28/12/03

Visatec Solo Kit 384 Photo Studio

The Solo Kit 384 is based on the Visatec Solo 400 B and 800 B units. For the first time, Visatec is offering a complete kit including a SOLO 800 B as the main light and two Solo 400 B units as fill lights. Standard accessories include a Soloflex 60 x 60 cm softbox, an umbrella reflector with a silver umbrella, a standard reflector, barn doors, three honeycombs; and a synch cable.
The most striking features of Visatec Solo 400 B and 800 B are their light output, continuous 3 f-stop output control capability, proportional halogen modelling light and built-in photocell. With the patented bayonet mount, reflectors can be changed quickly and rotated 360°; it also accommodates the comprehensive selection of Visatec light shapers.
The case keeps everything neatly organized and prevents damage to its valuable contents, so the entire flash equipment is always ready to use in the studio or on location. The kit's contents can be adapted to each individual photographer's requirements and expanded at any time. The transport bag is no bigger than an ordinary travel bag.
Photo (c) Visatec / Bron Elektronik AG - All rights reserved - www.bron.ch

27/12/03

Dali Collection Americaine Floride – Musée Salvador Dali de St. Petersburg

 

 

Centenaire de Dali
Une Collection Américaine

Musée Salvador Dali, St. Petersburg, Floride

09-01 > 26-09-2004

Le Salvador Dali Museum de St. Petersburg en Floride fête le centième anniversaire de la naissance de Dali avec une importante exposition " Dali Centenial: An American Collection ", présentée tout au long de la saison 2004, de janvier à septembre. Le musée de Saint Petersburg Florida entend ainsi souligner et expliquer, à nouveau, auprès du public américain, l'importance majeure de la place tenue par Salvador Dali dans l'histoire de l'art et, plus largement, dans l'histoire culturelle et sur le plan des idées. Le musée entend aussi rappeler l'importance de sa propre collection dans le cadre de Dali 2004 qui peut être l'occasion de toucher un public plus large.

L'exposition est présentée à la fois de façon chronologique et thématique. L'approche chronologique permet de bien mettre en lumière les différentes périodes dans l'évolution artistique de Dali. Les sections thématiques permettent quant à elles de montrer la récurrence de certains sujets ainsi que du symbolisme dans l'ensemble de l'oeuvre de l'artiste.

Le musée américain dédié à Salvador Dali possède une collection impressionnante d'oeuvres, ainsi que des archives, de l'artiste. C'est cette collection qui est exposée dans le cadre du centenaire avec une scénographie spécifique pour l'événement. L'exposition bénéficie également de prêts d'oeuvres de Dali provenant de deux autres musées : la Fondation Dali en Espagne et le musée d'art de Philadelphie.

En plus des peintures qui sont souvent exposées, le Salvador Dali Museum de Floride présente des oeuvres de sa collection qui sont moins souvent montrées au public, avec, entre autres, des sculptures et des oeuvres de joaillerie. En outre, certains documents de la collection, des archives ou de la bibliothèque du musée américain, faisant partie de l'exposition, ne sont que très rarement exposés et, pour certains d'entre eux, ne l'ont jamais été. Il s'agit en particulier de manuscrits originaux de Dali provenant de la succession d'André Breton, de documents importants sur l'histoire de la vie de Salvador Dali comme son certificat de naissance et des diplômes, de pages manuscrites, de contributions de Dali au magazine Studium, de livres de la bibliothèque personnelle de Dali, d'exemplaires rares de catalogues surréalistes pour lesquels Salvador Dali avait réalisé de superbes dessins ainsi que des brochures et catalogues soulignant la participation de Dali à de nombreuses expositions.

Une très importante exposition donc, par laquelle la Floride, au travers du Salvador Dali Museum de Saint Petersburg, célèbre le maître espagnol du surréalisme.

Mécénat : Progress Energy. Le musée a également bénéficié d'un soutien de l'Ambassade d'Espagne aux Etats-Unis.

Dali Centenial: An American Collection
9 janvier - 26 septembre 2004

Salvador Dali Museum
1000 Third Street South
St. Petersburg, Florida 33701

Site web : www.SalavadorDaliMuseum.org

10/12/03

Cindy Sherman, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh

Cindy Sherman 
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh 
6 December 2003 – 7 March 2004

The first ever solo exhibition of the work of internationally renowned artist Cindy Sherman in Scotland opens at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art. Organised by the Serpentine Gallery in London, this fascinating show is also Cindy Sherman’s first survey exhibition in the UK for a decade. Around fifty photographs are brought together in Cindy Sherman, spanning thirty years of the artist’s career and including her latest works.

Cindy Sherman (b.1954) is widely recognised as one of the leading artists of our time. Although never interested in making self-portraits, Sherman shapes her own image with a bewildering array of disguises, using make-up techniques, wigs, costumes and prosthetics to create the subjects of her photographs.

Cindy Sherman’s provocative and intriguing portraiture often explores the themes surrounding female identity and stereotype in Western culture. Her work has been hugely influential on a younger generation of photographic and performance artists, raising her to iconic status in contemporary art.

Cindy Sherman first came to prominence in the mid-1970s with her series Untitled Film Stills – black-and-white photographs in which she imitated both the performers and settings of Hollywood B-movies, combining the roles of director, photographer and leading actress. In the 1980s she began to work on a larger scale and in colour, making reference to art history, fashion photography, television, horror movies and pornography. Recently she has created a series of portraits of ‘ordinary’ women with extraordinary character. 

The exhibition also provides an opportunity to view Cindy Sherman’s latest works for the first time in Scotland. Turning her attention to clowns, she examines costume and pretence in its most exaggerated and caricatural form.

Richard Calvocoressi, Director of the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, says: “We are delighted to be continuing our relationship with the Serpentine Gallery by bringing this exhibition to Scotland, and her first Scottish audience. Cindy Sherman is an outstanding contemporary artist.”

The landmark exhibition is being extended to include a specially produced display of Cindy Sherman’s work at Omni, Greenside Place, Edinburgh. Originally seen in London, the series of ten large billboards were commissioned collaboratively by the Serpentine Gallery and London Underground’s public art programme ‘Platform for Art’. The Billboard Commission comprises specially produced versions of Sherman’s works made between 1983 and 2002 and will be on view at Omni from 7 January to 7 March 2003. 

Cindy Sherman launches a series of exhibitions and displays at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art – throughout 2004-5, ‘A Year of American Art’ features work by some of the giants of postwar and contemporary American art, including Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol.

A fully illustrated catalogue will be available to accompany the show, published by the Serpentine Gallery and priced at £14.95. 

SCOTTISH NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART 
Belford Road, Edinburgh
www.nationalgalleries.org

Inside-Out Portrait Photographs at the Whitney Museum

Inside-Out: Portrait Photographs from the Permanent Collection 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
February 7 - May 23, 2004

Portraiture is the subject of the exhibition Inside-Out: Portrait Photographs from the Permanent Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art. All recently acquired by the Whitney, these photographs explore the intricate dynamics involved in the relationship between subject and artist, examining issues such as vanity, comfort, and intimacy. The works, by such artists as Chuck Close, Nan Goldin, Sally Mann, Nicholas Nixon, Irving Penn, and Stephen Shore, assert photography’s capacity both to register a subject’s physical characteristics and to suggest the complexity within the subject’s emotional and psychological interior life.
Several artists, including Dawoud Bey, Chan Chao, and Melissa Pinney photograph unknown subjects within their environments. By contrast, Chuck Close, Nan Goldin, and Nicholas Nixon portray friends, family, or people with whom they have cultivated a relationship. More formal portraits describe an activity or commemorate an occasion, as in Paul Shambroom’s image of city council members at work, or in Irving Penn’s portrait of five esteemed American artists – Chuck Close, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Kenneth Noland, and Robert Rauschenberg.

When a subject and a photographer come together and agree that a likeness will be made, a complex dynamic is set in motion,” said Sylvia Wolf, the Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography at the Whitney. “In the most compelling portraits there is often a collision of wills, an exposure of vulnerability, a seduction, or surrender. The public face that the sitter wants to show the world is tempered by something deeper. Multiple layers of experience are brought to the surface and the inside is turned out for us to see.”
Whitney Museum of American Art [Click the link for more information]

Celebrating Contemporary Craft - Arkansas Arts Center's Exhibition

Celebrating Contemporary Craft 
Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, AR
December 5, 2003 - February 22, 2004

CELEBRATING CONTEMPORARY CRAFT is an exhibition organized by the Arkansas Arts Center to recognize the contributions of Alan DuBois, curator of decorative arts, who will retire in June 2004. Alan DuBois has selected approximately 100 contemporary craft pieces from the Arkansas Arts Center Collection. Works were chosen for their high quality and importance to the collection. A broad range of media including glass, basketry, wood and ceramics is on view.

