Rethinking the Biennial Mphil by Project by Marieke Van Hal Date
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Omer Fast: Nostalgia
Press Release Whitney Museum of American Art Contact: 945 Madison Avenue at 75th Street Stephen Soba New York, NY 10021 Molly Gross whitney.org/press Tel. (212) 570-3633 Fax (212) 570-4169 [email protected] NOSTALGIA, BY BUCKSBAUM AWARD-WINNER OMER FAST, RECEIVES NEW YORK DEBUT AT THE WHITNEY Nostalgia III (production still), 2009 Super 16mm film transferred to high-definition video, color, sound; 32:48 minutes Photograph by Thierry Bal; courtesy gb agency, Paris; Postmasters, New York; and Arratia, Beer, Berlin. NEW YORK, November 18, 2009 – Omer Fast: Nostalgia is a new three-part film and video installation that continues Fast's fascination with exploring configurations of fact and fiction through narrative and filmic constructions, intertwining modes of documentary and dramatization. In this exhibition, organized by Tina Kukielski, senior curatorial assistant, the work receives its New York debut at the Whitney Museum of American Art, where it will be seen from December 10, 2009, through February 14, 2010. It is presented as part of the 2008 Bucksbaum Award, conferred on Fast for significant contributions to the visual arts in the United States. Endowed by Whitney Trustee Melva Bucksbaum and her family, the Bucksbaum Award is given every two years to an artist chosen from the Museum’s Biennial exhibition. (The next recipient will be selected from among the artists in the 2010 Whitney Biennial, which opens to the public on February 25.) Nostalgia (2009) begins with a fragment from an interview between the artist and an African refugee seeking asylum in London, during which the artist/interviewer is told how the refugee built a trap for catching a partridge back home in his native Nigeria. -
Biennals 10-13 CUBAN
Iniva: Stuart Hall Library: Select Bibliography 2008 States of Exchange: Artists from Cuba/ Estados de Intercambio: Artistas de Cuba Jeanette Chávez Autocensura / Self-Censorship , 2006 Video, 2:52 min Image courtesy of the artist CONTENTS CUBAN ARTISTS 2-7 CUBAN ART 7-9 CUBAN ART: Biennals 10-13 CUBAN ART: Biennals: Journal articles 13 CUBA ART: Context 14-15 Iniva: Stuart Hall Library: Select Bibliography 2008 States of Exchange: Artists from Cuba/ Estados de Intercambio: Artistas de Cuba ITEM LIBRARY SHELF NUMBER CUBAN ARTISTS Alfonzo, Carlos AS ALF Viso, Olga M. (ed.) Triumph of the Spirit, Carlos Alfonzo: a survey 1975-1991 . Miami: Miami Art Museum 1998. Bedia, Jose AS BED Jose Bedia: Fabula . Bogota: Galeria Fernando Quintana, 1993. Brugera, Tania AS BRU Tania Bruguera: esercizio di resistenza = exercise in resistance . Turin: Franco Soffiantino Arte Contemporanea, 2004. Campos-Pons, Maria Magdalena AS CAM Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons: meanwhile, the girls were playing . Cambridge Mass.: MIT List Visual Arts Centre, 2000. Capote, Ivan AS CAP Ivan Capote . Herausgabe: Havana Edition, 2007. Ivan Capote: Aforismos . AS CAP Cuba: Galeria Habana, 2007. Capote, Yoan AS CAP Yoan Ca pote. Herausgabe: Havana Edition, 2007. Carmona, Williams AS CAR Todos miran, pocos ven /they all look, but few only see . [Paris]: Corinne Timsit International Galleries, [n.d.] Castro, Humberto AS CAS Humberto Castro: le radeau d'Ulysse Paris: Le monde de l'art, [n.d.] [Text in French] Ceballos, Sandra AS CEB Ceballos, Sandra and Suárez, Ezequiel (curs.) Dónde está Loló: Pinturas: Sandra Ceballos . La Habana: Centro Wifredo Lam, 1995. Text in Spanish] 2 Iniva: Stuart Hall Library: Select Bibliography 2008 States of Exchange: Artists from Cuba/ Estados de Intercambio: Artistas de Cuba ITEM LIBRARY SHELF NUMBER Cuenca, Arturo AS CUE Arturo Cuenca: Modernbundo . -
Baltic Triennial 13 – Give up the Ghost
