31-01-10

MIRO/DUBUFFET/BASQUIAT EXHIBITION ANNOUNCED AT NASSAU COUNTY MUSEUM

Joan Miri, Personage

Nassau County Museum of Art (NCMA) will present works by Joan Miró, Jean Dubuffet and Jean-Michel Basquiat, shown together for the first time. The artists do not share generation nor culture, but they do share a confrontational antagonism to the traditional and academic, resulting in art that is raw, bold and forthright. Primal symbols characterize their work in personalized types of graffiti that exist in a timeless, unidentifiable space. In the work of these artists, signs and color erupt in a free association of structure and rhythm; the mysterious act of painting is shown as wild and free, yet also very exacting. Miró/Dubuffet/Basquiat opens at NCMA on March 13, 2010 and remains on view through May 24, 2010.
Joan Miró (1893-1983) was born in Barcelona. He studied art at the Barcelona School of Fine Arts and at the Academia Gali. In the beginning of his career he dabbled in different painting styles that were fashionable at the time, among them Fauvism and Cubism. In 1920 Miró made the first of a series of trips to Paris, settling there in 1921. He met Pablo Picasso and many of the other great painters and artists living in the center of arts in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. From 1924 on, Miró joined the circle of the Surrealist theorist, André Breton, increasingly painting in that style. But he never integrated himself completely and remained somewhat of an outsider. By the 1930s, Miró’s fame and recognition had become international. From 1940 to 1948 he was back in Spain and visiting the U.S. where he had several solo exhibitions including a retrospective at MoMA.
Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985) lived in Montparnasse, where, in addition to painting, he read widely in ethnology, paleography, and ancient and modern literature. After seven years, he abandoned painting and became a wine merchant. During the ‘30s, he painted again for a short time, but it was not until 1942 that he began the work that has distinguished him as an outstanding innovator in postwar European painting. His interest in art brut, the art of the insane, and that of the untrained person, whether a caveman or the originator of contemporary graffiti, led him to emulate this directly expressive and untutored style in his own work. His paintings from the early forties in brightly colored oils were soon followed by works in which he employed such unorthodox materials as cement, plaster, tar, and asphalt-scraped, carved and cut and drawn upon with a rudimentary, spontaneous line. Variations of this method of working preoccupied him until 1962 when he wrote and illustrated a book, L'Hourloupe, in which he evolved a new stylistic and ideological concept for his later work, both paintings and plastic sculpture.
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) was born in Brooklyn. His father was from Haiti, his mother of Puerto Rican descent. He displayed artistic talent from his earliest years and was encouraged by his mother. In 1977 he began to spray paint cryptic aphorisms on subway trains and around Lower Manhattan and signing them with the name SAMO©. He left home, supporting himself by selling hand-painted postcards and T-shirts. The first public viewing of his art was in 1980, in a group exhibition sponsored by Colab (Collaborative Projects Incorporated). Basquiat continued to exhibit his work around New York City and in Europe, participating in group shows with other emerging contemporary artists. He met Andy Warhol in 1983 and they collaborated on several paintings. Basquiat’s work began to soar in value and was featured in a 1985 New York Times magazine cover story. He continued to experience artistic success until his death of a drug overdose at the age of 27.


Website : NCMA

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30-01-10

NEW PHOTOGRAPHY GALLERY UNVEILED AT DENVER ART MUSEUM

Exposure: Photos from the Vault opens April 30, 2010, in the newly remodeled Anthony and Delisa Mayer Photography Gallery on the 7th floor of the North Building. The renovated space will host the first exhibition of the department of photography at the Denver Art Museum (DAM), featuring a diverse selection from the 7,000-object collection including works by Ansel Adams, Diane Arbus, Chuck Close, Alfred Stieglitz and Garry Winogrand as well as recent acquisitions of work by Henry Bosse, Petah Coyne and Shirin Neshat.
“I had a lot of fun digging to the depths of this exquisite collection to create the debut display,” Paddock said. “We’re presenting a wide range of photos, from portraits and landscapes to abstraction and Surrealism that photo enthusiasts and museum visitors will enjoy. This first installation is a way to say hello to the community and start a conversation about photography.”
The Museum began collecting photography in 1937, adding pieces to many curatorial departments over the years including the 1994 acquisition of the Daniel Wolf collection of 19th and early 20th century American landscapes and frequent donations of contemporary work through the 1980s and 1990s. In 2009, the DAM formed a standalone Department of Photography and brought on veteran curator Eric Paddock to lead the charge in creating exhibitions and collection experiences with the museum’s strong collection of historic and contemporary photography.
Exposure is just the first of the department of photography’s upcoming programs that will include traveling and temporary exhibitions. The Place We Live, a comprehensive Robert Adams retrospective organized by the Yale University Art Gallery, will open in Denver in fall 2011. Adams, a Colorado native, photographed the landscape of the American West for more than 40 years. He rose to prominence as part of the photographic movement known as New Topographics which sheds light on manaltered landscapes. His work is inspired by the natural beauty of the world, but also notes the destructive effects of urbanization and population growth. This temporary exhibition will showcase over 200 works highlighting various stages of Adams’ career.
“Forming this new department has allowed the DAM to come to the forefront of photography and actively engage our attentive photography community,” said Christoph Heinrich, DAM director. “We are thrilled to have enthusiastic and dynamic donors who helped realize the DAM’s first photography department and continue to help us be relevant in the local and national photo community.”

Website : DAM

29-01-10

AMSTERDAM KRIJGT KAREL APPEL-HUIS

Het geboortehuis van Karel Appel aan de Dapperstraat nummer 7 in Amsterdam-Oost komt volledig in het teken te staan van de overleden kunstschilder. Woonstichting De Key verhuurt vanaf 25 april, de geboortedag van Appel, vier appartementen aan binnen- en buitenlandse studenten van de Rijksacademie voor beeldende kunsten en stelt het huis een maand per jaar open voor publiek.
Dat zei een woordvoerster donderdag naar aanleiding van een bericht in De Telegraaf. De studenten verblijven elf maanden in het huis, waarna de opleiding eindigt en het pand een maand leeg staat voordat de nieuwe lichting komt. In die periode komt er een tentoonstelling aan de hand van werk dat de jonge kunstenaars, geïnspireerd door Appel, hebben gemaakt. Ook laat de Key met de expositie zien hoe de kunstenaar in die tijd leefde. Dit gebeurt in samenwerking met het Cobra Museum in Amstelveen en aan de hand van herinneringen van buurtbewoners.

Website : Karel Appel Foundation

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28-01-10

LE MUSEE DES BEAUX-ARTS DE RENNES RENOVE

Le musée des Beaux-Arts de Rennes rouvre le 10 février au public son espace de collections permanentes du premier étage
Après deux ans de travaux sans fermeture, il propose aux visiteurs un espace rénové et agrandi. Davantage d'oeuvres pourront ainsi être exposées dans l'ancien bâtiment universitaire, édifié en 1855 sur les quais de la Vilaine, qui abrite le musée des Beaux-Arts.
Le musée de Bretagne a quitté le bâtiment pour s'intégrer à l'espace culturel des Champs Libres, créé par l'architecte Christian de Portzamparc et inauguré il y a deux ans près de la gare. Cela a permis d'agrandir au musée des Beaux-Arts de récupérer de l'espace pour déployer ses collections autour d'un nouveau parcours muséographique.
320 oeuvres, soit 70 oeuvres de plus qu'avant, seront exposées dans des salles rénovées, auxquelles sont ajoutés 230 m2. Une salle entière est consacrée aux oeuvres de Geneviève Asse.L'immense Descente de Croix de Charles Le Brun (plus de 3 m de large et 5,5 m de haut) a été accrochée aux cimaises le 18 janvier dans la grande galerie. On pourra admirer également le Persée délivrant Andromède de Véronèse, le Nouveau-né de Georges de la Tour ou La chasse au tigre de Rubens.
Parmi les 69 oeuvres nouvelles figure un paysage de Henri Mauperché (vers 1602-1686), récemment acquis par le musée afin de compléter un fonds déjà très important de peintures françaises du XVIIe siècle. Ce tableau entrera dans le cadre d'une prochaine exposition sur "le beau langage de la nature".
Une nouvelle tranche de travaux va être bientôt lancée pour la création d'un cabinet de curiosité dans l'esprit de ces anciens cabinets où les particuliers aisés rassemblaient leurs collections.
Le
musée des Beaux Arts de Rennes présente, à partir du 10 février et jusqu'au 23 mai, une nouvelle exposition consacrée à Georges Folmer, peintre et sculpteur français (1895-1977) et à son cheminement vers l'abstraction.
Website : Musée des beaux-arts de Rennes

27-01-10

20/21 INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR TO BE HELD AT ROYAL COLLEGE OF ART IN FEBRUARY

The 20 21 International Art Fair will take place at the prestigious Royal College of Art, in Kensington Gore, London SW7, from February 18 - 21, 2010. The fair will be opened by the internationally acclaimed singer, Patti Boulaye FRSA, who has a passion for the arts. She is a writer and also an accomplished artist whose work is shown with one of the exhibiting galleries. The fair, now in its 4th year, features modern and contemporary art form China, Japan, Vietnam, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Italy, the Ukraine, Poland and the USA alongside a large selection of modern and contemporary British work.
The 50 exhibitors, most of whom are UK based, will offer art by both 20th and 21st century artists : Matisse, Miro, Picasso and Chagall (all works on paper) plus British 20th century favourites such as Henry Moore, David Hockney, Mary Fedden et al together with many artists who may be less well known but worth discovering.
Included will be oils, original prints, watercolours, drawings, photography and ceramics from 1900 to the present day with a very accessible price range.
London is a vibrant cosmopolitan city and this is reflected in the enormous variety of art on offer from galleries and dealers who bring together work from all over the world. This fair gives people the opportunity to enjoy this diversity under one very historic roof.

