Archive for November 6th, 2006

Eleanore Mikus @ The Drawing Center

Monday, November 6th, 2006

White Paperfold, 2000, 5 x 14 1/2 inchesWhite Paperfold, 2000, 5 x 14 1/2 inches

The Drawing Center is pleased to present the remarkable work of Eleanore Mikus. A noted figure in the 1960s, Mikus’s early work received considerable attention. Yet despite a long and successful teaching career at Cornell University and the exhibition and acquisition of her paintings by the Museum of Modern Art, her work seems to have been missed by art history.

Aiming to redress this oversight, Eleanore Mikus: From Shell to Skin will reintroduce the artist with a selection of early drawings and paintings including “Tablets” from the early 1960s as well as “Paperfolds” from the later 1960s and past two decades. Seemingly minimalist and reductive in style, Mikus’s paintings and folded paper works actually result from experimentation with and refinement of additive processes as she continues to work and rework her pieces for many years, often returning to them after long periods of time.

The exhibition will be accompanied by Drawing Papers 65: Eleanore Mikus: From Shell to Skin featuring new photography and a comprehensive essay by curator Luis Camnitzer.
Eleanore Mikus: From Shell to Skin, curated by Luis Camnitzer, will be on view in the main gallery through February 10, 2007.

The Drawing Center
35 Wooster Street
New York, NY 10013
Gallery hours: Tuesday-Friday 10 am-6 pm; Saturday 11 am-6 pm
www.drawingcenter.org

LatentCity: Six Emerging Vancouver Artists

Monday, November 6th, 2006

 Alex Pensato , The Dark Tower Projects: Sakura, Carbon Paper & Post-It Notes on Wall, Transmounted Lightjet Prints, 2006 Alex Pensato , “The Dark Tower Projects: Sakura”
Carbon Paper & Post-It Notes on Wall, Transmounted Lightjet Prints, 2006

LatentCity,
Published by the Helen Pitt Gallery in conjunction with the LatentCity exhibition, held October 20 to November 11, 2006.
ISBN 0-9782165-2-0
Released November 2006
32 pages, soft cover, color plates, 5.5” x 8.5”
For ordering contact pittg@telus.net

The Helen Pitt Gallery is pleased to announce the publication of LatentCity, the catalogue of the exhibition held from October 21 to November 11, 2006 in Vancouver, British Columbia.

LatentCity brings together the recent work of six diverse Vancouver artists who share an interest in the relationship between the materiality of the urban environment and the psychological traces it leaves on its inhabitants. Conceived as an inversion of Freud’s notion of the mind as a city, these artists present an archeological view of our built environments that suggests the opposite—the city as mind.

The works in LatentCity—spanning installation, drawing, photography and video—locate the distinct yet hazy communicative pulses and impulses resonating from the grey matter of the built environment. Using a variety of artistic and investigative strategies, the artists in this exhibition engage the city in much the same way a psychoanalyst studies a subject or an anthropologist attempts to resurrect a sense of context from the relics of past civilizations. And yet this type of analysis is far from perfect science. As LatentCity suggests, the possibility of fully understanding the subject is constantly confounded by miscommunication, misreading and problematic issues of psychological transference and projection. In LatentCity the idea of the city remains a half-imagined fiction; the artists’ investigations into the various facets of city life are ultimately investigations of self.

The works in this exhibition move through a conceptual, associative landscape marked by haunting industrial zones, backyard excavations, neighbourhood karaoke, Arthur Erikson, Zabriskie Point and buildings that come to you in your dreams. Collectively, these artists have shown across Canada and Europe, and locally at the Or gallery, Contemporary Art Gallery, Charles H. Scott and Artspeak, among others.

ARTISTS
Curtis Grahauer is a graduate of the Emily Carr Institute. Working with film, sound, mixed media and primarily working in video, his practice is studying the dissipation and parasitic nature of pop culture through the documentation of isolated performative moments.

