Key Title Information IT's URGENT!

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Key Title Information IT's URGENT! Key title information IT’S URGENT! Product Details A LUMA Project curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist £28.00 Editor(s) Luma Foundation Publisher Walther Koenig ISBN 9783960989363 “The point of departure for IT’S URGENT! is an exhibition model that I Format softback started (with Christian Boltanski and Betrand Lavier) in 1993 with DO Pages 320 IT. For this on-going, flexible and open-ended show, we invite artists to Illustrations 152 colour, 5 b&w write instructions, scores and recipes that can then be interpreted by others each time they are presented.” – Hans Ulrich Obrist Dimensions 310mm x 210mm Weight 1589 This book features all 153 original posters created by the 127 artists invited to participate in IT’S URGENT!, an open form touring exhibition. Publication Date: Feb 2021 IT’S URGENT! aims to make the artists’ ideas available to all, open up to new audiences and insert them into public life and the community at large. Artists from all over the world responded to this invitation to address the most pressing themes of our times – ecology, inequality, common future, solidarity, anti-racism and social justice had a profound presence in this vast ensemble of creative endeavour. Artists include – Etel Adnan, Tania Bruguera, Olafur Eliasson, Hans Haacke, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rirkrit Tiravanija, David Adjaye, Mark Bradford, Judy Chicago, Douglas Coupland, Jimmie Durham, Formafantasma, Cao Fei, Fernando Garcia-Dory, Liam Gillick, Renée Green, Newton Harrison, Luchita Hurtado, Pierre Huyghe, Koo Jeong A, Josh Kline, Suzanne Lacy, Yoko Ono, Trevor Paglen, Raymond Pettibon, Raqs Media Collective, Peter Saville, Stephen Shore, Lawrence Weiner, and Stanley Whitney. The exhibition has so far toured to Kunsthal Charlottenborg and Heartland Festival, Denmark (2019) Luma Westbau, Zurich, Switzerland (2019-2020) Luma Arles, Arles, France (2020). Distributed by Enquiries Website Cornerhouse Publications +44 (0)161 212 3466 / 3468 www.cornerhousepublications.org HOME [email protected] 2 Tony Wilson Place Twitter Manchester Orders @CornerhousePubs M15 4FN +44 (0) 1752 202301 England [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • Frieze New York
    FRIEZE NEW YORK Press Release Precious Okoyomon Wins 2021 Frieze Artist Award at Frieze New York New York, US (February 25, 2021) – New York-based artist Precious Okoyomon is the winner of the 2021 Frieze Artist Award. Supported by the Luma Foundation, the award presents a major opportunity for an emerging artist to debut an ambitious new commission at Frieze New York. Launched in 2018, the initiative furthers the established program of Artist Award commissions at Frieze London. Previous recipients of the award at Frieze New York include Lauren Halsey and Kapwani Kiwanga. This year, Frieze New York will take place for the first time at The Shed in Manhattan, from May 5 – 9, 2021. The fair is supported by global lead partner Deutsche Bank, continuing a shared commitment to artistic excellence. Okoyomon’s commission was selected by a jury chaired by Jenny Schlenzka (Executive Artistic Director at Performance Space New York), and featuring Ralph Lemon (Artistic Director, Cross Performance), Vassilis Oikonomopoulos (Senior Curator, Luma Arles), and Stuart Comer (Chief Curator of Media and Performance Art, MOMA). Loring Randolph, Director of Programming for Frieze New York said: ‘In recent years, the Frieze Artist Award in New York and Luma Foundation have debuted significant large- scale sculptures by leading international artists. In 2021, we could not be more excited to work with an exceptional New Yorker, Precious Okoyomon on realizing their live project in collaboration with The Shed. It has been hugely beneficial to work with Jenny Schlenzka of Performance Space, a leading institution moving boundaries in New York, and our expert jury who are the world’s tastemakers in performance art amongst much more.’ Jenny Schlenzka, Executive Artistic Director at Performance Space New York added: ‘The jury is proud to present Precious Okoyomon with the Frieze Artist Award.
