Monday, August 22, 2016

The 11th edition of Asia Contemporary Art Week, New York, September 8 - November 18, 2016



The 11th edition of Asia Contemporary Art Week expands to a full season, offering cutting-edge exhibitions, receptions, performances, discussions & festivities at leading Consortium Partner museums & galleries citywide!

(New York, September 8 - November 18, 2016)

Not-to-be-Missed Highlights
- an unprecedented overview of contemporary art from China in New York City this fall, including the first US retrospective for Zou Wou-ki (Asia Society); newly commissioned works by 6 major emerging artists, co-organized by Xiaoyu Weng & Ho Hanru (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum); a striking installation by Wu Jian'an (Chambers Fine Arts), plus work by the infamous Ai Weiwei (Lisson Gallery); South & Southeast Asia and its diaspora is represented by prominent artists- Amina Ahmed (Twelve Gates Arts), Jitish Kallat(Philadelphia Museum of Art), Rasheed Araeen (Aicon Gallery), Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan(Sundaram Tagore Gallery), Zarina Hashmi (DAG Modern), and Reena Saini Kallat (MoMA);Solo exhibitions for women artists known for their community-engaged, multidisciplinary performance-based practices include Mariam Ghani (Ryan Lee Gallery), Mierle Laderman Ukeles (Queens Museum), and Arahmaiani (with an opening night performance at Tyler Rollins Fine Art). Multiple symposiums and lectures across the city contextualize artists and historical timelines, such as Turner Prize winner Simon Starling on his expansive Noh Theater installation (Japan Society). Other timely & provocative ACAW co-organized programs feature a panel on the life and philosophy of Arakawa (with Reversible Destiny Foundation, hosted at Artnet), an evening with Palestine-based artists and architects Sandi Hilal & Alessandro Petti (with ArteEast), and a private mid-season kickoff reception for ACAW, generously hosted by Sylvia Wald & Po Kim Foundation
A full agenda is now available at: acaw.info 
 
Signature Forum 
FIELD MEETING: Thinking Practice 
November 11 & 12, hosted at Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum & Asia Society


With performances, lecture-performances, and lively discussions by over 30 creative compelling figures including Shezad Dawood (London), Jennifer Wen Ma (Beijing & New York), Jonas Staal (Amsterdam), Mami Kataoka (Tokyo), Sarah Rifky (Cairo & Boston), Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme (Ramallah & New York), Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige (Beirut), and many more. For full speaker lineup, profiles and curatorial narrative, click here
Curated by ACAW Director Leeza Ahmady
Space is limited and advance registration is required. Register to attend here!

For Press Inquiries email acawpr@asiasociety.org

Consortium Partners & Participating Institutions: Asia Society Museum / ArteEast / Asia Art Archive in America / Japan Society / The Metropolitan Museum of Art / MoMA | Museum of Modern Art / Queens Museum / Rubin Museum of Art / Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Sylvia Wald & Po Kim Foundation / +91 Foundation / Reversible Destiny Foundation / Twelve Gates Arts / Aicon Gallery / Art Projects International / Chambers Fine Art / DAG Modern / Doosan Gallery / Lisson Gallery / Owen James Gallery / Ronin Gallery / Roya Khadjavi Projects / Ryan Lee Gallery / Sundaram Tagore Gallery / Tyler Rollins Fine Art / Ab-Anbar Gallery (Tehran) / Alserkal Avenue (Dubai) / Edouard Malingue Gallery (Hong Kong) / Exhibit320 (New Delhi) / Galeri Zilberman (Istanbul) / Ink Studio (Beijing) / Richard Koh Fine Art (Kuala Lumpur) / Space Station (Beijing) / Mori Art Museum (Tokyo) / Otto Zoo Gallery (Milan) / The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation / Sa Sa Bassac (Phnom Penh) / The Third Line Gallery (Dubai) / Kadist Art Foundation / APA Institute NYU / Philadelphia Museum of Art / Sotheby's

