Archive for September 16th, 2007

KUNSTHALLE BASEL presents exhibitions of Ibon Aranberri, Minerva Cuevas and Michael Hakimi

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
KUNSTHALLE BASEL

IBON ARANBERRI
Integration

MINERVA CUEVAS
Phenomena

MICHAEL HAKIMI
ROOF

September 23 - November 11, 2007
Opening: Saturday, September 22, 2007, 7pm

KUNSTHALLE BASEL
Steinenberg 7
CH-4051 Basel
Switzerland
Tel +41 61 206 99 00 / Fax +41 61 206 99 19
info@kunsthallebasel.ch
http://www.kunsthallebasel.ch

Opening hours:
Tue/Wed/Fri 11am-6pm / Thu 11am-8.30pm / Sat/Sun 11am-5pm

In September 2007, three individual exhibitions will open at Kunsthalle Basel.

Ibon Aranberri (born in Itziat-Deba, Spain, 1969) will present a group of works under a common title Integration. In the main exhibition space, prefabricated pieces of cast concrete will accumulate into an expansive architectural structure, supported by sawhorses. The profiled concrete slabs may seem reminiscent of curb blocks. However, as they are slightly elevated and topped with broken green bottles, as if meant to keep intruders away, they also bring to mind a top of concrete wall, lowered to waist-height. The idea for this work emerged in the context of Aranberri’s project Floating Garden (P.S.1, New York, 2004). The artist proposed to install modular pieces of concrete with inserts of glass shards on top of the iconic concrete wall surrounding the courtyard of P.S.1. Due to the institution’s concerns about visitors’ safety, the piece in New York was realized as a series of prototypes and sketches. At Kunsthalle Basel, the piece has been adapted to the interior location
and will materialize for the first time in its entirety. In two small adjoining spaces, Aranberri presents slide projection, including material for another project which has not come to fruition so far and exists as selection of documents and photographs, Light over Lemoniz (2000-). This proposal included the fireworks show on the (now abandoned) site of the nuclear power plant which was built 20 km from Bilbao in the early 70s and never started-up, due to a protest movement. The fireworks show was modeled on the one accompanying the opening of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao in 1997. The works of Aranberri are exercises in decoding ideologies behind the appearances of specific
material structures.

In her show Phenomena, Minerva Cuevas (born in Mexico City, 1975) has addressed appearances: how we perceive and understand things. The title of the show refers to Immanuel Kant’s distinction between phenomena ("beings of sense", appearances capable of being observed by one of the five human senses and understood by speculative reason) and noumena ("things in themselves", transcendental objects), introduced in his Critique of Pure Reason (1781). Phenomena are, above all, raw data of striking and diverse qualities, and Minerva Cuevas brings some of these data forth in her installation, using customized antique optical devices, such as a projecting microscope and slide projectors, combined with modern fiber glass light projectors. The projected images belong to the standard repertory of popular science of the 19th and early 20th century: an ape wearing a jacket hangs on a tree, a collection of unicellular algae unravels. A series of four photographs depicts
surfaces of meteorites from natural history museums in Mexico. They are juxtaposed with found film footage, presented on monitors, recording experiments in behavioral psychology meant to demonstrate the learning and adaptive skills of infants. In her installation The Battle of Calliope (2004) Minerva Cuevas used the recording of the Vodun drummers from Ghana, who performed the curse on the current U.S. political administration. The scientific specimens may become indistinguishable from curiosities, yet on the other hand, the obsolete techniques may bring surprisingly productive results. By including the outmoded techniques of observation as parts of her exhibition, the artist enables us to see how the ways of seeing have been constituted as social phenomena.

