Archive for December 12th, 2007

ARCO/BEEP NEW MEDIA ART AWARD

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
ARCO/BEEP

ARCO/BEEP NEW MEDIA
ART AWARD
3rd edition

Conceded by BEEP, in collaboration
with ARCO

Worth 15.000 euros
http://www.arco.beep.es

The goal of these awards is to advance the production and exhibition of New Media Art, and art linked to new technologies. Its purpose is to promote new high-tech art, and to foster communication between the manufacturers/creators of this new technology and those who create art. A natural collaboration, which will benefit and enrich both sides.

There is one ACQUISITION PRIZE:

ARCO/BEEP ACQUISITION PRIZE: worth 15.000 euros. To be eligible, an artwork must be shown by a gallery at the 27th edition of ARCO, the International Contemporary Art Fair, in Madrid (13-18 February 2007), and must have a significant component involving new technology and media.

The prizes will be awarded by an international jury of prestigious specialists.

Registration form will be available from the 1st of January on the ARCO/BEEP NEW MEDIA ART Prize website http://www.arco.beep.es

Marcel Broodthaers

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Marcel Broodthaers Coquilles d'Oeufs 1966.jpg
Marcel Broodthaers: ‘289 Coquilles d’Oeufs 1966’ Courtesy SMAK, Ghent. Copyright Broodthaers Estate

Marcel Broodthaers
26 January – 30 March 2008

Milton Keynes Gallery presents the most comprehensive exhibition in the UK by renowned Belgian artist Marcel Broodthaers (1924–1976) since his Tate Gallery retrospective nearly thirty years ago. Broodthaers was a poet, photographer, film-maker and artist and throughout his career challenged the role of the artwork, the artist and the art institution. Considered to be one of the most important artists of the last century, Broodthaers’ work and thinking is highly influential on many artists working today. This exhibition explores the diversity of Broodthaers’ practice including books, editions, objects, projections and paintings and features several works never seen in the UK before. His first ‘artwork’, Pense Bête,1964, addresses his enduring concerns about form and language and the construction of meaning. Also shown will be Miroir d’Epoque Regency,1973 from arguably the artist’s most significant passage of work Museum d’Art Moderne, Département d’Aigles.!
This
comprised twelve different ‘sections’ and was founded with the 19th century section in his Brussels house in 1968. The mirror reflects the gallery and viewer back on themselves, questioning the role of the institution and the visitor within it. The exhibition also includes examples of his renowned shell works – mussels and eggs – as in Grande Casserole de Moules, 1966 and 289 Coquilles d’Oeufs,1966. The egg and mussel shell become a recurrent symbol in Broodthaers’ work as a means of questioning the social function of the artwork.With characteristic wit and insight Broodthaers announced ‘Everything is eggs. The world is eggs’.

An illustrated exhibition catalogue with contributions by co-curators Barry Barker, Maria Gilissen and Michael Stanley will be available from the Gallery shop.

Exhibition supported by SMAK, Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Ghent; Eurostar; The Henry Moore Foundation and the Broodthaers Estate.

GALLERY OPENING HOURS:
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 5pm, Sunday 11am – 5pm, . Thursdays open late until 8pm. Closed Mondays

ADMISSION FREE

Milton Keynes Gallery
900 Midsummer Boulevard
Central Milton Keynes
MK9 3QA

www.mk-g.org

T. 01908 558 302
F. 01908 558 308

Pascale Marthine Tayou: ‘Plastik Diagnostik’

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

2__MG_0048.JPG
Pascale Marthine Tayou: ‘HUMAN BEING@WORK (2007– ongoing)’, Milton Keynes Gallery 2007. Copyright: Jerry Hardman-Jones

Pascale Marthine Tayou: ‘Plastik Diagnostik’
17 November 2007 – 13 January 2008

Through his installations, drawings, films and performances, Pascale Marthine Tayou (Cameroon, b. 1966) articulates the nomadic existence of his life, from birth in Cameroon to travelling throughout Europe and his ceaseless journeying as an artist working internationally and moving from country to country. For his first exhibition in the UK, Marthine Tayou will show a selection of work that questions cultural and national identity and the role of the individual. As a self described foreigner and traveller, his work is directly influenced by the drama that he witnesses on the streets of the countries he travels through, and is manifest in the personal artefacts and ephemera including train and airline ticket stubs, restaurant and shop receipts and labels or wrappings for socks, razors and batteries. His insistent reuse and recycling of these objects confirms the fluidity and borderlessness of space, culture and thought, and that one’s own biography is inextricably linked wi!
th
economics, migration and politics.

Please find more at www.mk-g.org

GALLERY OPENING HOURS:
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 5pm, Sunday 11am – 5pm, . Thursdays open late until 8pm. Closed Mondays

ADMISSION FREE

Milton Keynes Gallery
900 Midsummer Boulevard
Central Milton Keynes
MK9 3QA

www.mk-g.org

T. 01908 558 302
F. 01908 558 308

Paul McCarthy at S.M.A.K.

