Archive for October 24th, 2007

Robert Irwin at MCASD

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD)

Robert Irwin in the Robert Caplan
Artist-in-Residence Studio
MCASD Jacobs Building, on July 11, 2007
Photograph by Stephanie Diani

Robert Irwin: Primaries and Secondaries
October 21, 2007 - February 23, 2008
(Jacobs Building)
October 21, 2007 - April 13, 2008 (1001 Kettner)
Museum of Contemporary Art
San Diego, Downtown
1100 & 1001 Kettner Boulevard
San Diego, CA 92101
General Information:
(858) 454-3541

http://www.mcasd.org

The largest exhibition of Irwin’s work since 1993, Robert Irwin: Primaries and Secondaries features five new major installation works created specifically for the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego’s downtown galleries, and is drawn almost exclusively of works from the Museum’s collection. The exhibition, a survey spanning more than 50 years of work, is curated by Hugh M. Davies, The David C. Copley Director at MCASD, and is on view at both the new Joan and Irwin Jacobs Building (through February 23, 2008) and 1001 Kettner galleries (through April 13, 2008) in downtown San Diego.

Of the five new major site-determined installations, four will premiere at MCASD, and a fifth, Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow & Blue , is a larger version of the three-room piece that appeared at PaceWildenstein, New York in December 2006. The two enamel paint on honeycomb aluminum works, and the fluorescent installation are new departures for the artist.

While specific objects are utilized in these installations, they serve as a passive platform to facilitate the transformation of energy and to trigger a phenomenal, visual experience. The enameled panels of Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow & Blue (2007) and Primaries and Secondaries (2007) function as colored mirrors whose complex reflections enable us to see the world in a new light while at the same time spark interlaced art historical connotations, from color theory to mid-20th century
Modernist Abstraction.

Light itself focuses and diffuses our gaze in Irwin’s new environmental light installation Light and Space (2007), consisting of two-foot and four-foot colorless fluorescent tubes mounted on the north wall of the Foster Gallery in the Jacobs Building. The piece creates a dialogue between solid architecture and empty space mediated by electric light–three forms of matter at different accelerations. In this work–developed during Irwin’s residency in MCASD’s Robert Caplan Artist-in-Residence Studio–he uses for the first time fluorescent light tubes alone as the main triggers of a mass-less, enveloping perceptual experience.

In another new work, Square the Room (2007), Tergal voile fabric, a type of scrim material, functions to redefine the contour of the Royston Gallery at 1001 Kettner–to literally “square” its sharply obtuse-angled walls. Finally, in Five x Five (2007), created in response to the interior volume of the Copley Gallery at 1001 Kettner, five black scrim and five white scrim panels are placed perpendicularly to create a subtly changing monochrome mass out of the empty space between walls and ceiling.

The location of Southern California is primary to Irwin’s work, and the vast, light-filled spaces at MCASD’s Jacobs Building and the Irwin-designed high-ceiling spaces with abundant windows and skylight of 1001 Kettner are both particularly well-suited to show the work to its best advantage. Together with artist Richard Fleischner and architect David Raphael Singer, Irwin designed the museum spaces at 1001 Kettner, which opened in 1993.

MCASD has collected the artist’s groundbreaking work in depth, and this exhibition includes a wide range of work–from early Abstract Expressionist paintings to minimal canvases, and from early sculptural objects, including his seminal disks and acrylic columns, to large installations. MCASD has an ongoing commitment to collecting and preserving the work of this American master and has over 50 works by Irwin in the Museum’s collection.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue that includes a scholarly essay written by Davies; 30 full-spread color images documenting the exhibition and new installations; a transcript of an interview between Irwin and Davies; and five previously-published essays selected from Irwin’s distinguished theoretical output to give further context to the extraordinary artistic contribution of this eminent West Coast artist. A video documentary of the installation process is included with the catalogue and provides rare insight into Irwin’s on-site approach.

Robert Irwin: Primaries and Secondaries is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. The exhibition is sponsored by friends and colleagues in honor of Charles and Tanya Brandes.

About MCASD
Founded in 1941, MCASD is the preeminent contemporary visual arts institution in San Diego County, with locations in downtown San Diego and La Jolla, and a collection of more than 4,000 works of art created since 1950.

Admission is free for ages 25 and under, and is generously supported by QUALCOMM.
http://www.mcasd.org

The Power Plant presents 20/20 VISION

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
The Power Plant

General Idea, Untitled (Trinitron),1986
Gouache, acrylic and pasta on canvas
132.1 by 182.9 cm
Courtesy AA Bronson/The Estate of General Idea

20/20 VISION
20th Anniversary Gala Dinner &
Art Auction
15 November, 2007

Supported by Sotheby’s
The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery at Harbourfront Centre
231 Queens Quay West
Toronto, ON Canada M5J 2G8
416.973.4949
thepowerplant@harbourfrontcentre.com
http://www.thepowerplantevents.org

Join us on 15 November for the 20th ANNIVERSARY GALA DINNER & ART AUCTION–an extraordinary celebration featuring a live auction of artworks by internationally renowned artists associated with the history of The Power Plant, and supported by Sotheby’s.