    [Show full text]
  • 25Th Anniversary
    25th Anniversary Montblanc de la Culture 25th Anniversary Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award Arts Patronage Montblanc de la Culture 25th Anniversary Arts Patronage Award 1992 25th Anniversary Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award 2016 Anniversary 2016 CONTENT MONTBLANC DE LA CULTURE ARTS PATRONAGE AWARD 25th Anniversary — Preface 04 / 05 The Montblanc de la Culture Arts Patronage Award 06 / 09 Red Carpet Moments 10 / 11 25 YEARS OF PATRONAGE Patron of Arts — 2016 Peggy Guggenheim 12 / 23 2015 Luciano Pavarotti 24 / 33 2014 Henry E. Steinway 34 / 43 2013 Ludovico Sforza – Duke of Milan 44 / 53 2012 Joseph II 54 / 63 2011 Gaius Maecenas 64 / 73 2010 Elizabeth I 74 / 83 2009 Max von Oppenheim 84 / 93 2 2008 François I 94 / 103 3 2007 Alexander von Humboldt 104 / 113 2006 Sir Henry Tate 114 / 123 2005 Pope Julius II 124 / 133 2004 J. Pierpont Morgan 134 / 143 2003 Nicolaus Copernicus 144 / 153 2002 Andrew Carnegie 154 / 163 2001 Marquise de Pompadour 164 / 173 2000 Karl der Grosse, Hommage à Charlemagne 174 / 183 1999 Friedrich II the Great 184 / 193 1998 Alexander the Great 194 / 203 1997 Peter I the Great and Catherine II the Great 204 / 217 1996 Semiramis 218 / 227 1995 The Prince Regent 228 / 235 1994 Louis XIV 236 / 243 1993 Octavian 244 / 251 1992 Lorenzo de Medici 252 / 259 IMPRINT — Imprint 260 / 264 Content Anniversary Preface 2016 This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Montblanc Cultural Foundation: an occasion to acknowledge considerable achievements, while recognising the challenges that lie ahead. Since its inception in 1992, through its various yet interrelated programmes, the Foundation continues to appreciate the significant role that art can play in instigating key shifts, and at times, ruptures, in our perception of and engagement with the cultural, social and political conditions of our times.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Museum, LUMA Arles, and the LUMA Foundation Present Forty
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PRESS CONTACTS: May 8, 2017 Paul Jackson, Communications Director [email protected] 212.219.1222 x217 [email protected] The New Museum, LUMA Arles, and the LUMA Foundation Present Forty-Two International Fellows Will Participate in a Five-Day Residency Program in Arles Leading up to a Public Conference on May 27, 2017 LUMA Foundation’s Parc des Ateliers, Arles Photo: Victor Picon New York, NY…The New Museum is pleased to announce the program and featured participants of IdeasCity Arles, held in partnership with LUMA Arles and the LUMA Foundation, extending a collaboration that began at IdeasCity Detroit and continued at IdeasCity Athens. Led by IdeasCity Director, Joseph Grima, IdeasCity Arles will take place from May 22 to 27, 2017, and will feature an intensive five-day residency program with forty-two Fellows, culminating in a public conference featuring Kunlé Adeyemi, Amale Andraos, Michel Bauwens, Raphaële Bidault-Waddington, Bouchra Khalili, Rem Koolhaas, Ben Vickers, and Amanda Williams, among others. The public conference, which will be free and open to the public, will feature a keynote lecture by Rem Koolhaas and will take place on Saturday, May 27, 2017, at the Grande Halle, Parc des Ateliers in Arles. IdeasCity—the New Museum’s platform to explore the future of cities—will work in partnership with local community organizations in Arles to tackle key issues specific to the region. Building upon discussions initiated in Detroit and Athens, IdeasCity Arles will address the future city, looking at key forces that shape Arles and the Camargue region today. Working alongside local stakeholders in Arles to investigate the countryside as a place where urban change is accelerating, IdeasCity will develop “scenarios for a City in a Bioregion” through the following themes: City of Culture & Agriculture, Twenty-First-Century Factory Town, City as Campus, UNESCO City 3.0, and Global Village.
