Archive for June 21st, 2007

László Fehér at Ludwig Museum

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
LUDWIG MUSEUM

László Fehér
Retrospective exhibition
Works 1975-2007
22 June-16 September 2007

LUDWIG MUSEUM
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
PALACE OF ARTS
H-1095 Budapest Komor Marcell u. 1
Phone: (36 1) 555 3444, 555 3457
Fax: (36 1) 555 3458
info@lumu.hu

Opening: Thursday, 21 June 2007, 6.00 pm
Opened by Sándor Radnóti, aesthetician
Guided tour and press reception:
Tuesday, 19 June 2007, 4.00 pm

Curator: Katalin Néray

http://www.lumu.hu

László Fehér first came to attention in the late 1970s in the Studio exhibitions, and has been a prominent figure of Hungarian art for the last twenty-five years. After the radical social documentation of his early photorealistic period, he turned to family mythology. Through images of anxiety filtered through family photographs and childhood memories from the nineteen fifties, he found a more indirect format for conveying his message. It was then that he developed what has remained, if changing from time to time in colour and form, an unmistakeable individual style made up of bold framing, dynamic, often diagonal composition, few colours and a sensitive balance of contour-indicated forms and fine detail.

Fehér has had many exhibitions, but until now the only true retrospective exhibition was in December 1997, in the Liechtenstein Palace, Vienna.

The primary aim of this exhibition is to present the process underlying Fehér’s special iconography and method of imagery as it has developed over three decades.

The last time the Ludwig Museum held a Fehér exhibition was twelve years ago, in spring 1995 (in its old premises in the Buda Palace), entitled New Pictures. Since then, periods have followed one after the other, the dominant colours have changed, but the unchanging essence, the message, is an intricate relationship between the human figure and its surroundings: emotionally complex, often visually shocking, and at once harmonious and disharmonious. The basis is photography, whether old family photographs or the artist’s own snapshots. This is the starting point, a tool which the artist uses at will. Series drawn from each period build up to an integral whole held together by Fehér’s philosophy of art and life.

The Ludwig Museum sees the time as right for a presentation of the phases of Fehér’s work over the thirty years which have passed since 1975. It has selected paintings from many public and private collections and the artist’s own studio, and puts some new works on public display for the first time.

Alexandra publishers have produced a richly illustrated book on the occasion of the exhibition.

László Fehér was born in Székesfehérvár on 17 March 1953. He studied at the Hungarian College of Fine Arts between 1970 and 1976 under Lajos Szentiványi and Ignác Kokas. He was a Derkovits Scholar from 1978 to 1980, and won the Mihály Munkácsy Prize in 1993, the Kossuth Prize in 2000 and the Prima Award in 2006 (in the Hungarian Visual Arts Category). In 2007 he became the Hungarian Ambassador of Culture. He lives in Budapest and Tác.

Tuesday-Sunday: 10am-8pm
On the last Saturday of every month: 10am-10pm
Closed on Mondays
Press contact: Patrícia Piringer, PR Manager, tel: (36 1) 555 3468 or (36 30) 99 13 454
e-mail: patricia.piringer@lumu.hu

Events linked to the exhibition:

Saturday, 23 June, 5.00 pm - Is-Is randevú (discussion) Guests:
Painter László Fehér and philosopher Ágnes Heller
Thursday, 28 June, 6.00 pm: guided tour by painter László Fehér
Saturday, 15 September, 4.00 pm: guided tour by painter László Fehér

For more information go to: http://www.lumu.hu

tank.tv presents Fresh Moves

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
tank.tv

Fresh Moves
New Moving Images from the UK
A DVD of film and video art by tank.tv
ISBN: 978-0-9555181-0-2
Paperback 150 x 180 mm portrait

Fresh Moves
will be launched at the ICA, London
on the 28th June 2007 at 7pm.
Book now through the ICA box office.
http://www.ica.org.uk

For more information and to order Fresh Moves please see:
http://www.tank.tv/freshmoves.htm

The appearance of Fresh Moves is a unique event making artists’ moving images, some of which are rarely seen, available beyond the conventional context of art exhibitions and fleeting lives online. The project is the result of tank.tv’s continuous collaboration and exchange with artists, institutions and independent curators which has made it the inimitable platform for moving image practice that it is today.

Showcasing new moving image work since 2003, tank.tv presents its first DVD anthology. This collection contains 24 film and video pieces by 24 UK based artists, each around three minutes long, and reflects the creativity, innovation and wide variety of subject matter for which http://www.tank.tv has become known and respected. It also includes five new, specially commissioned interviews pieces between feted curators and artists.

Fresh Moves was compiled by a panel that included Hans Ulrich Obrist, director of the Serpentine Gallery, and Stuart Comer, curator of film and video at Tate Modern. Turner Prize winner Jeremy Deller and infamous philosopher Slavoj Zizek both make an appearance in the series of interviews.

The DVD features recent work from some of the most important artists working in moving images today, such as Cerith Wyn Evans, Daria Martin, Runa Islam, Spartacus Chetwynd and Andrew Kötting, as well as emerging artists like Torsten Lauschmann, Anja M. Kirschner and David Blandy. Rather than a comprehensive overview, Fresh Moves aims to provide an anthology encompassing animation, fictional narrative, digital film, montage and installation-based film work. The works explore a wide variety of subjects - from politics to identity and aesthetic practices, all tempered with a healthy measure of humour - and so celebrate not just the artists featured, but the art of moving images as a whole.