Asia Contemporary Art Week (ACAW) is a collaborative curatorial & educational initiative of Asia Contemporary Art Consortium, fiscally sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) 

Images: 1. Sandi Hilal & Alessandro Petti, Concrete Tent, Photo by Anna Sara/Campus in Camps. Courtesy of ArteEast
2. Wafaa Bilal, The Things I Could Tell, installation, 2015. Copyright Wafaa Bilal. Courtesy Artpace & Driscoll Babcock Galleries
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Thursday, August 18, 2016

INTERNATIONAL FINE PRINT DEALERS ASSOCIATION ANNOUNCES THE 2016 IFPDA FOUNDATION GRANT AWARDS








INTERNATIONAL FINE PRINT DEALERS ASSOCIATION
ANNOUNCES THE 2016 IFPDA FOUNDATION GRANT AWARDS

Seven grants given to museums and art centers across the US in support of exhibitions, programming and research in printmaking


 Ann Dean; Image from the 2014 Steamroller Project at The Lawrence Arts Center

New York, August 17, 2016 - The International Fine Print Dealers Association (IFPDA) is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2016 IFPDA Foundation grant awards in support of exhibitions, scholarly publications, and educational programs that promote a greater awareness and appreciation of fine prints. This year's projects range from exhibitions to performance-based community happenings, and scholarly research, many of which use new technologies to enhance their impact. 

The seven grant recipients are: Arts Center of the Capital Region (Troy, NY); Kala Art Institute (Berkeley, CA); The Lawrence Arts Center (Lawrence, KS); RISD Museum (Providence, RI); Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago (Chicago, IL); University of St. Joseph Art Museum (West Hartford, CT); and the Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library  (Winterthur, DE).

For over two decades, as the leading international authority on fine art prints and their connoisseurship, the IFPDA has been dedicated to advancing scholarship in the field.
 Michele Senecal, Executive Director of the IFPDA, explains, "As a part of our longstanding mission to further the dialogue surrounding the medium, we are proud to support these institutions in their work and look forward to seeing these projects come to fruition and engage new audiences of print enthusiasts."

The selected grant recipients will explore notable periods and methodologies within the printmaking discipline; increase audience engagement through public art happenings and events; make use of new technologies in the creation of multimedia installations; and produce scholarly and archival catalogs. 

2016 IFPDA grant recipient projects:

The Arts Center of the Capital Region will host the East Coast Screen Print Biennial from October to December 2016. Encompassing multiple art exhibitions, a symposium, and talks by nationally-recognized artists Josh Macphee and John Hitchcock, the 2016 biennial will celebrate the specific discipline of screen printing. Also referred to as serigraphs or silkscreen prints, these are made using a process based on the stencil principle in which ink is forced through the exposed areas of the mesh screen. The resultant image is simple, yet bold and often has a graphic quality. In January 2017 a version of the biennial exhibit will also travel to the Center for Contemporary Printmaking in Norwalk, CT where it will be exhibited through March 2017.

The Kala Art Institute will use their grant support to make their archive and print collection public and accessible. Consisting of more than 2,500 prints by local, national, and international artists, the Institute's archive and print collection serves as an important historical record of its 42 years of serving artists who create prints. Kala's programs directly support professional artists working in and across printmaking and digital media, as they take artistic risks and experiment with new forms of printmaking and related media. Making the collection public and accessible serves Kala's mission: to help artists sustain their creative work over time through its artist-in-residence and fellowship programs, and to engage the community through exhibitions, public programs, and education.

The Lawrence Arts Center will use the IFPDA grant to reactivate the Steamroller Printing Project which was unable to run in 2016 due to a lack of financial support. This is an eight-week class that will be offered in 2017 to students aged 14 and up in which students carve relief patterns into large MDF boards under the guidance of the Arts Center's print fellow, culminating in a public street party, during which the City of Lawrence's Public Works Department will provide a steamroller and steamroller operator to help each student print their relief patterns onto paper and muslin. By using fine prints as a focal point for public gatherings, and with the partnership of the city of Lawrence, this project brings together artists and non-artists alike to appreciate printmaking as a fine art that can also be a form of community.