    [Show full text]
  • New Curator for Frieze Projects: Raphael Gygax
    Frieze London Press Release 25 November 2015 New Curator for Frieze Projects: Raphael Gygax Today Frieze announces that Swiss curator Raphael Gygax has been selected as the new Curator of Frieze Projects - the innovative, non-profit programme of artist commissions at Frieze London, established in 2003. Gygax, who is Curator at Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich, will devise the 2016 Frieze Projects, commissioning artists to realise ambitious new work at the fair. Frieze Projects and the Frieze Artist Award are supported by the LUMA Foundation. Victoria Siddall, Director of the Frieze fairs, said: ‘The Frieze Projects programme of artist commissions has been a cornerstone of the fair since its inception in 2003. I am thrilled to welcome Raphael Gygax as the new curator of the projects for Frieze London. His diverse interests in performance, film and theatre, and his wide-ranging curatorial experience, will continue a rich tradition – begun by Polly Staple and most recently led by Nicola Lees – of commissioning exciting, ambitious, site-specific works which challenge disciplinary boundaries and contribute to the entirely unique experience of the Frieze fairs.’ Gygax said: ‘It’s an incredible opportunity for me to work with such an interesting organization that manages to stay so dynamic, curious and enlightened – and I feel honoured. I would like to use the international visibility that this platform offers to work with artists from different generations and art fields. Diversity, transformation, hospitality and otherness will be important key terms that will accompany me on this journey.’ Gygax has explored performance, dance and body politics through diverse academic and curatorial activities, including a recently completed PhD at the University of Berne.
    [Show full text]
  • Untitled“, Adam Linder‘S „Some Proximity“ and „Auto Ficto Reflexo“, and Liz Kinoshita‘S „Volcano“
    14 July — 14 August 2016 A MEETING OF THE arts at IMPULSTANZ 2016 In 2016, ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival invites greats of and newcomers to the world of contemporary dance as well as over forty visual artists. Golden Lion winner Tino Sehgal and collabo- rators have conceived a series of workshops and research projects. Additionally, outstanding spaces of encounter between choreography and the visual arts are being created in Leopold Museum and mumok as part of the festival’s performance programme. One of the highlights among the many artistic encounters initiated by ImPulsTanz has been specially devised for Vienna: the visual arts x dance project by Tino Sehgal, who may be considered the most important propo- nent of art at the interface of choreography and the visual arts at present. In a five-week series of workshops and research projects (open level and advanced), Sehgal invites artists from both fields to exchange ideas and experiences. A debate between French choreographer Jérôme Bel and art historian and curator Dorothea von Hantelmann on the opening day of the festival (14th July) in Leopold Museum marks the beginning of a series of highly diverse artistic formats, which continues until 14th August both in Leopold Museum and Vienna Arsenal. New York choreographer Maria Hassabi and Brussels-based gallery owner Jan Mot, for example, start off their project, which will extend over several days, with a leisurely stroll through the garden of Belvedere Palace. Exceptional performer Justin F. Kennedy meets Canadian artist Jeremy Shaw, a “researcher of intoxication”: they call their five-day laboratoryWormhole Through Your Brain, during which they will experiment with various states of trance.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Museum, LUMA Arles, and the LUMA Foundation Present Forty
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PRESS CONTACTS: April 27, 2017 Paul Jackson, Communications Director [email protected] 212.219.1222 x217 [email protected] The New Museum, LUMA Arles, and the LUMA Foundation Present Forty-Two International Fellows Will Participate in a Five-Day Residency Program in Arles Leading up to a Public Conference on May 27, 2017 LUMA Foundation’s Parc des Ateliers, Arles Photo: Victor Picon New York, NY…The New Museum is pleased to announce the program and featured participants of IdeasCity Arles, held in partnership with LUMA Arles and the LUMA Foundation, extending a collaboration that began at IdeasCity Detroit and continued at IdeasCity Athens. Led by IdeasCity Director, Joseph