Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for June 19th, 2008

Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt presents Total Enlightenment

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt

ALEXANDER KOSOLAPOV
LENIN – COCA-COLA, 1993
Oil on canvas
75 x 120 cm
Courtesy Antonio Piccolo Collection

TOTAL ENLIGHTENMENT
MOSCOW CONCEPTUAL ART
1960 - 1990
21 June - 14 September 2008

SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT
Römerberg
60311 Frankfurt, Germany
phone: (+49) 69 29 98 82-0
fax: (+49) 69 29 98 82-240
welcome@schirn.de
http://www.schirn.de

The art which we know as Moscow Conceptualism emerged in the 1960s, and the performances, installations and texts of the Moscow Conceptualists constituted a critical reflection on Soviet imagery. As artistic endeavor in the Soviet Union was subject to strict ideological censorship, the activities of this group of artists were perceived as a kind of political provocation, for these artists usurped for themselves the privilege of interpreting art and society, which was supposed to be the sole provenance of the Communist Party. This exhibition presents about 130 works by 30 artists, including Erik Bulatov, Ilya Kabakov, Vitaly Komar & Alexander Melamid, Alexander Kosolapov, Igor Makarevich, Elena Elagina, Andrei Monastyrski, Boris Mikhailov, Dmitri Prigov, Leonid Sokov and Vadim Zakharov. As early as 1992, the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt undertook a fundamental appraisal of the Russian avant-garde with its exhibition “The Great Utopia,” and explored the art of the subsequent
Stalinist period with the show “Dream Factory Communism” in 2003. With “Total Enlightenment,” the Schirn Kunsthalle is now staging its third exhibition of Russian art, and has thus comprehensively documented and analyzed all of the most important artistic trends of the twentieth century in Russia and the Soviet Union.

In the Russian art community, Moscow Conceptualism is considered the most important Russian art movement of the second half of the twentieth century. In the West, even though individual representatives of this group, such as Ilya Kabakov, Erik Bulatov, Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, Andrei Monastyrski, Vadim Zacharov, Pavel Pepperstein and Yuri Albert, are known, there has to date been no attempt to place the group in an art historical context through an exhibition.

Moscow Conceptualism grew out of the independent, unofficial Moscow art scene of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. This scene emerged in the larger cities of the Soviet Union almost immediately after Stalin’s death in 1953. Although tolerated by the authorities, it was cut off almost entirely from the official exhibition circuit and the state-controlled mass media. The name “Moscow Conceptualism” references both the Moscow underground scene and the Western, particularly Anglo-American, conceptual art of the 1960s which was well known to the Moscow Conceptualists. But in Moscow, this practice underwent a fundamental transformation that derives from the specific conditions under which all art in the Soviet Union functioned. In the Soviet Union there was no market, and thus no art market. The value of a work of art was determined not according to the rules of the market economy but the rules of the symbolic economy, according to which all of life in the Soviet Union was ordered.
When observing a picture, the normal Soviet viewer, though entirely unfamiliar with Art and Language, would automatically replace this picture with its possible ideological-political-philosophic commentary—and he would consider solely the commentary in evaluating that picture as Soviet, half-Soviet, non-Soviet, anti-Soviet, etc. Moscow Conceptualism thus saw itself as an investigation of the Soviet symbolic economy.

The artists of the first generation of Moscow Conceptualism of the 1960s and 1970s, such as Ilya Kabakov, Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, Dmitri Prigov or Lev Rubinstein, mainly used the language of the “simple Soviet person.” The carefully selected and iteratively censored formulations of official Soviet ideology were inevitably damaged and displaced by their quotidian “uncultivated” use, and simultaneously “adulterated” with every conceivable purely private and unconsidered opinion. Ilya Kabakov and Dmitri Prigov in particular helped themselves liberally to this trove of everyday, uncultivated theorizing in their commentaries on their own and other art, and often in a highly entertaining fashion. One can say that Moscow Conceptualism made the discursive mass culture of its time into its object. On the one hand, it was indeed a kind of conceptual art. But it was much more than just a kind of discursive Pop Art.

Like almost all avant-garde movements of the twentieth century, the Moscow Conceptualists systematically organized a counter-public, which primarily comprised the artists themselves and their friends. They met regularly to discuss new works and texts. They issued their own and international publications, and created archives. Particularly Andrei Monastyrski and his group “Collective Actions,” which started staging actions in the mid-1970s, contributed to triggering a process of self-institutionalization of Moscow Conceptualism.

