May 13, 2008

OLIVIER DEBROISE, 1952-2008

Artnetnews512081

Olivier Debroise at ARCO 2005
Photo by Haupt & Binder
Universes in Universe

via ARTNET NEWS, May 12, 2008:

OLIVIER DEBROISE, 1952-2008
Olivier Debroise, 56, a prolific scholar and curator of Mexican modern art and a key figure in the country’s art world for more than three decades, died from a heart attack in Mexico City on May 6, 2008. As coordinating curator in the Department of Visual Arts at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), he had been working on plans for the university’s new contemporary art museum, designed by Teodoro González de León and scheduled to open in September.

A French citizen born in Palestine, Debroise lived in Poland, Morocco and Brazil before settling in Mexico in 1970, where he became the art critic for La Cultura en Mexico (1979-86), La Jornada (1986-94) and Reforma (2000-03). He helped found the curatorial think tank Grupo Teratoma as well as CURARE, an alternative art critics’ association and magazine. He published scores of articles and books, ranging from studies of Diego Rivera in Montparnasse (1979) and Mexican art in the 1920s and 1930s (1982) to a survey of photography in Mexico (1999).

As a curator, Debroise helped integrate Mexican modern art into the international exhibition circuit, bringing a leftist political bent to numerous landmark shows, such as "Modernity and Modernization in Mexican art" at the Museo Nacional de Arte (1991), "The Bleeding Heart/El corazón sangrante" at the ICA, Boston (1991), and "David Alvaro Siqueiros: Portrait of a Decade," which traveled from Mexico City to Houston, Santa Barbara and the Whitechapel Gallery in London (1997). His curatorial projects also included the cross-border art show "InSITE97," which saw artworks installed in public places in both San Diego and Tijuana, and "The Age of Discrepancies: Art and Visual Culture in Mexico 1968-1997," which premiered at UNAM in 2007 and travels this year to MALBA in Buenos Aires and the Pinacoteca in São Paulo.

A wide-ranging intellectual, Debroise completed three novels, the most recent of which, Cronica de las destrucciones (1998), is a reimagining of the early post-Conquest history of Mexico. He directed the film A Banquet in Tetlapayac about Sergei Eisenstein’s Qué viva Mexico. The critic and curator Cuauhtémoc Medina, who worked with Debroise on the "Discrepancies" show, describes him as "one of the most ferocious critics and curators of the art of Mexico, the inventor of the notion of the curator as a leftist cultural politician, a homosexual novelist who explored the crossroads of history, violence and desire, and an equally devastating cultural agent in demolishing myths and provoking institutional transformations."

Debroise’s unexpected death shook the fractious Mexico City art world, whose leaders turned out to pay their respects at the wake and funeral, among them most of the city’s museum directors, curators, foundation heads, collectors and artists, including Francis Alÿs, Melanie Smith, Thomas Glasford, Alex Navarrete and Enrique Serrano.

– Jason Edward Kaufman

May 06, 2008

Goldwater Library Wi-Fi Hot Spot

Futurewifi

Great News! the Library now has free Wi-Fi! Feel free to bring your laptops and surf the web in our Reading Room.

Wifi What is Wi-Fi?

via PCWorld:

Wi-Fi, or wireless fidelity, is a technology that allows PCs to communicate with each other or access the Internet via radio communication rather than wires. Originally developed for laptops, Wi-Fi now incorporates devices such as mobile phones, PDAs and games consoles (including PSP and Xbox 360). You can use Wi-Fi in your home with a broadband Internet connection and a wireless router. Alternatively, when you’re out and about you may encounter Wi-Fi hotspots. These range from a single room – say a coffee shop or airport lounge – to large areas of overlapping hotspots, such as a Wi-Fi enabled city centres. You’ll sometimes see Wi-Fi referred to as a number, 802.11, which relates to the frequency the technology operates on. Most current Wi-Fi devices use 802.11g, which offers a typical data transfer rate of 25 Mbits-per-second and a range of around 30 metres. 802.11n, though, typically performs at a much more impressive 200 Mbits-per-second and has a range of 50m.

