Archive: July 16th, 2010

CONTEMPORANEITY AND ART @ VCAM

http://vkhabirov.ru/images/photos/IMG_5573.JPG

Two days of public lectures, panel discussions and seminars for the initiative to establish the Australian
Institute of Art History and the VCAM, University of Melbourne. Free admission.

Day 1 Thursday 22 July, 2010
HISTORIES OF CONTEMPORARY ART
Time: 6pm. Evening lecture
Venue: Elizabeth Murdoch Theatre A, University of MelbourneParkville
Keynote lecture: “Histories of contemporary art: paradoxes, antinomies, contingencies”
Speaker: Terry Smith, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Contemporary
Art History and Theory, University of Pittsburgh

Day 2 Friday 23 July, 2010
CONTEMPORANEITY
Morning and afternoon panel discussions and public lectures
Venue: Federation Hall, Victorian College of the Arts and Music
180 St Kilda Road Southbank.

10.00 – 12.00
WORLD- PICTURING
Keynote lecture: W.J.T. Mitchell, Gaylord Donnelley Distinguished
Service Professor of English and Art History, University of Chicago.
“World Picturing in the Time of Terror and Since”
Respondents and panelists: A/Prof Charles Green, Dr Amelia
Douglas and Professor Nikos Papastergiadis

13.00 – 14.45
WORLD PICTURING, PLACEMAKING ANDCONNECTIVITY: 5 PERSPECTIVES + 5 DIALOGUES
= 100 MINUTES
Chairs: A/Professor Charles Green and Dr Daniel Palmer
Five Invited Panelists: Professor Sean Cubitt; Dr Larissa Hjorth; Professor Leon van Schaik; Dr Alex Baker; Jarrod Rawlins

15.15 – 16.45
DIALOGUE AND RESPONSE:
PROFESSORS TERRY SMITH AND W.J.T. MITCHELL
Chairs: Professor Nikos Papastergiadis and Dr Larissa Hjorth. One hour dialogue between Professors Smith and Mitchell + 30 minutes dialogue with audience.

FREE ADMISSION.
Queries contact c.green@unimelb.edu.au, coatesr@unimelb.edu.au

Young Curators, New Ideas III

July 22 – August 20, 2010 Opening Reception: Thursday, July 22, 6 – 8pm

mr. & mrs. amani olu (formerly amani olu projects), in conjunction with P·P·O·W, is pleased to present Young Curators, New Ideas III, an experimental exhibition that investigates current positions in contemporary art through the perspective of six curators. Exhibiting curators include Andrew Russeth & Liza Buzytsky, Erin Dziedzic, Kate Greenberg & Hilary Schaffner, Stamatina Gregory, Gabriella Hiatt, and James Shaeffer. These multifaceted and dynamic micro-exhibitions consider contemporary issues that exist at the intersection of curatorial practice and artistic production.

Personal / Public / Private curated by Andrew Russeth & Liza Buzytsky: In attempting to participate actively in art making, some contemporary curators have surrendered their positions as committed cultural arbiters. This project opposes that trend, positing the curator as an autonomous actor selecting existing work for an exhibition based on specific criteria. It includes three projects — with work by Erik Lindman, Liza Buzytsky, Phil Chang, and Alexandra P. Spaulding — that use modernist devices in four specific mediums for resolutely personal ends, which inhabit a place between their creator’s private obsessions and their audience’s public reception.

Erin Dziedzic presents, Craig Drennen‘s (Untitled) The Masquers, part of a continuing series of characters from the entire dramatis personae of the Shakespearean play Timon of Athens, which was never performed during Shakespeare’s life and is often considered a “failed” work. Drennen has recontextualized Talent (1986), David Robbins’ photographic images of major art figures of the 1980s. Drennen’s paintings peruse the notion of so-called “successes” and “failures” in contemporary art, situating himself within our existing cultural structure and visually exploring an unoccupied bandwidth within which a “failed” project resides, therefore addressing the idea of redirection in the visual language, concepts, and critical theory of the current moment. (Untitled) The Masquers bring to light the possibility of postmodernism’s tenure losing ground to a new hybrid practice that assimilates and questions traits from modernism and postmodernism, intensifying the desire for new perspectives beyond the available vocabulary.

Broken Lattice, curated by Kate Greenberg & Hilary Schaffner, is an installation of photographs, found objects, and sculptures by the artist Bryan Graf. Working in both two and three dimensions, Broken Lattice reflects on the materiality of time by exploring the ways in which photography can be abstracted, pulled apart and collapsed. Graf’s installation consists of visual palindromes and image fractions that range in reference from kaleidoscopes and family albums to cinematic editing techniques such as shot/reverse shot. The installation intends to mimic the way pictures generate content through their physical presence as objects, thereby highlighting Graf’s fascination with temporality and the natural environment.

