daily recommended exhibitions

posted 02. Sep 2017

Nick Brandt. Inherit the Dust

20. May 201703. Sep 2017
Nick Brandt. Inherit the Dust The Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow presents ‘Inherit the Dust’, a new project by the celebrated British photographer Nick Brandt. Nick Brandt was born and raised in London. After studying painting and cinematography at St. Martin’s School of Art he made a successful career as a director of music videos. In the early 90s he moved to the USA, where he worked with Michael Jackson and Moby. Nick Brandt first visited Tanzania in 1995, while filming a clip for Jackson’s ‘Earth Song’, which is dedicated to protection of the environment. That trip radically changed Brandt’s life: he fell in love with the natural world of Africa and decided to devote himself to photography. ‘Few photographers have ever considered the photography of wild animals as an art form,’ explains Nick Brandt. ‘The emphasis has generally been on capturing the drama of wild animals in action, on capturing that dramatic single moment, as opposed to simply animals in the state of being... My aim is for the images to go beyond the animal documentary genre and reach the arena of fine art photography. To achieve this I eschew action shots and, most importantly, the use of a telephoto lens. Instead I move in close, often taking photos from a few feet away.’ The first series of photographs created by Nick Brandt in East Africa in 2000 attracted public attention to his work and to the important issues he raises. Solo exhibitions of Brandt’s images in London, New York, Los Angeles, Sydney, Melbourne and San Francisco from 2004 to 2006 have been highly acclaimed. Brandt first conceived the project ‘Inherit the Dust’ in 2014. Previously unpublished portraits of wild animals were printed in large format, pasted on panels and installed in locations where these animals once roamed but have now been wiped out due to human greed and indifference. Nick Brandt then photographed the panels, combining urban landscapes and animal images in a single frame. The exhibition is comprised of 19 photographs with titles that provoke a sense of dissonance in the viewer: ‘Wasteland with cheetahs and children’, ‘Factory with chimpanzee’, ‘Construction site with rhinos’, ‘Quarry with elephant’, ‘Road to factory with zebra’, ‘Railway line with lioness’, and so on. These animal pictures reminiscent of classic portrait paintings have been inserted in the threatening landscapes of urban outskirts and industrial zones, underscoring the extraordinary fragility of a world that is slowly but inexorably vanishing under the influence of man. ‘In nearly all the final photographs the panels with animal images are practically invisible to the people who walk around them. The animals have become the ghosts of these shattered landscapes,’ says Nick Brandt. ‘It may be a cliché, but we urgently need to do something. If we continue to do nothing, future generations will be inheriting the sad remnants of a once-vibrant living planet. They will be inheriting dust.’

artist

Nick Brandt 
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posted 01. Sep 2017

Mit den Händen zu greifen und doch nicht zu fassen / To See or Not to Be

01. Sep 201719. Nov 2017
opening: 31. Aug 2017
„Seit mindestens drei Jahrzehnten erzählt sie mir, dass sie spurlos verschwinden möchte, und nur ich weiß, was sie damit meint. Sie hat nie eine Flucht im Sinn gehabt, einen Identitätswechsel, den Traum, anderswo ein neues Leben zu beginnen. Sie hat auch nie an Selbstmord gedacht. [...] Nein, ihr schwebte etwas anderes vor: Sie wollte sich in Luft auflösen, wollte, dass sich jede ihrer Zellen verflüchtigte, nichts von ihr sollte mehr zu finden sein.“ (Elena Ferrante: Meine geniale Freundin, 2016) „Verschwinden“ – vielleicht war dieser Begriff nie aktueller als heute. In unserer Epoche, in der Bilder und Informationen im Sekundentakt gestreut werden, suggeriert er einen selbstgewählten Ausstieg aus dem beschleunigten Leben, mit anderen Worte: Ruhe. Doch ebenso wie eine Sehnsucht bildet er eine tiefe Furcht des Menschen ab, denn wer kennt sie nicht – die Angst vor dem Nicht-Gesehen-, vor dem Vergessenwerden oder dem eigenen Vergessen? Und diese Angst verbindet Menschen seit Jahrtausenden. Sie manifestiert sich in Palästen, Denkmälern, Kunstwerken, die die Erinnerung an Herrscher oder Berühmtheiten lebendig halten. Doch nicht nur das körperliche Verschwinden, auch das rein visuelle Verschwinden, das Unsichtbarmachen, beflügelt seit langer Zeit die menschliche Fantasie: Schon in der griechischen Mythologie taucht die Hadeskappe auf – ein Helm, der seinem Träger, dem Gott der Unterwelt Hades Unsichtbarkeit verleiht. Im Nibelungenlied trutzt Siegfried dem Zwerg Alberich einen Mantel ab, der ihn unsichtbar macht. Im Herr der Ringe lässt der Ring seinen Träger verschwinden. Der Beispiele fänden sich noch viele, doch ihnen ist eines gemein: Sie illustrieren die tiefe Sehnsucht des Menschen nach einer zeitweisen Existenz frei von seinem eigenen Körper und vor den Blicken aller verborgen. Obwohl bekannt ist, dass die im Internet hinterlassenen Spuren auf von uns gegangenen Pfaden nicht zu löschen sind, dass das Internet „nichts vergisst“, bildet das Digitale eine Sphäre, in welche der User abtauchen kann. Dieser Gedanke schlägt sich auch in Auswirkungen der digitalen Revolution nieder: Die Lust am Spiel mit der Fiktion – die längst keine Fiktion mehr ist. Dank technischer Möglichkeiten werden Computerspiele zunehmend tatsächlicher, virtuelle Realitäten greifbarer und animierte Körper real. Mit der Entgrenzung unserer vierdimensionalen Welt und deren Durchdringung seitens der Virtualität gehen Ent- und Re-Materialisierungsprozesse einher. Menschen ziehen sich zurück aus der analogen hinein in eine virtuelle Realität. Sie beginnen in dieser nicht-körperlichen Welt zu leben. Anders herum haben virtuelle Realitäten längst begonnen über ihre Netz-Existenz hinaus zu wachsen. Avatare und Cyborgs – Mischwesen zwischen künstlichen und lebendigen Organismen bzw. gänzlich artifizielle Kreaturen – sind Grenzgänger zwischen den Welten und vermehren sich beständig. Technische Neuerungen binden Körper in Bildern und Essenzen. Tarnung oder Verstecken stellen zwei weitere Techniken des Verschwindens dar. Sei es im spielerischen Umgang, im Dienste gesellschaftlich relevanter Belange, beispielsweise beim Ausspähen von Staatsfeinden, bis hin zur überlebenswichtigen Strategie des Individuums, um in bestimmten Kontexten nicht aufzufallen – durch Angleichung des Äußeren oder Inneren geht der Mensch in seiner Umgebung auf. Schließlich sei das unfreiwillige Verschwinden aufgrund gewaltsamer Übergriffe oder im Zuge transformativer Prozesse genannt, das einen konkreten Teil unserer Gegenwart bildet. Menschen, Orte, Städte und ihre Bauten sind Zerstörungsaktionen, aber auch naturgemäßen Veränderungen ausgesetzt. Altes verschwindet, um Neuem Raum zu geben. Transformationsprozesse überrollen Städte sowie deren Strukturen und radieren bisweilen die Geschichte eines Ortes vollkommen aus. Am Schnittpunkt zwischen Fantasie und Realität entsteht Kunst und so geht die Ausstellung der Frage nach, wie das Phänomen des Verschwindens seinen Niederschlag in Werken der Gegenwartskunst findet. Wie gehen Bildende Künstler mit diesem Stoff, der die Menschheit seit so langer Zeit fesselt, um? Welche Mechanismen erwirken und steuern Auflösungsprozesse? Und was setzen Künstler dem Verschwinden entgegen? Die Ausstellung Mit den Händen zu greifen und doch nicht zu fassen vereint Strategien des Entschwindens, der Auflösung, der Transformation. Sie geht dem physischen sowie mentalen Verschwinden nach und thematisiert den Umgang mit ihm, der einsetzt, sobald die Gestalt bzw. das materielle Erinnerungsstück unkenntlich wird. Künstler: Vajiko Chachkhiani, Tim Etchells, Petrit Halilaj, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Sofia Hultén, Yutaka Matsuzawa, Agnieszka Polska, Walid Raad, Pamela Rosenkranz, Kateřina Šedá, Juergen Staack Kurator/en: Stefanie Böttcher Die Ausstellung wird unterstützt durch: Kulturstiftung Rheinland-Pfalz
Kunsthalle Mainz