Wifitshirt1
To find out more information please visit www.wi-fi.org

April 16, 2008

Textile Museum exhibit tangled up in blue

Reblogged from the Textile Museum web site:

BLUE

April 4 - September 18, 2008

Blue1 > Hiroyuki Shindo, Shindigo Space 07 (detail), 2006. 'Shindigo shibori'-dyed cotton and hemp and Shindigo balls (polystyrene wrapped with hemp and dip-dyed). Courtesy of the artist. Photo by Joel Chester Fildes.

The human perception of color is a complex sensory phenomenon filtered through the eyes, brain, language and multiple layers of social experience. While shades of red (examined in the 2007 Textile Museum exhibition RED) quicken the pulse and increase blood pressure, blue induces a calming effect and is widely perceived as a “cool,” tranquil color.

Blue2_2 > Kain panjang (long cloth, hip wrapper) detail, Indonesia, Yogyakarta (in the style of Ceribon), Chinese-Indonesian, 20th century. Commercial cotton, resist patterning. The Textile Museum 1998.11.16. Gift of Beverly Deffef Labin Collection.

BLUE explores the creation and meaning of the color blue on textiles produced across time and place, with particular emphasis on contemporary artists’ use of natural indigo dyes. Until the invention of chemical dyes in the late 19th century, peoples worldwide relied largely on indigo-bearing plants to achieve blue-colored garments, household furnishings, artworks and even body paint. Many cultures attributed talismanic properties as well as health benefits to indigo, and the mysterious transformation of this temperamental dye has long been steeped in myth and magic .... 

BLUE is curated by Lee Talbot, Assistant Curator, Eastern Hemisphere Collections, and Mattiebelle Gittinger, Research Associate, Southeast Asian Textiles.

Associated Events:
(Registration required)

April 10

BLUE Lecture Series: "A Passion for Indigo: My Fascination with the Exotic Past and Exciting Future of this Unique Dyestuff"
Jenny Balfour-Paul, Scholar and Artist
Thursday, 6:30 pm

April 24

BLUE Lecture Series: "African Blues"
Lisa Aronson, Associate Professor of Art History, Skidmore College
Thursday, 6:30 pm

May 1

BLUE Lecture Series: "Transforming Blue: From Seed to Dye, Indigo in Contemporary Japan"
Rowland Ricketts, III, Artist
Thursday, 6:30 pm

May 15

BLUE Lecture Series: "Indigo Immortal: The History and Global Culture of Levi's Jeans"
Lynn Downey, Historian, Levi Strauss and Company
Thursday, 6:30 pm

May 22

BLUE Lecture Series: "Indigo: A Personal Journey"                      
Hiroyuki Shindo, Artist and Mary Lance, Filmmaker
Thursday, 6:30 pm

April 15, 2008

Where tourism meets cultural heritage

Reblogged from the NY Times (via Associated Press), April 10, 2008:

Easter Island: Statue Vandal Fined $17,000

Arteasterislandap < Chilean Investigative Police released this photo showing the damage to the right earlobe. (AP Wirephoto via CNN)

A Finnish tourist who chipped an earlobe off an ancient statue on Easter Island two weeks ago for a souvenir is being allowed to go home after paying a $17,000 fine and agreeing not to return for three years, the police said. At the request of prosecutors, he also wrote a public apology for damaging the 13-foot-tall moai, as the statues are known.

Previously reported more fully on CNN.com/World.

April 14, 2008

Tips on web tools for anthropology

Savage

Rex at Savage Minds has re-posted a very helpful (if unattributed) blog post with suggestions on "how to use commonly available and completely free tools on the Internet in order to keep up to date with the latest literature in anthropology." He offers to updated it regularly if there is sufficient interest from the readership.

The focus of the original post is Pacific Islands research, and the choices may reflect that. Here's what's covered:

  • Table of Contents Alerting
  • Get an email account
  • Subscribe to American Anthropologist and other American Anthropological Society journals
  • Subscribe to the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
  • Subscribe to new book alerts at University of California Press
  • Sign up to your other favorite publishers

Even if you already do all this, you might want to skip down to the "Final Thoughts" entry, where the unintended consequences of Total Information Awareness are addressed.

