Archive for May 13th, 2007

Polish Pavilion: Monika Sosnowska, 1:1

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Polish Pavilion

Monika Sosnowska, 1:1
Polish Pavilion
52 Venice Biennale
pavilion commissioner:
Agnieszka Morawinska
curator of the exhibition:
Sebastian Cichocki
assistant commissioner:
Zofia Machnicka
organized by the Zacheta National Gallery of Art

Opening reception:
8th June, 12 am, Gardini di Castello
Exhibition: June 10th-
November 21st 2007
Vernissage: June 7th – 9th, 2007

Monika Sosnowska will represent Poland at the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007. The exhibition, "1:1" will be curated by Sebastian Cichocki, the programme director of Kronika art centre, Bytom.

Sosnowska is interested in places encumbered with error, knocked out of functionality, in absurd ideas and absurd implementations. Her works are often peculiar mementos of architectural utopias brought out from the past, inspired by architecture’s psychedelic properties. The main reference point for Sosnowska are the experiences of post-war modernisation – the all-too-familiar to the inhabitants of Eastern Europe landscape of housing blocks, service pavilions, train stations and shopping centres.

The artist’s latest project, called 1:1, is the consequence of a reflection on the post-war architectural concepts analysed from the angle of the local, Eastern European, surprisingly vital mutation of the International Movement. During the People’s Poland era, progress was often restricted to impulsive, rash (and often absurdity-producing) modernisation. The requirement of ‘modernity’ in post-war Poland was a top-down imposed decision, controlled through a series of orders.

In a number of recent works Monika Sosnowska transgressed the, more or less artificial, border between contemporary art and architecture. In her own words: ‘It seems to me that what I do is somehow in opposition to what architecture stands for. I also think that my art is a completely different discipline, even though I focus on the same problems as architecture does: the forming of space. Utilitarianism is architecture’s fundamental attribute. My works introduce chaos and uncertainty instead’.

Uncertainty is also an irremovable part of the latest project. The additional structure emerging in the Polish Pavilion is almost organic – it ‘parasitises’ the almost 70 years older exhibition venue. The installation 1:1, like Sosnowska’s other works from the last couple of years, can be viewed as a reference to the practices of the artists of the 1970s (G. Matta-Clark, R. Smithson and others) and a continuation of the reflection on decay and destruction, but also as a criticism of the art institution via a radical intervention in its architectural tissue. After all, the project serves to ‘exhibit’ the Polish Pavilion itself – a building representative of the 1930s, which, as one of the work’s elements, ‘wrestles’ with another construction growing out from inside it. Sosnowska’s project fits both the local context and the global discourse on the search for functionality, on moving away from modernism’s stylisation and pro-community tasks.

Monika Sosnowska was born in 1972 in Ryki, Poland. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Poznan and the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, and currently she lives and works in Warsaw. Her recent exhibitions include shows at MoMA, New York, Galerie Gisela Capitain, The Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein Vaduz, Freud Museum Vienna, Serpentine Gallery London, De Appel in Amsterdam. Sosnowska participated in Manifesta 4 (Frankfurt), 8th Istanbul Biennale, Venice Biennale 2003.
For further information on the presence of Poland in the Venice Biennale, please visit:
http://www.labiennale.art.pl
contact: Zofia Machnicka (assistant commissioner), z.machnicka@zacheta.art.pl

Polish participation in the 52nd International Art Exhibition is realized with the financial support of the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Poland.
The exhibition in the Polish Pavilon is organized by Zacheta National Gallery of Art.

sponsor of the gallery Epson
media patronage of the gallery: Gazeta Wyborcza, Polityka, TVP, Onet.pl, TOK FM, The Warsaw Voice, EMPiK

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

Five ‘Wildly Independent Experimenters’ Win Alpert Award in the Arts

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Herb Alpert Foundation

Five ‘Wildly Independent Experimenters’ Win $75,000 Alpert Award in the Arts

Annual Award from Artist and Philanthropist Herb Alpert Honors Integrity, Independence
and Promise Across Five Disciplines

Fifty Percent Increase in Prize Amount Makes Award the Largest of its Kind

The Herb Alpert Foundation announced today the 2007 recipients of the prestigious Alpert Award in the Arts. Created by artist and philanthropist Herb Alpert, the award is an unrestricted $75,000 prize — a 50 percent increase this year over previous years — given annually to five daring artists in the fields of dance, film, music, theatre and the visual arts. Widely held as visionaries by their peers, the winners are selected by panels of prominent critics, artists and administrators.

“This year’s recipients represent the essence of the Alpert Award in the Arts,” said Alpert. “The winners are wildly independent experimenters who think about and respond to the world beyond their studio walls. As artists driven more by their individual visions and passions than by what is safe or trendy, they are truly challenging art, their own disciplines and society as a whole.”

Alpert began the national awards in 1994 in order to counter what he saw as disturbing cuts in public funding of the arts and in artistic freedom. To recognize and support the practices of fearless, socially responsive artists, he teamed up with the California Institute of the Arts.