BALTIC TRIENNIAL 13 – GIVE UP THE GHOST Contemporary Art Centre (CAC), Vilnius 11 May – 12 August, 2018 Private view 11 May, 6pm Artistic Director: Vincent Honoré BT13 – GIVE UP THE GHOST launches its fi rst chapter at Contemporary Art Centre (CAC), Vilnius on Friday, 11 May with an evening of performances followed by a public programme on Saturday, 12 May. BT13 in Vilnius includes works by Caroline Achaintre, Evgeny Antufi ev, Korakrit Arunanondchai, Darja Bajagić, Olga Balema, Nina Beier, Huma Bhabha, Dora Budor, Miriam Cahn, Jayne Cortez, Melvin Edwards, Daiga Grantina, Max Hooper Schneider, Anna Hulačová, Pierre Huyghe, E’wao Kagoshima, Sanya Kantarovsky, Ella Kruglyanskaya, Benoît Maire, Katja Novitskova, Pakui Hardware, Anu Põder, Laure Prouvost, Ieva Rojūtė, Rachel Rose, Augustas Serapinas and Michael E. Smith alongside a public programme of performances by Liv Wynter, Adam Christensen, Anton Lukoszevieze, Ieva Rojūtė and Žygimantas Kudirka celebrating the Triennial. The Baltic Triennial has historically taken place at the CAC Vilnius only. For its 13th edition, it will - for the fi rst time - be organised by and take place in Lithuania, Estonia (opening on June 29th) and Latvia (opening on September 21st), taking the form of three distinct chapters. Baltic Triennial 13 is informed by a shared concern: what does it mean to belong at a time of fractured iden- tities? BT13 – GIVE UP THE GHOST unfolds through and with this very question, careful not to off er a single or illustrative response. Instead, it opts for a collective vision of what is at stake: independence and depen- dency—and everything that lies in between—to territories, cultures, classes, histories, bodies and forms. -
Participatory Art and Creative Audience Engagement
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies Legacy Theses 2011 Practices of Fluid Authority: Participatory Art and Creative Audience Engagement Smolinski, Richard Smolinski, R. (2011). Practices of Fluid Authority: Participatory Art and Creative Audience Engagement (Unpublished doctoral thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/22585 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/48892 doctoral thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY Practices of Fluid Authority: Participatory Art and Creative Audience Engagement by Richard Smolinski A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF ART CALGARY, ALBERTA DECEMBER 2011 Richard Smolinski 2011 i The author of this thesis has granted the University of Calgary a non-exclusive license to reproduce and distribute copies of this thesis to users of the University of Calgary Archives. Copyright remains with the author. Theses and dissertations available in the University of Calgary Institutional Repository are solely for the purpose of private study and research. They may not be copied or reproduced, except as permitted by copyright laws, without written authority of the copyright owner. Any commercial use or re-publication is strictly prohibited. The original Partial Copyright License attesting to these terms and signed by the author of this thesis may be found in the original print version of the thesis, held by the University of Calgary Archives. -
International Projects Since 2015
International projects since 2015 A Fund for Contemporary Art Gelatin Museum Boijmans Van Marko Lulić Anna-Sophie Berger Beuningen, Rotterdam, 2018 Skulpturenmuseum Cell Project Space, London, Glaskasten Marl, 2019 2019 Christian Eisenberger Kunsthalle Gießen, 2020 Lois Weinberger documenta 14, Kassel, 2017 Katrin Hornek ar/ge kunst, Bolzano, 2021 Oliver Laric Mathias Poledna Ines Doujak 9th Liverpool Biennial, 2016 10th Liverpool Biennial, 2018 11th Liverpool Biennial, 2021 Lazar Lyutakov Simian, Copenhagen, 2021 Sophie Thun Kim? Contemporary Art Centre Riga, 2021 Katrin Hornek Sarah Ortmeyer 2nd Riga Biennial, 2020 2nd Riga Biennial, 2020 Philipp Timischl Anna-Sophie Berger Fondation Fiminco, S.M.A.K., Ghent, 2018 Paris, 2021 Julia Haller Christoph Meier Midway Contemporary Art, Casino Luxembourg, Minneapolis, 2018 2018 John Gerrard Susanna Fritscher 13th Gwangju Biennale, 2021 Centre Pompidou-Metz, 2020 Renate Lorenz & Pauline Boudry 3rd Timișoara Art Encounters Biennial, 2019 Leander Schönweger Ursula Mayer 15th Istanbul Biennial, 2017 16th Istanbul Biennial, 2019 Susanna Fritscher Ashley Hans Scheirl & Thomas Feuerstein Ulrike Müller 14th Biennale de Lyon, 2017 Jakob Lena Knebl 15th Biennale de Lyon, 2019 Queens Museum, 15th Biennale de Lyon, New York, 2020–2021 2019 Angelika Loderer Heimo Zobernig Kay Walkowiak New Museum Triennial, Austrian Pavilion, 1st Lahore Biennale, 2018 New York, 2021 56th Biennale di Venezia, 2015 Ulrike Müller 78th Whitney Biennial, New York, 2017 Søren Engsted Friedl Kubelka Main exhibition, vom Gröller -