"I construct signs that let the semantic threshold become visible," said Michael Hakimi (born in Eutin, Germany, 1968) in a recent interview. The threshold is a good example here — as it is both a part of the building, dividing the rooms, and more generally a difference between things that we perceive. At the Kunsthalle Basel, the artist shows his new installation interlocking two adjacent spaces. Depending on the point of view, the exhibition’s title — ROOF — may simply delineate the area on top of a building, or direct our attention to the heights above. The first space contains works realized in different techniques: black geometric shapes cut out of plywood lean against the wall, globes, coronae of the sun or other celestial bodies are spray-painted on different kinds of paper, or stuck on the walls. This ensemble of works evokes the broken skyline of a city at dusk, the cut-and-paste technique of the multiplication and repetition of motifs sets the viewer in
the middle of a storyboard. The work develops as a fast-paced rhythmic collage of frames, and gains the quality of an early cinematic experiment. The second space may represent the proper roof. The monumental black shapes, painted directly onto the walls of the room, are supported by aluminium tubes attached to the walls at one end, and to the floor at the other. Two-dimensional images propped by solid sculptural infrastructure allude to the reduced contours of advertising signs seen from the back. Between the sign and the object falls the shadow, and it remains firmly there.

In conjunction with Minerva Cuevas’ exhibition a catalogue will be published in co-operation with the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven in early 2008. In January 2008 Minerva Cuevas will have an individual exhibition at the Van Abbemuseum. In relation to Ibon Aranberri’s show at the Kunsthalle Basel, and following the exhibition projects of Ibon Aranberri at Frankfurter Kunstverein and Van Abbemuseum, scheduled respectively for 2008 and 2009, a publication is planned to come out at the end of 2008 in co-operation with the Frankfurter Kunstverein and Van Abbemuseum. By the end of the year a catalogue of works by Michael Hakimi will be produced in collaboration with the Kunstverein Hamburg.

For further information please visit our website: http://www.kunsthallebasel.ch

Image:
Titles for the images (from left to right):

Ibon Aranberri
Light over Lemoniz, 2000-2003
Slide projection
Courtesy the artist

Minerva Cuevas
Like me, 2007
Magic lantern slide, circa 1900
Courtesy the artist

Michael Hakimi
Roof, 2007
Spray paint on paper
Courtesy the artist

The exhibition of works by Ibon Aranberri is generously supported by:
Annemarie Burckhardt and SEA CEX

Minerva Cuevas’ exhibition received generous support from:
Annemarie Burckhardt and Fundacion/Coleccion Jumex

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

PULSE Contemporary Art Fair presents PULSE London

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
PULSE London

PULSE London
Invitational Contemporary Art Fair

Thursday 11 October -
Sunday 14 October, 2007
Mary Ward House, 5-7 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SN
Email: info@pulse-art.com
Telephone: + 44 (0) 20 7099 9293
Fax: 1 212 255 2024

Fair Hours:
1pm - 8pm Thursday 11 October
12pm - 8pm Friday 12 October
12pm - 8pm Saturday 13 October
12pm - 5pm Sunday 14 October

http://www.pulse-art.com

Building on its network of highly successful fairs in both Miami and New York, PULSE Contemporary Art Fair is pleased to announce the creation of PULSE London. This new venture has been added to PULSE’s growing line-up in response to demand from exhibitors who are now greatly anticipating the forthcoming London event. PULSE London — a four-day fair — will provide a highly visible international platform for the programs of over 40 established and emerging galleries from around the world, including PPOW (New York), Noga Gallery of Contemporary Art (Tel Aviv), Rubicon (Dublin,), White Space (Beijing), Shoshana Wayne Gallery (Los Angeles), Rhona Hoffman Gallery (Chicago) and DNA (Berlin). Fourteen international galleries will make their debut with PULSE in London.

