Tag Archives: exhibition

“Lia Perjovschi Knowledge Museum Kit, Dan Perjovschi Daily, Weekly, Monthly”

Solo_07

Din 2 februarie s-a deschis expozitia expozitia “Lia Perjovschi Knowledge Museum Kit, Dan Perjovschi Daily, Weekly, Monthly” la Galeria IFA din Berlin (Linienstrasse 139/140 Berlin Mitte). Expozitia va ramane deschisa pana pe 15 April va fi itinerata la Stuttgart (galeria ifa) intre 20 iulie si 23 septembrie.

This series of exhibitions by the ifa Galleries Berlin and Stuttgart of the Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations is entitled “Solo for …”. These are solo exhibitions for artists who first exhibited in the ifa Galleries years ago, at the beginning of their international careers. Today, Gülsün Karamustafa and Ay?e Erkmen from Turkey, Dan and Lia Perjovschi from Rumania, Moshekwa Langa from South Africa or Liina Siib from Estonia – to name but a few – are active internationally: They live, work and teach – in most cases on a temporary basis – in New York and Amsterdam, in Vienna and Frankfurt a. M.. Their work can be seen at the documenta, at the Biennale in Venice, in São Paulo, Istanbul and Gwangju. Institutions like the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin or the Tate Modern in London invite them to stage large projects, extensive individual exhibitions and retrospectives. More on this, here.

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The Meal – One moment. One meal. One photograph. Let’s eat.

meal

On February 24th at 12pm EST, join thousands of people around the world in a simultaneous global meal. Whether it’s breakfast in LA or a midnight snack in Beijing, let’s take a moment from our hectic lives and share it with strangers around the world. Snap a photo of yourself and your meal and mail it to us — we’ll create an exhibition from these self-portraits, documenting the world’s largest communal snack.

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Chiosc / Kiosk exhibition at Rondo Sztuki Galeria+ in Katowice, Poland

Chiosc

Chiosc / Kiosk exhibition with participating artists: Tonka Malekovic [HR] & Ion Fisticanu [MD], Pawel Mendrek [PL] and Ewa Zasada [PL], Krystyna Nikiel [PL], Lukasz Obalek [PL], Jarek Sedlak [CZ], Bartek Skrzyczek [PL], Leslaw Tetla [PL], Vladimir Us [MD], Kasia Wolny [PL], Joanna Zdzienicka [PL]. Curators: Leslaw Tetla [PL], Vladimir Us [MD]

http://chiosc.oberliht.com/2011/12/15/kiosk/

Rondo Sztuki Galeria +
opening: December 15, 2011, 18:00
address: Rondo im. Gen. Jerzego Zietka 1, Katowice, Poland
http://rondosztuki.pl
program: 15/12/2011 – 05/01/2012
Tue-Fri: 11:00 – 19:00
Sat-Sun: 10:00 – 18:00
contact: + 48 32 720 11 32

free entrance

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Expo: “Stop the demolition of Cinema Komsomol”

The event opens one major theme, and the occasion is the old cinema Komsomol/Kosmos*.

The city council of Plovdiv recently voted the removal of the cinema building and its replacement by a multistory garage and a commercial-administrative building – may be the next Mall. This is happening in the very central part of Plovdiv, in immediate closeness to an old, once bourgeois residential neighborhood with narrow streets and
emblematic architecture.

The building of the cinema itself is a valuable example of modern architecture. Cinema Komsomol was designed in 1960 by architect Liubomir Shinkov and arch. Liubomir Bonev and was completed in 1964. Although too large in comparison to the surrounding secesión or simply plain small houses the building still impresses with its proportionate volumes and specific details.

A few are the architectural details sealed in the mind of every Plovdivian; the curving staircase in the lobby, the pleated “origami” facade on one side followed by a glass wall opening a view to that beautiful staircase from outside. The emblematic value of the cinema is undeniable for the generations who remember the crowds of visitors at the square in front of the building.

