ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKAS – FAMILY MATTERS

Posted on 2016-05-23

According to Amnesty International, more than 27,000 people remain missing or disappeared in Mexico. In 2014 alone it reached 6000, a record. The real number is probably much higher; many cases go unreported for fear of retaliation and because of distrust in local and government authorities.

Working closely with the families of the 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers School that went missing in September, 2014 in Iguala after being ambushed by the local police and handed over to a narco group, one thing became clear to me: not only had these familie’s future been stolen, but a memory of their past was also doomed to disappear. Apart from a few mugshots and cellphone images, very few of the Ayotzinapa families had pictures of their disappeared loved ones.

Exhibition runs through to June 6th, 2016

The Half King
505 West 23rd Street
New York
NY 10011

www.halfkingphoto.com

  

CHIP HOOPER: CALIFORNIA’S PACIFIC 2ND SET

Posted on 2016-05-23

Chip Hooper once described his method: “the process of creating photographs is a contemplative one. It is an exploration of my feelings as much as it is an exploration of what I am seeing. The best images always happen when what I am feeling becomes one with what I am seeing.” The photographs presented in the Robert Mann Gallery exhibition, Californiaʼs Pacific 2nd Set, are perhaps the best embodiment of his process. These works evoke a visceral response, and when faced with a series of large-format photographs, it is hard not to be caught up in the whirlpool of emotion.

With the recent passing of Chip Hooper, Californiaʼs Pacific 2nd Set takes on new meaning. In his lifelong study of the worldʼs oceans Hooper sought the harmonizing moment where sea and sky become one. Two separate but equally majestic forces are seemingly joined infinitely when light unifies both bodies for one perfect moment. However in Moonlight, Hurricane Point the contemplative merging of sea and sky become the study of a finite moment. It is understood that this union, and really all serendipitous moments, are fleeting; the mirage will diffuse with time given the simple certainty that things change.

The ambiguous melding of the terrestrial with the cosmic become the visual representation of eternity and perhaps, for one man, a metaphor for mortality. The significance of subject matter is also transformed. If Hooper looked to capture what he was feeling, solitary waves in an expansive ocean and isolated rock formations become self-portraits. Perhaps most striking is Evening Clouds, where the moon fearlessly shines out of black night and is carefully cradled over a glassy sea by the exact horizon Hooper was fascinated with capturing. The contemplative response to the works of Chip Hooper is as important to the audience as it was to the artist.

Opposite – Cliffs, Pacific Ocean, 2012

Exhibition runs through to July 1st, 2016

Robert Mann Gallery
525 West 26th Street
2nd Floor
New York
NY 10001

www.robertmann.com

  

CHRISTIANE BAUMGARTNER – LICHT-BILDER

Posted on 2016-05-23

Baumgartner’s woodcuts are based on images – photographs, videos, documentations – found or produced by herself and then transferred in traditional prints using ancient woodcutting techniques. She masterfully engraves the wood using horizontal lines, the structure thus indicating the former image and having to be completed by the viewer due to the grade of abstraction. Baumgartner skilfully uses this abstraction and coarsening of perception to deal intensively with the concepts of time, space and motion, and the problem of depicting them.

The nearly two by three-meter-work Storm at Sea (2013) depicts an enormous wave. Baumgartner used a film still she made by filming a documentary on TV as starting point. The change of medium leads to a particular default, the so called Moiré which occurs when a secondary pattern is superimposed on the primary one that then creates an optical illusion of sorts. To see the work as a whole as well as the complexity of the details the accommodation of one’s eyes is constantly necessary.
Baumgartner also used film as a source for her less abstract series Kleines Seestück I-IV (2011). Through the use of a self generated line grid, the woodcuts seem to flicker when looked at and the scene that has been brought to a standstill appears to be moving once again.

Opposite – Storm at Sea, 2013

Exhibition runs through till July 23rd, 2016

Galerie Christian Lethert
Antwerpener Straße 4
Cologne
D-50672
Germany

www.christianlethert.com

  

MIA – POC THAT STILL A RYDA

Posted on 2016-05-23

This song is a LRICAL mix of songs on my upcoming Lp – had to do a remix to OLA to let u know , i been poor , i been rich , i been brown , i been seen black , i seen white and i been around the world a few times ay ay ay ay . LOVE IS THE ANSWER what the question is i don’t fucking know.
we in this together.

POC that isn’t from the LP. it was born out of re-doing OLA which i couldn’t clear at the time. Its a indian beat sampled by american hip hop sampled by a Srilankan

M.I.A

miauniverse.tumblr.com

  

PHYLLIS BRAMSON – UNDER THE PLEASURE DOME

Posted on 2016-05-23

Phyllis Bramson is an enigmatic and influential artist and professor in the Chicago art world. Her lush colors, coy figuration and wholehearted embrace of the decorative in the service of masterfully composed assemblages and paintings, that draw the viewer ever further in to many layered stories are continuous threads in her decades long practice of artmaking and teaching. Bramson’s use of kitsch objects, erotic overtones and Orientalist references creates lightly veiled, deeply complex works. The Chicago Cultural Center’s exhibition “Under the Pleasure Dome” is a wide selection of paintings and assemblages drawn from the artist’s collection and illustrative of her work over many years including examples of her most recent “scroll” series.

“Flirting with the psychosexual subconscious of Americana objects, winking at conventions of ‘good taste,’ and pinching at the backside of our public facades of normalcy: Bramson’s aesthetic is that of the bawdy banal. It is sentimental, and it is smart. Through iconography and innuendo Bramson searches for, and somehow depicts, complex worlds of desire, emotion, and curiosity that cultural fantasy, industry, and kitsch-commodity (or, in other words: post-modernity) have conspired to make possible”.

Danny Orendorff, independent curator and art critic

Opposite – Pastoral Pleasures, 2006

Exhibition runs through till August 28th, 2016

Chicago Cultural Center
78 East Washington Street
Chicago, IL60602

www.cityofchicago.org

  

HEINZ MACK – SPECTRUM

Posted on 2016-05-23

The current exhibition thus proposes reviving this essential reformer from the history of abstract art. With
enthusiastic support from the artist as well as major lenders and institutions, I have selected for this exhibition a substantial group of more than seventy works, including some very old ones that have never been shown in public. The presentation will exceptionally take place in all of the spaces of the Galerie Perrotin in Paris, and will link together works of various formats, natures, and periods in order to highlight the main lines, if not the “whole spectrum,” of a broad career.
From one period to another, Mack’s esthetic search has been a constant exploration—both systematic and sensual—of the
lumino-chromatic spectrum and its perceptive thresholds. This immaterial goal took on a philosophical dimension for
the artist, one that was paradoxically based on highly material means, and that used the raw simplicity of natural or
manufactured materials such as paint, metal, wood, stone, glass, plexiglass, or sand. The variability of the manual
production, both controlled and random, as well as this primitivist reduction, make Mack the source of an exceptional phenomenological unfolding. The viewer is prompted to feel the tangible experience of vision, and to consider time and
space as entirely separate mediums.

Opposite – Vibration im blau, 1959

Exhibition runs through till June 4th, 2016

Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin
76, rue de Turenne
75003 Paris

www.perrotin.com