Andrew Kent’s work generally involves compounding literal readings of culturally (in)significant moments. He lives and works in Vancouver and is a graduate of the Emily Carr Institute.

Scott Massey is a Vancouver artist whose work explores the uneasy relationship between nature and culture. Although primarily a photo-based artist, Massey also creates sculptural installations and temporary outdoor interventions related to this theme. He has recently exhibited at Artspeak (Vancouver) and the Surrey Art Gallery.

Alex Pensato’s works forge associative systems of language that question the modern built environment. Rematerializing the abstracted notions of our surroundings, his works offer the viewer a personal experience with the structures and material sensibilities of the city. He recently exhibited Coming Soon… .at Access Project Space and will have a solo exhibit in 2007 at the Galerie Werner Whitman in Montreal.

Kara Uzelman has worked extensively both collaboratively and independently. Since 2002 she has shown work in numerous group and solo exhibitions and has been highlighted in both national and local publications. Recently she received a Visual Artists Development Award and has been studying with Archaeologist, Ross Jamieson.

Danna Vajda was born in North Vancouver, BC. She graduated from the Emily Carr Institute in 2005 and currently resides in Montreal, Quebec. Recent exhibitions include Model Spaces at Galerie Werner Whitman and Holodecks and Other Spaces: Wreath of Kron at the Blackboard Gallery.

AUTHORS
Willie Brisco is the current director of the Galerie Werner Whitman, Montreal. Working as an artist, curator and writer, he has produced numerous exhibitions objects and events. Forthcoming exhibitions include Noh Forest, Premise Beach and Jerry Zaslove: Photographs.

Lance Blomgren is the curator/director of the Helen Pitt Gallery. His books include Practice (1995), Walkups (2000) and Corner Pieces (2004).

LatentCity Publication Launch
Friday, November 10, 2006, 7:30 pm

LatentCity: featuring works by Curtis Grahauer, Andrew Kent, Scott Massey, Alex Pensato, Kara Uzelman and Danna Vajda.
Writing by Willie Brisco and Lance Blomgren.
Exhibition curated by Werner Whitman.

Helen Pitt Gallery
#102-148 Alexander Street
Vancouver, British Columbia
T: 604.681.6740
http://www.helenpittgallery.org

Cooley | HADLEY+MAXWELL // LUCIEN SAMAHA | NOV 4-DEC 10, Portland

Monday, November 6th, 2006

“I want to show you somewhere.”

November 4­December 10, 2006
Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College, Portland, Oregon

HADLEY+MAXWELL
Hadley+Maxwell (VANCOUVER, BC) ‹ consider subjectivity and political
experience through moving image, song, drawing, and printed matter. Created
for the Cooley, their poetic installation asserts the importance of the
idiosyncratic and the incomplete in re-envisioning the body politic.

LUCIEN SAMAHA
Lucien Samaha (NEW YORK, NY) ‹ 100 photographs, a social contract, a
high-speed internet connection. Samaha inhabits the Cooley for the duration
of the exhibition, continuing his investigations into exchange, value,
conversation, and pleasure.

_________________________________________________________________

EVENTS
Saturday, November 4, 6:30 p.m.
back room symposium with artists Hadley+Maxwell
and writer Lisa Robertson, hosted by Matthew Stadler.
For reservations and more info visit: http://www.thebackroompdx.com/

Monday, November 6, 7:30 p.m.
Vollum lounge, Reed College campus
Public conversation with artists Lucien Samaha and Hadley+Maxwell
Followed by a reception at the Cooley Gallery
The Cooley will be open Monday November 6, 12 p.m. ­ 9 p.m.

Wednesday, November 15, 7 p.m.
Vollum lecture hall, Reed College campus
Lecture by MOMA NY Chief Conservator Jim Coddington, who will discuss
current issues in conservation in relation to contemporary artistic forms.