KUNSTHALLE MAINZ | Am Zollhafen 3–5
55118 Mainz

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posted 31. Aug 2017

Magali Reus. Night Plants

03. Jun 201722. Oct 2017
Die niederländische Künstlerin Magali Reus (*1981 Den Haag) entwickelt komplexe skulpturale Werke, die existierende Objekte wie Behältnisse, Klappstühle oder Pferde-sättel evozieren und dabei potentiell funktionsfähig erscheinen. Aufgrund ihrer eigenwilligen Gestaltung und differenzierten Materialität erhalten die Objekte einen entschiedenen Fetischcharakter. Reus’ Arbeitsweise entpuppt sich als in höchstem Masse detailversessen. Die Skulpturen wirken in ihrem raffinierten Design vertraut, zugleich aber höchst eigenwillig. Es verdichten sich darin formale Einflüsse und kunsthistorische Referenzen von Minimal bzw. Postminimal Art zu vielschichtigen Formverbindungen, die gleichermassen in die industrielle Produktion wie ins private Er-leben verweisen. Magali Reus, die in London lebt und arbeitet, war international bereits in zahlreichen Einzel- und Gruppenausstellungen vertreten, u. a. in der Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebau-dengo, Turin, im Westfälischen Kunstverein, Münster, im Sculpture Center, New York. In der Ausstellung Post/Postminimal war bereits 2014 die Werkgruppe Parking im Kunstmuseum St.Gallen zu sehen. Nun folgt, in Kooperation mit dem Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, die erste Einzelausstellung der jungen Künstlerin in einem Schweizer Museum.

artist

Magali Reus 

curator

Nadia Veronese 
Kunstmuseum St. Gallen

Museumstraße 32
CH-9000 Saint Gallen

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posted 30. Aug 2017

Philippe Parreno: Synchronicity

08. Jul 201717. Sep 2017
Philippe Parreno: Synchronicity Jul 8, 2017 - Sep 17, 2017 Venue: Rockbund Art Museum (20 Huqiu Road, Huang Pu District, Shanghai) Curator: Larys Frogier Artist: Philippe Parreno Organizer: Rockbund Art Museum Support: Rockbund, French Consulate-General Shanghai, Croisements festival Dramaturge: Asad Raza Music and Sound design: Nicolas Becker Show control design: Johan Lescure Arrangement and sound editing: Cengiz Hartlap Atelier Philippe Parreno: directed by Marie Auvity with Elsa Beaudoin et Virginie Oudjane About the exhibition The Rockbund Art Museum will present a major solo exhibition by French artist, Philippe Parreno, his first in China. This exhibition is dedicated to the late Xavier Douroux whose influence on Parreno's career cannot be overstated. Curated by the Director of the museum, Larys Frogier, Parreno’s first exhibition in China will occupy four of the museum’s six floors, also extending to its seventh floor glass rooftop. Over the past twenty years, Parreno has radically redefined the exhibition going experience by exploring its possibilities as a medium in its own right. Realised in dialogue with the physicality and functionality of the museum’s architecture, the exhibition will alter the building’s current existence through an unexpected use of time, space, light, and sound to become a semi automated puppet, a perpetual motion of events in which Parreno subverts the conventions of the gallery space. Curator of the exhibition, Larys Frogier, states: “Parreno invites visitors to engage with contradictory notions of the physical, emotional, and conceptual. He blurs the distinction between reality and fiction to create an all-encompassing world of endless possibilities”. By manipulating light, shadow, and duration, Parreno will guide visitors through a constantly evolving space. The artist will cover various windows of the renovated Art Deco building with blinds that will act as eyelids to the building, opening and closing in different locations, and to variable time sequences – each gallery space shifts from darkness to twilight, and then to full light. Some blinds will be activated using motors, but for the very first time the artist will work with ‘dalang’ performers to operate the remainder. A ‘dalang’ refers to the puppeteer in an Indonesian Wayang performance; traditionally controlling the white screen and lighting that together create the shadow puppets that make up the performance. On the museum’s glass rooftop, Parreno will install a heliostat that will direct sunlight into the fourth floor space in a carefully choreographed ensemble of natural light that dances in sync with the movement of the blinds. A vertical plane in line with the building’s own axis, will cut through the spaces of the exhibition, each floor becoming a template of the other. The plane will be visible on the first floor lobby next to a rotating secret bookcase door, on the second floor alongside a large-scale screen that will play a new rendition of Parreno’s 2000 film Anywhere Out Of the World. On the third floor, next to a wall displaying a new series of Parreno’s Fade to Black fluorescent silkscreened posters. For the new rendition of Parreno’s animated film Anywhere Out Of the World, the 2D manga heroine who featured in the opening series of the artist’s 1999 collaborative project, ‘No Ghost Just A Shell’, will re-appear in stereoscopic 3D, with new narration. An illuminated glass marquee placed at the 3rd floor of the exhibition will play a tune that resonates throughout the entire building. From the appearance of a film to the disappearance of an image, to a song sung by the dalangs: Parreno will choreograph the Rockbund Art Museum. About the artist A key artist of his generation, Philippe Parreno radically redefined the exhibition experience by taking it as a medium, placing its construction at the heart of his process. Working in a diverse range of media including film, sculpture, drawing, and text, Parreno conceives his exhibitions as a scripted space where a series of events unfold. He seeks to transform the exhibition visit into a singular experience that plays with spatial and temporal boundaries and the sensory experience of the visitor, who is guided through the space by the orchestration of sound and image. For the artist, the exhibition is less a total work of art than a necessary interdependence that offers an ongoing series of open possibilities. Based in Paris, France, Parreno has exhibited and published internationally. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Grenoble from 1983 - 1988 and at the Institut des Hautes Etudes en arts plastiques at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris from 1988 -1989. Parreno was awarded the prestigious 2016 Hyundai Commission at Tate Modern Turbine Hall, titled Anywhen the commission received international acclaim. Parreno was also the first artist to take over the entire 22,000 square metre gallery space at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris with his exhibition Anywhere, Anywhere Out of the World which opened in October 2013. Major exhibitions of Parreno’s work include: Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, Porto (2017); ACMI, Melbourne (2016/17); Hangar Bicocca, Milan (2015), Park Avenue Armory, New York (2015), CAC Malaga (2014), The Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow (2013); Barbican Art Gallery, London (2013); Fondation Beyeler (2012); Philadelphia Museum of Art (2012); The Serpentine Gallery, London (2010); Witte de With (2010); Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin (2009); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2009); Kunsthalle Zurich (2009); CCA Kitakyoshu, Japan (2006); Kunsthalle Zürich (2006); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2003); Musée D’Art Moderne de le Ville de Paris (2002), and Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2001). About the curator Larys Frogier is the Director of the Rockbund Art Museum (RAM) in Shanghai. Curator, critic and art historian, he is involved in artistic and social challenges in post-global contexts where ongoing social, economical, cultural transformations demand new ways of interrelations, citizenship and reinvented creativity. He has curated numerous exhibitions and published extensive essays on the works of international artists: Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Nan Goldin, Paola Pivi, UgoRondinone, Wang Du, Yang Jiechang. Previously the Director of the contemporary art centre La Criée in Rennes (France), he curated long-term projects (symposiums, residencies, exhibitions, publications), which question the links and ruptures between broadening transcontinental areas. Chair of the HUGO BOSS ASIA ART jury since 2013 at the Rockbund Art Museum, he is conceiving this new award, exhibition and research program as an evolving platform to promote emerging artists and to question Asia as a construction to investigate rather than a monolithic area or fixed identities. Larys Frogier taught art theory, history of art and curatorial studies at the University of Rennes, while he was also researcher at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) and at the Archives for Art Criticism. About Xavier Douroux Xavier Douroux was director and co-founder (with Franck Gautherot) of the art centre Le Consortium in Dijon (1977). He was also the director and co-founder (with Franck Gautherot) of the publishing house Les presses du reel (1992), and the director and co-founder (with Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Franck Gautherot, Pierre Huyghe, Charles de Meaux, Philippe Parreno ) of the film production company Anna Sanders films (1997).
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posted 29. Aug 2017

