29-07-11
'SNAPSHOT' EXHIBITION AT VAN GOGH MUSEUM WILL ZOOM IN ON ARTISTS' EVERYDAY LIVES
George Hendrik Breitner (1857-1923), Bridge over the Singel near Paleisstraat in Amsterdam, ca. 1897. Oil on canvas, 100 x 152 cm. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, bequest of Mr and Mrs Drucker-Fraser.
At the end of the nineteenth century, the enthusiastic users of the earliest amateur cameras included many artists. What role did photography play in their lives and how did it influence their work? The exhibition Snapshot. Painters and Photography, 1888-1915 sheds a light on this creative process, presenting 220 photographs and 70 paintings, prints and drawings from seven artists.
The invention in 1888 of the first manageable, easy-to-use camera for amateurs made spontaneous photography possible: the snapshot was born. The painters George Hendrik Breitner, Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis, Henri Evenepoel, Henri Rivière, Felix Valloton and Edouard Vuillard latched onto this new possibility. Their intimate, personal snaps provide a broader picture of their time, and make it clear how photography and painting interacted. The exhibition will run from 14 October 2011 to 8 January 2012 at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.
The seven painters from the Netherlands, Belgium and France who occupy centre stage in Snapshot. Painters and Photography 1888-1915 are all contemporaries of Van Gogh. They used the camera like everybody else, but with the added benefit of their artistic eye: making private photographs of their families and mistresses, their surroundings and one another. They mainly photographed what they found interesting, sometimes deciding later to use it in their art. For example, Breitner and Rivière were fond of photographs of urban renewal. Rivière made dizzying images of the Eiffel Tower as it was being built.
Breitner took numerous pictures of building pits in his home town of Amsterdam, even though he conspicuously never took any photos of the final result. Family photographs, portraits and photos of one another were recurring subjects for Bonnard, Denis, Valloton, Vuillard (all painters of the French Nabis group) and Evenepoel. The ‘living room photographs’ of the latter establish a clear picture of everyday life at the end of the 19th century. The painters were also fond of using the camera to immortalise their travels. Snapshot shows how the seven artists all experimented with photography and generally focused on the same subjects.
Website : Van Gogh Museum
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
28-07-11
FILM ARCHIVES SHOWCASE THEIR COLLECTIONS: THE EUROPEAN FILM GATEWAY IS ONLINE
After nearly three years of preparation and development, the European Film Gateway – EFG – is now online. The Internet portal to the digital collections of European film archives and cinémathèques offers free access to currently about 400,000 digital videos, photos, film posters and text materials. By September, the number of digital items will increase to 600,000 from 16 film archives.
"The European Film Gateway creates a central online access to Europe's film heritage for the first time. Previously, this remarkable record of 20th century European cinema had been dispersed on different national platforms," says Claudia Dillmann, director of the Deutsches Filminstitut, which co-ordinates the project. "Now the films and information about them are more accessible, not only to scholars, journalists and creatives, but also by a broader audience interested in film."
"EFG also provides access to material in film archives that was hitherto hardly known, and some is now online for the first time," says project manager Georg Eckes. These include unique magic lantern slide collections from France, erotic films made in Austria in the early 20th century, advertising films from Norway, newsreels from Lithuania and a comprehensive film poster collection from Denmark. Hidden treasures can be discovered from 15 European countries. Cinecittá Luce from Rome, for example, contributes not only a famous Italian newsreel collection reporting on important film-related events and persons, but also a fine collection of early films by great masters like Rossellini, Antonioni, Comencini, and other famous names of Italian filmmaking. An extensive collection of set photos to films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder contributed by the Deutsches Filminstitut will be available for the first time online from August on.
Users of the portal can search for people, for example Marlene Dietrich, but also by film title or keywords. They get an overview of related digital objects from the film archives which can be viewed directly in the portal. The portal always links back to the website of the relevant archives, and therefore also works as a search engine for selected digital holdings of European film archives.
Website : EFG
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
27-07-11
PRE-COLUMBIAN GOLD AND JADE JEWELRY TO BE DISPLAYED AT THE FABERGE MUSEUM IN GERMANY
On July 16, the Fabergé Museum unveiled the latest edition to its collection, almost 100 very rare and exquisite treasures of the ancient peoples of South America – the Aztecs, Incas, and Maya. These gold and jade jewelry items pre-date the arrival of Columbus in the Americas, and they are now open to the public for the first time ever. Audiences will certainly be enthralled by both their beauty and nearly one thousand-year history. The fabulous items once decorated royal courts, as well as temples.
These treasures, however, also recall some of the bloodiest pages of world history. The European thirst for gold in the early 16th century saw numerous expeditions set sail for the New World. The Spanish conquistadors were amazed by the wealth and splendour of the indigenous civilizations. Through conquest and coercion, the Spanish amassed huge treasure troves – ranging from exquisite gold ritual ornaments to prosaic jewelry. Most were melted down into bullion, and then shipped back to Europe. Pirates working in the service of the British, French, and Dutch kings often preyed on Spanish treasure ships; thus further scattering the treasure around Europe.
The items in the Fabergé Museum collection are among the small number still in existence in Europe. These include jewelry in the form of animals and mystical creatures with jingling balls inside, and an Aztec golden sun, brought from the New World to the palace of the Spanish viceroy in Brussels. There are also figurines of deities made of gold and jade, as well as various pendants and other masterpieces by South American goldsmiths. Of great interest will be a local deity made of Tumbaga alloy.
The methods of pre-Columbian jewelry making are described in the exhibition’s catalogue, which describes in great detail the history and art of these ancient civilizations. The book’s author, Professor Alexander Ivanov, the Fabergé Museum’s founder, hopes this book will increase our knowledge and understanding of these ancient cultures, and stimulate further research and inquiry into one of the least-known but greatest human civilizations.
Professor Ivanov purchased the collection in 2001 from the heirs of a recently-deceased collector in Amsterdam. That man had spent decades assembling the nearly 100 items, whose value today is estimated at about 70 million euros.
The unveiling of the current exhibition is part of a greater plan to open a Museum of Gold, destined to be the first of its kind in Europe. The Fabergé Museum also owns more than 100 items of Scythian gold jewelry, and numerous Byzantine gold items.
``Together with Fabergé, the Museum of Gold will show the full range of human genius in jewlery manufacture,’’ said professor Ivanov. ``I have great appreciation for the genius and talent of the jewelry masters of the past.’’
Website : Fabergé Museum
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
26-07-11
DECES DU COLLECTIONNEUR GEORGE BEMBERG
Le collectionneur et mécène argentin Georges Bemberg est mort à Paris à l'âge de 96 ans
Il avait installé en 1995 sa riche collection de peintures de la Renaissance et de l'Ecole française moderne, gérée par la fondation portant son nom, dans l'Hôtel d'Assezat à Toulouse.
Ce joyau de l'architecture du XVIe siècle abrite depuis des oeuvres de Clouet, Cranach, Le Tintoret, Bonnard, Monet, Vuillard, Rouault, Pissaro, Toulouse-Lautrec...
Considéré comme un grand humaniste du XXe siècle, Georges Bemberg a offert à la ville de Toulouse environ 150 oeuvres: il voulait installer sa fondation dans le sud de la France et, alors que d'autres lieux proposaient d'abriter sa collection, il avait été séduit par l'hôtel d'Assezat.
Héritier d'une riche famille d'origine allemande installée en 1850 en Argentine, Georges Bemberg se présentait comme éleveur de bétail mais il a aussi été pianiste, compositeur et écrivain.
Elevé à Paris, diplômé d'Harvard et grand voyageur, Georges Bemberg a assouvi sa passion de l'art en achetant tout au long de sa vie tableaux de maîtres, modernes ou anciens, livres, objets d'art des XVIe et XVIIe siècles. Sa première acquisition fut un tableau de Pissarro.