The Arkansas Arts Center began collecting contemporary craft in 1968 and now houses over 600 works. In 1989, Alan DuBois joined the Arkansas Arts Center and has been instrumental in achieving national recognition and in doubling the size of contemporary craft collection.
ALAN DUBOIS said, "We are beginning to see the fruits of the decision made by the Arkansas Arts Center Board of Trustees and Foundation Board to collect contemporary craft pieces. The works are shared in exhibitions around the country and the museum and its unique collections have a national reputation." 
Arkansas Arts Center 
www.arkarts.com

07/12/03

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco - Architecture

Hiroshi Sugimoto: Architecture
Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
December 4, 2003 - January 31, 2004

Profoundly beautiful and powerfully evocative, the recent body of work entitled Architecture by internationally-acclaimed Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto is presented at Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco. This series of large-scale black-and-white photographs dissolves the lines between time, memory, and history in icons of modernist architecture as disparate as the United Nations Headquarters by Wallace K. Harrison, Luis Barraagan’s Satellite Towers, the Saint Benedict Chapel by Peter Zumthor and Minoru Yamazaki’s World Trade Center.

Hiroshi Sugimoto has two recurring obsessions: history and time. He has described this new body of work as "architecture after the end of the world." Hiroshi Sugimoto is known for taking years to work on his series of long-exposure photographs on themes ranging from museum dioramas, movie theaters, seascapes, and historical wax figures. The new architectural images run counter to the traditional sense of a photograph as capturing a moment in time.

The architectural icons in his most recent series represent the fifth major theme that Sugimoto has explored in depth. With this series Hiroshi Sugimoto has essentially broken all the rules of architectural photography. Photographing great landmarks of modernist architecture around the world, Sugimoto has deliberately taken the images out of focus and at unusual angles, isolating the recognizable forms. The blurred forms evoke the passage of time, muting the architectural details and leaving the essence of the building; suggestive of the way in which our memories preserve images.

Hiroshi Sugimoto: Architecture was recently seen at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and is accompanied by a major publication and essays by Francesco Bonami, John Yau, and Marco Di Michelis.

FRAENKEL GALLERY
49 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA 94108

29/11/03

Jacques Tourneur Une rétrospective au Centre Pompidou

Rétrospectivre Jacques Tourneur 
Centre Pompidou, Beaubourg, Paris 
3 décembre 2003 - 29 janvier 2004

Du 3 décembre 2003 au 19 janvier 2004, les Cinémas du Centre Pompidou présentent, pour la première fois en France, la rétrospective intégrale des films de Jacques Tourneur (1904-1977). Cet hommage rendu au réalisateur de La Féline (1942), permettra au public de (re)découvrir ce cinéaste franco-américain polymorphe, à travers films noirs thrillers, westerns, films de cape et d’épée, en passant par de véritables chefs-d’œuvre du film fantastique. Le travail sur la lumière, la concision du découpage, la maîtrise du hors-champ, une mise en scène suggestive du mystère et de la peur, une vision désenchantée et parfois mélancolique de l’existence ont contribué à faire de Jacques Tourneur l’un des cinéastes les plus modernes de Hollywood.

Près de 60 films seront présentés : les premiers réalisés lors de son retour en France entre 1929 et 1935 (Tout ça ne vaut pas l’amour (1931) avec Jean Gabin), les courts métrages, quelques épisodes de séries télévisées, et bien entendu les classiques hollywoodiens : La Féline (1942), L’Homme-léopard (1943),  Vaudou (1943), La Griffe du passé (1947), Nightfall (1956), Rendez-vous avec la peur (1957). Ce film inédit en France (titre anglais : Night of the Demon), présenté en copie neuve, est projeté à cette occasion. 

Les Editions du Centre Pompidou accompagnent cette rétrospective de la publication du premier livre en français sur le cinéaste, Jacques Tourneur ou la magie de la suggestion, par Michael Henry Wilson, réalisateur et historien du cinéma. 

JACQUES TOURNEUR OU LA MAGIE DE LA SUGGESTION DE MICHAEL HENRY WILSON, AUX EDITIONS DU CENTRE POMPIDOU

A Hollywood, Tourneur fut l’un des « contrebandiers », peut-être le premier, qui ont subverti le récit classique de l’intérieur. Un explorateur de l’autre côté, en quête des «passages» qui ouvrent sur      d’autres dimensions. Un poète attentif à l’inquiétante étrangeté de notre décor quotidien lorsqu’il révèle ses fractures. Un promeneur  extraordinairement solitaire, poursuivant à l’insu de tous, protégé par son humilité même, une expérimentation qui a transformé le cinéma en profondeur. 

Né et éduqué à Paris, MICHAEL HENRY WILSON est un Français de Californie. Cinéaste, historien du cinéma, collaborateur de la revue Positif depuis trente ans, il a publié, notamment, Le Cinéma expressionniste allemand, Voyage de Martin Scorsese à travers le cinéma américain et Raoul Walsh, la saga du continent perdu. Ses deux passions, le cinéma et l’histoire, se marient dans ses scénarios (Investigating Sex d’Alan Rudolph) et ses réalisations (A la recherche de Kundun). Après le Voyage à travers le cinéma américain, sa collaboration avec Scorsese se poursuit avec un documentaire sur le cinéma britannique.

Relié sous jaquette
192 pages format 23 x 27 cm
150 illustrations en bichromie
prix : 39,90 euros

Editions du Centre Pompidou 
Date de parution : 3 décembre 2003




Mise à jour 05-2011

28/11/03

Garry Sollars at Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

Gary Sollars

Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

27 November - 7 December 2003

An oil painting by Liverpool-based artist Gary Sollars, My partner, Philip Munro. Died 13.1.89. Aged 34, is on display at Walker Art Gallery since 27 November through 7 December 2003 to coincide with World Aids Week.

This moving memorial painting represents the moment of death of the artist`s partner of 13 years from an Aids-related illness. It was painted five years after Philip Munro`s death and so has a stillness that has been achieved through the passage of time.

Gary Sollars not only depicts his partner`s death but also his attendance at his bedside. To the left, the picture is dominated by two naked men trailing a red ribbon – the figures symbolic of their relationship. The painting also features flowers and the grieving faces of Philip`s sister and Gary`s mother. Gary Sollars says: "This is a painting that should be shared by anyone who has lost somebody – not necessarily through Aids."

Originally from Chester, GARY SOLLARS lived in London and Brighton before moving to Liverpool three years ago. He showed work at both Liverpool Biennials and has also exhibited twice at the National Portrait Gallery. As well as painting, he produces installation and video work. Gary Sollars is planning projects for next year`s Biennial and is looking for a venue for a one-man show.

Walker Art Gallery
William Brown Street
Liverpool
L3 8EL

23/11/03

Louise Bourgeois, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin - Stitches in Time

Louise Bourgeois: Stitches in Time
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
26 November 2003 - 22 February 2004

The first large-scale exhibition in Ireland by Louise Bourgeois, one of the greatest and most influential artists of our time, opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Louise Bourgeois: Stitches in Time includes an extraordinary group of life-size sewn fabric busts, a series of cell-like vitrines, housing curious scenes of torture and ecstasy, and a small group of totemic figures, reinterpreting in fabric Bourgeois’s very first sculptures of the late 1940s and ‘50s. Over 20 pieces, most created in the last three years, are accompanied by a selection of the artist’s graphic work including 'He disappeared into Complete Silence', 1946, her first major suite of etchings and poems in which she unfolds tales of loss and loneliness.

Born in 1911, LOUISE BOURGEOIS was one of the first artists to assert the importance of autobiography and identity as subjects for contemporary artists. Her family background and childhood in the suburbs of Paris and the traumatic relationship between her father, mother and governess have continued to underpin her work throughout her long career. 'Seven in a Bed', 2001, for example, seems to distil the artist’s memory of far distant weekend mornings when she and her siblings would tumble into bed with their parents, but the Janus-like addition of extra heads warns us that things, especially people, are not always what they seem.

In the 1980s Louise Bourgeois began making a series of theatrical spaces entitled 'Cells', representing different types of pain – “the physical, the emotional and the psychological, and the mental and the intellectual”. The 'Cells' are self-contained or partial enclosures which can be experienced either by entering the space or by encountering it close up through mesh walls, doors or windows. These works are the anthesis of Bourgeois’ famous monumental installations, such as the three vast towers, 'I do, I undo, I redo', commissioned for the opening of Tate Modern in 2000.

Some of the most arresting of Louise Bourgeois’ recent works are a series of extraordinary upright and front-facing fabric heads, of which three can be seen in the exhibition. Sewn with a crudeness that belies their structural sophistication, they are nevertheless uncannily lifelike – open mouths appear moist from exhalation and their eyes apparently focus directly on the viewer, or seem to deliberately glance away. These are difficult works to confront; a difficulty compounded by the mute and resistant glass cases which encase them.

Born in Paris during the heyday of Cubism, Louise Bourgeois moved to New York following her marriage to the American art historian Robert Goldwater. Her first exhibition of sculpture took place in 1949. Although her early work was respected by contemporaries, it was not until she was 71 that she received wider acclaim for her first major retrospective at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition revealed a sculptor of startling originality and a unique ability to work with many different materials, from marble and bronze to latex and fabric. The event gave Louise Bourgeois the confidence and opportunity to set out, in fascinating detail, not only the domestic dramas of her childhood but also the architecture, furnishings and artefacts which had surrounded her as the child of a mother whose family had been engaged in the Aubusson tapestry industry and a father who was a dealer in restored tapestry and antique furniture.

