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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. -
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. -
Matias Faldbakken
MATIAS FALDBAKKEN BIOGRAPHY Born 1973 in Hobro, Denmark Lives and works in Oslo, Norway EDUCATION 1994-1998 B.F.A, Academy of Fine Art, Bergen, Norway 1996-1997 M.F.A, Academy of Fine Art, Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany RESIDENCIES 2004 IASPIS, Stockholm, Sweden 2002-2003 Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany 2001 NIFCA Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art, Helsinki, Finland SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2019 Matias Faldbakken, Paula Cooper Gallery, New York, NY 2017 Matias Faldbakken - Effects of Good Government in the Pit, Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo, Norway ''BOBLE'', Standard (Oslo), Oslo, Norway Effects of Good Government in the Pit, Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo, Norway Why New French Art Is Lousy, House of Gaga // Reena Spaulings Fine Art, Los Angeles, CA Matias Faldbakken & Leander Djønne: Void to Void, Galerie Neu, Berlin, Germany The Image Is A Screen That Hides What It Means, Le Mur Saint-Bon, Paris, France 2016 THINGUMBOB SCREENS OVERLAPS, Eva Presenhuber, Zürich, Switzerland EUROPE IS BALDING, Paula Cooper, New York, NY 2015 CAPRI, Düsseldorf, Germany Overlap, Galerie NEU, Berlin, Germany 2014 Matias Faldbakken, STANDARD (OSLO), Oslo, Norway Matias Faldbakken, Paula Cooper Gallery, New York, NY 2013 Matias Faldbakken, Le Consortium, Dijon, France (curated by Anne Pontégnie) SACKS / TRUNKS, Simon Lee Gallery, London, UK Envy, Galerie Neu, Berlin, Germany 2012 Shall I Write It, Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich, Switzerland Maintenance, Simon Lee Gallery, Hong Kong Intervention #21: Matias Faldbakken, Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Portrait Portrait of of a a Generation Generation, OCA, Oslo, Norway. This exhibition then travelled to Wiels Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels, Belgium (2013). -
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. -
Paulacoopergallery.Com
P A U L A C O O P E R G A L L E R Y FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE WALID RAAD Better be watching the clouds 521 West 21st Street May 18 – June 30, 2017 NEW YORK – Paula Cooper Gallery is pleased to present a new series of work by Walid Raad, entitled Better be watching the clouds (2000/2017). The presentation will include a selection of fifteen plates from the series and will be on view from May 18 through June 30, 2017 at 521 West 21st Street. The plates in Better be watching the clouds show pages from a book of flora native to the Middle East where the heads of political leaders involved in, or contemporary with, the Lebanese Civil War appear as efflorescences. Its brightly colored blossoms budding with black and white photos of politicians recall the history of political critique and photomontage by artists such as Hannah Höch and John Heartfield. Raad’s index catalogs an extensive collection of players including: Muammar Gaddafi (Libya), Margaret Thatcher (UK), Anwar Sadat (Egypt), Saddam Hussein (Iraq), Jimmy Carter (USA), François Mitterrand (France), Yasser Arafat (Palestine), King Hussein of Jordan, Ayatollah Khomeini (Iran), Ali Khamenei (Iran), Menachem Begin (Israel), Yitzhak Shamir (Israel), Shafik Wazzan (Lebanon), Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan (UAE), Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah (Kuwait). The series is accompanied by wall text that reads: “The following plates were donated in 1992 to The Atlas Group by Fadwa Hassoun, a retired officer in the Lebanese Army. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Lebanon’s Deuxième Bureau codenamed local and international political and military leaders in the language of local flora. -
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. -
Unpacking My Collection
University of Wollongong Research Online University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 2017+ University of Wollongong Thesis Collections 2019 Unpacking My Collection Newell Marcel Harry University of Wollongong Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/theses1 University of Wollongong Copyright Warning You may print or download ONE copy of this document for the purpose of your own research or study. The University does not authorise you to copy, communicate or otherwise make available electronically to any other person any copyright material contained on this site. You are reminded of the following: This work is copyright. Apart from any use permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process, nor may any other exclusive right be exercised, without the permission of the author. Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. A court may impose penalties and award damages in relation to offences and infringements relating to copyright material. Higher penalties may apply, and higher damages may be awarded, for offences and infringements involving the conversion of material into digital or electronic form. Unless otherwise indicated, the views expressed in this thesis are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Wollongong. Recommended Citation Harry, Newell Marcel, Unpacking My Collection, Doctor of Creative Arts thesis, School of the Arts, English & Media, University of Wollongong, 2019. https://ro.uow.edu.au/theses1/794 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. -
