Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for June 4th, 2008

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden presents The Cinema Effect

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Hirshhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden

Installation view of Runa Islam’s Tuin, 1998
Image courtesy Jay Jopling/White Cube
Photo by Gerry Johansson

“The Cinema Effect: Illusion, Reality and the Moving Image”
Part II: “Realisms”
June 19, 2008 to September 7, 2008

http://www.hirshhorn.si.edu

The second part of the Hirshhorn’s two-part exploration of contemporary moving-image art, “Realisms,” looks at a decade of work that demonstrates how cinema—now encompassing such related moving-image media as television, home video and digital entertainment—is a pervasive artistic and social language that complicates rather than clarifies the relationship between fiction and reality. The works of 19 international artists examine some of the traditions and qualities of moving- image media, as well as cinema’s ability to invent new forms, functions and correspondences with the world at large.

“Realisms” is divided into two sections: the first focuses on works that quote global cinema, mainstream television and Hollywood production, while the second examines media representations of historical people, places and events, political propaganda and criminal trials. The exhibition is on view June 19 through Sept. 7 and is organized by Hirshhorn curators Anne Ellegood and Kristen Hileman.

In the first section, works by Candice Breitz, Julian Rosefeldt and Pierre Huyghe refer to, sample from and re-create other cinematic works. In “The Third Memory” (1999), Huyghe gives John Wojtowicz, the bank robber portrayed by Al Pacino in Sidney Lumet’s 1975 film “Dog Day Afternoon,” a chance to recount his version of the events that inspired the film. Huyghe’s work reveals that, as time goes on, Wojtowicz’s memory of the actual robbery has become intertwined with the story as portrayed in Lumet’s film. Rosefeldt’s “Lonely Planet” (2006) tracks the journey of a Westerner in modern-day India, culminating with his participation in a musical number on the set of a Bollywood film.

Runa Islam’s “Tuin” (1998) serves as a transition between the first and second sections of the exhibition. She re-creates a complex shot from Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1974 film “Martha” in which an unseen camera circles around a man and woman as they first encounter one another, conveying the dizziness of their fateful meeting. In Islam’s version, cameras and equipment are visible. “Tuin” exposes the techniques used to fabricate cinema’s spell-binding versions of physical and emotional reality.

In the second section of the exhibition, Michèle Magema, Jeremy Deller, Artur Zmijewski and others explore the confrontation between control and freedom in a cinematic age. These artists re-create historical happenings but enable non-actors to interfere with and or take control of cinema’s processes of storytelling and simulation, resulting in works that critique mass media’s filtering of events.

Artists Isaac Julien and Omer Fast look to montage and multiple screens to deconstruct media’s presentation of people, cultures and historic events. Their films do not use traditional narrative structures. Taking as his subject Colonial Williamsburg and its inhabitants, Fast deconstructs the interview format common within the documentary genre and makes apparent the way moving pictures are spaces where we construct and complicate identity and reality. Essential to the delivery of Julien’s montage is the presentation of characters and landscapes in 3-D space across four screens. This phenomenon of proliferating screens is, of course, occurring outside of gallery spaces as well, as moving-image content is presented on movie screens and televisions, as well as on computers, cell phones and other portable devices, expanding the impact of the cinema throughout daily life.

Generous support for “The Cinema Effect” is provided by The Broad Art Foundation and the Audrey and Sydney Irmas Charitable Foundation, with assistance from Marion Boulton Stroud, Lorie Peters Lauthier, the British Council, the Holenia Trust in memory of Joseph H. Hirshhorn, the Friends of Jim and Barbara Demetrion Endowment Fund, and the Hirshhorn’s board of trustees. In-kind support was provided by Sony Electronics Inc.

The Artists
“Realisms” features the work of Candice Breitz, Matthew Buckingham, Paul Chan, Ian Charlesworth, Phil Collins, Jeremy Deller, Kota Ezawa, Omer Fast, Pierre Huyghe, Runa Islam, Christian Jankowski, Isaac Julien, Michèle Magema, Julian Rosefeldt, Corinna Schnitt, Mungo Thomson, Kerry Tribe, Francesco Vezzoli and Artur Zmijewski.

