Archive for September 28th, 2007

MFAH presents Ornament as Art

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection Opens at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, September 30, Inaugurating
National Tour

MFAH-Organized Show Challenges Viewers to Look Beyond
Jewelry’s Traditions

Some 300 objects on view, from the 1960s through the present, all from the acclaimed collection
at the MFAH

Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection, on view at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston places contemporary jewelry within the larger framework of twentieth and twenty-first century art. Tracing the history of the artists and the aesthetic influences and technical innovation of the jewelry, the exhibition showcases a broad array of national and international works from the 1960s through today. In addition to approximately 275 pieces of jewelry, Ornament as Art also contains drawings, watercolors, sketchbooks and sculptural constructions by the artists. The exhibition draws entirely from the MFAH’s celebrated Helen Williams Drutt Collection of contemporary jewelry, the most significant contemporary jewelry collection in the United States. Acquired by the museum in 2002, the collection, assembled by legendary scholar and educator Helen Drutt, consists of 720 pieces of jewelry and 84 works on paper. Over 175 artists from 18 different countries
are represented with the largest concentration working in the United States, Western Europe, Japan, and Australia. Ornament as Art is on view from September 30, 2007 through January 21, 2008. The exhibition will then begin a national tour, appearing next at the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery in Washington D.C.

Ornament as Art is organized by Cindi Strauss, the MFAH’s curator of modern and contemporary decorative arts and design, and is drawn from a collection that was assembled over a forty-year period in which the history and developments in the field were observed and documented by the collector. The exhibition is structured as a progression, tracing the development of artist-made jewelry chronologically, while touching on major innovations in techniques, material, scale, and concept. Focused sections examine narrative impulses, the relationship between jewelry and major artistic movements of the 20th century, and the idea of performance jewelry. Among the artists represented are Gijs Bakker, the Netherlands; Liv Blåvarp, Norway; Claus Bury, Germany; Peter Chang, the United Kingdom; Georg Dobler, Germany; Lisa Gralnick, the United States; Otto Künzli, Switzerland; Stanley Lechtzin, the United States; Nel Linssen, the Netherlands; Bruno Martinazzi, Italy; Bruce Metcalf,
the United States; Albert Paley, the United States; Wendy Ramshaw, the United Kingdom; Gerd Rothmann, Germany; Bernhard Schobinger, Switzerland; Olaf Skoogfors, the United States; Emmy van Leersum, the Netherlands; Tone Vigeland, Norway; David Watkins, the United Kingdom; Margaret West, Australia; and Hiramatsu Yasuki, Japan; among others.

Ornament as Art also provides the opportunity to study three themes in depth: narrative jewelry, the influence of twentieth-century art movements, and performance jewelry. Whether depicting personal stories, myths, politics, history, or popular culture, narrative works engage the viewer by transporting them to a particular time or place and by encouraging imagination, interaction, and fantasy. Many artists in the collection also use tenets of major art movements such as the Bauhaus, assemblage and collage, constructivism, Minimalism and Conceptualism in their jewelry. Finally, the interaction between jewelry and the body and the active dialogue that resulted from it informed a genre of jewelry that questions the fundamental traditions of what jewelry should be.

Ornament as Art is organized by the MFAH. Generous funding is provided by The National Endowment for the Arts; The Rotasa Foundation; Fulbright and Jaworski, L.L.P.; The Center for Craft, Creativity, and Design; The Mondriaan Foundation;
Ms. Anne L. Kinder, and The Consulate General of the Netherlands.

Exhibition Tour Schedule
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston: September 30, 2007-January 21, 2008
Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum: March 14-July 6, 2008
Mint Museum of Craft + Design, Charlotte, North Carolina: August 16, 2008-January 4, 2009

Tacoma Museum of Art, Tacoma, Washington: June 27-September 13, 2009

For information, call 713-639-7300 or visit http://www.mfah.org

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
1001 Bissonnet
Houston, TX 77005
http://www.mfah.org

Image Credit:
Georg Dobler, Brooch, 1985, steel and acrylic lacquer, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Helen Williams Drutt Collection, museum purchase with funds provided by the Design Council, 2004, 2002.3722. Copyright: Georg Dobler

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

PERFORMA07: Second Biennial of New Visual Art Performance in New York City

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
PERFORMA07

PERFORMA07
SECOND BIENNIAL OF NEW VISUAL ART PERFORMANCE IN NEW YORK CITY

OCTOBER 27 THROUGH
NOVEMBER 20, 2007

http://www.performa-arts.org

PERFORMA07, the second biennial of new visual art performance, opens on October 27 in New York City, launching a four-week program of performances, exhibitions, screenings, symposia, and live events including ten major PERFORMA Commissions by Carlos Amorales, Sanford Biggers, Nathalie Djurberg, Japanther, Isaac Julien, Daria Martin, Kelly Nipper, Adam Pendleton, Yvonne Rainer, and Francesco Vezzoli. PERFORMA07 features the work of over ninety international artists at more than fifty leading cultural institutions and venues throughout the city, with the participation of more than thirty curators, and is organized under the artistic direction of its founder, RoseLee Goldberg.

