Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts

Monday, 21 April 2014

In focus: Young Contemporary Hungarian Artists at derkó.pécsi.2014

This year's Easter weekend was marked by a visit to Budapest's Kunsthalle contemporary art museum located in 1895 eclectic-neoclassicism building in the Heroes' square. Strolling at night after a heavy Hungarian dinner, I have noticed a big announcement of Shirin Neshat's exhibition and my visit followed the next day.  

Little I knew about the contemporary art in Hungary, so the discovery of quite a few names paid off my early Sunday morning pilgrimage. The group exhibition consisted of Derkovits Gyula Fine Arts Scholarship holders' artworks. My  favorite were István Felsmann's Lego Relief pieces and witty pieces and a witty installation of three maneki-neko sculptures playing music instruments as well as Gábor Koós's Budapest Diary large-scale prints and wooden stencils (I have been quite lucky to try to make some on my own in Autumn 2013). 


 István Felsmann, Hospitalacryl, lego, 2010
 István Felsmann, Hospitalacryl, lego, 2010. Detail
István FelsmannD.M.Z, print, lego, 65X65, 2013
 István FelsmannD.M.Z, print, lego, 65X65, 2013. Detail
István Felsmann, Newspaperlego, newspaper, 34X45, 2011
István FelsmannNewspaperlego, newspaper, 34X45, 2011. Detail
 István FelsmannCompositionlego, paper, 34X45, 2010
István FelsmannBookletlego, booklet, 34X45, 2009

István FelsmannManeki-neko Playing Bass, installation, 2014

Gábor Koós's Budapest Diary series, print, 2014
 Gábor Koós's Budapest Diary series, stencil, 2014
 Gábor Koós's Budapest Diary series, print, 2014
Gábor Koós's Budapest Diary series, stencil, 2014

Works of Judit Rita Raboczky reminded me a variation of Pawel Althamer's 2011 commission for Deutsche Guggenheim, Venetians large-scale sculpture installation for 2013 Venice Biennial while the installation of Szanyi Borbàla - to another Polish artist NeSpoon whose works are based on lace patterns usually inserted into urban landscapes. However, for this associative exercise, there is a separate post.

Judit Rita RaboczkyLooking in the Mirror, 2011, achor
Judit Rita RaboczkyLooking in the Mirror, 2011, achor. Detail
Judit Rita Raboczky, 2011, achor
Pawel Althamer at Venice 2013 Biennale with a variation of his 2011 commission for Deutsche Guggenheim, Venetians large-scale sculpture installation

Szanyi Borbàla, YSA PUR III, 2013, iron
NeSpoon, Franciacorta project for Art Kitchen Foundation. Source: artist's Behance page



Click here for more photos and videos

Sunday, 6 April 2014

When Lady Gaga was not even born...

...there was a Dutch duet whose creations she would definitely wear. 

Gijs Bakker and Emmy Van Leersum, "couple from the year 2000", as they were called by a journalist covering their revolutionary show opening at Amsterdam's Stedelijk Museum Edelsmeden 3 (Silversmith 3) back on May 12, 1967, were also partners in real life. In the first five years of their marriage they signed a number of jewelry designs with GIJS+EMMY stamps, represented by two plus signs. 

The duet placed great emphasis on the relationship between jewelry and human body and was the first to use industrial materials such as lightweight aluminum or hard, unruly stainless steel. Space theme, massive and unusual forms, choice of cheap and affordable materials are the main characteristics of their bold creations. 

Decades later, the museum decided to get back to the legendary and provocative designers by creating a temporary show (on view until August 24, 2014) inspired by 1967 exhibition.  

photos of the entry video reconstructing the 1967 show ambience

full video


Probably, these items have been inspiration for Maison Martin Margiela jewelry department

 
 ...and these for Philip Treacy's creations

"basic garments" rejecting the fashion dictates of Parisian haute couture
In 1967 show the garments were worn by designers' friends who shocked the visitors by appearing among them in these futuristic garments and later walked out in the streets of Amsterdam. One witness has claimed to see the "spacemen" while others found them quite "absurd romper suits"

Saturday, 1 February 2014

Rashid Rana Solo Show Opening at Lisson Milan and Flashbacks to Lalla Essaydi

Rashid Rana at Lisson Gallery 


Last week I went to Rashid Rana's opening at Milan's Lisson gallery. Rana, one of the most famous and definitely the most expensive (since this term nowadays is more impressive and for some is a key element of whether or not to visit an exhibition opening) Pakistani artist. I am used to gallery openings when few give a speech and do praise an artist standing next to him, visitors bring the flowers and gifts, but in Europe I do not think it is a tradition or maybe I arrive too late and miss the event's culmination. 

Rana entered space one hour later when everyone were already in the courtyard enjoying Italian wine and cold cut, so his arrival remained unnoticed to the majority of the crowd. Another observation, those who come to the exhibition openings, at least, from my very scarce experience, do not recognize the artist. In the world of Google search this ignorance, especially when one visits a solo show is a bit disrespectful. But again, I might be wrong. 

