Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for March 29th, 2007

Hiroshi Sugimoto at Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Villa Manin

Hiroshi Sugimoto
Curated by: Francesco Bonami

1st April – 30th September 2007

Villa Manin Centre for
Contemporary Art
Passariano, Codroipo (Udine) Italy
Tel: +39 0432 821211
Fax: +39 0432 908387
http://www.villamanincontemporanea.it
info@villamanincontemporanea.it

Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art announces the opening on April 1st 2007 of the first large-scale exhibition in Italy dedicated to Hiroshi Sugimoto, one of the most important photographers on the international contemporary art scene.

The show, curated by Francesco Bonami, brings together fifty large-scale photographic works and two sculptures by the Japanese artist.

The great variety of works presented touches on all the themes of the artist’s work, from the first Dioramas in 1975 to the series Theaters, Seascapes, Portraits, Conceptual forms, up to the new projects Lightning Field and Talbot.

Strongly inspired by the conceptual and minimalist tradition, Hiroshi Sugimoto’s works deal with the idea of photography and deny its limits and definitions. As Francesco Bonami says: “Sugimoto’s work is a search into the origins of History, be this the zoological history of the earth or that of human actions, seen, symbolically, through the passing of time inside the camera lens and by using film as the surface of memory”.

The artist, impressed on his very first visit to Villa Manin by the seventeenth century building which will host the show, has conceived the entire installation plan creating, between his works and the exhibition spaces, a series of references and allusions which can be apparent but also more subtle, as to involve the visitor in a mental game that unravels through the various rooms. An example of this is the bedroom on the ground floor – the one that Napoleon used to sleep in when he chose Villa Manin as his headquarters for a new redefinition of Europe. In this very room the photograph Napoleon Bonapart is displayed, a work belonging to the series Portraits, through which the artist portrays historical figures and contemporary personalities. All the photographs of this theme group have been taken by isolating and illuminating on black backdrops wax statues present in various museums, thus emphasizing the reference to the models by which they are inspired, such as the paintin
gs by Jacques-Louis David and Hans Holbein.

Hiroshi Sugimoto has been extremely respectful of the exhibition spaces, unveiling the walls and frescoes of the dogal residence: a few photographs - placed on simple easels designed by the artist himself - characterise each room, with the exception of the one that combines, almost like a family reunion, Henry VIII and the portraits of his unfortunate wives.

Throughout this retrospective all the various series can be encountered, such as the Dioramas, that are characterised by scenes of primitive life taken in natural history museums and that disorientate the viewer, who is used to associate a certain type of documentary photography with the reproduction of reality; or the series entitled Theaters, taken in cinema-theatres of the Twenties and Thirties such as the Radio City Music Hall in New York and the Metropolitan Theatre in Los Angeles. Here Sugimoto tried to condense the flow of time and the perception of space into a single moment, levelling out the exposure time and that of the duration of the film projection. The white and bright rectangle that derives from it illuminates the otherwise dark room and contains the traces of a longer unit of time. Time is also the protagonist of the series Seascapes, where water and air meet exactly halfway in the image, in the attempt to recreate the first, absolute vision of the sea experi
enced by the ancient explorers.

The desire to test his ability to reproduce the “non representable” has lead the artist, over the years, to confront tangible models in order to express theoretical and spiritual concepts, such as the curved surfaces of Conceptual Forms that represent numerical formulae.

With the use of sophisticated games of illusions and references, Sugimoto pushes the viewer to actively confront the image and the ambiguous weave between time and memory that it communicates.

Exhibition details

Title: HIROSHI SUGIMOTO

Curated by: Francesco Bonami

Dates: 1st of April – 30th September 2007

Venue: Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art
Piazza Manin 10, Passariano, 33033 Codroipo (UD), Italy

Opening hours: from 1st April – 3rd June 2007, Tuesday - Friday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.
from 5th June – 30th September 2007, Tuesday – Sunday 10a.m. – 8 p.m.
Closed Mondays

For information: Tel: +39 0432 821211 Fax: +39 0432908387
http://www.villamanincontemporanea.it
info@villamanincontemporanea.it

For more information go to: http://www.villamanincontemporanea.it

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF THE ARTS CELEBRATES 100TH ANNIVERSARY

Thursday, March 29th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF THE ARTS

CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF THE ARTS CELEBRATES 100TH ANNIVERSARY
A Yearlong Schedule of Programs and Events

The centennial celebration continues at California College of the Arts. A host of celebratory events will be held at locations both on- and off-campus. As a tribute to the college’s influence and reputation, more than 40 galleries and museums from New York to Los Angeles and the Bay Area have organized exhibitions to celebrate the centennial. Highlights for coming weeks include:

Through April 22: 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change, Oakland Museum of California

Through August 16: California College of the Arts at 100: Innovation by Design at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

April 1: Graduate Open Studios, San Francisco campus

April 25: Centennial Gala and Threads Fashion Show at Fort Mason in San Francisco

May 10–19: Graduate Exhibition, San Francisco campus

May 26–July 14: CCA(C) at the Di Rosa Preserve: The Collection in Context

Other highlights include Celebrating a Centennial: Contemporary Printmakers at CCA at the de Young Museum September 29, 2007–April 20, 2008; and CCA: 100 Years in the Making, at Oakland Museum of California October 13, 2007 through January 27, 2008.

Galleries and museums participating in CCA’s centennial include 871 Fine Arts, American Craft Council, John Berggruen Gallery, Berkeley Art Museum, Rena Bransten Gallery, Braunstein/Quay Gallery, Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, Charles Campbell Gallery, Claudia Chapline Gallery, Crown Point Press, Di Rosa Preserve, Gallery Paule Anglim, GarageGallery, Brian Gross Fine Art, Hackett-Freedman Gallery, Haines Gallery, Jack Hanley Gallery, Nancy Hoffman Gallery, Hosfelt Gallery, Intersection for the Arts, Gregory Lind Gallery, Walter Maciel Gallery, Judah L. Magnes Museum, Heather Marx Gallery, Modernism, Montclair Gallery, Museum of Craft and Folk Art in San Francisco, Oakland Museum of California, Palo Alto Art Center, Paulson Press, ProArts Oakland, RayKo Photography Center, Richmond Art Center, San Francisco Museum of Craft + Design, San Francisco Museum of Craft and Folk Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Sculpturesite Gallery, Andrea Schwa
rtz Gallery, Small Press Traffic, Patricia Sweetow Gallery, Thompson Art Gallery at San Jose State University, Traywick Contemporary, Triangle Gallery, and Stephen Wirtz Gallery.

About the college
From its humble beginnings in 1907 with three classrooms, 43 students, and three teachers, California College of the Arts (CCA) has developed into one of this country’s most prestigious colleges of art and design. Today CCA boasts state-of-the art campuses in San Francisco and Oakland, 19 undergraduate and six graduate programs, 1,660 fulltime students, nearly 500 faculty members, and an estimated 14,000 alumni.

For a complete list of CCA’s centennial activities, please visit http://www.cca.edu/100 .

For more information go to: http://www.cca.edu/100