August 22nd, 2007

Kienholz, Irwin, Turrell, and more–on view at LACMA

Artipedia - Arts News
LACMA

LACMA’S GREATEST HITS
OF THE 60s AND 70s
Permanent Collection
Exhibition Features
Southern California Art that
Reflects an Era
August 19, 2007 through
March 30, 2008

Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles CA 90036
Tel. 323-857-6000
323-857-0098 (TDD)

http://www.lacma.org

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) presents SoCal: Southern California Art of the 1960s and 70s from LACMA’s Collection, an exhibition that explores the myth of California– and particularly of Southern California–that has long loomed large in the modern psyche. Portrayed in the early years of the twentieth century as the land of gold and sunshine, California was understood in the popular imagination in more nuanced terms by the mid-twentieth century. Images of both the utopian and the dystopian took shape in the vision of artists working in the 1960s and 70s in Southern California, emerging on the one hand in the sleek, elegant, at times even transcendental works of the so-called "light and space" and "finish fetish" artists and on the other hand in the gritty, even tawdry imagery and materials of assemblage and California pop art. SoCal, on view August 19, 2007 through March 30, 2008, will examine these dualities and their reverberations into
the 1980s and 1990s.

With approximately fifty objects, SoCal features a wide range of works by Robert Irwin, from oil paintings made in the early 1960s to an ethereal acrylic column and disk from the end of the decade that incorporates light and shadow into its essence. A room-sized installation by Doug Wheeler offers an experiential environment in which light takes on a three-dimensional and simultaneously otherworldly existence. The polished polyester geometries of John McCracken, the plexiglas relief sculpture of Craig Kauffman, the cast resin objects of Peter Alexander, and the coated glass creations of Larry Bell all owe a debt to the technological innovations of the Southern California aerospace industry, considered at mid-century to be a harbinger of possibility and plenitude. Billy Al Bengston’s sleek polyester and resin paintings on aluminum and Alexander’s and McCracken’s sculptures draw inspiration from another southern California mainstay–car and surf culture.

In counterpoint, the found objects and detritus that make up the assemblages of artists such as Ed Kienholz, George Herms, Tony Berlant, Michael McMillen, and Gordon Wagner speak of an entirely different world. The funky, in-your-face energy of these sculptures achieves more recent echo in works by Betye Saar, Alexis Smith, and John Outterbridge, which also reference the increasingly multifaceted and culturally diverse southern California of the 1980s and 90s. Imagery from postcards and consumer culture also finds its way into the exhibition via paintings and sculptures by Llyn Foulkes, Joe Goode, and others.

While much of the work produced in southern California during this period was initially considered to be regional, in recent years it has gained international stature, due in large part to such exhibitions as Sunshine & Noir (The Louisiana Museum, Humlebaeck, Denmark, 1997) and Los Angeles 1955-1985 (Centre Pompidou, Paris, 2006). Now, thanks to a concerted effort in the 1960s and 70s to acquire the work of Los Angeles artists, which continues today, LACMA proudly presents its own collection, especially rich in these highly-regarded holdings.

Image credit:
Edward Kienholz (1927-1994), Back Seat Dodge ‘38, 1964, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, purchased with funds provided by the Art Museum Council Fund, Copyright: Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz, photo 2007 Museum Associates/LACMA

Larry Bell, Cube, 1966, vacuum coated glass, Gift of the Frederick R. Weisman Company, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Art Museum Council Fund, photo Copyright: 2007 Museum Associates/LACMA

This exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. It was made possible in part by Bank of America.

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

August 22nd, 2007

Hiraki Sawa at the CHISENHALE GALLERY

Artipedia - Arts News
CHISENHALE GALLERY

Hiraki Sawa
Hako

PREVIEW: TUESDAY 4 SEPTEMBER 2007, 6:30 - 8:30PM
DATES: 5 SEPTEMBER - 14 OCTOBER 2007
OPENING TIMES: WEDNESDAY - SUNDAY, 1 - 6PM
THURSDAYS 6 SEPTEMBER & 4 OCTOBER, 1 - 9PM

Hiraki Sawa first gained attention in the UK through East International and New Contemporaries in 2002. For his first solo exhibition in a London public gallery, Sawa has created a newly commissioned multi-screen video with a soundtrack produced by Takeshi Nishimoto and edited by Dale Berning. Hako comprises six videos with subtle digital animation depicting extraordinary transformations of landscapes, a nuclear powerstation, a Shinto monastery and constructed model interiors of rooms and corridors.

