Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for November 3rd, 2007

Skew Gallery Presents— Glide: Laura Millard

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

reflect_press.jpg
Opening Reception: Thursday, Nov. 22, 6-9pm Artist in Attendance

Laura Millard’s large-format colour photographs are a continued exploration melding photography and mixed media painting.
Through fine brushwork, Millard delivers a surface with texture, luster and mass. Her exploration of the boundaries that define photography and abstract painting presents a hybrid of the documentary and notions of embellishment.

Millard takes her inspiration from the delicate and minute details of air and light as they play across the surface of frozen lakes, rivers and streams found in Banff National Park. Her bird’s eye perspective of the effervescent nature of oxygen bubbles captured as water turns to ice invites the viewer to focus in on the beauty in the details of the landscape, adding a human scale to the viewing experience. She challenges traditional notions of photography as documenting reality, and through her manipulation and alteration of the image, presents a truth about the landscape in a more evocative nature. These painterly embellishments are both subtle and skillful, adding depth to the abstracted details of the elemental landscape.

Laura Millard has an MFA from Concordia University and has exhibited her work across Canada and the United States. She has received numerous grants and awards during her career, including an Ontario Arts Council Visual Arts Grant and a Canada Grant. Her work is in both private and public collections across North America. Laura Millard is currently Chair of Painting and Drawing at the Ontario College of Art & Design.

For more information regarding this exhibition, or for acquisition of work by Laura Millard, please contact Emily Barnett at: 403.762.4455 or email: info@skewgallery.com

Skew Gallery
1615 -10 Ave SW
Calgary, AB

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Utrecht Manifest: 2nd Biennale for Social Design

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Utrecht Manifest

Isotype symbol, 1930
Gerd Arntz

Utrecht Manifest
2nd Biennale for Social Design
Utrecht, the Netherlands
24 November 2007 - 11 February 2008
http://www.utrechtmanifest.nl

Utrecht Manifest turns the spotlight and investigates the latest developments in the field of design through a socially engaged prism. The mainstays of Utrecht Manifest 2007 are research and reflection and an exhibition programme. The multidisciplinary approach adopted by Utrecht Manifest ensures there is ample consideration for related disciplines such as architecture, film and the visual arts, so that design is not treated as an autonomous, capsular discipline.

The investigative, theoretical aspect is comprised of lectures, debates, workshops, interim publications and an international symposium on 28 November about the hot issue of sustainability. Many people are suddenly realizing that we urgently need to find a new way of interacting with our natural environment if we want to have a future worth talking about. All kinds of conflicting aspirations, fears and responsibilities become evident in this quest for sustainability. Guest speakers at the symposium The Sustainability Dilemma include renowned Italian designer Enzo Mari, architects Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner from Venezuela, German chemist Michael Braungart and British designer Fiona Raby. The key question to be addressed is to what extent the modernist legacy of designers such as Gerrit Rietveld is still of value and relevance today. What is the relevance of terms such as engagement and sustainability for today’s designers? How does the call for sustainability a
ffect the development of the design disciplines?

At the Centraal Museum in Utrecht two remarkable exhibitions are being staged by the intendant of the event Dutch designer Ed Annink: Lovely Language and A Safe Place. For Living & Working Together shown at the Academy Gallery, Ed Annink selected works with a focus on socially engaged design in association by students from international design courses.

Lovely Language
Words divide, images unite
In the 1920s, the Austrian sociologist Otto Neurath (1882-1945) developed an international visual language, for which the German-Dutch graphic artist Gerd Arntz (1900-1988) designed more than 4,000 pictograms. Neurath’s motto — words divide, images unite — is the point of departure for the Lovely Language exhibition. Many of the duo’s designs were the forebears of pictograms we now encounter everywhere, such as the man and woman on toilet doors. How tenable is the ISOTYPE (International System of Typographic Picture Education) by Neurath and Arntz in the 21st century? Lovely Language presents Neurath and Arntz’s visual language and the way it was employed as the basis for the development of an international visual language. Also on show is recent and inspiring work at the frontiers of word and image by Dutch designers Mieke Gerritzen, Arnoud van den Heuvel and Koert van Mensvoort, the British-Finnish artist Charles Sandison and others.

A Safe Place
Pictograms for disaster areas
Television, radio, newspapers and the Internet treat disasters as happenings. Clear communication between the local population, any foreign tourists and the international aid workers is critical for every kind of disaster. Gert Dumbar, the renowned graphic designer, devised a new set of universal pictograms for humanitarian relief organizations together with his son Derk and students from Iowa City, Seoul, Paris and The Hague. After years of research these important designs are being presented for the first time in
this exhibition.

The Dutch Design Center in De Pastoe Fabriek (Utrecht) presents two more exhibitions: Re-use and Use and Use…, showing the results of a workshop where children collected disused items and injected them with a new lease of life. Beautiful Cultures presents the results of a workshop for students and migrants during which symbols from their original cultures were amassed and translated into contemporary designs.