The 2007 awardees, picked from a nationwide pool of nominees, all live in New York City — the first time one city is the source of all Alpert winners. They include:

Jeanine Durning, Dance: The virtuoso dance-maker and performer creates mysterious, haunting pieces — each different from the next. (One work was performed inside a moving truck outside the theatre, with the roll-up door was the “curtain” and the “dance space” lit by street lamps and flashlights.) She has been described as having “a transforming power” and, in 2003, was selected for the New York Times’ “Top Ten Dances and Dancers of the Year.” Her performing has been called “madly exquisite,” and her latest piece, “out of the kennel into a home,” was called “odd and disturbing to watch but impossible to look away from…a psychological work that avoids the clichés of modern dance.”

Mark Feldman, Music: The composer/performer/improviser melds classical violin with jazz and improvisational styles. His unconventional approach has caught the attention of others; Feldman has recorded with Willie Nelson, John Zorn, Michael Brecker, John Abercrombie, Lee Konitz, Dave Douglas, Tim Berne and Johnny Cash. The prestigious Kronos Quartet commissioned and performed one of his string quartets, and he has appeared as a violin soloist with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra and the WDR Radio Orchestra of Cologne, Germany — both of which commissioned concertos specifically for Feldman to perform.

Jacqueline Goss, Film/Video: The work by this experimental video-maker and new media artist explores the collision and tensions between science, mapping systems and other manmade efforts to order the world. Her work combines animation with documentary film, transforming both genres and creating a new hybrid form. Her short videos, which integrate 2-D animation, take on subjects as varied as Helen Keller, the Human Genome Project and map making. Goss’s next project is an animated fictional work — inspired by Thomas Mann’s Magic Mountain, the movie “The Breakfast Club” and the metric system — about 10 characters attending an international conference in Switzerland. She also plans to make a part fictional, part documentary film about the 2008 Presidential primary in her small New Hampshire hometown.

Cynthia Hopkins, Theatre: When on stage, this musician, performance artist and storyteller assumes multiple alter-egos during a mix of media performances — Sufi dance trances, PowerPoint presentations, video, confessional memoir and alt-country rock numbers. Her latest piece, Must Don’t Whip ‘Um, chronicles a daughter’s efforts to make a documentary about her mother, a failed and missing rock star. Her 2004 production, Accidental Nostalgia, put Hopkins on the map. Through monologue, song and video, she tells the story of an amnesiac neurologist on a quest to trigger her missing memories — and literally change her mind. Hopkins is currently working on a new album of love songs and writing a new show that takes place in the very distant future, exploring the long-term effects of the human race on the universe.

Walid Raad, Visual Arts: Although he moved to Boston as a teenager, Raad was born in Beirut and says his “formative years belong to the years of the Lebanese wars.” His works explore the experiences and representations of war through video, photography and performance. “The Atlas Group,” a 14-year project about the contemporary history of Lebanon, is a collection of documents that present a fictional universe that explores the cultural, political and psychological effects of the Lebanese wars. It includes the notebooks of Dr. Fadl Fakhoury, an imaginary, historian of the wars. Raad’s videotape, Hostage: The Bachar Tapes (#17 and #31) - English Version, presents the fictional testimony of an Arab man held hostage in Lebanon in the 1980s alongside Americans Terry Anderson, David Jacobsen and others. The videotape explores the literary, sexual and political dimensions of the kidnapping of Westerners in Lebanon in the 1980s.

“The talent and promise of these artists are staggering, and we cannot wait to see what they do next,” said Irene Borger, Director of the Alpert Award in the Arts. “The Alpert Award in the Arts aims to invest in artists at a moment in their lives when they are poised to propel their work in new and completely unpredictable directions.”

Past winners have gone on to take their work to new levels of exposure, impact and critical acclaim, including other awards and distinctions. Some previous winners include: Coco Fusco, Jim Hodges, Ann Carlson, Vijay Iyer, Christian Marclay, Rtmark, George Lewis, Bill Morrison, Catherine Opie, Suzan-Lori Parks and Cai Guo Qiang.

“This year’s Alpert Award winners, like their predecessors, are respected for their ingenuity and impressive bodies of work,” said Steven Lavine, President of CalArts. “They are chosen for their promise, as well as a commitment to the world around them.”

Rona Sebastian, President of the Herb Alpert Foundation, added, “This award recognizes artists who, much like Herb himself, embody the spirit of giving back. Many winners use the Alpert Award to inspire, teach and support other artists.”

Winners hold week-long teaching residencies at CalArts, and some have also performed or exhibited their work at REDCAT, the Roy and Edna Disney CalArts Theater in Los Angeles. The concept of winners sharing their knowledge and experience with other artists is central to the award program that Herb Alpert and CalArts created.

Alpert’s own artistic success began in music, as he introduced the “Tijuana Brass” sound to broad audiences. He also formed the hit record label A&M with Jerry Moss, which became a music recording empire renowned for nurturing new artists, such as Quincy Jones.

