Archive for August 31st, 2007

DESTE Foundation Presents Fractured Figure

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
DESTE Foundation

Fractured Figure
Works from the Dakis Joannou Collection

An exhibition organized by the DESTE Foundation
Opening: September 5, 2007, 20.00
On view: September 6, 2007 - March 29, 2008

DESTE
Em. PAPPA & FILELLINON 11
street, Nea Ionia
Athens 142 34, Greece

http://www.deste.gr

Opening hours:
September 6, 2007 to September 30, 2007: Monday to Saturday, 12:00 - 20:00
October 2, 2007 to March 29, 2008 : Thursday to Saturday, 12:00 - 20:00

Participating Artists:
Pawel Althamer, David Altmejd, Janine Antoni, assume vivid astro focus, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Ashley Bickerton, John Bock, Maurizio Cattelan, Paul Chan, Dan Colen, George Condo, Nigel Cooke, Roberto Cuoghi, Folkert De Jong, Nathalie Djurberg, Anastasia Douka, Haris Epaminonda, Urs Fischer, Barnaby Furnas, Robert Gober, Matt Greene, Tim Hawkinson, Adam Helms, Elliott Hundley, Chris Johanson, Martin Kippenberger, Terence Koh , Jeff Koons, Nate Lowman, Mark Manders, Paul McCarthy, Matthew Monahan, Takeshi Murata, Wangechi Mutu, Tim Noble & Sue Webster, Cady Noland, Chris Ofili, Poka-Yio, Richard Prince,Georgia Sagri, Aurel Schmidt, Gregor Schneider, Tino Sehgal, Dana Schutz, Kiki Smith, Christiana Soulou, Francine Spiegel, Andro Wekua, Ralf Ziervogel

Fractured Figure - Works from the Dakis Joannou Collection is the new Deste Foundation project that reflects, with its concept, scope and synergies, both, the way an increasing number of artists are viewing the human form and the way that very different but equally legitimate realities comprise our experience of the world.

The exhibition is curated by Jeffrey Deitch with Massimiliano Gioni as curatorial advisor. Exhibition design by Jeffrey Deitch, Massimiliano Gioni and Dakis Joannou. Nadja Argyropoulou is the project coordinator. A book conceived and designed by Urs Fischer & Cassandra MacLeod accompanies the exhibition. Two other publications are created as part of the exhibition’s project-like character: Christiana Soulou’s numbered edition, titled Fractures and Roberto Cuoghi’s flip book, titled DOADAKIS.

As, the exhibition’s curator, Jeffrey Deitch notes, "if every period in art can be characterized by an approach to figuration that reflects the prevailing sense of the human condition, Fractured Figure represents a sense of cultural dysphoria, a state of dissatisfaction and anxiety, the opposite of euphoria. The new figural form is ruptured and deteriorating. It is fragile, just like real people… A search for truth, after years of being derided as an anachronistic and misguided pursuit in a world where there is no absolute truth, might actually be coming back to art. This truth is a different kind of truth, however. It is fragmented, complicated, and multi-sided, not absolute. … The Fractured Figure bears artistic witness to a fractured world and calls for a renewed embrace of humanity".

At the exhibition’s opening on September 5, assume vivid astro focus will be doing a DJ set with VJing provided by avaf long time collaborator, Honeygun Labs (bec).

Exhibition credits also include: Cecilia Alemani: editorial coordinator, Ali Subotnick: curatorial advisor,
Marina Vranopoulou: assistant project coordinator, Eugenia Stamatopoulou: installation manager,
Natasha Polymeropoulos: book and catalogue copy editor, Stavroula Tseva: administration.

Special thanks are due to Maurizio Cattelan for his advice and inspiration.

Yorgos Tzirtzilakis, advisor to DESTE and Xenia Kalpaktsoglou, director of DESTE
have contributed to the project’s realization.

For more information contact: Stavroula Tseva , Marina Vranopoulou, E: info@deste.gr

DESTE Foundation for Contemporary Art: T: + 30 210 2758490, F: + 30 210 2754862 E: info@deste.gr

For more information go to: http://www.deste.gr

Fall/Winter 2007-08 Exhibitions at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu

Fall/Winter 2007-08 Exhibitions at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu

Phantasmagoria: Specters of Absence
September 1 - November 25, 2007

Phantasmagoria: Specters of Absence, brings together 12 international artists–Christian Boltanski, Jim Campbell, Michel Delacroix, Laurent Grasso, Jeppe Hein, William Kentridge, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Teresa Margolles, Oscar Muñoz, Julie Nord, Rosângela Rennó, and Regina Silveira–who use ephemeral means in their work such as fog, reflection, shadows, and vapors. The exhibition title refers to 18th- and 19th-century entertainments created by "magic lanterns" and rear-screen shadow projections. These precursors of the modern film projector were used to stage dancing specters and other frightening theatrical effects for their audiences. The exhibition draws on this rich theatrical tradition to reframe questions of absence and loss, death and the afterlife around contemporary issues.

