Archive for October 22nd, 2007

The Lotus Eaters: New Vancouver Video Art

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

8 PM - Grand Luxe Theatre
The Western Front
303 East 8th Avenue
Vancouver

Free

The land of the Lotus Eaters is known for attracting newcomers who join others on the island to eat the delicious lotus plant: those who become Lotus Eaters leave everything behind to stay and partake everafter of the lotus. This Greek legend is a metaphor charged with layers describing the complex circumstances of so many Vancouverites who have come to this city, each on a personal pursuit.

For the first time in Western Front’s history, the Media Arts Programme is pleased to present a curated screening of recent video works by artists who call Vancouver home. Selected from an open call, the screening features eight standout videos produced within the last four years. The Lotus Eaters brings together divergent practices and concerns, ranging from questions about documentary subjectivity to the use of allegory in fabulist filmmaking.

Videos by Abbas Akhavan, Sobhi al-Zobaidi, Eric Deis, Meesoo Lee, Isabelle Pauwels, Kristina Lee Podesva, Igor Santizo, and Donna Szoke plot a distinct trajectory in the recent history of video production in Vancouver. From al-Zobaidi’s interviews about the sea as a signifier of boundless territory to Deis’ transformation of an apartment through a dousing of water, these videos are critical, engaged, aesthetically rigorous, and above all, unexpected.

The Media Arts Programme acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $11.8 million in media arts throughout Canada.

For further information, please contact:

Alissa Firth-Eagland
Director / Curator of Media Arts
The Western Front
303 East 8th Avenue
Vancouver, BC, V5T 1S1

(604) 876-9343

The Showroom presents Sue Tompkins: Apple

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Showroom

Sue Tompkins
Apple
31 October - 9 December 2007
Opening Tuesday 30 October 19:00 - 21:00hrs
Live performance of Country Grammar 20:00hrs
Special late ‘First Thursday’ opening until 20:30hrs on Thursday 1 November
The Showroom
44 Bonner Road
London E2 9JS
T. +44 (0)20 8983 4115
F. +44 (0)20 8981 4112
tellmemore@theshowroom.org
Wednesday - Sunday 13:00 - 18:00hrs

http://www.theshowroom.org

The Showroom is delighted to announce that Sue Tompkins will present Apple, her first solo exhibition in London at the gallery later this month.

Sue Tompkins is widely known for her energetic performances and text-based works that fuse the fizzy confidence of pop music with the more tentative rhythms and repetitions of beat poetry. Often based on a single word or simple phrase, these works go through a rigorous process of repetition, editing and layering to build mesmerising, free-flowing texts that seem to follow closely and allow unlimited access to the artist’s thought patterns.

For The Showroom, Sue Tompkins will present a new installation of works designed to link the two distinct, triangular gallery spaces. Casually formal groupings of large-scale text works on paper - on which tiny, fragile concrete poems cling and cascade - will be punctuated by small, brightly coloured paintings. In addition, a series of tables will contain other text works, providing further intimate fragments gleaned from snippets of conversations with friends, lines from pop songs and sound bites from magazines.

The gallery is also delighted that Sue Tompkins will revisit her performance work, Country Grammar, first presented in 2003, on the night of the opening at 20:00hrs.

Sue Tompkins is currently based in Glasgow, where she is represented by The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd. Sue Tompkins was nominated for Beck’s Futures in 2006 and has recently presented work at Tate Britain, Diana Stigter Gallery, Amsterdam, Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York and the Scottish Pavilion, Venice Biennale 2005.

For further information please contact either Natasha Tebbs or Kirsty Ogg at The Showroom on 020 8983 4115, or the gallery’s website http://www.theshowroom.org

The Showroom is financially assisted by Arts Council England, London Office, the Moose Foundation for the Arts and the many members of the gallery’s Friends Scheme.

Apple is generously supported by The Elephant Trust.

Asia Society presents Zhang Huan: Altered States, Discussion and Lecture

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Asia Society and Musuem

Zhang Huan: Altered States

Curator: Melissa Chiu
The First-Ever Museum Retrospective of Zhang Huan
Through January 20, 2008

Discussion
Breakout: Chinese Art
Outside China
Wednesday, October 24, 6:30 pm

Lecture
10 Things You Need to Know about Chinese Contemporary Art
Tuesday, November 13, 7:30 pm

http://www.AsiaSociety.org

Asia Society Museum presents the first-ever museum retrospective of Zhang Huan, one of the most important and widely recognized Chinese artists working in the United States and China. Zhang Huan: Altered States includes 55 of the artist’s major works produced over the past 15 years in Beijing, New York and Shanghai including photographs and sculpture.

Born in 1965 in An Yang, Henan Province, China, Zhang Huan is best-known for his controversial early works in performance art. When he began his career in Beijing, his performances focused on physical endurance, pushing the limits of what was acceptable to authorities in the early 1990s, post-Tiananmen. In 1998, he moved to New York where he saw greater freedoms and established his international career with larger-scale performances that often involved the participation of scores of volunteers. Last year, Zhang Huan moved to Shanghai, abandoning performance art in favor of works in sculpture, installation art and painting. Many of these show greater connections to Chinese heritage and history. The exhibition is organized around these three distinct phases of the artist’s work.

