Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for August 5th, 2008

Visit the City that Creates. Portland.

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Portland Art Focus

Portland Art Focus

Visit the City
that Creates. Portland.

http://www.portlandartfocus.net

This fall, Portland, Oregon, is the city where world-class art, neighborhood restaurants, and a multitude of recreation options all come together to make Portland one of the most culturally exciting and livable cities in the nation. Portland Art Focus, a group of art and cultural institutions in the city, invites you to visit. This fall, make Portland your destination.

Experience the vitality of Portland culture through the following exhibits, festivals, installations, tours, lectures and classes.

Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery at Reed College
suddenly: where we live now
August 26 - October 5, 2008

Inspired by the work of urban planner Thomas Sieverts, suddenly is a set of exhibitions, an annotated reader, and a series of public events that gives the lived landscape an independent identity in the imagination of its occupants. Participants include: Marc Joseph Berg, the Corridor Project, Zoe Crosher, Michael Damm, Molly Dilworth, Fritz Haeg, Frank Heath, Hadley+Maxwell, Shawn Records, Oscar Tuazon, Gary Wiseman, and others. Join us for an exhibition opening, Psychedelic Sprawl, September 2, 7 p.m., at the Cooley Gallery.

Feldman Gallery+Project Space at Pacific Northwest College of Art
Keep It Slick: Infiltrating Capitalism with the Yes Men
September 4 - October 26, 2008

This is the first exhibition of work by the artist-activist group The Yes Men. By impersonating representatives from big corporations and government organizations, these culture-jammers expose dehumanizing business practices and enact ethical “identity correction”. Keep It Slick is curated by Astria Suparak and is co-produced by the Feldman Gallery at Pacific Northwest College of Art and the Miller Gallery at Carnegie Mellon University.

The Hoffman Gallery at Oregon College of Art and Craft
Electoral Collage: Art & Politics in 2008
September 4 - October 26, 2008

In this politically charged election year, Electoral Collage: Art & Politics in 2008 showcases work that provokes ideas and discussions about war and peace, the economy, environment, education, civil rights, justice for all and justice for the select few. The exhibition is curated by artists and educators Horatio Hung-Yan Law, Heidi Schwegler, and Steven Taylor.

Ronna and Eric Hoffman Gallery of Contemporary Art, at Lewis & Clark College
Beyond Green: Toward a Sustainable Art
September 11 - December 7, 2008

Beyond Green brings together 13 international artists who incorporate sustainable thinking in their art and social change in their message. The exhibition is co-organized by the Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, iCI (Independent Curators International), New York, and circulated by iCI. The exhibition is curated by Stephanie Smith.

Museum of Contemporary Craft
Manuf®actured: The Conspicuous Transformation of Everyday Objects
August 28, 2008 - January 4, 2009

Curated by former ID Magazine editor Steven Skov Holt and art historian Mara Holt Skov, Manuf®actured reveals a major trend taking place today in visual and material culture: the radical appropriation of consumer goods as raw material for art and object making. With works as diverse as Cat Chow’s dresses made from one continuous zipper and Jason Rogenes’ towers crafted from polystyrene, Manuf®actured offers an arresting look at the new crossover of craft, art and design, and an exciting new cultural genre.

Portland Art Dealers Association (PADA)

Highlights of September gallery exhibitions include: Augen Gallery with Joan Miro—Prints, and Andrew Bohl—baptism pictures with devils waiting. Butters Gallery shows famed photographer Jock Sturgess with “Last Summer, Montalivet, France.” Froelick Gallery goes international with Marco Buti, Claudio Mubarac—Printmakers from São Paulo. Pulliam Deffenbaugh Gallery will host an exhibition that integrates traditional ideas of high/low art, gender, and technique, with Blurring the Line, the Art of Thread, featuring Hildur Bjarnadóttir, Diem Chau, Linda Hutchins, Jen Pack. PADA galleries host monthly exhibitions with openings and extended hours the 1st Thursday of the month.

Portland Art Museum
Wild Beauty
Photographs of the Columbia River Gorge, 1867-1957
October 4, 2008 - January 11, 2009

The Columbia River Gorge has been photographed continuously for nearly 150 years. Appearing exclusively at the Portland Art Museum, Wild Beauty chronicles the beauty and changing character of this dramatic passage of the river. The cultural memory of the Gorge is reassembled through these photographs, as themes of human and natural history and the diversity of geography, climate and ecosystems abound.

Portland Institute for Contemporary Art
2008 Time-Based Art Festival
September 4 - 14, visual art projects until October 4

The sixth-annual convergence of contemporary performance, dance, music, new media and visual arts projects in Portland, Oregon. TBA:08 features projects by Antony and the Johnsons, Jérôme Bel, Mike Daisey, Lizzie Fitch, Fritz Haeg, Superamas, Ryan Trecartin, Reggie Watts, and more.

From collecting museums to contemporary art festivals, Portland’s art programming creates a haven for exemplary art and our city is home to some of the world’s best artists. Visit Portland Art Focus , the arts enthusiasts’ first stop to learn about the world-class art happening in the city.

