BEHEMOTH (BEI XI MO SHOU)

Posted on 2016-08-08

Under the sun, the heavenly beauty of grasslands will soon be covered by the raging dust of mines. Facing the ashes and noises caused by heavy mining , the herdsmen have no choice but to leave as the meadow areas dwindle. In the moonlight, iron mines are brightly lit throughout the night. Workers who operate the drilling machines must stay awake. The fight is tortuous, against the machine and against themselves. Meanwhile, coal miners are busy filling trucks with coals. Wearing a coal-dust mask, they become ghostlike creatures. An endless line of trucks will transport all the coals and iron ores to the iron works.

In theatres August 19th, 2016

Behemoth

  

THE CHILDHOOD OF A LEADER

Posted on 2016-08-08

A child’s angelic face conceals a budding sociopath in the audacious, senses-shattering feature debut from actor Brady Corbet. A powerhouse international cast led by Robert Pattinson and Bérénice Bejo (The Artist) headlines this dark domestic nightmare. Set amidst the turmoil of World War I and its aftermath, it follows the young son of an American diplomat living in France as he learns to manipulate the adults around him-a monstrous coming of age that ominously parallels the rising tide of Fascism in Europe. A stylistically fearless tour-de-force, The Childhood of a Leader reaches fever-pitch delirium thanks to ravishing cinematography and a thunderous score by legendary, boundary-pushing musician Scott Walker.

In theatres August 19th, 2016

bowandarrow.la

  

LOWFOOL VS. LOWFOOL – INNER CONFLICT

Posted on 2016-08-08

The brand-new Lowfool vs. Lowfool: Inner Conflict vinyl offers a comical take on the everyday lives of Super Heroes. This first edition features Superman hunched over a tiny arcade game as he battles his sometime nemesis – Batman, on screen. Powered in part by the play on scale—a ridiculously large hero (even by comic book standards) and a way-too-small arcade game—the absurdly awesome concept imagines a world in which super heroes aren’t so different from diehard fans who buy every product and yes, play every video game with reckless abandon.

Limited to 398 pieces

doublefools.blogspot.co.uk

  

TOM SACHS – BOOMBOX RETROSPECTIVE 1999–2016

Posted on 2016-08-08

Tom Sachs pays tribute to a defining icon of street culture—the boom box—by transforming our glass entryway, the Rubin Pavilion, into a living sound system that hovers between art and science, the functional and the mythological.

Tom Sachs: Boombox Retrospective, 1999–2016 features eighteen works that highlight the artist’s ability to inventively transform ordinary, everyday materials into art. With wit and ingenuity, he creates boom box sculptures that play music and activate the space, turning it into an immersive sound environment. The work is programmed with playlists that go on sequentially throughout our public hours.

The installation includes Toyan’s (2002), a group of speakers eight feet tall by twelve feet across inspired by Jamaican sound systems, and Presidential Vampire Booth (2002), complete with a stocked bar and Presidential seal. Sachs’s work is crafted from a wide range of materials such as plywood, foamcore, batteries, duct tape, wires, hot glue, and solder.

Opposite – Model One, 1999

Exhibition runs through to August 14th, 2016

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn
New York 11238-6052

www.brooklynmuseum.org

  

DANNY LYON – MESSAGE TO THE FUTURE

Posted on 2016-08-01

Danny Lyon: Message to the Future is the first comprehensive retrospective of the career of Danny Lyon (b. 1942) to be presented in twenty-five years. The exhibition is organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and will premiere at the Whitney in June 2016 before traveling to San Francisco.

The exhibition assembles approximately 175 photographs and related films and ephemera to highlight Lyon’s concern with social and political issues and the welfare of individuals considered by many to be on the margins of society. The presentation includes many objects that have seldom or never been exhibited before and offers a rare look at works from Lyon’s archives alongside important loans from major public and private collections in the United States. This is also the first exhibition to assess the artist’s achievements as a filmmaker.

A leading figure in the American street photography movement of the 1960s, Lyon has distinguished himself by the personal intimacy he establishes with his subjects and the inventiveness of his practice. With his ability to find beauty in the starkest reality, Lyon has through his work provided a charged alternative to the bland vision of American life often depicted in the mass media.

Opposite – Weight lifters, Ramsey Unit, Texas, 1968

Exhibition runs through to September 25th, 2016

Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street
New York
NY 10014

whitney.org

  

DIANE ARBUS – IN THE BEGINNING

Posted on 2016-08-01

Diane arbus: in the beginning focuses on seven key years that represent a crucial period of the artist’s genesis, showing Arbus as she developed her style and honed her practice. Arbus was fascinated by photography even before she received a camera in 1941 at the age of 18 as a present from her husband, Allan, and made photographs intermittently for the next 15 years while working with him as a stylist in their fashion photography business. But in 1956 she numbered a roll of 35mm film #1, as if to claim to herself that this moment would be her definitive beginning. Through the course of the next seven years (the period in which she primarily used a 35mm camera), an evolution took place—from pictures of individuals that sprang out of fortuitous chance encounters to portraits in which the chosen subjects became engaged participants, with as much stake in the outcome as the photographer. This greatly distinguishes Arbus’s practice from that of her peers, from Walker Evans and Helen Levitt to Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander, who believed that the only legitimate record was one in which they, themselves, appear to play little or no role. In almost complete opposition, Arbus sought the poignancy of a direct personal encounter.

Exhibition runs through to November 27th, 2016

The Met Breuer
945 Madison Avenue
New York
NY 10021

www.metmuseum.org