Now in her 92nd year Louise Bourgeois’s artistic practice has spanned the best part of the last century. She has always led the field of innovation, often working at more than one remove from the well-known avant-garde movements of her lifetime: Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Minimal and Conceptual art.

The exhibition is selected by Frances Morris, Senior Curator, Tate Modern, and is co-curated by her with Brenda McParland, Head of Exhibitions at IMMA.

A catalogue published by IMMA and August Projects, with an essay by Frances Morris, accompanies the exhibition.

IMMA - IRISH MUSEUM OF MODERN ART 
Military Road, Kilmainham, Dublin 8
www.modernart.ie

22/11/03

Llewellyn L. Berry III and Alex Downs, Parish Gallery, Washington DC - LewLex

Llewellyn L. Berry III and Alex Downs: LewLex
Parish Gallery, Washington DC
November 21 - December 3, 2003 

Parish Gallery presents an exhibition of recent works by local photographers, Llewellyn Berry and Alex Downs entitled “LewLex”. 

Llewellyn Berry was a teacher in the DC Public Schools for 32 years where he taught Photojournalism, Radio Production and Broadcast Journalism, media related courses and English. In retirement Llewellyn Berry continues his work as a photographic artist.  “I have long had a fascination with black and white images. I prefer black and white films of the 30’s and 40’s because I grew up with them and early on they made a profound stylistic impression on me.  In my own exploration of photographic images, many elements excite me.  I like structures with dynamic line and shape configurations.  I am particularly enamored of landscape photography in the tradition of Ansel Adams, the rural studies of PH Polk, the urban studies of Black Americans by James Van Der Zee and the photojournalistic style of Henri Cartier Bresson. Chiaroscura, the use of light and dark or highlights and shadows in photography, make everyday objects and visions profound in the way shape and texture, juxtaposition and conscious placement of objects define the world in which I live.”

Alex Downs is an artist who works across a range of media from photography, film and audio, to print, motion graphics and video.  He is a design veteran with over seven years experience in print and new media design.  He enjoys creating photographs which are concurrently provocative, elegant, combustible, exquisite and sumptuous. Born in Ohio during the twilight of the sixties, he now lives and works in the Metropolitan DC area.  His photographic career commenced while he was studying at Morehouse College in Atlanta, which in turn eventually led to a BFA from the Corcoran School of Art.

PARISH GALLERY - GEORGETOWN
1054 31st Street, NW, Washington DC 20007
www.parishgallery.com

19/11/03

Sophie Calle, Centre Pompidou, Paris, Beaubourg - SOPHIE CALLE. M'AS-TU VUE

SOPHIE CALLE. M'AS-TU VUE
Centre Pompidou, Paris
19 novembre 2003 - 15 mars 2004

Le Centre Pompidou consacre une importante exposition à l'oeuvre de Sophie Calle. Présentée sur 1100 m2, cette manifestation est la première exposition d'envergure de l'artiste dans un musée français depuis plus de dix ans. L'exposition offre l'occasion de réunir des travaux anciens, depuis 1979, dont certains très peu montrés en France. Elle propose aussi un important corpus d'oeuvres nouvelles et inédites, dont la plupart ont été créées pour l'événement, notamment l'ensemble de Douleur exquise (1984-2003) et l'oeuvre récente Unfinished (2003).

Née en 1953 à Paris, Sophie Calle part au début des années 70 pour un long périple à travers le monde. C'est lors d'un séjour en Californie en 1978, qu'elle prend ses premières photographies « sans vocation » : des tombes portant les inscriptions « Father » et « Mother » . Elle vient de découvrir ce qui pourrait « plaire à son père ». À son retour à Paris, elle commence ses premières filatures d'inconnus dans la rue, dérive contrôlée dans la ville qu'elle agrémente de photographies et de textes, consignés dans des carnets. Le travail de Sophie Calle a pu être ainsi apparenté à celui des artistes des années 60-70, où le statut de l'image photographique concernait la trace, la preuve objective de leurs expériences et de leurs performances.

L'oeuvre de Sophie Calle se donne à voir depuis plus de vingt ans sous la forme d'installations de photographies et de récits, dont l'articulation et l'agencement se rapprochent davantage d'un art narratif issu lui aussi des années 70. En réalité, les oeuvres de Sophie Calle constituent l'aboutissement et le prolongement de situations mises en scène et vécues sur un mode autobiographique. Le sillon dans lequel s'inscrivent ses premiers travaux reflète une relation entre l'art et ta vie singulièrement distincte du registre neutre, distancié et informatif des oeuvres conceptuelles. Sophie Calle s'est engagée dans les années 80 dans une voie spécifique, qui donne une place importante à l'affect et au sentiment . L'artiste construit des règles du jeu et des rituels dans le but d'améliorer sa vie, de lui rendre sa dimension existentielle.

SOPHIE CALLE . M'AS-TU VUE : Thématiques et oeuvres de l'exposition

Cette exposition permet pour ta première fois de croiser l'ensemble des thématiques développées par l'artiste depuis vingt ans. Le parcours s'articule principalement autour du thème du lit, déployé tout d'abord à travers le premier travail de Sophie Calte, Les Dormeurs (1979) . Pour ce projet, l'artiste avait convié durant une semaine plus d'une vingtaine d'inconnus et amis à venir dormir dans son lit, à raison de huit heures chacun.

L'ensemble des photographies et récits des Dormeurs fut montré à la XIème Biennale de Paris en 1980, première exposition de Sophie Calte qui décide alors de « devenir une artiste ». Le lit est au centre de la Chambre à coucher (2003), dans laquelle on rencontre les emblèmes de ses Autobiographies développées depuis 1988 . Le Voyage en Californie (2000-2003) est une installation narrant le périple outre-Atlantique du lit de L'artiste à l'attention d'un inconnu désirant y vivre le deuil d'une histoire sentimentale.

On retrouve ce leitmotiv en filigrane dans un grand nombre d'oeuvres, notamment dans la magistrale Douleur Exquise (2003), produite en français et montrée ici pour la première fois. Ce projet, déployé en trois volets, est fondé sur l'expérience exhumée d'une rupture sentimentale remontant à 1984 et vécue alors par l'artiste comme le moment le plus douloureux de sa vie . Enfin, le fil conducteur du «lit» trouvera son prolongement avec la projection du film No Sex Last Night/Double Blind (1992), road-movie aux Etats-Unis réalisé avec Greg Shephard.

Les problématiques de l'absence, de la disparition et du manque traversent également toute l'exposition . La Filature, commandée en 1981 par le Centre Pompidou pour une exposition consacrée aux « Autoportraits photographiques », est le récit à double-voix de l'enquête d'un détective sur une journée de l'artiste. Sophie Calte réitère l'expérience en 2001, à la manière cette fois d'un bilan de sa vie d'artiste, lorsqu'elle réalise Vingt ans après selon l'initiative de son galeriste Emmanuel Perrotin.

Après avoir suivi, filé, « inquiété » des inconnus, Sophie Calle poursuit sa démarche en repoussant le regard au-delà. Les Aveugles (1986) évoquent la question de voir sans être vu, mais aussi la délicate notion de la beauté, en tant que représentation mentale. « Quelle est selon vous l'image de la beauté ? » demande l'artiste à des aveugles de naissance. Quelques années plus tard, il s'agit alors de comparer les descriptions de peintures monochromes faites par des aveugles, avec les écrits théoriques de leurs auteurs : Sophie Calte réalise La Couleur aveugle (1991) et questionne « l'expérience du monochrome ». La disparition et le manque sont toujours au coeur de son oeuvre Last Seen (1991), où l'absence physique de tableaux dérobés au Musée Isabella Stewart Gardner de Boston, fait place aux descriptions des conservateurs, gardiens et autres permanents du musée concerné.

Mais c'est surtout avec une oeuvre inédite, Une jeune femme disparaît (2003), que l'artiste place le point d'orgue de toutes ses thématiques . Un fait divers a croisé le destin de Sophie Calte, lorsque ta presse a mêlé son nom à celui de Bénédicte V., disparue après l'incendie de son appartement de Ille-Saint-Louis en 2000. L'artiste exhume des cendres les photographies réalisées par la jeune femme, agent d'accueil au Centre Pompidou, qui admirait Sophie Calte . L'avis de recherche de la disparue est dispersé dans différents espaces du Centre Pompidou, hors des limites de l'exposition elle-même.

À la fin du parcours, le visiteur est confronté à des images de distributeurs automatiques de billets - images de visages anonymes dont Sophie Dalle tente en vain, à plusieurs reprises, d'exploiter les qualités esthétiques. Elle réalise pour l'occasion une vidéo inédite, Unfinished (2003) qui devient le récit et la mise en scène de cet échec, mais aussi de la relation à ce qui fait oeuvre, à travers la problématique du «style» de l'artiste.