Website : Fondation Bemberg
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Bron/Source : France 2.fr
25-07-11
PINACOTHEQUE DE PARIS ANNOUNCES ALBERTO GIACOMETTI AND THE ETRUSCANS EXHIBITION
It is the most eventful exhibition of the fall, an exhibition that the specialists and art lovers of Giacometti, have been expecting for over fifty years. Giacometti’s attraction to the primitive figure was present very early on in the artist’s oeuvre. Etruscan art, which he first of all discovered in the Louvre, in the archeological department, where he went regularly, then during the exhibition on the Etruscans in 1955 in Paris, was, however, to produce in the artist a very meaningful turmoil, and made up one of the essential keys to the understanding of his best known and most powerful form of creation. The exhibition will be on view from September 16, 2011 through January 8, 2012 at the Pinacothèque de Paris.
No exhibition on the Etruscans has been shown in Paris since 1955. But it was precisely that show which enabled Giacometti to discover that extraordinary civilization, based on the economy of a seafaring people; a people of pirates according to the Greeks who regarded them as their chief rivals. That still strange and mysterious civilization was one of the most brilliant before Rome.
The Etruscans devised an outstanding art form, exceptional in its quality, richness and beauty, chiefly made up sculpted sarcophagi and of powerful warrior figures. They also developed a kind of very slender sculpted figure. It was such a shock for Giacometti that he wanted to go further in his quest and in his understanding of that people and its art.
For Giacometti the next step was to go to the Etruscans’ own land, in Tuscany. The journey to the centre of that world seems to have led him to Florence, to the archeological Museum, and then later on, to Vol¬terra, a city in Etruria, close to Pisa. There he discovered the emblematic figure of the Etruscan world, L’Ombre du soir (The Evening’s shadow). That work – that had not travelled to Paris in 1955 and which has never left Italy – is the Etruscans’ Mona Lisa. There exists a less striking version in the Louvre, that Giacometti already knew about for several years, but the one in Volterra provided a real shock for him.
A willowy figure, fine, powerful, mysterious, sensual, soulful and with an outstanding magnetic force, the Ombre du soir was a revelation. The artist was left speechless before that unique piece.
His work was totally overwhelmed: in order to prolong that discovery, Giacometti drew, painted and sculpted with reference to the Ombre du soir. None of the artist’s most famous figures, from the series of Femme de Venise to that of the Homme qui marche can be imagined, conceived without reference to the Ombre du soir.
It is that outstanding confrontation – which provides a new reading of Giacometti’s oeuvre – that the Pinacothèque de Paris is showing for the first time in Paris. The Ombre du soir shall be accompanied by more than one hundred and fifty Etruscan objects, exhibited alongside a unique group of about thirty sculptures, among the most famous by Giacometti.
The Collections of the Pinacothèque de Paris
« The Museum must not become a graveyard. » That sentence by Malraux is important because it expresses a fear which, unfortunately, has not been disavowed for years all over the world and not just in France.
Through that quote there exists a basic question, that of the work’s future once it has left the collector’s walls to enter the museum. Personally, for years now, I have never ceased to question myself as to the reason why the work of art dies, loses its life as soon as it is sanctuarized. Being lucky enough to see them in the collectors’ homes and being amazed by their splendor, I can never understand how, the moment I come across them years later in museums, they have lost that magic, that aura we find in the homes of those who loved them for so many years. Is that the fear Malraux wished to express, he who – an enlightened art lover – knew the collectors so well and was for a long time at the head of the French museums as Minister for Culture?
If we go back to the beginning, to the very essence of the work, to its initial function, we inevitably return to what the museum was in the very beginning: the curiosity cabinet. The place where the collected objects were stored and exhibited, i.e. the private museum put at the disposal of a chosen un public.
The idea was to renew to-day with everything the museum has lost of its essence and of its meaning, but this time by offering the secrets of the art lover’s cabinet to all our visitors. Transversality, as I often describe it, allows us to explain that all the artists from all times, of every culture and of all origins, make up a community out of the ordinary, but whose methods of thinking, of reflection and of approach are the same. The museum-sanctuary seems to have forgotten, by its ency¬clopedic approach, its chief role: to bring the works to life, gathered together and exchange a dialogue beyond the frontiers and periods, because, finally, they are all saying the same thing. They speak of beauty, of references, of convergences and of histories, and, above all, they summon up everything we hold in common. Thus you will notice that Tintoretto, Van Dyck, Reynolds or Bonnard represent the “worthies” in the same manner, be he French in the 19th century, Italian in the 16th, Flemish in the 17th or English in the 18th centuries. You will also note that Van Gogh painted interiors in the same fashion as Peter de Hooch or Delvaux, that Léger thought about and composed his still-lives in the same way that Heda painted a Vanity, that Brueghel, Daumier or Teniers had the same approach to popular festivities, and that landscapes by Hobbema or Courbet are constructed along the same lines. That Primitivism and the central placing of the body is the same from Rembrandt until Duchamp.
Marc Restellini, director of the Pinacothèque de Paris, provides us with his reflections on the part the museum must play at the heart of the city and of its period. Les Collections in the Pinacothèque are proof of his conclusions : about one hundred works, from the Primal Arts to the Moderns, gaze at each other, have a dialogue and query the pertinence of classification, of schools and of chapels, grouped together in thematic rooms: still-lives, Nativities, landscapes. The visitor is free to think about art in his own way: at the entrance to each room, a quote attracts his attention: « The private or religious feast, on the village square or in front of the cathedral; community living has always fascinated artists throughout the ages»; then it is up to the visitor to discover the correspondence between Utrillo’s La Cathédrale de Reims, La Danse de Mariage by Brueghel and Modigliani’s Hancka Zborowska . These paintings have come from all over the world, and they take over the spaces for various lengths of time; because Les Collections are not fixed, the deposit will increase and will live in accordance with the various and unusual hangings.
Website : Pinacotheque de Paris
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
22-07-11
THE WHITECHAPEL GALLERY'S MAJOR SUMMER EXHIBITION PRESENTS THOMAS STRUTH: PHOTOGRAPHS 1978 - 2010
The Whitechapel Gallery‘s major summer exhibition presents Thomas Struth’s first solo show in Britain for almost 20 years. Struth’s large-scale photographs bring his intense and precise vision to subjects as diverse as visitors looking at famous works of art in the world’s great museums, family portraits and the dense undergrowth of the Asian jungle. The exhibition is on view from July 6 through September 16, 2011 in Galleries 1, 8 & 9.
Thomas Struth is an artist who travels widely and captures cities from New York to Tokyo, while his latest vast colour photographs show sites of cutting edge technology such as the Kennedy Space Station on Cape Canaveral and Korean shipyards. The exhibition includes his iconic museum series of life-size photographs showing tourists admiring Michelangelo’s David statue in Florence, Italy, and pupils chatting in front of Velazquez Las Meninas at the Prado, Madrid. The works show the awe that art can inspire on people’s faces, without revealing the object they are looking at, and are testament to Struth’s continuous interest in places of culture around the globe.
The Whitechapel Gallery exhibition includes over 70 works from 1978 to 2010 and assesses the important role he has played in redefining fine art photography.
Several photographs depict a range of places in which people invest faith and belief: from French Gothic cathedrals to the extraordinary El Capitan rock in Yosemite National Park, California and high-tech research laboratories pushing the boundaries of science in the twenty-first century. Struth once compared the space shuttle programme to the construction of medieval cathedrals, reflecting on ‘the extremes of human effort, conviction, organisation and perhaps also hubris’. This interest in human construction also encompasses huge-scale panoramic photographs of sites of shipyards, oil rigs and sprawling cities in Asia; structures which make our modern way of life possible but at the same time dwarf people in their scale and ambition.
The artist’s most recent images of sites at the cutting edge of technology such as his almost 4-metre-wide panorama of the space shuttle undergoing repair at the Kennedy Space Centre on Cape Canaveral are among the largest on view. Their ambitious scale shows the possibilities of human achievement, but also the flaws in this ambition, as repairs are made to the huge structure.
