ALINA SZAPOCZNIKOW

Posted on 2013-10-28

The basic principle, the Tartuffe principle, we can call it (Molière’s Tartuffe, but not only), endures through the ages and across cultures (Femens in every land, the job has still to be done!): “Cover that breast I cannot bear to see!” Sex, as we know, has a bad reputation.

When explicit it is terrible, dirty or nasty! So leave it to the pornographer and his vile deeds! When more suggestive, half-hearted (or through pursed lips, so to speak), it fares better with the upholders of good taste, but then of course it butters no parsnips. Not that artists have refrained from representing it, and sometimes in the most brutal fashion (from Courbet to Nauman, via Picasso, Man Ray, Molinier, Louise Bourgeois or Lebel), with or without “delectation” for the beholder, as Duchamp used to say. But clearly, like an artistic equivalent of the top shelf, it is clear that these pieces are “curiosities,” minor works even when major-format. Fémininmasculin, the exhibition conceived for the Pompidou Centre fifteen years ago by Marie-Laure Bernadac and Bernard Marcadé, showed, however, that sex was neither secondary nor scabrous, but intimately bound up (excuse the expression!) with the process of art itself.

That in fact it expressed more than it revealed through forms whose representation in itself is pretty much an open and shut case: that it cast light on creation from within, we might say. At the time, I regretted and was above all astonished that Alina Szapocznikow did not feature in what was and remains a milestone in the French approach to “gender.”

Exhibition runs through to December 7th, 2013

Galerie Loevenbruck
6, rue Jacques Callot
F – 75006 Paris
France

www.loevenbruck.com

  

JIMMIE DURHAM

Posted on 2013-10-28

The choice of Brussels for the opening of a second space was motivated by longstanding friendships, close relationships with collectors, museum directors and artists but is also linked to the development over the past years of the Belgian art scene and more particularly that of Brussels’s. The gallery will have the pleasure to initially present its European and American artists and to offer the opportunity for Belgian artists to use its space.

The sculptures and drawings that Jimmie Durham offers us provoke in us a desire for dialogue(s). Dialogues with banal objects, which are common or even neglected but unconsciously carry a story and/or a political reality close to that of the artist, unperceived at the first glance.
In fact, the works of Jimmie Durham are indefinable, cannot be categorised and carry on a conversation about their identity, their story, their “life.” The artist invites the objects he has found, for example, on long walks with his family and to his studio, plays with them before sending them back into the world in a new way.

Jimmie Durham tells us, “I would like to make art each individual thing there is, there would not be a time when you had to decide to keep it or throw it away. It seems to me one can do that sort of non-dictatorial thing by making things which don’t have to do with craftwork at all just intellectually join our normal physical world.”

Exhibition runs through to December 7th, 2013

Galerie Michel Rein Brussels
51A Washington Street
B-1050 Brussels
Belgium

michelrein.com

  

PAUL RAMÍREZ JONAS – AGGREGATE

Posted on 2013-10-28

On view in the main gallery, five cork busts present a series of anti-monuments whose conventional forms are subverted by angular cuts to each face that deliberately obscure and de-center the identity of the memorialized figure.

Monuments, commonly fabricated with permanent materials, are often set out of reach with the purpose of inscribing public spaces indelibly. Counter to this tradition, the cork that is used for the Ventriloquist series is covered in pushpins. Each anonymous monolith surrenders its discursive power and submits its authority to a public. In turn, that public will transform each monument into a communal bulletin board by posting its own messages. Ultimately, the Ventriloquist sculptures assert that public voice is not necessarily permanent nor singular; it can instead reflect the fragility, contingency, and plurality of the general populace.

