I saw two Mega art shows this weekend - Magritte at Lacma and WACK! at MOCA. It is kind of like seeing your favorite old rock band play all of their major hits. They are still all the same, but when they mix it up a bit, it adds a new depth and sensibility. The Magritte show was fun and it did what Magritte does best - shows that art can be smart and fun at the same time. The pairings with Rucha I thought quiet fabulous - they could have had a show just of that and they would have been just fine. However the other range of artists did bring greater diversity and understanding.
We did the Pierce Brosnon tour; at it was really annoying and interesting simultaneously. Annoying in that when taking about art Brosnon seems more full of himself than in regular life. Interesting in that if you look, read, and listen you get three slightly different interpretations of the piece usually at the same time. Since it was the final days of the show, LACMA was a big crowded art party, which is how I prefer to think the exhibition was the entire time.
As for the other big art party - the WACK! show at MOCA is big. So big that I hit the art viewing wall about 2/3 of the way in and didn't quite recover. The period of work 60's -80's often contains so much detail that each work takes a long time to absorb. Then multiply that by, at least, 75 works and your are a super tired art viewer. There is a ton of video in the show, but I didn't have a chance to see any of it. A lot of the video works are really long. I will come back on another day to see a few more. I think that this presentation of video however, may be just what the museum system doesn't need as far as art video. It makes it seem unapproachable and unconquerable. I will give a more comprehensive overview as time goes on.
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