Struth’s early black and white photographs taken in the deserted streets of cities including Brussels, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, London, Naples, New York, Paris and Rome in the late 1970s and early 80s are on display, shaped by his years growing up in re-built German cities. He has also repeatedly photographed families he knows both near home as well as in far-off destinations such as Lima, Shanghai and Hiroshima. While showing cultural differences, the similarities of these portraits reveal a shared sense of humanity.
The exhibition also includes the dense jungles and forests from Struth’s Paradise series. They are a detailed presentation of nature, with no human presence, in contrast to his other works about culture and systems of belief.
Website : Whitechapel Gallery
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
21-07-11
FIRST INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR DEDICATED TO OLD MASTER PAINTINGS TO BE LAUNCHED IN PARIS
The first international art fair dedicated to Old Master paintings, will open to the public from Friday 4 to Tuesday 8 November 2011 at the renowned Palais de la Bourse, the former stock exchange located in the heart of the Paris art scene. This important new event was devised by ten leading Parisian paintings dealers who wish to share their passion for the field and to encourage the wider appreciation of paintings from the 14th to the mid 19th centuries. They have invited ten important international colleagues from London , Amsterdam , Zurich , Rome , Madrid and New York to join them in this showcase for excellence.
The ten Paris dealers, led by Maurizio Canesso of Galerie Canesso, are Didier Aaron et Cie, Éric Coatalem, De Jonckheere, Talabardon & Gautier, Haboldt & Co, Jean-François Heim, Jacques Leegenhoek, Galerie Giovanni Sarti, and Galerie Claude Vittet. From London come Charles Beddington Ltd, Derek Johns Ltd, Stair Sainty Gallery and The Weiss Gallery; Amsterdam dealers Noortman Master Paintings and Kunsthandel P. de Boer will be joined by David Koetser Gallery from Zurich, Adam Williams Fine Art Ltd from New York , Galleria Cesare Lampronti from Rome and Galeria Caylus from Madrid .
One of the oldest works to be exhibited will be a beautiful gold-ground painting of the Virgin and Child dating from circa 1330 by Andrea Di Nerio, an important artist whose works rarely appear on the market, offered by Galerie Giovanni Sarti, while one of more recent will be shown by Jean-François Heim, an exhilarating rendition of the rushing waters of the river Velino below the famous Marmori falls at Terni in Umbria by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796-1875) painted during the artist’s first visit to Italy in 1826.
The Weiss Gallery will be exhibiting for the first time in France two important works with strong resonance for French patrimony and culture. One is a moving scene of Christ carrying the cross dating from circa 1632-35 by Nicolas Tournier (1590-1639) that was once in an important chapel in Toulouse and has only recently been rediscovered. The second is a very rare portrait of Madeleine Le Clerc, circa 1570-72, by François Clouet (c.1515-c.1572). A dendrochronological examination has established that the panel is made from the same wood as a work by Clouet in the British Royal Collection.
Kunsthandel P. de Boer will bring to Paris an important view of La Grande Galerie du Louvre seen from the West with the Seine , the Porte Neuve, the Tour du Bois and the Pont Neuf by Abraham de Verwer (c.1585-1650). It was probably commissioned by Stadholder Prince Frederik Hendrik of Orange who asked the artist to visit Paris several times to paint views of the city. Indeed, De Verwer is considered to be the first painter to have executed such cityscapes, painting towering Dutch cloudscapes above Parisian panoramas.Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697-1768), called Canaletto, was one of the most famous of all painters of Venice , and also travelled to other cities to paint. Galleria Cesare Lampronti will exhibit a stunning view of the Thames looking towards Westminster Bridge painted during the artist’s decade-long sojourn in England .
Didier Aaron & Cie will show an elegant portrait of a huntsman by Henri-Pierre Danloux (1753-1809) painted in 1802 just after he returned from England where he lived from 1792 to 1801. The seemingly simple composition of the young English dandy is rendered highly original through a trompe l’oeil of an astonishing fox brush hanging over a painting of a hunting scene.
Many of the finest artists travelled to work in other countries, especially Northern artists who visited Italy , and an example of this can be seen in An Inlet near Naples with a castle and Fisherfolk by the leading French landscape artist Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714-1789) to be exhibited by Charles Beddington Ltd. Vernet’s grandson Émile-Jean-Horace Vernet (1789-1863) was one of the most prolific French military painters and Portrait of the Young Baron Le Selliers, 1811, is a fine full-length portrait of a young officer standing beside his horse to be shown by Derek Johns Ltd. Jacques Leegenhoek will offer a newly discovered and published allegory of the river Tiber by Charles Le Brun (1619-1690) and Gaspard Dughet (1613-1675) painted while Le Brun, who later became first painter to Louis XIV, was in Rome between 1642 and 1645.
De Jonckheere will feature a delightful winter landscape with skaters by Hendrick Avercamp (1585-1663), a hitherto unpublished roundel with colourful and lively figures painted with the delicacy and luminosity for which this exceptional painter is known. Deaf and dumb, Avercamp is the acknowledged master of winter scenes which he established as a distinct category in Dutch art. Of a panoramic landscape with travellers painted on copper in 1608 by Jan Bruegel the Elder (1568-1625), David Koetser said: “As soon as I saw the painting for the first time I felt I was among the horses and carts, listening to the noises and seeing the little boats shining in the light near the misty horizon, the sun warming my back. That is what I look for with Bruegel, I have to be convinced.”
Haboldt & Co will show Flora by the Florentine artist Vincenzo Mannozzi (1600-1658). The sensuous nude draped in a red cloak is painted on a large piece of grey-blue veined marble left bare in the background which gives the effect of a cloudy sky and confers the work with an extraordinarily modern quality. Another moving work is the painting of Saint Francis at prayer, circa 1650-66, by Fancisco de Zurbarán being shown by the Spanish dealer Galeria Caylus. Vulcan in his Forge is a very powerful work by Pompeo Batoni (1708-1787). Monogrammed and dated 1750 when the artist was in Rome , it is offered by Galerie Canesso while Galerie Claude Vittet will show a painting depicting Alexander the Great receiving Darius’ family by Hans Jordaens the Elder (c. 1539-1630).
Not surprisingly, visitors to Paris Tableau will discover a splendid selection of work by French painters. Talabardon & Gautier will offer La Sortie des orangers, a delightful work by Hubert Robert (1733-1808) showing gardeners wheeling out a tub of orange trees after the winter at the foot of the sweeping steps of a grand garden. A sensitive depiction of an alert doe in a wood by Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686-1755), one of the outstanding animal painters of the 18th century, will be exhibited by Éric Coatalem, while an engaging scene of a young woman attending to her correspondence in her boudoir by Louis-Rolland Trinquesse (1746-1800) is being shown by Stair Sainty Gallery. Allegory of Poetry by Eustache Le Sueur (1616-1655) will be shown by Noortman Master Paintings and a charming portrait of a young woman with a black scarf by Jean-Baptiste Greuze (1725-1805) will travel from New York with Adam Williams Fine Art.
Old Master paintings may hit the headlines less frequently than contemporary art but the pleasures and rewards of collecting this field are manifold. Paris Tableau will enable collectors and curators to make their choice among major paintings, many of which are exhibited for the first time, and give art lovers the opportunity to meet and share their passion with art dealers.
Website : Palais Brongniart
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
20-07-11
EXHIBITION AT THE LOWRY FOCUSES ON THE MOST ALLURING DIVAS OF ANDY WARHOL'S TIME
This newly curated exhibition by The Lowry presents an unprecedented collection of some of Andy Warhol’s most iconic works, focusing on the most alluring Divas of his time. As well as presenting the stars he admired, the exhibition will focus on Warhol’s transformation into his own glamorous alter ego, within his self-portrait in drag photographs.
The term Diva, meaning ‘Goddess’ was originally attributed to the ‘prima donna’ or first lady of opera (an art form Warhol had the greatest respect for), whose voice and inimitable talent could not be done without. They were revered characters, often with inflated egos and irritable temperaments.
Today, the term Diva is used far more readily within the spheres of popular and entertainment culture to describe any powerful, glamorous, tempestuous and often egotistical male and female performers. Catapulted into stardom by their voice, their temperament or both, these characters are identified as true icons and are admired and adored as such.
