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David Greg Harth

  • Socially Engaged Art + Participatory
  • Performance
  • Drawings + Prints + Paintings
  • Video + Film + Audio
  • Photography
  • Self-Portraits
  • Other Works
  • Archive
  • Words
  • Info
    • Bio/Statement
    • News
    • Press
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    • Contact
    • Search
    • Subscribe
    • Support
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  • Collect

Weekly Planet

Newspaper Clipping

Weekly Planet
"Off The Wall" Local Art Scene Found
November 27 - December 3, 1997
Issue - Pg 55
Author: Jennifer Johnson

View Referenced Art Work

"Off The Wall" Local Art Scene Found

"The Lost Weekend, 3 Days of Visual Art" kicked off what art mavens around town are hoping will be a great year for the Tampa art scene. The effort, jointly organized by J.S.G. Boggs, Bob Dorsey of Image Brewery in Valrico, Tiffany Szilage and Glenn Chang of Gallery at 145 in St. Petersburg, and John and Michael Murphy of Silver Meteor Gallery in Ybor City, was a fine one, and - if there's anything to be said for omens - its success might be a sight that they're right.

"The Lost Weekend" featured the works of nearly 50 artists at three Bay area venues. The show opened Friday, Nov. 21 at Gallery at 145, Nov. 22 at the Image Brewery in Valrico, and wrapped up Nov. 23 with a reception at Silver Meteor. Attendance was promising. Each opening drew close to a hundred people, among them, amazingly, actual buyers - a rare breed -round here.

It's not that art isn't a commodity. In fact, the art market at large seems to be doing well. After a dip in the extraordinary sums modern art commanded in the 1980s (thanks to the large, expendable incomes of the Japanese nouveaux riches), prices seem to again be on the ascent. For example, at a Nov. 10 auction of Victor and Sally Ganz's modern art collection in Christie's in New York, Pablo Picasso's "Dream" went for $48.8 million - the fifth highest price ever paid for a painting at an auction - and Jasper John's panel "Corpse and Mirror" sold for $8.4 million, which is among the highest paid for a painting by a living artist.

There's money being spent in the art world, but Tampa Bay has never seen a proportionate share of these dollars. A big reason for that has been the lack of serious local collectors - you can't expect your art scene to receive outside attention until, at least, it's self-sustainable.

"The Lost Weekend- evinced a move toward that happening. Twenty or so works were sold in the course of the show, which also marked the return of "The Collectors Club."

The Collector's Club was an anonymous group of prominent elderly individuals who supported Tampa Bay's visual arts scene from the early 1980s. Speculation as to why the club faded away ranges from talk of death and illness among the member to rumors of legal questions regarding the ownership of the club's collection.

Their first incarnation never gained much respect from the art community due to their (then) small budget and "terribly ill-informed" buying habits. On several occasions, the Collectors' Club offered to donate some of the works they had purchased to the Tampa Museum of Art, but was "summarily rebuffed due to the complete unsuitability of the work for a serious museum collection," says an unnamed source at the museum.

But a small group of "offspring" have decided to carry on the tradition, bringing to the club new blood, new life and (most importantly) better taste. And the new and improved group so impressed with "The Lost Weekend" that they spent an estimated $5,000 (rumored to be nearly their entire 1997 acquisition budge) on works highlighted in the show.

Here's the works that made the Collector's Club purchase list: Caroline Sykora's "Agitation" and Thomas Kettner's "Tiny Couple" at Silver Meteor Gallery; Caroline Sykora's "Agitation #2" and a David McDaniel etching, "Untitled," at Gallery at 145; and Catherine Bergman's "Breath," Thomas Kettner's "Self Portrait," Giancarlo Rendina's "Untitled" (painting), Angela Dickerson's "Monoprint" and Caroline Sykora's "Agitation #3" at Image Brewery. The top three Collector's Club purchase awards went to David Breeze, "Art Forum," $300 (at Image Brewery); Jon Karl Holm, "Pardon Me," $500 (various locations); and Theo Wujcik, "Untitled," $3,500.

The Collector's Club weren't the only ones buying. By the time they sent their choices to Bob Dorsey at Image Brewery, two of the works they had selected (David Greg Harth's "Untitled" and David Waterman's "Vellum Boar and Sow") were already taken.

Apart from Club purchases, several other works sold. Boggs purchased a Tiffany Szilage and a Giancarlo Rendina from Image Brewery. And Dr. Robert E. Kahn, a New York collector with an eye on Tampa, also nabbed a work or two.

