Monday, December 16, 2013

Exhibition Preview: Jérôme Chazeix - Zeix Desire


5p banner member aktuell
***
chazeix studio 2013

Exhibition Preview: Jérôme Chazeix - Zeix Desire

The world which populates Jérôme Chazeix’s (1976, Nantua/France) drawings – animals, models, stars and ornaments, sparingly-coloured and succinctly outlined – piles up already in his studio: in glass cupboards, where normally one finds collected cups, Chazeix has placed animals as if to provoke our expression of sympathy (oh, isn’t it sweet!). One looks at foxes, elks or birds lacking anything unfamiliar. They are condemned to an existence as cuddled pets. In between lie genuine deer horns and flower vases bringing post-war cosiness to mind. Above, over this popular world, the objectively-scientifically stuffed bird and other dermatoplastic processed animals are being naturally displayed.
It is true that for the time being the stuffed bird has nothing to do with an image, but with a way of recording. Because science ascertains with the help of these objects and a clip box the content of the world. Yet as disposition – and yet again as image (this is a pheasant!), it should not be absent. After all, the production of the popular picture flood has its starting point in the stuffed fauna. In the corners and shelves of Chazeix’s far too small studio pile up animal atlases, books about birds and goods that are being collected in order to use their illustrations and schematized drawings. The taxonomic will to record and the naivety of the look, which seeks to erase every complexity, exert a magical attraction on Chazeix. He pursues image research.
The seriousness of his venture becomes visible when one is given files in the hand to leaf through. In them one can find, thematically organized, copies of cosmonaut photos, ad booklets, fashion magazines, textbooks, medicine books, tables and catalogues of contemporary art. “I’m through with the National Library” adds Chazeix. One begins to suspect, that it is about an inventory of popular images of the “unfamiliar” in the world, not inferior to science regarding its extent.
It is no surprise then, that Chazeix pulls out atlases in order to show us that he scientifically assembles his hotchpotch of cosmos, model, porno, animal and ornament in self-made notebooks. There are atlases (with candy papers, tags and milk labels with a cow face, like an object feeding us happily) or atlases with various modulations of the female image, pornographic varieties included.
Therefore, the picture formulas which Chazeix has mostly by chance come across (“I have bought this fox at a Chinese market”) are being injected in order reservoirs of his own.
chazeix 1

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled I

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
chazeix 2

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled II

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
chazeix 3

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled III

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
chazeix 4

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled IV

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
chazeix 5

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled V

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
chazeix 6

Jérôme Chazeix - Untitled VI

Original drawing
Mixed media on 150g/m2 lana paper
Signed by the artist
Size: 42 x 29.7 cm
#fineartmagazine

Foley Openings



header.Openings.(Short)

                                                                             Murmur No. 20, 44 x 44 inch inch pigment print 
Richard Barnes 
Murmur & Refuge


January 15 - February 23, 2014  

The formations of birds in flight and their nest building architecture are both guided by an innate sense of purpose and survival.  In an early investigation from Animal Logic (Princeton University Press, 2009), we find the photographer examining both phenomena with reverence.

In Murmur, Barnes observes the flocks of starlings that cloud the skies of EUR, a suburb of Rome.  In this series, he depicts nature as it behaves on it's own, alive and breathing.  The photographs capture the birds' aerial displays, which can take on the form of suspended mesh sculpture or simply blacken the sky. The photographs of the starlings can appear light, airy, and elegant, while others are captured with an unnerving and ominous quality.

Refuge examines the complex architecture of birds' nests, constructed from elements of the natural world along with debris discarded by humans such as string, plastic and dryer lint.  The nests are intricate structures, unique in shape and form.  This study of birds' nests exhibits an interesting and perhaps complicated relationship between humans and nature.  As we make more debris and waste, we pollute the environment, but in turn these nests are made of things we see as trash and they become safe havens for this part of the animal kingdom.  

Richard Barnes graduated from the University of California at Berkley with a BA in Fine Arts. He went on to work as the photographer for the joint Yale/University of Pennsylvania excavations at Abydos, Egypt.  His resume includes solo exhibitions at the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego, the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, the Carpenter Center at Harvard, Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum and the University of Michigan Art Museum. 

His work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.  Barnes received the Rome Prize in 2005/2006, and the Alfred Eisenstadt Award in Photography and the Sidman Fellowship for the Arts in 2009.

Murmur & Refuge will remain on view through February 23rd.  Foley Gallery is openWednesday - Sunday, 12 - 6pm.  To request images; please contact the gallery at 212.244.9081or info@foleygallery.com.

Footer (short) 
#fineartmagazine

Saturday, December 14, 2013

LOLA ARIAS EL AÑO EN QUE NACÍ / THE YEAR I WAS BORN

LOLA ARIAS
EL AÑO EN QUE NACÍ / THE YEAR I WAS BORN

January 23-26, 2014

Argentinean writer, director, performer, and songwriter Lola Arias brings El Año en que nací / The year I was born to the MCA Stage. Ten performers, born during Augusto Pinochet's 1970s and 1980s dictatorship in Chileretell their parent's stories using photographs, letters, cassette tapes, old clothing, anecdotes, and elusive recollections. The performances are part of the MCA Stage Global Stage Series and take place January 23-25 at 7:30 pm, and January 26 at 3 pm, in the Edlis Neeson Theater at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.

Invited by the Chilean government to create a new work, Arias chose to explore the seemingly-lost histories of people who lived under the Pinochet regime. Arias identified ten performers whose parents had diverse experiences living in Pinochet-era Chile. They don their parent's clothes and tell family stories that represent a range of economic, racial, and political backgrounds. Performer-by-performer, the stories collect and converge, retracing both personal histories and the collective history of Chile.A harrowing and cathartic experience for the performers, this playful and political piece reveals the complexity and dark secrets alongside the joy and humor of lives recovered.

Lola Arias is the co-founder of Compañía Postnuclear, an Argentinean group of interdisciplinary artists. Her productions explore the boundaries between reality and fiction, using biographies and real documentation in a surreal or poetic way. In her work Striptease (2007), a baby occupied the center of the stage while the parents dueled by telephone. In El amor es un francotirador (2007), performers related true and fictional love stories amid a rock band playing live. In 2010-2012, she curatedCiudades Paralelas, a festival of urban interventions in Berlin, Buenos Aires, Warsaw, Zurich, and SingaporeHer works have been performed internationally at festivals including Steirischer Herbst, Graz; Festival d'Avignon; In Transit Festival, Berlin; We Are Here, Dublin; Spielart Festival, Munich; Alkantara Festival, Lisbon; and Radicals Festival, Barcelona. Together with Ulises Conti, she composes and plays music and has released the albums El amor es un francotirador (2007) and Los que no duermen (2011).  

RELATED PROGRAMS
MCA Screen: Films by Pablo Larraίn
Saturday, January 11, 12-6 pm
Tuesday, January 14, 2-8 pm
In conjunction with Lola Arias's El Año en que naci / The year I was born, the MCA presents Chilean director Larran's trilogy. The films trace the Allende presidency's overthrow in the 1970's, which inaugurated Pinochet's 17-year military dictatorship.
·         Post Mortem (Saturday at noon, Tuesday at 2 pm) is inspired by official public accounts of the assistant coroner who performed the autopsy on the former president.
·         Tony Manero (Saturday 2 pm, Tuesday 4 pm) is named for John Travolta's character inSaturday Night Fever, which along with Grease, were the only American movies Pinochet's censors permitted to be shown in Chile. Tony Manero was shot on 16-millimeter film.
·         No (Saturday 4 pm, Tuesday 6 pm) is a portrayal of the surprise plebiscite election in 1988 which was caused by, and unseated, Pinochet.

MCA Talk: El Año en que nací / The year I was born
Thursday, January 23, immediately following the performance
Yolanda Cesta Cursach, Associate Director of Performance Programs, leads a discussion with the artists.

MCA Studio: DO IT in Español
Saturday, January 25, 1-3 pm
Participants can join Lola Arias's ensemble in a hands-on workshop conducted in English and Spanish. Participants need to bring five personal documents about their life, such as photos, papers, or cassette tapes.

