Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for June 7th, 2008

Kunstmuseum Basel presents Above The Fold

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Kunstmuseum Basel

David Lamelas, “Limits of a projection”, 2008
(1967) and Ayse Erkmen, “One Half Each”, 2008
installation view Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel
photographer: Stefan Altenburger

Above The Fold
Ayse Erkmen, Ceal Floyer and David Lamelas
1st June - 12th October, 2008

Curated by: Nikola Dietrich

Kunstmuseum Basel
Museum für Gegenwartskunst
St. Alban-Graben 8
Postfach
CH-4010 Basel
http://www.kunstmuseumbasel.ch

The three artists Ayşe Erkmen (born, 1949), Ceal Floyer (born, 1968) and David Lamelas (born, 1964) are united by an artistic approach that follow a reduced grammar of form. Their individual handling of time and space, their preoccupations with limits and possibilities for the creation of alternative communications and cognitive processes has been the motive of this group exhibition. The exhibition title Above – the – Fold* refers to an artistic strategy, for the creation of works, in which the surface structures, on the one hand, follow the semantics of the exhibition space and transform it, and on the other, refer beyond their own form to contexts, which often only become legible in the works’ subtexts.

Lamelas numbers amongst the pioneers of conceptual art and had already created significant works by the end of the 1960s establishing the hybrid character of the exhibition location. The use of a variety of media is characteristic of his way of working and incorporates sculpture, performance, photography and film. David Lamelas’ work Dos Espacios Modificados (two modified spaces) is to be reconstructed for the first time for this exhibition (after more than 40 years since its inception). It can be regarded similarly both as starting and turning point in Lamelas’s unique oeuvre. His contribution representing Argentina in the 1967 São-Paulo Biennial conceived as a critique of the tradition of an installation institution won Lamelas international recognition. It addressed Oskar Niemeyer’s spiral- formed spatial conception of the exhibition hall and thus the cultural and societal significance of a building that was one of the first modernist constructions of the post-war p
eriod. Corner Piece (1966) and Límite de una proyección I (Limit of a projection, 1966) are also architectonic interventions in which the architecture itself or the limits of the medium are made the subject of the work.

Ceal Floyer’s works, which are composed of light projections, videos, audio pieces, paper works and sculptures stimulate certain associations evoked by incongruities between object and denotation. The formal constructions are simple and reduced to a bare few elements. Frequently the same materials are used in her installations so it is much more the case that the technical apparatus itself is determining as constructor of the word game and the work itself. A renowned work by Floyer, Door (1995) created from an arrangement of light, electricity cable, door and projector simply throws a strip of light from along the crack at the bottom of a door. It corresponds to the notion of light shining from a neighbouring room. The ambiguity in the game of deception is also borne in the title. The word “Door” itself does not evoke something like “light” – what one sees is a door upon which light is beamed. In turn a video projection, newly developed for the exhibition situati
on, titled Viewpoint takes up a situation from everyday life, by scrutinizing the “taken for grantedness” of its own visual perception.

Ayşe Erkmen’s works are often the result of intensive examinations with specific locations and are conceived exclusively for the length of an exhibition. In her installations and architectonic interventions she concentrates on the divergent legibility of their societal and historically implied architectures and surroundings. For this concrete situation she has created some new works which respond to existing structures of the museum building in varying designs. One Half Each describes in a few words everything that the work deals with: three carpets, which were made in Istanbul - her hometown – trace the particularly eye-catching ground plan lines of the three floors of the new building in half scale. On the top floor, laid over one another, woven in luminescent colour, they reproduce the abstract two-dimensional image of the floors crossed beforehand. The temporary nature of her works is expressly legible here - only with great difficulty could the works be adapted for
other spaces. The respective dependence of the objects on the context of their origins and location of their presentations, become the explicit subject.

An accompanying magazine is to appear for the exhibition. It is simultaneously the opener for a substantial publication titled Above – The – Fold, published by Hatje Cantz publishers (German/English) in July, 2008, featuring texts by Nikola Dietrich, Kassandra Nakas, Jacob Lillemose and Jan Verwoert.

*In newspaper jargon this means the “lead” or “front-page story”.

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

ICA, London Anniversary Print Portfolio 2008

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

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

Tomas Saraceno
Untitled, 2008
Giclée print on paper, 50 x 40cm
Courtesy of the artist, Andersen
S Contemporary, Copenhagen

ICA Anniversary
Print Portfolio 2008

Featured artists:
Carol Bove
Peter Coffin
Ryan Gander
Judith Hopf
Rosalind Nashashibi
Tomas Saraceno
http://www.ica.org.uk/printportfolio

Published on the occasion of the ICA’s 60th anniversary, this special print portfolio is a unique opportunity to own a collection of works commissioned from six British and international artists, figures who the ICA believes are helping to define the art practice of the future. The artists are Carol Bove, Peter Coffin, Ryan Gander, Judith Hopf, Rosalind Nashashibi and Tomas Saraceno.