Once the largest and the most modern cinema in Plovdiv with 900 seats amphitheater it was devoid of function in the mid 90′s. Nearly 15 years the cinema has been idle until the end of 2010, when the city council pronounced it completely unnecessary for the Plovdivians and their generations. The City council voted a change of purpose and status of the current property . A great cinema building was pronounced best to turn into a garage. From a public building with cultural purpose it became a private municipal property and a garage on paper.

Penka Popova and George Serbezov
24 January – 28 February

supported by Open Arts Foundation
more info: http://openarts.info/?p=873
http://daspasimkinokosmos.blogspot.com/

artnewscafe /// Plovdiv, Bulgaria, 38 Otets Paisiy str. www.artnewscafe.com

Penka Popova and George Serbezov react to the last events and by invitation of artnewscafe and Open Arts Foundation put together a documental exposition while aiming to provoke a discussion and save the building in the very end. Everybody is welcome to join , support or discuss the matter.

The presentation on at artnewscafe will address questions which are extremely important and very much neglected in the public domain. What has been happening with the urban space of Plovdiv in recent years? What is our response to these changes ? What is our relationship with the places we inhabit? What are the priorities and official policies of the
city and what future they draw? What happens when a parking space is more important than clean air and cultural activities? Who makes the decisions for us and why don’t we participate in the process? How many office buildings, shopping malls, food chains and garages are sufficient in a city like Plovdiv? What does the demolition of a building means for an entire neighborhood?

Bring and share with us your findings on cinema Komsomol/Kosmos !

In artnewscafe, Plovdiv is exposed the entire collection of documents, video, archival and new photos, all obtained during the “info excavations” at the archival center, the municipal institution and in the conversations with one of
the authors of the building arch. Liubomir Shinkov as well as with other experts and architects. You will be able to look at the documented views and decisions of the authorities concerning the case. An audio file of the discussion at the session of the city council leading to the fatal decision will be available.

The exposition presenting old and new photographs, plans and other documentation will be on view every day from January 24th to February 28th in artnewscafe

*The name of the cinema was changed in the 90s to “Kosmos”

—SARIEV GALLERY
www.sariev-gallery.com

—ARTNEWSCAFE
www.artnewscafe.com

—OPEN ARTS Foundation
www.openarts.info

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Utopia of Exotic at Pavilion Unicredit in Bucharest

The exotic subject, whatever it may be, is first assigned two essential qualities, namely the great distance between the analytical entity and the formal unusual/weird characteristics. But the farther an object is from the analyst, the less worthy it becomes of being examined. The proposition of knowledge is substituted by the proposition of indifference and superficiality of being known. When we talk of nation-states-societies we can easily say that pursuing naively an utopian system of values, one could imagine that exoticism implies a certain type of reciprocity between subject and analyst. Somewhere along the way a vague connection is established between the one being determined and the one that determines. Nonetheless Western society has assumed the role of absolute analyst. Thus, the type of relation towards the apparently exotic space modifies its assessment parameters… Therefore throughout history, exotic space was a locus of social, economic and political experiments, generated by utopian ideas and ideologies. The hypothesis  of potential for non-Western space to transform into a social paradise was  demolished by twentieth-century history through violent and traumatizing arguments. Utopia, whether a concept, an idea, a semblance or a reality can be regarded as such: the exotic can be treated as an utopian subject precisely due to the lack of reciprocity between analyst and subject. In this sense Utopia of Exotic, an inquiry into what the two terms mean nowadays, explores economic, social and political aspects of what Western society considers exotic land or culture, trying to underline the utopian character of the term exotic.” (Extras from the text “Utopia of Exotic” by Andrei Craciun, from the publication with the same title).

Utopia of ExoticDecember 09, 2010 – February 27, 2011

UTOPIA OF EXOTIC

Opening: December 9, 2010, 19:00

Curator: Andrei Craciun

Participants: Kristoffer Ardena (ES/PH), Tania Bruguera (CU), Lado Darakhvelidze (GE / NL), gold extra (A), Hong-An Truong (US), Yoshinori Niwa (JP), Saviana Stanescu (RO/US)

Publication: “Utopia of Exotic” with texts by Anne Alexander, Tania Bruguera, Andrei Craciun, Walter Mignolo, Saviana Stanescu. Edited by PAVILION – journal of politics and culture, English/Romanian, 80 pages, B/W, 14,8 x 21,0 cm, softcover, 4 EURO / 12 RON.