The shadow–literally, the absence of light–represents something that is beyond the object yet inseparable from it. In many of the works included in Phantasmagoria, shadows are used to allude to death, the obscure, and the unnamable, and to construct allegories of loss and disappearance. In several of these pieces, the artists evoke performances of shadow theater, as in the work by South African artist William Kentridge, and in French artist Christian Boltanski’s shadows from cut-tin puppets, recalling imagery from the carnival as well as figurines used to celebrate the Mexican Day of the Dead.

Mist, breath, and fog are often associated with mystery; in their double status as perceptible yet almost nonexistent phenomena, they suggest evanescence or absence. In Brazilian artist Rosângela Rennó’s arresting installation Experiencing Cinema, fog is employed as a curtain onto which family photos are projected, addressing the fleeting nature of memories and the images that attempt to record them. Throughout the installations presented in the exhibition, artists’ use of shadows and/or actual fog and mist evokes the alluring enigma and magic of Phantasmagoria.

Phantasmagoria: Specters of Absence is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with a text by exhibition curator José Roca of the Luis Ángel Arango Library, Bogotá, Colombia.

Phantasmagoria: Specters of Absence is a traveling exhibition co-organized by iCI (Independent Curators International), New York, and the Museo de Arte del Banco de la República, Bogotá, Colombia, and circulated by iCI. The guest curator for the exhibition is José Roca. The exhibition, tour, and catalogue are made possible, in part, by the iCI Exhibition Partners and the iCI independents. The presentation at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu is made possible in part by in-kind support for the exhibition in Honolulu has been provided by Horizon Lines, LLC, Terisol, Inc., and Sony Hawaii.

Satashi Ohno: Prism Violet
September 1 - November 25, 2007

The Contemporary Museum presents the first solo museum exhibition of Japanese artist, Satoshi Ohno (born 1980). Known for his paintings and drawings, Ohno often presents his works as an installation incorporating found objects and natural materials.

Elements of nature are prominent in Ohno’s work. He grew up in Gifu Prefecture and moved to Tokyo to study at Tokyo Zokei University. During the seven years he lived in Tokyo, Ohno made infrequent forays outside the city into natural settings that made him conscious of the different physical and emotional reactions we experience in each environment. "I felt as if I were melting into nature and that my footing on the ground gave me a sensation linked to an inner feeling that I did not experience in the city… I realized that my footing on concrete was absolutely devoid of those feelings I had in nature." Images of cedar trees recur in Ohno’s paintings and drawings, further symbolizing the artist’s desire to be connected to nature. For Ohno the images of the trees became a kind of self-portraiture that transformed into more literal self-portraits in other works in which his head and long, cascading hair evoke the shape of the trees. The centerpieces of Ohno’s new insta
llation are two towering mountain forms made of carpet over wooden structures. The artist says the mountains make reference to the volcanoes in Hawai’i, his way of paying tribute to the landscape of the place in which he created this exhibition.

The inspiration for Ohno’s TCM installation, Prism Violet, came from a simple observation: the attraction of insects to light in the darkness of night. It’s an instinctive, compulsive behavior that in consequence may perish from heat or become the victims of waiting predators that gather near light sources. Ohno notes that humans are also drawn to light — specifically to the light refractive qualities of prisms and the sparkle of diamonds, which in their man-made faceted forms are like prisms. Prisms bend and separate light into color spectrums, and Ohno sees viewers’ experience of his installations functioning in a similar way. As people move in and through his environments they see and experience things from different perspectives. The experience is dynamic, ever changing, as positions and relationships to objects change. Ohno wants viewers to sense physical and emotional shifts as they circulate among and within his works, just as he experienced the effects of time spent
in the urban confines of Tokyo streets or the rustic openness of forest paths.

Satoshi Ohno: Prism Violet was organized by The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, and curated by Associate Director/Chief Curator James Jensen. The exhibition is endorsed by the Consulate General of Japan in Honolulu.

On the Beach: Photographs by Richard Misrach
December 15, 2007 - March 2, 2008

Richard Misrach, renowned color photographer of the desert, has turned his eye and his camera to water. In the past five years, Misrach has been working on a series of pictures of beaches, the ocean, sunbathers, and swimmers, shot from above. Dramatically scaled, with some being as large as 6 x 10 feet, the photographs envelop the viewer with a strangely disorienting view. The viewer is confronted with details of the people in the pictures, but is also made to contemplate the inconsequential place of humankind on the vast landscape of the earth’s beaches and waters. Stirred by the events of September 11, 2001, Misrach’s title On the Beach references Nevil Shute’s Cold War novel about nuclear holocaust.

