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visits on art, design, architecture and literature

Category: Munich

Munich: at Haus der kunst; Conference on “Postwar – Art Between the Pacific and Atlantic, 1945-1965” Day 3-Friday

A great day at the conference with some amazing papers presented by wonderful scholars

photo copy 59.30-10.15 am  Keynote: ” Paolozzi in Postwar  Paris: The Second American Invasion”  presented by Dr Walter Grasskamp, Akademie der Bildenden Künste, Munich

…Eduardo Paolozzi, born in 1924, stands for a dramatic blend of twentieth-century migration. In 1947 Paolozzi lived in postwar Paris, visiting french heroes of prewar modernism. He also joined the  local colony of remaining GIs, who supplied him, an expatriate still accustomed to austerity, with magazines and films filled with colorful impressions of a consumer paradise across the Atlantic. Here, Paolozzi became the first artist to map the second American invasion, one of consumer goods and media cliches, which would transform European everyday culture in the decades to come – insufficently, but not completely wrong, labeled pop culture. “

Continued with Panel 1: Concrete Visions, Transatlantic Worlds

Adapting an approach that is both regionally specific and cross-culturally comparative, this panel situates the production and reception of Concretism within transatlantic networks that stretching from Paris to Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo to Munich. A focus on Latin America further brings to surface complex negotiations between the social and the aesthetic, offering critical perspectives on radical and intractable realignments of artistic centers and peripheries during the tumultuous decades following the end of the Second World War.

panelists: Abigail McEwen, University of Maryland,  “Cuba’s Concretos: the Constructivist Revolution”  ; Federico Deambrosis, Politechnico di Milano, “Time, Space, Borders: A Possible Map of Concrete Art from an Argentinian Perspective ” ; Susanne Neubauer, Freie Universitat, Berlin “Politicla Entaglements of Brazilian Modernism and is Reception in Postwar Germany, 1951-1959″and Gerardo Mosquera, Independent Curator, Havana and Madrid, “Brazil: Disarranging Concretism”

In the afternoon, “Nation(s) Seeking Form . How might artistic and intellectual movements from the former colonies and peripheries impact our understanding of postwar modernism? Through specific  case studies, the panel presents a socio-historical and critical understanding of postwar aesthetic practices in Africa and the Middle East.

panelists: Sam Bardoui, Art Reoriented and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat, Munich ” I  See Wonderful Things! The Art and Liberty Group and Manifestations of Surrealism in Egypt 1939-1945″; Nada Shabout, University of North Texas, “Enemy of the People: The Baghdad Group of Modern Art”; Chika Okeke-Agulu, Princeton University, “Ucke Okeke, Ibrahim El Salahi, and Postcolonial Modernism in the 1960s” and Burcu Dogramaci, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat, Munich “A Look Back to the Future: Art in Turkey in the 1950s”

 

 

Munich;Anne Imhof at Deborah Schamoni gallery; opening and performance

Anne Imhof 9.5-21.6.2014

Thursday night at Deborah Schamoni gallery a very interesting performance during the preview opening of Anne Imhof, commissioned and produced by Deborah Schamoni.

 

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all photos below @deborah Schamoni gallery

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Anne Imhof was born in 1978 and lives and works in Frankfurt am Main and in Paris. She graduated from Städelschule in 2012, receiving the graduate prize for her final project. In 2013 she holds the fellowship of the Hessische Kulturstiftung.

more here http://deborahschamoni.com

 

 

 

 

Munich;Adreas Binder Gallery; a highlight evening and artist talk with Joseph Zehrer and Dr Eva Karcher and music

Munich; Andreas Binder Gallery :a highlight evening and  artist talk with Joseph Zehrer and  Dr Eva Karcher with performance music by Pico Be  and Daniel Murena : “Walking words and spoken sounds“and generous presentation of drinks and wonderful food  by gracious and elegant Andreas and Veronica Binder.. thank you ! I enjoyed it very much.

 

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photos @ VK  during the evening event by permission

more on the gallery here 

Munich;Bayerisches Staatsballett; world premiere “Der Gelbe Klang” (The Yellow Sound)

April 4, 2014  ; going tonight with my beautiful daughter; what a pleasure to go to watch amazing dance performances

The Yellow Sound / Spiral Pass / Violin Concerto

Choreographies: Michael Simon / Russel Maliphant / Aszure Barton

Music: Mason Bates / Mukul / Frank Zappa

 

Webansicht 150 breit

 

The Yellow Sound is an exemplary work of the most important concepts of the abstract visual arts at the beginning of the 20th century. The result was the approximation, mixing and enrichment of different art forms, as inherent in the work of the Ballets Russes amongst others. The Yellow Sound was created by Russian born but Munich resident painter Wassily Kandinsky, who is probably most well-known for being a part of The Blue Rider group. At the base of the 1906 work is a synesthetic concept, uniting color, sound and movement to complement one another. Five yellow giants are the original protagonists of the piece, amongst a big yellow flower, a child dressed in white and a large man. Michael Simon uses these elements to develop a choreographic theater of images with the dancers, set to musical compositions by Frank Zappa.

