Archive for June 26th, 2007

Simmel’s Draw at Over het IJ Theatre Festival

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Over het IJ

Simmel’s Draw
Over het IJ Theatre Festival 2007
Exhibition duration: 5 till 15 July
Opening: 5 July, from 19 hours
Location: NDSM-shipyard and surroundings, Amsterdam North

http://www.overhetij.nl

David Michael DiGregorio (co-conceived with Sung Hwan Kim)
Zhana Ivanova
Martín y Sicilia
Tilmann Meyer-Faje
Jesús "Bubu" Negrón
Otobong Nkanga
Erik Olofsen
Michail Pirgelis
Fernando Sánchez Castillo
Kan Xuan

Curators: Bianca Visser and Veronique Hoedemakers

How is conviction inspired? This is the central question posed by the visual arts programme presented during the 15th edition of the Over het IJ Theater Festival, that is being held each year on the esplanade and interior of the monumental NDSM shipyard, located in Amsterdam. The title refers to the 19th century German philosopher Georg Simmel, who wrote an essay about how from his point of view theatre relates to reality. According to Simmel, the role of the actor is decisive in the endeavour to conceive a convincing play. He will not succeed in his assignment if he remains himself, but, on the other hand, he will arouse suspicion if he plays his part too realistically. In both cases, reliability is not accomplished. But, what happens when confidence is gained? In other words: how does the art of credibility function?

Twelve international artists have been invited to produce a new work in the surrounding of the NDSM shipyard. To widen the scope of view on art, the definition expressed by the Spanish philosopher Fernando Savater has been applied. From his point of view, art is a human skill that, once learned, can never be fully mastered.

The exhibition is being generously funded by: Mondrian Foundation, Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst, Stichting Cultuurfonds van de Bank Nederlandse Gemeente.

For updated information on the program and addresses of the venues, times and entrance fees check: http://www.festivalaandewerf.nl

For more information go to: http://www.overhetij.nl

A.R. Penck Retrospective at Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt

A.R. PENCK RETROSPECTIVE
15 June – 16 September 2007

SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT
Römerberg
60311 Frankfurt, Germany

phone: (+49) 69 29 98 82-0
fax: (+49) 69 29 98 82-240
welcome@schirn.de

http://www.schirn.de

Hardly any German artist did as much as A.R. Penck to revive painting in Germany. Even while still in the German Democratic Republic, Penck repeatedly addressed the topic of the relationship between the individual and society. Since his expatriation in 1980, he has employed his unmistakable style to turn abstracted figures and pictorial signs into a universal vocabulary in which recollections of the beginnings of painting are fused with contemporary history and modern science to form a memorable visual world. The first large survey in Germany in twenty years presents Penck’s work against the backdrop of changed social and art-immanent contexts and forms of reception. Approximately 130 large-format paintings, sculptures, and objects from 1961 to the present day reveal the artist and his most important themes and groups of works. A special feature of the show is a selection of about 70 artist books which also introduce Penck as a wordsmith and draftsman in a comprehensive manne
r.

That Penck, né Ralf Winkler in Dresden in 1939, chose the geologist and glaciation expert Albrecht Penck’s (1858–1945) name as his first and still valid pseudonym in the 1960s, adding an R. for Ralf, has often been regarded as a commentary on the Cold War. The second reference is to be seen in the parallels between Penck’s universe of signs and the pictorial solutions of ice age cave paintings. Penck explained his choice – which was followed by pseudonyms like “Mike Hammer,” “Mitchel Hammer,” “Tancred Mitchell,” “Theodor Marx,” as well as mathematical symbols like α Y (a.r. penck) – with his discovery of a certain analogy between “deposited information and geology.” He emphasized that the return to archaeology had essentially stimulated and influenced his painting. After Penck had already set out on his quest for an independent path beyond traditional art and Socialist Realism in the late 1950s, he created his so-called “Weltbilder” (world pictures) from 1961
on which already feature his two-dimensional reduced and anonymous “matchstick men.” These elements stemming from his interest in prehistoric painting that brought forth a combination of figuration and abstraction were to become his trademark. His first “Weltbild,” which the artist describes as a modern historical painting, shows a group of individuals holding up signs with mathematical formulae, fighting, embracing each other, marching, drawing weapons. Regardless of the distinct and recognizable character of some scenes and symbols, the work presents itself as anything but unambiguous. Penck does not tell picture stories but always fuses the individual and the general to arrive at timeless truths in his complex compositions.

