Posts tagged ‘travel’

April 10, 2013

Christo Javacheff and Jeanne-Claude Denat

Christo_Umbrellas_Japon_2

Running Fence

17artist1_span-articlelarge

1280px-A_SIX-TON_CURTAIN_BILLOWS_ACROSS_RIFLE_GAP_-_CONCEIVED_BY_ARTIST_CHRISTO_JAVACHEFF,_EXECUTED_AT_A_COST_OF_$700,000...._-_NARA_-_544843

164487  christo

ChristoJavacheff-The-Running-Fence-California-1976

Running Fence

merchants_gates_christo

The two postmodernist artists Christo Javacheff and Jeanne-Claude Denat formed one of the closest and most creative collaborations in 20th Century contemporary art. Based in New York, the couple specialized in a unique form of avant-garde art known as ‘empaquetage’ – meaning packaging or wrapping of objects. Beginning in 1958 with small items, they extended the idea to the wrapping of buildings, coastlines, even offshore islands. In the process, they created a sort of hybrid artform – a combination of conceptual art, outdoor installation, and large scale land art. Their works include the wrapping of the Berlin Reichstag building, the Pont-Neuf bridge in Paris, a stretch of Australian coastline and eleven islands in Biscayne Bay, Florida. One of the least known contemporary art movements, empaquetage is essentially a transitory artform done for reasons of aesthetics, rather than environmental concerns. The partnership was ended in November 2009 by Jeanne-Claude’s death following a brain aneurysm. By any yardstick, Christo and Jeanne-Claude must be considered two of the most original artists of of the 20th century. Their public art has touched the lives of people in four continents.  These huge undertakings, such as surrounding eleven islands in Biscayne Bay in Miami, Florida, erecting a 24-mile-long/18-foot-high fence in two Northern California counties or hanging a giant curtain between two mountains in Rifle Gap, Colorado, become stories of hope and triumph in the face of adversity. The act of filming becomes the project itself, as the filmmakers are present every step of the way from planning, approval, execution and display of these temporary artworks.

These artists to me, are absolutely incredible – heart stopping – take some time to watch the documentary ” 5 Films About Christo & Jeanne-Claude” This fascinating anthology shows the passion, vision and complexity of the environmental art of Christo and Jeanne-Claude, whose projects include a 24-mile, 18-foot-high fence in California and a giant curtain hung between two mountains in Colorado. The films — spanning 30 years — document not only the process but also the transformational effect the completed works have on those who come in contact with them.  Also ” The Gates “

Check out Plexifilm

October 5, 2012

David Leventi

Opera

Romania

Employing both 4”x5” and 8”x10” Arca-Swiss cameras that maximize detail, Leventi creates a body of large scale photographs that document the intricate interiors of famous opera houses around the world, such as the Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. In these dramatic photographs, Leventi seeks to alter both lateral and vertical symmetry in order to flatten out the opera houses. Space, in perfect equilibrium, creates the effect of the viewer being surrounded from the spot at center stage where performers would stand. Rows of velvet seats, ornate private boxes, chandeliers and gilt decorations are captured in incredible detail and symbolize the wealth and grandeur of its respective nation.

The opera houses in this body of work were specifically chosen by Leventi because they are all places his grandfather, a cantor, never had the opportunity to perform. His grandfather, who was trained by the famous Danish operatic tenor Helge Rosvaenge, often sang to Leventi when he was a child. The son of two architects, the artist says he felt a “religious feeling walking into a grand space such as an opera house.” For him the actual space can feel like the event itself and he invites his viewers to “pour over the details, to feel the potential energy in a space where it is all just about to happen.”

Artist Statement…. read more here

Artist Blog

October 2, 2012

Jenny Van Sommers

 

Photographer Jenny van Sommers was born in Australia to a professor of psychology and a sociologist. After failing out of art school in Sydney, she decamped to Britain in 1995 and began a professional winning streak that has netted her numerous awards, including the Golden Lion at Cannes, and ad clients including Apple, Audi, Hermès and Nike. Van Sommers’s images have appeared in AnOther, 10, and English, French and Italian Vogue. Since 2011, she has been concentrating on personal projects exploring abstraction and large-format film work. A new series, Paper Moon, uses lo-fi special effects such as dry ice and turntables to recreate each planet in the solar system.  Jenny van Sommers lives and works in SE1 in London with frequent visits to the US and France.

September 22, 2012

Massimo Vitali

 

Massimo Vitali was born in Como, Italy, in 1944.

