Cveigh, Roisin
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
05/17 Artforum
SUMMER 2017 ! CULTURE IS ITSELF an act of citation—of reference, response, and transformation. From Mayan iconography to Warhol, the Pictures generation to Nanook, orientalism to punk, art has copied, taken, simulated, re-created, and appropriated all manner of images, styles, texts, and experiences. When is such movement a form of resistance, and when is it a form of violence? When is speech free, and when does it harm? Such debates have long raged in the visual arts as in documentary film, sociology, anthropology, and history, but they have taken on a new cast in this time of social media, microaggressions, branding, and a vastly exploded terrain for the circulation of ideas and images. In the pages that follow, artists Salome Asega, Ajay Kurian, and Jacolby Satterwhite; scholars Homi K. Bhabha and Joan Kee; Artforum editor Michelle Kuo; and writer, artist, and activist Gregg Bordowitz examine these urgent and omnipresent politics of representation, appropriation, and power. ! Still from Katy Perry’s 2014 video This Is How We Do, directed by Joel Kefali. HOMI BHABHA: Let’s start with a proposal: I prefer translation to appropriation. The process of translation is a process of interpretation, of relocation—of producing, as Walter Benjamin says, “in another place, something new, which bares the trace of”—I won’t call it “the original,” but I will call it the anterior, the anterior without priority. Translation assumes that there is a prior state—whether it’s a text, or a prior historical moment, or a prior identity, there is something anterior to that which becomes translated. -
Town & Country April, 2011 the Culture: Art
Town & Country April, 2011 The Culture: Art Shows of the Season Rachel Wolf Who'll claim contemporary art supremacy this month: L.A. or New York? California's newest art impresario, Los Angeles's Museum of Contemporary Art director Jeffrey Deitch, is finally making waves in his new home. Along with a team of graffiti gurus, he'll launch the country's first full-scale museum survey of street art. "ART IN THE STREETS" (April 17-Aug. 8 at the Geffen Contemporary) traces the movement from its roots-with works by Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat to contemporary practitioners like Banksy and Shepard Fairey. It's already deliciously controversial: In December, Deitch was accused of censorship when he painted over a MoCA-commissioned mural by the street artist Blu meant to promote the April exhibition. (Deitch thought residents would be offended by the antiwar work, which depicted coffins shrouded in $1 bills.) And contentiousness won't be in short supply on the East Coast either, thanks to KARA WALKER, the New York artist best known for her raunchy silhouettes and stop-motion animations about race and womanhood. On April 23, Walker mounts her largest exhibition of new work since 2008, a two-venue show at Chelsea's Sikkema Jenkins gallery and Lehmann Maupin's Lower East Side locale (through June 4). Of particular interest is a new video that builds on the scenic work Walker did for Lincoln Center's recent production On the Levee, a drama about the worst river flood, pre-Katrina, in U.S. history. . -
Artist File 2013―The NACT Annual Show of Contemporary Art Press
Darren ALMOND AZUMATEI Jun Yeondoo JUNG KAGABU Shiho KUNIYASU Takamasa Nalini MALANI NAKAZAWA Hideaki SHIGA Lieko January 23 (Wed.) to April 1 (Mon.), 2013 The National Art Center, Tokyo Special Exhibition Gallery 2E Organized by The National Art Center, 106-8558 Tokyo 7-22-2 Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan TEL: (+81) 3-5777-8600 (Hello Dial) URL: http://www.nact.jp/ Closed on Tuesdays Opening hours: 10:00-18:00 (Fridays 10:00-20:00) Open until 22:00 on March 23 (Sat.) in conjunction with “Roppngi Art Night 2013” Last admission: 30 minutes before closing Yeondoo JUNG, Wonderland – ‘Snow White’, 2004 © Yeondoo Jung Outline Admission (tax included) Adults College students The Artist File is an ongoing series of contemporary art exhibitions that was launched General Tickets 1,000 500 when the National Art Center, Tokyo first opened. Artists are not chosen to fit in with Advance Tickets 800 300 any particular