Wednesday, March 15, 2023

Norwegian Film Festival:Ten Norwegian films have been selected for the festival, which unspools March 15 to 26

CPH:DOX 2023

A record year at CPH:DOX

Ten Norwegian films have been selected for the festival, which unspools March 15 to 26.
 
In competition: Margreth Olin, Tonje Hessen Schei, Karrar Al-Azzawi, Ane Hjort Guttu, John Haukeland amongst others. Read more about the films here.

DOX:AWARD Competition

SONGS OF EARTH

F:ACT Award Competition

BAGHDAD ON FIRE

PRAYING FOR ARMAGEDDON

NORDIC:DOX Competition

FIGHTERS

VOICE

Sound & Vision

I GOT WORDS

RAHÄŒAN – ELLA’S RIOT

Next:Wave

THE GROUP CRIT

HIGHLIGHTS

BUDDING HUMANS

CPH BØRNE:DOX

TITINA

FORUM 

ALMOST HUMAN

 

THE LIONS AT THE RIVER TIGRIS

 

FORUM - Work in Progress

ADIL

 

PHANTOMS OF SIERRA MADRE

A Danish scriptwriter goes on a naïve adventure into Mexico looking for a tribe of lost Apaches. Slowly but surely, he finds himself in an ethically challenging position, but a human skull found in an attic in Oslo turns out to be his salvation.
 
2024 100 min DIRECTOR HÃ¥vard Bustnes PRODUCTION HÃ¥vard Bustnes, Christian Aune Falch for UpNorth Film CO-PRODUCTION Napa Films (FI), Cactus Film (MX) SALES DR Sales

Upcoming titles

Learn more about our short and feature length documentaries.

Meet us at CPH:DOX

Attending are Dag Asbjørnsen and Toril Simonsen from the International department, Documentary Film Commissioners Anna J. Ljungmark and Klara Nilsson Grunning, Production Adviser Helen Prestgard and Manager Professional Training Rune Tellefsen.

Co-Produce with Norway

The Norwegian Film Institute (NFI) funds minority co-production of feature films, documentaries, drama series, short films and video games. The NFI also operates the Norwegian Incentive Scheme and the Norwegian South Film Fund, Sørfond. In addition, regional film funds support co-productions for fiction and documentary feature films and drama series, and the regional film centres support co-production for documentaries and for shorter formats. 
 

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Russian Artists – YouHave To Be A Hero



LOVE RANCH

 



In the act of perception there are accordingly these two things, the mind engaged in a certain act, and the thing called the tree which is not mental. ~Samuel Alexander 
 


Byron Bay, Australia – For their inaugural exhibition in Australia, Tripoli Gallery is pleased to present Love Ranch in collaboration with Justin Crawford. For Love Ranch, the gallery founder Tripoli Patterson, has curated an extensive group show bringing together 21 artists from the USA, Puerto Rico, and Australia. This exhibition strives to foster an increased dialogue between artists in New York and beyond, with artists and collectors in Australia. Justin Crawford is a polymath of sorts with a focus on painting, photography, surfing, and developing environments, and his millinery company called FallenBROKENStreet he runs with his partner Diva Cory. Crawford’s paintings echo his interests and personality, presenting representational figures, life mantras through his recognizable font, and objects in uncertain situations.

Lottie Consalvo 
Send my Love to the Mountains, 2023
river pebbles and acrylic on board
15.7 x 19.6 inches; 18 x 22.2 inches framed
(40 x 50 cm; 46 x 56.5 cm framed)
Lottie Consalvo 
I'll Talk to You Through the Trees, 2023
acrylic on board
15.75 x 19.69 inches; 18.12 x 22.26 inches framed 
(40 x 50 cm; 46 x 56.5 cm framed)
 
Lottie Consalvo 
I Will See You in the Mountains, 2023
acrylic on board
11.83 x 15.75 inches; 14.76 x 18.52 inches framed
(30 x 40 cm; 37.5 x 47 cm framed)

 

Tripoli Gallery, founded in 2009, is a staple on Long Island’s East End. A hub for global contemporary artists as well as those long established within the 20th Century, artists exhibited include Ashley Bickerton, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Mary Heilmann, Keith Sonnier, Katherine Bernhardt, Ross Bleckner to name a few. The Gallery has always had a connection to the sea which is part of its connection to Australia. Tripoli Patterson is an avid surfer who first visited Australia in 2003 while competing in the World Qualifying Series. It was during this trip when he learned that his father, with the direction of his friend Willem de Kooning, played a key role in encouraging James Mollison, then director of the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra (1973), in the controversial acquisition of a Jackson Pollock painting for 1.2 million titled, Blue Poles, (Number 11), 1952. Today it is considered as one of the most important paintings by Pollock valued over 400 Million. Mr. Patterson was also responsible for adding the largest collection of Pre-Columbian art in Australia to the Permanent Collection of the National Gallery of Victoria where it is currently, and permanently on view.

Lottie Consalvo
Nothing Makes Sense But The Trees, 2022
river pebbles and acrylic on board
36 x 48 inches; 38.97 x 51.18 inches framed
(91.5 x 121.92 cm; 99 x 130 cm framed

Lottie Consalvo
Nothing Makes Sense But The Trees, 2022
(Details)

Co-collaborator Justin Crawford is the son of the legendary photographer Peter Crawford and has always been passionate about art. In 2017, he created ‘A SPOT OF GENIUS,’ a gallery in the middle of Byron Bay town, in an old beach shack. The gallery represented authentic culture and community that needed to be showcased. Artists exhibited included Jack Irvine, Ozzy Wrong, Brodie Jackson, Peter Crawford, and Luke Tafee. Justin Crawford and Tripoli Patterson were introduced by their mutual friend, collector of the gallery, and 8x World Surfing Champion, Stephanie Gilmore. Justin began exhibiting his work with Tripoli Gallery in 2019. Following the growing popularity and pace of Byron Bay, quantified by the pandemic (a feeling very similar to that of the Hamptons), Justin began envisioning a new gallery location in the nearby Industrial Estate, one that mimicked the times of marvel Street Byron — this exhibition launches FallenBROKENstreet Gallery.

