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Singapore Arts Festival

The Singapore Arts Festival first began in 1977 as a national arts festival celebrating the local arts activities of Singapore's diverse communities. Over the last three decades, the Festival, organised by the National Arts Council, has played a symbiotic and catalytic role in the development of the artistic and cultural life of Singapore. It has helped to transform the city's cultural landscape, turning it into one of Asia's major cultural capitals today. It has influenced the work of artists and has since generated a growing public demand for the arts, spawning new cultural platforms, events, and movements that help underpin the lively cultural scene in present Singapore.

Singapore Arts Festival :: 15 May - 14 June

Direct Digital

Direct Digital è organizzato da Artegenti in collaborazione con Movimenta.

Direct Digital

David Claerbout

David Claerbout

22 May – 1 August 2009, Hauser & Wirth London, Piccadilly

Since the mid 1990s, David Claerbout has made extraordinary video installations, often combining moving and still images to unsettle the delineation between past and present. Impacting subtle philosophical reflections, his works are strikingly sensual, using every constitutive element available — pixel constellations, image sequences, speed, speech, music and ambient sound, installation environment and the technologies used to convey these — to elicit new modes of perceptual absorption. Three new projection pieces will be on display at Hauser & Wirth London. Although very different on first appearance, they each have a common concern with sound; for all the painterly and statuesque qualities that Claerbout invests in these moving images, he describes the works as ‘audio pieces, embedded in video.’

Riverside (2009), installed in the main gallery, consists of a two-channel video installation with stereo audio headphones. One projection depicts the story of a woman, the other that of a man. Set in a valley with a small river below, both characters unconsciously move towards each other, engulfed in their individual stories. They remain separated both geographically and in time, like the projection screens on which they make their journeys. He is moving from East to West, while she starts from the opposite direction. At one point they both cross a river at the same location, where a dead tree trunk traverses it. Precisely at the point where the landscape would geographically join the two characters, the viewer realises with certainty that the man and the woman are in the same valley, in the same place, but at different moments in time. There is no reconciliation but for the sound of the river, which brings the viewer to the subtle protagonist of the work. During the 25 minutes journey, each film has a ‘broken’ audio-channel. Her film lacks the right channel, while his lacks the left. As they both sit on the tree trunk, the sound of the river unfolds like an open space in our brain. Riverside translates the lack of narrative resolution into an audio phenomenon: that of aural completion through stereophony, after an impaired journey.

Downstairs in the vault room, Sunrise (2009), an 18 minute video installation, thrusts the viewer into near-total darkness, requiring their eyes to acclimatise to the film which depicts a nocturnal scene inside a villa. A maid is seen setting up breakfast, the deliberate movements of this archetypal figure elegantly conforming to the severe geometries and exact proportions of the house. Through its exaggerated sense of composition the architecture presents itself as a sleeping monument to a past Utopia, or perhaps a prison for life. Yet rather than witnessing its stirring to life, the camera follows the girl as she finishes her shift and cycles off into the surrounding countryside. The darkness gives way to sudden and brilliant sunlight, momentarily blinding the viewer again as Rachmaninov’s Vocalise is heard. The balance of the film turns in these final minutes from mute perfection to a flood of emotion. Although filmed as a classical end sequence, it feels like a beginning.

In The American Room (1st movement) (2009), a single-channel video installation shot and shown in the gallery’s eponymous upstairs space, music creates a spatial dialogue between spectator and listener. The perspective is that of a slow camera which travels around the audience of an intimate concert, allowing an almost stereoscopic vision, as though the viewer were actually there. Subtle interventions put into question the individual authority of photographic stillness, filmed motion and spatial distance: the listeners have been scanned using stills, not a video camera, creating an immobility that contrasts with the rhythm and continuity advocated by the music. A three-dimensional — virtual — space allows for infinite camera movement. However this has been purposely constrained to mimic a conventional camera’s path. This relationship between movement and stillness is translated very literally into the breathing in and holding of breath. The moments in which we hear the singer are also those in which she is off-screen — moments as long as a breath can hold.

David Claerbout was born in 1969 in Kortrijk, Belgium, and lives and works in Antwerp. He studied at the National Hoger Instituut voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp, from 1992 to 1995, and benefited from the DAAD, Berlin, between 2002 and 2003. A major solo exhibition of his work ‘The Shape of Time’ opened at the Pompidou Center, Paris (2007), and toured to MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge MA (2008), Kunstmuseum, St Gallen (2008), Morris and Helen Belkin art Gallery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver (2008), and De Pont, Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg (2009). Other solo shows include ‘Background Time — Gezeiten’ at Akademie der Künste, Berlin (2005); Dundee Contemporary Arts Centre (2005); and Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (2005).