"…this special project addresses the idea of carrying video and filmic work beyond the boundaries of contextually, or spatially, confined spaces pertaining to where a work can be seen. […] It furthers the investigation into how different modes of filmmaking evolve within the changing consciousness of the public media […] a sort of polyphony of voices, stories and philosophies. [The project] …produced an investigation into a new generation of artists working in the UK. […] Eric Hobsbawm, the great English historian speaks of the very necessary and urgent need for our hyper-paced culture to issue a ‘protest against forgetting’."
-Hans Ulrich Obrist

ARTISTS: David BLANDY, Ben CALLAWAY, Duncan CAMPBELL, Ergin CAVUSOGLU, Spartacus CHETWYND, Kate COOPER, Ann COURSE, Katy DOVE, Max HATTLER, Runa ISLAM, Kevin HEAVEY, Anja M. KIRSCHNER, Zineb SE DIRA, Andrew KÖTTING, Torsten LAUSCHMANN, Daria MARTIN, Alex HEIM, Ben RIVERS, Samuel STEVENS, Stephen SUTCLIFFE, Mark Aerial WALLER, Saskia OLDE WOLBERS, John WOOD & Paul HARRISON, Cerith WYN EVANS

INTERVIEWS: Steven EASTWOOD with Benjamin COOK, Jeremy DELLER with Chrissie ILES, Ryan GANDER with Hans Ulrich OBRIST, Laure PROUVOST with Michael CONNOR, Sophie FIENNES with Slavoj ZIZEK.

The compilation was selected by: Hans Ulrich Obrist (the Serpentine Gallery), Benjamin Cook and Mike Sperlinger (LUX), Stuart Comer (Tate Modern), Michelle Cotton (Independent curator, London), Rose Cupit (Film London) and Kathrin Becker (NBK, Berlin).

A project by: Laure Prouvost and Birgit Ludwig

Fresh Moves: New Moving Images From the UK
ISBN: 978-0-9555181-0-2
Paperback 150 x 180 mm portrait
300 pages / content printed on 81 colour pages
PAL DVD / Region 0 / running time 85 min
Published by Tank Form Ltd
Distributed by Thames & Hudson.

Interviews with artists and curators involved with Fresh Moves are on http://www.tank.tv until July 15th.

Generously funded by the National Lottery through the Arts Council, England.

For more information go to: http://www.tank.tv

21 POSITIONS at the Austrian Cultural Forum New York

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Austrian Cultural Forum New York

21 POSITIONS

May 15 – August 25 | 2007
Gallery hours:
Monday – Saturday | 10 am – 6 pm

Austrian Cultural Forum New York
11 East 52nd Street
New York, NY 10022
212 319 5300
http://www.acfny.org

21 POSITIONS

Exhibition dates: May 15 – August 25 | 2007
Gallery hours: Monday – Saturday | 10 am – 6 pm

Bitter / Weber
Hubert Blanz
Heinz Cibulka and Magdalena Frey
Clegg & Guttmann
Lois Hechenblaikner
Judith Huemer
Harald Hund
Iris Klein
Markus Krottendorfer
Paul Albert Leitner
Michaela Moscouw
Rita Nowak
Lisl Ponger
Lois Renner
Markus Schinwald
Eva Schlegel
Ruth Schnell
Günther and Loredana Selichar
Manfred Willmann
Andrea Witzmann
Erwin Wurm

Curator: Christoph Thun-Hohenstein

The Austrian Cultural Forum New York is pleased to present 21 POSITIONS, an art photography show that will be on view through August 25. More than a mere assembly of 21 artistic positions, this exhibition is about looking at the 21st century from different angles. Rather than celebrating speed, ubiquity, and unlimited growth, the new state of the art is to make us reflect on what we are about to lose. Presenting 21 artistic positions of seeing others and ourselves, the show explores a number of core factors underlying the malaise and optimism of our young century: SURFACE AND ILLUSION (Eva Schlegel, Clegg & Guttmann, Michaela Moscouw); SEDUCTION (Lois Renner, Rita Nowak, Lois Hechenblaikner, Iris Klein); OBSESSION (Markus Schinwald, Erwin Wurm); LIKENESS AND DIFFERENCE (Magdalena Frey and Heinz Cibulka, Ruth Schnell, Paul Albert Leitner, Harald Hund); CHANGE, FAST AND SLOW (Hubert Blanz, Markus Krottendorfer, Günther and Loredana Selichar, Andrea Witzmann, Judith Hue
mer, Lisl Ponger, Bitter / Weber, Manfred Willmann). 21 POSITIONS is curated by Christoph Thun-Hohenstein, director of the Austrian Cultural Forum New York.

The exhibition’s focus is on recent art photography from Austria. In contradistinction to the situation in Germany, the Austrian scene has not been marked by a dominant art photography school. While Viennese Actionism and the systematic exploration of the self were a determining influence for almost any Austrian artist, including those interested in photography, this pressure also created a stimulus to break free from the strong focus on the body. A broad range of artistic possibilities opened up, and younger artists from very different artistic backgrounds felt free to roam into less orthodox territories. 21 POSITIONS offers a glimpse into the variety of recent art photography in Austria without attempting to capture the entire spectrum. All the works included date from 2000 or thereafter, with the exception of the selection of 27 photographs from Manfred Willmann’s celebrated oeuvre Das Land. His photographic observations on the slow pace of change in the Austrian countrysi
de and the lives of those who stay and resist the temptation to move to the city make us reflect on memory and progress, a focus of ACF’s activities.

An exhibition catalogue, available for free, has been published in conjunction with the exhibition.

# # #

Admission to all ACF exhibitions, concerts, and other events is free.
Gallery Hours: Monday through Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm.
The Austrian Cultural Forum is located at 11 East 52nd Street in Manhattan.
For additional information call 212 319 5300 or visit http://www.acfny.org

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