A Century of the Artist’s Studio: 1920-2020 review – congealing palettes, fading light and magic

Paul Winstanley, Seminar (Grey), 2014, Oil on Linen, 165X160cm.

By Laura Cumming

From Frida Kahlo’s sickbed to Cindy Sherman’s Manhattan loft and Picasso’s 60s chateau, this superb show exploring where artists work is nothing less than a portal into their minds.

A show with this theme opens at the Whitechapel Gallery next week. And it turns out be a riveting experience, achieved with great wisdom and drama by Iwona Blazwick and her team. A Century of the Artist’s Studio goes in and out of this magical place in such inventive ways. There are spectacular reconstructions of actual studios – Matisse’s bedroom in the south of France, hung with magnificent embroideries; Kurt Schwitters’s Dada studio, all wild wooden stalactites – but the show also moves through global space, crossing five continents from the secret studios of Iran to the tiny kiosk in Manila where the father of Filipino art, Roberto Chabet, made conceptual sculptures.

Kerry Tribe uses language as a medium in ‘Onomatopoeia’

Image still from “Afasia,” on view at the Emerson Contemporary Media Art Gallery.

By Cate McQuaid

“How can one be known by another?” Kerry Tribe asks in Spanish in her video “Afasia.” The subtitle, in English, appears over an image of a pre-Hispanic stone head at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City. The Boston-born, Los Angeles-based artist’s exhibition “Onomatopoeia,” at Emerson Contemporary Media Art Gallery, steps into gaps of understanding within ourselves and between people.

Amid Volcanic Crisis in Tonga, Arts Enterprise TBA21-Academy Calls for Support

An overview of Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha'apai volcano in Tonga in December, a month before the recent eruption.

By Andy Battaglia

As part of the call for support, the organization—directed by Markus Reymann and chaired by the storied art collector and patron Francesca Thyssen-Bornemisza—has offered an example of the kind of work made as a result: a 21-minute video titled Hunga Tonga by the Danish artist collective Superflex, which participated in a seafaring journey with TBA21-Academy in 2018. (“They’re almost like landscapes that you sail across,” Rasmus Nielsen of Superflex told ARTnews about sailing over the unfathomably deep Tonga Trench for a feature about TBA21-Academy shortly after. “You feel out of scale, and seasick. There’s so much water underneath you that it’s hard to grasp.”)

Painting in Limbo: An Interview with Petra Cortright

Petra Cortright: ‘Baleaf Gys Akademiks Maamgic Brokig,’ 2021, installation view at Société Berlin // Courtesy of the artist and Société, Berlin

by Cristina Ramos | Dec. 7, 2021

“We sat down with American artist Petra Cortright on the occasion of her current exhibition ‘Baleaf Gys Akademiks Maamgic Brokig’ at Société Berlin. The exhibition presents a series of landscape paintings alongside a video piece, loosely inspired by heaven and hell, infused with the countryside of the American West and the laws of nature it contains. Provoking an ambiguous feeling in the viewer—perhaps pleasant, sometimes disturbing—Cortright builds infinite fantasy worlds within the digital paintings, employing found imagery from the net and image-editing software.”

The Conversation

By D. Edward Martin

“Beyond the fun, however, there are layers of meaning to unpack and to contemplate. For example, the conversation between human and animal is one that is fraught with difficulty. We speak for animals, and we talk over them. A conversation implies two or more parties that are equal in some way, and this conversation is held back by those who believe that between human and animal there is (to borrow a phrase from Jane Goodall) a difference of kind, and not simply one of degree. Additionally, the idea that nature is somehow “out there” and not surrounding us at every moment—whether in a gallery, at home, or in the outdoors—erects barriers to sympathy as well.”

‘Light & Space’ at Copenhagen Contemporary: ‘moving art without moving elements’

Installation view Light & Space, Copenhagen Contemporary, 2021. Photography: David Stjernholm

By Jeni Porter

“Epic group show ‘Light & Space’ explores the past and present of the iconic light and installation art movement. It’s physical, emotional, bodily and disorientating.”

“In scale and scope, the ‘Light & Space’ exhibition at Copenhagen Contemporary is epic. ‘It will be BIG in every way!’, the international art centre declared before opening the doors on 2 December 2021. Sprawling across 5,000 sq m, with artworks from 27 artists, it is the biggest exhibition ever for the six-year-old institution, as well as the most comprehensive presentation of artists from the influential light and installation art movement (Light and Space) that emerged in and around Los Angeles in the 1960s.”

