Exhibitions Elsewhere

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 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.

March 20, 2008

Joburg Art Fair: Contemporary Art in the City of Gold

Bili_bidjocka

Cameroonian artist Bili Bidjocka, whose work appears in Simon Njami's curated group show "As You Like It," at the opening of the Joburg Art Fair. Photo by Sean O'Toole.

via ArtInfo:

Jubilant Debut for Joburg Art Fair
By Sean O'Toole
Published: March 17, 2008

JOHANNESBURG—March 13 was a day of jubilant highs for South Africa. While international news anchors announced record prices for gold, arguably the country’s best-known export commodity, in Johannesburg, nicknamed the City of Gold, residents and visitors were fussing over contemporary art at the Joburg Art Fair, Africa’s first-ever fair devoted singularly to contemporary art.

Bank executives and celebrity athletes aside, attendees at the opening included artists, dealers, and art-world insiders eager to make sense of this new event. Johannesburg artist William Kentridge numbered among the invited guests, as did a suave contingent of Cameroonian expatriates, including the renowned scholar Achille Mbembe, curator Simon Njami, and artists Bili Bidjocka and Joel Mpah Dooh, who had works available at Njami’s curated show at the fair.

Business on the opening evening was unexpectedly brisk, despite the recent devaluation of the South African currency and political uncertainty surrounding incumbent president Jacob Zuma’s constitutional court battle to stave off corruption charges. A 1947 oil on canvas by pioneering South African modernist Gerard Sekoto grabbed most of the attention. The modestly sized self-portrait, notable for its glowing yellow tones and the subject’s proud bearing, made headlines last May when South African dealers Michael Stevenson and Johans Borman, together with their London counterpart Michael Graham-Stewart, purchased it for $250,000 at the inaugural South Africa Sale at Bonhams in London. Although the dealers were unwilling to disclose the price they achieved in Johannesburg, reliable sources suggested it had sold for over $600,000.

Commenting on buying patterns generally, Neil Dundas of Johannesburg’s Goodman Gallery said most of his sales were between $2,500 and $12,500, a range that some commentators anticipated would show the slackest returns. Goodman is South Africa’s leading contemporary dealer and represents, among others, Kentridge, whose bronze statuette of a horse, from an edition of seven, fetched $42,000.

A painted bronze statue by South African sculptor Claudette Schreuders, also in an edition of seven, earned a similar amount at the Jack Shainman Gallery booth. Claude Simmard, a director at Shainman, remarked that there was a definite nationalist undercurrent at the fair, with works by South African artists generating the most interest.

Tellingly, in the same booth where the Sekoto proudly looked on at visitors, a compelling series of midcentury paintings by Nigerian artist Ben Enwonwu remained unsold after the fair’s first two days. But by the conclusion on Sunday, March 16, eight of the 11 works on offer had eventually sold, five to a Nigerian art foundation seeking to repatriate the artist’s work.

Dealer Michael Stevenson ascribed the relative lack of interest in African art among South Africans to ignorance about practices from elsewhere on the continent. Two years ago Stevenson showed a signature fabric work by Nigerian sculptor El Anatsui at his Cape Town gallery. Despite energetic attempts to sell the piece, priced at $25,000, he was unable to find a local buyer. Now, following the artist’s Venice Biennale debut last year, Anatsui’s market has suddenly spiked. Simmard stated that Shainman, which represents Anatsui, fielded numerous requests for the artist’s work despite current price points of $200–400,000 and having no available stock.

Although plagued by the occasional technical glitch and the late arrival, midway through the fair, of some works in Njami’s show of African artists, sentiment was generally positive, and most galleries indicated they would return next year. The fair’s director, Ross Douglas, echoed the upbeat mood while waiting in line to collect his vehicle following the opening evening’s festivities. “Look at my phone, it has 250 messages,” he said.