"The Lost Weekend" was an open call (meaning that any artist who wished to participate could), so the work, in general, wasn't all that impressive. There were some highlights, however - Tom Kenney's three submissions shined, a few of Boggs' bills graced the wall and Jon Karl Holm (presently Tampa's art "Golden Boy" - there's nothing, it seems, he can't sell) impressed most everyone with his all-over installation of shoes resting on door mats placed strategically between three venues.

The show's sales, most of which were under $100, didn't- even remotely approach Picasso prices - but it's a start.

From there, who knows where things can go.


back to press
Thursday 11.27.97
Posted by David Harth
 

The New York Times

Newspaper Clipping

The New York Times
Obituaries
October 5, 1997
Issue - Pg -
Author: David Greg Harth

Yes, in 1997 I really did pay to publish part of my poem as an obituary in The New York Times for the artist Roy Lichtenstein. Below is the poem in it’s entirety. Does this count as press for me? Doesn’t matter. Here it is:

Roy Lichtenstein


I had a friend,
just the other day,
my friend Roy,
he died today

From little ones
to big ones
his dots always
had me
grabbed me
made me unstable
on solid ground

His retrospective
winding up the Guggenheim walls...
His thin, structural body,
standing tall,
another member,
of that Cedar bar,
I'm sure.

Roy,
why did you have to go?
my bible is empty?
my letter undelivered?
Roy,
where will you plot?
without a last dot?

Roy,
how come there is a fighter jet
a child with a toy
yet an image of
destruction?

Don't go,
for I only knew you...
for so many years...
and more to come
more to dream of
dream with...

I had a friend,
just the other day,
my friend Roy,
he died today

In New York City
he passed away
Center of POP
for you and me
I’ll be there
will U2?

In the city
glorious lights
Mondrian's Broadway
city delights

Roy,
tell me your daughter's name,
before you go
send me a present
a lesson of the future,
before you go

A beg
a round-a-bout
come inside,
have a cup of coffee,
its all I can offer
to a god of pop

a god of pop.

© 1997 David Greg Harth NYC USA 1245am Tuesday 9.30.97


back to press
Sunday 10.05.97
Posted by David Harth
 

The Tampa Tribune

Newspaper Clipping

The Tampa Tribune
Arts Extra! Gallery Glimpses: Reviewed This Week
July 17, 1997
Issue - Pg -
Author: Joanne Milani

View Referenced Art Work

Arts Extra! Gallery Glimpses: Reviewed This Week

.5 & 10 (Art for Change): (rating: this show expands and offers alternatives to the Tampa Museum's "Undercurrent/Overview" exhibition reviewed below) While are art experts made the selections in the Tampa Museum's survey of the local art scene, Brandon-based artist J.S.G. Boggs pulled together his roundup of works by Tampa and New York artists including David Byrne of the Talking Heads.

Thanks to great private sponsorship and energetic participants, you have a fun, gorilla-type show to enjoy. It's fun because it's uneven. You'll find highly sophisticated works displayed next to some very forgettable, hackneyed stuff - all on the premises of a 1960s-era dime store. It's a "gorilla" show because this is an unofficial, self-elected lineup runningfor only a week (through Sunday). However, it is a stop on Saturday's Summer -97 Open House.

Since some of the participating artists also are represented in the Tampa Museum show, you have a chance to see a wider spectrum of their work. Among them: the adventurous, top-notch veteran of the Tampa scene, painter Theo Wujcik; 19 year-old computer-camera prodigy David Breeze of Brandon, Hoang Van Bui, a young Vietnam-born artist whose installations have been ranking in top prizes; and a St. Petersburg artist who fashions ceramics of unsettling beauty, Yasuko Nakamura.

The best canvases in the dime store are by Tampa's Tom Kettner and Sarasota's Leslie Lerner - both of whom are absent from the museum's exhibition. In "Nuclear Winter Stereogram" Kettner plays off thickly painted red borders against the receding space of a devastated, white landscape. Lerner uses Oriental rules of perspective - no receding background as in Western art, just flat patterns arranged against an atmospheric haze - in his canvases filled with costumed figures, rocks and ice floes.

Also worth you attention: Jim Lute's giant black-and-white abstraction. David Greg Harth's disturbing photography and Nurit Newman's sly videos. Boggs has fun with funny money as he tweaks your expectations about what you are seeing. And Jon Karl Holm concocts a lush installation using wooden knife holders. David Byrne's photographs and light boxes were not yet on view when the show was reviewed.


back to press
Thursday 07.17.97
Posted by David Harth
 

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