Tag: photograph

Thomas Demand

thomas demand portrait
‘At heart I’m a frustrated nerd’ … Thomas Demand. Photograph: Christine Nguyen/© J Paul Getty Trust

What got you started?

I grew up in an area of Munich that was full of artists and architects. My father was an artist; my uncle was an architect; my best friend’s father was an art dealer. I never considered doing anything else.

What was your big breakthrough?

Being part of a show called New Photography at MoMA in New York in 1996. It put me on the map.

You’re based between Berlin and Los Angeles. Which city do you find most inspiring?

At the moment, LA. I lived in Berlin for 14 years – the longest I’ve lived in any one place – but by the end, I felt I needed some fresh air. LA feels freer.

Do you suffer for your art?

Yes.

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Professor Has Camera Removed From His Head

Wafaa Bilal

The New York University professor who had a camera inserted in the back of his head as part of an art project was forced to remove part of the camera on Friday because his body had rejected it, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The camera was to take a photograph every minute as the professor, Wafaa Bilal, went about his day. The project, which raised privacy concerns at the university, was called ”The 3rd I,” and was organized by a new Qatari museum called Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art. According to the Chronicle, the device, which was installed by a body modification artist in a tattoo shop in Los Angeles, was originally mounted on three posts that were attached to a titanium plate implanted between Mr. Bilal’s skin and his skull. But Mr. Bilal’s body rejected one of the posts, despite treatment with antibiotics and steroids, and he was in constant pain. So on Friday he had the post removed. While the wound heals, he is tying the camera to the back of his neck. Why didn’t he do that in the first place? “It’s a performance,” he told the Chronicle. “With the performance comes endurance. But also it’s a commitment. And I didn’t feel that strapping something around my neck would be the same.”

Call for Submissions, the 7 Billionth Person Project, WHAT WOULD YOU TELL THE 7 BILLIONTH PERSON ABOUT THE WORLD WE LIVE IN TODAY?

The 7 Billionth Person Project:

In the next 1,000 days, the 7 billionth person will be born. What is the state of the world he/she is being born into? The 7 Billionth Person Project, the first project of Collective Answers towards a Global Civics seeks to collect photographs, videos and text from around the world that will provoke engagement and reflection on the state of the world we live in today. While the images, videos and short essays cannot tell the whole story, they can provoke conversation, spark curiosity and invite further investigation. Collecting submissions from around the world, the Project is inclusive, community-based, and global in reach.

Current Call for Submission:

We want to hear your voice!! We are seeking to collect creative submissions regarding the state of the world today from citizens around the world.

WHAT WOULD YOU TELL THE 7 BILLIONTH PERSON ABOUT THE WORLD WE LIVE IN TODAY??

Send us a photograph (to be printed 8×10 so 900×720 pixels atleast), a short essay (no more than 100 words) or a video (no more than 3 minutes) that answers this question. We invite you to be creative and global in your thinking. Some questions to get you thinking: How would peace change your life? What are the sources of violence? What is your image of a great life? Is religion a unifying or dividing force? Do you think of the world as a violent or peaceful place? What are the greatest forces of inequality?

ALL submissions will be included in an exhibition that will take place in New Haven, CT in the fall of 2010. This exhibition is the first in a series of global exhibitions.

PLEASE EMAIL YOUR ANSWERS TO: submissions(at)collectiveanswers.org

For more information, please see www.collectiveanswers.org

Guidelines:

• By submitting you agree to license your work as per the Attribution-Noncommercial Creative Commons License.

• Captions to guide the viewer are required. Please also include your name, profession, home country/city.

• Photos and text should be sent through email: submissions(at)collectiveanswers.org. For video, please upload the video to youtube or a similar type program and send us the link.

• Materials that are obscene, vulgar, sexually-orientated, hateful, threatening, or otherwise violate any laws will not be included in any online or public exhibitions.

Saatchi Gallery: Nice gift Charles, but what now?

Richard Wilson's art installation 20:50 at the Saatchi Gallery
Richard Wilson’s 20:50 at the Saatchi Gallery. The gallery is soon to become the Museum of Contemporary Art, London. Photograph: Linda Nylind

So the Saatchi Gallery is to be renamed the Museum of Contemporary Art, London. The Saatchi Gallery will now join museums of contemporary art in Sydney, Los Angeles, New York (where the museum of contemporary art is better known as the New Museum) and various other major and not so major cities. What hubris, I thought, when I first heard the news. On reflection, this seems churlish. It is an extremely generous gift, and the building itself is a great space for art, is extremely popular and attracts a very broad audience. But it is the collection that is likely to be problematic.

Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery are invariably incoherent: the work he shows can be spectacular, but alongside the good there is plenty that is bad or mediocre. We don’t even know what art Saatchi currently owns, or what he is giving to the nation. Even the works he is giving are variable in quality, and not always even the best works Saatchi first exhibited. There’s no artist’s film and video, for instance, and little good photography – and how can you have a museum of contemporary art that ignores these media?

For all his money and enthusiasm, Saatchi has never bought consistently or well. What else is Saatchi donating? Not more Ron Mueck, please.

Unlike other collections of contemporary art that have been shown internationally – the collection of Belgians Anton and Annick Herbert, or the collection of the legendary late German gallerist Konrad Fischer, both of which were built up over decades – Saatchi’s collecting has never had any focus. Young Brits have come and gone, as have artists from the US, Germany, India, China and the Middle East.

Whatever happened to the New Neurotic Realism, an entirely made-up movement that never went anywhere? Richard Wilson’s lake of reflective oil, Tracey Emin’s bed and Jake and Dinos Chapman’s sexualised mannequins never seemed to have much connection, except that they were made by British artists who live in London and happen to know each other. Put these works together with some of the others mentioned and one can only imagine a series of nightmarish, specious exhibitions that misrepresent the trajectories of contemporary art. The hope that the collection will evolve must be tempered by other questions, too: who will curate? What will be bought, and what sold off? Most of all, what does it mean to “continue the same policy that was established when the gallery began 25 years ago”, as the press release has it? The truth is that there never was any policy. In the end, there is only Charles Saatchi: his enthusiasms and, now, his generosity.

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