IT
EN
combat-Art-Review-OK.jpg
0
  • Facebook - Black Circle
  • Instagram - Black Circle
  • All Posts
  • NEWS PRINCIPALE
  • OPINIONS
  • ULTIMI POST
  • NEW POST
  • LATEST POST
  • OPINIONS EN
Cerca

NEW MUSEUM TO PRESENT A MAJOR RETROSPECTIVE OF HANS HAACKE, THE FIRST US SURVEY OF THE ARTIST’S WORK

The New Museum has presented the first major U.S. survey of Hans Haacke in over thirty years, on display in the Museum's main galleries from October 24, 2019 to January 26, 2020. “Hans Haacke: All Connected” will bring together more than thirty works from across the artist’s career, from the 1960s to the present. This exhibition will be the first American museum survey of work by the highly influential artist since the New Museum presented the exhibition “Hans Haacke: Unfinished Business” in 1986.


71Shapolsky_Venice-Biennial,1978-©-Hans-Haacke_Artists-Rights-Society-(ARS)

For six decades, Haacke has been a pioneer in kinetic art, environmental art, Conceptual art, and institutional critique. This retrospective will bring together a wide range of works, focusing in particular on how Haacke expanded the parameters of his practice to encompass the social, political, and economic structures in which art is produced, circulated, and displayed. The exhibition will include a number of Haacke’s rarely seen kinetic works, environmental sculptures, and visitor polls from the late 1960s and early ’70s, all of which were central to discussions around systems aesthetics in art during that period. It will also feature works from the 1970s and ’80s that address the corporate sponsorship of major art institutions and political interference, along with others from the same period that investigate the provenance of artworks and museum collections, and more recent works that consider the intersection of global capitalism, nationalism, and humanitarian crises around the world. Among the works on view in the Museum’s Second Floor galleries, Large Condensation Cube (1963–67) comprises a sealed acrylic box in which light, air temperature, and other factors influence the pattern of water droplets on its interior walls as they slowly cycle through processes of evaporation and condensation. Other pieces on this floor, such as Sphere in Oblique Air Jet (1964/2011) and the dynamic Wide White Flow (1967/2008), a billowing field of white silk animated by rotating fans, link Haacke’s early experiments in physical phenomena to his later investigations of social and economic systems. Also on view will be Gallery-Goers’ Birthplace and Residence Profile, Part 1 and Gallery-Goers’ Residence Profile, Part 2 (1969 and 1970), which surveyed and mapped New York’s gallery-going public of the late 1960s; the noted earthwork Grass Grows (1967–69); and High Voltage Discharge Traveling (1968), a twenty-two-foot-long glass pipe carrying an electric current.


Condensation-Cube,196-065. Photo courtesy NEW MUSEUM
Condensation-Cube,196-065. Photo courtesy NEW MUSEUM

The Museum’s Third Floor galleries will feature works such as Oil Painting: Homage to Marcel Broodthaers (Oelgemaelde, Hommage à Marcel Broodthaers) (1982), for which Haacke installed a gilt-framed portrait of Ronald Reagan across from a photomural of antinuclear activists, with a red carpet and velvet stanchion between them—auguring the increasing links between art, politics, image, and spectacle. On Social Grease (1975), a series of six photo-engraved plaques, gathers quotations from prominent American political and business leaders on the motivations behind corporate involvement in the arts. Haacke would further investigate the ethically complicated relationships between art and business in works like A Breed Apart (1978) and MetroMobiltan (1985), both of which address the role of multinational corporations in supporting art and repressive regimes such as South Africa’s apartheid government. These will be joined by Seurat’s “Les Poseuses” (small version), 1888–1975 (1975), a full-size color reproduction of Georges Seurat’s Les Poseuses [The Models] (1888) accompanied by fourteen text panels that lay out the painting’s provenance, presenting biographical information on each of its successive owners—including their economic circumstances and political affiliations—as well as acquisition data, with sales and purchasing prices when available.


84TakingStock_Total_Zindman-color-corrected. Photo courtesy NEW MUSEUM

The exhibition will also serve as the New York premiere of Haacke’s sculpture Gift Horse (2014), a bronze sculpture of a horse’s skeleton adorned with an LED ribbon streaming stock prices in real time, which the artist originally created for London’s Fourth Plinth Program. On view on the Museum’s Fourth Floor, Gift Horse will be accompanied by Shapolsky et al. Manhattan Real Estate Holdings, a Real-Time Social System, as of May 1, 1971 (1971), a canonical piece of Conceptual art that was at the center of the Guggenheim’s cancelled Haacke retrospective in 1971.


Haacke_Gift-Horse
Haacke_Gift-Horse. Photo courtesy NEW MUSEUM

The Fifth Floor of the Museum will include a new edition of one of Haacke’s signature visitor polls, as well as documentation and materials from some of his celebrated earlier visitor surveys: MoMA Poll (1970), created for the Museum of Modern Art’s famed “Information” exhibition, and Documenta-Besucherprofil[Documenta Visitors’ Profile] (1972), a survey produced for the fifth edition of documenta, one of the art world’s most important international exhibitions. This exhibition is curated by Gary Carrion-Murayari, Kraus Family Curator, and Massimiliano Gioni, Edlis Neeson Artistic Director. The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue copublished by the New Museum and Phaidon Press, including contributions from Larry Abramson, Tania Bruguera, Daniel Buren, Jeremy Deller, Sam Durant, Maria Eichhorn, Olafur Eliasson, Andrea Fraser, Renée Green, Sharon Hayes, Thomas Hirschhorn, Carsten Höller, Pamela M. Lee, Park McArthur, Walid Raad, Gloria Sutton, and John A. Tyson, along with Hans Haacke in conversation with Gary Carrion-Murayari and Massimiliano Gioni.


- Redazione


Hans Haacke: All Connected

10/24/19 - 01/26/20

NEW MUSEUM

235 Bowery - New York

www.newmuseum.org





  • NEW POST
106 visualizzazioni

Museum Brandhorst is “Forever Young”, celebrating 10 years of activity


Opens today the incredible exhibition “Forever Young” at Museum Brandhorst in Munich to celebrate its tenth birthday. As a museum with one of the most important collections of contemporary art in Europe, Museum Brandhorst celebrates on this May, 10 years of activity. Ten years in which a lot has happened and its collection of artworks has expanded considerably. Since its opening in May 2009, the collection has gone from 700 to 1200 works, with many masterworks by Andy Warhol, Bruce Nauman, Cady Noland, Cy Twombly and Wolfgang Tillmans.



Forever Young - Source: Museum Brandhorst's website

To celebrate its 10th anniversary, there will be a major exhibition called “Forever Young – 10 Years of Museum Brandhorst” , where everyone can admire incredible artworks from the museum’s collection: 190 works by 45 artists. From the early 1960s to today, the exhibition brings together works well-known from the past and recent acquisitions. An interesting insight into the development of art.



Museum Brandhorst's external building - Source: Museum Brandhorst's website

The exhibition will be articulated in three main themes: the first one is about the colours and the irony of Pop Art, particularly in its often overlooked political dimension, and in its dark side. The second one is about how capitalism changes society and shapes identity, in the controversial topic of subjectivity in the present era. The third and last one is more properly about art, particularly contemporary painting and the continual renewal of this traditional art form. Brilliant shows like “Painting 2.0: Painting in the information Age”, “Wade Guyton: Das New Yorker Atelier”, “Kerstin Brätsch: Innovation” and “Jutta Koether: Tour de Madame”, exhibited in these recent years in the museum, were dealing with this core theme.

Also, there will be many lectures, discussions, talks, workshops, exhibitions tours and performances, a lot of collateral events to the main exhibition. Art at 360 degrees, in every detail, in every nuance of it, for every enthusiast and curious.



Andy Warhol - Self portait, 1986 - © 2016 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York - Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen

Thanks to the wide range of partnerships, people can also listen to music, like “Ave Maria” from Giuseppe Verdi’s “Otello”, sung by Mirjam Mesak of the Bavarian State Opera Studio; or get fit with “Workout with Warhol”. Or dance, watch films, enjoy the gastronomic offerings. A wide variety of offers. Especially for the anniversary, the gallery presents Twombly’s rose paintings in its original form as envisaged by the artist.

All the people who are in the art world, as artists, curators, gallerists, collectors, art fans, but also general curious public are invited to this incredible event, which celebrates an important landmark for the museum, a milestone to celebrate the success of the past 10 years and to look forward to a promising future.