Since its founding in Miami in December 2005 under the direction of Helen Allen, the expansion of PULSE Contemporary Art Fair has helped to broaden the global art fair market, presenting high-qualityinnovative artwork from innovative prominent galleries worldwide. PULSE Miami 2006 reported record breaking sales and near-double attendance with close to 12,000 visitors. The Wall Street Journal focused on the quality of works at PULSE compared to the other fairs, "You had only to go to the independent PULSE art fair, near the Design District, to get a shock of pleasure at work by established but non-celebrity artists", while The Baer Faxt reported that visitors and art professionals had voted PULSE the best fair of all Miami fairs, "in a surprising tie" with Art Basel Miami Beach. PULSE New York 2007 attracted 9,500 attendees, up from 8,000 in 2006, bringing Magnus Muller from Berlin to report that it was "their best fair ever".

PULSE London will be held at Mary Ward House, home of the legendary 19th-century novelist and social reformer Mary Ward. It is a unique facility located in London’s fashionable Bloomsbury district. This historic address is convenient to the city’s arts and culture destinations, including the British Museum, as well as Bloomsbury’s famed gardened squares.

PULSE London Exhibitors
Ambrosino Gallery (Miami), Bernhard Knaus Fine Art (Mannheim), bitforms gallery (New York), BravinLee Programs (New York), Catharine Clark Gallery (San Francisco), Changing Role Gallery (Naples), Charles Cowles Gallery (New York), Conner Contemporary Art (Washington D.C.), DCKT Contemporary (New York), DNA Gallery (Berlin), Fabio Tiboni Arte Contemporanea (Bologna), fiedler contemporary (Cologne), Finesilver Gallery (Houston), Freight + Volume (New York),Galería Senda (Barcelona), Galerie Anita Beckers (Frankfurt), Galerie Brunnhofer (Linz), GALERIE ERNST HILGER (Vienna), Galerie Stefan Röpke (Cologne),Galerie Volker Diehl (Berlin), Heather Marx Gallery (San Francisco), Jack Shainman Gallery (New York), Knoll Galeries Vienna + Budapest (Vienna/Budapest), Lora Reynolds Gallery (Austin), Lukas Feichtner Gallery (Vienna), Magnus Müller (Berlin)
Mark Moore Gallery (Santa Monica), Max Protetch (New York), moniquemeloche (Chicago), Nathan Larramendy Gallery (Ojai), Noga Gallery of Contemporary Art (Tel Aviv), P.P.O.W (New York), Perugi Artecontemporanea (Padoua), Priska C. Juschka Fine Art (New York), Rhona Hoffman (Chicago), Richard Levy Gallery (Albuquerque),Rubicon Gallery (Dublin), Russell LaMontagne (Boston), Shoshana Wayne Gallery (Santa Monica), Tokyo Gallery (Tokyo), Walter Maciel Gallery (Los Angeles), White Space (Beijing).

Sponsors
New York Residents
Renault
Contemporary
Ketel One

Complimentary Car Service:
A complimentary car service courtesy of Renault will be running between the Tavistock PlaceMary Ward House, Regent’s Park and Piccadilly throughout the duration of the fair. For schedule and details, please check http://www.pulse-art.com

New Venue for PULSE Miami 2007
PULSE Miami, the pioneering fair of the Wynwood District, will move from the tent it occupied for two years to the recently renovated, 40,000 sq. ft. + SOHO Building located just blocks away at 2136 NW 1st Avenue & NW 21st Street. The new venue offers a much more spacious environment to its exhibitors and collectors and will feature an outdoor lounge space, large scale installations and café. The fair will follow its successful format, representing 80 galleries invited by the PULSE Invitational Committee; however, this year the Committee hopes to expand the list of participating IMPULSE galleries who will be selected based on their submissions of one and two person projects. PULSE Miami will take place December 5-9, 2007.

