Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Future Pass - From Asia to the World


Future Pass - From Asia to the World is part of the Collateral Events programme at this year's Venice Biennale. Curated by Victoria Lu, Renzo di Renzo and Felix Schober, the exhibition features works from more than 100 artists, including Hye Rim Lee. She is also represented in the second edition of Glasstress in the Collateral Events programme.
Image: from Hye Rim Lee's Crystal Candy series (2011), perspex face-mounted print on alupanel, 1000 x 1000 mm

Monday, May 30, 2011

Magnus Renfrew on ART HK 11


Magnus Renfrew, director of ART HK 11, talks about the changing nature of the fair and the appetites of Chinese and Asia-Pacific collectors. Play video

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Dane Mitchell at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery


Dane Mitchell's RADIANT MATTER PART II opens today at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery and runs to 28 August 2011.
Image: Dane Mitchell, RADIANT MATTER PART II, installation view, Dunedin Public Art Gallery

Friday, May 27, 2011

Ai Weiwei's Marble Arm at ART HK


There is just one work by Ai Weiwei in the current edition of ART HK. Marble Arm can be viewed at the Galerie Urs Meile booth. The piece is on reserve, but the artistic director of Galerie Urs Meile has declined to reveal the buyer.
Image: Ai Weiwei's Marble Arm currently on display at the Galerie Urs Meile booth, ART HK 2011

Thursday, May 26, 2011

ART HK 2011 launched


ART HK opened last night with a lively vernissage. Predictably, the direction the fair will take under its new owners was the subject of many conversations. The early signs are promising for those hoping the fair will retain its distinctive point of difference. Speaking by telephone from Switzerland, Art Basel co-director Marc Spiegler said: "We are not interested in copying and pasting the same fair on three locations. Along with the greater interest in China, we are looking at many rising markets from Australia and New Zealand, to Singapore and Indonesia. The Asian market is developing so quickly, it's hard to say what it will look like in five years." Read more...

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Review of Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting


"Henry with these (and earlier) works is combining a contrived invisibility with cultivated exhibitionism. Intro- and extra- version seamlessly blended." Read more...
Image: Matt Henry, Vernacular Painting, installation view, Starkwhite, 2011; 2050 x 843 Signal Yellow 2011, acrylic and lacquer, installed in door frame, 2050 x 843 mm

Monday, May 23, 2011

This week at Starkwhite


We'll be in Hong Kong this week for ART HK, but Starkwhite will be open Monday to Friday from 11am to 5pm and 11am to 4pm on Saturday. Our exhibitions are: Group Show (downstairs), Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting (upstairs) and Billy Apple®: $23,610 Top Up, which is on display in the foyer and reception areas of Minter Ellison's Auckland offices.
Image: Alicia Frankovich, The Opposite of Backwards (2009), c-type photograph, 700 x 1050 mm, Starkwhite Group Show, May 2011

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Art Gallery of New South Wales opens new John Kaldor Family Gallery


Today the Art Gallery of New South Wales unveils a new floor for contemporary art, a development catalysed by the gift of the John Kaldor Family Collection - the largest donation of art to a public art gallery in Australia's history. The Collection includes over 200 works by artists of our time and features in-depth representations of Robert Rauschenberg, Christo, Sol LeWitt, Richard Long, Bill Viola, Thomas Demand, Francis Alys and Ugo Rondinone.
Image: The new John Kaldor Family Gallery with Sol LeWitt's "Wall Drawing #1091: arcs, circles and bands (room)," 2003

Friday, May 20, 2011

Mercedes Vicente talks to Dane Mitchell in the latest issue of Flash Art


In the May/June 2011 issue of Flash Art, Mercedes Vicente talks to Dane Mitchell about his recent work and how it engages with the notion of the 'vapourous' — teetering on the edge of the invisible, making the intangible tangible.
Image: cover images of the May/June issue of Flash Art, by Thomas Hirschhorn and Lygia Clark

Thursday, May 19, 2011

SPEECH MATTERS: The Danish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale


For the 54th Venice Biennale, the Danish Pavilion will host an international group exhibition, curated by Katerina Gregos, which will explore the timely and complex issue of freedom of speech. SPEECH MATTERS will feature 18 international artists of different generations from 12 countries. 13 new installations have been commissioned especially for the exhibition. Read more...
Image: Jan Svankmajer, The Garden, 1968, 35 mm film, 16'

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

2011 Pritzker Architecture Prize


Portugese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura is the jury's choice for the 2011 Pritzker Architecture Prize. It is the second time in the history of the prize that a Portugese architect has been chosen. The first was in 1992 when Alvaro Siza was selected. 