L'itinérance de l'exposition SOPHIE CALLE . M'AS-TU VUE est prévue, en 2004, à l'Irish Museum of Modern Art de Dublin, au Martin-Gropius-Bau de Berlin ainsi qu'au Ludwig Forum de Aachen.

Commissaire : Christine Macel conservateur pour l'art contemporain en charge du service Création Contemporaine et Prospective. Musée national d'art moderne. Centre Pompidou.

CENTRE POMPIDOU - BEAUBOURG - PARIS

16/11/03

Janine Antoni & Paul Ramirez Jonas, Miami Art Museum

Janine Antoni And Paul Ramirez Jonas
Miami Art Museum
November 14, 2003 – January 18, 2004

Miami Art Museum (MAM) presents the first museum exhibition in the United States of collaborative works by artists JANINE ANTONI and PAUL RAMIREZ JONAS. The exhibition is organized by Miami Art Museum and curated by Lorie Mertes, MAM curator, as part of the museum’s New Work series of projects by contemporary artists.

Janine Antoni and Paul Ramírez Jonas presents two major works, one of which has been commissioned especially for this exhibition by MAM and is the first piece visitors are encounter upon entering the gallery. Titled Mirror, the work is a massive sculpture that dominates the center of the space and consists of a stairway made from 26 stacked wood beams – each beam 12 x 12-inches -- and a free-standing curtain that is seven-foot tall and runs for 25 feet. Made of heavy red fabric, the curtain spans the length of the space dividing the room in half by appearing to magically enter and exit cleanly through the middle of the stairs. Visitors can negotiate their path through the gallery by walking around the curtain or by using the imposing stairway. The title, Mirror, refers to the physical nature of the piece and the viewer’s participatory experience. The second work, Always New, Always Familiar, is a room-sized video installation that consists of two views of the seascape filmed simultaneously from the front and back of a moving boat.

In each of these works there are distinct points of negotiation between two separate and sometimes disparate elements that combine to create a single work. While physically very different, each of the works are similar in that they map or diagram aspects of a relationship, stressing separation as well as union.

Janine Antoni and Paul Ramírez Jonas are internationally recognized artists each known for their distinct bodies of work. Less well known is the fact that the married couple, with family ties to South Florida, has been creating collaborative videos and photographs since 1999. Focusing on process, the passage of time and the trace of the body, their collaborative works serve as poetic metaphors for the nature of relationships.

“I have long admired the work of each artist and was very intrigued when I discovered that they had collaborated over the years,” said Curator Lorie Mertes. “It’s not unusual for artists to collaborate in order to explore ideas and processes that may not evolve from their individual work. The results of these collaborations vary widely, however. In the case of Janine and Paul, I was excited at how this particular melding of artistic sensibilities resulted in something entirely new and compelling.”

JANINE ANTONI
Janine Antoni was born in Freeport, Bahamas in 1964. She received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College in New York, and earned her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1989. Antoni has had major exhibitions of her work at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York; S.I.T.E. Santa Fe, New Mexico; and the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin. The recipient of several prestigious awards including a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship in 1998 and the Larry Aldrich Foundation Award in 1999, Janine Antoni currently resides in New York.

Antoni is known for works that blur the distinction between performance art and sculpture. Transforming such everyday activities as eating, bathing, and sleeping into ways of making art, Antoni uses her own body as the primary tool for making sculpture. She has chiseled cubes of lard and chocolate with her teeth, washed away the faces of soap busts made in her own likeness, and used the brainwave signals recorded while she dreamed at night as a pattern for weaving a blanket the following morning. For her most recent work she learned to balance and fall from a tightrope.

PAUL RAMIREZ JONAS
Paul Ramirez Jonas was born in 1965 and raised in Honduras. He received his BA from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and earned an MFA in Painting from Rhode Island School of Design in 1989. Ramírez Jonas has exhibited nationally and internationally with solo exhibitions at: Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, UK; Beaver College Art Gallery, Glenside, PA; Postmasters Gallery, NY; White Cube, London; White Columns, New York; and Artists Space, NY. Group exhibitions include: Pictures, Patents, Monkeys and More...On Collecting at the ICA, Philadelphia in 2002; Every Day, Public Art Fund, New York; Globe>Miami

Ramirez Jonas’ work, using various media, deals with the inevitability of time and its consequences: memory, attention, and expectation. In works that combine scientific inquiry and the inevitability of futility, the artist has done everything from recording his climbs to the highest points of each state in the country and remaking Thomas Edison’s first recording machine to making an attempt at stopping time by waking up at dawn and chasing after the sun by driving as far west as possible before it sets—all the while questioning whether progress resides in the future, and history in the past.

About the Curator: MAM Curator LORIE MERTES has been with the museum since 1994. She has curated solo exhibitions by artists such as Jim Hodges, Liisa Roberts and Alexis Smith, as well as curating New Work Miami: Robert Chambers and Frank Benson, New Work Miami: Dara Friedman and Robert Thiele, and mantle, a special project by the critically acclaimed artist Ann Hamilton commissioned by MAM in 1998.  LorieMertes recently served as the MAM Curator for the American Tableaux: Many Voices, Many Stories, Shirin Neshat and Roberto Matta: Painting Drawings of the 1940s traveling exhibitions and is overseeing the Kerry James Marshall exhibition that opens in February 2004. Her additional projects in process include a solo exhibition by California-based artist Russell Crotty that opens at MAM next March and New Art, the South Florida Cultural Consortium Fellowship winners for September 2004.

MIAMI ART MUSEUM
101 West Flagler Street, Miami, FL 33130
www.miamiartmuseum.org

15/11/03

Stephan Balkenhol, Galleri Lars Bohman, Stockholm

Stephan Balkenhol
Galleri Lars Bohman, Stockholm
November 15 - December 5, 2003

Galleri Lars Bohman presents an exhibition of new sculptures and drawings by the German artist STEPHAN BALKENHOL. In his third exhibition at the gallery, Stephan Balkenhol continues his investigation of the figurative sculptural tradition, updating a classical impulse from a present-day perspective.

Stephan Balkenhol deploys a vocabulary from traditional sculpture - carved wood, pedestals, polychrome - to singular, very contemporary ends. His subject is the human figure, but his intention is to reflect on the present, not commemorate the past. This vitality can be seen in what the artist calls ‘the adventures of the small man in white shirt and black pants,’ an ‘everyman’ who always maintains a serene presence even in the face of frequently outrageous circumstances.

Stephan Balkenhol creates figures that are ordinary rather than idealised, and anonymous rather than heroic, this is further emphasised by his use of wood rather than marble or bronze. His sculptures convey a universal humanism, and his colourfully painted figures may be seen as the familiar strangers that occupy our everyday lives, young men and women wearing ordinary clothing and introspective expressions, without any explicit reference to profession, function or social status.

Stephan Balkenhol’s unconcern with meticulous realism is corroborated by his emphasis on the production process, which can be perceived in the evidence of a usually hasty handling of the surface. Stephan Balkenhol’s sculptures and pedestals are hewn from one block of wood (often soft woods such as wawa or poplar) and then the surface is hand-painted, except for the flesh of the figure which is left natural. The wood is carved so that every bite of the chisel is visible and these splintered and chisel-marked surfaces suggest a raw fragility. Whether sculpting humans, animals, or scenes from his imagination, there is always something strange and enticing about his mute, reserved and peacefully contemplative figures. The artist’s presence is discernible in every mark, reinforcing the humanity of his enterprise.

These works acknowledge the ever-present complexities between the individual and the universal. Neal Benezra, Director of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, has stated: ‘At a time when all manner of political, social, and cultural dogma seems open to question, it may just be possible for Stephan Balkenhol to breathe new life into figurative sculpture.’

STEPHAN BALKENHOL was born in Fritzlar/Hessen, Germany in 1957, and lives and works in Meisenthal, France. He attended the Hochschule för Bildende Künste in Hamburg and studied for Ulrich Ruckreim. He is professor at the Academie für Bildene Künst, Karlsruhe, Germany.

Recent solo exhibitions include: Sprengel Museum, Hanover, Germany; Le Rectangle and Goethe Institute, Lyon, France; Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London in 2003. Begegnungsstätte Kleine Synagoge Erfurt, Erfurt in 2002. Kunstforum Baloise, Basel, Switzerland; Centro Galego de Arte Contemporaneo, Santiago de Compostela, Spain and Museum der Bildenden Künste Leipzig, Germany in 2001.

GALLERI LARS BOHMAN
Karlavägen 16, 114 31 Stockholm
www.gallerilarsbohman.com

10/11/03

Philip Guston: Mind and Matter, McKee Gallery, New York

Philip Guston: Mind and Matter 
McKee Gallery, New York 
November 11 - December 23, 2003 

From Plato to Descartes to the present time philosophy's inquiry into the duality of mind and matter was the basis for explaining human individual and social existence. The events of the mental world were absolute, pure and superior; the events of the physical world, received through the senses and nourished by our appetites, were impure, clumsy, chaotic. Although both mind and matter were parts of the human composition, mind was considered the higher order in life.

