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Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture at P.S.1 – James Westcott
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:53Apprehending this summer’s architecture installation in P.S.1’s courtyard is very difficult: it’s a plasticy, skeletal, undulating, and strangely sci-fi sculpture that snakes off into other sections of the compound, and it refuses to resolve into a legible pattern along the way. It’s both an alien landing and an archeological dig. Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture […]
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Whose City? Looking Elsewhere for Urban Renewal – Eva Rouleau
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:50Division Ave. in Grand Rapids Michigan is not an area that one would categorize as conducive to creative production. For one thing, the material conditions simply do not exist; outside of Morningstar 75, a coffee shop in what is known as the heartside district is a sandwich board that reads "Coffee, Its What?s for Dinner," […]
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What is Political Performance? clothespins, fingerprints and burning straws – Anna Kerrigan
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:46Even when deformed by the multitude of clothespins fastened to the flesh of his face, or masked by a flaming paper bag over his head, it is evident that Wladyslaw Kazmierczak knows what he?s doing. What is Political Performance? clothespins, fingerprints and burning straws Anna Kerrigan Ewa Rybska & Wladyslaw Kazmierczak performance, Poznan, Poland, 2005 […]
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A Room of Their Own – Chloe Hawkins
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:42On the list of what a writer needs to produce great works, a room of one?s own is at the top. In Novel: A Living Installation, the newest project put on by the Flux Factory, an artist’s collective in Queens, New York, three separate writers have been provided with what some might consider an artist’s […]
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The Risk of the Present Tense – Solange Farkas
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:38What are the trends and paths of contemporary audiovisual production? How does it unfold into different formats, supports, and genres? How does it convey the contemporary experience? These are some of the questions we have asked to elicit responses in the forms of artworks for the Videobrasil International Electronic Art Festival. The Risk of the […]
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Moving Images, Moving Paintings – Nancy Matthews
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:30When American audiences first went to the movies in 1896, they saw monumental subjects such as Niagara Falls projected onto canvas screens framed with huge gold frames. Within months of the debut of films by the Edison and Lumi?re companies in New York, the whole country could see the new "moving pictures" not only in […]
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A Broad Tent – Mitchell Miller
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:27Now in its tenth year, the works on display at Glasgow?s Art Fair?05 confirmed the current trend in favor of painting over conceptual or installation work. But it remains an eclectic, heterodox affair?exhibitors range from small, committed community arts groups such as Impact Arts, working with homeless kids in the city?s east end, to the […]
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100 Ways of Looking at a Corot (and Other Forms of Leisure) – David Markus
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:24Among the great painters of leisure, Jean Baptiste-Camille Corot stands out as one of the finest. Bathers enjoying the dying light of a late August swim, or figures crouched in a moment of intimate contemplation, distracted by their reveries from the day?s chores?in the languorous pastors of Corot, even the peasants have time to daydream. […]
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Clocks, Chocolate… Basel – Ian Green and James Westcott
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:22Basel for dummies Basel, Switzerland, a small town bisected by the Rhine and tucked in along the border of Germany and France, is an unlikely home for the biggest art fair in the world. Aside from Pope Felix V?s Council of Basel, from 1431-49, a brief rebellion in 1831 and Dr. Albert Hoffmann?s accidental discovery […]
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Bodies Moving: The Independent Performance Group and Dansgroep Krisztina de Châtel with Egon Schiel
Wednesday, 28 June 2006 10:17A large survey of Egon Schiele?s drawings and paintings closed this weekend at the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam. It was the first ever exhibition in Holland devoted to Scheile, the Austrian expressionist who died of Spanish flu in 1918, but the event was most notable for a bold, and apparently unprecedented interdisciplinarity: live performance […]