Laith McGregor
Sleepy Landscape, 2017
oil on canvas with rattan conical hat
78 x 59.84 inches (198.12 x 151.9936 cm)
Laith McGregor
Sleepy Landscape, 2017 (Details) 

Love Ranch, is derived from an oil painting of the same name, Love Ranch (2013), by artist Jonathan Beer who is from New Orleans, Louisiana. The artists in the exhibition examine the often overlooked area where nature encounters mysticism. This takes various forms from painting (figurative and abstraction) to sculpture (wood, clay, aluminum, plastic or hemp) to tapestries (hand sewn and cut cloths, and vintage rugs), practiced by artists who created works for this exhibition, to Connie Fox, who painted Yellow Rainbow in 1973.

Byron Bay sits in the region known as Arakwal Country, a place of vast resources which stretches along the coast, north of Sydney, and south of Brisbane and has a rich indigenous history that dates back some 20,000 years. “Because of the abundance, we were not nomadic—we had villages and houses built” says Aunty Lois, a Nyangbul Bundjalung Elder. Originally known as ‘Cavanbah’ or meeting place, Byron Bay is Australia’s easternmost point that was believed to lead to the spirit world and is charged by the volcanic rock below. It was the site of numerus spiritual tea tree lakes, sacred to the indigenous Bundjalung women who would come here to give birth and wash in the medicinal waters. Today, it is a buzzing cultural hub and a destination for tourists and locals alike. The concept of an exhibition in the contemporary framework, is a meeting place. It allows for discussion (agreeing or disagreeing), contemplation, inspiration, and can contribute a particular level of sacredness to everyday visual culture.

Sally Egbert
August Yellow, 2022
acrylic and oil on canvas
16 x 20 inches (40.64 x 50.8 cm)

Sabra Moon Elliot
Holy Shadow, 2022
acrylic on canvas and glazed clay
13.5 x 8 x 2 inches (34.29 x 20.32 x 5.08 cm)

The exhibition and gallery plan to honor the land and nearby sea through a select group of contemporary artists who explore personal histories and the metaphysical. The shoreline is something that is in constant flux —an area for recreation, sport, migration, and resources. Waves lap the sand, emerging and disappearing with the current, something artists have drawn from for centuries. Whether this inspiration results in visual whimsy or melancholic reflection, the artworks in Love Ranch traverse space through a conceptual portal offering the opportunity to travel with feet firmly planted on the ground. 

~ Katy Hamer


About the Exhibition
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Tripoli Gallery · 26 Ardsley Road · Wainscott, New York 11975 · USA

Monday, March 13, 2023

Artexpo New York, now in it’s 46th year

 

United Kids For Ukraine

United Kids For Ukraine is an international, self-funded charity organization supporting Ukrainian refugee children and teenagers, founded by two dedicated Ukranian women, Masha Zolotova, and Katrina Bila.  Originally founded in 2009 in Odessa, the charity supports more than 600 children, some of whom were evacuated to Austria after the current war in Ukraine began. The long-term vision is to develop a safe and creative platform that supports talented young Ukrainian artists all over the world, both online and offline through Unitedkids.art. Additionally, the group of volunteers develops creative therapies for Ukrainian children in need, as well as a safe environment for Ukrainian women.http://unitedkids.art/




 

Yaryna Yuryk

Samir Sammoun of Sammoun Fine Art invites one of Ukraine’s most prominent and honored artists of Ukraine to this year’s Artexpo New York.  Lviv National Art Gallery has honored Yaryna Yuryk, who was the Associate Professor of the Department of Design and Fundamentals of Architecture at the National University Lvivskar Polytechnic, as well as an artist in her own right. Her watercolor works from the series "My Ukraine" and "Creation" have been presented at the Grand Palais National Museum in Paris, the Latin American Memorial in Sao Paulo, and during Art Week in Miami. However, the artist's first exhibition took place when she was 23 years-old, at the National Museum in Lviv. Yaryna Yuryk is the founder of the modern cordocentric worldview for watercolor painting in Ukraine, and her paintings are held in private collections across the world. 


 


 Alex Shabatinas

Represented by Artios Gallery in New York, Alex Shabatinas was born in the city of Kaunas, Lithuania. He has been living in New York City since 1999. Alex is internationally renowned and his oil-on-canvas works have been purchased by private collectors all around the world, including H.R.H. King Charles of England, former President of the United States Ronald Reagan, and the last General-Secretary of the U.S.S.R., Mikhail Gorbachev. The artist's works were presented on Sotheby's Internet Art Auction, where he sold fifty-one paintings. 



Cliff Lee

Austrian-born Cliff Lee came into prominence in 1993 when he was invited to contribute a piece of his work to the White House Collection of American Crafts.  Two years later, his porcelain work was in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery.  Lee's “Prickly Melons” with imperial yellow glaze, took him 17 years to create and caught the eye of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which acquired a pair for its permanent collection - a rare distinction for a living artist.