Archive for July 5th, 2007

Project Arts Centre / Sung Hwan Kim and David Michael DiGregorio

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Project Arts Centre

Sung Hwan Kim and
David Michael DiGregorio
In the room
Exhibition until 14th July, 2007

Project Arts Centre, Dublin
39 East Essex Street
Temple Bar
Dublin 2, Ireland
(+353 1) 881 9613/14

http://www.project.ie

You see, there’s a person, and she looks like a normal person, but if she opens her mouth, she only has one tooth growing out of all of her gums. So, from the upper gum, one tooth is coming down growing into the lower gum. So when she talks, her tongue is flicking around inside the mouth but the tooth is sound proof, so nobody hears.
- from Scary Stories, In the Room

Sung Hwan Kim and David Michael DiGregorio create a world bound together by stories, performing and singing a series of scenarios and drawings in something akin to opera. The exchange between the two artists engineers an understanding of the relationship between text and lyrics, image and sound, Korea and the US, iconophilia and iconoclasm - both the fetishisation and destruction of iconic symbols. A tale is told through text, music, film and live video, as Kim and DiGregorio, with musician Byungjun, perform in a new installation for Project Arts Centre. "It is considered a major error in radio broadcasting when there is even five seconds’ silence on air." Pushing against the air, a concert with talking and images, is inspired by Byungjun’s radio show, World Music Journal, broadcast nationwide in Korea from 2004 to 2005, and was performed on the opening nights. The music itself is made with layered voice, ocarina, delay, a sampling keyboard, harmonica, kazoo, pump
organ, guitar, mallets, stretched membranous materials, air, dry-erase marker on plastic, jae-gum (Korean cymbals) and pang-eul (Korean bells).

Sung Hwan Kim is a Korean artist based in Amsterdam and finalist in the Prix de Rome; David Michael DiGregorio is an Amsterdam-based US musician recording under the name of dogr.

Click on the following link for a sound preview: http://www.project.ie/cgi-bin/eventdetail.pl?id=576

Support provided in part by DasArts, Amsterdam.
http://www.project.ie

Ongoing new productions at Project Arts Centre:

Four international artists and collaborators are currently developing new works with Project Arts Centre over the forthcoming 18 months, referencing an awareness of both the political, social and economic reality of a booming Irish economy, as well as the unique possibility of producing work within the performance and theatre spaces of the multidisciplinary institution:

Rosa Barba (Germany) & David Maljkovic (Croatia), Jeremiah Day (US/Netherlands), Lonnie van Brummelen & Siebren de Haan (Netherlands) and Aurélien Froment (France).

PHILIP, the science-fiction novel written by Heman Chong, Cosmin Costinas, Rosemary Heather, Francis McKee, David Reinfurt, Steve Rushton, Leif Magne Tangen and Mark Aerial Waller which was curated by Mai Abu ElDahab and published by Project Press in January 07, is now available in a third and increasingly more affordable edition, at http://www.lulu.com/content/571972

Project Arts Centre | Dublin | Ireland
Curated by Tessa Giblin

Please contact Publicist, Aisling McGrane aisling@project.ie for further information about all exhibitions.

For more information go to: http://www.project.ie/cgi-bin/eventdetail.pl?id=576

Two Exhibitions at Palazzo Re Rebaudengo

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo & Fondazione Edoardo Garrone

YOUNG CURATORS
RESIDENCY PROGRAMME

Two exhibitions at
Palazzo Re Rebaudengo,
Guarene d’Alba (Cuneo) – Italy
26 may - 30 September

FONDAZIONE SANDRETTO RE REBAUDENGO and FONDAZIONE EDOARDO GARRONE, with the kind support of COMPAGNIA DI SAN PAOLO is proud to present the exhibitions Iscrizioni (Inscriptions) and Laws of Relativity (La legge è relativa per tutti) for the first edition of its new annual residency programme for young curators.

