MEDIA

Publishing: Lady Jane's Miscellany, USA, Interview Featured Artist 2010 + New Paintings

lady jane;s miscellany#2Now Available

Lady Jane's Miscellany magazine features the work of critically acclaimed poets, dramatists, essayists, short story writers, artists and more!  I'm really pleased to be the featured artist for their second issue with an interview and several of my recent paintings, especially given the high quality writing of this publication which includes several poets laureate. It's published bi-annually by San Fransisco Bay Press.

Chanson de geste-song of Hillary, Gopalkrishnan 2009

The images are in greyscale and include my painting: Dog Deity (2008); Viva Las Shiva (2006); Talk Show (2006); Elsewhere 2 (2008); a detail of Apocalypse the Game (2010); and my portrait of Hillary Rhodam Clinton Chanson de geste:Song of Hillary [pictured bottom left -see Galleries]. Poetry talks to our soul and this is a very very engaging collection of thoughts by talented American poetsI want to thank Jeff at LJM for being such an insighful interviewer. The interview deals a lot with my current work in progress, In The Dead Duke's Place

Buy A Copy Here

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Published by Carl Gopal | July 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: The French Literary Review, Featured Artist, Oct, 2010

[due October] I will be the featured artist in the English-language, French poetry magazine The French Literary Review #13 in October. The FLR specialises in English poetry that connects with France, it's language, history, culture and the pleasurable things in life which don't have categories. A small magazine from the south of France with good values and, I have to say it, a really wonderful old world charm about it. I love that.

Published will be: Revolution 1-4;  and 2 close ups from this painting in greyscale. My pen and ink drawings of the ancien régime characters were drawn in 2001 and exhibited in my 2008 show We'll Always Have Paris at Kieth + Lottie (pictured with a sample of their standard cover).

Schrödinger's Requiem close up1  The painting, of course, is about Diana's death in a tunnel in Paris in 1997. In my history degree I did a lot of French history, albeit from a rather unusual perspective (as usual). The 2008 show had several paintings which explored the 'idea' of Paris as a location of the different worlds which quantum theory makes possible.

The Diana painting, Schrödinger's Requiem, asked what the alternative realities might be had Diana lived, where was she, what was she doing, was she still living in a car on the run? What are all our other selves doing that took a left, instead of a right, turn, before entering the tunnels which decide our fate. As I was painting, cutting, spraying and drying (it was endless this one), I was playing Gary Numan's 1979 track 'Cars'. The words, ever appropriate to Diana's life, worked their way into the painting.

Schrödinger's Requiem close up2The title refers to Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger's famous 1935 thought experiment Schrödinger's Cat (Google it). Long story short, a cat is put in a box without air. Before opening it, the cat could be either alive or dead. But before opening the box, the cat is, in quantum terms, BOTH alive and dead. In this spirit, and as someone who loved Diana's spirited life, I wondered if she is alive in another world where boxes remained closed - but possibilities open.

 

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Published by Carl Gopal | June 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Empowering Communities: Phati'tude Literary Magazine, USA & Utilitarian Donuts, Canada, 2010

Publishing July/August 2010

Angels and Pears  BW version

Busy month. In July I'm helping out to promote the value of diverse communities. LGBT writers in NYC and grassroots political art and poetry in Regina, SK, Canada. In this sense, it's a part of my social activism and belief that art can help to move thinking in new directions.

My painting Angels and Pears will be featured in the special issue of Phati'tude Literary Magazine celebrating LGBT writers and artists. It will help illustrate an essay on Gay Marriage and the challanges this issue faces. I spoke to Melbourne radio station 3CR about this a few months back and of course was included in the UK queer literary journal Chroma in 2009. I feel good when I can support other GLBT folks get across the idea that compassion, diversity and justice is nothing to fear. 

