Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Archive for August 25th, 2008

Simon Starling and Michael McLoughlin at Limerick City Gallery of Art

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Limerick City Gallery of Art

SIMON STARLING Concrete Light

MICHAEL McLOUGHLIN
I only come here ‘cos it’s free
September 12th - November 16th 2008

Limerick City Gallery of Art
Carnegie Building, Pery Square, Limerick, Ireland.

http://www.limerickcitygallery.ie

SIMON STARLING Concrete Light

Limerick City Gallery of Art is delighted to host a major solo exhibition by Turner Prize winner Simon Starling. This survey exhibition, which is Starling’s first major exhibition in Ireland, will present previously existing works exhibited with a newly commissioned site-specific work, Concrete Light. The work references the stone wall tradition particular to the West of Ireland and involves a dry stone wall being constructed in the gallery space, in which specially replicated stones allow the wall to mirror itself.

Readymade for Kunsthalle Bern, 1997, forms a centre piece of the exhibition, in which two aluminium objects, a ‘Marin Sausalito’ bicycle and a Charles Eames ‘Aluminium Group’ chair, were reconstructed using the metal from the other. The result is two handcrafted, degraded, mutations of their former manufactured selves, scarred from their form transfer and separated by a sheet of glass which holds a text explanation of the work. The work inverts the notion of the ready made in a simple but labour-intensive act of transmutation. Readymade for Kunsthalle Bern, holds for Starling particular association to Ireland, in the form of reference to Flann O’Brien’s novel ‘The Third Policeman’.

Starling’s innovative research process involves absorbing the histories, environment and social nuances of a locale. He breaks down specific histories which he re-uses and reconstructs, through his evolving transformation of objects. Starling’s work playfully explores the intimate relationships between craft, material and technique. His investigations reveal a fascination with process. Starling’s reflections on modern manufacturing and traditional crafts show countless nuanced contradictions in the production of a single object. His work explores part utopian vision and part critical. Starling is fascinated by the processes involved in transforming one object or substance into another. He makes objects, installations and pilgrimage-like journeys which draw out an array of ideas about nature, technology and economics. Starling describes his work as ‘the physical manifestation of a thought process’, revealing hidden histories and relationships.

Born in 1967 in Epsom, England, Simon Starling graduated from the Glasgow School of Art. He won the Turner Prize in 2005 and was short-listed for the Hugo Boss Prize in 2004. He lives in Copenhagen and is Professor of Fine Arts at the Staedelschule in Frankfurt. Starling has exhibited widely including the Bienal de Sao Paulo and the Busan Biennale in 2004. Recent exhibitions include Cuttings at The Power Plant, Toronto and Three Birds, Seven Stories, Interpolations and Bifurcations at Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest.

Works courtesy of FRAC Fonds Régional d’Art Contemporain, Montpellier and The Modern Institute Glasgow http://www.themoderninstitute.com.

MICHAEL McLOUGHLIN I only come here ‘cos it’s free

Limerick City Gallery of Art is delighted to host a major solo exhibition by socially engaged, Dublin based artist Michael McLoughlin. This is McLoughlin’s first museum exhibition and will present bodies of new work. McLoughlin’s process involves connecting with specific groups in society and developing work in audio, film, drawing, photography and sculptural installations, which explores their collective histories and social environments.

Efforts to track and record travel, migration and movement are of particular interest to the artist. McLoughlin focuses on memories, histories, dreams and aspirations, while commenting accurately on social circumstance by working together with communities. McLoughlin is, “interested in the stories of this space that may seem almost trivial to others.” The role played by social clubs in preventing isolating, particularly for older people in the community, is specifically interesting to McLoughlin. Social outlets are particularly important for older people who may have less contact with a broad family network and these groupings can almost take on the role of surrogate family.

A new body of work focuses on an aging community, exploring Bingo as their primary activity of social engagement. Documentation from artist organised bingo events, together with a series of installations study the various aspects of the activities and how individuals respond to them, while McLoughlin’s curious field recordings form a link between the two strands of the exhibition.

The centre piece of the exhibition is a new film-work I Don’t See The Lads That Much Anymore, developed in collaboration with critically acclaimed actor and comedian Jon Kenny and writer Michael Finn. The film re-visits a previous character, a London based Irish emigrant, exploring displacement through an individual’s struggle but also the multitude of changes experienced in Irish culture in the past 20 years.

