Showing posts with label moving image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moving image. Show all posts

17.6.08

FORMAT International Photography Festival

!call for EXPOSURE exhibitions now open!

Artists working with photography or moving image are invited to submit proposals for new or existing works for display in the FORMAT EXPOSURE exhibitions in non gallery spaces as part of the FORMAT Festival 2009 6th March - 5th April 2009.

These exhibition opportunities are open to any artist/photographer based in the UK or internationally. Selected artists will be included in the FORMAT09 brochure, catalogue, website and will be profiled as part of the festival.

The EXPOSURE exhibitions curated for FORMAT09 will be held in 30 venues throughout Derby city centre ranging from temporary gallery and non-gallery spaces including bars and cafes, university campuses, museums, civic and other public access buildings.

The selection panel includes:

* Louise Clements - Senior Curator FORMAT & QUAD
* Mike Brown - Arts Projects Co-ordinator FORMAT & Derby City Council
* Clare Grafik - Curator The Photographers Gallery
* David Campany - Writer/Curator/Teacher
* Huw Davies - Dean of Arts Design & Technology, University of Derby

The theme for FORMAT09 - PHOTOCINEMA is deliberately broad inviting practitioners to respond in a number of ways;

We are interested in seeing any work that ranges from 'film still' to 'still film'. The theme for FORMAT09 is positioned in the half-light between these two narrative and technical sensibilities, colliding - fact with fiction, historicism with fantasy.

The festival will contain a broad variety of work from artists who can relate to the cinematic through referencing or have the look of films, single images that are so brimming with narrative as if they were a film in one shot, the use of sequencing, directed or documentary photography and moving image from single still to feature film. Works may be derived from/inspired by film, be highly composed and directed, or can be documentary or street photography, in essence regardless of definition the exhibitions included in the festival will need to subscribe to a notion of the cinematic.

FORMAT09 will include the diversity of techniques within photography from darkroom to digital, printed, projected and moving image. Including works that fall within these categories:

* Screen based
* Projected
* Wall mounted
* Web based

Download the application form and more information:
www.formatfestival.com

FORMAT is an International Photography Festival that takes place in the city of Derby, UK, which celebrates the diversity of photographic practice from darkroom to digital. Established international practitioners exhibit alongside the best emerging talent from the UK and beyond.

17.4.08

Washington Garcia present Kalup Linzy



WASHINGTON GARCIA
16 TRONGATE
GLASGOW
G1 5EU

PREVIEW: SATURDAY 12TH APRIL 2008, 7PM – 9PM.
PERFORMANCE: SATURDAY 12TH APRIL 2008, 8PM.
OPEN: FRIDAY 11TH APRIL TO SUNDAY 27TH APRIL, 11AM – 5PM, (DAILY).



You are invited to the preview of Kalup Linzy at 16 Trongate, Glasgow - a new Washington Garcia venue.

Washington Garcia is pleased to announce, as part of the Glasgow International 2008, a newly commissioned body of work by New York based artist Kalup Linzy. This exhibition and exclusive performance will be shown in the City Centre location of 16 Trongate, an ex-retail space that offers a bold and unconventional Glasgow context for Linzy's first UK solo show.

Reveling in the Public/Private curatorial theme of this year's Gi festival, Linzy's work is a sophisticated play between pastiche and exposure, extroversion and masquerade – all in the public languages of TV Soaps, You Tube and MTV. As Rachel Wolff (New York Magazine) describes:

"[In his recent work] … Linzy is doing to daytime soaps what John Waters did to his Baltimore childhood. Part Richard Pryor, part RuPaul, Linzy writes, directs, and stars (wigged, heeled, and often scantily clad) in this series of shorts that are tender and vulgar, hilarious and heartfelt.
[…] With new YouTube video stars popping regularly, Linzy (who received a Guggenheim fellowship this year) has been pegged as a key figure in a new generation of "queer video artists."

