Good stuff has been happening around these parts this summer. Our screening of "Who is Bozo Texion" was a blast:
And the opening night of "Lost Closet" with work by visiting artists Leif Goldberg and Erin Rosenthal was fantastic (don't miss this show, it runs through September): Shingles by Leif Goldberg
Print by Erin Rosenthal
PLUS, There was music by Crude Hill and Wooden Robot:
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel art critic Mary Louise Schumacher just posted a sneak peek of tomorrows cue section featuring a front cover story about MIGA! You can read (and comment) her article online HERE. Also check out the interactive Gallery Night & Day page where Milwaukee residents were asked to call in with their favorite pick for Gallery Night shows. MIGA founder Jessica Steeber gives a shout out to Paper Boat and local filmmaker Andrew Swant hollers at the Armoury and Green Gallery! Check it out it's techonology at its finest!
Also, check out Onmilwaukee.com where writer Mollie Butler wrote a great article "Off the Beaten Path" about the small galleries in Milwaukee and the struggle to stay open. MIGA and many of it's galleries were mentioned in the article HERE.
For immediate release July 1, 2008 Paper Boat presents: "Sunset Scavenger" Work by Bill DanielJuly 4th- 31st Curated by Faythe Levine Summer Gallery Night, July 25th 7-10pm 9PM Enjoy a special FREE screening of "Who Is Bozo Texino?" a documentary film by Bill Daniel (outside weather permitting)
"Sailvan in Arizona" 2004 Paper Boat is pleased to be showing the varied work of artist, filmmaker and photographer Bill Daniel. "Sunset Scavenger" will feature a variety of wall based work, based around Daniel's most recent romance with houseboat culture. There will be mural-sized Xerox blow-ups which are a way to turn the imagery into wheat-pasteable graffiti, and some new digital murals, as well as some traditional b/w photography. A special screening of Daniel's documentary film "Who Is Bozo Texino" will be shown on Gallery Night (in the backyard, weather permitting). Sunset Scavenger is a project supported by Creative Capital Foundation. Also available throughout the duration of the exhibit will be Daniel's new book "Mostly True" published by Microcosm, a companion to his documentary "Who is Bozo Texino? Artist Statement: "Sunset Scavenger is the catch-all title for an on-going series of related projects--- photo, video, installation--- that started around 2002 when I coupled my interest in outlaw houseboaters with my long-time fascination with the specter of environmental collapse. Since then the project has morphed and evolved to include more subjects, like Katrina, Peak Oil, traditional and punk-style boat building, people living in vehicles… The documentary aspects are woven together with more mythological and folksy elements. I'm drawn to all kinds of American vernacular forms, from railroad graffiti to hippie buses. When people weld an old VW van to the top of a schoolbus to make a mobile house--- that is one of my favorite expressions of ingenuity and self-reliance. Now I want to find someone who is figuring out how to turn abandoned SUVs into greenhouses. Filmography: "Who Is Bozo Texino?" The secret history of hobo graffiti Directed, photographed, edited by Bill Daniel 2005, 56 min, B/W, 16mm and Super 8, mastered on Digibeta NTSC
Shot on freight hopping trips across the wild West and 16 years in the making, this is the mostly-factual cinematic account of the epic search and unlikely discovery of hobohemia's most legendary boxcar artist.
Who is Bozo Texino? chronicles the search for the source of a ubiquitous and mythic rail graffiti-- a simple sketch of a character with an infinity-shaped hat and the scrawled moniker, "Bozo Texino"-- a drawing seen on railcars for over 80 years. Daniel's gritty black and white film uncovers a secret society and it's underground universe of hobo and railworker graffiti, and includes interviews with legendary boxcar artists, Coaltrain, Herby, Colossus of Roads, and The Rambler. Shooting over a 16-year period, Daniel rode freights across the West carrying a Super-8 sound camera and a 16mm Bolex. During his quest he discovered the roots of a folkloric tradition that has gone mostly unnoticed for a century. Taking inspiration from Beat artists Robert Frank and Jack Kerouac, the film functions as both a sub-cultural documentary and a stylized fable on wanderlust and outsider identity. "I was drawn to the subject by the universal graffiti impulse and the classic, corny notion of freight train blues escape." � BD
Biography born Dallas, Texas 1959 Texas-born, San Francisco exile, and confirmed tramp, Bill Daniel continues to experiment with survivalism and bricolage in his attempts to record and report on the various social margins he often finds himself in. Working without an art or film school education, he endeavors to make work that connects with an outsider audience. His work began in 1980 as he participated in and photo documented the blossoming punk rock scene in Austin, Texas. Since then his subcultural documentary subjects have included bicycle messengers, radical environmentalists, hobo graffiti artists, swap meet guitar players, rural drag racers, and "water squatters"--outlaw anchored live-aboards. His study and love for documentary photography and filmmaking has given Daniel the charge to create work that communicates across socioeconomic boundaries. Drawing from his backgrounds in studio photography, experimental media and the construction trades, Daniel builds site-specific viewing environments as a method for deploying non-linear documentary material within an allegorical, interactive setting.
Daniel's work has received awards from Creative Capital, Film Arts Foundation, The Pioneer Fund, Texas Filmmaker Production Fund, the R & B Feder Charitable Foundation, and The Western States Media Alliance. He was a Wattis Foundation artist-in-residence at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, where his installation "Souls Harbor" was exhibited in Dec. In 1999 he was in-residence at The Headlands Center for the Arts where he produced several multi-projection 16mm film installations, including "Trespassing Sign" in collaboration with the late Margaret Kilgallen. In 2001 his hobo campfire installation "The Girl on the Train in the Moon" was included in "Widely Unknown" at Deitch Projects in New York. A veteran of the touring scene, Daniel has programmed, booked and exhibited several mobile art shows, including the Lucky Bum Film Tour with partner Vanessa Renwick. In 1997-98 he curated a weekly screening series, Funhouse Cinema, in Austin, that also regularly screened in Houston and San Antonio. Daniel is also recognized for his work as cinematographer and editor for filmmaker Craig Baldwin. Other endeavors include publishing two zines--The Western Roundup, a punk fanzine in 1981-82, and Detour, a situationist journal in 1986. He is also the creator of an experimental sports league, The Texas Gas-Powered Leaf Blower Hockey Association.
Read a great interview with Bill Daniel HEREMedia Contact: Faythe Levine (414) 483-8462 paperboatboutique@gmail.com Paper Boat Gallery 2375 S. Howell Ave Milwaukee, WI 53207 www.paperboatboutique.com
EST. 2005
Proprietors:
Faythe Levine & Kim Kisiolek.
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