Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

MICHEL DE BROIN's "Superficial"


I'm just getting acquainted with Michel de Broin's work. The featured work here is Superficial, to which had the following to say:

"Upon invitation to reflect on the notion of transparency, that led me into the forest to envelop the contour of a large stone with fragments of mirror. The large stone, tucked away deep in the woods, became a reflective surface for its surroundings. In this play of splintered radiance, the rock disappears in its reflections. Because it reflects one cannot be mislead by its presence, yet we cannot seize it, rather it is the rock that reflects us."



Images of Michel de Broin's Superficial, Mirror, glue, cement / Vosges, Alsace, France 2004

Links:
Michel de Broin
Michel de Broin (Artnews)
Michel de Broin (VOX)

Monday, 1 September 2008

Multiple KLEIN BOTTLES inside/outside eachother

For those of you unfamiliar with a Klein Bottle, it has the special property in that it's surface (both interior and exterior) are the same. In our universe of three dimensions, we can only come up with an approximation of a true Klein bottle.

Taking it a step further, Alan Bennett of Bedford, UK created three Klein bottles set inside eachother as shown above.

Here is an animation of how a Klein bottle is formed:



Links:
Glass Triple Klein Bottle (Science Museum)
Klein Bottle Wiki
Imaging Maths - Inside the Klein Bottle

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)

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)

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

Saturday, 10 May 2008

Introducing KATRÍN SIGURÐARDÓTTIR

Katrín Sigurðardóttir's work is often composed of miniature landscapes and architecture set within or atop cubist frames and plinths that divide, confine, distort or expand. Her disinterest in borders and the myths that buttress nationalism are apparent in much of her work and stems from something I experienced in attending university in a country 5000 miles from home which is an extreme change of perspective that renders any nationalistic paradigms farcical.

Born in Iceland(1967), Katrín studied at the Icelandic College of Art and Crafts and the San Francisco Art Institute. She currently resides in New York and has exhibited internationally.


Links:
Katrín Sigurðardóttir
Katrín Sigurðardóttir (P.S.1 MOMA)
Katrín Sigurðardóttir (e-flux)
Katrín Sigurðardóttir interview (Homesick)
Katrín Sigurðardóttir (Artnews.is)

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, 18 April 2008

Interview: THEO JANSEN

I first discovered Theo Jansen's work just over a year ago and immediately started correspondence with him. Today, we sat down for what is a key interview in the roster bringing together the worlds of science and art in the most natural and unexpected ways.

Theo Jansen studied physics at the University of Delft, Holland before becoming a painter. After his seven year career in painting, he started work on the UFO project which entailed the creation of an actual flying saucer that flew over Delft in 1980 causing pandemonium in the town and attracting considerable attention to his work.


For more than 10 years now, he has been working on the genesis of new nature in his Strandbeest creations which he envisions becoming completely autonomous, intelligent, wind-powered life forms. As an introduction to this work, here is his presentation on this fascinating project for TED:


Theo Jansen: The art of creating creatures



What prompted you to quit your studies of Physics at the University of Delft and becomes a painter?
I was young of course. The hippy period was there. I was distracted from my study by all these new dreams of people and a lot of friends of mine were artists and so I decided to become one as well and started becoming a painter.


And have you continued painting?
No, it stopped as soon as I started the UFO project at the beginning of the eighties and then the UFO project had such a success also media wise and I had been famous for about three months in my country for that and so I chased it more or less on bigger projects. After that, I couldn't paint anymore, sit in my studio and just paint. It wasn't possible anymore.

Following on from your painting, you seem to have had a desire to “work outside the box” and pursue new forms of expression through the painting machine and light sculptures. How did these projects develop?
After the UFO project, I had to do something more technical things and my interest for physics which has never been away during painting, it was really a rebirth in the technical interest after the UFO so I wanted to make something technical.


The painting machine was something interesting because in those days there were no printers yet so it was quite unusual to paint with a painting machine like that especially as the perspective of the images that came out of the painting machine because it made real size photos in front of the wall so the distance didn't matter at all. If a chair was standing a meter or 100 meters it would be the same size. That was the special thing about the painting machine because you could also make the opposite perspective objects with it so I also made photographs of chairs and tables which were in opposite. Things which were closer were smaller and things which were bigger were further away from the wall so it's just the opposite of normal perspective.

What did you learn from them?
My mind was really going on thinking. It made me change my living just for a lot of dreaming about abstract 3D forms in my head and the possibilities of machines. It really did change my thinking and my attitude. I was asked to write a column for a university magazine that really was sort of, this is a Dutch expression, “a stick behind the door”. That means that someone is standing there beating you up when you don't do your homework.


And did this work have any influence on your Strandbeests?
It surely had as this column really forced me to think about anything in the world and because every time I tried to find new, strange perspectives on reality and in effect, the strandbeests they started off as a column in the newspaper and that is about 18 years ago now and in the first period after that nothing happened. I had written the column and then half a year later, I got the idea of going to the shop and buying some of these tubes. I started playing with it and I did that for an afternoon and in the period of the afternoon, I decided to spend one year on these tubes, on these conduits because I saw so many possibilities in there. It turned out to be more than I could ever think of all those years ago.