The RISD Museum will produce an online resource to augment the upcoming exhibition The Elements of Etching: Process and Innovation in Late 19th-Century Paris, planned for July 2017. The exhibition will explore the manner in which the etching process fostered creativity and experimentation to an unprecedented degree in both subject matter and form among artists working in Paris in the late 1800s. The web-based resource will be the first to combine the specialized knowledge of art historians and the technical knowledge of printmakers to understand the ways that the independent and private production of etchings led this medium to become a locus for creativity and formal experimentation during this period in Paris. It will be useful in supporting research use by both advanced scholars as well as general audiences.

The Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago will exhibit Classicisms, on view from February 16 - June 11, 2017. This exhibition explores the enduring influence of Classicism in the visual arts from antiquity through the 20th century, while examining its shifting aesthetic and sociocultural implications across multiple eras and contexts. Classicisms will examine prints as an important means of communication among artists themselves and their use in transmitting stylistic developments in the arenas of painting and sculpture and providing affordable resources for inspiration, study and further elaboration, bridging geographic and generational gaps between artists and helping facilitate the continued evolution of Classicism as a major theme in the visual arts. 

The University of St. Joseph Art Museum in West Hartford, CT will present HANGA NOW: Contemporary Japanese Printmakers, a survey of the most important Japanese printmakers working today in all print media, from color woodblocks to etchings, mezzotints, lithographs and screen prints. This will be the first museum exhibition in the Northeast in more than thirty years to present a survey this kind and will include collaborative programming from both the Greenwich Historical Society and the Bellarmine Museum at Fairfield University alongside printmaking demonstrations from Tamekane Yoshikatsu at nearby Smith College and the Loomis-Chaffe School.

The Winterthur Museum, Winterthur, DE will exhibit Lasting Impressions: The Artists of Currier & Ives, the first exhibition to investigate the role of two of the Currier and Ives' most prolific artists, Frances Bond Palmer and Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait. Through their association with printmaking and with this publisher of popular lithographs, Palmer and Tait expressed innovative visions of artistic creation in a world that witnessed the early stages of mass visual culture. This exhibition will provide a greater awareness of the roles of lithography and two under-studied artists in the development of 19th century American fine arts. Through an app created for the show, visitors will engage with the exhibition and appreciate 19th century art in print through the connoisseurship-oriented attitude that characterized many 19th century viewers.  Other programs include lectures on hand coloring techniques, print collecting, and the role of prints in American art.

About The IFPDA
Founded in 1987, The International Fine Print Dealers Association is a non-profit organization of expert art dealers dedicated to the highest standards of quality, ethics, and connoisseurship. The IFPDA has grown to include nearly 170 members in 13 countries, whose areas of specialization range from old master and modern to contemporary prints, including publishers of prints by renowned contemporary and emerging artists. The IFPDA aims to promote a greater appreciation and a deeper understanding of fine prints among art collectors and the general public through the annual IFPDA Print Fair, as well as public programming, awards, and funding for institutions via its public charity, the IFPDA Foundation.
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Monday, August 15, 2016

Spaik Brings Symbolic Eagle to Address Fear in Paris and Ibiza

Brooklyn Museum 

Spaik Brings Symbolic Eagle to Address Fear in Paris and Ibiza
Editorz, 10 Aug 12:02 AM

Mexican modern folkloric muralist Spaik participated in the Bloop Festival in Ibiza during the month long proactive music festival that is now in its fifth year. With a general ethos that “Art is for Everybody”, Bloop invites a number of artists each year to create works all over this town that for two decades has […]
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Whitney Museum of American Art, Mirror Cells, till Aug. 21

EMAIL_HEADERS142Mirror Cells
CONTACT
Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street
New York, NY 10014