March 05, 2008

Contextualizing the Colonial Conquest of the Americas

Reblogged from the NY Times, 3/5/2008:

Slide11_2 Exhibition Review
Two New Shows Cast Light and Darkness on Early Cultures in the Americas
by Edward Rothstein

So an attitude of promotional banality clouds the considerable virtues of [the Field Museum] show, which is rich in example and description, if not in analysis; this is a problem shared by many exhibitions about native peoples. The Field even boasts that it brought in indigenous descendants to advise and approve — something that has become perversely obligatory for museums, even if it is a little like consulting today’s residents of Tuscany when mounting an exhibition about ancient Rome.

Rothstein compares the temporary exhibition “Exploring the Early Americas” at the Library of Congress and the permanent installation “The Ancient Americas” at the Field Museum in Chicago. The article includes a slideshow.

Above: Moche sculptures at the Field Museum. Photo: Joshua Lott for the New York Times

February 28, 2008

African art programs @ Clark Art

Clark

From The Clark Art Institute web site:

This spring The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute and the Williams College Museum of Art have organized a series of programs and exhibitions focusing on contemporary African art, diasporic art, and art history, designed to catalyze dialogue across academic disciplines for artists, scholars, students, and the general public.

Artistic Crossings of the Black Atlantic: The Migratory Aesthetic in Contemporary Art (Symposium)
Saturday, March 1, 2008

This symposium invites five acclaimed artists—multi-media artist Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, sculptor Willie Cole, British filmmaker Isaac Julien, photographer Hank Willis Thomas, and installation artist and MacArthur Fellow Fred Wilson—to discuss the Black Atlantic aesthetic. Through transatlantic connections among Africa, Britain, the Caribbean, and the United States, black intellectuals and literary figures such as W.E.B. Du Bois and Richard Wright fashioned a Black Atlantic culture that made a central contribution to the modernist aesthetic. Today this Black Atlantic aesthetic extends into the realm of the visual as international artists critically engage cross-Atlantic migration as a principal focus of their work. (Ticketed event: $20, $10 for members; students free)

Art History and Diaspora: Genealogies, Theories, Practices (Conference)
Friday, April 25-Saturday, April 26, 2008

This year's Clark Conference will bring together artists, curators, and art historians to investigate the impact of the field of diaspora studies on art historical scholarship. A primary focus will be on defining how diaspora—with its connotations of forced migration because of political expulsion, enslavement, shifting belief systems, war, and other forms of nationalist conflict—has shaped both art-making and art historical scholarship in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Speakers will include John P. Bowles, Hamid Naficy, Richard J. Powell, Nikos Papastergiadis, Kobena Mercer, Simon Njami, Pamela R. Franco, and Lubaina Himid. Co-convened by Mora Beauchamp-Byrd, Natasha Becker, and Ondine Chavoya.

Contemporary African Art: History, Theory and Practice: A Workshop
May 24, 2008

"Contemporary African Art: History, Theory, and Practice" is a workshop organized by the Research and Academic Program of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute and the Wits School of the Arts at the University of Witwatersrand (WITS) in Johannesburg, South Africa. This project, undertaken with the generous support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will examine more than forty years of art historical scholarship about modern and contemporary African art. The two components of the workshop, international gatherings of distinguished scholars and artists, will take place in 2007 and 2008. The initial phase of the Workshop [was] held at WITS (October 25–28, 2007), and the second phase will be held at the Clark in Williamstown, Massachusetts (May 22–25, 2008). This will be followed by a Getty-funded residency for African participants in Williamstown and New York City from May 25–30.