Grima, IdeasCity Arles will take place from May 22 to 27, 2017, and will feature an intensive five-day residency program with forty-two Fellows, culminating in a public conference featuring Kunlé Adeyemi, Amale Andraos, Michel Bauwens, Raphaële Bidaut-Waddington, Bouchra Khalili, Rem Koolhaas, Ben Vickers, and Amanda Williams, among others. The conference, which will be free and open to the public, will take place on Saturday, May 27, 2017, at the Grande Halle, Parc des Ateliers in Arles. IdeasCity—the New Museum’s platform to explore the future of cities—will work in partnership with local community organizations in Arles to tackle key issues specific to the region. Building upon discussions initiated in Detroit and Athens, IdeasCity Arles will address the future city, looking at key forces that shape Arles and the Camargue region today. Working alongside local stakeholders in Arles to investigate the countryside as a place where urban change is accelerating, IdeasCity will develop “scenarios for a City in a Bioregion” through the following themes: City of Culture & Agriculture, Twenty-First-Century Factory Town, City as Campus, UNESCO City 3.0, and Global Village.
    [Show full text]
  • Maja's Masterpiece
    M AJA’S MASTERPIECE A decade in the making, Luma Arles—Maja Hoffmann’s cultural complex in Provence, France—has helped transform the city she loves. As the project nears completion, she opens up about the region’s star attraction. BY JAY CHESHES PHOTOGRAPHY BY DEREK HENDERSON N THE WEE HOURS of a sticky spring morn- Institute in New York and on the board of the New Two years before breaking ground on the Gehry ing, Luma Arles, a vast new art and culture Museum, and she has previously served on the boards tower, she introduced the public to her idea with Luma complex in a former rail yard in the southern of the Tate Modern and Palais de Tokyo, among other Arles’s inaugural show, To the Moon Via the Beach, a French city of Arles, is swarming with mod- institutions. Her Luma Foundation, founded in 2004 mix of art and performance that for four days in the els, fresh off the runway for Gucci’s new cruise “to support the activities of independent artists and summer of 2012 took over the city’s Roman arena. collection. La Grande Halle, a warehouse- pioneers,” operates an art complex in Zurich and a Works by 20 artists (including Pierre Huyghe, Daniel Iturned–exhibition space there, has been converted winter biennial in Gstaad, Switzerland, along with Buren and Fischli & Weiss) filled the site, along with a for the night into an after-hours dance club. Rap managing her big project taking shape here in Arles. mountain of sand that was gradually transformed by star A$AP Rocky and actress Saoirse Ronan float Hoffmann grew up just outside the city, spending a team of sculptors from beachscape to moonscape.
    [Show full text]
  • HENI Publishing Catalogue 2019
    Since its inception in 2009, HENI Publishing has worked closely with artists and authors of the highest calibre across a wide range of titles, from major trade publications to artists’ books and limited editions. Among our new titles for 2019 we are delighted to be publishing the collected conversations of two titans of the contemporary art world in Hans Ulrich Obrist’s The Richter Interviews; a new monograph on New York- based British artist Shantell Martin, the first critical book to showcase her multi-faceted practice; a beautiful and intimate survey of nude photography by Mary McCartney, complete with an artist’s special edition; an artist’s book by Cathy Wilkes to accompany her exhibition at the British Pavilion at this year’s Venice Biennale; and the first of two volumes of the collected writings on art by one of the world’s leading critics and curators, Robert Storr. To find out more about our books – as well as HENI’s work across editions, film, photography and more – visit our website: www.heni.com Contents New Titles 2019 5 Recent Titles & Backlist 29 List of Illustrations 45 Index 46 Sales & Distribution 48 New Titles 2019 Mary McCartney: Paris Nude Essay by Charlotte Jansen Paris Nude presents for the first time a new body of work by the celebrated British photographer Mary McCartney. Over the course of two days in summer 2016, McCartney stayed with her subject Phyllis Wang at her St Germain apartment in Paris, photographing Wang in the nude to produce an extraordinary and intimate series of images. A mixture of black-and-white and colour, the delicate photo- graphs collected here showcase the trust required from both subject and photographer.