Website : 20/21 International Art Fair

26-01-10

LONG BEACH MUSEUM OF ART CELEBRATES 60 TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE MUSEUM'S IMPRESSIVE PERMANENT COLLECTION

The Long Beach Museum of Art announced that 2010 marks the 60th Anniversary of the Museum’s impressive permanent collection. To celebrate this exciting milestone, the Museum will present an extended exhibition series titled Celebrating Sixty, which will feature eight rotating exhibitions that respectively highlight specific elements of the rich history of the Museum’s collection.
The first installment of Celebrating Sixty will offer a glimpse into the past of the Long Beach Museum of Art when they open to the public on Friday, February 5, 2010. The exhibitions will highlight the extraordinary legacy of the Museum, offering the public an opportunity to view a variety of works from the permanent collection and gain a more thorough understanding of the tremendous impact that the Museum has had on the history of contemporary art in Southern California since 1950. Many of the works presented in Celebrating Sixty have not been seen in decades.
The first installment of Celebrating Sixty will open on February 5, 2010 with three captivating exhibitions illustrating art works from 1950—1966. Beginning Our Collection: Selections from 1950 - 1957 will feature approximately 37 works in a variety of media. These paintings, ceramics and photographic prints were some of the first works added to the Museum’s collection. Beginning Our Collection will offer a fitting tribute to the initial establishment of the Museum’s permanent collection, and the humble beginnings from which it grew. This exhibition will close on April 11, 2010.
Open Doors: Selections from Juried Exhibitions 1957 – 1966 will celebrate the many important works that were added to the Museum’s collection as purchase prize winning artworks from juried exhibitions. The Long Beach Museum of Art was one of the few institutions that offered juried exhibitions to local artists, giving Southern California artists exposure not only regionally, but also nationally as exhibitions often toured the country. Open Doors will run through May 2, 2010.
Track Record: Notable Works from 1948-1961 will pay tribute to artists who donated works to the Museum’s permanent collection from exhibitions taking place at the Museum. From the earliest years of collecting and exhibiting works, the Museum has consistently awarded emerging artists their first solo exhibition. Track Record will share this piece of history by presenting approximately 16 works by such esteemed artists Karl Benjamin, June Wayne and Oscar Fischinger. Through April 18, 2010, Track Record will showcase works in a variety of media, including oil, ceramics, charcoal, enamel and other mixed media.
These three exhibitions, highlighting the contributions from the community during the early years of the Long Beach Museum of Art history, will be celebrated on Thursday, March 11, 2010 at a press and patron preview reception from 5:00-7:00 pm followed by our popular LBMA After Dark from 7:00-10:00 pm. Also recognized at this reception will be Sizeable Selections 1960—1976. Sizeable Selections 1960-1970 will be presented on the first floor of the gallery pavilion from March 5, 2010 through June 6, 2010. This rotation will present large-scale artworks from juried exhibitions in the 1960s and 1970s.
Sizeable Selections features works from such esteemed artists as Charles Eames, Hans Burkhardt, Tony Berlant and Karen Carson, among others. Although all exhibitions in the Celebrating Sixty series feature a variety of media, Sizeable Selections pays special tribute to the Museum’s long history of collecting works in all media. The exhibition includes bronze sculptures, lithographs, oil paintings, steel sculpture, ceramic objects, furniture, fiberglass, and enamel.

Website : The Long Beach Museum of Art

Bron/Source : Artdaily

25-01-10

ABBAWORLD


ABBAWORLD is the ultimate interactive experience of ABBA. Fully approved and supported by ABBA, ABBAWORLD will make its stunning, sequin spangled, world debut on 27 January 2010.
The hugely interactive experience will take visitors on a mind-blowing journey through ABBAWORLD’s 25 rooms, bursting with exclusive music, footage, images and never-before-displayed memorabilia from the personal collections of the world’s most cherished pop icons; Agnetha, Benny, Björn and Frida.
An engaging introductory movie by critically acclaimed film director, Jonas Åkerlund, will start the experience and a free audio guide will move you through the magical space at your own pace.
The phenomenon of ABBA will be brought to life with interactive highlights including
‘Perform with ABBA’ which will allow you to get up on stage with your idols, as part of a stunning 3D holographic illusion.
‘Tretow MIX Challenge’ - a chance to mix things up and re-create the ABBA sound
The ‘ABBA Quiz’ which will test your knowledge.
There is also the opportunity to Sing-A-Long and dance with ABBA, plus a chance for you to see yourself as part of an ABBA video.
As part of the ticket, all interaction will be recorded so you can choose to access it later online at http://www.abbaworld.com/, allowing your experience to live on and on, just like the music.
On entry to ABBAWORLD, you will have your photograph taken, this will appear during a number of the interactive features; you'll see yourselves as part of ABBA album covers, posters and other iconic pictures.
Earls Court, London is the obvious choice for the world premiere of ABBAWORLD.
The UK has a special place in the history of ABBA and it was here that global ABBA fever started with the glorious win of ‘Waterloo’ at the Eurovision Song Contest in Brighton in 1974.
ABBA topped the charts in the UK more times than anywhere else in the world and through the smash hit musical Mamma Mia and its ten-year success in London together with the Mamma Mia movie being the highest grossing movie of all time at the UK box office, a new audience has taken ABBA to their hearts.
The Swedish super group created a legendary sound that sold close to 400 million records and made the whole world take to the dance floor.
ABBA once again create history through ABBAWORLD; the interactive and audiovisual experience of the world’s most loved pop icons. This major world event is a close collaboration with all four members of ABBA, making ABBAWORLD the definitive experience of this groundbreaking group. ABBAWORLD will bring you closer to the music, the magic and the memories than ever before.

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Bron/Source : EC&O

24-01-10

SITE SPECIFIC INSTALLATIONS TO BE PRESENTED AT BOLOGNA ART FIRST 2010

Bologna Art First reaches its fifth edition: for the first time, this exclusive itinerary in the city becomes a project curated by Julia Draganovic. From 29 January to the end of February 2010, the project, a collaboration between the City of Bologna and Arte Fiera Art First, will present a series of site specific installations by artists who work with participating galleries. Some of these works will be specially created in situ, respecting the structure of the historical buildings that host them.
This single, large collective exhibition will create a dialogue between contemporary art and unusual locations in the city's historical centre and its surroundings, and Bologna will once again demonstrate its eclecticism by alternating from ancient to modern, becoming a stage where the public can see and experience contemporary art in environments radically different from the usual white cubes.
The title "Here and Now" makes ironic reference to a popular Buddhist concept, which seems to present a truism only at first sight: facing the present is, indeed, a daily challenge.
The site specific installations and works chosen to be exhibited in some of Bologna's most important locations aim to attract attention to locations we consider historical but nevertheless are part of modern life and never lose their relevance.
The locations hosting installations and artists for the 2010 edition are: Palazzo Re Enzo - Stefano Cagol, Fabrizio Passarella; Palazzo del Podestà / Emporio della Cultura - Sophie Whettnall; Courtyard of Palazzo d'Accursio - Giuseppe Maraniello, Vedovamazzei; Sala Borsa - David Lindberg; Museo della Sanità e dell'Assistenza/Oratorio della Vita - Luca Pozzi; Archiginnasio - Francesco Simeti; Museo Archeologico - Barry x Ball, Michael Bevilacqua, Lizbeth Marano, Rita McBride, Damir Ocko, TooMattos (Roxy in the Box and Carlo Rossi); Galleria Cavour - Angela Glajcar; Piazza de' Calderini - Kaarina Kaikkonen; Musei Universitari di Palazzo Poggi - Nicola Bolla, Luca Francesconi; Courtyard between Accademia di Belle Arti and Pinacoteca Nazionale - Daniel Knorr; Museo Civico Medievale - Nicola Evangelisti; Marconi Business Lounge - Andrea Mastrovito.
For the first time, Bologna Art First presents "site specific" works created for some of the city's historical buildings: artists Michael Bevilacqua, Angela Glajcar, Kaarina Kaikkonen, Daniel Knorr, David Lindberg, Francesco Simeti, and Giuseppe Stampone will come to Bologna a week before Arte Fiera opens and will create their installations specifically for their intended spaces.
In addition, Nicola Bolla, Nicola Evangelisti, Andrea Mastrovito, Fabrizio Passarella, Luca Pozzi and TooMattos (Roxy in the Box and Carlo Rossi) will present new works.
Bologna Art First becomes interactive and digital thanks to a map offered on GoogleMaps, indicating all of the exhibition sites as points of interest, with information on artists and works. And starting 15 January 2010, visitors can write comments on the works and artists thanks to a geo-blog.