ISCRIZIONI (INSCRIPTIONS)
Curated by Jimena Acosta

Artists:
Wolfgang Berkowski | Carola Bonfili | Enrica Cavarzan | Lara Favarreto | Alessandro Piangiamore | Paolo W.Tamburella

The works included in Iscrizioni address the way in which society appraises its own remains by connecting the perceived value of objects, which differ from one socioeconomic context to another, with the unplanned journey that concludes after they are discarded and subsequently reclaimed. This act of appropriation, be it a formal economic transaction (trading old footballs or buying lost luggage in an auction) or an informal and unplanned act (playing football in a public garden or marking public space as private property), embody many characteristics of the urban environment and how it relates to the perception of wealth and the symbolic significance of everyday objects. The dents and scratches on their surface as well as in the urban context, allows us to decode how they related in the past and the way in which they integrate into the value and ownership structures of today’s contemporary society.

LA LEGGE É RELATIVA PER TUTTI (LAWS OF RELATIVITY)
Curated by Anna Colin and Elena Sorokina

Artists:
Alterazioni Video | Ana Maria Bresciani | Paolo Chiasera | Claire Fontaine | Formazero | goldiechiari | Isola Art Center (organised by Bert Theis and Katia Anguelova) | Armando Lulaj | Lupo&Burtscher | Elena Nemkova | Orfeo TV-Telestreet | Paolo Pennuti (Shoggoth) with Lorenzo Pazzi and Gianluca Stazi | Annapaula Passarini | Andrea Salvino | Lorenzo Scotto di Luzio | Mario Spada | Eugenio Tibaldi | Italo Zuffi |

Laws of Relativity brings together work that reflects on the tensions between legal and illegal in Italy and abroad. The project sheds light on practices which query the way constitutional laws as well as unwritten rules function, their stability and rightfulness both on the short- and long-term. The relativity — ensuing from cultural, historical, economical, political and geographical difference — of the very notions of legality and legitimacy are being put forward for thought and comment in this exhibition. Using film, video, documentary, audio recording, photography, drawing and archival solutions, the works and projects presented — whether existing or produced specifically for this exhibition — provide different takes and strategies to address this topic and to navigate the spaces in between legal and illegal.

Some artists opt for a journalistic or sociological approach, such as Elena Nemkova, the silent interviewer of a Russian art dealer who recounts his involvement in crooked businesses up until becoming a full-time gallerist. And while Mario Spada has localised and photographed the delirious villas of detained gangsters which, following their instructions, have been burnt to prevent access, Eugenio Tibaldi has spent some seven years mapping the illegal architecture of Naples’ suburbs through primary research. Paolo Pennuti, like the aforementioned artists, approaches his topic — New Orleans only four months after being hit by Hurricane Katrina — through the documentary and act of mapping, which he then takes the freedom to reinterpret.

Detachment from the subject under scrutiny is not a rule; some artists contribute their own experience or one they have chosen to make theirs. goldiechiari have made visible some documents related to the two public prosecutor’s seizures they have been the subject of. And through their work Legal Support, Alterazioni Video have brought attention to another legal case: one resulting from the material damage demonstrators have caused during their protest in Genova in 2004. Also contesting a governmental decision deemed arbitrary, namely evicting sans-papiers squatters from a building in Rome in 2004, Formazero have been providing support of a structural and diplomatic kind to the group of people affected by this very decision. In all three cases, what is known as legal action is presented as defendable by the artists who dispute its applications.

While operating according to similar incentives — weighing the juridical against the human - some collective initiatives such as Isola Art Center or Orpheo TV-Telestreet go one step further in their attempt to bring citizens more rights than they think they have. Instituted in Milan in 2002 by critics, curators and artists, Isola Art Center is a project which acts against speculation by developers over the public space, demanding the groups’ legitimacy to co-decide on it. And following the 1970’s tradition of free radio in Italy, Orpheo TV-Telestreet exercises the Brechtian claim over media as a two-way communication apparatus. For Laws of Relativity, Isola Art Center like Orpheo TV-Telestreet presents works that characterize their approach to artistic action.

Favouring critique to action, Claire Fontaine brings light, literally, to an excess of power: that by which the plaque commemorating Giuseppe Pinelli’s death and reading "killed innocent" (written. ‘ucciso innocente’ in the original text) was replaced for a new one saying "died accidentally", following the order of the Mayor in Milan in 2006. In Flessibilita’ Negativa (2006), Annapaula Passarini also approaches questionable decisions and rules. The artist examines the precariousness of current working conditions, as observed in European industries increasingly threatened by outsourcing.

