Archive for January 29th, 2008

Vancouver Art Gallery presents TruthBeauty

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Vancouver Art Gallery

Elias Goldensky
[Portrait of three women], c. 1915
platinum print
George Eastman House Collection, Gift of 3m Company,
Ex-collection Louis Walton Sipley

Vancouver Art Gallery Exhibition to
Illuminate the Golden Age
of Photography

Vancouver Art Gallery
750 Hornby Street
Vancouver, BC V6Z 2H7

http://www.vanartgallery.bc.ca

TruthBeauty: Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945 presents a fascinating look at the artistic movement that transformed photography from a tool of documentation to one of the most exciting means of visual expression of the twentieth century. Bringing together nearly 200 photographs from major museum collections around the world, the exhibition includes a large group of works from the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film in Rochester, New York, the world’s oldest and most extensive photography museum, as well as important loans from The Museum of Modern Art and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. On view at the Vancouver Art Gallery from February 2 to April 27, 2008, the exhibition is organized in collaboration with George Eastman House and is curated by Alison Nordström, curator of photographs, George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film.

“TruthBeauty presents a rare opportunity to experience a defining moment in the development of photography and the formation of modern photographic practice,” said Vancouver Art Gallery director Kathleen Bartels. “The conceptual, aesthetic and technical innovations of the Pictorialist artists continue to be highly influential more than 100 years later. Vancouver is one of the world’s foremost centres for contemporary photographic art, making the presentation of these masterworks of early photography especially meaningful.”

Reflecting the wide reach of Pictorialism, one of the first international artistic movements, this major presentation marks the first time that masterworks by renowned artists from North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, Japan and Australia have been brought together in a single exhibition. The presentation provides a historic overview of the full range of Pictorialism’s rich aesthetic photographic tradition and technical innovation.

Beginning in the late nineteenth century, Pictorialist artists sought to elevate photography to an art form equal to painting. Often compared to Impressionist painters, Pictorialist artists strove for an aesthetic that evoked a distinct mood or emotional response from the viewer. While painters achieved this through new ways of applying paint to canvas, Pictorialist artists experimented with a soft-focus approach, dramatic effects of light and richly coloured tones to create almost painterly works of art. Their compositions opened up a new world of visual expression in photography.

The main section of the exhibition features nearly 200 extraordinary Pictorialist photographs by the leading members of the movement, including Alvin Langdon Coburn, Robert Demachy, Frederick Evans, Elias Goldensky, Gertrude Käsebier, Heinrich Kühn, Edward Steichen and Alfred Stieglitz. The exhibition will trace the evolution of Pictorialism from its origins in the United Kingdom to its spread to Western Europe, Canada, the United States and beyond. Also included is a group of rare photographs by figures such as Julia Margaret Cameron and Peter Henry Emerson, British artists who preceded the origins of Pictorialism in the mid-1880s, but whose work would later inspire the Pictorialists to pursue photography as a true art form. Closing the exhibition is a selection of important photography by artists associated with the later Modernist tradition, such as Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham and Edward Weston, whose early work was firmly rooted in Pictorialist practice.

The Pictorialists were passionate proponents of art photography and formed a complex network of camera clubs, competitions and photography salons in key centres around the world. Instrumental in spreading the philosophy and visual aesthetic of Pictorialism worldwide were the number of photographic journals published by the movement’s champions. The exhibition includes a selection of these publications.

Led by Alison Nordström, Eastman House curator of photographs, the team contributing to the exhibition and accompanying publication includes scholars from the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, the Museum of Decorative Arts, Prague and the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra. The exhibition is coordinated by Thomas Padon, adjunct curator, Vancouver Art Gallery.

Fondazione Nicola Trussardi presents Peter Fischli & David Weiss

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Fondazione Nicola Trussardi

Peter Fischli / David Weiss
Snowman, 1990
Photograph. Study for Kunstprojekte Heizkraftwerk Romerbrucke, Saarbrucken. Copyright: Peter Fischli / David Weiss. Courtesy the artists; Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich; Monika Spruth Philomene Magers, Cologne/Munich/London; Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.

ALTRI FIORI E ALTRE DOMANDE
BY PETER FISCHLI & DAVID WEISS
From January 30 until March 16, 2008
Opening: January 29, 2008 at 6:30 pm.

Fondazione Nicola Trussardi at:
Palazzo Litta, Corso Magenta 24,
Milan - Italy
Tel. +39 02 8068821
info@fondazionenicolatrussardi.com
http://www.fondazionenicolatrussardi.com

The Fondazione Nicola Trussardi is proud to present Altri fiori e altre domande, the first major exhibition in Italy by Peter Fischli & David Weiss. Installed in the spectacular rooms of Palazzo Litta - a seventeenth century mansion that thanks to the Fondazione Nicola Trussardi opens its doors to contemporary art for the first time - the exhibition is a unique occasion to enter the surreal world of Fischli & Weiss.