The break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991 brought with it the de facto dissolution—or irrelevance—of all state Soviet institutions. In the post-Soviet era, the tradition of Moscow Conceptualism has thus taken on a special significance—for this group, which also included curators and art critics, formed the seed for the emergence of a new art public in the new Russia.

An exhibition of the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt and the Fundación Juan March, Madrid. “Total Enlightenment. Moscow Conceptual Art 1960–1990” will be presented at the Fundación Juan March, Madrid, from 10 October 2008 to 11 January 2009.

FEATURED ARTISTS: Yuri Albert, Sergei Anufriev, Grisha Bruskin, Erik Bulatov, Ivan Chuikov, Elena Elagina, Andrei Filippov, Ilya Kabakov, Georgy Kiesevalter, Collective Actions, Komar & Melamid, Alexander Kosolapov, Yuri Leiderman, Igor Makarevich, Inspection Medical Hermeneutics, Boris Mikhailov, Andrei Monastyrski, Nikolai Panitkov, Pavel Pepperstein, Viktor Pivovarov, Dmitri Prigov, Lev Rubinstein, Leonid Sokov, Vadim Zakharov.

CATALOGUE: “Total Enlightenment. Moscow Conceptual Art 1960–1990.” Edited by Boris Groys, Max Hollein and Manuel Fontán del Junco. With a foreword by Max Hollein and Manuel Fontán del Junco, texts by Ekaterina Bobrinskaya, Manuel Fontán del Junco, Boris Groys, Martina Weinhart and Dorothea Zwirner as well as artists’ texts by Ilya Kabakov and Andrei Monastyrski. German-English edition, 440 pages with 150 color illustrations, Hatje Cantz Verlag, Ostfildern, 2008, ISBN 978-3-7757-2124-0.

DIRECTOR: Max Hollein

CURATOR: Prof. Dr. Boris Groys

OPENING HOURS: Tue., Fri. - Sun. 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Wed. and Thur. 10 a.m. - 10 p.m.

INFORMATION: http://www.schirn.de

PRESS CONTACT: Dorothea Apovnik, phone: (+49-69) 29 98 82-118, fax: (+49-69) 29 98 82-240, e-mail: dorothea.apovnik@schirn.de http://www.schirn.de (texts and images for download under PRESS).

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Everybody‘s a VIP: the Summer Mixtape fundraiser

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

smt_titleimage.jpg
Exit Art

Friday, July 11, 8pm - midnight
with DJ Kiku, Hell Yup and DJ Edowa
Beer and wine at the bar

Join us for Everybody’s a VIP, a fundraising party for the exhibition Summer Mixtape Volume 1, featuring a night of dance-able music spanning hip-hop, electronica, old school, orchestral beats, down beat and a MySpace mashup. Bring your people!

Exit Art’s summer exhibition, Summer Mixtape Volume 1: the Get Smart Edition, opens on Thursday, July 24. Drawing on influences from hip-hop and popular culture, the exhibition seeks to evoke the appropriated, personalized essence of the mixtape. Summer Mixtape features 27 up-and-coming artists from the greater New York area and works that range widely in theme and medium, mirroring the diverse sights, sounds and cultures of the New York streets. The exhibition, curated by Exit Art’s Associate Curator, Herb Tam, and Assistant Curator, Lauren Rosati, will also feature a jukebox with mixtapes produced by the artists and some special guests.

Summer Mixtape Volume 1: The Get Smart Edition is the must-see show in New York this summer. Continuing Exit Art’s tradition of exposing new artists, this show is both an exhibition of some of the hottest in New York and a platform for twilight performances, dance parties, and mixtape listening sessions. Join us in celebrating the start of summer with a Summer Mixtape fundraiser to keep the beats going.

$10 before, $15 at the door. Tickets and more information about the exhibition available on our website at http://www.exitart.org.