Vom Raum an die Wand. Bildhauergrafik

15. Jul 201708. Oct 2017
Vom Raum an die Wand. Bildhauergrafik 15.07.2017–08.10.2017 Erstmals widmet sich die Kunsthalle Vogelmann der Bildhauergrafik. Was interessiert dreidimensional arbeitende Künstler an Zeichnungen und Grafiken? Sind diese Papierarbeiten als Studien in den Werkprozess eingebunden oder stehen sie gleichberechtigt neben der Bildhauerei? Für Eduardo Chillida (1924-2002), Fred Sandback (1943-2003) und Richard Serra (*1939) ist die Druckgrafik nicht nur Hilfsmittel, sondern ein eigenständiges Feld voller Experimente. Richard Serra bezeichnet die grafische Arbeit gar als „Alchemie“ und spielt darauf an, dass die künstlerischen Resultate nicht eindeutig vorhersehbar sind. Insbesondere die unterschiedlichen druckgrafischen Techniken der Radierung, der Lithografie und des Linolschnitts inspirieren die drei Bildhauer zu neuen Bildfindungen: Sie denken und realisieren klassische Fragestellungen bezüglich der Räumlichkeit, Proportion und Bewegung in der Fläche. Die Ausstellung, die ausgewählte Grafiken mit Unikatcharakter aus Privatsammlungen vereint, erlaubt eine Gegenüberstellung dieser drei international bedeutenden Bildhauer und veranschaulicht Methoden skulpturalen Denkens.

artists & participants

Eduardo Chillida,  Fred Sandback,  Richard Serra 
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posted 28. Aug 2017

Robert Wilson | Black and White

12. Aug 201709. Sep 2017
Robert Wilson | Black and White August 12 — September 09 2017 Opening: August 12, 2:00 pm Luisa Strina presents Robert Wilson’s first exhibition at the gallery. ­ ­ Robert Wilson is one of the rare artists who works across artistic media without being buoyed by one method of making. The process of creation transcends a single medium and instead finds outlet within the archetype of an opera, the architecture of a building, the stains in a watercolor drawing, the design of a chair, the choreography of a dance, the rhythm of a sonnet, or the multiple dynamics revealed in a Video Portrait. ­ ­ While widely known for creating highly acclaimed theatrical pieces, Robert Wilson’s work is firmly rooted in the fine arts. His drawings, paintings and sculptures have been presented internationally in hundreds of solo and group showings. For Black and White Wilson will be presenting two video portraits and a selection of over 30 works on paper. ­ ­ WORKS ON PAPER ­ ­ ­ Robert Wilson’s drawings are about time; the future, the present, the past. Many of the drawings are about the time when a new or old theatrical production is being studied in advance of the production. They are the concrete or abstract visual representations that will inform what Wilson might or might not see as possible on the stage.The drawings can be specific to what Wilson envisions for that particular act, scene or interlude. Another set of drawings might be made when the stage work is being physically created within the theater itself. These drawings might be about what Wilson sees or wants to see, or might not want to see on stage during rehearsals. They might be about what is happening that day, the next day, the previous day on the stage itself. The drawings tend to be a record of what the production is, was, or where it might be going. Another set of drawings might be about the times when reflecting back on a production that has been. They are what Wilson remembers the work to be or wishes it was. At all times Wilson’s drawings stand alone, independent from his theater. His drawings are works of art and his own theatrical associations are not necessary to speak of, can be a distraction, and as he says might get in the way of seeing clearly. ­ ­ ­ VIDEO PORTRAITS ­ ­ The video portraits act as a complete synthesis of all the media in the realm of Wilson’s art making – lighting, costume, make up, choreography, gesture, text, voice, set design, and narrative. The medium is HD video but the form blurs time-based cinematography with the frozen moment of still photography. As in the layering nature of Wilson’s creative process, the video portraits infuse references found in painting, sculpture, design, architecture, dance, theater, photography, television, film and contemporary culture. The final result on the HD monitor resembles a photograph, but on closer inspection reveals Wilson’s highly developed theatrical language. (Noah Khoshbin, Curator / Watermill Center)

artist

Robert Wilson 
Luisa Strina, Sao Paulo °

Rua Oscar Freire 502
01426-000 Sao Paulo

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posted 27. Aug 2017

A different way to move - Minimalismes, New York, 1960-1980

07. Apr 201717. Sep 2017
A different way to move* Minimalismes, New York, 1960-1980 An exhibition celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Centre Pompidou Suggesting a subversive history of Minimal Art, this project sheds fresh light on common focuses and intersecting perspectives in a mixture of visual art, dance and music of the sixties and seventies in the New York. Recognized in the field of art today are some radically trail-blazing paths taken by the pioneering figures of American Postmodern Dance – most notably Trisha Brown, Lucinda Childs, Simone Forti and Yvonne Rainer – an area of research close to Minimal Art. “A different way to move” envisions a collective history, placing on an equal footing these concise, direct, artless gestures that together revolutionized Visual Art and Performance Art. Yvonne Rainer sums it up neatly: “We had to find a different way to move”. The idea caught on both in the new languages of choreography and sound environments and in this exploration of the dialogue between object and viewer that characterizes the works of Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, Richard Serra and others. It was also closely connected to the political activism of artists opposing the Vietnam War, and fuelled a penetrating critique of relations based on power in their works. Hence the exhibition takes a look at Minimalist forms within a broader perspective, with special attention to the way the arts of time – dance and music, and also writing, film and video, which from the mid-sixties formed the core conceptual and so-called “post-minimalist” practices – placed the conflicting polarity between the concept and perception at the forefront of artistic research. Some key figures like Bruce Nauman and Vito Acconci, contribute to this conversation. This project is based on works from the collections of the Centre Pompidou, enriched by numerous loans (notably including the Centre National de la Danse, Collection Lambert, Kunstmuseum Basel, Getty Research Institute, MoMA, Museo de Arte Reina Sofia, and the Whitney Museum of American Art), and a programme of performances and concerts, organized jointly with local area institutions. Artists in the show: Vito Acconci, Carl Andre, John Baldessari, Robert Barry, Stanley Brouwn, Trisha Brown, Lucinda Childs, Dan Flavin, Simone Forti, Philip Glass, Eva Hesse, Joan Jonas, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Alvin Lucier, Jackson Mac Low, Babette Mangolte, Gordon Matta Clark, Robert McElroy, Peter Moore, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Charlemagne Palestine, Steve Paxton, Yvonne Rainer, Terry Riley, Richard Serra, La Monte Young. Curator: Marcella Lista Some works may offend the sensibility of young visitors.