You can see selected works by Eduarod Souto de Moura here.
Image: Eduardo Souto de Moura's Municipal Stadium, Braga, Portugal

Monday, May 16, 2011

Alicia Frankovich at Salon Populaire, Berlin


Alicia Frankovich will present an evening with two live performance acts, two video pieces and a sculptural activation at Salon Populaire, Berlin on 18 May at 8pm.  
Image: Salon Populaire, Berlin

Saturday, May 14, 2011

curated by_vienna 2011


Now in its third year, this year's curated by_vienna takes as its starting point the importance and relevance of Vienna for Eastern and Southeastern European contemporary art and artists. 21 international curators, including Rene Block, Magda Kardasz and Nicolaus Schafhausen, were invited to develop special exhibitions for 21 galleries. The exhibitions run to 18 June.

The project includes a panel programme examining topical issues facing art and society in East and South East Europe, including the Baltic States, Russia, former-Yugoslavia and Turkey. The panels will be moderated by Simon Rees, the curatorial coordinator of curated by_vienna 2011.

This link takes you to the curated by_vienna 2011 website.

Friday, May 13, 2011

A Way of Calling at the Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts


A Way of Calling opens tonight at the Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, Melbourne. The exhibition highlights six practices (Dane Mitchell and Ann Shelton are in the lineup) that evoke, activate or engage mysterious forces, energies or sensations. This link takes you to the exhibition page on the Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts website.
Image: Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, St Kilda, Melbourne

Thursday, May 12, 2011

NEA brings video games in from the cold


The National Endowment for the Arts has embraced video games as an art form. Following on the heels of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's release for its upcoming The Art of Video Games exhibition, the NEA has renamed and rebranded its Arts on Radio and Television Grants, which will now be called Arts Media Grants. "We'll continue to support television and radio", NEA director of media arts Alyce Myatt explains in a video about the change, "but we're also going to fund content development for the Web, for theatrical release, for mobile phones, content to be distributed via satellite, and even content for game platforms."
Image: from Cory Archangel's tribute to Super Mario's clouds

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Artists voyage to the Kermadec Islands

This week a group of artists from the South Pacific region, including Phil Dadson and John Reynolds, travel on HMNZS Otago to a place rarely explored - the Kermadec Islands.

The Kermadecs are the most remote part of New Zealand. Despite their historical, as well as mythological significance, public awareness of the islands and surrounding waters is slight. The voyage aims to change that by documenting an imaginatively-charged encounter with one of the least known natural wilderness areas on the planet.  

Later in the year the Tauranga Art Gallery will present an exhibition of works produced by the artists. The Gallery was selected as the exhibition venue because the Kermadec Ridge (the undersea formation which includes Raoul Island where the artists will spend two days) is geologically linked with the Tauranga area.

The project is an initiative of the Pew Environment Group's Global Ocean Legacy programme, which promotes the designation of large, highly-protected marine reserves.
Image: NASA photograph of Raoul Island, the Kermadecs

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Tender is the Night opens at Wellington's City Gallery


The City Gallery (Wellington)  has opened Tender is the Night, an exhibition curated by Heather Galbraith that "brings together a selection of art works which explore the complex and intense nature of desire, love and the loss of a loved one." You can read more about the exhibition and lineup of artists (they include Phil Dadson and Derrick Cherrie) at the City Gallery website.
Image: Phil Dadson, Breath 1976 (a statement about birth and death), b/w video for two monitors, 16'30"

Monday, May 9, 2011

Ai Weiwei's Zodiac sculpture unveiled in New York

Ai Weiwei's public art project Circle of Animals: Zodiac Heads has been unveiled at the foot of New York's Pulitzer Fountain. The work consists of 12 bronze animal heads representing different phases of the Chinese calendar installed in a semi-circle in the shallow, stepped pools of the fountain.

The bronzes are scaled up versions of heads that originally adorned a Chinese imperial the water-clock in the Garden of Perfect Brightness in Beijing, which was looted by Anglo-French forces during the second Opium War in the 1850s. The repatriation of the heads has become cultural priority and in 2009 the Chinese Government launched a PR offensive against Christie's when the auction house attempted to sell two of the imperial bronzes as part of its Yves St Laurent / Pierre Berge auction. Berge taunted that he would give the heads for free if China vowed to "observe human rights and give liberty to the Tibetan people and welcome the Dalai Lama." Eventually at the sale, Cai Mingchao, the Chinese bidder who offered $14m for each head, refused to pay for them and described his sabotage of the auction as a patriotic act.