The selection of silkscreen, Polaroid, magazine covers, photographs and film within this exhibition will bring to life the essence of The Diva as we know it today, showcasing some of the world’s most iconic performance figures of the 20th century immortalized by Warhol for generations to come.
The exhibition presents some of Warhol’s most instantly recognisable subjects, including Marilyn Monroe, Liza Minnelli, Mick Jagger and Debbie Harry, alongside some rarely exhibited works such as Pia Zadora and Jane Fonda.
Warhol’s work is on loan to The Lowry primarily from The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh as well as other private and institutional collections. The exhibition features nine original screen prints, 30 Polaroid works, one drawing, ten paintings, five photographs by Christopher Makos, 18 Interview magazine covers and 14 black and white reportage style photographs as well as the film Andy in Drag, October 2, 1981, 1981 (56 minutes).
Kate Farrell, The Lowry’s Curator of Special Exhibitions explains, “We are honoured to be presenting the work of one of most of the most celebrated artists of the 20th Century. Exploring Warhol's fascination with the most revered performers of his generation within the context of The Lowry is a perfect match, allowing us to present internationally renowned artwork with an emphasis on the theatrical. Warhol admired and adored the subjects he depicted in his work, immersing himself in their lifestyle and living and breathing the glamour of their existence which offers an incredible body of material for the exhibition. I hope our visitors will be as excited by this fascinating collection of works as we are to show it off".
This exhibition is presented as part of The Lowry’s performance related visual art programme, which explores performance practice in its broadest sense.
Website : The Lowry
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
19-07-11
ANJA KIRSCHNER AND DAVID PANOS OPEN THE STAATSGALERIE STUTTGART'S ARCHIVES FOR EXHIBITION
In the series "Open Archives" the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart invites artists to work with its collection. The series takes its starting points from the works and areas of the collection held in the archives of the museum —usually closed to the public —and from a discussion of the archive itself as a place of conservation and categorisation. "Open Archives" shows what has never been shown, what is rarely or not currently exhibited. From contemporary artistic and curatorial perspectives it activates the contents of the extensive collection and archives of the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart.
The artists Anja Kirschner (b. 1977) and David Panos (b. 1971) from London are presenting their "Open Archives" selection in correspondence with their new film "The Empty Plan" which was produced with support from the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. The protagonist of the film— premiered in Germany within this framework —is the German author, dramatist and director Bertolt Brecht. With a focus on his Hollywood period (1941-–47), the film explores Brecht’'s theoretical and practical theatre work and its changing historical conditions during the late years of the Weimar Republic and the period of exile in California, after his return to Germany and in the later German Democratic Republic. A collage of contrasting stage improvisations, imaginary dialogues in film studio settings and documentary reconstructions, "The Empty Plan" raises fundamental questions concerning ideological content in various forms of artistic presentation, as well as the relationship between art and politics —aspects still relevant to current aesthetic-political debates.
In their selection of works primarily from the archives of the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart’'s Department of Prints, Drawings and Photographs, Kirschner and Panos likewise explore the complex and ever-changing relationship between artistic forms and political movements in the critical period leading up to World War II. They base their deliberations on Brecht'’s criticism of the naturalistic and nationalist constructions of realism which gained popularity during the period in question and were also present in the exhibition programme of the Department of Prints, Drawings and Photographs. In his theoretical and practical work alike, Brecht defined realism —on the contrary —as a critical attitude towards the prevailing circumstances with regard to possibilities for collective change. The choice of works from the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart was carried out in dialogue with the art historian Kerstin Stakemeier, one of whose research fields is Realism.
Website : Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
18-07-11
FRANCOIS ROUAN, AYANT ASSIMILE MATISSE...
L'expo confronte les années 1966-1970 et le présent. La présence du corps surgit dans la substance du tableau...
C'est un paysage après la bataille. Comme toute sa génération, François Rouan s'est retrouvé confronté à la mise en question radicale de la peinture et de ses outils traditionnels. Au milieu des années 60, non seulement le refus du lyrisme abstrait de la précédente décennie fait rage, mais surtout il faut déconstruire la peinture en dissociant ses éléments constitutifs.
François Rouan y répond par des collages, sur fond peint, de papiers gouachés, découpés, inspirés de Matisse. Puis, à partir de 1966, par une technique qui va caractériser toute son œuvre et donner corps à un nouveau support consistant et complexe : le tressage.
L'artiste est né en 1943 à Montpellier. Il y a suivi les cours de l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts. En 1961, il rejoint à Paris l'atelier de Roger Chastel. Il rencontre Claude Viallat, Joël Kermarrec, Jacques Poli, Daniel Buren, Michel Parmentier, Pierre Buraglio.
Bleu et brun sur blanc, le grand papier gouaché découpé qui ouvre l'exposition François Rouan, la découpe comme modèle date de 1967. Dans cette première série de travaux, entre 1965 et 1970, Rouan ne cache pas que Matisse est un père fondateur, tout comme le sont aussi le peintre américain Jackson Pollock ou le Français d'origine hongroise Simon Hantaï. Tous ont regardé Matisse, non pas le peintre de « la fraîche beauté du monde » mais le Matisse de la planéité absolue.
François Rouan donne ici toute la pleine mesure de son art. Dans les jeux d'épaisseur, de couleur rehaussée et gribouillée, une relation complexe évolue vers l'oblique, la fente, le tressage qui est la clé de lecture du « mille feuilles » de peinture.
Comment procède-t-il ? Deux toiles au préalable teintes ou peintes sont découpées en lanières et nattées. Leur tressage inclut un troisième terme constitué de signes et de sens. « Le motif de la croix est une résultante du processus, précise François Rouan, plutôt qu'un élément fonctionnel qui spécifie un espace de sacralité. »
L'impression du corps
Quarante ans plus tard, dans la deuxième partie de l'exposition, où en est Rouan ? Une série a été entamée à partir de l'été 2010 sur le thème de l'Odalisque Flandres, une autre en harmonie fruitée, Fleurs de coing, un film aussi où des modèles nus évoluent dans l'atelier, s'étirent, papotent, s'assoupissent, nouvelle référence directe à Matisse qui travaillait avec ses modèles « genoux contre genoux ». Le corps devient la matière du tableau, de l'empreinte photographique comme du travail vidéo.
Les couleurs ont changé : le rose, l'orangé, le fuchsia, toute une richesse picturale laisse apparaître l'expérience sensible de la présence corporelle. On retrouve la combinaison du motif décoratif puisé aux sources les plus diverses (des papiers déchirés, des points, des tirets, des hachures, des arabesques). Ces matériaux sont amalgamés, divisés par l'opération de la découpe puis recomposés par tressage, retravaillés par la couleur jusqu'à constituer un « corps ».
Cette relation du corps à la pensée ne cesse de relancer l'acte de la découpe, les thèmes du modèle et de la figure. C'est une signature dans un espace qui fait fonctionner l'esprit, du format rectangulaire au tondo. En ligne d'horizon, François Rouan maintient l'objectivité du regard. « Les adolescents disent “C'est clair”. Cela ne m'a jamais intéressé, déclare-t-il abruptement. La seule chose qui m'importe, c'est une rencontre très forte sur laquelle je puisse revenir et revenir. » Et, effectivement, dans son apparente facilité de lecture proche du « décoratif », l'art de Rouan demeure matissien : c'est l'expérience du corps lorsqu'il est en prise avec la pensée.
Website : Musée Matisse, Palais Fénelon, Le Cateau-Cambrésis
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Bron/Source : Lesoir.be
15-07-11
ONE OF THE MOST ICONIC PORTRAITISTS, YOUSUF KARSH: REGARDING HEROES AT KALAMAZOO INSTITUTE OF ARTS
Sir Winston Churchill by Yousuf Karsh, 1941. Gelatin silver print © Estate of Yousuf Karsh.