    [Show full text]
  • TD Press-Kit.E-3.Pdf
    Installation view of “Trisha Donnelly” at the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, Porto, Portugal, 2016. © SERRALVES FOUNDATION, PORTO, PORTUGAL/FILIPE BRAGA TRISHA DONNELLY WINS MUSEUM LUDWIG’S 2017 WOLFGANG HAHN PRIZE BY Alex Greenberger The Museum Ludwig in Cologne, Germany, announced today that Trisha Donnelly has won its 2017 Wolfgang Hahn Prize. The New York–based artist, who recently had a solo show at the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art in Porto, Portugal, will now receive an exhibition at the Museum Ludwig. A sum of money, with a maximum amount of €100,000 (about $106,000), is typically given to the winner, though the amount awarded to Donnelly was not specified in a new release. Donnelly’s work (some of which will now be acquired by the Museum Ludwig) takes a wide variety of forms—installations, pho- tographs, performances, drawings, videos, and writings, often dealing with time and perception. Hers are typically slow works that demand patience and often rely on a knowledge of the space in which they’re exhibited. “Trisha Donnelly is without doubt one of the most compelling artists of our time whose work offers entirely new ways of expe- riencing and thinking about form,” Suzanne Cotter, the director of the Serralves Museum, said in a statement. Cotter added, “As an artist she occupies a position of committed resistance to the easy appropriation of art as something contained and ultimately controllable. At the same time, the extraordinary generosity of her work, that touches on the visual—in particular the photographic—the spoken, the aural and the physical, is electrifying in its permission.” Cotter was a member of the prize’s jury.
    [Show full text]
  • Filter Bubble Observations, Notes Takeshi Shiomitsu 17 Filter Bubble Lebo Mashifane 33
    Filter F Bubble B Contents Introduction Simon Castets & Hans Ulrich Obrist 9 filter bubble observations, notes Takeshi Shiomitsu 17 filter bubble Lebo Mashifane 33 Sarah Abu Abdallah 36 Sophia Al Maria 38 Abdullah Al-Mutairi 40 Rachael Allen 42 Yollotl Alvarado 44 Arca & Jesse Kanda 46 Darja Bajagic´ 48 Alessandro Bava 50 James Bridle 52 Andrea Crespo 54 Manolis Daskalakis-Lemos 56 Alex Mackin Dolan 58 Valia Fetisov 60 Louisa Gagliardi 62 Deanna Havas 64 Max Hawkins 66 Bernhard Hegglin 68 Ho Rui An 70 ‘Filter Bubble’ Emmanuel Iduma 72 31 October 2015 – Alexander Jackson Wyatt 74 28 February 2016 Nicholas Korody 76 Venue: Isabel Legate 78 LUMA Westbau Löwenbräukunst Luca Lum & Marcus Yee 80 Limmatstrasse 270 Nicholas Maurer 82 CH-8005 Zurich, Switzerland www.westbau.com Felix Melia 84 Mitchell Gilbert Messina 86 Ryan Murphy 88 Wyatt Niehaus 90 Adriana Ramic´ 92 Tabita Rezaire 94 Bunny Rogers 96 Ben Rosenthal 98 Bogosi Sekhukhuni 100 Crista Siglin & Isaac Wilder 102 Jasper Spicero 104 Jesse Stecklow 106 Hito Steyerl 108 Elisabeth Sutherland 110 Philipp Timischl 112 Urban Zellweger 114 Zou Zhao 116 Bruno Zhu 118 Damon Zucconi 120 Special Thanks 139 Colophon 140 About LUMA 141 About 89plus 141 Introduction In 1989, the introduction of the World Wide Web carried the promise of an open, limitless and objective means of disseminating and finding knowledge across the globe. The idea of someone’s world view being influenced by the newspaper they read or TV channel they watched seemed about to be relegated to a distant past. Over the past few years, however, the improvements in personalisation have clouded the aspiration of making the Internet a window on the world and gradually turned it into a series of individualised mirrors, reflecting one’s interest as identified by automated pattern recognition.