OPENING party & live concert with
HANDSOME FURS & UMA SWAN in CONTROL CLUB
(www.control-club.ro), December 10, 2010, 22.00 hours
The gig is organized by ONEDAY.RO

To be keeped posted you can RSVP on FB at
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=122122791184150&index=1


Image: Kristoffer Ardena, Apparition, sculpture/photography, dimensions variable, 2008. Courtesy of the artist.

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Ciprian Muresan at Wilkinson Gallery

Ciprian Muresan @ WilkinsonWilkinson Gallery is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition of Romanian artist, Ciprian Muresan in the UK.
Muresan’s work is an evocative response to his own politically tumultuous milieu; his art is rooted in a confrontation with this history and an artistic commitment to locate it within personal and collective experiences and the history of art itself. Whilst the immediate context of Muresan’s work is the turbulent years of post-communist Romania, his body of work is a delicate but ranging consideration of global socio-political issues creating a powerful and often unsettling artistic narrative. His has recently had work shown at the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the New Museum (New York) and The Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago (Chicago), and had two successful solo shows this year, at n.b.k – Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (Berlin) and Plan B (Berlin).

Muresan’s art is profoundly aware of the history of art; intelligently referencing and recontexualising art and literary
history. For example his work The End of the Five Year Plan, 2004, is a reinterpretation of Maurizio Cattelan’s controversial La Nona Ora, 1999. Muresan’s 2004 reinterpretation replaces Cattelan’s decrepit global icon, Pope John Paul II, with the Orthodox Patriarch. Locating the work within recent Romanian political history, Muresan’s reinterpretation transcends Cattelan’s initial connotations of contemporary iconography and the deconstruction of protective authority. Muresan forms an assault against the Orthodox Church’s relationship with Nicolae Ceausescu‘s brutal regime and the blurring of secular and religious distinction. This reinterpretation of existing art work is central to Muresan’s practice, as Nicolas Bourriaud has conceptualized, this method of production; whereby artists interpret and reclaim preexisting objects, is an art of ‘postproduction’. National identity is a further defining narrative within the work or Ciprian Muresan. Romanian Blood, 2004 sets a precedent for this opposition toward the ideological falsification of history and national identity. The very paradox of this image is the tricolor of red, yellow and blue which run from the wrist of this individual; seemingly the ‘blood’ of a true patriot, except this ignoble death is surely a renunciation of any patriotic responsibility. It is this incomprehensible construction or idea of national identity that Muresan challenges. Muresan strives to create a more personal, less reified identity, and champions a sincere and proudly ambiguous alternative. This alternative perspective is evident in Choose…, 2005, which documents Vlad Muresan mixing Pepsi and Coca-Cola in a glass. Whilst most overtly the act of defining these two indistinguishable, late capitalist products, appears to be a commentary on the invasive nature of corporate branding strategies, the work can equally be understood as a comment on the vacuity of false identities, which in essence all brands are.

Ciprian Muresan’s exhibition at Wilkinson is a culmination of those existing narratives that punctuate his work. 4’33”,
2008, which takes its title and dimensions from John Cage’s original 1952 composition, is an alternative view of post- industrialism. Like Cage’s original piece, the soundscape of Muresan’s 4’33” is governed by an eerie stillness, the frozen machines and echo of the departed work force are a somber memorial to a former epoch of productivity.

Muresan’s dispute is with a failed utopianism and subsequent social decay that leaves a factory in this languid state, neither communism nor subsequent privatization could prevent this erosion. Communist manifesto, pig latin translation, 2007 is an intriguing obfuscation of the Communist manifesto. The reduction of this text to mere playful jargon is an ironic statement, but also a remark upon the ever-complicated reading of communism. The culmination of the exhibition is the deeply unsettling Dog Luv, 2009. Visually, the film’s atmospheric, indeed chiaroscuro, use of light is mysterious and striking. Muresan re-interprets a text by Romanian playwright Saviana Stanescu and the narrative extends a powerful and brutal portrait of humanity’s history of torture and execution. This dark and theatrical vision of society presents a world where choice, security and authority are bought into question.