GALLERY HOURS Tuesday to Saturday 10am – 6pm

FORTHCOMING EXHIBITIONS ZÜRICH:
PAUL MCCARTHY - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 7 June – 25 July 2009
JOAN MITCHELL - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 7 June – 25 July 2009
PIPILOTTI RIST - Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Limmatstrasse 270, 29 August – 17 October 2009

FORTHCOMING EXHIBITIONS LONDON:
MARTIN EDER - Hauser & Wirth London, 15 Old Bond Street, 10 – 16 September 2009
SUBODH GUPTA - Hauser & Wirth London, 196a Piccadilly, 10 – 16 September 2009

Exhibitions — David Claerbout — Hauser & Wirth

DAVID BLANDY

"DAVID BLANDY
27 April - 19 July 2009
The Barefoot Lone Pilgrim

BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art presents The Barefoot Lone Pilgrim, a video by David Blandy.

David Blandy’s work deals with his problematic relationship with popular culture, integrating fantasy adventures with real life in a search for his cultural position in the world. His video performance work The Barefoot Lone Pilgrim documents a journey of discovery. The Pilgrim, is a lone character wearing the orange robes of a Buddhist Shaolin Monk and carrying a portable record player. In his episodic adventure he is searching for ‘soul’, as a hermit in an 18th Century Park in Surrey, on an American road trip, journeying through the Lake District and the city of London."

Exhibitions - BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art

Voies Off

For thirteen years now, The Voies Off festival has offered an alternative look on emerging photography with its own specificities, its evolution and its struggles...

The evening shows staged by the Rencontres d'Arles Voies off Festival have become a worldwide reference for the discovery of new artists and the follow-up of photographic creation. Through its themes, the festival takes a critical look at the evolution of the present world. Each year, around twenty different nationalities are represented at the Festival Voies Off.

Voies Off - Photographie en Arles : Festival - Galerie - Labo

Significant and Unsignificant events

26 May 2009 – 16 August 2009

This exhibition explores the meaning of events deeply steeped in military pageantry that can appear to the viewer as bearers of lofty significance and value, and a number of apparently random and puzzling events, which are in fact loaded with hidden meaning. Through the juxtaposition of the works of three artists, Amar Kanwar, Shahzia Sikander and Pascual Sisto, this program suggests that events that are rooted in tradition and in courtly spectacles follow similar modes and rituals of anodyne events (as one can gather from the procession of joggers and cyclists in Pascual Sisto’s Beneath the Paving Stones the Beach and the retinue of army bands in Shahzia Sikander’s Bending the Barrel).

As all the events depicted follow a stringent and yet enigmatic logic, the viewer will question which event is devoid and which one is full of meaning.

The title of this exhibition is culled from a sentence that overlays an image of a Pakistani army band in Shahzia Sikander’s latest video Bending the Barrel.

İstanbul Museum Of Modern Art

International Kansk Video Festival

VIII International Kansk Video Festival

Dates: August 23-29, 2009

Place: Kansk (Krasnoyarsk region)

International Kansk Video Festival (Russia/Siberia) is not a conventional film festival. It is an experiment in time and space. The place…. the small Siberian city of Kansk, was found on the Internet by chance and selected as its name correlates with the Cannes Film Festival, Kansk in the Russian language is pronounced the same as Cannes. I grew as an artistic joke….Siberia having it’s own ‘Festival de Cannes’.
Since 2002 in the depths of Siberia the festival happens annually. Far way from the Côte d\'Azur to the severe Taiga climate, 7000 km from London, 4500 km from Moscow and 300 km from Krasnoyarsk by ‘Irons Road’, and the Trans-Siberian Railway. In an area full of wonderful and brave Siberian people, pelmeni, cedar nuts, even buses reminiscent to the old school buses of a long lost Soviet a place full magic. The Kansk Video festival has grown immeasurably from it’s 2002 beginnings, each year it hosts an international jury from the industry and artistic communities, running international film and video-art competitions with a special screenings program and a bank of ideas for a further 150 years of the festivals future. The festival promotes new names of independent and uncompromising video and filmmakers.

