Archive for July 18th, 2007

Nineteen Going on Twenty at Contemporary Museum, Honolulu

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu

Nineteen Going on Twenty:
Recent Acquisitions from the Collection of
The Contemporary Museum
May 19, 2007 through August 12, 2007

The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu
2411 Makiki Heights Drive
Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822
Tuesday through Saturday 10am-4pm,
Sunday noon-4pm

http://www.tcmhi.org

Approaching its 20th anniversary next year, The Contemporary Museum will showcase the newest additions to its permanent collection with the exhibition, Nineteen Going on Twenty.

The approximately 70 works in the exhibition, most of which have not been shown previously at TCM, include some of the most important pieces to be added to the collection since the museum opened in October 1988. Purchased with donated funds or acquired as gifts, works by Christo, Jennifer Bartlett, Joseph Cornell, Sam Francis, David Smith and Georgia O’Keeffe are among the new acquisitions.

Nineteen Going on Twenty is the first in a series of events anticipating the museums planned expansion and historic building restoration. It is also a preview of the kinds of exhibitions the expansion will make possible; slated to open in 2009, new galleries will house an ongoing, rotating exhibition of works from the TCM permanent collection. These 3000 works - paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, ceramics, wood, glass, metal and fiber objects, as well as video works - currently remain largely unseen due to lack of exhibition space.

About Nineteen Going on Twenty
Honolulu collector Betty Sterling bequeathed several works that are included in this exhibition. Foremost is Sam Francis’ early 1950s painting Black and Red, in which the artist filled the canvas with veils of color organized into amorphous cell-like forms. Works by David Smith, Herbert Ferber, Pat Steir, Christo, Robert Motherwell, and Donald Sultan are also in the Sterling bequest.

Honolulu collectors Jay and Wallette Shidler have donated another important Sam Francis painting, a 1968 work from the artist’s Edge Paintings series in which Francis moved all color and gesture to the perimeter of the canvas, leaving a field of expansive whiteness filling most of the composition’s space. This gift is a wonderful complement to the Francis painting in the Sterling bequest, allowing TCM to show an artist’s development over 15 years in two major paintings. Other gifts from the Shidlers include two collages by Joseph Cornell from his Penny Arcade series, bringing TCM’s Cornell holdings to 27 works, and a gouache by Tom Wesselman.

An anonymous donor has contributed two important works, a large photograph by Thomas Ruff from his Substrat series of brightly-colored amorphous abstractions, representing the first work by the contemporary German school of photographers to enter the collection; and a sculpture from her Internal DupliCity series by Maria Elena Gonzalez, whose work Nani’s House was installed on TCM’s lawn last year as part of the museum’s Catalyst program.

Also on view in the exhibition are major works by Robert Hudson, Jose Bedia, and Alexis Smith donated by Cade and Waileia Roster; Georgia O’Keeffe’s charcoal on paper Drawing II, a gift from The Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation; Jennifer Bartlett’s monumental painting and sculpture work House with Open Door given by Sharon and Thurston Twigg-Smith; two self-portrait works by Robert Arneson donated by Dr. Ed and Jeannine E. Bernauer, and Arneson’s study drawing for Forged Earth, a gift from Sandra Shannonhouse, being shown with the final ceramic sculpture which is on loan from a private collection.

TCM’s collection of ceramics, wood and metal has been enhanced by several works which will also be on view: Beverly Mayeri’s ceramic sculpture The Toddler, a gift of the Peter G. Drewliner Trust in honor of Charles E. Higa; Nicholas Arroyave-Portela’s ceramic Tall Zig Zag Form and Robert Butts’ turned milo wood Tall Vessel, both gifts from Helen Drutt English; Michelle Holzapfel’s carved wood Black and White Bowl #2, purchased with funds donated by the Greenberg Foundation and members of the Renwick Alliance; and Junko Mori’s forged steel Propagation Project, purchased in memory of Dr. Alan Pavel with funds donated by his friends and family.