Summer Mixtape Volume 1: the Get Smart edition

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

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Exit Art

Summer Mixtape Volume 1: the Get Smart edition
July 24 – August 29, 2008
Opening: Thursday July 24, 2008 7-10pm
with treats from Sweet Tooth of the Tiger

ARTISTS
Martin Basher, Colby Bird, Tyler Coburn, Corey D’Augustine, Sarah Davis, Jason Duval, Cacy Forgenie, Donna Huanca, Rashid Johnson, Jayson Keeling, Joyce Kim, Dorota Kolodziejczyk, William Lamson, Kalup Linzy, Jeffrey Lopez, Marisa Olson, Rosemarie Padovano, Alyssa Pheobus, Thabiso Phokompe, Fay Ray, Ted Riederer, Jacolby Satterwhite, Xaviera Simmons, Nick Stillman, Thomas Torrescordova, Lan Tuazon, Yuh-Shioh Wong

Long after the cassette tape has become an obsolete relic of a clumsier analog era, the essence of the mixtape lives on through CDs and MP3 playlists. Summer Mixtape Volume 1: the Get Smart edition pays tribute to this vital form of popular expression with a group exhibition that compiles some of the hottest work from the New York area that the curators have seen all year.

The curators looked back through previous calls for submissions, canvassed other curators and artists for recommendations, visited dozens of artists’ studios, and saw hundreds of shows to wind up with the 27 artists that make up Summer Mixtape Volume 1. The works in the exhibition cover a vast array of themes and mediums, mirroring the diverse mix of sights, sounds and cultures on the streets of New York. The show also features a jukebox programmed specifically for the exhibition that includes mixtapes and cover art produced by the artists and some special guests.

Audio mixes are still made for long road trips, disc jockey sets, as mood-setters for parties, as surrogate love letters, and as outlets to hear the latest hip-hop hitting the streets. Yet despite its cultural ubiquity, the mixtape remains a durable emblem of the counter culture. Drawing on these influences, Summer Mixtape Volume 1 materializes the mixtape’s spirit of appropriation, customization, unabashed nostalgia and relaxed fun.

Curated by Herb Tam and Lauren Rosati.

Friday, August 1, 7-9pm
Performances by artists Nick Stillman and Donna Huanca
and a Summer Mixtape jukebox listening party

“The Best Art Today” - With sonic contributions by artist Corey D’Augustine and noise band Knyfe Kyts, artist and Artforum critic Nick Stillman will deliver a slide lecture on the best art today.

“Rua Minx: Etapa del Funcionamiento (segundo)” - This performance by artist Donna Huanca, under the pseudonym RUA MINX, should be viewed as an experience rather than voyeuristic entertainment. Intuition and audience participation drives the performance, which may include the integration of videos, drums, sewing machine(s), bass, electronics, animals, and voice. For more information, visit http://www.ruaminx.com.

Tuesday, August 5, 7-9pm
Video mixtape by Prerana Reddy, Director of Public Events at the Queens Museum of Art, and a video mixtape by artist Colby Bird

Colby Bird presents “From Viennese Actionism to the Triumph of Vince Young”
with material by:
Otmar Bauer, Carla Edwards, Nils Ericson, Insane Clown Posse/Twiztid,
Seth Price, Mariah Robertson, The Texas Longhorns, Josh Tonsfeldt,
Hype Williams, Xtreeme Films LLC, and viral video from anonymous sources

Information on Prerana Reddy’s program TBA.

Wednesday, August 13, 7-9pm
Analog Cine Mix, a night of 16mm film inspired by summer fun; $3

WITH:
Crocus, Suzan Pitt (6:30, 1971)
Garden Path, Mary Beth Reed and Stan Brakhage (7:00, 2001)
Les Tournesols et Les Tournesols Coloré, Rose Lowder (6:00, 1982-1983)
What the Water Said, Nos. 1-3, David Gatten (16:00, 1997-1998)
Spills and Chills, by the Vitaphone Corporation (10:00, 1949)
Our Lady of the Sphere, by Larry Jordan (10:00, 1969)
and more

Friday, August 29, 7-9pm
Summer Mixtape Closing Party
with music curated by you – Bring your own iPod – first come, first served.

http://www.exitart.org

ecology

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Without thought.jpg
print 100×120 cm

Loumuiotis Dimitrios Digital art http://www.artmajeur.com/loumiotis/

New York Conversations

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
A Prior Magazine

William Hogarth, c. 1730-5

On the occasion of the making of A Prior Magazine #18 and the opening of the new e-flux’ space, A Prior Magazine is happy to present The New York Conversations with Nico Dockx, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Anton Vidokle

Partcipants:
Liam Gillick, Martha Rosler, Louwrien Wijers, Jan Verwoert, Miwon Kwon, Marti Peran, Sis Matthé, Egon Hanfstingl and A Prior editors Anders Kreuger, Dieter Roelstraete, Monika Szewczyk, Andrea Wiarda and Els Roelandt.

