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Galerie Anita Beckers, Frankfurt
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Performance //
Frame
Victor Alimpiev | Maria Jose Arjona | Karolin
Back & Mira Bussemer | Kathryn Cornelius | Dennis
Feser | Patrycja German | Nilbar Güres | Séverine Hubard |
Jürgen Klauke | Vollrad Kutscher | Bjørn Melhus | Julia
Oschatz | Johanna Reich | Ulrike Rosenbach | Amparo Sard | Ula
Sickle | Annegret Soltau | Sebastian Stumpf | Herbert Weber |
Eva Weingärtner | Paul Wiersbinski | Elizabeth
Wurst
Galerie Anita Beckers Opening:
Saisonstart 04.09.2009, 7pm With Life Performance by Eva
Weingärtner Sunday, 06.09.2009 Breakfast for Performance
Lovers from 11 am Exhibition duration: 04.09 - 31.10.
2009
*Satellit - Raum für junge Kunst*,
*Sebastian Stumpf - Site-specific Installation* Technisches
Rathaus Am Römerberg (zw. SCHIRN und Kunstverein) Annegret
Soltau, Ulrike Rosenbach, Elizabeth Wurst and Patrycja
German Opening: 05-09.2009, 5pm Exhibition duration:
05.09. - 31.10.2009
15 years after the symposium "LIFE IS ART
ENOUGH - Performance and expanded art forms. One approach" -
organized by Anita Beckers in collaboration with the Institute
Mathildenhöhe in Darmstadt - we would like to pick up the
thread again in the gallery and through selected positions
question the current situation of Performance as an artistic
medium.. In a moment when the art market regenerates, artists
whose work deals with one's own body and is commercially
difficult, seem to trigger new critical discourses.
"... .. The non-ambiguity and vagueness of the term
[Performance] corresponds almost programmatically to a
developing form of expression, which through one or another
specific performance always ascertains enhancement. If one
follows the development of its history through the
body-related performance of the 70s, one comes to a, preserved
until today, fundamental rebellious attitude, which could be
traced back to the actions, happenings and events of 60s
(Fluxus) and to the actions of the Dadaists in the
20s. Critical, anarchist, individualist, often multimedia
and communitarian, Aesthetical utterances were developed
against fragile and questionable cultural and social
conventions. Thus today performance refuses in most cases
to be an easily consumable art commodity ..." (Vollrad
Kutscher, 1992)
For the season start, Performance // Frame tries to
pick up some thematic directions within Performance art and
confront positions from the 70s with younger artists. In this
context we feature works by Ulrike Rosenbach and Vollrad
Kutscher, who already participated in the 1994
symposium.
As a group show, Performance // Frame does not explore
one concept of performance, as each artist works on a very own
subjective concept, but rather looks into the richness of
performative processes. As every other exhibition, it can
only offer an incomplete snapshot of the artistic development
of this medium in recent years. Despite this, three directions
seem to stand out of the entire exhibition. Namely, women
performers concerned with Post-feministic issues, performers
concentrated essentially on body and space issues - with
strong focus on the measurement of space through one's body -
and finally, a direction which relates more with the stage and
linguistic tradition. To what extent do the technical
recording possibilities of the works redefine the notion of
performance is a scientific question which we want to pursue
in an artist talk conducted by Prof. Dr. Christian Janecke
with Jürgen Klauke in the gallery space. Performance //
Frame represents though an attempt to understand and give
performance art more attention, and will lead to a new
symposium next year.
Image: Paul Wiersbinski Videostill from the
video "Mr. Babyape is Passion", 2009 09:59 min, Color,
Stereo, DV, 4:3 Courtesy Galerie Anita Beckers |
Frankfurt
Galerie Anita Beckers Frankenallee
74 60327 Frankfurt Germany +49 69 739 009 - 67
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Galerie Stefan Röpke,
Cologne |
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Polaroids and Silver Prints In
Context
September 04 - October 17, 2009
Galerie Stefan Röpke is
pleased to present Robert Mapplethorpe: Polaroids and
Silver Prints In Context on view from September 04 -
October 17, 2009.
The exhibition presents for the first time
the early Polaroid works of Robert Mapplethorpe alongside and
intermixed with the silver print photographs of the 80's; the
mature work that he is most renowned for.
Mapplethorpe first began taking instant
photographs with a Polaroid camera in 1970 as a tool to create
material for the collages that he was making at the time, but
very shortly after, he appreciated the medium for itself,
taking hundreds of pictures and eventually having a solo show
in January of 1972.