Hako’s development began with Sawa’s interest in a Victorian doll’s house and box garden therapies. In this form of treatment a doctor gives a patient an empty wooden box along with a set of miniature objects. Each of these objects is selected for its symbolic meaning, as determined by the doctor. The patient is then asked to furnish the box with these elements, to create his or her personal garden, which the doctor then analyses. In both the box garden and Sawa’s doll’s house there is a controlled structure where rules and selected elements allow improvisation and play to reveal unconscious processes.

Similarly the six scenes and events in Hako are charged with psychological and mythological aspects as they shift between fantasy and reality. In these evocative interrelated films, fireworks explode over a Japanese nuclear powerstation set dramatically at the ocean’s edge, birds flock around warm churning water pumped into the sea at Dungeness, a miniature toy clock is animated to keep real world time, a carefully cultivated forest surrounding a Shinto monastery is shown as the light shifts, and romantic land and seascapes morph into one another.

Hiraki Sawa received an MFA in Sculpture at the Slade School of Fine Art, London in 2003. He has a forthcoming solo exhibition at Centro de Arte de Caja (CAB) in Burgos, Spain. Previous solo exhibitions include First Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville, USA; Aichi Arts Centre in Aichi, Japan; National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia and Firstsite in Colchester, UK. His work was also shown in Around the World in Eighty Days, a joint exhibition between South London Gallery and ICA in London in 2006. Hiraki Sawa was born in Japan in 1977. He lives and works in London and is represented by James Cohan Gallery, New York and Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo.

This exhibition is a collaboration between Chisenhale Gallery and Centro de Arte de Caja (CAB) in Burgos, Spain. It is accompanied by a full colour catalogue with an introduction by Simon Wallis, Director of Chisenhale Gallery and an essay by Jennifer Thatcher, Director of Talks, ICA.

CONTACT CHISENHALE GALLERY FOR CV, HIGH RES IMAGES OR FURTHER INFORMATION
CHISENHALE GALLERY, 64 CHISENHALE ROAD, LONDON E3 5QZ
T 00 44 +(0)20 8981 4518 / F 00 44 +(0)20 8980 7169
E press@chisenhale.org.uk / W http://www.chisenhale.org.uk

For more information go to: http://www.chisenhale.org.uk

August 22nd, 2007

Stefano Arienti at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Artipedia - Arts News
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Stefano Arienti: The Asian Shore
June 29 - October 14, 2007

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
280 The Fenway, Boston, MA USA
Open Tues - Sun, 11am - 4:45pm
(001) 617 278 5165

http://www.gardnermuseum.org

Stefano Arienti: The Asian Shore is a contemporary installation by the Artist-in-Residence that brings together drawings, photocopies, a range of rugs, and a rarely viewed set of XVII-century Japanese sliding doors from the Gardner Museum’s collection. These objects and drawings are positioned in a way to involve the viewer in an intimate and sensual encounter with art. The exhibition is a result of an autonomous investigation by the artist into the museum’s Asian collection and archives.

The Asian Shore is also the title of a new book by Stefano Arienti devoted to drawing and the artist’s abiding relationship with the material of images, documented by works from his career dating back to 1987. It will be released in the Fall and is published by Edizioni Charta on the occasion of the
Gardner exhibition.

Stefano Arienti (b.1961), a leading mid-career Italian artist, was an Artist-in-Residence at the Gardner Museum in 2004. He has exhibited widely since his first solo show at Studio Corrado Levi in 1986 and currently shows with Studio Guenzani, Milan and the Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York. Arienti lives and works in Milan.

Friday, June 29, 1:30pm: A conversation with the Artist Stefano Arienti and Pieranna Cavalchini, Curator of Contemporary Art, Gardner Museum

Thursday, September 27, 6:30pm: Tourist and Collector: Isabella Stewart Gardner’s Passion For Asia. Nuriko Murai, Professor at Temple University, Tokyo and Gardner Museum Curator of the Collection Alan Chong discuss Isabella’s Asian collection and travels.