The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, a theory of quantum mechanics, claims that there are features of the world that cannot simultaneously be quantified. One can’t measure, for instance, both the speed and position of a particle, or a planet: the knowledge of one blurs the value of the other, and the observed becomes part of an observed system. Quantum Limbo, curated by Stamatina Gregory, brings together two artists, Julia Oldham and Brian Clifton, who have independently explored this principle through their work, in both literal and metaphoric engagements with the meanings and measurements of physics. Their practices share a ruthless, yet eloquent appropriation of a scientific rubric in order to investigate contemporary structures of meaning from both within and without the art world.

Immaterial Architecture, curated by Gabriella Hiatt, explores the different modes of experiencing spatial environments freed from the reliance on physical materials. Artist Jan Tichy generates forms that, while sharply defined, are not solid, but utterly penetrable features that give shape to a reality literally under our field of vision—those man-made structures such as oil rigs, pipelines, and water wells that are only visible on land as a cylindrical container of liquid or a cube above the sea. In Tichy’s work these fixed architectural elements operate in dialogue with a changing projected environment, suggesting an underworld of flux and turmoil. During the opening a special performance by choreographer Douglas Dunn will mediate the imperceptible spaces between air and matter throughout the gallery, calling attention to the juncture of the seen and the seen through.

zu täuschen den Schutzhund, curated by James Shaeffer: As the Internet has increasingly become a source for not only the exhibition of art but also the transfer of artworks so has ideas of dematerialization and issues of originality in artwork come into question again. Now artworks can be created on a computer and sent to multiple participants simultaneously while also exhibited online. Images, 3D models, and videos can all be reproduced ad infinitum and exhibited endlessly. Featuring works by AIDS-3D, Ben Schumacher, and Victor Vaughn; each artist presents pieces that address concurrent issues of originality, distance, immaterialism and reproduction – a theme attended to with the actual exhibition itself. Concomitantly with the exhibition at P·P·O·W, all the work will be available for free download off the Internet and simultaneously shown at REFERENCE Art Gallery in Richmond, VA.

‘PURE BEAUTY’ John Baldessari @ LACMA

Article Tab : Kissing Series: Simone Palm Trees (Near) (1975), two color photographs on board by John Baldessari. On view at the L.A. County Museum of Art through Sept. 12.
“Kissing Series: Simone Palm Trees (Near)” (1975), two color photographs on board by John Baldessari. On view at the L.A. County Museum of Art through Sept. 12.
COLLECTION OF CRAIG ROBINS, MIAMI; IMAGE COURTESY OF LACMA

‘John Baldessari: Pure Beauty’ Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 5905 Wilshire Ave., Los Angeles, Through Sept. 12 Noon-8 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays; noon-9 p.m. Fridays; 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays $12 adults, $8 seniors and students 18+ with ID, free for children 17 and younger . lacma.org

‘PURE BEAUTY’

Over at LACMA, the largest-to-date retrospective of John Baldessari’s work is currently on view in the Broad Contemporary Art Museum. This show comes to LACMA by way of the Tate Modern in London, where it was on display from Oct. 13, 2009 to Jan. 10.

I had the opportunity to see this exhibit in London, and I have to say, it looks a whole lot better in Los Angeles. Maybe it’s the newer, fresher gallery space at LACMA, versus the Tate’s gray, institutional interiors. Or perhaps it’s the palm trees that are visible outside the museum and also present in Baldessari’s work. Whatever the reason, “Pure Beauty” feels at home at LACMA.

Baldessari is an extremely influential artist, one of the vanguards of conceptual art stretching back to the 1960s. He was also an art professor at the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia and at UCLA, and has taught generations of artists, including David Salle, Cindy Sherman and Barbara Kruger. Basically, you can hardly escape Baldessari’s reach and influence if you are an artist, critic or art historian living and working in California.

“Pure Beauty” is fascinating, occasionally repetitive, and, at times, darn humorous. It’s enlightening to see how Baldessari moved from traditional painting to text and photographic image-based collages, bringing much of the art world with him.

The show features some iconic Baldessari works, including “Tips for Artists Who Want to Sell” (1966-68), “Everything is Purged…” (1966-68) and “A Painting That is its Own Documentation” (1966-2010).

Baldessari uses old images from forgotten films, sometimes isolating specific parts and other times covering faces with colored or white circles, rendering the people anonymous. “Frames and Ribbon” (1988) is a sardonic commentary on an art competition, while “Kiss Panic” (1984) is a powerful collage of guns pointing in a kaleidoscope of directions.

His later work embraces shape, dimension and color, demonstrating that he’s still exploring relevant concepts even as he approaches his eighth decade.

Like Andy Warhol, Baldessari tells us volumes about our culture and our obsessions, using text, film, TV and photographic images to reflect fundamental characteristics of our era.

Related Posts with Thumbnails