The Kalamazoo Institute of Arts presents one of the most iconic portraitists in the history of photography, Yousuf Karsh! Yousuf Karsh: Regarding Heroes is on view from July 9 until September 3, 2011.
Canadian Yousuf Karsh's work helped form our collective visual memory of the most celebrated political and cultural figures of the 20th century, including Albert Einstein, Marian Anderson, Albert Schweitzer, Ernest Hemingway and many others. Karsh's defiant and scowling portrait of Winston Churchill in 1941 became an instant icon of Britain's stand against facism. From that time on, Karsh became internationally renowned and a long list of statesmen, artists, musicians, writers, actors and celebrities sat before his camera.
The 100 works on view are a selection of Karsh's own favorites, now in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. This exhibition tour is organized by Curatorial Assistance, Pasadena, California.
Yousuf Karsh admired individuals of high achievement and his notion of what constituted a genuine hero was affected by his optimistic outlook on society, even in the darkest days of World War II. Karsh's defiant and scowling portrait of Winston Churchill became an instant icon of Britain's stand against fascism. While styles in portraiture changed after the war, Karsh's images, with their engaging lighting and indelible character study, consistently display one of the most recognizable, signature styles in portrait photography.
Throughout his long career, Karsh put aside a selection of his own favorite prints of his favorite subjects that are now in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. This exhibition contains 100 prints drawn from that collection, accompanied by a catalogue with essay by David Travis, exhibition curator and former Chair and Curator of Photography, The Art Institute of Chicago. This exhibition tour is organized by Curatorial Assistance, Pasadena, California.
Website : Kalamazoo Institute of Arts
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
14-07-11
KUNST HAUS WIEN DEVOTES FOUR MONTH EXHIBITION TO FRIEDENSREICH HUNTERTWASSER
Hundertwasser 487
Kleiner Palast der Krankheit, 1961.
Privatbesitz, Japan
© KUNST HAUS WIEN, 2011
With this exhibition KUNST HAUS WIEN honours the artist on whose philosophy and artistic principles this institution is largely based. The 20th anniversary of KUNST HAUS WIEN, a museum which unites, under one roof, international temporary exhibitions and the permanent Museum Hundertwasser, offers an occasion for this special exhibition project. For a period of four months, all of KUNST HAUS WIEN is thus devoted to Friedensreich Hundertwasser. The exhibition is on view from July 7 until November 6 2011.
The time is ripe for a renaissance of Friedensreich Hundertwasser, for a comprehensive tribute to this innovative artist and ecological visionary. This biographic and thematic exhibition spotlights significant junctures in his life and work which, taken together, convey an overall impression of Hundertwasser as a person and as an artist and serve as signposts to the intellectual and artistic cosmos of an original thinker and pioneer – a peacemaker between human beings and nature, who placed his art and his life in the service of the green path.
Ideally, the exhibition should be visited in combination with the Museum Hundertwasser, the world’s only museum devoted exclusively to Friedensreich Hundertwasser. Key works by Hundertwasser that have never been shown in Vienna before, and photo series by photographers such as Manfred Bockelmann, Robert Lebeck, Erich Lessing, Elfriede Mejchar, Stefan Moses or Christian Skrein, some of which have never been exhibited until now, are supplemented by a wealth of documentary material, including excerpts from Peter Schamoni’s film “Hundertwasser’s Regentag” and the voices of Hundertwasser’s contemporaries.
In 13 stations, the exhibition takes us on a journey to selected focal points of Hunderwasser’s artistic life: important times in Vienna, Paris, Hamburg, Venice and Japan, the legendary Otto Wagner attic studio on Spiegelgasse in Vienna, Hunderwasser’s artistic actions protesting the rigidity of architecture, the “Regentag” motif as a key to his universe, and finally, New Zealand – his second home and last paradise. Thus, this jubilee exhibition opens up a pathway to a rediscovery of Hundertwasser, whose ideas and pioneering actions are reflected in today’s ecological trends.
Website : Kunst Haus Wien
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
13-07-11
PICASSO'S : MASTERPIECES FROM THE MUSEE NATIONAL PICASSO, PARIS AT THE DE YOUNG
The exhibition focuses on Picasso’s artistic development from his arrival in Paris in 1900, where he discovered a thriving international art community, until 1907, when he had established himself as the leading figure on the avant-garde art scene in Paris. His first direct exposure to the work of painters such as Gauguin, Van Gogh, Cézanne, Toulouse-Lautrec, Steinlen and Forain was a revelation to the young artist. His response was immediate, and was reflected in the discovery of new painting and drawing techniques and his embrace of a new subject matter, centred on his own experiences of modern life and modern art. For instance, the suicide in Montmartre of his Barcelona friend Carles Casagemas prompted works that deliberately evoked the palette and brushstrokes of Van Gogh.
One of the most important aspects of this exhibition is the way it brings out these habitual features of Picasso’s art. He was never an imitator — no Picasso can be confused with any other work — but he continually drew on the findings of his contemporaries, and on art history, to construct a personal style of his own.
This exhibition brings together some sixty pieces by Picasso in a variety of media, and twenty or so works by artists such as Cézanne, Van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec, Rodin, Steinlen and Gauguin, among others, whose prestige was at its peak in the Paris of those years, with the aim not of comparing them with one another but of bearing witness to the tremendous visual stimulus that Parisian life and art represented for Picasso during the first decade of the twentieth century. The exhibition will also include photographs and other materials documenting the Paris of the time.
The exhibition feature works from major museums and private collections around the world, including the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Artin New York, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart. In addition, an outstanding selection of works from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam will be shown here for the first time in Barcelona, in order to give some idea of the prestige and influence of the Dutch painter in Paris in 1900.
Website : de Young Museum
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
12-07-11
PINAKOTHEK DER MODERNE PRESENTS CURVATUREROMANCE BY THE AMERICAN ARTIST JOHN CHAMBERLAIN
DEJASHMOOZCOUPE, 2010. © John Chamberlain / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2011.
CURVATUREROMANCE is the first museum presentation of the large-format metal sculptures completed during the last four years by the American artist John Chamberlain (*1927). The show also marks the start of the AMERICAN SUMMER program in the Pinakothek der Moderne, on view from July 7 through October 23, 2011. As early as the late-1950s Chamberlain created a sculpture for the first time that made use of colored steel parts from a car that was in the backyard of his friend Larry Rivers. He thereby found his Carrara - a working material that was to become as natural for Chamberlain, as marble was for sculptors of the Renaissance.
Hammer and chisel were replaced by a scrap metal press which the artist uses - still, to this day - to compress and stretch, fold and bend his material, assembling the individual parts piece by piece, in a process of adding-on and taking-away again, until “it fits” (JC). Chamberlain thus transforms industrial material and design into a radical creative language. In so doing, his sculptures represent a formal contrast to the restrained and geometrically articulated Minimal Art of the same period, the serialized and systematic approach of which can be seen parallel to this in major works by Donald Judd, Dan Flavin and Fred Sandback in the Pinakothek’s permanent collection.
Chamberlain’s sculptural work, however, can be seen in a much wider historical context. His compression of metal parts creates folds, which interact with the dynamic lines in the sculpture as a whole. The psychological charging of sculptures in such a way allows comparisons to be drawn, in particular, with the folds in material found in earlier works in the history of art. The parallels described in the catalog essay between Chamberlain’s works and selected, examplary sculptures ranging from the Middle Ages and the Baroque up to one of Auguste Rodin’s major works, show how the artist’s work represents a logical continuation and renewal of a central line of development in the twelve sculptures especially chosen for the Munich exhibition, some of which rise to a towering five meters, Chamberlain has successfully taken a further step in perfecting the expressiveness of his sculptural oeuvre, while continuing to increase their density and presence.
In his almost unprecedented creative output and with a lightness that appears unforced, Chamberlain enters into an open dialogue with the recalcitrant material and, for that very reason, is able to provide it with a suggestive liveliness. In the process, his impulse to work from intuitive and improvised compositional moments is combined with the inclination to not be fully in command of material and form: “The resistance of that metal, the molecular structure, has a great deal of compatibility with people,” the artist once said in an interview. CURVATUREROMANCE, the exhibition title coined by Chamberlain himself, evokes the association of pulsating bodies. The sculptures have become charismatic dancers: erotic, powerful, fearless, very comical - monstrous and with the wisdom that comes with age.
