Archive for January 11th, 2008

ASU Art Museum Receives $1.4 Million Bequest

Friday, January 11th, 2008

museum2.jpg
ASU Art Museum, Tempe, AZ

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM
Tempe, Arizona
http://asuartmuseum.asu.edu

Wilhelmine “Helme” Prinzen passed away in late 2007 and left her more than $1.4 million estate in Paradise Valley, AZ to the ASU Art Museum, part of the Herberger College of the Arts at Arizona State University. Originally she planned for her bequest to remain anonymous, but later changed her mind to encourage others to consider including the ASU Art Museum in their estate planning.

Prinzen’s endowment will be used to assist and advance emerging artists through exhibitions organized by the museum and purchases of works by emerging artists for the museum’s permanent collection. In addition, the endowment will fund research and education in the area of contemporary art with emphasis on emerging artists.

“The Prinzen Endowment recognizes the ASU Art Museum’s history and ongoing commitment to exhibitions, publications and educational programs that focus on emerging artists,” says Heather Lineberry, senior curator and interim director of the ASU Art Museum. “Helme’s bequest significantly enhances our ability to continue these programs and to provide extraordinary experiences with contemporary art and artists for our students and audiences.”

Prinzen loved the ASU Art Museum, a place she found that reciprocated her interest in contemporary art, especially that of emerging artists.

“While Helme recognized that showing the work of artists already consecrated by art history or the market was important, she was attracted to our more adventurous approach,” says Marilyn Zeitlin, retired director of the ASU Art Museum and curator of its 2000 exhibition of Prinzen’s work, the first in a U.S. museum. “We were the first to show and collect work by Heidi Kumao, Einar and Jamex de la Torre, and gave the American audiences the first opportunity to see the works of Cuban artists in 1998. Helme liked that we often produce the first printed documentation of emerging artists’ work.”

Prinzen was introduced to the ASU Art Museum through her doctor, Rick Levinson, also an important artist and past chair of the museum’s advisory board. Prinzen was very much impressed with the museum’s emphasis on contemporary and emerging art – the museum was one of the first to show the works of Angela Ellsworth, Jon Haddock and Matthew Moore. She was also impressed with the museum’s commitment to show the works of artists who have not been seen in the region, including Shirin Neshat, Pipilotti Rist and Bill Viola.

Though a native of Germany, Prinzen spent six month of each year in Paradise Valley, Arizona. When not in Arizona, Prinzen lived in Kaarst, Germany, where she began her career as a gallerist, founding Gallery 44 in 1972. It quickly became noteworthy in Europe for showing challenging work, representing the works of Lucio Fontana, Yves Klein and Rotraut.

Once in Arizona, Prinzen’s interest eventually grew from the desire to show work, to creating her own pieces. She was influenced by the mandalas of Asian religious art and the persistence of the circle in the art of other cultures, including that of Native Americans. She incorporated that imagery into her own pieces.

“Her intimacy with this level of work and the creative processes behind it meant that when she began to make art herself, she did so at a high level of sophistication,” Zeitlin says. “Helme’s gift is the museum’s first major donation marked for endowment and allows the museum to show work by emerging artists who often are very close in age to our own students.”

Arizona State University Art Museum
Tenth Street and Mill Avenue
Tempe, AZ 85287-2911
t. 480.965.2787
f. 480.965.5254
e. asuartmuseum@asu.edu
w. http://asuartmuseum.asu.edu/

Creative Capital announces 2008 Film/Video and Visual Artists

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Creative Capital

Creative Capital announces 2008
Film/Video and Visual Artists
Creative Capital
65 Bleecker Street, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10012

http://www.creative-capital.org

Film/Video
Kenseth Armstead
Anita Chang
Erin Cosgrove
Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman
Rodney Evans
Lynn Hershman Leeson
Tia Lessin and Carl Deal
Brad Lichtenstein and Vernon Reid
Billy Luther
Tara Mateik
Catherine Mazza
Leighton Pierce
Laura Poitras
Anayansi Prado
Jay Rosenblatt
David Russo
Luke Savisky
Cauleen Smith
Daniel Sousa
Banker White and Zach Niles
Julie Wyman

Visual
Sanford Biggers
Susan Brandt and Kristine Woods
Zac Culler, Ben Beres and John Sutton
Kianga Ford
Joseph Grigely
Wayne Hodge
Jennie C. Jones
Kalup Linzy
Naeem Mohaiemen
Matthew Moore
Otabenga Jones & Associates:
Robert A. Pruitt, D. Jabari Anderson and Kenya Evans
Michael Rakowitz and Emna Zghal
Angela Reginato
Lili Smith
Eve Sussman
Mark Tribe
Trimpin
Lauren Woods
Mario Ybarra, Jr.
Bruce Yonemoto and Juli Carson

These forty-one projects representing fifty-two artists have each received initial awards of 10,000 dollars. As the projects develop, Creative Capital offers additional funds; projects may receive as much as 50,000 dollars each through the tenure of the multi-year grant.

Creative Capital artists also may participate in the organization’s distinctive Artist Services Program valued at 25,000 dollars per artist. This program offers artists skills-building assistance in areas such as fundraising, networking, marketing, and strategic planning with the goal of advancing both their projects and their careers.

In all, more than 2.5 million dollars has been committed to this new class of Creative Capital artists.

Since its founding in 1999, Creative Capital has committed more than 12 million dollars in financial support and services to 283 projects representing 350 artists. A complete list of grantees, profiles of funded projects, and up-to-date grant cycle information can be found online at the foundation’s website at http://www.creative-capital.org

Upcoming Grants

This upcoming year, Creative Capital will support projects in emerging fields, innovative literature and the performing arts. Applications are accepted online at http://www.creative-capital.org from February 4 through March 4, 2008.

Emerging Fields: Architecture | Bio Art | Design | Gaming | New Media Art | Sound Art
Innovative Literature: Fiction | Non-fiction | Poetry | Prose
Performing: Dance | Music | Performance Art | Puppetry | Spoken Word | Theater

Blanton WorkSpace: Paul Ramirez Jonas

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Blanton Museum of Art

Paul Ramirez Jonas
Wishing well, 2007
Clay, sculpture modeling stand, tele-prompter, speech fragment.
Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Blanton WorkSpace:
Paul Ramirez Jonas
Avra Kehdabra: You create as
you speak asks
November 3, 2007 - February 3, 2008

The Blanton Museum of Art is pleased to present the work of artist Paul Ramirez Jonas for its current WorkSpace–a series that explores new developments in contemporary art by featuring commissioned projects by emerging and mid-career artists from around the world.

In this exhibition artist Paul Ramirez Jonas draws on the words of famous Argentinean writer Jorge Luis Borges taking the following sentence as a point of departure: “Reading, obviously, is an activity which comes after that of writing; it is more modest, more unobtrusive, more intellectual.” Avra Kehdabra: You create as you speak asks: What action can awaken a written text? Each time a song lyric is sung or prose read aloud it takes on different meanings in response to the context, intention, and personal beliefs of the singer or reader. Ramirez Jonas presents four types of texts: surveys (on religion, labor, and national values), lyrics to the song “This Land is Your Land,” a courtroom oath, and a television speech that can be found in many State of the Union addresses. In each case the text is typed onto thick slabs of moist clay that refer to an ancient tradition of recording the written language in clay tablets in places such as Summeria. Ramirez Jonas questions th
e meaning of the words “written in stone” and invites the audience to actively engage with each text by reading them aloud. Together, they accrue meaning through the distinct interpretations that each text might suggest to different people.. Ramirez Jonas’s work points to the fragility of written history and proposes how knowledge and meaning are in fact constructions formed in the present by the society that produces the written material. This dichotomy of fragility versus solidity of the written word is highlighted by Ramirez Jonas’s use of clay as artistic material, and even though ancient Sumerian clay tablets may appear fragile, those that still exist will have had a longer life than published translations of the texts in paper, which disintegrates more easily. Ramirez Jonas transforms written ideas into objects and breaks with the convention of the pedestal as a standard base by using common objects as placeholders of the clay tables. These objects become platforms where the viewer activates meaning as they speak in front of them.

Paul Ramirez Jonas (b. 1965, USA, raised in Honduras) lives and works in New York. He holds a Master in Fine Arts from Rhode Island School of Design and a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brown University. His work has been featured at Ellen de Bruijne Projects (Netherlands), Roger Bjorkholmen Galleri (Stockholm), Ikon Gallery (UK), Kadist Art Foundation (Paris), 6th Shanghai Biennial (China), inSite_05 (San Diego Tijuana, Mexico), Jack Tilton Gallery and Creative Time (New York), and the Miami Art Museum (Miami), among others. He currently teaches at the Art Department, Hunter College (New York), and is preparing a solo show at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut.

