re-title.com
  14 October 2010
Photography, Film & Video 

YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY, New York
JOHNEN GALERIE, Berlin
GALERIE MAX HETZLER, Berlin
CAMPAGNE PREMIERE, Berlin
MILLKEN, Stockholm
 

 
YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY, New York
 
 
Laura Letinsky, Untitled #28, from the series The Dog and The Wolf, 2009
 
 
Laura Letinsky
After All
 
September 16 – October 30, 2010
 
The Yancey Richardson Gallery is pleased to present After All, an exhibition of photographs by Laura Letinsky that continues the artist’s exploration of the still-life tradition, featuring selections from two recent bodies of work – “The Dog and the Wolf” and “Fall.” Formal elements characteristic of Letinsky’s oeuvre – oblique lines of perspective and depth, juxtaposition of incongruent objects, exquisitely controlled gradations of light – are presented here as a backdrop upon which our ideas surrounding food, desire, and death are illuminated.
 
“The Dog and the Wolf” is a reference to the Aesop Fable of the same name, alluding to the tension between domesticity and a romanticization of the wild. This series, made at twilight as the brood of night approaches, touches upon a formal literalism as this time of day is known also by the phrase, “le chien et le loup.” Distinctions between comfort and danger are investigated in their relation to “home,” in all its abundance and denial. The few objects included in each image - dead animals, wilting flowers, the dried, peeled skin of an orange - emphasize these conflicts, identifying the photographs under a shroud of temporality. Reminiscent of 17th century Dutch vanitas, Letinsky’s elegiac arrangements are a subdued meditation on the symbolic passage of day into night.
 
Taken one step further, Letinsky’s most recent series – “Fall” – examines a singular, enigmatic strand of the relationship between food and mortality. Driven by the artist’s thinking about last meals, the works are suggestive and abstracted considerations of what those meals would look or taste or even smell like. Drawn from real and fictional accounts of last meals, Letinsky’s sparsely occupied picture planes are bathed in an eviscerating light that does more to obscure than reveal the picture space.
 
Born in Canada in 1962, Laura Letinsky received her MFA from Yale University in 1991 and was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2000. Letinsky’s work is held in the collections of the Stuttgart Museum, Germany, Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Amon Carter Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, among others. She has exhibited internationally, most recently in Rome, London and Germany. The exhibition coincides with the release of her third monograph, After All, by Grafiche Damiani. She is currently a professor at the University of Chicago.
 
 
Image:
Laura Letinsky
Untitled #28, from the series The Dog and The Wolf, 2009
40 x 53 inches, Chromogenic print
Ed. of 9
Courtesy of Yancey Richardson Gallery, New York
 
 
YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street 3rd floor
New York, NY 10011
T +1 646-230-9610
Tuesday - Saturday, 10 AM - 6 PM
 

 
GALERIE MAX HETZLER, Berlin
 
 
Thomas Struth, Semi Submersible Rig, DSME Shipyard, Geoje Island, 2007 
 
 
Thomas Struth
New Works
 
7 October – 27 November 2010
 
Galerie Max Hetzler is proud to present its eight’s solo exhibition of German artist Thomas Struth.
 
Struth’s work reconciles forms of documentation and contemplation. His most recent photographs offer a new experience for the viewer’s eye since most of us have not yet examined the interior of a reactor vessel, entered a space shuttle or walked around in a nuclear power station before; all places hidden from the public.
 
Without knowing the location, it is impossible to acknowledge in which part of the world the image has been captured. In his new series the artist forces the eye beyond normal observations and, the longer we look at the images, the more they become somehow reminiscent of abstract painting’s compositions.
 
Struth changes the context of the technological sublime by transferring the motives into the gallery space: Anonymous sculptures reveal structures that are incomprehensible to the majority of spectators while the viewer is confronted with alienated forms of industrial and technological progress. Titles, such as Tokamak Asdex Upgrade periphery, intensify the formality in photographs that analyze and document the human ambition and the progress of today’s industries. Also on view are photographs that record architectural sites in Korea, including an oil platform and a shipyard, strongly contrasting with the advanced technologies of the former. The depiction of the image’s architecture seems to create iconographic and hyperreal manifests of the present.
 