Cy Twombly - "Untitles (Roses)" 2008 - Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Bavarian Staatsgemälde - Collections: Museum Brandhorst , Munich - © Cy Twombly Foundation

Forever Young – 10 Years of Museum Brandhorst

Period: 24 May 2019 – 1 April 2020

Opening hours: Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 10 am to 6 pm

Thursday: 10 am to 8 pm

Closed on Mondays

Admission to the museum will be free for the first weekend , 25 – 26 May.

Where: Museum Brandhorst

Kunstareal Theresienstrasse 35 a

80333 Munich – Germany

Entry: regular 7 €, reduced 5 €, Sunday 1 €


- Giulia Zamponi

  • NEW POST
35 visualizzazioni

Eva Marisaldi. Trasporto Eccezionale. PAC Milano. A transition from the familiar to the surprising.

After a period of closure for renovation work, on December 17th the PAC of Milan reopened its doors with “Trasporto Eccezionale”, an exhibition that is part of the investigation into the generation of contemporary Italian artist born in the 1960s, carried out by the institution in Milan.


Eva Marisaldi - No hope, 2003 - Installation view - PAC - Padiglione Arte Contemporanea , 2018

The project, curated by Diego Sileo, presents the work of the Bolognese artist Eva Marisaldi, offering an enormous corpus of works, ranging from historical works to the most recent ones, to new productions designed specifically for the occasion. However, the exhibition is not a retrospective, nor an anthological, but rather a simple opportunity for discovery and immersion in the poetics of the artist; as evoked by the title itself, it’s in fact an invitation to travel, to “be carried out” by the many works that, without responding to dictates of a chronological or thematic aspect, populate the exhibition space with great freedom. To this curatorial choice is added the heterogeneity of languages adopted by Marisaldi: photography, video, installations, actions, performances, more traditional techniques such as drawing and embroidery follow one another in a path that is very varied. The impact is therefore that of a pile of very different works, that inevitably generate an initial sense of disorientation in the viewer, thus requiring a more careful look at these works. We are welcomed by Welcome (2018), three small gymnastic tapes that, when activated by mechanical arms, produce a continuous but snappy motion, thus generating a sort of buffer but at the same time attractive action in the visitor, who is invited by the work itself to enter. This contradiction is revealed in many of Marisaldi’s work, a mechanism often triggered by the artist’s large use of Duchamp’s matrix; the object taken from everyday life, in fact, reveals itself in a new light, it loses its functions of use and it’s bent to the discovery of hidden aspects of that same reality from which it comes.

This is the case, for example, for the large yellow panel made with post-it, entitled Omissioni (1997): the yellow posts-it have been altered with coloured pencils, thus generating a picture of different tones of the same colour, with allusion to the different ways in which it’s possible to communicate the same thing and therefore to the omissions present in the reports.


Eva Marisaldi- Omissioni, 1997 - Installation view - PAC - Padiglione Arte Contemporanea , 2018

Equally eloquent is Senza Titolo (2018), a small theatre where two spoons suspended on threads like marionettes, duel with each other. The duel between the spoons is intended to be a tribute to Antonio Gramsci, and more specifically to the episode told in Notebooks from the prison of the welcome show, organized by the prisoners, which consisted of a knightly duel made with knives. Marisaldi changes the knives with spoons, staging a hypnotic and attractive fight, also made so by the noise generated by these two spoons that move away and then bang each other, revealing the general attention of the artist to the sound element. In fact, the importance of the auditory component in Marisaldi’s work is interesting, an aspect also testifies by her successful collaboration with the musician and composer Enrico Serotti in some works such as Porto Fuori (2017) and Musica per Camaleonti (2003). Visiting the exhibition, the sensation is therefore that of being in a sort of “theatre of the absurd”, where what is familiar to us surprises and questions us.



Eva Marisaldi. Trasporto Eccezionale.

Period: 18 Dicember 2018 - 3 Febraury 2019

Opening hours: Mercoledì, venerdì, sabato e domenica 9.30- 19.30. Martedì e giovedì 9.30 - 22.30. Closed on Mondays

Dove: PAC - Padiglione d'Arte Contemporanea

Via Palestro, 14, Milano

Entry: regular € 8, reduced € 5, free for


children up to 6 years old.


- Giulia Zompa



Eva Marisaldi- Senza Titolo, 2018 - Installation view - PAC - Padiglione Arte Contemporanea , 2018


  • NEW POST
90 visualizzazioni
123
4
5
Torna alla home page
Back to home page