Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 September 2008

Featurette: LYNNE ROBERTS-GOODWIN

Mrs. Deane posted on Lynne Roberts-Goodwin's work on the Landings series of "Bad Birds". Here is an excerpt from Lynne's profile; the full verion is HERE.

LYNNE ROBERTS GOODWIN - Born Sydney, Australia
Lynne Roberts-Goodwin’s work is grounded in a deep concern for nature and humanity. Her strategic partnerships with industrial and scientific communities underpin photographic artworks relating to endangered species and their environments that transcend geographical representation, creating ‘a characteristic push–pull … between the aims of truth on the one hand and those of rhetoric and desire on the other ... Roberts-Goodwin is constantly investigating the possibilities whereby images, even for an instant, can cross the borders of language.’ (Adam Geczy).



As a sidenote, it also seems that this series is tangled in a minor controversy.

Links:
Artist Profile + works (Sherman Galleries)

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Featurette: TIM SIMMONS

Tim Simmons has some interesting work in his portfolio. The surreal landscapes are particularly enchanting though it's somewhat disappointing that there isn't an artists' statement on his site. On an aesthetic level, I really like the blanket of artifice that the lights and extended exposure give to the natural scenes while at the same time, I can't help but think how a logo or catchphrase wouldn't look out of place within their frames.




Links:
Tim Simmons
FAS Contemporary Art

Saturday, 31 May 2008

From Another Shore

For those of you in New York, there's an excellent opportunity to see an impressive selection of Icelandic artists at Scandinavia House (just four blocks south of Grand Central Station).

"This survey of contemporary Icelandic art from the National Gallery of Iceland includes sculpture, installation, painting, photography, and videos by 21 of Iceland’s most acclaimed artists: Þórdís Aðalsteinsdóttir, Olga Bergmann, Hildur Bjarnadóttir, Margrét H. Blöndal, Ólafur Elíasson, Steingrímur Eyfjörð, Gabríela Friðriksdóttir, Hulda Hákon, The Icelandic Love Corporation (Sigrún Hrólfsdóttir, Jóní Jónsdóttir, and Eirún Sigurðardóttir), Guðný Rósa Ingimarsdóttir, Hekla Dögg Jónsdóttir, Ragnar Kjartansson, Ólöf Nordal, Jón Óskar, Eggert Pétursson, Katrín Sigurðardóttir, Hrafnkell Sigurðsson, Magnús Sigurðarson, and Hulda Stefánsdóttir."
The show will run through to August 15, 2008.

Links:
Scandinavia House
LIST (Icelandic Art News)
Icelandic Love Corporation interview (SiouxWIRE)
Katrín Sigurðardóttir (SiouxWIRE)
Gabríela Friðriksdóttir (SiouxWIRE)

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Introducing MAMORU TSUKADA

Mamoru Tsukada has some intriguing work in his portfolio. From Tokyo Art Beat:

"Mamoru Tsukada was born in Nagano prefecture in 1962. After studying photography in the U.S, he is currently based in Tokyo. He started his career as a photographer taking pictures of blind people. Blind people build their visual experience through their other senses and the image they create in their brain differs from our reality. Tsukada gets his artistic inspiration from working with them. He explores how an image functions, by making photographs that deviate from reality to arouse the unconsciousness."



Links:
Mamoru Tsukada (Asian Photography Blog) - SOURCE
Mamoru Tsukada (Tomio Koyama Gallery)
Mamoru Tsukaka (Hangar.org)
Tokyo Art Beat

Friday, 23 May 2008

Featurette: Húbert Nói Jóhannesson

One day when I live in Reykjavik, I hope I'll actually be able to go to one of these. This new show at Gallery Turpentine is featuring the work of Húbert Nói.

From CIA(Center for Icelandic Art):

Húbert Nói (b. 1961) studied biology, geology and chemistry at the University of Iceland in addition to his studies at the Icelandic College of Art and Crafts. While painting forms the core of his artwork, his diverse oeuvre includes drawings, etchings, videos, and even a CD of real-time music for astronauts. His creative work can be conceptualized as a sort of contemporary alchemy: transforming the scientific into the spiritual.