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Bron/Source : Artdaily

23-01-10

PICK ME UP, THE FIRST CONTEMPORARY GRAPHIC ART FAIR IN THE U.K.


Somerset House presents Pick Me Up, the first contemporary graphic art fair in the UK. The fair will bring together the most exciting graphic artists working today, giving you the opportunity to buy limited edition, affordable graphic art, illustration and design.
The fair will be presented alongside a lively programme of events and performances including an open studio from legendary paper artist Rob Ryan and a pop-up print workshop from Print Club London.


Website : Summerset House

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22-01-10

NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY LAUNCHES NEW WEBSITE

The New York Public Library has launched its new Drupal-based website, at http://www.nypl.org/. The dramatically redesigned site, created by the Library’s in-house digital team, embodies the Library’s forward–thinking vision and commitment to the growing needs of its patrons. Based on extensive research with librarians and Library users, it offers:
• rich content provided by staff from across the Library system
• direct access to reference librarians from almost every page
• streamlined searching and more intuitive navigation
• interactive exhibitions using multimedia and technology like Google mapping software
The site’s homepage welcomes visitors with bold new colors, a clean uncluttered design, and moving images with featured content centered on the Library’s mission to inspire lifelong learning, advance knowledge, and strengthen our communities. A short video on the site's new features can be viewed here .
“With changing information needs, the introduction of many new library services, and the availability of new web technology, it was time for a comprehensive restructuring of the online window to our services,” said Library President Paul LeClerc. “The new www.nypl.org is easier to use, reflects a diverse range of staff voices, and provides increased flexibility for future growth. It will greatly improve the experience of Library users as we move ahead into new realms of digital service. I am immensely proud of it.”
Annually, millions of users visit www.nypl.org to reserve books, search for classes, check library hours, order prints of digital images, sign up for classes, get homework help, read blogs and take advantage of the myriad of other features the website offers. The development of the new site began in 2008. Numerous prototypes were created and shared with staff and users who participated in a variety of in-person and online studies producing more than 100,000 responses.
Improved Navigation and Searching
Analysis showed that 25% of all searches of nypl.org are for basic information about the Library, so a new “Using the Library” section was created as one of eight core navigation items at the top of each page. Deep footers and sidebars on every page also provide shortcuts to multimedia content, job information resources, exhibitions, and other popular content. Librarian-created content also increases instances of broad Internet searches leading back to reliable Library-vetted information. A link to Ask NYPL, where users can reach librarians directly, is for the first time accessible on almost every page. Searching within the site is one of the most crucial activities, so those functions were significantly improved. Previously a search for information on Edgar Allan Poe, for example, would produce results in different categories and require the user to choose which category seemed most likely to have the relevant results. In the new site all relevant information relating to Poe appears in one set of search results, with filtering options for further refinement. Additionally users may easily toggle back and forth between searches of the Library’s catalog and other content.
Staff Voices and Serendipity
Librarians have been charged with generating content such as blog posts and photo uploads and with tagging relevant information from throughout the website that will help visitors access the depth of services available, recreating the serendipitous nature of research that happens at the physical libraries. The pages for each of the 89 libraries in the Bronx, Manhattan, and Staten Island will now be created and managed by staff in the local libraries, allowing each page to continue to provide the basic information and also showcase the unique qualities of the library and the neighborhood it serves. For example the 96th Street Branch page highlights a podcast series, Turn it Up at 96th Street, created and hosted by its teen users.
New Types of Content
The website will feature new types of digital content, inspired by the Library’s collections and other resources. The first of these projects, a new one-of-a-kind digital exhibition, Picturesque Journeys-On the Road with Candide (http://candide.nypl.org), features a pick-and-choose visual storytelling plus a “Candide Journey” project created in Google Maps by 10th-grade students and many other features.
New Underlying Technology
A major aspect of the new site is the use of Drupal, an open source software platform. Drupal eliminates the dependency on commercial software vendors that provide rigid frameworks with little room for customization. Switching to an open source platform allows the digital team to write code for the Library’s specific needs as well as share and benefit from innovations across the Drupal community. “Until now the Library’s web site has gone through a cycle of major re-designs,” said Dr. LeClerc. “This launch lays the groundwork for a philosophy of ongoing evolution and expansion of nypl.org with new features and improvements being made continually. We look forward to feedback from our users and exciting new developments to come.”

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21-01-10

ACQUISITION OF NEW WORKS ON PAPER OFFER A NEW APPROACH TO VIEW JOAN MIRO

The Joan Miró Foundation is adding seventeen new original works on paper, loaned by the Miró family, to its permanent displays. With the assistance of the Catalan Government, it has also remodelled its Permanent Collection.
The Miró Foundation opened its doors in 1975 as a centre for contemporary art where both experts and the general public could come into contact with Miró’s work through the pieces the artist, as well as his friends and relatives, donated to the institution. Together, all these items make up the largest collection of the artist’s work.
The museum holdings have now been extended to include seventeen original works on paper, produced between 1931 and 1953, a loan from the Miró family. Over the years, paper was the material that Joan Miró most frequently used, and he worked with all kinds, from sandpaper and cardboard to newspaper and other printed materials. His artistic output in this medium was innovative and daring. Moreover, the immediacy resulting from working on paper allows for a closer look at the artist’s method.
The new Permanent Collection displays have been made possible thanks to generous funding from the Catalan Government. The new displays technically upgrade all the rooms, most notably with an improved, state-of-the art lighting system.
In addition, the new displays feature wall texts that explain the different techniques used by Miró – from painting and sculpture, to textiles, ceramics, and prints – and place his artistic development within its original historical context: his training in Barcelona, the time he spent in Paris, his relations with the early avant-garde, his interest in experimentation, and the emergence of a highly personal style. The panels are illustrated with images of the artist at different stages of his career to enhance the visitors’ experience and give a more complete understanding of his life and work.
The main pieces on display are also accompanied by short quotes from the artist to help visitors better recognise their relevance in Miró’s artistic development.
A new room for the screening of documentaries on the artist and a browsing station complete the new presentation of the permanent collection.
With its new displays, the Miró Foundation hopes to give a more accessible, yet in-depth view of the work of Joan Miró, an artist rooted in tradition but with a clear vision of things to come, who became one of the most idiosyncratic and influential figures in twentieth-century art.

Website : Joan Miro via Artcyclopedia

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20-01-10

CHILI OPENS MUSEUM OF MEMORY FOR DIRTY WAR VICTIMS


Chile inaugurated the Museum of Memory on Monday to make sure the tens of thousands of people who were imprisoned, killed or disappeared during Gen. Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship are not forgotten.
President Michelle Bachelet, who was herself detained and tortured during Chile's 1973-1990 military regime, said the museum sends a powerful signal of the country's "desire to never again suffer a tragedy like the one we are remembering here."
"A tragedy that from the first day brought together denial and concealment, and the pain of captivity or death," Bachelet said at the opening of the $22 million Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Chile's capital, Santiago.
The inauguration stirred angry memories days before Chile's presidential runoff election in which the ruling center-left coalition could lose power to the right for the first time since the restoration of democracy.
Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa, who is in charge of creating a similar museum in his homeland, was booed as he gave his speech because of his support for conservative candidate Sebastian Pinera. Pinera's presidential candidacy is backed by conservative parties, including two that at the time supported the dictatorship.
The museum contains wrenching testimonies, documents, letters, personal objects and art by prisoners, as well as the photos of the 1,197 people who disappeared during the crackdown by security forces on Pinochet's opponents. Among the exhibits is a small metal bed that victims were tied to before receiving electrical shocks.
A commission established that 3,197 people died during the dictatorship, including those listed as missing. Another commission found that 30,000 people were imprisoned and/or tortured.
As of last Aug. 31, 769 members of the armed forces and some civilians had been charged in the killings and abuses, of whom 276 have been sentenced. Pinochet died in December 2006.
"This is an act of reparation to the victims ... a homage to the detained/disappeared who have undergone a nonexistence," said Marcia Scantlebury, who was responsible for organizing the exhibits.