January 23, 2008

Okwui Enwezor's Archive Fever @ ICP

Article00

Left: Artists Jutta Koether, John Miller, and Mike Kelley. Right: Curator Okwui Enwezor. (Photo: David Velasco)

Gossip first, via Artforum, Scene & Herd:

01.21.08   Photographic Memory

“I’m not going to talk about the exhibition in any detail now, as many people would fall asleep.” Okwui Enwezor is usually not one for such rhetorical caginess, as evinced by his thorough dissection of last summer’s European “Grand Tour” in September's Artforum, yet in addressing the crowd at the Thursday-morning press preview of his new group exhibition at New York’s International Center of Photography, he had evidently decided that it would be best to save his theoretical chops for a more opportune moment. Introduced as “our globe-trotting adjunct curator,” the slender, dark-suited Enwezor thus gave only the briefest of introductions to “Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art,” but later led an energetic walk-through that saw the assembled scribes eddying through the ICP’s extensively reconfigured lower galleries in a desperate effort to keep up. [read on...]

Review, Holland Cotter's review ("Well, It Looks Like Truth") of the current show at ICP, "Archive Fever," organized by Okwui Enwezor, via The New York Times, Jan 18, 2008 :

After an autumn of large, expert, risk-free museum retrospectives, the time is right for a brain-pincher of a theme show, which is what “Archive Fever: Uses of the Document in Contemporary Art” at the International Center of Photography is.

Organized by Okwui Enwezor, an adjunct curator at the center, it’s an exhibition in a style that’s out of fashion in our pro-luxe, anti-academic time, but that can still produce gems. The tough, somber little show “Manet and the Execution of Maximilian” at the Museum of Modern Art last year mixed grand paintings with throwaway prints and demanded a commitment of time and attention from its audience. The payoff was an exhibition that read like breaking news and had the pull of a good documentary. It was the museum’s proudest offering of the season.

Mr. Enwezor’s “Archive Fever” is up there with it. It has something like the same suspenseful pace, without the focused story line. The archive of the title is less a thing than a concept, an immersive environment: the sum total of documentary images circulating in the culture, on the street, in the media, and finally in what is called the collective memory, the “Where were you when you heard about the World Trade Center?” factor.

Photography, with its extensions in film, video and the digital realm, is the main vehicle for these images. The time was, we thought of photographs as recorders of reality. Now we know they largely invent reality. At one stage or another, whether in shooting, developing, editing or placement, the pictures are manipulated, which means that we are manipulated. We are so used to this that we don’t see it; it's just as a fact of life.

"Archive Fever" puts us deep inside right from the start. The gallery walls have been covered with sheets of plain industrial plywood. The exhibition space looks like the interior of a storage shed or a shipping container packed with images both strange and familiar.

Familiar comes first: Andy Warhol's early 1960s 'Race Riot,' a silk-screened image of a black civil rights marcher attacked by police dogs. Warhol, our pop Proust, was a child of the archive; he lived in it and never left it. He culled his images straight from the public record — in this case Life magazine — and then made them public in a new way, as a new kind of art, the tabloid masterpiece, the cheesy sublime..." [read full article]

January 16, 2008

Planet Africa

via email:

Hvafrica2

Calvin Dondo, "Charge Office. Harare City Center, 2001, 60 x 90 cm, C-Print auf Aludibond

planet africa  photography

Mohamed Camara | Calvin Dondo | Kokonyimi Mbowanga Maboke |
Zaynab Toyosi Odunsi | Zwelethu Mthethwa | Abraham Onoriode Oghobase |
Fatogoma Silué

9 January - 29 February 2008

Opening: Tuesday, 8 January, 7-9 pm

Gallery Hengevoss-Dürkop
Klosterwall 13, 20095 Hamburg
Germany
Tel.: +49 (0)40 30 39 33 82
Fax: +49 (0)40 30 39 33 83
galerie@hengevossduerkop.de
www.hengevossduerkop.de
Tues-Fri 12 midday - 6 pm . Sat 12 midday - 2 pm and by appointment

This exhibition is part of the project "Planet Africa - Carte Blanche" and presents seven photographical positions of six countries.

It reveals, how the traditional studio-portrait-photography has more and more given way to a dedicated young black author photography.

