| Good Morning, MidnightJune 22, 2007- July 31, 2007Reception: June 21, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Curated by Bruce Hainley
Oh God how I hate penny in the slot thoughts and actions, and oh God what terrible harm they cause. If I live I will call my next and last book There is no penny and no slot and if you pinch that title or variations I’ll climb up to your window and give you nightmares. (This is a joke.)
Anyway there is no penny for the slots. Not for writing or the black versus white question—the lies that are told—or for anything at all that matters. Only for lies. Yet everybody believes in the non existent penny and the invisible slot. So what to do?
-Jean Rhys, from a letter, 1963
Jean Rhys’ novel, Good Morning, Midnight, was first published in 1939.
While I wish to pay homage to her novel, its staunch mood and mode, its indifference and bleak humor in an uncertain moment, in the show, which is no illustration, I also wish to consider any given medium used against itself and the rapidity with which one thing, form or action, becomes another. That said, there is no penny and no slot.
Jeff Burton lives and works in Los Angeles
Brian Calvin lives and works in Los Angeles
Lecia Dole-Recio lives and works in Los Angeles
Trisha Donnelly lives and works in San Francisco
Vincent Fecteau lives and works in San Francisco
Richard Hawkins lives and works in Los Angeles
Roger Hiorns lives and works in London, England
Jasper Johns lives and works in Connecticut
Larry Johnson lives and works in Los Angeles
William E. Jones lives and works in Los Angeles
George Kuchar lives and works in San Francisco
Lisa Lapinski lives and works in Los Angeles
Sturtevant lives and works in Paris, France
Mitchell Syrop lives and works in Los Angeles
Reviews of Good Morning, MidnightNew York Times July 27, 2007 | | Holland Cotter | | "This mostly Californian group show is the brainchild of the estimable Los Angeles-based art critic Bruce Hainley. And it feels a little like his writing: smart, buzzy, mordant, uncanonical, the kind of writing that makes most of the rest of us sound like uptight schoolteachers. In “Good Morning, Midnight” — the title is from a Jean Rhys novel — Mr. Hainley sends up a few thematic balloons, but he keeps them light and drifting...." |
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