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Review: Art becomes blood sport in formulaic reality competition ‘The Exhibit’

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Review: Art becomes blood sport in formulaic reality competition ‘The Exhibit’

A short time in the past, a examine confirmed that the strongest sign for “making it” as an artist right this moment isn’t expertise or a grasp of high quality arts diploma or group reveals. What issues most, in response to the analysis, is endorsement: how shortly an artist can safe institutional assist within the type of a solo exhibition at a serious gallery or museum. Every thing else follows. There are apparently few different ladders to climb.

That explains MTV and the Smithsonian Channel’s latest actuality providing, “The Exhibit: Discovering the Subsequent Nice Artist,” a present that transforms endorsement into the final word prize. Throughout six episodes, seven rising artists compete for $100,000 and an exhibition on the Smithsonian Institute’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Backyard in Washington, D.C. Contenders vary from rising stars (Baseera Khan, who’s been reviewed in Artforum, Frieze and the New Yorker) to the up-and-coming (Misha Kahn, whose “Watermelon Get together” was exhibited at Dries Van Noten’s L.A. flagship in 2021) to the established however missed (Frank Buffalo Hyde, whose work is held by the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe).

In a well-recognized formulation, the artists have a number of hours to make one “fee” in response to a given theme — gender, social media— and their work is critiqued by a rotating panel of judges, together with the artist Adam Pendleton and author Kenny Schachter. After six weeks, one artist will vault to a stage of visibility that sometimes solely megagalleries present. For artists who can’t depend upon conventional platforms all the time working of their favor, the present affords a recourse to a prejudicial gallery system and a possibility for them to broaden their viewers.

Nonetheless, these gladiator video games within the cultural area are a tacit validation of the damaging perception that tradition is a blood sport. Artists already compete with one another for validation, assets and a focus, and “The Exhibit” solely exacerbates the issue by framing it as leisure.

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This isn’t the primary present forged from this mould. In 2010, Bravo’s “Work of Artwork: The Subsequent Nice Artist,” produced by the corporate behind “Challenge Runway” and “High Chef,” exploited a tidy parallel between internecine art-world drama and acquainted conceits of actuality TV. The present additionally supplied a $100,000 money prize in addition to a solo exhibition on the Brooklyn Museum, the place one trustee resigned in protest, citing the museum’s notion as “a celebration place and a middle of celeb.” The critic Jerry Saltz penned an apologia for his function as a choose on the primary season, describing it as “dangerous for artwork.” (He subsequently returned for the following season.)

After profitable the second and closing season, Kymia Nawabi instructed Hyperallergic: “Sadly, the present has not likely impacted my profession in very apparent methods (but). I believed there could be some galleries serious about my work: nope. I believed I used to be going to make a ton of latest gross sales: nope.” Regardless of first rate rankings, “Work of Artwork” was canceled and succeeded by the much more short-lived “Gallery Women,” which adopted a number of upstarts in New York Metropolis’s glamorous gallery scene and ended, tellingly, when one forged member selected a job at a luxurious concierge over an internship at a prestigious artwork advisory.

“The Exhibit” properly holds its institutional affiliation at a calculated distance. Melissa Chiu, the Hirshhorn director and the present’s chief choose, opens the competitors by describing the modern artwork museum as “the wild baby” of the Smithsonian. Hosted by MTV’s Dometi Pongo, it’s definitely a bolder and extra irreverent present than its luxurious closeups of moist paint and dim galleries might need you imagine, extra aligned with the museum’s high-profile initiatives with such modern artists asBarbara Kruger and Nicolas Get together. Following within the wake of much less cutthroat craft tournaments like “The Nice Pottery Throw Down” and “Blown Away,” the present seeks to domesticate a congenial vibe, foregoing weekly eliminations. In its earnest embrace of sportsmanship, “The Exhibit” desires to renegotiate a parasocial relationship to actuality TV and inject some much-needed levity into the rarefied and sometimes forbidding province of Excessive Artwork.