At the time Philip Guston broke through the prescriptions against figuration, mind was considered the higher order in art as well. Abstract Expressionism had a spiritual momentum and then Color Field dogma narrowed the artist's realm of possibilities. But Philip Guston had much more to say. He opened the door, believing that the whole truth of human existence, the world of the mind and the world of the senses, was the proper subject of art, and it alone could satisfy him as a human being and as an artist. He was comfortable in the perfect realm of the intellect, but he was a man in time and space as well, where the everyday life of painting, sleeping, eating, politics, his wife Musa, were essential.

The inspiration for this show is a painting called Pyramid and and Shoe 1976, currently on exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in which Philip Guston accepts the duality of mind and matter and redresses the imbalance. The pyramid is the symbol of absolute pure thought and the clumsy shoe stands beside it as an everyday imperfect object. They are on equal footing. From 1968 until his death in 1980, Philip Guston continued to paint forms derived from the intellect and forms derived from the material world. Unlike some critical assertions, he never abandoned either source as a fertile terrain for painting.

The first section of this exhibition is devoted to Matter: the physical world. Paintings such as Painter's Head 1975, Anxiety 1975, Eating 1977, Alfie in Small Town 1979, and drawings Untitled (pasta) 1969, Objects on Table 1976.

The second section is Mind: forms of the intellect. Balance 1979, To J.S. 1977 (the Surrealist poet, Jules Supervielle), Martyr 1978, Aegean 1978.

The third room includes work with related forms. Wall Forms and Blue Sea 1978 is the more mental version and Rock 1978 the more material one; Untitled 1968 and Untitled 1980, relate in the same way.

Philip Guston's figuration, now widely admired as some of the greatest work of 20th Century American art, was revolutionary in the 1970's. Guston wondered why people didn't understand the paintings, since, after all, they are about us.

A retrospective exhibition is currently at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, until January 4, 2004. It was organized by the Museum of Modern Art at Fort Worth, and will continue on to the Royal Academy, London, opening January 20, 2004.

MCKEE GALLERY
745 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10151

Yitzhak Golombek, Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv - “Gaya”

Yitzhak Golombek - “Gaya”
Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv
November 8 - December 13, 2003
"Exhibited is a garden surrounded by cardboard sculptures, each a still life, about the height of a three-year-old. The objects – packaging, sewing notions and ornaments – which are piled up into towers or strewn on the floor like archeological ruins, are from a home where nothing is thrown away 'in case it might come in handy some day.' The back garden sits on a balcony belonging to a family of refugees. A universe of three generations huddling together and clinging to one another while holding on to inanimate objects that harbor the touch of the father, the son, the daughter. At the same time, the exhibit aims to achieve maximal receptiveness to materials and forms, and to construct from the compressed parcels the alphabet of an independent sculptural language."

Yitzhak Golombek

DVIR GALLERY
11 Nahum st., Tel Aviv 63503

07/11/03

Roland Colorip 2.0 RIP Software

Roland DGA Corporation today introduced Roland Colorip 2.0 - the latest and most powerful version of its RIP software bundled with VersaCAMM, EX and Pro II Series inkjets. "Roland Colorip 2.0 will boost inkjet productivity for both expert printmakers and beginners," said Patrick Chen, Roland product manager. "Right out of the box, it makes printing fast and easy with enhanced production features and color controls."
In a single dialog box, Roland Colorip 2.0 now integrates complex output settings such as device selection, ink type, connection, media and print mode. A Master Queue window displays RIP and Print jobs for all four print configurations, making it easier to track the status of multiple jobs.
For Roland customers who demand complete color control, Roland Colorip 2.0 features a Color Transforms window that integrates all color controls. The new graphical feature makes it easy to edit all pertinent ICC Profiles, linearizations and ink limits. Roland Colorip 2.0 also offers RIP & Print capability, enhanced color management, contour cutting and several unique layout options. In addition to Postscript jobs, the RIP lets graphics professionals print directly from TIFF, JPEG, EPS, PS, PDF 1.4 and DCS 2.0 files.
COLORIP 2.0 Features Easy-to-use interface Print directly from TIFF, JPEG, EPS, PS, PDF 1.4 and DCS 2.0 files. ICC profiles for Roland coated and uncoated medias Full Adobe Postscript 3 compatibility CMYK plus LcLm and OrGr printing support Simultaneous RIP-and-Print capability Supports precision contour cutting Automatic or manual cropping, nesting and tiling Robust color management features Spot color replacement to fine tune custom colors Unlimited color databases to organize custom colors Built-in out-of-gamut alert
COLORIP 2.0 is currently shipping will all VersaCAMM, EX and Pro II Series inkjets. Beginning in December, current owners will be able to upgrade to the new bundled software free of charge.
Roland Digital Group America

05/11/03

Jonah Freeman & Michael Phelan, John Connelly Presents, New York - "The Giving Tree"

Jonah Freeman & Michael Phelan 
"The Giving Tree"
John Connelly Presents, New York
November 7 — December 13, 2003

John Connelly Presents announces the first solo exhibition of the collaborative work of Jonah Freeman and Michael Phelan. In keeping with previous efforts, Freeman and Phelan use disparate means to explore the contemporary cultural landscape. References to nature, autobiography, popular culture and banal architectural forms are meshed into an installation of painting, video, light and sculpture.

At the center of the installation "The Giving Tree", 2003 offers us the holy grail of absurd 21st Century convenience in the form of a ready-made rotisserie chicken and BBQ. As the rotating heart of the exhibition, the rotisserie is both contained and reflected by the mirrored surfaces of the sculpture's core. The geometric intersecting planes of "The Giving Tree's exterior reflect and diffract the rest of the works that infiltrate the gallery space, including "Love is Colder Than Death", 2003 a large wall drawing of throbbing black and white lines. This reference to the synthetic manipulation of perception and space found in "Love is Colder than Death" is also echoed in a suite of sixteen small, colorful paintings on an opposite gallery wall, each titled after a different street name of LSD.

The disorientating, op-art vibrations of "Love is Colder than Death" are taken to the extreme in "The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters", 2003 where two video monitors are matched tête-à-tête in a futile dialogue between technology and nature. One pulses endlessly with the black and white blips of 300 indistinguishable and relentless sonic beats per minute while the other captures a lone but talkative prairie dog in a desolate field. The dialogue between these two disparate subjects is both humorous and heart breaking.

Other sculptural works reflect the collision between culture and nature that is a central theme in the exhibition. "Soul Man", a sturdy piece of drift wood turned into an endearing sidekick with two small carefully placed plastic eyes; and "A Season in Hell" liberates nine resilient penguins from a cardboard box of shimmering faux snow.

Jonah Freeman's work has most recently been shown at the Andrew Kreps Gallery in New York City; Public Art Fund at the Brooklyn Public Library; Galerie Edward Mitterand, Geneva, Switzerland; The Prague Biennale I, Prague, Hungary and the Cheekwood Museum in Nashville, Tennessee.

Michael Phelan's work has most recently been included in "Social Fabric", Lothringer 13, Munich, Germany, "Painting as Paradox", Artist Space, "How Come", Stephan Stux, New York, NY, "High Desert Test Sites", A-Z West, Joshua Tree, CA., and at Leo Koenig Gallery in New York City.

JOHN CONNELLY PRESENTS
526 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001
www.johnconnellypresents.com

29/10/03

Camescope numérique JVC GR-D200

Camescope numérique JVC GR-D200

JVC GR-D200
(c) JVC

Quand on découvre le nouveau caméscope numérique à large bande JVC GR-D200, on se dit qu'il est vraiment mignon avec sa petite taille et son design tout en rondeur. Puis, quand on le met en marche, on est tout aussi surpris par ses belles performances… 

Equipé d'un CCD 1,33 mégapixels, il enregistre des images d'une qualité exceptionnelle, aidé par son processeur large bande qui pousse au maximum les possibilités du format DV, avec une résolution horizontale de 540 lignes. Non content d'enregistrer de magnifiques images animées, il peut aussi se transformer en appareil photo numérique et capturer des images fixes en quatre dimensions au choix, avec une qualité tout aussi exceptionnelle (il multiplie par 1,5 la résolution verticale par rapport aux images fixes classiques). Pourvu des dernières innovations en matière de multimédia, le JVC GR-D200 possède une interface Haute vitesse USB, qui décuple encore ses possibilités. Via un ordinateur, il propose ainsi de créer ses propres CD vidéo au format MPEG1, de réaliser ses clips vidéo au format MPEG4 pour les envoyer ensuite par e-mail, ou encore de l'utiliser comme une webcam… Convivial et performant,il est également simple d'utilisation. Son fonctionnement "Power-Link" lui permet de s'allumer automatiquement, que ce soit en tirant le viseur ou en ouvrant l'écran. Et pour filmer de nuit, son flash automatique est secondé par la technologie "Digital NightScope" qui pousse la sensibilité lumineuse pour obtenir une image claire et en couleur même si la lumière ambiante est insuffisante.

