Showing posts with label 2014. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014. Show all posts

2014/12/09

Day by Day, exhibition in Ljubljana

Day by Day
Exhibition and guided tour
12 December 2014–4 January 2015
Artists: Bariş B. Atal (Turkey), Avgust Černigoj, Beli sladoled / White ice cream (Miha Perne & Leon Zuodar), Neža Jurman, Miha Perne, Leon Zuodar (Slovenia)
Curators: Saša Nabergoj, Simona Žvanut
Assistants: Nina Jesih, Zala Kurinčič

Opening: Friday, 12 December 2014, at 8 pm
Preview with the artists and curators:
Friday, 12 December 2014, at 7 pm
Guided tour with the curators:
Tuesday, 23 December 2014, at 6 pm
venue: Škuc Gallery, Stari trg 21, Ljubljana

Avgust Černigoj, untitled, 1978, felt-tip pen on paper, 30.1 x 22.2 cm 
(original kept by the Avgust Černigoj Gallery at Lipica Stud Farm).

Day by Day focuses on the exploration of drawing in the form of a diary entry, drawing that is therefore produced in a more or less organized sequence and records daily impressions, ideas, memories or flow of thoughts. The drawings have been produced in different situations (the hustle and bustle of the daily life of a 4-million Turkish city, the domesticity of the early morning ritual of drinking tea, the hospital and rehabilitation centre ...), on various supports (from receipts, diaries, scraps of paper of different sizes and colours, rolls of paper ... ), during different times (the most recent stem from the time of preparing the exhibition, the oldest date from the mid-1970s). The drawings thus compose a cacophonic image of the personal and public worlds of the five participating artists, which even intertwine with one another from time to time.

The Beli sladoled (White ice cream) art duo is showing their piece Don't Look Back (2012), a 21 metres-long drawing that was the result of their one month long drawing action, which is actually an experimental test of a different, new way of collaborating. Instead of their established joint creative process, the artists set themselves the task of “a long-distance collaboration”. Like writing a diary entry, they decided to make a drawing every day at a certain time, each in their own home and on their own roll of paper, without looking back. They then proceeded to bring the rolls into the gallery, unravelled them together, attached them to the wall, only to be surprised by the finding that the two drawings were actually of the same length. In such a way the contemporary frieze speaks of individual art practices that intertwine in terms of working style and form, as well as topic. In this, as well as in their other, more or less, joint works, a sense of paradox is in the forefront, as well as a mocking sense of humour, self-irony, a dense and playful iconography of contemporary society, witty and meaningful comments, and fluid and precise drawing.
Avgust Černigoj, untitled, 1978, felt-tip pen on paper, 31 x 23.4 cm 
(original kept by the Avgust Černigoj Gallery at Lipica Stud Farm).

The works 8 O'Clock Drawings and 10 O'Clock Drawings by Leon Zuodar are a series of drawings, which the artist has been making since 2010 every morning with his first cup of tea; initially at 10 am, before the time moved to 8 am over the years (the older we get, the earlier we get up). These are drawings with different motifs, since they note a variety of objects around him – the view through the window, humorous and self-ironic musings with an emphasis on the figurative, or totally abstract drawings that spring from the currents of the subconscious and automated drawing action.

With his series Serious Research of Nonsense (since 2009), Miha Perne is exhibiting drawings that are created spontaneously every day during the course of the entire day. Moreover, he must steal time for them, because he never really knows when he will actually have the time. As a father of two young children, he (also) makes drawings during the tiny stolen moments of family life (as the children watch a cartoon or take a bath, for instance). He is also required to make many a drawing according to their wishes, and sometimes even forgets a half-done drawing on the kitchen table, which the children promptly complete themselves. His drawings have therefore never meant to be “serious” in the sense of a predetermined motif or intent like his other painted and drawn works, which he works on in a very systematic way. The Serious Research of Nonsense drawings are produced in response to his daily events, but more than that, they adapt to him and “force” the artist to work outside the established frameworks. And this is usually before morning coffee … a considerable number of the exhibited drawings have actually been produced whilst waiting for the water to boil ...

Avgust Černigoj, the founder of Slovenian constructivism and the most prominent representative of the historical avant-garde in Slovenia, is presented with an almost unknown series of drawings (1977–1979). A serious traffic accident in 1975 chained him to the beds of the hospitals in Sežana and Valdoltra for several months, where he drew the daily hospital life in order to relieve his boredom. This is how the series of twenty drawings (a selection of ten will be exhibited) was created, in which various objects and medical instruments appear as equals to the human figure: wheelchairs, crutches, splints, physiotherapy devices, etc. Featuring a strong contour and a simple line, the drawings resemble comic strips and have a distinctly contemporary air to them.

Bariş B. Atal is a Turkish artist of the younger generation, who is taking part in the exhibition (his first international show abroad) with his drawings. The Turkish notion of time is different to our own, as we increasingly see time as a precious resource – which is why we try to organize ourselves as efficiently as possible, in public as well as in private life. In Turkey, already the understanding of a timetable as such is much more flexible and indefinite ... giving rise to a lot of waiting. In offices, at the doctor’s, on the bus (in rush hour), in the shop, in college, in meetings. In such a way, Bariş B. Atal started to regularly record his frequent waiting at different places and at different times by adding drawings besides the notes, ideas and sketches in his notebooks. He does this by (always) drawing just his feet and the ground, annotating the drawings with a few brief comments in Turkish. This is how three notebooks of drawings have been produced since 2013 that follow his daily life, whereas by identifying the ground (the mosque, the market, the concrete ground...) we may also decipher certain fragments of Turkish culture. After being invited to take part in the show, the artist began to make a fourth notebook following the same principle, in which, however, English instead of Turkish notes began to appear – like in his everyday life as he was spending a considerable amount of time communicating with us and the other artists about the preparations for the show. Particularly with Neža Jurman, also an artist of the younger generation. As curators, we invited them to take on a very special collaboration: a joint piece. Namely, we recognized a similar principle in their work, which is reflected in an intensive daily drawing production, experimentation with drawing as a medium, as well as a quest (and invention) of new modes of operation within the art system. Their dialogue began in the virtual world and continues during Bariş’s two-week residency in Ljubljana before the exhibition. The presented work will be the result of the intertwining of their practices and personal dialogue: a diary entry of their common everyday.

At the same, we invited Neža Jurman to start a new production, which will be an expression of her communication with the starting point of the exhibition and the selected works of the other artists. She will create a unique situation in the back room of the gallery. Before the exhibition, the space will predominantly be used for working together with Barış, and will be a kind of crossover between a space of production and presentation, whereas afterwards she will implement constant changes to the exhibited artwork throughout the duration of the exhibition. Day after day she will continue to work with the installation by adding or taking something away, thus using the time component to further highlighting the recording of daily life in diary form – something that the exhibition at hand sets to the fore in its various ways and formats.

