David Zwirner and Tony Huang’s hospitality via Art Observed
“Who’s Afraid of Jasper Johns?”, a show conceived by Urs Fischer & Gavin Brown, opened Friday night at Tony Shafrazi Gallery in New York. An outpouring of support from the community poured into the Chelsea gallery. Heavy rain could not keep Mr. Shafrazi’s friends, clients, and fans from flooding to fete his latest feat.
Tony Shafrazi Gallery [Tony Shafrazi]
Gavin Brown [Gavin Brown]
Urs Fischer [Gavin Brown]
Rob Pruitt [ArtNet]
Celebrating at Mr. Chow’s [NYMag]
Roberta Smith Review [NYTimes]
Benjamin Godsill & Annie Burns via Art Observed
Rod Pruitt’s “Viagra Falls”, greeted patrons as they climbed the sloping staircase to the gallery. Inside, Gallery Assistants and Security Guards alike have had their likeness emblazoned upon the gallery’s white walls as a whimsical accompaniment to the striking canvases and sculpture on display.
Lou Reed and Lisa Phillips via Art Observed
Fellow gallery owners, artists, thespians, athletes, collectors, musicians and socialites shared in friendly rainy evening banter and a suspicious-looking potage that was set up picnic-style on the otherwise pristine floors. Tony Shafrazi, Gavin Brown, Rod Pruitt and other affiliated artists were in attendance to socialize with well-wishers and greet a pleasing variety of guests. A black and white photo of Shafrazi in handcuffs following his arrest at MoMA in 1974 served as the opening’s invitation and poster-sized takeaway. The current exhibition features work by Keith Haring, Rirkrit Tiravanija (photo below), and photographs by Urs Fischer, superimposed on the new pieces on display. The overwhelming theme of the show was a celebration of thoughtful juxtapositions as they play out in history. Shafrazi’s spray-painting of the words “KILL LIES ALL” onto Picasso’s Guernica provided both a shining example and curatorial inspiration.
Gilberto Maldonado via Art Observed
Tara Subkoff “observes” via Art Observed
Vivo Nevo and Zhang Ziyi via Art Observed
Peter Brandt via Art Observed
Paul Jacobsen and Christian Wassman via Art Observed
Richard Belzer looking dapper via Art Observed
Slava & Brian of SUPERM via Art Observed
Laurence Graff sparkles via Art Observed
Rikrit and Leigh get friendly via Art Observed
Melissa Bent and Emma Reeves looking lovely, via Art Observed
The handsome John and Kevin McEnroe via Art Observed
Todd Eberle via Art Observed
David Sardari, Mosalemy, Kevin Bright and Ignacio Corral via Art Observed
Matthew Steinberg and Nancy Smith via Art Observed
Photo via Art Observed
Patients Often Misdiagnosed.(cluster headaches often misdiagnosed)
Pain & Central Nervous System Week January 13, 2001 2001 JAN 13 – (NewsRx.com) — by Michael Greer, staff medical writer — Patients who suffer from cluster headaches often go misdiagnosed for years, suffering from increased medical costs and inappropriate medications, neurologists report. in our site deviated septum surgery
Writing in the journal Headache, J.A. Klapper and colleagues at the Colorado Neurology and Headache Center in Denver described the results of their Internet-based survey of cluster headache patients.
“Previous cluster headache surveys have been at specialty centers,” explained Klapper et al. “These patients might be different from cluster headache sufferers in the general population.” While almost nine out of 10 of the survey respondents could be diagnosed with cluster headaches by International Headache Society criteria, this diagnosis was not made correctly for an average of more than six years and four doctors, the researchers reported (“The misdiagnosis of cluster headache: A nonclinic, population-based, Internet survey,” Headache, 2000;40(9):730-735). site deviated septum surgery
Unnecessary – and expensive – magnetic resonance or computed tomography scans were performed on more than 70% of the respondents, study data showed. Many respondents had been prescribed ineffective medication while being denied access to medicine such as sumatriptan that could have relieved their symptoms.
In addition, 4% of patients responding to the researchers’ survey even reported having unnecessary sinus or deviated septum surgery in an attempt to reduce their headache pain.
“The most alarming finding was the delay in diagnosing cluster headache in this population – an average of 6.6 years,” wrote Klapper et al. “Using International Headache Society criteria for cluster headache, 87% of the respondents should have been correctly diagnosed by the first physician seen.” The corresponding author for this report is J.A. Klapper, Colorado Neurology and Headache Center, 1155 E. 18th Avenue, Denver, CO 80218, USA.
Key points reported in this study include:
* Patients who suffer from cluster headaches often go misdiagnosed for years, suffering from increased medical costs and inappropriate medications * According to a Web-based survey of cluster headache patients, the average time until the correct diagnosis is made is over six years, and requires on average four doctors * Many patients underwent expensive and unnecessary imaging procedures, were prescribed ineffective medication, and in some cases even underwent unnecessary surgery
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