Exhibition Media Sponsors: WBUR 90.9FM and Boston’s Weekly Dig

The 2007 Artist-in-Residence program is made possible, in part, by the Nimoy Foundation and generous individuals. The Gardner Museum receives support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

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

August 21st, 2007

Wattis Presents Americana: 50 States, 50 Months, 50 Exhibitions

Artipedia - Arts News
CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts

AMERICANA:
50 STATES, 50 MONTHS, 50 EXHIBITIONS
September 5, 2007 - May 31, 2012

CCA Wattis Institute for
Contemporary Arts
California College of the Arts
1111 Eighth Street
San Francisco CA 94107
T: 415.551.9210

http://www.wattis.org

"The United States themselves are essentially the greatest poem."

August 21st, 2007

Portland Art Focus 2007: The World is Coming to Portland

Artipedia - Arts News
Portland Art Focus 2007

Portland Art Focus
SEPTEMBER 2007

Experience international artists, adventurous curators and cutting-edge performances.

The world is coming to Portland.
You should too.

http://www.portlandartfocus.net

PICA Presents The 2007 Time-Based Art Festival
An annual convergence of contemporary performance, dance, music, new media and visual arts projects in Portland, Oregon, USA. Now in its fifth year, TBA:07 is presented from September 6-16, with visual art installations running until October 6, 2007. The TBA Festival examines and celebrates every form of contemporary art and is the only festival of its kind in North America.

Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA)
Committed to presenting diverse works by artists in various disciplines from all over the
world since 1995.

Museum of Contemporary Craft
CRAFT IN AMERICA: Expanding Traditions
Through September 23

The inaugural exhibition at the Museum’s expansive new downtown location surveys the storied evolution of the American craft movement since the Industrial Revolution. CRAFT IN AMERICA: Expanding Traditions recognizes many of the significant social, cultural, political and artistic contributions that have guided the development of craft across the country.

Hoffman Gallery
Oregon College of Art and Craft
Craft Biennial: A Review of Northwest Art and Craft
August 2 - September 27

Featuring work by more than 60 artists, this juried exhibition examines the state of modern craft in the Pacific Northwest.

Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery
Reed College
Marko Lulic / Peter Kreider
A part of PICA’s Time-Based Art Festival
Curators Stephanie Snyder / Reed + Kristan Kennedy / PICA
September 4 - December 9

This commissioned installation brings together two artists who explore the material and social repercussions of modernism’s cultural cycles and cross-pollinations. Austrian artist Marko Lulic explores the repercussions of modernism and monumentality; and New York City artist Peter Kreider explores the unholy marriage of the ordinary and the extraordinary. Catalog published by
Reed College and PICA.

Portland Art Center
Multimedia Installations in three galleries
September 6 - 28

Piece Process; a national traveling exhibition by artists of Middle Eastern descent, working in America, Europe and the Middle East. Preparations by Mack McFarland; experiments in color,
touch, sound and smell.

Feldman Gallery + Project Space
Pacific Northwest College of Art
Regina Silveira
Part of PICA’s Time-Based Art Festival
September 6 - October 21

In Outgrown (Tracks and Shadows) Regina Silveira utilizes the white cube of the gallery as the backdrop for her spatial experiments, composed of poetically profound, stark, black images applied directly to the gallery walls.

Affair at the Jupiter Hotel 2007
Organized by Stuart Horodner & Laurel Gitlen
September 14 - 16

Forty rooms of contemporary art; adventurous and thoughtful dealers, curators, collectors and artists meet for an intimate art fair. Special exhibitions, tours of local collections, discussions and parties animate this immersive art weekend.

Portland Art Museum
Chuck Close Prints
Process and Collaboration
October 6, 2007 - January 6, 2008

This landmark survey of the artist’s printing methods features 143 works from 1972 to 2004. (Also on view: Camouflage, through November 4.)

Portland Art Dealers Association (PADA)
Oregon’s foremost contemporary art galleries present regional and international exhibits year-round. Galleries include: Augen, Blackfish, Bullseye, Butters, Froelick, Elizabeth Leach, New American Art Union, PDX Contemporary Art, Pulliam Deffenbaugh, Quintana, Laura Russo, Mark Woolley. Public receptions are held the first Thursday evening of every month.

