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Robert Mann Gallery, New
York |
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Aaron Siskind: The Egan Gallery Years,
1947-1954
May 15 - June 28 2008
Robert Mann Gallery presents a selection
of photographs by Aaron Siskind that draw
upon the four seminal exhibitions the artist had at the Egan
Gallery between April 1947 and June 1954. Included are a
selection of prints believed to have been presented in the
original exhibitions.
At the recommendation of his
friend Barnett Newman, photographer Aaron Siskind paid a visit
to art dealer Charles Egan, one of the few gallerists in New
York devoted to contemporary art at the time. The result
was four exhibitions at the Egan Gallery. Siskind's
photography had begun moving away from social documentary,
flattening the picture plane as everyday objects moved into
abstraction. Placing Siskind in an exhibition program that
included Robert Rauschenberg and provided the first American
venue for Willem de Kooning, Egan recognized the importance of
the photographer's work in the contemporary discourse of
visual arts. From a 1948 press release: "Mr. Siskind's
discernment of the poetic in the casual and passed-by aspects
of every day reality are rich in their eloquence of line and
shape and take their place with the serious expression of the
modern American artists." While the first show at Egan
endeared Siskind to many of his colleagues in the painting
community, it drew the ire of critic Clement Greenberg.
Leaving the exhibition together in an elevator, Greenberg
insisted to Siskind that he couldn't do that with photography,
photography had to be anecdotal, to tell a story. In spite of
Greenberg's judgment, Siskind's work became an integral part
of the American art historical and photographic
canon.
These four exhibitions were crucial to solidifying
Siskind's place as the photographer in the American abstract
expressionist movement. While it would be easy to assume that
Siskind observed what was happening in painting and simply
translated it to photography, the record shows that aesthetic
exchange went both ways. In an essay that accompanied the 1951
exhibition, Elaine de Kooning called Siskind "a painter's
photographer". Such mutual affinities are evidenced by
Franz Kline's painting Siskind, 1958 and the incorporation of
motifs from the photographer's work into Willem de Kooning's
Woman series. The richness of visual material developed
by Siskind during this period astounds: fragments of wrought
iron coils, found dÈcollage street posters, suggestions of
figuration in grease-stained paper bags-all toward the
development of a unique style and sensibility.
Aaron Siskind (1903-1991) is
included in numerous major museum collections. The Aaron
Siskind Centennial Celebration took place during 2003-2004
with exhibitions at more than a dozen institutions across the
country, each devoted to a different period or theme of the
his life and work. Among these was Robert Mann Gallery's
exhibition, Aaron Siskind 100.
Image:
Aaron Siskind Untitled, c. 1950 14.5 x 20 inch
vintage silver print
© Aaron Siskind
Foundation ROBERT MANN
GALLERY
210 Eleventh Avenue New York, NY
10001
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Victoria Miro Gallery,
London |
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Jesper Just A Voyage in
Dwelling
20 May - 14 June 2008
Victoria Miro Gallery is delighted
to announce the first solo exhibition in the UK by Danish
artist Jesper Just. The exhibition will
premiere the newly commissioned film trilogy A Voyage in
Dwelling in addition to a selection of earlier works,
including Just's acclaimed film A Vicious
Undertow. The new trilogy - consisting of
the eponymous work A Voyage in Dwelling, A Room
of One's Own and A Question of Silence - stars
renowned Danish actress Benedikte Hansen whose character, a
woman in middle age, embarks on a psychological journey of
displacement to unravel her sexuality. The films register as
an uneasy mapping of female desire, as they chart the slippage
between one woman's actual and imagined sexual self. Just
sensitively explores the idea that "the received paradigm of a
man's journey is that he always returns to the point of
departure expecting to find his home and wife unchanged,
unaffected. Benedikte's experience, by contrast, is one of
pleasurable displacement - she becomes a nomad in her own
mind, never returning to her former status quo." Shot on a
remote island and on a dilapidated Polish ferry, the trilogy
also features an original soundtrack by Theremin composer
Dorit Chrysler and American transgender singer/songwriter,
Baby Dee.