Hans Haacke Biography
P A U L A C O O P E R G A L L E R Y Hans Haacke Biography 1936 Born Cologne, Germany 1956-60 Staatliche Werkakademie (State Art Academy), Kassel, Staatsexamen (equivalent of M.F.A.) 1960-61 Stanley William Hayter's Atelier 17, Paris 1961 Tyler School of Fine Arts, Temple University, Philadelphia 1962 Moves to New York 1963-65 Return to Cologne. Teaches at Pädagogische Hochschule, Kettwig, and other institutions 1966-67 Teaches at University of Washington, Seattle; Douglas College, Rutgers University, New Jersey; Philadelphia College of Art 1967 - 2002 Teaches at Cooper Union, New York (Professor of Art Emeritus) 1973 Guest Professorship, Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Hamburg 1979 Guest Professorship, Gesamthochschule, Essen 1994 Guest Professorship, Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Hamburg 1997 Regents Lecturer, University of California, Berkeley Lives in New York (since 1965) Awards 1960 Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) 1961 Fulbright Fellowship 1973 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship 1978 National Endowment for the Arts 1991 College Art Association Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement Deutscher Kritikerpreis for 1990 Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts, Oberlin College 1993 Golden Lion (shared with Nam June Paik), Venice Biennale 1997 Kurt-Eisner-Foundation, Munich Honorary Doctorate Bauhaus-Universität Weimar 2001 Prize of Helmut-Kraft-Stiftung, Stuttgart 2002 College Art Association Distinguished Teaching of Art Award 2004 Peter-Weiss-Preis, Bochum 2008 Honorary Doctorate, San Francisco Art Institute -
WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2006: DAY for NIGHT to OPEN Signature Survey Measuring the Mood of Contemporary American Art, March 2-May 28, 2006
Press Release Contact: Jan Rothschild, Stephen Soba, Meghan Bullock (212) 570-3633 or [email protected] www.whitney.org/press February 2006 WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2006: DAY FOR NIGHT TO OPEN Signature survey measuring the mood of contemporary American art, March 2-May 28, 2006 Peter Doig, Day for Night, 2005. Private Collection; courtesy Contemporary Fine Arts, Berlin. The curators have announced their selection of artists for the 2006 Whitney Biennial, which opens to the public on March 2, and remains on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art through May 28, 2006. The list of participating artists appears at the end of this release. Whitney Biennial 2006: Day for Night is curated by Chrissie Iles, the Whitney’s Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator, and Philippe Vergne, the Deputy Director and Chief Curator of the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. The Biennial’s lead sponsor is Altria. "Altria Group, Inc. is proud to continue its forty year relationship with the Whitney Museum of American Art by sponsoring the 2006 Biennial exhibition," remarked Jennifer P. Goodale, Vice President, Contributions, Altria Corporate Services, Inc. "This signature exhibition of some of the most bold and inspired work coming from artists' studios reflects our company's philosophy of supporting innovation, creativity and diversity in the arts." Whitney Biennial 2006: Day for Night takes its title from the 1973 François Truffaut film, whose original French name, La Nuit américaine, denotes the cinematic technique of shooting night scenes artificially during the day, using a special filter. This is the first Whitney Biennial to have a title attached to it. -
Meriç Algün (B. 1983 Istanbul/Turkey)