Portland Art Focus travel packages available with The Jacobs Group
Packages include three-night deluxe hotel accommodations, tickets to art events, unique and exclusive events, select transportation and a VIP concierge service to help tailor your package to your tastes. http://www.thejacobsgroup.net | 866.362.1039

For more information about Portland Art Focus, visit: http://www.portlandartfocus.net

For more information go to: http://www.portlandartfocus.net

August 21st, 2007

PEEP SHOW at The Renaissance Society

Artipedia - Arts News
The Renaissance Society

PEEP SHOW!
The Renaissance Society’s Annual Art Auction
September 8, 2007

The Renaissance Society
5811 South Ellis
Chicago, IL 60637
773 702-8670

http://www.renaissancesociety.org

The Renaissance Society is pleased to announce an online preview of PEEP SHOW! its annual benefit art auction. The auction contains cutting-edge art by over eighty of today’s most compelling artists, including Darren Almond, Francis Alÿs, Markus Amm, Paul Chan, Dan Graham, Rodney Graham, Katharina Grosse, Arturo Herrera, Daniel Hesidence, Mike Kelley, Sze Tsung Leong, Glenn Ligon, Rebecca Morris, Mai-Thu Perret, Raymond Pettibon, Steven Shearer, Rirkrit Tiravanija, and many others.

The online preview of the auction is on view at: http://renaissancesociety.org/site/Benefit/Auction_Items.0.0.0.0.8.html

Advance bids are now being accepted online or by phone at 773 702-8670 until
September 6, 2007, 5:00 p.m. CST.

All proceeds from the auction support The Renaissance Society’s 2007-2008 exhibition season.

For more information go to: http://renaissancesociety.org/site/Benefit/Preview.0.0.0.0.8.html?RENSOC_SESSID=8936c3538765e5722ee15c79267c0fd8&benefit_auctionsID=392

August 20th, 2007

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson at SFMOMA

Artipedia - Arts News
SFMOMA

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson
September 8, 2007 - February 24, 2008

San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art
151 Third Street
San Francisco, CA 94103
415.357.4000

http://www.sfmoma.org

Widely heralded as one of the most important artists of his generation, Olafur Eliasson nimbly merges art, science, and natural phenomena to create extraordinary multisensory experiences.

Challenging the passive nature of traditional art-viewing, Eliasson engages the observer as an active participant, using tangible elements such as temperature, moisture, and light to generate physical sensations. The works assembled for this presentation–the first U.S. survey of this Icelandic artist’s oeuvre–date from 1993 to the present and reflect all facets of his creative practice. Encompassing sculpture, photography, and large-scale immersive installations–including a newly commissioned kaleidoscopic tunnel that envelops the Museum’s steel truss bridge–these projects are intentionally simple in construction but thrilling to behold, sparking profound, visceral reactions designed to heighten one’s experience of the everyday.

Eliasson describes his artworks as "devices for the experience of reality." As visitors interact with the pieces, they become conscious of their own cognition. The artist describes the effect as "seeing yourself seeing"–an idea key to all his work.

Organized by Madeleine Grynsztejn, Elise S. Haas Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture at SFMOMA, in close collaboration with the artist, Take your time: Olafur Eliasson is accompanied by an extensive catalogue, featuring essays by Mieke Bal, Klaus Biesenbach and Roxana Marcoci, Daniel Birnbaum, Madeleine Grynsztejn, Pamela M. Lee, and Henry Urbach, as well as a conversation between Eliasson and artist Robert Irwin. The exhibition will embark on an international tour following its San Francisco debut.

Also opening:
Your tempo: Olafur Eliasson
September 8, 2007- January 13, 2008
Presented in conjunction with Take your time: Olafur Eliasson, this special exhibition marks the first public and sole U.S. presentation of Your mobile expectations: BMW H2R project, a new work by Eliasson created as part of BMW’s long-running art car program. Shrouding BMW’s hydrogen-powered H2R race car in a new skin of steel mesh, mirror-coated stainless steel, and many layers of ice, Eliasson transforms an object of industrial design into a work of art that critically and poetically reflects on the relationship between global warming and the automotive industry. Organized by Henry Urbach, SFMOMA’s Helen Hilton Raiser Curator of Architecture and Design, this independent yet complementary exhibition will resonate with the survey, refracting its overarching themes through a single project.

