Showing posts with label PRESS RELEASE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PRESS RELEASE. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2011

Medi(t)ation - 2011 Asian Art Biennial























Curator: Iris Shu-Ping Huang

The National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts (NTMoFA) will present the third Asian Art Biennial from October 1, 2011. Under the direction of staff curator Iris Shu-Ping Huang, this exhibition proposes the theme Medi(t)ation, a concept that reflects the trend across Asia towards an M-shaped societal structure and the related threats it poses, while presenting a strongly communicative Asian cultural stance and stressing methods for mediating conflicts and tensions.

Building upon the models established and developed by the previous two editions of the Biennial since its inception in 2007, the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts encourages and supports in-house curators to conduct research and planning to actively establish a platform for Asian arts and culture exchange through proactive planning and participation, and to further firmly establish Asian aesthetics through international forums and academic presentations.

Medi(t)ation is a neologism coined especially for this exhibition. This term combines the two core concepts of mediation and meditation, stressing mediation of conflict while also standing for the longing for reconciliation inherent in the human spirit. Medi(t)ation refers to exploring changing Asian culture, and how artists search for a middle ground between traditional values and modern cultural development amidst widely varying extreme influences; and how they look for the room for "cultural mediation" over the course of reflection and shifting power structures, to establish their position in the anxious area of global cultural competition.

This exhibition enlists the participation of artists from 20 countries across Asia. Through various creative forms and types of works, they will reflect the cultural essence of Medi(t)ation, stressing subjective self-awareness, communication approaches in response to shifting realities, and means of adjusting to structural transformation. Teams of artists from such countries as Indonesia, the Philippines, China, and Taiwan will also be invited to undertake new on-site commissions, conducting social research surveys, lyrical transfer of everyday language and things, and the inspiration and responses of physical conduct as paths for analyzing Asian reality.

This biennial features 40 artists and collaboration groups, including Shi Jin-Hua, Lin Chuan-Chu, Hamra Abbas, Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan, Leslie de chavez, E Chen, Parastou Forouhar, Shaun Gladwell, Nigel Heyler, Penny Hes Yassour, Ho Tzu Nyen, Dinh Q Le, Ahmet Ögüt, Sopheap Pich , Sara Rahbar, Raqs Media Collective, Shinoda Taro, Tromarama , Tsang Kin-Wah , Xu Tan, Yin Xiuzhen, Yuan Goang-Ming, Andrey Blazhnov, Park Chang Kyong, Bae Young-whan, Min Jung Yeon, Ohmaki Shinji, Aida Makoto, Tiffany Singh, L.N. Tallur, Guy Ben-Ner, Huang Ming-Zheng, Wen Chi-yi, Wawi Nabarroza, Aristarkh Chernyshev, Yee I Lann, Bani Abidi, Samsuddin Wahab, Alexander Ugay, and Michael Rakowitz.

The 2011 Asian Art Biennial will have its opening ceremony at National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts on the night of September 30. The exhibition officially opens to the public on October 1. The biennial's opening will be accompanied by an international Forum and Artist Talks dedicated to discussing Asian contemporary art.

"2011 Asian Art and Curator's Forum" will be held on October 2 and the participating artists at this year's Biennial will be invited to the Artist Talks on Oct. 1 for in-depth analyses on the links between their personal creations and the realities of present day Asia.


Medi(t)ation – 2011 Asian Art Biennial
1 October 2011–1 January 2012

National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts
No.2, Sec. 1, Wu Chuan W. RD.
Taichung 403 Taiwan, R.O.C.
Opening Hours:
Tuesday to Friday: 09:00–17:00
Weekends: 09:00–18:00
Closed on Monday.
Admission free.
T 886-4-2372-3552 #132
www.asianartbiennial.org
www.ntmofa.gov.tw 


Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Press Release for MAM PROJECT 012: TROMARAMA

The first press release for our solo exhibition next July at Mori Art Museum, Japan.
For further information about this exhibition click here. Enjoy :)

Friday, April 2, 2010

Review on Philadelphia City Paper

Another review for our video works "Happy Hour" at Philagrafika 2010. Enjoy.