He moved to London after high school, where he studied Photography at the London College of Printing.

In the early Sixties he started working as a photojournalist, collaborating with many magazines and agencies in Italy and in Europe. It was during this time that he met Simon Guttmann, the founder of the agency Report, who was to become fundamental in Massimo’s growth as a “Concerned Photographer”.

At the beginning of the Eighties a growing mistrust in the belief that photography had an absolute capacity to reproduce the subtleties of reality led to a change in his career path. He began working as a cinematographer for television and cinema. However, his relationship with the still camera never ceased, and he eventually turned his attention back to”photography as a means for artistic research”.

His series of Italian beach panoramas began in the light of drastic political changes in Italy. Massimo started to observe his fellow countrymen very carefully. He depicted a “sanitized, complacent view of Italian normalities”, at the same time revealing “the inner conditions and disturbances of normality: its cosmetic fakery, sexual innuendo, commodified leisure, deluded sense of affluence, and rigid conformism”.1

Over the past 12 years he has developed a new approach to portraying the world, illuminating the apotheosis of the Herd, expressing and commenting through the most intriguing, palpable forms of contemporary art – Photography.

In 1995 he commenced the Beach Series.

He lives and works in Lucca, Italy, and in Berlin, Germany.

1995 Begins the Beaches Series
1993 Starts working on large format photography
1989 Director of Photography in Fiction and Advertising Films
1979 Free-lance Photojournalist
1964 London College of Printing, England
1961 Liceo, Milano, Italy
1944 Born in Como

September 22, 2012

Ricky by Will Robson-Scott

This film meets Ricky Powell, a native New Yorker whose photographs of iconic people such as the Beastie Boys, Keith Haring and Cindy Crawford made him a pivotal figure in the downtown party scene during the ’80s and ’90s.

Now 50, Ricky’s lust for photography and music is still strong. Through his eccentricities such as his love for a transistor radio and feeding squirrels in the park, we gain an insight into his everyday life. Retrospective of New York City and how it has changed over his lifetime, he shows us around the city and contemplates what the future holds.

 

September 17, 2012

David Stephenson

David Stephenson was born in 1955, and studied at the University of Colorado and then the University of New Mexico, completing an MFA in 1982. He moved to Australia that same year to take up a position teaching photography at the University of Tasmania, where he completed a PhD in Fine Art in 2001. A fascination for the vast in space and time has led him to travel and photograph extensively around the world, with journeys to Europe, the Himalayas, and both the Arctic and Antarctic.
Stephenson’s photographs and video have been exhibited extensively internationally, including solo exhibitions at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (1993), the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (1994), the Paisley Museum and Art Gallery, Scotland (1995), the National Gallery of Victoria, (1998), the Cleveland Museum of Art (2001), and the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (2001). His work is represented in many public and private collections including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Art Gallery of South Australia, the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Queensland Art Gallery, the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, the International Museum of Photography and Film at George Eastman House, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
A meditation on the sublime has sustained David Stephenson’s artistic practice over 30 years, which has evolved through long-term, interrelated projects of inquiry. His photographs of the sublime ceilings of European sacred architecture have been published in two monographs with Princeton Architectural Press: Visions of Heaven: The Dome in European Architecture (2005) and Heavenly Vaults: From Romanesque to Gothic in European Architecture (2009, and showcased worldwide in many exhibitions.While travelling for these projects Stephenson made his first photographs of cities at night, bringing together a number of his previous interests, including the idea of the sublime, environmental concerns, and the transcendental power of light. The glowing “light city” seems the perfect emblem of so much that is both good and bad in our industrialized culture: an extraordinary example of a monumental technological sublime, where awe, beauty, and human aspiration are tinged with the horror of potential environmental catastrophe, our engine of modernity seemingly running on empty.
A key aspect of Stephenson’s current Light Citiesproject is the explosion in growth of the modern city. The visible symbols of economic aspiration such as the skyscraper have spread across the globe. Every reasonably sized city contains a downtown area of high buildings, with urban sprawl often extending for hundreds of square miles, and all those buildings glowing with electric light from sundown through to the early hours. With the vast majority of this electric power generated by coal-fired thermal power stations, it is not difficult to see that this situation has a finite timeframe, before the fuel runs out or climate change has drastic effects on the world’s ecosystems, requiring major changes to take place in the entire fabric of our modern industrialized culture. That many of these cities were founded as ports and are located at sea level, making them highly vulnerable to rising sea levels, gives further urgency to a close scrutiny of the modern city.Stephenson has also been collaborating with Martin Walch since 2010 on the Derwent Project, which aims to create new immersive approaches to the representation of complex and remote environments. An overview of the project and samples of their multichannel video works can be viewed on their Vimeo site: vimeo.com/derwentproject.
David Stephenson lives and works in Hobart, Tasmania. He is Associate Professor of Art at the University of Tasmania, where he serves as School Research Coordinator and Head of Photography at the Tasmanian School of Art. He is Co-director of the University’s  Arts and Environment Research group.
August 29, 2012

JR

 

JR owns the biggest art gallery in the world.