Specifically conceived for the sumptuously decorated spaces of Palazzo Litta, among brocade tapestries, period furniture and baroque mirrors, the exhibition Altri fiori e altre domande - like the complete oeuvre of Fischli & Weiss – blurs the border between the normal and the exceptional.

For Altri fiori e altre domande the artists have completely reconfigured parts of their traveling retrospective – organized in collaboration with Tate Modern and Kunsthaus Zurich – adding new works and seminal, rarely seen pieces, which are presented in a site-specific installation conceived for the monumental spaces of Palazzo Litta. The exhibition insinuates itself throughout the Palazzo, leaving its decor and atmosphere untouched while staging a series of sudden revelations and intimate encounters with the artists’ work. Fischli & Weiss’ mysterious objects and miniature crises turn the building into a dollhouse of the absurd.

Fischli & Weiss have been working together since 1979, and have since imposed themselves as the prophets of an art of childish amazement, ferocious skepticism and primal stupor. In their photos, sculptures, films and installations, the Swiss duo casts an enchanted look upon the world, revealing its banal beauty and astonishing dullness. Consummate philosophers and court jesters, Fischli & Weiss combine severity with lightness, fusing the power of imagination with the rigor of a mad scientist.

Always searching for new occasions to connect contemporary art with new audiences and unusual spaces, the Fondazione Nicola Trussardi presents an exhibition that is at the same time introspective and retrospective, a unique combination of historical and original works, in one of the most fascinating buildings of the city of Milan. The Fondazione Nicola Trussardi is a private non-for-profit institution that commissions and produces new works by contemporary artists for the historical and public sites of the city of Milan. Since 2003, the Fondazione Nicola Trussardi has organized exhibitions with: Michael Elmgreen & Ingar Dragset, Darren Almond, Maurizio Cattelan, John Bock, Urs Fischer, Anri Sala, Paola Pivi, Martin Creed, and Pawel Althamer.

More on http://www.fondazionenicolatrussardi.com

The exhibition Altri fiori e altre domande is organized by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi in collaboration with Tate Modern, London and Kunsthaus Zurich, Zurich. The exhibition is curated by Bice Curiger, Vicente Todolí, and Massimiliano Gioni.

Special thanks to the Direzione Regionale per i Beni Culturali e Paesaggistici della Lombardia.

Amy Simon at Kulturhuset and Galleri Martenson & Persson

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Kulturhuset and Galleri Mårtenson & Persson

Kulturhuset Stockholm - photos
Galleri Mårtenson & Persson - drawings
February 1 – 24, 2008

Amy Simon
Manège – from the Central Park portfolio

http://www.kulturhuset.stockholm.se
http://www.gallerimartenson-persson.se

Amy Simon works with and in places that have special meaning for her during different stages in her life and has consequently returned to over and over again. It can be Central Park in New York, Wengen in Switzerland, Marrakech in Morocco, or Miami in Florida. What distinguishes the choice of location is that they touch on memory and feelings of belonging. She uses images to strengthen and re-experience. These images are keys to enhancing a cathartic experience, which anchor the memories and make them extremely personal. Editing takes place at the moment of shooting. Through the lens she sees the final result.

As far back as the Byzantine kingdom there existed simple carousels. The author Anatole France (1844-1924) explained why we ride carousels: the need for movement, of dizziness, a secret longing to be taken away, to be astounded. Originally the carousel was a type of riding contest. The French word manège, as in the exhibitions title, makes no discrepancy between the carousel and riding a horse.

In the exhibition at Kulturhuset, photographs from 2007, are horses with kicking hooves, wild, overwrought eyes and silent screams, along with snorting dragons. The strong clear colors have been repainted many times throughout the years but are still vivid. Amy Simon has used the carousel as a starting point in several works since 1990. The over-dimensioned horse sculptures, along with the rest of the carved figures are equally beautiful as horrifying.

The drawings exhibited at Galleri Mårtenson & Persson rely on this same theme, but now in segmented miniature. The essence of the larger works can be sensed, only here it has manifested into private delicate colored pencil encounters with metal, wood, and paint.

Amy Simon has exhibited at Malmö Konstmuseum and several galleries in Stockholm, at Centre Culturel Suédois in Paris as well as in New York. Her artworks encompass photography and drawing. In earlier exhibitions she has amongst other issues touched upon the question of places and their importance and our realistic understanding of them. She has also made a documentary film. Born and raised in New York City, Amy lives in Stockholm, Sweden since 1993.

Kulturhuset Stockholm
Sergels Torg
10327 Stockholm, Sweden
Tel: +46 8 508 314 00
E-mail: info@kulturhuset.stockholm.se
http://www.kulturhuset.stockholm.se

Galleri Mårtenson & Persson
Karlavägen 20
114 31 Stockholm, Sweden
Tel: +46 8 660 68 02
Email: info@gallerimartenson-persson.se
http://www.gallerimartenson-persson.se