WorkSpace: Paul Ramirez Jonas is curated by Ursula Davila-Villa, assistant curator of Latin American art, and is generously supported by the Susan Vaughan Foundation and by members of the Blanton Contemporary Salon.

PAC MURCIA presents ESTRATOS”

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
PAC MURCIA

REF. ALMARCEGUI, LARA 01
Lara Almarcegui
La montaña de escombros
Saint Truiden, Belgium
2005

ESTRATOS’’
31 January to 31 March 2008

CONTEMPORARY ART
PROJECT MURCIA 2008
http://www.pacmurcia.es

“What if the past played an identical role for us that, in times gone by, the future played for modernists? This was the first question that came to mind when, during my first visit, I was taken aback by the layout of the Arab city, and by the numerous remains of Islamic civilisation surfacing beneath the European present. This historic sedimentation can be made out in the urban fabric, taking the form of an open-air archaeological site, in which the past and the present coexist, and echo one another.

The urban reality of Murcia is the ideal place for carrying out an exhibition about this key problematics in contemporary art: many artists today borrow archaeological methods, excavating in the contemporary world or digging into History, giving their research the same attention to detail that specialists in lost civilisations do.

In this case, archaeology is seen from the point of view of the method, not so much as an area of expertise, and even less as a form of nostalgia: far from extolling the past, these artists survey it, in order to better explain the present. They also apply archaeological techniques to the field of contemporaneity. The arche, the foundation, is unearthed in their work to illuminate us about ourselves. This archaeological research can then be applied to the most distant past, as well as to the most recent events in time, even up to the present moment.

For the modern age, the past represented the tradition only recently replaced by what was new. For the postmodern, it served the purpose of a catalogue, or a repertoire. Today, the past is defined in territorial terms: when we travel, we do it to change temporality; in contrast, examining an art history book refers us to the options chosen by the geography of contemporary styles and techniques. Therefore, the urban reality is currently an open book in which artists can explore the stratum of the past, and the footprints of what is to come.

ESTRATOS’’ poses these questions. Some artists respond to them through the exploration of the different layers that make up the present, while others do it by creating a space that redistributes the usual order of time. As when walking through the streets of Murcia, here we find the complexity of the questions raised by the persistence of memory in a modern time, tired of its flight forward.”

ARTISTS
LARA ALMARCEGUI, BERND & HILLA BECHER, BLEDA Y ROSA, JUAN CRUZ, VERNE DAWSON, MARK DION, JIMMIE DURHAM, CYPRIEN GAILLARD, ILANA HALPERIN, JOACHIM KOESTER, MARK LOMBARDI, ALLAN McCOLLUM, PAUL NOBLE, PAULINA OLOWSKA, DIEGO PERRONE,
ABRAHAM POINCHEVAL & LAURENT TIXADOR, MARJETICA POTRC, GREGOR SCHNEIDER,
EVE SUSSMAN & THE RUFUS CORPORATION, KEITH TYSON

CURATOR
NICOLAS BOURRIAUD

The PAC MURCIA Proyecto de Arte Contemporáneo (Contemporary Art Project) is one of the most ambitious initiatives conceived by the Regional Administration of the Region of Murcia to lay the foundations for a consistent and referential context in the contemporary art field. As well as the exhibition curated by Nicolas Bourriaud, titled ESTRATOS”, it will also feature a selection of films with this same topic in the Filmoteca Regional during the month of February; a parallel program of exhibitions by local galleries and institutions and the seminar “HETEROCHRONIES: Temporality and image in contemporaneity” organised by the CENDEAC including lectures by Mary Ann Doane, Pamela M. Lee, Peter Osborne, José Luis Molinuevo, Manuel Cruz, Gary Shapiro, as well as some of the artist in the exhibition.

Seizing the occasion of PAC MURCIA, the Regional Dept for Culture, Youth and Sport has signed a number of agreements with various artists’ residencies in Berlin, London and Rotterdam, for local
art practitioners.

VENUES
Centro Párraga
Espacio AV
MAM (Museo Arqueológico de Murcia)
MUBAM (Museo de Bellas Artes de Murcia)
Museo de Santa Clara
Sala San Esteban
Sala Verónicas

Public spaces

CENDEAC (Centro de Documentación y Estudios Avanzados de Arte Contemporáneo)
Filmoteca Regional Francisco Rabal

For further information, please contact:
Press Office
T. (+34) 902 106 504
info@pacmurcia.es
http://www.pacmurcia.es