Welcome to blogs.ocweekly.com
Blogs
  • News
    • Daily News
    • News Articles
    • Moxley Confidential
    • National
    • Letters
  • Music
    • Top Picks
    • Heard Mentality
    • Entertainment Ads
    • Submit An Event
  • Calendar
    • Top Picks
    • Submit an Event
    • Valentine's Day Events
  • Restaurants
    • Restaurant Guide
    • Reviews
    • This Hole-In-the-Wall Life
    • Stick a Fork In It
    • Sponsored Online Menus
    • Restaurant Ads
  •  
  • Arts
    • Theater
    • Books
    • Trendzilla
    • Submit an Event
  • Films
    • Now Showing
    • Movie Showtimes
    • Reviews
    • Movie Ads
  • The Ads
    • Ad Index
    • Flip Book
  • Classifieds
    • Free Classifieds
    • Real Estate For Sale
    • Virtual Career Fair
    • Personals
    • Personals Blogs
    • Alternative Healing
  • Blogs
    • Navel Gazing
    • Heard Mentality
    • Stick A Fork In It
  • Columns
    • Ask A Mexican
    • Hey You!
    • Savage Love
    • Letters
  • Best Of
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bars & Clubs
    • Food & Drink
    • People & Places
    • Shopping & Services
    • Best of Ads
    • Readers Choice
  • Bars/Clubs
    • Bars/Clubs Home
    • Bars/Club Ads
    • Marijuana Dispensaries
  • Archives
  • Reader Recommendations
  • Promotions
    • Events
    • Street Team
    • Join the Street Team
    • On Sale!
    • Free Stuff
    • Sponsored Concert Calendars
  • Site Map

Top

blog

Stories

  • A Clockwork Orange

    Israel Ambassador Shouted Down

    By Matt Coker

    1
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Coolest Beachhouses EVER?

    By Matt Coker

    2
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Did Mom Kill Twin Tot?

    By Matt Coker

    3
  • Breaking News

    Ousted Mayor Demands Recount

    By Spencer Kornhaber

    4
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Brawl at the Pool Club

    By Matt Coker

    5
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Rep. Miller Targets Immigrants

    By Matt Coker

    6
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Life's a Beach Houses

    By Matt Coker

    7
  • Gimme That OC Religion

    Schullers Do Pastoring Wrong

    By Gustavo Arellano

    8
  • A Clockwork Orange

    Real Housewife Companion of OC

    By Matt Coker

    9
  • Breaking News

    George Will Clucks for Chuck

    By R. Scott Moxley

    10
  • Naranja News

    LiberalOC vs. Orange Juice!

    By Gustavo Arellano

    11
  • School Daze

    Buy a Fruit Cup, Save College Summer Session

    By Fiorella Casella

    12
  • Dishney

    Fat People at Disneyland: An Appreciation

    By Vickie Chang

    13
  • Breaking News

    Judge in Jailhouse Murder Failed to Disclose Conflict

    By Nick Schou

    14
  • A Clockwork Orange

    District Attorney Objects to Judge's Gang-Banger Sentences

    By Matt Coker

    15
 
A Clockwork Orange

From Newport Beach Film Festival to Tribeca for Harbor High Theater Freak-Turned-Filmmaker

By Matt Coker, Tuesday, Mar. 24 2009 @ 4:21PM
Comments (30)
Categories: Art Review, Newport Beach Film Festival
Con-Artist_Sladek.jpg
Courtesy of Plug Ugly Films
Straight from the horse's mouth with Michael Slàdek.
Though Norma Desmond only lived at the cineplex (and now Netflix), she famously said, "I am big. It's the pictures that got small." Filmmaker and one-time Newport Beach resident Michael Slàdek is not yet big, but he is turning the phrase uttered by Sunset Boulevard's gloriously spaced-out Gloria Swanson on its head. For him, it's the film festivals that got big.

Five years after Slàdek's debut feature, Devils Are Dreaming, premiered at the 2004 Newport Beach Film Festival, Con Artist, his new feature-length documentary on New York "business artist" and composer Mark Kostabi, makes its world premiere April 25 at the Tribeca Film Festival in Manhattan. It's a long way from Newport Harbor High School, where Slàdek finished high school after his family moved from Denver when he was 16.