Meriç Algün (b. 1983 Istanbul/Turkey) The Library of Unborrowed Books, 2012/2017, is based on the concept of the library as an institution manifesting language and knowledge, open to all types of people and literature. This version comprises a selection of more than 5000 dissertations from the library of Lunds University that have never been borrowed. It is difficult to determine why certain books have never been borrowed, but Algün validates their existence by borrowing and placing them in this library. Her installation also reflects on the disappearance of the book and it is a warning of a future where all libraries consist of unborrowed books. CV Algün has exhibited widely in group and solo exhibitions including Moderna Museet, Malmö (2016) and Stockholm (2015); MoCA, Detroit; Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna; Art in General, New York (all 2013); CCA Wattis, San Francisco; Witte de With, Rotterdam; Malmö Konsthall, Malmö (all 2012); the 12th Cuenca Biennale (2014), Istanbul Biennial (2011), as well as the 14th Istanbul Biennale (2015), the Kyiv Biennial (2015) and the 56th Venice Biennale (2015). www.mericalgunringborg.com Section VI: Sabancı University Information Center, Istanbul, 2015 at Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Istanbul, photo credits: Murat Germen Christian Bang Jensen (b. 1983, Denmark) Christian Bang Jensen's work deals with the act of collecting and discourses of knowledge production in different spaces and institutions. So-called rational modes of thinking are disrupted by associative mind processes to underline qualities of animism and rhizomatic connections to different regimes of knowledge production. Jurassic Dreams, 2015, incorporates palaeontological books from Lund University. -
Zarouhie Abdalian We Can Decide March 11 – April 24, 2021
Zarouhie Abdalian We can decide March 11 – April 24, 2021 Altman Siegel presents We can decide, a solo exhibition of new works by Zarouhie Abdalian. The exhibition centers around a sound installation, threnody for the unwilling martyrs, which sees Abdalian return to the use of bells as a basis for sound sculpture. Throughout We can decide, a state of suspension pervades the space of the gallery and threnody for the unwilling martyrs is its emblem. Set just slightly in motion, five brass signaling bells sound out their indeterminate status, both and alternately signifying and hailing, marking and calling, meaning and doing. In recognition of the mass murder Abdalian asks us to lay at the feet of the U.S. government, it may be read as a memorial and an incitation. Elsewhere in the gallery, two large sculptures impose themselves as nameless witnessing objects to the present conjuncture. Emptied of its cargo, a 2,500 lbs. bulk bag gapes. Nearby, the torso of an internal combustion engine stands as tribute to social labor and Promethean will. Suspended from the ceiling, a light sculpture counts out the indeterminate intervals between events, registered as flashes of brilliant energy. A poem—the exhibition’s namesake—is printed as a takeaway. The text is derived from a 2019 piece titled Rhymes and Reckonings (for Sverdlovsk and Yekaterinburg) made with collaborator Joseph Rosenzweig. The body of the text records in irregular couplets the social character of commodity production—that is, the real world from which the “readymade” objects of the exhibition are plucked. Abdalian’s interest is not so much in what any given object represents but what of its history can be clarified at the utopian (no place) site of the gallery. -
SHARON LOCKHART Catalogues and Brochures
SHARON LOCKHART Catalogues and Brochures 2016 Mileaf, Janine. Sharon Lockhart: Rudzienko. Chicago: The Arts Club of Chicago, 2016. Mexico: Essays on a Myth. Bilbao: Iberdrola, 2016. 2015 Sharon Lockhart: Milena Milena. Milan: Silvana Editoriale, 2015. Whitney Museum of American Art: Handbook of the Collection. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 2015. Schwartz, Alexandra. Come As You Are: Art of the 1990s. Montclair: Montclair Art Museum, 2015. “The heroine Paint” After Frankenthaler. New York: Gagosian Gallery, 2015. Heyler, Joanne, ed. The Broad Collection. Los Angeles/Munich: The Broad/Prestel Verlag, 2015. 2014 In Context: The Portrait in Contemporary Photographic Practice. New York: Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art Hamilton College, 2014. 2013 Tormey, Jane. Photographic Realism: Late twentieth-century aesthetics. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013. 2012 Baron, Stephanie and Britt Salvesen, ed. Sharon Lockhart | Noa Eshkol, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Israel Museum of Art, Jerusalem: DelMonico & Prestel, 2012. Little, David E. The Sports Show: Athletics as Image and Spectacle. Minneapolis: Minneapolis Museum of Art, 2012. Armstrong, Elizabeth. MO/RE/RE/AL? Art in the Age of Truthiness. Munich and Minneapolis: Prestel and Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2012. Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists Fifty Years. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012. 2011 Lunch Break II, Secession and Mildred Lane Kemper Museum, 2011. More American Photographs, CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, California College of the Arts, 2011. 2010 Lockhart, Sharon, Jane E. Neidhardt, and Sabine Eckmann. Sharon Lockhart: Lunch Break. St. Louis: Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, 2010. 2009 Living Flowers: Ikebana and Contemporary Art. Los Angeles: Japanese American National Museum, 2009.