From the 1960s on, the concept of (visual) information and the theory of the abstract machine became increasingly important to Penck. The language of cybernetics with its high degree of abstraction and its system concept also began to play a crucial part. Penck recently wrote that “all this had an impact on my painting and made me think about and experiment with the logic of pictures. This approach led me to the concept of ‘Standart’ and resulted in numerous experiments concerning signs, spaces of signs, and the signal character of signs and symbols. The system concept was essential and comprehensive. Pictures as systems – systems as pictures. This pictorial method, which was new to me, changed my motifs and themes which assumed a more general and political character. The Cold War between the East and the West was the subject of my first ‘Weltbilder’ and ‘Systembilder’ (system pictures).”

Penck’s “Standart-Bilder” (standart pictures) are a form of political concept art which was aimed at making a constructive contribution to socialism. The pictures were designed to work as visual signs to be understood and used by everybody. The artist’s program of reducing pictures to signs and symbols that control and structure patterns of behavior was to establish a non-hierarchical discourse and influence the discussion on art. Yet, in the reality of his pictures, Penck transforms this vocabulary into a much more complex world. This world even has room for apparently contradictory tendencies such as magic and mystery which enhances the works’ fascination. Apart from his “Standart-Bilder,” Penck also created a number of “Standart-Modelle” (standart models): painted cardboard sculptures with inscriptions characterized by a “poor” aesthetics that makes us think of Fluxus and Beuys.

Penck’s “Standart” realism was thwarted by the reality of 1968, which was determined by the representatives of the new order in the East. The experience of the unmasking of real-life socialism is reflected in Penck’s “Mike Hammer“ and “TM” series; the pictures, which have titles such as “Mike Hammers Geburt – Die Wurzeln des Faschismus” (Mike Hammer’s Birth – The Roots of Fascism) are markedly more aggressive and expressive. In the 1970s, Penck worked in a variety of media, produced films, objects, wood sculptures, and his outstanding artist books, and even experimented with surreal compositions. While the pressure on him in the East increased (he was not allowed to show his works in public in the GDR from 1962 on), he received great acclaim in the West and participated in the Venice Biennial and the documenta.

After his expatriation from the GDR and his move to the West in 1980, the artist continued to work incessantly. Yet, he found himself confronted with the necessity to come to terms with this fundamental change in his life: the years in question saw the production of numerous works on the East-West issue accompanied by a stylistic shift towards more colorfulness and three-dimensionality. As Penck himself noted, elements of “anxiety,” “restlessness,” and even “romanticism” gradually disappeared. The artists digested his travels and new manifold impressions of the Western world in large-format works such as “Ich in New York” (I in New York) or “Ich in Dublin” (I in Dublin). In 1982, the artist already had moved on to London, was appointed to a professorship in Düsseldorf in 1989, and has been living in Dublin since his retirement from it in 2003.

Penck has once described the East as a desert and the West as a jungle. The two fundamentally different political systems, the conflict of these worlds, and his very individual and still pronounced philosophical-political basic attitude have remained his work’s major thematic pivot.

SPONSORS: “A.R. Penck Retrospective” is sponsored by Bank of America N. A. Additional support has been granted by Skoda Auto Deutschland GmbH.

VENUES: Kunsthalle zu Kiel (29 September 2007 – 6 January 2008), Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris (14 February – 5 May 2008).

CATALOGUE: “A.R. Penck Retrospektive.” Edited by Ingrid Pfeiffer and Max Hollein. With texts by Isabelle Graw, Harald Kunde, Ingrid Pfeiffer, Kevin Power, Pirkko Rathgeber, Jürgen Schweinebraden Freiherr zu Wichmann-Eichhorn. German and English edition, ca. 310 pages, ca. 400 color illustrations, Richter Verlag GmbH Düsseldorf, ISBN 978-3-937572-68-0

DIRECTOR: Max Hollein
CURATOR: Dr. Ingrid Pfeiffer
OPENING HOURS: Tue., Fri.–Sun. 10 a.m. –7 p.m., Wed. and Thur. 10 a.m. – 10 p.m.
INFORMATION: http://www.schirn.de
PRESS CONTACT: Dorothea Apovnik, phone: (+49-69) 29 98 82-118, fax: (+49-69) 29 98 82-240, e-mail: dorothea.apovnik@schirn.de, http://www.schirn.de (texts and images for download under PRESS).

For more information go to: http://www.schirn.de

RECOGNISE

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

IMGP1023.JPG
Nada Prlja, Tomorrow Is Mine, neon light installation, 2007

Friday 22 June - Friday 7 September 2007

RECOGNISE is taking place in a spectacular setting of an old warehouse in London’s Finsbury Park from June to September 2007. The latest productions of more than 40 international artists will be shown for the first time in London. The exhibition will additionally include screenings, talks, panel discussions, performances, and interventions selected from an astounding range of artworks, which are a survey of a vast and diverse array of international artists addressing the Middle East.

The multimedia exhibition curated by Predrag Pajdic includes works by Mohamed Abdulla, Ziad Antar & Rasha Salti, Oreet Ashery, Yasmeen Al Awadi, Tim Blake, Lisa K Blatt, Ali Cherri, Hassan Choubassi, Nemanja Cvijanovic, Tarek Al Ghoussein, Sagi Groner, Khaled Hafez, Roza El-Hassan, Susan Hefuna, Hilda Hiary, The Infinity Project, Emily Jacir, Lamia Joreige, Nedim Kufi, Dana Levy, Avi Mograbi, Rabih Mroué, Nada Prlja, Ayman Ramadan, Khaled Ramadan, Paul Ryan, Wael Shawky, Sadegh Tirafkan, Milica Tomic & Branimir Stojanovic, Jalal Toufic and Rachel Wilberforce.

Breathing new life into the region for a media weary audience, the exhibition focuses on a new visual culture of the Middle East, political, to be sure, but where the primary strength lies in the artists’ work, not in their political or religious views.

For more information please visit: www.infocusdialogue.com

Contemporary Art Platform
1 Thane Villas
London N7 7PH
United Kingdom
Opening hours:
Wednesday – Sunday, 13.00 – 19.00

The nearest tube station: Finsbury Park (Victoria & Piccadilly lines)
Buses: 4, 19, 29, 153, 253, 254, 259

RENATA LUCAS: FALHA at REDCAT

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Gallery at REDCAT, Los Angeles

RENATA LUCAS: FALHA
Opening reception: Friday, June 29, 6 – 9pm
Artist’s talk at 6:30pm
Exhibition dates:
June 30 – August 26, 2007

REDCAT (Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater)
631 West 2nd Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012 USA
http://www.redcat.org

Renata Lucas manipulates urban spaces and architecture to intensify the tension between inside and outside, public and private, past and present. Lucas’s practice is a critical interpretation of how our built environment determines actions, behavior and social relationships, and by extension, society’s dependency on the preservation of prescribed definitions of space, property and order. The artist’s work imagines a space where these barriers break down, where the possibility of deconstructing boundaries might result in a different social dynamic. By offering an alternative spatial imagination—one that brings into consideration malleability, manipulation and play—Lucas provokes the possibility of new subjective and collective engagement within our built environment.

In her recent contribution to the São Paulo Biennial, Quick Mathematics, Lucas installed pavement, curbing and streetlights on top of the existing sidewalk, a subtle but concrete gesture of doubling that necessitated a consideration of the architecture of the street, one that promotes informal assembly, pedestrian transit, and unexpected obstacles, coincidences and pleasures. As Lynn Zelevansky observes in the exhibition catalogue: “Lucas is fascinated by the makeshift nature of Brazilian construction, the way buildings are adapted and then readapted until they no longer have a functional logic.”

For her Los Angeles debut, Lucas revisits the work Falha (Failure, 2003) an ambitious installation of hinged sheets of plywood that initiates a series of interactions with and reconfigurations of the site, thereby unleashing new expectations of the relationship between individuals and the space of the gallery. The exhibition is accompanied by a publication (forthcoming, August 2007) that documents the artist’s work and includes contributions by REDCAT acting director and curator Clara Kim, curator and critic Adriano Pedrosa, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art curator Lynn Zelevansky.

Born in 1971 in Ribeirão Preto, Brazil, Lucas has had solo exhibitions at the Galeria Millan Antonio in São Paulo, A Gentil Carioca in Rio de Janeiro, Castelinho do Flamengo in Rio de Janeiro, Paço das Artes in São Paulo and Museu de Arte da Pampulha in Belo Horizonte. She participated in the 27th Bienal de São Paulo in 2006. This year she will be included in exhibitions at Encontro de Medellín, Colombia; the Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation, Miami; and the Tate Modern, London. Lucas received her BFA and MFA at the Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Lucas lives and works in São Paulo.

This exhibition is made possible in part by the Nimoy Foundation and Ana Sokoloff. Additional support provided by R-23.

Admission to the gallery is always free
Gallery hours: noon–6 pm or curtain, closed Mondays
Visit http://www.redcat.org or call +1.213.237.2800 for more information

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