A large-format artist’s book, replete with lush reproductions of the photographs, will
accompany the exhibition.

On the Beach: Photographs by Richard Misrach was initiated by the Art Institute of Chicago. The presentation of the exhibition at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, is made possible in part by Allure Waikiki, and by in-kind support provided by Horizon Lines, LLC.

About THE CONTEMPORARY MUSEUM
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, is the only Hawai’i museum devoted exclusively to contemporary art. Exciting and provocative exhibitions and educational programs are presented in two distinctive Hawai’i venues: the primary campus at the intimate and historic 4-acre Cooke-Spalding house and gardens in residential Makiki Heights, and the innovative First Hawaiian Center in downtown Honolulu.

The Contemporary Museum
2411 Makiki Heights Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822

Tuesday through Saturday 10am-4pm, Sunday noon-4pm
Free to the public on the third Thursday of each month.
Closed Mondays and Major Holidays.

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

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

Image captions from left to right:

Rosângela Rennó, Experiencing Cinema, detail, 2004
DVD, fog machine, photographic projection on smoke wall
Dimensions variable
Courtesy Galeria Vermelho, São Paulo

Satoshi Ohno, Prism, 2007
oil, watercolor, ink on canvas mounted on board
62 5/8 x 71 1/4 inches
Private collection, courtesy Tomio Koyama Gallery, Tokyo
photo by Shigeo Nutou, image Copyright Satoshi Ohno

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

Fotomuseum Winterthur Presents NeoRealismo

Friday, August 31st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Fotomuseum Winterthur

NeoRealismo
Italy’s New Image 1932-1960
1 September to 18 November 2007

Fotomuseum Winterthur
Grüzenstrasse 44+45
CH-8400 Winterthur (Zurich)
Switzerland
Phone: +41 52 234 10 60
Fax. +41 52 233 60 97
Opening hours: Tue - Sun 11am - 6pm,
Wed 11am - 8pm, closed on Mondays

http://www.fotomuseum.ch

NeoRealismo — Italy’s New Image 1932-1960

Neorealism, mainly associated with the films by Visconti, De Sica and Rossellini, was a heartfelt artistic response to the transformation of Italy in the course of the twentieth century. With the demise of Fascism, which had harnessed the mass media of photography and film for its own purposes and moulded a new aesthetic of reality, Neorealism surged to the fore. The newfound freedom of opinion and the need to forge a new Italian identity fuelled a feverish interest in documenting reality and exploring what it meant to be Italian. One after another, illustrated magazines were launched and photographic-ethnographic field studies undertaken on life in the country’s remote communities. Society needed photographs that captured all aspects of life in every situation.

The exhibition and accompanying publication bring together some 250 photographs by 75 different photographers, making this the first major in-depth presentation of photographic Neorealism. Six authors chart the development of Neorealism from its inception to the late 1950s, shedding light on the reciprocal influences of photography, film and literature.

The exhibition is curated by Enrica Viganò. It has been organised in collaboration with SEPIF s.a.s. (Studi e Progetti in Fotografia), Turin, and La Fábrica, Madrid.

Main sponsor of the exhibition and the book: UBS AG
With additional support by Istituto Italiano di Cultura, Zurich.

For more information on the exhibition "NeoRealismo" please visit: http://www.fotomuseum.ch/PRESS.3.0.html?&L=1

Accompanying programme to the exhibition "NeoRealismo":
At the same time, film screenings and literary events will be held, providing a more in-depth understanding of the Neorealist movement. Further details: http://www.fotomuseum.ch/EVENTS.30.0.html?&L=1

Publication: "NeoRealismo — Die neue Fotografie in Italien 1932-1960". Ed. Enrica Viganò, published at Fotomuseum Winterthur and Christoph Merian Verlag. With texts by Enrica Viganò, Giuseppe Pinna, Gian Piero Brunetta and Bruno Falcetto, and an extensive lexicon put together by Enrico Manfredini and a chronology by Fabio Amodeo. 340 pages, 250 Duplex-illustrations of 75 photographers, format 24,5 x 30 cm, hardcover, bound. Price: CHF 69.-

Still on display until 14 October 2007 (Collection):
Towards a New Ease - Set 4 from the Collection of the Fotomuseum Winterthur
http://www.fotomuseum.ch/TOWARDS_A_NEW_EASE.289.0.html?&L=1

From 27 October 2007 to 10 February 2008 (Collection):
Fantastic Postcards — The Playful Element of Photography in the Medium of the Postcard

For more information go to: http://www.fotomuseum.ch