Print edition available now but the official launch is at New York City's well established The Bowery Poetry Club, Friday, July 9, 2010 @ 7:30PM. Read more about my painting in my diary. Phat'itude have been active in shaping diverse voices in literature in the US since 1997. The Lavender Issue: LGBT Literature Today will be available for sale on their website from July/August, 2010 on Amazon.com. Each issue features writers from the U.S., Canada, England, Scotland, Australia, New Zealand, Guam, the Philippines, Japan. The publisher's (IAAS) various programmes are designed to strengthen the ability to foster understanding of and respect for cultural diversity through literature and media literacy.

Angels and Pears, acrylic, screenprint, photo stencils on stretched canvas.
Carl Gopalkrishnan. 2009.

Utilitarian  Donuts#1 Cover Art Gopalkrishnan 2010Utilitarian Donuts, Cover Art - July/August 2010

A new poetry and arts publication in Regina, Canada will provoke ideas and discussion around social and political movements through poetry, prose and art. Differing points of view appear side by side with the only intent to provoke new creative energies in the Regina arts community. Go Donuts! Regina based and distributed.

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Published by carl gopal | June 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Radio: Interview 3CR In Ya Face, James McKenzie

3CR Melbourne's In Ya Face presenter James McKenzie interviewed me a few weeks ago on his live radio program. I just want to thank them again (belated post) for a frank, informed and lively discussion. I came away from that grateful for being able to explore different views on questions as diverse as gay marriage, art and politics and the US Tea Party Movement.

About In Ya Face

“It’s probably the longest running queer radio show in Australia,” James says. In Ya Face explores gay, lesbian and queer issues with interviews, music and chat. Topics include civil unions, relationships, HIV/AIDS and queer current affairs, plus much more. “We like to interview people doing interesting things in the queer community, whether it be activism, social justice, peer support or entertainment,” Jacqui says. “We’re also big on the quirk factor”.

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Published by Carl Gopal | May 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: The Palestine Chronicle, April 2010

My painting And Starring Benyamin Netanyahu as Norman Maine uses the main characters from the 1950s musical A Star is Born as metaphor for the current relationship between America (Esther) and Israel (Norman). It was very much a personal response to the January 2009 ground invasion of Gaza and I painted it just after the March election which returned the Likud party to power in Israel.

I used the metaphor of a relationship in a Hollywood movie to make the point that we bring different experiences and history to a relationship. We think we speak the same language or culture, but the reality is that when things go wrong, it’s often caused by differences we never saw coming. The time to acknowledge these differences is now, not by the time the issue becomes life and death. The painting suggests a different lens. What if our leaders entered into relationship counseling instead of political mediation?

The film metaphor is also about navigating the falsehood of public life and politics. They are playing multiple roles. Sometimes conflict is useful to them, and the audience is left to ponder  what's real and not real. Anyway, see the film and ponder.

It has been published in the Art Section of the Palestine Chronicle. Just log onto their website and go to the Art link at the top of the page and select "paint". Palestine Chronicle:  http://www.palestinechronicle.com .

To answer people's email about why I chose the subject, I’m concerned that artists today are disconnecting from the political context of art history, and indeed their own art. The union of art and politics is very discouraged in the art world. Art that focuses on political content gets lumped with protest and propaganda art more often. This is where the disconnect starts.

There is today a new assumption that ‘real art’ isn’t about politics at all. As a community, we should be very concerned with that because it’s part of the censoring of our history. And political expression is a huge part of our art history.

On the conflict itself, what the painting is concerned with is history, including personal history, clouding one's ability to make proportional and just decisions. Cultures of militarism and extremism thrive within cycles of violence. That is why, as artists, we can and should use culture to change culture.

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Published by Carl Gopal | April 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Breadcrumb Scabs, #14, 2010.

My second cover art for US poetry magazine Breadcrumb Scabs is out for February 2010. View the full cover in the 'Media' section (click left).

Lena's poets always dive off the edge and this issue is no different. A great supporter of diverse cultures and bad-tempered poets. The cover is a painting from my untitled series from 2000. A really difficult collection of images from a very odd time and Lena's poets capture that perfectly. I respect her choices when she puts each issue together.

I'm also working on some new paintings exploring the 'Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse' from Chapter 6 of Revelation. The four horses (minus the men) carry across several paintings, and I am in the process of a very detailed pen and ink drawing/print based on ancient board games with a mix of hand drawn and sampled historical and political images.