April 11, 2008

New York African Film Festival, April 9 –15, 2008

Ezra_thumbThis_is_my_africa_nana_thumbSlavetradepicwole_thumb

via the Film Society of Lincoln Center site:

the fifteenth New York African Film Festival
April 9 –15, 2008

We are honored to welcome Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and veteran film director Charles Burnett to receptions during the festival.

The New York African Film Festival (NYAFF) celebrates its 15th anniversary with a lineup of 40 films from 22 countries throughout Africa and the African Diaspora, emphasizing history and storytelling, technology and the future. In a compelling array of features, shorts and documentaries, as well as experimental film and archival footage, the festival selects from treasured stories of the past, as well as contextualizes the present and future within the framework of history. The Festival is also showcasing works by a new wave of female African cineastes. Through eye witness accounting, social activism and pure fiction, Osvalde Lewat-Hallade, Ngozi Onwurah, Katy Léna Ndiaye, Zina Saro Wiwa and other female filmmakers challenge and question the taboo traditions of the Continent and the Black community at large.

“Cinema is such an important medium for Africans, as it functions to both preserve the oral tradition and to act as a vehicle to bring Africa’s voice to the world stage,” said Mahen Bonetti, founder and executive director of the AFF. “The rapid advances in the field of media technologies is presenting the people of Africa and the African Diaspora more opportunities than ever before to dictate the terms of their destiny and to tell their stories on their own terms.” [read more]

Click here for the schedule and film descriptions.

The festival continues at FIAF,   French Institute Alliance Francaise on May 6, 13, 20 & 27, and at BAMCinématek, May 23–26.

Pictured above (l-r):
Ezra
Director: Newton I. Aduaka, Release: 2007, Runtime: 110

This is My Africa screening with Fantôme Afrique
Zina Saro-Wiwa, African continent/Nigeria/UK, 2008; Runtime: 55

The African Slave Trades:Across the Indian Ocean
Director: Diane Seligsohn & Richard Rein, Country: USA, Release: 2007, Runtime: 26

April 10, 2008

Four Maya sites featured on new web site

Originally spotted on ARLiSNAP:

An visually exciting and comprehensive web site on four Maya archaeological sites has just been posted by Charles Rhyne, professor emeritus of art history, and his colleagues at Reed College. [Kudos to Prof. Rhyne, who was my academic advisor at Reed.]

Title3_2

Architecture, Restoration and Imaging of the Maya Cities of Uxmal, Kabah, Sayil and Labná "includes over 1000 photographs ... taken on site, with descriptive captions, including architectural and sculptural details, paint remains, and interior spaces, not previously published. In addition, there are over 250 19th century drawings, prints and photographs and another 300 by early 20th century scholars, many previously unpublished, showing the appearance of these four cities before the extensive restoration campaigns of the twentieth century." While the site was produced by Reed College primarily for the use of its faculty and students, the site will certainly be of interest to a wider audience of specialists and non-specialists alike.

Of particular note to the library research-minded are the extensive scans culled from published works including Waldeck's Voyage pittoresque et archéologique dan la province d'Yucatan (1838), the several works by Stephens and Catherwood from the 1840s, as well as Charnay's Cités et Ruines Américaines (1862-63) and Anciennes  Villes du Nouveau Monde (1885), photographs by Le Plongeon, and Seler's monograph on the ruins at Uxmal.

An extensive bibliography is included, sorted into four separate pdf files by subject, author, title and date.

Web 2.0: Ross Day and Erika Hauser Podcast

Rdeh

< March 28, 2008, Ross Day and Erika Hauser (Goldwater Library) in the newly installed Oceanic wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

via Sarah Falls @ ARLIS/NA at Altitude (The official blog of the ARLIS/NA 36th annual conference in Denver, Colorado May 1-5, 2008). This podcast runs best with iTunes. It can also be streamed from Ourmedia.