He exhibits freely in the streets of the world, catching the attention of people who are not typical museum visitors. His work mixes Art and Act, talks about commitment, freedom, identity and limit.

After he found a camera in the Paris subway, he did a tour of European Street Art, tracking the people who communicate messages via the walls. Then, he started to work on the vertical limits, watching the people and the passage of life from the forbidden undergrounds and roofs of Paris.

In 2006, he achieved Portrait of a Generation, portraits of the suburban “thugs” that he posted, in huge formats, in the bourgeois districts of Paris. This illegal project became “official” when the Paris City Hall wrapped its building with JR’s photos.

In 2007, with Marco, he did Face 2 Face, the biggest illegal exhibition ever. JR posted huge portraits of Israelis and Palestinians face to face in eight Palestinian and Israeli cities, and on the both sides of the Security fence / Separation wall. The experts said it would be impossible. Still, he did it.

In 2008, he embarked for a long international trip for Women Are Heroes, a project in which he underlines the dignity of women who are often the targets of conflicts.

At the same time, he creates up the project The Wrinkles of the City. These actions aim to show through theirs wrinkles, the inhabitants of a city, the history and memory of a country. The artist chose the cities that have experienced changes such as Cartagena in Spain, Shanghai or Los Angeles.

In 2010, his film Women Are Heroes is presented at Cannes in competition for the Camera d’Or.

In 2011, he received the Ted Prize, which offers him the opportunity to make “A wish to change the world”. He creates InsideOut, an international participatory art project that allows people worldwide to get their picture and paste it to support an idea, a project, an action and share their experience.

JR creates “Pervasive Art” that spreads uninvited on the buildings of the slums around Paris, on the walls in the Middle-East, on the broken bridges in Africa or the favelas in Brazil. People who often live with the bare minimum discover something absolutely unnecessary. And they don’t just see it, they make it. Some elderly women become models for a day; some kids turn artists for a week. In that Art scene, there is no stage to separate the actors from the spectators.

After these local exhibitions, the images are transported to London, New York, Berlin or Amsterdam where people interpret them in the light of their own personal experience.

As he remains anonymous and doesn’t explain his huge full frame portraits of people making faces, JR leaves the space empty for an encounter between the subject/protagonist and the passer-by/interpreter.

This is what JR’s work is about. Raising questions…

JR collaborates with Cuban-American artist José Parlá

JR collaborates with Chinese artist Liu Bolin

JR collaborates with Japanese artist Takashi Murakami

JR collaborates with Portuguese artist VHILS

JR collaborates with Italian artist Blu

 

WOW! Explore & Enjoy

August 29, 2012

José Parlá

José Parlá Artist Statement

Historically, walls have exhibited the voice of the people.  My earliest paintings were made on walls at night. My thought and impulse behind the gesture was as primitive as that of cavemen marking and drawing in their dwellings to assert their existence in a place and time.  As my works evolved, be it paintings, signatures, or even the documentation of these early ephemeral artworks throughout city walls, the works took on the nature of personal journals based on empirical experiences. The organized black books and photo albums also became my diaries. This style of art became an influential subculture in many of the places I have traveled to and inspired the aesthetic in my cityscape paintings.

During the beginning, this was an art that was not accepted by society because it was seen as destructive, rebellious, and anarchic. I felt a challenge to present art that originally existed outdoors—inside, like art displayed in museums, and this was an interesting problem for me that needed a solution.  I wanted to create works that retained their roots. My new paintings could not abandon their environment.  I then embarked on a journey to search out in detail the dialogue of decaying walls, the marks on them, and what it all meant to me.  This would lead the paintings to become memory documents.  As a result, these works are time capsules, mixed documents of memory and research; part performance, as I impersonate the characters that leave their marks on walls. Time is a part of these paintings as their creative process simulates the passing of time on city walls and their layers of history with layers of paint, posters, writing, and re-construction.  This process, like meditation, affirms my everlasting devotion to art as a form of spirituality, which exists in the present and pays homage to those who leave their traces behind.