RACHEL WOLFF,
NEW YORK MAGAZINE, OCTOBER 15, 2007 "A PORTRAIT GALLERY OF TEN OF THE MOST PROMISING ARTISTS TO HAVE EMERGE FROM THE BOOM"

The work of Kalup Linzy touches on issues of black stereotyping, pop culture, art world politics and wigs. Glasgow will never be the same again.

Kalup Linzy is a New York based video and performance artist. Linzy graduated from the MFA program at the University of South Florida in 2003. He also attended The Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture video art workshop, and has been artist in residence at P.S. 1 in New York. In 2005 Linzy received a grant from the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation and was recently, named a Guggenheim fellow for 2007-2008. Kalup Linzy's recent work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art in America, Artforum, ArtReview and ModernPainters. He is represented by Taxter & Spengemann, New York.


The WASHINGTON GARCIA committee is: Kendall Koppe, Ruth Barker, Douglas Morland.

Relocating Absence


Group exhibition showcasing the work of thirteen internationally emerging artists. Through a variety of media, including sculpture, installation, video, photography and drawing, the exhibition offers a series of artistic interpretations of the theme, often playing with the constants of space and time. Absence, in fact, is essentially temporal – it is located where something was: it lies between the realms of Being (object) and Knowledge (perception, creation of a mental image).

18 April – 4 May 2008
PRIVATE VIEW Thursday, 17 April, 6.30 - 10 pm
Exhibition Talk with the artists, curators and writer on Tuesday, 22 April, 6.30 pm. Free.
Opening hours: Thursday - Sunday 12 am - 5 pm

Elevator Gallery,Mother Studios, Queens Yard, White Post Lane,
Hackney Wick, London E9 5EN

Absence can be intended as a state of being, as a period of time, as a lack, or even desire, or as the inattention to present surroundings or occurrences. All these connotations are encountered in the exhibition, which, in fact, proposes an open-ended investigation of the concepts of belonging, displacement, repetition, visual and literary narrative, emotional and physical distance, as well as archive, memory and diary keeping.
The artists have created presence from absence, erased the pre-existent iconography of presence, drawn the viewers’ gaze to details that would otherwise have remained long unnoticed. These acts of relocating, of replacing, collecting or remembering what was there continue absence into the future: new tangible objects now substitute or relocate a previous absence, soon to leave room to new absences, in the viewer’s mind.

Brada Barassi presents Sei sempre appena andata via (You Have Always Just Gone Away), a video installation exploring the relationship between being, memory and distance through a series of photographs, combined with sound. The images were taken across two countries (UK and Italy) in the space of three years, and the narration is bilingual. The piece questions one’s connection to the idea of belonging through a feeling of displacement, and the interplay of the constants of time and space.

Craig Cooper exhibits a series of roadwork signs, where the informative panels have been removed and substituted with sheets of glass. Devoid of their visual lexicon, they become abstract objects characterized by their own aesthetics, on the boundary between sculptural and painterly. A similar abstraction is shown in Cooper’s maps, where the erasure of text leaves room to a sequence of new grids and thick black lines, denying the initial function of the map as a navigation tool.

Amelia Crouch’s Looking- Capture- Reproduction, a fragmentary narrative in scenes, consists of a series of eight short texts printed on paper and pasted to the wall. Each text is highly evocative of an absent visual image, that the viewer is invited to relocate in his own mind, drawing on his personal visual archive.

Hondartza Fraga exhibits a site specific installation, Incandescent, where the contrast between a series of light bulbs and their skillfully drawn shadows recalls the dichotomy of absence and presence. The perfect miniature scenarios depicted in the shadows become promises that can never be fulfilled, pointing out the isolation and imperfection of the reality they evoke.

Zbigniew Tomasz Kotkiewicz’s The Swimmer is suggestive of an invisible narrative, through the image’s compositional elements as well as the irony of the title. The absence of a figure contrasts starkly with the traces of a human presence, triggering the viewer’s curiosity and visual memory.

