Subject:

UPDATES: Exhibitions, Prints, and TV
We know its been a little while since our last update but we have been on a
roller coaster of a ride these past few months. After the success of a SOLD
OUT show in New York at the Jonathan LeVine Gallery we headed back home and
got right back to work. Shepard has been busy making some new prints and
preparing for our next monumental exhibition. Shepard has a solo exhibition
scheduled for early November in London presented by Stolen Space Gallery
(www.stolenspace.com). The location of the exhibition will be held in a
20,000 square foot space located in the Old Truman Brewery in London’s East
End. And if that wasn’t enough, following the London exhibition, we are
going to have our Los Angeles Solo Exhibition in December at the Merry
Karnowsky Gallery. Dates and info are included below. We hope to see you
there.

LONDON
Exhibition dates – Friday 2nd November – Sunday 25th November
StolenSpace
Old Truman Brewery
91 Brick Lane
London
E1 6QL
info@stolenspace.com

  • Stolenspace
  • NOW SHOWING:
    ‘Trophy’ A solo show by Kirsty Whiten.
    Featuring drawings, sculptures and a short film.

    LOS ANGELES
    December 1, 2007 – January 14, 2008
    Merry Karnowsky Gallery
    170 South La Brea Ave
    LA, CA 90036

  • Merry Karnowsky Gallery
  • TV

    Shepard has been taking some time out of his schedule to be a TV star.
    Check out these two TV episodes that feature Shepard talking about art,
    politics, and music.

    OVATION TV – August 12th, 8pm ET/PT

    During our stay in NYC, the Jonathan Levine Gallery was great enough to hook
    us up with tons of press and interviews. One of the bonuses of the exposure
    was a feature on Ovation TV. They got some great footage of the artwork and
    the DUMBO exhibition. Mark the date to see how it all went down.

    “Art or Not” will air this Friday online at 12 PM PST at www.ovationtv.com
    in case you want to add it to your blog (it will air on Ovation TV, DIRECTV
    Channel 274 August 12th). Here’s some further info about the show (below).

    The Ovation TV original special, “Art or Not?” (Sunday, August 12, 8 PM
    ET/PT ) is a one-hour exploration of a question that’s entertained,
    frustrated and inflamed passionate – and even casual — art lovers forever:
    “Is ‘it’ art, or is ‘it’ not art?” The special will showcase artists from
    the edges of the art spectrum to gain insight into what makes people
    passionate — and highly opinionated — about a broad range of visual art.

    HENRY ROLLINS SHOW – August 24th at 11 ET/ 8 PT

    Yesterday was pretty awesome. I was invited to be a guest on the Rollins
    Show on IFC. Henry Rollins is one of my heroes not only for his role as
    vocalist in Black Flag, but also because he is an artist and activist who
    writes and publishes books through his own imprint and lectures about his
    life experience and well informed political views. He even has a radio show
    on L.A.’s Indie 103.1. Henry has always embraced the concept of “be the
    media” and now he has his own cable too that is awesome if you have not seen
    it check out IFC’s website (www.ifc.com, www.henryrollins.ifc.com) or buy
    the first season on DVD. I truly can’t think of a role model that I identify
    with more than Henry… so being on his show was a real Wayne’s World “I’M NOT
    WORTHY” moment (to only add to that feeling, Steven Tyler was being
    interviewed right after I was). When I have a firm date when the episode
    will air I’ll post it. – SHEPARD

    Update: The episode airs August 24th at 11 Eastern, 8 Pacific. Set your
    Tivo’s!

    Prints

    If you have not been able to keep up with all the print releases here is a
    reminder on how you can get a hold of one. All prints are released on
    Tuesdays around 12:00pm PST (Los Angeles time). We are still trying to
    battle all the Ebay instant resellers (the list is getting longer and
    longer) and we are doing our best to make every print available to all –
    fans, new collectors, and old collectors alike. We understand some of the
    frustrations you face and we would like to THANK all of you for all of your
    support and patience. Keep an eye on the website for print previews and new
    releases.