_________________________________________________________________

HADLEY+MAXWELL

“We ‘feel free’ precisely because we lack the very language to articulate
our unfreedom.” ‹ Slavoj Zizek

Hadley+Maxwell consider subjectivity and political experience through moving
image, song, drawing, and printed matter, working, in part, from photographs
of the Kent State riots on May 4, 1970, as chronicled in news magazines of
the time. During the summer of 2006, Hadley+Maxwell improvised these
photographs on the Reed College campus, alternating roles as victim and
bystander, corpse and “person,” re-imagining and re-opening consideration of
the images as historical records, but more critically, as spaces for the
incomplete and idiosyncratic articulation of gesture, time, and attachment.

While the video is projected onto small, cut-out representations of the
artists and reflected around the room, the artists ground our experience on
the textured surfaces of a series of delicate graphite drawings based on the
Kent State photographs. The drawings carefully record a process of
identification between the artists and their subject, taking on the quality
of a body of evidence that exists somewhere between public and private
experience. Permeating the space is a recording of Hadley singing a somber
and matter-of-fact rendition of “Gloomy Sunday.” A song written by Rezsô
Seress in 1933 that was banned from the airwaves in the 1940s for being too
damn sad. Throughout the installation, the bodies of the artists are cropped
and rescaled, deleted and reinserted. This dislocation makes space for, and
summons, the viewer into the work ‹ an invitation to “be-together” that
resists over-definition; an invitation to “be” together, in consideration of
something meaningful, an invitation to “be-together-in-meaning.” What
Hadley+Maxwell invite the viewer to engage in, they first and foremost do
themselves, together. The installation is neither a practice run for
something else, nor a partial action.

Accompanying Hadley+Maxwell’s installation is Promise, a 22-ft. flag pole
waving a white flag at half staff that will be installed on the great lawn
across from Eliot Hall, Reed’s oldest building. Promise comes to Reed from
Vancouver BC, where it was first installed in front of the Contemporary Art
Gallery of Vancouver as part of the exhibition Deleted Scenes (March 31­May
28, 2006, curated by Jenifer Papararo).

Hadley+Maxwell (Hadley Howes and Maxwell Stephens) began working and living
together in 1997 in Vancouver, Canada. They have exhibited and published
work across Canada and internationally, recently at the Vancouver Art
Gallery and the Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver, the Saidye Bronfman
Centre for the Arts, Montréal, and the Western Bridge, Seattle.
Hadley+Maxwell’s practice includes silk-screen, photography, video,
sculpture and site-responsive work, and often involves extending their
collaboration to include third persons, investigating mediation as the
condition of being-together.

_________________________________________________________________

LUCIEN SAMAHA

Lucien Samaha photographs situationally ‹ continually documenting life as it
unfolds around him while pursuing formal, social, and personal compulsions ‹
such as photographing people touching cheek to cheek, or playfully exploring
the work of friends such as the Austrian artist collective Gelitin. Samaha
is driven by how people relate to each other photographically, exploring the
significance and value of the photographic object, specifically in relation
to the global art market, new image technologies, and the elusive, sometimes
deceptive nature of the on-line environment. To describe Samaha as an
obsessive photographer of the everyday is something of an understatement.
Since the 1970s Samaha has created an archive of over 300,000 images that he
has purposed in exhibitions and site-specific projects around the world.

For “I want to show you somewhere.” Samaha comes to work at the Cooley
Gallery for the duration of the exhibition. It is a project that Samaha
doesn’t like to say too much about, as it involves rich surprises for those
who venture to engage him in the space. Suffice it to say that Samaha has
assembled 100 photographs from his archive and he wants to talk with you
about them. He wants to get to know you. Samaha plans to continue the
project around the world, as it involves meeting as many people as possible,
both in and out of art institutions, and investigating the various roles
that we all play in producing and determining the value of images.

Samaha’s project continues from the Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt,
Germany, where it began in the exhibition “Gut ist was gefallt.” — “Good is
What Pleases.” from Jan 15‹Feb 12, 2006, a group exhibition with Hans-Peter
Feldmann and Wolfgang Tillmans.