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson
Exhibition information and program schedule:
http://www.sfmoma.org/exhibitions/exhib_detail.asp?id=232

Your tempo: Olafur Eliasson
Exhibition information and program schedule:
http://www.sfmoma.org/exhibitions/exhib_detail.asp?id=316

Take your time: Olafur Eliasson is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Lead support is provided by Helen and Charles Schwab and the Mimi and Peter Haas Fund. Generous support is provided by the Bernard Osher Foundation, the Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, and Collectors Forum. Additional support is provided by Patricia and William Wilson III, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the American-Scandinavian Foundation. Support for education programs has been provided by Helen Hilton Raiser in honor of Madeleine Grynsztejn. Media support is provided by Dwell magazine.

Your tempo: Olafur Eliasson is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and generously supported by BMW. The freezer is supported by locally produced, renewable geothermal energy, provided by Constellation NewEnergy. Media support is provided by Dwell magazine.

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

August 20th, 2007

DHC/ART Awards its first production grant to Nancy Davenport

Artipedia - Arts News
DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art

DHC/ART Foundation for Contemporary Art is delighted to announce its very first production grant to New York based Canadian artist Nancy Davenport. The grant helps Nancy to complete a project titled Workers for the 2007 Istanbul Biennial. DHC/ART is committed to initiating and supporting the production of new work by Canadian artists in a variety of media through an annual commission or grant.

Workers is an ambitious media installation which laterally tackles the representation of labour and issues arising from globalisation by connecting Norwegian workers to their out-sourced Chinese counterparts in a seamless, multi-screen DVD environment. At the centre of this merged, moving frieze of animated portraits of both sets of workers is an image of a factory — itself subjected to digital enhancements where workers gather at the gates or rocket into outer space referencing film pioneers the Lumière brothers and
Georges Méliès.

Davenport’s hauntingly beautiful work offers a wry critique of architecture and other social spaces. She fictionalises documentary modes and engages the history of performance art and film while exploring how digital culture has cast a veil of suspicion over the authority of the photographic document.

In September 2001, a week before the events of 9/11, her exhibition The Apartments opened at Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery in New York. The large-scale, digitally collaged images stage incidents of terrorist attacks and other forms of political protest on modernist apartment facades. Davenport later exhibited Campus, a series of photographs depicting "brutalist", melancholy university campuses infused with both the idealism of the enlightenment and the disenchantment of failed revolt. Set at the entrance of a university, Week-end Campus, a video loop composed of hundreds of still photographs taken by the artist, is a slow pan over the cataclysm of stalled cars, accidents and impassive witnesses, paying witty homage to Godard’s much-acclaimed tracking shot in Weekend.

Biography
Nancy Davenport’s work has been widely shown in exhibitions including the 25th Biennale de Sao Paulo, 1st Triennial of Photography and Video at the International Center of Photography, NY and "Urban Dramas" at the de Singel International Kunstcentrum in Antwerp. In 2005, an early version of Workers was exhibited at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and at the Frognerparken in Oslo. Additionally in 2005, her series entitled Campus travelled to different venues in the UK and was widely reviewed. Davenport’s writing has been published in October magazine and in "Still Moving: Between Cinema and Photography", a book edited by Karen Beckman and Jean Ma (forthcoming Duke UP, 2007). http://www.nancydavenport.com

http://www.dhc-art.org

Information: Cheryl Sim — Program Coordinator
(514) 866-6767 / cheryl@dhc-art.org

For more information go to: http://www.dhc-art.org

August 18th, 2007

Lorenza Lucchi Basili at Radford University Art Museum

Artipedia - Arts News
Radford University Art Museum

Lorenza Lucchi Basili
Vetro e verità
August 30 - November 16, 2007
Opening Reception August 30
Catalog forthcoming

Curated by Preston Thayer

Radford University Art Museum
Jefferson & Main
Radford VA 24142
USA
phone: (504) 831-5754

http://www.radford.edu/rumuseum

The Radford University Art Museum is proud to present this solo exhibition of Lorenza Lucchi Basili curated by the museum director, Preston Thayer.