A catalogue in the form of a zine will also be produced to accompany the exhibition, which will be prepared jointly by Leon Zuodar and Neža Jurman under the auspices of the book production of Beli sladoled (White ice cream).
Saša Nabergoj and Simona Žvanut

Production: 
SCCA–Ljubljana, Center for Contemporary Arts / World of Art, School for Curators and Critics of Contemporary Art; Co-Production: Škuc Gallery
Supported by: Ljubljana Municipality, Department for Culture, Ministry of Culture of Republic of Slovenia, European Cultural Foundation, Lipica Stud Farm (www.lipica.org), National Gallery of Slovenia, Turkish Embassy in Ljubljana, Turkish Airlines, Embassy of the Republic of Slovenia in Ankara
.-.-.-.-.-.-
more at:  http://www.scca-ljubljana.si/news-en_14-43.htm

2014/12/04

ANTI – Contemporary Art Festival 2015, Open call

ANTI – Contemporary Art Festival 2015, Finland, call for proposals
Deadline:16.12.2014

ANTI – Contemporary Art Festival is an international contemporary arts festival presenting site-specific works made for public space in Kuopio, Finland. ANTI presents live, sonic, visual and text-based art from today’s most exciting and innovative artists. A truly international festival and Finland’s foremost presenter of Live Art, ANTI is a meeting place for artists and audiences fascinated by how art shapes the spaces of everyday life.
In September 2015 ANTI Festival will collaborate with the Kuopio Marathon to present a unique series of cultural events created in response to the race. We invite proposals for projects that engage with one or more of the following areas:
·      Duration, longevity and time; the long and short of time-based activities
·      Sport and culture, sporting culture, cultural sport
·      The body and endurance – expanded ideas of endurance: political, social, cultural forms of endured activity; the social agency of endurance
·      The quantified self: fitness culture, technology and performance
·      The race, racing and competitive frameworks
·      Participation and mass events – the individual and the many
·      The enthusiast and the amateur: the cultural agency of the ‘trained’ every-person
·      Topographic trajectories and spatial intervention: running/reading/using the city
ANTI is a site-specific festival – we do not show projects in traditional cultural spaces, thus projects have a direct relationship with the spaces and places they are shown in. When proposing a project please make it clear where your project would ideally be located, and why. The 2015 festival will take place in and round the Kuopio Marathon – projects are imagined to establish a number of relationships with the race itself; some may engage directly with the event while others might happen in parallel to it etc.
The Kuopio Marathon was first held in 1998. 2015 will see around 2,500 runners take part. The event comprises a mix of distances – full marathon, half marathon, 10K (walk or run) and a series of races for children. The events takes place across the 4th and 5th of September. For more information: http://www.kuopiomaraton.com
Before making your proposal it may be beneficial to spend some time with the online archive of previous festival editions: http://www.antifestival.com
The proposal process
All proposals must be sent using this electronic form (https://anti.gruppo.fi/online-applications/index.php/survey/index/sid/426793/lang/en) and written in English. The form allows a link to be made to online documentation of previous work and for applicants to attach a CV and max three supporting images. Proposals that do not strictly conform to these guidelines will not be considered.
The proposal deadline is 16.12.2014
ANTI - Contemporary Art Festival 1 - 6 September 2015
Kuopio, Finland
Further information: info@antifestival.com

16th Media Art Biennale WRO 2015, Poland

16th Media Art Biennale WRO 2015, Poland

Dates: May 14–September 2015
Deadline: December 10, 2014


 Program is open to various forms of creative artistic expression and communication made using electronic and/or digital media and completed after January 1, 2013

Entry form, conditions, details: http://www.wro2015.wrocenter.pl


WRO 2015: Test Exposure
The aim of the WRO 2015 Biennale is to give exposure to new media art experiments, individual explorations and approaches investigating the potential of art both to affect and to reflect emerging issues in culture.

Artists are invited to submit works that take on the risks of innovation, inquiry and imagination, using original observations, contemporary technologies and procedures in the process of creating inventive forms, interpreting the present and revising the notion of the future (which no longer seems to be a clearly defined project).

The WRO 2015 Test Exposure Biennale is a testing ground for creative, unconstrained investigations of art's potential to react to the present and to anticipate future challenges.

The WRO Biennale: about
The WRO Media Art Biennale is the major forum for new media art in Poland, and one of the leading international art events in Central Europe. Since its inception in 1989, WRO has been presenting art forms using new media for artistic expression and communication, exploring current creative territories and building a critical perspective toward emerging issues in culture, art, society and technology.

The previous edition of the WRO Biennale—WRO 2013 Pioneering Values Biennale—was held at 18 sites around the city of Wrocław: museums, galleries, art house cinemas, department stores, old factory halls and public space,  where the works of over 200 artists were shown. The exhibitions, concerts, performances, video projections, installations and conferences were attended by more than a thousand accredited guests and over 110,000 visitors. The WRO 2013 Catalog is available both in print and online here.

Artistic director: Piotr Krajewski

WRO Media Art Center Foundation / The WRO Art Center
ul. Widok 7
50-052 Wrocław
Poland

T +0048 71 343 32 40
biennale@wrocenter.pl
http://www.wrocenter.pl

2014/11/22

PAOLO VIVIAN AND HIS EXHIBITION " MAPPA MEMORIA: [im]POSSIBILI UTOPIE"


mappa memoria : (im) possibili utopie
PAOLO VIVIAN
a retrospective exhibition
paintings, sculptures and installations
22 | 11-14 | 12 | 2014

VENUES: 
Pergine  Valsugana  (Trento) , Italy
- Exhibition Hall of the Municipal Theatre | Piazza Garibaldi, 5 / H
-Sala Maier, Piazza Serra
CURATORS: 
Dora Bulart and Paul Zammatteo
ORGANIZED:
Municipality of Pergine Valsugana (Trento), Italy

the abstract:
The project mappa memoria: (im)possibili utopie is a kind of artistic “cartography” of the work of Paolo Vivian, a special journey into the depths of his Alter Ego. The anthology covers the historical period of 30 years that has generated the various stages of creative growth, the formation of the art equipment, the development of the style and art identity. In the centre of the presentation, which is orchestrated by means of modern philosophy, mental mapping and game associations, are placed the author’s researches into the field of collective memory in the dialog with his own philosophy for utopia, the inner perfection and ideal beauty. It is as an artistic revelation of human longing for Shangri-La, a journey to the new Promised Land, an urge of the spirit to absolute freedom and spiritual purity. For Paolo Vivian the memory is an artistic tool, a password for access, a language for communication and the muse, and the object, and the path.
image: Paolo Vivian "Bar Code of correct memories", wooden object, wooden colored cubes, 2014; 
photo credit : Paolo Vivian, ANB  