Zhang Huan: Altered States is accompanied by a fully illustrated hardcover 177 page catalogue that includes scholarly essays by curator and Asia Society Museum Director Melissa Chiu and art critic Eleanor Heartney, first-hand accounts of Zhang Huan’s early performance works in Beijing by the artist Kong Bu, and an essay by Zhang Huan who provides his own perspective on his art and life. To order the catalogue, visit http://www.AsiaStore.org

Morgan Stanley is the lead sponsor of Zhang Huan: Altered States.

The Kai-Yin Lo Distinguished Program Series: Discussion
Breakout: Chinese Art Outside China
Wednesday, October 24, 6:30 pm
Post-1989 Tiananmen, many artists left China for New York, Paris and Sydney. Two leading expatriate artists, Xu Bing and Yun Feiji, speak with Melissa Chiu, Asia Society Museum Director (Breakout: Chinese Art Outside China). Reception and book signing follow. Breakout is available at AsiaStore or http://www.AsiaStore.org

10 Things You Need to Know about Chinese Contemporary Art
Tuesday, November 13, 7:30 pm
Gain insights into the burgeoning markets for contemporary Chinese art in this comprehensive survey of the field by Asia Society Museum Director Melissa Chiu.
Free admission

To attend, call 212.517.ASIA (2742) or email boxoffice@asiasociety.org

Media Contact:
Elaine Merguerian
Jennifer Suh
212.327.9271

Asia Society and Musuem
725 Park Avenue at 70th Street
New York, New York
http://www.AsiaSociety.org

The MacDowell Colony Announces New Funding for Artists

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The MacDowell Colony

THE MACDOWELL COLONY ANNOUNCES NEW FUNDING
FOR ARTISTS

http://www.macdowellcolony.org

The MacDowell Colony, the leading artist residency program in the United States, is pleased to announce the establishment of a new fund for artists. Thanks to a generous grant by The Leon Levy Foundation, artists accepted for a MacDowell Fellowship who need additional financial assistance are now eligible for such aid. These grants can be used to cover expenses that continue to accrue while artists are away from home, including rent, utilities, and childcare. Artists may also use the grants to compensate for lost income or in the event an employer requires an unpaid leave to attend the Colony. Equipment and supplies may be addressed by this aid, as well.

The MacDowell Colony, which was founded in 1907, provides Fellowships to more than 250 artists each year across seven contemporary disciplines: visual arts, interdisciplinary art, architecture, film, theatre, literature, and music composition. Set on 450 acres of beautiful woods in rural New Hampshire, MacDowell’s reputation for offering the ideal environment for creative pursuits is well-established and highly regarded. Past Fellows include such luminaries as Milton Avery, James Baldwin, Leonard Bernstein, Willa Cather, Aaron Copland, Thornton Wilder, and more recently Jonathan Franzen, Bright Sheng, Oscar Hijuelos, Eve Sussman, Qin Feng, and Stewart Wallace, among many others.

Offering 32 private studios designed for the specific discipline of the artist, the Colony also provides meals and separate accommodations. Artists who are accepted to MacDowell through its highly competitive application process are allowed up to eight weeks of undisturbed time and space to pursue their work. The criterion is talent as demonstrated in a work sample that is reviewed by selection panels in each discipline. Application deadlines for the three annual residency periods are January 15th, April 15th, and September 15th.

The Leon Levy Grants are part of an overall effort by MacDowell to ensure artists face no barriers in finding the time and space necessary to create. This program expands on a similar successful program for writers established in 1997. In addition, through The MacArthur Foundation and the David and Rosamond Putnam Foundation, MacDowell reimburses the transportation costs for international and domestic artists for travel to and from the Colony. Permanent funding for the financial assistance programs is being sought.

“While MacDowell Fellowships are awarded based on exceptional talent, we believe that as many as half of the artists who come to the Colony each year struggle financially,” says Cheryl Young, MacDowell’s executive director. “A review of financial information indicates that the average income for aid applicants in literature in 2006 was 22,000 dollars, with 48 percent of these households falling below the poverty line. It’s wonderful that The Leon Levy Foundation is making it possible to expand this program to Colony artists of all artistic disciplines.”

The Leon Levy Foundation is a private, not-for-profit foundation created from the estate of Leon Levy, a legendary investor with a longstanding commitment to philanthropy and humanism.

Celebrating its Centennial this year, The MacDowell Colony was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1997 for “for nurturing and inspiring many of this century’s finest artists.” It is the only artist residency program to have received this prominent honor. MacDowell has served as the model for residency programs throughout the United States and internationally. Since its founding 100 years ago, such communities have become the nation’s largest source of support for individual artists. For more information about the Colony or to apply, please visit our Web site at http://www.macdowellcolony.org