theme, rather they are selected from both Japan and abroad on the basis Group Tickets 800 300 of interest and relevance, and their work is presented as a group of small solo shows in *Admission is free for high school students and those under 18, the exhibition space. as well as those with physical disability certificates and one accompanying person. *Free admission on March 23 (Sat.) in conjunction with “Roppongi This exhibition, the fifth in the series, features eight artists including three from overseas. Art Night 2013”. They are a diverse group both in terms of age (ranging from those in their 30s to their *Group tickets are available only at the venue (discounts only applicable to groups of 20 or more). -
Walker Art Center Annual Report 14 15 Contents
Walker Art Center Annual Report 14 15 Contents Letter from the Executive Director 3 Measures of Success 11 Annual Fund 16 Acquisitions & Gifts 33 Financial Statement 42 Board of Trustees 46 Miwa Matreyek, This World Made Itself Photo: Gayle Laird, ©Exploratorium Year in Review Letter from the Executive Director BY OLGA VISO The year 2015 marked a major milestone in the Walker Art Center’s history: for 75 years it has served as a public center dedicated to con - temporary art and culture. To celebrate, we invited artists and our community to come together and join us in a series of WALKER@75 exhibitions, programs, and events that launched in the fall of 2014 and culminated with the public announcement of a major campus renovation that commenced in August 2015. At the heart of our celebration was an examination of the many questions that have motivated and guided the Walker’s work during its 75-year history. The Walker is at its core about asking questions and has from its very beginning offered spaces and plat- forms for productive dialogue and debate. This long-standing institutional commitment to creative inquiry is grounded in the belief that providing a safe space for the exchange of ideas and open dialogue about the culture around us leads to a place where growth and mutual understanding be- come possible. Celebrating WALKER@75 With generous sponsorship from Target, we invited our community to join Olga Viso us in the act of questioning, with more than 100,000 participating in the Photo: ©Walker Art Center Walker’s 75th-anniversary celebration. -
DARREN ALMOND Dark Light 57 Rue Du Temple, 75004 Paris
DARREN ALMOND Dark Light 57 rue du Temple, 75004 Paris March – May 2021 Galerie Max Hetzler is pleased to announce the solo exhibition Dark Light with new paintings and works on paper by Darren Almond at 57 rue du Temple, in Paris. British artist Darren Almond works in a variety of media, spanning photography, film, installation, sculpture and painting. His diverse subjects deal with abstract ideas of time, space, history and memory, and how these concepts relate and intersect. Unearthing the symbolic and emotional potential of objects, places and situations, the artist produces works charged with historical as well as personal resonance. Darren Almond, Katsura Night Fall III, 2021 For his second show with the gallery in Paris, Almond will present a 182 x 258 cm selection of new paintings and works on paper inspired by the “Great photo : Stephen White & Co Conjunction”, a rare astronomical phenomenon that recently took place in one of its most remarkable iterations in December 2020. Steeped in mythology, this celestial event occurs approximately every twenty years, when Jupiter and Saturn appear closest together in the sky. On the night of the Great Conjunction of 2020, the two planets shared the most intimate nocturnal proximity since 1226, appearing as a unified, gigantic and extraordinary star defying perception, space and time. Drawing on this cosmic alignment, as well as the art of the Japanese Ukiyo-e masters, Almond has produced a series of nine large-scale paintings, each inscribed with abstracted numerical digits inlaid with precious metals and alloys – all pure conductors of light. The artist explains, “All works are multi-panelled canvases that hang on a grid format, the grid being the mathematical gateway to the abstract. -
Five Decades of Black Performance Art to Electrify New York City from Greenwich Village to Harlem Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art