"It was definitely a culture shock," he recalls by phone from his new home in New York City, in between busily finishing post-production on Con Artist in preparation of the festival that runs April 22-May 3. "I remember coming to town. First I started high school at Corona del Mar, then I went to Newport Harbor. I was wearing jeans, boots, a black trench coat, the sides of my head were shaved. I was looking a little like a punk rock kid. And everyone else was in shorts, tee-shirts with long, surfer hair. It was definitely quite different." Slàdek fit in nicely in the theater department. "In the long run I had a blast in Newport," he said. Having just read in the New York Times about the controversy involving the on, off and on-again production of Rent at Corona del Mar High School, Slàdek said, "I know there are a lot of strange things now" and seemed genuinely mystified about it. He was not oblivious to clashes between art, culture, politics and discrimination during his time behind the fabled Orange Curtain--an "unfortunate undercurrent" as he put it--but that was not his local experience, remembering the community as being "very supportive for the most part" to a high school theater freak.
 
He took his high school chops to Orange Coast College and also appeared in theatrical productions at Laguna Playhouse and South Coast Repertory. He later moved to Los Angeles, wound up in an experimental theater company and grew "sick of it there." He moved to New York and spent three years working behind-the-scenes at MTV News and also directed music videos, worked off-camera in the porn industry and managed the Brooklyn band Stupid. He'd never got involved in film production while in Orange County, but jumped into cinema in the Big Apple.

"I guess the New York scene is more friendly to independent film than Los Angeles," he said. "I didn't realize it, it just happened that way."

Devils-Are-Dreaming.jpg
Courtesy of Plug Ugly Films
Not a knife-wielding "Devils Are Dreaming" scene.
Among his first film-related gigs was working at Tribeca and he remains the New York rep for SAGIndie. He also runs his own NYC-based indie production company, Plug Ugly Films, whose debut feature was Devils Are Dreaming, which he set in Southern California and largely shot in Orange County. For the film's hypnotic soundtrack, he leaned on Stupid (synergy, baby!). As he told the Weekly's Greg Stacy in an April 2004 interview, among the obstacles that production suffered was getting shut down by Irvine police on the first day of shooting because red-headed lead actor Stephen Donovan was running through the UCI campus in his underwear and a robe, wielding a large kitchen knife.
 
As you can imagine, Devils Are Dreaming is unusual. It follows a frustrated, wannabe artist named Joseph (Donovan) bouncing between various realities, capturing glimpses of other paths his life could have taken. In his separate Weekly review, Stacy called it a "strange and irritating but potent directorial debut."
 
Slàdek went on to make other shorts and features that got picked up by other festivals, and ranking them all he puts Newport Beach's among the top of his list, calling it "one of the more fun and well-organized, filmcentric festivals I've been to." It saddens him Con Artist will not be making the trip to the town he once called home. Unfortunately, the Newport and Tribeca festivals overlap this year.
 
The choice over which to enter was obvious. Slàdek calls Tribeca "a major festival." Producer Jane Rosenthal and legendary actor Robert DeNiro founded the event in Manhattan's TriBeCa neighborhood in 2002 as a response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center. Newport is the type of place newbie filmmakers go to get their films seen by someone, anyone. Tribeca is among the festivals to go to in hopes of actually selling your picture. Con Artist will get three shots as it is shown in an AMC Theatre April 25, 28 and May 2 during Tribeca, in addition to an unscheduled press screening.

"All involved, including the executive producer, really see it being sold," Slàdek says. "It's an interesting project to us because I think it has the legs to reach a larger audience than people just interested in art. It is not a biography of an artist. It's really more a black comedy about an anti-hero figure who exists in the art world but opposes artwork at the same time."

Con-Artist_dollars.jpg
Courtesy of Peter Serlin
Mark Kostabi, only in it for the money.
The 48-year-old Kostabi is known most for creating the cover art for the Guns n' Roses Use Your Illusion albums and for being a notorious and self-referential faker--thus the title of Slàdek's film. Among those sharing their recollections are East Village regulars like filmmaker Michel Gondry, Interview's Glenn O'Brien and graffiti artist Daze. The soundtrack features underground artists such as the Willowz, Richie Follin and Fur Cups for Teeth.

The center of attention is always Kostabi, however.

"He tries to find himself again after a huge rise in fame and massive drop from fame," the filmmaker says of his subject. "He has had success and is obsessed with finding success again. It's a personal look at his journey, set in art world. I think of the dark comedies, like the King of Comedy and Napoleon Dynamite, that had these quirky, interesting guys you can't take your eyes off of."