Auction preview now online at http://www.thepowerplantevents.org
Advance bids accepted on-line or by phone at 416 973 1264 through 13 November.
Featuring donated works by:

Stephen Andrews, Fiona Banner, Iain Baxter&, Lee Bul, Paul Butler, Geneviève Cadieux, Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, Ian Carr-Harris, Lynne Cohen, Christine Davis, Peter Doig, Stan Douglas, Sam Durant, Marcel Dzama, Geoffrey Farmer, Eldon Garnet, Frank Gehry, General Idea, Liam Gillick, Dan Graham, Angela Grauerholz, Adam Harrison, Luis Jacob, Christian Jankowski, Glenn Ligon, Ken Lum, Scott Lyall, Scott McFarland, Kelly Mark, John Massey, Jonathan Monk, Paul P., Raymond Pettibon, Annie Pootoogook, Daniel Richter, Royal Art Lodge, Michael Snow, Joanne Tod, Francesco Vezzoli, Ian Wallace, Christopher Williams.

Since opening in 1987 The Power Plant has supported the development of international and Canadian contemporary art through a dynamic mix of exhibitions, commissions, public programs, publications, and events. The gallery’s exhibitions feature the most exciting art being made today while its publications are renowned around the world.

The 20th ANNIVERSARY GALA DINNER & ART AUCTION commemorates 20 groundbreaking years of The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery and will empower its future for 20 more. The evening will feature a live auction of artworks by internationally renowned artists associated with the history of The Power Plant and a late autumn, bespoke feast by superstar chef Michael Stadtländer, featuring sumptuous food, wonderful wines, imaginative décor and entertainment befitting the theme of 20/20 Vision.

Free Public Preview of auction artworks from 9-14 November, beautifully installed in The Power Plant’s exceptional gallery spaces.

For more information, to reserve tickets or purchase tables, please contact Joe Goulart at 416.973.1264 or jgoulart@harbourfrontcentre.com or visit http://www.thepowerplantevents.org

Casco presents Hidden Curriculum

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Casco
Office for Art, Design and Theory

Hidden Curriculum
Annette Krauss
Monday 17 September - Sunday 18 November 2007
Casco
Office for Art, Design and Theory
Nieuwekade 213-215
3511 RW Utrecht, The Netherlands
Phone & fax: +31(0)30 2319995
Opening hours: Tues - Sun 12 - 6 pm

http://www.cascoprojects.org

‘Hidden Curriculum’ looks at the unrecognized and unintended knowledge, values and beliefs that are part of the learning process in schools. It focuses on actions that go beyond existing norms and shows creative and productive ways of navigating through everyday life in school. The project is currently being realized through a series of workshops with two groups of 16-17 year old students from the Gerrit Rietveld College and Amadeus Lyceum in Utrecht. The workshops will set a framework within which the students will investigate their own actions and forms of behaviour and transfer the knowledge that they gain from this towards other ends, such as the production of printed material, video and public actions.

Activating situations that may go beyond common sense or secure behaviour, they will reflect on the legitimacy of specific social contexts, taking a critical stance in order to think through the complexity of their own actions. In a broader context the project forms a model of how institutional structures are negotiated in all areas of public life, thinking about how people deal with rules and imposed categories of thought, and both internalise them as well as subconsciously resist them.

‘Hidden Curriculum’ will be developed over three months and is open to the public throughout with a continuously developing body of documentation and special events. The final outcomes of the project will be presented in a screening, and will be on view at Casco during the last week.

’show and tell’ by Celine Condorelli
‘Hidden Curriculum’ takes place within an evolving and adaptable workspace specially developed for the project by Celine Condorelli as part of her ongoing research into support structures.

‘Hidden Curriculum Files’
Graphic design students from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Amsterdam will produce a series of booklets documenting the project.

EVENTS:

Saturday 3 November, 15.00

Screening: Petra Bauer/Annette Krauss ‘all the things I need to learn…’ 2005

Lecture:
Thomas Alkemeyer / Thomas Pille
‘The physicality of education. On the silent power of symbolic violence’
The human body is often ignored in discussions on education. Alkemeyer and Pille’s analytical perspective focuses on the corporeality of education in order to interpret the interactions that take place in educational institutions. Tracing body movements in spatial environments that reflect social orders, they will look at the intrinsic symbolic violence of educational institutions and the reproduction of social inequalities in everyday school life.

Thursday 15 November, 17.00-19.00
Final presentation
Screening and presentation of the documentation of the project
On view at Casco until 18 November