Anastasia Loginova’s black and white photographs depict an enchanted girl wrapped in a clear plastic bag, her facial expression frozen. A delicate, almost ethereal narrative frames the suspended gestures of the subject, making them timeless, almost lost.

Michelle Lord exhibits Future Ruins, a series of photographs inspired by J. G. Ballard’s apocalyptic literary fiction, which Lord relocates in Birmingham, using hand made models and rear screen projections. The inhabitants of the city are absent, and familiar, concrete urban structures become occupied by strange assemblages, built from the technological detritus of abandoned television sets, computers and domestic appliances. The images aim to highlight the temporality of landscape, reflecting on lost or ephemeral urban architectures.

Erin Newell’s A Map of the Ocean between my Sister & Me is an unusual record for emotional and physical distance through a personal journey. A collection of water samples from the ocean, this highly intimate archive is presented in a display case - each sample labeled - establishing a connection between a traditional museum display and the exposure of personal memories.

Ellakajsa Nordström exhibits Window View, a multimedia installation documenting one year of performative recordings of the view from her studio’s window, facing the backyard of a row of houses. A collection of detailed diary writings, photographs, video and sound recordings - as well as documentation of performances as a means to explore the view and the artist’s relationship to it - the piece explores the dualism between absence and presence, and questions the realms of narrative, time, space and diary keeping.

Anahita Razmi’s Fall is a participatory installation entailing the viewer to become a sculptural form, crawling into a sleeping bag where a video of a “downfall” in a tube slide is shown. This upside down continuous fall generates in the viewer a strong feeling of displacement, as if he was falling upwards.

Erica Scourti’s Spectrum is a projection of digitally manipulated photographs of world-wide protests and marches, from which the artist has erased all text on banners. Instead of carrying meaning and proclaiming the bearers’ beliefs, the banners turn into colourful, sculptural and painterly objects. Furthermore, being archived according to colour, they become totally abstracted from any political credo.

Mikio Saito and Youngho Lee collaborate as an artists’ duo. Alternating their drawing act, while brainstorming and discussing inspired by the exhibition’s title, they have created a large drawing installation especially for Relocating Absence. They introduce the viewer to a new visionary landscape, populated by a magical cast of characters: a skillfully directed doodling, devoid of narrative, yet suggestive of a million microcosms.

Elisa Tosoni, 2008

Filmobile


FILMOBILE is a network project developed at the University of Westminster bringing together the mobile phone industry, filmmakers and artists working with mobile devices. In April and May 2008 FILMOBILE is organising a major international event consisting of a gallery exhibition, cinema screenings and an international conference. This event will explore the cultural and economic impact brought about by new mobile technologies and initiate debates between artists, the media and the new mobile industry.

The FILMOBILE EXHIBITION at London Gallery West will feature mobile art works by Mark Amerika, Camille Baker, Bebe Beard, Melissa Bliss, Elly Clarke, Romain Forquy, Steve Hawley, Brian House, Brooke A. Knight, Simon Longo, Anne Massoni, Kasia Molga, Sylvie Prasad, Michele Pred, Henry Reichhold, Max Schleser and Jo Thomas.

FILMOBILE EXHIBITION at London Gallery West, Watford Road, Harrow HA1 3TP (tube Northwick Park)
Exhibition Private View:
Thursday 3 April, 5pm – 8pm at London Gallery West
Featuring a live performance by Jo Thomas and Visual Rhythms
Exhibition Opening Times:
4 April to 4 May, 2008. 9 am to 5pm daily

9.6.05

51st International Art Exhibition - Venice Biennale


Pipilotti Rist . Homo sapiens sapiens 2005 . Videoinstallation . at Chiesa di San Stae

Directors: María de Corral - Rosa Martínez
Vernissage: 9-10-11 June
Official opening: 10 June
Open to the public: from 12 June to 6 November 2005

la Biennale di Venezia
Ca' Giustinian, San Marco, 30124 Venedig
Tel. +39 041 5218846 / 5218716
Fax. +39 041 2411407
infoartivisive@labiennale.org
www.labiennale.org