The anthology allows you to explore this particular imaginative world, full of inner contradictions and dynamism of personal victories; a world, harmonized by the poetry of the present, full of love, hope, passion and admiration of the beauty. His artistic development is as an act of self-knowledge and an expression of striving for spiritual perfection through the necessity of creativity. The overview explores the formation of his plastic art language, “mapping” his creative discoveries in the depths of memory - individual and collective, the concepts for possible utopia and messages for freedom of the spirit, for a pure love and inner peace. In art of Vivian the collective memory has a laconic form and vertical direction. Cultural archetypes, mutation of myth and taboo he transforms into the totem of memories, the dialogue between generations and the daily human communications - into the bar code of modernity. In his “fusion of horizons” the symbols of the personal experience and its different faces have coloured cubic form made by wood and iron. The “cubes of memories “ of Vivian are special instruments organizing his messages and creating new impressions for the audience, assisting the invention of his ideas. The artist used mnemonics distinctive methods and specific set of associations building a visual parallel reality of the cultural memory of the individual, based on the memory of the community.
exhibition view "Locus of Memory" at Exhibition hall (Teatro Comunale); photo credit: ANB
 
 exhibition view "Locus of Utopia" at Sala Maier ; photo credit :ANB
The vertical laconic forms of Vivian’s totems, wooden figures, objects, same as his panels and installations are in derivation to ancient cultural models connected with the concept of Mather Nature and eternal longing to perfection. Natural wood and stone in his works are not only materials for the forms, they are the symbols of the ”centre” of mankind and his own sacral place in which he creates in his unique way a new puzzle of the synthesis between modernity and the colourful face of present form of collective and cultural memory.
exhibition view: Paolo Vivian , retrospective exhibition "mappa memoria: (im)possibili utopie;2014; 
photocredit :ANB

Following in the steps of this personal awakening, revealing the wisdom of ancient religions and beliefs through the faces of “Eros and Thanatos” Paolo Vivian “merges the horizons” with the modernity of our time, creating his messages as the “locus” or “places of memory” encoded the personal records in coloured semantic systems.
As in a poem William Blake says
«To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour»,
unbiased viewer is invited to follow the “mappa memoria “ of Paolo Vivian to his Promised Land and leading by his creative “diary” to arrange his own pieces of memory and to create an own, personal possible utopia.
Dora Bulart,
co-curator of he project

bio 
Paolo Vivian (1962, Trento, Italy) working in the field of sculpture, installation and performance. His works have been presented in the program Vilnius - European Capital of Culture in 2009, in celebration of the 100th anniversary from the foundation of the city of Differdange in Luxembourg; in the curatorial project "Heroes Corners" in Budapest, "Art & Nature", the Netherlands under the auspices of Dutch Queen; in the "Mythology of the tree" in Italy, "Off-On" project in Hamburg, International Biennial of visual Arts, Exi[s]t project; Bulart gallery, Varna, gallery "Actus Magnus", Vilnius and others. He has over ten solo exhibitions in private galleries and cultural institutions in Italy and abroad, including the Palazzo Ducale, Genova, Palazzo Liberia,VillaLagarina; Cultural Institute Bernstol, Italy, gallery Artstudio, Ravenna, gallery La Ravellina,Ferrara, Augustinian Abbey in Novacella , Bolzano etc. Lives and works in Palu del Fesina, Trentino, Italy.

practical information:
mappa memoria : (im) possibili utopie
PAOLO VIVIAN
a retrospective exhibition
paintings, sculptures and installations
22 |11  - 14|12|2014

VENUES: Pergine  Valsugana  (Trento) , Italy
- Exhibition Hall of the Municipal Theatre | Piazza Garibaldi, 5 / H
-Sala Maier, Piazza Serra
CURATORS: Dora Bulart and Paul Zammatteo

official opening ( left to wright): Angela Leornardelli, vice-mayor of culture , Municipality of Pergine Valsugana, Italy, Paolo Zammatteo, co-curator fo the project, Paolo Vivian , Daniele Lazzeri, the Chairman of the magazine “Nodo di Gordio”; Dora Bulart, co-curator of the project; photo credit: ANB; Paolo Vivian; Municipality of Pergine Valsugana (Trento)

The exhibition is organized by the Municipality of Pergine Valsugana (Trento), Department of cultural promotion. To support of exhibition was edited a mongraphy with critical texts by Paolo Zammatteo and Dora Bulart  (176 p, graphics and printing Publistampa Graphic Arts, Pergine Valsugana (Trento), Italy, 2014).
blog of the project: www.mappamemoria.blogspot.com

2014/08/28

Paris: ANTHONY CARO`s last Works @ GALERIE DANIEL TEMPLON

PARIS: ANTHONY CARO | Last Works @ GALERIE DANIEL TEMPLON


image : Anthony Caro | Horizon 2012; 
photocredit:Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris


SEPTEMBER 6 - OCTOBER 25, 2014
OPENING : SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6th, 2014 FROM NOON TO 8PM

Galerie Daniel Templon in Paris presents an exhibition of recent works by Sir Anthony Caro. The show pays homage to the master of modern sculpture, who died a year ago.
Born in 1924 and knighted by the Queen of England in 1987, Anthony Caro is considered to be one of the greatest sculptors of the last fifty years. A former student of Henry Moore, Anthony Caro constantly re-invented the language of modern sculpture, experimenting with a wide range of different materials. Over the years, his work evolved from the radically abstract line of the sixties to an avant-garde exploration of space, always with a deep-seated artistic freedom.
Last Works, a selection of sculptures from his final two years comprising steel pipes, beams, discs and farm tools, reveal new facets of Anthony Caro’s work. Evolving from his exploration of how people view works in public spaces, the Park Avenue series suggests the movement, speed and horizontality so characteristic of the thoroughfares of New York. The captivating forms of a work such as Horizon condense in a few structured lines the astonishing creativity and boundless energy of an artist who never ceased exploring the language of abstraction.
image : Anthony Caro | Up along 2009; 
photocredit:Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris
Sir Anthony Caro’s art has recently been celebrated with major shows at the Tate Britain (2005), Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (2011), Chatsworth House and Yorkshire Sculpture Park in the UK (2012), and Venice’s Museo Correr (2013). The artist is currently the subject of a major retrospective at the Würth Ersteinn museum in France, which runs until January 2015. Sir Anthony Caro’s work also features in the world’s leading public art collections, including the Centre Pompidou in Paris, New York Museum of Modern Art, London’s British Museum, Tokyo’s Museum of Contemporary Art and Ludwig Museum in Cologne.

contacts:
​GALERIE DANIEL TEMPLON
30 rue Beaubourg, 75003 Paris 
T : +33 (0)1 42 72 14 10
www.danieltemplon.com

open call : Liverpool Biennial >>Curatorial Internships

Curatorial Internships @Liverpool Biennial
OPEN CALL 

It is seeking two volunteers Curatorial Interns to support the Curatorial team in the closing stages of the 2014 Biennial, research and development of the 2016 Biennial; and the delivery of the Biennial’s year-round public program events.
Volunteer Internships typically last for three months (two – three days per week) and specific activities and learning will include:
Supporting the team to keep paper and electronic files related to artists and their commissions up to date and in good order.
Conducting research and collating information on artists for press, marketing, grant applications and general archival purposes.
Conducting research and collating information on possible sites and venues for the public realm artworks.
In consultation with the Team, booking accommodation and travel where applicable for artists, speakers and curators, and assisting with research visits.
Assisting with the technical, logistical and administrative aspects of developing and delivering the year-round public programme and Australian artist residency programme.
Liaising with various external contacts in order to obtain information required for the research and preparation of 2016 Biennial as well as the year-round public programme, as required.

