Category: Articles of interest

Artist Measures Visitor Attention Span With Kinect-Powered Tape Measurers

"Tape Recorders" (2011) by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer from bitforms gallery on Vimeo.

How much time do we spend looking at a work of art when we’re in a museum or gallery? Do we really take the time to reflect and let the work sink in? Or do we simply breeze by in an effort to see as much as possible? Some studies suggest that the average visitor only spends about 5 seconds looking at each work, but Mexican media artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer has found a different way of measuring this interaction.

Lozano-Hemmer’s new installation Tape Recorders takes a more physical approach to calculating the answer to this question. Composed of a series of automated measuring tapes fixed to a wall, the tape ascends to the ceiling when visitors are present, tipped-off by a Kinect sensor. Once it reaches its peak, the tape crashes down, unable to hold itself up any longer, and is then reeled back in. Visitors can walk past the full spectrum of tape measurers, making them grow in succession as if performing the “wave,” or stand in front of one to force it to its crashing point. It also tabulates the collective time spent in front of the installation and prints out the summation every hour.

The installation’s awareness of its visitors seemingly has the effect of making them stay longer, incentivizing their attention with the tapes’ impending crash and recoil. Since the presence of people is required for the installation to activate, audience participation and appreciation is crucial to the piece—it would’t work otherwise. The longer visitors interact with the work, the more interesting it becomes.

Tape Recorders, along with several other works by Lozano-Hemmer, will be on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney through February 12th, 2012.

Artist Measures Visitor Attention Span With Kinect-Powered Tape Measurers
Dylan Schenker

Are collectors more important than museum’s?

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“The Collector’s Show: Chimera” opened at the Singapore Art Museum over the weekend, during Art Stage Singapore. It is a group show of works from private collections around the world, with Takashi Murakami, Yayoi Kusama and other well-known artists represented.

Siu Li Tan, assistant director and curator of the Singapore Art Museum, talks about the idea behind the exhibition, the role of the collector and what piece was the hardest to get.

Why “Chimera?”

“Chimera” has multiple meanings, and is simultaneously evocative of a sense of mystery, danger and illusion. It fits in well with the kind of tone and experience I wanted to convey with this exhibition, which I hope will seduce its viewers at the same time as it disturbs and challenges them.

What piece proved to be the most complicated to bring into the show?

I am particularly happy that we managed to secure Rashid Rana’s “Red Carpet IV.” Since he has done [more than] a couple of “Red Carpets,” you would think that getting one for our show would be relatively easy, but it was far from the case. The works we wanted were either on exhibition elsewhere, or the dates were not good (since the works were needed for another show somewhere else), or collectors were simply reluctant to let the works leave their living rooms. We met with a lot of dead ends, and it took some persistence (and taking calls in the middle of the night), but we managed to locate an edition of “Red Carpet IV,” and the collector very generously agreed to lend it to us.

In Asia, some say private collectors are more influential than museums, especially for contemporary art. What do you think of this?

I have been watching with interest the recent mushrooming of private museums and art foundations across Asia. Some of these have been established with very clear aims and ambitions in mind: Besides serving as an exhibition platform for new art forms, these private museums or foundations are also committed to nurturing an appreciation and understanding of contemporary art with their education and outreach initiatives.

At the same time, however, a number of other private museums exist purely to house their founders’ expansive collections, and are not exactly accessible to the public. This is where an institution like SAM can play a role — in bringing together, in a single venue, important or interesting works of art drawn from these private collections.

It remains to be seen how this recent trend of private museums develops in this region, for it has enormous potential to shape the contemporary art scene — given the lack of public art institutions with the means and/or inclination to exhibit contemporary art. I can’t help but think about the FACE (Foundation of Arts for a Contemporary Europe) model, where an alliance of art foundations established by private collectors organizes exhibitions which draw on works from their collections and which travel around the different country venues. Imagine what a similar model could do for contemporary art in Asia.

At a time when museum budgets, especially for acquisitions, in established museum-going societies in Europe and North America are being slashed, what is the role of collectors? Should museums bother to build permanent collections?

Increasingly, collectors are stepping in to take up roles formerly associated with museums or art institutions, for example, that of championing and promoting new art and artists. In recent years, there have been a number of art prizes and awards funded by private collectors, which aim to identify and groom the next generation of artists. Take, for instance, the Future Generation Art Prize, established by the Viktor Pinchuk Foundation. Finalist artists this year were given an exhibition as a fringe event of the Venice Biennale, no doubt raising their profile greatly, and winners are paired up with “mentor artists,” who are stars of the contemporary art world.

