Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for August 22nd, 2008

Deconstructing Hip — Call for Submissions

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

hipsterGlasses.jpg
The Lab Sessions 4.0 - Deconstructing Hip

OPEN CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

The Lab Sessions 4.0
“Deconstructing Hip”

Labspace Studio invites cultural producers, critics, academics, artists and collectives to present their work(s) as part of the fourth installment of The Lab Sessions, a series of themed multi-media, interactive art parties produced by Labspace Studio.

“Deconstructing Hip” is a sociological investigation and cultural excavation, a romp into the lineage of hip culture from Ginsberg to Williamsburg, scene to mainstream, hepcats to hipsters. The show will examine the barrage of trends and icons that have shaped, shifted and defined hip as we know it.

What We’re Looking For
Work that addresses, analyzes, deconstructs or reconstructs the hipster phenomenon throughout the past and into the present.

SUBMISSION CATEGORIES:
-Painting, Collage, Photography, Drawing
-Video, New Media
-Writing, Spoken Word, Text
-Performance
-Dance
-Installation
-Music, Sound
-Advertising/Commercial Media

Please submit work or project proposals via email, with a brief description of your proposed piece(s) as well as supporting/portfolio material of the described work or other work recently completed in a similar medium.

Submissions can be sent to info@labspacestudio.com

The deadline for submissions is September 19, 2008.

Artists are required to financially support their projects. Labspace Studio will facilitate required technologies and assist in the installation process to the best of our ability. **Keep in mind that The Lab Sessions is a party environment! Artwork may need to be tailored to suit the atmosphere.

The Lab Sessions 4.0 will be held on October 25th at Labspace Studio in Toronto’s east end.

For more information, please contact Labspace Studio at:
Labspace Studio
2A Pape Ave
Toronto, ON, M4M 2V6
info@labspacestudio.com
416-836-1516
http://www.labspacestudio.com

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Eleanor Antin at San Diego Museum of Art

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
San Diego Museum of Art

Eleanor Antin,
A Hot Afternoon, from the The Last Days of Pompeii series, chromogenic print, 60 x 48 in., 2001.
Courtesy of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.

Eleanor Antin: Historical Takes
July 19 - November 2, 2008

San Diego Museum of Art
1450 El Prado, Balboa Park
San Diego, CA 92112-2107

http://www.sdmart.org

San Diego Museum of Art organizes major solo exhibition of acclaimed conceptual artist Eleanor Antin

The San Diego Museum of Art has organized a solo exhibition of the celebrated artist Eleanor Antin, known for her works at the intersection of photography and performance. The exhibition is the first to focus on Antin’s recent series of large-scale tableaux photographs based on Greek and Roman history and mythology, which are presented together for the first time. Eleanor Antin: Historical Takes is on view from July 19 through November 2, 2008.

Organized by Betti-Sue Hertz, SDMA’s curator of contemporary art, the exhibition features more than 50 works, including large-scale photographs from Antin’s three new series, Roman Allegories, Last Days of Pompeii, and Helen’s Odyssey. The staged photographs are witty and psychologically complex melodramatic enactments of mythological and fictional classical narratives. The artist’s friends and models pose in elaborately staged settings shot in various locations throughout San Diego (including SDMA’s a classically transformed James S. Copley Auditorium) that are suggestive of sites from the ancient world.

“SDMA is proud to mount this particular exhibition of work by Eleanor Antin, an internationally renowned artist who has played an integral role in San Diego’s sense of its own art history,” says Derrick Cartwright, SDMA’s executive director. “Contemporary art has a place among the important commitments that we undertake, and in Eleanor’s case, fulfilling this commitment has been both a real pleasure and point of pride for SDMA.”

In her new works, created from 2001 to 2008, Antin engages photography in a dialogue with nineteenth-century French and English salon painting, evident in the staging and backdrops of her photos that were inspired or transformed from the grand tradition of European history painting. The works are affectionate spoofs on classical culture with metaphorical parallels to the excesses of contemporary consumer economy. Antin’s most recent photographs are presented along with a selection of works from three of her earlier quasi-historical projects from the 1970s and 1980s, The King (1974–1975), Angel of Mercy (1977), and Recollections of My Life with Diaghilev (1975–1978). Eleanor Antin: Historical Takes is accompanied by a catalogue, co-published with Prestel, featuring reproductions of works in the exhibition, essays by the exhibition’s curator and art historian Amelia Jones, and photography historian Max Kozloff’s interview with the artist.

Eleanor Antin was born in New York City in 1935. She is considered one of the most influential artists to emerge from the feminist art movement of the 1960s and 1970s and is also one of the most highly regarded women conceptual artists of the period. An influential performance artist, film and video maker, and photographer and installation artist, Antin delves into history as a way to explore the present. She recently received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Woman’s Caucus of the College Art Association, a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in 1997, and a Media Achievement Award from the National Foundation for Jewish Culture in 1998.

Antin is a widely exhibited artist with many solo and group shows both nationally and internationally, including a thirty-year retrospective at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1999; Selections from the Angel of Mercy at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, in 1997; and 100 Boots, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1973. An exhibition of her series Helen’s Odyssey was recently on view at the Ronald Feldman Gallery in New York. Antin lives and works in San Diego, California, and is an Emeritus Professor at the University of California, San Diego.

Eleanor Antin: Historical Takes is organized by the San Diego Museum of Art and made possible by the generosity of Pam and Jerry Cesak, Sharon and Joel Labovitz, Gordon Brodfuehrer, Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, SDMA’s Artists Guild, Supervisor Pam Slater-Price and the County of San Diego, and an anonymous donor. Additional support is provided by the City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture, the County of San Diego Community Enhancement Program, and members of the San Diego Museum of Art.

San Diego Museum of Art
1450 El Prado, Balboa Park
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 122107
San Diego, CA 92112-2107

General Information: (619) 232-7931 / Facsimile: (619) 232-9367
Group Sales: (619) 696-1915
Web site: http://www.sdmart.org

Museum Hours: Tuesday–Sunday: 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.; Thursday: 10:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m., Memorial Day through Labor Day

The San Diego Museum of Art provides a rich and diverse cultural experience for more than 400,000 annual visitors. Located in the heart of beautiful Balboa Park, the Museum’s nationally renowned collections include Spanish and Italian old masters, South Asian paintings, and 19th- and 20th-century American paintings and sculptures. In addition, the Museum regularly features major exhibitions of art from around the world, as well as an extensive year-round schedule of supporting cultural and educational programs.

Artspeak presents Carrall Street by Althea Thauberger

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Artspeak

CARRALL STREET
Althea Thauberger
September 30, 2008

8-11pm in the 200 block of Carrall Street, Vancouver

An Artspeak OFFSITE project,
curated by Melanie O’Brian

http://www.artspeak.ca

Althea Thauberger’s site-specific event will take place on the 200 block of Carrall Street in front of Artspeak Gallery.

Althea Thauberger’s one-night performance will present the street (brightly lit like a film set at nighttime) as a stage, or zone of illumination where the roles of participant and spectator blur. The interweaving of organized performers, random passers-by and audience members will allow for unforeseen interactions to take place, resulting in a destabilized form of community theatre that reveals the street’s history, its current successes and stresses, as well as its future.

Carrall Street is one of the oldest streets in Vancouver. It can be argued that the entire history (and pre-history) of the city can be mapped along it. Caught between urban gentrification and extreme decay, the 200 block of Carrall Street divides the most touristic part of the city from what is described as the poorest neighbourhood in Canada. Activity on the street is varied: hundreds of homeless people live in this area and thousands of tourists pass through it each day. It is frequented by activists, professionals, private security guards, addicts, hipsters, pub crawlers and business people. The area is home to social service organizations and community advocates, boutique businesses and condominiums, entertainment industries and arts organizations. Like many inner cities, it has been affected by development, public policy neglect and polarized politics. The film industry frequently uses the neighbourhood’s streets to represent generic urban centres. Although contemporary
artists have a long history in the area, those who work publicly in the area are often perceived as interlopers.

The event Carrall Street is planned in collaboration with local theatre directors and community members with varied interests in the area. It will provide a platform for conflicting political positions and present possibilities for reflection on familiar, deadlocked issues.

A public forum on the event will take place October 2, 2008 at 33 West Cordova Street.

A publication accompanying the project will be available in 2009.

Althea Thauberger is an artist based in Vancouver. Her work involves research and collaboration with a group or community that result in performances, films, videos, audio recordings and books. Thauberger gravitates towards social enclaves perpetuated by coercive and voluntary social controls. She has worked with members of a linguistic minority in a small valley in Northern Italy, San Diego military wives, Canadian tree planters, male youth in the German civil service and residents of a low-income building in Victoria.

Thauberger’s work has been presented at Manifesta 7, Trento, Itlay; The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, 2008; BAK, Utrecht, 2007; Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, 2006; Singapore History Museum, 2006; Presentation House Gallery, Vancouver, 2005; Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp, 2005; Berkeley Art Museum, 2005; Insite, San Diego/Tijuana, 2005. Later this year she will participate in the Gaungzhou Triennial, China, and will be travelling to Canadian Forces Base Kandahar, Afghanistan to make a new work with soldiers stationed there.

Artspeak is a non-profit artist run centre established in 1986. Artspeak presents contemporary practices, innovative publications, talks and events that encourage a dialogue between visual art and writing. From September 2008 to September 2010, Artspeak is going OFFSITE, taking artist projects outside the gallery to the street, airwaves and other alternative sites in Vancouver and beyond. OFFSITE will include performances, public projects, speaker series and collaborations that engage with innovative strategies of production. At the same time, Artspeak’s gallery space is transforming into a venue for publications, printed matter, readings and dialogue.

This project has been supported by Arts Partners in Creative Development, The Canada Council for the Arts, the City of Vancouver and the Portland Hotel Society.

ARTSPEAK
233 Carrall Street
Vancouver, BC
V6B 2J2 Canada
http://www.artspeak.ca