Archive for June 20th, 2007

Argos announces two new exhibitions

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Argos – Centre for Art & Media, Brussels

Argos announces two new exhibitions:

Clemens von Wedemeyer & Maya Schweizer: Films in Common

Lonnie van Brummelen & Siebren de Haan: Monument of Sugar
Featuring: A Work of Lawrence Weiner, 1969

26 June – 8 September 2007
Argos – Centre for Art & Media
Werfstraat 13 Rue du Chantier
Brussels 1000 - Belgium
T: +32 2 2290003
E: info@argosarts.org
http://www.argosarts.org

Clemens von Wedemeyer’s films combine an awareness of social issues with an investigation of the multiplication of cinematic perspectives and the processes of filming in front of as well as behind the scenes. At Argos, Wedemeyer will present his film installation Otjesd as well as a joint work with artist Maya Schweizer entitled Metropolis, Report from China. The title of the exhibition Films in Common reflects the cooperative and social working processes which characterise the works on view.

Otjesd, which in Russian means departure, is a meditation both on migration but also the act of film making itself, based on a real scene Wedemeyer witnessed when he was in Moscow: Russians waiting in a queue outside the German embassy. In the unlikely setting of a wooded wasteland Wedemeyer stages a surreal scene which intimates the Kafkaesque struggle with border bureaucracy.

Together with Otjesd, Wedemeyer will also show The Making of Otjesd, which describes the process and research behind the making of the film and a series of photographs from the set.

In 2004 Clemens von Wedemeyer and Maya Schweizer travelled to China in order to research for an adaptation of the legendary 1927 feature film Metropolis by Fritz Lang. The film has not been re-made but the result of the artists’ investigations in Beijing and Shanghai is a documentary film entitled Metropolis, Report from China (2006). The film features the interviews conducted there, footage of the urban fabric, casting research and discussions with the workers and architects who are responsible for the building of the 21st century Chinese metropolis. It provides insight into growth of the Chinese mega-city, but also questions the implications of modernity, development and progress at all costs. At Argos the film will be shown alongside photographs and archival material the artists collected during their research in China.

For their first solo presentation in Belgium, the Dutch collaborative artist duo Lonnie van Brummelen and Siebren de Haan will present Monument of Sugar, an installation consisting of a 16mm silent film essay and a floor sculpture. As with many of their projects this one also explores the intersection of social and political issues with artistic and aesthetic practices. Following the discovery that a large amount of European sugar ends up outside of Europe, the artists embarked on a research trip to investigate the European subsidized sugar trade which took them from Holland to Poland and finally to Lagos, Nigeria. They decided to reverse the flow of the subsidized commodity by buying European excess sugar cheaply in Nigeria and shipping it back to Europe. To elude the European trade barrier for sugar imports they would transport the sugar as a ‘monument’. The material result of their research, two groups of sugar modules, is shown together with a dialectical film essay which
charts the artists’ travels and investigations into the sugar trade. Slowly running titles narrate the obstacles faced by the artists in their quest to find out more about the sugar trade route as well as the difficulties encountered in the production of their ‘monument’. These running titles, or ‘Garamond landscapes’, as the artists call them, are intersected by documentary footage exploring, in long slow takes, hidden production landscapes of global trade, like crop fields, sugar refineries, flow-bands, harbours, and the different sites where the artists performed their drifting studio practice.

Monument of Sugar is shown together with a work by Lawrence Weiner from 1969. In agreement with the ideas of many conceptual artists who gained international recognition in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Weiner’s works challenges the myth of artistic authorship and undermines the ‘prestige’ of the artwork. His statements are lettered in a standard typeface, phrased with impersonalised syntax, and the lettering need not be done by the artist himself, as long as the work is executed according to the minimal instructions by the artist. In transferring 1000 euros worth of sugar from one continent to another, Van Brummelen and de Haan’s work seems to poignantly echo Weiner’s 1969 Statement.

Lonnie van Brummelen & Siebren de Haan: Monument of Sugar has been made possible with the support of the Mondriaan Foundation

Argos general support: The Flemish Authorities, the Flemish Community Commission of the Brussels-Capital Region

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

AUTO EMOTION: Autobiography, emotion and self-fashioning

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Power Plant

AUTO EMOTION: Autobiography, emotion and self-fashioning
18 May – 19 August, 2007

Marina Abramovic, Reza Afisina, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Sophie Calle, Andrea Fraser, Rodney Graham, Christian Jankowski, Yayoi Kusama, Nikki S. Lee, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer,
Matt Mullican, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, Adrian Paci, Johannes Wohnseifer

Curated by Gregory Burke and
Helena Reckitt

Despite Conceptual Art’s disavowal of narrative and self-expression, a number of contemporary artists are mining autobiographical and biographical genres. Some artists have not hesitated to express deep feelings about the world, themselves and the artist’s role. Others have wrestled with questions of how to represent the self, sometimes trying to avoid clichés, at others deliberately appropriating them. Drawing inspiration from events in their own lives, and setting up situations that blur the division between art and life, several artists explore art’s potential for transformation and catharsis. ‘Auto Emotion’ includes works that carry an interest in the relationship between social conformism and autonomy, brain chemistry and emotion, automatic behavior and self determination, the fictional and the real.

Performance becomes self-portraiture in Official Welcome (2001) by Andrea Fraser, The Onion (1995) by Marina Abramovic, and during a hypnotized performance given by Matt Mullican. Canadian artist Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay represents the biographical in Live to Tell (2002) and Lyric (2004), where pop songs are represented as folklore both to tell his story, and to investigate notions of clichés as cultural truths. This element is taken into the therapist’s office for artist’s block experienced by Christian Jankowski in the pressure to make new work, or questioned as fictional elaborations of romantic partnerships by a master of disguises, Nikki S. Lee, exposing these states of perpetual flux within the varying personas. Adrian Paci’s Vajtojca (2002) shows the self in the cycle of birth and death, both as an Albanian, and as an artist, when he stages his own funeral and pays a professional mourner to weep for him.

This exhibition is a timely reflection on issues of the complexity of self-representation and deflection, within and outside the art institution as many of the artists in ‘Auto Emotion’ question the role of the artist in society.

1 – 17 June, 2007
PULSE FRONT: Relational Architecture 12

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer

Curated by Gregory Burke

In association with and linked to ‘Auto Emotion,’ The Power Plant presents ‘Pulse Front: Relational Architecture 12’, a new commission by Montreal-based artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. ‘Pulse Front’ features a matrix of light over The Power Plant and Harbourfront Centre, made with light beams from twenty of the world’s most powerful robotic searchlights. The installation is entirely controlled by sensors that measure the heart rates of passersby. Ten metal sculptures with embedded sensors and computers are placed along the harbour where they detect the pulses of people who hold them and convert them into light pulses. Computers also determine the orientation of the beams, recording changes in participants’ physical and emotional states. The resulting effect is a visualization of vital signs, arguably our most symbolic biometric, in an urban scale.

Lozano-Hemmer is an artist who relies on the public to create the work, and claims that he merely orchestrates the tools. While he has exhibited in over 48 countries, ‘Pulse Front’ is his first public interactive installation in Canada.

‘Pulse Front’ is commissioned by and premiered at Luminato, curated by The Power Plant and co-produced by Harbourfront Centre. Presented by TELUS.

The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery
231 Queens Quay West
Toronto ON Canada M5J 2G8
http://www.thepowerplant.org

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

YOUNG BELGIAN PAINTERS AWARD 2007

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Centre for Fine Arts | Palais des Beaux-Arts

YOUNG BELGIAN PAINTERS AWARD 2007
22.06 > 09.09.2007

Centre for Fine Arts | Palais des
Beaux-Arts, Brussels
Rue Ravensteinstraat 23
1000 Brussels, Belgium
http://www.bozar.be
info@bozar.be
+32 (0) 2 507 82 00
Admission Free

Since 1950 this competition has focused attention on young Belgian artists. “Young” means under 35 years of age; “Belgian” means based in Belgium; for a long time now, it has not been restricted to “Painters”. The competition is akin to the Turner Prize in the United Kingdom, the Prix Marcel Duchamp in France, and the Vincent in the Netherlands. Laureates such as Pierre Alechinsky, Ann Veronica Janssens, Hans Op de Beeck, and Christophe Terlinden indicate its international impact. All of those who have succeeded in convincing the extremely demanding jury are already winners. This year’s jury is made up of: Ann Demeester (De Appel, Amsterdam), Eva Gonzalez-Sancho (FRAC Bourgogne, Dijon), Stijn Huijts (Stedelijk Museum Het Domein, Sittard), Jérôme Sans (BALTIC, Gateshead), and Nicolaus Schafhausen (Witte De With, Rotterdam).

The seven candidates will produce for the occasion a new work that competes for the four awards: the Young Belgian Painters Award- Crowet (€ 25,000), the Young Belgian Painters Award-Emile and Stephy Langui (€ 12,500), the Centre for Fine Arts Award (€ 12,500), and the ING Award (€ 12,500).

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