Archive for May 1st, 2008

HEADSetera

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

HEADSetera_PeterDrake.jpg
Peter Drake, Pyramid, 2008, 53 x 48″

HEADSetera

Peter Drake, Laurence Hegarty, Mark Mennin

April 25, 2008 - May 25, 2008

HEADSetera, an intimate show of heady interplay between three artists, Peter Drake, Laurence Hegarty and Mark Mennin.

Jack the Pelican Presents
487 Driggs Ave,.
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY

Thurs–Mon, 12–6pm
eva@JackthePelicanPresents.com
tel. #718.782.0183

http://jackthepelicanpresents.com/headsetera.html

http://peterdrakeartist.com
http://markmennin.com
http://www.cynthiabroan.com/frameset_hegarty.html

May 2008 in Artforum

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Artforum

May 2008 in Artforum

http://www.artforum.com

In this issue of Artforum: May ’68. The sheer magnitude of the events that took place in Paris and around the world forty years ago this month remains striking, and indeed, those paroxysms of protest are often the stuff of nostalgia—and yet their true significance is perhaps still unclear when it comes to the shapes of aesthetic, social, and political narratives today. Seeking to take stock of our own moment, Artforum invited more than a dozen art historians, artists, and philosophers to investigate that seminal moment of rupture in historical counterpoint, beginning with critical theorist and Semiotext(e) founder Sylvère Lotringer speaking at length with Italian political philosopher Antonio Negri.

“In the end, when we think about it, May 1968 was not about exalting confrontations and struggle; that’s still its ‘modern’ aspect. Nineteen sixty-eight was something else completely—the pleasure of discovering a new humanity, a deep joy in ourselves and around us, of realizing that elements of expression, imagination, and life can exist together.” —Antonio Negri

Plus: Feminist scholar Ti-Grace Atkinson muses on politics and aesthetics; art historian Benjamin H. D. Buchloh considers the critical activities of Daniel Buren and BMPT; scholar Sally Shafto reflects on the Zanzibar group’s intermingling in film of leftist politics and cinematic dandyism; and architectural and urban theorist Tom McDonough rereads French sociologist Henri Lefebvre’s newly republished study of 1968, The Explosion.

“Gradually, every mature artist and her/his work add up to a coherent theory about the world. Here is where I believe there is an analogy between the artist and the radical political theorist.”
—Ti-Grace Atkinson

“It will be one of the questions for our decade to ponder why the spaces and practices of contestation that opened at the end of the’60s were—or so it seems now, at least—irredeemably hijacked by corporate clowns designing handbags.” —Benjamin H. D. Buchloh

And: Art historian and critic Tom Holert assesses the legacy of art and education after 1968; author Chris Kraus offers a short history of sexual mores and the underground newspaper Suck, published in Amsterdam from 1969 to 1974; artist Liam Gillick considers how art production today remains steeped in questions posed forty year ago; contributing editor Arthur C. Danto recounts his experiences during Columbia University’s student revolts in the spring of 1968; and art historian Paul Galvez and Cologne-based painter Michael Krebber visit the traveling retrospective of Gustave Courbet.

“I think Courbet truly understood dogs.” —Michael Krebber

In addition: Amy Taubin probes the multimedia practice of New York–based filmmaker and musician James Nares; Barry Schwabsky speaks with Ed Ruscha; P. Adams Sitney investigates loneliness and lyricism in the films of Peter Hutton; Bob Nickas weighs in on Philip Taaffe’s retrospective at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg; Chinese artist Qiu Zhijie lists his Top Ten; and Artforum looks ahead to the summer season with previews of fifty shows opening worldwide.

Visit Artforum online at http://www.artforum.com

To subscribe, visit http://www.artforum.com/subscribe

Visit artguide—Artforum’s free directory of the international art world, listing art fairs, auctions, and current gallery and museum shows in more than four hundred cities—at http://www.artforum.com/guide

ICA, London presents Nought to Sixty

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London

ICA, London
5 May - 2 November 2008

http://www.ica.org.uk/noughttosixty

Nought to Sixty is an ambitious, fast-moving programme of exhibitions and events that – over the course of six months – is presenting sixty solo projects by emerging British- and Irish-based artists. This wide-ranging programme is being held at the ICA from spring until autumn 2008, over which period there will be new events staged every week, building up a multi-faceted portrait of the contemporary art scene in Britain and Ireland.

The artists in Nought to Sixty are drawn from a thriving art scene that stretches across the Britain and Ireland, but which is especially concentrated in cities such as London, Glasgow and Dublin. Most of the participating artists are under thirty-five, and few of them have had significant commercial exposure. The project draws instead on a network of artist-run initiatives and brings this energy into the ICA, emphasising the ICA’s founding role as a club which fosters exchange between artists – and between artists and
the public.

All of the artists and artist groups in Nought to Sixty are presenting solo projects, and hence the programme avoids the group show format into which emerging artists are so often placed – and instead gives participants a more autonomous space. The core of the programme takes the form of exhibitions in the ICA’s Upper Galleries, but the season also includes events in the ICA Theatre, Cinemas and Nash and Brandon Rooms as well in the building’s public areas.

Exhibitions will last a week, and are being marked by special opening and closing viewings every Monday evening from 7 to 10pm. Monday evenings are also being used for performances, screenings and talks, as well as for other events featuring Nought to Sixty artists and guests. The special exhibition viewings on Mondays are free and open to all; the other events are also free, although booking for these is required.