Interview 1: Ross Day and Erika Hauser
Sarah Falls

On March 28, 2008, I sat down with Ross Day and Erika Hauser of the Goldwater Library at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We discussed their outreach efforts with web 2.0 technologies through such sites as Flickr, Wikipedia and with blogging.

To listen to the interview, click here (mp3 format)  Interview #1

Sites to visit for the Goldwater Library:

Library blog: http://goldwaterlibrary.typepad.com/

Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/people/goldwaterlibrary/

Wikipedia Entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Goldwater_Library

Library wiki: http://goldwaterlibrary.wikidot.com/er-introduction

You can also click on the top bar of the audio player below:

                   

April 04, 2008

Going With the Flow @ The Studio Museum in Harlem

Tfontaine

"The Long Crossing" by Thierry Fontaine

via NYTimes:

Art Review | 'Flow'
Out of Africa, Whatever Africa May Be
By HOLLAND COTTER
Published: April 4, 2008

Afropolitanism is the modish tag for new work made by young African artists both in and outside Africa. What unites the artists is a shared view of Africa, less as a place than as a concept; a cultural force, one that runs through the world the way a gulf stream runs through an ocean: part of the whole, but with its own tides and temperatures.

This idea, or something like it, lies behind “Flow” at the Studio Museum in Harlem, a fine-textured survey of 20 artists who, with a few exceptions, were born in Africa after 1970 but who now live in Europe or the United States.

Before the 1980s contemporary African artists had virtually no presence in the mainstream Euro-American art world. And on the rare occasions they were admitted to its precincts, they were required to show clear evidence of Africanness — Africanness as gauged by Western standards, that is — in their work, like a visa prominently displayed.

Multiculturalism, whatever its deficiencies, began to change this situation. It exposed art-world apartheid for what it was and forced open some long-locked gates. Not only did artists once excluded by color and class gain entry, they were also granted certain options as to how they might appear there. They could wrap themselves in evidence of their origins, or wear that evidence lightly, or not at all, the first option being preferred by the market.

The artists in “Flow” choose among these options, which means the show has no essential look, though there are broad patches of formal common ground. A lot of what’s here is based on an aesthetic of assemblage and fragmentation, the piecing together or taking apart of materials and ideas, including art-historical precedents.

Latifa Echakhch, born in Morocco and now living in France and Switzerland, has created her own version of Richard Serra’s “Splash” pieces from the 1960s. Rather than throw molten lead against a wall as Mr. Serra did, she throws Moroccan tea glasses. Their smashed remains lie on a gallery floor like the aftermath of an explosion. The piece neatly pinpoints the aggression of the original, an aggression with many metaphorical and political ramifications. But is Ms. Echakhch’s work topical? Polemical? Whimsical? Personal? It shifts from one to the other of these possibilities, which is, generally speaking, the “Flow” dynamic.

A second North African, Adel Abdessemed, Algerian by birth and now living in Paris, starts with many fragments and builds something from them. In this case the result is a toy-size model of the luxury liner Queen Mary II pieced together from cut-up bits of commercial packaging for olives and pepper, products exported from a continent that helped produce the immense wealth the ship represents.

Modou Dieng, a Senegalese artist now in the United States, evokes the exhilaration and misplaced optimism of 1960s Africa in his trio of wall ensembles made from secondhand vinyl records adorned with neckties and glitter. The names on the record labels range from Nat King Cole to Jimi Hendrix to Mos Def, suggesting that the high cultural moment, which also saw the ballooning of a market economy, extends into the present.

It does. It’s there in the photographs of Nontsikelelo Veleko, known as Lolo, of fiercely chic young Johannesburgians, and in the heroically scaled portraits, culled from fashion magazines but resembling passport photos and mug shots, by Mustafa Maluka, a fine painter who was also one of the creators of africanhiphop.com, a music Web site and pop-cultural gold mine now a decade old.

The evidence of material richness continues where crafts traditions and modernist abstraction meet: in moss-green yarn reliefs by the Ethiopian artist Elias Sime; in Nicholas Hlobo’s suturelike stitched pieces based on Zulu needlework; and in enigmatic collages by Moshekwa Langa, one of several artists in the show who were also in “Africa Remix,” the grand contemporary survey in 2005 that never made it from Europe to the United States.