Lucien Samaha has been photographing his life and adventures since he took
one of the first photography courses offered in a US High School in 1973.
Photography has been Samaha’s companion throughout his many careers,
including that of a TWA Flight Attendant; a Marketing Manager for Eastman
Kodak Company where he was instrumental in the launch of the first digital
camera; and a world renowned DJ on the 107th floor of the World Trade
Center. Samaha has exhibited his work at spaces including: the Museum für
Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, Germany; the Center for Opinions in Music and Art
(C.O.M.A.), Berlin; the Elizabeth Foundation, NY; and the Feldman Gallery,
Pacific Northwest College of Art, Portland, OR. Samaha was a finalist for
the Nam June Paik award in 2004. He is represented by the Sara Tecchia Roma
Gallery, NY, NY.

_________________________________________________________________

Curated by Stephanie Snyder, John and Anne Hauberg Curator and Director
Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College.

The title of the exhibition is a quotation from the novel “Landscape
Memory” by author Matthew Stadler.

For more information contact:
Stephanie Snyder, director and curator
Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery
Reed College
3203 SE Woodstock Blvd.
Portland, OR 97202

snyders@reed.edu
503.777.7251

http://web.reed.edu/gallery

Light Resource Lecture Series | TED CULLINAN | NOV 7

Monday, November 6th, 2006

NOVEMBER 7, 2006 @ 6pm
TED CULLINAN
Edward Cullinan Architects
London, UK
www.edwardcullinanarchitects.com

ADMISSION FREE; NO RESERVE SEATING
1.5-2 HOUR LECTURES = 2 LCU CREDITS
C300 THEATRE, UBC @ ROBSON SQUARE
800 ROBSON STREET, VANCOUVER
www.lecturesonarchitecture.net; info@lecturesonarchitecture.net
AIBC 604.683.8588 ext.500

++++++++
NOVEMBER 28, 2006 @ 6pm
XAVEER DE GEYTER
Xaveer De Geyter Architects
Brussels, Belgium
www.xdga.be
Co-sponsored by Eureka

ADMISSION FREE; NO RESERVE SEATING
1.5-2 HOUR LECTURES = 2 LCU CREDITS
C300 THEATRE, UBC @ ROBSON SQUARE
800 ROBSON STREET, VANCOUVER
www.lecturesonarchitecture.net; info@lecturesonarchitecture.net
AIBC 604.683.8588 ext.500

UBC | Lecture: Arjun Appadurai | NOV 9

Monday, November 6th, 2006

JOAN CARLISLE-IRVING LECTURES 2006-2007
Arjun Appadurai
Solids and Liquids: Notes on the Materialities of Terror
Thursday, November 9, 2006, 6:00 pm
Frederic Wood Theatre, UBC
a reception following the arjun appadurai lecture will be held at, and is
sponsored by, the morris and helen belkin art gallery, ubc.
Arjun Appadurai serves as Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic
Affairs at The New School in New York City, where he also holds a
Distinguished Professorship as the John Dewey Professor in the Social
Sciences. Appadurai was born and educated in Bombay.
He earned his B.A. from Brandeis University in 1967, and his M.A. (1973) and
Ph.D. (1976) from the University of Chicago.
During his academic career, he has held professorial chairs at Yale
University, the University of Chicago, and the University of Pennsylvania.
He has authored numerous books and scholarly articles including Fear of
Small Numbers: An Essay on the Geography of Anger (2006, Duke University
Press) and Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization, (1996,
University of Minnesota Press; 1997, Oxford University Press, Delhi). His
previous scholarly publications have covered such topics as religion,
cuisine, agriculture and mass culture in India.
Arjun Appadurai’s lecture is co-sponsored by the Affect Research Group (UBC
and SFU); the India and South Asian Research Group; the Centre for the Study
of Historical Consciousness; the Museum of Anthropology; the Department of
Anthropology; and the Department of Theatre, Creative Writing and Film, UBC.
The JCI Lecture series is organized by Manuel Pina and William Wood,
Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory.
Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory
403 - 6333 Memorial Road
Frederick Lasserre Building
University of British Columbia
V6T 1Z2
tel: 604-822-4340
email: ahvagrad@interchange.ubc.ca
www.finearts.ubc.ca