Since the late 70's Struth has been capturing and enlarging our time; the world today as seen in streets of different cities, cultural venues, worship scenes, nature and more recently industrial and technological locations, often underlining the relationship of human beings with the sublime: In former series Thomas Struth explored the relationship with high art or nature, as in the Museum-Photographs or in the Paradise-Series. Some of the most abstract photographs as Stellerator Wendelstein 7-X Detail remind us of these jungle views, nature and technology presenting similar intricate lines of either bright green vegetation or coloured cables.
 
Parts of this recent series are included in a touring exhibition which debuted in 2010 at the Kunsthaus Zürich and will travel to the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen K20, Düsseldorf; the Whitechapel Gallery, London and the Museu Serralves in Porto.
 
Thomas Struth was born in 1954 and currently lives and works in Berlin. Struth has been subject of numerous exhibitions, at among others, the Museo del Prado, Madrid (2007); the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2003); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2003); the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2002); Dallas Museum of Art (2002); the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (2000); the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo and the National Museum of Art, Kyoto (2000).
 
 
Image:
Thomas Struth
Semi Submersible Rig, DSME Shipyard, Geoje Island, 2007
c-print
270 x 340 cm, 279,5 x 349 cm, framed
edition of 6
Courtesy of Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin
 
 
Galerie Max Hetzler
OsramHöfe
Oudenarder Str. 16-20
D-13347 Berlin
T +49 30 229 24 37
Tuesday - Saturday 11 am - 6 pm
 
 
 
 

 
JOHNEN GALERIE, Berlin
 
 
Thomas Ruff, ma.r.s. 02 
 
 
Thomas Ruff
ma.r.s.
 
5 October - 13 November 2010
 
Johnen Galerie is proud to present Thomas Ruff’s new series ma.r.s., opening on October 9th, 2010, during art forum berlin. This is the world premiere of this new body of work.
 
After the ‘Zycles’ series (since 2008), Thomas Ruff has taken up ma.r.s. as a new visual challenge. In the context of his research about image-generating means of photography the artist came across high-resolution photographs of Mars, taken by a satellite with a HiRISE (High Resoluton Imaging Science Experiment) camera that NASA made accessible to the public via the internet.
 
Ruff starts by transforming the images that were shot by a satellite from a straight down angle, so that the perspective seems to be that of a plane traveler’s, looking upon the planets. Thus the viewer gets the impression of being able to see Mars’ surface from close proximity. In addition, Ruff colorizes the originally black and white photos and thereby accentuates the extraordinary characteristics of these landscapes, without changing their character in any way. As a result breathtakingly beautiful images of deserts and crater landscapes come into being, all located on an inconceivably distant planet, yet seemingly familiar. In consideration of the ongoing discussions about possibilities of generally accessible, manned space travel, these pictures can almost be seen as a virtual anticipation of future travel imagery.
 
This series demonstrates the ongoing examination of most advanced technology together with objective documentation and formal elegance in Ruff’s œuvre. His interest has for a long time been directed towards the enormous collective efforts necessary for developing new photographic techniques. In Ruff’s ma.r.s. series, images that were originally exclusive to a relatively small circle of scientists are now accessible to a wider audience. This is being achieved decidedly by Ruff’s artistic treatment that reveals the full spectrum of esthetic qualities inherent to the scientific original. The artist takes the viewer on a travel to experience the beauty of outer space.
 
Thomas Ruff (b. 1958 in Zell am Harmersbach, Germany) studied from 1977 to 1982 at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf with Professor Bernd and Hilla Becher. In 1995, he represented Germany at the Venice Biennale with works from his series “Andere Porträts” and “Stereofotos”. Since 2000 Thomas Ruff is professor at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. The Kunsthalle Baden-Baden presented a first retrospective of his works in 2002; in 2006 Thomas Ruff received the Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography in New York.
 