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
S.M.A.K.

EXPO S.M.A.K.
Paul McCarthy
Head Shop/Shop Head. Works 1966-2006
13.10.2007… 17.02.2008
Municipal Museum for Contemporary Art
Citadelpark
9000 Ghent
Belgium
P +32 (0)9 221 17 03
museum.smak@gent.be

http://www.smak.be

Paul McCarthy, born in 1945 in Salt Lake City, USA, continues to impress us with his work. Indeed his work has influenced a whole generation of artists such as Cindy Sherman, Jason Rhoades, Mike Kelly and Jonathan Meese.

A confrontation with McCarthy’s work is an unforgettable experience. His visual idiom is overwhelming, insightful, repulsive, even frightening; the action is violent, chaotic and often frankly burlesque.

McCarthy’s apparently chaotic scenes are not the product of a madman or the catharsis of a tormented mind. Indeed, the aim of his oeuvre is to confront us with cultural and social traumas, the dark side of The American Dream and Western consumer society. Moreover, it emphatically appeals to our repressed fears and desires, which makes it even more confrontational. McCarthy says ‘You may understand my actions as vented culture. You may understand my action as vented fear’.

McCarthy began studying art in 1966. The dominant art movements at the time were Abstract Expressionism (which had already had its heyday), minimal art, pop art, conceptual art and experimental film, and we see their influence in his work. McCarthy integrates them as parallel forms of artistic expression and therefore does not evolve from painting to performance and on to sculpture. He set up the performances as installations and transformed the props he used in them into sculptures. He saw painting as an action rather than an object. In this he proved himself to be a successor of Jackson Pollock. From pop art he derived the use of products and the visual idiom of American consumer society. Especially ketchup, which has more or less become his trademark.

Paul McCarthy began his career as a performance artist. The actions were small-scale with a focus on the human body, and performed only for a handful of people. In the eighties and nineties his performances became more complex. He stopped performing them live and only filmed them. The sets became larger and McCarthy began to use actors and professional film crews.

In addition to his performance and video work, McCarthy has continued to create sculptures and installation throughout his career. They are often based on his videos and performances.

Through the many recurring themes one could regard his body of work as one large work which is constantly involved in a process of transformation.

The Head Shop/Shop Head retrospective exhibition (the curator is Magnus af Petersens), which is being held in association with Moderna Museet in Stockholm and ARoS in Aarhus, is the first time a representative selection of his work, produced from 1966 to 2006, has been exhibited in Europe. McCarthy has created new work, The Bush Pieces, especially for the exhibition which is held
in S.M.A.K.

FOUR presents Fire Tale

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
FOUR

FOUR presents
Karen Azoulay
Fire Tale
14 December - 20 January 2007

Preview : 6-8pm 13 December 2007
http://www.fourdublin.com

The history of women and fire is a fraught one. From hearth to witch burning, the relationship between female and flame has intertwined, often deleteriously, since time immemorial. Fire Tale, Karen Azoulay’s latest consideration of the enduring power of symbol and archetype, reanimates several mythic collisions of the feminine and the incendiary with photographs, sculptural props, and a
video installation.

Azoulay’s images recall figures such as the legendary phoenix, Cinderella, Prometheus, and the Statue of Liberty, yet Liberty’s torch is papier-mâché, its fire a crown of broken orange glass; the ominous waters of New York Harbour are merely swathes of shimmering blue fabric pieced together around the whitewashed live model. Flames in other works comprise small pennants of fabric blown by a fan, their minatory quality the result of lighting and a suspension of disbelief. Azoulay creates her images from the most prosaic of materials and the most transparent of effects. Their homey charm and plainspoken theatricality seem not so unlike that of a school pageant; the video, Phoenix Rising, in fact, plays within a proscenium constructed from foam board and house paint. But Azoulay’s craft (and the word is used advisedly) does nothing to diminish either the resonance or the potency of her work. It succeeds because of, rather than in spite of, the coexistence of its gravely l
earned ends and its unpretentiously ingenuous means.

Karen Azoulay was born in Toronto, Ontario, in 1977, and received her BFA from York University in 2000. Solo exhibitions of her work include Wading Under a Crackling Sky, curated by Glenn Ligon at CUE Art Foundation in New York (2007), and The Evening Canopy and the Sunset Hour at Mercer Union in Toronto (2006). Her installations and performances have been seen at The Art Gallery of Ontario and The Power Plant in Toronto; White Columns in New York; the Islip Art Museum in East Islip, New York; Hanna Gallery in Tokyo; Art & Idea in Mexico City; and Galerie Kunstbuero in Vienna. She lives and works in New York City.

The exhibition Fire Tale is curated by Joseph R. Wolin.

This exhibition is hosted in Dublin City Council
at The LAB, Foley Street, Dublin 1

Preview : 6-8pm 13 December 2007

14 December - 20 January 2007

Opening hours
Monday - Saturday
10am - 5pm

Regards,
Lee Welch

FOUR
http://www.fourdublin.com