lowercase gallery | Jo Cook & Owen Plummer | NOV 4

Monday, November 6th, 2006

the lowercase gallery
3934 Main Street
Vancouver, BC
V5V 3P2
Telephone: 604-877-2247
www.assemblyoftext.com
inquiries@assemblyoftext.com

Welcome to Dino World
Jo Cook & Owen Plummer

October 30 - December 2, 2006
Opening Party: Saturday November 4, 8 PM

Dinosaurs may be extinct but they are still very much on the minds of Jo
Cook and Owen Plummer, two cross-disciplinary artists whose exhibition,
Welcome to Dino World, challenges the latest scientific knowledge in the
fields of paleontology and UFO-ontology.
Comprehensive, innovative, and as unique as the dinosaurs and
extraterrestrials themselves, Cook and Plummer’s installation at the
lowercase gallery rivals the tableaux of some of the world’s great natural
history museums. Focusing on a radical reinterpretation of paleontology,
Welcome to Dino World re-imagines a landscape where Birdfooted Dinosaurs,
Boneheads, the Great Predators and, even Horned Dinosaurs establish close
ties with visitors from other galaxies.

Visitors to the gallery will find that the current debate surrounding the
question of feathered dinosaurs can now be put to rest with Cook and
Plummer’s discovery that many of the Giants (including Armoured and Plated
Dinosaurs) were once covered in a skin-like wrapping of obscure text. You
won’t want to miss this
show - the first of its kind in the Lower Mainland, or in Canada, or even
the World.

The Regional Assembly of Text 604 877 2247
www.assemblyoftext.com 3934 Main Street Vancouver BC V5V 3P2 Canada

Bjornson Kajiwara Gallery | Joey Haley, Eerie Park | opens NOV 2

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Joey Haley’s paintings evoke mystery - a feeling of familiarity that one
cannot fully trace. Fascinated with how the events of a decade or century
work vicariously through an artist, traditional or other, and the
conventions that are established for a measurable period as a result of this
elusive phenomenon, Haley aims to make work that transcends the
constrictions of representation and convey a reality in the sensation of the
image. He is intrigued by the thematic relationship between people and
environments and how daily events become eerie when isolated or shifted into
other contexts. Eerie Park opens at Bjornson Kajiwara Gallery Nov. 2nd from
6 to 9pm. 1727 W. Third Avenue, Vancouver, BC V6J 1K7, ph: 604.738.3500,
www.TAG.bc.ca Exhibition continues to Dec. 2nd.

VAG | Lecture: Luc Tuymans | NOV 8

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Vancouver Art Gallery
750 Hornby Street Vancouver BC. V6Z 2H7 604.662.4700

International Lecture Series

Luc Tuymans
Wednesday, November 8 at 7:00pm

Belgian artist Luc Tuymans is considered one of the most significant and
influential painters working today. His arresting works, based on Œalready
represented imagery¹ ranging from drawings, photographs and Polaroids to
film-stills and found images, face the challenge of what he terms the
‘belatedness’ of painting. He takes up an expansive range of subjects, from
the political situation in the Belgian Congo through abstract psychological
conditions to seemingly banal everyday situations and objects ­ constantly
testing the ability of painting to generate meaning and reflect the
complexity of contemporary life. Tuymans¹ work has been exhibited at the
Museum of Modern Art, the National Museum of Modern Art Georges Pompidou
Centre, documenta IX, the Biennale di Venezia in 2001 and the Biennale di
Sao Paulo in 2004. In 1999 he was the co-curator (with Narcisse Tordoir) of
the exhibition Trouble Spot Painting at MUHKA, Antwerp. Tuymans was also
recently the subject of a solo exhibition at Tate Modern, London, which
travelled to K21 Kunstsammlung D?sseldorf. A major solo exhibition will be
touring the United States in 2007 and 2008.