The portfolio is produced as an edition of 60 (plus 10 artist’s proofs) and comes in a custom-made box. Each print is 40×50cm and is signed and numbered by the artist. All proceeds go to support the ICA visual arts programme. All works are currently on display at the ICA.

Sales enquiries
To buy a portfolio, or for more information, email Vicky Steer at the ICA vicky.steer@ica.org.uk , speak with the ICA Bookshop (+44 20 7766 1452) or see the ICA website http://www.ica.org.uk/printportfolio

Carol Bove
Bove’s silkscreen print is based on a string drawing, and is printed using saffron. The artist feels that string drawings offer an interesting parallel with instruction-based conceptual artworks of the 1960s – even though they come from a very different, and craft-based, tradition. Carol Bove is based in New York, and her work appears courtesy of the artist and Hotel, London.

Peter Coffin
The silkscreen print by Coffin is related to a series of sculptures by the artist, entitled Sculpture Silhouette Props, which recreate icons of sculptural history as two-dimensional cut-outs. Coffin says that the silhouettes “represent a static memory – all of sculpture in one mass.” Peter Coffin is based in
New York.

Ryan Gander
Gander’s works often create fictional histories, and his print is a photograph of a watercolour illustration by Mark Beesley – one that portrays the ICA’s artistic director, Ekow Eshun, carrying an abacus and a torch in the basement of the organisation. Ryan Gander is based in London.

Judith Hopf
Hopf has worked in a wide range of media, offering an absurdist – and ultimately utopian – exploration of artistic forms and everyday conventions. Her silkscreen print was inspired by the work of Bridget Riley, whose style is here unexpectedly used to depict a nose. Judith Hopf is based in Berlin.

Rosalind Nashashibi
Nashashibi is best known for her film works, but has also made a number of collages, and her mixed media print is based on one such work. The artist says that the piece “is a sort of wish or fantasy self-portrait and simultaneously a portrait of a friend.” Rosalind Nashashibi is based in London.

Tomas Saraceno
In 2006, in a commission for the Barbican Centre, London, Saraceno travelled to the world’s largest salt lake, Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia. The artist’s photograph captures a sensation that is created in this extreme environment: that of immersion in the clouds. Tomas Saraceno is based in Frankfurt am Main.

Public Art Norway (KORO) Call for Artists

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Public Art Norway (KORO)

Invitation to a pre -
qualifying round
Call for artists: Artwork commission

In the public foyer at The Performing Arts Centre in Kristiansand, Norway

http://www.koro.no

Public Art Norway (KORO) hereby invites artists working within the fields of visual art, arts and craft and other visual expressions designers, to participate in a pre-qualifying round for two large-scale and distinctive commissions, a 3000 m2 concrete floor and the second-floor foyer.

“Kilden”, the new Performing Arts Center will have a unique architectural presence and will stand as a landmark building in Kristiansand. The primary architectural feature is the inclined, undulating wall facing the quayside. The building will house four performing spaces with seating for over 2200 visitors. The commissioned artworks are intended to highlight Kilden as a meeting place that opens up for a broad spectrum of aesthetic experiences. The Art Committee is seeking candidates for two parallel competitions, for two large-scale and distinctive projects:

The concrete floor: An artwork is envisaged that will interact with the 3000 m2 area from the quayside to the foyer. It is intended that this large indoor/outdoor area will create the identity of a classic cultural concourse. The intention is to create a unique identity for this site for both the visitors to the Centre, as well as passers-by. Close collaboration with the architect and other relevant specialists during the competition period will be necessary.

The second-floor foyer: An artwork that adapts the inclined, undulating wall that runs the full 95-meter length of the building. The height ranges from 2.7 to 6.4 meters. This is an area where audiences will gather before a performance or during the interval. This suggests an unobtrusive, abstract artwork that takes into consideration the audience’s expectations, discussions and reflections. A range of solutions could be possible: including painting/wall drawing; light/projection; sculpture / relief / installation; tactile materials. Close collaboration with the architect and other relevant specialists during the competition period will be necessary.

The application to the pre-qualification phase must not exceed 10 A4 pages. It should contain a CV, a statement on relevant experience, and documentation of previous projects. Unless a stamped and addressed return envelope is included, all submitted material will be destroyed.

For further information please see http://www.koro.no and http://www.kilden.com

Mark the envelope “Kilden” and send to:
KORO
Postboks 6994, St Olavs Plass
0130 Oslo, Norway

Deadline: 1st September 2008