curator

Marcella Lista 
Carré d´Art, Nimes

Place de la Maison Carrée
30000 Nimes

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posted 26. Aug 2017

Sarah Lucas: Good Muse

15. Jul 201717. Sep 2017
Legion of Honor Sarah Lucas: Good Muse July 15, 2017 – September 17, 2017 Sarah Lucas has gained notoriety for creating sculptures and installations that showcase the innate crudeness of stereotypical conceptions of gender and sexuality. From the outset, Lucas has used self-portraiture to debunk conservative notions of femininity, adopting stances associated with male behavior that purposefully foster sexual ambiguity. Lucas’s penchant for androgyny has also filtered into her sculpture, with bodies that flaunt both male and female attitudes and attributes and deny any clear association with either. In conjunction with Auguste Rodin: The Centenary Installation, the Legion of Honor has invited Lucas to bring a contemporary perspective to our understanding and appreciation of Rodin. Purposefully confrontational in its allusions to sexual acts, both verbal and physical, her work highlights Rodin’s erotic side, albeit confronting his idealizing male gaze with work that takes a demonstrative stance against female objectification and for the empowerment of woman. Many of the works by Rodin included in The Centenary Installation will remain on view during Lucas's installation.

artist

Sarah Lucas 
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posted 25. Aug 2017

Fragile State

17. Jun 201707. Jan 2018
Fragile State 17 June 2017 - 7 January 2018 The PinchukArtCentre is proud to present “Fragile State” - a major international group exhibition with 10 leading artists including Marina Abramovic, Jan Fabre, Urs Fischer, Douglas Gordon, Damien Hirst, Carlos Motta, Oscar Murillo, Santiago Sierra, Barthelemy Toguo and Ai Weiwei. A Fragile State often reveals a delicate moment of vulnerability and might be an accurate description of the world around us. The notion of Fragile State reflects upon the fragile state of the world order, or in a more abstract sense it refers to ideological, cultural and social vulnerabilities. But it is equally a notion that can be understood in a deeply personal sense, the fragility of body and mind. This exhibition meanders systematically in between those different definitions of the Fragile State. It provokes conversations linking the fragility of our body and mind, and the fragility of ideologies and historical understandings. It draws parallels between the fragility of youth and that of a country at war conflict or the fragility of life and that of a State at risk. The exhibition starts with a reflection on culture, civilization and history, embodied in Ai Weiwei’s LEGO version of Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (2016). The work is a recent translation of the early 1995 images where Ai Weiwei photographed himself dropping and breaking a 2000-year-old ceremonial Urn from the Han Dynasty (considered a golden Age in Chinese history). Responding to public outcry, he famously replied: ”General Mao used to tell us that we can only build a new world if we destroy the old one”. That thought is reinforced by Carlos Motta's work, Colonial Forts #10 (2013). The artist traced back the architectural remains of the first colonists of Latin America who in their conquest of a continent destroyed entire civilizations. This theme continues in various forms throughout the exhibition and comes full circle with Douglas Gordon's work, The End of Civilisation (2012). The work shows a grand piano being burned in the panorama of the Scottish border with England, alongside Hadrian's Wall. His work is both meaningful in historical terms, reminiscent of Roman civilization ending right there at Hadrian's wall, and in a contemporary political sense, provoking a thinking on what this border means for England and Scotland today. The fragility of States, as a political understanding, runs in a historic sense through all the above-mentioned works. The works by Santiago Sierra address this understanding today. In 2012, he made Burned Word (2012) in Valencia (Spain). It shows a monumental word, “Future”, constructed in front of a poor looking apartment complex. The word is set on fire and burns to the ground. This took place at the height of the Financial Crisis in Spain, a moment when the state was no longer capable of supporting its own financial sector and received a financial bailout of more than 100 billion euros from the EU. At the same time, support for an independent Catalonia increased dramatically. Sierra's second work called Veterans of war facing the corner continues a series of performances he has staged since 2011, inviting war veterans from historical conflicts to simply stand in a corner with their backs to the viewer for a period of time. The performance emphasizes the soldier as a worker in the industry of war. It critically questions his or her social position once they can no longer fight or work, while investigating the relationship between power and guilt. For the first time, Sierra is not working with veterans from a cold conflict, but with those who fought in Donbas, in eastern Ukraine, in a conflict that is still ongoing. Bringing a veteran of a still-ongoing conflict into the gallery provokes a confrontation with reality. It provokes thoughts on the veteran and his or her relationship to the political powers that need to bring this conflict to an end. Veterans of war facing the corner speaks not only about a political state but also about personal fragility. This is a subject that is addressed very differently in Oscar Murillo's work Frequencies (2013 – ongoing), a series of 28 canvases made with collaboration of children from all over the world. The works are a part of a long-term project where Murillo attaches canvases to the desks of schoolchildren aged 10 to 16 years. The drawings capture a portrait of concerns, thoughts, fears, hopes and the imagination of a future generation. They move between the personal and political, representing a fragile moment in a young person's life, a moment of openness and a view towards the future. Urs Fischer also addresses personal fragility, but his subject draws from the ordinary and daily life with works like Internal Weather (2000), Chair for a Ghost: Urs (2003). His wax candle sculpture Untitled (2011) depicts the artist sitting at a table with a bottle of wine, slowly melting away through the course of the exhibition. This traditional Memento Mori represents the body in decay and stands in conversation with Overcome the Virus! (2016) by Barthélémy Toguo. His eight hand-painted vases are inspired by research into the HIV and Ebola viruses. Toguo explains the vases as larger than a human being, symbolizing our relationship to water, being both purifying and a possible source of contaminations. It expands the body's fragility to the world around us, to nature and life itself, echoed in the work of Damien Hirst, Here Today, Gone Tomorrow (2008). The final chapter of the exhibition is Marina Abramovic's Generator (2014/2017). The artist invites the public to experience their body, their mind and the space surrounding them, completely deprived of any sense of hearing or sight. It brings the notion of Fragile State onto the viewer’s body and mind, placing them in a position of vulnerability while concentrating on a central notion in Abramovic’s work: “nothingness”. As she said: “The hardest thing is to do something which is close to nothing.” Curator – Artistic director of the Bjorn Geldhof of the PinchukArtCentre.

curator

Bjorn Geldhof 
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posted 24. Aug 2017