Internships at Liverpool Biennial are unpaid and are classed as voluntary work, however we do make reimbursement for travel to and from work, and also pay a meal allowance. Total reimbursement is £15 per day.

If you are passionate about Contemporary Art and would like to be considered for an internship please send your CV with a covering letter of application by e-mail to jane@biennial.com no later than midday on 11th September 2014. Interviews will be held on the afternoon of Monday 15 September 2014. Please ensure that you put INTERNS 2014 as the subject title for your email.

more at http://www.biennial.com/

THE VALUE OF NOTHING @ TENT | ROTTERDAM

THE VALUE OF NOTHING @ TENT | ROTTERDAM
04.09.2014 - 16.11.2014


On Thursday 4 September, TENT Rotterdam opens The Value of Nothing with five newly commissioned projects, a group exhibition, Fieldwork Residencies, and an in-depth public program in which local and international artists reflect on our current economies and value systems. The Value of Nothing is curated by Jesse van Oosten (TENT) and Michel van Dartel (independent curator, V2_).

The Value of Nothing springs from long-term research initiated by TENT into shifts in thinking about value and economy, and the role that art can play therein. In the aftermath of the global economic crisis increasingly urgent questions arise that are related to neoliberal values seeping into almost every aspect of our lives. In addition to the known financial and economic criteria, can we articulate different ideas about the concept of value? What are other possible forms of economic exchange? And what do these alternatives mean for how value manifests itself?
image:Priscila Fernandes, For a Better World, 2012;
photocredit:TENT,Rotterdam
The Value of Nothing presents artists who contribute to the current debate on the commercialization of society, expose the underlying mechanisms, or propose alternative strategies. They reveal value beyond the mainstream market, like Jeanne van Heeswijk’s project in Rotterdam’s Afrikaanderwijk district, or show that trade in a global economy also means non-monetary cultural exchange, as in Meschac Gaba’s artistic currency exchange bureau. Others, such as Remco Torenbosch, immerse themselves in the beauty and philosophical idea behind the distribution of goods, or like Paolo Cirio, deliver concrete possibilities for dodging tax.

The Value of Nothing brings together artistic practices and projects that reflect our current economies and value systems, or that focus on possible alternatives. Meschac Gaba, Jeanne van Heeswijk, Jonas Lund, Helmut Smits and Remco Torenbosch present newly commissioned works. Gil & Moti, Weronika Zielinska, Roel Roscam Abbing, Kym Ward and Oblique International will each participate in a Fieldwork Residency at a Rotterdam-based company or organization. They will each develop a proposal that deals with the values held or produced by the organisation, such as its hospitality to outsiders, equality on the workfloor, or success criteria. The proposals will be presented in TENT during Fieldwork Friday, on 3 and 24 October. In addition, on 16 October and 13 November, curator and writer Nat Muller organises Breaking the Bank: a two-part event in which academics, journalists, and other practitioners explore how art, value and the global economy are interrelated. In a research project, Erasmus University College students will discuss and explore the exhibition’s topics. The Rotterdam architecture firm ZUS designed objects that serve as a stage for the public program.

Public program
Opening :Thursday 4 September, 17h

Fieldwork Friday 
Friday 3 October, 17h
Artist talks by Roel Roscam Abbing, Gil & Moti, and Kym Ward
With responses by philosopher Karim Benammar, NetExpert, and VS Schoonmaak BV

Breaking the Bank I: Art, Value and the Global Economy
Thursday 16 October, 20h
First of a two-part event led by Nat Muller in which academics, artists and journalists scrutinise the relationships between art, value, and global economy. With, amongst others, writers/artists Alana Jelinek (This is Not Art: Activism and Other 'Not-Art', 2013) and Anna Moreno.

Fieldwork Friday
Friday 24 October, 17h
Artist talks by Weronika Zielinska, Oblique International
With responses by journalist Koen Haegens, Hotel Van Walsum, and Marco Tieleman Coaching

TENT Halloween – a night to remember
Friday 31 October

Breaking the Bank II: Art, Value and the Global Economy
Thursday 13 November, 20h
Second part of the event led by Nat Muller in which academics, artists and journalists scrutinise the relationships between art, value, and global economy. With, amongst others, noted journalist Georgina Adam (Big Bucks: The Explosion of the Art Market in the 21st Century, 2014)

ARTISTS
MESCHAC GABA// JEANNE VAN HEESWIJK// IRATXE JAIO + KLAAS VAN GORKUM// PRISCILA FERNANDES// HELMUT SMITS// GIL & MOTI// OBLIQUE INTERNATIONAL// KYM WARD// ROEL ROSCAM ABBING// WERONIKA ZIELINSKA// ANTONIA HIRSCH// PAOLO CIRIO// JONAS STAAL// CLAIRE FONTAINE// BILL BALASKAS// REMCO TORENBOSCH// JONAS LUND// ZUS


The Value of Nothing is made possible by: Stichting DOEN, SNS REAAL Fonds, and Mondriaan Fund
Thanks to: NetExpert, Hotel Van Walsum, VS Schoonmaakbedrijf BV, Marco Tieleman Coaching

Along with the The Value of Nothing, Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art concurrently opens the exhibition Dai Hanzhi: 5000 Artists. The building remains open until 23:00h.

practical info
TENT Rotterdam
Witte de Withstraat 50
3012BR Rotterdam
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 11–18h
T +31104135498
www.tentrotterdam.nl