Building upon Ramírez Jonas’ earlier Admit One drawings, the new Assembly drawings present overlaid floor plans of multiple designated meeting places and the precise seating arrangements of the assembled publics within them. Stamped admission tickets stand in for every seat that awaits occupation. Whereas each Admit One renders a single architectural site, each Assembly imagines how separate spaces of deliberation (Congress), of action (meeting halls), and of spectacle (cinema) might intersect. Through this process, Assembly reveals unwitting ideological interdependencies and problematizes similarities between seemingly unrelated cultural spaces.

Exhibition runs through to December 7th, 2013

Koenig & Clinton
459 West 19th Street
New York
NY
10011

koenigandclinton.com

  

PATRICK LICHFIELD – CARIBBEAN

Posted on 2013-10-28

This is the first exhibition of Lichfield’s Caribbean images, many unpublished, representing all genres of Lichfield’s photography: landscape, portraiture, fashion and nudes.

Patrick Lichfield (1939-2005) was an internationally renowned photographer who worked for all the major magazines. His pictures were exhibited worldwide, and he published several books during his career. The National Portrait Gallery dedicated a retrospective exhibition to the first twenty years of his work in 2002.!His great break was when he was summoned by Diana Vreeland, the doyenne of fashion editors, to photograph the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and he was given a five year contract with American Vogue. In 1981 he was appointed official photographer at the wedding of his cousin The Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer.

Exhibition runs through to December 7th, 2013

The Little Black Gallery
13A Park Walk
London
SW10 0AJ

www.thelittleblackgallery.com

  

TYLER SHIELDS – SUBMERGED

Posted on 2013-10-28

The gallery will exhibit a variety of never before seen images of Young Hollywood’s elite featuring stars like Lydia Hearst and Connor Paolo in a unique series entitled ‘Submerged’. The gripping underwater series was photographed at various sub aqua locations – from the sea and Grand Canyon lakes to the lowly bathtub. It took six months to complete, and was chosen as a theme by Tyler to really challenge himself and push his own boundaries.

The participants had to learn how to hold their breath underwater for as long as possible- Tyler being the longest at a whopping 4mins 30 secs! Morgan Peszko was second best excelling at 2mins 01secs. This made the shoot both difficult and excitingly dangerous. The girls wore giant ball gowns to really emphasise the flowing elegance underwater. These heavily weighed them down in the water, to the point that the girls wanted to burn the dresses when the shoot was over!

When asked what the inspiration was behind ‘Submerged’, Tyler said “Shooting underwater is very, very hard. This series is about showing my view of an underwater world. A lot of these photos look like they are taken in space. They feel other worldly. My goal was to create the most insane underwater series ever done.”

Exhibition runs through to November 9th, 2013

Imitate Modern
27a Devonshire Street
London
W1G 6PN

imitatemodern.com

  

CORINNE DAY – MAY THE CIRCLE REMAIN UNBROKEN

Posted on 2013-10-28

A young man in a yellow crocheted bikini talks on the phone, a woman wearing only a lampshade kneels on the floor and another man uses chips for fangs. Filled with humour and life where one can almost hear the laughter out of shot, these images of Kevin, Tara, Vinca and George form part of an exhibition of previously unseen photographs of early work by Corinne Day.

May the Circle Remain Unbroken shows the people that Corinne’s work brought together and the friendships that formed over 20 years ago and continue to endure three years after her passing. It also illuminates Day’s pioneering approach to photography where the boundaries are blurred to the extent that it is impossible to dissect the constructed from real. Corinne and long term partner Mark Szaszy’s Brewer Street flat often doubled as a set where friends, models and muses all overlapped. In addition to the photographs, a series of music videos by Mark will be screened bringing to life the protagonists in Day’s work.

Accompanying the exhibition is a new publication of the same name by Morel Books. Edited by Mark Szaszy, this book documents Corinne’s progress from the early to mid nineties and stands as the first work since Diary.

Opposite – Rose with yellow flowers, 1997

Exhibition runs through to November 23rd, 2013

Gimpel Fils
30 Davies Street
London
W1K 4NB

www.gimpelfils.com