Last Chance

Catch it or regret it

by Holly Otterbein

After Philagrafika ends on April 11, will the city's galleries, curators, artists and art allies ever again be as harmonious? For the past two months, the inaugural fête celebrating all things print has pervaded seemingly every venue — and medium — in town. It's as if we've all been part of one giant, heretical, ink-stained collective consciousness — a nice change for a community that can feel disjointed and even, occasionally, at odds with itself.

Post-Philagrafika, Philly's arts scene should have more swagger: We know the city can host a print-themed triennial, so why can't it host something like the Whitney Biennial? Additionally, Philagrafika has given us a broader, more easygoing definition of print: Not only is digital photography "print," but so is video, confetti and performance art. It's these little things that should hold us over until the fest returns in three years ("unless it's back in two," says artistic director José Roca).

Of course, Philagrafika 2010's time of death hasn't been called just yet. Consider scurrying to the following shows — exemplars of the festival's Apollonian vibes — before it is.

Temple Gallery

Speaking of prematurely called deaths: Barthélémy Toguo's Heart Beat and Francesc Ruiz's Newsstand (pictured) both cast an eye on print journalism. Copies of the Inquirer, which Toguo scribbled over with a Sharpie, line Temple Gallery's walls, giving viewers a visceral sense of being silenced. Meanwhile, Ruiz constructed a life-size, Philly-style newsstand, complete with original Philly-style newspapers, magazines and Lotto tickets — things he believes are already relics. "Newsstands are the closest thing we had to Internet before it existed," he says. "They are places where you can access all kinds of information, and they are also places of exchange. I think it is necessary to begin to preserve them. Maybe we should create a Museum of the Newsstand." Ends April 11, Tyler School of Art, 2001 N. 13th St., 215-777-9000, temple.edu/tyler/exhibitions.

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

Faced with a society too wrapped up with money, Indonesian-based collective Tromarama bravely resisted making art about its cash-hungry brethren that was pedantic or atrabilious. Instead, Happy Hour is a lighthearted video imagining that money — long the impetus behind unhappiness, suicide and war — has tired of carrying the weight of the world on its shoulders, and enjoys some much-needed R&R. Likewise, urban detritus king Mark Bradford's Untitled (Dementia) pokes fun at a makeshift ad for Alzheimer's sufferers in L.A., but doesn't dwell on its sadness. Ends April 11, Samuel M.V. Hamilton Building, 128 N. Broad St., 215-972-7600, pafa.org.

Print Center

In the Print Center, Space 1026's artwork looks vastly different than it does in the collective's Chinatown digs. The yurt it constructed for Philagrafika (pictured) lacks the abrasive, overstimulating qualities that can sometimes hamper the collective — and not because the Space trashed its tried-and-true eyeball, pyramid and intestine motifs, but rather because the yurt is alone, isolated from a barrage of other wacky Space 1026 works. Additionally, this piece speaks best to the fest's congruency: An exhibit by the Argentinian group Eloisa Cartonera is inside of Space 1026's yurt, like two Russian nesting dolls tucked into one another. Ends April 11, 1614 Latimer St., 215-735-6090, printcenter.org.

The article taken from here.
Published: Mar 23, 2010

Monday, March 15, 2010

Review on The New York Times

Philagrafika 2010 and our new works "Happy Hour" video being review by The New York Times. Here's the article. Enjoy.

What Is Printmaking Today?

Philadelphia Dares to Ask

by Ken Johnson

PHILADELPHIA — The fine art of printmaking is not what it used to be. To produce printed images using tools more sophisticated than potatoes and rubber stamps once required the esoteric knowledge of an alchemist and the manual skills of a surgeon. Today anyone with the right software and a good color printer can make infinitely reproducible images that are hard to distinguish from professionally made drawings, paintings, montages, commercial illustrations and other sorts of pictures. Which raises the question: What should a major, international exhibition devoted to contemporary printmaking entail?

Going by “Philagrafika 2010,” the first in what its organizers hope will become a triennial citywide festival here devoted to the print in contemporary art, the technical possibilities are unbounded. “Philagrafika” includes etchings and woodcuts, vinyl graphics, comic books, videos and complicated, conceptually driven projects intended to raise social consciousness.

