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California College of the Arts

@cacollegeofarts / cacollegeofarts.tumblr.com

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β€œVivid and ambitious, Molly Prentiss's debut novel Tuesday Nights in 1980 (Scout Press) is a multi-sensory experience. Set, as the title suggests, in 1980, it is anchored at one end by the New York art sceneβ€”from blue chip dealers to a budding Basquiatβ€”and at the other by the political repression stifling Argentina. Through her three protagonists, Prentiss presents different shades of New York. There is James, a socially inept art critic who ascribes everything a color (confidence, for example, is orange, while new money is purple, and his wife is a strawberry red). Argentine immigrant Raoul is a confident, talented painter. Then there is Lucy, a 22-year-old from the Midwest who feeds of creativity and longs for a larger life. Each character faces his or her own tragedy at the hands of the city, and Prentiss's omniscient narration weights the novel with dread. Raised in Santa Cruz, California, and now based in New York, Prentiss received her MFA in creative writing from the California College of the Arts. She has been working on Tuesday Nights, which comes out today, since graduate school.”

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VOID CALIFORNIA opens tonight at the Wattis Institute in San Francisco.

Void California surveys punk-inflected media that emerged from California subcultures in the late 1970s and 1980s. Encompassing zines, photography, collage, video montage, documentary film, and sound collage, the exhibition presents its artists and musicians as subcultural anthropologists, documenting a world at the brink of disaster. The exhibition takes as its starting point the aftermath of the Vietnam War and Ronald Reagan’s first bid for the presidency. Under the leadership of Reagan, California had become ground zero for neoconservative attacks on the social contract as well as the context for an array of violent episodes, including the Manson Family murders, the SLA abductions and bombings, the assassination of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, and the Jonestown massacre. To some of those who lived through it, the future looked bleak β€” a void, indeed. The resulting desperation prompted artists and musicians to create powerful, visually striking work that reflected their disillusionment, and to disseminate it in new ways. New access to portable recording equipment, VCRs, and photocopy machines allowed them to unravel top-down mass media control over communication. By appropriating and mocking the imagery of newspapers and TV in cheap, reproducible media, artists created an alternative account of the period. In doing so they formed a self-invented community. Informed by extensive archival research among a network of artists, musicians, writers, and collectors, the exhibition charts a constellation of California artists and art forms that β€” despite certain of its participants later achieving a more traditional art-world success β€” have until now received little serious attention, beyond an oversimplified nostalgia for the punk moment. Publications and artists included in the exhibition are Melody Sumner Carnahan, Matt Heckert, Randy Hussong, Cameron Jamie, Negativland, NOMAG (Los Angeles), Raymond Pettibon, Ruby Ray, Search & Destroy (San Francisco), Greta Snider, Survival Research Laboratories, Joe Rees/TargetVideo77, Vile (San Francisco), and We Got Power (Los Angeles).

(Raymond Pettibon, Untitled (I thought California would be different), 1989)

Source: wattis.org
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Untitled by president Stephen Beal - see this piece and many others at the opening reception of White Album this Saturday from 5-7 at George Lawson Gallery! (at George Lawson Gallery)

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Found in the nave - another piece from Franklin Williams' 2D/3D. Can anyone identify the artist? (at California College of the Arts)

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Up close with MFA alum @sarah_thibault's "Bad Karma" at alumni founded @thezoolabs in Oakland. Curated by @etalgallerysf.

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Weird and wonderful work from our Graphic Design students at WTF Did You Do During the Summer III in Campus Center Galleries - opening reception tmrw at 5:30! Room Womb by Felix Talkin pictures here. (at California College of the Arts)

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Gorgeous piece by our own Robert Hunt on display now at Illustration's "Drought" exhibition. (at California College of the Arts)

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