19-01-10

FRENCH ARTIST CHRISTIAN BOLTANSKI TAKES UP THE MONUMENTA CHALLENGE IN 2010


MONUMENTA is an outstanding, ambitious artistic encounter. Each year, a leading international contemporary artist is invited by the Ministry of Culture and Communication to create an exceptional new work for the 13,500 m² Nave of the Grand Palais, in the heart of Paris. Following the success of the first two MONUMENTA events, featuring Anselm Kiefer in 2007 and American sculptor Richard Serra in 2008 – both of which attracted over 140,000 visitors in five weeks – leading French artist Christian Boltanski takes up the Monumenta challenge in 2010. The exhibition is co-produced by the Centre national des arts plastiques (French National Centre for the Visual Arts), the Grand Palais and the Réunion des musées nationaux.
Born in 1944, Christian Boltanski has established an international reputation since the 1970s, as a leading artist at the forefront of the contemporary scene. His new installation, created especially for MONUMENTA 2010, is conceived as a powerful physical and psychological experience, an episode of spectacular emotion and sensations exploring the nature and meaning of human existence. Embracing the whole of the immense Nave of the Grand Palais, Boltanski creates a rich, intense commemorative space, in sound and vision. Personnes (literally both "people" and "nobodies") is the evocative title of this social, religious and humanistic exploration of life, memory and the irreductible individuality of each and every human existence – together with the presence of death, the dehumanisation of the body, chance and destiny.
Conceived as a work in sound and vision, Personnes takes up a new theme in Boltanski's work, building on his earlier explorations of the limits of human existence and the vital dimension of memory : the question of fate, and the ineluctability of death. Personnes transforms the entire Nave of the Grand Palais through the creation of a coherent, intensely moving installation conceived as a gigantic animated tableau. Personnes is a one-off, ephemeral work. In accordance with the artist's wishes, the components of the piece will all be recycled at the end of the exhibition.
Christian Boltanksi's work is accessible, challenging, and moving. In the Nave of the Grand Palais visitors leave behind the conventional experience of art in a gallery or museum and enter bodily into the installation, becoming a part of the living dramatisation of art and memory. For Boltanski, an artist is "someone who shows the viewer something he already knows deep down, something that's already there inside, something he can bring to the forefront of his consciousness." MONUMENTA 2010 is a theatre of recall, questioning the meaning of human destiny and asserting the right of every individual to a place in the collective memory.
As part of MONUMENTA 2010, Christian Boltanski will continue his project to create the Archives du coeur, a collection of recorded human heartbeats. Visitors are invited to record their own heartbeat and offer it to the artist.
MONUMENTA 2010 is produced by the Délégation aux Arts Plastiques. Reflecting its commitment to attract the widest possible public, the Délégation has invited the Centre national des arts plastiques to implement a public outreach policy that aims to make available a huge range of visitor resources and services.
Mediated learning specialists are on hand to accompany individual visitors (free of charge) and discuss the work on show in a spirit of exchange and dialogue. School groups have access to their own specially-devised activities and teaching resources. Visits and workshops are available for all ages, from 10 to 18, in a range of formats developed in collaboration with a variety of educational institutions, and France's national curriculum authority. This initiative therefore offers varied approaches, coherent with the common trunk of academic learning and programmes. MONUMENTA is committed to the value of art in education, and to providing students with the keys to an understanding of the work on show, through practical workshops focussing on drama and creative writing. In a specially-created space at the heart of the installation, students will explore the relationship between individual and collective memory, the creation of identity and the expression of humanity through fiction. More than ever, the French Ministry of Culture and Communication is dedicated to promoting the widest possible access to the work of our greatest living artists, as a key focus of this exceptional event.
Catherine Grenier is the curator of MONUMENTA 2010. As curator at the Centre Pompidou, her many exhibitions include Les Années Pop (2000) ; Giuseppe Penone (2004) ; Big Bang (2005-2006), the first themed rehanging of the Centre's permanent collection ; and the major group exhibition Los Angeles, 1955-1985 (2006). In 1999 Catherine Grenier was a guest curator for the exhibition Abracadabra at the Tate Modern in London. She publishes regularly on art history and aesthetics, and is the author of monographs on Annette Messager, Robert Morris, Claudio Parmiggiani and others. Her writings on contemporary art include the essay La revanche des émotions, published by Seuil, 1997. She is an expert on the work of Christian Boltanksi, with whom she has undertaken a series of extended interviews, published in 2008 (La vie possible de Christian Boltanski). Her new monograph on his work is scheduled for publication at the end of 2009 (co-published by the Centre national des arts plastiques and Flammarion).
Reflecting MONUMENTA's commitment to promote the widest possible access to contemporary art, admission to the installation costs 4 euros (2 euros for concessions). An extensive program of related events (free to ticket holders) includes lectures on Christian Boltanski's work, themed round-table discussions, screenings, and a concert of new music in the Nave. The event's website is available in French and English, with extensive documentary resources : in-depth interviews with the artist and other leading personalities, texts highlighting the installation's core themes, and a photo gallery. Educational workshops will explore the artist's work in the context of the French national curriculum through a range of teaching tools (a teachers' pack, dedicated Web pages etc.). Themed tours and practical workshops for visitors of all ages are also planned, based on the shared experience of creative work.

Website : Christian Boltanski via Artcyclopedia

FIC123.BE een website met info en cultuur.
Bron/Source : Artdaily

18-01-10

PECS IS THE EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE IN 2010


Pécs, the Multicultural Town
The building blocks of the past are of Latin, Turkish, German, Croatian and Hungarian origin, today the town is the most important Hungarian venues for the German, Croatian and Roma culture. Nine ethnic minority governments operate here (German, Roma, Croatian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Polish, Greek, Ukrainian, Ruthenian). Pécs is the most important town for the culture of Hungarian Germans. The only town in Hungary where education is provided in Roma language from the nursery to the University. Cultures that had no connection at all coexist in Pécs and in its region, this is the meeting point of West European, Balkan, German and Turkish cultures. The old German name of the area (Schwäbische Türkei) stands as a memento to this unusual cultural conjunction. The cultural layers of the town have settled in a curious order: The culture of Pécs was Latin when the university was established (1367), it was Turkish in the 17th century, German and Latin at the end of the 18th century and primarily Hungarian in the 20th century. When you walk through town you walk across a mass of cultural zones. The Turkish mosque standing on the main square is now a Catholic church. The Turkish half moon and the Catholic cross on the top of the mosque symbolise very well the coexistence of cultures in the town. It is not only the architectural heritage that reflects this unique cultural composition: you will find similar values in the cultural and artistic traditions as well. The mentality of people living here also shows the signs of multicultural values: for them openness, the acceptance of other cultures is natural. This is the spirituality what really makes Pécs multicultural. This is one of the reasons why the University of the city is frequented so much by foreign students, who do not only study here but also actively take part in the life of the town. The multicultural value of the town is especially visible during festivals, such as the Heritage Festival, the Pécs Spring Festival, the International Folk Dance Festival or the Weeks of Art and Gastronomy. During these festivities you can have a hands-on experience of the colourfulness while tasting the wines of the Mecsek and Villány hills and the national dishes of the peoples of the town.

Website : Pécs 2010

FIC123.BE een website met info en cultuur.
Bron/Source :Pécs.portal

17-01-10

ISTANBUL CULTURELE HOOFDSTAD

Vanaf januari 2010 mag Istanbul zich Culturele Hoofdstad van Europa noemen. Dit betekent dat de Europese Unie een jaar lang het culturele leven van Istanbul in de schijnwerpers zet.
Waar heeft Istanbul deze eer aan te danken? Istanbul vormt een brug tussen het oosten en het westen en heeft met zijn unieke geografische door de eeuwen heen faam verworven als smeltkroes van verschillende beschavingen. Vroeger was de stad bekend onder de namen Byzantium en Constantinopel, of op zijn Turks: Konstantiniyye. Tegenwoordig staat Istanbul met een geschat aantal van 15 miljoen inwoners als vierde op de lijst van grootste Europese metropolen.

Istanbul 2010: de Stad van de Vier Elementen
In 2010 zet Istanbul alles in het teken van kunst en cultuur. Gefaseerd over het hele jaar heeft de stad een programma samengesteld van evenementen, feesten, voorstellingen en tentoonstellingen aan de hand van vier elementen: vuur, water, lucht en aarde. ‘Een kans bij uitstek om de culturele dimensies van Istanbul te laten schitteren,’ aldus Murat Karakus, directeur van het Turks verkeersbureau in Nederland. ‘Door deze benoeming zal het toch al grote culturele aanbod in Istanbul nog verder uitgebreid worden. De ervaring leert dat een benoeming tot Culturele Hoofdstad positief is voor het imago en het inkomend toerisme.’
Naast Istanbul zijn ook Essen in Duitsland en Pécs in Hongarije uitverkoren tot culturele hoofdsteden van Europa in 2010.