Daily food and conversation sessions 26-27-28 june
Hours: 1pm till 3 pm and 8pm till 10pm

Where: 41 Essex Street, NYC, NY 10002*
*This event is free but there is limited seating so please make your reservation by sending an email to els@aprior.org . (Please also state what day and hour you want to come, please only enlist for one session so to give others a chance to join too). A limited number of seats is available the days of the event.

The New York Conversations will be followed by the production of A Prior Magazine #18 and its festive presentation at Beursschouwburg Brussels (10-11 october 2008) . http://www.beursschouwburg.be

Participants and visitors are advised to respect the following rules *:

- It is necessary to listen to others if one wants to have their attention

- Above all things and upon all occasions, avoid speaking of yourself

- Being over confident and peremptory does very much unfit men for conversation

- Avoid too excessive pedantic or technical speech (like direct interrogation, the use of imperatives and short answers such as ‘Yes’ and above all ‘No’)

- Adapt your conversation to the people you are conversing with

- Honourable people must never use a low word in their speech

- Subjects to avoid for men: ‘hunting, hawking and the War of the Netherlands; for women: fashionable clothes and housewifery. In general avoid talking about one’s children, telling one’s dreams or boasting of one’s nobility or riches.

- It is a great fault to be too fond of keeping silent

- don’t talk when you eat, it makes people think you are not enjoying the food

- It is better to be a men of few words than a ciarlatore

- No one speaks to the king during his public meals unless he addresses him first

And ofcourse:
Whereof one cannot speak, thereof must one be silent

* see Peter Burke, The Art of Conversation in Early Modern Europe, 1993

v.z.w. Mark // A Prior Magazine
Main office:
J Kluyskensstraat 6, 9000 Ghent, Belgium
t. +32 476 23 54 94 // els@aprior.org

Milan Office: andrea@aprior.org
Berlin Office: monika@aprior.org
Research and Circulation: maria@aprior.org
Subscriptions on: http://www.aprior.org/subscriptions

http://www.aprior.org for content and advertising

A Prior Magazine is supported by the Flemish Community and the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (KASK) of the University College Ghent

THE STORE, Tulips & Roses, Vilnius

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

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THE STORE
Curated by Adam Carr

May 23rd – June 21st, 2008

With works by: Saâdane Afif, Olivier Babin, Stella Capes, Tomas Chaffe, Jason Dodge, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Claire Fontaine, Liam Gillick, Loris Gréaud, Arunas Gudaitis, Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Gabriel Kuri, Matthieu Laurette, Juozas Laivys, Flávia Müller Medeiros, Darius Mikšys, Jonathan Monk, Paola Pivi, Dan Rees, Hannah Rickards, Yann Sérandour, Dexter Sinister, Andreas Slominski, Superflex, Ron Terada, Mungo Thomson, Mario Garcia Torres, Tris Vonna-Michell

And other people’s projects: ‘Top 100’ by Davide Bertocchi; ‘Dot Dot Dot’ by Dexter Sinister; ‘Lester & Malasauskas’ by Raimundas Malasauskas & Gabriel Lester; ‘Old News’ by Jacob Fabricius; ‘Pin-Up Badges’ by Pierre Beloüin & Nicolas Simonin

Tulips & Roses, Vilnius is extremely delighted to announce its inaugural exhibition, THE STORE, curated by Adam Carr.

THE STORE takes as its starting point the location of the gallery––Vilnius, a place in which the art market has just begun––and its occasion––the galleries inaugural exhibition––to form a celebration of the art object while aspiring to provide critical reflection on the manner by which it operates in the eyes of the art market.

All of the artists included in THE STORE have been invited to participate with works that will available to the general public. The result is an inventory comprising artwork by over 25 international artists, as well as projects curated by other people, all of which can be purchased at relatively small prices or be taken away for free. THE STORE therefore offers artworks to a mass audience usually conserved in a private gallery context for a selective few, and in doing so aims to offer a new experience not only within private commercial galleries but for exhibition going entirely. Interestingly, by making purchases from the goods on offer––selecting a pair of keys, a poster and not say a slice of a cake and/or a napkin, for example––viewers will in effect be curating their own shows for which can be taken away with them. This shifts the role of the spectator into consumer and active participant, and in response to their activity, the exhibition will be subjected to pe!
rpetual
change, order and reorder–– altering both its form and meaning.