Related Programs
Meet the Artist talks with Isaac Julien (June 19) and Candice Breitz (June 26) and interactive Friday Gallery Talks offer a range of educational experiences designed to engage people of all ages and interest levels in contemporary art. After Hours (June 20) offers extended hours to view the exhibition (8 p.m. to midnight) and a special live performance by Maxi Geil & Playcolt, a music project conceived by artist Guy Richards Smit. This late-night social gathering attracts large numbers of attendees from around the Washington, D.C., area. The museum’s ever expanding library of podcasts (featured on iTunes in the top 100 Arts and Entertainment podcasts) make walkthroughs and interviews with artists accessible internationally.

Catalog
The fully illustrated catalog includes essays by Ellegood and Hileman, as well as “Dreams” curators Kerry Brougher and Kelly Gordon. In addition, artist Tony Oursler has created a chronology of the moving image. The catalog is co-published with D Giles Ltd, London, a fine arts publisher, and distributed worldwide. It was made possible in part by the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation and Barbara and Aaron Levine.

About the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
The Smithsonian Institution’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden welcomes visitors at all levels of understanding to experience the transformative power of contemporary art. The museum collects, preserves and presents international modern and contemporary art in all media, distinguished by in-depth holdings of major 20th- and 21st-century artists. By collaborating with artists on exhibitions, programs and special projects, the Hirshhorn provides an important national platform in Washington, D.C., for the vision and voices of artists. The museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (closed Dec. 25) and is located at Independence Avenue and Seventh Street S.W.; admission is free.

Media only: Gabriel Riera (202) 633-4765; rierag@si.edu
Note: Visit our new online press room and register to download print-quality images.
Public only: (202) 633-1000

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki presents NO BORDERS (Just N.E.W.S.*)

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
CACT - Contemporary Art
Center of Thessaloniki

KRISTOFFER AKSELBO
Mona Liza Toaster, 2007
(modified toaster, aluminium plates with
cut-out images 21 x 30 x 16 cm)

“NO BORDERS (Just N.E.W.S.*)”
19 June - 28 September 2008

Collaborating institutions:
AICA & the European Centre for Contemporary Art in Brussels “La Centrale Électrique”

Opening reception: Thursday, 19 June 2008, 9 pm
Venue: Old Ice Chambers, Port of Thessaloniki, Greece

Opening speeches by Henry Meyric Hughes, Ramon Tió Bellido, Efi Strouza & Syrago Tsiara

http://www.cact.gr

Twenty-two art schools in 22 European countries… “come together” through the works of 29 of their graduates who transcend all borders and provide proof of the common - although with many different “dialects” - language of art in the exhibition titled “NO BORDERS (Just N.E.W.S.*)”, which is being organised by the Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki in collaboration with the International Association of Art Critics (AICA) and the European Centre for Contemporary Art in Brussels “La Centrale Électrique” from 19 June (opening at 21:00) to 28 September 2008 at the Old Ice Chambers at the Port of Thessaloniki, Greece.

The purpose of the exhibition titled “NO BORDERS (Just N.E.W.S.*)” (in actual fact N.E.W.S. constitutes the initials of North, East, West and South) is to raise the profile of young artists from all over Europe in a way that reveals both their common roots and their diversity of expression. In view of the high level of artistic exchange that already exists in Europe, it simultaneously seeks to give fresh opportunities to young artists just setting out on their careers to show in a different environment and interact with a new public, thus overcoming the limitations imposed by geopolitics.

The exhibition - which was already a success in Brussels - was organised at the initiative of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA), which is based in Paris, with the help and support of AICA Ireland, AICA Denmark, AVCA Valencia and AICA Hellas. Each of the above bodies organised an international seminar in their region, followed by an examination of artists’ dossiers. The final selection of work for the exhibition was made based on around 170 submissions by young artists who had been recommended by a total of 40 art schools, and on a subsequent interview with the artists who were short-listed.

At first sight, the works in the exhibition show a remarkable degree of homogeneity, despite the variety of techniques employed, from painting, sculpture and photography to video, installations and all kinds of digital techniques. However, this should come as no surprise, considering that these young artists are all taking their first steps towards independence and away from the background provided by their art school training.

Through their work these artists pose problems that are of an international nature, but seem to invite a ‘glocal’ response. In other words, the young artists who are recommended through the exhibition exploit their potential to the fullest, demonstrating their capacity to meld ‘local’ factors with reflexive mediation in fashioning a ‘global’ discourse.