View a PDF Programme
Speaker bios Bani Abidi is a visual artist working with video, photography, drawing and sound. She lives in Berlin and Karachi. Recent solo shows include: ‘Funland’, Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah; ‘Bani Abidi - They died laughing’, Gropius Bau, Berlin; ‘Bani Abidi - Exercise in Redirecting Lines’ Kunsthaus Hamburg, Hamburg and ‘Bani Abidi – Look at the city from here’, Gandhara Art Foundation, Karachi. Group shows include Karachi Biennial (2018), Busan Biennale (2018), Edinburgh Arts Festival Commissions (2016), 8th Berlin Biennial (2014) and DOCUMENTA 13 (2012). Her work is in the permanent collections of Tate Modern, Museum of Modern Art NY, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Guggenheim Museum and the British Museum. Iftikhar Dadi & Elizabeth Dadi have collaborated in their art practice for twenty years. Their work investigates memory, borders, and identity in contemporary globalization, the productive capacities of urban informalities in the Global South, and the mass culture of postindustrial societies. Exhibitions include the 24th Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil (1998); The Third Asia-Pacific Triennial, Brisbane, Australia (1999); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2000); Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2000); Liverpool Biennial, Tate Liverpool (2002); Moderna Museet-Stockholm (2005); Whitechapel Gallery, London (2010); Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan (2012); Art Gallery of Windsor, Canada (2013); Dhaka Art Summit (2016); Office of Contemporary Art Norway, Oslo (2016); Lahore Biennale 01 (2018); and the Havana Biennial (2019). Iftikhar Dadi is an associate professor in Cornell’s Department of History of Art and Director of the South Asia Program, and a board member of the Institute for Comparative Modernities. He is the author of Modernism and the Art of Muslim South Asia (2010) and the edited monograph Anwar Jalal Shemza (2015). -
Heri Dono the World and I
FINE ART HERI DONO THE WORLD AND I Jalasveva Jaya Mahe, 2013 Flying Angels, 1996 Tyler Rollins Fine Art is pleased to host the first New York solo exhibition for Heri Dono, taking place from October 30 – December 20, 2014. Entitled The World and I, the exhibition features an overview of paintings, sculptures, and installations from throughout his thirty- year career. It follows a major mid-career survey of Dono’s work, The World and I: Heri Dono’s Art Odyssey, on view earlier this year at Art 1: New Museum in Jakarta, Indonesia, for which a 260 page catalogue was published. One of Indonesia’s most well known and internationally active contemporary artists, Dono has achieved iconic status both internationally and in his native Indonesia. Born in Jakarta in 1960, and a graduate of the Indonesian Institute of the Arts in Yogyakarta, Dono early on developed a distinctive style that came out of his extensive experimentation with the most popular form of Javanese folk theatre, wayang, a vibrant and eclectic art form that enacts complex narratives, often derived from ancient mythology, incorporating music with performances by two-dimensional shadow puppets as well as more lifelike wooden puppets and even human actors. Dono’s elaborate sculptural installations take inspiration from these puppets, bringing them into the contemporary world of machines, robots, and television. Often featuring unusual juxtapositions of motifs, a variety of moving parts, and sound and video components, these multi-media works make powerful statements about political and social issues as well as the often jarring interrelationship between globalization and local cultures. -
Screening Guides to the Sixth Season