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Cabinet magazine issue 30 available now

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Cabinet

Cabinet magazine issue 30, with a special section on “The Underground,” available now

For a full table of contents, see
http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/30/

Subscribe online at
http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/shop/index.php?cPath=31

Buy the current issue at http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/shop/product_info.php?cPath=28&products_id=78

Digging up numerous items of interest, including:

- Michael Saler on the London Underground’s aesthetic departures
- Sina Najafi interviews Rosalind Williams on the subterranean imagination
- Magnus Bärtås uncovers the temple of Damanhur
- Mark Wasiuta on Ant Farm’s plans for missile-silo reclamation
- Alessandro Scafi on the underpinnings of Dante’s Inferno
- Joshua Foer interviews Michel Siffre on his six-month sojourn in a cave

And closer to the surface:

- Nina Power on Mary Wollstonecraft and the mannequins of Tehran
- Paul La Farge on Victor Hugo’s sainthood in Vietnam
- Michael Taussig on the headier influences of Walter Benjamin and William Burroughs
- Sasha Archibald on Alfred Yarbus’s science of visual attention
- Moyra Davey on feeling marooned
- D. Graham Burnett explores the commonplace book
- Celeste Olalquiaga on coral polyps and the politics of science
- Josiah McElheny on the curious position of Mies van der Rohe’s Glass Skyscraper Project
- Allen S. Weiss on the intoxicating aspects of a Japanese guinomi
- Margaret Wertheim interviews Nancy Knowlton on the vanishing world of coral

Cabinet is on sale in the US at independent bookstores, Barnes & Noble, Tower, Borders, Hudson News, and Universal News. Also available in Canada, the UK, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Sweden, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Turkey, Singapore, New Zealand, and Japan. A partial list of retailers worldwide can be found at http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/information/wheretobuy.php

Cabinet is published by Immaterial Incorporated, a non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization. Cabinet receives generous support from the Orphiflamme Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Starry Night Fund of the Tides Foundation, the Flora Family Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the Peter Norton Family Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Katchadourian Foundation, the Danielson Foundation, and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts.

Four presents ‘It’s a roller coaster.’, new work by Rhona Byrne hosted by Kerlin Gallery

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Four

Rhona Byrne.

Four at Kerlin Gallery

It’s a roller coaster.
8th August to 6th September 2008

Four
119 Capel St,
Dublin 1,Dublin

http://www.fourdublin.com

Four is pleased to present ‘It’s a roller coaster.’ new work by Rhona Byrne hosted by Kerlin Gallery Dublin.

In Kerlin’s private viewing room, Byrne has built a full-scale section of a wooden roller coaster. The tracks cut through the space as though looping through the floor and re-emerging, before cutting through the back wall and disappearing off into the city. It offers a heady and vertiginous way out of the gallery, a kind-of nerve-racking adventure.

Byrne also presents the early results of a collaborative research project with renowned environmental and investigative psychologist, David Canter. This work is an exploration of the relationship between behaviour and experience and the built and natural environment. It considers the roles that design, function and memory play in our attachment of meaning to place. In a film of a discussion about meaning and space, Canter reflects, amongst other things, on how galleries operate in relation to his idea of ‘rules of place’.

Rhona Byrne makes objects; site-specific, gallery and context-based
installations; films; publications and collaborative event-based projects. These projects focus on the interplay between people and their surrounding environment at both macro and micro levels. Byrne’s work explores and engages with the multilayered surfaces and workings of the built environment and navigates intangible and transient layers of physical, mental and social space.

Recent solo exhibitions include; Nothing Happens, Gallery for One, Dublin, 2007; The Umbrella Project, The Lab, Dublin, 2006 (publication); Home, Axis Arts Centre, Ballymun, 2005 (publication). Selected group exhibitions include; Green Screen, ICA, Sydney, 2008; Architecture: the bridge, The Dock, Leitrim, 2008; Changing spaces, The Concourse, Dublin, 2007; Work, Haus der Architektur Graz, Austria, 2006; Locws International 3, Swansea, 2007; Here there and Otherwise, Dublin, 2005; Offside, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane, 2005.

Rhonacurrently an artist in residence at the Irish Museum of Modern Art.

Professor David Canter is an internationally renowned applied environmental psychologist, writer, social researcher, criminal and investigative psychologist. He began his career as an architectural psychologist in the early 1960s and has published widely on varied aspects of psychology and is best known for his theory of the Psychology of Place. He has consulted and lectured extensively on issues of environmental design, safety and energy efficient design and architectural psychology. http://www.davidcanter.com

The Kerlin Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Nicholas Byrne and Benedikt Hipp from August 8 until September 6, 2008.

Although both of these artists explore the traditions of drawing and painting in highly individual and very distinctive manners, it can be said that both bodies of work display an undeniable ability to investigate shape and form whilst demonstrating an intense love of the chosen medium and its possibilities for illusion, complexity, intricacy, darkness and humour.