It is also true that in Europe and North America, many museums are being priced out of contemporary art acquisitions, with a number of “star” pieces entering private collections rather than museum collections. A number of collectors do choose to donate major works to museums, particularly in America where there is a strong culture of philanthropy. In Europe, quite a number of collectors have opted to establish their own private museums with collections to rival those of public museums. Think of Pinault’s Palazzo Grassi and Punta Della Dogana in Venice.

The situation in Southeast Asia is a little different, although the question of whether museums should have permanent collections or not is something we have also discussed at SAM. For us there was never any doubt that we needed to build a permanent collection of Southeast Asian contemporary art, so as to ensure that we would be able to preserve and present the art coming out of our region to audiences not just in Singapore but in the rest of the world as well.

Before the 2000s, the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum in Japan and Queensland Art Gallery in Australia collected a fair bit of Southeast Asian art, but they have since either shifted their collection focus or realigned their priorities. It is therefore important to us at SAM that we collect important works of our time before they disappear into private collections, and become difficult to access in future.

It is also in our national interest to build a strong permanent collection of Singapore and Southeast Asian contemporary art, because we want Singaporeans to be able to look at and understand themselves and their neighbours beyond what they read in the papers and see on TV. Art is often a reflection and critique of society, albeit in a creative or philosophical way, and provides us with a different lens through which we can study and understand society and the world around us.

One of the possible issues with collectors is that some of them may also be active art investors. Given how lively the Asian auction market is, and the international art world’s experience with the Estella Collection, how do you as a curator negotiate this?

This happens everywhere, not just in Asia. And if a work of art or an artist is good, or interesting, then the work will appeal to curators and collectors alike, and it will be featured in museum presentations as well as at auction. As curators, we are primarily concerned with the significance and merit of an artwork, not its market value.

Having said that, I should point out that museum curators do tend to go for rather different works as compared to collectors or speculators, many of whom will choose to pass up on more challenging or strident works, or works in mediums that are difficult to “collect,” such as performance or a large immersive/site-specific installation.

As far as possible, as curators we do try to work with collectors whom we know are “serious” about their art collections. Many collectors we work with are established, and will almost never part with the works they own.

By Alexandra A. Seno
http://blogs.wsj.com/scene/2012/01/16/are-collectors-more-important-than-museums-one-curators-take/?mod=djemSceneA

Abstract Expressionism causes Abstract Rage

A 36-year-old Denver woman has been formally charged with felony criminal mischief after punching and scratching a Clyfford Still painting estimated to be worth between $30 and $40 million.
According to Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey’s office, Carmen Tisch visited the new Clyfford Still Museum on December 29 around 3:30 p.m. There, according to police, Tisch scratched the painting and punched it before pulling her pants down and rubbing her buttocks against it while urinating.
The oil painting, titled “1957-J-No. 2,” is approximately 9.5 by 13 feet, and the full extent of the damages done to it are unknown but reparations are estimated to cost at least $10,000.
“It doesn’t appear she urinated on the painting or that the urine damaged it, so she’s not being charged with that,” Lynn Kimbrough, a spokeswoman for the Denver District Attorney’s Office, told the Denver Post.
UPDATE:
By STEVEN K. PAULSON, Associated Press
DENVER (AP) — Investigators are trying to determine why a woman caused $10,000 worth of damage to a large expressionist painting at the Clyfford Still Museum by punching and scratching it, then removing her pants and sliding down the artwork.
The painting, referred to as 1957-J-No. 2, is valued at more than $30 million. The large montage of black, white and burnt orange swaths with a sliver of yellow is from Still’s middle period.
Museum officials said they believe security is adequate for the facility and that they regularly evaluate security to protect the collection and visitors. Museum spokeswoman Regan Petersen said in a statement that its guards “acted swiftly and appropriately; the police were summoned immediately and the offender was taken into custody.”
Visitors touring the gallery Thursday said they were horrified by the attack. Rachel Gelbman and Christine Shaw, of Denver, said they had seen the painting at the Denver Art Museum and noticed it was missing, replaced by a similar painting from the 1956-1958 era.
To them, it wasn’t the same.
“What would possess someone to do that?” Gelbman said as security guards roamed the building.
However Tisch’s mother Mary Thompson tells 9News that her daughter has been an alcoholic “for a long time.”
“We have been trying to get her help,” Thompson said.
At the museum, on the wall near where Still’s painting once stood, Still summed up his philosophy of art: “I never wanted color to be color, texture to be texture, images to become images. I wanted them all to fuse into a living spirit.”
EARLIER:
Tisch has a criminal record that include a 2008 arrest for driving while under the influence and an armed robbery charge which was later dismissed.
Denver was selected from among 20 other cities to house the Clyfford Still Museum and opened with a concert by Devotchka. Still was one of the best-known American post-World War Two abstract painters and he died in 1980. His widow Patricia, who helped bring Still’s works to Denver passed away in 2005.
Tisch is in the Denver County Jail on $20,000 bond and is due for her first court appearance on Friday morning. If convicted, she could be sentenced to up to 12 years in prison.
On Wednesday, the museum issued the following statement about the incident:
On December 29, 2011, an incident of criminal mischief took place at the Clyfford Still Museum. The police were summoned and the offender was arrested and is currently in police custody. Museum officials are cooperating with the authorities regarding the situation and are in the process of further assessing the incident.

