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Tobias Putrih

Artist Tobias Putrih uses everyday materials such as cardboard, Styrofoam™, and plywood to produce fragile structures that span from small modular objects to larger installation environments. Recent work has featured Putrih's collaboration with MOS, a collective of designers and architects that creates software and uses customized tools of parametric design to produce simple but highly complex structures and buildings. The two principals, Michael Meredith and Hilary Sample, teach at Harvard University and Yale University while maintaining the practice. In a recent installation Overhang, shown at the Baltic Center for Contemporary Art, (England) Putrih and MOS created a Styrofoam™ brick structure in a constant verge of collapse. The project was based on a mathematical problem that determines the maximum overhang of a brick stack—the software developed by MOS generates brick stacks in minimal structural equilibrium. Intervention #10, created for the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, (the Netherlands) continued to examine aesthetic values of original parametric design through the creation of a primitive arch.

Current Exhibitions | List Visual Arts Center

Biennale Internazionale Arte Plurale

Arte Plurale è un evento promosso dalla Città di Torino, Divisione Servizi Sociali e Rapporti con le Aziende Sanitarie, Settore Disabili in collaborazione con le Divisioni: Servizi Culturali, Settore Arti Visive e Servizi Educativi, Progetto Integrazione e Politiche per l’Integrazione, Settore Integrazione Educativa, ITER / Istituzione per un’Educazione Responsabile di Torino e la Circoscrizione 8.

L’edizione 2009 presenta un’esposizione di pitture, sculture, installazioni, fotografie, video e altri manufatti realizzati – durante gli ultimi due anni - da coppie o gruppi di artisti, studenti e persone con disabilità o disagio psichico, all’interno di istituzioni scolastiche, servizi diurni o servizi educativi museali ed ecomuseali a Torino, in altre città italiane, europee ed extraeuropee.
L’evento espositivo sarà animato da: una mini rassegna cinematografica; laboratori didattici rivolti al pubblico di ogni età; spettacoli musicali e teatrali curati dalle Associazioni che aderiscono al progetto cittadino “Motore di Ricerca: comunità attiva”.
All’interno dello spazio espositivo sarà possibile, inoltre, acquistare prodotti artigianali e artistici, realizzati da persone con disabilità, presentati da “InGenio, bottega di arti e antichi mestieri della Città” di Torino.



Biennale Internazionale Arte Plurale. Un progetto di arte contemporanea - a carattere relazionale - in contesti educativi

Ulrich Vogl

Paolo Maria Deanesi Gallery is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition by Berlin-based artist Ulrich Vogl. The technique of drawing is at the core of Ulrich Vogl's œuvre. Using a process-based and analytical approach however he takes this technique into new spheres: drawings in the classical sense - works on paper - are the exception. Instead, his works are mainly films, objects or even installations. The expression "Extension of drawing", already the title of an exhibition and a catalogue, epitomises Vogl's approach and can be considered the leitmotiv of his artistic practice.

Under the title watching the stars Ulrich Vogl now presents a new nucleus of works, especially created for this exhibition. In five partially serial works Vogl proposes his entire artistic vocabulary, transforming the night sky, the stars and astronomical instruments into inventive and fascinating pieces. The artistic engagement with the stars is however not to be considered an illustration of astronomical facts. For Vogl, rather, the stars represent a metaphor for something inexplicable, romantic, sensual and unattainable. The technical apparatus, which appear repeatedly in watching the stars, form the rational antithesis to this. Magical and rational elements are played off against one another, whilst remaining in a state of equilibrium.
As in previous exhibitions by Vogl, the spectator is invited to directly interact with the pieces. Following the reception theory the works only become complete by means of viewer presence and interaction. With the artist's help the spectator slips into the role of an explorer, discovering the infinite vastness of the cosmos. Shimmering drawings, telescopes and seductive objects recalling a section of the firmament are permanent companions of ours whilst travelling through space and time.

Paolo Maria Deanesi Gallery

Ariel Orozco

For the show at the gallery Ariel Orozco has realized three new installations: Déjà Vu, Whip, Loop and two video titled 5 km, 223 metros de tolerancia and Turista. The objects used by the artist, like a bicycle, a disco ball and a whip, are deprived of their original function to reveal something different from itself that includes, at the same time, the inner nature of the object necessary to the new meaning intended by the artist.

