Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for March 26th, 2008

You Had No 9th of May! -Julieta Aranda at Sala Diaz, San Antonio

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Sala Diaz

Julieta Aranda “You Had No 9th of May!”

Julieta Aranda
You Had No 9th of May!

March 28 – April 27, 2008
Opening: Friday, March 28, 7 – 11 PM
Sala Diaz
517 Stieren
San Antonio, TX 78210
210 852 4492
salad@satx.rr.com

To break with the powerful linear conception of time as a line as a line consisting of Now-points seems to require a spatialization of a new kind. We need richer and more intricate architectural models that allow for temporal heterogeneity and multiplicity: not one line but always many.
Daniel Birnbaum, Temporal Spasms
……………………………………………………………………………………………

Sala Diaz is pleased to present a new work by Julieta Aranda, organized in conjunction with guest-curator Regine Basha. 

Though we are conditioned to experience ‘time’ or the immaterial concept of time, as a linear passage –measured conveniently by clocks, calendars, and other devices, isn’t it possible that the markers that we use to signal it: ‘yesterday’, ‘today’ and ‘tomorrow’ are an imposition ? Can’t we instead be the arbiters of our own experience of time? Can time be bent, sliced, poked through, stretched, flashed, collapsed?

Julieta Aranda’s new work, You Had No 9th of May! underlines the rigidity of our construction of time, and proposes as an alternative several material representations for it. What does the shape of time actually look like?

Aranda’s primary source is the elusive International Date Line (IDL). Zigzagging across the earth, the IDL is an imaginary line on the globe that separates two consecutive calendar days and indicates the boundary between today and tomorrow. Despite its name however, the precise location of the IDL is not fixed by any international law, treaty or agreement (though it is commonly identified on maps as being 180 degrees longitude from the 0 meridian located in Greenwich, England). The peculiar course of the International Date Line in fact bends forward a day and back across the South Pacific archipelago of Kiribati, causing an aberration in our assumed time-space continuum (in 1995, the archipelago decided to move the dateline so that its territory would no longer be split between ‘today’ and ‘tomorrow’).

This temporal spasm in the IDL, and Kiribati’s power to literally ‘move time’ becomes the blueprint for Aranda’s installation and the basis for a configuration of both narrative and abstracted elements including wall drawings, diagrams, models and props, and a newspaper designed after Kiribati’s own (NEWSTAR) which brings together a collection of articles that cover the subject from several perspectives from the 1920s until today. There is also a resource library with a small selection of books dealing with alternative constructions of time including the Chronicles of Magallanes’ Circumnavigation, Borges’ “New Refutation of Time”, Liam Gillick’s “Erasmus is Late” and several essays on Zeno’s Paradox amongst other titles.

Central to Aranda’s inquiry is the idea of a politicized subjectivity and the power over the imaginary: how a little-known impoverished country like Kiribati, (save for when used for nuclear test-bombing by global powers, or when pilfered for phosphate) has the power to choose its own substantive experience of time and cause global temporal disturbances and inaccuracies. There are actions that take place in the political arena, but their poetic reverberations carry them much further than that. Did one of the most significant political and poetic acts of the last century go completely unnoticed?

Julieta Aranda is an artist from Mexico City currently living between Berlin and New York. Her work recently appeared in Transmediale 2008, Berlin, the 9th Lyon Biennial, Escultura Social: A New Generation of Art from Mexico City at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, as well as at Portikus, Kunstwerke Berlin, and the 7th Havana Biennial. With Anton Vidokle, she has conceived the projects, PAWNSHOP and E-Flux Video Rental (EVR).

Regine Basha is an independent curator currently moving from Central to Eastern time.

Sala Diaz is a 501 (C)(3) non-profit space supporting the San Antonio community with exhibitions of local, national and international artists and is located at 517 Stieren, near the intersection of South Alamo and South Saint Marys street in the heart of the Restaurant Supply District. Open weekly, Thursday - Saturday from 2 - 6 PM and every First Friday at 9 PM. Sala Diaz is sponsored by Fluent Collaborative, Liberty Bar, The National Endowment For The Arts and numerous private individuals.

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Angela Bulloch at Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau München

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und
Kunstbau München

ANGELA BULLOCH
“THE SPACE THAT TIME FORGOT”
February 16 - May 18, 2008

ARTIST TALK AND CATALOGUE PRESENTATION
Thursday, March 27th 2008, 6 pm

Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus
und Kunstbau München
Luisenstr. 33
80333 München
+49 (0) 89 / 233 320 00
http://www.lenbachhaus.de

Angela Bulloch guides through her exhibition at the Kunstbau accompanied by Diedrich Diederichsen and Matthias Mühling. Afterwards they will present the catalogue, which is published on the occasion of the exhibition.