Rana is indisputably talented, but after reflecting and comparing his current exhibition with his earlier works, I incline to say that there is a bit of distantiation and less innovation in the works that are now on view: when looking at the pieces it might not be obvious that Rashid Rana made them, but when asking oneself whether Rashid Rana could have be the author of these pieces at the exhibition, the answer is "yes". 

"My work is often a three-way negotiation between myself, my immediate physical surroundings and what I receive – whether through the Internet, books, history or collective knowledge.” 
Rashid Rana, ArtReview, 2013
Rashid Rana, Notions of Narrations II, 2013. C-print, 228 x 323 cm. Image Source: Lisson Gallery


"Would anyone in this room know where the hell is Baku?"


- Would anyone in this room know where the hell is Baku? Seriously, Baku? So Dina, my friend Dina, went there and made a show of Lalla Essaydi in Baku!
- When was it?
- This autumn and before she was curating Love Me, Love Me Not pavilion at Biennale
- Oh
- Btw, Essaydi did not come up with anything new. Shirin Neshat has been doing that already. But you know what, after knowing her personal story I have started to appreciate her more. 
-?
- She has been married to a Saudi and then when they separated he was keeping the children and all those stories. So her Harem series is actually about her life with her husband!

I overheard this monologuous dialogue in the lower lever of the gallery sitting between three ladies, Middle Eastern by their appearance, whose English accent revealed they all have been living or visited often UK. It was difficult not to hear their conversation, despite I tried to read the press release - the reason why I sat down. Still, I did not want to be impolite and intervene with "Yes, I know where's Baku" comment. Later, however, when helping the same young lady to order a cab, I have brought up this topic and we both laughed. 

Shirin Neshat, from Soliloquy series, 1999. Gelatine silver print, 25,4 x 33 cm 

Lalla Essaydi in Baku's Museum of Modern Art


Beyond Time and Beauty exhibition was the one mentioned in the conversation. I am glad I had a chance to see Lalla Essaydi's works live so soon after discovering her participating in a group show She Who Tells a Story in Boston's Museum of Fine Art earlier last year.


Born in 1956 in Marrakech, Morocco, Lalla Essaydi has been working in variety of media, recently devoting herself to photogpraphy. Despite she was educated in Europe and the USA, many years spent in Saudi Arabia have shaped her works. Lalla Essaydi’s photography is a contemporary reflection of Orientalism that is traced back to the nineteenth century art of Ingres, Delacroix and Gérome.

“In my art I wish to present myself through multiple lenses – as artist, as Moroccan, as Saudi, as traditionalists, as Liberal, as Muslim. In short, I invite the viewer to resist stereotypes.” 
Lalla Essaydi

“<…> the subject of Harem Revisited are clothed in elaborate caftans and their environments are now covered with these richly adorned fabrics. The draperies are dense and have such rich embroidery and complex patterns that when seen altogether, the effect is dizzying, essentially turning the women themselves into objects of decoration, camouflaged within their environments. They become, in effect, a metaphor for the essence of Essaydi’s exploration. These vintage textiles, which were created between the 17th century to the early 20th century for use in wedding ceremonies, to decorate palaces and the harem area, were all generously loaned to Essaydi from the Nour and Boubl er Temli collection.” 
Dina Nasser-Khadivi, exhibition curator  
Lalla Essaydi, Harem #19b, 2009. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 101,6x76,2 cm (40x30 in.) 
Lalla Essaydi, Harem #19b, 2009. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 101,6x76,2 cm (40x30 in.). Details
Lalla Essaydi, Harem Revisited #39, 2012. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 101,6x76,2 cm (40x30 in.)
 Lalla Essaydi, Harem Revisited #39, 2012. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 101,6x76,2 cm (40x30 in.). Detail
 Lalla Essaydi, Les Femmes du Maroc: Harem Women Writing, 2008. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 122x152,4 cm (48x60 in.)
Lalla Essaydi, Les Femmes du Maroc: Harem Women Writing, 2008. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 122x152,4 cm (48x60 in.). Details

In the works from the Bullet Revisited series, a scene is set the sort of room one finds in Orientalist painting. Each room – its tiles, woodwork, and other décor, as well as the women’s clothing – is reproduced in faithful detail. But these scenes are created with bullet casings that turn the domestic space into a psychological one, charged with the violence within contemporary society.” 
DDina Nasser-Khadivi, exhibition curator 

Lalla Essaydi, Bullets Revisited #3, 2012. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium in three parts, 122x152,4 cm (48x60 in.) each.
Lalla Essaydi, Bullets Revisited #21, 2012. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 122x152,4 cm (48x60 in.)
Lalla Essaydi, Bullets Revisited #21, 2012. Chromogenic print mounted on aluminium, 122x152,4 cm (48x60 in.).Detail


For more photos from Lalla Essaydi exhibition, click here.


P.S. 


My favorite Artistic Twinship "game" may juxtapose Shirin Neshat's and Lalla Essaydi's works with Chinese Landscapes (1999-present) by Huang Yan who participated in independent Chinese pavilion at the 55th Venice Art Biennale with the works below. 

 Huang Yan, from Chinese Landscapes series, 2001, 100 x 80 cm
 Huang Yan, from Chinese Landscapes series, 2001, 100 x 80 cm

If interested to see more "body art", check out this post called Printed Skin on Pattern Bank blog.