Anselm Kiefer, for Velimir Khlebnikov

30. May 201703. Sep 2017
Anselm Kiefer, for Velimir Khlebnikov 30 May 2017 - 3 September 2017 Nicholas Hall of the Winter Palace On 30th May 2017, for the very first time in Russia, the State Hermitage Museum inaugurates a solo exhibition of one of the most famous contemporary artist, Anselm Kiefer. Located in the Nicholas Hall of the Winter Palace, the exhibition is organized by the State Hermitage Museum in close collaboration with the artist and in cooperation with Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London/Paris/Salzburg. Anselm Kiefer dedicated the exhibition to the great Russian poet Velimir Khlebnikov. Anselm Kiefer is an artist whose work demonstrates a deep and diverse intellectual reflection. In his oeuvre he faces the themes of history, religion, literature, philosophy as well as the question of memory and heritage. One of the main source of inspiration for Kiefer is world culture in its widest perspective: German history, religious mysticism, antiquity, and Mesopotamian mythology. Anselm Kiefer was born in 1945 in a little German town called Donaueschingen, a few months before the end of the Second World War. Researching the themes of guilt and pain, which paralyzed his generation, Kiefer, alongside Georg Baselitz and Gerhard Richter, became one of the first artists who blatantly addressed the topics of Nazism and the Holocaust. In 1980 Kiefer represented Germany at the Venice Biennale. In the following years he had solo exhibitions held at the Kunsthalle in Düsseldorf, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, the Royal Academy of Arts in London as well as at the Grand Palais and the Centre Pompidou in Paris. Anselm Kiefer is the only living artist to be part of the permanent display of the Louvre. According to the German philosopher Peter Sloterdijk, “Anselm Kiefer’s art lodges in a strange spaciousness, as far from horrible as it is from decorative”, – two constants of contemporary art. His pictorial works – extensive, multilayered, three-dimensional – mark the revival of the history painting genre with its key concerns: memory and cultural myth. In a challenging manner, Kiefer explores layers of history by a distinct treatement of materials and texture, colours in his canvases are mixed with dust, soil, clay, rusted metal, straw and dry flowers. In 1985 he acquired an obsolete roof of the Cologne cathedral: lead sheets became pages of his artist’s books, one of his central means of expression. Delving into the practice of Anselm Kiefer demands a viewer that is prepared for mystic compassion and an immersion into the whirling of rarified intellectual ideas. In 2016, Anselm Kiefer, inspired by his visit to St. Petersburg, created a new exhibition project specially for the Hermitage Museum. It is in the triadic space of the colossal Nikolaevsky Hall of the Winter Palace that Kiefer chose to display around 30 new works dedicated to the Russian futurist-poet Velimir Khlebnikov (1885-1922). For Kiefer, poetical production is often a starting point: “I think in pictures. Poems help me with this. They are like buoys in the sea. I swim to them, from one to the other. In between, without them, I am lost. They are the handholds where something masses together in the infinite expanse.” One of Khlebnikov’s central ideas is that major pivotal naval and terrestrial battles endlessly repeat every 317 years. This foresight was for Kiefer a thread to reflect on themes of war and peace, the fugacity and finitude of all human aspirations and the mercilessness of fate. All the while, the exhibition “Anselm Kiefer, for Khlebnikov” is an ode to the sorrowful beauty of rusted vessels – these relics of wars once instilled fear and are now left at the uttermost points of the earth. The exhibition is curated by Dr. Dimitri Ozerkov, the Head of the Contemporary Art Department of the State Hermitage Museum, and Nina Danilova, Associate Curator of the same department. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue (both in Russian and English). The catalogue features a foreword by Prof. Mikhail Piotrovsky, the General Director of the State Hermitage Museum, and texts by Dimitri Ozerkov, Ivan Czeczot, Peter Sloterdijk and Klaus Dermutz. The exhibition “Anselm Kiefer, for Velimir Khlebnikov” is accompanied by a compelling educational program and curated events. It includes meetings with the artist and curators, film screenings, lectures, workshops and public talks. The exhibition is organized by the Contemporary Art Department of the State Hermitage Museum in the frame of “the Hermitage 20/21 Project” which aims to collect, study and exhibit Contemporary Art. It marks the centenary anniversary of the Revolution in Russia, celebrated in 2017.

artist

Anselm Kiefer 
State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg / RUS °

THE STATE HERMITAGE MUSEUM | Dworzowaja Nabereschnaja 34
Saint Petersburg

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posted 23. Aug 2017

Jasper Johns: ‘Something Resembling Truth’

23. Sep 201710. Dec 2017
Jasper Johns: ‘Something Resembling Truth’ 23 September — 10 December 2017 “One hopes for something resembling truth, some sense of life, even of grace, to flicker, at least in the work.” Jasper Johns, 2008. 1949. Jasper Johns arrives in New York City from South Carolina, Georgia, seeking somewhere he’ll find art, and artists. By 1955 his use of accessible and familiar motifs like flags, targets, maps and lightbulbs creates a new vocabulary in painting – forging a decisive new direction in an art world previously ruled by Abstract Expressionism. Six decades of continually evolving, technically brilliant, game-changing work later, and it’s no wonder we consider him one of the world’s greatest living artists. This ambitious show unites over 150 paintings, sculptures, drawings and prints tracing Johns’s extraordinary and long-ranging career. We look at his innovations in printmaking, and his integration of studio objects and casts of the human figure in painting. We present his works of the 1970s, dominated by an abstract pattern known as “crosshatchings”, and art illustrating his use of collage, where he incorporates details of works by artists including Pablo Picasso and Edvard Munch. We look at highly conceptual work and famous collaborations with choreographer Merce Cunningham, composer John Cage and fellow artist Robert Rauschenberg. All the way through to brand new, never-before-seen work created specifically by Johns for our Main Galleries. Throughout, returning time and again regardless of media, are his overarching concerns with themes of memory, sexuality, the familiar and the unfamiliar, and mortality. Time Out says it is an “indisputable fact: there’s no more important painter alive today than Jasper Johns”. This exhibition will follow in the Royal Academy’s tradition of celebrating our Royal Academicians, continuing the strand of programming that has showcased some of the most significant living artists including Anish Kapoor, David Hockney, Anselm Kiefer and Ai Weiwei. Working in close collaboration with the artist, the exhibition is co-curated by Dr Roberta Bernstein and Edith Devaney.

artist

Jasper Johns 
Royal Academy of Arts, London

Burlington House, Piccadilly
W1J 0BD London

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posted 22. Aug 2017

Tracey Emin and William Blake In Focus

16. Sep 201603. Sep 2017
Tracey Emin and William Blake In Focus Continuing our In Focus series, this free exhibition compares important works from the Tate collection, demonstrating a shared concern with birth, death and spirituality in both artists’ work. At the heart is one of Britain’s most renowned artworks of the past 20 years, Tracey Emin’s (b.1963) My Bed 1998. This will be the first time My Bed has been displayed in the north of England. Featuring Emin’s own bed, it offers an unflinching self-portrait in which the artist herself is absent. My Bed, along with drawings by Emin from the Tate collection, will be shown alongside those of the visionary British poet and artist, William Blake (1757–1827). Presented in the context of Emin’s empty bed, and symbolising the absent figure, highlights include Pity c.1975 and The Crucifixion: ‘Behold Thy Mother’ c.1805. Blake stood against the hypocrisies of his age championing liberalism, sexual freedoms and above all freedom of expression. This new display affirms Blake’s Romantic idea of artistic truth through existential pain and the possibility of spiritual rebirth through art, shared in the work of Tracey Emin.