Canadian Aszure Barton studied in Edmonton, Alberta, at the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and the John Cranko School in Stuttgart. She started choreographing early on and soon received a commission by the Baryshnikov Arts Center (BAC), New York. Since then, she has created work for the Nederlands Dans Theater and the Martha Graham Dance Company, was artists in residence at BAC New York and founded her own ensemble. This will be her first time working in Munich for the Bavarian State Ballet. Russell Maliphant hails from England but has long made a name for himself in continental Europe. His pieces Broken Fall and AfterLight have received standing ovations from audiences in Munich. This time, he is back by popular demand to create a world premiere on the ensemble.

Munich ;Pinakothek der Moderne:”People in a River Landscape” August Sander and the Photography of the Present from the Lothar Schirmer Collection

02.04.2014-24.08.2014

An amazing evening.. Schirmer Mosel publications  celebrated its 40th anniversary with an opening of Lothar Schirmer photographic Collection with about 40 works from August Sander’s epochal cycle “People of the 20th century”

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The celebration continued with a reception at the Vorhoelzer Forum  of the Technical University with fine food and a surprising  performing appearance of legendary Hannah Schygulla. Amazing evening. Congratulations Schirmer Moser Publications and Lothar Schirmer for the great exhibition at Pinakothek.

 

Sander’s photographic typology of German society did not only fascinate artists, writers and philosophers of that period but, at the same time, formed an important point of reference for the artistic concept contemporary photographers had of themselves. This is also reflected in the Munich publisher Lothar Schirmer’s photographic collection, the starting point of which was a group of some 80 works by Sander comprising not only portraits, but also landscapes and urban pictures, acquired in the early 1970s. Sander’s photographs from this collection will be exhibited for the first time in their entirety and be displayed in dialogue with works by contemporary artists such as Bernd and Hilla Becher, Andreas Gursky, Thomas Ruff, Cindy Sherman, Thomas Struth and Jeff Wall. The selection will be extended by a rare group of extraordinary photographs taken in Berlin by Heinrich Zille in the late 19th /early 20th century and enlarged by Thomas Struth almost 100 years later. (press;Pinakothek der moderne)

more at Pinakothek here 

On the occasion of the exhibition, an illustrated catalogue is  published.

http://www.schirmer-mosel.de/homee1/index.htm

 

Munich; Lenbachhaus at Kunstbaum “Playtime”

a sunday afternoon to the newly fabulous  opened exhibition at Lebenchhaus at Kunstbaum ” Playtime”

a collaboration of the Lenbenchhaus and Munich Re on the subject of work.

March 15, 2014-June 29, 2014

 Tehching Hsieh One Year Performance 1980-1981 (Waiting to Punch the Time Clock)
Photograph by Michael Shen   © 2014 Tehching Hsieh
Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York

Artists:
Darren Almond, Francis Alÿs, Mel Bochner, Monica Bonvicini, Pet Shop Boys, KP Brehmer, Charlie Chaplin, Slatan Dudow, Beate Engl, Harun Farocki, Peter Fischli & David Weiss, Andrea Fraser, Melanie Gilligan, Tehching Hsieh, Jörg Immendorff, Stephan Janitzky, Ali Kazma, Sharon Lockhart, Michaela Melián, Henrik Olesen, Anna Oppermann, Adrian Paci, Dan Perjovschi, Peter Piller, Julian Röder, Martha Rosler, Dieter Roth, Andreas Siekmann, Christoph Schlingensief, Allan Sekula, Richard Serra, Kerstin Stakemeier, Mladen Stilinović, Berwick Street Collective (Marc Karlin, Mary Kelly, James Scott and Humphry Trevelyan), Donna Summer, Jacques Tati, Wibke Tiarks, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Timm Ulrichs, Ignacio Uriarte

“The exhibition PLAYTIME takes up the subtle critique aimed at the modern working environment by Jacques Tati in his eponymous film, and raises a variety of questions: How do artists from different generations and backgrounds engage with the subject of work? What does it mean to work as an artist today? And how is the artist’s work different from other forms of work? The artists we have invited contribute a wide range of perspectives and methods. They not only address work as such, but also the norms and behavioral precepts of a society defined by work. They examine existing power relations and gender-specific conventions in the working world and interrogate the connections between identity, the situations in which we live and work. 1960s socio-critical and activist positions enter into dialogue with more recent pieces that reflect on the conditions under which we work today.”  (Lenbachaus press release)

In Bildern: Die Ausstellung „Playtime“ im Münchner Lenbachhaus

Sharon Lockhart: Lunch Break Installation, „Duane Hanson: Sculptures of Life,“ 14 December 2002 – 23 February 2003, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, 2003, Vier gerahmte C-Prints, je 183 x 307cm(Courtesy Collection of Contemporary Art Fundació “la Caixa”, Barcelona Foto: Sharon Lockhart und Collection of Contemporary Art Fundació “la Caixa”, Barcelona)

super-paper-playtime-lenbachhaus-ausstellung

Dieter Roth “Solo Scenes” 1997-1998

more here 

Munich: Opera House; Bayerisches Staatsballett “Helden”

a beautiful evening at the Munich opera house with my young daughter to a new production “Helden”(Heroes)

Choreography by Terence Kohler

The music for the ‘symphonic ballet with a storyline’ is composed of pieces by Alfred Schnittke and Russian-American composer Lera Auerbach who worked closely with Kohler, contributing original scores for his work. Stage-, object- and costume design is by rosalie.