Website : Istanbul 2010

FIC123 een website met info en cultuur.
Bron/Source :Turkry Now Festival

16-01-10

CASIO'S DIGITAL ART FRAME TRANSFORMS IMAGES INTO WORKS OF ART

Casio America, Inc. and its parent company, Casio Computer Co., Ltd., announced that it has developed a revolutionary new digital imaging product that transforms ordinary digital photographs into works of fine art.
Utilizing a “snapshot-to-painting conversion” function to render digital photographs into creative and personalized artistic expressions, Casio’s Digital Art Frame is unlike any conventional digital photo frame on the market. Going beyond simply decorating a home or office with a revolving view of favorite photographs, Casio’s new product can actually create original photographic artwork from digital images, making it more enjoyable than ever to share images with friends and family.
“We are excited to announce yet another innovative product with unparalleled features distinctive to Casio,” said Toshiharu Okimuro, Chairman of Casio America, Inc. “The Digital Art Frame adds personalization and artistic integrity to your conventional digital photo frame.”
A truly next-generation digital imaging product, the Digital Art Frame converts ordinary photographs into vibrant works of art by using image recognition and image processing technologies. Users can create up to eight different authentic styles of art from a single photo at the push of a button: Water Color Painting, Color Pencil Sketch, Pastel Painting, Pointillism, Air Brush, Oil Painting, Gothic Oil Painting, and Fauvist Oil Painting.
The Digital Art Frame integrates Casio’s superior facial recognition technology to create a work of art that highlights facial characteristics in the image, ensuring that people’s faces are completely recognizable. Moreover, users can enjoy slide shows with automatic playback of photos, art, or both, just by inserting an SD card with photos on it. The product also comes with Dynamic Photo, a popular function in Casio’s digital cameras that enables the creation of composite moving images. User can combine moving characters directly on the Digital Art Frame. With the included Art Dynamic Photo function, which applies snapshot-to-painting conversion to the Dynamic Photo images, users can create moving works of art to impress and entertain family, friends and guests.
The Digital Art Frame also uses Adobe® Flash® Lite™ playback technology, which allows users to display preset Flash content, such as clocks and calendars, to add a decorative accent to just about any type of room. Users can also download additional content from the internet. Or they can use family photos to make their own homemade clocks and calendars, by combining the Dynamic Photo and snapshot-to-painting conversion functions on the Digital Art Frame and images from a Casio digital camera with high-speed burst shooting.
Packed with all these new features, Casio’s new Digital Art Frame is a quantum leap beyond conventional digital photo frames, which really do nothing more than replace photo frames for printed photos. Casio’s Digital Art Frame unleashes the full creative potential of every user, providing entirely new kinds of fun for users to want to create and share images. The new product will be available in the spring of 2010.

FIC123.BE een website met info en cultuur.
Bron/Source : Artdaily

15-01-10

KUNSTVEREIN : VERENIGING VAN KUNSTMINNERS


Het fenomeen is in Duitsland wijdverbreid en kent een lange traditie. En sinds kort is er ook één in Amsterdam: een Kunstverein.
Amsterdam heeft sinds drie maanden een nieuwe plek voor beeldende kunst. Geen galerie, geen kunstenaarsinitiatief, maar een vereniging met een ledenstructuur. Een salon, gevestigd in een statig, negentiende-eeuws appartement in de Ruyschstraat.
De vereniging is opgezet naar Duits voorbeeld door tentoonstellingsmakers Krist Gruijthuijsen (1980) en Maxine Kopsa (1972). Het tweetal wil met de vereniging een programma bieden met tentoonstellingen, lezingen en publicaties.
Gruijthuijsen: ''Het systeem van een Kunstverein is oorspronkelijk voor mensen die van kunst houden en die daarin willen investeren. In Duitsland discussieert men of het systeem nog wel urgent is. Wij hebben besloten de term hier onvertaald te introduceren, om te onderzoeken of het in een andere context vorm kan krijgen.''
Kopsa: ''We werden aanvankelijk vooral gebeld door Duitsers die wilden weten hoe dat zat, een Kunstverein in Amsterdam.''
Op basis van de Amsterdamse vestiging volgen ook andere niet-Duitse steden. Volgens het franchisemodel is al een ruimte in New York geopend. Binnenkort volgen Milaan en Istanboel. Gruijthuijsen: ''Daarom heet het ook Kunstverein en niet Kunstverein Amsterdam. Het gaat om het woord dat een merk wordt, zoals een papieren zakdoekje een kleenex werd.''
De Amsterdamse kunstwereld reageerde enthousiast op het initiatief. Na een ledenwerfdag met besloten performances in het Amstel Hotel en bij Kunstverein zelf begon het balletje te rollen. In drie maanden konden Kopsa en Gruijthuijsen meer dan tweehonderd leden noteren. Kunstverein is overigens niet alleen toegankelijk voor leden. Iedereen is welkom om tentoonstellingen te bezoeken en discussies bij te wonen.
Kunstverein ontvangt geld van het SNS Reaal fonds en de Mondriaan Stichting, maar die subsidie is volgens hen niet essentieel. De basis wordt gevormd door de steun van de leden. Gruijthuijsen: ''Het is ook zelforganisatie. Dat je iets opbouwt, kijkt hoe mensen reageren en onderzoekt wat de urgentie is om een gemeenschap te creëren in Amsterdam. Veel gesubsidieerde instanties willen een zo groot mogelijk publiek bereiken, maar eigenlijk worden ze niet gesteund door een echte gemeenschap.''
Kopsa: ''Tot een paar jaar geleden had je het gevoel dat er genoeg was. Maar sinds het Stedelijk Museum en De Appel dicht zijn, groeit de behoefte aan goede, geconcentreerde tentoonstellingen. Dat we zo snel zoveel leden hebben gekregen bevestigt ons in het idee dat we niet helemaal gek bezig zijn.''
Het jonge instituut opende met een tentoonstelling van de conceptuele kunstenaar Ian Wilson, die in de jaren zestig bekend werd met abstracte schilderijen en objecten en die later de discussie als kunstvorm introduceerde. Ook organiseerde Kunstverein een avond waarop bezoekers onder hypnose konden worden gebracht.
Op dit moment is in de ruimte van Kunstverein een tentoonstelling te zien van de Engelse kunstenaar Adam Pendleton. De expositie bestaat uit abstracte beelden en taalwerken. Binnenkort lanceert het nieuwe instituut ook een eigen tijdschrift, met louter bijdragen die onder pseudoniem worden gepubliceerd. ''Geen kunstblad maar een clubblad, gestencild maar wel heel mooi vormgegeven.''
Elke bezoeker aan Kunstverein krijgt bij binnenkomst een persoonlijke rondleiding door Gruijthuijsen of Kopsa. Gruijthuijsen: ''We willen het contact heel persoonlijk houden. Kunstverein speelt zich af op de scheidslijn tussen privé en publiek. Het gaat hier niet zoals bij veel galeries. Mensen komen binnen, krijgen een persberichtje en gaan na tien minuten weer weg. Dat is een situatie die wij totaal niet ambiëren. Het gaat om de kwaliteit van de bezoeker en niet om de kwantiteit.''
Kopsa: ''We hoeven ook geen duizend leden. We kunnen toch maar 45 mensen tegelijk in onze ruimte kwijt. Zoveel wijnglazen hebben we trouwens ook niet.'' (KEES KEIJER)
Kunstverein, Ruyschstraat 4- III, Amsterdam.