    Also, a special thanks goes out to everyone who purchased a Darfur/HOPE
    print! With your support we were able to raise $10,000 for the Global
    Grassroots Organization to help aid the Darfur situation. For more
    information visit www.globalgrassroots.org and www.hopeartists.org.

    MORE updates coming soon…

    Marcus Witmers

    Opening Thursday, August 9, from 17-20

    Afterparty at Venners Hjem from 20.00 pm, with pig roast and Dj. Master Fatman

    ..::: EXHIBITIONS :::..

    Vibe Bredahl · Jesper Carlsen · Cathrine Raben Davidsen · Sabine Dehnel · Berta Fischer · Jens Robert Jørgensen · Martin Liebscher · Pilaiporn Pethrith · Fredrik Raddum · Hans Hamid Rasmussen · Jacob Stangerup · Lisa Strömbeck · Trine Søndergaard/Nicolai Howalt · Jaiver Tapia · Ebbe Stub Wittrup

    10. august – 1. september 2007

    EXHIBITIONS

    Summer in the City – MAP Group Show
    10 August – 1 September 2007

    New works by artists of the gallery.

  • Martin Asbæk Projects
  • Graffiti



    Found some old stuff, but still cool.

    THE POOR MAN, THE RICH MAN AND THE MOSQUITO


    THE POOR MAN, THE RICH MAN AND THE MOSQUITO

    I

    A poor man once lived opposite a rich man. Everyday, through his window, he saw how poor he really was. He said to himself:
    “What have I in common with this man?”
    The poor man, rapt in his devising, was all but dying of poorness. One can eat badly for one, two, and even four days, but no more, not without losing strength and falling ill, specially when one works. Which is exactly what happened at this poor man’s home, where everyone started falling ill. Without money for medicine and no longer able to get anyone to loan them anything, some deadly fevers started claiming their lives one by one. The poor inventor first lost his wife, then his daughter and finally his son.
    Now he was dying.
    And the rich man across the way who saw him every day said to himself:
    “What have I in common with this man?”
    And the poor man was dying. Dying.
    He was hated by everyone, for to everyone money he owed. He was feared by everyone because everyone, afraid of the fever, feared his physical approach. He was languishing, no flesh and only bones, unable so much as to bear his own weight. He sweats and sweats, trembles and trembles. He was dying, thinking of his inventions, raving about strangely, blazing forth numbers and then more numbers.
    He was dying, alone as can be.
    And the rich man across the way saw him every day from his window and, stingy, he once again said to himself, “What have I in common with this man?”
    But then that same night one of the millions of mosquitoes that lived in a swamp bit the dying man.
    Later, flying at the mercy of the shadows, it gained entrance to the home of the rich man, who was sleeping, and bit him too.
    As the mosquito bit him, it passed on the disease of which the poor man was dying.
    And the rich man was no longer able to see the poor man from across the way from his window.

    II

    Both men died of the same affliction, both died practically at the same time, unaware of what the one had in common with the other. Underground practically at the same time, they were left to the worms practically at the same time, alone as can be. And, to this day, those worms remain unaware of who was the rich man and who was the poor man.
    And what about the mosquito? Whatever happened to the mosquito? Whomever else did it bite? Whomever else will it bite?
    One can’t really say. One can’t follow a mosquito into the shadows. Maybe it still flies along at night, buzzing its eternal jest. Filling up on all sorts of blood, it injects one man’s blood into another. One can’t really say one way or another.
    The only thing set in stone is that there will never be a shortage of the thousands of types of mosquitoes whose singular mission is to show us that it is not in our best interest for there to be wretches amongst us, that to help them in due time means to help ourselves. It means that whichever mosquito bites them in the future will not in turn ruin our lives.
    The only thing set in stone is that there is never a shortage of mosquitoes, nor of even more minute beings, there to violently remind us of that which men of the heart should already know, that we all have much, very much in common with our neighbours, particularly when our neighbours are dreadful wretches.

    TOMAS MEABE.

  • MC KUNST