TICKET INFORMATION
El Año en que nací / The Year I Was Bornis 120 minutes with no intermission and is in Spanish with English subtitles. Performances take place January 23-25 at 7:30 pm, and January 26 at 3 pm, in the Edlis Neeson Theater, 220 East Chicago Avenue. Tickets are $28 and a limited quantity of $10 student tickets is available. The MCA Box Office is at 312.397.4010 or www.mcachicago.org. One free museum admission is granted with an MCA Stage ticket stub, valid up to seven days after the performance.
 
Image:Lola Arias: El Año en que nací. Photo: David Alarcón.

Lola Arias: El Año en que nací / The year I was born is generously supported by Lois and Steve Eisen and the Eisen Family Foundation. Touring support is made possible in part by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Chile, and by the National Performance Network (NPN) Performing Americas Program.  El Año en que nací / The year I was born is a production of Fundación Teatro a Mil, Santiago, Chile (FITAM).

Major contributors of National Performance Network (NPN) include the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts (a federal agency), the MetLife Foundation and the Nathan Cummings Foundation.   Performing Americas is a partnership between NPN and the Network of Cultural Promoters of Latin America and the Caribbean (La RED), with funding provided by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation.
   

voice: 312.397.3828
  
voice: 312.397.3834
#fineartmagazine

AFA's Collector's Show

       
WHAT | AFA's 17th Annual Collector's Show & unveiling of a new exhibition of 20 new paintings by Bill Carman. Opening reception to include new works by five additional artists: Joe Sorren, Travis Louie, Kukula, David Lipson & Lin Esser will be in attendance and available for interviews.
 
WHEN | Saturday, December 14th, 6-9PM
 
WHERE | AFA of SoHo: 54 Greene Street (at Broome), New York City
 
 
GALLERY HOURS | Monday - Saturday: 10am to 7pm / Sunday: 10am to 6pm
 
EXHIBITION PREVIEW | You can preview the collection for Bill Carman's "Foibled" exhibition here
 
 
"As an imagemaker, "Where do you get you inspiration," is one of the questions most frequently asked of me. I have several pat answers but the truth is we humans are unavoidably interesting. We voluntarily have our faces injected with poison, "fin" sharks for soup, grind up animal horns in hopes of an erection, and count boredom among our most common afflictions. Our species serves up unending inspiration on a platter. Inspiration pushes me to unsettle with originality, question with juxtaposition and scratch away at peoples' minds."  -BILL CARMAN
AFA | At AFA, we are inspired by wildly imaginative artwork that indulges the senses and engages the emotions with layers of  symbolism and dark complexity. We exhibit paintings, drawings and sculptures created by extraordinary established and emerging artists who are highly skilled and have a unique vision.
 
Artwork copyright protected. All Rights Reserved.

The Art Dossier


Santa goes highbrow. “Artist Ed Wheeler created a holiday-themed series of hilarious self portraits, where he has inserted himself, as Santa, into the classic works of Vermeer, Caravaggio, Degas, Botticelli, Rousseau and many more. Ho-ho-ho . . . love it!”… [What's in the news]
The largest and first art installation in Antarctica. “California-based artist Lita Albuquerque led an expedition to Antarctica, near the south pole in the creation of her… [What's in the news]
British artist Alex Chinneck inverts a livery stable in London. “Both juxtaposing and synthesizing with its surrounding, Chinneck explains that, ‘I wanted to create… [What's in the news]
Grey Power, one of our favorite projects of the year, celebrates the elderly through the eyes of their adoring grandchildren. “shedding new light on a generation… [What's in the news]
Famous masterpieces recreated in Lego to encourage imagination. “If there’s one thing children have in abundance, it’s imagination. Seeking to encourage… [What's in the news]
#fineartmagazine

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Cheryl Hazan


 
  
 
Jeff Muhs 'Red Drift' 62" x 74" oil on canvas 2013 
 
ROUGE 

OPENING RECEPTION
THURSDAY DECEMBER 12, FROM 6-8PM
 
Show runs through January 12, 2014 


Jeff Muhs, 'St. Catherine of Alexandria (After Lotto)' oil on canvas 54" x80" 2013
#fineartmagazine