Philosophical questions remain. As new mediums proliferate and lines between genres dissolve, you may wonder if there is any value in maintaining printmaking as a separate artistic category. The festival’s chief overseer, José Roca, an independent curator from Colombia, does not equivocate about what he sees as the demise of the traditional print. In his introductory essay in the festival guidebook he asserts, “Fixated on defining the realm of printmaking based on technique, some printmakers have printed themselves into a corner, away from the center of contemporary artistic trends.”

Mr. Roca’s mission is to expand — indeed to explode — received definitions: “Exposing the print component in sculptural, environmental, performance, pictorial and video works and highlighting their relevance to contemporary art” is his goal.

With exhibitions taking place in almost 90 galleries and other sites around the city and works by more than 300 artists on view, “Philagrafika 2010” presents viewers with a daunting challenge. But the core of the event, titled “The Graphic Unconscious,” is doable for day trippers. It consists of five exhibitions at five different institutions and collectively includes 35 artists.

Those most connected to traditional craftsmanship are at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Here, in a handsome show organized by Julien Robson, curator of contemporary art at the academy, Kiki Smith’s sensitive, etched portraits of young men in big hats would be no surprise to Rembrandt. But he might be confounded by her large, sloppy collages incorporating passages of etching, glued-on paper scraps and glitter depicting, for example, a woman fighting big snakes.

A huge woodcut by the German artist Christiane Baumgartner presents an image of bombers from a World War II propaganda film. Its fine, horizontal lines indicate that the image was copied from a television screen. If Gerhard Richter made prints, they might look similarly moody and ominous.

An enormous composition of carved-wood panels and large prints by Orit Hofshi, an Israeli, pictures a shadowy figure walking into a desolate, rocky landscape punctuated by architectural fragments, while the Philadelphia artist Pepón Osorio offers a celebration of life and death in the form of an image of his mother’s X-rayed head ink-jet printed onto a thick bed of glued-together confetti.

Two artists, one American and one Chinese, riff on different kinds of verbal signage. Mark Bradford’s thickly layered works reproduce signs advertising help for people with Alzheimer’s disease; faded and disappearing letters visually pun on memory loss. And Qiu Zhijie’s rubbings of Chinese characters quote sayings of rulers like Mao Zedong and Chiang Kai-shek to politically subversive ends.

Here the most technically tricky and entertaining work is by an Indonesian group called Tromarama. Using its own finely etched copies of Indonesian currency, Tromarama created a short stop-action music video in which the leaders portrayed on various bills lip-sync to a bouncy tune called “Happy Hour.”

Works in an exhibition organized by Lorie Mertes, chief curator at Moore College of Art and Design, stray further from fine-art traditions. Made by a stenciling technique, a 40-foot-wide, black-and-white outdoor mural on a wall of the Moore’s main building by the British artist Paul Morrison pictures a fantastic, montaged landscape of trees and flowers lifted from a variety of fine-art and popular sources. Gunilla Klingberg, of Stockholm, has created a vast, Neo-Pop mandala in orange vinyl whose pattern consists of familiar commercial logos — Target, Kmart and others. It has been applied to the front windows of the college’s facade to form a radiating, see-through screen.

In an indoor gallery, Virgil Marti, a Philadelphia artist, has covered the walls with silver paper bearing an ornate, floral pattern that turns out, on closer scrutiny, to be made up of skulls and bones, to create a gleaming, environmental memento mori.

In another gallery the Brazilian artist Regina Silveira has flooded the walls and floors with gigantically enlarged, black vinyl images of insects. It is an eye-boggling, walk-in nightmare. And in a connecting corridor Betsabeé Romero who works in Mexico City, presents prints made by rolling inked old tires that she retreaded with images of birds onto yardslong lengths of paper.

Projects at the Tyler School of Art’s Temple Gallery in a show organized by Sheryl Conkelton, an independent curator, do more still to stretch the definition of printmaking. A Danish team called Superflex has set up a workstation where students are assembling cube-shaped hanging lamps whose paper sides, spit out by an online printer, bear photographic images of copyrighted lights by famous designers. It is a provocative comment on theft and intellectual property rights.

