Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for May 19th, 2008

Cecilia Edefalk at Lunds Konsthall

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Lunds Konsthall

Cecilia Edefalk
Double White Venus with Arm, 2006 - 2008

CECI
Cecilia Edefalk
24 May - 24 August 2008

Opening:
Friday, 23 May at 6 - 8 pm

Lunds Konsthall
Mårtenstorget 3
SE-223 51 Lund, Sweden
tel. +46 46 355295
fax. +46 46 184521
lundskonsthall@lund.se

http://www.lundskonsthall.se

Since the late 1980s Cecilia Edefalk has been one of the leading and most sought-after Swedish artists at home and abroad. Her production is substantial, but there have been relatively few comprehensive survey exhibitions of her paintings, sculptures, photographs and films. Lunds konsthall is now showing a concentrate of Cecilia Edefalk’s art from 2002 onwards, highlighting some works that rework and reinterpret the antique sculptural heritage.

This is the first time a Swedish audience gets to see To View the Painting from Within. The original version was premiered at Documenta 11 in 2002. The starting point is a finely worked white marble portrait of the young Marcus Aurelius, the Roman emperor known as the ‘philosopher on the throne’. A battered fragment of this sculpture is painted from different angles, evoking the phases of the moon as an image of the passage of time, of continuity and decay.

Three new bronze objects have been cast from the same face that modelled for the painted series. They are commented by Cecilia Edefalk’s documentary film from the Herman Bergman Art Foundry in Stockholm. That is also where she found the original for the sculpture Memory, a simple wooden support used for touching up bronze sculptures. The foundry has also lent us several plaster casts from antique originals.

The series Double White Venus depicts classical sculpture in one of its oldest and most banal functions, that of mass-produced ornament for parks and gardens. Paradoxically, by pushing the painterly representation ever further into rudimentary sketchiness the artist allows the de-individualised statue of Venus to impress itself with increased clarity on the viewer’s memory.

The ‘Diving Paintings’ derive from a present-day Venus. The motif is a photograph of a woman about to cut through the surface of a lit swimming-pool, accidentally found lying on the ground. Her arched naked body conveys the same harmony in movement as antique sculpture.

Precisely the contingent and the inexplicable are important sources of inspiration for Cecilia Edefalk’s art. The new text-based work for Lunds konsthall, Histories for the Future, invites us to join a series of conversations between the artist and August Strindberg, the great ‘first person’ of Swedish literature. The artist identifies herself as ‘she’, but also makes the other’s self-imposed male authority her own. The occult meeting of ‘August’ and ‘her’ becomes an image of the artist’s condition, its swings from self-assertion to fundamental doubt.

We thank all lenders, the Herman Bergman Art Foundry and Brändström & Stene in Stockholm for their significant assistance in realising the exhibition.

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Mudam Luxembourg presents China Power Station: Part III

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Mudam Luxembourg

Cao Fei
I. Mirror: A Second Life City, 2007
Video installation
Astrup Fearnley Collection

China Power Station: Part III
26 April 2008 to 15 September 2008

Mudam Luxembourg
Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean
3 Park Dräi Eechelen, L-1499 Luxembourg
t. +352 45 37 85 1
info@mudam.lu
http://www.mudam.lu

Artists
Cao Fei, Chen Qiulin, Chen Shaoxiong, Chu Yun, Huang Yong Ping, Hu Xiangqian, Institute of Sound (curated by Ou Ning), Jia Zhang-Ke, Kan Xuan, Lee Mingwei, Liang Wei, Liu Wei, Lu Chunsheng, Qiu Anxiong, Wang Jian Wei, Xu Zhen, Xue Tao, Yang Fudong, Zhang Ding, Zhang Peili, Zhou Tao

Curators: Julia Peyton-Jones, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Gunnar B. Kvaran

Mudam Luxembourg presents China Power Station: Part III, the third step of an exhibition project created in collaboration with the Serpentine Gallery in London and the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art in Oslo.

China Power Station: Part III is the result of long research work that curators Julia Peyton-Jones, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Gunnar B. Kvaran carried out in various Chinese metropolises. The project was created as an evolving, dynamic exhibition, reflecting the surprising developments that the Chinese cultural scene has experienced over the last few decades. A first exhibition was held by the Serpentine Gallery at the acclaimed Battersea Power Station in London, and a second in Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art in Oslo. After its presentation in Mudam, the exhibition will mark its final step in Beijing in autumn 2008. Each stage is structured around a different selection of artists and works of art, devised according to the context in which they are presented.

The exhibition at Mudam aims to link the generation of artists who emerged in China in the 1980s, a time when China underwent a surprising artistic explosion, with a younger generation of artists who appeared on the international artistic scene from 2000. Unlike their elders, who mostly began their careers in the West, these artists have decided to stay in China in order to witness the profound social, political and economic changes the country is going through and be actively involved in them.

China Power Station: Part III explores the themes linked to urban space, the historic and contemporary situation in China, and to everyday spaces. It marks, through the example of a country which is currently undergoing accelerated economic change, together with the danger of unrestrained urbanisation and uniformity connected to globalisation, the ways in which current artistic practices respond to the challenges which stimulate the contemporary world. It shows a particular interest in the quest for modernity and a return to tradition while revealing a real sensitivity towards urban and environmental transformations.

Press contact: presse@mudam.lu

Opening hours
Every day 11am - 6pm, Wednesday 11am - 8pm, closed on Tuesday

China Power Station: Part III is initiated by Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art and Serpentine Gallery in collaboration with Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, Mudam Luxembourg and coproduced by The Red Mansion Foundation.

Artpace presents Paint it Black

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Artpace

Oliver Lutz
Paint it Black, 2008
Installation view
Originally commissioned and produced by Artpace San Antonio

PAINT IT BLACK
New Work by Oliver Lutz
On View through August 17, 2008

Artpace
445 North Main Avenue
San Antonio, TX 78205

http://www.artpace.org

In New York-based Oliver Lutz’s first solo museum show, Paint it Black, Artpace presents an exhibition experience exploring dimensions of contemporary mass spectacle. Austere paintings, cloaking pigments, sound, and surveillance technology implicate the viewer in an installation that deconstructs modes of viewing, cognition, and participation in spectacles, be they art exhibitions or sporting events.

Organized by Artpace Executive Director Matthew Drutt, Paint it Black features six large paintings which appear to be monochromatic to the naked eye. Covered in infrared sensitive pigment, the under-painted imagery is visible only in an adjoining gallery via eleven video monitors connected to ultraviolet surveillance cameras tuned into the main exhibition space. The TV screens reveal realistically rendered scenes culled from photographs taken by Lutz at a NASCAR event at Texas Motor Speedway earlier this year that explore different genres of spectacle and spectatorship.

In one detail revealed via monitor, the artist portrays the archetypal race fan, complete with aviator glasses and headphones. In the sky above, military jets execute a flyover maneuver that launches each NASCAR event at then end of the singing the national anthem. And although the planes are not yet half way over the race course, the subject has become disinterested, signifying the high degree of distraction within the race environment, which saturates fans with multiple, simultaneously occurring events all festooned with logos and messages promoting different commercial products.

The monitors in the “surveillance gallery” also capture visitors to the exhibition space, situating them in the midst of Lutz’s compositions as they contemplate the installation. The superimposition of the exhibition visitor among the race fans forges a connection between the art viewer and NASCAR fan, the gallery and racetrack, spectator and spectacle.

All of the work in the Hudson (Show)Room was commissioned and produced by Artpace San Antonio for the occasion. In addition, a selection of performance videos from 2006 is on display in Artpace’s
lobby entrance.

ABOUT THE ARTIST
Oliver Lutz was born and raised with his twin brother on a goat farm in rural Maine. He received his MFA from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, in 2006. His work has been included in the following group exhibitions: Übergangsräume—Potential Spaces, Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart, Germany (2007); Wight Biennial: Anxiety of Influence, New Wight Gallery, Broad Art Center, Los Angeles, CA (2006); A Forest I, FILTER projektraum, Hamburg, Germany (2006); and Kamp K48, John Connelly Presents, New York, NY (2006). Lutz was recently awarded the IV International Painting Prize, Certamen de pintura Diputación de Castellón, Spain (2007).

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
This exhibition is made possible in part by the Linda Pace Foundation; the City of San Antonio’s Office of Cultural Affairs; and The Brown Foundation, Inc.

ABOUT ARTPACE
Artpace San Antonio serves as a laboratory for the creation and advancement of international contemporary art. Artpace believes that art is a dynamic social force that inspires individuals and defines cultures. Our residencies, exhibitions, and education programs nurture the creative expression of emerging and established artists, while actively engaging youth and adult audiences.

Artpace is located downtown at 445 North Main Avenue, between Savings and Martin streets, San Antonio, Texas. Free parking is available at 513 North Flores Street. Artpace is open to the public Wednesday through Sunday, 12-5 PM, Thursday, 12-8 PM, and by appointment. Admission is free.

Copyright: 2008 Artpace San Antonio