The artists

Kristoffer Akselbo (Denmark) Ece Burgaz (Turkey) Nina Canell (Sweden/Ireland) David Cantera (Spain) Sebastian Christoffel (Germany/Netherlands) Coolturistes (Lithuania) Rudy Decelière (France/Switzerland) Marjan Denkov (FYROM) Kristina Draskovic (Serbia) Brendan Earley (Ireland) Willehad Eilers (Germany/Netherlands) Merike Estna (Estonia) Erica Eyres (Canada/United Kingdom) David Ferrando Giraut (Spain) Caroline Froissart (France) Simon Hitziger (France) Tellervo Kalleinen (Finland) Ulrike Knorr (Germany/Belgium) Maria Lusitano (Portugal) Kristina Müntzing (Sweden) Ailbhe Ní Bhriain (Ireland) Randi Nygård (Norway) Lala Rascic (Croatia) Katerina Sedá (Czech Republic) Ivana Smiljanic (Serbia) Mayra Vázquez (Spain) Babis Venetopoulos (Greece) Pernille With Madsen (Denmark) Zorka Wollny (Poland)

Curatorial Team:

Henry Meyric Hughes, President of AICA
Ramon Tió Bellido, Secretary-General of AICA, Chief Curator of the exhibition
Fabienne Dumont, Artistic Director, La Centrale électrique
Alexandra Gillet, Assistant to the curatorial team
Ciáran Bennett, President of AICA Ireland
Maité Beguiristain, Vice-President of AICA
Malene Vest Hansen, President of AICA Denmark
Efi Strouza, President of AICA Hellas
Syrago Tsiara, Director of the Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki

CACT - Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki
http://www.cact.gr

Press Office
Mrs. Yiota Sotiropoulou
Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki
Warehouse B1-Thessaloniki Port
P.O. Box: 10759 GR 54110
Greece

Tel.: +30 2310 589152
Mobile +30 6972336261
press@greekstatemuseum.com

Casco presents Travel Stories

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Casco
Office for Art, Design and Theory

Pia Rönicke and
Zeynel Abidin Kızılyaprak
Travel Stories
8 June - 20 July 2008

Opening
7 June 2008, 18.00

http://www.cascoprojects.org

Travel Stories is a collaborative project produced for Casco by Danish artist Pia Rönicke, Kurdish writer Zeynel Abidin Kizilyaprak, which thinks about the nature of how stories are shared, heard and retold. The exhibition is centered around the film Facing, which the artist and writer co-directed in Istanbul in January 2008.

Rönicke met Kizilyaprak at the Villa Aurora in Los Angeles, where he was participating in their writer in exile programme. Some months later, she invited him to collaborate with her on a film dealing with questions around the Kurdish situation – something that he has written extensively about, both through journalism and fiction. The starting point of Facing is Kizilyaprak’s short story Knock…Knock…Knock…, which is based on his experiences of a Turkish torture house. The story is told from the perspective of its writer from a present day position, depicting a meeting between the storyteller and a character in the story. The film moves between fiction and the reenactment of the author’s own story, and is interspersed with archival footage that gives the story an otherwise unspecified political reality.

An Usual Story from a Nameless Country
Discussion 7 June 2008, 16.00
Pia Rönicke and Zeynel Abidin Kizilyaprak will talk about the process of making the film and about Kurdish history from a personal perspective.

Supported by Gemeente Utrecht, Mondriaan Stichting, Danish Arts Council. Facing is additionally supported by Andersen’s Contemporary Art, Copenhagen and gb agency, Paris.

Travel Stories will also be shown as part of U-TURN Quadrennial for Contemporary Art, Copenhagen (5 September – 9 November 2008) and in an upcoming solo exhibition by Pia Rönicke at gb agency, Paris (13 September – 8 November 2008).

Open Space presents FOLDED—IN

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Folded In - Irena Paskali, treto.jpg
Folded In - Irena Paskali, treto

° FOLDED-IN, June 9th - June 27th 2008

Opening
7 June 2008, 19.00

Project Curator: Personal Cinema & the Erasers
Presentation: Ilias Marmaras, Gülsen Bal und Daphne Dragona

Lecture/talk
09 June, 19.00 – 20.30

Ilias Marmaras and Fahim Amir with Gülsen Bal (Language: English)
at Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien

FOLDED-IN
Crossing the borders of a WEB 2.0 reality

The reason for such an undertaking is that we live in a moments of rupture that regulates the transformations of “demographic politics” and politicisation of life. The main idea behind this involves a concern for affairs that are brought to the attention to bio-politics. We’re not only talking about the culturally specific conditions within shifting modalities, but towards far broader issues that reaches its debates around cross border dialogue, cultural intersections, crossings and/or networks which are profoundly rooted in a “disappearance” of subtle, ‘concrete’ boundaries.