Both will be held in English.

Admission free

The 104 page bilingual catalogue includes a photographic documentation of the Munich exhibition, and essays by Diedrich Diederichsen and Matthias Mühling. Diedrich Diederichsen states a current crisis of space, both in terms of our conception of the uni-verse and our experience of space in our everyday lives, and analyzes Bulloch’s work from this perspective. The second essay describes Bulloch’s works in the Kunstbau, and identifies their scholarly, philosophical and art historical references. Carsten Eisfeld’s photographs, which were produced in close collaboration with Angela Bulloch, provide a documentation of the works in the show. Finally, this publication is the first to include a comprehensive bibliography on Angela Bulloch.

The catalogue, edited by Mathias Mühling, is published by Verlag der Buchhandlung Wal-ther König, Cologne. You can order the catalogue plus forwarding expenses at Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus
( shop at http://www.lenbachhaus.de ), or through your bookstore. ISBN 978-3-86560-426-2

Le Laboratoire art science experience

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Le Laboratoire

Copyright: Mathilde de l’Ecotais (picture from film)

Within Thierry Marx’s Sphere…
March 29th to July the 21th

Le Laboratoire
4 rue du Bouloi
75001 Paris
http://www.lelaboratoire.org

Imagined and founded by the scientist and Franco-American writer David Edwards, Le Laboratoire is a cultural space dedicated to art and design experimentation inspired by an encounter and collaboration with a leading international scientist.

In fusing artistic and scientific visions, the creative process of artscience redefines itself outside traditional boundaries, no longer belonging solely within one discipline or another.

This interdisciplinary approach becomes a catalyst for innovation that Le Laboratoire seeks to cultivate through its annual experiments.

In this, the fourth of Le Laboratoire’s exhibitions since its opening in October 2007, we present the product of a partnership between Michelin-starred chef Thierry Marx and physicist Jérôme Bibette, an innovative fusion of culinary art and colloidal* science.

* Substances in liquid or gel form which contain, in suspension, particles small enough for the mixture to be homogeneous.

Live the Experiment!

To enter “Thierry Marx’s Sphere” is to pass the border of gastronomical mysteries and to experience new pleasures, both culinary and visual. This exhibition aims to reinvent the spirit of the chef’s table in applying Jérôme Bibette’s latest advances in the science of microparticles.

How can one create spheres whose membranes are as thin as a soap bubble – spheres which, when they burst in one’s mouth, reveal the entire and unique flavor of a food or a dish ? How can one deconstruct a product and then reconstruct it in a contemporary form to release the savor of a recipe in one mouthful?

From this collaboration in artscience, Thierry Marx and Jérôme Bibette have given birth to new sensations brought together in the three recipes created for the exhibition.

The meals are served in bento boxes (traditional Japanese meal-boxes), redesigned with special consideration for these new recipes by Mathieu Bassée and Christophe Dubois, in the context of a workshop with the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Création Industrielle, led by Laurent Massaloux.

Mathilde de l’Ecotais’ visual environment, between beautiful body movements and secrets of composition, narrates the story of an encounter and of an experiment both artistic and scientific.

The soundtrack is created by Ommm, human beatbox group.

Taste the Future…
At any time, visitors may go to the “Whif Bar” to taste aerosolized chocolate alongside an espresso. Designed by Harvard students in collaboration with David Edwards, le Whif is a prototype of a new design to be developed by Le Laboratoire over the course of 2008.

…and join at the LaboClub.
Come discover the new FoodLab and its menu created by Thierry Marx. Open to LaboClub members, but also to the public ( requires online registration info@labogroup.com ). The LaboClub is asking everyone to come together and collaborate to create the menu, which will be offered at the opening of the FoodLab next September.

FOR RESERVATIONS OF THE BENTO BOX:
+ 33 (0)1 78 09 49 50
INFO@LELABORATOIRE.ORG

Partners of the exhibition:
Bonnet
Nespresso
Paris Première
Raynier Marchetti

Opening days and times:
Friday to Monday,
From 12am to 7pm
(Le Laboratoire will be close on March 31th)

Press contacts:
Valérie Abrial valerie.abrial@wanadoo.fr
+33 (0)6 84 37 96 23

With the support of Claudine Colin Communication
marie@claudinecolin.com
+ 33 (0)1 42 72 60 01