Curated by studio artist / writer / DJ Dennis Kane

Shirin Aliabadi

iranian subversion

This week’s art post features the work of Shirin Aliabadi (1973-2018). Aliabadi’s work focused on Iranian women and their unique relationship to Western culture. Not singularly a critique of Western capitalism, the work explores secular transgression, body image and female identity under a repressive religious regime.

Miss Hybrid, 2008
Shirin will always be remembered for her kind soul, the depth of her work and the mark she left on the world. The female protagonists of her best-known series presented themselves as a radical counter-design to the officially propagated image of women, and displayed a young generation’s ways of breaking free from regulations.”
— Third Space Gallery, Dubai

Photo Credit:

Universes Art, Operation Supermarket

Phillips.com, Shirin Aliabadi

Art Fund, Shirin Aliabadi

Aperture, She captured the modern face of Iran

Portrait: The Art Newspaper, Shirin Aliabadi, known for depicting rebellious Iranian women, has died

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Annette Lemieux

ideological minimalism

This week’s art post features the great work of Annette Lemieux. She works in a variety of media and works in a theater of memory, examining aporias in accepted, dominant narratives. Check her work at her website.

She’s looked at archetypical images from art — 20th century art history, but also film — and edited them and tweaked them to give them new meaning, whether that’s cheeky or critical, She’s always taking something from the world and turning it on its head to give it new meaning.
— Al Miner, Boston Museum of Fine Arts

Photo Credit:

Mitchell Inns & Nash, Annette Lemieux

Whitney Museum, Annette Lemieux

Quote and Portrait Credit: WBUR, Annette Lemieux, Whose Art Addresses History And Politics, Wins MFA’s $10K Prize

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Jean Luc Godard

french new wave master

This week’s art post is selected stills from film’s by the great Jean Luc Godard who passed this year at age 91. It is an understatement to say Godard was a giant, he profoundly impacted cinema and modern thinking several times over. His work was always advancing, changing form and challenging the status quo. He was always morally outrages and always willing to stay on the margins. He understood life’s cruelty and saw art as a tool for resistance. He celebrated the defiance of beauty, the grace of charity, and the aunthenticity of being a moral enemy of the state.

Je vous salue JLG!

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art, wednesday art, dennis kane Matthew Ward art, wednesday art, dennis kane Matthew Ward

Matias Faldbakken

creative vandalism

This week’s art post features the work of Matias Faldbakken. Faldbakken’s sculptures/ combines have an absurdity to them, a dark comic theatricality and resonant gestalt. He is represented by Standard Oslo. In addition to his visual art he has written several novels and a collection of short stories.

Faldbakken... (has an) ability to bite his own tail by making works that unite vandalism and creativity, while both celebrating and lamenting the constant commodification of rebellious acts.

More than anyone, he understands that frontal critique only reinforces the classic master-slave dialectic, and that true radicality consists of infiltrating and perverting the system from within.
— Sinziana Ravini

Photo credits:

Simon Lee Gallery, London, Hong Kong

Occula, Gallery Chant Grousel, Paris

Renaissance Society, “Fear of Property” Installation, University of Chicago

Mousse Magazine, Museum Boijmans, Rotterdam

kunstkritikk, Nordic Art Review, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo

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