Vetro e verità (Glass and truth) starts from a curatorial intuition — that of fostering dialogue between Lucchi Basili’s architecture-based photos and a series of mid-XX century glass objects produced in the Murano glass-making district — including landmark pieces designed by Carlo Scarpa. Lucchi Basili and the glass pieces literally share a common ground, namely the Veneto region, where the Murano district lies and where Lucchi Basili lives and works. The implied relationship is quite open-ended, however. Lucchi Basili’s research is focused on a non-representational approach to architecture, and in particular to architectural artifacts of symbolic value for the societies that built them. They are explored through the photographic means rigorously sticking to analogic techniques and avoiding any form of digital manipulation, to reveal unexpected layers of perception that are usually overlooked in our common everyday experience. The work of Lorenza Lucchi Basili provi
des us with a phenomenological core-drilling into some of the deep sources of human visual imagery and of their strong links to the Modernist shape grammars which, as in Jorge-Luis Borges’ Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius, are inescapably colonizing reality, which is then not only inherently fictional, as demostrated by so many recent photographic research, but also inherently abstract.

In Lucchi Basili’s research, architectures of glass are a recurrent theme and a true source of phenomenological complexity. The interaction with the Murano pieces was therefore intentionally meant to provoke a systematic reflection on the issue. Lucchi Basili’s project for the Radford Art Museum delivers exactly that. Four different series have been chosen for the exhibition project, two of which already released and two shown here for the first time, each of which reflects a specific articulation (or, as Deleuze puts it, a specific folding) of a layer of perception. In Space fortynine, Chicago (the folding ‘glass reflects’), we try to convince ourselves that the forms that can be seen on the windows of a skyscraper in the Loop cannot be ‘real’, whereas they entirely are; they are the reality of something purportedly unreal (the reflex). In Space sixtyfive, Vancouver (’glass mimetizes’), we witness the actual disappearance of the glass surface which reveals the backbone of a
banking building in the city’s business district, which now emerges as a ghostly presence. In Space seventy, Prague (’glass bends’) we discover how flat glass panes may define a curved space that winds around the viewer. In Space seventythree, Prague (’glass transforms’), we see the glass surface turning itself into rock, wood, or gold under rapidly changing, unplanned light conditions. Each of these modes directly question our stipulations of perceptual reality, and our steady, possibly unintended effort to adhere to them to re-affirm well-known and reassuring identitarian coordinates.

After the exhibition opening, Lorenza Lucchi Basili will travel across Virginia for a short artist residence inquiring about the traces of the Palladian legacy in local architectures over various centuries such as Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello House in Charlottesville, as part of a project for the 500 years since Andrea Palladio’s birth, to be exhibited in Italy in 2008.

Lorenza Lucchi Basili has exhibited widely in the past few years in venues including Modern Art Gallery, Bologna; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; apexart, New York; Meno Parkas, Kaunas; Noass, Riga; Eyedrum, Atlanta; Orange County Center for Contemporary Art, Santa Ana; Fondation Electricitè de France, Paris; Viafarini, Milan; Belleza y Felicidad, Buenos Aires; Raid Projects, Los Angeles; European Photography, Reggio Emilia; Hallwalls at SoundLab, Buffalo; Fuori Uso, Pescara; New Media Scotland, Edinburgh; Zerynthia, Paliano. In october she will have a major solo exhibition at Oredaria, Rome, including a catalog published by Skira with a text by Mark Gisbourne. In november she will have a solo project in the Statements section of Paris Photo.

This exhibition is generously supported by Regione Veneto.