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Published by Carl Gopal | February 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Towards Freedom resource booklet

It's a privilege to be able to support the work of Same Sex Domestic Abuse Group (SSDAG) in Western Australia through their use of my art for the cover of their new resource booklet Towards Freedom (SSDAG, 2009).

The story behind the whole 2001 "Untitled" exhibition (see side menu) from which this cover painting comes from, is very personal. Suffice to say that the journey of these images fits a type of poetic justice. This valuable resource will hopefully help a lot of same sex DV persons to find their own journey to freedom from abuse.

[pictured Mark Ravenscroft, founding Chairman of SSDAG]

SSDAG Chairman Mark Ravenscroft 2009

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Published by Carl Gopal | February 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Chroma Journal UK , # 9 'Americas'

I have a painting in the current issue of Chroma Journal in London, themed "Americas". It's my acrylic and stencil/spray on canvas painting "Obama in Conversation with Vishnu and Daleks" (see Work in Progress and Media sections). Chroma is funded by Arts Council England and it's literary pieces get positively reviewed in The Times.

My painting is about many things, not least the way that Obama emerged from the Internet, as if he and everything we name must be reborn through the Internet to have legitimacy to our ideas of 'what's real'. That said, I unnapologetically support Mr Obama's agenda, but agree that the changes we need cannot be achieved by one person. Hidden in the painting is a lot of code which isn't clear in a reproduction. So who is Vishnu and who are the Daleks? Who will influence Obama the most and change our world without asking us? And in a world of information operations and communications warefare, are the Daleks the good guys? A painting about secret agents, and agents of change.

Purchase a copy of Issue 9 online: http://www.chromajournal.co.uk/
or at the following bookshops:

In Paris, (@Librairie Les Mots la Bouche)
In London, (@Gay's the Word)
In San Francisco, (@City Lights Bookshop)

Or read about the contents and order Issue 9 at:    http://www.inpressbooks.co.uk/chroma_9_americas_issue_i019951.aspx

Thanks to ACE and Editor Shaun Levin and his team for publishing this piece. You can still view my cover feature gallery for 'Literal Latte' in New York City at http://www.literal-latte.com/2009/06/carl-gopal/

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Published by Carl Gopal | February 2010 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: June 2009, NYC: Cover in 'Literal Latté', USA

I have new cover art in the US, for Literal Latté in New York City for the June 2009 issue. This publication has been helping new writers to get a foot in the door of the traditional publishing world for many years now. Literal Latté remains committed to finding and nurturing great talents both on its website and in its new annual anthology,in book format. It's been great making new friends with the editorial team there. They are online at: http://www.literal-latte.com

Please do more than visit them (read everything in the issue and trail the archives). They kindly included a gallery of my art too. The Latté team have a real enthusiasm and respect for all things creative. The cover image is titled 'Elsewhere3', part of a series of works using Hermann Minkowski's illustration of 'spacetime'. It ponders on how we create reality, what's inside and outside our perception and asks what's going on "elsewhere"? That said, it also looks like an hourglass doesn't it? More time metaphors...

In July 2009 I will have work in Chroma Journal, the UK's only queer literary journal. Published twice a year, you can read more about the journal online at: http://www.chromajournal.co.uk/

Also, I have now added a new feature to my website with a 'Contact' page to send a more direct email enquiry about the work or to leave a comment in my 'Guest Book'. Please let me know your thoughts:)

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Published by Carl Gopal | July 2009 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Breadcrumb Scabs, cover, June/July 2009

This month I have an oil pastel on the cover of Breadcrumb Scabs' Issue 6, June 2009 [pictured], a new independent poetry magazine from Michigan. This little publication is raw, quirky, and a bit in your face in a way I thought had disappeared. Lucky that quality is still around. Also in June I have artwork featured in the literary journal (Literal Latte in NYC). Latte care about high quality writing and support emerging writers and artists that don't always fit a particular mould. I fear that the written word is facing death-by-Xbox if we don't keep it alive. I wish I could write as well as the contributers in this journal but my brush is mightier than the pen:)

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Published by Carl Gopal | May 2009 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Drexter Magz, Indonesia, 2009 + New Paintings

I am a featured artist in the latest issue of Drexter Magz, the pdf arts and culture magazine from indonesia. Many thanks guys. Some great artists in this issue.