Recent exhibitions include “Thomas Ruff retrospektíf”, Kunsthalle Budapest, 2008/09; Thomas Ruff. “Oberflächen, Tiefen”, Kunsthalle Wien 2009; “Thomas Ruff”, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rivoli-Turin 2009.
 
Recent publications: “Thomas Ruff. Oberflächen, Tiefen", Kunsthalle Wien 2009; “Thomas Ruff”, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte, 2009; “Thomas Ruff. jpegs", Dumont, 2009
 
 
Image:
Thomas Ruff
ma.r.s. 02
Courtesy of Johnen Galerie, Berlin
 
 
Johnen Galerie
Marienstrasse 10
10117 Berlin
Germany
T +49 30 27 58 30 30
E mail @ johnengalerie.de
Tuesday - Saturday, 11 am - 6 pm
 
 
 
 

 
CAMPAGNE PREMIERE, Berlin
 
 
Uriel Orlow, Limbo, 2010
 
 
URIEL ORLOW
The Short and The Long of It (2.0)
 
2 October - 13 November 2010
 
While the focus of "The Short and The Long of It " is a real event, Uriel Orlow is more intent on permitting us glimpses than revealing the whole picture. Spilling evocative images and letting out the narrative like yards of rope, Orlow in turn leads and obscures our reading of carefully edited artefacts, images and texts, so that the momentum of our own curiosity dictates the extent of our fragmentary understanding.
 
The installation relates to an incident that unfolded during the outbreak of the ‘Six Day War’, or the ‘June War’ in 1967. The conflict between Israel, Egypt, Jordan and Syria re-inscribed the US/USSR divide of the concurrent Cold War, as well as the ongoing Arab–Israeli confrontation. In short, as a result of heavy artillery fire and sunken trawlers at either end of the Suez Canal, 14 cargo ships of various nationalities were stranded for eight years in the Great Bitter Lake, a large body of water at the canal’s midpoint where ships pass one another before re-entering the one-way traffic.
 
Trapped in the eye of a political and military storm, this rum collection of commercial seafarers formed the Great Bitter Lake Association (GBLA), a pan-national alliance whose main aim was, firstly, to survive; secondly, to create a functioning society between ships; and thirdly, to fill the days, months and years ahead. The GBLA mirrored the evolution of civilisation in microcosm, quickly developing from a programme of contingent survival to one that incorporated robust infrastructures of communication, formally organised leisure pursuits and casual frivolity. Specially designed postal stamps effectively declared the lake as a territory to be factored into global geographies, while onboard Olympic Games converted what Noam Chomsky has referred to as the ‘irrational jingoism’ of the official Olympics to a pan-national gesture of resilient, playful solidarity.
 
The GBLA might consequently be thought of as a utopian society where antagonisms between nations, creeds, classes and so on have been eradicated; the itinerant essence of a ship, and the globalism it embodies, setting it apart from the territorializing war of attrition that raged around it. On the other hand, the reality may be less idealistic, with the hard-boiled commercial shippers’ insistence that crew remain to safeguard vessels and cargo marking an imperative that simply pitches all hands against looters instead of one another.
 
Orlow does not indicate which interpretation he favours. He is careful to encourage broad historical, formal or theoretical inferences over specific politics. A video interleaving vintage photographs and Super8 film shot by crewmembers with the artist’s own recent footage on location is paired with a series of text slides that names moments of particular relevance, general importance or personal interest from the eight years of the ships’ confinement. This three-way comparison of timeframes and events creates a complication of concurrence, consequence and dissociation, giving rise to a sense that time is pleated, causality radiating and that this rippling expanse of saltwater somehow communicates diagonally through time.
 
The accompanying selection of found material sets up a similar dynamic field of information, where historical representation is ribboned through with facts, associations, symbolism and poetics. Images of a glut of apples rotting in their boxes, for instance, becomes an exemplar of the flow of capital abruptly halted by the canal’s closure; a snapshot of men in drag hints at the socio-sexual impact of confinement; Orlow’s drawings of fish that continue to migrate from the Red Sea to the warmer Mediterranean waters express admiration for the ingenuity of nature and its own temporality, while a sober image of photographic slide boxes remind us of the persuasive archival processes at work here. But, whereas nostalgia articulates the weighty pain of partition from a personal past, Orlow’s open-handed presentation permits us to retrieve from the shadowy margins a history that is buoyant with the potential of the indeterminate.
 