Website : Kunstverein

Bron/Source : Het Parool

14-01-10

LA PRISE D'ARZILA SAUVEE DES MITES


Quatre superbes tapisseries tournaisiennes du XVe siècle racontent une campagne militaire du roi du Portugal Alphonse V. Mais les mites avaient terrassé les armées royales... A découvrir après restauration au Cinquantenaire, pendant deux mois seulement.
Une forêt de soldats armés jusqu'aux dents, une armada battant pavillon au loin… L'ensemble de quatre tapisseries ressemble à un terrible fouillis. Puis l'œil s'habitue, reconstitue un sens de lecture, s'égare sur un détail pour un repos bien mérité au cœur de la tourmente. Nous sommes au XVe siècle, en plein tumulte guerrier. Ces tapisseries monumentales (11 mètres de long sur 4 de haut) sont exceptionnelles. Trois d'entre elles illustrent la conquête d'Arzila au cours d'une expédition qui eut lieu du 20 au 24 août 1471. La quatrième raconte l'entrée à Tanger du roi du Portugal, Alphonse V.
Présenté à Bruxelles, avant de regagner l'Espagne où elles seront exposées à Tolède puis Madrid, cet ensemble de tapisseries renaît dans un éclat de tonalités et une densité plastique étonnante. Elles reviennent de loin. Le Fonds inBev-Baillet-Latour a permis leur restauration, en collaboration avec la Fondation Carlos Amberes, l'une des plus anciennes d'Espagne puisqu'elle date de 1594. C'est d'ailleurs cette même Fondation qui les a découvertes près de Madrid, à la Collégiale de Pastrana, en très piteux état, noircies, criblées de trous. Si elles avaient été présentées en 2008, à Gand lors de l'exposition des plus belles tapisseries des trésors royaux d'Espagne, elles auraient contaminé tous les autres spécimens.
Une armée de mites
De quelle maladie honteuse souffraient ces tissages majestueux, probablement réalisés à Tournai, peut-être sur des cartons de Nuno Gonzalves et par l'atelier de Passchier Grenier, probablement sur ordre du roi Alphonse V ?
« Elles étaient criblées de trous, dévorées par les mites, répond Yvan Maes De Wit, directeur de la Manufacture royale De Wit chargée de la restauration. C'est de loin le cas le plus grave que nous ayons eu en 30 ans ! Les mites ne s'attaquent pas aux tapisseries anciennes parce que le gras de la laine, la kératine, se décompose après un siècle. Il n'y a plus rien à manger. Que s'est-il passé ici ? Restaurées il y a une cinquantaine d'années avec des laines récentes, les tapisseries avaient tout pour attirer les mites qui se sont concentrées sur celles-ci. Après, elles ont poursuivi le travail en s'attaquant au tissage dans son ensemble. »
Parsemées de trous dont le plus grand faisait quand même 4 ou 5 centimètres de diamètre, les tapisseries de la conquête des côtes marocaines ressemblaient à un ciel étoilé. « La partie supérieure était particulièrement atteinte, souligne Yvan Maes. Plus on monte en hauteur, plus il fait chaud : les bêtes se sentent à l'aise… Elles étaient conservées dans un endroit sans lumière, sans circulation d'air : le pire ! Sinon, on a rencontré les problèmes classiques des tapisseries du XVe, les soies attaquées par la lumière, la corrosion des bruns… »
Décontamination par anoxie, dépoussiérage, nettoyage, restauration des couleurs instables à l'eau, consolidation des lacunes, il a fallu une année de travail minutieux à Malines pour que la Manufacture De Wit leur rende une nouvelle jeunesse. A condition que les conditions de conservation soient modifiées à Pastrana !

Website : MRAH - KMKG

Bron/Source : Le Soir

13-01-10

CENTRE POMPIDOU IN METZ

Het Centre Pompidou breekt dit jaar uit. In Metz gaat op 12 mei het eerste satellietmuseum open, een regionale vestiging waarmee de kunsttempel een nieuw tijdperk binnenstapt.
Met het Noord-Franse zusje wil het uit zijn voegen barstende Centre Pompidou vooral een nieuw publiek aanboren. Het grijpt ook de kans
om de gigantische collectie moderne kunst op een meer aantrekkelijke, eigentijdse manier te laten circuleren.
Het Musée national d'art moderne, dankzij een rist megatentoonstellingen de grote trekpleister van het Centre Pompidou in Parijs, heeft ongeveer 60.000 werken in bezit. Daarvan kan het er nog geen tweeduizend tonen. De toenemende globali-sering en de verscherpte competitie tussen de grote instituten dwongen het Centre Pompidou tot een nieuwe zet.
Decentralisering kan de collectie een stuk toegankelijker maken en de instelling ook een grotere zichtbaarheid geven. Door de ligging in Frankrijk is een publiek uit Duitsland en de Benelux bovendien binnen handbereik. Het Centre Pompidou wil zich op die manier positioneren als een sterker merk.
Met die politiek staat het overigens niet alleen. Ook het Louvre krijgt een eigen filiaal, in Lens. Het wonderlijke, transparante museumgebouw van het Japanse bureau Sanaa gaat in 2012 open.
Golvend
De Noord-Franse stad Metz krijgt met het nieuwe museum een mooie trekpleister in de schoot geworpen. Metz Metropole, de lokale partner, interpreteert de joint venture als een strategische zet om zijn centrumpositie in de regio te verstevigen. De bouw van het museum was ook de gedroomde voorzet voor een facelift van de stad. Het Centre Pompidou-Metz verrijst op een mooie locatie vlak bij het TGV-station. Met een plein, tuinen en een ondergrondse parking wordt het verder ontwikkeld.
Het Centre Pompidou was het aan zijn reputatie verplicht om met sterke architectuur uit te pakken. De kunsttempel in Parijs is de voorbije dertig jaar uitgegroeid tot een modern icoon. Ook het publiek heeft het ooit erg futuristisch ogende concept in de armen gesloten. Niemand noemt het Centre Pompidou nog een raffinaderij, zoals in de beginjaren.
Voor Metz mocht Shigeru Ban zijn winnende project verder uitwerken. De 53-jarige Japanse architect raakte bekend met vederlichte bouwwerken uit papier en karton. Hij werkt ook vaak met gerecycleerd materiaal. In Metz wilde hij op dezelfde manier innoverend zijn als de architecten Renzo Piano en Richard Rogers in de jaren zeventig. Zijn nieuwe museum wordt verrassend licht en helder. De tentoonstellingsruimte, zo'n vijfduizend vierkante meter groot, is extreem moduleerbaar.
Een golvend houten dak ligt als een soort exotische hoed over de drie expositieruimtes en de centrale hal. De spits van 77 meter die boven de luifel uit komt priemen, moet je als een knipoog zien. Hij is precies even lang als de roltrap van het originele Centre Pompidou.
Het nieuwe museum mocht geen replica worden, vond de nieuwe voorzitter Alain Seban. 'Het is veel meer een toekomstprojectie.' De strikte scheiding tussen de permanente collectie en de tijdelijke tentoonstellingen wordt opgeheven. In Metz moet je een soort reis door de twintigste eeuw kunnen maken.
Al meteen voor de openingstentoonstelling worden de peperdure schilderijen van Picasso en Matisse van stal gehaald. Chef d'oeuvre biedt een uitgelezen kans om het brede palet van twintigste-eeuwse kunst te laten zien. De tijd is ook rijp voor een round-up. Wie bepaalt nog wat een meesterwerk is? En hoe kan je voorspellen dat een werk eeuwigheidswaarde heeft?
Laurent Le Bon, die in Parijs in 2005 het Dada-overzicht samenstelde, wordt de curator van het museum. Hij neemt ook de openingstentoonstelling voor zijn rekening.
Intussen droomt het Centre Pompidou alweer van een nieuwe stap. De architect Patrick Bouchain, die het Théâtre Zin-garo in Aubervilliers ontwierp, werd eind vorig jaar aangesproken om een mobiel museum te tekenen.
Het 'nomadische' Centre Pompidou moet de ultieme museum-ervaring helpen verspreiden. De mobiele tentconstructie maakt tentoonstellingen mogelijk op een marktplein, op een binnenplaats van een kazerne of zelfs op
een parking.

Website : Centre Pompidou Metz

Bron/Source : De Standaard

12-01-10

INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR FOR CONTEMPORARY OBJECTS RETURNS TO THE SAATCHI GALLERY


The Crafts Council announced that COLLECT 2010, the leading international art fair for contemporary objects, will return to the Saatchi Gallery on London’s Kings Road from May 14 - 17, 2010. Now in its seventh year, COLLECT has established itself as the event to view and buy the best in contemporary craft. Over 10,000 visitors attended COLLECT 2009, with international private collectors and public institutions, including the V&A and the National Museums of Scotland, making significant acquisitions.
Following on from last year’s success, COLLECT has seen a significant increase in the number of exhibitor applicants for the fair in 2010, making this year’s selection process fiercely competitive. This year some 300 artists will exhibit work at COLLECT, representing 36 galleries from the UK and Ireland, Central Europe and Scandinavia as well as the United States, Japan and Australia. First-time exhibitors for 2010 include the Netherland’s Flatland Gallery and London’s Galerie Besson. COLLECT 2010 is also delighted to welcome back Swedish gallery blås&knåda, London-based Cockpit Arts, Ruthin Craft Centre from Wales and Liverpool’s Bluecoat Display Centre. COLLECT 2010 will present both established artists and new talent, covering all disciplines: ceramics, glass, jewellery, silver and fine metalwork, textiles, and wood and furniture.
COLLECT 2010 will also feature an exciting programme of events and activities, details of which will be announced in late March 2010.
Art Fund Collect
COLLECT 2010 also sees the return of Art Fund Collect, an initiative launched by the Crafts Council and The Art Fund, the UK’s leading independent art charity, in 2008 and now in its third year. For 2010 the fund will again be £75,000, allowing a shortlist of curators to select significant works by artists and makers of international status, taking the total over its three years to £200,000. The successful applicants will be announced at the private view on Thursday, May 13, 2010.