But, inside 10 minutes factions and villains emerge as predictable tropes. Pedigreed artists lapse into MFA jargon as they trash speak the self-taught painters, who discover camaraderie and motivation in being ostracized from the mainstream; sculptors and mixed-media artists are pitted towards the painters and draftspeople in a mild parody of centuries-long tutorial debates. The Indigenous painter Frank Buffalo Hyde, for instance, criticizes the eye given to younger, institutionally validated artists over those that’ve lengthy “finished the work” — a good critique, although one whose cursory therapy right here typecasts the artist and units up an ageist battle.

Rivalry might be generative. It could maintain creativity over lengthy careers and push the bounds of inventive experimentation. However this sense of competitors is frustratingly at odds with an issue-of-the-week format that expects artists to trend topical (and legible) work on demand.

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Contestants are judged for his or her originality, high quality of execution and power of idea — a set of standards so common that it’s basically worthless. Within the first crit, that includes works about gender, Misha Kahn is dinged for an excessively formidable resin sculpture of a banana (“a novelty toy,” says Schachter). Visibly unimpressed, Pendleton dismisses Jamaal Barber’s vaguely Cubist charcoal portrait of a two-gendered sitter as “redundant,” and knocks Jillian Mayer’s olfactory work that off-gasses hormones for failing to “activate the house.” Not solely is that this acquainted criticism, nevertheless it additionally affords no sense of imaginative and prescient and trajectory to its topics. If “The Exhibit’s” personal judges don’t even purchase the present’s promise that the museum can play kingmaker for a brand new class of artists, why ought to we?

Every competitor may have been granted $100,000 for lower than the manufacturing finances, and the present’s money prize doesn’t even match “Work of Artwork’s” accounting for inflation. Baseera Khan, “The Exhibit’s” most established artist, already had a well-received solo exhibition on the Brooklyn Museum. What do they stand to achieve? The prize exhibition is just a single work: the winner’s sixth fee for the season finale. Whereas that’s hardly the “exhibit of a lifetime” promised within the trailer, the shrine to the spectacle is bound to be, in Pongo’s phrases, “profession defining.”

‘The Exhibit: Discovering the Subsequent Nice Artist’

The place: MTV

When: 10 p.m. Friday

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Streaming: SmithsonianChannel.com

Score: TV-14 (could also be unsuitable for youngsters underneath the age of 14)

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Movie Reviews

‘Armand’ Review: Ingmar Bergman’s Grandson Directs Renate Reinsve as a Mother Defending Her Son in Ambitious School-Set Drama

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‘Armand’ Review: Ingmar Bergman’s Grandson Directs Renate Reinsve as a Mother Defending Her Son in Ambitious School-Set Drama

Norwegian writer-director Halfdan Ullmann Tondel takes some big swings with his first feature Armand, not all of which connect, but the ambition and risk-taking are largely impressive.

A single-setting drama that unfolds in an echo-filled elementary school after hours, it stars Renate Reinsve (The Worst Person in the World) as local celebrity Elisabeth, the mother of never-met Armand, a first-grade boy who is accused by his classmate Jon, also never seen, of sexual abuse.

Armand

The Bottom Line

Works hard, but not quite top of the class.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Cast: Renate Reinsve, Ellen Dorrit Petersen, Endre Hellestveit, Thea Lambrechts Vaulen, Oystein Roger, Vera Veijovic
Director/screenwriter: Halfdan Ullmannn Tondel

1 hour 57 minutes

When the boys’ teacher and key school staffers call a meeting with parents to decide the next steps, Elisabeth clashes with Jon’s parents, Sarah (Ellen Dorrit Petersen) and Anders (Endre Hellestveit), although not all is as it seems. The basic setup recalls, among other stories about accusations, Roman Polanski’s adaptation of stage play Carnage, but Armand gets much weirder as it goes on, with choreographed dance sequences and melodramatic revelations that feel contrived and tacked on to make the film more arthouse and less issues-driven-middlebrow.

Reception in Cannes has been largely warm following its debut in the Un Certain Regard strand, and Armand has racked up some offshore sales.

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Bit by bit, Ullmann Tondel’s screenplay reveals that Elisabeth and Sarah have more history than shared playdates for their kids. They’ve known each other since they were children at this very same school, and Elisabeth was married to Sarah’s brother, who is now dead, possibly from suicide after a tempestuous relationship with Elisabeth. Reinsve plays her character here as a woman trying to live as normal a life as possible and be the best mother she can be, even though she’s well aware how her fame changes the dynamic in every room she enters — though egalitarian-minded Norwegians often try to seem unimpressed.