Website : Pinakothek der Moderne
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
11-07-11
GLAMOUR OF THE GODS: HOLLYWOOD POTRAITS AT THE NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY IN LONDON
This new exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery examines the importance of photography in creating the stars of Hollywood from 1920 to 1960. Glamour of the Gods: Hollywood Portraits, Photographs from the John Kobal Foundation includes portraits of Marlene Dietrich, James Dean, Joan Collins, Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe by nearly 40 photographers including George Hurrell, Clarence Sinclair Bull, Laszlo Willinger, Bob Coburn and Ruth Harriet Louise. This exhibition is on view from July 7 until October 23, 2011.
Nearly all of the photographs in the exhibition are vintage prints drawn from the archive of the John Kobal Foundation. This is a rare opportunity to view these important artifacts of a now extinct Hollywood studio system. The exhibition shows both iconic and previously unseen studio portraits of Clark Gable, Marlene Dietrich, Joan Crawford, Vivien Leigh, Loretta Young, and Carole Lombard among others. These portraits are shown alongside film scene stills including Lillian Gish for The Wind, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers for Swing Time and James Dean for Rebel without a Cause. Stills photographs which were used for lobby cards and posters and had to encapsulate the film plot, or be powerful and dramatic enough to attract film-goers in just one image.
The film studios in Hollywood between 1920 and 1960 exercised an extraordinary level of control over the image of the stars they represented. The portraits they released to the public and press depicted the actors as glamorous and inaccessible, imbuing them with mystique. The photographers in this exhibition were the leading photographers employed by the studios to shoot and oversee the star portraits. The exhibition includes portraits by Davis Boulton, one of the few British photographers working for the Hollywood studios, and Ruth Harriet Louise, the only woman to run a studio photo gallery. Often stars would build up a relationship with a photographer as was the case with Greta Garbo and Clarence Sinclair Bull, and Joan Crawford and George Hurrell. This was a time before paparazzi, and these photographs distributed by the studios were the only vehicle of connection between stars and fans. Thousands of photographs would be sent out worldwide by the studios both to fans and to publications. To enable the photographs to be reproduced as widely as possible for publicity they were stamped ‘copyright free’, which resulted in the names of many pivotal studio photographers remaining uncredited for creating timeless and career-defining portraits.
John Kobal (1940-1991) was a collector and author who methodically sought to understand the role of photography in the Hollywood legend. He began collecting film photographs in the 1950s, visiting Los Angeles frequently when many of the major studios were being bought by corporations who cared little for the history of the film industry. At first his interest was solely in the stars and their films but his interest began to shift to the photographers behind the portraits, many of whom were still alive and accessible at this time. Kobal tracked down the surviving members of the circle of great Hollywood photographers and through a series of major exhibitions and books sought to gain them the recognition they deserved. As a result, the significance of the Hollywood photographers is now widely acknowledged for their contribution to both the film industry and twentieth century photographic portraiture.
Website : National Portrait Gallery
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
08-07-11
VICTOR HORTA SORT DE CIMETIERE
L'Hôtel Aubecq était l'apothéose de l'Art nouveau créé par l'architecte belge Victor Horta. Les Musées des Beaux-Arts présentent pour la première fois au public le puzzle de pierres numérotées de sa façade. Des meubles sauvés de la destruction complètent cette exposition gratuite.
Visionnaire ou illuminé ? Victor Horta, le maître de l'Art nouveau, aurait eu 150 ans cette année. Ses innovations ont chambardé les goûts et les couleurs de l'architecture mondiale entre la fin du XIXe et le début du XXe siècle. Mais le caractère novateur et subversif de son esthétique a fâché l'esprit petit-bourgeois catholique conservateur. Montrée du doigt pour ses extravagances, l'œuvre d'Horta a été victime d'une omerta.
La Maison du peuple du Sablon et l'Hôtel Aubecq de l'avenue Louise ont été « bruxellisés » peu après sa mort. Sa femme, Julia, et son disciple, Jean Delhaye, sauveront tant bien que mal une poignée de pierres et de ferronneries que les autorités abandonneront aux intempéries et aux herbes folles. En 1950, un subside de 300.000 francs avait permis de démonter in extremis un pan de la façade de l'Hôtel Aubecq pour le remonter ailleurs.
Un demi-siècle plus tard, les pièces de ce meccano sont présentées pour la première fois au public dans le cadre d'une exposition d'hommage à l'Hôtel Aubecq, où les Musées royaux des beaux-Arts de Bruxelles ont rassemblé les pierres numérotées et un choix de pièces du mobilier.
Construit entre 1889 et 1902, l'Hôtel Aubecq était une œuvre d'art total, dont Horta avait tout dessiné. Même les serviettes de table et le porte-parapluies portaient sa griffe ! A la mort de son propriétaire, la famille a vendu le chef-d'œuvre clé sur porte, pendules comprises, au prix du terrain. Un « immeuble de classe », traduisez un projet d'appartements spéculatif, a été bétonné sur le site.
La grâce et l'élégance perdues
Aujourd'hui, la Région bruxelloise est propriétaire des pierres numérotées de la façade. Le Musée d'Orsay, à Paris, a racheté les 46 pièces de mobilier sur mesure de la salle à manger. Le reste est irrémédiablement perdu, à l'exception de quelques objets sauvés par des collectionneurs privés ou des musées comme autant de miettes de ce somptueux moment d'architecture. Dans l'exposition des Beaux-Arts, un foyer de cheminée de marbre, une pendule à thermomètre, un garde-corps en bronze doré, une table de billard, un tabouret de velours, un chevalet, des fauteuils, des portes… témoignent de la grâce et de l'élégance perdues.
« Cette exposition est l'occasion de poser un nouveau regard sur les vestiges de l'Hôtel Aubecq, a déclaré le ministre-président bruxellois, Charles Picqué. Sa façade est devenue un morceau d'histoire de l'art, un objet archéologique. Elle est appelée demain à devenir un élément de promotion touristique et la pièce maîtresse d'un Centre d'interprétation de l'Art nouveau dont Bruxelles est la capitale. Elle y sera accessible au public et aux chercheurs. Le projet existe mais nous devons encore trouver un lieu, qui pourrait être la place Marie Janson à Saint-Gilles. »
Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique à Bruxelles
Musée Art ancien
Lieu de rendez-vous : Sales Boël et Bernheim
1er juillet > 9 octobre 2011
Website :KMSKB - MRBAB
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Bron/Source : Lesoir.be
07-07-11
DAZZLING DISPLAY BY THE GREATEST VIENNESE ARTISTS AT THE NATIONAL GALLERY OF VICTORIA
Stylish, provocative, rebellious and unforgettable – the world has seen nothing like Vienna in 1900. The National Gallery of Victoria today opened Vienna: Art & Design, a dazzling display of over 300 extraordinary works by the greatest Viennese artists of the early 20th century.
Vienna: Art & Design features truly spectacular works by the world-renowned Gustav Klimt (1862–1918) including his magnificent portrait Emilie Flöge 1902, alongside the groundbreaking paintings of Egon Schiele (1890–1918), Oskar Kokoschka (1886–1980), Koloman Moser (1868–1918) and other masters of Viennese modernism.
The decorative objects and interior designs of Josef Hoffmann and the Wiener Werkstätte (Vienna Workshop) are also celebrated in this Australian-first exhibition,
which presents exquisite furniture, divine jewels, silver and ceramic wares.
Dr Gerard Vaughan, Director, NGV, said: “Exclusive to Melbourne, Vienna: Art & Design forms a major part of our 150th birthday celebrations.
“Visitors will be amazed to discover that this radical, edgy style could be both minimalist and incredibly rich in its decorative detail. The exhibition presents an in-depth exploration of the art, architecture and design of a modern city, which influenced the world. They will be surprised by just how modern the designs of the time were and how relevant they are to today”.