The majority of the selected photographers are autodidacts, who improved their skills in workshops or in a group.

One of them is Zaynab Toyosi Odunsi with her pictures of concerts and busstops, bars and billard saloons in nocturnal Lagos. Lagos, the fastest growing metropolis of the 21st century, is also the theme of Abraham Oghobase, whose everyday scenes are represented in "Mysterious Mind".

Another member of this group is Kokonyimi Mbowanga Maboke, who studied history. He calls his photos of the life of the river of Kinshasa "the other Kongo".

Fatogoma Silué is represented with "Young Patriots", "Rebels" and "Miliz", pictures of violence and counter-violence at the Ivory Coast. He works as a photographer for several African newspapers.

Just as Calvin Dondo, who studied in the capital of Zimbabwe at the "Haare Polytechnic". He teaches in workshops and curated numerous exhibitions in Zimbabwe. Among the most famous international photo artists are Zwelethu Mthethwa and Mohamed Camara.

The former was to be seen since the end of the nineties in most of the major exhibitions of African contemporary art. Both lastly took part in "Snap Judgements; New Positions in Contemporary African Photography" at the ICP New York.

After various performances in Germany, the gallery is the last stop of the exhibition, which arose within "AFRICOM 2004-2006". This is a project of the federal ministry for political education.

The exhibition was directed by Thomas Mank, atelier kultursysteme, Berlin and curated by Thomas Michalak, Berlin in cooperation with Ingo Taubhorn, Hamburg.

Detailed information is available on request.

Mish-Mask

Shonibare

A still from Yinka Shonibare’s “Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball)” (2004) {See Slide Show}

via NYTimes:

Art Review | 'Mask'
Face Time: Masks, Animal to Video
By ROBERTA SMITH
Published: January 11, 2008

The mask is one of the most basic and recognizable of all forms, and for good reason. One way early humans made sense of the universe was to personify its forces, and the most visible form of personification was the face. Masks have long been central to religious rituals, serving as tools of transformation and bridges to the spirit world. They have figured in ceremonies intended to ensure fertility and raise the dead, make crops grow and rain fall, kill enemies, ward off evil and cure sickness. They have been used by soldiers and celebrators of Lent, astronauts and action heroes, hockey players and fencers, firefighters and welders.

The ubiquity of the mask, regardless of time, place or purpose, is the impetus behind “Mask,” a sprawling show at the James Cohan Gallery in Chelsea. Subtitled “an exhibition of historic masks and contemporary works curated in collaboration with Joseph G. Gerena Fine Art,” this gathering of more than 40 masks and hoods, and more than 30 works in sculpture, video and photography, is a mishmash of cultures and functions in which old and older tend to dominate. This can mean an American firefighter’s goofy-looking smoke hood from around 1900; a carved and painted wood exorcism mask from 19th-century Sri Lanka; or a terra-cotta jaguar/man mask from Ecuador (700-300 B.C).

These and about 40 other masks from sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, premodern Europe, turn-of-the-century America and several parts of Asia do most of the showstopping here. All were provided by Mr. Gerena, a private dealer who seems to have an excellent eye and, along with Mr. Cohan and his staff, has orchestrated an installation full of interesting cross-references and juxtapositions.

The show is also commendable for not being loaded with the gallery’s artists; only 4 of the 32 contemporary works here are from Team Cohan. This includes the opening salvo, a riveting video by Yinka Shonibare that may be one of the best things he has ever done. It shows a highly stylized masked ball in which the guests wear 18th-century garments made from Mr. Shonibare’s distinctive Euro-African fabrics, which is not new for him. But in this case he has used a combination of sound and movement to strip a minuetlike dance down to a tribal, almost animalistic ritual while still leaving its mannered veneer intact.