That’s certainly the case with the boys’ classroom teacher Sunna (Thea Lambrechts Vaulen), who, although she looks young, is trying to appear as professional as possible and handle the whole situation by the book. The school’s principal, Jarle (Oystein Roger), is mostly concerned with covering his back and avoiding any escalation that would get him in trouble. School safeguarding lead Ajsa (Vera Veijovic) is there to back him up with policy advice, but when she keeps getting uncontrollable nose bleeds the constant interruptions to the meeting only serve to escalate the tension.

The atmosphere could be cut with a popsicle stick from the start already, with prissy, judgy-faced Sarah ready to call the cops at any second and keen to put all the blame on Elisabeth. But Elisabeth is not to be trifled with, and she defends her son vigorously, pointing out that it’s only one kid’s word against another and questioning whether or not what was said was misinterpreted.

Back and forth the bickering goes until Ullmann Tondel starts to throw strange shapes into the drama. In the press notes he talks about the influence of films by Luis Buñuel, especially The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and The Exterminating Angel, and that’s felt in the increasingly surreal touches, as when Elisabeth suddenly gets an uncontrollable fit of giggles — a scene that goes on uncomfortably long. While that feels closer to Buñuel’s taste for shock moves and absurdist mystery, the sequences of Elisabeth suddenly breaking into a choreographed pas de deux with the school janitor (Patrice Demoniere) and later an almost orgiastic ensemble dance with a larger cast just seem self-indulgent and silly.

Some may find themselves straining to find artistic traces here of the work of Ullmann Tondel’s grandparents, Ingmar Bergman and Liv Ullmann, but millennial-generation Ullmann Tondel’s directing style feels more of a piece with contemporary Nordic cinema, with its flights of fancy and quirky humor, than the high style of his progenitors. His screenwriting here, however, feels like it’s lost its way when it tries to tidy everything up in the final scene, even if the staging strains to maintain a sense of mystery by drowning out the dialogue with thrashing rain.

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Full credits

Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard)
Cast: Renate Reinsve, Ellen Dorrit Petersen, Endre Hellestveit, Thea Lambrechts Vaulen, Oystein Roger, Vera Veijovic, Assad Siddique, Patrice Demoniere
Production companies: Eye Eye Pictures, Keplerfilm, One Two Films, Prolaps Produktion, Film I Vast
Director/screenwriter: Halfdan Ullmannn Tondel
Producers: Andrea Berentsen Ottmar
Executive producers:  Dyveke Bjorkly Graver, Harald Fagerheim Bugge, Renate Reinsve
Co-producers: Koji Nelissen, Derk-Jan Warrink, Fred Burle, Sol Bondy, Alicia Hansen, Stina Eriksson, Kristina Borjeson, Magnus Thomassen
Directors of photography: Pal Ulvik Rokseth
Production designer: Mirjam Veske
Costume designer: Alva Brosten
Editor: Robert Krantz
Sound designer: Mats Lid Stoten
Music: Ella van der Woude
Casting: Jannicke Stendal Hansen
Sales: Charades

1 hour 57 minutes

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Amid cancer treatment, Princess Catherine still hasn't been cleared for return to public duties

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Amid cancer treatment, Princess Catherine still hasn't been cleared for return to public duties

Princess Catherine will be staying out of the public eye for a while longer — but her philanthropic work isn’t slowing down.

“The princess is not expected to return to work until it’s cleared by her medical team,” a Kensington Palace spokesperson told the BBC at the release of a new report by the Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood. Early childhood development is a focal point for Catherine.

Kate has remained a “driving force” behind the center and was “excited” by the report, which detailed how cultural changes in the workplace could better support parents of young children, the spokesperson said.

The princess has been out of the public eye since January, when she underwent abdominal surgery that later led to a cancer diagnosis. Prince William has since shared that the family was “doing well” and recently made his own return to public duties after taking time off to care for his wife.

King Charles III revealed a cancer diagnosis of his own in February but returned to work publicly in late April while continuing to receive treatment.