Art to download is little more than dead-eyed commercialism

The vogue for selling digital editions of art by Hirst and Emin at ‘affordable’ prices is a trivial luxury for a fabled moneyed elite

Tracey Emin's Love Is What You Want<br />
Tracey Emin: Love Is What You Want<br />

Britart for your phone … Tracey Emin’s Love Is What You Want. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

Human beings are better at inventing things than we are at asking why we invented them. If we can do it, we will. But just occasionally, a supposed wonder of the new age makes me mutter the question: “Why?”

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‘Populist art undermining our identity’: Academy president resigns in anger at 22-ft Damien Hirst sculpture

The president of an historic art academy has quit in protest over ‘populist’ exhibitions just weeks after a 22ft Damien Hirst statue was erected outside the building.

Simon Quadrat, 65, believes that displaying pop art ‘undermines the integrity’ of the Royal West of England Academy (RWA) in Bristol, which was founded in 1849.

He has been locked in a long-running feud with board over what he considers to be ‘feeble’ exhibitions which are designed only to appeal to the masses.

Damien Hirst, whose creations include sharks suspended in formaldehyde, is displaying his centre-piece 'Charity' statue above the entrance to the Grade-II listed Royal West of England Academy of Art

Controversy: Damien Hirst is displaying his centre-piece ‘Charity’ statue above the entrance to the Grade-II listed Royal West of England Academy of Art

The final straw is believed to be an exhibit of work by Scottish artist Jack Vettriano, whose pieces are widely available online and in High Street shops.

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Watch out for carpet burns… the ‘tiger-skin’ rug that’s made out of 500,000 cigarettes

Made from 500,000 individual cigarettes and weighing an incredible 440lb, this mock tiger skin rug is the creation of master artist Xu Bing.

Currently on exhibit at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the painstakingly put-together tobacco artwork is meant to highlight global trade, packaging and how people are seduced into deadly smoking habits.

Tiger feat: Chinese artist Xu Bing's art work made of more than 500,000 individual cigarettes designed to look like a tiger skin rug pictured in Richmond, VirginiaTiger feat: Chinese artist Xu Bing’s art work made of more than 500,000 individual cigarettes designed to look like a tiger skin rug pictured in Richmond, Virginia

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People Who Mistook Life for a Museum, and Vice Versa


Eleanor Bauer in her performance piece “(Big Girls Do Big Things)” at New York Live Arts, part of Performa 11 biennial. Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

The Performa biennial, now in full outrageously outsize swing across the city, is known for its big events: parties and premieres that, as is usually the case in the arts, have far more flash than substance.

Real magic is often more easily conjured in smaller offerings, and this year’s version, Performa 11, is no exception. Some of these events, whether presented by the biennial or its myriad partner organizations, have only a tangential connection to Performa’s central focus, which is new visual-art performance, or to the specific biennial’s themes. (This year’s include Russian constructivism and Fluxus.)

It’s curatorial sprawl, for good and for ill. Sometimes you wish more choices had been made; sometimes the grab-bag mayhem works out swimmingly, as it did for me last weekend at a cluster of events (all of which the smart young Performa curator Lana Wilson had a hand in). Composition is, after all, in the words of one of the pieces I saw, “about making a choice, including the choice to make no choice.”