artists & participants

William Blake,  Tracey Emin 
Tate Liverpool

TATE LIVERPOOL | Albert Dock Liverpool Waterfront
L3 4BB Liverpool

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posted 21. Aug 2017

Marie-Louise Ekman

17. Jun 201717. Sep 2017
Marie-Louise Ekman 17.06.2017 – 17.09.2017 Stockholm Marie-Louise Ekman has alternated effortlessly between painting, sculpture, film and drama since the late 1960s. In her works, Ekman exposes the absurdity of everyday life and undermine social constructions, and in rooms decorated with floral wallpaper, people, animals and farting geezers sit at the same table. Featuring nearly 350 works, this exhibition is the largest presentation so far of her renowned oeuvre. Liberation and comic books Marie-Louise Ekman belongs to a generation of Swedish artists who emerged in the politically turbulent 1960s. Many young artists in the 1960s were deeply influenced by popular culture, and comic books in particular. Ekman made series of silkscreen prints, stitched fishcakes out of shiny, pink silk, built enclosed worlds out of miniature objects, and borrowed the format of comic strips for her own serialised paintings. In her early works, she also appropriated images from The Phantom, Donald Duck and Ernie Bushmiller’s Nancy. Ekman’s protagonists, however, are Minnie and Daisy, together with April, May and June, rather than their male friends. At Home With a Lady Ekman’s works have a strong narrative focus. In cramped pictorial spaces with warped one-point perspectives, dreams, passions and disappointments run amok in a heightened reality. In the series At Home With a Lady from 1973, a lonely woman acts out her desires, captive in an interior, like an animal in the zoo, reliving the same reality day after day. In Striptease (1973), this blonde female figure is transformed step-by-step, via ape and man, into a bird that flies away. This is not a sexually charged act of undressing, but a way of stripping off roles and entering and exiting states of mind. In other paintings, windows and sinkholes open up to other worlds. The women’s orifices evolve into exotic landscapes with oceans lined by palm trees, and beyond the windows are other windows, where new wondrous scenes are enacted. Monuments During the early 1980s, Ekman appropriated the styles of other artists, creating works where Picasso’s women and Daisy Duck vie for space. In these paintings, Olle Baertling’s terse compositions provide the landscape for swaddled infants, wounded fledglings and dissected crocodiles on pedestals. In a large series of recent works, shown for the first time in this exhibition, Ekman instead revisits her own works from the 1970s. With her grandchildren as muses, she moves in and out of the familiar pictorial scenes. The children are here given free rein to paint over and add their own images. In other pictures, the rooms are bare, and where there used to be tables and chairs, all that remains is a play of shadows. Watch Ekman’s movies After eight feature films and numerous TV productions, Ekman definitely sees herself as an artist who makes films, rather than a film director. The exhibition features The Dramatic Asylum (2013–14), a drama series in 50 episodes, which she filmed using her mobile. With humour and painful precision, Ekman scrutinises the theatre, its power relationships and her own role as director and colleague. By contrast, Barnförbjudet (The Elephant Walk, 1979), Ekman’s first feature movie, is a sensational show with marches and musical numbers, where scales and meanings are displaced, while the kids stoically observe the affected manners of the grownups. Curator: Jo Widoff

curator

Jo Widoff 
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posted 20. Aug 2017

Otto Freundlich. Kosmischer Kommunismus

10. Jun 201710. Sep 2017
Neubau Otto Freundlich. Kosmischer Kommunismus 10.06.2017–10.09.2017 Kuratorin: Julia Friedrich Otto Freundlich (1878–1943) kannte alle und kannte alles. Kaum ein Künstler der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts hat sich so leidenschaftlich mit den unterschiedlichen Strömungen der Kunst auseinandergesetzt. Persönliche Bekanntschaft, oft auch Freundschaft verband ihn mit den führenden Künstlern fast aller Strömungen der Avantgarde – Expressionismus, Fauvismus, Kubismus, Orphismus, Dadaismus, De Stijl, Bauhaus und den Abstrakten. An gegenseitiger Beeinflussung hat es nicht gefehlt. Und doch verfolgte Freundlich mit seinen Gemälden und Skulpturen, mit seinen Mosaiken und Glasmalereien einen ganz eigenen Weg. Die Ausstellung Otto Freundlich – Kosmischer Kommunismus will die Arbeits- und Lebenswege Otto Freundlichs abschreiten und die Entwicklung seines künstlerischen und philosophischen Denkens nachvollziehen. Sie lenkt den Blick auf das Werk eines Künstlers, dem die Nazis den Krieg erklärt hatten: Ein beträchtlicher Teil seiner Kunst wurde von ihnen vernichtet, Freundlich zuletzt in einem Vernichtungslager umgebracht. Sein bekanntestes Werk ist bis heute die Plastik „Grosser Kopf“ (1912); sie prangte auf dem Umschlag des Ausstellungsführers zur NS-Schau „Entartete Kunst“. Die Retrospektive weist nach, dass die Nazis nicht nur den Titel des Werks fälschten (sie gaben ihm den noch heute üblichen Titel „Der neue Mensch“), sondern auch die Skulptur selbst: Auf mindestens einer Station der Wanderausstellung „Entartete Kunst“ stellten sie statt des Originals eine plumpe Nachbildung aus. So politisch aktiv und entschlossen Freundlich war, orientierte er sich nicht an den Kämpfen des Tages, sondern an utopischen Entwürfen. Leitend ist in seinem Œuvre ein alles umfassender Universalismus, den er „kosmischer Kommunismus“ nannte. Mit Freundlichs Verfolgung in Deutschland ist auch ein grosser Teil der frühen Werke verloren gegangen. Allein in der Aktion „Entartete Kunst“ wurden 14 Werke konfisziert. Das in Frankreich verbliebene Werk Freundlichs wurde von einigen Unterstützern auch nach seinem Tod bewahrt und schliesslich in eine Stiftung im Museum Pontoise bei Paris eingebracht. Die vom Museum Ludwig in Köln konzipierte und nun im Kunstmuseum Basel gezeigte Ausstellung versammelt rund 50 Werke. Die Retrospektive mit zum Teil faszinierenden neuen Forschungsergebnissen macht Freundlichs Werkentwicklung von 1909–1940 nachvollziehbar.

curator

Julia Friedrich 
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posted 19. Aug 2017

TOMAS SCHMIT - bald ist wieder schneckentreffen

01. Jul 201717. Sep 2017
Tomas Schmit - Bald ist wieder Schneckentreffen 01/07/2017 – 17/09/2017 Tomas Schmit (1943 - 2006) gehört zu den Pionieren der Fluxus-Bewegung in den frühen 1960er Jahren. Über Nam June Paik, den er 1961 traf, lernte er George Maciunas kennen und nahm an den ersten Fluxus-Aktivitäten teil. Zu seinen engen Künstlerfreunden gehörten unter anderem George Brecht, Ludwig Gosewitz, Arthur Köpcke, Dieter Roth und Gerhard Rühm. Seit Beginn seiner künstlerischen Tätigkeit beschäftigte sich Tomas Schmit mit Sprache und Text; Ende der 1960er Jahre begann er zeichnerisch zu arbeiten. In humorvoller Weise thematisiert er in seinen Zeichnungen, Editionen und Künstlerbüchern Phänomene der Wahnehmung und der Sprachlogik. Seine paradoxalen, wortspielerischen Arbeiten sieht er als Teil eines Forschungsprojektes zur Evolution der Sinne und des Denkens. Dabei geht er immer von eigenen, konkreten Beobachtungen aus und behandelt in Zeichnungsserien und Texten unerklärliche Phänomene - zum Beispiel Übung für mutige: sich farben vorstellen, die es nicht gibt (1985). Die Ausstellung wird realisiert in Kooperation mit der Kunsthalle Lingen und dem Kunstverein Bremerhaven. Kuratorin: Meike Behm, René Zechlin

artist

Tomas Schmit 

curators

Meike BehmRene Zechlin 
Wilhelm Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen

Wilhelm-Hack-Museum & Rudolf-Scharpf-Galerie | Berliner Straße 23
67059 Ludwigshafen

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posted 18. Aug 2017

Grayson Perry: The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever!