The Nought to Sixty programme is being announced monthly, and publicised through the monthly magazine as well as on the ICA’s website. As well as details of each month’s programme, the magazine and website will also carry further comment and information, including extended essays and a gazetteer of artist-run projects and resources. The ICA wants to encourage debate about the range of forces that make up a healthy art scene, and to this end the events programme includes a series of monthly salon discussions.

The highlights of the May programme include the following. Participating artists: Babak Ghazi; Nina Canell and Robin Watkins; Alastair MacKinven; Seamus Harahan; Kim Coleman and Jenny Hogarth (with Boyle Family); Aileen Campbell; Matthew Darbyshire; Hardcore is More Than Music. Salon Discussion: ‘Independent Publishing and Critical Discourse’, in collaboration with Afterall. Extended essay for publication and website: written by Lisa Le Feuvre.

Nought to Sixty is being organised by Mark Sladen and Richard Birkett of the ICA, with the help of a wide range of collaborators. The programme is supported by the Scottish Arts Council and Culture Ireland. Other partners include Afterall, Art Review and LUX. Nought to Sixty is a major part of a range of events designed to mark the ICA’s 60th anniversary, a season which climaxes with a 6oth anniversary exhibition and auction in September-October 2008.

For further information, please contact:
Zoë Franklin
ICA Press Office
Tel: 020 7766 1418
Email: zoe.franklin@ica.org.uk

http://www.ica.org.uk

Peter Hutton at Museum of Modern Art, New York

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
The Museum of Modern Art,
New York

All film stills Copyright 2008 Peter Hutton.
Courtesy the artist

PETER HUTTON
May 5 - 26, 2008

The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street
New York, NY 10019
(212) 708-9400

http://www.moma.org

MoMA PRESENTS A RETROSPECTIVE OF THE FILMS OF PETER HUTTON

Filmmaker’s Luminous and Meditative Studies of Waterways, Cities, and Landscapes Among 18 Featured Works

Opens on May 5 with Modern Mondays:
Peter Hutton in Conversation with Author and Critic Luc Sante

Peter Hutton (b. Detroit, 1944) is one of cinema’s most ardent and poetic portraitists of city and landscape. A former merchant seaman, he has spent nearly forty years voyaging around the world, often by cargo ship, to create sublimely meditative, luminously photographed, and intimately diaristic studies of place, from the Yangtze River to the Polish industrial city of Lodz, and from the fjord valley and coastline of northern Iceland to a ship graveyard on the Bangladeshi shore. This comprehensive retrospective of 18 films reveals an artist dedicated to reawakening a more contemplative and spontaneous way of observing and envisioning the world.

“Hutton sculpts with time,” curator Joshua Siegel observes, “whether in seeking remembrance of a city’s fading past, or reflecting on nature’s fugitive atmospheric effects. Each film unfolds in silent reverie, with a series of extended single shots taken from a fixed position, harking back to cinema’s origins and to traditions of painting and still photography. Among the works featured are the two magnificent series that Hutton began in the 1970s: one, an impressionistic sketchbook of New York that is sensitive to the effects of sunlight and moonlight on the city’s hard-edged geometries; and the other, a series of explorations of the Hudson River Valley that transcribe and exalt landscape in the manner of Thomas Cole and the nineteenth-century Luminist painters.”

The exhibition is organized by Joshua Siegel, Assistant Curator, Department of Film, The Museum of Modern Art.

“Like the haiku of Bashô, these seemingly simple films offer lessons in the art of seeing and fashioning images that make you wonder how anyone could produce something simultaneously so humble and so astounding.”—Tom Gunning, Spiral

“Hutton’s Budapest Portrait (1984 - 86) suggests the photographs alternately of Eugène Atget and Bernd and Hilla Becher, if not a lushly entropic gloss on Dziga Vertov’s Man with a Movie Camera…. Human presence is often suggested merely by indexical signs—photographs, shadows, or bullet holes. This relative absence of the figure, together with the harsh chiaroscuro of the winter light, induces a poignant sense of loneliness and isolation. Voluptuously gray, worn, and lived in, the city is like a stage set for an invisible drama.”—J. Hoberman, Artforum

About the artist: Peter Hutton studied painting, sculpture, and film at the San Francisco Art Institute under the tutelage of Robert Nelson, Bruce Nauman, and Bruce Conner. He is currently the director of the Film and Electronic Arts program at Bard College, where he has been a professor of film since 1984; his students at Bard, and other institutions including Hampshire College and Harvard University, have included Sadie Benning, Matthew Buckingham, Ken Burns, Hal Hartley, and Mira Nair. Hutton’s work has been shown in major museums and festivals throughout the United States and Europe, and he is the recipient of grants from, among others, the National Endowment of the Arts, DAAD Berlin, Rockefeller Foundation, Dutch Film Critics Prize, and John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

SCREENING SCHEDULE

For a complete screening schedule and tickets, visit http://www.moma.org or
call (212) 708-9480.

Monday, May 5, 7:00 p.m.
Modern Mondays: Peter Hutton in Conversation with Luc Sante

To open his MoMA retrospective, Hutton presents New York Portrait, Part I (1978 - 79) and Skagafjördur (2002 - 04) as part of a special Modern Mondays conversation with Luc Sante, visiting professor of writing and the history of photography at Bard College, and author of Low Life, The Factory of Facts, and Kill All Your Darlings.

For press inquiries, please contact Paul Power at (212) 708-9847 or paul_power@moma.org

Modern Mondays is made possible by Anna Marie and Robert F. Shapiro. Additional support is provided by The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art. Media sponsorship is provided
by Artforum.