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Shaking up what it means to be an arts leader

The Cultural Leadership Handbook

The Cultural Leader’s Handbook – How to Run a Creative Organisation by Robert Hewison and John Holden

  • Publisher: www.gowerpublishing.com
  • Illustrations: Includes 6 b&w illustrations
  • Published: July 2011
  • Format: 244 x 172 mm
  • Extent: 222 pages
  • Binding: Hardback
  • ISBN: 978-0-566-09176-6
  • Price : £40.00 

You can also visit johnholden.info

Leadership has never been more important to the cultural industries. The arts, together with museums and heritage sites, play a vital part in keeping economies going, and, more importantly, in making life worth living. People in the sector face a constant challenge to find support for their organizations and to promote the value of culture. Leadership and management skills are needed to meet the mission of creative arts and cultural organizations, and to generate the income that underpins success. The problem is, where can you learn these essential skills?

The Cultural Leadership Handbook written by Robert Hewison and John Holden, both prime movers in pioneering cultural leadership programmes, defines the specific challenges in the cultural sector and enables arts leaders to move from ‘just’ administration to becoming cultural entrepreneurs, turning good ideas into good business. This book is intended for anyone with a professional or academic interest anywhere in the cultural sector, anywhere in the world. It will give you the edge, enabling to you to show creative leadership at any level in a cultural organization, regardless of whether your particular interest is the performing arts, museums and art galleries, heritage, publishing, films, broadcasting or new media.

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Overzealous cleaner ruins £690,000 artwork that she thought was dirty

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The artwork, entitled When It Starts Dripping From The Ceiling, consists of a trough under a wooden tower of slats. Photograph: Bernd Thissen/EPA

An overzealous cleaner in Germany has ruined a piece of modern art worth £690,000 after mistaking it for an eyesore that needed a good scrub.
The sculpture by the German artist Martin Kippenberger, widely regarded as one of the most talented artists of his generation until his death in 1997, had been on loan to the Ostwall Museum in Dortmund when it fell prey to the cleaner’s scouring pad.
The work, called When It Starts Dripping From the Ceiling (Wenn’s anfängt durch die Decke zu tropfen), comprised a rubber trough placed underneath a rickety wooden tower made from slats. Inside the trough, Kippenberger had spread a layer of paint representing dried rainwater. He thought it was art: the cleaner saw it as a challenge, and set about making the bucket look like new.
A spokeswoman for the museum told German media that the female cleaner “removed the patina from the four walls of the trough”.
“It is now impossible to return it to its original state,” she said, adding that it had been on loan to the museum from a private collector and was valued by insurers at €800,000 (£690,000).
She said that cleaning crews had been told to keep 20cm (8in) away from artworks, but it was unclear if the woman – who worked for a company to which cleaning had been outsourced – had received the memo.
If Kippenberger is now turning in his grave, he may find solace in the fact that he is not the only artist to have his works ruined by cleaners. In 1986, a “grease stain” by Joseph Beuys valued at about €400,000 was mopped away at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf.
At least the artwork didn’t end up in a skip. In 2004, a cleaner at Tate Britain in London threw away part of a work by another German artist, Gustav Metzger, after mistaking it for rubbish. The cleaner failed to realise that a plastic bag containing discarded paper and cardboard was an integral part of Recreation of First Public Demonstration of Auto-Destructive Art, and not just some litter. The bag was later recovered, but it was too damaged to display, so Metzger replaced it with another bag.
Germans are not the only victims. In 2001, Damien Hirst lost a pile of beer bottles, ashtrays and coffee cups, meant to represent the life of an artist, when a caretaker at the Eyestorm Gallery in London cleared it away.

Andy Warhol app brings Pop Art to phones

“My mind is like a tape recorder with one button–Erase,” Andy Warhol wrote in his book “The Philosophy of Andy Warhol,” in which he chronicles his love of TV and his tape recorder.

Doubtless the Pop Art wizard, who died in 1987, would have reveled in the sheer ephemera that is the Internet. A new app brings an in-depth examination of his works to your mobile device.

The Warhol: Art, available in the iTunes App Store and Android Marketplace, contains archival materials, letters, source images, film and video clips, as well as audio recordings.

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