Links:
Húbert Nói
Húbert Nói interview (LIST)
Gallery Turpentine
CIA (Center for Icelandic Art)

Sunday, 18 May 2008

Featurette: DANIEL GUSTAV CRAMER

German born photographer, Daniel Gustav Cramer has some stunning work in his portfolio particularly the trilogy of woodland, underwater, and mountain photographs.



Links:
Daniel Gustav Cramer
Daniel Gustav Cramer (DOMOBAAL)
Daniel Gustav Cramer (re-title.com)
Daniel Gustav Cramer (Vera Cortes)
Daniel Gustav Cramer (kunstaspekte)

Saturday, 17 May 2008

Featurette: RACHI AKIRA

Ch'ng Yaohong posted on Rachi Akira's work over at the wonderful Asian Photography Blog. Both are well worth a visit.


Links:
Rachi Akira
Rachi Akira (Asian Photography Blog) - SOURCE

Thursday, 15 May 2008

The Reykjavík Arts Festival 2008

The Reykjavik Arts Festival has been held since 1970 featuring an international selection of artists. Since 2004, the original bi-annual schedule of the festival was made an annual event held each May. This year it will be held from the 15 May to 5 June.

The festival takes in a variety of artists with music representative of classical, pop, jazz, opera, and world as well as visual artists, seminars, theatre and dance. Some of the highlights of this year's festival include Croatian Contemporary Art at Gallerí 100°, the Experiment Marathon Reykjavík at the Reykjavík Art Museum (RAM) organized by the Serpentine Gallery(London), and what sounds to be a fascinating performance by the Iceland Dance Company and The Norwegian Company of Contemporary Dance featuring choreography by Ina Christel Johannessen and music composed by two Icelandic musicians, Kira Kira and Hildur I. Gudnadottir, along with their German counterpart Dirk Desselhaus.




Links:
The Reykjavik Arts Festival

Tuesday, 13 May 2008

Noodles again

After a hiatus, Noodles is moving once more.

Thursday, 8 May 2008

LIFE ON MARS: The 55th Carnegie International

The oldest contemporary art exhibition in North America featuring artists from around the world is the Carnegie International. Established in 1896, the current and 55th exhibition sits under the title Life on Mars asking "Are we alone in the universe? Do aliens exist? Or are we, ourselves,the strangers in our own worlds?"

Here is Douglas Fogle's statement on the show:

"Life on Mars, the 2008 Carnegie International, focuses on the increasingly relevant question of what it means to be human in the world today. Foregoing any universal answers to this question, the artists in the exhibition investigate particular aspects of the human condition, moving along paths that are both introspective and worldly while poetically traversing the dramatic spectrum from tragedy to comedy. The question, "Is there life on Mars?" is a rhetorical one, posed in the face of a world in which increasingly accelerating global events--political, social, natural, and economic--seem to challenge and threaten to overtake our most basic forms of everyday existence. Rather than a literal search for extraterrestrial intelligence, this question might be seen as a metaphorical quest to explore what it means to be human in this radically unmoored world. Moving from the micro to the macro levels of experience, the exhibition proposes to look at the multiple perspectives and myriad responses to this 21st-century dilemma from artists from all over the globe."

"Today, a concern with the question of what it means to be human can be found in contemporary art everywhere. Many of the younger artists in the exhibition have inherited a legacy that seeks to produce the momentary, the ephemeral, and the modest rather than the monumental. One sees in their work not a discredited universal humanism but a real connection to the human condition, expressed with an economy of means that is at once fragile and powerful."

"Life on Mars is a collective self-portrait of humanity colliding with the economic and political events that define daily existence. Questions of our survival are humorously and poignantly brought to the fore in films, installations, paintings, sculptures, and photographs that search for the sublime in the banality of everyday life."

The official site contains biographies for the artists participating as well as samples from their contribution to this year's event. For those in the vicinity of the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, USA, visitor information is available HERE.

Links:
Life on Mars: Carnegie International
Carnegie Museum of Art
Frieze - Douglas Fogle interview
Arts Journal/Modern Art Notes Q&A with Douglas Fogle

Friday, 2 May 2008

MICHAEL STIPE's Futurepicenter.com

There's some interesting work to be found on the archive of Michael Stipe's 2007 photographic project, Futurepicenter.com.