New Paintings

Like everyone else, I never thought to see the day. Obama will need a lot of goodwill and support-this planet is a mess. Like the rest of the world, I watch and hope for the best. I'm no different from the many artists trying to make sense of these changes, and have been inspired to paint a series of canvases about the new US administration. 

We need to avoid canonising him, or the inevitable disappointments will detract from his good points. I'm already a bit disappointed in some of the symbolic aspects of the inauguration in January, but let's see what Obama has planned for bringing noisy, different people together. It's a tough challenge.

Still, you never know what will come out on the canvas, and these are interesting times. The working title is: "One Dove is Wearing Vera Wang". I'm using a lot of symbols: from AI and Indian mysticism to Braille code and equations from cognitive theorems used in AI. The works are all in acrylic on canvas, but I am experimenting with adding both stencil and spray on the acrylic on canvas.

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Published by Carl Gopal | February 2009 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Daily Constitutional, Essay, Printed Matter, NYC, USA

(Daily Constitutional #6 Covertransfered from my old blog) This publication ran from 2006-2009.

Daily Constitutional Launch - By Proxy (Issue 6, Summer 2008, Saturday, August 16, 2008, 5:00-7:00 pm.

Printed Matter, Inc. is pleased to announce a launch for Issue 6 ("By Proxy") of the Daily Constitutional, a bi-annual magazine devoted to providing a platform for artists projects and writings. My article Creative Vivisection is part of Issue 6. The launch will take place on Saturday, August 16th from 5:00-7:00 PM. Printed Matter is located at 195 10th Avenue (between 21 and 22nd Streets) in New York City. Support this innovative, creative and intelligent journal which poses all the tough questions about the contemporary art market and the real experiences of today's artists.

ESSAY: Creative Vivisection

This essay appears in The Daily Chronicle's Issue 6 (June 2008).

Today’s editorials exude the illusion that creativity is a tame beast. The proponents of managerial utopias busily recruiting creativity to sell their message are often shocked when they try and harness this beast primarily for economic or corporate prestige. When they look for the innovative idea that will save or raise the bottom line, they find that nature has a mind of its own.

Since Harvard’s MBA professors anointed ‘A’rtists as the next wave of business accessories, the word ‘innovation’ has been doped with steroids. One of the current solutions helping senior management everywhere to avoid introspection and self-honesty is to harness ‘creativity’ or creative individuals as engines of change. Most often this change is economic, although thankfully the buzz that accompanied Richard Florida’s The Rise of the Creative Class is giving way to the sober realization that creativity doesn’t actually work unless there is a grain of sense to it. The public today will simply vomit it up.

Sadly, creative people also find their process being harnessed to support the corporate and political ethos of some pretty shallow goals. Anyone who rents a DVD knows that creativity can be entertaining and make loads of money. What they forget is that creativity is also a dialogue with ourselves. In this dialogue we unlock the door to change, where the beast of indecision, confusion, and chaos lie waiting.

Hardly great news for risk management analysts. Creatively-deficit benefactors also do not realize that, like a Medusa, staring at truth means losing control. This is naturally the opposite effect of harnessing the engine of creativity for profit.

A battle is therefore being fought in the popular mind about the role of creativity that has not been seen for some time. But is this a Renaissance or a Rort? And where does the artist find themselves in this new marketplace of ideas?

Creatives or artists usually spend years getting to know this beast, and either befriend it or train it to serve their ends. The third option of course, is that the beast tears you apart, and you make great fodder for some Indie screenwriter to turn your life into a biopic. That is, of course, if you distinguish yourself past the millions of other artists simply screwing up their life and dropping dead without an obituary. But if you have survived a few years of artistic travel without too many addictions, your skills as an animal trainer make you a valuable asset to HR managers eager to look innovative for the top brass.

