KATHLEEN WHITE – (A) RAKE’S PROGRESS

Posted on 2014-08-18

The exhibition, (A) Rake’s Progress, is comprised of the complete polymorphichrome drawings produced by Ms. White outdoors in the summer of 2009. The cycle of pastels on paper, a progression numbering 71 works, were created in remembrance of Ms. White’s late brother Chris White.

Chris’s suicide of 2007 was unreconcilable. Gripped by the shadow of loss, I spent a year studying the colors in my Ludlow Street courtyard —the wild garden was transformed from a derelict garbage heap by Rafael and myself. Knowing also that the garden would soon be lost to the high rents plaguing our city -as “the lost decade”, “the fear decade”, “the greed decade” turned 9 -this physical exploration of color through its endless grinding, its proliferating combinations and intense contact onto the page is at once a stance of grace and defiance against the all the world’s insults.

The “glut” of information which prevails over the pursuit of knowledge and feeling in modern times is of particular distress to Ms. White who often utilizes the phrase, “Get out of the way, hobo!” to refer to the state of our present culture’s pervasive, implosive, subtly celebrated, corrosion of empathy. As in the artist’s earlier installations over the past three decades this presentation is in keeping with Ms. White’s practice of creating spaces of reverence, connection and love.

The choice of the pastels was made during a conversation with Mr. Sánchez, “I want this to be an installation of color and sound.” The two artists who have collaborated on numerous acclaimed projects looked to this body of work that has lain dormant for five years. The inclination toward sound comes from a more recent body of work by Ms. White, Sound Texts, which will be represented by the recorded sounds of her instrument of choice during their production: the typewriter.

Exhibition runs through to August 31st, 2014

Momenta Art
56 Bogart Street
Brooklyn
New York
NY
11211

www.momentaart.org

  

THE WAR ON DRUGS – UNDER

Posted on 2014-08-18

The War On Drugs “Under The Pressure” from the album ‘Lost In The Dream’ out now on Secretly Canadian. The video is directed by Houmam.

www.secretlycanadian.com

  

RAF SIMONS X FRED PERRY 10TH COLLECTION

Posted on 2014-08-18

The line entails classic Fred Perry silhouettes synthesized with Raf Simons’ eye for playful details, with the use of asymmetrical lines and geometric patterns playing central theme with incorporated patchwork garnishings.

www.fredperry.com

  

ANNA VOGEL – GIVE BACK THE KINGDOM

Posted on 2014-08-18

Vogel’s works function intuitively for the most part. The theme of Give Back the Kingdom – without sounding any religious or environmental overtones – has to do with the idea of a lost kingdom in a Biblical sense. The works of the exhibition focus on the nonchalance with which we treat the world, the unintended vestiges that we leave behind in it, the fleeting and superficial manner in which we perceive it. Here lifeless roadways stretch across unspecific landscapes. Rubbed-out, scratched oceans subside at the horizon. Forests can only be dimly recognized behind thick lines. In a few works, the landscapes have completely entered the realm of ornament and abstraction. In others, they take on post-apocalyptic aspects: Blood red and white clouds of fire-extinguishing sand float disquietingly in the atmosphere, as if they had been emitted not by airplanes, but by an invisible force. An aircraft carrier drifts homelessly upon the seas. At the edges of these pictures, in their instances of faint blurriness, their occasionally visible pixelation and color distortions, the noise of the atmosphere becomes clearly perceptible. The dynamic lines and scratches of the works point toward the inescapable slipping out of control to which our memory is subject in a world of constant acceleration.

The investigation of these contents is accompanied by a richly imaginative playing with the medium of photography that self-confidently transcends the traditional borders of the genre. Vogel herself took some of the photographs on which the works are based; she found others on the Internet or created them herself with a computer. She subjects her motifs to a large number of analog and digital processes of image editing. She retouches certain visual elements or alters the pictorial composition. She makes use of traditional collage technique, expands the photographic space with the help of drafting tools, and is not afraid to scratch the picture surface in a mechanical way.

Opposite – Untitled, 2014

Exhibition runs through to August 30th, 2014

Sprüth Magers Berlin
Oranienburger Straße 18
D-10178
Berlin

www.spruethmagers.com

  

INCASE ACTION CAMERA COLLECTION

Posted on 2014-08-18

Designed with GoPro cameras and accessories in mind, the collection features a bevy of protective and organizational products for a photographer’s GoPro setup and is highlighted by the inclusion of TENSAERLITE protection technology.

goincase.com

  

CAIO REISEWITZ

Posted on 2014-08-12

One of Brazil’s leading contemporary photographers, Caio Reisewitz (b. 1967) has produced a remarkable body of work during the past 15 years, concentrating almost exclusively on Brazilian subjects. His large-scale color photographs explore the changing relation of the city and the countryside in a period of feverish economic development. Many of Reisewitz’s photographs testify to his fascination with the architectural heritage of Brazil’s colonial period, as well as its innovative 20th-century modernist architecture. Other imposing works portray the pristine landscapes and dense forests around his hometown of São Paulo—areas that are now threatened by urban sprawl. His smaller-format photocollages take a very different direction, employing a playful, jazz-like visual approach. In these works, tiny photographic images of urban environments are scattered within scenes presenting the green expanses of Brazil’s forests.

Exhibition runs through to September 7th, 2014

Opposite – Garrapata Beach, 1956

International Center of Photography
1133 Avenue of the Americas at 43rd Street
New York
10036

www.icp.org