Monday, 7 April 2008

Introducing Gabríela Fríðriksdóttir

Living and working in Reykjavik, Gabríela Fríðriksdóttir is yet another Icelandic artist that has caught my attention.

Gabriela graduated from the Icelandic College of Art & Crafts in 1997. She works in a variety of media including sculpture, drawing, media, sound, and music. Creating her own mythology, exploring borders of dream and reality, she has quickly become a prominent figure in the Icelandic art world. In 2005, she was Iceland's representative at the Venice Biennale.



Links:
Gabriela.is
Gabriela (POL Oxygen)
Gabriela (Unit - Bjork.com)
Gabríela Friðriksdóttir - Versations Tetralogia (cia.is)
Gabríela Friðriksdóttir at Venice Biennial (cia.is)
Salt of the Earth (cia.is)

Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Introducing MIRCEA CANTOR

A wolf and a deer in an immaculate closed gallery are the basis for Mircea Cantor's Deeparture. Having read several interpretations of the meaning of this short film, I was surprised at the variation in the reactions and how far they diverged from my own feelings about this piece.

For me, the idea that the wolf will attack the deer is only an extreme unlikelihood but the tension is there. Between the two, there is a relationship that is palpable and easy to identify in the stark environment. The feeling that it evokes for me is that of being a stranger, a foreigner, an outsider with an indefinable unease that I feel is evoked with Deeparture. They both have fears of the environment in which they are placed while at the same time holding the mantles of hunter and hunted; or do these even matter anymore?

It's an interesting work. You can view it below. I am curious to hear what you think...


Deeparture, 2005 - 16mm transfer to beta / silent


Born in Cluj, Romania in 1977, Mircea Cantor left home in 1999, hitch-hiking across Europe until settling in France. Despite this, a high proportion of his works continue to have strong ties to Romania. He is co-editor of the artist-run magazine, Version. Living and working in Paris and Cluj, Mircea is represented by Galerie Yvon Lambert in Paris & New York, and Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv.

Starting today (2 April 2008), an unusual exhibition at Modern Art Oxford exhibits Mircea's work together with Ansel Adams and Katie Paterson. Entry is free and the exhibition continues until 1 June, 2008.


Links:
Mircea Cantor Channel (YouTube)
Version Magazine
Mircea Cantor (Frieze Magazine)
Galerie Yvon Lambert
Dvir Gallery
Modern Art Oxford

Saturday, 29 March 2008

Featurette: MICHELANGELO PISTOLETTO

click image to go to the interactive panoramic

Michelangelo Pistoletto has from the beginning of his career to his latest installation worked with mirrors. From his paintings on mirrors (see below) to infinite environments (see above), he has engaged with communities and experimented with a broad range of means and methods.

It's also refreshing to find an established artist who actually has a website. Follow the links below for more.




Links:
Michelangelo Pistoletto (Official)
Cittadelarte - Fondazione Pistoletto
Guggenheim Biography
Pistoletto - A Reflected World (Walker Art Center)
Pistoletto (La Scultura Italiana) - Italian
Pistoletto article (ArtForum)
Pistoletto RadioBooks (deBuren.eu)
Michelangelo Pistoletto Wiki (Italian)
Interactive Panoramic

Tuesday, 25 March 2008

Featurette: REBECCA HORN

Rebecca Horn's works have a consistent thread through them with her creations taking what preceeded it and developing the concepts. Creating installations, performances, films, sculptures, drawings, and photographs, her early explorations between body and space still echo in her latest work.

At 20, Rebecca contracted severe lung poisoning. Living in seclusion at a sanatorium, this isolation was compounded by the death of her parents. Working from her bed, she started working with coloured pencils and developed the first of her body extensions from balsa wood and cloth.

Returning to Hamburg Academy, she further developed the body extensions for which she is most known creating cocoon-like wraps, elongated and supplemental limbs as well as performances built around these creations. And despite her methodical approach, she hasn't been averse to whimsy or humour which adds to weightless, ethereal feel to some of her works.





Links:
Rebecca Horn (official site)
Rebecca Horn Wiki
The Bionic Woman (Guardian Unlimited)
Rebecca Horn at the Tate Modern

Monday, 17 March 2008

Featurette: JOCHEM HENDRICKS

Jochem Hendricks highly conceptual pieces have a playful quality reminiscent of compatriot Rebecca Horn. Jochem has used a wide variety of media and methods including painting, sculpture, eye drawings using a specially designed interface, taxidermy, performance, and lawbreaking.

Exploring the boundaries of society, testing them and crossing them, he seems to be asking us to question societal paradigms as well as hisself. For example, his work 3,281,579 grains of sand is based on his affirmation that he has counted the individual grains of sand. Did he really? Can it be proven? Does it really matter?




Links:
JochemHenricks.de (English)
Guardian Unlimited article (2 September 2007)
Media Art Net (Eye Drawings)
Interview with Jochem Hendricks (Yuki Aruga)

Saturday, 15 September 2007

Featurette: ÉVA MAGYARÓSI


Having only recently graduated in animation at MOME in 2005, Hungarian Éva Magyarósi's film Hanne which was submitted as part of her thesis was awarded at the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen. Her collection of work is full of beguiling imagery which is generously showcased on her homepage. The animation below is Szerelemhús (Flesh of Love), created by Éva in 2003 (courtesy of Daazo, the European Short Film Centre.)