art:21 screening guides to the sixth season © Art21 2012. All Rights Reserved. www.pbs.org/art21 | www.art21.org season six GETTING STARTED ABOUT THIS SCREENING GUIDE unique opportunity to experience first-hand the complex artistic process—from inception to finished This screening guide is designed to help you plan product—behind some of today’s most thought- an event using Season Six of Art in the Twenty-First provoking art. These artists represent the breadth Century. This guide includes an episode synopsis, of artistic practices across the country and the artist biographies, discussion questions, group world and reveal the depth of intergenerational activities, and links to additional resources online. and multicultural talent. Educators’ Guide The 32-page color manual ABOUT ART21 SCREENING EVENTS includes information on the ABOUT ART21, INC. artists, before-viewing and Public screenings of the Art in the Twenty-First after-viewing questions, and Century series illuminate the creative process of Art21 is a non-profit contemporary art organization curriculum connections. today’s visual artists by stimulating critical reflection serving students, teachers, and the general public. FREE | www.art21.org/teach as well as conversation in order to deepen Art21’s mission is to increase knowledge of contem- audience’s appreciation and understanding of porary art, ignite discussion, and empower viewers contemporary art and ideas. Organizations and to articulate their own ideas and interpretations individuals are welcome to host their own Art21 about contemporary art. Art21 seeks to achieve events year-round. Art21 invites museums, high this goal by using diverse media to present an schools, colleges, universities, community-based independent, behind-the scenes perspective on organizations, libraries, art spaces and individuals contemporary art and artists at work and in their to get involved and create unique screening own words. -
Reynier Leyva Novo
GALLERIA CONTINUA Via del Castello 11, San Gimignano (SI), Italia tel. +390577943134 fax +390577940484 [email protected] www.galleriacontinua.com REYNIER LEYVA NOVO El peso de la muerte Opening: Saturday 13 February 2016, via del Castello 11 and via Arco dei Becci 1, 6pm–12 midnight Until 1 May 2016, Monday–Saturday, 10am–1pm / 2–7pm Galleria Continua is pleased to present the first solo exhibition by Reynier Leyva Novo in Italy. One of the latest generation of Cuban artists, Novo has already had occasion to show his work in important international events and venues such as the Havana Biennial, the Venice Biennale, MARTE Museo de Arte de El Salvador and the Liverpool Biennial. El peso de la muerte is a project specially conceived for Galleria Continua and brings together a series of new works in which investigation and procedure are key elements. Deeply poetic but also alive with questions, Novo’s work is situated in the context of the daily battles to get to the bottom of individual and collective identity. In his artistic practice he moves forward turning his back on the future, penetrating into the most hidden folds of history to offer us a fresh dialogue and a different point of observation. His works are often the result of joint efforts involving historians, cartographers, alchemists, botanists, musicians, designers, translators and military strategists, all engaged in the eternal struggle to gain freedom – individual and collective – , in the attempt to set into motion ideological mechanisms blocked by the rust and sediment that have accumulated over years of immobility and lethargy. -
12Th Istanbul Biennial
Tracy Williams, Ltd New York VOLUME 26 ISSUE 3 MAY 2011 12th Istanbul Biennial Marcus Verhagen The institution of the biennial is burgeoning – and in crisis. While biennials proliferate across the globe, commentators point out that they tend to be unwieldy, centrifugal affairs with grand titles and thin curatorial premises. Many also hold that the biennial does no favours to quiet or demanding work; in shows too sprawling for their curatorial scaffolding vast showstoppers, works more likely to inspire awe than sustained engagement, tend to set the tone. Meanwhile, biennial curators regularly stress that they want to raise the visibility of non-Western artists, while continuing to give pride of place to artists who work in or near the old centres of the commercial artworld. And many biennials are designed to burnish the cultural credentials of their host cities in the eyes of tourists and potential investors; their cultural