In 1975, Sam Wagstaff, Mapplethorpe's lover
at the time, gave him a Hasselblad 2¼-inch camera that would
allow him greater control and quality. Mapplethorpe would
never return to the regular use of the Polaroid materials
again, embracing the sophistication and precision of the new
equipment that he would use to produce the later works that
would bring him commercial success and artistic recognition
and notoriety.
To see these two bodies of works together
gives one the opportunity to see, on one hand, the differences
between them - the experimental and spontaneous Polaroids
versus the precise and formal silver prints - and on another,
the similarities that give us a view into the creative
development of Mapplethorpe's eye and his early preoccupation
with the classical form, line and light that inform his mature
work a whole decade later.
Image: Robert Mapplethorpe Untitled
(Enrique Maza), 1973 3 3/8 x 4 1/4 inches / 8,6 x 10,8
cm Polaroid unique
Galerie Stefan Röpke St.-Apern-Straße
17-21 D - 50667 Köln +49 221 255559
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ClampArt, New York |
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AMY STEIN DOMESTICATED
September 10 - October 31, 2009
ClampArt is pleased to
announce the exhibition of Amy Stein's
photographic series, "Domesticated"- the artist's first show
with the gallery.
In this body of work Stein explores the
archetypal motif of man verses nature. More specifically, her
photographs explore the tenuous relationship between man and
animals as human civilization continues to encroach upon
nature. Informed by actual newspaper accounts and oral
histories from citizens of the small town of Matamoras in
Northeast Pennsylvania, which borders a state forest, Stein's
photographs are inspired by true events.
The artist writes: "My photographs serve as
modern dioramas of our new natural history. Within these
scenes I explore our paradoxical relationship with the 'wild'
and how our conflicting impulses continue to evolve and alter
the behavior of both humans and animals. We at once seek
connection with the mystery and freedom of the natural world,
yet we continually strive to tame the wild around us and
compulsively control the wild within our own nature. Within my
work I examine the primal issues of comfort and fear,
dependence and determination, submission and dominance that
play out in the physical and psychological encounters between
man and the natural world."
Amy Stein was raised in
Washington, DC, and Karachi, Pakistan. In 2007, she was named
one of the world's top fifteen emerging photographers by
American Photo Magazine. Her work has been exhibited
extensively in the United States and in Europe, and her
photographs are represented in such prestigious public
collections as the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania;
the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago; the Nevada
Museum of Art, Reno; the San Jose Museum of Art, California;
and the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, Arizona.
Copies of Stein's first monograph will be
available for sale during the run of the show. [Domesticated
(Portland, Oregon: photolucida, 2008), 64 pp., 25 color illus,
$24, with an essay by George Eastman House curator, Alison
Nordström.]
Image: © Amy Stein, "Riverside," 2008 Digital
C-print (Edition of 3) 30 x 40 inches Courtesy of
ClampArt, New York
CLAMPART 521-531 West 25th
St Ground Floor New York, NY 10001 +1
646.230.0020
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Exile, Berlin |
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Bill Jacobson American Trip 1974-1978 / A
Series of Human Decisions
September 05-October 03, 2009
Exile, the Art and
Residency space in Berlin-Kreuzberg, will open its fall
program by presenting two bodies of work, American Trip
1974-1978 and A Series of Human Decisions, by American artist
Bill Jacobson. The exhibition brings together
these two distinctly different photographic perspectives,
separated by 30 years of artistic production and life
experience, and explores their common grounds.
The first body of work, American Trip
1974-1978, includes some of Jacobson's very first photographs,
taken shortly after turning 17 during cross-country trips, and
while attending college in San Francisco and Providence, Rhode
Island: "I always had a car and a camera...."
While being clearly influenced by some of
the photographic role models of the time, the unique strength
of these photographs stems from their curious immediacy. They
are not only an exploration into seemingly strange and
unfamiliar cultural and social landscapes, but also a young
artist's discovery of his personal and artistic identity. The
photographs have a striking intensity and intimacy between
observer and subject matter: in that particular moment, both
seem on the road to self-discovery, divided only by the lens
of the camera. Thirty years later, while giving a glimpse into
an almost mythologized era of American photography, these
photographs still speak of the worries, anxieties, and
excitements of the small but meaningful moments of life.