Vienna: Art & Design is exclusive to the National Gallery of Victoria as part of the Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series; it is drawn from two of Vienna’s most important museums – the Belvedere and the Wien Museum – and also includes loans from private lenders and public institutions from all over the world.
“Museums and galleries internationally and especially in Vienna have responded with exceptional generosity, recognising both the existing strength of the NGV’s modern Viennese design collection, and also the special and exciting moment of our 150th anniversary,” said Dr Vaughan.
Vienna: Art & Design explores modernism, individualism, the rise of the radical Secession movement and the creation of a new style concentrating on the use of function, colour and design, when, a century ago, a group of innovative young artists, architects, writers, musicians, designers and thinkers overturned all the rules and created a brave new world.
Otto Wagner, Gustav Klimt, Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser were central to this artistic revolution, known as the Vienna Secession movement, which transformed Vienna into a dynamic metropolis at the forefront of ground-breaking ideas.
Vienna: Art & Design explores this extraordinary period of artistic and intellectual flowering, with a major section dedicated to the exhibitions and stylistic leaders of the Vienna Secession movement.
Nine major paintings by Gustav Klimt will be brought to Melbourne, as well as a full scale facsimile of Klimt’s 30-metre-long Beethoven Frieze from the Vienna Secession building.
Frances Lindsay, Deputy Director, NGV said: “At the dawn of the 20th century, life attained a new height of intelligence, elegance and daring. Living became an art form and art fuelled life with intensity.
“Supple and sleek, and outrageously chic, contemporary design explored bold new forms for every conceivable object of daily use, laying the foundations of the modern industrial look,” said Ms Lindsay.
Exclusive to Melbourne, Vienna: Art & Design will be shown only at the National Gallery of Victoria. This is the first time an exhibition of this size and scale focusing on the exquisite art and design of Vienna will be shown in Australia.
The Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series began in 2004 with The Impressionists: Masterpieces from the Musée d’Orsay, continued in 2005 with Dutch Masters from the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, followed by Picasso: Love & War 1935–1945 in 2006, Guggenheim Collection: 1940s to Now in 2007, Art Deco 1910–1939 in 2008, Salvador Dalí: Liquid Desire in 2009 and European Masters: Städel Museum, 19th–20th Century in 2010.
Vienna: Art & Design is open daily from 10am–5pm from 18 June to 9 October 2011 and until 9pm every Wednesday from 22 June for art after dark.
Website : National Gallery of Victoria
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
06-07-11
EXPERIENCE BERLIN'S MOST INNOVATIVE EXHIBITION, THE LANDMARK HUMBOLDT BOX
The Company Megaposter GmbH commissioned the Architect Office KSV Krueger Schuberth Vandreike with the project ‘Humboldt-Box’.
Right here, in the heart of Berlin on the Museum Island, with view on the cathedral and the ‘Lustgarten’, the world of the Humboldt-Box awaits you with a vision of the future along with a highly interesting function. Until the completion of the future project ‘Humboldt-Forum’, the Humboldt-Box as a complete piece of art takes on the responsibility to trigger a certain curiosity in and extensively inform Berlin’s general public and visitors from all parts of the world about the contents of the planned Humboldt-Forum and the design of the palace site as well as the building project as such.
With an area of 3,000 square meters and a height of 28 meters with five extraordinary floors, this architectural solitaire embodies an impressive focal point, an information forum, an exhibition area, an observation platform as well as a first-class event location all in one and all in the spirit of the World Explorers Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt: It is a place of discovery.
It is the objective of the Humboldt-Box to represent the Humboldt-Forum innovatively and temporarily.
Inside the exhibition centre, the future project partners of the Humboldt-Forum jointly present themselves in a kaleidoscope of impressive examples out of science, art, culture and the new global society. Renowned institutions organize a dynamic and fascinating show. Medial exhibition techniques lead visitors on a journey through a variety of complex issues regarding our world. It begins in the early times, and leads through the presence into the future. Much is to grasp, to re-examine and to discover with amazement.
Humboldt-Forum and Humboldt-Box. Two landmarks for a changing Berlin
The Humboldt-Box and its worlds of experiences ‘Exhibition Berlin’ invite to come and see, use and explore. Its purpose is only a temporary one though. Upon completion of the Humboldt-Forum (presumably in 2019), the Humboldt-Box fulfilled its task and will be dismantled. The luminosity and the impact of the entire concept will, however, remain as a guide for innovative architecture in the city, as a public source for information and for the metropolitan development.
A location for communication and a magnet for spectators
The Humboldt-Box adds to the importance of the Museum Island in Berlin and enriches Berlin with another attraction. Designed by a trio of architects - Krueger, Schuberth and Vandreike - the Humboldt-Box radiates a futuristic ease amidst the historic buildings in Berlin’s centre. Its architecture is to reflect the idea of temporality. With a stipulated period of eight years, presumably until 2019, it holds a temporary, exciting spot advertising in an innovative way the future Humboldt-Forum Berlin – as well as being an actual trademark for Berlin.
The attractiveness
Behind an innovatively combined façade of glass and media space with views over the Lustgarten, a variety of cultural and informative topics are presented to the visitors inside. Five floors accommodate a variety of adventure areas including space for exhibitions and events, a museum shop as well as the restaurant ‘Humboldt Terrassen’ with two large outside terraces 21 meters up above. In the heart of Berlin, 360’ all around views from all levels in the building over the city will just take your breath away! The building statics as well as its structure are extraordinary. The skin outside with its movable fabric, which is secured through steel beams and cross-bars, lends the proverbial exciting character to the building. The angles and slants are striking. The pretense and attractiveness of something provisional were realized in architectural ease through applying consistency and enormous effort.
The architects
The Company Megaposter GmbH commissioned the Architect Office KSV Krueger Schuberth Vandreike with the project ‘Humboldt-Box’. Since years KSV produces cutting edge work with respect to architecture, design and communication. The competence of Megaposter complements KSV’s experience in the area of architecture. KSV produced a draft of the Humboldt-Box, which convinced the jurors. “It is the attractiveness of a built sculpture, which unites elements of the provisional and the short-lived in its appearance, as we know it from pole buildings and party tents.”
The planning of the project
The Land Berlin commissioned the Company Megaposter GmbH with the planning, erecting, refinancing and managing of the project HUMBOLDT-BOX in compliance with a license-holder contract.
Website : Humboldt-Box
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
05-07-11
THE VAN HERCK COLLECTION: TERRACOTTAS FROM THE 17TH AND 18TH CENTURY AT THE BONNEFANTENMUSEUM
Jacques Bergé, The Crucifixion of Peter, terracotta, 35 x 56 cm. 1733. Photo: King Boudewijn Foundation, coll. Charles Van Herck, Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, Belgium, © P. de Formanoir.
There are over 50 terracotta statues on display in the exhibition The Van Herck collection - Terracottas from the 17th and 18th century in the Bonnefantenmuseum. The statues were part of the impressive collection of the Antwerp art connoisseur and collector Charles Van Herck (1884 – 1955). A small selection of his collection, which his relatives placed in the custody of the King Boudewijn Foundation in Brussels, is usually on display in the Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp. As the museum is currently undergoing renovation, this summer the Bonnefantenmuseum is exhibiting a larger selection from this collection and making it accessible once again to a wide public. The exhibition is on view from July 3 through October 9 2011.
Van Herck
Charles Van Herck came from a family of antique dealers, and on graduating as an architect from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, in 1902, he followed in the footsteps of his forefathers. Besides being a dealer, he also acted as an expert at auctions, made inventories of estates, and did research into his great passion: the life and work of Antwerp sculptors from the 17th and 18th century. Through this interest, Charles Van Herck developed a great aesthetic preference for drawings and terracottas by these sculptors, putting together an exceptional collection of drawings and terracottas by these Antwerp artists.