Website : Crafts Council

Bron/Source : Artdaily

11-01-10

RUHR INAUGURATED AS EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE, EXPECTS MORE THAN 5 MILLION VISITORS


The Ruhr area in western Germany, with its 53 cities and 5.3 million inhabitants, has been officially inaugurated as European Capital of culture 2010 — the first time an entire region was chosen for the title. German President Horst Koehler said Saturday at the opening ceremony in Essen that in the Ruhr area, which is known for its history of coal mining and steel production, "culture is not an elite event, but it is providing vivid strength for everybody."
Thousands of art and cultural events are planned for the year and more than five million visitors are expected.
Since the decline of coal mining at the end of the last century, the once highly industrialized region has been struggling with severe unemployment and poverty.

Website : ESSEN - RUHR 2010

Bron/Source : Artdaily

10-01-10

UVA TOONT 150 JAAR MAX HAVELAAR

Het is 150 jaar geleden dat Multatuli zijn boek Max Havelaar schreef. De Bijzondere Collecties van de Universiteit van Amsterdam (UvA) wijdt daarom een tentoonstelling aan de beroemde uitgave. De expositie 'Het is geen roman, 't is een aanklacht! 150 jaar Max Havelaar' is vanaf 3 februari tot en met 16 mei te zien, maakte de UvA donderdag bekend.
De Bijzondere Collecties herbergt de handschriften van Multatuli, pseudoniem voor Eduard Douwes Dekker (1820-1887). Hij wilde met het boek de misstanden aan de kaak stellen die hij had meegemaakt toen hij in de periode 1838 tot 1856 als ambtenaar diende in Nederlands-Indië. Het werk verscheen op 16 mei 1860 bij uitgeverij De Ruyter in Amsterdam en bracht veel teweeg.
De tentoonstelling laat het politieke, maatschappelijke en literaire belang zien van Max Havelaar. De aanklacht tegen onderdrukking staat hierin centraal. Bezoekers kunnen verder het originele handschrift van het boek bewonderen.

Website : UVA

Bron/Source : Noordhollands Dagblad

09-01-10

LES 'COLONNES DE BUREN', RENOVEES, DE NOUVEAU VISIBLES A PARIS

Le ministre de la Culture, Frédéric Mitterrand, a inauguré une nouvelle version des "colonnes de Buren" dans la cour d'honneur du Palais-Royal, au coeur de Paris.
Après 18 mois de travaux de rénovation, les 260 colonnes en marbre noir et blanc installées depuis 1986 à deux pas de la Comédie française, du Conseil d'Etat et du ministère de la Culture sont comme neuves. Les travaux d'éclairage et d'étanchéité du sol ont coûté près de six millions d'euros.
Seule modification visible à l'oeil nu: les plots lumineux, qui émergeaient auparavant, sont placés au ras du sol.
Très controversée lors de son installation, l'oeuvre "Les Deux Plateaux", mieux connue sous le nom de "colonnes de Buren", fait désormais partie intégrante du Palais-Royal, site né au XVIIe siècle où de nombreux enfants viennent jouer chaque jour.
"Depuis le tout début, j'ai été ravi et intéressé de voir que les gens venaient. Ils sont toujours là, discutent, se donnent rendez-vous, les enfants inventent des jeux", a dit Daniel Buren à la presse.
"Tout cela est objectivement positif et personnellement, ça me fait plaisir bien sûr", a ajouté l'artiste, dont l'oeuvre a été décrite par Frédéric Mitterrand comme "la conjonction de l'ancien et du nouveau, de la création et du patrimoine".
"Avec le recul du temps, force est de constater que les colonnes de Buren ont conquis une place (...) je dirais, presque royale dans l'espace public", a-t-il souligné.
Le mauvais état de l'installation, qui avait fait l'objet d'une commande publique, avait provoqué en 2007 la colère de Daniel Buren, qui avait menacé de faire démonter ses colonnes si elles n'étaient pas restaurées.
L'artiste s'est dit satisfait des rénovations. "Elles sont comme elles étaient il y a presque 25 ans. C'est très réussi, très bien fait. Même si elles ne sont pas visibles, les améliorations sont intéressantes pour le futur", a-t-il dit.

Website : Daniel Buren

FIC123.BE een website met info en cultuur.

Bron/Source : Reuters France

08-01-10

TAKASHI MURAKAMI INVITE DU CHATEAU DE VERSAILLES


Le plasticien japonais Takashi Murakami sera l'invité du Château de Versailles du 12 septembre au 12 décembre 2010
L'artiste, dont ce sera la première grande rétrospective en France, succédera à l'Américain Jeff Koons (2008) et au Français Xavier Veilhan (2009). Il présentera ses oeuvres dans 15 salles du château (Appartements du Roi et de la Reine, Galerie des Glaces). Il y aura un tiers de créations spécifiques (des sculptures) mais aussi des peintures.
Né en 1962 à Tokyo, Murakami est l'un des artistes phare de la scène internationale contemporaine.Il collabore, entre autres, depuis maintenant six ans avec la marque de luxe Louis Vuitton pour laquelle il a réinterprété de grands classiques de la marque comme par exemple la ligne Monogram cerises, créée à l’occasion du défilé printemps-été 2005. La cerise, fruit d’un rouge intense, brillant et appétissant, apporte fraîcheur et joie de vivre en multipliant ses expressions : tantôt riant aux éclats, tantôt étonnée, ou les deux à la fois ! De cette collaboration est né un univers particulier.

Website : Takashi Murakami

07-01-10

UN FACE-A-FACE DE GEANTS

A Paris, le Musée Rodin confronte deux créateurs de générations différentes mais qui eurent le temps de se croiser et de s’influencer. Bravant le froid, le vent et une pluie fine mais tenace, ils sont venus d’Espagne, d’Italie, des Etats-Unis ou de Belgique pour découvrir l’univers de Rodin. Avec ses sculptures disséminées dans le parc et son ancien hôtel particulier permettant de jouir pleinement des œuvres du sculpteur (et de quelques pièces superbes de Camille Claudel), le Musée Rodin est l’un des plus visités de France.
Pourtant, loin de se reposer sur sa notoriété, celui-ci propose régulièrement des expositions temporaires dans l’espace situé à l’entrée du parc. C’est là que l’on peut découvrir actuellement un étonnant face à face entre Rodin et Matisse.
Pour beaucoup, le premier est un sculpteur et le second un peintre. Rodin a pourtant énormément travaillé sur papier tandis que Matisse a pétri la terre et réalisé de nombreux bronzes inspirés par la figure humaine.
L’exposition parisienne, orchestrée par Nadine Lehni, met remarquablement en valeur les points communs entre les deux hommes. Ainsi que leurs différences. Le premier point commun, le dessin, se déploie dans tout le couloir d’entrée. Pour l’un comme pour l’autre, il s’agit là de l’essence de l’art. « C’est bien simple, mes dessins sont la clef de mon œuvre, écrit Rodin en 1910. Ma sculpture n’est que du dessin sous toutes les dimensions. J’ai dessiné toute ma vie, j’ai commencé ma vie en dessinant. » Matisse n’est pas en reste qui déclare en 1939 : « Mon dessin au trait est la traduction directe et la plus pure de mon émotion. La simplification du moyen permet cela. »
On ne peut que leur donner raison. Bien plus que des études préparatoires, les dessins de Matisse comme les lavis de Rodin jouissent d’une liberté, d’une vibration, d’une sensualité inégalée.
Du modèle à l’abstraction
La suite du parcours permet de prendre également conscience de leurs différences. Leur première rencontre a lieu en 1899. Rodin est déjà un artiste reconnu et Matisse vient lui présenter quelques dessins. Pas de chance, le grand homme ne les aime pas. La même année pourtant, Matisse réalise plusieurs dessins à partir d’un buste de plâtre façonné par son aîné.
De salle en salle, on découvre les correspondances entre leurs œuvres (l’amour de la danse, l’importance du modèle, la passion du corps humain) et leurs singularités. On voit aussi l’évolution de chacun, Rodin approchant l’abstraction dans certains dessins tandis que Matisse s’y frotte avec quatre grands nus de dos, réalisés entre 1909 et 1930 et allant vers une simplification des formes de plus en plus marquée.
Passionnante et remarquablement présentée malgré un espace étriqué, cette exposition vaut assurément le détour et surprendra à plusieurs reprises les amateurs de ces deux géants de l’art.
Jusqu’au 28 février au, Musée Rodin, 79 rue de Varenne, 75007 Paris.

