Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for March 14th, 2007

Double at Museum Het Domein

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Museum Het Domein

Wouter van Riessen:
Double

Painting, drawings, prints and photography
From 24 March to 29 April 2007
Tuesday – Sunday 11.00 am – 5.00 pm
Opening Friday March 23, 2007, 17.00h.

at the same time:
Retrospective, Jacques Dieteren: paintings
Le sacre Du Printemps, Jasper de Beijer, photography

Museum Het Domein Sittard
Kapittelstraat 6
6131 ER Sittard
T + 31 (0)46 4513460
F +31 (0)46 4529111
info@hetdomein.nl
http://www.hetdomein.nl

The T-time (discussion session) on the occasion of the Wouter van Riessen exhibition will be held on Sunday April 22, 2007 . 12.30 am – 2.00 pm, live music by Wouter van Riessen.

Museum Het Domein will be hosting the exhibition Double by Dutch artist Wouter Van Riessen (1967 Bloemendaal). The title Double refers to Van Riessen’s practice of frequently portraying himself in the company of dolls, or layering meaning into his self portraits by other means. Van Riessen’s self portraits - paintings and screen prints - are typified by black contours and vivid colours which lends them a vivid, graphic appearance. His pencil drawings exhibit a more expressive line.

The oeuvre of Wouter van Riessen is constructed around images of the artist himself. Highly stylised, these self portraits both deconstruct and reduce the subject, with which the artist objectifies his own portrait and investigates ideas of identification and subjectivity. Van Riessen exposes his work to the projected memories and associations of the viewer, eliciting the human longing for interaction.

As Van Riessen’s oeuvre progressed, mirrorings and duplications started to appear. The artist introduced dolls to investigate the phenomenon of projection – is a drawing of a doll any different to a drawing of a human being? The artist gradually developed an increasing interest in the visual reflection of layered emotions, using dolls to articulate internal conflict.

Van Riessen studied at the Academie voor Beeldende Kunsten in Arnhem and at the Rijksakademie voor Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam. His work is represented in various museum collections and he has exhibited his work widely both in the Netherlands and internationally.

To mark the exhibition, Roma publications are publishing the book Full Grown Man with an essay by Lene ter Haar, curator at Het Domein. Wouter Van Riessen will also be making a new mural in the T-zone at Het Domein. Also a musician/songwriter, Van Riessen has explores the themes addressed in his visual work in songs, and will be giving a live performance in T-Time on Sunday 22 April. For more information and visual material, please visit the press room on the museum’s site: http://www.hetdomein.nl . Or contact Karin Adams or Lene ter Haar on 046 - 451 34 60; karin.adams@hetdomein.nl.

For more information go to: http://www.hetdomein.nl

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

FLEEING AWAY FROM WHAT BOTHERS YOU MOST at MAGASIN 3 STOCKHOLM KONSTHALL

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
MAGASIN 3 STOCKHOLM KONSTHALL

FLEEING AWAY FROM WHAT
BOTHERS YOU MOST
Jumana Emil Abboud
David Perlov
Raeda Saadeh
Gil Marco Shani
Jan Tichy
Jean-Luc Vilmouth

17 March – 17 June 2007
Curator: Sarit Shapira
in collaboration with Elisabeth Millqvist and Sandra Weil

MAGASIN 3 STOCKHOLM KONSTHALL
Opening hours: Thur 12–7 pm, Fri–Sun 12–5 pm
Öppettider: tor 12–19, fre–sön 12–17
http://www.magasin3.com
e-mail art@magasin3.com
Tel +46854568040, Fax +4685456804
Frihamnen, 11556 Stockholm, Sweden

Sarit Shapira is an associate curator at Magasin 3. This is her first own exhibition for the institution and a Swedish audience. Sarit Shapira lives in Tel Aviv and bases her activities on her region of operation, the Middle East. At Magasin 3 she presents six oeuvres that are linked to the region. These artists employ different approaches, for instance using national symbols such as the camel and the olive tree, making models of mythically charged buildings, or letting the landscape be a stage for enacting scenes from art history.

The featured artists are currently or have been active in Israeli or Arabic areas. Every week we get fresh news from these areas, a rapid flow of reports about a violent everyday life. Sarit Shapira highlights these artists’ ability to transform the situation in the region into something imaginary, abstract, with artistic and contemporary qualities. She combines the legendary filmmaker David Perlov’s (1952-2002) snapshots with works by young and promising artists, such as Raeda Saadeh. Several of the participating artists do not display an obvious political stance in their work – an avoidance that could be interpreted as a political standpoint in itself. The title refers to this approach, which is also what links the artists to each other.

Sarit Shapira is a leading authority on contemporary art in the Middle East. She lectures in art theory at the Bezalel Art Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem/Tel Aviv, and is a freelance curator at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem and other institutions. Sarit Shapira has written books about the artists Raffi Lavie and Avner Ben-Gal among others and articles for magazines such as October and ArtForum.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS:

Jumana Emil Abboud
(b. 1971, Shefa-Amer, lives and works in Jerusalem)
“Al Awda/The return”, 2002, video loop 4.35 min.
This video work shows a person walking in the woods. As in the fairytale of Hansel and Gretel, she leaves a trail on the ground to find her way back. The work documents a performance and the artist expresses the work’s central theme as “the Palestinians’ right to return to their homeland”. Selected drawings from Jumana Emil Abboud’s “The Heart Collection”, (2002-2005), a work in progress, are also featured in the exhibition.