For more information go to: http:/www.radford.edu/~rumuseum

August 18th, 2007

Fluxus East Facilitates An Encounter with Ideas, Works and Texts

Artipedia - Arts News
FLUXUS NETWORKS

FLUXUS EAST
September 27 to November 4, 2007,
Wed - Sun 2-7 pm
Opening: September 26, 7 pm

FLUXUS NETWORKS IN
CENTRAL EASTERN EUROPE
Künstlerhaus Bethanien
Mariannenplatz 2
D-10997 Berlin

Gábor Altorjay, Eric Andersen, Tamás St. Auby, Azorro, Robert Filliou, György Galántai, Geoffrey Hendricks, Dick Higgins, Tadeusz Kantor, Milan Knízák, Alison Knowles, Július Koller, Jaroslaw Kozlowski, Vytautas Landsbergis, George Maciunas, Jonas Mekas, Larry Miller, Ben Patterson, Mieko Shiomi, Slave Pianos, Endre Tót, Gábor Tóth, Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas, Jirí Valoch, Ben Vautier, Branko Vucicevic, Emmett Williams

curator: Petra Stegmann, exhibition architecture: Andrea Pichl

Fluxus is well-known as an (anti-)artistic, international network with centres in the USA, Western Europe and Japan. But what about this "intermedia" art — art encompassing music, actions, poetry, objects and events — beyond the "Iron Curtain"? What echo did Fluxus find in the states of the former Eastern Bloc, and what parallel developments existed there?

As a "programme of action", Fluxus — according to its self-styled "chairman", the exiled Lithuanian George Maciunas in a letter supposedly to Nikita Chruscev — was predestined to bring about unity between the "concretist" artists of the world and the "concretist" society of the USSR. Maciunas planned Fluxus as a collective based on the model of the Russian LEF (Leftist Arts Front). But these plans — e. g. for a performance tour by the artists on the Trans-Siberian Railway –, developed with polished communist rhetoric in manifestos and letters, were to remain no more than a utopia.

After 1962, a different FLUXUS EAST developed through creative exchange between Fluxus artists and artists/musicians of the former Eastern Bloc, leading to events including Fluxus festivals in Vilnius (1966), Prague (1966), Budapest (1969), and Poznan (1977).

FLUXUS EAST represents a first stocktaking of the diverse Fluxus activities in the former Eastern Bloc; the exhibition shows parallel developments and artistic practices inspired by Fluxus, which are still adopted by some young artists today. Besides the "classic" Fluxus objects, the display will include photographs, films, correspondence, secret police files, interviews and recordings of music that document the presence of Fluxus in the former Eastern Bloc. As an interactive exhibition, FLUXUS EAST aims to facilitate a profound encounter with ideas, works and texts — some presented as facsimiles to permit intense study. It is possible to play at FLUX PING PONG, and visitors are also invited to explore the POIPOIDROME by Robert Filliou.

Performances by Eric Andersen, Geoffrey Hendricks, Milan Knízák, Alison Knowles, Larry Miller, Ben Patterson, Tamás St. Auby, Ben Vautier and others will take place at the
opening on September, 26th.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue (German/English, ca 250 pages, ca 200
images, hardcover).

The exhibition at Künstlerhaus Bethanien and the catalogue are funded by the
German Federal Cultural Foundation.

From September 27-29, 2007 the conference FLUXUS. NETWORKS BETWEEN WEST AND EAST — a joint event of Künstlerhaus Bethanien and House of World Cultures — will take place at House of World Cultures and Art Forum Berlin. http://www.hkw.de/de/programm2007/new_york/veranstaltungen_14292/fluxus_14921/AlleVeranstaltungen.php

Further exhibition venues: Contemporary Art Center, Vilnius (November 30, 2007 - January 13, 2008), Bunkier Sztuki, Kraków (February 7 - March 30, 2008), Ludwig Múzeum, Budapest
(April 17 - June 1, 2008).

Network programme in Berlin:

Tschechisches Zentrum Czechpoint
Czech Action Art of the 1960s to the 1990s
Exhibition, September 14 - November 2, 2007

Collegium Hungaricum Berlin Portable Intelligence Increase Museum. Pop Art, Conceptual Art, and Actionism in Hungary during the 60s - 1956-1976 / The Near-East-European Criss-Cross (1956-1989)
Exhibition, September 26 - November 4, 2007

Polnisches Institut Berlin Galeria Akumulatory 2
Exhibition, September 28 - November 8, 2007

Art Forum Berlin Slave Pianos: Dissident Consonances
(The Flux-Labyrinth & the Iron Curtain at the Art Forum Berlin)
Concert, September 28, 2007

For more information about FLUXUS EAST contact: fluxus@bethanien.de or presse@bethanien.de

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

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