Website : Musée Rodin

Bron/Source : Le Soir

06-01-10

RECENT WORK BY MITCH DOBROWNER TO OPEN AT KOPEIKIN GALLERY


The Kopeikin Gallery presents the first California exhibition by Los Angeles based photographer Mitch Dobrowner. Titled "Troposphere" the exhibition features recent work of extreme weather throughout the Midwestern United States. The exhibition opens on January 9 and continues through March 6.
Mitch Dobrowner has always loved storms; the rumble of distant thunder, the flashes of lightning, the energy and electricity in the skies. Watching a storm born from a small, unstable weather system and developing into a towering, powerful, beautiful and majestic "super cell" is for him a sight to behold, and one he wants to share.
Starting in Rapid City, South Dakota, Dobrowner spent ten days driving over 5700 miles in ten mid-western states photographing severe weather systems. These states included: Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado.
On July 13, 2009 Dobrowner tracked a severe weather system for nine hours, from its initial formation outside of Sturgis, South Dakota through the Badlands and into Nebraska. By the time it came to rest in a field outside the town of Valentine, the cloud structure of this super cell had reached an amazing 65,000 feet. The lightning, with the rumble of hail and 60 mph inflow wind gusts made the physical experience of standing there similar to being in front of a 65,000 foot high vacuum cleaner. Visually it was like witnessing an atomic explosion.
Through his series of photographs Dobrowner hopes to communicate nothing less than the powerful beauty he felt while experiencing these amazing forces of nature. He wants the viewer to know what it's like to stand in a field as an inflow of cold air feeds into the storm; the electricity, rain, hail, wind, and the smell of the crops as they are being pounded in the fields. Mitch Dobrowner grew up on Long Island, New York. In his late teens his father gave him an old Argus rangefinder camera and after seeing the images of Minor White and Ansel Adams quickly became addicted to photography. At 21 he left home to see the American Southwest and settled in California where he started a family, created a successful design studio, and stopped taking pictures. Years later, in 2005, Mitch again picked up a camera and today sees as his mission to make up for years of lost time.
Mitch creates images that evoke wonder of the planet. He concentrates on landscapes that have existed well before our time and will continue long after we are gone. In this pursuit he acknowledges his debt to the great photographers of the past, especially Ansel Adams, for their dedication and inspiration.

Website : Mitch Dobrowner

Bron/Source : Artdaily

05-01-10

IL Y A CENT ANS, KANDINSKY INVENTAIT L'ART ABSTRAIT


En 2010, on fêtera le centième anniversaire de l’art abstrait, le courant artistique sans doute le plus radical du XXe siècle. C’est en 1910 en effet, que Wassily Kandinsky réalise une aquarelle ("Sans titre"), appartenant aujourd’hui au Centre Pompidou et au dos de laquelle il écrit "aquarelle abstraite 1910". Kandinsky, né à Moscou en 1866, va ainsi plus loin que l’impressionnisme, plus loin que le cubisme, plus loin que le futurisme.
La petite histoire, narrée par Kandinsky lui-même, raconte comment il en était arrivé là. Deux ans auparavant, rentrant en soirée chez lui, la tête préoccupée par mille choses, il aperçoit contre un mur un tableau qu’il trouve superbe par ses formes et ses couleurs. Mais qui l’avait peint? En s’approchant, il se rend compte de sa méprise et voit que c’était un de ses propres tableaux, mais placé sur le côté. Il comprit alors que la figuration pouvait nuire à sa peinture.
Certes, on a contesté depuis lors cette date de 1910. Il semble que Kandinsky ait antidaté cette aquarelle. Celle-ci serait plutôt une esquisse pour une grande huile sur toile, "Composition VII", achevée à l’automne 1913. Kandinsky lui-même écrivait dans son livre si important "Du spirituel dans l’art", écrit en 1910, une phrase qui semble repousser la date de l’abstraction: "Nous ne sommes pas assez avancés en peinture pour être déjà impressionnés profondément par une composition de formes et de couleurs totalement émancipée".
L’a-t-il antidatée pour s’assurer de la paternité de l’art abstrait? Certes, d’autres artistes cheminaient dans la même direction et vers les mêmes conclusions presque au même moment: Malevitch qui aboutira à son "Carré blanc sur fond blanc", Mondrian, Kupka. Si Kandinsky choisit une voie expressive, toutes en courbes, Malevitch et Mondrian privilégièrent la géométrie et Kupka, la couleur. Mais pour aboutir au même constat.
Quelle que soit la réalité de la paternité, l’influence de Kandinsky et de son livre furent déterminantes dans un contexte de bouillonnement artistique intense. Rappelons que Picasso peignait "Les demoiselles d’Avignon" en 1907 et qu’en une poignée d’années seulement, la peinture fit des bonds de géant. Certes, de tout temps, il y eut des abstractions. Et depuis des décennies, les peintres avaient des plages abstraites dans leurs tableaux (il suffit de se souvenir de Turner). De plus, l’apparition de la photographie bien plus performante pour représenter la réalité apparente des choses, forçait la peinture à emprunter de nouvelles voies. Mais avec l’art abstrait, on quitte volontairement toute idée de représenter encore un objet, une réalité. La peinture abstraite est une image autonome qui ne renvoie qu’à elle-même. Mais en quittant l’illusion de pouvoir représenter la réalité, l’art peut alors toucher, estime Kandinsky, à des vérités plus profondes et spirituelles. Il n’est pas sans intérêt de remarquer que Kandinsky, comme Mondrian, Malevitch et Kupka, avait une pratique spirituelle ou ésotérique. Ils étaient tous également en rapport avec la musique, art abstrait par essence, qui éveille pourtant des émotions sans pareilles. Kandinsky était proche de Schönberg. Il faut aussi remarquer qu’à cette époque d’avant la Première Guerre mondiale, les sciences étaient en révolution. Freud démontrait que le conscient cachait un inconscient actif. Planck montrait que la nature était probabiliste et Einstein expliquait que l’espace et le temps qu’on croyait immuables pouvaient varier.
Les sciences humaines et physiques apportaient la preuve que nos yeux pouvaient trahir la réalité.
Kandinsky fut baigné par cet esprit. Jeune, il fut déjà impressionné par un tableau de meules de foin de Monet, quasi abstrait, et il fut abasourdi par une représentation de Lohengrin de Wagner où, à l’audition, des lignes sauvages se dessinaient devant ses yeux.
Mais l’élément clé fut sans doute, la découverte par Kandinsky, du livre "Abstraktion und Einfühlung" de Worringer, l’essai paru en 1907 d’un jeune historien d’art. "La tendance à l’abstraction, écrivait-il, est la conséquence d’un trouble profond de l’homme devant le monde. Ruiné par l’orgueil du savoir, l’homme moderne se trouve aussi démuni que l’homme primitif devant l’image du monde." Nos images anciennes du monde se sont écroulées avec les découvertes de la science. Et pour Kandinsky, il n’y a plus de vérités que celles qu’on découvre au fond de nous-mêmes, soutenues par ce qu’il appelle "le principe de la nécessité intérieure".
Dans "Du spirituel dans l’art", Kandinsky écrit: "Un artiste qui ne voit pas, pour lui-même, un but dans l’imitation, même artistique des phénomènes naturels et qui est créateur, et veut et doit exprimer son monde intérieur, voit avec envie avec quel naturel et quelle facilité ces buts sont atteints dans l’art le plus immatériel à l’heure actuelle: la musique. Il est compréhensible qu’il se tourne vers elle et cherche à trouver dans son art les mêmes moyens. De là découle la recherche actuelle de la peinture dans le domaine du rythme, des mathématiques et des constructions abstraites, la valeur qu’on accorde maintenant à la répétition du ton coloré, la manière dont la peinture est mise en mouvement, etc." Plus loin, il ajoute: "Plus l’artiste utilisera ces formes abstraites ou "abstractisées", plus il se sentira chez lui dans leur domaine et plus il y pénètrera profondément."
Avec l’art abstrait, estime Kandinsky, on peut atteindre sa vérité intérieure, mettre en avant le sentiment et le spirituel avant le calcul et l’illusion du réel. Malevitch en 1915 dira la même chose en termes vifs: "Chez l’artiste, seules la lâcheté de la conscience et l’indigence des forces créatrices tombent dans le panneau et établissent leur art sur les formes de la nature, craignant que ne se dérobent les fondations sur lesquelles le sauvage et l’académie ont basé leur art. Reproduire des objets et des coins de nature favoris, c’est agir à la manière d’un voleur qui contemplerait avec admiration ses pieds enchaînés. Seuls les peintres bornés dissimulent leur art sous la sincérité. Dans l’art, il faut la vérité et non la sincérité. Pour la nouvelle culture artistique, les choses se sont évanouies comme la fumée et l’art va vers la fin en soi, la création, vers la domination des formes de la nature."
Depuis un siècle, l’" image abstraite" (étrange oxymore!) a connu bien des histoires, depuis son refus par les nazis la traitant d’art dégénéré, jusqu’à sa renaissance flamboyante avec l’expressionnisme abstrait américain. Elle fait aujourd’hui partie de la palette des artistes, parmi d’autres courants, y compris la figuration réinventée.

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