Making points about information overload, Francesc Ruiz, of Barcelona, Spain, has recreated an outdoor newsstand and stocked its shelves with satiric fake magazines, while Barthélémy Toguo, of Cameroon, has covered the walls of a separate space with newspaper pages that have all their words blacked out. In a dark room a hypnotic video by the South Korean Web-art group Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries uses big, block letters appearing in infectiously punchy rhythms to tell a violent story of three young misfits visiting the border between North and South Korea.

At the Philadelphia Museum of Art politics meets surrealistic fantasy in a two-artist show organized by Shelley R. Langdale, an associate curator of prints and drawings at the museum. In one gallery Óscar Muñoz, of Colombia, shows a quartet of floor-projected videos in which photo-silk-screened pictures of people from newspaper obituaries float on the surface of water in a white sink. As the water runs out, the images become distorted and go down the drain; then the process reverses and the anonymous faces recohere. The videos poignantly symbolize the tragically ephemeral quality of life in some parts of the world.

In a gallery next door a short animated film by the Japanese artist Tabaimo explores psychoanalytic territory. Called “dolefulhouse,” it shows giant hands installing miniature pieces of antique furniture in a dollhouse. Then octopuses start coming in through the windows, tentacles proliferate like vines, and the house fills with water. Normal consciousness is swamped by previously repressed psychic energies.

The longstanding tradition of populist printmaking is updated at the Print Center in a show of 14 artists and collectives organized by the center’s curator of prints and photographs, John Caperton. Eric Avery, a Texas psychiatrist as well as an artist, has wallpapered the lavatory with small, cartoonish prints illustrating how to use male and female condoms. Woodcuts by Sue Coe illustrate and protest against cruelty to animals. A Chicago collective called Temporary Services presents cheaply produced booklets containing miscellaneous information, including one about illegal devices concocted by prison inmates using legal materials. Upstairs, the Philadelphia collective Space 1026 has constructed a yurt using its own printed fabrics within which people may read, converse and lounge.

The upshot of all this is intellectually stimulating but inconclusive. Is printmaking dead, or is it reborn? Is it a meaningful category at all anymore for contemporary artists who revel in mechanically produced imagery of all kinds and fearlessly use and misuse whatever tools are at hand? If you think these questions matter — and there are good reasons to think they do — you need to plan a trip to Philadelphia.

“Philagrafika 2010” runs through April 11 at various galleries and museums across Philadelphia.

philagrafika2010.org

The article taken from here. Published: February 4, 2010

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Tromarama: Serigala Militia

by Joselina Cruz


Music videos as an influential aesthetic form were embraced by cultural institutions as early as the late 1980s. Spawned by MTV’s coming of age, music video has come to cross over into art with work by artists such as Laurie Anderson and Pipilotti Rist. In 2003, Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon was invited by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, alongside Anderson and Rist, to curate a selection of music videos from between 1965 to 1985 [1]. Such precedents have allowed younger artists to experiment with the form and come up with their own formulations.

Formed in 2004, Tromarama is a tightly knit group of young artists coming from design backgrounds, who are now actively using music videos as a site for exploring various media. By employing the stop motion technique in animation, the group has produced three music videos for bands in a range of genres (indie, jazz and thrash metal). Tromarama’s videos are characterised by their use of unlikely materials and techniques alongside the language and media of high technology. In a recent video made for the indie band RNRM, they used buttons, sequins and colourful beads to animate the band. The result - a rich and shimmering moving canvas. All their music videos are marked by the implicit monotony necessary to the craft and the method of stop motion.