BRUSSELS CREATIVE FORUM 2014


During two days at the end of the summer holidays BRUSSELS CREATIVE FORUM presents rich program  to discover the cultural en creative world in Brussels. On and around the Mont des Arts and in the SQUARE Brussels Meeting Center there will be a Culture Market, a Street Art Village and a series of debates and conferences.
BCF is an initiative of asbl BAPEO and co-founded by VisitBrussels, SQUARE Brussels Meeting Center, Prométhéa, Stichting voor de Kunsten and Architempo.
The main events are :
CULTURE MARKET
Wander around at the Culture Market and meet numerous cultural institutions, both French/Flemish speaking and international. A stage with artists, musicians, comedians, dancers, will present short extracts of creations/shows to come.
The younger ones will also get a taste of culture thanks to the Kids Village, that will take place on Saturday 30th of August, and organised by Kidsgazette in collaboration with VisitBrussels and other cultural partners. The kids will test their creativity & cultural aptitudes while their parents browse through the impressive cultural offer of the 14-15 Season.
CREATIVE INITIATIVES
Here you can discover new or existing projects presented by individuals of cultural/creative organisations. They will each have 15 minutes to present their project in an inspiring way.
STREET ART VILLAGE
On the Mont des Arts, the Street Art Village shall be dedicated to urban art in a broad sense. The Street Art Village enables the general public to discover from a different angle, urban culture in Brussels, as innovative, pertinent and original. The Street Art Village is the opportunity to offer these street initiators a mean to achieve recognition as cultural operators.
STREET FOOD FESTIVAL
Also the gourmands will have their fun. The Street Food Festival, is a festival of gastronomy on wheels (trucks, caravans, etc.) on the Mont des Arts where the new trends of open air fooding, shall work on exciting your taste buds
You can find the complete programme here 
CONFERENCES AND DEBATES
The BRUSSELS CREATIVE FORUM shall be the focus point between professionals to meet & exchange points of view. Each debate is co-ordinated by an association or institution which proposes a subject, invites the different speakers and enables the presentation and moderation of the meeting. A creative and stimulating mood shall be encouraged for dialogue and sharing experience aiming to develop economic activities thanks to culture & creation.
Friday 29-08
Debates: “Developments and challenges concerning employment in creative and artistic professions.” Coordination: Kunstenloket; “Third places and professional cooperation: between social innovation, urban development and entrepreneurship.” Coordination: SMart.; “How enterprises support our access to culture.” Coordination: Promethea ; “Socio-professional integration: link between culture and development of social enterprises” Coordination: European Think Tank “Pour la Solidarité”; "Faut-il mettre Bruxelles en transition : Biodiversité" par Windbag ; "Cultiver sa communication, ou quand le marketing ne se limite pas aux affiches et sites web" par Edi.pro et IHECS Academy
Conferences: "European cultural networks : what are they? how do they operate? why join networks and how to participate?" (in english) by Creative Europe Desks Belgium.; “What role for cultural and creative industries for Brussels in the run-up to 2020?” by Platform of CCI of the Brussels-Capital Region.; Apéro du numérique #7 : " Territoire et création dans l'espace numérique / la place du numérique dans le territoire "; PechaKucha
Workshops: professionals only: Event Professional Meetings : 3 workshops by Clément Demers, Nathalie Courville, Olivier Mees and Daniel Van Calck; " La culture du digital, le digital dans la culture " by Sacha Waedemon and Maxime Charbit
 
Saturday 30-08
Debates: "Is cultuur een blank privilege ?" (NL) Coordination: Christophe Callewaert of Dewereldmorgen; “Mobility and participation to cultural events in Brussels.” coordination: BECI; “Contemporary architecture: which debates? Which public?” Coordination: CIVA;"Culture and youth"", coordination:Tremplin Asbl; "Faut-il mettre Bruxelles en transition : Transition en général"  par Windbag;"Faut-il mettre Bruxelles en transition : Education; "Faut-il mettre Bruxelles en transition : L'entrepreneuriat sociétal, une manière innovante de relever des défis"
Conferences: “Brussels, the city of patrons and artists. A secular history.” by Roel Jacobs;“A bet for Brussels: a Europe that makes cultures emerge.” by Paul Vermeylen; “Between culture and the digital world: How has the culture’s paradigm got to change in order to be able to profit from the advantages of the digital?” (ENG) by Philip Weiss.
Workshops: professionals only: " L’intelligence collective au service des projets artistiques et culturels " by Mission pour l’emploi des artistes
see the organisations - participants here

save the dates : 29 > 30.08.2014
pin the place : SQUARE Brussels Meeting Centre

practical info:
Monts des Arts
1000 Brussels
Mail : brussels@creativeforum.eu
Facebook : www.facebook.com/EUcreativeforum
Twitter : @EuCreativeForum #BCF14

Galerija Vartai , Vilnius: DEIMANTAS NARKEVIČIUS | SOUNDS LIKE THE XX CENTURY |

DEIMANTAS NARKEVIČIUS | SOUNDS LIKE THE XX CENTURY

September 9 – October 24, 2014
Opens on Thursday, September 9 at 6 PM

Galerija Vartai is pleased to announce the opening of Deimantas Narkevičius solo exhibition Sounds Like the XX Century. He is one of the most internationally renowned and acclaimed Lithuanian artists with his work widely represented in museums, art institutions and galleries around the world. The installations and films of Deimantas Narkevičius are often described as artistic research into the relationship between historical documents of political repressions and our memory. The artist is particularly concerned with the way representation is used to construct the perception of truth and reality, and the influence personal and collective experiences, as well as the medium itself, have on the latter. Art critic Neringa Černiauskaitė notes in her description of the artist's work that Narkevičius 'adopts a program that combines the modalities of a completely free artist and authoritarian television, and becomes an editor or, rather, a "moulder" of "reality" information whose academic background in sculpture enables him to approach images from a distinctive spatio-temporal perspective.'

image: Deimantas Narkevičius, Matching TU-144, 2012
Installation view at Marino Marini Museum, Florence, Italiy; credit photo: Dario Lasagni


Curated by the artist himself, Sounds Like the XX Century presents films, installations and objects from various periods that have not yet been shown to a Lithuanian audience. Sound becomes the exhibition's central formative element and principal agent. It disperses in space, migrates from one hall to another and undergoes various transformations, spawning different contexts, meanings and semantic centres of gravity.
The display begins with the film Disappearance of a Tribe (2005), in which sound, albeit not being manifestly central, acts as a very important underlying element. Disappearance of a Tribe is a collage of black and white family photos capturing episodes from the artist's father's life. Yet the autobiographic aspect is not emphasised in this family story; on the contrary, the artist seeks to find common, universal elements in the everyday life of that time and to revive the shared experiences of the Socialist era. The film's soundtrack refers to particular scenes: buzzing bees, bubbling water or a creaking floor. It is only the funeral scene that is completely silent. The soundtrack is assembled from field recordings made in the places where the photographs were taken during the period 1940-1989. Having revisited the locations captured in the photographs, the artist recorded the sounds that were present there at the time. With the introduction of motion, photography becomes film, while manipulated sound assumes the role of living history and reality. Simultaneously, the juxtaposition of sounds from the present and images from the past gives rise to a temporal contradiction. Disappearance of a Tribe is a powerful historical document that sheds light on the traditions of Soviet Lithuanian amateur photography.
Narkevičius's sound installation Matching the TU-144 (2012) refers to the 1960s, when France, Great Britain, the USA and the USSR actively competed in their attempts to create a supersonic passenger aircraft. The Soviet Union built the Tupolev TU-144 plane, which exceeded the speed of sound in 1969 and became the fastest airliner in history. The human body physically feels sound waves before the mind perceives the source of where they come from and associates them with a certain familiar phenomenon or object. The sound of the TU-144 engine re-created in the gallery space revives the historical tensions and alludes to the competitive aspect of power.
The film The Role of a Lifetime (2003), screened in the adjacent hall, combines three different narrative modes. The first is an interview with the British filmmaker Peter Watkins recorded during his residence in Lithuania. Watkins's reflections on his work, films and the close relationship between biography and creativity are juxtaposed with Mindaugas Lukošaitis's drawings of Lithuanian landscapes, including the Grūtas Park with its post-war Socialist sculptures. The third element of the film is footage filmed by an amateur recording the life of his home town Brighton (UK) found in the city's archives. Watkins and Narkevičius share a sceptical attitude towards images traditionally understood as authentic. Independently from each other, the two artists seek to deconstruct the conventional visual rhetoric of historical testimonies and look for a cinematic language that does not subjugate history to ideological assimilation or media manipulation.