Beside the door to the video gallery there is an Oddfellows hoodwink from early-20th-century America. A small, neat variation on the masks seen in Mr. Shonibare’s video, it combines a leather eye mask and eyeglasses. It looks like something Amelia Earhart might have worn, except that the eyeglass lenses have little hinged covers that were raised and lowered as the Freemasons’ initiation rites progressed.

In the main gallery there is a lively interchange among historic masks from different cultures, with intermittent input from contemporary works. First, a row of seven masks confounds expectations. An 18th- to 19th-century skull mask from the Tibetan Sherdukpen people of northern India seems made to order for a Mexican Day of the Dead festival, while what looks like an African monkey mask is actually from Nepal.

The show emphasizes these transcultural twists and turns. [read on...]

El Anatsui in Chelsea

via Ionarts:

Shimmering, Flowing Beauty in Chelsea


On my cruise through Chelsea this past week the first thing I noticed, besides the 70 degree temperature, was that unfortunately most of the new shows would not open until the end of the week, but not to worry, there’s always something to see.

One of those somethings was Ghanaian born artist El Anatsui’s knock-out, gorgeous wall hangings at Jack Shainman. What first appear to be quilted fabrics or tapestries are actually a mixture of flattened bottle tops, metal foil, and at times glass, woven together with copper wire.

As with the work of Martin Puryear, from my last post, there is a linkage to African imagery and culture, as well as Western influences. In Puryear’s case it’s intimated, with Anatsui, more direct. The found objects, flattened bottle caps and cans, are castoffs of a consumer culture, versus a culture where nothing was wasted, recycled into flowing objects of beauty. More images of the week on flickr.

UPDATE:
Newsgrist covers this week's installation of El Anatsui's Between Heaven and Earth at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the first contemporary African sculpture acquired for their collection. View the Met's flickr.

January 14, 2008

Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-op Presents "Hand in Hand"

Shigeyuki_kihara_pic
above: Shigeyuki Kihara

Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative
presents artwork & performances from SistaGirl, Queenie, Takatapui, Fa'a Fafine, Gay, Lesbian and Transgender artists at both Boomalli situated in Leichhardt, and Performance Space @ carriageWorks in Eveleigh, Sidney, Australia.

Hand in Hand

Curated by Jenny Fraser & Shigeyuki Kihara
Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Maori, Samoan, Niuean and Fijian artists from Oz and beyond, celebrate Mardi Gras 2008.

Participating Artists:
Sionelagi Falemaka
Jenny Fraser
Dianne Jones
Shigeyuki Kihara
Gary Lee
Dan Taulapapa McMullin
Arone Raymond Meeks
Tracey Moffat
Clinton Nain
Moana Nepia
Rea
Jeffrey Samuels
Claudine Sartain
Darrell Sibosado
Salote Tawale
Niwhai Tupea
Adrian Wills

+++

Boomalli
55-59 Flood Street
Leichhardt, NSW 2040
AUSTRALIA

Postal Address:
PO Box 176, Westgate NSW 2048
tel: +61 (0)2 9560 2541
fax: +61 (0)2 9560 2566
Email: boomalli@gmail.com

Performance Space
245 Wilson Street
Eveleigh NSW 2015
AUSTRALIA

Phone  02 8571 9111
Fax      02 8571 9118

Administrator
Tallulah Kerr: admin@performancespace.com.au

Media & Communications
Rosie Dennis: media@performancespace.com.au

{The word Boomalli is taken from 3 Language/tribal groupings  Gamailerio,  Bundgulung and the Wiradjuri

Making a mark is not only about art it is about expressing a repressed voice within the history of Australia, exhibiting and promote Aboriginal art on our own terms.

It has only been within the last 30 years that Aboriginal art has been taken out of a sterile ethnographic museum context and recognized as an aestetic and cultural expression as unique as the landscape that it often depicts.

Boomalli is a resource centre for Aboriginal artists as well as the wider artistic community and continues to make a mark on art and culture in Australia today.}

Feeds + Licenses

Blog powered by TypePad