FIRST PERMANENT PUBLIC WORKS IN LONDON FROM UGO RONDINONE, PAE WHITE & CATHERINE YASS COMING TO PADDINGTON SQUARE.

Pae White | FAD Magazine

Pae White. COURTESY: © Pae White / PHOTOGRAPH: Enrico Fiorese

By Mark Westall

Paddington Square, London’s new quarter for work, retail and dining at the heart of Paddington’s regeneration, has announced a major programme of public art commissions, comprising first London permanent public works by internationally renowned artists Ugo Rondinone, Pae White and Catherine Yass. The artworks will be unveiled with the full opening of Paddington Square in 2022.

“The Paddington Square public art programme acts as a conversation starter: to demonstrate and inspire the power, beauty, potential and responsibility of curating art in the public realm. Our curatorial approach takes its cues from the vision of Sellar, together with Renzo Piano Building Workshop’s architectural ambition to bring one of London’s biggest transport gateways to life through public spaces and contemporary art. Lacuna conducted extensive research into the neighbourhood, working with local communities and engaging with a diverse set of stakeholders, greatly enriching our curatorial approach and the development of these landmark commissions with leading international artists. While lockdown presented us with new challenges, it also allowed us to develop novel methods for critical engagement with the evolving cultural conversation, which visitors will see borne out in the final works as they are unveiled in 2022.” - Stella Ioannou (Director) & Jade Niklai (Associate Curator), Lacuna.

Diana Thater: The Conversation at 1301PE

Installation view, Diana Thater, The Conversation, 2021. 1301PE Los Angeles. Photography by Fredrik Nilsen.

Written by Shana Nys Dambrot

“Titled Talk to Us and Listen to Us (both works: 2021, 2-channel audio / video installation, endless loop), Thater packs a lot of poetry and dissonance into two installations. The color is warm and beckoning, while the literal cacophony is both mysterious and overwhelming. It’s loud and it’s hard to get a handle on. The human voices mimicking parrot voices which at times are themselves imitating human speech, intertwined with the lavishly expressive abstract natural language of these birds, blends and obscures and augments and eventually settles into a kind of rhythm. The soothing effect of the colored light flooding and unifying the space helps this process, anchoring the viewer to the room long enough for the poetics and onomatopeias to sort themselves out. “Up and down and in and out…To run, to walk, to dream. Bang, whistle, woo-hoo! Listen to us! Listen to us!””

ARTIST DIANA THATER WANTS TO SHOW US A WORLD WORTH SAVING

Diana Thater | Change Lab Podcast

For Diana Thater making art is like oxygen. It sustains and nourishes her. And when her access to it is suddenly limited –as it was in the spring of 2020–she figures out a way to create her art. By any means necessary.Her latest exhibition, Yes…

For Diana Thater making art is like oxygen. It sustains and nourishes her. And when her access to it is suddenly limited –as it was in the spring of 2020–she figures out a way to create her art. By any means necessary.

Her latest exhibition, Yes, There Will Be Singing, is the captivating result of an extraordinary pandemic pivot. The ArtCenter alum and distinguished professor conceived the idea for the sound-based piece when her original in person show was canceled. But what’s most ingenious about this immersive work is not its format but rather its remarkable subject–Whale 52, who is deaf and yet sings into a world of complete darkness and silence.

It’s hard to imagine a more perfect metaphor for resilience in the face of the isolation we’ve all just experienced than Whale 52 and, more specifically, the sensitivity with which Thater represents his plight in her stunning sound, video and light piece (which can still be experienced here).

Dancers From the Deep Sea Shine on the U.N. for Climate Week

SUPERFLEX | New York Times

“A Danish arts collective spotlights the bizarrely beautiful siphonophore, which performs a vital role in removing carbon from the atmosphere.”

By Arthur Lubow

Published Sept. 14, 2021Updated Sept. 16, 2021

A little-known but crucial agent of carbon removal from the atmosphere — the siphonophore, which lives in what’s known as the twilight zone of the sea — will be highlighted during U.N. Climate Week in a video projection from a Danish arts collective.

The siphonophore is a bizarrely beautiful creature. Like a coral reef, it is composed of individual parts, known as zooids, which perform specialized functions. “Some are digesters, some are swimmers, some are reproducers,” Heidi Sosik, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, said. “But they all get together. It is an interesting metaphor for humanity to think about.”

Next week, Sept. 21-24, in a light projection more than 500 feet high on the entire northern facade of the U.N. Secretariat building, a siphonophore will perform a sinuous, pulsating dance nightly between 8 and 11 p.m. Coinciding with the meeting of international delegates, who will discuss how to counter human-caused climate change, the video, “Vertical Migration,” is intended to draw attention to the animal’s deep sea carbon removal system.