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Movie Reviews

Film Review: The Garfield Movie – SLUG Magazine

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Film Review: The Garfield Movie – SLUG Magazine

Film Reviews

The Garfield Movie
Director: Mark Dindal 

Alcon Entertainment and DNEG Animation
In Theaters: 05. 24

As a kid growing up in the early ‘80s, there was little that got me giggling harder than a Garfield comic strip. While most of them don’t necessarily hold up very well as an adult, I still have a fondness for the orange tabby,  and it brings back a strong nostalgia for childhood. The Garfield Movie didn’t have to be a great film to win me over. It just had to live up to its title.

As the movie begins, we meet young Garfield as a cuddly kitten on a dark, rainy night. Garfield’s father, Vic (voiced by Samuel L Jackson, Pulp Fiction) leaves him at a shelter, promising to return. Cold, scared and hungry, Garfield waits and waits, until he sees a human, Jon Arbuckle (Nicholas Hoult, Mad Max: Fury Road, The Great) dining alone in an Italian restaurant. The two bond, and Jon adopts Garfield. Years later, Jon’s dog Odie, runs into Vic, who needs his son’s help to get him out of hot water with his vengeful ex-girlfriend, a cat named Jinx (Hannah Waddingham, Ted Lasso, The Fall Guy), who used to be in gang with Vic until a dairy heist went wrong and she was sent to the pound, while Vic escaped, leaving her behind. To settle his debt, Vic must complete the original mission: steal thousands of milk bottles from a dairy called Lactose Farms. Garfield, Vic, and Odie must infiltrate the heavily guarded location. Their only ally is Otto (Ving Rhames, Mission: Impossible), a bull who was on the face of Lactose Farms, along with the love of his life, a cow named Ethel, until they were separated. The menagerie of animals must work together, and father and son must learn to trust one another gain, if this high stakes mission is going to succeed.

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It’s understandable that the makers of The Garfield Movie felt that they needed to have a plot that kept audiences engaged, and that making a good movie was more important to them than taking a purist approach to the material. The plot certainly didn’t need to be nearly this convoluted, however, and it’s shamelessly derivative of Chicken Run and is hard to escape, right down to the character design of Marge, an animal control officer voiced by Saturday Night Live’s Cecily Strong. In general, the design is all over the place, with Garfield, Jon, and Odie following the look established by Jim Davis, the original cartoonist, but many of the other characters look like they have just been pulled from various mismatched existing movies. If you’re going in as a fan, be prepared that for the most part, The Garfield Movie is so far from getting the basic attitude of the lead character or the simple dynamic that it feels like a peripheral connection to the source material at best. All of this would be more easily forgivable if it was a lot more entertaining, but sadly, it falls flat more often than not. There’s a certain amount of physical comedy that may appeal to kids, but the sly, cynical sarcasm of the title character has largely been neutered. The narcissistic edge is kept carefully in check, and is completely gone from his interactions with Jon and Odie, the heart of the original material. The feline villains and Vic’s past as a thief suggests that the screenwriters got Garfield and Heathcliff confused and didn’t bother to do enough research to correct the error, and very little of this plot thread works at all. The film really only succeeds on any tangible level when it’s milking the relationships between Garfield and his two dads, the absentee father Vic, and the adoptive father, Jon, for emotional warm fuzzies. The final action sequence aboard a train is fast moving and fun, if completely out of place. 

Much has been made out of the casting of Chris Pratt as Garfield, and while it’s not ideal casting, he does a capable enough job, and the shortcomings in the portrayal of the character can’t be blamed on him. Jackson is energetic as Vic, and the two try to inject some heart into the proceedings despite a lack of chemistry. Hoult is trying too hard to do a goofy cartoon voice as Jon, and while Rhames does have one of the most memorable voices in the movies, the character of Otto simply never clicked for me. The rest of the voice cast isn’t even worth mentioning, with the villain characters being so annoying and out of place that even the presence of talented voice actors couldn’t make me enjoy them.

The Garfield Movie gets some mileage out of moments of cuteness, and enough manic energy to keep kids watching, particularly in the second half. In terms of keeping parents – the ones who are more likely to be attached to Garfield as an intellectual property – engaged, this is a bit of a slog, and I’d recommend it only as a discount night family excursion, or something to wait and let the kids watch on video. –Patrick Gibbs

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