Over recent years, Just has crafted his own signature
breed of filmmaking characterised by glossy production values
and emotionally-pitched soundtracks. He has created a unique
cinematic language, but one which is deeply informed by film
history, eliciting comparisons to Tarkovsky, Resnais, Bergman
and Antonioni. His works are unified through their careful
elision of narrative climax, leaving the viewer emotionally
seduced but without a sense of resolution.
Just's videos attempt to dissect the nature of human
interaction and the awkwardness of relationships. As in A
Vicious Undertow (2007) - a seductive pas de trois between a
middle-aged woman, and a younger woman and man - Just often
seeks to emphasise the absurdity of gender roles and the way
which cultures generate them. He presents charged
relationships that could be perceived as perverse and endows
them with beauty and dignity. With little, if any, dialogue,
Just's repertory casts unpredictably sing in chorus, embrace,
and weep, creating suggestive yet ambiguous
situations.
A Voyage in Dwelling has been generously
supported by Outset Contemporary Art Fund and the Danish Arts
Council.
The artist would like to credit sound engineer Jakob
Garfield, cinematographer Kasper Tuxen and actors Benedikte
Hansen, Johannes Lilleore and Peter Hesse Overgaard.
Born in 1974 in Copenhagen, Jesper
Just is a graduate of the Royal Academy Of Fine Arts,
Copenhagen and currently resides in New York. Just has
exhibited widely, with recent major solo presentations at
Witte de With, Rotterdam, Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, S.M.A.K,
Ghent, The Moore Space, Miami, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington
and the UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. He will present a
significant solo exhibition at The Brooklyn Museum, New York
in the autumn of 2008 and will be included in both the
upcoming Liverpool Biennial and Copenhagen
Quadriennale.
Image:
Jesper Just 2008 A Voyage in Dwelling Super
16mm transferred to DVD
Courtesy Victoria Miro Gallery Copyright ©
Jesper Just
Victoria Miro Gallery 16 Wharf Road
London N1 7RW
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VAN HORN,
Düsseldorf |

11 Apr 2008 to 14 June 2008
For almost a year Andrea Bowers
followed the story of Elvira Arellano in the press. On August
15, 2006, Arellano entered into sanctuary at the Adalberto
United Methodist Church in Chicago, IL. She began her vigil
against a deportation order to avoid being separated from her
eight year old son Saul, who is a U.S. citizen. She refused to
return to Mexico because she would not leave behind the child
that she had raised by herself for most of his life. Bowers
interviewed Arellano two weeks prior to her one-year
anniversary in sanctuary. Less than three weeks later,
Arellano was separated from her son and deported to Mexico.
While involved in one of the most contentious political
debates in the U.S. - that of immigration - Arellano's courage
and dignity drew me to her story.
This exhibition,
Sanctuary, continues Bowers' exploration of direct action and
non-violent civil disobedience enacted through the lives of
women. She presents the stories of activists to express her
belief that dissent is essential to maintaining a democratic
process, as well as to illustrate the importance of a
political strategy that stands in opposition to violence and
war. In this body of work she continues to consider the
intersections between aesthetics and political protest. Bowers
investigates the role of art in the reconsideration of
historical records, storytelling and documentation. Included
in the project are a 16 mm film and photographs.
The film Sanctuary focuses on the genre of
portraiture, employing the gaze to confront the social and
political scrutiny that occurs in spectatorship. Arellano was
the first undocumented immigrant to publicly acknowledge her
situation. Most people in her circumstances, for obvious
reasons, feel they must stay in hiding. Andrea Bowers found
her decision to publicly refuse her deportation courageous and
this is conveyed through the eye contact she makes with the
viewer. In Sanctuary the subjects Elvira and Saul Arellano do
not speak, and as a result the judgments and assumptions made
during the act of viewing are fore-grounded. The film makes
the viewer's internal dialog conscious, turning the
traditionally objectifying gaze on the female subject into a
situation for ego identification and mirroring for the
viewer.