The artists reappropriating 'feminine crafts' through a queer lens

Judy Ledgerwood | Creative Bloom

Judy Ledgerwood, Visigothic, 2021

Judy Ledgerwood, Visigothic, 2021

“Chicago-based abstract painter Judy Ledgerwood's work considers domestically created decorative work made by women across cultures, using circles, quatrefoils, and seed-like shapes organised within triangles and chevrons that "she perceives as a womanly cypher symbolic of feminine power," according to the gallery.”

San José Museum of Art Announces 86 New Acquisitions by 27 Artists

Pae White | Artfix Daily

Noisy Blushes (2020) Installation view at San José Museum of Art, photo by Fredrick Nilsen

Noisy Blushes (2020) Installation view at San José Museum of Art, photo by Fredrick Nilsen

“Building on SJMA’s commitment to celebrate the creative impact in the South Bay, this group of acquisitions features Pae White’s Noisy Blushes (2020), the largest artist’s commission in the Museum’s history. The sculpture comprises 12,000 hexagonal stainless-steel disks suspended within SJMA’s atrium and unveiled to the public in October 2020 to celebrate the Museum’s 50th anniversary.”

Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul (Photo Story)

Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul. On view from June 16th – August 15th, 2021.

Installation view, Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul“Pranayama Typhoon combines the word “pranayama,” a breathing technique that dates back to ancient India, with the word “typhoon,” a catastrophic weather phenomenon, which is also the name of a state-of-the- art fighter plane. The title of the exhibition hints at the collision of human breath with the unpredictable, destructive forces of nature. Banner conceived the work in Pranayama Typhoon during the Covid lockdown in the UK."

Installation view, Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul

“Pranayama Typhoon combines the word “pranayama,” a breathing technique that dates back to ancient India, with the word “typhoon,” a catastrophic weather phenomenon, which is also the name of a state-of-the- art fighter plane. The title of the exhibition hints at the collision of human breath with the unpredictable, destructive forces of nature. Banner conceived the work in Pranayama Typhoon during the Covid lockdown in the UK."

SUPERFLEX: Super Reef a New Kind of Urbanism

Superflex Infomail

640w_SuperReef_1622559793.jpg

Sometimes, the best way to care for other species is to collaborate with them on new projects. In that spirit, SUPERFLEX is working on a master plan to build at least 55 km2 of reef along the coast of Denmark. Super Reef is a large-scale collective undertaking involving scientists, fish, marine biologists, policy makers, local communities, and seagrasses. Together we can increase biodiversity, clean the air, boost the fish population, make art, and imagine forms of symbiotic living.

Over the last century, Denmark has lost huge areas of stone reef. Humans have extracted tons of stone for construction and coastal protection, decreasing biodiversity and leaving parts of the seabed as empty as a desert. Reefs are crucial partners in a flourishing world: not only do coastal ecosystems help prevent erosion, they have the potential to remove carbon dioxide from the air even more efficiently than terrestrial forests.

Because underwater creatures like variety, just as humans do, Super Reef will be constructed from a range of materials, from repurposed stones to specially-designed fish-friendly pink bricks. Acknowledging the importance of an interspecies perspective, SUPERFLEX is including marine life in both scientific and aesthetic decisions. Perhaps algae can tell us what they want, if only we learned to listen.

Humans built our cities with material taken from the ocean, and now we are developing a sculptural infrastructure to build cities for fish. Super Reef is a new kind of urbanism, premised on an expanded notion of collaboration and knowledge-sharing: between humans as well as between species. 

Super Reef is a project derived from the Deep Sea Minding research which was originally supported by TBA21-Academy. 

SUPERFLEX Upcoming Exhibitions

SUPERFLEX Infomail

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea, installation view. maat – Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (Lisbon), 2021. Courtesy of EDP Foundation. Photography by Francisco Nogueira

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea, installation view. maat – Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (Lisbon), 2021. Courtesy of EDP Foundation. Photography by Francisco Nogueira

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea
A selection of Pink Elements is being exhibited at MAAT in Lisbon as part of the exhibition Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea. Pink Elements consists of varying configurations of pink, coral-friendly bricks that stand as future-ruins turned fish metropolis. The bricks are materially aligned with the needs of underwater creatures, their pink color scientifically known to propagate coral polyp growth.
Aquaria examines how the ocean has washed up inside our cities, homes, and cultural institutions, and questions how we have interiorised the notion of an ocean kingdom. 
Pink Elements are based onthe Deep Sea Minding research, supported by TBA21–Academy.

Works exhibited:  Pink Element no. 1/Revolving Corner, Pink Element no. 4/Penthouse, Pink Element no. 7/Corner District and Vertical Migration
Location: Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (MAAT), Lisbon
Closing date: 6 September 2021
For more information visit https://www.maat.pt/en

 
Sharity - teilen, tauschen, verzichten
Alle Daten Dem Volke is showing at the Kunst(Zeug)Haus in Rapperswil-Jona as part of the exhibition Sharity – teilen, tauschen, verzichten. The work points to the asymmetry in the current access to data and to the right of all people to information and distribution of power, on which democracy depends. 
The exhibition deals with sharing, an archetypal form of our existence that has advanced to become a lifestyle. It questions the reasons why and what we share and how our society is changing as a result of this.

Work exhibited: Alle Daten Dem Volke    
Location: Kunst(Zeug)Haus, Rapperswil-Jona
Closing date: 16 May 2021
For more information visit : https://www.kunstzeughaus.ch


Every End Is A New Beginning / Gravmonumenter
For the exhibition Gravmonumenter at Kunsthal Aarhus, we made a proposal for an interspecies burial monument that challenges standardized perceptions of post-living arrangements. The organically shaped monument defines the systematic grid in cemeteries by moving across several graves. By taking a shape that is neither end nor beginning, it becomes a continuously growing sculptural infrastructure that manifests our interspecies relations.
Gravmonumenter is a catalog of inspiration for how we, as citizens and society, can incorporate contemporary art on several levels - even when death occurs.

Location: Aarhus Kunsthal, Aarhus
Closing date: 9 May 2021
For more information visit: https://www.kunsthalaarhus.dk


One Two Three Swing! / Real DMZ Project
One Two Three Swing! at Dora Observatory in South Korea went online with the Virtual Real DMZ Project exhibition. One Two Three Swing! is an installation of three interconnected swings affixed to an orange steel line, extending beyond the gallery walls and stretching into the landscape, and potentially beyond into the wider world. 
The virtual exhibition shows three-dimensional renderings of works by internationally acclaimed artists in the setting of a virtual demilitarised zone that is replete with numerous dreams yet to be achieved. Tune into YouTube for a virtual exploration of the Real DMZ Project https://youtu.be/DKolRBF19Mc

Work exhibited: One Two Three Swing!
Location: Dora Observatory, South Korea
Closing date: 23 May 2021

Pae White on Hyde or Practise Podcast

Pae White | Hyde or Practise

S 4 Ep 5: Artist Pae White Interview!

“We interviewed Pae White and Alexis didn't spontaneously combust so in general, that's a huge win! She talks to us about finding community in unlikely places during the pandemic, building her studio up from a solo venture to the multinational operation it is now, learning about contracts and looking to friends for advice. Also mushrooms, a lot of mushrooms. This is an incredibly informative and generous interview and hearing her talk about her journey is beyond rewarding. She casually drops working on her piece at the Venice Biennale...I mean...what more do you want?“

Petra Cortright: ‘Predator Swamping’ Digital Paintings Based on Appropriated Photographs

Petra Cortright | Art Now LA | Jody Zellen

Screen Shot 2021-03-18 at 5.10.36 PM.png

“Petra Cortright is a master at manipulating digital files and incorporating stock digital effects. She seamlessly moves back and forth between creating animated and printed images and is as adept with programs like Photoshop as she is with compositing video footage. Cortright first came to prominence in the mid 2000s for webpages filled with low-brow animated GIFS appropriated from a wide range of online sources. She was also celebrated for short video performances captured by her computers webcam and posted to YouTube where they were available to stream, as well as purchase for a price based on their number of views. In many of these purposely manipulated, kitschy and campy performances, she posed for the camera to act out ‘girly’ fantasies. The poster for her current exhibition, Predator Swamping, is a fragmented image of her looking suggestively out at the viewer and alludes to those more performance-based works. Instead, Cortright presents digital paintings based on appropriated photographs of the landscape, many of which are incorporated into wall-sized tableaux.”

Ana Prvački’s Pandemic Trilogy

BOMB I Ana Prvački I Regine Basha

I’ve always been fascinated by artists employing humor in times of crisis. Surrealists and Dadaists, for instance, turned to absurdist humor during the war and postwar years; their creative audacity helped us to recognize collective trauma and inertia. At the start of the pandemic last year, following a major cultural mood swing, many artists and performers had to ask themselves whether the use of humor was still appropriate.