Creatives recruited to serve the new innovation bandwagon, however, risk becoming deaf to their inner dialogue if they allow the most shallow managerialist gurus to redefine creativity for a society bereft of meaning. In our technological Disneyland, functionality is only a part of creativity.

Yes, it dominates the growing list of skills required from creative recruits, but Robert Putnam has done much to help us understand that ‘social capital’ has a crucial role to play in how we administer our resources. Utopians who rationalize creativity to fit in nicely with ideas of ‘economic man’ or some management guru’s twist on game theory that he thinks he can market in the business press, risk sterilizing their little pet. And despite the discomfort of domesticating it, society needs this animal to evolve in order to unleash that social capital into society.

False innovation rhetoric turns our reverie into a revision controlled outside of the privacy of our inner world. Certainly creativity and innovation is needed in the world. But we should pay heed to that core of self-honesty that comes with living with the beast.

History has many lessons of powerful leaders, societies, and ideologues that have used creativity as a spearhead into the population to increase their power and influence. When Nazi propagandist filmmaker Leni Riefendstahl was asked about the Holocaust in her 1997 interview with the New York Times she said, "I did not know what was going on. I did not know anything about those things." To say it’s about selling out doesn’t even come close.

Creative practitioners are both educators and gatekeepers to this knowledge. They need to know the power they possess, and that havoc and inspiration paint from the same brush. We need to acknowledge the seduction of our benefactors’ adulation and our role in being co-opted as functionaries to managerialist fads. In the diminishing sense, we need to protect the sacredness of creativity from the hungry, but one-dimensional perceptions of the innovation-obsessed.

By avoiding reflection on the role of creativity in people's lives, we risk turning the innovation bandwagon into a false Renaissance. It is a revolution, but as we have seen throughout history, change that rides on the black market of creative vivisection can destroy, as well as create. Artists should bear this in mind before they take off on holiday and leave the beast with neighbors they don’t trust.

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Published by Carl Gopal | August 2008 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Front Magazine cover, May/June 2008, Vancouver, Canada

(transfered from my old blog)

My photo from the 'Suburban Dreamtime' series, which was part of my 2006 exhibition 'Sedition and Other Bedtime Stories' is featured on the cover of Vancouver arts magazine Front Magazine. Front is an arts organisation in Vancouver that supports experimental work, often challenging the mainstream, and enjoy exploring new ideas. Sold in Canada and the US, the magazine has a large subscriber base internationally.

It is a theme around the Iraq War, specifically how we are led to believe things, like children. It came about from my research on the Anti-terrorism legislation in Australia which produced the work for my 2006 exhibition, Sedition and Other Bedtime Stories, at Kieth+Lottie Gallery in Perth, WA. Some people found this image a bit confronting, but it turned out exactly as I wanted it to. The model, who was supervised in the shoot by her mother, was amazing.

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Published by Carl Gopal | June 2008 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Publishing: Cover Art, Social Policy Magazine, USA, 2007 + Drum Media Interview

SPM and layout Carl Gopalkrishnan 2007

(transfered from my old blog)

Cover Art: Social Policy Magazine, New Orleans, USA. 2007 (Education Reform). I really found this a challenge, as I worked with a great editor, Caitlin, who sent me the complex articles on the No Child Left Behind Act which was being reviewed by Congress during the publishing of this issue. In the end I think I got it right, the annual yearly progress (AYP) being highlighted in a scene reminiscent of a miltary rescue operation with the kids, paying the price for adult politics.

Interview: Drum Media, Alphabet City coverage, Artrage Frestival, Perth, W.Australia, 2007

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Published by Carl Gopal | June 2007 | Tag : Media | 0 comments


Radio Interview - RTRFM, Aug 2006

 

This is an interview I gave to promote the Sedition show with McKenzie Murray interviewing. RTRFM Radio in Perth have been very supportive, especially with Sedition and Other Bedtime Stories. Please tune into RTRFM's Monrning Magazine, it's a great show/

 

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Published by Carl Gopal | August 2006 | Tag : Media | 0 comments