just don’t know. Part of me wants to respond that this makes me more well-rounded, but that’s probably hogwash. I’m sure there are plenty of well-rounded people out there who become well rounded by learning to play the piano, not listening to ball games. The Romans had a phrase that I remember from high school latin, Panem et Circenses: Bread and Circuses. I remember it vaguely as referring to the means by which the Roman ruling authority was able to keep the citizens pacified. As long as you keep the people fed, and keep the people entertained, then you can do what you will. I think fed and distracted is even more accurate. The one thing an artist cannot afford to be for any long period of time, is distracted. I willingly distract myself far too frequently with infinite, meaningless rabbit trails (”reading the news”) on the internet, and keeping up with baseball, football, golf, auto racing, cycling, etc… I so willingly and easily distract myself with all of the distracting offerings that life in America affords. Panem et Circenses… gotta give that one some thought.

I’m currently reading Anne Rice’s Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt, on my brother’s recommendation. I’m finding it fascinating, and very enjoyable to read. It’s an imagined account of Jesus as a seven year-old. I think I’m enjoying it so much because, as a former atheist, Rice explicitly affirms the incarnation in her introduction. It’s allowed me to relax reading it and know that I’m not reading some veiled attack on orthodox Christian theology.

I’m currently listening to Bach arrangements by Leopold Stokowski. Karen is currently rehearsing a reconstructed Doris Humphrey modern dance work titled Passacaglia, set to Bach’s Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. We searched iTunes to find the piece so that I could listen to it, and stumbled across Stokowski, who arranged the version the dance it set to. I love Bach, but I have never heard Bach played like Stokowski conducts it. I’m tempted to say that I’ve never heard Bach before. It’s just unbelievable to have heard a particular piece of music so many times, to have loved it, and then hear it one more time and marvel at the fact that it can become so completely brand new, so completely, completely sublime.

I’m off to the studio today, for a bit. I need to begin cleaning and organizing for the school year. I also might try to go to the Museum of Contemporary Art and the Art Institute to see some shows that I’ve neglected seeing yet.