The exhibition ends with a group of TCM’s acquisitions of works by emerging artists. Tam van Tran’s Vegetarian Summer, painted in spirulina and chlorophyll on paper, and Jaume Plensa’s mixed-media work on paper Father, Mother, Brother… were both purchased with funds given by the Toshiko Takaezu Foundation; and Yuri Masnyj’s charcoal drawing Undertow, was a gift from Stephen and Suzanne Diamond.

Nineteen Going on Twenty is organized by the The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu.

About THE CONTEMPORARY MUSEUM
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, is the only museum in the state of Hawai’i devoted exclusively to contemporary art. TCM provides an accessible forum for provocative, dynamic forms of visual art, offering interaction with art and artists in a unique Island environment. TCM presents its innovative exhibition and education programs at two venues: in residential Honolulu at the historic Spalding house, and downtown at First Hawaiian Center.

Discounted admission to Seniors and Students, Free to children 12 and under;
Free to the public on the third Thursday of each month.
Closed Mondays and Major Holidays.

The Contemporary Museum at First Hawaiian Center
999 Bishop Street, Honolulu, Hawaii 96813
Free. Monday - Thursday 8:30am-4pm, Friday 8:30am-6pm
validated parking for museum members

Information: (808) 526-1322 / http://www.tcmhi.org
24 hour recorded message: (808) 526-0232

MEDIA CONTACT:
Pualana Lemelle, PR Officer
The Contemporary Museum
(808) 237-5235 OFFICE
(808) 536-5973 FAX
plemelle@tcmhi.org

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

Museum of Contemporary Art Leipzig Presents Make Death Listen

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Museum of Contemporary Art Leipzig

MAKE DEATH LISTEN
Solo Exhibition by MARKUS MUNTEAN & ADI ROSENBLUM
Leipzig, 14-Jul-07 to 07-Oct-07
Opening on 13-Jul-07, 7pm
Curated by Ilina Koralova and
Barbara Steiner

MUSEUM OF
CONTEMPORARY ART LEIPZIG
Karl-Tauchnitz-Stra ße 9 + 11
D-04107 Leipzig
Telephone: +49.341.140 81 0
Fax: +49.341.140 81 11
Tuesday through Sunday:
12 noon - 7pm
office@gfzk.de

http://www.gfzk.de

The Museum for Contemporary Art in Leipzig presents the first major solo exhibition in Germany by Markus Muntean & Adi Rosenblum.

An (almost empty) disco, a garage, a heap of rubbish and a car park provide the backdrops to the search for the true meaning of one’s own existence, indeed, for affirmation that one exists at all. Here we see the ruins of an affluent society built on the cornerstones of shopping, cars, consumerism, fun and leisure that absorbs and regards every attempt at expressing genuine feelings, authenticity and sincerity, solely in terms of its economic potential.

The compositions adopted by Muntean & Rosenblum in their large-scale, figurative paintings, drawings and films are familiar from art history. Gestures, poses and colours are used dramatically to heighten emotions. Such formulaic pathos is employed today by the advertising industry to market products and services (even) more effectively. These works manage to establish a connection between the artistic traditions of past centuries and the present day, dominated by the mass media. They explore the different cultural codes, social conventions and ideals of beauty that conflict with our longing to be individual but simultaneously influence how we construct our identities. The artists make conscious use of this contradiction and reject the claim for a clear border between authenticity and artifice, between true emotions and the deliberate use of contrived, emotive language.

The exhibition has been organised in cooperation with MUSAC, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León in Spain and in collaboration with the Forum zeitgenössischer Musik/Thomas Heyde, Leipzig and Lena Seik/Alexandra Kühnert (GfZK for You)

The accompanying catalogue was published by JRP/Ringier, Zurich in cooperation with MUSAC, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y Léon.