JVC France : jvc.fr

26/10/03

Knut Asdam at Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin

Knut Åsdam 
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
29 October 2003 - 4 January 2004

An exhibition of two filmworks by the Norwegian multi-media artist Knut Åsdam opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Wednesday 29 October. In this, his first showing in Ireland, Åsdam seeks to demonstrate how the architecture of a city can embody contemporary life.

'Filter City', 2003, is Knut Åsdam most ambitious film/video work to date. The work focuses on two women, their relationship to each other, to a larger social group and to a city that is in constant transformation – architecturally, socially and politically. The film is mostly shot outdoors in modern apartment/housing complexes, using scenes that are interchangeable with different Western cities. Through dialogue and filmic description of places and people, Knut Åsdam brings the characters into a narration with a city that is constantly changing socially and politically. 'Filter City' was first shown at the recent Istanbul Biennial.

The second work 'Cluster Praxis', 2002, deals with dancing as a form of social practice, and particularly as an expression of the desire for collectivety. The work is structured around the sound – a narrative mix of voice and ambient soundscapes – dominated by a five-minute-long poetic monologue. Writing in Artforum, Jordan Kantor, described the work as tracing an ever-deepening subjectivity with the “objective” camera.

Knut Åsdam was born in 1968, in Trondheim, Norway, and studied in London at Wimbledon College of Art and Goldsmiths College. He has exhibited extensively in the US and Europe and was selected for the Nordic pavilion in the 1999 Venice Biennale. His most recent shows include solo exhibitions at Klmens Gasser and Tanja Grunert, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Oslo, and Tate Britain, London.

A publication, with an essay by Simon Sheikh, Curator and Assistant Professor of Art Theory and Co-ordinator of the Critical Studies Programme, Malmo Art Academy, accompanies the exhibition.

IMMA - IRISH MUSEUM OF MODERN ART 
Military Road, Kilmainham, Dublin 8
www.modernart.ie

25/10/03

Stefana McClure, Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York - Lost in Translation

Stefana McClure: Lost in Translation 
Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York 
October 24 – November 29, 2003 

Cristinerose | Josee Bienvenu Gallery present Lost in Translation, an exhibition by Stefana McClure. This is her second solo show at the gallery. Concurrently, her work is included in Drawings of Choice from a New York Collection at the Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio. She has recently participated in exhibitions at The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, at Yale University Art Gallery and at the University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach, California.

Stefana McClure investigates the structure and visual properties of language. She is captivated by the physical appearance of subtitles, closed captions, intertitles, dictionary definitions, and the layout of text on a page. The exhibition comprises three bodies of work: a large group of films on paper (including a wall installation of scattered mini DVD drawings and a “video wall”); a series of ten dictionary drawings and five fiction filmed drawings. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, Stefana McClure spent twelve years in Japan, she now lives in New York but remains fascinated by the gray area that exists between languages and cultures.

Stefana McClure turns text into image. Distillation of time and obliteration of information characterize her drawings. To make her films on paper she watches a film frame by frame, and inscribes successively all the subtitles on top of each other on a background of transfer paper. As the successive layers of information are transferred off, the surface of the colored paper gets slowly eroded. The image is built by removing. Hours of translated dialogues are reduced to a ghost form, dense in the middle, fading towards the edges. The hypersensitivity and intrinsic memory of the transfer paper enables these multi-layered works to become palimpsests. They have the iridescent glow of high tech video screens.

The Video Wall, an installation of Passionless Moments: Japanese subtitles to a film by Jane Campion, as shown on thirteen different television monitors, recreates the electronics store experience of simultaneously viewing the same video on multiple screens. The installation explores the qualities of clarity, precision of focus, image distortion and interference distinct to each monitor. For this piece, she deliberately looked for irregularities inherent in mass-produced rolls of graphite transfer. The scratchy gray backgrounds have the feeling of used home video tapes. The Scatter Wall (of mini DVDs and Audiovox format films) is a celebration of cinema in the form of a random scatter of 47 films on paper. Installed on a sky blue wall, the works included range from English subtitles to Krzysztof Kieslowski’s A Short Film about Love to Japanese intertitles to a number of early silent films by Yasujiro Ozu to English subtitles to Jour de fete by Jacques Tati, depicted on a bright yellow screen.

She subjects herself to a series of “non-decisions” and lets the material dictate its own rules. The size of the work is determined by the format of the TV monitor on which the film was viewed or by the physical dimensions of the text she has decided to transcribe. The color and texture of the transfer paper is restricted to availability on the office supply market: graphite, red wax, yellow, pink, light blue, dark blue, white and black.

The series of ten dictionary drawings present a distillation of Kenkyusha’s New Collegiate Japanese- English Dictionary, a dictionary that prides itself on the wealth of examples it provides, and the first “serious” Japanese-English dictionary the artist acquired when she moved to Japan. The drawings offer tribute to knowledge. The architectural structure of the dictionary gradually reveals itself as more and more layers of information are removed. Also based on books, Stefana McClure inaugurates a new series entitled fiction filmed drawings. Each of the five works capture and condense an entire novel, short story or play on which a film was subsequently based. Among them: The Birds: a story by Daphne Du Maurier, Double Indemnity: a novel by James M. Cain and Rashomon: a short story by Ryunosuke Akutagawa.

Josée Bienvenu Gallery
529 West 20th Street, New York NY, 10011
www.joseebienvenugallery.com

11/10/03

Hayley Tompkins, at Andrew Kreps Gallery, NYC

Hayley Tompkins
Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York
October 11 - November 15, 2003
My street's very, very quiet, and no-one brings anyone in here - it's very private.
But there are these motor homes and
20 people in black suits,
standing in the middle of my street, So I pull up.
In my car and I've got my hair pulled back - and he
starts to take pictures. No make-up, no nothing.
So I said, "Fine" I see myself like that every day.
I think I'm very free. On + on.
Once you overcome an obstacle,
You springboard into the future.

Borrow it.
His / her / it's life activity. Conscious life activity.
Find it.

Life is interesting and short
It's not supposed to be easy, and if it is
You're probably just in denial and you're existing here
Like a zombie.
No zombies.
That's what I love about -

-Sue Tompkins
Andrew Kreps Gallery presents an exhibition of new work by Hayley Tompkins. Based in Glasgow, Scotland, Hayley Tompkins has recently participated in exhibitions at Galerie Krinzinger in Vienna, Austria and at The Modern Institute in Glasgow. This is her second solo exhibition at Andrew Kreps Gallery.

The exhibition features Hayley Tompkins' trademark watercolors on paper as well as paintings on wooden board, a new medium for her. Hayley Tompkins sees these paintings on board as an "attempt to retrieve images of other paintings in my mind. Like remembering. The paintings feel aged to me already, like I am making ready-made objects and inserting them into history straight away."

In this exhibition, a number of works are hung on a large cubical structure built in the center of the gallery space. As viewers navigate around the structure, Hayley Tompkins' installation unfolds. The artist sees encountering the structure as "a gestalt, 'unwhole' experience" because only one part of the exhibition is visible at a time. The four walls of the box-structure provide a stage of sorts, where the paintings are installed to express their distinctive qualities. Some of the works contain references to stage or costume design. Hayley Tompkins cites Malevich, Sonia Delaunay and Oskar Schlemmer as influential for their work, as well as for their holistic approaches as artists-cum-stage designers. Other works in the exhibition are hung to emphasize their surreal content.

ANDREW KREPS GALLERY
516 wEST 20th Street, New York City

Exposition Botticelli au Musée du Luxembourg, Paris

 

Botticelli, de Laurent le Magnifique à Savonarole

Musée du Luxembourg, Paris

1er octobre 2003 - 22 février 2004

Palais Strozzi, Florence, 10 mars - 11 juillet 2004

 

Dans le cadre des grandes manifestations qu'il consacre à la Renaissance italienne, le Sénat présente au Musée du Luxembourg après Raphaël, Grâce et Beauté, une importante exposition consacrée à Sandro Botticelli. Fruit d'un accord international entre le Musée du Luxembourg et la Surintendance spéciale des Musées florentins, cette exposition situe l'art de Botticelli dans le contexte politique de Florence à la fin du Quattrocento.

L'exposition réunit plus d'une vingtaine de peintures de Botticelli. Provenant de différents musées et collections privées, elles sont pour la première fois rassemblées et certaines sont montrées pour la première fois au public. Sont aussi exposés des dessins importants. Il s'agit pour l'essentiel de chef d'œuvres à destination privée, réalisés pour des familles et des personnages importants de la cour des Médicis et dont l'exposition montre qu'ils développent un propos en relation avec les événements de l'époque. L'exposition comprend également, à titre de comparaison, un petit ensemble de peintures et de dessins exécutés par d'autres protagonistes de la scène artistique florentine contemporaine : Léonard de Vinci, Piero di Cosimo et Filippino Lippi.