Deimantas Narkevičius's newest two-channel video installation Books on Shelves and Without Letters (2013) shows a band called Without Letters playing at a second hand book store in Vilnius. Although the concert by a young Lithuanian band is shot in these times with a spontaneously moving camera, the very texture of the image, the editing typical of vintage music videos and the peculiar aesthetic of the book store seem to transport the film to another dimension and make it difficult to read historically. The mythical reality of a young rock band created in the film is punctuated by fragments of another time pulsating in the books being leafed through by the readers. History, the present and the dream of the future become intertwined.
The exhibition also features the work Proposal for Whatever You Play, It Sounds Like the 1930s (2012), produced for the newly built National Socialism Museum in Munich, and one of the artist's earliest sculptures, Game No. 1. Made in 1995, this work is a soccer ball consisting of separate segments which are casts of the surface of the artist's own body. In this way, the latter becomes a part of a familiar object designed for playing. The original 1995 work was made of concrete, while the present version has been re-created in bronze using the same form.
Deimantas Narkevičius (b. 1964) represented Lithuania at the 49th Venice Biennale in 2001, and received the prestigious Vincent van Gogh Award and the Lithuanian National Culture and Art Prize in 2008. He has participated in Manifesta 2 and Manifesta 10, the Istanbul, São Paulo, Busan and Gwangju contemporary art biennials, Sculpture Projects Münster, as well as the Rotterdam, Oberhausen and Berlin international film festivals. Works by the artist are in major private and state art collections including MoMa in New York, Tate Modern in London, Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid, the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Copenhagen, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the French National Collection, and many others.

Patron Vilnius City Municipality
The main sponsor of the exhibition Lewben Art Foundation
Sponsors of the exhibition: Bioderma, Lithuanian Council for Culture
Information sponsor Clear Channel 
Sponsors of the gallery: Lietuvos rytas, Ekskomisarų biuras, Infoterminalas, Namas ir Aš, Echo Gone Wrong

contacts:
Galerija VARTAI
Vilniaus g. 39, LT-01119 Vilnius, Lietuva
T/F: +(370 5) 212 2949


2014/07/14

Sofia: Hortus Memoriae | solo exhibition sculpture&installations by Paolo Vivian (IT)

HORTUS MEMORIAE | PAOLO VIVIAN (ITALY)
16.07.14 - 31.07.14 
Gallery of UBA "Shipka" 6, Sofia, Bulgaria
After the great success in Varna during the contempo - International Festival of Contemporary Art on July 16, 2014 in Sofia, in the presence of the artist will be opened the solo exhibition - sculpture and installations of Paolo Vivian entitled "HORTUS MEMORIAE". This exhibition brings together 28 works - sculptures, installations and objects created in recent years, the result of the creative researc of the Italian artist Paolo Vivian into the field of collective memory.The idea of the project is to create an imaginary picture of the European family, combining the relationships and influences generated in the process of globalization, migration and distribution of cultural models in a united Europe.
"HORTUS MEMORIAE" is exhibition with coded layout of the works involves the visitors in an intellectual and aesthetic puzzle where everyone creates his own imaginary garden of memory.The curator of the project is Dora Doncheva.
image: Paolo Vivian with his object "Codici ed Incroci" 
during openg of the exhibition in Sofia ;2014;photocredit:Art News Bulletin
The exhibition is realized with the collaboration of the Italian Cultural Institute - Sofia and it is under the patronage of the Municipality of Varna, Fund "Culture" , the program "Varna 2019". Partners of the project are Graffit gallery , Raya Georgieva Foundation. Sponsors: Insurance company "Armeec" ; Devnya Cement, Bulgaria Air. Supporters are Dieter hotel / restaurant; Schenker group, Gran Mobil, Ginger cofee, Plaza hotel, Top-Print.
image: exhibition view ;Hortus Memoriae project;  Paolo Vivian,Sofia ;2014
photo credit: Istituto Italiano di Cultura-Sofia
bio 
Paolo Vivian (1962, Trento, Italy) working in the field of sculpture, installation and performance. His works have been presented in the program Vilnius - European Capital of Culture in 2009, in celebration of the 100th anniversary from the foundation of the city of Differdange in Luxembourg; in the curatorial project "Heroes Corners" in Budapest, "Art & Nature", the Netherlands under the auspices of Dutch queen; in the "Mythology of the tree" in Italy, Off-On project in Hamburg, International Biennial of visual Arts, Exi (s) t; Bulart gallery, Varna, gallery "Aktus Magnus", Vilnius and others. He has over ten solo exhibitions in private galleries and cultural institutions in Italy and abroad, including the Palazzo Ducale, Genova, Palazzo Liberia Lagarina Cultural Institute Bernstol, Italy, gallery Artstudio, Ravenna, gallery Laravelina Ferrara, Augustinian Abbey in Bolzano etc.Lives and works in Palu del Fesina, Trentino, Italy.


address: Exhibition Centre Union of Bulgarian Artists Shipka 6, 3rd floor;
1504 Sofia, 6 Shipka Str | www.sbhart.com

2014/02/27

JR @Frieder Burda Museum and in Public Space in Baden-Baden

The Exhibition JR @Museum Frieder Burda ( curated by Patricia  Kamp) and in Public Space in Baden-Baden >> save the dates: March 1–June 29, 2014 
The French artist JR (1983) is one of the most innovative representatives of contemporary art 
on the international art scene. He lives and works in Paris and New York, and he consciously keeps his true identity a secret. He applies his oversized  black-and-white photographs   in   the form of monumental posters to walls worldwide. Thoroughly considering the urban architecture, JR’s work adapts cultural and historical contexts, and the emotional impact finds expression in the faces of the people in his close-up photographs. Based on this idea, the artist has already carried out large-scale projects in Europe, North and South America, Africa, and Asia. JR’s most important motivation is interaction with other people. 
His works raise  questions about freedom and identity and in how far art can change people’s perception of  themselves and their environment. However, his  actions   also  draw attention to injustice. Characteristic of JR’s art are the stories he tells with his collages and his talent for bringing together isolated worlds. JR creates relationships. He is a conductor who lends a face to anonymous existences or unrecognized and even forgotten stories. 
In 2011, JR won the TED Prize—the 2007 recipient of the award was Bill Clinton—for his creative visions. 
"My art does not change the world, but I hope it inspires people to change how they look at the world and at other people,” says JR. 