As the trailer (which you can see here) shows, Kostabi was once hailed as a genius for his "original art." Like Andy Warhol before him, Kostabi maintained a factory of talented people. Unlike Warhol, who as far as we know only exploited his hangers-on for art he alone created, Kostabi took the actual artwork made by his followers and simply put his signature to them--and publicly admitted as much. As such, he was hailed as an even greater genius, commenting as his art was on the recyclable nature of our polluted, celebrity-soaked society's ... aw, who the fuck knows? All that can be said with certainty is a bright star inevitably fades away. Just ask Norma Desmond.
    
Con-Artist_Kostabi.jpg
Courtesy of Plug Ugly Films
Would you buy a painting from this man?
A few summers ago, unemployed and looking for any kind of work, Slàdek was talking with a neighbor who was once one of Kostabi's uncredited painters. He mentioned the artist needed help with the production of a game show televised from his studio. Not knowing a lick about Kostabi, Slàdek headed over, picked up a video camera and started shooting for the artist "for a few bucks every Friday. Little by little I was stunned by the characters who would show up."

Indeed, it hit Slàdek that Kostabi's life was the stuff of a feature-length documentary.
"It's a story that has to be told," the filmmaker said. "It's not just a story about Kostabi but art, money, celebrity and him being a faker. Those really became the themes of the film project I wanted to do. I enlisted another production company I had worked with on things in the past. I really just started shooting to see where it would go."

Where it went the world will discover at Tribeca. Slàdek is adamant that no one lay eyes on his picture until its first audience has, a prohibition that extends to Kostabi. "No, he has not seen the film," Slàdek says. "We've been very, very upfront about no audience seeing the film until it's out there." He's afraid showing it to Kostabi, who was quite generous when it came to granting access, sitting for interviews and allowing Slàdek to dig for archival footage from the artist's extensive library, would  "put him in a really strange position."

"It's hard not to see a picture beforehand, but it's harder to see it without realizing an audience has seen it first," he said. "So we've kept him from it. He's been very open to the whole project, very willing and helpful giving us access. He likes the fact that we're doing it."

Slàdek suspects Kostabi will be surprised "in good and bad ways, probably" by some of the footage and interviews contained in the finished film.

Ah, the finished film. Making that phrase a reality currently motivates Slàdek--and keeps him up at night--mere weeks before Tribeca opens.

"We're very far along, but the film is not finished. We are just starting the audio mix. We are just to the point where we are comfortable with the edit. Everything left to do now is a combination of technically finishing the film, bumping up the motion graphics, color correcting the stills, fudging with it to make things look better. We are in the process of licensing what needs to be licensed. You don't do any of that stuff at first because you don't know what will survive the edit."

If he could afford shoestrings, he'd be working on a shoestring budget.

"We are not rolling in Hollywood money, but that is inspiring us," he said. "We will be firing on all cylinders, 24/7, until the festival. When it is over, we want to to come to Newport Beach and relax."

Perhaps lying on the cool sands of Little Corona Slàdek can decide on his next project.

"Mainly I want to get narrative features up and running after this one is done," he says. "We're looking at a dark black comedy, a western and we're also developing a thriller. There is a book that might potentially turn into a film as well. But the next one has to be a narrative and much easier. I don't want it to take 2 ½ years like this did."

By the way, Kostabi also knows Southern California well, having grown up in the Whittier area. But New York is where he made it as an artist, just like Slàdek.

"Yeah, we share a similar path in that regard," says the filmmaker. "I also have Eastern European parents like he does. Some might say we're similar in the con-artist myth. You could probably say most filmmakers have a little con artist in there, pulling something out of nothing on a regular basis. We point cameras, make edits; there's a little con in doing that to some degree."

He's hopeful Con Artist will make it to an Orange County screen "soon."
Comments (30) Write Comment
Share

Related Content

  • First-Time OC Filmmakers Enter the Newport Beach Film Festival April 8, 2004
  • Locals Only Extra: More from Semi Sweet! September 25, 2009
  • Meet Winemakers of Bodegas M. September 24, 2009
  • Taste of Newport Begins Today September 18, 2009
  • Hops to It April 10, 2008

More About:

  • Michael Sladek
  • TriBeCa
  • Newport
  • Norma Desmond
  • Visual Arts

Comments (30)

Mark Kostabi says:

Dear Matt Coker and all who happen on this comment,
Sladek never told me he was from Orange County. Otherwise I would have told him that my first one person art exhibition, outside of art school (Cal State Fullerton), was at the Newport Harbor Art Museum (now the Orange County Museum.) I could have recounted my whole deep involvement with Newport Beach in the late 70s and early 80s onto which which he could have added his own Newport Beach expertise to, in the film. By the way, I'm from Whittier, not "the Whittier area."
When Sladek says about me: "He has had success and is obsessed with finding success again." I suspect he is projecting about himself. The definition of success is a matter of opinion, but from a popular point of view, the only "success" that has decreased for me are my appearances in gossip columns and mainstream media. My success in serious critical acclaim, respect among great artists and musicians and in acquiring money has only steadily risen since my first show at the Newport Harbor Art Museum in 1981. Skadek who "A few summers ago, unemployed and looking for any kind of work," seems to be projecting. If we're all prostitutes than I am too, but I've never had to accept "any kind of work."
Sladek also says here:
"It's not just a story about Kostabi but art, money, celebrity and him being a faker." The only thing I ever faked was my hair color in the 80s (and actually I have some fake blond highlights now too). I suspect I might be in for another typical journalist con, like when the reporter pretends to be your friend until the day the hatchet job gets published. Sladek told me all along that "the real con is the corruption and hypocrisy in the art world" and that I was the ironic exposer of it. Now he says I'm the faker. And he also told me he'd show me the film before its release...that he was just waiting for it to get to "a more finished point." Now he publically say he won't show it to me. Who's the faker here??

As for the sentence about Warhol in this article:
"Unlike Warhol, who as far as we know only exploited his hangers-on for art he alone created,..." It is very common, heavily documented knowledge that Warhol did not create his art alone. Warhol is famous for many things, but most famous for his "Factory" where everyone knows that people like Ronnie Cutrone and Gerard Malanga executed Warhol's paintings.
Thanks for the article though. It gave me a surge of media caffeine. I can feel it tingling in my veins. And now I need more. So I'm going downstairs from my Rome apartment to get an espresso. But I won't need a double today, thanks to your stimulating article.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 1:27AM
Heie Treier says:

Seems to be interesting film. Although, this "con artist" label seems a little bit too 1980s, compared to the present situation.
I have also thought, how to understand Mark Kostabi. His creation definitely involves specific method of making paintings and tv-shows. His interviews have inspired me a lot. But who actually knows who is Mark Kostabi, behind the wall of this self created hype.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 4:34AM
Robbie Fields says:

Mark Kostabi is definitely losing "it". The M.K. of '90's art world lore would have been (open) secretly financing such a documentary.

M.K. in his rebuttal does a pretty good job castigating the sloppy use of language and doubtful manners by Sladek but Matt Coker really should be more careful in future confusing artifice with fakery.

Perhaps more disturbing to Mark these days is the paucity of
fake Kostabi paintings being peddled around the globe.
Yes, just like your friend's Rolex, various forgers have tried replicating the Kostabi imprimateur!

That said, being counterfeited is recognition where it counts, according to the gospel of Mark, in the market place.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 6:07AM
Mark DeMuro says:

Despite the inaccurate description of Andy Warhol's working methods, this seems like a decent promo article for Sladek and Kostabi. This artist has never shied from publicity---he's always sought it out, created it, and revelled in it.
I've known Mark Kostabi since he arrived in New York. He's always been completely upfront about his art--what he does,and how he does it-- so I'm not at all sure where the "con-artist" tag comes from. Like him or loathe him, Kostabi's gleefully pursued his career and has always done exactly as he wishes---How many can claim that kind of success? It will be interesting to see if the film accurately portrays him.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 6:15AM
Perri Sopp says:

Give him hell Mark! Too many times in life do people get to tell it like it really is!

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 7:19AM
Tammy says:

Movie trailers and articles do not always capture the true essence of a movie or a person. One cannot always believe what one reads or watches. Reading an entire book is the only way to give the entire story. Reading random pages of a book set the reader up for disappointment. Watching trailers also can set false expectations. The best documentaries I have seen have been those that grab all angles of a person, not just selected “pages”. I am and was blessed with being friends with Mark Kostabi and Baird Jones. At Baird’s memorial Mike was gracious enough to share with us to play at the memorial, the interview that was done three days before his death. Mike did an outstanding job of capturing a side of Baird that many probably did not know. This is what makes people want to watch a movie. To learn the unknown. To learn the beauty of a person. More so than ever the public hungers for this knowledge. It's easy to capture what already has occurred in ones life, it’s the truly talented directors who capture beauty and the hidden stories that represent the person’s real life contributions. In today’s tough economy and world the negative is not what sells Beauty and the positive do. I agree with the above comment in regards to the title, ConArtist. There is always a better title. Mark has a show that comes up with titles; maybe he can help with that. (; I will look for the beauty in this film. Although some provocative comments made in the trailer, Baird loved Mark with all her heart and I think some comments in the trailer were out of context. I thanked Mike for capturing a side of Baird that many did not know and really appreciate. I thanked him for the wonderful interview of him. Baird was so knowledgeable in art history of the 80s’ and art in general. He had a heart of gold. That is how he and I became very good friends thru art. I did not really go the crazy parties (could only stay as long as it took me to drink a cup of coffee Danny the Wonder Pony, midget bowling etc, were and still are amazing NY phenomena. What Mike captured is the side of Baird that made his family love him and me love him. He was THE best! We used to talk for hours about art all the time. From the trailer I see all the “Mark antics of the 80’s” which is a very important part of art history. But, I can only hope that a side of Mark that I know was captured as well. Mark has a totally different from the trailers that make him quite beautiful as a person. There is a whole side to him that beneath the colorfulness is someone very sensitive and loving. Mark’s parents both passed away this past year and what he did for his parents last year (especially his mom) was only something that someone beautiful could do. It took my respect for him to a whole new level. The ultimate loving son. It was amazing. When I go to Rome on holiday he plays a one hour concert for me all the time. It’s amazing. Just him playing. No sheet music. All from memory. It is so nice. He is a great friend and has done wonderful drawings for me over the years. He even did a painting of my lovely pets that I treat who I treat like little humans. I will go to the premier and hope the movie meets my expectations on what is defined as a true documentary.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 8:32AM
shannon says:

NO documentarian would make a film about a person they did not respect and find utterly fascinating. There are too many thousands of hours of labor in the work.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 8:42AM
Paul Mills says:

The irreverent and ironical themes attributed to Mark Kostabi's work - which includes his life - are shared by other artists who have been labeled post-modernists. The recipe for success however remains the same as it was a hundred or a thousand years ago: imagination; boldness; talent; luck. Kostabi's prominence comes from those qualities, to some extent in spite of his candor. If this film perceives him as a mere faker, à la Bernie Madoff, it is no triumph of insight. But it could still be worth seeing. Kostabi certainly merits the attention.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 9:21AM
Herb Nass says:

Mark Kostabi is a smart and talented artist who enjoys pushing the proverbial envelope. He and his art history are worthy of a full length documentary, and I look forward to seeing what will undoubtedly be a fascinating film about him and his career.

Herb Nass

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 10:54AM
Gordon Cox says:

Posh Boy has captured the essence of the matter. Dont know Posh? google him.
Sladek can only dream of the sustained success Mark has known.
It appeares hes attempting to be Kostabi-ing Kostabi. Sounds like Sladek has learned well(that imitaion and flatery thing...)
Remember, its art. If you take it too seriously, it'll kill you.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 10:59AM
Eric Mittleman says:

Being a Kostabi fan since the 80s, both for his actual art and the art of his business, I am looking forward to this documentary. However, I am a little concerned with the skewed view of the filmmaker. Words like "faker" concern me especially since Kostabi's process has never been a secret. In my eyes, this honesty has made Kostabi a true innovator and creator and hopefully that identity will not be lost in this film. I am hoping for a documentary with the impact of Wim Wenders' "Notebook on Cities and Clothes" because Kostabi is to the art world what Yamamoto is to fashion AND that documentary transcended it's material as this filmmaker seems to aspire to.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 11:28AM
jean says:

Great Article on KOSTABI. Looking forward to the film!!!!!!!!
JK

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 11:30AM
helen garber says:

I watched the trailer for this movie, and it looks like it should be incredibly entertaining, I just hope that the film maker did not take an exploitive approach towards Mark. I am glad that someone documented his life, because it really is unbelievable, but using Mark as an example of all that is wrong with the contemporary art world is just critically lazy, as well as inaccurate. Mark is not a faker, he is a very dedicated artist, and having known him well for several years, I truly do believe that he is a genius. Geniuses don't walk through the world like everyone else, and sometimes that can lead to misunderstanding by the rest of us. Mark is a bit of a space alien, but he shouldn't be set up to ridicule. He has the ability to manipulate the conventions of the artworld because, instead of thinking outside of the box, he actually recreates the box, which anyone in the artworld should fully appreciate.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 12:16PM
Diana Hale says:

I think the use of words like 'faker' and 'con artist' in relation to Mark Kostabi is strictly a marketing ploy! He is neither - Mark is a talented artist and musician - has never pretended to paint all his artwork - but is more than capable of doing so. He's one of the most interesting people I've ever had the good fortune to know. He's also a master in the art of marketing! He was very generous to my husband and to me when we were in Rome and I hope to count him as a friend for many years to come.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 4:25PM
TC Verheide says:

I have read this article and all the comments posted,. including Marc's. Now I anticipate the movie. I am a thinker, and Marc Kostabi is worthy of thought. He has inadvertently entered my philosophical mind-milieu in a crucial way that I am only now beginning to unravel. I am no fan-frau, ass-kisser, or butt-moss poster child. I consider myself a skeptik of skepticism, and I find marc Kostabi to be an incredibly interesting persona; one much more than either he/himself or anyone for/against him realizes. For instance, when I read his web-zine responses to questioners, or watch him on the "Title This" TV show, I see him as an unusually / brutally-honest person whose ironic art-persona and capitalistic tendencies places him in a very complex and perhaps elegant / beautiful 'fabulization' of life; life as real as it gets, and as deep as it gets. I hope this film can capture any of that, any of Marc's conceptual 'becoming". But that would an unlikely outcome coming from someone who did so little background-work on his subject, that he failed to discover that he and the protagonist grew up in the same area. Interesting.... Perhaps the irony will be his own education.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 5:07PM
Mark Kostabi says:

As TC Verheide astutely points out, Sladek missed an opportunity by never telling Kostabi he was from Newport Beach, Kostabi's own stomping ground. Coker told Kostabi today, by e-mail, that if Sladek had told Coker that Kostabi was from Orange County, Coker would have put the story on the cover. So much for keeping ones cards close to the chest.
Mark Kostabi, referring to myself in the third person...

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 5:20PM
Rich Kane says:

It also should be noted that former OCW staffer Rich Kane wanted to write a Kostabi cover years ago if he had only known when the artist was showing in the county -- because LHHS grads, Scotch Tape staffers and Betty Carr fans should stick together, incestuous as it may be.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 25 2009 @ 8:49PM
Peter Welch says:

Having interviewed Mark for a short film of mine a couple of years back I can attest to his poise and charisma on camera. The story of his approach to art and success is a uniquely American one, and seeing it told on film (or video for that matter) is an experience I look forward to.

Posted On: Thursday, Mar. 26 2009 @ 7:25AM
Trace Kirkpatrick says:

Great Article. I can't wait to see the film. Im not sure why Sladek would have told Coker that Kostabi was from the OC. Whittier is in Los Angeles, not Orange County.

Posted On: Thursday, Mar. 26 2009 @ 8:32PM
Roman Scott says:

After reading this interesting article and the comments to it, it's got me curious and burning to see Con Artist! As an insider of Mark's studio (idea man), I can attest that he is no faker. If Mr. Sladek can pull that angle off convincingly, though, I would be impressed with his film making prowess. These labels (fake, con artist) may be in the air, a hopeful capitalization on the zeitgeist. What will make or break the film will be its ability to simply portray the comings and goings, the color and character of Mark Kostabi, and all his people: workers, collectors, intellectuals, admirers and detractors. If he can distill this mix, the film will tell a great story!

Posted On: Friday, Mar. 27 2009 @ 2:34PM
Amanda Mobbs says:

Mark Kostabi is internationally renowned as being one of the most important and successful artists of the late 20th century and indeed of our times. I hope this documentary paints Kostabi in the light that he deserves as a charismatic, larger than life character and as a modern genius, however doubt has already been cast on Sladek's ability to fully research, understand and portray his subject appropriately. Sladek's behaviour in not allowing a generous Kostabi, prior access to the film is ethically questionable and merely a publicity stunt to fuel public interest and speculation as to the film's content.

I await to see the finished film and hope to be pleasantly surprised but fear it may ultimately be misrepresentational due to a fundamental misperception of Kostabi on the part of Sladek himself and the need to manipulate and sensationalise content in order to derive mass appeal.

Posted On: Friday, Mar. 27 2009 @ 6:21PM
berkshiresnow.com says:

Old Jed's a millionaire.

Posted On: Friday, Mar. 27 2009 @ 7:20PM
Heie Treier says:

to continue my previous comment... It seems that it would be simplistic to consider Mark Kostabi either "con" or "angel", it would be simplistic to believe every single word of his interviews or every single acting in front of the camera. He is just an artist, in that sense, allowing imagination take over, no matter if others consider this imagination "truth" or not. Maybe the real "truth" is actually very boring. But anyway, it seems not healthy to have an ego conflict on the territory of Mark Kostabi.
I liked the idea somebody wrote here - to find a new title for the film in the "Title this" show. Should it be possible?

