Wednesday, December 29, 2010

JOEL TAUBER "Pumping" VIDEO and SCULPTURE INSTALLATION at Susznne Vielmetter Gallery. Exhibition in Culver City. California - thru Jan 22, 2011! Review by Ginger Van Hook


SUSANNE VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES PROJECTS
JOEL TAUBER

"Pumping"   December 18, 2010 - January 22, 2011
Reception: Saturday, December 18, 6 - 8 pm 
Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects is pleased to present "Pumping", an installation of new videos, sculpture and photographs by Joel Tauber. 


"Pumping" is an investigation of the early history of trains in Los Angeles and that history's intersection with water and oil resources. Looking at the history of the Southern Pacific Railroad which was largely responsible for transforming Los Angeles from a small town into a giant metropolis, the exhibition traces the two crucial resources for this development: water and oil. Throughout the project, Joel Tauber ponders the fragility and temporality of the city's foundation. 

Joel Tauber explores the History of the Railroads in "Pumping"
as it intersects with the industries of oil drilling and water distribution in Los Angeles. In an intimate setting at the new Susanne Vielmetter Gallery space, Tauber depicts wall sized photographs of a barren Los Angeles desert landscape fueled by his imagination and the energy to close in on the structures that dotted our pioneering spirit when settlers were just beginning to tame the wild wild west. Tauber brings the railroad logs and ties and even the old fashion original railcar into the gallery to demonstrate its powerful message within the context of fine art. 
This is an artist whom I have covered for his environmental activist projects involving his love for one Sycamore Tree in particular, from Pasadena 
(refer to blog site http://gingersartjoural.blogspot.com  2008 "The Art of Lovin' Trees").
Joel Tauber continues to create impactful exhibitions 
involving issues of environmental concern to each and every resident 
of the State of California.
Photo and caption by Ginger Van Hook©2010
Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010. 

Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010. 

Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010.


Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010.


Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010.


Joel Tauber "Pumping" Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010.
Consisting of a 3 channel video installation, a steel handcar displayed on 80 feet of railroad tracks, and a selection of accompanying photographs, the exhibition is Tauber's most ambitious sculptural installation to date. As in earlier projects, the artist is the central actor in this current narrative. Accompanied by a whispered monologue, we see him riding a hand-powered railcar on abandoned train tracks through the desert and pumping water from an old-fashioned water pump. The desert landscape suggests an unspecified future - one that lacks the infrastructure of the contemporary city, and suggests what Los Angeles might look like had it never been developed. There are no trains or oil, and there is little water in this imagined period. The future and the past are conflated through visual cues: the work was filmed using a 16mm hand-cranked camera and the photographic prints are distressed so that the installation looks like it was made at the dawn of the 20th century. These relationships are further elucidated through the narration which begins with a contemplation of Los Angeles in 1873, wonders about the promise of economic progress and the belief in corporate power and follows the city's rapid growth based on the illusion of a never ending supply of oil and water. Grappling with our past and potential futures, "Pumping" looks at our relationship with finite resources and with past expectations of this city's destiny. 

Joel Tauber received his MFA from Art Center College of Design and his BA from Yale University. His work has been featured in the 2004 and 2008 California Biennials, Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, CA; in "Cluster Balloons: From Lawn Chairs to Cosmic Rays", Anderson-Abruzzo Albuquerque International Balloon Museum, Albuquerque, NM; in "No Matter. Failure and Art", Kunstverein Hildesheim, Germany; in "Flight Dreams", Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia, Canada; in "Love is Like Oxygen", W139, Amsterdam, Netherlands; "The Gravity in Art", De Appel Centre For Contemporary Art, Amsterdam, Netherlands; and "Systems Theory", Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, CA. Film Festivals include the San Francisco Documentary Festival, Blue Planet Film Fest (Los Angeles), the Hartford International Film Festival, and the Downtown Film Festival - Los Angeles, where his movie, "Sick-Amour", was awarded "Best Green Film." Tauber won the 2007 Contemporary Collectors of Orange County Fellowship and the 2007-2008 CalArts / Alpert Ucross Residency Prize for Visual Arts. 

Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects is located at 6006 Washington Blvd in Culver City, 1 block west of La Cienega at Sentney Avenue, on the south side of the street. Gallery parking is available across the street from the gallery off of Sentney Avenue. Gallery Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 11 am - 6 pm and by appointment. 

6006 Washington Boulevard, Culver City, California 90232 phone 310.837-2117 www.vielmetter.com

Special thanks to Susanne Vielmetter for the courtesy of reprinting the press release and for her  talking the time  to pose for a photo just before the opening reception for Joel Tauber's "Pumping".  

Susanne Vielmetter promoting the opening exhibition of
Los Angeles Film, Sculpture and Photography Artist Joel Tauber in "Pumping".
Photo and Caption by Ginger Van Hook©2010 

Monday, November 29, 2010

The World Premiere of Sick-Amour, The First Documentary Movie by Film-maker Joel Tauber took to the large screen on September 11, 2010!