Image:
Andrea Bowers
Sanctuary
Installation View at
VAN HORN, Düsseldorf - until June 14,
2008
Courtesy of Van Horn,
Düsseldorf VAN
HORN BEUTHSTR. 14 ENTRANCE
SCHIRMERSTRASSE D - 40211, Düsseldorf
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Inter Art Center and Gallery,
Beijing |
All the Things Between - Photography and
video from Europe and North America13 -
26 June 2008 Alison Dalwood (UK),
Stephan Hausmeister (Germany), Sam
Jury (UK), Tim Van Laar (USA),
Isidro L-aparicio (Spain), Stefan
Sulzer (Switz), Sebastian Utzni
(Germany), Michael Wright (UK)
'all the things between' a major
exhibition of photography by eight artists from Europe and
North America who all, in their distinct ways, critique the
nature of global media representations and the ability of
photography and film to serve as an all-encompassing mediator
of reality. By exploring and debunking the ubiquitous imagery
of slick consumerism 'all the things between'
seeks to question the narratives that overlay and homogenize
culture and location.
In a visually saturated age, our perceptions of truth
and experience are mediated and made uncertain by our capacity
to vicariously absorb knowledge through images. Our
understanding of the world is dominated by iconic media images
and photography and video is seen as a tool to record what is
the truly newsworthy, grandiose and momentous. 'all
the things between' explores the gaps or fissures
between these so-called events, whether it is the
objectification of the seemingly mundane or a re-imagining of
a time and place seen through improbable circumstances.
Collectively the artists in this show share a dialogue that
gives visual form to questions about our expectation of
realism and the reading of imagery in the age of
globalization, suspending the spectator in the space
between.
Image:
Stefan Sulzer video installation with 14
monitors
Courtesy of the artist
Inter Art Center Sevenstar Main
Street 798 ArtZone No.4 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang
District Beijing, 100015 China
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art agents gallery,
Hamburg |
Tim Roda /
Living Large
May 16th - June 27th 2008
Tim Rodas black and white family
portraits are filled with reverberations of his own childhood
memories and family traditions as a site for individual and
communal mythmaking. Incorporating his son and wife into his
photographs while enacting familial scenes, Roda collapses the
past and present as well as private and public. He positions
his family in elaborately staged arrangements, which he builds
out of rough and simple materials like wood, clay, paper and
everyday items. His latest work explores themes of transition,
whishes and dreams as well as the isolation of immigrants.
Like memories the images are fragmented narratives, in which
familiarity and strangeness blur. His technical process seems
appropriately unfinished. He roughly cuts the borders of his
photographs so that they look vulnerable and he allows or even
creates chemical splashes and other technical flaws. This
treatment of the pictures adds to the atmosphere of hand
crafted, not at all valuable and is in contrast to usual
clean-cut photography. The invalidation corresponds with the
content. Rodas work is beautiful and alarming. Tim
Roda was born 1977 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania,
USA.15th May - 19th June, 2008
Image:
Tim Roda
Living Large #150, 2007
b/w photo on Ilford fibre matt paper
84 x 97 cm
Courtesy of the artist and art agents gallery,
Hamburg
art agents
gallery Wilstorfer Straße
71 21073 Hamburg
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Daniel Hug, Los Angeles
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ERIKA VOGT MOTOR POST MOTOR BAND
DISBAND
10 May 2008 to 7 June 2008
Daniel Hug presents Motor Post Motor Band
Disband, the first solo exhibition by Erika
Vogt. In this exhibition, Vogt inhabits a
mediated space where the studio, the machine, the body and the
object are brought together as a means of interrogation. The
show begins with images from the series I Arrive When I Am
Foreign. Set in the studio and adopting the uniform of the
American artist as icon (black t-shirt and blue jeans), Vogt
performs a series of ritualized actions with objects that make
historical reference to notions of progress. In Centennial
Tin, 2006, for example, Vogt acquired and opened a one
hundred-year-old can of peas chosen both for its symbolic
resonance as a model of invention (first sanitary can) and
also for its embedded relationship to time travel. After
emptying the can's contents, a mush pile of green peas, Vogt
exposed the interior and exterior surfaces of the can to a
still camera and a video camera. The result is an image that
was made in two parts and which itself is a reflection and
embodiment of an expanded recording of time.