Posted On: Saturday, Mar. 28 2009 @ 1:58PM
Heie Treier says:

Because I am art critic and writing from Europe and I have no monetary relation to Mark Kostabi, I may hold a lecture about the history of "con artist".

This label was started in the 1980s (if there are some fact mistakes, please correct me). Historically, the situation was transition period from "modernist" art to "postmodernist" art. "Modernists" valued "originality" and "authenticity", while Kostabi as "postmodernist" used very many quotations in his paintings, this shocked art world at that time a lot. So, either Kostabi himself or yellow yournalists created the hype narrative about "con artist" (which was actually a humour, at least I remember my cousin who lives in US laughing really a lot when hearing this label). Another hype label was "stealing". It was meant as if - artist who is not "original" as artist, who "steals" motifs from other artists, becomes super famous. This was the narrative of yellow press in 80s.

To use the same word "con artist" in 2009 in an innocent way shows simply lazyness of thought. Or this label should be used with quotation marks, at least. Or question mark, for example, which would boring version. In my mind, this label is not funny any more. I cannot imagine my cousin who lives in US starting to laugh about "con artist" in 2009 any more.

Posted On: Sunday, Mar. 29 2009 @ 6:09AM
Heie Treier says:

And more. Among the art critics who have been interviewed in the film is mentioned Donald Kuspit.

Knowing that Kuspit represents Frankfurt school of philosophy (hard core marxism), it's logical that he does not like Kostabi's case - the hype has shown Kostabi identifying with cruel expoiting class. This has been this "media gymnastics" practised by Mark Kostabi himself. And Kostabi has already been punished for that. If anybody really tries to learn "the truth", then this is boring - Mark Kostabi comes from poor background. And Donald Kuspit is known as quite hard personality, at least before I met him years ago, I was given an early warning by friends, although he turned out to be quite a nice person.

So, the trap the film should avoid is -- please do not make "universal" and "final" conclusions from any interviewer (including Kostabi himself) or historical hype shots. Conceptually, it would be strong (once more) if the title of the film would be created in the "Title This" show, so that "Con Artist" would stay only a work-in-progress title.

I am aware that there are people in the art world who do not like Mark Kostabi because of his efficient and sometimes really questionable self publicity which is considered bad manners. Ok, if we can purify this level and think about him as just one case in the specific New York art scene, it becomes interesting.

And knowing that New York art world people like to be arrogant and think arrogantly, Kostabi has been mirroring back the same arrogance. Ok, we may question if "mirroring" is the greatest strategy for an artist. More than that, I have had problems with Kostabi's arrogance because I am not from New York. Ok, if I am "the Other" in respect to New York art world, maybe somebody would still listen.

Posted On: Sunday, Mar. 29 2009 @ 6:48AM
emily xyz says:

You can call Mark Kostabi a lot of things, but "faker" isn't one of them. He has always been completely upfront about his methods of art-making and his philosophy of art. My understanding is that his understanding is that it's the entire art-machine that is the fake, and he's basically just riding it -- as are all artists, dealers, collectors and critics -- but Mark is at least willing to say so. He is a stone realist in his outlook. He bullshits nobody, least of all himself, and buys into nothing. But extreme independence of mind seems cynical, I guess, to a culture so comfortable not thinking for itself.

Posted On: Sunday, Mar. 29 2009 @ 9:25AM
Anna says:

The situation as described in the article is definitely intriguing. Quite frankly it is the filmmaker who sounds like a fake, or is at least very lazy...no research? Not to know where Kostabi hails from if he is a "documentary maker"!?!? Come on. But another aspect is - why did Kostabi give him so much access. THAT sounds naive, but then could or would Mark Kostabi be naive!?!? Or was it hubris -"I am so great, no one can harm me no matter what they do." It all does make one want to see the film!

Posted On: Monday, Mar. 30 2009 @ 12:00PM
Käären Schilke-Cherns says:

Ach! I am so sick and tired of hearing the "shock" over the studio system employed by artists. This is nothing new even in the 21st century!!! First of all, historically, paintings were rarely painted entirely by the master of the workshop. Coker should have done his homework. He says, "Kostabi took the actual artwork made by his followers and simply put his signature to them" The master's studio worked as a team. Go inside Kostabi World & you'll see that it is a vibrant collaborative atmosphere. His "followers" are his valued, gifted staff of employed assistant artists. It is crystal clear that Mark Kostabi is the creator of the iconic faceless characters & the Master of his Domain. Mark is talented, self driven, entrepreneurial, very funny & is the most generous person I know. He is no poser, or a "fake". Many articles written on Mark are self serving, "condesending-so-you-look-smarter" kinds of fare. That shit is easy to knock out... Maybe I'm shooting the messenger scolding Coker. I'll wait for Sladek to get his film completed & in the theater to see how well he did his homework. It doesn't bode well for Sladek...

