Tag: curators

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

Rethinking Curating

Rethinking Curating: Art after New Media (Leonardo Book Series)

Title: Rethinking curating: art after new media

  • Publisher: The MIT Press; First Edition edition (February 5, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780262013888
  • US$ 25.99

As curator Steve Dietz has observed, new media art is like contemporary art—but different. New media art involves interactivity, networks, and computation and is often about process rather than objects. New media artworks, difficult to classify according to the traditional art museum categories determined by medium, geography, and chronology, present the curator with novel challenges involving interpretation, exhibition, and dissemination. This book views these challenges as opportunities to rethink curatorial practice. It helps curators of new media art develop a set of flexible tools for working in this fast-moving field, and it offers useful lessons from curators and artists for those working in such other areas of art as distributive and participatory systems.

Rethinking Curating explores the characteristics distinctive to new media art, including its immateriality and its questioning of time and space, and relates them to such contemporary art forms as video art, conceptual art, socially engaged art, and performance art. The authors, both of whom have extensive experience as curators, offer numerous examples of artworks and exhibitions to illustrate how the roles of curators and audiences can be redefined in light of new media art’s characteristics. They discuss modes of curating, from the familiar default mode of the museum, through parallels with publishing, broadcasting, festivals, and labs, to more recent hybrid ways of working online and off, including collaboration and social networking. Rethinking Curating offers curators a route through the hype around platforms and autonomous zones by following the lead of current artists’ practice.

 

 

 

 

 

Harlem Biennale

Harlem Biennale logo

The Harlem Biennale (HB) brings together artists, curators, educators and the public from Harlem, New York and around the world to connect with our history, geography and diverse communities through innovative explorations in contemporary art.

Harlem Biennale (HB) brings together artists, curators, educators and the public from Harlem, New York and around the world, to connect with our history, geography and diverse communities through innovative explorations in contemporary art. Combining a focus on Harlem and Upper Manhattan with socially-engaged artistic practices, Harlem Biennale creates a platform for cultural production and dialogue on urgent issues confronting our local and global community. HB’s unique model provides an ongoing program of events, exhibitions, performances, artist residencies and art education culminating in the bi-annual event. The first edition HB2012 is slated for May 3rd to July 1st, 2012.

Harlem Biennale (HB) is a non-profit arts organization incubated by the Fund for the City of New York (www.fcny.org).

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NEW DELHI — The third India Art Summit

NEW DELHI — The third India Art Summit, an art fair that ended last week, took up more than 90,000 square feet of Pragati Maidan, the main public exhibition hall here in India’s capital. Eighty-four galleries were represented, showing the work of 500 mostly Indian modern and contemporary artists. Organizers reported 128,000 visitors over the fair’s three-day run, and millions of dollars changed hands, with a couple of buyers each taking home more than $2 million in art.The Armory Show it was not. The quality of works varied much more widely than at that premier New York art fair, and there was a lot less money involved. But it was also a far cry from the first version in 2008, when only 34 galleries and 10,000 visitors showed up, and Neha Kirpal, the event’s 27-year-old founder, didn’t manage to break even. This time around Ms. Kirpal, now 30, bustled around the crowded hall on the first day of the fair, collecting business cards and stuffing them in the suit pocket of an assistant who trailed her.

“There are people who are coming who are saying: ‘I have money in my bag. Where do I start?’ ” Ms. Kirpal said.

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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.

Pretty Young Things 22 May – 23 May 2010

hi everyone,
i’m in a group art show this saturday.  lucky for me they have the space to accommodate big work so i will be showing some brand new 7-foot paintings.

the address is 833 broadway # 2 near 13th st, new york, ny.

opens may 22 at 6pm.


the show is called “pretty young thing” – i realize that some of you may not consider me to be either, but the curators must or they wouldn’t have invited me. either way, come show your face and have a drink on me.


see you there,

todd

www.toddbienvenu.com

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