Both men were named “Icons of the Music Industry” at the 2007 Grammys, and Alpert also won a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 1997 Grammys. He has produced award-winning plays on Broadway and, for over twenty-five years, has created and widely exhibited his paintings and sculptures.

About the Herb Alpert Foundation
The Herb Alpert Foundation, a non-profit, private foundation established in the early 1980’s, makes significant annual contributions to a range of programs that support the arts, arts education, and compassion and well-being. Its funding is directed toward projects in which Herb and Lani Alpert and Foundation President Rona Sebastian play an active role. The Foundation does not accept unsolicited proposals.

About the California Institute of the Arts
The California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) was incorporated in 1961 as the first degree-granting institution of higher learning in the U.S. created specially for students of the visual and the performing arts. The Institute was established through the merger of two well-established professional schools, the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music, founded in 1883, and The Chouinard Art Institute, founded in 1921. The Institute is comprised of six related schools: Art, Critical Studies, Dance, Film/Video, Music and Theatre. CalArts encourages students to recognize the complexity of political, social and aesthetic questions and to respond to them with informed, independent judgment. Supported by its distinguished faculty of practicing artists, CalArts offers BFA and MFA degree programs in Art, Dance, Film/Video, Music and Theatre, and an MFA program in Critical Studies. In recognition of the Institute’s artistic excellence, The Herb Alpert Foundation selected CalArts to administe
r and collaborate creatively in the establishment of the Awards Program.

For more information, contact: Sarah Bacon 212-584-5000 ext. 318, sbacon@fenton.com or Joy Engel 415-901-0111 ext. 309 jengel@fenton.com

For more information go to:

Turkey at the 52nd International Art Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia

Sunday, May 13th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Turkish Pavilion

Don’t Complain
Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin

Turkey at the 52nd International Art Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia

Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin represents Turkey at the 52nd International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia with an installation titled Don’t Complain.

Turkey’s participation will take place in the Artiglierie section of the Arsenale. Sponsored by Garanti Bank, under the auspices of Republic of Turkey, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, with the contribution of Promotion Fund of the Turkish Prime Ministry, and supported by the Venice Biennial/Friends of the Turkish Pavilion, the exhibition is curated by Vasif Kortun and organised by Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (IKSV), the organising body of the Istanbul Biennial.

Exhibition:
10 June–21 November 2007

Press Preview:
7-9 June 2007

Press Conference:
8 June, 16.00, Teatro Piccolo - Arsenale

Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin
Alptekin’s installation for Turkey’s participation in the Venice Biennial is named “Don’t Complain.” This tautological title underscores an objection, and sets off suspicions about the probable meanings of such a grievance. Who is complaining when saying “don’t complain?” Is it about the artist, the country, or the viewer?

The installation consists of a series of specific single-cell spaces in a semi-arched form. The inspiration for these comes out of a particular type of public dining in West Asia where restaurants may be tightly divided into separate cabins assembled around an open courtyard. Hence, each group of guests keeps to their privacy, and their unique mental setting.

In each cabin of the installation there will be a series image sequences on LCD screens. These are made of a layering of hundreds of single images, recordings of random and nonessential moments, anonymous myths that do not make it to history, and of fleeting acts that normally elude our attention. Alptekin calls them the “Incidents.” In the “The Bombay Incident” on Juhu Tara Beach and The “Rio de Janeiro Incident” on Ipanema Beach differences are folded in to silhouettes of commonalty. In another incident, Alptekin traces a mute, black man over four seasons from the same vantage point; it is a register of the man’s place on the corner of a street around a rubbish bin next to an abandoned car. He organizes the garbage in liaison with the street cleaners and inhabitants of the districts within the context of an informal economy, tolerated illegality, and auto-ecology. The deeply empathic assignation to the invisible under-belly of globalization, the cosmos of authorless, displa
ced presences, has as well to do with Alptekin’s peripatetic livelihood, the ”escape” from home and local context. His unabated rummaging around of other mental places provides him a specific knowledge and a working model.

The installation was prepared in Vaasa, Finland as part of the artist’s Platform Vaasa residency with support from “Cheap Finnish Labour” project and BRG: Barn Research Group [Johan Ångerman, Peter Båsk, Camila Rocha, Cemali Marino, Hüseyin Alptekin].

Hüseyin Alptekin has participated in numerous exhibitions including the 4th (1995) and 9th (2005) International Istanbul Biennials; 24th São Paulo Biennial (1998); 4th Cetinje Biennial, Montenegro, (2004); Manifesta V; 47th October Salon: Art, Life and Confusion, Belgrade, 2006; and How Latitudes Become Forms, Walker Art Center (2003). Vasif Kortun is the director of Platform Garanti Art Center in Istanbul.

Press Relations

Carlo Simula
carlo.simula@loom.it
+39 347 7973217

Ustungel Inanc
uinanc@iksv.org
+90 532 4537012

Press material can be downloaded at http://www.iksvpress.com/venedikbienali

For more information go to: http://www.iksvpress.com/venedikbienali