Bozzetti & Modelli
In his private collection, Van Herck was able to amass many bozzetti and modelli, which are forms of modelling that give excellent insight into the creative process of the sculptor. The bozzetti often served as a way of recording an artist's idea by working it roughly and quickly in clay. The modelli, on the other hand, were more advanced and detailed versions of the original idea and were often used to obtain the approval of the patron. The modelli were often kept in the sculptors' ateliers for longer than the bozetti, because they were more detailed and could therefore be used as study material later on, whereas the bozzetti were regarded merely as quick sketches and were destroyed after they had served their purpose. Nowadays, the modelli, in particular, are regarded as works of art in their own right, and this happened occasionally in the 17th and 18th century as well, as shown by the signatures on some of the modelli from the collection.
The highlights of the exhibition include a signed self-portrait of the Antwerp-London sculptor Michael Rysbrack, dating from around 1730. The artist regards the world self-confidently and the soft fabrics of his coat and shirt have been made to look very lifelike in the hard-baked terracotta.
Of a whole other order, but no less impressive is the Modello made by Artus Quellinus the Elder, around 1650, for a marble relief in the Royal Palace (previously the town hall) in Amsterdam. The representation of Apollo and Python is still part of a series of depictions of gods from antiquity.
The terracottas are both religious and secular in nature, and stories are represented from the Bible as well as from antiquity, though not all the statues are narrative. There are also portraits of Hercules, Beethoven and Rossini, as well as the aforementioned self-portrait by Rysbrack.
Website : Bonnefantenmuseum
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
04-07-11
HUNGARIAN PHOTOGRAPHERS IN FRAME IN UNITED KINGDOM'S ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS EXHIBITION
Laszlo Fejes, Wedding, Budapest, 1965. Silver gelatin print, 155 x 238 mm. Hungarian Museum of Photography. © Hungarian Museum of Photography.
Robert Capa once said "It's not enough to have talent, you also have to be Hungarian," and a new London exhibition on five leading figures of the medium shows that he was only partly joking.
"Eyewitness: Hungarian Photography in the 20th Century" at the Royal Academy focuses on Capa, Brassai, Andre Kertesz, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Martin Munkacsi, who were all born in Hungary.
All, apart from Capa, were born in the 1890s, all were Jewish though not strictly religious and all changed their birth names -- indicative of the anti-Semitism they experienced at varying stages of their lives.
Yet they were not part of a "Hungarian school" despite these connections, and the exhibition, which runs from June 30-October 20, throws up as many contrasts and comparisons as it does similarities through more than 200 images.
It opens with a room featuring photography in Hungary itself from around 1914, including many rural scenes, often idealized in the "Magyar" style, by photographers including Rudolf Balogh.
Included is the earliest surviving picture by Kertesz, the 1912 "Boy Sleeping."
The show then moves on to World War One, triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne.
Brassai, Kertesz and Moholy-Nagy were all called up to fight, but only Kertesz took war photographs although he was still only an amateur.
His "Latrine," dated 1915, shows a row of four soldiers sitting on a rudimentary lavatory without the privacy of a screen, and Balogh's "Soldier's Grave," taken in Serbia in 1914, depicts a bearded man staring at a wooden cross.
UPHEAVAL MEANS EXODUS
Hungary lost nearly three quarters of its territory and two thirds of its population in the re-drawing of the political map following the war, and thousands of intellectuals, many of them Jewish, fled abroad.
The exodus of the featured photographers helped explain why they went on to become such major influences on renowned Western practitioners.
That influence was underlined by Frenchman Henri Cartier-Bresson, considered by many to be the father of modern photo-journalism, who said it was Munkacsi who inspired him more than anyone.
Upon seeing his 1930 photograph of three African boys playing in the water, he remarked:
"It is that very photograph which was for me the spark that set fire to the fireworks ... and made me suddenly realize that photography could reach eternity through the moment."
Moholy-Nagy went to Germany in 1920 and became an influence on the Bauhaus movement, and Munkacsi arrived in Berlin in 1928 where he worked for the mass circulation "Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung."
Kertesz moved to Paris in 1925 a year after Brassai and they immediately made an impact, becoming friends with famous artists and taking pictures of Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Marc Chagall.
All but Brassai went further west to the United States, although Capa also covered the Spanish civil war which broke out in 1936 and took the seminal image "Death of a Loyalist Militiaman" which is featured in the show.
The dramatic photograph of a Republican fighter taken apparently at the moment he was shot dead has been argued over for decades, with experts declaring it both a genuine snapshot of death on the battlefield and a posed fake.
One suggestion offered by the Royal Academy was that Capa, believing there was no danger, had asked the fighter to run down a hill for a photograph when he was picked off by a sniper's bullet.
Capa went on to become one of the world's most revered war photographers, with famous images that include a blurred picture of U.S. forces landing on the beaches of Normandy in 1944.
(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)
Website : Royal Academy of Arts
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Bron/Source : Artdaily
01-07-11
TOTAL RESPECT POUR LE GRAFFITI
A Bruxelles comme à New York, le graffiti passe du statut anecdotique à celui d'avantgarde artistique. Du mur à la toile, un destin complexe.
Une Yamaha dans un musée. Incongru ? Taguée par Keith Haring, la cylindrée participe à l'exposition Explosion. L'art du graffiti à Bruxelles. Un vent de délinquance, un débordement anarchique font joyeusement loi dans ce lieu dévolu à l'art belge des XIXe et XXe siècles.
Le graffiti, c'est le jeu du chat et de la souris. Lettrages explosifs, couleurs pétantes, parler franc et clair accompagnent un acte de transgression. Extrêmement codé, il envahit les voies de chemin de fer, les murs aveugles.
Les immenses fresques de Defo Dalbino, le premier mural hip-hop sur le Mirano Continental de Koor, l'art cellulaire infini de Jean-Luc Moerman, les squelettes d'Hell'O Monsters, le style typiquement bruxellois de Rage, les sessions de nuit de Bonom, un sacré parcours d'œuvres interdites éclate l'espace muséal.
L'exposition proposée par l'historien d'art Adrien Grimmeau pose énormément de questions. De la rue aux galeries, que reste-t-il du graffiti ? Est-ce de l'art ?
Comment faire le tri dans toutes les règles tacites de cette contre-culture ? L'exposition analyse l'essor du graffiti à Bruxelles, jusqu'au relais assuré par les galeristes, de Keiteleman dans les années 1980 à Alice Gallery.
CoBrA a fait souffler un courant d'art frais. L'Expo 58 va donner le signal mais le désamour suivra, avec les grands travaux urbains, la démolition des Marolles, l'essor du Quartier Nord. Dans le sillage de Mai 68, les artistes de Mass Moving vont occuper l'espace. A la même époque, le phénomène du graffiti explose à New York : Jean-Michel Basquiat et Keith Haring font la course artistique en tête.
Missions nocturnes
A Bruxelles, dès 1986, les pionniers n'ont pas 18 ans. Ils bombent avec leurs tripes. Les conflits entre les « crews » (groupes) dynamisent l'explosion de lettrages et le style né des comics. L'acte de mise en présence de l'art dans la ville, ce sont des sessions de nuit sur un rythme de hip-hop, des montées en rappel sous les nuages en forme de baleine.
Les dinosaures de Bonom, le style généreux et expansif à l'aérosol de Defo Dalbino, Arne Quinze, les prises de Plug, les stickers de Denis Meyers, toute l'évolution du graffiti nous pose la question de la transgression. Les logogrammes de Christian Dotremont ne sont jamais loin de la pratique de Parole où six lettres se répètent à l'infini…
Aujourd'hui, les néo-graffeurs recourent aux stickers, affiches, pochoirs. Créés avant l'expédition, ils sont posés à la sauvette. Le plaisir transgressif n'est plus dans le geste mais dans le contenu de l'image.
Passé de l'éphémère à l'indélébile muséal, le street art se découvre malgré tout le nez en l'air, à l'affût d'une ville qui se tord sous l'aérosol et le trait acéré.
Website : Musée d'Ixelles
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Bron/Source : Lesoir.be
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