Selected Artists using photography or videoart

"The Experience of Art" (Italian Pavilion)
Curated by María de Corral
Eija-Liisa Ahtila , Vasco Araújo , Candice Breitz , Tania Bruguera , Chen Chieh-jen , José Damasceno , Tacita Dean , Willie Doherty , Stan Douglas , Dan Graham , William Kentridge , Barbara Kruger , Zwelethu Mthethwa , Bruce Nauman , Perejaume , Thomas Ruff , Francesco Vezzoli , Mark Wallinger , Jun Yang

"Always a Little Further" (Arsenale)
Curated by Rosa Martínez
Jennifer Allora & Guillermo Calzadilla , Blue Noses , John Bock , Christoph Büchel & Gianni Motti , The Centre of Attention (Wolfgang Tillmans,...) , Stephen Dean , Carlos Garaicoa , Cristina García Rodero , Subodh Gupta , Mona Hatoum , Runa Islam , Emily Jacir , Guerrilla Girls , Kimsooja , Oleg Kulik , Mariko Mori , Nikos Navridis , Rivane Neuenschwander , Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba , Olaf Nicolai , Adrian Paci , Bülent Sangar , Berni Searle , Santiago Sierra , Shazia Sikander


Participating Countries + artists
National pavillions
ALBANIA Sislej Xhafa l AUSTRIA Hans Schabus l BRAZIL Caio Reisewitz l CHINA Xu Zhen, Liu Wei l DENMARK Eva Koch, Ann Lislegaard, Gitte Villesen,... l ESTONIA Mark Raidpere l FRANCE Annette Messager l ICELAND Gabríela Fridriksdóttir l INDIA Nalini Malani, Raqs Media Collective l ISRAEL Guy Ben Ner l JAPAN Miyako Ishiuchi l LITHUANIA Jonas Mekas l LUXEMBOURG Antoine Prum l NETHERLANDS Jeroen de Rijke and Willem de Rooij l NORWAY Matias Faldbakken l POLAND Artur Zmijewski l PORTUGAL Helena Almeida l SPAIN Antoni Muntadas l SWITZERLAND Gianni Motti, Shahryar Nashat, Marco Poloni, Ingrid Wildi l Pipilotti Rist l TAIWAN Kuang-yu TSUI, Ichen KUO l TURKEY Hussein Chalayan l UNITED KINGDOM Gilbert & George l UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Ed Ruscha l WALES Peter Finnemore

15.2.05

Mélanie Manchot @ Photographer's Gallery


Melanie Manchot, Manege, 3.23pm, from Groups and Locations (Moscow), 2004

The show entitled Stories from Russia is on since the 21st of January to the 27th of February 2005. A photographic series (Groups and Locations (Moscow)) and a video piece (Hotel Moscow) constitute the bulk of this exhibition.
Charlotte Cotton, Head of Programming for the Photographer's Gallery, states: "Groups and Locations (Moscow) and Hotel Moscow both hinge on Manchot’s construction of situations in which contemporary Russians both perform and reveal themselves. The resulting photographs and video sequences are intriguing versions of portraiture that consciously draw together contemporaneity and history, private and public, individual and collective ideas about Russia and its citizens."
In Hotel Moscow, indeed, six moscovites give their account of events that underpinned the construction of Moscow's most peculiar Hotel. The story behind the Hotel being that it was constructed according to two different architectural plans. Thus, both sides of the building totally differ in style, giving the building an assymetric look. What happened was that Stalin, being offered two different projects signed between the two. The architects, not wanting to have Stalin explain his decision, decided to follow what seemed to be his instructions, to construct the Hotel following both plans. At the time, it was a matter of life and death if the dictator's decisions were questionned...
For more info check out http://www.photonet.org.uk/sections.pl5?section=programme