08. Jun 201710. Sep 2017
Grayson Perry: The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever! 8 Jun 2017 to 10 Sep 2017 This summer Grayson Perry, one of the most astute commentators on contemporary society and culture, presents a major exhibition of new work. The works touch on many themes including popularity and art, masculinity and the current cultural landscape. Perry’s abiding interest in his audience informs his choice of universally human subjects. Working in a variety of traditional media such as ceramics, cast iron, bronze, printmaking and tapestry, Perry is best known for his ability to combine delicately crafted objects with scenes of contemporary life. His subject matter is drawn from his own childhood and life as a transvestite, as well as wider social issues ranging from class and politics to sex and religion. Taking place during the Serpentine’s popular summer season, when the parks enjoy hugely increased local and international audiences, The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever!, tackles one of Perry’s central concerns: how contemporary art can best address a diverse cross section of society. Perry said: “I am in the communication business and I want to communicate to as wide an audience as possible. Nothing pleases me more than meeting someone at one of my exhibitions from what museum people call ‘a non-traditional background.’ The new works I am making all have ideas about popularity hovering around them. What kind of art do people like? What subjects? Why do people like going to art galleries these days? What is the relationship of traditional art to social media?” A Channel 4 documentary Grayson Perry: Divided Britain followed Perry as he created a new work for the show: his attempt to capture the thoughts of a divided country a year after the EU referendum. Harnessing social media, Perry invited the British public to contribute ideas, images and phrases to cover the surface of two enormous new pots: one for the Brexiteers and one for the Remainers. He also visited the most pro-Brexit and pro-Remain parts of the country for the programme, which is available to watch on All4. Listen to Grayson Perry talk about his work and read his own captions to some of the pieces on our mobile tour of the exhibition, accessible in the gallery through the Serpentine’s free WiFi.

artist

Grayson Perry 
Serpentine Gallery, London

Kensington Gardens
W2 3XA London

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posted 17. Aug 2017

Mark Tobey: Threading Light

06. May 201710. Sep 2017
Mark Tobey: Threading Light Curated by Debra Bricker Balken Mark Tobey: Threading Light is the first comprehensive retrospective of the American artist’s work in twenty years. The exhibition traces the evolution of the artist's groundbreaking style and his significant yet under-recognized contributions to abstraction and mid-century American modernism. With 70 paintings spanning the 1920s through 1970, Mark Tobey: Threading Light is curated by the independent curator Debra Bricker Balken and surveys the breadth of Tobey's oeuvre and reveals the extraordinarily nuanced yet radical beauty of his work. One of the foremost American artists to emerge from the 1940s, a decade that saw the rise of abstract expressionism, Mark Tobey (1890–1976) is recognized as a vanguard figure whose "white-writing" anticipated the formal innovations of New York School artists such as Jackson Pollock. When Tobey’s small paintings composed of intricate, pale webs of delicate lines were first exhibited in New York in 1944, they generated much interest for their daring "all-over" compositions. His unique calligraphic renderings largely invoke the city—its dizzying, towering architecture, thoroughfares, and pervasive whirl of electric light. As such, they are the outcome of a lyrical combination of both Eastern and Western visual histories that range from Chinese scroll painting to European cubism. This unique form of abstraction was the synthesis of the artist’s experiences living in Seattle and New York, his extensive trips to Hong Kong, Shanghai, Kyoto, and Europe, and his conversion to the Bahá'í faith. As curator Debra Bricker Balken explains, "Within this mix of sources, Tobey was able to skirt a specific debt to cubism—unlike his modernist peers—by fusing elements of like formal languages into compositions that are both astonishingly radical and beautiful." Tobey's work bridges the international dimensions of mid-century modernism, a connection that has been previously unexplored in the discourse on postwar art.

artist

Mark Tobey 
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posted 16. Aug 2017

Christian Marclay. The Clock

01. Jun 201703. Sep 2017
Christian Marclay. The Clock 01.06.2017–03.09.2017 Copenhagen Contemporary is delighted to bring Swiss-American artist and composer Christian Marclay’s The Clock (2010) to Scandinavia for the first time. This video installation is recognised as a contemporary masterpiece and won the Golden Lion at the 2011 Venice Biennale. The Clock is a 24-hour montage comprising thousands of scenes from film and television that feature everything from wristwatches to clocktowers, from buzzing alarms to the cuckoo clock – along with other references to the time. With The Clock, Marclay deconstructs and challenges the narratives of individual scenes by removing them from their original context and inserting them into another, where time itself becomes the protagonist. Synchronised with the local time of the exhibition space, the work conflates cinematic and actual time, revealing each passing minute as a repository of alternately suspenseful, tragic or romantic narrative possibilities. At the same time, our natural, established perception of time is tested and challenged by the work’s many different narratives, which have no beginning or end. During the show CC looks forward to presenting six special 24-hour screenings of The Clock, where audiences can experience the work in its entirety, covering the full span of a day and night. Overnight screenings 04. June 24. June 22. July 12. August 25. August 01. September The Clock first premiered in London in 2010 and has since been exhibited worldwide in more than twenty venues, including the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2011); Museum of Modern Art, New York (2012); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2013); and Guggenheim Bilbao (2014). About Christian Marclay For more than thirty years, Christian Marclay has been exploring the connections between the visual and the audible, creating works in a wide range of media, including sculpture, video, photography, collage, music, and performance. A pioneering DJ using records and turntables as musical instruments to create sound collages, since 1979 Marclay has performed and recorded both solo and in collaboration with many musicians, including John Zorn, Elliott Sharp, Otomo Yoshihide, Butch Morris, Shelley Hirsch, Okkyung Lee, Mats Gustafsson, and Lee Ranaldo. Marclay’s work has been shown in museums and galleries worldwide. International solo exhibitions include the Staatsgalerie in Stuttgart (2015); Musée d’art moderne et contemporain in Geneva (2008); Hammer Museum at UCLA, Los Angeles (2003); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2002); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2001); Kunsthaus Zürich (1997); Musée d’art et d’histoire, Geneva (1995); and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. (1990).
Copenhagen Contemporary CC °