In an interview with filmmaker Alison Klayman, Ai Weiwei said he was playing with the idea of real and fake, and of national symbolism. "It's a new interpretation", he said. "My work is always dealing with real or fake, authenticity, what value is, and how value relates to the current political and social understandings and misunderstandings."
Image: Ai Weiwei's Circle of Animals: Zodiac Heads (detail), Pulitzer Fountain, New York

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Curator finds his art in the slow, contemplative lane

This link takes you to a short article in the Sydney Morning Herald on Justin Paton's UNGUIDED TOURS exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Image: Justin Paton, curator of the UNGUIDED TOURS exhibition, in front of Ian Burns' From orbit

Saturday, May 7, 2011

ART HK and Art Basel join forces


Asian Art Fairs Ltd has announced a new development for ART HK - Hong Kong International Art Fair. MCH Swiss Exhibition (Basel) Ltd, the organiser of Art Basel and Art Basel Miami Beach, will take a majority ownership in Asian Art Fairs Ltd.

Following ART HK later this month, next year's edition will take place from February 2 to 5 so that its timing fits better with the dates of Art Basel and Art Basel Miami Beach. Next year's edition will remain under the show's current ART HK name, with Magnus Renfrew remaining as director. In the mid-term ART HK is to be integrated into the Art Basel brand as the third platform for the international art show.

Tate announces 2011 Turner Prize nominees


The Tate has announced the nominees for the 2011 Turner Prize. Karla Black, Martin Boyce, Hilary Lloyd and George Shaw have been shortlisted for the award, which laureates a British artist under 50 "for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the twelve months preceding." The winner will be announced on 5 December 2011.
Image: Hilary Lloyd's Crane (2010)

Friday, May 6, 2011

Leigh Davis Flag Poems in Time, Text & Echoes


Image: Leigh Davis, Hau, flag poem presented in the JAR exhibition Time, Text & Echoes (2010-2011), a sequence of ten-day hoists over 300 days, New North Road, Kingsland, Auckland, NZ

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Unguided Tours: Anne Landa Award for video and new media arts


The Anne Landa Award exhibition opened last night at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Selected by Christchurch-based curator and author Justin Paton, the artists in the Unguided Tours exhibition lineup (and contenders for the video and new media award of AUD25,000) include Auckland-based artist Jae Hoon Lee.

Here is a short introduction to the show from the AGNSW website:

'Where to'? From a plane halfway round the globe, to a poetic walk through suburban backstreets, to a virtual voyage through a digitally constricted world, the 2011 Anne Landa Award offers a series of 'unguided tours' through some rich imaginative territory. Using video, computer animation, kinetic sculpture and even an immersive game environment, the seven contemporary artists in Unguided Tours explore the lure of other places, the anxieties and pleasures of travel, and the unexpected rewards of getting lost.
Image: Jae Hoon Lee, Becoming (2002), archival pigment ink on Ilford paper

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Starkwhite group show

Currently we are presenting a group show in our ground floor gallery with works by Billy Apple, Martin Basher, Alicia Frankovich, Hye Rim Lee, Jae Hoon Lee and Seung Yul Oh. The exhibitions runs concurrently with Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting on the first floor and Billy Apple®: $23,610 Top Up at the Auckland offices of Minter Ellison Rudd Watts. The group show runs to 28 May 2011.
Image: Martin Basher, HALO OF JOY 2011, oil and acrylic on canvas, 1350 x 2140 mm

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

A response to T J McNamara's review of Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting


On Saturday T J McNamara reviewed Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting exhibition in his weekly column in the Auckland Herald's Arts Section. It's a short piece that serves no useful purpose other than allowing him to say in a few willfully dismissive lines that he didn't think much of the show. But it begs the question: what purpose does this sort of content-impoverished writing serve for the Herald's readers? None as far as we can see, but then we believe the job of the arts commentator is to add to the constellation of ideas that circulate around contemporary art.

McNamara's approach on this occasion - in and out in 136 words and parting with a low blow - stands in marked contrast to approaches taken by other arts commentators over the weekend with programmes aired on New Zealand's National Radio.

On Composer of the Week Matthew Crawford talked to pioneering intermedia artist Phil Dadson about his life and work and Kim Hill talked to Dane Mitchell on her Saturday Morning programme about his current work and Radiant Matter, a three-part exhibition being staged at the Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, followed by the Dunedin Public Art Gallery and finally at Auckland's Artspace.