International Kansk Video Festival - Международный Канский Видео Фестиваль - Home page

Eldorado - Tris Vonna-Michell

Eldorado - Tris Vonna-Michell
27.05.09 - 26.07.09
La Mostra | Cenni Biografici | Soci

Eldorado: Tris Vonna-Michell
Studio A: Monumental Detours / Insignificant Fixtures (2008 – ongoing)
A cura di Alessandro Rabottini
28 maggio – 26 luglio 2009

Inaugurazione: 27 maggio 2009, ore 19.30


La GAMeC – Galleria d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Bergamo presenta la prima personale in un'istituzione italiana dell'artista inglese Tris Vonna-Michell.

La mostra è parte del programma Eldorado, che la GAMeC dedica ormai da anni agli artisti emergenti più interessanti sulla scena internazionale, invitati a presentare un progetto site-specific commissionato per l'occasione.

Il lavoro di Tris Vonna-Michell è una complessa costruzione narrativa che si sviluppa nel tempo e che l'artista costruisce come un racconto in divenire attraverso l'uso di molteplici mezzi come performance, video e suono. Tris Vonna-Michell è un viaggiatore della memoria che attraversa il passato e il presente, proiettando la quotidianità sulla storia e intrecciando le proprie esperienze personali con l'eco di avvenimenti all'apparenza estranei tra loro.

Il titolo della mostra Studio A: Monumental Detours / Insignificant Fixtures (2008 – ongoing) indica che a comporla sono due installazioni che convergono in un'unica, complessa costruzione fatta di voci, racconti e immagini che provengono da luoghi e tempi tra loro distanti.
Il punto di partenza è Studio A, un'installazione già presentata alla Biennale di Berlino del 2008 e al Museo d'Arte Contemporanea di Detroit nel 2009, riproposta in una nuova versione, pensata per gli ambienti della GAMeC e che, in quest'occasione, si intreccia con il lavoro inedito Monumental Detours/ Insignificant Fixtures. Studio A è un'installazione in progress che ha come soggetto la città di Detroit e la sua storia, uno spazio in cui realtà e finzione si sovrappongono: se, infatti, negli anni Venti Detroit costituiva una florida promessa di espansione industriale e di benessere, oggi la città è il teatro principale della crisi globale dell'industria automobilistica. Studio A è, quindi, un complesso set dove passato e presente si incontrano e mettono in scena il capitalismo come luogo dell'aspirazione e, al contempo, della disillusione.
Ma a Detroit è stato ambientato anche RoboCop, il film di fantascienza urbana del 1987 che aveva come protagonista un poliziotto cyborg. Una fantasia dai toni oscuri su giustizia e sopruso e in cui l'immagine un tempo futuribile della metropoli americana si risolve in una metafora di fallimento. In Studio A convergono materiali di archivio, immagini e suoni frutto della permanenza dell'artista a Detroit nel 2007: la città diventa quindi non solo oggetto di un'archeologia industriale e della memoria, ma anche uno spazio di proiezione personale, dove le fantasie individuali si sovrappongono alla storia e alla finzione cinematografica.

A questa nuova edizione di Studio A si aggiunge l'opera inedita Monumental Detours / Insignificant Fixtures, anch'essa frutto dei viaggi che l'artista ha compiuto a Detroit tra il 2007 e il 2008. Quest'esperienza confluisce nella stesura di un testo, in cui non solo l'artista racconta i suoi attraversamenti quotidiani di questo ambiente post-industriale, ma anche di un sogno fatto alla fine della sua permanenza. In questo modo, l'esperienza conscia della città e quella inconscia convergono in questa sorta di breve diario di bordo, cui si aggiungono altre fonti sonore registrate all'aperto, come se l'esterno della città si riversasse all'interno del museo.

Le installazioni di Tris Vonna-Michell sono componimenti ricchi di mistero e suggestione, partiture architettoniche in cui il suono, la luce e gli oggetti più comuni, provenienti da un passato più o meno recente e comunque rimosso, diventano casse di risonanza di un'esperienza assolutamente individuale, cioè quella dell'artista, in cui viaggio, memoria, finzione e invenzione convivono.

In occasione della mostra il materiale sonoro di Monumental Detours / Insignificant Fixtures è stato inciso su un disco 33 giri prodotto dalla GAMeC in collaborazione con la Kunsthalle di Zurigo. Il vinile è stampato in un'edizione di cui alcune copie, numerate e firmate dall'artista, esistono in tiratura limitata.


La mostra è parte di una serie in onore di Arturo Toffetti.

Eldorado - Tris Vonna-Michell