Language, writing and seeing are linked at several levels in José Parlá’s semiotically inflected paintings: the distinction between image and text is consistently denied—image-as-text, text-as-picture—both modes are often overlapping and present in the same painting. This glimpse makes us aware that we are not mere passive bystanders, but active participants in the world we see, that our senses produce for us moment-to-moment.

José Parlá’s paintings are composed from several distinct types of source material: the purely abstract (painterly) dabbing, gesture and layering of paint; collaged materials and detritus from the streets of the world (and that may include type or other writing and images); writing, which is easily the dominant material of these works, filling and often obscuring its contents in successive layers. Rarely is this written material actually fully legible in any of his works, usually it lies at the boundary between abstract marking and calligraphy, complicated and obfuscated by the palimpsest process he employs throughout.

Parlá’s works have appeared in major exhibitions in London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Paris, and recently in Stages for the Livestrong Foundation at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris. Deitch Projects, New York, and OHWOW in Miami. Parlá’s solo show titled: Walls, Diaries, and Paintings at Bryce Wolkowitz in March 2011, which was accompanied by a new monograph published by Hatje Cantz.

His most recent exhibition Character Gestures, opened September 2011 in Los Angeles at the OHWOW gallery in West Hollywood. Parlá’s latest projects include a collaboration with French artist JR for the 11th Havana Biennial in Cuba entitled ” Wrinkles of the City”, a mural painting commissioned by the Brooklyn Academy of Music for the new BAM FISHER Theatre in Brooklyn, the Parlá Frères exhibition with his brother Rey Parlá at the renowned Colette in Paris, an exhibition at SCAD MUSEUM in Savannah, Georgia with fellow alumni Wendy White entitled Performing Painting, and a public mural commissioned by the Barclays Center in Downtown Brooklyn. Mr. Parlá is also part of the advisory board of No Longer Empty.

Other collections include: The British Museum, London, UK, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, US, The Concord Project, City of Toronto, Canada, and the Barclays Center, Brooklyn, New York

José Parlá studied painting at the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia, and The New World School of the Arts in Miami, and lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

“Like Gerhard Richter, Parlá sees our art-historical notions of abstraction and abstract expressionism as having inextricably and poetically woven themselves in our contemporary understanding of the real, the authentic, the dramatic, the historic, the classic, the modern, the global, the magical, the African, the human.” – Greg Tate

“Parlá concentrates on the problems inherent in the change of context from the street to the galleries that few of the old school writers had successfully negotiated. A notable exception is, of course, SAMO, who later painted under his given name, Jean-Michel Basquiat. Parlá’s work takes off from and expands on these roots.” – Joan Waltemath for the Brooklyn Rail

“Caught very much in the moment, Parlá’s time is always transitory, a measure of echoes rather than certainties, a resonance of history where absence constitutes a more formidable presence than anything so shiny and new as the present.” – Carlo McCormick Contemplating the Storm. 2011.

August 29, 2012

JR and José Parlá

JR and brooklyn-based artist José Parlá are in Havana, Cuba in order develop his latest installment of the series ‘the wrinkles of the city’.

In this unique collaboration JR is  currently photographing the city’s elderly inhabitants, then creating gigantic prints from the sitter’s likeliness. these massive images are then wheat-pasted onto the facades of Havana’s building exteriors and decorated with the swirling paint strokes of Parlá.

‘wrinkles of the city’  Havana, enabling an encounter between the subject and observer, grounding the passerby in the humanity of the region.   We  really admire this project and could not help but post alot of their images ! Enjoy & support.

‘wrinkles of the city’ Los Angeles

‘wrinkles of the city’ Shanghai

‘wrinkles of the city’ Cartagena

 

August 22, 2012

Jack Pierson

 

 

 

Jack Pierson (born 1960 in Plymouth, Massachusetts) is a photographer and an artist. He studied at the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston. Pierson has made a name for himself with a body of work that includes photographs, collages, word sculptures, installations, drawings and artists books. His “Self-Portrait” series was shown in the 2004 Whitney Biennial and his works are collected by major museums worldwide. Jack Pierson currently divides his time between his home and studio in the Southern California desert near Joshua Tree National Park and New York. He has photographed many well-known celebrities and models, including Michael Bergin, Naomi Campbell, Snoop Dogg, Massimiliano Neri, Brad Pitt, and Antonio Sabato Jr.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 671 other followers

%d bloggers like this: