Archive for May 11th, 2007

WIELS : Opening and Inaugural exhibition

Friday, May 11th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
WIELS

WIELS : Opening
First stage on the 26th – 28th of May

Inaugural exhibition: “Expats/Clandestines”
26th of May – 5th of August 2007

Wiels Contemporary Arts Centre
Avenue Van Volxemlaan 354 – B-1190 Brussels
t/f (32)(0)2 347 30 33
http://www.wiels.org
wiels@wiels.org

WIELS : Opening
First stage on the 26th – 28th of May

Wiels, the new Contemporary Arts Centre of Brussels, opens its doors on the weekend of the 26th–28th of May, 2007. Following its restoration, the remarkable corner building of the former Wielemans-Ceuppens breweries built by the modernist architect Adrien Blomme, now houses Wiels Contemporary Arts Centre. The first stage of this renovation concerns one exhibition floor and the brew hall.

The creation of Wiels meets an old need: a center with an international vocation specializing in contemporary art finally opens in Brussels!

Thanks to a broad range of activities and services, Wiels will create an open and dynamic context, ideal for the discovery and understanding of contemporary art. The three exhibition floors of a total surface of 1.800 m2 will accommodate six annual large scale exhibitions. The back wing will house nine artists in residence as well as education, training and community-based programs. Social commitment, essential to share the stakes of contemporary art with every public, will be carried through an innovative program of mediation, training and professional development.

A large program of complementary activities will complete the activities of Wiels: a cinema, conferences, festivals and concerts. The brewery hall, will serve as a convivial lobby, which will host a café-restaurant and a bookshop. Finally, the panoramic rooftop terrace will offer a unique viewpoint over Brussels.

The renovation was financed by the Brussels-Capital Region (“Monuments and Sites” and special investment credits), the European structural funds Urban II and the District of Forest/Vorst, along with private sponsors and donors. For its operations, Wiels is supported by the Flemish Community structural subsidies and the French Community punctual subsidies, the VGC and the COCOF, as well as the Bernheim Foundation, the Evens Foundation, Puilaetco Private Bankers, Leon Eeckman SA and Duvel Moortgat.

Inaugural exhibition: Expats/Clandestines
26th of May – 5th of August 2007

This exhibition, scheduled for the opening of Wiels, will explore the question of plural identities, which are formed beyond national borders and lines of demarcation, whether they are real or imaginary. Addressing the obvious duality between expats and clandestines as a starting point, this exhibition will focus on the phenomena of complex biographies and on the tremendous cultural mix, visibility and anonymity, presence and absence, and on the work of contemporary artists in the swirl of migration.
With Francis Alÿs, Saâdane Afif, André Cadere, Nairy Baghramian, Gabriel Kuri, Moshekwa Langa, Chen Zhen

Marcel Berlanger, Tore

On the second floor of Wiels, Marcel Berlanger presents a “theatrical” installation of 7 large paintings modulated by a light show designed by Julie Petit-Etienne. A unique visual and fascinating experience.

Short films commissioned for the opening of Wiels

Ann Veronica Janssens, Eclipse

Hiraki Sawa, Hako

Paulina Olowska/Bonnie Camplin, A like Akarova

Opening hours

Saturday – Sunday: 12 – 24:00
Monday: 12 – 20:00

Avenue Van Volxem 354 – B-1190 Brussels – t/f (32)(0)2 347 30 33 – http://www.wiels.org

For more information go to: http://www.wiels.org

Dimensions of Constructive Art in Brazil: The Adolpho Leirner Collection

Friday, May 11th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Dimensions of Constructive Art in Brazil: The Adolpho Leirner Collection

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
May 20 – September 23, 2007

Dimensions of Constructive Art in Brazil: The Adolpho Leirner Collection is the first exhibition that celebrates the acquisition of the Adolpho Leirner Collection of Brazilian Constructive Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Conceived by Dr. Mari Carmen Ramírez, the Wortham Curator of Latin American Art and director, International Center for the Arts of the Americas at the MFAH, the presentation will be organized to reveal the innovation and originality achieved by the various Brazilian constructive tendencies as well as to illustrate specific traits that separate them from related movements in Europe and the United States. Approximately 100 pieces spanning two decades (1950-1965) will be featured in the show. The exhibition will be accompanied by two publications, a 160-page full-color catalogue, and an expanded catalogue with essays by leading scholars that will accompany an international tour in 2008-2009. The Houston presentation will be in the Upper Brown Pav
ilion of the museum’s Mies van der Rohe-designed Caroline Wiess Law Building from May 20 through September 23, 2007.

“In the 1950s and 1960s, the contributions of artists from the São Paulo-Rio de Janeiro axis opened up a highly original chapter in the history of international Modernism that has only now been fully recognized outside Brazil,” said Ramírez. “It has been my privilege to highlight examples from the Leirner Collection in two of the MFAH’s major presentations of Latin American art: Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America, organized in 2004, and Hélio Oiticica: The Body of Color, presented this year. We are now thrilled to have this outstanding addition to the museum’s burgeoning collection of Latin American art. The Leirner Collection offers a rare opportunity to understand certain critical developments in Brazilian art which are also relevant to the history of avant-garde art in Latin America and elsewhere.”

Highlights of the Collection

Forerunners of abstract art in Brazil, including the first artist to embrace geometric abstraction, Cícero Dias (1907-2003) and the influential teacher Samson Flexor (1907-1971) are represented, as are major works by the most cutting-edge and avant-garde artists and groups active in the 1950s: the Grupo ruptura of São Paulo, and Rio de Janeiro’s Grupo Frente. Artists from these groups include Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973) and Mauricio Nogueira Lima (Grupo ruptura); and the brothers César (1939-) and Hélio Oiticica (1937-1980) and Lygia Pape (1929-2004) from Grupo Frente. The collection is also strong in work from the Neo-concrete movement, with six major constructions by Lygia Clark (1920-1988). In addition, the collection features major artists who embraced constructive tenets yet worked independently of these groups, including Alfredo Volpi (1896-1988), Mira Schendel (1919-1988), and Sergio Camargo (1930-1990).

Organization

This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Generous support is provided by Mr. Samuel F. Gorman and Macy’s.

General Information

For information, the public may call 713-639-7300, or visit http://www.mfah.org . For information in Spanish, call 713-639-7379. TDD/TYY for the hearing impaired, call 713-639-7390. For membership information, call 713-639-7550 or e-mail membership@mfah.org.

For more information go to: http://www.mfah.org

BILL VIOLA at Zacheta National Gallery of Art

Friday, May 11th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Zacheta National Gallery of Art

BILL VIOLA
12 May – 1 July 2007

Zacheta National Gallery of Art
Pl. Malachowskiego 3
00-916 Warsaw, Poland
phone (+ 48 22) 827 58 54
http://www.zacheta.art.pl

The Bill Viola exhibition in Zacheta is the first individual presentation in Poland of the work of this outstanding artist and pioneer in video art who has played a major role in the recognition of video as a new form of artistic expression and in the development of this medium.

Over the course of the over 35 years of his work, Viola has created many groundbreaking films and video-installations that engage the viewer on many levels: intellectual, emotional and perceptual. Through the visualisation of images, contents and states which symbolise a human’s condition and place in the world, Viola’s work addresses the fundamental questions of human existence. The artist takes his inspiration from travel, poetry and philosophy, traditional art, Christian mysticism, Islamic Sufism and Zen Buddhism, and also deep personal experiences. In Viola’s works, individual content is linked with group and historical memory, psychic experiences with physical encounters, and direct perceptual experiences with those that are the product of the imagination. The artist records reality and confronts it with the images of the subconscious, in which knowledge is interweaved with memory and emotions. In this process, the camera comes to play the role of the ‘mind’s eye’: it en
ables the unveiling of different aspects of reality (internal and external), the anticipation of events or their recalling from memory, and also the creation of the world and the giving back to us of that which has been lost. Viola believes that the camera is not just an instrument of perception, but also a discursive instrument and that the images recorded on it confront us with the fundamental questions of life, change and momentary stability in the constant cycles of changes. The works of Viola research the properties of video, its temporal, visual and sound dimensions, in order to metaphorically show characteristics of perception and apprehension.

At the exhibition, we present 9 works, including The Crossing (1996), The Raft (2004) and Ascension (2000), works that make reference to the symbolism of the elements. Particular significance is attributed to water, the symbol that recurs most frequently in the artist’s works, and which conveys connotations of changes, birth and death, but also of the forces of nature, and spiritual cleansing. The work The Crossing is composed of two simultaneous projections, showing, on the one side a man consumed by fire, while on the other he is consumed by water. The video makes reference to the destructive action of the elements, while also indicating their cathartic power. In Ascension we see a figure falling into deep water. This is a metaphor for the passage of the body into the sphere of infinity, a return to a primeval state of formlessness and unconsciousness. The work The Raft, on the other hand, relates to a catastrophic aspect of water - a flood. In it we observe how a group of
people, who look as though they are waiting perhaps for a metro, are suddenly struck by a deluge of water and how they pick themselves up after such an attack by an element. Being plunged into water signifies the fall and the disruption of the consciousness produced by shock, after which takes place a rebirth, a spiritual regeneration as though after a symbolic christening. We also present a work which marks a turning-point in Viola’s work: The Greeting (1995), inspired by Jacopo Pontormo’s painting The Visitation (1528–1529). It is one of the artist’s first works to take up the question of the depiction of emotions in relation to the traditions of painting. Viola went on to develop this theme further in later years, in particular through his research into the portrayal of emotional states in Renaissance and Middle Ages painting at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles in 1998. At the same time, he has explored the possibilities of the visual and thematic translation of the layers of painting into the language of video. A result of these explorations is the cycle of works The Passions, which he began in 1999. At the exhibition in Zacheta, we present the following works from this cycle: Silent Mountain (2001), Surrender (2001), The Locked Garden (2000), The Quintet of the Astonished (2000) and Observance (2002). These works focus on the research into and presentation of emotional states, expressed through the language of the body and in facial expressions, modelled amongst others on religious painting from the late Middle Ages and Renaissance. In these works use is made of the formal conventions of painting and the plasma and LCD screens are arranged in traditional diptych or triptych forms. In them, short scenes, arranged and recorded by the artist and played by actors and which last just a few seconds, are slowed down so that the projection is extended in time, deforming the image and undermining the impression of the illusion and linear quality of narrative. The slowing of the image concentrates attention on the waves of powerful emotion that rise and fall in the characters. The effect of a pausing of time, the neutral background to the scenes in combination with the contemporary outfits of the actors, and the playing of scenes drawn from iconography are all factors in giving Viola’s works a universal character. Making use of the traditions of traditional art, he draws from them their spiritual vales, cultural archetypes and cosmological imagination and communicates them by translating them into contemporary images and experiences. Viola brings us closer to the essence of the medium, by bringing us closer to the complex realms of our existence, and since the medium is a creation in time, these works become a reflection of the impermanence of human existence.

Bill Viola’s works have been shown amongst others at: the 49th Biennale in Venice; in the Museum of Modern Art; Whitney Museum of American Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York); Guggenheim Museum (New York, Berlin, Bilbao); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles); Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; Moderna Museet (Stockholm); Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam), National Gallery, Tate Modern (London); Mori Art Museum (Tokyo), Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Tel Aviv Museum of Art.

Zacheta National Gallery of Art
Director Agnieszka Morawinska
Curator Maria Brewinska
Assistant Curator Joanna Sokolowska
Execution Anna Muszynska
Press Spokesman: Olga Gawerska, rzecznik@zacheta.art.pl

Bill Viola Studio
Executive Director Kira Perov
Studio Director Bettina Jablonski
Administration Marie Corboy
Curatorial Assistant Gene Zazzaro

Special thanks are extended to James Cohan of the James Cohan Gallery, New York.

The exhibition in Zacheta will be accompanied by a 160 page, richly illustrated catalogue, with texts by: Maria Brewinska, Benjamin Cope, Minoru Hatanaki and Jaroslaw Lubiak.

The exhibition supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland.

Exhibition organized under the honorary patronage of His Excellency Victor Ashe, Ambassador of the United States in Poland.

Exhibition Patron Efekt Doradztwo finansowe

sponsor of the exhibition Intercontinental
sponsors of the gallery: Epson, Netia
sponsor of the opening ceremony: A.Blikle, Freixenet
patron of the children’s program Bank Zachodni WBK
media patronage: Gazeta Wyborcza, Polityka, Telewizja Polska, Tok FM, The Warsaw Voice, Onet.pl, ams, EMPiK

For more information go to: http://www.zacheta.art.pl