Posted On: Monday, Apr. 6 2009 @ 10:41AM
Rick Prol says:

Mark has made his mark and this you cannot deny. All artists careers have ups and downs. Success --yes how do you define it.
The thing about Mark is he has a very funny sense of humor and you don't hear that enough. Mark and I have had a "strange and difficult relationship" at times but I've grown to respect him on many levels and I do believe he is something of a visionary, yes I would say that. I like his own early work the most but he really extended his means andthat made him into what he is today. A very curious and complicated master.
Love you Mark and i send you a big hug. I've wanted to do that for a long time. Keep up the noise!!!!!!!!!!

Posted On: Sunday, Apr. 26 2009 @ 12:51PM
Mark Kostabi says:

Hi Rick,
I appreciate the hug but didn't anyone ever tell you the last thing an artist wants to hear is "I like your early work." Also, the way you described it as "his own early work" implying that my current work was not my own, implies that you don't agree with what I believe my work is. I believe it's healthier for art and society to respect each individual artists definition of his or her work. Not for an observer to say something like: "Oh no, that's not his own real work. His own real works are those made when he was young and got his hands dirty with paint." Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing your new work.

Posted On: Tuesday, Apr. 28 2009 @ 9:29AM

Write Comment


Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking "Post," you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Tools

Search Navel Gazing


Follow

Email tips to tips@ocweekly.com

SlideShows»

  • TRMRS, Cosmonauts, Lights Rays @ TrashPretty
  • Date a Derby Dame!
  • VANS Costa Mesa Grand Opening: Christian Hosoi, Jeff Grosso, Omar Hassan and More
  • More Slideshows >>

Most …

  • Wax On, Wax Off: Vans Store Opens in Costa Mesa
  • ¡Ask a Mexican! YouTube Edición: On How Non-Mexican Men Can Date Mexi Gals
  • Sting Nets Those Not Allowed to Drive Driving Away From Court
  • Israel's Ambassador to U.S. Comes to UCI. Amazingly, Only 12 Arrests Follow
  • Racist OC Register Fustercluck of the Day
  • More Recent Entries...
  • The Liberal OC Sues Orange Juice! in Media Pissing Match of the Decade (25)
  • Miguel Pulido's Only Friend--Adam Probolsky, GOP Legend! (20)
  • [UPDATED:] Bessie Whyman, O.C. Homicide No. 3: 84-Year-Old Robbed, Tortured and Murdered (17)
  • Crystal Cathedral Schuller Clan Used as Prime Example of Why Pastors Shouldn't Hire Family (15)
  • The Curious Case of Anaheim's Founding, Probably Mythological Goat (13)
  • It's Not the 7-Year Itch, It's Your Toilet Seat!
  • Dishney: Flickr Set Documents "Fat People in Disneyland"
  • Girls Volleyball Coach Could Get a Year for Allegedly Exposing Player's Vagina and Breasts
  • Dishney: Woman Groped While Riding the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
  • Have You Seen Jesse James' Pit Bull Cinnabon?
  • Tue
    9
  • Wed
    10
  • Thu
    11
  • Fri
    12
  • Sat
    13
  • Sun
    14
  • Mon
    15
This week's best events
3 Best Things To Do on Tuesday, Feb 9
  • Akram Khan Dance Company: Bahok

    Where: Irvine Barclay Theatre

    Type: Dance, Performing Arts, Theater

  • Thao With the Get Down Stay Down; Thermals

    Where: Detroit Bar

    Type: Indie, Rock

  • Venus Infers; Matt Kollar and the Angry Mob; Brown and Blue

    Where: The Prospector

    Type: Alternative, Indie, Rock

  • submit an event
  • 43 more things to do today >>

Twitter Feed

Follow Navel Gazing on Twitter

More Twitter >>

Navel Gazing on Digg

Links

About Us | Work for OC Weekly | Esubscribe | Free Classifieds | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Problem With the Site? | RSS | Site Map
©2010 Village Voice Media All rights reserved.