For more information about PULSE, please visit http://www.pulse-art.com or call
US +1 (212) 255-2327 or UK +44 (0) 20 7099 9293

For further information on the program and interviews:
Media contact — UK and International (except USA)
Jasmin Pelham or Fariel Karmali
JB Pelham PR
T. +44 (0)20 8969 3959
E. jasmin@jbpelhampr.com or fariel@jbpelhampr.com

Media Contact – USA
Kirsten Moore
Blue Medium
T. +1 (212) 675-1800
E: Kirsten@bluemedium.com

Image:
U-Ram Choe
Varietal Urbanus Female, 2007
"Scientific Name" Anmopista Volaticus Floris Uram
Etched stainless steel, metal halide lamp, circuits, motors, CPU board, custom software, cable
75 x 75 x 141 cm (closed)
216 x 216 x 137 cm (open)
Edition of 5
Photo by David plakke
Photo Courtesy: bitforms gallery nyc

For more information go to: http://www.pulse-art.com

Wim Delvoye at Casino Luxembourg

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Casino Luxembourg - Forum d’art contemporain

Wim Delvoye: Cloaca 2000 - 2007

Casino Luxembourg -
Forum d’art contemporain
41, rue Notre-Dame
L-2240 Luxembourg
B.P. 345 / L-2013 Luxembourg
T. +352 22 50 45
F. +352 22 95 95
info@casino-luxembourg.lu

http://www.casino-luxembourg.lu

The Casino Luxembourg — Forum d’art contemporain, in collaboration with the Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean (Mudam Luxembourg), proudly presents an extensive monographic exhibition of Wim Delvoye’s fabulous project Cloaca, on show from 30 September 2007 to 6 January 2008.

For the first time ever, the exhibition Wim Delvoye: Cloaca 2000 - 2007 brings together the seven machines that have been produced so far — Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca Turbo, Cloaca Quattro, Cloaca N° 5, Super Cloaca and Personal Cloaca — alongside more than 200 original drawings, 3D and x-ray photographs, models, sealed bags of Cloaca Faeces and other paraphernalia that assemble to form one of the most extraordinary artistic endeavours of all times.

Also for the first time, two Cloaca — a first-generation model (Cloaca - New & Improved, 2001) and a more recent model (Personal Cloaca, 2007) — will function simultaneously. On display at the Casino Luxembourg, they are scheduled to run for the entire duration of the show and will be fed by local caterers. In a worldwide premiere, Mudam Luxembourg will furthermore activate Super Cloaca for three days starting Saturday, 13 October (museum night). The machine will be on display at Mudam until 26 November.

Wim Delvoye’s Cloaca series is a human dream come true in that it reproduces the functioning of the human body. Thanks to an unprecedented combination of art and science, these machines-as-artworks, while retaining an undeniable popular character, inscribe themselves in a historic tradition that ranges from Jacques de Vaucanson’s (1709-1782) famous Canard [Duck] to the no less notorious Merda d’artista [Artist’s shit] by Piero Manzoni (1933-1963). Witty and poetic, Delvoye’s devices nevertheless introduce a new era, which is that of the cybernetic and entrepreneurial artist who designs the machine that creates his works, ridding the figure of the artist of the romanticism commonly attached to it and inserting his products in the global economic system, even going so far as to introduce them to the stock market http://www.cloaca.be

A specially furbished Cloaca Shop at the Casino Luxembourg will hold an assortment of books and specifically created Cloaca products: Cloaca T-shirts, a Wim Delvoye doll, a 3D Viewmaster, Cloaca toilet paper, bags, etc.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a richly illustrated book (French/English edition) with original texts by Luis Cammitzer, Michael Glasmeier and Jens Hauser, which is already on sale online http://www.casino-luxembourg.lu/publications

Curator: Enrico Lunghi
Assistants: Guillaume Baudin and Kevin Muhlen
The exhibition was made possible with the precious help of the Studio Wim Delvoye in Ghent info@cloaca.be
Associated caterers (Luxembourg): Brasserie des Nations, Restaurant Contact, Hôtel-Restaurant Cravat, Ristorante-Pizzeria Il Cherubino, Maison Paul Elio & Fils, Coffee Lounge, La table du pain, Mesa Verde

For more information go to: http://www.casino-luxembourg.lu