MEDIA RELEASE CONTACT: Laurie Duke, Press Officer, Grey Art Gallery [email protected] | 212.998.6782 Liz Gwinn, Communications Manager, The Studio Museum in Harlem [email protected] | 646.214.2142 Five Decades of Black Performance Art to Electrify New York City from Greenwich Village to Harlem Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art NYU’s Grey Art Gallery | September 10–December 7, 2013 The Studio Museum in Harlem | November 14, 2013–March 9, 2014 New York City (July 8, 2013)—This fall, New York University’s Grey Art Gallery and The Studio Museum in Harlem will co-present Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art, the first comprehensive survey of more than five decades of performance art by black visual artists. The exhibition, organized by Valerie Cassel Oliver for the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, will be presented in New York in two parts: Part I will be on view September 10 to December 7, 2013, at NYU’s Grey Art Gallery; Part II will take place November 14, 2013 to March 9, 2014 at The Studio Museum in Harlem. The exhibition will be accompanied by more than a dozen live performances and public programs throughout its six-month run. These include a series of performances co- organized with Performa 13, New York’s celebrated performance- art biennial (November 1–24, 2013). Providing a critical history beginning with Fluxus and Conceptual art in the early 1960s through present-day practices, Radical Presence chronicles the emergence and development of black performance art over three generations, presenting a rich and Maren Hassinger performing in Senga Nengudi’s RSVP (1975–77/2012) at Contemporary Arts complex look at this important facet of contemporary art. -
You Don't Immediately Think of Jeffrey Deitch and Larry Gagosian As
Pogrebin, Robin. Jeffrey Deitch and Larry Gagosian to Collaborate in Miami, The New York Times, October 15, 2015. You don’t immediately think of Jeffrey Deitch and Larry Gagosian as collaborators. Indeed, the two were historically competitors, dealers who represented some of the same artists at different points in their careers. But these art world heavyweights — both protégés of the dealer Leo Castelli — have known each other for years and de- cided for the first time to collaborate. The result is an ambitious exhibition on figurative painting and sculpture in Miami in December. “Larry and I have wanted to do a project together for some time,” Mr. Deitch said. “Everything came together.” The show, “Unrealism,” opens on Dec. 1 in a 20,000-square-foot space in the Moore Building in the Miami Design District and will remain through the week of Art Basel Miami Beach (Dec. 3 through 6). Craig Robins, the developer who spear- headed the district, offered Mr. Gagosian the space, and Mr. Gagosian said he thought of Mr. Deitch. “He’s one of the most imaginative, innovative curators out there,” he said. “My gallery represents a lot of figurative artists. I think it’s a very important part of what’s going on now.” Mr. Deitch had long wanted to explore the subject in a show, but said he never had the chance as the director of the Mu- seum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. When he returned to New York, he was struck by the work of emerging figurative painters — many of them women — like Ella Kruglyanskaya, Jamian Juliano-Villani and Tala Madani. -
Hieronymus Bosch Meets Madonna's Daughter in Jacolby Satterwhite's Epically Trippy New Video at Gavin Brown
Hieronymus Bosch Meets Madonna’s Daughter in Jacolby Satterwhite’s Epically Trippy New Video at Gavin Brown It's the artist's first New York solo show since 2013. Sarah Cascone, March 10, 2018 Jacolby Satterwhite, Blessed Avenue, still image. Courtesy of Gavin Brown's Enterprise. “I’m so nervous,” admitted Jacolby Satterwhite. artnet News was visiting the artist at his Brooklyn apartment ahead of the opening of his upcoming show at New York’s Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, and he was feeling some jitters. “My first solo show, no one knew who I was,” he added, noting that the pressure is way more “intense” this time around. Satterwhite’s first solo effort in the city was in 2013. “So much has happened for me