Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for April 18th, 2008

MACBA presents Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas. Devices for action

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Museu d’Art Contemporani
de Barcelona

Map of Europe, found in the offices of the Yukos refinery in Mazeikiai, Lithuania, 2005.

Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas. Devices for action

Exhibition dates: Until 15 June 2008
Produced by: Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA)

http://www.macba.es

The work of Nomeda and Gediminas Urbonas –born in Lithuania in 1968 and 1966 respectively– takes the form of projects in which they explore the conflicts and contradictions thrown up by the new economic, social and political conditions in the former Soviet countries as they affect everyday life, management of public spaces and the idea of the nation. This exhibition features five installations, the results from their work over the last eight years: Transaction (2000-2004), Ruta Remake (2002-2004), Druzba (2003 - ongoing), Pro-test Lab (2005 - ongoing) and Villa Lituania (2007).

The exhibition begins with Transaction, a work that explores the experiences of citizens as they adapt to the sudden change from one system to another. The title alludes to transactional analysis, a psychiatric method based on applying the scheme of a dramatic triangle in which three roles are assigned: the Persecutor, the Victim and the Rescuer.

In Transaction, the roles in the transactional analysis triangle are played by women, the cinema and psychiatrists. The project studies the cinema as a mechanism used to construct an identity for women based on a feeling of victimisation, and which can be extended to apply to the whole country. The cinema archive brings together more than 50 Lithuanian films produced between 1947 and 1997.

In Ruta Remake, the archive is formed by recorded voices from radio programmes, films and commercials. These recordings are analysed in interviews with Lithuanian women engaged in different fields relating to oral culture: writers, linguists, musicologists, singers and activists who study the voice as a place between the social and the metaphysical spaces. Ruta is the name of a plant (rue) that is popular both as a symbol of femininity and virginity and for its well-known capacity to induce abortion. In the project, a drawing of the plant serves as the motif for creating the score/matrix for an interactive instrument or device known as the Theramidi.

Pro-test Lab is amongst the projects that have generated the greatest controversy and caused the most political consequences. Taking the management of public spaces as its theme, the project focuses on the specific case of the Lietuva cinema building. In Soviet times, culture had been systematically protected and subsidised. Film was an essential part of the country’s cultural life, and huge cinemas were built in many city centres in Lithuania. Under the new capitalist system, however, these cinemas became the perfect targets for the growing property market, and many were demolished to make way for large buildings: apartment blocks, supermarkets and shopping centres.

Villa Lituania is the result of the invitation extended to the Urbonas to represent Lithuania at the Venice Biennale. The building of this name in Rome once housed the embassy of the First Republic of Lithuania (1918-1940) in Italy, serving as such from 1933 to 1940, when it became USSR property after the Soviet occupation. The Villa Lituania now houses the Russian Consulate in the Italian capital, and many Lithuanians considered it the last occupied territory. The project did not aim to reclaim the building, but to identify a place for political negotiation through a symbolic space.

Druzba is the title of a project launched in 2003 as a metaphor revealing mechanisms of power and submission that rightfully belong to the past but which still persist even today. In Russian, druzba means “friendship”, and is the name given to the Soviet government’s most ambitious undertaking in the 1950s, to build an oil pipeline stretching from the Urals to Central Europe and supplying the Soviet republics with energy. The most important refinery along the pipeline was in Lithuania. The enterprise combined apparent solidarity and the patriotism with a process of colonisation and dependence. The privatisation of the pipeline after Lithuanian independence and the subsequent break-up of the Soviet Union aptly serves to illustrate the relations between economics and politics in strategic industries.

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art presents GOD & GOODS

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art

GOD & GOODS
Spirituality and Mass Confusion
20.04. - 28.09.2008

Curated by Francesco Bonami and Sarah Cosulich Canarutto

http://www.villamanincontemporanea.it

Artists in the exhibition:
Adel Abdessemed, Victor Alimpiev and Marian Zhunin, Darren Almond, Thomas Bayrle, Cai Guo-Qiang, Mircea Cantor, Maurizio Cattelan, George Condo, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Colin Darke, Berlinde De Bruyckere, Fischli/Weiss, Katharina Fritsch, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Subodh Gupta, Huang Yong Ping, Christian Jankowski, Koo Jeong-A, Sarah Lucas, Dan Perjovschi, Susan Philipsz, Richard Prince, Anri Sala, Nedko Solakov, Thomas Struth, Piotr Uklanski, Yan Pei-Ming and Artur Zmijewski

GOD & GOODS. Spirituality and Mass Confusion aims to open a dialogue with the topic of religion being it an immense, controversial and unresolved debate but also a concept open to new and diverse forms of interpretation.

