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Review: Super 8
Reviews
My Kid Could Paint That
A layered art-world exploitation
By
ALICIA POTTER
|
October 10, 2007
MY KID COULD PAINT THAT
3.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
My Kid Could Paint That
.
Marla Olmstead, the subject of Amir Bar-Lev’s absorbing documentary, at once reveals an artist’s temperament: dark moods, fits of inspiration, a reticence to discuss her work. Marla is four years old — yet her precociously accomplished abstract paintings (
Ode to Pollock
,
Lollipop
) have garnered worldwide acclaim and mega-sales. With quick strokes, Bar-Lev establishes the players: the wary mom, the gung-ho dad, the skeezy gallery owner who sees dollar signs in Marla’s drips. At first, the film plays like an art-world
Gypsy
; clouds gather when
60 Minutes
comes tick-tick-ticking around and concludes that an adult manipulated Marla’s best efforts. Although his conclusion doesn’t fully satisfy, Bar-Lev connects several provocative ideas, from the critical value of Abstract Expressionism and our fickle preoccupation with prodigies to his own conflicted role in Marla’s exploitation. Only the kid’s chaotic canvases are more layered.
Related
:
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,
Able not to hear
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Your tax dollars at work
,
More
Ralph Hamilton - side
Able not to hear
During the years 1796 to 1801, John Brewster Jr. painted the portraits of Colonel and Mrs. Thomas Cutts of Saco.
Your tax dollars at work
This isn’t the sort of government-funded art rife with smut, perversion, and blasphemy that sparks legislative hearings — unfortunately.
Good behavior
Restrained playfulness and a certain decorative sensibility are the outstanding attributes of this year’s DeCordova Annual Exhibition, an event that began life 16 years ago to showcase the work of New England artists at various stages of their careers.
The Artist's Body, edited by Tracey Warr, Amelia Jones
This paperback reprint of last year’s hardcover is the perfect gift for the transgression-loving art nerd on your list.
New kids on the block
24-year-old Julie Kuceris decided her Rhode Island School of Design education was more useful elsewhere. .
A paper burns
This article originally appeared in the July 13, 1982 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
Local color
It’s an art-world misconception that, to champion local art, you have to grade on a curve.
Widow speaks out
At a fund-raiser for the family of New York State Trooper Joseph Longobardo, killed in August while attempting to capture a man who had escaped from a New York jail, members of Maine’s law-enforcement community gathered around the widow of the man murdered by Manning in a 1981 highway shootout. Censored artwork hits the road: Supporters take prisoner’s paintings for a walk. By Rick Wormwood
Family affair
“New Work,” a collaboration at Whitney Art Works between mother Judith Allen and daughter Eirene Efstathiou, is a joy to unpack.
Academic (im)prints
The Bowdoin Alumni Printmaking Exhibition at ICON Contemporary Art in Brunswick is the perfect primer for the array of talent emerging from the Bowdoin College campus.
Less
Topics
:
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,
Painting
,
Visual Arts
,
Amir Bar-Lev
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[
06/02
]
Always, Patsy Cline
@ Ogunquit Playhouse
ARTICLES BY ALICIA POTTER
REVIEW: FRIENDS WITH KIDS
| March 08, 2012
There are only so many baggy vagina jokes one can take. And writer/director Jennifer Westfeldt's disappointing film about how parenthood changes a Manhattan circle of friends has its share.
REVIEW: DECLARATION OF WAR
| February 16, 2012
A baby with a brain tumor is no laughing matter.
REVIEW: YOUNG ADULT
| December 13, 2011
A baby, a high school, and esoteric pop culture references once again figure prominently — albeit less glibly — in director Jason Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody's first re-teaming since Juno.
REVIEW: A DOLPHIN TALE
| September 20, 2011
Winter the dolphin gamely plays herself in this loose re-telling of her fight for survival after a crab trap mangles her tail.
REVIEW: AFRICAN CATS
| April 25, 2011
To their credit, directors Alastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey don't cut away from a downed gazelle or a hippo mid evisceration.
See all articles by:
ALICIA POTTER
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