PERFORMA07 will open with a special premiere of a new PERFORMA Commission by celebrated Italian artist Francesco Vezzoli in the rotunda of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. In his first ever live performance, Vezzoli will present a restaging of Cosi’ e (se vi pare,) or Right You Are (If You Think You Are), the renowned play by Luigi Pirandello, which implicates the audience in its examination of celebrity while also pointing to the relativity of truth, the necessity of illusion, and the instability of the human persona. The evening will begin with a Gala Dinner, to benefit PERFORMA, hosted by Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn. Tickets for the dinner can be reserved by calling (212) 366-5700.

ARTISTS:
Vito Acconci / David Adamo / Carlos Amorales / Ei Arakawa & Amy Sillman / Are You Meaning Company / Fia Backström / Ronnie Bass / Jérôme Bel / Tamy Ben-Tor / Sanford Biggers / Ulla von Brandenburg / Pablo Bronstein / Trisha Brown / Tania Bruguera / James Lee Byars / Kabir Carter / Dimitri Chamblas / Boris Charmatz / Cheapcream / Zoila Imaculada de la Concepción / Douglas Coupland / Tom Cole & Lovett/Codagnone / Tony Conrad / Marie Cool & Fabio Balducci / Nick Curris (aka Momus) / Philippe Decouflé / Nathalie Djurberg / Pete Drungel / Nicolás Dumit Estévez / Emilio Fantin / Ryan Gander / Gang Zhao / Rainer Ganahl / Grand Union / Nicolas Guagnini / Deborah Hay / He Yunchang / Karl Holmqvist / Hans Isaksson / International Festival / Christian Jankowski / Joan Jonas / Japanther / Isaac Julien & Russell Maliphant / Allan Kaprow / Alison Knowles / Elke Krystufek / Tove Leffler / Shaun El C. Leonardo / Long March Collect
ive / Daria Martin / Eva and Franco Mattes (aka 0100101110101101.org) / Dave McKenzie / Meredith Monk / Robert Morris & Stan VanDerBeek / My Barbarian / Bruce Nauman / Maurizio Nannucci / Luigi Negro / Kelly Nipper / Giancarlo Norese / Michael Northam / Darren O’Donnell / Yoko Ono / Serkan Özkaya / Adam Pendleton / Mai-Thu Perret / Cesare Pietroiusti / Michael Portnoy / Emilio Prini / Qiu Zhije / Yvonne Rainer / Robert Rauschenberg / Aïda Ruilova / Jelena Rundqvist / Carolee Schneeman / Second Front / Dexter Sinister / Markus Schinwald & Oleg Soulimenko / Snöfrid / Barbara Sukowa & The X-Patsys / Elaine Summers / Emily Sundblad / Eva Svuje / Min Tanaka / TM Sisters / Tomas Vanek / Francesco Vezzoli / Emily Sundblad / Marianne Vitale & Agathe Snow / Tris Vonna-Michell / Jennifer Walshe / Lawrence Weiner / Michael Williams & Melissa Brown / Ian Wilson / Xu Zhen / + MORE

PERFORMA07 CONSORTIUM:
Anthology Film Archives / Artists Space / Art in General / Art Radio WPS1.org / Aperture Foundation / Baryshnikov Arts Center / The Bronx Museum of the Arts / Brooklyn Academy of Music / China Institute / Creative Time / Dance New Amsterdam / Dance Theater Workshop / DISPATCH / The Drawing Center / Electronic Arts Intermix / Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts / The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Japan Society / The Jewish Museum / The Judson Memorial Church / The Kitchen / Lower Manhattan Cultural Council / The Museum of Arts and Design / Museum of Chinese in the Americas / New York University / Participant, Inc. / Performance Space 122 / P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center / SculptureCenter / The Studio Museum in Harlem / Storefront for Art and Architecture / Swiss Institute–Contemporary Art / WFMU 91.1FM-NYC and http://www.wfmu.org / White Box / White Columns / The Whitney Museum of American Art / WPS1 Art Radio / + MORE