Adam Carr is an independent curator and writer currently based in London.
For further information concerning the exhibition, please contact the gallery or see in store.

_______________________
TULIPS & ROSES
Gaono g. 10
LT - 01131
Vilnius
T: +37069800017
E: info@tulipsandroses.lt
W: http://www.tulipsandroses.lt

Photographic Exhibition “CROMOGENIAS“

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

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Cromogenias 10

With “Cromogenias” Pepo Alcalá (Malaga, 1973) explores the limits of the abstract photography. He seeks to create, with photographic tools, a world imagined, shaped by fantasy, through an inner journey. “Cromogenias” are not digital images created by computer. The raw materials of this serie are the water and the wine. Pepo, using the correct light, looks for the transparency of these elements so they acquire abstract forms and colors, but only photographing the reality. This Spanish artist shows us that the photography is no based only on observing and capturing the real but it also creates images of great beauty. So Pepo Alcalá is absolutely right when he says that “the photography, wich is now universally acknowledged as art, should not limit itself to mimesis but to seek its own path of development and to show that not only is able to capture images but also to create them”

COLORIDA ART GALLERY
Rua Costa do Castelo 63, Lisboa
Tel 211 512 142
http://www.colorida.pt

Until July 12, from Tuesdays to Saturdays, 1:30PM to 7PM.

YVETTE POORTER: Knock on Woods Roving International Residency

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

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Yvette Poorter, KNOCK ON WOODS, 2008

The Helen Pitt Gallery presents:

KNOCK ON WOODS: A Roving International Artist Residency
Yvette Poorter

Closing reception and video presentation: Saturday, June 21 at 7:00 pm
Artist talk: 7:30 pm

Please join us for the reception concluding the KNOCK ON WOODS residencies at the Helen Pitt Gallery. For the past week, the gallery has hosted 12 short-term residencies of local artists, writers, yogis, musicians and people who do other things too.

With Knock on Woods, Rotterdam-based artist Yvette Poorter has created a nomadic version of her previous residency projects This Neck of the Woods (2005-07) and A Week in the Woods (2001-03). After a number of European stops, Poorter is now in the process of touring the project to a number of Canadian cities. Poorter will also be presenting this project at Open Space (Victoria), Mercer Union (Toronto), Modern Fuel (Kingston) and Quartier Ephemère (Montreal) over the next months.

Knock on Woods International Residency is a constructed space that dedicates itself to offering local and international artists of all sorts a sense of rootedness and respite from a hectic and bewildering globalism. The residency is a para-site that consists of a rustic tent-cabin and a forest of tree-flags. Functioning as a sculpture, an architectural intervention, an archive, a series of collaborations and a traveling circus, KOW suitably can be seen in more nebulous terms: a cross-roads, a zone, a state of mind.

Artists were invited to do a residency with Knock on Woods for a minimum of four and a maximum of 24 hours. Any kind of work/non-work was advocated: out-come-based projects, pointless exploration, rest or respite.

For more information on the background for this project, the artist, and a link to Knock on Woods, please visit http://thisneckofthewoods.net/

YVETTE POORTER is a Canadian/Dutch artist currently based in Rotterdam. Her sculpture, video, photography, text-works, actions and installation have been shown extensively in North America and Europe, as well as in Japan. Recent solo exhibitions include The Vegetarians at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria (Victoria BC), ICI3 at Buro Dijkstra (Amsterdam), and Forty-Hour-Work-Week at Sox36 (Berlin). Previous versions of Knock on Woods were staged at TENT (Rotterdam) and Ouve, O Seculo (Lisbon). In 2005 Poorter was part of the photography exhibition Duplicitous, at the Helen Pitt Gallery.

Helen Pitt Gallery artist run centre
#102-148 Alexander Street
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6A 1B5
www.helenpittgallery.org
Contact: Lance Blomgren, Director/Curator

Private / Corporate V at Daimler Contemporary, Berlin

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Daimler Contemporary

Ill.: Franz Erhard Walther, Fünf Räume [five spaces], 1972
Daimler Art Collection

Private / Corporate V
A Dialogue of the Collections Lafrenz, Hamburg, and Daimler, Stuttgart/Berlin

June 20 - September 21, 2008
Opening Thursday, June 19, 2008, 7 pm

Daimler Contemporary
Haus Huth
Alte Potsdamer Straße 5
10785 Berlin
Germany
Open daily 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Admission free
http://www.collection.daimler.com

The Daimler Art Collection is pleased to announce the exhibition Private/Corporate V at Daimler Contemporary at Potsdamer Platz in Berlin. Private/Corporate V – a collaboration with Collection Lafrenz, Hamburg - is the fifth in a series of exhibitions initiated in 2002, in which the Daimler Art Collection presents itself in a dialogue with an international private collection once a year. These co-operations have always gone hand in hand with a sense of focus that is typical of each private collector invited to participate and so the holdings of the Collection can be examined from the point of view of a related collecting interest.