and political ambitions are often undone, or at least compromised, by their instrumentalisation at the hands of political patrons and sponsors. The biennial has largely internalised these common criticisms. Artists have aired their misgivings in pieces such as De Novo, the film that Dominique GonzalezFoerster made for the 2009 Venice Biennale, in which she detailed the disappointments of her previous participations, or Death in Venice, a piece by Gonzalo Dı´az for the pavilion of the Istituto Italo-Latinoamericano in 2005, which used letter-shaped fish tanks to spell ‘ARTE’ and so clearly likened the Biennale to a fishbowl and those involved in it to fish – colourful, essentially idle and oblivious to external concerns. -
The Politics of Urban Cultural Policy Global
THE POLITICS OF URBAN CULTURAL POLICY GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES Carl Grodach and Daniel Silver 2012 CONTENTS List of Figures and Tables iv Contributors v Acknowledgements viii INTRODUCTION Urbanizing Cultural Policy 1 Carl Grodach and Daniel Silver Part I URBAN CULTURAL POLICY AS AN OBJECT OF GOVERNANCE 20 1. A Different Class: Politics and Culture in London 21 Kate Oakley 2. Chicago from the Political Machine to the Entertainment Machine 42 Terry Nichols Clark and Daniel Silver 3. Brecht in Bogotá: How Cultural Policy Transformed a Clientist Political Culture 66 Eleonora Pasotti 4. Notes of Discord: Urban Cultural Policy in the Confrontational City 86 Arie Romein and Jan Jacob Trip 5. Cultural Policy and the State of Urban Development in the Capital of South Korea 111 Jong Youl Lee and Chad Anderson Part II REWRITING THE CREATIVE CITY SCRIPT 130 6. Creativity and Urban Regeneration: The Role of La Tohu and the Cirque du Soleil in the Saint-Michel Neighborhood in Montreal 131 Deborah Leslie and Norma Rantisi 7. City Image and the Politics of Music Policy in the “Live Music Capital of the World” 156 Carl Grodach ii 8. “To Have and to Need”: Reorganizing Cultural Policy as Panacea for 176 Berlin’s Urban and Economic Woes Doreen Jakob 9. Urban Cultural Policy, City Size, and Proximity 195 Chris Gibson and Gordon Waitt Part III THE IMPLICATIONS OF URBAN CULTURAL POLICY AGENDAS FOR CREATIVE PRODUCTION 221 10. The New Cultural Economy and its Discontents: Governance Innovation and Policy Disjuncture in Vancouver 222 Tom Hutton and Catherine Murray 11. Creating Urban Spaces for Culture, Heritage, and the Arts in Singapore: Balancing Policy-Led Development and Organic Growth 245 Lily Kong 12. -
SUPERFLEX Formed in 1993 by Bjørnstjerne Reuter Christiansen
SUPERFLEX Formed in 1993 by Bjørnstjerne Reuter Christiansen, Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen. The Danish artist group SUPERFLEX has been working since 1993 on a series of projects to do with economic forces, democratic production conditions and self-organisation. With a diverse and complex practice that engages art, design, commerce and economic structures of dependency, the Copenhagenbased artists collective Superflex challenges the role of artists in contemporary society and explore the nature of globalization through ongoing collaborative projects. Bjørnstjerne Reuter Christiansen born 1969 Jakob Fenger born 1968 Rasmus Nielsen born 1969 Work and live in Copenhagen, Denmark & Sweden Education The Royal Academy of Fine Art in Copenhagen Solo exhibitions (selected) 2014 The Corrupt Show and The Speculative Machine, The Jumex Foundation, Mexico City, MX Superflex, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen 2013 Mærsk – The Opera, Horsens Art Museum, Horsens, DK 2012 7th Liverpool Biennial, Liverpool, GB Kuh, Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary, Vienna, AT Reprototypes, Triangulations and Road Tests – w. Simon Starling, Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary, Vienna, AT Prouvé in Africa / Bent, Pressed, Compressed, Welded, and then Copied, Musée d’Art Moderne, St-Etienne, FR Bankrupt Banks, Peter Blum, New York, US Modern Times Forever, 1301PE Gallery, Los Angeles, US Flooded McDonald’s, The Cube, Taipei, Taiwan 2011 COPY LIGHT – MODERN TIMES FOREVER, Galerie Jeusse Entreprise, Paris, FR Flooded McDonalds, Museum der Westkünste, Alkersum/Föhr, D Foreigners,