Utrecht Biennale Foundation
P.O. Box 2152
3500 GD Utrecht
T +31 (0)30 258 55 56
F +31 (0)30 258 55 49

More information at: http://www.utrechtmanifest.nl

YCAM presents doubleNegatives Architecture “Corpora in Si(gh)te”

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media

copyright: doubleNegatives Architecture

doubleNegatives Architecture
“Corpora in Si(gh)te”
media architecture installation, commissioned by YCAM
http://corpora.ycam.jp
13 Oct 2007 - 13 Jan 2008
YCAM | Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media
Nakazono-cho 7-7, Yamaguchi,
753-0075 JAPAN
+81-83-901-2222
http://www.ycam.jp

An attempt to extract autonomous architecture responding to the environment through information networkYamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (YCAM) holds a new installation“Corpora in Si(gh)te” (commissioned by YCAM) by “doubleNegatives Architecture.” doubleNegatives Architecture is an architectural group who is engaged in crossover activities in a new area of architecture, making good use of various media and information technologies. In “Corpora in Si(gh)te,” a number of sensors are set up in the whole area around YCAM (building and central park) to form a meshed network, so that real-time environmental information (temperature, brightness, wind direction, sound, etc.) is collected and networked. A cellular, distributed network of nodes react through realtime processing to the environmental conditions, growing and subsiding like an organism. Despite each node making local descisions and not having a central architect, the nodes inadvertently give rise to an arch
itectural structure, both indoors in the YCAM building and outdoors in the park. This “information architecture” has its own spatial perception to make itself transform into various forms by providing each part of architecture with Super-Eye perceptive points with the environment, such as voluntary notation from each node of Corpora. Changes in the architecture that looks as if living in the environment are visualized for visitors, as images overlapping real scenes through the AR (augmented reality) technology at several points around YCAM building.

- doubleNegatives Architecture
Sota Ichikawa / Architect [Japan]
Max Rheiner / Artist, Soft-Hardware Developer [Swiss, Korea]
Ákos Maróy / Software artist [Hungary]
Kaoru Kobata / Graphic designer [Japan]
Satoru Higa / Artist, Programmer [Japan]
Hajime Narukawa / Architect [Japan]

doubleNegatives Architecture launched in 1998 as the brainchild of architect Sota Ichikawa, views the processes and devices used to measure space as “architecture”, assembling a team for each project and engaging in a unique spectrum of activities including installations, software and architectural design. Currently dNA is employing a bottom-up-style cell automaton program to study architectural modeling through the autonomous generation of forms, and in future aims to convert this to three-dimensional media and present it in urban spaces.
http://www.doubleNegatives.jp

Co-production: YCAM InterLab
Project Curator: Kazunao Abe (YCAM)
Produced by: YCAM
Cooperation: University of the Arts Zurich (ZHdK)
Department Interaction Design, Zurich Switzerland
Nextlab, Budapest Hungary

For further information:
Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (YCAM)
+81-83-901-2222
http://www.ycam.jp
information@ycam.jp

Dennis Ashbaugh and Eduardo Kac at IVAM

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno

Dennis Ashbaugh
September 25 - November 18, 2007

Eduardo Kac
September 27 - November 11, 2007
IVAM, Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno
Guillem de Castro 118
46003 Valencia
SPAIN
T: +34 96 38 676 79
F: +34 96 39 21094
comunicacion@ivam.es
http://www.ivam.es

Opening hours:
Tuesday to sunday: 10 am to 8 pm
Monday closed

The Valencian Institut of Modern Art (IVAM) presents two shows that open up the new line on Art and Science: “Dennis Ashbaugh. The aesthetics of biology”, curated by Barbara Rose, and “Eduardo Kac”, curated by Ángel Kalenberg.

Dennis Ashbaugh

Born in Red Oak, Iowa, in 1946 and brought up in Southern California, Dennis Ashbaugh set out as an artist in the early seventies. His initial relationship with scientific processes led to various paintings based on the principle of hybridization, implanting images from different artists – such as Mondrian or Pollock – to create a mutant combination. His reflection on important advances that were being made in genetics and biotechnology began in the late eighties, with research on DNA giving the central focus. In 1990, Ashbaugh began using DNA sequencing documented by digital imaging as a starting point for heroic-scale paintings made up of layers of stains drifting through an ambiguous atmosphere with antecedents in Turner’s paintings of smoke and mist and Miró’s cosmic imagery. It is their sophisticated acknowledgement of tradition that differentiates Ashbaugh’s genetic “portraits” from the current craze for digital prints of
DNA material.

Almost simultaneously he started on a series of works based on computer viruses, and this led him to collaborate with the science fiction writer William Gibson, who coined the word “cyberspace”. The result was the book Agrippa (A Book of the Dead), with pages that could be permanently eliminated, like computer data.

Marine forms interlock in Ashbaugh’s most recent paintings, offering references to the camouflage of tropical fish and the ubiquitous pattern of combat uniforms. Considering biology and genetics as sources for iconography enables serious artists who have realized that Pop culture has ceased to be a relevant resource to access imagery that resonates with a large audience.

The exhibition of works by Dennis Ashbaugh is sponsored by ASISA.

Eduardo Kac

Considered one of today’s leading artists, Kac opened at the dawn of the twenty-first century a new direction for contemporary art with his “transgenic art”–first with a groundbreaking net installation entitled Genesis (1999), which included an “artist’s gene” he invented, and then with his fluorescent rabbit
called Alba (2000).

From his first online works in 1985 to his current convergence of the digital and the biological, Kac has always investigated the poetic, philosophical and political dimensions of communication processes. Equally concerned with the aesthetic and the social aspects of verbal and non-verbal interaction, in his work Kac examines linguistic systems, dialogic exchanges, and interspecies communication.

Kac’s work has been exhibited internationally at venues such as Exit Art and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York; Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris, and Lieu Unique, Nantes, France; OK Contemporary Art Center, Linz, Austria; Seoul Museum of Art, Korea; and Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro. Kac’s work has been showcased in biennials such as Yokohama Triennial, Japan, Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil, and Gwangju Biennale, Korea. His work is part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the ZKM Museum, Karlsruhe, Germany, and the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, among others. His public art commission from the University of Minnesota is in the permanent collection of the Weisman Art Museum, Minneapolis.

For further information please visit our website: http://www.ivam.es

Images above (left to right):

Dennis Ashbaugh: Flavr-Savr, 1990
Mixed media on canvas, 290 x 295 cm

Eduardo Kac: Chaos, 1986
Silver-halide hologram, 30 x 40 cm