Admission $15; $10 for Gallery members/seniors; $5 for students.
For tickets, call 604-662-4717.

Belkin Satellite | performance: Giorgio Magnanensi & Chris Rolfe | NOV 2

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Thursday, November 2, 7:30 pm

In conjunction with the exhibition What Sound? What Silence? Fluxus, Musical
Events and John Cage, the Belkin Satellite is pleased to present a
performance by Giorgio Magnanensi and Chris Rolfe of John Cage’s Sculptures
Musicales (1989).

The score for Cage’s piece reads:

Sculptures Musicales “Sounds lasting and leaving from different points and
forming a sounding sculpture which lasts” (Marcel Duchamp) An exhibition of
several, one at a time, beginning and ending “hard edge” with respect to the
surrounding “silence”, each sculpture within the same space the audience is.
>From one sculpture to the next, no repetition, no variation. For each a
minimum of three constant sounds each in a single envelope. No limit to
their number. Any lengths of lasting. Any lengths of non-formation. Acoustic
and/or electronic. ‹ John Cage, 1989

Admission to this event is free.

The exhibition runs from October 21 to November 12.
Hours: Wednesday to Sunday 12 to 5 pm
Belkin Satellite
555 Hamilton Street
Vancouver, British Columbia V6B 2R1
604 687 3174
www.belkin-gallery.ubc.ca

Centre A | Joanna Staniszkis | opening: NOV 3

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Joanna Staniszkis
Silk City

Exhibition
Saturday November 4 - December 9, 2006
Opening Reception
Friday, November 3, 8:00 pm

Centre A is pleased to present an exhibition of new works by Vancouver
textile artist Joanna Staniszkis, featuring installation, sculpture, and
multimedia works. ³Silk City² is a continuation of the artist¹s ongoing
investigation into the history, aesthetic potential, and ecology of silk.

In ³Silk City², the juxtaposition of giant cocoons, architectural models and
live silk worms animate the space of the gallery and disrupt one¹s sense of
normal scale. This series of works addresses the tensions between processes
and product, nature and culture, and creates a complex dialogue between
Vancouver¹s past and present.

Staniszkis makes reference to the contemporary urban geography of Vancouver
and evokes the city¹s history as a port for ships arriving from Asia laden
with raw silk. This valuable cargo would be loaded onto high priority ³Silk
Trains² and rushed across the country, past the current site of Centre A, to
destinations in Eastern Canada. Journeys, cycles of transformation, and the
possibilities therein, are resonant themes in Staniszkis¹ work. In ³Silk
City² the metaphor of personal growth is linked to economies of
globalization and social change at play in the urban core.
Staniszkis engages with her material at every stage, raising silk worms,
growing mulberry trees to feed these hungry collaborators, and watching them
spin their tightly woven cocoons. This investigation brings the artist, and
the audience, to a discovery and understanding of this precious natural
resource.

* * * * *
Joanna Staniszkis is Professor Emerita of the Landscape Architecture Program
at the University of British Columbia. She is the recipient of many awards
and is recognized internationally for her work in the textile medium. She is
especially well known for large-scale architectural commissions on display
at prominent buildings around the world. Since the late 1960s, Staniszkis
has worked with a wide variety of natural fibres and dyes, often including
cross-cultural references. She involves herself in all aspects of textile
production and expresses her vision though the use of unconventional
materials and techniques.

Centre A is grateful for the generosity of our exhibition patron, Anndraya
T. Luui. This exhibition is also made possible through the support of the
Vancouver Foundation, the City of Vancouver, B.C. Arts Council, and the
Canada Council.

Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art
2 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V6B 1G6
t. 604-683-8326; f. 604-683-8632
centrea@centrea.org; www.centrea.org
Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 11am-6pm