COPENHAGEN CONTEMPORARY (CC) | Trangravsvej 10-14
1436 Copenhagen

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posted 15. Aug 2017

Medusa. Bijoux et tabous

19. May 201705. Nov 2017
Medusa Bijoux et tabous From 19 May to 05 November 2017 The Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris presents MEDUSA, an exhibition taking a contemporary and unprecedented look at jewellery, unveiling a number of taboos. Just like the face of Medusa in Greek mythology, a piece of jewellery attracts and troubles the person who designs it, looks at it or wears it. While it is one of the most ancient and universal forms of human expression, jewellery has an ambiguous status, mid-way between fashion and sculpture, and is rarely considered to be a work of art. Indeed, it is often perceived as too close to the body, too feminine, precious, ornamental or primitive. But it is thanks to avant-garde artists and contemporary designers that it has been reinvented, transformed and detached from its own traditions. In the wake of the museum’s series of joint and cross-disciplinary exhibitions, such as “L’Hiver de l’Amour”, “Playback” and “Decorum”, MEDUSA questions the traditional art boundaries by reconsidering, with the complicity of artists, the questions of craftsmanship, decoration, fashion and pop culture. The exhibition brings together over 400 pieces of jewellery: created by artists (Anni Albers, Man Ray, Meret Oppenheim, Alexander Calder, Salvador Dali, Louise Bourgeois, Lucio Fontana, Niki de Saint Phalle, Fabrice Gygi, Thomas Hirschhorn, Danny McDonald, Sylvie Auvray…), avant-garde jewellery makers and designers (René Lalique, Suzanne Belperron, Line Vautrin, Art Smith, Tony Duquette, Bless, Nervous System…), contemporary jewellery makers (Gijs Bakker, Otto Künzli, Karl Fritsch, Dorothea Prühl, Seulgi Kwon, Sophie Hanagarth…) and also high end jewelers (Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Victoire de Castellane, Buccellati…), as well as anonymous, more ancient or non-Western pieces (including prehistorical and medieval works, punk and rappers’ jewellery as well as costume jewellery etc .). These pieces, well-known, little-known, unique, familiar, handmade, massproduced, or computer made, mix some refined, hand-wrought, amateur and even futuristic aesthetics which are rarely associated together. They sometimes go far beyond simple jewellery and explore other means of engaging with, and putting on, jewellery. The exhibition is organized around four themes with a specific display for each: Identity, Value, Body and Instruments. Each section starts from the often negative preconceptions surrounding jewellery in order to better deconstruct them, and finally reveal jewellery’s underlying subversive and performative potential. Fifteen works and installations by contemporary artists (Mike Kelley, Leonor Antunes, Jean-Marie Appriou, Atelier EB, Liz Craft…) dot the exhibition, echoing the themes of its various sections. The works presented question related issues of decoration and ornament, and anchor our connection to jewellery within a broadened relationship to the body and the world. Curator: Anne Dressen In collaboration with Michèle Heuzé and Benjamin Lignel, scientific advisors

curator

Anne Dressen 
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posted 14. Aug 2017

Les Rencontres d´Arles 2017

03. Jul 201717. Sep 2017
Les Rencontres d´Arles 2017 03.07.2017-17.09.2017 New Space SAM STOURDZÉ DIRECTOR OF THE RENCONTRES D'ARLES "The more we think a country closed, stuck in political and economic crises, the more we find photographers there. They reveal, describe, demonstrate, invent, repair, build, in their own language, that of the image. They decipher the preliminary signs of societies in upheaval. The 48th issue of the Rencontres de la Photographie shares this taste for other places. All across the city of Arles—a city of living legacy which, in the space of a summer, transforms into a wonderful place of welcome for our exhibitions—a trajectory emerges that will lead you from Latin America to Iran, from the shores of the Bosphorus to the Syrian border, from Château Davignon to the trailers of Arles. You’ll go on a snorkeling tour of flooded lands; you’ll go by train across the vast Russian landscape; you’ll pick up the pieces of Lenin in Ukraine; you’ll reflect on Monsanto; you’ll follow the life of a Romani family for twenty years… From the local to the global, this 48th issue will take you to the heart of Colombia, immerse you in a new Spanish generation, introduce you to the sideways glance in Iranian photography—all in a sweeping journey to the heart of busy and complex geopolitics. SEE THE WORLD As a matter of fact, the world is moving. Nothing new in this, but it’s moving ever faster. Nowadays images circulate at the speed of light. Technological liberation, once lauded as the acquisition of direct expression, the spearhead of an ever more participative democracy, reveals another face, another use. It puts itself at the service of populist conquests. Have we entered into the age of the war of images, in which each person chooses to make themselves, alternately, the one who disseminates or the one who collects truth or fallacy? More than ever, we need artists and their ability to capture the apt time. Artists participate in decrypting, in contextualizing, in making new forms of writing emerge; and the festival amplifies their voices, transcribes their simple, efficient, and ambitious program: to see the world as it is, as it could be, as it ought to be. THANKS TO YOU! Patrons of the Rencontres have made no mistake. In 2016, you were more numerous than ever before. In fifteen years, attendance at the Rencontres d’Arles increased dramatically, testifying to the growing public interest in photography. The event now occurs as an annual fixture, a freeze frame, an x-ray of artistic creation, as the Rencontres are on the scene for every development in the field of photography, and sometimes at its initiative. Thus, the 48th issue holds a few surprises. The artist Jean Dubuffet appropriates and diverts photographic convention, using its reproducibility to replicate painting and drawing. Roger Ballen works on site for the exhibition itself, offering the visitor an immersive, ballenesque experience. Virtual reality (VR) promises to be the next revolution in technology. It is a new model for creation, one which is challenging representation and rewriting established codes. It is inspiring artists and producing new forms. The festival supports these major developments related to the image, setting up a new stage for them with the VR Arles Festival, accessible all summer at the Couvent Saint-Césaire. Here, visitors can experience the two dozen films selected for the official competition. ALL OF PHOTOGRAPHY Ultimately, we are a photography festival at the service of photographers. Yet, art is an ecosystem with a large number of actors involved, from creation to production to distribution. We support this ecosystem, issue after issue, as a place of welcome, of expression and promotion. Because of its visibility, the festival is a unique platform for the photography community, a common good at the service of all its players: photographers, of course, but also curators, researchers, publishers, collectors, and this year, gallery owners. At Arles, curators find a ground for experimentation that matches their ambitions. In 2017, more than XXXX curators are offering their interpretation of photography. Publishers are now supported largely by the Dummy Book Award and the Book award, while Cosmos-Arles Books brings together around 80 specialized publishers during the festival’s opening week. The 48th issue continues its interest in art collectors. From the excellent Latin-American collection of Laetitia and Stanislas Poniatowski, to the strange vernacular collection of Claude Ribouillault, devoted to dwarfs, giants and strongmen, collectors are celebrated for the free spirit by which they bring to light neglected areas in the history of photography. And finally, we officially welcome the key players on the art scene with the presentation of the New Discovery Award. Gallery owners, in their pioneering role, are often the first to spot, support, and encourage future talent. They are here invited to nominate an artist of less than 45 years old, whose work they esteem to merit promotion with an international audience. Thus, ten photographers have been selected from among 200 candidates; their work will be presented this summer. It is then up to the professionals to decide, from among these candidates, the winner of the New Discovery award during the opening week. Clearly, all the players in photography enrich our program, and increase, by a little each year, the significance of the Rencontres d’Arles. A SPIRIT, NOT A PLACE This year, we are opening up new spaces, literally as well as figuratively. In 2017, the spirit of the Rencontres will breathe on two new sites. Both are found at the border of the historical center on Boulevard Émile Combes. The sites were built from derelict houses, old shops, warehouses, and urban land. Open to the public for the first time, they’ve been reconfigured as exhibition sites and walkways for the occasion. They add to the Rencontres d’Arles’ reputation as innovator of the city. But one space can hide another! More than square meters, these are new spaces of photography which, above all, tirelessly mobilize our energy: creative spaces, political spaces, spaces of protest and rebellion, spaces for reflection, and most of all, spaces consecrated to the critical eye and free thinking. Let’s make it clear—before it is a place, the Rencontres d’Arles are a space of liberty! "
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