I really hope it keeps going! It’s such an important resource for the artworld. Thanks Kate
@casinoburger8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the tour of Art in the Big City
@singlespies8 ай бұрын
Oh no! You're thinking of suspending the Kalm Report? I hope not, I love it - it's my favorite thing on KZbin!
@johnjones37148 ай бұрын
Distressing for me as well No other channel like this
@e56428 ай бұрын
=(
@daltjacob46877 ай бұрын
Me too
@eriknieminen7 ай бұрын
please say it ain't so!
@slipton64937 ай бұрын
Loved these juicy paintings! Thank you so much James and Kate!!!
@marcusjolley10708 ай бұрын
Thank you and thank you kate
@thirdrockjul22247 ай бұрын
Thank you Kate! ❤
@chrisknights1237 ай бұрын
Who’s Kate?
@GrandPrizeFitnesAJAY7 ай бұрын
Thank you Kate! Your channel is a highlight of my youtube experience. ✨️
@tonsfocus8 ай бұрын
I have spent hours scrutinizing and "grok-ing" a stash of images of Joe Bradley's work for painting inspiration. The majority from his previous oeuvre (as you mention later in this video) consisting of a lot of raw unprimed canvas, looking like it was on the studio floor for 6 months (as you said). I have that extreme feeling of preciousness and vulnerability, that, it takes a special awareness to see the genius and wonder in what to most lay-persons would appear to be chaotic, random, and just splashed paint and accidental marks. It's the same camouflaging of intent and craft that Cy Twombly deployed with his graffiti squiggles and automatic drawing marks so long ago. It's like being able to see a secret world that most would dismiss out of hand. I appreciate his new avenue of exploration, and I think you explained his position relative to the art world and recent art history beautifully. That said, I just couldn't catch the actual word you were using in your comment (@ 6:18) about the Neo-Expressionists "maybe even some of the HEFTIC(?) painters - George Baselitz, Immendorf, Keifer." Sorry - could you reply with what you said, I missed it. I hesitate to add in the ultimate art hand grenade, but... I feel a bit of Picabia in these as well. :-) You will be missed so badly when you hang up your camera for good, so, please just keep on truckin'! Thanks James, thanks Kate!
@jameskalm8 ай бұрын
Hey Tons, the tern I used was "Heftige painters", a subcategory of the "Neue Wilden" bunch. The word "heftige" means something like "heavy" or "forceful". Also I believe many of the Heftige painters were outside Berlin in places like Cologne and Hamburg. Here's a quote from the Ketterer Kunst website " The German "Neue Wilden" tied in with the "First Neo-expressionism" of the 1960s, when Georg Baselitz, A. R. Penck, Markus Lüpertz, Bernd Koberling, Karl Horst Hödicke and others sought a new expressive way to return to the figurative. This was the basis for Neo-expressionism in Germany, which became synonymous with the "Neue Wilde", a title of an exhibition in Aachen in 1980. The term is problematic, as it does not reference a form of wild art, but rather wild artists - an alternative description of the tendency is "Heftige Malerei" (Vigorous Painting) which seeks direct contact with the work." P.S. I'll try to keep on keepin' on, but one only has so much time to paint...JK
@tonsfocus8 ай бұрын
@@jameskalm Thanks so much for the explanation. I honestly should know all of this, tsk tsk. Thanks!
@frank-j6l2z7 ай бұрын
thank you for the comment. but why shouldn't the canvas be primed? it can't hold without primer. it would also destroy the fabric. can you explain that? many thanks FROM HAMBURG-GERMANY
@tonsfocus7 ай бұрын
@@frank-j6l2z Heya Crazy Paint... I don't know if you hope JK will reply, and as a former Utrecht Paint Store employee, I'm sure he knows far more than I do. That said, I'd imagine that if Joe Bradley was using acrylic paints on unprimed canvas, it might have some archival hope. But yes, if it's oil straight on canvas, that seems bad to me too. I'm often shocked by these blue chip artists throwing archival concerns to the wind despite their works selling in the tens of millions of $. Seems negligent.
@frank-j6l2z7 ай бұрын
@@tonsfocus yes, that's right. it's negligent. thank you very much for your answer. sir best regards from Hamburg
@christopherwestpresents8 ай бұрын
I love so much of what Zwirner shows, but I feel bad for the collectors that dropped 6 figures on these paintings.
@forbeshamish44527 ай бұрын
Thank you Kate
@gavinyates91898 ай бұрын
Thank you Kate😊
@janwebber97908 ай бұрын
Fantastic show and great commentary! Thank you never gets old. 🤩
@LooroD7 ай бұрын
Thank you
@TD-qi2rw8 ай бұрын
I loved the show. Thanks Kate. All art comes out of art. A beautiful gallery presentation too.
@marceloelisarmiento88407 ай бұрын
Will you be checking out Julian Schnabel show at vito Schnabel gallery?