Helden/Heroes is a comprehensive theme: Kohler choses to focus in on the conflict between Epimetheus and Prometheus. According to mythology, the former assigned animals their character traits while the ladder brought fire down to earth – hence introducing culture to human kind which opens up doors to claim power. This might either be used to bring reason and useful items to humanity, or to surrender to the satisfying feeling of omnipotence which might ultimately become self-destructive. Terence Kohler extends this challenge to find reason into the here and now in search of hope for a better future ahead.”

 

Munich: Kunstverein k.m; 7 pm presentation “The Further Adventures of Parlando, Melisma, and the Cookie Master: a brief history of unique singing techniques” by curator Mark Beasley

The Further Adventures of Parlando, Melisma, and the Cookie Master: a brief history of unique singing techniques

Due to the exhibition “La Voix Humane” curator Mark Beasley  presented a listening-session and brief history  of vocalization and Extended Vocal Technique from female pioneers Patty Waters, Cathy Berberian and Joan La Barbara; Grindcore and the Death Growl to the current re-examination of voices as material in the work of Florian Hecker, Stine Motland and C. Spencer Yeh.

Mark Beasley

Mark Beasley is a curator and writer based in New York. He is currently curator at Performa, and programmed and commissioned a series of vocal concerts and artist’s projects for Performa 13. He recently organized a performance series in conduction with the retrospective exhibition of Mike Kelly at MoMa PS1, New York that included Michael Smith and Blowfly, X-TG and Kim Gordon and Jutta Koether. His recent curatorial projects with the Performa biennial include Florian Hecker’s C.D.- A Script for Synthesis, France Stark and Mark Leckey’s Put a Song in Your Think at Abrons Theater; Robert Ashley’s That Morning Thing at the Kichen; Mike Kelley’s Day is Done at Judson Church; Arto Lindsay’s Somewhere I Read, and the experimental music festival (co-curated with Mike Kelley) A Fantastic World Superimposed on Reality. His first LP with the group Big Legs will be released on Junior Aspirin Records in Spring 2014.

 

Munich; afternoon visit at Bernheimer Fine Art Photography; Michael Kenna “Light on Asia”

Fri, Feb.21-Sat 26 April 2014

a beautiful spring day in Munich yesterday, I visited  in the afternoon  the Bernheimer Fine Art Photography, a fabulous show by Michael Kenna, based on his journey through Asia.

In San Francisco Michael Kenna,  got to know Ruth Bernard (Berlin 1905 – San Francisco 2006), the American photographer of German extraction who has had a great influence on Kenna’s creative development. Bernard once called Kenna’s photos “islands of serenity and silence in a loud and chaotic world.”

photos@Bernheimer fine arts, published by gallery permission

“.…In this third solo exhibition of around fifty photographs by Michael Kenna, the visitor is invited to take a sensational trip through Asia, from Japan, South Korea, China and India to Vietnam. On this journey we pass through the “Huangshan Mountains” in southern China, with their bizarre projecting rock formations, gnarled pines and steep mountain slopes shrouded in a dense sea of clouds, and follow the course of the “Lijang River”, with its clear waters and sandbanks, fringed by steep mountains and spectacular rocks. In addition to capturing the different shapes of Nature, Kenna also shows us the foremost industrial city in China: Shanghai with its skyline studded with iconic buildings such as the Oriental Pearl Tower and Jin Mao Tower sparkling in the darkness of the night.”  (gallery press release) 

more here 

Munich; Haus der Kunst; opening Ellen Gallagher “AxME”

28.2-13.07.2014

A most amazing exhibition opened at Haus der Kunst of Ellen Gallagher organized by Tate Modern in association with Sara Hilden Art Museum Tampere and Haus der Kunst, Munich.

A lovely dialogue conversation with the artist and Dr Ulrich Wilmes.

photos@vk

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..Ellen Gallagher took the New York art world by storm in the early 1990s with a series of beautifully balanced, deceptively minimalist paintings such as “Oh! Susanna” (1993), “Oogaboogah”, and “Pinocchio Theory” (both 1994). In a series of work she used advertisements for wigs and other commodities as well as feature articles from black-oriented magazines like Ebony, Our World, Black Stars, etc. One of her most intriguing works consists of a grid of twenty female wig models of various skin shades set against a vast white background. The wigs are meticulously cut into elaborate shapes and float on paper as if embossed.(HdK press release)

more here 

In the catalogue essay on the exhibition “Ellen Gallagher – AxME”, Ulrich Wilmes writes about the cornerstones of the artist’s visual language. The “yellow paintings”, made between 2001 and 2004, illustrate her source of inspiration, which also influenced other works.

more here 

more here 

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