Archive for May 12th, 2007

The Art of Failure

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Kunsthaus Baselland

The Art of Failure

Christoph Abbrederis, Nic Bezemer, Stefan Burger, Gerard Byrne, Róza El-Hassan, Ceal Floyer, Philipp Gasser, Sofia Goscinski, Asta Gröting, Pascal Häusermann, Anna Jermolaewa, Isabelle Krieg, Teresa Margolles, Deimantas Narkevi_ius, Roman Ondák, Elodie Pong, Max Philipp Schmid/Stella Händler, Santiago Sierra, Nedko Solakov, Erik Steinbrecher, Rosemarie Trockel, Gabriela Vanga, Ed Young
A project by Sabine Schaschl and Claudia Spinelli

Exhibition dates: 5 May-1 July 2007

States of emotional overdrive are a fertile breeding ground for art. Whether it is unrequited love, despair over one’s own shortcomings, an ideology in disarray, political standstill, or the inability to comprehend what is going on, culminating in an existential crisis—ever since Samuel Beckett, failure has been a facet inextricably linked with artistic production. Certainty has been supplanted by ambivalence, finality has given way to experimentation and transitoriness, and answers recede as questions wash ashore. Thus, the works created by many artists having this mindset are imbued with a sense of permanent search. The latter will never be over; on the contrary: in these artworks emphasis is placed on one’s own failure and that of others.

Failure is a trivial everyday phenomenon but has also gained political currency. With the demise of socialist utopias and the upheavals in the former Eastern Bloc, failure was invested with an additional dimension almost 20 years ago that has left an indelible imprint on the artistic production of an entire generation. What is the best way to handle the dismantling of societies and the erosion of values upheld by them? How can new ideals and objectives be formulated and further developed? There is no evidence at all suggesting the existence of an emerging and universally valid world order.

Since the end of modernity and the loss of absolute ideals, artists have been increasingly called upon to respond to ongoing social changes and the concomitant sense of insecurity. As an artist, how can you hold your own in a context of incessant questioning and criticizing? The artistic contributions on display in “The Art of Failure” are statements brimming with ambivalence and irony. Creating something provisional, non-finite, ambiguous, but at the same time profoundly serious is a good method to turn failure into a compelling act, and perplexity into art.

The exhibition “The Art of Failure” explores a vast field, encompassing the banality of everyday life, politics, and existential ideologies. To put it differently, it is intriguingly positioned at the interface between art and life.

Sunday, 13. May, 11:00 a.m.
Guided tour through the exhibition with Claudia Spinelli

Wednesday, 30 May, 6:30 p.m.
Guided tour through the exhibition with Sabine Schaschl

Roman Ondák’s performance “Teaching to Walk”, 2002/07 takes place from 12 to 16 June, from 12:00 to 12:30 p.m. and from 3:00 to 3:30 p.m.

Christoph Abbrederis’s “Daily Failure” can be viewed for the duration of the exhibition at http://www.kunsthausbaselland.ch

Kunsthaus Baselland
St. Jakob-Strasse 170
CH-4132 Muttenz/Basel
T: +41 61 312 83 88
office@kunsthausbaselland.ch
http://www.kunsthausbaselland.ch

For more information go to: http://www.kunsthausbaselland.ch

History will repeat itself, HMKV, Germany, June 9 - Sep 23, 2007

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
HMKV and KW Institute for Contemporary Art

History Will Repeat Itself
Strategies of Re-enactment in Contemporary (Media) Art and Performance
A cooperation between Hartware MedienKunstVerein, Dortmund, and KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin

Hartware MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund, Germany: June 9 - September 23, 2007; Opening: Friday, June 8, 2007, 19:00
KW Institute for Contemporary Art Berlin, Germany: November 18, 2007 – January 13, 2008; Opening: Saturday, November 17, 2007

Concept: Inke Arns
Curated by: Inke Arns and
Gabriele Horn
Co-curator: Katharina Fichtner

The exhibition History Will Repeat Itself illuminates current strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance, and presents the positions and strategies of 23 international artists. A cooperative project by Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV) Dortmund and KW Institute for Contemporary Art Berlin, this is the first comprehensive exhibition project on the subject of re-enactment in Germany.

Unlike popular historical re-enactments, artistic re-enactments are not simply affirming what has happened in the past, but rather they are questioning the present via repeating or re-enacting historical events that have left their traces in the collective memory. Re-enactments are artistic interrogations of media images that try to scrutinise the reality of the images, while at the same time pointing towards the fact that the collective memory is significantly informed by media images.