A few artists revisit and revise primitivist myths of Africa. Thierry Fontaine does this in photographs of his own body transformed by layers of natural materials — clay, sand, grass — into a series of freakish sculptures. So does Joël Andrianomearisoa in a video called “The Stranger” (2007), in which a naked man evolves from prowling the forest to settling down in a nice, neat house. It’s worth noting that the “native” in this civilizing process appears to be white.

Thandomama

Back to Me 1” by the South African artist Thando Mama

The show, organized by Christine Y. Kim, associate curator at the Studio Museum, has a fair amount of video. A short piece called “Back to Me 1” by the South African artist Thando Mama gives a sense of what it’s like to be plugged into the world when the world isn’t plugged into you. A young man (the artist) sits transfixed in front of a television that is broadcasting inaccurate accounts from abroad of the Africa he knows.

Grace Ndiritu, born in London of African parents, and Michèle Magema, from Congo and now living in Paris, both address liabilities of Afropolitanism, past and present. In a striking film called “Au Bord de la Loire,” one of a small number of pieces in the show to address race directly, Ms. Magema reminds us that a few centuries ago her relationship to France might have been as a West Indies slave. Ms. Ndiritu acknowledges her conflicted connection to Africa now: despite her heritage, she’s a tourist there.

For tourists and transplants, can any place be real? Ananias Léki Dago, born in Ivory Coast, photographs the slums of Paris as if through the haze of dreams. Mounir Fatmi turns the immigrant’s life into an obstacle course of bright-colored horse-jumping poles. In a mural by Dawit L. Petros views of Tanzania, California and Canada — all places where the artist has lived — merge. Monrovia, the strife-wracked capital of Liberia, becomes the heavenly city in Trokon Nagbe’s gilded painting of it. And in studio photographs by Otobong Nkanga, Africa’s grand landscape is reduced to a tabletop diorama, a Lilliputian thing.

So Africa is unreal. Or maybe it’s super-real: a place, or state, where present and future coexist. Ms. Veleko’s street dandies look futuristic enough. So do Olalekan B. Jeyifous’s marvelous architectural models, like materializations of cyberspace; and the imaginary faces, half human, half something else, that peer out of darkness in Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s fictional portraits.

Some of the eight portraits in the show are more interesting than others. Some are almost too dark to see; put them in an art fair and they’d vanish in the visual noise. Yet as a group they work; they wrap you in a substantial if elusive sensibility. To some degree the same can be said of “Flow.”

Whether, or how, that sensibility can be defined as “African” is a question. There is no single Africa, and the continent’s multiple elements change all the time, art included. No wonder artists are resisting the idea of Africanness as a fixed identity, or are trying to tailor it to something they can pick up or lay aside at will, and layer under and over other identities.

At the same time they understand, it would seem, that their choices have weight. Postcolonial African art, wherever it is produced, is all but inseparable from politics. In Africa art has always played a social role, assumed moral status, a status that even physical distance — almost none of the work in “Flow” has been shown in Africa — can’t erase.

And so Afropolitanism, young and cool, comes with responsibilities. Maybe it is the awareness of this that gives a light-touch show heft and focus, a sense of thereness, geography-free but concrete, without which flow becomes drift.

“Flow” continues through June 29 at the Studio Museum in Harlem, 144 West 125th Street; (212) 864-4500, studiomuseum.org.

April 03, 2008

Portfolio of Hopi Kachinas

another reblog from BibliOdyssey, 4/1/08:

Kachina_2
These illustrations are presumably © the estate of Homer H Boelter.
In 1969 Boelter published an album of lithographs of Hopi Indians - 'Portfolio of Hopi Kachinas' - limited to one thousand copies. The first illustration above comes from PBA galleries. The paired image and the balance of the sixteen plates in the series - and background - can be found at Native American Links.

Kachinas_2

See the originals at the Goldwater Library!

Portfolio of Hopi kachinas by Homer H. Boelter
Hollywood, Calif. : H. H. Boelter Lithography, [1969]
RGL call number: R8E H7B66 Quarto

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