ADDITIONAL VENUES:
590 Madison (The Atrium) / The Box / Columbia University / Dance New Amsterdam / Dexter Sinister / Freemans / The Highline Ballroom / The Hudson Theatre at the Millennium Broadway Hotel / Passerby / The New School / Second Life / Stephan Weiss Studio / World Financial Center / The Zipper Theater / + MORE

PARTICIPATING GALLERIES:
Canada / Chambers Fine Art / Deitch Projects / Fruit and Flower Deli / Greene Naftali Gallery / James Cohan Gallery / Metro Pictures / Salon 94 / Smith-Stewart / + MORE

PERFORMA07 BIENNIAL FUNDING & SPONSORS:
PERFORMA Commissions and PERFORMA07 programs are supported by grants from the Toby Devan Lewis Philanthropic Fund, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the David & Elaine Potter Charitable Trust, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, The Greenwall Foundation, the Peter Norton Family Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Fundación/Colección Jumex, The Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, the Savannah College of Art and Design, Outset Contemporary Art Fund, the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, IASPIS, Altria Group, Inc., New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Ken and Judith Joy Family Foundation, Dena Foundation, Bloomberg L.P., the Moon and Stars Project, Goethe-Institut New York, Austrian Cultural Forum, the PERFORMA Producer’s Circle, the PERFORMA Visionaries, and many generous individuals. Sponsors include: Time Out New York, Grolsch, Millennium Hotels, Christiania, and Fazioli.

A complete program of events and full ticketing information is available at http://www.performa-arts.org

For more information go to: http://www.performa-arts.org

Arts on Film Archive at Tate Modern

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Tate Modern

Arts on Film Archive at Tate Modern
Tuesday 2 October - Tuesday 16 October 2007

Tate Modern
Starr Auditorium
Bankside
London SE1 9TG

http://www.tate.org.uk

This programme of screenings showcases the University of Westminster’s newly established online Arts on Film Archive http://www.artsonfilm.org.uk Supported by the AHRC and based at CREAM (Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media, University of Westminster), the archive currently contains more than 465 documentary films drawn from Arts Council England’s Film Collection. The archive is a unique record of British and international post-war art, and of documentary filmmaking in the UK. Many titles in the archive contain rare material about individual artists; others offer definitive coverage of their subject. The screenings are followed by on-stage conversations with artists and filmmakers, led by John Wyver, author of the newly released publication Vision On: Film, Television and the Arts in Britain (Wallflower Press).

With support from CREAM at University of Westminster, and the Arts and Humanities
Research Council.

Tuesday 2 October 2007, 18.30

Richard Hamilton
James Scott, UK 1969, 25 mins
Made in collaboration with the artist Richard Hamilton, this documentary remains vivid and surprising nearly forty years on. Fragments of Hamilton’s works are integrated with newsreel images, movie trailers and other footage from the period. The artist offers an audio-only commentary, but this too is layered and disrupted. From this disorienting and often funny patchwork emerges a perceptual analysis that avoids conventional explanation, yet reveals key ideas that shaped Hamilton’s art.

The Great Ice Cream Robbery
James Scott, UK 1971, 35 mins
This rarely seen film, projected on two screens, was made in the summer of 1970 while Claes Oldenburg was in London setting up his retrospective at the Tate Gallery. It was the last film in a quartet of collaborations with artists that included David Hockney, RB Kitaj, and Richard Hamilton.

Wednesday 3 October 2007, 18.30

Bill Brandt: Shadows from Light
Steve Dwoskin, UK 1983, 59 mins
‘A cinematographic journey through the photographic atmospheres of Bill Brandt’ by renowned experimental filmmaker Steve Dwoskin. Many of the photographer’s most famous images are presented, along with Brandt himself, who died in December 1983. Much of the film is a succession of glistening, high contrast monochrome frames, echoing Brandt’s style and blurring the boundary between the photographs and the film’s photography. There are quotations too, about photography, from Man Ray, Susan Sontag, Edward Steichen, plus a child reading fragments from Alice Through the Looking Glass. Shadows from Light, like Lewis Carroll, is mysterious and haunting, innocent yet rewardingly complex.

Tuesday 16 October 2007, 18.30

Music and Performance Films
Throughout the 1990s, the Arts Council collaborated with BBC Television on a number of successful series of imaginative short films bringing together creative filmmakers with dancers, choreographers, musicians and performance artists. Included in the programme are Blight made by John Smith with composer Jocelyne Pook, Jayne Parker’s The World Turned Upside Down, David Hinton and Rosemary Lee’s work of documentary choreography, Snow, as well as John Tchalenko’s delightful tribute to step-dancer Sam Sherry.

For tickets book on http://www.tate.org.uk or call 020 7887 8888.

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