It is often the unknown or the unseen that forms the dialogue within Muresan’s art; meanings lie beneath metaphor and insinuation, yet once uncovered there is a frankness that disconcerts the viewer and demands reflection. Muresan’s view is not linear, his inquisition of life is complex and there are no direct answers, instead an unsettling question mark lies over society.

Ciprian Muresan lives and works in Cluj (Romania), he is the co-editor of VERSION and editor of IDEA art + society
magazine. Recent solo exhibitions include ‘Ciprian Muresan’ at n.b.k. – Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin, ‘How I Wonder What You Are’ at Plan B, Berlin. He has also exhibited in the Romanian Pavilion at the 2009 53 rd Venice Biennale. He is represented by Plan B, Cluj.

Ciprian Muresan at Wilkinson (50-58 Vyner Street, London) – 2.09.2010 – 3.10.2010.

For more info: www.wilkinsongallery.com

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Sorin Campan at Plan B

Galeria Plan BGaleria Plan B is pleased to announce the solo exhibition of the Romanian artist Sorin Campan (born 1940, lives and works in Cluj, Romania).

Among the long-term projects of Plan B, one strand of research and exhibition engages and seeks to revaluate a group of remarkable painters active in Romania between 1970–2000. We believe the works these artists produced can contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the period when they were made, and that they have not lost any of their poignancy in the intervening years. These works visualize a double removal: they were made at a distance from the official artistic establishment of the ’70s and ’80s, and have not succumbed, like many of their contemporaries, to a mimetic rehearsal of international models after ’89. In the majority of cases, the paintings never left the studio, and were undervalued, both culturally and economically, after 1989. We are proposing them as possible landmarks in a yet-unwritten history of the Romanian art scene, but also as models of artistic and social behavior.

Sorin Campan “Ora si loc”

February 19 – March 13, 2010
Tuesday – Saturday, 16 – 20 h
Str. Henri Barbusse 59-61 . 400616 Cluj

Sorin Campan’s works achieve their appearance of simplicity via a series of detours and through a nuanced reflection on the insturments of painting. Their enigmatic articulation demands a patient reading: simple images like nocturnal landscapes or still lives with fruit are pretexts to localize mystery, to subject it to a kind of order, which does not coincide with its translation or explanation. Beyond the always surprising dosage of transparency and secrecy, the quality of the painting – the austerity of means and the often exuberant chromatics – make Campan a remarkable artist. From a handful of artists, less visible but whose art continues to address us, Sorin Campan stands apart not by the size or number of works, but by his genuine, calm investigation of and with the medium of painting.

For further information please contact the gallery at +40.740658555 or contact(at)plan-b.ro

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Call: Filmer la Musique (Paris)

Is a music film festival in Paris, with a strong focus on independant and innovative productions. With more than 80 movies and 120 videos presented over three years, Filmer la Musique is the main music film festival in France.
FILMER LA MUSIQUE #4 will take place from june 8 to 13, 2010 in three different locations in Paris.

Deadline for the call for entries is february 25, 2010.

Music related documentaries, narrative features and shorts, raw rushes, phone films, music videos, filmed performances and concert films ….

There are no restrictions regarding shooting format, length, or year of production.

Info, rules and submission form on www.filmerlamusique.com
Pictures and trailer on www.myspace.com/filmerlamusique
Join the Filmer la Musique group on facebook for regular updates.

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Monument to Transformation

galerija miroslav kraljevic
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Monument to Transformation
20 January – 20 February 2010

Lia PerjovschiGalerija Miroslav Kraljevic invites you to see “Monument to Transformation” (20 January – 20 February 2010).

Artur Zmijewski, Lise Harlev, Anggun Priambodo, Fernardo Sanchez Castillo, Anibal Lopez, Lia Perjovschi, Lida Abdul, Ivan Moudov, Jiri Kovanda, Erick Beltran.