The works of the twenty-eight artists in the exhibition underline existential questions, play with the senses and perception of reality and challenge in some cases the mechanisms of beliefs. Art looks at religion from an outside perspective: it can expose the evocative power of an image as well as relate the mythology of consumer goods to holy iconography.

The title itself implicitly contains three ways in which the works seem to approach religion and its dynamics. The dichotomy God and goods speaks of the relationship between religion and consumption, spirituality refers to those works that suggest the search for an alternative dimension, while the word confusion recalls doubt in all its meanings.

In the past art and religion have been indissolubly linked, considering that only a few centuries ago the artists really freed themselves from the wishes and the necessities of the commissioners. But what is the relationship between art and religion today? Maybe it would be correct to say that they are complementary: one asks questions, the other gives answers. What brings them closer it is not their consequentiality but, on the contrary, their common source of doubt. This exhibition wishes to observe the way in which, through doubt, the artists challenge the stereotypes and the limitations of the concept of God to substitute it with many different and infinite question marks.

The works in the exhibition, dating from the late Eighties until nowadays and including also some new site specific projects, deal with the concept of religion from a series of indirect point of views: they can confront its dictates with irreverence, analyse its systems and dynamics or propose, ironically or not, alternative models.

In Christ You Know It Ain’t Easy Sarah Lucas weaves hundreds of cigarettes to create the figure of a Christ on the crucifix, an irreverent approach to classic religious iconography which questions the meaning of vice and addiction in today’s consumerist society. Also Thomas Bayrle revisits with profane pathos the same Christian symbol, through a collage of small sequences depicting cars running along a motorway in search of an unreachable destination, while Questions (Italian language) by Fischli/Weiss raises existential and metaphysical questions as well as vain everyday doubts, reflecting the dimension of uncertainty and fragility of the human condition. The spiritual tension assumes instead social and political connotations in the video Them by Artur Zmijewski, where the freedom of expression clashes with the difficult cohabitation of different religious and moral ideals. If Colin Darke proposes a model of alternative belief that connects the artist and its creation as
well as political ideology and alienation, Richard Prince is inspired by the legendary tradition of the American cowboy from a famous cigarette advertisement. By taking this iconography out of its commercial context, the artist moulds a new mythology which provides another model of freedom and aspiration. In a different way, Darren Almond creates sublime and transcendent images of nature that call attention to man’s quest to find meaning in the complexity of the universe. A more private and melancholic narrative is that conveyed by the beggar sleeping inside the Milan Cathedral in Anri Sala’s video. Here the church, before acquiring any spiritual function, appears as a physical and concrete refuge. The same place of worship is the subject of Thomas Struth’s photography, that analyzes the structure and the mechanisms of belief through an objective vision.

Four interventions are planned in the Park of the Villa by Maurizio Cattelan, who will present for the first time in Italy Frau C., Subodh Gupta with a new work, Felix Gonzalez-Torres and
Susan Philipsz.

The exhibition, open to the public until the 28th of September 2008, will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue in Italian and English, with critical texts by the curators and biographical apparatus.

Opening hours:
From 20 April until 31 May, Tuesday – Friday 9am – 6pm, Saturday – Sunday 10am – 8 pm

From 1 June to 28 September, Tuesday – Sunday 10am – 8pm.
Monday closed

For further information please contact
press@villamanincontemporanea.it - t +39 0432 821234

Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art
piazza Manin 10, Passariano - Codroipo (Udine) Italy
t +39 0432 821211 , f + 39 0432 908387
info@villamanincontemporanea.it
http://www.villamanincontemporanea.it

colourblindGallery (Cologne, Germany) presents Petr Krupin

Friday, April 18th, 2008

plakat_large.jpg
colourblindGallery (Cologne, Germany) presents Petr Krupin

On April, 19th, the colourblindGallery will present to the public the project INDIRECT EVIDENCE of Petr Krupin, the photographer from Russia. The vernissage will be held in Cologne (Germany) at 7pm, Schaafenstr.37.

The Jeu de Paume presents three new exhibitions

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Jeu de Paume – Concorde

Alec Soth
The Space Between Us

Valérie Mréjen
La place de la concorde

Angela Detanico & Rafael Lain
25 / 24

April 15 - June 15, 2008

http://www.jeudepaume.org

The Jeu de Paume is pleased to present three springtime exhibitions by the artists Alec Soth, Valérie Mréjen, Angela Detanico & Rafael Lain — April 15 - June 15, 2008.

Alec Soth: the Space Between Us

Alec Soth is a Minneapolis-based photographer born in 1969 and a Magnum Nominee since 2004. “The Space Between Us” refers to his idea of portrait: “If the photograph represents something, it’s the space between me and the subject.”

This exhibition features a selection of three of his best-known series: