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Saturday, April 28, 2012

Exhibitions NYC | Images from the Whitney Biennal

I finally visited the biennial exhibition . As in the past 30 years media have merged in the last decade the boundary between art and life, private and public, has definitely been blurred, as witnessed by this year biennial. I found it generally uninspiring, re-presenting installation and performances already seen and often lacking the aesthetic qualities and depth of thought which should differentiate life from art.
With a few exception: the multichannel video installation of filmmaker Werner Hergoz stood in its lyrical beauty and profound meaning.







 Dawn Kaspar, who has moved her studio to the Whitney museum as her Biennal presentation




Friday, April 27, 2012

Events | Space Shuttle in the Sky over New York

New Yorkers could enjoy exciting views of the sky today: the space shuttle Enterprise hovered around the city, r on top of a modified jumbo jet. A view almost out of a science fiction cartoon! The retired shuttle performed flyovers over several neighborhood and landmarks including the Statue of Liberty and the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum on Manhattan’s west side, before landing at its temporary home, Kennedy Airport.



Vernissages NYC |


 Larry Rivers "New Works" @ Tibor de Nagy Gallery


 Arno Rafael Minkkinen's Self Portraits at Barry Friedman

 Jonathan Borofsky, Richard Tuttle "Tiles and Works on Paper" @ Gemini G.E.L. @ Joni Moisant Weyl

 Gilbert & George "London Pictures" @ Lehmann Maupin


 Claes Oldenburg, Coosje van Bruggen "Theater and Installation 1985" @ The Pace Gallery


Molly Barnes at Gilbert & George "London Pictures" @ Sonnabend Gallery


 "Animism" at Meulensteen Gallery


 "The Quality of Presence" curated by Dmitry Komis @ Chelsea Hotel Arts Initiative


 Walk total length: 14km

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

camminando + vernissage | Robert Irwin, 57th Street, Moon

 Robert Irwin "Dotting the i’s & Crossing the t’s" @ The Pace Gallery






Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Exhibitions | Landscape Vocabularies: Wu Guanzhong and David Dew Bruner

Two art exhibitions seemingly disconnected present the powerful complexity of visual signs of landscape representation ---mainly trees--- and subsequent abstraction.



Signs expand from the articulation of shapes extracted from representation of trees to become abstract grammars in  "Revolutionary Ink: The Paintings of Wu Guanzhong" the exhibition which opens today at The Asia Society.

Wu Guanzhong (1919–2010) was born in Jiangsu Province, China. He studied in Paris at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts and his works were condemned before and during the Cultural Revolution. He is also known for his writings on art and creativity, below my favorite quotes:
"The relationship between semblance and non-semblance is in fact the same as the relationship between concrete and abstract. What exactly constitutes spirit resonance and lifelike motion (qiyun shengdong) in Chinese traditional painting? Whether in landscape or in flower-and-bird painting, it lies in the expressive difference between motion that has spirit resonance and motion that does not. Within this there is the question of the harmony or conflict between the abstract and the concrete, and the factor of either beauty or ugliness that hovers just beyond. The principle of analysis for form is the same as for music."
"Whenever I am at an impasse, I turn to natural scenery. In nature I can reveal my true feelings to the mountains and rivers: my depth of feelings toward the motherland and my love toward my people.


Revolutionary Ink: the Paintings of Wu Guanzhong
Asia Society
725 Park Avenue
April 25 through August 5, 2012


The other exhibition by artist/landscape designer David Dew Bruner opened in Hudson on April 23, at Hallam gallery:
David Dew Bruner continues in his exploration of tree forms with his vibrant new drawings inspired by the celebrated Viennese artist Hundertwasser, renowned for the shattered intensity of his myriad shapes and patterns. Bruner takes you to the forest to seek out the repetitive detail of bark, limb and knot, as the trees become elegant abstracted design, reminiscent of the graphics of early 20th century Austrian art. The tension builds as these arboretums jostle for prominence in the elements, as branches are pared down to reveal their skeletal inner structure, and knots become tightened muscle.
In the second part of the show - Bruner demonstrates his passion for travel and has created an exciting new body of work based on recent trips to Britain. After exploring the diverse coastline of southern England with its undulating, pebble filled beaches and hazy, pallid light, these drawings perfectly evoke the moodiness and intensity of these monumental elements. Inspired by the visceral, disturbing beauty of British post-war master Graham Sutherland's powerful drawings, Bruner captures the shading, transparency and emotion of these often peaceful and reflective landscapes. Ancient sea-washed stone, bleached bone, and ancient spirits are brought to life in these inspiring new works on paper.




New Drawings by David Dew Bruner
HALLAM
426 Warren Street
Hudson
April 14-29