Le parcours de l'exposition se fonde sur les résultats des travaux historiques les plus récents pour proposer une relecture approfondie de l'œuvre et de la personnalité de Botticelli. Fruit d'une recherche formelle systématique et inspiré par des « stratégies figuratives » qui attribuent à l'image une fonction polyvalente, à la fois esthétique et symbolique, son langage artistique n'ignore jamais la destination des œuvres. Dans l'atmosphère particulière de Florence au cours des trente dernières années du siècle, alimentée d'abord par l'humanisme intellectuel médicéen avant d'être agitée par les inquiétudes suscitées par les prédications de Savonarole, Botticelli atteint des sommets de raffinement linéaire et chromatique, aussi bien dans les thèmes mythologiques et littéraires que dans la méditation douloureuse sur le thème chrétien.

Outre diverses versions de la Vierge à l'Enfant, sont présentées quelques Annonciations dont la tension dramatique et spirituelle est exemplaire de l'artiste. Sont également présentes des peintures narratives inspirées par la littérature romanesque ou hagiographique, quelques-unes des mythologies et des allégories les plus célèbres, comme la Calomnie, des oeuvres religieuses de la dernière période, les cercles de l'enfer de la Divine Comédie de Dante, ainsi qu'une tapisserie et une broderie exécutées sur des dessins de Botticelli et des panneaux décoratifs de coffres de mariage.

Né à Florence en 1445, Alessandro Filipepi aurait, selon la tradition, reçu sa première formation artistique chez un orfèvre appelé « Botticello », auquel il aurait dû son surnom. L'hypothèse n'est plus acceptée par la critique, mais on peut la rapporter à son frère Giovanni, dont un document de 1458 note qu'il pratiquait la profession d'orfèvre. Il est probable que Sandro ait fait un bref apprentissage dans l'atelier de son frère, dont il a hérité le surnom. Comme dans le cas de Pollaiolo et de Verrocchio, cette expérience d'orfèvre, même limitée, laissera une marque reconnaissable dans la linéarité rapide et nerveuse des premières oeuvres. Mais c'est à l'école du frère dominicain, et peintre affirmé, Filippo Lippi que Botticelli a reçu sa véritable formation artistique.

Sa première commande publique lui est confiée par le Tribunal de l'Arte della Mercanzia (Guilde des Marchands) en 1470 – date à laquelle le nom de Botticelli figure parmi ceux des maîtres d'atelier. Il s'agit d'un panneau (La Force, conservée aux Offices) qui devait compléter une série de représentations des sept Vertus théologales et cardinales (Foi, Espérance, Charité, Force, Justice, Prudence et Tempérance).

Entre 1481 et 1482, l'artiste séjourne à Rome, et, avec d'autres peintres florentins comme Cosimo Rosselli et Domenico Ghirlandaio, il travaille à la décoration des murs de la Chapelle Sixtine, construite entre 1475 et 1477 par le pape Sixte IV à l'image du Temple de Salomon. Tout de suite après cette expérience romaine, il réalise d'affilée quelques-unes de ses plus belles peintures de thèmes mythologiques et poétiques, toutes liées d'une manière ou d'une autre au mécénat médicéen : les quatre panneaux peints à la détrempe représentant la nouvelle de Boccace, Nastagio degli Onesti, le célèbre Printemps, Pallas et le Centaure et La Naissance de Vénus.

Un climat d'insécurité générale pèse sur Florence après le départ des Médicis, chassés de la ville en 1494, tandis que leurs adversaires accèdent au pouvoir et que les prédications de Savonarole minent les valeurs morales et la conception même de la vie auxquelles on avait cru. Dans cette phase tardive, à partir des années 1490, les peintures de Botticelli sont animées par des figures emportées par une tension spirituelle croissante, qui traduisent l'inquiétude de cette fin de siècle à Florence. Mais cette transformation est perçue comme une opposition à la modernité et aux développements formels apportés par Léonard de Vinci et Michel-Ange. Ce dernier le critique en particulier pour sa conception des utilisations de la perspective. Les diverses versions de la Pietà et de la Nativité reflètent cette ultime phase de tourment spirituel.

Botticelli meurt à Florence en 1510.

Commissaires de l'exposition :
Daniel Arasse, Directeur d'Etudes à l'EHESS, Paris.
Pierluigi De Vecchi, Professeur d'iconografie d'iconologie à la Facoltà di Lettere dell'Università degli Studi di Milano.

Un catalogue de 250 pages sera édité par Skira avec des reproductions en couleur de toutes les oeuvres de l'exposition.

 

Musée du Luxembourg
19, rue de Vaugirard
75006 Paris

Horaires de l'exposition
Vendredi, samedi, dimanche, lundi 11h - 22h30 (nocturnes)
Mardi, mercredi, jeudi 11 h - 19 h

05/10/03

Laura Owens at Milwaukee Art Museum

Laura Owens 
Milwaukee Art Museum
October 18, 2003 - January 18, 2004 

Los Angeles-based artist Laura Owens is one of the most highly regarded young painters working today. The exhibition Laura Owens, on view in the Milwaukee Art Museum's Vogel/Helfaer Contemporary Galleries is the first major monographic survey of the artist's work and traces her development from 1997 to the present. Incorporating a wide and imaginative range of subjects and techniques, her work moves with ease between high and low, personal and social, figuration and abstraction. The exhibition, Laura Owens' most significant presentation to date, features approximately 20 paintings and several drawings, including a group of new large-scale works created for this presentation. 

Laura Owens is part of an international movement of emerging painters who investigate the formal issues of the medium through a highly personal blend of abstract and representational imagery. Her work incorporates an eclectic range of visual references, including English embroidery, Chinese and Japanese landscape painting, European and American modernism, and her own photography. Her unique style moves from landscape to abstraction with energetic, thick brushstrokes, fanciful childlike doodles, whimsical collage and sophisticated fine line drawings. 

"Laura Owens is one of the most important painters to emerge in the past decade," said Margaret Andera, exhibition coordinator at MAM and associate curator. "We are happy to be able to have her work on view for Milwaukeeans and visitors to enjoy." 

The Milwaukee Art Museum's presentation of Laura Owens allows viewers to track the artist's development and to forge links between works that, in many cases, have never been shown together. Laura Owens is creating significant new, large-scale paintings for the exhibition. Among them is Untitled (2002), a spacious desert landscape comprised of washes of color, strange sponge effects, and cacti drawn in outline with paint squeezed from a tube. 

Laura Owens' paintings, which challenge traditional concepts of painting, are often grandly scaled. They envelop the viewer and incorporate the walls and floors of the room in which they were made or exhibited. Her practice takes the exhibition site into account and she frequently plays with the installation of works to enhance their meaning. Installed on one wall but spaced apart, her two-panel painting Untitled (1999) features monkeys who beckon to each other across the blank space between them. The viewer who stands between the two canvases ends up occupying the virtual space of the work of art. Another work, Untitled (2000) is one of a pair of works created for an installation at Inverleith House in Edinburgh; it was both inspired by and made to compete with the view from the gallery windows of the surrounding botanical garden. 

Laura Owens' work has been included in the most important surveys of new painting, including Examining Pictures (Whitechapel Art Gallery, London and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 1999), Painting at the End of the World (Walker Art Center, 2001), Painting on the Move (Kunstmuseum, Kunsthalle, and Museum für Gegenwartkunst, Basel, 2002), as well as the 1999-2000 Carnegie International and Drawing Now: Eight Propositions (The Museum of Modern Art, 2002-03). 

Born in 1970 in Euclid, Ohio, Laura Owens is a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence; Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Maine; and the California Institute of Arts, Valencia. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles. Since her first solo show in 1995, Laura Owens has exhibited extensively and has enjoyed wide international exposure and substantial critical acclaim. Her works are in the collections of MOCA, the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, and the Guggenheim Museum in New York. 

The exhibition is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and coordinated at MAM by Margaret Andera, associate curator. The exhibition is accompanied by a major catalogue, with essays by exhibition curator Paul Schimmel and art historian Thomas Lawson. Nationally, Laura Owens is made possible by the generous support of Mark S. Siegel, The Pasadena Art Alliance, Kathi and Gary Cypres, David Hockney and Betye Monell Burton. 

The exhibition comes to the Milwaukee Art Museum after its debut at MOCA and showing at the Aspen Art Museum (August 2 - September 28, 2003). After MAM, the exhibition travels to the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami (March 4 - May 9, 2004).

MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
700 N. Art Museum Drive, Milwaukee, WI 53202
www.mam.org

Updated 02.07.2019

Childe Hassam at Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh - Prints and Drawings from the Collection

Childe Hassam: Prints and Drawings from the Collection 
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
October 4, 2003 - February 8, 2004

Frederick Childe Hassam (1859–1935), the best-known American painter in the Impressionist style, began his artistic career in his native Boston, working first as a wood-engraver, then as an illustrator, and eventually established himself as a painter of city life. Childe Hassam began to paint in the Impressionist style after he visited Paris between 1887 and 1889. In his paintings, he portrayed life in urban America, primarily his winter home of New York City, and the country landscapes of New England, where he spent his summers. Although Childe Hassam did not consider himself an Impressionist, his paintings and drawings are as filled with color and sunlight as the works of the French painters who inspired him.