@jameskalm7 ай бұрын
Hey @marceloelisarmiento8840 I've got both of Julian's shows in the can. You'll just have to give me some time to edit the program, Thanks...JK
@balkandepot8 ай бұрын
Thank you James. 👌
@johnjones37148 ай бұрын
Wow just last night I was wondering what's up with Joe . Of course I know Joe from this channel. So thanks Kate.
@Chron_Dawg788 ай бұрын
appreciate your coverage and commentary, great work from Joe. Concerning the colors, I read somewhere recently that Joe generally uses out of the tube colors, so that his red is "red", his green is "green" etc. Not sure if that's 100% of the time.
@della28798 ай бұрын
Thanks Kate
@urbangardener667 ай бұрын
Many large canvases, I feel like there is a lyrical thinker trapped in all those white loopy lines trying to break out and breath. My reaction, nay advice, less can be more. I think the last painting by far the most successful. Thanks James and to Kate. Hoping you find it in you to continue your unique presentation and view point on the art happening in NY.
@robertalenrichter8 ай бұрын
I'm used to overlaying and juxtaposing patches of colour to create some sort of loose pattern, then incising a bit of form with linearity, but that's only the beginning. Which is why I take issue with the suggestion that these are "intensely worked". It doesn't take long to cover something with something else. This is not intensity. Actually, I prefer avoiding negativity, since it won't make my life any better. But, on the other hand, once in a while you just have to be true to your feelings in communication as well. Here's a bit of praise -- impressed that James Kalm remembers Horst Antes. That's an encyclopedic painting mind. Also hoping that Kalm keeps on for a while yet.
@adambrett64697 ай бұрын
Did you like the paintings?
@riverlocqa7 ай бұрын
I've always had a slight problem with Joe's work, but after years of looking it was my problem not getting it...he is an original and very strong painter...thanks Kate and JK...
@zephyrzephyr36388 ай бұрын
please please dont suspend the kalm report - -
@boandersson91347 ай бұрын
The woman model painting looks intresting. A kind of slow variation on de Kooning.
@kareymaurice32367 ай бұрын
I see a nod to Bryce Marden if my eyes are correct as well as your references. Thank you as always... Kate!
@lawrencetarpey3738 ай бұрын
I think his strongest work to date, that I'm familiar with were the "Mouth and Foot Paintings" at Gavin Brown's a few years ago. Mighty powerful stuff.
@stepladder138 ай бұрын
Don't like the white lines except in the final painting, probably because the background is quite simple compared to the other paintings in the show. I do like the busier backgrounds but I find the white lines very jarring in these works, like nails on a blackboard. Just feel that he went in the wrong direction after some lovely vibrant beginnings. Also, awesome buskers!
@RUSTYCATART7 ай бұрын
The Primo Tenderizer Pedals 😻🧡 I like you so much more now lol
@sublimeister96308 ай бұрын
I see some Gorky, some Appel, some Guston, some Basquiat, etc. The colors are playful, the lines are somewhat abstract and cryptic but they do represent recognizable symbols…of a swan, a phallus, and some faces. Fundamentally, it’s just a play on color, texture, and lines. Vom (“Bom” = Good in Portuguese) Abend (Evening in German)…in other words, the title of the show is “Good Evening,” hence the dark background contrast of the series of paintings. 👍😊
@luc79376 ай бұрын
Love from korea :)
@Nikolaorevic-hu2ul7 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@GrandPrizeFitnesAJAY7 ай бұрын
Cheers to 17 plus years of half azz ness. ❤❤❤
@Alanturner-c5xАй бұрын
I sense a certain reticence James Damned with faint praise maybe.
@59jaguar8 ай бұрын
Nice gallery space. Paintings are inconsequential . I Like your videos though.
@cedarraine78298 ай бұрын
I don’t know about that brown color he continues to use.
@jameskalm8 ай бұрын
I just scanned through the show, and didn't see a lot of brown (?)...JK
@missinglink99738 ай бұрын
70s brown vibe yuck
@lobstermash6 ай бұрын
I'm fine with the brown. But there's a grubby pink in there which is the colour of old medical prostheses and the gums of dentures. Even a little dab gives me flashbacks.
@eenkjet7 ай бұрын
His early work is stronger. This is too Cobra.
@msolbakken8 ай бұрын
Gestural catalog of lines and shapes. Kind of a mash up of Brice Marden and Trudy Benson.
@adriancarroll69957 ай бұрын
Joe Bradley has folliculitis on his butt.
@nnervecenter8 ай бұрын
A lot of late Picabia going on
@adriancarroll69955 ай бұрын
Folliculitis of the butt
@missinglink99738 ай бұрын
not my cup of tea
@RamonRamonism8 ай бұрын
thanks to your video we can confirm he's another overrated painter...
@blindofintellect2 ай бұрын
Big Bradley fan here, but what's with the thick, blatent white, Marden-like, Johns-like outlines, Joe? Yuck. The painting underneath, the color, the forms and shapes are all magnificent. Too bad you found a need to tie everything up and together like a child's Christmas presents. They look middle aged-repressed and "arty" compared to your early abstractions which remain, frankly, masterpieces. So...magnificent painting, elaborate disappointing paintings.