Orlow has exhibited widely including solo projects at Laure Genillard, London (2010), Les Complices*, Zurich (2009), Habres & partner, Vienna (2009), Jewish Museum New York (2008-9), Blancpain Art Contemporain Geneva (2008-9) and Argos Brussels (2008). Group exhibitions in 2010 include Hydrarchy, Gasworks, London, Over the Counter, Kunsthalle Budapest, Yesterday Will Be Better, Aargauer Kunsthaus, The Revenge of the Archive, Center for Photography, Geneva, Us, South African National Gallery, Cape Town, Paradise is Somewhere Else, Galerie Anita Beckers, Frankfurt and Jerwood Drawing Prize, UK touring exhibition. His work has also been shown at Tate Modern London, Third Guangzhou Triennial at Guangdong Museum of Art China, Kunstmuseum Bonn, ICA London, Whitechapel Gallery London, Shedhalle Zürich, the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, Locarno Film Festival, Visions du Réel, Nyon and the Biennale of the Moving Image, Geneva. Orlow has published several artist’s books and has written for a number of publications.
 
 
Image:
Uriel Orlow
Limbo, 2010
HD video with sound, 13’
Courtesy of Campagne Première, Berlin
 
 
Campagne Première
Chausseestrasse 116
D-10115 Berlin
T +49 30 400 54 300
 
 
 
 

 
MILLIKEN, Stockholm 
 
 
Tova Mozard, In the Beginning White Seen from a Distance, 2010 
 
 
Tova Mozard
How’s the world treating you?
 
October 8 – November 13, 2010
Length of film 31 min
 
…to use the language of theatre in film makes the distance between reality and film shorter. Through a filter of dissimulation reality appears truer. Pretence becomes natural.- Tova Mozard
 
For her first exhibition at Milliken Gallery Tova Mozard delves deep into her interest in theatre, film and the representation of reality. In Mozard’s photography and film there is a vague distinction between what is perceived as `prop´ and what might constitute an `actor´. Each individual element whether human or object appears instead as a clue to a cryptic narrative. Mozard devises scenes in which the actions and placement of props and actors are constructed as to nullify their boundaries and guide the viewer to discover obscured stories. What emerges are undisclosed dramas that remain unrecognized but persist in being sensed. Certain things are real whilst others might not be; depicted reality doesn’t always offer the truth.
 
Mozard’s new film The Big Scene begins with the artist, her mother and her grandmother applying makeup in the dressing room of the Royal Dramatic Theatre. Whilst preparing the women speak of their age, looks, death and their relations. The women enter the stage, and with their backs against the empty audience seats continue their conversation in the presence of a therapist. The conversation is real but the setting in which it takes place, and the appearance of those in it, skews reality. Mozard experiments with the private in a theatrical setting and stages a situation where life and its realities are unavoidable. Emotions such as sadness become the foundation for the films narrative structure that reveals insights sometimes only recognizable externally or from other perspectives. The film concerns the complexities of real life where complicated chains of events and traumas form patterns and become a story.
 
Tova Mozard’s work can be found in amongst others the collections of Moderna Museet, Malmö Konstmuseum, Bonniers AB and Twentieth Century Acquisitions. Previous exhibitions include, Vox Populi, Philadelphia, Life Stories, Toronto and The Moderna Exhibition, Stockholm.
 
The film The Big Scene was made possible with the support of Memfis Film.
 
 
Image:
Tova Mozard
In the Beginning White Seen from a Distance, 2010
Pigment print
87 x 71 cm
Edition of 5
Courtesy of Milliken, Stockholm
 
 
MILLIKEN
Luntmakargatan 78
113 51 Stockholm
Sweden
T +46 (0) 8 673 7010
 
 
 
  
 
 

 
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