Participating artists include: Guy Ben-Ner (IL/DE), Walter Benjamin (YU), Irina Botea (RO/US), C-Level (US), Daniela Comani (IT/DE), Jeremy Deller (GB), Rod Dickinson (GB), Nikolai Evreinov (RU), Omer Fast (IL/DE), Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard (GB), Heike Gallmeier (DE), Felix Gmelin (SE), Pierre Huyghe (FR), Evil Knievel (US), Korpys/Loeffler (DE), Zbigniew Libera (PL), Robert Longo (US), Tom McCarthy (GB), Frédéric Moser / Philippe Schwinger (CH), Collier Schorr (US), Kerry Tribe (US), T.R. Uthco & Ant Farm (US), Artur Zmijewski (PL).

In Dortmund, the exhibition will run in parallel (9 June - 23 September) to Documenta 12 in Kassel and skulptur.projekte muenster in Munster, Germany. The venue of the show is Hartware MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund, a spectacular 1895 factory hall measuring 2.200 square meters belonging to a giant former steel production plant.

Located in the formerly heavily industrialized region of the Ruhr valley, Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV) Dortmund is one of the leading institutions for media art in today’s Germany. Founded in 1996, HMKV serves as a platform for the production, presentation, education on and contextualisation of contemporary and experimental media art.

Please note that Dortmund is only 30 min. by train from Munster, and 2,5 hours from Kassel.

Later this year, the show will travel to Berlin and be on display at the KW Institute for Contemporary Art from 18 November 2007 until 13 January 2008.

The exhibition History Will Repeat Itself is funded by the Federal Cultural Foundation, Kunststiftung NRW, Staatskanzlei NRW, Bundesamt für Kultur BAK (Switzerland), NRW Kultursekretariat Wuppertal, The Henry Moore Foundation, Pro Helvetia, and The British Council.

The program of Hartware MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund is supported by Kulturbuero and by Wirtschaftsfoerderung der Stadt Dortmund.

The cultural programs of KW Institute for Contemporary Art are made possible thanks to the support of The Governing Mayor of Berlin - Senate Chancellery - Cultural Affairs.

For more information, check out
http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/e_program_exhibitions/detail.php?nr=2104&rubric=exhibitions&

For press material, please contact Roland Kentrup, kentrup@zk.nrw-online.de

Venue and opening hours:
HMKV at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund (exhibition venue)
Thursday and Friday 11 - 22
Saturday and Sunday 11 - 20
Hochofenstrasse / corner Rombergstrasse
Dortmund-Hoerde

How to get there / Map:
http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/e_contact_roaddescription/

Hartware MedienKunstVerein (office)
Guentherstr. 65
44143 Dortmund
Germany
T ++49.231.823106
F ++49.231.8820240
info@hmkv.de
http://www.hmkv.de

For more information go to: http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/e_program_exhibitions/detail.php?nr=2104&rubric=exhibitions&

Announcing Best Art Practices - International Award for young curators

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Best Art Practices

Best Art Practices
International award for young curators

First edition theme
projects in non-conventional spaces

Announced by
Italian Cultural Office of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano – South Tyrol

Curated by
Denis Isaia

http://www.bestartpractices.it/

The Award

The Italian Cultural Office of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano – South Tyrol, next host of the European Biennal Manifesta, is announcing the first edition of the international competition Best Art Practices – International award for young curators.

Best Art Practices will assign prizes to the best curator practices of contemporary art of the last five years. The theme of the first edition will focus on projects in non-conventional spaces.

The Award accepts only projects that have been completed in the last five years and therefore inaugurated after 1 March 2002. Itinerant events or events taking place over a period of time will be accepted as long as all the phases are concluded by 1 March 2007. The Award is open to all curators of all nationalities born on or after 2 March 1967.

Entries must arrive by 12 midday of Monday 3rd September 2007 by post, courier or hand delivery at the Award secretary’s office. The postmark will not be considered as proof for the date of arrival of the entry and data sent by email or other means of transmission different from those indicated above will not be accepted.

Prizes
First prize € 10,000
Second prize € 3,000
Third prize € 2,000

Official languages
English, Italiano, Deutsch, Español,

Composition of the Jury
The international Jury is composed of a Jury President and five commissioners.

President: Carlos Basualdo, curator - Philadelphia Museum of Art
Commissioner: Marion Piffer Damiani, independent curator; Bolzano
Commissioner: Letizia Ragaglia curator – Museion; Bolzano
Commissioner: Montse Romaní, independent curator; Barcelona
Commissioner: Anton Vidokle, artist; New York and Berlin
Commissioner: Andrea Viliani, curator – Mambo; Bologna

Enrolment forms, prizes-giving criteria and more information are available at http://www.bestartpractices.it .

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