Later, between 1990 and 2002, Jacobson
became well known for a body of work that negates the clarity
of photographic vision in favor of an immateriality of light
and form. His photographs became increasingly ethereal,
haunting, and momentary. In 2002, Jacobson returned to the
sharp-focus image with A Series of Human Decisions. He began
to photograph a variety of interior and exterior scenes
ranging from art students' studios to details of therapists'
practices.
Characteristic for these photographs is
Jacobson's analytical, at times funny, but always poignant
approach. Remarkably, in all of these quite formal photographs
the human figure, while ever present, is itself absent. A
Series of Human Decisions results in a poetic observation of
life as a collection of small, intricate and distinct
situations.
When viewed together, both bodies of work,
American Trip 1974-1978 and A Series of Human Decisions, while
distinctly different, have the same seemingly simple question
and curiosity at their core. In both, Jacobson searches for
'the little things': life's often overlooked minute details
and moments. Spanning over 30 years of artistic work, the two
bodies of work show Jacobson's passionate investigation into
nothing less than who, what and where we are.
Exile Alexandrinenstr 4, HH D -
10969 Berlin +49 176 83097626
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On Stellar Rays, New York |
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ZIPORA FRIED Trust Me. Be
Careful.
September 9 - October 25, 2009 Opening Wednesday,
September 9, 6-8pm
This exhibition presents portrait
photographs, objects and drawings, displaying the artist's
practice of detachment from the obligation or facility to form
language or function. The works instead preserve and
politicize the irony, idolatry and emotion specific to the
time of formation..
From a letter to the artist by João
Ribas:
Zipora....
We have both come to think of hands as
instruments of transcendence, the source of our entry into the
symbolic. Are our hands not at the origin of
self-consciousness (Tallis), of gesture and agency, of
reaching out (towards others) and intention, of command and
causation? Is it not through the hand---with its
transformative, manipulative potential----and the traces it
leaves, that the subject, if not nature itself, is radically
reconceived, shaped into its own image?
The human hand lies at the origin of the
labor that allows for the collective record of human
difference to exist; for the making, moving, and repeating
that transcends nature. What is at hand is what makes the
world. Yet what of those things that seems so indifferent and
accidental in their form, the products of nature, time, and
chance that seem imperceptibly 'unmade', those very things
between imagination and necessity that force us to admit that
perhaps no hand can in fact have made this .. Are these not
the very things the human hand is always enticed to fashion or
to mime as objects, and moreover to repeat; these things that
seem out of the common order of perceptible phenomena always
surrounding us, neither tool nor weapon, but some heteroclite
thing that is only further exaggerated by our poor mimesis. In
doing so, we come to see in such a thing---like that shell
Valery writes about holding and turning between his
fingers---some plan, some form, a purpose, as if through
invention we could somehow grasp its place, its utility, its
necessity, the need it somehow exists to appease, correct, or
fulfill. Our labor-in these moments of repeating---only makes
such things stranger, almost by a negative inversion; we
craft, handle, and care for this thing. We know it, if in fact
to make a thing is to know it, but it somehow grows ever
stranger in our hands, despite have been made by us---some
strange haecceity. Our hands: abutting metaphor and function,
repeating, working meticulously by proceeding with an aim we
think neither chance nor machine can fulfill. Our hands,
indexing, repeating, doubling... Lucretius writes somewhere
that if the hand is pressed underneath the eye the things we
see appear to become doubled before us as we look at them,
such that what is already before us can be doubled by the use
of our hands. Must not something always slip away for the
transcendence afforded by the human hand to exist---don't our
hands transcend precisely only in this deviation, by the very
difference we perceive in such repetition, by the variance in
imitation we want to call invention ? What of those things,
like that shell, that seem almost imperceptibly made, even
when made by human hands? With such quiddity and purpose. So
our hands cover up and inexplicably reveal; they trick the eye
into disbelief, and simple gestures or things are transformed
as if under frail utility lies some other metaphysic waiting
to be forged out by hands......
João Ribas, 2009
Image: Zipora Fried Courtesy of On Stellar
Rays, New York
On Stellar Rays Candice
Madey 133 Orchard Street New York, NY 10002 +1 212
598 3012
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re-title.com - Independent directories of
emerging & professional contemporary art
Coming Next
September 9-10 - Painting / Drawing
September 16-17 Sculpture / Installation
September 23-24 Mixed / Multi Media
Autumn / Fall schedule now
available
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BM Box 5163 London WC1N 3XX United
Kingdom
+44 (0) 870 922
0438 |
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