Curated by: Vit Havranek & Zbynek Baladran

Photo: Lia Perjovschi, Mental Maps, 2009

Exhibition opening:  Wednesday, 20 January 2010, 7 pm

Galerija Miroslav Kraljevic, Subiceva 29, Zagreb

The exhibition presents the outcome of more than two years of researching ‘social transformation’ . It is conceived as an imaginative and analytical space that – with a certain distance – enables the visitor to see and reflect the processes of change that started by the fall of the Iron Curtain and have to an extent continued until the present. The way this topic is approached is influenced by a feeling of affiliation to these changes which are in a way co-formed by us and whose impact affects and influences us. It is therefore an attempt to look at ‘transformation’ as at a ‘lived out’ and gradually receding process.

While researching transformation processes, we abandoned the reductive theories of the region that we come from and that we represent. We extended research to artistic and theoretical outputs that reflect the transformations in Spain, Indonesia, Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Germany, Albany, Mexico and Poland. The attempt to newly formulate trans-local specifics of transformation meant to abandon the stigmatic construction of so-called “Eastern Europe” and opt for a differentiated, authoritative and new map of the world of transformation.

One of the possible ways how to approach this exhibition is to see it as a layer with various artifacts that are mutually connected. The exhibition presents a group of theoretical and artistic outputs that go back together to a certain time and place and represent a sum of past activities. The motif of this common return to the past is the need to destroy the clarity and definiteness of the view of the ‘transformation’ that one has gained through individual experience.

(Vit Havranek and Zbynek Baladran)

The exhibition is organized by tranzit and Galerija Miroslav Kraljevic. Main partner of the project “Monument to Transformation”: ERSTE Stiftung. The exhibition is supported by Embassy of the Czech Republic in Zagreb.

www.monumenttotransformation.org

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Call for projects for the Artwall Gallery 2009

The Center for Contemporary Art Prague announces the call for projects for the Artwall Gallery.

History of the Artwall Gallery
Since 2005, the Artwall Gallery has occupied an outstanding outdoor space consisting of eight large stone frames within the wall supporting the Letna Hill on the kpt. Jarose and Edvarda Benese Embankment in the downtown area of Prague. In May 2008, the Prague Municipality decided to terminate the leasing contract on the pretext of the “Collective Identity” exhibition by a Czech art group Guma Guar (see www.artwall.cz), thus practically liquidating the Artwall Gallery. Currently, the Center for Contemporary Art aims at renewing the contract and the exhibition program. If we succeed, we are planning to exhibit four projects between spring and fall 2009.

Theme
This year’s theme, “Vox Populi”, is a continuation of the last year’s program and was inspired by visually dominant character of the exhibition space that guarantees an efficient and rather authoritative communication with the public. The project aims at critical analysis of the notion of “The voice of the People” that has served democratic as well as demagogic purposes. At the same time it is exploring the authority of the artist confronted with the public space. Judged by the heated debate engendered by the “Collective Identity” exhibition we assume that the theme Vox Populi in combination with the commanding space is able to capture attention of a wide audience and amplify the role of contemporary art within our society.

Technical parameters of the project
The proposed projects should be in the form of seven vertical images (the eighth frame will contain the title of the exhibition) providing a sufficient information about the visual appearance of the project. The selected projects will be printed out as large scale digital prints on foil
(each approx. 400 x 210 cm). We can send you the exact size of the individual frames, on request. Please, send the proposal together with a concise written description of its concept to zuzana.stefkova@fcca.cz as jpg or pdf. The deadline is on the 28th of February 2009.

We are looking forward to your proposals.

On behalf of the Center for Contemporary Art Prague

Zuzana Stefkova
Curator

Project is realised by the Center for Contemporary Art Prague, with the financial support of Ministry of Culture Czech Republic, and City Prague
Media partners: Respekt, Umelec, A2 kulturni tydenik

Zuzana Stefkova
zuzana.stefkova@email.cz
Centre of Contemporary Art, Prague
www.fcca.cz
Tel: +420 731 512 512
Tato zprava byla odeslana z emailoveho adresare AKCE CCA,
CSU Praha, o pripadne vyskrtnuti z listu pozadejte prosim na adrese:
ludvik.hlavacek@fcca.cz

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