The Lafrenz Collection concentrates on aspects of Minimal and Concept Art, Post Painterly Abstraction, Land Art and Arte Povera. It was established in the 1970s by Dr. Klaus and Rosemarie Lafrenz, and its works lay behind the foundation of the Neues Museum Weserburg Bremen, which is seen as the prototype of the collector’s museum. At the same time, part of the Lafrenz Collection is on permanent loan to the Kunsthalle Hamburg, and has also been shown in various national and international exhibition contexts. As the oldest of the four children, Björn Lafrenz took over continuing and presenting the collection as a private commitment, after his father’s early death. So among other things he is still pursuing the original idea of not concentrating on work series, but on placing individual works by different artists, from the 1960s to the present day – for example Judd, Ryman, Serra, LeWitt, Marden, Mangold, Novros – in new dialogue situations. In the mean time, work by co
ntemporary artists, represented here by Johannes Esper, Frank Gerritz and Liam Gillick, have joined what are mainly American classics – but also German work such as that of Albers, Erben, Palermo and Ruthenbeck.

The idea for Private/Corporate V was born in a flash in Hamburg in summer 2007 – after each of the partners had taken a thorough look at the other collection. Björn Lafrenz and Dr. Renate Wiehager, the head of the Daimler Art Department, deliberately chose work by some artists – Gillick, LeWitt, Novros – from both collections. The exhibition starts with a conversation between the ‘fathers’ of Minimal Art – Judd, Ryman, Novros – with the younger artists Gerritz and Gillick. In the main gallery at Daimler Contemporary works by Franz Erhard Walther, Palermo and McCracken – backed by an ‘all-over’ of Minimalist drawings – lay Minimal Art’s analytical relation with space open to physical experience. Private/Corporate V also introduces German exponents of Minimalism – Posenenske and Schene – to a conversation with American pioneers and young artists such as Tom Sachs, Katja Strunz and Jonathan Monk.

The show comprises over 60 works by some 20 artists, dating from the 1960s to the present day.

Participating Artists:

From the Lafrenz Collection: Josef Albers (D), Markus Amm (D), Carl Andre (USA), Alan Charlton (UK), Johannes Esper (D), Frank Gerritz (D), Liam Gillick (GB), Donald Judd (USA), Sol LeWitt (USA), Brice Marden (USA), John McCracken (USA), David Novros (USA), Blinky Palermo (D), Robert Ryman (USA).

From the Daimler Art Collection: Markus Amm (D), Hanne Darboven (D), Liam Gillick (GB), Hermann Glöckner (D), Sol LeWitt (USA), Jonathan Monk (GB), David Novros (USA), Charlotte Posenenske (D), Peter Roehr (D), Tom Sachs (USA), Eckhard Schene (D), Jan J. Schoonhoven (NL), Katja Strunz (D), Franz Erhard Walther (D).

Private/Corporate V is accompanied by a comprehensive program, including artist talks, lectures and discussions with represented artists as well as thematic guided tours: These tours are available on every first Saturday of a month at 4 p.m. (July 05 / Aug 02 / Sept 06, 2008). Guided tours “Art and Architecture on Potsdamer Platz” can be booked on request. Please check our website for updates and announcements. If you would like to receive regular information about exhibitions and activities of the Daimler Art Collection please send an E-Mail to: kunst.sammlung@daimler.com

Exhibition catalogues are available at Daimler Contemporary, at bookshop Bücherbogen am Savignyplatz in Berlin or can be ordered online at: http://collection.daimler.com/publikationen/publikationen_e.php

Further information on the Collection Lafrenz can be found online.

Contact:

Daimler Contemporary
Haus Huth
Alte Potsdamer Straße 5
10785 Berlin
Germany

Phone: +49 (0)30 259 41 42 0
Fax: +49 (0)30 259 41 42 9
E-Mail: kunst.sammlung@daimler.com
http://www.collection.daimler.com