I watched artist Ana Prvački boldly facing our shared fear with a trilogy of video works (which was presented virtually as part of the 2020 Gwangju Biennale) just as COVID-19 began to grip the globe and the death toll was rising. Prvački released three wry videos over the course of several months, offering coping strategies for our bleak and awkward new social reality. Titled MultimaskEnergetic Tickle, and The Splash Zone, they are poetic ruminations on anxiety and wellness. 

A conceptual and performance artist, Prvački was born in Serbia and raised in Singapore. After living in Spain and the US, she currently works from Berlin, Germany. She is innately connected to Eastern European avant-garde history, including Fluxus and conceptual performance (she occasionally collaborates with Marina Abramović). Most of Prvački’s work confronts behavioral conventions, such as social and gender etiquette, and proposes ways to improve mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing. She researches these topics with utmost seriousness but delivers her findings with a twinkle in her eye, and sometimes tongue in cheek. Her background in theater, music, and architecture, as well as beekeeping and traditional masked acting, brings a singular edge to Prvački’s practice; her humor is subtle, even elusive, and is often laced with the erotic.

Prvački’s Pandemic Trilogy takes us into a near future. Balancing sincerity and absurdity, she uses the sonorous inflections of her speaking voice and meticulously calibrated expressions of her eyes to guide us: “You do not need to look human, just friendly.” Multimask, the first in the trilogy (released in May 2020), employs 3-D rendering for an all-over face mask that, in Prvački’s words, “reimagines quarantine and isolation as a time for renewal, personal growth, consciousness, and beauty while providing a safe way to interact with others in a social environment.” The emoji-like face with beady eyes provides an experience of slight sensory deprivation—because how much more input can we bear?—and encourages internal reflection and self-study. The video operates between a public service announcement, an infomercial, and a beauty tutorial, and is so convincing that a number of people thought the mask was an actual product that could be ordered online. 

For many of us who are not essential workers, the lockdown has brought a sense of isolation and a hyperawareness of our inner lives. For Prvački, our current collective anxiety sharpened her work’s focus on enduring social concerns. In a prescient performance from 2007, titled At the Tips of Your Fingertips, the artist methodically, and enthusiastically, cleaned one-dollar bills with what she called “money-laundering wet wipes.” A witty nod to the germ-ridden symbol of capitalist interconnectivity, this work sailed to the top of my mind as soon as the pandemic hit.

In Energetic Tickle, the trilogy’s second video, Prvački instructs the viewer on how to overcome the “energetic, emotional, and physiological implications” of social distancing. To the sound of an accordion, Prvacˇki calmly enacts a new way of greeting our fellow humans with the help of sensed energy flowing from and to the fingertips. Choreographed like a dance, the work puts non-touch to the test: Can it indeed reach us and titillate?

The Splash Zone, the final work in the trilogy, is a poetic vignette that imagines a future, unexplained climate event. Prvački enacts a personal encounter, merging outer and inner life within “a space of both creativity and anxiety, analog and digital,” referred to by the artist as “the supralittoral zone.” Concerned with spiritual more than physical care, this piece poses the idea of humans having a porous relationship with water, our survival requiring an entirely transformed collective experience.

Might the heightening of the provocative and the absurd be a way out of our worrying minds? Can art’s liminal space—and in Prvački’s case, somatic space—be not an escape route but a proposed, valid solution during times of darkness and social duress? In her Pandemic Trilogy, Prvački meets us, much like a benevolent extraterrestrial, with cheery yet grave euphemisms to remind us that we have gone astray.

Interspecies Assembly SUPERFLEX x ART 2030

ART 2030 | SUPERFLEX

ART 2030 and SUPERFLEX are delighted to announce our upcoming collaboration: Interspecies Assembly, on this World Wildlife Day.

Against the backdrop of this critical moment of time – in which humans are waging war on nature, biodiversity is collapsing, and human activity is at the root of Earth’s descent towards chaos - Interspecies Assembly will mark the very first gathering of human and other species on earth, to address the future of our planet and promote interspecies dialogue and cooperation. The mission of Interspecies Assembly: to urgently lay the foundation for peace, harmony, and the right to a strong and sustainable future for all species on planet Earth. The project addresses today’s most urgent issue of protecting the diverse ecosystems and many forms of life across the planet, that are fundamental to global progress and achieving all Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.

Further details to be announced.

Interspecies Assembly is supported by New Carlsberg Foundation, The Obel Family Foundation, TBA21– Academy, Beckett Fonden, and Danish Arts Foundation.

For more information click here.