Archive for January 27th, 2008

Schirn Kunsthalle presents ALL-INCLUSIVE A TOURIST WORLD

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt

HO-YEOL RYU
Flughafen, 2005
Ca. 100 x 150 cm
Digital Print
Courtesy Ho-Yeol Ryu

ALL-INCLUSIVE
A TOURIST WORLD
30 January 2008 - 04 May 2008

SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT
Römerberg
60311 Frankfurt, Germany
phone: (+49) 69 29 98 82-0
fax: (+49) 69 29 98 82-240
welcome@schirn.de
http://www.schirn.de

Tourism has long since become a crucial phenomenon of today’s mobile world society. The traces left by travelers all over the Earth give evidence of a continually growing tourist industry and mark the beginning of a global movement that drastically transforms present-day man and the spaces he passes through. The exhibition “All-Inclusive. A Tourist World,” on show at the Schirn from 30 January to 4 May 2008, presents numerous works depicting and critically questioning various tourist phenomena. Documentations, parodies and defamiliarizations of traditional tourist motifs, and dream images interlink with subjects like migration, tourist industry, and global communication. The project curated by Matthias Ulrich assembles works by about 30 internationally renowned artists such as Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, Ayse Erkmen, Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Tracey Moffatt, Jonathan Monk, Santiago Sierra, and Thomas Struth.

Tourism is a desideratum full of steadily recurring images of beauty, longing, recreation, and adventure. The tourist is on his way to these images to confirm, to duplicate, and to archive them as the résumé of his vacation. The British artist Martin Parr’s photographs, for example, depict tourist patterns of behavior frozen to clichés, as it were, and unfold a picture of the vacation activities of an underprivileged class primarily centered on his native Britain. The artificial tourist landscapes of the Austrian artist Reiner Riedler’s photo series “Fake Holidays” are based on similar stereotypes. They too confirm Peter D. Osborne’s theory that tourist photography mainly serves the purpose of confirmation and not of discovery.

Yet, the pictures’ appeal also changes their subjects. In accordance with the prevailing images, trite places turn into interesting destinations, and famous sights are used for whatever objective: there are world parks like the Shenzhen Window of the World with sights from all over the Earth or projects like in Las Vegas and Dubai with cliché elements from famous cities and cultures. Perfectly orchestrated places where you can ski in summer and get some Caribbean sun in winter are no less artificial and, at the same time, serve as bearers of desires.

Tourism is of global importance, mobilizing by calling for mobility and making it possible – from the individual setting out into the unknown and making new experiences to entire regions transformed into sights such as the Basque city of Bilbao under its Guggenheim Museum’s influence. The comical, sometimes absurd mise-en-scène of a Nepalese landscape untouched by tourism in the American artist Stuart Hawkins’s film “Souvenir” or one of the provocative works by the Spanish artist Santiago Sierra realized on the vacation island of Mallorca in 2001 are set against this background.

Present-day tourism constitutes itself through networks exceeding the borders between different cultures and nations – a fact that necessarily calls into question certain binary notions like host and guest, native and foreigner, rooted and nomadic. Travelers find themselves confronted with other people living in the global city rather than with the specific circumstances of a place.

Traveling has also become an everyday routine for many contemporary artists. Much of it finds immediate expression in their works, like in the baggage conveyor belt turning around its own axis by the Scandinavian artist duo Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset or the huge archive of vacation photos by the Swiss artists Peter Fischli and David Weiss. The experience of certain places and spheres such as airports and hotels is anything but limited to tourists today. The individual’s mobility informs the character of working life in the capitalist economic system, which brings about an organization and design of large parts of the word tailored to mobility. Because of this wave of mobilization, escape as the tourist’s motive to get rid of everyday dictates and devote himself to a paradisiacal life has to be dealt with in a new context. For a different movement often occurs on the paths of tourism – a movement grounded in political and economic circumstances: migration as the
stagnating traffic counter to tourism. The Moroccan artist Yto Barrada, who was born in France, has impressively captured this dualism in her photographs about Tangier and the Straits of Gibraltar, for example. The London-based Bulgarian artist Ergin Çavusoglu aims at something similar in his film “Point of Departure,” in which the transit zones and travel spaces of Stansted and Trabzon, a Western and an Eastern European airport, cross each other.