Links:
Futurepicenter.com
Michael Stipe Wiki
R.E.M. HQ

Monday, 28 April 2008

THE GRANGE PRIZE


The Art Gallery of Ontario has announced that Sarah Anne Johnson is the inaugural winner of the Grange Prize for Contemporary Photography. A jury comprised of representatives from the Art Gallery of Ontario and underwriters Aeroplan selected the five finalists representing Canadian and international artists whose work you can see represented here.

The final vote was selected solely by the public via The Grange Prize website which troubles me somewhat. Though one can certainly get a flavour for an image on-line, it isn't the same as viewing the print itself. Add to that the various settings and attributes of screens used to view the selection and it muddies the waters even more. There is certainly a lot of work in the selection that screams for a larger format than is on offer, but I think that's a discussion left for later.

It's an interesting group of artists and each have an eclectic mix of work in their portfolios. Visit The Grange Prize site for more of their work or go to the end of this post for additional links.





George Steinmetz wasn't one of the finalists though his aerial image of clear-cut forest masked from the road was brought to mind by Sarah Anne Johnson's "The Buffer Zone".


Links:
The Grange Prize
Art Gallery of Ontario
Sarah Anne Johnson (Julie Saul Gallery)
Liu Zheng
Miao Xiaochun Wiki
Huang Yan Wiki
Raymonde April

Saturday, 26 April 2008

Featurette: EIJA-LIISA AHTILA


With her experimental video work, photographer and sculptures, Eija-Liisa Ahtila's explores themes such as death, relationships, and mental breakdown through what she describes as "human dramas". Her work experimenting with narrative in video through multiple screens virtually removing the two-dimensional cause and effect is fascinating. Grounded in extensive research, her application of moments to her multi-platform video tableau is in essence more painterly than cinematographic.

Follow the links below for more information.


Links:
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (BBC Wales)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (BFI)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila interview (Kopenhagen)
The Never-ending Story (Guardian)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila Wiki
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (ArtForum)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (New York Times)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila's Affective Images in The House (Mediascape)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (Kiasma Magazine)
Eija-Liisa Ahtila (Paolo Curti)

Wednesday, 23 April 2008

Featurette: MARIA ELVIRA ESCALLON


Mark Hooper at Guardian Unlimited has posted a heads up to this interesting artist. This really underscores my need for a Spanish translator and/or collaborator. Unfortunately, Mr. Hooper is similarly flummoxed by Spanish. Ironically, Maria was born in London.



Her bio from the 2005 Berlin Photography Festival states:
born in London in 1954, Maria Elvira Escallón lives and works in Bogotá, Colombia. She initially studied psychology and later changed to fine art, taking workshops and courses at Colombian art academies. Of high formal heterogeneity, where each work has its own precise and unique path, Escallón’s work focuses on the processes of memory and destruction, nature and culture. Since 1980 her work has been included in many institutional art events in Colombia, including several solo exhibitions. Her work has received recognitions such as The National scholarship to Individual Creation granted by the Ministry of Culture in 1997 and the Luis Caballero Award in 2003. Since 2000, Escallon has exhibited her work and developed projects internationally.
She is currently exhibiting at The Photographer's Gallery in London as part of Once more with feeling which features recent work of Columbian photographers.




Links:
Maria Elvira Escallón
Guardian Unlimited - Mark Hooper
The Photographers Gallery

Tuesday, 25 March 2008

Wellcome Image Awards 2008

A fly on sugar crystals -Dave McCarthy & Annie Cavanagh

The Wellcome Image Awards gallery for 2008 is online. The images come from various scientific branches with most displaying subjects which are invisible to the naked eye. Each image is accompanied by information about its subject as well as that of the scientist(s) involved and the methods used. It's a fascinating collection of typically invisible organics.

Visit the homepage HERE.

crystals of oxidised vitamin C - Spike Walker


Ruptured Blood Vessel - Anne Weston

Links:

Wellcome Image Awards

** Images displayed with the kind permission of Wellcome Images