Movie Review by Ginger Van Hook
      
The story of how a mortal fell in love with a Sycamore Tree is not your everyday love story, and yet, in an almost mythological occurrence this actually happened in the local parking lot of our Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. One day, Joel Tauber contemplated the life of a lonely tree that had been the brunt of many cars and SUV bumpers...Under several layers of black tar and asphalt, Dry and Wilting in the blazing sun, this Sycamore Tree was graced with the love and attention of an artist who had recently graduated from Art Center College of Design (also a lonely young man at the time).
And that was several years ago, mind you, so not only is this love story unique, it is additionally a story that resulted in the Sycamore Tree blessing his patron with love in return! In a very moving account of how Joel Tauber came to meet the Sycamore tree and how he became the self-proclaimed patron and lifelong caretaker of this tree's children, this documentary movie will inspire you to feel that miracles are still possible.















I interviewed Joel Tauber for a story in 2008 for Ginger's Art Journal: http://gingersartjournal.blogspot.com/2008/11/art-of-lovin-trees-featuring-joel.html


At the time, the documentary movie was just beginning to build an audience. But as Tauber continued to support the latest treebabies with tree-planting events all over California and select places around the world, the children of the "Sick-Amour" tree, a new level of appreciation grew between the tree and Joel Tauber. In his latest version of the "Sick-Amour" movie, Joel Tauber includes the heartwarming authentic love story that will leave audiences with hope, joyful tears and reveal the most beautiful result: a romantic wedding, celebrated around the tree.


If you have a chance to see the movie, don't miss it! The story is timeless and romantic. The message promotes the love of trees, the love of our community and the love of our planet. An award winning movie, Joel Tauber has revealed his talents as a documentary film-maker and will delight audiences all over the world.  (Below are some of the places where "Sick-Amour" has screened recently and be sure to keep your eyes on this title, as it is likely to win numerous more awards in film-festivals world-wide. ...Could even be opening in a movie-theatre near you, sooner than you think!)

Announcing the world premiere for Joel Tauber's movie, Sick-Amour!

Sick-Amour premiered at the Downtown Film Festival-Los Angeles
(http://www.dffla.com/) on Saturday September 11 at 2:30 pm.
After the screening of the 33-minute film, the artist and film-maker
Joel Tauber discussed the making of the project until about 4 pm.

Joel Tauber discusses the making of his latest movie
"SickAmour"
Photo by Ginger Van Hook©2010

The screening took place at the Downtown Independent Theater
(http://www.downtownindependent.com/),
which is located on 251 S. Main Street LA,
California 90012.

Here are some web links:
The trailer for Sick-Amour:  http://www.sickamour.com/
The IMDB page for Sick-Amour:  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1518279/
The Downtown Film Festival-Los Angeles:  http://www.dffla.com/
The Downtown Independent Theater:  http://www.downtownindependent.com/

http://gingersartjournal.blogspot.com/2008/11/art-of-lovin-trees-featuring-joel.html




Sick-Amour is screening next at Blue
Planet Film Fest on October 8 @ 10 am, October 9 @ 10 am & October 10
@ 9:45 am at 1210-1211 4th Street Santa Monica, CA 90401. There will
be a tree baby planting after the October 8 screening and lunch after
each of the screenings. Please see the festival website for tickets &
more info:  http://www.blueplanetfilmfest.com/

The movie is then travelling to the San Francisco Documentary
Festival. It will screen at the Roxie Theater (3117 16th St San
Francisco, CA 94103) on October 17 at 5 pm and on October 20 at 7:15
pm in the collection of short films called "All Kinds of Love."
Tickets and other info are available at the festival website:
http://www.sfindie.com/





Press Release

Sick-Amour  A Film by Joel Tauber
Blue Planet Film Fest San Francisco Documentary Festival
1210-1211 4th Street Santa Monica, CA 90401 

Roxie Theater: 3117 16th St. SF CA 94103
10/8@10 am, 10/9@10 am & 10/10@9:45 am 10/17@5pm & 10/20@7:15 pm
Tickets & other info: Tickets & other info: http://www.sfindie.com/
http://www.blueplanetfilmfest.com/ 
Look for the collection of shorts: “All Kinds Of Love”
Sick-Amour, a 33-minute documentary film / love story, 
by Joel Tauber is screening at Blue Planet Film Fest on October 8 at 10 am, 
October 9 at 10 am, and 
October 10 at 9:45 am. A special “tree baby” planting will take place in Santa Monica after the screening on October 8.
The movie will then be shown at the San Francisco Documentary Festival 
at the Roxie Theater on October 17 at 5 pm and on October 20 at 7:15 pm.