David Perlov
(b. 1930, Rio de Janeiro – d. 2003, Tel Aviv)
“My Stills, 1952-2002” (2003), color video, 61 min., in English
David Perlov was born 1930 in Brazil and died 2003 in Tel Aviv. When he was in his twenties he studied photography and film in Paris. In 1958, he moved to Israel and embarked on a film career that lasted for half a century. “My Stills 1952-2002” is based on David Perlov’s stills. The photos give the impression of snapshots, a flow of people documented in passing. Most of them were taken in Perlov’s own neighbourhood, but he also visits his favourite places in Paris and pays tribute to his idols and inspirational figures. Perlov’s narrative voiceover is equally captivating whether he is reflecting on the events of 9/11, or the flowers in the security guard’s buttonhole. “My Stills” was the last film he made.

Raeda Saadeh
(b. 1977, Um El-Fahem, lives and works in Jerusalem)
Mona Lisa, 2007, 86 x 63 cm; The Milk Maid, 2007, 92 x 82 cm; Diana, 2007, 120 x 90 cm, all color photographs mounted on aluminium
Raeda Saadeh has created photos that refer to paintings made in the 16th to 18th century by Da Vinci, Vermeer and Nattier. “I try to put myself in the place of the portrayed women,” says Raeda Saadeh. Using this as her starting point she explores the longing to be someone else and yet being tied down by the actual situation and reality of being a Palestinian and a woman. The settings she chooses emulate the landscapes in the background of the original paintings, and the artist also describes how “the occupied landscape becomes a co-actor” in the enactment.

Gil Marco Shani
(b. 1968, Tel-Aviv, where he lives and works)
Untitled, 2007, acrylic and marker on canvas, 203 x 300 cm; Untitled, 2007, acrylic and graphite on canvas, 203 x 300 cm; Untitled, 2007, acrylic and graphite on canvas, 156 x 122 cm; Untitled, 2005-2007, 20 drawings, pencil on paper, various sizes.
Gil Marco Shani’s drawings are usually based on photographs. Some of them eventually turn into paintings. He uses the same motifs repeatedly, reworking them or extracting details from them. He says that he depicts everyday scenes and uses symbols of national art such as the camel, but his imagery also includes deer and birds, sexuality, the army and violence.

Jan Tichy
(b. 1974, Prague, lives and works in Tel Aviv)
Jan Tichy has devoted part of his oeuvre to working with architectural models of veritably mythical places, sites with a history that refers to a context that is greater than the history of the building itself. He collects as much information as possible from the internet and constructs a model based on this information and his own suppositions of what it must look like.
“DIMONA”, 2006,paper model, video projection and ink jet printouts, 45 x 50 x 50 cm Dimona is a nuclear research reactor built in Israel around 1958 with aid from France. The facility has been kept secret and has not been subjected to international inspection safeguards. Today, the plant is 40 years old and there is concern that it may be hazardous.
”Yasser Arafat International Airport”, 2006, paper model, sand 120 x 45 x 15 cm The Yasser Arafat International Airport is in the southern part of the Gaza strip. It was built in 1996 during the upheaval of the Oslo peace process, and opened to the public in 1998. It was closed in 2000, shortly after the Second Intifada started. The artist describes the airport as a symbol of lapsed potential.

Jean-Luc Vilmouth
(b. 1952, Creutzwald, lives and works in Paris)
“Café de l’Olivier”, 2007
The cafés Jean-Luc Vilmouth creates are based on his walks in various cities. At Magasin 3 he has altered the existing café, recreating “Café de l’Olivier”, which he made for Anadiel Gallery in east Jerusalem in 1994. Anadiel Gallery, together with the al-Ma´mal Foundation for Contemporary Art, is the first and largest Palestinian forum for contemporary art. In 1994, the artist wrote: “On a walk in the eastern part of Jerusalem, I found an olive tree. It was to be torn up by its roots.” The tree was taken to the gallery and incorporated in the café he created during his exhibition there. Jean-Luc Vilmouth’s work with cafés and bars deals with an interest in the relationship between the artist’s concept and the visitor.

For more information go to: http://www.magasin3.com

A Vision for Brussels at BOZAR

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels (BOZAR)

BOZAR ARCHITECTURE

A Vision for Brussels
Imagining the Capital of Europe Exhibition

16.03 > 20.05.2007
Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels (BOZAR)
Rue Ravensteinstraat 23 - 1000 Brussels
http://www.bozar.be
+ 32 (0)2 507 82 00

This year Europe celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome. This also marks, of course, the fiftieth anniversary of the European presence in Brussels. But is Brussels really the right place to develop the capital of Europe? So how can Brussels fulfil its European mission and express the European political project? What is the true nature of the European presence in Brussels? What picture of itself does Brussels present, or needs to present, to Europe and the world?

An international team of sixteen architects and urban designers enrolled at the Berlage Institute (Rotterdam) has been looking at these questions since 2004. Their study has resulted in a concrete project for Brussels as a worthy capital of Europe. Starting on 16 March, this project will be presented to the public in the exhibition A Vision for Brussels - Imagining the Capital of Europe, which will be open until 20 May at the Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels. On 9 May, Europe Day, the Centre for Fine Arts will host an international symposium with the same title.

On the occasion of the exhibition, NAi Uitgevers and A+ Editions are publishing Brussels - A Manifesto. Towards the Capital of Europe, with contributions from leading thinkers such as the Italian philosopher Mario Tronti, the Brussels researchers Géry Leloutre and Iwan Strauven, and the architects Pier Vittorio Aureli and Elia Zenghelis. Like the exhibition, this manifesto takes a vigorous stand, making the link between the representative role of architecture and the future of Brussels and Europe.

A co-production of Het Berlage Instituut Rotterdam, A+ Belgium Magazine about Architecture & BOZAR ARCHITECTURE

Dates
16 March > 20 May 2007
Preview on Thursday 15 March at 6.30 pm

Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am > 6 pm
Thursday, 10 am > 9 pm

Price
Admission free

For more information go to: http://www.bozar.be