Michael McLoughlin (b. 1972) graduated from Limerick School of Art and Design and is based in Dublin. McLoughlin has a socially engaged practice and has made site-specific artworks in association with many groups, including Limerick Traveler Groups, Our Lady of Lourdes Community Development Young Women’s Group in 2003, Balcurris Boys Home 2004, St. Margaret’s Travelers Group and the wider community in Ballymun 2006/2007. Michael McLoughlin has exhibited widely in Ireland and internationally including at The Lab, Dublin, Limerick City Gallery of Art, Triskel Art Centre, Cork and as part of audio art radio events such as SonicEye, Helsinki 2000, Lola Gallery San Francisco 2003 and Resonant Cities, Glasgow 2004. http://www.mmcloughlin.org

LIMERICK CITY GALLERY OF ART
Open 7 days. Admission is FREE
W: http://www.limerickcitygallery.ie T: +353 (0)61 310633 E: artgallery@limerickcity.ie

Paul Russo - Black Abstracts

Creative Time presents Democracy in America: The National Campaign

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Creative Time

Democracy in America:
The National Campaign
September 21 - 27, 2008

Noon to 10 PM Daily

Opening
Sunday September 21, 2 to 10 pm

643 Park Avenue at 66th Street

http://www.creativetime.org/democracy

ARTISTS INCLUDE: Erick Beltrán, Center for Tactical Magic, Critical Art Ensemble, Annabel Daou, dB Foundation, Hasan Elahi, Feel Tank, Luca Frei, Chitra Ganesh + Mariam Ghani, Group Material, John Hawke, Sharon Hayes, Jenny Holzer, Kenneth Tin-Kin Hung, InCUBATE, Magdalena Jitrik, Matt Keegan, Jon Kessler, Olga Koumoundouros + Rodney McMillian, Steve Lambert, Ligorano/Reese, Pia Lindman, Rachel Mason, Carlos Motta, Angel Nevarez + Valerie Tevere, Trevor Paglen, Cornelia Parker, Jenny Polak, Steve Powers, Greta Pratt, Paul Ramírez Jonas, Red76, Duke Riley, Martha Rosler, Dread Scott, Allison Smith, Chris Sollars, Chris Stain, Mark Tribe, United Victorian Workers, Chu Yun, and more.

After traveling across the country to glean perspectives from artists and activists on the state of democracy, Creative Time’s year-long program Democracy in America: The National Campaign will culminate in the “Convergence Center”: a major exhibition in the historic rooms of New York City’s landmark Park Avenue Armor with speeches on democracy by artists, political thinkers, community leaders, and activists throughout its run.

EVENTS
A diverse group of political thinkers, writers, theorists, cultural producers, and local activists such as The Yes Men, Reverend Billy, Allison Smith, and Rachel Mason will be invited to give speeches and performances throughout each day the Convergence Center is open. These orations will address topics that change day to day, and punctuate activity in the Wade Thompson Drill Hall—a 38,000-square-foot participatory and social space akin to a public park in scale and accessibility during the course of the show. Visit http://www.creativetime.org/democracy for scheduling details.

MOBILE PROJECTS
Creative Time’s two mobile, participatory projects will travel to parks in Brooklyn and Queens before convening at the Democracy in America Convergence Center at Park Avenue Armory. The Center for Tactical Magic’s anarchist ice cream truck the Tactical Ice Cream Unit will roll through the city in an act of intervention that replaces cold stares with frosty treats and nourishing knowledge. Angel Nevarez + Valerie Tevere’s Another Protest Song invites the public to sing political karaoke.

NATIONAL COMMISSIONS
Performative public art commissioned by Creative Time from Sharon Hayes, Rodney McMillian + Olga Koumoundouros, Steve Powers, and Mark Tribe took place in six cities across the nation this summer, presented collaboratively with local partners the Blanton Museum of Art, LACE, the Oakland Museum of California, the Walker Art Center, UnConvention, and Dialog:City. Each of these projects, which explored the history and current state of politics and radicalism in this country, will be presented at the Convergence Center.

CREATIVE TIME
Creative Time presents the most innovative art in the public realm. From our base in New York City, we work with artists who ignite the imagination and explore ideas that shape society. We initiate a dynamic conversation among artists, sites, and audiences, in projects that enliven public spaces with free and powerful expression.

The Democracy in America Convergence Center is produced in association with Park Avenue Armory, with generous media support from WNYC and flavorpill.

Support for Democracy in America: The National Campaign is generously provided by Altria, American Center Foundation, Lawrence Benenson, Creative Link for the Arts, Cristina Enriquez-Bocobo, Fifth Floor Foundation, Emily Glasser and William Susman, Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation, Agnes Gund, Peggy Jacobs, Richard J. Massey, The Peter Norton Family Foundation on behalf of Eileen Harris Norton, Aaron Sosnick, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and Amanda Weil.

Creative Time is funded through the generous support of corporations, foundations, government agencies, and individuals. We gratefully acknowledge public funding from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; the New York State Council on the Arts, a State agency; New York City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn; and New York State Senator Thomas K. Duane.

Aperture Issue 192 Now Available

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News
Aperture magazine

New Aperture with Josef Koudelka, Duane Michals, Joel Sternfeld, and more!

To subscribe, visit http://www.aperture.org/magazine

The fall issue of Aperture (issue 192) features:

• Invasion 68: Prague by Josef Koudelka
Melissa Harris talks with Koudelka about his documentation of the Soviet-led invasion of Prague.

• Walead Beshty: Piece By Piece
Jan Tumlir examines Beshty’s protean engagement with photography.

• Leaving Kansas: A Look At Second Life
Fred Ritchin gives a tour of the Internet’s alternative to reality, Second Life, through the photographs of Michael Schmelling.

• Framing the Presidency: The Evolution of the Campaign Image
Robert Hariman discusses how candidates have been depicted photographically over the past century.

• Re-Viewing Rear Window
David Campany considers the role of photography in Hitchcock’s classic film.

• Claudia Angelmaier: Reproduction Art
A reflection on the age of mechanical reproduction in the work of art by Brian Dillon.

• Duane Michals: Chromophilia
Robert Kushner comments on a portfolio of Michals’s most recent work in color.

• Hanatsubaki: Perfection is Lifeless
The long life of an adventurous Japanese magazine, by Jason Evans.

• Joel Sternfeld: Oxbow Archive
Gretel Ehrlich looks at Sternfeld’s latest project in a meditation on seasonality in the age of climate change.

PLUS: Exhibition reviews from Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Paris, The Netherlands, and Switzerland.

Subscribe Now!

frieze Issue 117: Out Now

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Artipedia - Arts News

Issue 117: Out Now

Winner of 2008 Writer’s Prize announced

Additional exclusive content online at frieze.com

In the September issue of frieze…

Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith discovers an increasing interest in the relationship between language and the body in Steve McQueen’s first feature film.

Guy Brett traces Cildo Meireles’ ongoing communication with the public, which he has been exploring since the 1960s.

Tom Morton tracks the alternative histories and playful anachronisms that shape Steven Claydon’s sculptures, paintings and videos.

Emily King talks to Japanese designer Naoto Fukasawa about his interest in people, everyday objects and their environments.

In the September city report Cristina Ricupero and Vivian Rehberg find that, despite unemployment, inflation and suburban unrest, Paris’ community of small independent art space and collectives are thriving.

Plus, Jace Clayton on the re-release of rare records, Babette Mangolte lists some of her favourite films and Meg Cranston selects the books that have most influenced her.

In ‘Focus’, frieze considers the practices of Karen Reimer, Andro Wekua, Karla Black and Jo Ractliffe. The Back section includes exhibition reviews from around the world including the UK, USA, Australia, the Netherlands, Austria, Germany, Italy and France.

frieze is delighted to announce William Gass as the winner of the 2008 Writer’s Prize. He will receive a prize of 2,000 GBP and be writing a review for the October issue.

The runners up are Graham T. Beck and Conor Carville. Kate Forde, Tyler Friedman, Clay Lerner, J. MacNeill Miller, Chris Moore and Marianne Templeton have been highly commended.

Jennifer Higgie, co-editor of frieze commented, ‘The volume, quality and international scope of entries we received this year reflects the growing interest in frieze’s commitment to encouraging new writing. William Gass’ lively engagement with complex ideas made him a clear winner, and we look forward to his future contributions to the magazine. We are also very excited to have discovered new writers in Graham T. Beck and Conor Carville and in the shortlist of highly commended entrants. We were honoured to have Nicolas Bourriaud and Adrian Searle as judges and appreciate their dedication to new writing.’

William Gass’ review of Milena Dragicevic’s solo show at Galerie Martin Janda, Vienna, can be read at http://www.frieze.com

Exclusively online at frieze.com A trailer for Steve McQueen’s new feature film Hunger.
New films from Steven Claydon and Bojan Sarcevic.
MP3s from issue 117’s music reviews, including Nico Muhly.
Frieze Projects’ artists’ top YouTube picks.

Plus, additional reviews of current summer shows in London, Los Angeles, Lisbon and beyond. And, join in the ‘Comment’ debate with regular frieze contributors.

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

HERO — Jeremy Isao Speier at Rio Theatre

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Hero_Artificier_w.jpg
Jeremy Isao Speier, HERO, (2008), Film still

HERO
The premier screenings of HERO
Saturday, August 30, a noon show (12:00pm), a midnight show (12:00am)
RIO THEATRE
1660 East Broadway at Commercial Drive, Vancouver, BC
info at 604 879 FILM or www.riotheatre.ca

Vancouver, BC - Rio Theatre is pleased to present HERO a film by Vancouver artist Jeremy Isao Speier.

In HERO “The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man” is told in the conceptually imagined 1st draft of ‘Stephen Hero”. It is a film about the improper arts -desire and loathing, -stasis and kinesis, -truth and beauty. I am adapting The Artist, creating my own leitmotif: a premise about Joyce’s imagined character of artist/self, his free mind and evolving artistic soul. HERO is a poignant filmic work that explores the archetypal artist through the collective unconscious and universality.

Jeremy Isao Speier is a Japanese-Canadian interdisciplinary artist who graduated from Emily Carr College of Art & Design. He works in film/video, kinetic sculpture and sound, and installation. His work has been exhibited in Canada in numerous solo and group exhibitions. He is a three-time award recipient of the Filmmakers Assistance Program from the National Film Board of Canada.