By problematising the “transitory character” where different visions are converging and moving in defining and redefining the borders within new forms of articulation, the question we wish to raise is: what is this really referring to? What would happen when we encounter with a discursive space that produces a reality in which “there is no state in Europe” beyond its borders.

This exposes the imaginary geography and imaginary history which establishes a landscape by bringing together different modes of representation that are usually kept apart. And this coming to presence is by no means a certain matter as the definition of ‘folded-in’ refers a condition of existence.

This is why FOLDED-IN, an online multi-user platform that combines videogame basic elements with the possibility of a constant data flow, addresses the creation of an online community that will not only be part of the game but will create the networking that conveys the world in our absence in its multiplicity.

Thus the concept of becoming minor in its orientation; the project FOLDED-IN aims to take videos out of the context of the Greek-Turkish war (or any similar war or conflict situation in every part of the world) and of the Youtube framing and to re-register them, assigning to them a new role, that of a composing active element in a gameplay. In other words, the aim is their deterritorialization from the broadcast space of Youtube literally, but also metaphorically as signs, transforming the videos from mere screens, to game elements of a further play. FOLDED-IN project is an effort to interrupt the dominant process of propaganda re-production to be an ‘’affinity to infinity’’ an affinity for an always needed redefinition of its products. This generates specific impulses that form the recognition of reality where this manifests a progressive approach to a critical engagement within a creative practice.

The key to understanding this question is related to the concept “yet-to-come” (virtuality) that belongs to ‘being-in-the-world’.

Lecture/talk by Ilias Marmaras and Fahim Amir with Gülsen Bal will cover the presentation of the project and further some extends to the web 2.0 social politics.

Sponsoring and kind support provided by:

BM:UKK
Interkulturelle und Internationale Aktivitäten
Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien

for more info: office@openspace-zkp.org

http://www.openspace-zkp.org

frieze 116 out now

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News

frieze 116: Out Now

Additional exclusive content online at frieze.com

In the Summer issue of frieze…

As China prepares for the Olympic spotlight, Carol Yinghua Lu considers Ai Weiwei’s unprecedented visibility as a defining voice in the country’s cultural make-up.

Dominic Eichler recounts his research trip through Vietnam’s Central Highlands with artist Danh Vo and photographer Pratchaya Phinthong.

American writer A.M Homes talks to British artist Sarah Jones
about photography, film, memory, roses, psychoanalysis, women and hair.

Dan Fox explores the prolific output of Ryan Gander, which includes lectures, scripts, videos, sculptures, paintings, books, clothing, jewellery, typography, etymology, facts, fictions, borrowings
and more…

Editor at large Polly Staple discusses ways of seeing, power relations and reproduction in her special project, ‘Switzerland’.

Vivian Rehberg finds rewards in French artist Loris Greaud’s multi-faceted exhibitions and wild flights of the imagination.

Novelist Ben Ehrenreich sees the hopes and failures of a revolution within the story of the building of Cuba’s National Art Schools.

In ‘Ideal Syllabus’ artist and philosopher Adrian Piper reflects on the books that have been most important to her, whilst Raqs Media Collective, artist group and curators of Manifesta 7, share their favourite movies in ‘Life in Film’.

Among the regular frieze columns, George Pendle asks why so few artists enter politics, Sarah Kahn sees Elvis and Madonna as contradictory emblems of their homeland and Jennifer Allen reminisces on her love affair with an artificial gut.

And,
In the ‘Focus’ section frieze considers the practices of Susan Philipsz, Klara Lidén, Roberto Cuoghi and Javier Téllez, with a further 25 exhibition reviews from around the world including the UK, USA, the Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Italy and France.

Exclusively online at frieze.com
Ronald Jones explores the controversy of Guillermo Vargas’ dead dog
Mark Fisher looks at hauntology
Jennifer Kabat on the history of the recycling logo
and Nick Currie discusses the 1980s’ TV series Shock of the New

Plus, online audio and video from features in the Summer issue and more exhibition reviews from London, Bangkok, Paris, Glasgow and beyond.

………………
Subscribe to frieze now and save 40 percent off the cover price.
http://www.frieze.com