Federica Schiavo Gallery

So Is This

Michael Snow - So Is This

12 November - 19 December 2009

As the opening of a year-long programme of predominantly experimental film works and video installations at mother’s tankstation, we are honoured to present Michael Snow’s canonical 1982 conceptual cinematic work, So Is This.

The strategies Snow employs in this probing, but humour-laden, acknowledged masterpiece are simultaneously simple yet engagingly complex. Ostensibly, ‘So Is This’ is a forty-three minute long, silent film work, to be viewed from beginning to end, constructed solely from intertitles: Snow laboriously shot text, in the form of single, short “light” words, in negative, on celluloid in temporal sequence (now transferred to DVD). This process allows the viewer to mentally cement the ‘narrator’s’ words together to construct sentences and paragraphs. The effect - akin to controlled, depicted thought - is nothing short of mesmeric, and has been politely described by the long-time film critic of The Village Voice; J. Hoberman, as defamiliarizing “…both film and language, creating a kind of moving concrete poetry while throwing a monkey wrench into theoretical debate…”. Although the exploration of film and writing, ‘image’ and text was an important area of investigation in a number of conceptual works throughout the 70s and 80s, Snow’s agenda in ‘So Is This’ was, perhaps, prompted as much by the censors increasing interest in his work as its art-world chronology. Ultimately, it is the artist’s (on-going) and the work’s (particularized) concerns with the freedom of opinion and speech that makes this work timeless and eternally relevant.

The strange social process of reading words on moving celluloid frames in a populated theatre is self-evidently distinct from the self-regulated steady, private reading of words on the page and should perhaps carry a health warning; this film may be especially unsatisfying for those who dislike having others read over their shoulders (no audience rage, please). There is rather, an odd satisfaction in the shared experience, which amplifies the humour, the message, and the conspiratorial nature of an intimacy simultaneously imparted. In an ever-noisier world, there is also a compelling disparity between the silence of the work and the insistently dominant and controlling presence of the ‘narrator’, who carefully draws a distinction, in the third-person party, from the ‘author’. Through the façade of narrator the real power of “the author”, Snow, concentrates special attention on the small words (as the title indicates), which cradle the meaning of more complex sentences. The word – again as indicated by the title – most emphasized is ‘this’, which Snow beautifully describes as “the most present tense word there is”. The individual words that make up the frames are all set to the same margins. The result being, that small words are more emphasized, by dint of taking up a larger portion of the screen, while the longer ones are reduced in scale and impact (and often speed) to fit the margins. The duration of each word on the screen varies greatly, as does the darkness in the pauses between the words. This rhythmic pacing of words and darkness consciously moves the viewer/reader between humour and infuriation. Unlike other textual forms, where you can scan through sentences and paragraphs to make meaning, ‘So Is This’ only allows the audience to read at a pace strictly controlled by the filmmaker, whereby Snow underscores that all information is ultimately a carefully controlled construct.

The words of ‘So Is This’ are typeset in Helvetica font – a standard sans-serif style heavily utilised during the seventies and eighties, and also employed by Kruger and Holzer. However, rather than the adoption of a clean, graphic-studio appearance, Snow focuses in upon the imperfections characteristic to manual typesetting, stressing the humanized presences of the silent disembodied voice/s of the narrator/author. The letterings are sometimes cracked, or slightly fraying at the edges. Similarly, Snow used out-of-date colour film stock to make this ‘black and white’ film, which the viewer soon realizes is not black and white at all, but a range of dark and light colours. Some words have a flicker effect, and at times the ‘white’ text bleeds into a yellow tone, while the ‘black’ background moves toward a dark green. Although minimal in its use of ‘imagery’, ‘So Is This’ maintains a particular beauty in the simplicity of shapes and colours – the serendipitously unpredictable nature of out-of-date film – wherein the film-maker becomes almost a formalist painter in light. It also may seem odd to discuss aesthetic agendas of pattern, rhythm and colour in relation to such a theorized conceptual work like ‘So is This’, but Snow clearly pays indulgent attention to such details, and it is perhaps his masterful deployment of such, to conceptual ends, that adds to the work’s insistent longevity.

mother's tankstation - Contemporary Art Gallery, Watling Street, Dublin 8, Ireland