since then, creatively, cerebrally, and critically. I hope of all of that comes through in what I’m showing.” Titled Blessed Avenue, the exhibition is a concept album and an accompanying music video showcasing Satterwhite’s signature visuals, a trippy, queer fantasy of a dreamscape, with cameos from the likes of Raul De Nieves, Juliana Huxtable, and Lourdes Leon (Madonna’s daughter, now studying dance at a conservatory). At 30 minutes, it’s the artist’s longest animation to date—although Satterwhite is already teasing an extended director’s cut, on tap to be shown at Art Basel in Basel with Los Angeles’s Moran Moran. Jacolby Satterwhite, Blessed Avenue, still image. Courtesy of Gavin Brown’s Enterprise. Blessed Avenue is also the artist’s most collaborative project to date. Satterwhite credits the many people with whom he has worked with giving him the confidence to consider his practice more broadly. -
JACOLBY SATTERWHITE: We Are in Hell When We Hurt Each Other September 24 – October 31, 2020 534 West 26Th Street, New York
JACOLBY SATTERWHITE: We Are In Hell When We Hurt Each Other September 24 – October 31, 2020 534 West 26th Street, New York NEW YORK, August 13, 2020 – Mitchell-Innes & Nash is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new works by New York-based artist Jacolby Satterwhite, We Are In Hell When We Hurt Each Other. This exhibition, which marks the artist’s first show with the gallery, will include a new, large-scale virtual reality installation as well as new works in a variety of mediums including sculpture, photography, neon and mixed-medium installation. The centerpiece of the exhibition is the debut of Satterwhite's most recent immersive, virtual reality video installation, We Are In Hell When We Hurt Each Other. In the video, after which the exhibition takes its title, the current events of our present reality permeate Satterwhite's quasi-utopic universe. This virtual world is rooted in the expression of Satterwhite's body movements, which are modeled and transcribed through digital bodysuits into animated fembot form. Current events permeate his virtual space that posits a post-pandemic, post-revolution world in which Black CGI female figures rooted in the artist's body movements use ritual and movement as tools of resistance. For over a decade, Satterwhite has used 3D animation, sculpture, performance, painting and photography to create fantastical, labyrinthine universes. Exploring the themes of public space, the body, ritual and allegory, Satterwhite draws from myriad references including Italian Baroque painting, ‘90s video games, Modernism and artworks by his mother Patricia. Patricia’s drawings and recordings have had a significant influence on Satterwhite’s work, serving as a foundation for his otherworldly works. -
Oral History Interview with Jeffrey Deitch, 2006 May 15
Oral history interview with Jeffrey Deitch, 2006 May 15 Funding for this interview was provided by a grant from the Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation. Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Preface The following oral history transcript is the result of a recorded interview with Jeffrey Deitch on May 15, 2006. The interview took place in New York, N.Y., and was conducted by James McElhinney for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Jeffrey Deitch has reviewed the transcript. Their corrections and emendations appear below in brackets with initials. This transcript has been lightly edited for readability by the Archives of American Art. The reader should bear in mind that they are reading a transcript of spoken, rather than written, prose. Interview JAMES MCELHINNEY: This is James McElhinney interviewing Jeffrey Deitch at Deitch Products at— JEFFREY DEITCH: Projects. JAMES MCELHINNEY: —or Projects—I'm sorry—at 76 Grand Street in New York, New York, on the 15th of May— Monday. Well, here we go. When and where were you born? JEFFREY DEITCH: Hartford, Connecticut, in 1952. Should I do it in a more interesting format than this? JAMES MCELHINNEY: Oh, we could—we could—here are the questions: Where were you born and when? JEFFREY DEITCH: Yeah, I think I'll cover that, but should it be how I started in the art business and— JAMES MCELHINNEY: Well, they want to know—they want to know, too, what your childhood, family— JEFFREY DEITCH: Right. -