And between all the abovementioned strategies remain less tangible modes of address. Equivocal such as Italo Zuffi’s film Rural Faith (2006) (original title. Fede Rustica), whose portrayed interactions suggest uncertainty; metaphorical as in Ana Maria Bresciani’s transparent drawings alluding to surveillance, Andrea Salvino’s collection of icons of protest and power from political and cinematographic sources, or Armando Lulaj’s choice of imagery to represent the porous notions of illegal and legal in a post-communist state like Albania; finally ironical, with Lorenzo Scotto di Luzio’s Dreams and Conflicts (2003), a fake pass to access the Venice Biennale, which contests the legitimacies of the artworld or Paolo Chiasera’s myth, the Young Dictators’ Village, where aspirant but idle "famous dictators", from Idi Amin to Mao, cohabite.

Laws of Relativity will be designed by Lupo&Burtscher, also responsible for the design of the archive compiled by the curators together with Jimena Acosta during their research throughout Italy this spring.

For more information go to:

MoMA Presents Automatic Update

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
MoMA

Automatic Update
June 27 - September 3, 2007
Organized by Barbara London,
Associate Curator, Department of Media

The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street
New York, NY 10019-5497
Tel: (212) 708-9431

http://www.moma.org

Automatic Update features work drawn from technology of the last decade. Employing computers, LCD screens, DVD players, digital video, and user-activated components, works reflect contemporary artists trying their hands at a range of newly invented art forms. Cory Arcangel, Xu Bing, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Jennifer and Kevin McCoy, and Paul Pfeiffer make comical and sometimes absurd use of recent technologies while offering lighthearted critiques of today’s society.

In the 1990s, artists worked in a range of newly invented art forms, often switching from analog to digital equipment as the technology evolved. They built interactive installations and electronic publishing networks, and they made art for the Internet. Technology advanced so quickly that in some cases the platform upon which an art form depended would disappear while a work was being made. By the year 2000, this quasi-revolutionary aura had dissipated, and media art had settled into the mainstream.

Ms. London says, "The wildness of the dot-com era infused media art with a heady energy. Automatic Update is about the vision of art drawn from technology of the last decade. The show features the work of hackers, programmers, and tinkerer-revisionists from North America, Europe, and Asia."

The exhibition is on view from June 27 through September 3, 2007, in The Yoshiko and Akio Morita Gallery on the second floor, and is accompanied by a series of related films and videos that will be screened in The Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters from July 7 through September 2, 2007.

EXHIBITION WEB SITE:

Visit http://www.moma.org/automaticupdate for descriptions of works in the exhibition, interviews with the artists, and information about the film program. Designed by Matt Owens of Volumeone, New York, the site also links to an Automatic Update page at http://del.icio.us/Automatic_Update where visitors may view and share bookmarks pertaining to the show.

PUBLIC PROGRAMS:

Films and Videos for Automatic Update
The Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters, The Museum of Modern Art
July 7 - September 2, 2007

Video artists and film directors, including Laurie Anderson, Pierre Huyghe, Miranda July, Pipilotti Rist, David Cronenberg and Darren Aronofsky, tackle issues of media and technology in the works in this ongoing screening program. Organized by Barbara London with Hanne Mugaas.

For a complete screening schedule, visit MoMA’s Web site at:
http://www.moma.org/exhibitions/film_exhibitions.php?id=5228&ref=calendar

PopRally: Paper Rad
The Museum of Modern Art
July 24, 8:00 - 11:00 p.m.

PopRally–a program of events at MoMA and P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center for young New Yorkers–presents an evening of live performances, art, and music with Paper Rad, featuring Cory Arcangel. Paper Rad (Jessica Ciocci, Jacob Ciocci, and Ben Jones) playfully combines found TV and Internet footage with original animations, creating utopian, rainbow-filled environments that elicit nostalgia for the throwaway technology and images permeating the last two decades.

Tickets for this event will be available two weeks in advance. Guests will be invited to a special after-hours viewing of the exhibition. For more information or to join the PopRally mailing list, visit http://moma.org/calendar/poprally.

For press inquiries, please contact Meg Blackburn at 212/708-9757 or at meg_blackburn@moma.org

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