Crawford and Hill opened up conversations with the artists that were informative and illuminating, offering fresh insights into their practices and current projects. When faced with an artist's work that was "challenging", Hill weighed in with questions aimed at demystifying it for her listeners.

Rather than simply saying we don't care for T J McNamara's review of Matt Henry's exhibition, we have decided to re-present it alongside the sort of content-rich commentary we look for: Michael Wilson's review of Matt Henry's first exhibition at Starkwhite, showing how much you can say in two well-written paragraphs, and the conversations with Dadson and Mitchell aired on National Radio over the weekend, which can be accessed at Composer of the Week and Saturday Morning with Kim Hill.

Here is what T J McNamara had to say about Matt Henry's Vernacular Painting exhibition, followed by Michael Wilson's earlier review.

T J McNamara, New Zealand Herald Arts
At Starkwhite, an exhibition by Matt Henry contains one ordinary truth: position changes paintings. In the brilliant white of the upstairs rooms he has a plain painting set near the floor. It looks like a red radiator. Another room has a partition wall that is a doubled-sided painting. Elsewhere paintings masquerade as television sets. Art is made ordinary.

There is one special experience. A stepladder allows you to climb out on to the verandah roof, walk a few steps and climb through the other window where a little white painting might be a light fitting of some sort. [Correction: the "little white painting" is in the space T J McNamara left, not the one he arrived at.]

The trip along the verandah is the real experience of the show, which is called Vernacular Painting. From the roof last week you could see painters doing their own version of a vernacular painting on the building opposite.

Michael Wilson, artforum.com / critics' picks
Making elegant use of two adjacent mirror-image rooms, Matt Henry's Doppelgänger presents a tidy cluster of new paintings and objects that riff on the visual similarity of contemporary high-tech product design and Judd-era sculptural Minimalism. In his first solo exhibition at the K Road gallery staple, the native New Zealander blurs function into form, abstracting home-cinema gear to produce a set of mute postmodern totems with the hermetic gleam of John McCracken slabs. Placing three small MDF and Formica-veneer boxes on the floor of one room and a larger black block in the other, the young artist completes this kowingly spare installation with a pair of monochrome canvases, one nearly black and tinted with zinc white, the other a high-key electric green, glazed and framed in dark wood.

In his 2007 outing at the Fishbowl in New Plymouth, Henry exploited that gallery's architectural peculiarity (originally a garage, it was converted into a sealed storefront via the addition of a street-facing glass wall) to amplify his project's blend of bold geometry with wry domestic references. At Starkwhite he exercises a similar strategy, responding to the interior's polished serenity with a tongue-in-cheek homage to the culture of high-def surround sound. Doppelgänger sees the artist poke subtle fun at consumerist status anxiety by aligning high-street commodities with more rarified goods. He also contributes a minor but engaging - and seamlessly realised - subset to the history of aesthetic cross-pollination between the formal and the functional, further teasing us with the fact that we can't always tell one from the other.
Image: Matt Henry, Vernacular Painting installation view. In the foreground Untitled (Titanium White) 2011, acrylic and lacquer on linen and masonite, 210 x 210 x 45 mm; in the background 2050 x 843 (Signal Yellow) 2011, acrylic and lacquer on linen installed in doorframe, 2050 x 843 mm

Monday, May 2, 2011

Artists on air: Phil Dadson and Dane Mitchell



Over the weekend Radio New Zealand aired conversations with Phil Dadson on Composer of the Week and Dane Mitchell on Saturday Morning with Kim Hill.  
Images: Phil Dadson in performance (photograph courtesy of the artist) and Dane Mitchell, Radiant Matter Part 1, installation view, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, 2011 (photograph by Bryan James)

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Tintoretto at the Venice Biennale


Three Tintoretto masterpieces will be included in this year's ILLUMinations exhibition at the Venice Biennale. They are The Stealing of the Dead Body of St Mark, the Creation of the Animals and the Last Supper.

Tintoretto's work has been acknowledged source of inspiration for the exhibition since its theme was first announced in October. Curator Bice Curiger sees commonalities between the Venetian master's quest and a lot of contemporary art practice that tilts against convention. "Tintoretto too was worried about overturning the conventions of his time, through the near reckless approach to composition that overturns the well-defined classical order of the Renaissance", she says.

In return for the loan of the paintings, the biennale foundation will fund the restoration of the three works.
Image: Tintoretto's The Stealing of the Dead Body of St Mark