The seven short videos that comprise Motor Post Motor
Band Disband are part of a collection of works that in part
take the screen and projector as their subject. In Screen
Talk, for example, two iconic images, that of a motor part and
that of a music man find themselves exchanging information.
Both images reverberate on the screen. The motor pulsates
under the light and motion of a film projector and Vogt whirls
as an offset shadow, generating music that is deafened by the
sounds of the film machine. Each piece in the collection Motor
Post Motor Band Disband was taped, re-taped, filmed, and
re-filmed. The result is a raucous collection of animated
works that is both celebratory and mournful.
Also on view will be a suite of drawings from the
series Up Your Wall Forever. These works take on an economy of
exchange. Made over a long period of time, the pieces become
live documents of layered actions, revealing both the artist's
hand, via Vogt's smudges and markings, and the physical
effects of time.
Erika Vogt has exhibited her film
and video work at the Centre Pompidou, Paris, France (2006),
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (2006), The Artists
Cinema at Frieze Art Fair, London, UK (2006). Works have also
been exhibited at The Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati,
Ohio (2006). In the coming year Erika Vogt will be included in
the 2008 California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of
Art, Laguna Beach, California. She lives and works in Los
Angeles.
Image:
Erika Vogt
Motor Post Moter Band Disband
2008
Courtesy of Daniel Hug, Los Angeles
Daniel Hug
510 Bernard St. Los
Angeles, CA 90012
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Meat Market Gallery, Washington
DC |
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TIME MACHINE A TRANSMEDIA GROUP
SHOW
June 6 - 29, 2008
Curated by Amelia Winger-Bearskin for the
Perpetual Art Machine [PAM]
Meat Market Gallery is pleased to
present TIME MACHINE, a selection of
trans-media works from the online international video
collective Perpetual Art Machine [PAM], curated by PAM 'Artist
at Large' Amelia Winger-Bearskin. Winger-Bearskin's careful
selection of video works, time-based objects and sound pieces
transform the gallery space into a time machine ready to steal
moments of your time and store them for future
generations. Access the future, see the recorded past
and donate your time. Every moment that is consumed during
the course of this show will be given to the international
consortium for the preservation of time well spent.
The front gallery features a video portal, a time
capsule and other objects from past and future. In the
rear gallery, viewers will find a compaction of three years of
performance art, archived through a residue of sound.
An interactive performance at the exhibition's
opening on June 6 will utilize the manufactured darkness of
the gallery space to ease the audience into what can only be
described as a contraction of time and space. Spelunk
around the gallery and find the hidden gems. Be prepared,
these works will make time travelers of us all.
Artists include the following international and local
artists as well as members of the Video Art Collective
[PAM]:
Viewers beware - this is an out of control time
machine. Who knows where you might end up.
Jonathan Aseron (Austin,
TX) Artur Augustynowicz (Toronto, Canada)
[PAM artist] Christopher Borkowski (New
York, NY) [PAM artist] SunTek Chung
(Richmond, VA) Bailie Duncan (Austin, TX)
[PAM artist] Bidzina Kanchaveli (Berlin,
Germany) Dietmar Krumery (Detroit, MI)
[PAM artist] Robert Milton (Austin,
TX) Lisa Marie Thalhammer (Washington,
DC) Per Eriksson (Stockholm,
Sweden) Joseph Winchester (Austin,
TX) Lanneau White (Austin, TX) [PAM
artist] Amelia Winger-Bearskin (Nashville,
TN) [PAM artist]
Image:
Amelia Winger-Bearskin
Courtesy of the artist and Meat Market
Gallery
Meat Market
Gallery
1636 17th Street NW
Washington, DC 20009
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Coming Next
May 28-29 Sculpture &
Installation
June 4-5 Painting & Drawing
June 11-12 Mixed Media
June 19-20 Photography, Film &
Video
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