LIST OF ARTISTS: Franz Ackermann, Atelier Morales, Yto Barrada, Guy Ben-Ner, Ergin Çavusoglu, Ingar Elmgreen und Michael Dragset, Ayse Erkmen, Peter Fischli und David Weiss, Eva Grubinger, Stuart Hawkins, Mark Hosking, Richard Hughes, Christoph Keller, Won Ju Lim, Andreas Lorenschat, Kris Martin, Lee Mingwei, Tracey Moffatt, Jonathan Monk, Walter Niedermayr, NL Architects, Martin Parr, Philippe Parreno, Sascha Pohle, Reiner Riedler, Damien Roach, RothStauffenberg, Ho-Yeol Ryu, Santiago Sierra, Thomas Struth, Sislej Xhafa, Yin Xiuzhen.

CATALOGUE: “All-Inclusive. A Tourist World” Edited by Max Hollein and Matthias Ulrich. With a preface by Max Hollein and ten texts that have emerged from a public literary contest on the subject of tourism. In addition, all works in the exhibition are described in short essays by April Elizabeth Lamm, Jessica Morgan, and Matthias Ulrich. 236 pages with ca. 150 illustrations, German. SNOECK Verlag, Cologne. ISBN 978-3-936859-81-2.

SPONSORS: The exhibition “All-Inclusive. A Tourist World” is sponsored by Messe Frankfurt GmbH, Verein der Freunde der Schirn Kunsthalle e. V., and Smiths Heimann GmbH.

DIRECTOR: Max Hollein

CURATOR: Matthias Ulrich (Schirn)

OPENING HOURS: Tue., Fri.- Sun. 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Wed. and Thur. 10 a.m. - 10 p.m.

INFORMATION: http://www.schirn.de

PRESS CONTACT: Dorothea Apovnik, phone: (+49-69) 29 98 82-118, fax: (+49-69) 29 98 82-240, e-mail: dorothea.apovnik@schirn.de, http://www.schirn.de (texts and images for download under PRESS).

Anne Collier at Presentation House Gallery

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Presentation House Gallery

Anne Collier, Double Marilyn, 2007,
C-Print. 123.2 x 161.6 cm
Courtesy the artist, Marc Foxx, Los Angeles,
Corvi-Mora, London & Anton Kern Gallery, New York.

Anne Collier
January 26 to March 2, 2008

Presentation House Gallery
333 Chesterfield Avenue
North Vancouver, BC Canada
V7M 3G9
Tel 604 986 1351

http://www.presentationhousegall.com

Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, is pleased to present the first comprehensive survey exhibition of work by New York based artist Anne Collier.

Over the past decade Anne Collier has forged a rigorous body of works that engage in a unique dialogue with contemporary photography. Collier produces tight, sparely formalized compositions often using a technique of re-photography. Her interest in mass market and pop culture imagery from the 1970s is expressed in carefully staged found photographs, and she has used diverse sources ranging from advertisements and posters, to art magazines and 70s vinyl LP covers. Her biting, dryly humorous compositions–some subtly self-reflexive–frame recurrent tensions of power and gender.

A full colour publication will be released in conjunction with the exhibition, available in March 2008. It will be the first to document Collier’s practice, and will include texts by NY based curator Bob Nickas and German critic Jan Verwoert, with an introduction by exhibition curator Reid Shier.

Hours: Wednesday to Sunday, 12 to 5pm and Thursdays open till 8pm

Pedro Cabrita Reis at Landesmuseum Joanneum

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Landesmuseum
Joanneum

Pedro Cabrita Reis
True Gardens #6 (Graz)
Curators: Adam Budak, Peter Pakesch

Opening: Friday, February 1, 2008, 7pm
February 2 - May 18, 2008
Tue - Sun 10am-6pm

Kunsthaus Graz am
Landesmuseum Joanneum
Lendkai 1, A-8020 Graz

T +43-316/8017-9200, F -9212
info@kunsthausgraz.at

http://www.kunsthausgraz.at

Pedro Cabrita Reis (born 1956, Lisbon) is a master of cohabitation: his impressive œuvre consists of architectural, sculptural and painterly body of work, woven of a fabric of the everyday life, commonplace surroundings, construction materials and architectural semantic appropriated from an existing reality and miraculously transformed into altars of an almost spiritual experience. Practicing his alchemy of the everyday, the artist turns the familiar into sublime, the trivial into a precious and valuable, achieving the noble levels of human perception, emotion and appreciation of the world.

Pedro Cabrita Reis’ ongoing – conceptually nomadic – architecture-cross-installation-cross-sculpture project, “True Gardens” further explores a micro-cosmos of primordial matters as confronted by specificities of local settings and their parameters. The previous versions, realized in Crestet, Stockholm, Dijon and London were entering in a particular, extremely personal relationship with a given site and its exceptional genius loci. “True Gardens #1 (Crestet)” (2000), for instance, included a collection of mirrors, interrupted by two enamelled panels and placed on a wooden platform in the Art Centre’s patio, thus generating a synergy between the natural environment and the application of industrial materials, while “True Gardens #3 (Dijon)” (2004) built up an inner landscape of light whose intensity conspired with the interior’s own volume thus producing a polyphonic spatial experience of omni-sensorial nature.

