FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 16, 2010
SUSHI Performance and Visual Arts Presents Family Matters
A visual arts exhibition in conjunction with a dynamic series of multidisciplinary events
San Diego, Calif. –Family Matters introduces Sushi’s audience to a group of artists who reflect on the esoteric legacies of the avant-garde through work that is formally – if paradoxically – influenced by popular entertainment.
On view from Thursday, March 4 through Saturday, April 24, the exhibition brings a range of expression similar to that of a young person coming to terms with his own family history – harsh criticism, misty-eyed sentimentality, perverse parody, and nuanced understanding all abound. SUSHI’s viewer is presented with a range of experiences stemming from the personal stakes these artists have in the often revolutionary, always transient moments that make up the history of the avant-garde.
Curated by Brian Goeltzenleuchter, artists and performers featured in Family Matters include:
- The Cedar Tavern Singers will compose pop songs about such avant-trivia as the Futurist Manifesto and Robert Smithson’s iconic earthwork, Spiral Jetty.
- San Diego-based new media artist Lisa Hutton makes dada nonsense poems the subject of her multimedia animations.
- Andrew Kaufman plays the role of artist-as-amateur-magician in his Kiss series, which pays homage to the lineage of sculptors, from Constantin Brancusi to Felix Gonzalez-Torres, who have made work based on the subject of the kiss.
- Lauren Tyler Norby’s project Altruism confounds the notion of benevolence in art and cultural activities that involve gifting.
- Dutch artist Oscar Prinsen takes on the persona of a self-help guru who erects playground sculpture (for adults) that comically institutionalizes many of the themes of early performance art.
- Iowa-based artist, Donna Stack embraces the feminist legacy of using soft, gendered materials in a series of profanity-laden, hand-stitched welcome mats that would make Martha Stewart blush.
Event Programming
Family Matters is conceived as a visual arts exhibition and a dynamic series of special events programming, including music concert, film screening, panel discussion, and urban interventions.
EXHIBITION RECEPTION: March 5, 6-9PM
MUSIC CONCERT – March 6, 8PM
The Cedar Tavern Singers will play a live concert at Sushi featuring tracks from such albums as Songs for a Dead Hare and We Are Making Art. The band will be available after the concert for Q&A.
FILM SCREENING AND PANEL DISCUSSION – March 12, 8PM
Nepotism and Other Character Flaws is the title and sole requirement for this evening of artist-made films. Four artists from the Family Matters exhibition are charged by curator Brian Goeltzenleuchter to develop a film series comprised of “artists, friends, and/or colleagues to whom you owe something or from whom you want something.” Extending the theme of “family matters” and opening the typically derogatory concept of nepotism up for debate, this evening promises lively discussion between audience and panelists.
Panelists include: Lisa Hutton, Andrew Kaufman, Lauren Tyler Norby and Donna Stack
URBAN INTERVENTIONS – TBD
Dutch artist Oscar Prinsen will revise his role as evangelist and spokesman for his Institute for the Wandering Man in a series of interventions on the streets of Downtown San Diego. Encouraging all whom he meets to pause from secular concerns to engage in a therapeutic conversation with him in his trademark sculpture, Prinsen will draw further interest to Sushi’s role in the Downtown community.
An integral part of the West Coast cultural landscape, SUSHI earns national acclaim for the San Diego arts community and for almost 30 years has provided a forum for artists to reflect the rich diversity of its multifaceted ethnic, cultural, sexual, and personal backgrounds. Sushi’s office and performance space is located at 390 Eleventh Ave. at J St. in downtown San Diego. Gallery Hours: Wednesday – Friday 1 – 6PM. For more information on the shows and tickets, visit http://www.sushiart.org or call 619.235.8466.
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One of this year’s Red Ball musical performances will be Wolfgang von Cope and Orkestra Moustachio. The photo kinda tips the reason for the name, eh?