General Information: (212) 570-3600
whitney.org


MIRROR CELLS
Through Sunday, August 21
Mirror Cells presents an environment of new sculptures by five young artists who each explore narrative and aesthetic links among objects, immersing viewers in strange invented worlds. Largely composed of modest materials such as wood, clay, plaster, and fabric, these works engage the viewer through a sense of immediacy and tactility. Maggie Lee’s video-based installations chart her family’s ups and downs, while Win McCarthy’s precarious sculptures are imbued with the anxiety of daily life in an unstable world. Likewise, the anthropomorphic shapes of Elizabeth Jaeger’s large-scale ceramic vessels imply ambiguous emotions, and Liz Craft’s works are connected through gossipy internal dialogues reflected in sculptural mouths, word bubbles, and spider women. Finally, Rochelle Goldberg’s installation alludes to unstable environments and questions of survival through her use of morphing forms and the growth cycles of living things. Mirror Cells is organized by Whitney associate curators Christopher Y. Lew and Jane Panetta.

Image CreditInstallation view of Mirror Cells (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, May 13–August 21, 2016). Photograph by Genevieve Hanson

Whitney Museum
of American Art
whitney.org
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Gallery Nine 5 is moving


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Foley Gallery : Amy Casey, Sept. 7th- Oct: 30th

["Foley Gallery"]
 
 
 
Amy Casey
Hold On

September 7 - October 30, 2016
reception: September 76 - 8pm
 
Foley Gallery is very pleased to present, Hold on, an exhibition featuring new paintings by Amy Casey. This will be the artist's second exhibition with with the gallery.

Viewers are invited once more into Casey's absurd, invented neighborhoods based on her bus and walking travels throughout the greater Cleveland metro area. Photographs from her travels provide the basic model architecture for her acrylic paintings on paper and clayboard. They range from the intimate (12 x 12”) to the epic (40 x 60”). They are finely detailed with each brick and windowpane meticulously rendered.

These precariously balanced cityscapes seem to, at times, fold on to themselves, sprout new buildings and in other instances, need the help of ropes or the roots of trees to keep them from tumbling out of place. Rivers flow in the street, bridges loop the cities and stilts buttress leaning towers.

Of her work Casey says: “Though my townsfolk have gone through some difficult and perilous times, I am now trying to focus on growth (which I realize is also frequently difficult). I am trying to put down some roots in a landless landscape and move forward…I am curious about the resilience of life and our ability to keep going in the face of ever shifting circumstances.”

Amy Casey received her BFA in painting form the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1999. She has exhibited her work regionally and nationally with solo shows in Cleveland, Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Her work as been published in The New York times, New American Paintings, Juxtapoz, Hi Fructose, and Elephant and Harper's Magazine. Casey has been awarded two Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Awards, the Cleveland Arts Prize as an emerging artist and a grant though CPAC's Creative Workforce Fellowship program. Amy Casey currently works and resides in Cleveland, Ohio.

Hold On will remain on view through October 30, 2016. Foley Gallery is open Wednesdaythrough Saturday11 – 6pm. To request images, please contact the gallery at 212.244.9081 orinfo@foleygallery.com
3fineartmagazine
 

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Yale Art Gallery Acquires Famous Photographers School Archive





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Yale University Art Gallery Acquires the Famous Photographers School Archive

Archive provides window on history of American photography, iconic midcentury moments, and the techniques, philosophies, and artistry of ten “famous photographers,” including Richard Avedon, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Phillippe Halsman, and Irving Penn.

The Gallery is delighted to announce the acquisition of the archive of the Famous Photographers School. Founded in 1961 in Westport, Connecticut, the school was an outgrowth of the highly successful Famous Artists School, a correspondence-learning course started by illustrator Albert Dorne in 1948 that became a thriving postwar enterprise.

A selection of 19 photographs from the Famous Photographers School is currently on display at the Gallery, including works by Richard Avedon, Margaret Bourke-White, Alfred Eisenstaedt, and Bert Stern.

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Joellen Adae, Director of Communications
joellen.adae@yale.edu203.432.0611
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THE CASTLE BARN AT NOVA'S ARK PROJECT INVITES YOU TO A SPECIAL SCREENING AND RECEPTION Sunday Aug 14th


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