In 1915, Childe Hassam took up printmaking–first etching and later lithography. Over the course of his career, Childe Hassam produced some 375 etchings and 42 lithographs. His earliest prints reflect his interest in the effect of light on objects in the landscape. As he achieved technical mastery as a printmaker, his approach became bolder and more decorative. He exploited the inherent contrast between black ink and white paper to emphasize light and shadow.

Linda Batis, associate curator of fine arts, said "The drawings on view in the exhibition reveal Hassam's natural affinity for the graphic arts as a way to explore color and pictorial structure. They provide insight into a fundamental fact about Hassam's work. He drew and painted what he saw before him."

Childe Hassam enjoyed a long relationship with Carnegie Museum of Art and John Beatty, the museum's first director. Between 1896 and 1935, Childe Hassam exhibited more than 90 paintings at several Carnegie Internationals, the museum's recurring exhibition of contemporary art. He served on the exhibition's Jury of Award in 1903, 1904, and 1910, the year he was also honored with a solo exhibition of paintings. With the purchase of Fifth Avenue in Winter in 1900, Carnegie Museum became the first American museum to acquire one of Childe Hassam's paintings. In 1907, John Beatty purchased 30 drawings from the artist, one of the largest such groups in any museum collection. The etchings and lithographs on view are from a group of 60 prints donated to the museum by the artist's widow in 1940 in recognition of the close relationship between Childe Hassam and the Carnegie Museum of Art.

Childe Hassam: Prints and Drawings from the Collection includes 72 drawings, etchings and paintings. Many of the drawings on view were studies for some of Childe Hassam's most notable paintings. Replicas of some of these are on view alongside the drawings to give visitors a sense of the correlation between the study and the final work. Correspondence between Childe Hassam and John Beatty, which reveals a friendship based on mutual enthusiasm for art, are also on view as part of the exhibition.

CARNEGIE MUSEUM OF ART
4400 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

01/10/03

Bill Viola at The National Gallery, London - The Passions

Bill Viola: The Passions
The National Gallery, London
22 October 2003 - 4 January 2004

BILL VIOLA (b.1951) is one of the world’s leading video artists. This major solo exhibition shows 14 works by Bill Viola dating from 1995 to the present, most unseen in the UK, and including two specially commissioned pieces. His work is both at the forefront of technical innovation and deeply rooted in the art of the past. Drawing on images and ideas from the art and philosophy of both European and Eastern traditions he produces work of enormous intensity. The focus of this exhibition will be his ongoing series ‘The Passions’, exploring the power, range and expression of the human emotions. These will be seen with a selection of other art works, including paintings from the National Gallery collection.

The National Gallery’s relationship with Bill Viola began when he was invited to contribute a work in response to a painting in the Gallery’s collection for the exhibition ‘Encounters’ (2000). Taking Hieronymus Bosch’s ‘Christ Mocked (The Crowning of Thorns)’ as his starting point, Viola produced his ‘The Quintet of the Astonished’, in which a group of five people, shown in extreme slow motion, display a range of conflicting emotions, from sorrow to bliss.

‘Quintet’ was the first completed work in ‘The Passions’. Deeply influenced by the devotional imagery of the 15th and 16th centuries, these works are for the most part shown on flat digital panel screens whose size, display, texture and sharpness of definition imitate portable painted panels. In ‘Dolorosa’, for example, two hinged screens each show a man and a woman crying in slow motion. This evokes diptychs showing the Man of Sorrows and the weeping Virgin, such as the National Gallery’s examples by Dieric Bouts. Despite the New Testament echoes in this and many of Viola’s works, these figures are anonymous and contemporary, their situation secular and undefined. Another work, ‘Catherine’s Room’ comprises five small screens inspired by the narrative predella panels of Italian Renaissance altarpieces.

Two important works - both previously unseen in the UK - provide a prelude to ‘The Passions’. The exhibition will open with Bill Viola’s first work made in response to an Old Master painting, ‘The Greeting’ (1995) inspired by Pontormo’s ‘The Visitation’, in which a 40-second ambiguous encounter between three women is slowed to last ten minutes. In contrast the powerful and dramatic ‘The Crossing’ (1996) is an all encompassing video and sound installation: on two sides of a single central screen a figure is simultaneously consumed by the elemental forces of fire and water.

His new works, ‘Emergence’ and ‘Observance’ continue ‘The Passions’ series and both derive from Old Master paintings. In ‘Emergence’, based on a fresco by Masolino, two women receive the lifeless body of a man from an overflowing well in a work that can be read as symbolising birth and resurrection. ‘Observance’ is a narrow, vertical composition (derived from Dürer’s ‘Four Apostles’ in Munich) in which people respond to a disturbing sight that occurs out of frame. Their intense emotions and reactions are seen in hyper-slow movement, creating an absorbing and mesmerising ritual of grief.

The exhibition has been organised by the J. Paul Getty Museum in collaboration with The National Gallery. It has been curated by John Walsh, director emeritus at the J.Paul Getty Museum, and in London, by Alexander Sturgis.

THE NATIONAL GALLERY
Trafalgar Square, London

28/09/03

Photographs by Larry Racioppo at Brooklyn Public Library - "All This Useless Beauty"

All This Useless Beauty: Photographs by Larry Racioppo 
Brooklyn Public Library 
September 23 - November 18, 2003

From the crumbling stone cherubs of the Bushwick Theater to the peeling plaster ghouls of Coney Island's Spookhouse, LARRY RACIOPPO's artful images remind us of Brooklyn's illustrious past. Neglected but not forgotten, these beautiful old places evoke memories, nostalgia and a sense of history. "What shall we do with all this useless beauty?" -- This quote by Elvis Costello expresses the inspiration behind this collection of provocative, rarely seen, images of Brooklyn.

Brooklyn Public Library presents All This Useless Beauty, an exhibition of over 30 large color prints (20" x 24" and 30" x 40") by veteran photographer Larry Racioppo in the Grand Lobby of the Central Library. Larry Racioppo, a Brookyn native, has been photographing New York City's people and places for more than 30 years. In this new exhibition, he captures all the fading glory of Brooklyn's grand old movie theaters, churches and amusement halls. The exhibition takes viewers on a tour of some of Brooklyn's most memorable sites including several photographs of Loews Kings Theater and Coney Island. 

The vivid detail of color and texture in Larry Racioppo's large color prints reveal the striking contrast between the original vibrancy of these venues and their current dilapidation. They leave us with a haunting sense of the many pleasurable experiences that thousands of people had passing through, or by, these sites. In a photograph of the Loews Kings Theater, we look onto a balcony with rows of plush crimson seats beneath a still beautiful chandelier and an exquisite mural of an 18th century grand lady – now covered with plaster dust and peeling paint. A photograph of the Coney Island Spookhouse presents the striking image of a looming red macabre mask and the darkened doorway within it amidst the refuse of an abandoned building.

The power and beauty of these sites still touch us. We smile at a photograph of the Coney Island Playhouse and the raucous cartoon characters painted on the walls – a couple playing cards, the woman left with only a barrel to wear after revealing a bad hand, and a set of 'betty boop' females who cavort across the wall in their heels and ponytails kicking up dust in their chase. Larry Racioppo asks us to look at this beauty now. After having spent years photographing New York and Brooklyn, he offers this carefully selected collection of images.
"I've been lucky. While driving around Brooklyn since the mid-1990s, I have chanced upon incredibly beautiful buildings and structures, many of which were closed and sealed, often abandoned. They beckoned to me and I responded by taking their pictures," says Larry Racioppo. "Once grand churches, movie theaters and amusements now stand forlorn, their beauty compromised by the ravages of time and the elements. Many have outlined their usefulness and await demolition as the city reinvents itself. Some are still economically viable and have been transformed into bingo parlors and car repair shops, while others teeter on the edge of extinction. What connects them is their inexorable beauty.

"I want to photograph everything – the exposed bones of a structure, the fragment of a carved stone pediment, the faded detail of a mural in a movie theater lobby, the broken cherubs on a building's façade – before it disappears."
Larry Racioppo's photographs have been widely exhibited and collected. His work is in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, The Museum of the City of New York, The New York Historical Society and The New York Public Library. A Brooklyn native, he has been a staff photographer for the NYC Department of Housing Preservation and Development since 1989. He has a Master's degree in Television and Radio Production from Brooklyn College and a B.A. in Communications from Fordham University.

This body of work has been made possible by the support of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts and the New York State Council on the Arts.
"This exhibition is dedicated to The Captain Ron Hellgren, who long ago let me use his cool Nikkor lenses while we photographed in Coney Island; to Rob Gurbo and John Rossi, who know the Boardwalk and the back room at Nathan's; and to my wife, Barbara, who makes the present better than the past." – Larry Racioppo
BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY
www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org