The video Serigala Militia (2005-2006) was produced for a thrash metal band from Jakarta, Seringai (which means ‘grin’ in Bahasa Indonesia). Their music, heavy, noisy and gritty, is a subgenre of heavy metal music. Thrash metal lyrics are often directed to social issues coupled with an attitude of aggression. Tromarama’s video for Seringai utilised 450 plywood boards to create a woodcut animation. The rough grain of the wood and that of the etching’s unevenness associated with the metal group’s music typified by their use of high-speed guitar riffing. The video (the song is dedicated to Seringai’s fans) has an almost nostalgic quality with its sepia tone, despite the bluntness of the music. The perfectly smooth transitions belie the work behind the images. In the Biennale, these boards are installed together for the first time, and the whole room becomes the storyboard for the video. Tromarama recognise that their work has a continuity outside the space of the monitor and the video installation becomes the context wherein the video is to be seen and experienced. The clandestine tricks of technology no longer hide the rough movements in between transitions, the mistakes are there in full view. Here too, however, we can explore the work frame by frame, present at the moment when music, craft and technology are bound together in what has now become a commonplace feature of contemporary culture - the music video.

Note:

  1. Kathryn Weir, ‘Jump Cut: Music Video Aesthetics’ in Video Hits: Art & Music Video exhibition catalogue, Queensland Art Gallery, 2004, page 38.


Joselina Cruz
Independent curator and writer, working between Manila and Singapore. Formerly curator at the Singapore Art Museum and the Lopez Museum in Manila. Co-curator of the 2nd Singapore Biennale 2008.


(Courtesy of the Singapore Biennale 2008. Text published in the event's guide.)

taken from universes in universe

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

A decade of Selasar Sunaryo: Questioning art(ist)

Features - September 21, 2008

Aminuddin Th Siregar, Contributor, Bandung

The Selasar Sunaryo Art Space (SSAS) in Bandung marked a decade of presence in the country's art scene last week. The anniversary, celebrated in a low-key ceremony, leaves a lingering question: Where is the gallery heading?

SSAS celebrated with an exhibition, "Redefining Art", involving 33 artists and two artist groups as well as the launching of an accompanying monograph, A Decade of Dedication: Ten Years Revisited.

Journalist and author Goenawan Mohammad opened the exhibition on Sept. 5. The schedule of events proceeded informally and peacefully in stark contrast to the SSAS' opening ceremony back in 1998.

The SSAS, founded by veteran artist Sunaryo, was officially established under great emotional tension with a dash of dramatic performance art, for the event was intertwined with the ongoing social and political upheavals of that year. During the opening ceremony, Sunaryo covered all his works set out for display at the gallery, symbolizing his concern for the country's plight, and literally washed his hands as a symbol of his attempts to detach himself from the misery his compatriots faced.

In short, the SSAS has served as a personal arena in which Sunaryo could reflect and express his concern over the country's political and social situation. The SSAS has also become known as the place to showcase images of a vulnerable country where democracy remains a distant dream. At the same time, the gallery offers a response to the country's stalling infrastructure development.

The very same year, 1998, saw a critical, tearful phase for the country as it headed toward a new democracy.

From the current exhibition title, "Redefining Art", it is easy to infer the substance being explored. But it seems this exhibition is also being used to measure how artists comprehend their artistic efforts. Though the exhibition catalogues are full of artists' verbose explanations of what they understand art to be, their lengthy opinions convey nothing but one common problem faced by artists nowadays. How could that happen?

We all know the effect of the current art market -- how art debates on the brink of the most crucial, problematic situation in history, questioning what is art and what is not.

Art critics may say we are too mired in the terminology of art, but this simple question is hard to answer or may never be answered. While artists and some art critics are busy seeking answers, the art market has come up with a modest definition of art. Art is a commodity. That's it.

This distorted view of art then replicates, touching other professions in the art world: curators, critics, collectors, dealers, gallery owners, scholars and even the artists themselves. "Redefining Art" then is a timely reflection to challenge the commoditizing of art and the artists producing it, in the face of artists' eroding commitment to social purpose, thematic innovation, media explorations, experimental works and much more.

Out of dozens of prominent artists taking part in the exhibition, including Agus Suwage, Handiwirman, Heri Dono, Rudi Mantovani, Tisna Sanjaya and Yunizar, it seems only the works of Asmudjo J. Irianto, Sunaryo, the Tromarama group and Yusuf Ismail are outstanding. In his fiberglass and paint Melting, Sunaryo presents a melted white frame whose drippings nearly touch the floor. He is sending a critical message about how the art market works in the country.