Reading Sample
BASQUIAT BOOM FOR REAL 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 1 20.11.19 14:31 EDITED BY DIETER BUCHHART AND ELEANOR NAIRNE WITH LOTTE JOHNSON 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 2 20.11.19 14:31 BASQUIAT BOOM FOR REAL PRESTEL MUNICH · LONDON · NEW YORK 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 3 20.11.19 14:31 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 4 20.11.19 14:31 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 5 20.11.19 14:31 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 6 20.11.19 14:31 8 FOREWORD JANE ALISON 4. JAZZ 12 BOOM, BOOM, BOOM FOR REAL 156 INTRODUCTION DIETER BUCHHART 158 BASQUIAT, BIRD, BEAT AND BOP 20 THE PERFORMANCE OF FRANCESCO MARTINELLI JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT ELEANOR NAIRNE 162 WORKS 178 ARCHIVE 1. SAMO© 5. ENCYCLOPAEDIA 28 INTRODUCTION 188 INTRODUCTION 30 THE SHADOWS 190 BASQUIAT’S BOOKS CHRISTIAN CAMPBELL ELEANOR NAIRNE 33 WORKS 194 WORKS 58 ARCHIVE 224 ARCHIVE 2. NEW YORK/ 6. THE SCREEN NEW WAVE 232 INTRODUCTION 66 INTRODUCTION 234 SCREENS, STEREOTYPES, SUBJECTS JORDANA MOORE SAGGESE 68 EXHIBITIONISM CARLO MCCORMICK 242 WORKS 72 WORKS 252 ARCHIVE 90 ARCHIVE 262 INTERVIEW BETWEEN 3. THE SCENE JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT, GEOFF DUNLOP AND SANDY NAIRNE 98 INTRODUCTION 268 CHRONOLOGY 100 SAMO©’S NEW YORK LOTTE JOHNSON GLENN O’BRIEN 280 ENDNOTES 104 WORKS 288 INDEX 146 ARCHIVE 294 AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES 295 IMAGE CREDITS 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 7 20.11.19 14:31 Edo Bertoglio. Jean-Michel Basquiat wearing an American football helmet, 1981. 8 191115_Basquiat_Book_Spreads.indd 8 20.11.19 14:31 FOREWORD JANE ALISON Jean-Michel Basquiat is one of the most significant painters This is therefore a timely presentation of a formidable talent of the 20th century; his name has become synonymous with and builds on an important history of Basquiat exhibitions notions of cool. -
S Teve Po Wers
STEVE POWERS - STUDIO GANGSTER GINGKO PRESS STUDIO GANGSTER published on the occasion of STEVE POWERS: THE MAGIC WORD Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts October 20, 2007–January 27, 2008 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 118 North Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19102 OPENING IMAGE For my family, thanks for the baggage, and PAFA graduate Don Martin. Steve Powers: The Magic Word by Alex Baker Steve Powers is a pop artist in reverse. Instead of several years preceding the ICA exhibition. A Harvey, Dearraindrop, Nicole Eisenmann, Adam by Disney in 1997, peep shows and pornographic Powers ruminations on aspirations for success, using the current modes of expression associated cacophony of ESPO, REAS, and assorted found Cvijanovic, the Gents of Desire, Swoon, Gary Panter, movie theaters along 42nd Street near Times Square invention and reinvention, and the attendant with the advertising industry, he draws from an signs were anchored to the roof of the bodega and and Os Gemeos, among many others, created new (vacated by the stateʼs right of eminent domain tortures that come with the turf will soon be earlier era of words and images—the bygone the adjacent gallery walls, mimicking the visual signage and identities for businesses who could not during the real estate recession in the early 1990s) leveraged for social good—in marginalized youth idiom of the handpainted sign. Powers strives noise of the cheap urban-retail experience. Powers otherwise afford major facelifts.* In summer 2005, served as temporary public art installations and communities in Dublin and Belfast, in southern for authenticity in reviving this artisanʼs pursuit, hilarious phraseology was underscored in signs Powers opened the Dreamland Artist Clubhouse, interim artistic outposts courtesy of Creative Time, and northern Ireland, respectively, the result of a employing the richly vibrant, albeit highly toxic, like “ESPORAMA/Sensibly Slum;” “Fast Nickʼs in which customers can buy ready-made signs, but the same public art organization that spearheaded Fulbright fellowship he recently received.