Markus Muntean, born 1962 in Graz (Austria) / Adi Rosenblum, born 1962 in Haifa (Israel). Collaboration since 1992. Live and work in Vienna and London

Solo exhibitions (selected): Team Gallery, New York, 2007 — MUSAC, León; MAK, Vienna; Kunsthalle Budapest, Budapest, 2006 — Maureen Paley, London; Arndt & Partner, Berlin, 2005 — Tate Birtain, London; Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourn, 2004 — De Appel, Amsterdam; Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz, 2002 — SECESSION, Vienna; Kunsthaus Glarus, Glarus, 2000 — Georg Kargl, Vienna; Chicago Project Room, Chicago, 1999

Group exhibitions (selected): The Triumph of Painting V, Saachi Gallery London, 2007 — ARS 06, Museum of Contemporary Art KIASMA, Helsinki; Zurück zur Figur. Malereie der Gegenwart, Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, Munich, 2006 — Körper Sprachen, Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg; Postmediale Kondition, Neue Galerie, Graz, 2005 — 26. Bienal São Paulo, São Paulo; New Blood, Saatchi Gallery London; Seven Sins, MUSEION - Museum of modern and contemporary art, Bozen, 2004 — New Space! Group Show!, Gallerie Franco Noero, Turin; Permanent 04, Sammlung Essl, Klosterneuburg; Ausser Atem - Fokus österreichische Malerei, Kunstverein Wiesbaden, 2003 — The Gallery Show, Royal Academy, London, 2002

Supported by Kulturstiftung des Freistaates Sachsen, Bundeskanzleramt:Kunst, Wien, and Hotel Marriott Leipzig.

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

Spike Summer Issue Out Now

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Spike — The International Art Magazine

New: spike editions
Reaching the Mythical Masses
01: Gerwald Rockenschaub
02: Cory Arcangel
03: Kendell Geers

Spike art quarterly
Kaiserstraße 113115
1070 Vienna, Austria
Tel.: +43 1 360 85 201
editionen@spikeart.at
spike@spikeart.at

http://www.spikeart.at

GERMAN / ENGLISH:

ARTISTS TALK
TOBIAS REHBERGER and FRANCESCO VEZZOLI talking about their latest film productions On Otto and Democrazy.

ESSAY
Translation and Emancipation. Daniel Baumann on Outsider Art.

PORTRAITS
NANCY SPERO The American artist talking about violence and the aspect of repetition in her work. A telephone interview with Hans Ulrich Obrist.

MARIO GARCÍA TORRES History and reconstruction. Magali Arriola on the young Mexican artist.

HERBERT BRANDL The Austrian painter is this year’s representative at the Venice Biennale. In conversation with Rita Vitorelli.

KENDELL GEERS On the encoded strategies of revolution in the work of the South African artist. By Ines Gebetsroither

ART GUIDE: HELSINKI
After the crisis of the 1990s, Helsinki has developed into the hip cultural capital of north-eastern Europe. By Mika Hannula

ARTIST’S FAVOURITES
OLEG KULIK: Viktor Alimpiev, Dmitrij Bulnygin, Alla Esipovic, Irina Korina and Sinij sup

FILM Gilles Deleuze in the Mandrake Bar, Los Angeles. By Chris Kraus

MUSIC The German band Fehlfarben. By Raimar Stange

REVIEWS from Mexico, the UK, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, France and the USA, including "Otra de vaqueros" (German/Engl.), Karen Kilimnik (German/Engl.), "Slash Fiction" (German/Engl.), Deimantas Narkevicius, Jannis Varelas, Franz West, Rodney Graham, "Tension, Sex, Despair", "Elastic Taboos", "futuresystems", fabrics interseason; "State of Work", Hilary Lloyd, Simon Dybbroe Moller, "Fassbinder: Berlin Alexanderplatz", "OP ART", "KölnShow2", Museum of Noise, Gerard Byrne, Daniel Richter, Jean-Frédéric Schnyder, Chloe Piene, John Tremblay, Adam Putnam

GERMAN:

COLLECTIONS The Polish collector Grazyna Kulczyk. By Goschka Gawlik
IN BERLIN by Raimar Stange
IN WIEN by Ursula Maria Probst
SEDUCTIONS by Lara Almarcegui, Stefan Sandner, Jesko Fezer, Mika Hannula, Elisabeth Penker
ME AND MY ASS PONY by Fritz Ostermayer

Visit our Art Guide Eastern Europe (Moscow, Odessa, Kosovo, Sarajevo, Prague, Belgrade, …) at http://www.spikeart.at

For more information go to: http://www.spikeart.at