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02 Jul 09:55

“Plaisance” at Midway Contemporary Art

Artists: Jonathas de Andrade, Sven Augustijnen, Alejandro Cesarco, Tamara Henderson, Gareth James, Henrik Olesen, Willem de Rooij, Natascha Sadr Haghighian, Florian Zeyfang

Venue: Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis

Exhibition Title: Plaisance

Curated by: Fionn Meade

Date: April 19 – June 22, 2013

Click here to view slideshow

Full gallery of images, video, press release and link available after the jump.

Videos: 

Jonathas de Andrade, 4000 Shots, 2010. Super-8, 60 minute loop.

 

Tamara Henderson, Neon Figure, 2013. 16mm, 3 minutes.

 

Florian Zeyfang, Introduction to a Small History of Photography – Formalist Heady Pattern Version, 2008. Video, 12 minutes 21 seconds.

 

Images:

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Images courtesy of Midway Contemporary Art, Minnesota 

Press Release:

The group exhibition Plaisance engages contemporary artistic practices that move in and out of ethnographic framing, countering progressive and predominant codes of representation by inhabiting a secondary register of historical erasures, seeming blankness, and aphasic or amnesiac gaps within cultural memory. Giving living form, color, and voice to a resistant uncanny, Plaisance redirects affective forms of visibility and legibility to trouble political signification, referentiality, and presumed narratives of historiography.

While the exhibition’s title echoes the popular entertainments and mimetic objects of fleeting desire associated with pleasantries, distractions, and trifling objects, it also evokes a more archaic understanding of plaisance as a place affording contemplation alongside a prevailing architecture—not unlike the garden pavilion or Folie structures of eighteenth century leisure. Within the exhibition at Midway,plaisance becomes a place of rupture and reorganized looking that engenders thick descriptions of gesture, object, and image, enacting an intricacy of distinctions over the sweep of generalizing abstractions.

Sven Augustijnen’s Les Demoiselles de Bruxelles series, 2008, for example, portrays African prostitutes in self-selected night poses in the streets of Brussels, framed in dialectical tension with parallel nighttime images of monuments, buildings, and interiors that trace remnants of King Leopold II’s exploitative reign and Belgium’s colonial past held over into an uneasy present tense. A book of the same title extends Augustijnen’s exploration to coincident unravelings, including the irony that streetwalkers should work the Avenue Louise commemorating Leopold’s mother while Karl Marx penned the Manifesto of the Communist Partyunder threat of imminent exile blocks away. The dispersed subject of Henrik Olesen’s A.T., 2012, meanwhile, orbits around British mathematician Alan Turing (1912-1954). Lauded as a patriot for his wartime code-breaking and seminal computing innovations, Turing’s later punishment for being homosexual included forced hormone treatments, leading to what Olesen has described as a loss of body, and his ultimate suicide. A composite portrait composed of text, collage, and quotations, A.T. reveals unified historical subjects to be the normative and coercive fictions they are.

In Natascha Sadr Haghighian’s The Microscope, 2006, it is the eyepiece of the titular apparatus that gets examined and inverted. Wryly replaced with a speaker emitting a vocoder version of the pop song Every Breath You Take, the resulting lilt of Sadr Haghighian’s vision machine is accompanied by an adjacent booklet chronicling her conversation with Evelyn Fox-Keller, professor of History and Philosophy of Science at MIT and author of The Biological Gaze. Together they analyze the semiotic sway over our everyday retinal intake and customary looking. A different step-by-step adjustment and illusionistic breakdown animates the referential impasse of Willem de Rooij’s five-part abstract weaving Silver to Gold, 2009/2011, wherein a gradual manipulation of machined linen transitions from silver to gold. Enacting a refusal of staid terms of abstraction or symbolic value, the large-scale textile panels readily absorb all surface light while deflecting signification. Subtle and exact in its literal gradation, Silver to Gold is an incisive yet withholding companion when compared to the intricate flower bouquet works often shown alongside de Rooij’s textile spectrums, including Bouquet VI, 2010, configured here with black and white tulips.

An effacement of a more archival impulse propels Gareth James’ photographic collages and provides a transition to works on view in Midway’s adjoining library.Untitled (Young Claude Lévi-Strauss with Monkey, Fragment Spirals), 2011, for example, imposes a collaged interpretation of an unexplained pedagogical diagram embedded in a late photograph of the Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser. Excerpting an untethered symbol made by a thinker who decried the possibility of any epistemological coherence in postwar culture, James superimposes the oscillating image onto a photograph of a young Claude Lévi-Strauss, taken at the time of writing Tristes Tropiques, his groundbreaking anthropological travelogue of time spent in the Amazon basin and Brazil. As with Olesen’s prying apart and laying bare the fictions of biographical representation, James lets the lost diagram of Althusser’s recalcitrant formulation obscure and darken the figure of assumed methodological authority and innovation in Lévi-Strauss.

In the here and elsewhere of Tamara Henderson’s film Neon Figure, 2013, the irrational takes recombinant form in the “tourist night” of a collapse and build scenography that savors the absence of analytic consciousness, while Jonathas de Andrade’s 4,000 Shots, 2010, uses a roll of Super-8 film to obsessively capture anonymous male faces in the streets of Buenos Aires, compressing frame by frame an aphasic climate of imminent disappearance and historical depletion. In contrast, a re-presenting of pose and encoded gesture is given further amplitude in the territorial maneuvers of Alejandro Cesarco’s Broodthaers, 2008, which succinctly adapts and recasts a mixed utterance of warning and defiance, even as Florian Zeyfang’s Introduction to a Small History of Photography – Formalist Heady Pattern Version, 2008, revisits the books and embedded images that inspired Walter Benjamin’s 1931 essay, Kleine Geschichte der Photographie, adapting the speculative register of Benjamin’s experimental montage form to locate a renewed oversensitivity within today’s inscribed and increasingly pervasive image literacy.

Accompanied by an exhibition catalog, Plaisance further explores the continued relevance of such concepts as “secondary explanation,” originally formulated by anthropologist Franz Boas, and will consider how the genealogical imperative active within such artistic practices contributes to an articulation of ethnographic framing as a history of the present.

Link: “Plaisance” at Midway Contemporary Art 

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02 Jul 09:52

Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum

Artist: Mary Heilmann

Venue: Neues Museum, Nürnberg

Exhibition Title: Good Vibrations

Date: March 22 – June 23, 2013

Click here to view slideshow

Full gallery of images, press release and link available after the jump.

Images:

Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum 13054__0049 Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Heilmann_Music of Spheres Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum

Images courtesy of Neues Museum, Nürnberg. Photos by Annette Kradisch 

Press Release:

The American artist Mary Heilmann is recognised as a leading figure in contemporary abstract painting. While her work remained relatively unknown to the wider art audience for a long time, it gained the respect and admiration of her fellow artists. Born in 1940 in San Francisco, Heilmann established her position as a painter after moving to New York in 1968. Going against the dominant trends within art at that time, she opted for this traditional medium in order to develop her own pictorial language, creating abstract paintings that not only communicate personal experiences but also evoke visual pleasure.

Heilmann is known for her inventive explorations of fundamental painterly concerns, her expressive handling of paint and distinctive use of colour and form. While her art contains elements of abstraction and Colour Field painting, and at times recalls Hard-edge painting or Minimalism, it also incorporates pop-cultural motifs such as surfing and the ocean, or driving and the open road. Having been interested in ceramics since her student days, Heilmann has also practised forms of applied art and referred to craft traditions throughout her career.

Link: Mary Heilmann at Neues Museum

Contemporary Art Daily is produced by Contemporary Art Group, a not-for-profit organization. We rely on our audience to help fund the publication of exhibitions that show up in this RSS feed. Please consider supporting us by making a donation today.

02 Jul 09:49

“Corridor Plateau III” at DREI

Artists: Michael Bauer, Christian Freudenberger, Alexandra Hopf, Hannah Höch, Alex Jasch, Markus Karstieß, Konrad Klapheck, Esther Kläs, Markus Saile, Victor Vasarely, Detlef Weinrich, Anonymus

Venue: DREI, Cologne

Exhibition Title: Corridor Plateau III

Curated by: Christian Freudenberger and Markus Karstieß

Date: May 25 – June 22, 2013

Click here to view slideshow

Full gallery of images, press release and link available after the jump.

Images:

Konrad Klapheck "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Esther Kläs Alexandra Hopf Alexandra Hopf Esther Kläs "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Alex Jasch, Markus Saile "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Christian Freudenberger "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Markus Karstieß Konrad Klapheck "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Michael Bauer "Corridor Plateau III" at DREI Christian Freudenberger Michael Bauer, Markus Saile

Images courtesy of DREI, Cologne. Photos by Alwin Lay

Press Release:

Corridor Plateau is the title of a record by Detlef Weinrich. The occasion for recording was an exhibition of the same name (2011), which was part of a series curated by Christian Freudenberger and Markus Karstieß at Kunstverein Schwerte (2008 – 2011). Since then Corridor Plateau has been migrating in changing constellations as an independent exhibition format through various spaces, places, cabinets and corridors.

“I have examined maps of the city with the greatest care, yet have ne- ver again found the Rue d’Auseil. These maps have not been modern maps alone, for I know that names change. I have, on the contrary, delved deeply into all the antiquities of the place; and have personally explored every region, of whatever name, which could possibly answer to the street I knew as the Rue d’Auseil. But despite all I have done it remains an humiliating fact that I cannot find the house, the street, or even the locality, where, during the last months of my impoverished life as a student of metaphysics at the university, I heard the music of Erich Zann.”

H.P. Lovecraft: “The Music of Erich Zann”. © 1922 by The National Amateur Magazine.

With roots in the remote, the power of darkness, the depth and the (own) unea- se, the exhibition series Corridor Plateau develops a shadowed spatial frame- work, a cabinet, a chamber, a plateau, from which the tone of the artefacts per- meates through to us. We pass through the cupboard into the next room, sear- ching for a place that will never be found – hidden, lost, forgotten.

The stories of author H. P. Lovecraft can be considered collective mediators, communicating ideas of untraceable streets, hidden rooms and repeated storyli- nes (“The music of Erich Zann”). The energies and tones of his narratives are topical – though they signal the misshapen and monstrous within ourselves, and our forlornness in civilization. We don’t know when it happens. We see refe- rences to the Modern and a future beyond the crash of the present. You sit there, with your own, and everything begins.

Music

Detlef Weinrich studied sculpture at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Since 1994 he has been a member of the previously founded band Kreidler. In 2004 Detlef Weinrich was co-founder of the “Salon Amateurs” in Düsseldorf. Under the DJ alias Tolouse Low Trax, Weinrich also creates solo music. His debut album Mask Talk became a moody synthie-album with curious place- and timeless, almost ghostly tracks, reminiscent of the sounds of horror films.

Corridor Plateau continues in this dark tendency. The pieces on the record are arranged in corridors 1-6. We traverse through these cryptic corridors and hear the unknown approaching, coming ever closer. Corridor Plateau derives its inspiration from the dystopian fictions of H. P. Lovecraft, and is simultaneously an homage to the soundscapes of French composer and artist Ghedalia Tazartes. The needle moves from the inner to the outer edge of the vinyl, to achieve the maximal bass effect at the peak of each groove, and because the dance of the needle towards the edge seems to us like the dance on the narrow tip of existen- ce – right on the brink. Corridor Plateau was released by apparent-extent in Cologne.

Link: Corridor Plateau III at DREI

Contemporary Art Daily is produced by Contemporary Art Group, a not-for-profit organization. We rely on our audience to help fund the publication of exhibitions that show up in this RSS feed. Please consider supporting us by making a donation today.