Tauberʼs film, Sick-Amour, is an evocative portrait of something utterly ignored and neglected – a forlorn tree stuck in the middle of a giant parking lot. 
The tree is starved for water and oxygen, attacked by pathogens, weakened by pollutants, hit by cars, and deprived of any chance of reproduction.
Joel Tauber, a young and amorous man, is drawn to the tree. 
Outraged by the indignities that the tree is forced to endure, he devotes himself to improving the treeʼs life – watering it with giant water bags, installing tree guards to protect it from cars, building giant earrings to celebrate its beauty, lobbying to
remove the asphalt beneath its canopy and to protect it with a ring of boulders, and helping the tree reproduce…

Passionately narrated by Tauber and peppered with interviews by experts 
in a variety of disciplines (environmental philosophy, tree pathology, biology, ecology, urban forestry…), the film is a highly unusual documentary. It examines the tree in a personal and multi-faceted manner, offering it as a microcosm of the plight of urban trees and of forgotten individuals, in general.

At the same time, the film is a love story between Joel and the tree. A love story that leads to – among other things – the planting of one of the treeʼs offspring / tree babies in Santa Monica on October 8.

Trailer: http://www.sickamour.com/

Joel Tauber received his MFA in art from Art Center College of Design and his BA in art history and sculpture from Yale University. Tauber has presented his work at numerous art galleries and museums, including Susanne Vielmetter LA Projects (LA, California), Galerie Adamski (Berlin & Aachen, Germany), the Orange County Museum of Art (Newport Beach, California), the De Appel Centre For Contemporary
Art (Amsterdam, Netherlands), and the California Museum of Photography 
(Riverside, California). 
Tauber won the 2007 Contemporary Collectors of Orange County Fellowship 
and the 2007-2008 CalArts / Alpert Ucross Residency Prize for Visual Arts.

Sick-Amour is Tauberʼs first documentary film; the movie
premiered at the Downtown Film Festival-Los Angeles on September 11.
http://www.sickamour.com/ joeltauber@gmail.com



Sick-Amour (the movie) is screening next at the Hartford
International Film Festival on Sunday November 7 at 2:30PM. Sick-Amour
will be presented in "Short Program #2" at the Wadsworth Atheneum
Museum of Art (600 Main Street Hartford CT 06103). Tickets and more
info: http://www.capitolcinema.org/

Movie website: http://www.sickamour.com/
IMDB page: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt15 18279/



Sick-Amour
A Film by Joel Tauber
http://www.sickamour.com
joeltauber@gmail.com

Credits
Lived, directed, produced, filmed, & edited by Joel Tauber
Cinematography: Liz Rubin and Chris May
Additional Cinematography: Greg Shin, Jeff Schwartz, Germaine Chang, Paul Yoshida, & Jeff
Packard
Audio Recording: Liz Rubin and Mike Weinstein
Post-Finishing: Roush Media
Digital Colorist: Keith Roush
Sound Post-Production: Dino Herrmann
Music: Dino Herrmann
Guitars: Kevin Michael Gray and Byron Nemeth
Cast
The Tree
Grandma Lee Swerdlow
Joel Tauber
Interviews:
Scott Cameron Ph.D., Loyola Marymount University, environmental philosopher
Greg McPherson Ph.D., UC Davis, Urban Forestry Research
Jan Scow, arborist
Fred Roth, Ph.D., Cal Poly Pomona, Horticulture department, tree pathologist
Cheryl Swift Ph.D., Whittier College, biologist and sycamore expert
Glenn Fitzgerald Ph.D., US Water Conservation Lab, Phoenix, Arizona
John Gamon Ph.D., Professor of Biological Sciences, Cal State LA
Scott Wilson, Northeast Trees founder
Ken, sanitation worker
Ellen Mackey, Senior Ecologist, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Tim Brick, Managing Director of the Arroyo Seco Foundation, Pasadena, CA
Steve Madison, Vice Mayor of the City of Pasadena
Sid Tyler, Councilmember of the City of Pasadena
Tree Baby Parents & Sites in the film:
Mark Snyder and Alma Cielo (violin), Altadena, CA
Grant Miller, Jimena Arenas, & Carmen, Redwood City, CA
Bill Wheelock and Anne Hars, LA, CA
Gary Kornblau and Scott Freeburg, LA, CA
Denise Bratton and Jessica Fleischmann, LA, CA
Tad Beck, Los Angeles, CA
Laurie Firstenberg, Peter Zellner, & Edie, LA, CA
Martin, David, and Jennie Marie Fockens, and Constance Somerfeld
Donna Stein and Sophie Korn, Pasadena, CA
Joel Tauber, LA, CA
Sam Freeman, Venice, CA
David, Cheryl, Charlie, and Olivia Smith, Pasadena, CA
Marty and Deena Singer, Beverly Hills, CA
Theodore Payne Foundation, Sun Valley, CA
Audubon Middle School
Walteria Elementary, Torrance, CA
Walden School, Pasadena, CA
University of Southern California, LA, CA
Washington Park, Pasadena, CA
Melanie Bono, NAK, Aachen, Germany
Aram Moshayedi, LA><ART, LA, CA
Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, CA
Central Arroyo Seco Valley, Pasadena, CA
Wedding:
Joel Tauber
Alison Joy Goldberg
Their families