The Exhibition at the Museum 
The exhibition at the Museum Frieder Burda is being curated by Patricia  Kamp in close collaboration with JR. Using photographs and videos by the artist, it presents his early and ongoing projects and thus provides a retrospective look into JR’s overall artistic development. 
IT ALL BEGAN WITH A FOUND CAMERA 
JR began his career as a graffiti artist. As an adolescent, after finding a camera in the  Paris Metro he began documenting his jaunts over the roofs and in the tunnels of Paris. He carried out his first large-scale project, PORTRAIT OF A GENERATION, as early as 2004. Following riots in the Paris suburbs, JR put up posters in just these suburbs and middle-class districts of Paris featuring photographs he took of youths during the unrest. These images challenge passers-by  in that they  question the social and media representation of this generation. After the first posters were quickly removed by  the city cleaning service, the city  government soon legalized the project and suggested to JR to apply his posters to public surfaces near the city hall. 
The exhibition in Baden-Baden focuses, among other things, on the FACE 2 FACE project. In 
2007, JR organized the largest illegal photography exhibition ever: he produced portraits in the 
Middle East of Israelis and Palestinians with the same professions—for example, teachers, shopkeepers, sculptors—and posted the enormous photographs on the walls of buildings in the settlements on both sides of the border, including at the border installations themselves. The message is obvious: the hostile groups cannot be distinguished on the basis of their facial expression. 
For WOMEN ARE HEROES, in 2008 JR ventured into the Favela Morro da Providencia in Rio de Janeiro with a bold plan in mind: he wanted to meet the residents and lend a face to those 
who otherwise remain anonymous: the women of the favela. They are those who suffer most 
from drug-related crime, the weakest members of society and yet at the same time its pillars. He 
pasted large-scale posters on the shacks—wall-high black-and-white photographs of eyes and 
faces, close-ups of women from the favela. JR continued the WOMEN ARE HEROES project, 
about which he also shot a film of the same name, in Kenya, Liberia, Sierra Leone, India, and 
Cambodia. 
JR places older people at the center of his project THE WRINKLES OF THE CITY, a generation of urban dwellers who experienced how their cities were transformed during the 20th century and yet go largely unnoticed in the cityscape. After stations in Cartagena, Los Angeles, Havana,and Shanghai, in early 2013 his project took him to Berlin, where he interviewed elderly people, asking them about their memories, and put up posters featuring photographs he had taken of them on walls in Berlin’s urban space. The striking faces and the wrinkles of those he portrayed stand for the checkered history, from World War II to the fall of the Wall, that the people and 
their city have gone through. 
UNFRAMED—The  Project  in Public  Space in  Baden-Baden 
Marseille, Bordeaux, Washington, Sao Paulo, Grottaglie in southern Italy—since 2009, JR has 
traveled far and wide with the UNFRAMED project. For the first time in his career, he does not hang up his own pictures but works of known or unknown photographers.The exhibition presents project photographs of Vevey from 2010 and of Marseille, the 2013 European Capital of Culture. JR visited the residents of the working class neighborhood Belle de Mai, selected hundreds of photographs out of their photo albums, and subsequently posted a good dozen of them in the district between the harbor and the main train station: snapshots from the period of the People’s Front government, old school pictures, photographs of sailors, people on outings, and commuters—all of them are liberated from anonymity and take on new dimensions in urban space. 
Within the scope of the exhibition at the Museum Frieder Burda, UNFRAMED is also coming to 
Baden-Baden. As a large-scale project in the city’s urban space, UNFRAMED BADEN-BADEN addresses German-French history and the friendship between the two countries. By putting up posters featuring historical photographs from people’s private photo albums in Baden-Baden’s historic   city   center,   JR   places   the   theme   in   a   new  context.In the run-up to the exhibition,citizens of Baden-Baden were invited to participate and submit their own personal material. The city has always been a link between Germany and France where, after decades of enmity, the reluctant rapprochement between the two countries is palpable. 

* Photo credits of the images JR and Museum Frieder Burda

practical information:
Museum Frieder Burda 
Lichtentaler Allee 8 b 
76530 Baden-Baden Germany
Opening hours: 
Tuesday through Sunday 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., 
closed on Mondays
www.museum-frieder-burda.de

2014/02/05

Josip Vaništa, Oleg Kulik, Blue Noses @Ludwig Museum, Budapest

Transition and Transition.Josip Vaništa, Oleg Kulik, Blue Noses @Ludwig Museum, Budapest
curated by Petar Ćuković
6 February - 9 March 2014

Oleg Kulik: Eclipse 1, cibachrome, 116×84 cm, 1999; 
photocredit: Ludwig Museum (HU)

The exhibition at Ludwig Museum in Budapest Transition and Transition by Josip Vaništa, Oleg Kulik, Blue Noses is curated by Montenegrin art historian and critic Petar Ćuković.It presents works by three artists/artist groups who share a common characteristic feature: their central theme is the reflection on and the process of dramatic social events. Three selected artists explore the time, symbolically marked by the fall of the Berlin wall and what is it that exactly started with post socialism, a time whose very beginning is deeply paradoxically as it is defined by an ending. The present is anxiously lingering between an ending of one era, that it wants to have no connection with, and dreaming about a prolific future that it over and over again fails to reach.

Oleg Kulik: Eclipse 2,cibachrome, 116.5×85 cm, 1999.
photocredit: Ludwig Museum (HU)
Oleg Kulik, a Russian of Ukrainian ethnicity, is a world renowned artist well known for his radical performances and actions. Works from the so called animalistic cycle, where he inhibits an animal persona, became an emblem of his art in the 1990s .This radical actionism, as well as his works in the medium of photography and video, are a reaction to a brutal reality of a post socialist society, of this highly paradoxical time in history.

Josip Vaništa: Together Towards Development, collage, 1995
photocredit: Ludwig Museum (HU)
Josip Vaništa, a Croatian doyen of the Avant-Garde, is in his stylistic expression quite different form Kulik, he is contemplative and reserved, calm and cold, but shares with the Russian the common denominator or analyzing the process of societies passing from a communist to a liberal capitalist system. This exhibition will present his collages, which are stylistically keen to reduction, scarcity and minimalism, and that in a diary kind of way follow the horrors of the everyday transitional society.

Blue Noses: Kids from our block (2),
 chromogenic print, 60×80 cm, 2004
photocredit: Ludwig Museum (HU)
The Russian group Blue Noses (Alexander Shaburov and Vyeceslav Mizin) is according to some one of the most remarkable phenomena in the art world of the 21st century. Their work is based on the tradition of the Russian absurd, but at the same time is highly saturated with humor, self-irony and cynicism. Through the medium of photography and video installations they deal with the everyday cliches in a populist, small and unpretentious way. Their artistic way of expression desires to be understandable to all.
Their most characteristic artistic genres are jokes, gags, sketches and improvisations, recorded by a camera, and presenting the ever frail “little man” as main figure.