Famous for his satirical works, Asmudjo, also widely known as a curator, shows his latest work Alakazam: Seni Rupa Kontemporer!. In this work, a portrait of a mini Asmudjo gazes at a piece of art hanging on a gallery wall. With Alakazam, Asmudjo strikes right to the heart of the problem: art exhibition and its contribution to the people.

Yusuf Ismail's Call Now is an interactive video. The screen offers a phone number. If you call the number, automatically another visual is displayed.

The work is not pretentious, it merely demonstrates how technology can be used in a work of art. But it also reflects the era in which younger artists like Yusuf Ismail live. With new art exploiting digital media, Yusuf, if he is consistent and loyal to what he has been doing, can compensate for the scarcity of artists specializing in this media. While his peers are busy pleasing the art market with their use of conventional media, Yusuf takes new media art seriously and is willing to go the extra mile to explore its beauty.

Tromarama is a group of three artists; Herbert Hans. Febie Babyrose and Ruddy Alexander Hatumena, all graduates of he Bandung Institute of Technology. This group showcases Ting*, created using stop motion animation. Though a low-tech method, the visual results are astonishing. Tromarama plays with hundreds of pieces of ceramic tableware, arranging them so they move and tell stories.

The video is screened on the corner wall of the SSAS, almost in obscurity, but the ingenious placement manages to draw a bigger crowd.


Nevertheless, the exhibition's theme and the works displayed are not well correlated, which means the participating artists did not fully grasp the theme. This is regrettable for the artists missed their chance to propose works that could have pushed the boundaries between art and not-art.

The artists tend to resort to a common medium which has been uncontestedly accepted as art. Many of the works are conceptually staid, offering nothing new. One decade on for SSAS, the gallery has done much, spearheading the country's art scene and advocating discourse on contemporary art here. Alas, its long and provocative presence are celebrated with a distracting desire to define art. On the contrary, I think it is time to define what an artist is -- what role do they take when their compatriots are facing messy political and social dilemmas like today? Let's redefine artists.

The writer is a lecturer at the Faculty of Art and Design, Bandung Institute of Technology

A Decade of Dedication: Ten Years Revisited

Exhibition: 5 Sept - 5 Oct 2008
Selasar Sunaryo Art Space
Jl. Bukit Pakar Timur No 100, Bandung
Email: selasar@bdg.centrin.net.id
www.selasarsunaryo.com

taken from thejakartapost

Sunday, August 31, 2008

“A Decade of Dedication: Ten Years Revisited”

“A Decade of Dedication: Ten Years Revisited”
(Dekade Dedikasi: Mengenang 10 Tahun SSAS) exhibition

showing works from:
Adhya S. Ranadireksa, Agus Suwage, Arin Dwihartanto, Ay Tjoe Christine, Ahadiat Joedawinata, Anggun Priambodo, Arief Tousiga, Asmudjo Jono Irianto, Dadan Setiawan, Deden Sambas, Diyanto, Duto Hardono, Erik M. Pauhrizi, Gusbarlian Lubis, Handiwirman Syahputra, Haryadi Suadi & Radi Arwinda, alm. Hendrawan Riyanto, Heri Dono, Joko Dwi Avianto, Jumadi Alfi, Muhammad Irfan, Nindityo Adipurnomo & Mella Jaarsma, Rizki Resa Utama (Oq), R.E. Hartanto, Rosid, Rudi Mantofani, Seno Gumira Ajidarma, Sunaryo, Tisna Sanjaya, TROMARAMA (Febie Babyrose, Ruddy A. Hatumena, Herbert Hans), VIDEOBABES (Prilla Tania & Ariani Darmawan), Yunizar, Yusra Martunus, Yusuf Ismail.

The exhibition is curated by Agung Hujatnikajennong and Albert Yonathan Setyawan.

Friday, September 5th 2008 at 3.30 PM onwards
at Selasar Sunaryo Art Space
Jl. Bukit Pakar Timur no.100 Bandung and will be officiated by Goenawan Mohammad.