    [Show full text]
  • Artforum.Com Is a Registered Trademark of Artforum International Magazine, New York, NY
    login register ADVERTISE BACK ISSUES CONTACT US SUBSCRIBE follow us search ARTGUIDE IN PRINT 500 WORDS PREVIEWS BOOKFORUM A & E 中文版 DIARY PICKS NEWS VIDEO FILM PASSAGES SLANT SCENE & HERD Tale of Two Cities links RECENT ARCHIVE VENICE 06.16.14 Agnieszka Gratza on “Solaris Chronicles” at the LUMA Foundation in Arles Kate Sutton at the opening of Manifesta 10 Andrew Berardini on the opening of Gavlak Gallery in Los Angeles Linda Yablonsky on Jeff Koons’s retrospective at the Whitney Museum Linda Yablonsky on Juergen Teller, Rashid Johnson, and Paweł Althamer in Greece Gemma Tipton on Marina Left: Artist Christopher Williams and architect Rem Koolhaas, director of the 14th Venice Architectural Biennale. Right: Abramović and Ed Atkins Fashion designer and collector Muiccia Prada. (All photos: Linda Yablonsky) at the Serpentine WHILE IN VENICE, I didn’t hear a single joke about architects. This is a profession that appears to take itself very seriously—no bad behavior while away from home. At least, that’s how it seemed over three preview days at the Fourteenth Venice Biennale of architecture—my first. Experienced people predicted that there would be more artists involved than in any edition before, and probably the best one to break my virginity. The reason, they all said, was “Rem”—Rem Koolhaas, the exhibition’s curator and an architect so widely respected that even those who turn up their noses at his ideas pay them close attention. What kind of show would he make? Not the usual kind, to be sure. From the moment of my arrival on Wednesday, June 4, Venice did seem quieter than it is when the art world is in town.
    [Show full text]
  • Ian Cheng's Life After BOB, a New Form of Narrative Animation
    Ian Cheng’s Life After BOB, a New Form of Narrative Animation Imagining Life With Artificial Intelligence, to Tour Internationally in 2021 – 22 Commissioned by The Shed, Luma Arles, and LAS For more information, please contact: Christina Riley Senior Publicist (646) 876-6865 [email protected] Image from Ian Cheng’s Life After BOB: The Chalice Study, 2021. New York, NY – June 14, 2021 – The Shed, as lead commissioner, is partnering with co-commissioners Luma Arles and LAS (Light Art Space) to present an international tour of Ian Cheng’s new work Life After BOB, a new form of narrative animation that imagines how artificial intelligence will transform the archetypal scripts that guide our lives. This tour features the first episode in the miniseries, The Chalice Study, a 48-minute animation constructed and presented “live” using the Unity video game engine. Through this innovative approach, Life After BOB integrates classic authored storytelling with simulated real-time features that enrich the viewer’s relationship to the characters and details of their world. The exhibition premieres at Luma Arles in Arles, France, in June 2021 and then travels to The Shed in New York for its North American debut September 10 – December 19, 2021, followed by its presentation by LAS in Berlin, in 2022. The Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art in Seoul, South Korea, provided support for the dynamic features for Life After BOB. Life After BOB: The Chalice Study, introduces the character of Chalice Wong, a 10- year-old girl whose father, Dr. Wong, installs an experimental AI named BOB (“Bag of Beliefs”) into her nervous system to guide her through the challenges of maturing in an ever-changing world.
    [Show full text]