"The works by Josip Vaništa and Oleg Kulik, although they belong to different cultural and artistic, and even, to some extent, political contexts, have a common denominator - the reference to the time of transition, that is, the time of a cruel, uncontrolled privatisation. Josip Vaništa systematically produced during the transitional 1990s, in the form, one could say, of an artist’s diary. “Transition” in which an enchanted web which cannot be untangled was woven from bloody war, mindless politics, soulless and profiteering tycoon economics, raging nationalism, a pathetically aggressive Church, a feeble-minded entertainment industry and servile media, producing together vast, nearly immeasurable human misery. The invisible is an active constituent and part of his work, as is an inclination towards reduction. His basic, actually, his only material are clippings from newspapers or periodicals which are then glued to white A4-size paper. Vaništa’s later collages represent the “face of the very horror we are passing through”.said the curator of the project Petar Ćuković and continued "This socio-political and historical context also represented the temporal frame in which Oleg Kulik, an immigrant from Kiev, appeared on the Russian arts scene, more precisely, its Muscovite circles. It was this brutal “unmediated reality” that provoked radical actionism, the most meaningful artistic phenomenon on the Muscovite arts scene this decade, “an art of intense, almost exhibitionist performances in which corporality, physical danger and ethics were actualised”. Kulik’s work includes and animalist cycle, i.e. a zoophrenic programme among which Mad Dog has became an emblem of his art in the 1990s. Although he would occasionally return to the notion of transparency during the 1990s, the radically altered the character of the socio-cultural reality in Russia during the last decade of the 20th century – mostly its brutality – shifted the artist’s interest from somewhat abstract intellectual reflections on reality in general, based on analyses of mediatised sensory perception."

Blue Noses: Am I looking like a looser (1), 
print on metallic paper, 105×150 cm, 2001
photocredit: Ludwig Museum (HU)
"It was in this world, at the very end of the decade, and no less than at the dawn of the “new Millennium”, that the Blue Noses artistic group appeared", explained the curator .
" The appearance of this group, whose members are Alexander Shaburov and Viacheslav Mizin, marked a certain change of generations in modern Russian art. The group deals with everyday clichés to the point of self-irony. Their main way of expression is video or photo recording on a simple disk. They have a tendency towards “populist”, “small” and unpretentious, understandable forms of artistic expression, etc. Blue Noses would fill their works to overflowing with precisely such “lifelike” content, or, rather, the key content used to shape the living space via the principal media channels. As they claim themselves, the art of the Blue Noses is “popular”, understandable in both form and content to all. The face of the current century, as the Blue Noses well know, now requires new artistic phantasms and images."


The exhibition runs until 9th March 2014. The event is organised in cooperation with Croatian art collector Marinko Sudac.

Blue Noses: Advanced apes (1), colour photo
photocredit:Ludwig Museum (HU)

Program details:
6 February 2014, Thursday, 7 p.m. - OPENING CEREMONY
7 February 2014, Friday, 3-5 p.m.
TRANSITION: UNDER CONSTRUCTION - EXPERTS' CONFERENCE(Mini conference in Hungarian)
8 February 2014, Saturday, 4 p.m.
EXCLUSIVE GUIDED TOUR given by the curator, Petar Ćuković, and the artists, Oleg Kulik and Blue Noses(in Russian and Serbian, with Hungarian interpretation)

practical information:
Glass Hall
Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art
Palace of Arts
Komor Marcell u. 1,
Budapest, H-1095
Hungary
http://www.ludwigmuseum.hu/

Salzburg International Summer Academy of Fine Arts, Call for applications

Salzburg International Summer Academy of Fine Arts, Austria
deadline: 1 April 2014

About the Summer Academy Programme
The 2014 Summer Academy offers 21 courses of between one and four weeks—18 in Hohensalzburg Fortress, one in the Kiefer quarry in Fürstenbrunn and two in temporary venues in the city.
How does the world come into the picture?:This is the motto of the Summer Academy's widely varied programme. It deals with the particular ability of the fine arts to generate "images" of the increasingly impenetrable world, both of its superficial outward appearance and of social and political conditions.

Thus Amelie von Wulffen begins her course with the question of how artists appropriate the world, and how it then develops into a picture, and Norbert Bisky investigates the relation between perception and image-finding. Together with his students, Doug Ashford carries out research and practical experiment on the nature of human life, bodies and politics. By establishing direct on-site collaboration, Tobias Zielonyconcentrates specifically on the use of photography to show the life-worlds of young people.

about the program 
For the first time, the Summer Academy offers a course in The Art of Writing, with art historian, critic and writer Jennifer Allen. Since the Summer Academy programme opened up to include further artistic disciplines, starting with curatorial practice, this is a logical continuation.
Cinéma copains (Arne Hector/Minze Tummescheit) demonstrate how artists today can work with analogue film in their own dark-room, showing a method developed by artists in recent years parallel to the disappearance of analogue film. Robert Kusmirowski will direct the Summer Academy's first course in the genre "Public Art"; students will move around in the city from a "home base", exploring possible and impossible ways to realise both collaborative and individual projects. In another "first", Olga Chernyshevaand Anna Jermolaewa together with their students, will work closely with the curators in Anders Kreuger's course, and reflect on how pictures function and what they signify. They will also collaborate in mounting a final presentation.
The programme approaches topical questions of contemporary art, curating and writing about art. The course subjects, the techniques taught and the teaching methods are widely diverse, but the link between them is the quest for contemporaneity – examining current aesthetic, political, social – and thus artistic – questions, and for new forms of expression.

* The title of Amelie von Wulffen's course
Teaching artists in 2014
Nancy Adajania, Jennifer Allen, Doug Ashford, Kader Attia, Sarnath Banerjee, Norbert Bisky, Olga Chernysheva/Anna Jermolaewa, cinéma copains (Arne Hector/Minze Tummescheit), Charlotte Cullinan, Adriana Czernin, Felix Gmelin, Ellen Harvey, Anders Kreuger, Robert Kusmirowski, Peter Niedertscheider, Lukas Pusch, Lucy Sarneel, Elisabeth Schmirl, Paolo Woods, Amelie von Wulffen, Tobias Zielony

about regular application
The Salzburg Summer Academy is open to anyone interested. The high quality of the courses is guaranteed by the requirement that all prospective participants must apply for acceptance. On the basis of the submitted dossier, the teaching artists select participants. The fees are between 440.- and 1,160.- EUR, depending on the duration of the course. Students are entitled to a reduced fee. All application received by 15 May 2014 will be treated equally. Later applications are welcome, and will be processed in the order received, according to vacancies in the courses.
More info and applications click here
grants
The Summer Academy offers numerous grants, covering tuition fee to participate in one of the courses. Application deadline 1 April 2014.
More info for it click here

contacts:
office@summeracademy.at
www.summeracademy.at
T +43 662 842113