Developed especially for the Kunsthaus Graz, Cabrita Reis’ “True Gardens #6 (Graz)” is the artist’s yet another chapter in this specific fashion of “garden design”. Here, the organic and the biomorphic but also the utopian and the futuristic of the Cook&Fournier’s architecture converse with the seemingly minimal, still and sublime structure. “True Gardens #6 (Graz)” marks a bold and radical attempt at conquering and simultaneously taming the resistant and subversive space of the Kunsthaus Graz. Pedro Cabrita Reis enters the almost neo-baroque upper floor with a particular modesty and humility: his monumental installation is a maze of light and glass, supported by wooden blocks and distributed regularly through the open curvilinear surface of Space01. “True Gardens # 6 (Graz)” is composed of 88 individual elements, each of them having a similar basic structure: a labyrinthine box-like construction (approx. 25×200x125cm) made of yellow doka wood, accommoda
ting 3-4 standard fluorescent lights, and covered by a large transparent glass (laminated, 8mm thick sheets of 250×125cm). Each box includes too 1 or 2 painted with different colours sheets of glass of slightly smaller dimensions.

As such, with its rigor of horizontality and flatness, it recalls a painterly tableau of possible narratives that performs both a harmony and a contrast, and acts simultaneously as a gesture of disagreement and embrace towards its hosting site and its dynamic geometry. The industrial materials (neon tubes, glass sheets, rough wooden modules, meters of electric wires) and the visible signs of working process turn the space into a massive construction site where mental and physical labours contribute to reveal a meaning and a mystery of the inner and outer worlds. Cabrita Reis’ performative installation radiates with the intensity of light, and the silence which mutates into an almost disquieting stillness generates a poetic dimension which transforms the space into a site of contemplation and a melancholic palace of spatial communion.

According to Cabrita Reis, gardens are the geometry for nature. They express the artist’s utopian search for a clarity and order in a world dominated by aggressive discourses and superficial emptied rhetoric. In such mythological shelter, a locus of truth resides: transparent, reflective, naked, a landscape of elemental passions and basic knowledge, a residue of emotions and an assemblage
of memories.

The catalogue which has been published at the occasion of the exhibition includes essays by Jose Miranda Justo, Alessandra Ponte and Georges Teyssot, Felicity D. Scott, Philip Ursprung, Adam Budak as well as a conversation between Pedro Cabrita Reis and Peter Pakesch and rich visual material, composed of a documentation of previous versions of “True Gardens” and “True Gardens #6 (Graz)” installation shots from Kunsthaus Graz.

The exhibition is accompanied by the following events:

Friday, February 1, 2008
3pm: Artist talk Pedro Cabrita Reis: “Considerations on
Gardens and Few Other Things”, Needle, in English

Tuesday, February 12, 2008/7pm, Space04/Film screening
The Draughtman’s Contract (1982, dir. by Peter Greenaway),
and a selected short film by Archigram

Tuesday, April 22, 2008/7pm, Space04/Film screening
L‘Année Dernière à Marienbad/ Last Year in Marienbad
(1961, dir. by Alain Resnais), and a selected short film
by Archigram

Tuesday, April 29, 2008/7pm, Space04/Lectures
Felicity D. Scott: One or Many Truths
Philip Ursprung: “Ruins in Reverse”. The Art of Pedro
Cabrita Reis and the Eternal Present

More exhibitions in Kunsthaus Graz:

Hanspeter Hofmann
Bonheur automatique
January 19 – February 3, 2008
Finissage on Friday, February 1, 2008, 7pm

Swiss artist Hanspeter Hofmann will be exploring the interaction of mass media and auratic images during a two-week printing workshop he is running in Space04. Starting from existing graphics that the artist will rework with the assistance of a printing machine, information and images arising on a daily basis will be integrated and processed in a performative act.

Manuel Knapp
Stroboscopic Noise~
January 26– February 10, 2008/Space02, BIX façade
Opening: Friday, January 25, 7pm

In his video work Stroboscopic Noise~, Manuel Knapp investigates the aesthetic possibilities of a line choreographed in a reduced formal environment. The after-images created by strobos-copic effects constitute a complex architecture where the animation is accompanied by a subtle sound of various sinusoidal oscillations. Stroboscopic Noise~ will be shown in adapted forms as a trailer at the Diagonale film festival and on the BIX façade.