Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Crusade Installation in REMAP 3

Crusade
(Installation)


Crusade plays on symbolisms.
It's a word game.

It intervenes within a meditative environment and with religious tenderness it provokes concepts and images.

Balancing between "sacred" space and deterioration, pathos and nursing, protection and degeneration, presence and absence.

A meeting of four artists (visual artists, musicians and object manipulators/jugglers) who use objects, natural materials and sounds to an attempt to look within tradition for momentary and eternal values.


Installations & visual editing: George Maraziotis, eekuipoiz
object manipulation performers: eekuipoiz (Xristos Kaoukis & Marion Renard)
Sound Design: Thomas Pouliasis
Lighting: Nikos Sotiropoulos

object0.net
maraziotis.com

15 & 16 September 2011
KNOT GALLERY -20.30
Mixalakopoulou 206 & Pirrou
knotarts.blogspot.com
Metro Ambelokipi

22 & 23 September 2011
FROWN TAILS - 20.30
as part of ReMap 3
Paramithias 6
frowntails.com
Metro Metaxourgeio

Free Entrance

Monday, August 29, 2011

Phillips de Pury Auction in London -29 September 2011

ondon — Phillips de Pury & Company is pleased to announce the ceramics highlights from its London Design auction. The sale will offer the most important group of Modernist ceramics ever to appear at auction. Approximately forty works have been selected from the renowned Berkeley Collection. Formed during a period of nearly thirty years of close friendship between the collectors Harley Carpenter and Geof Walker and the Viennese born potter Lucie Rie. This auction is a unique opportunity to acquire some major works with an extraordinary exhibition history and well documented provenance by these most revered of ceramic artists. The ceramic works and wall will be displayed in the Phillips de Pury gallery in an innovative setting designed to enhance the viewers' experience of the exhibition.'

Lucie Riegave Harley Carpenter and Geof Walker access to some of her best pieces and encouraged them to also collect those of her friend and collaborator Hans Coper. The collection grew steadily and soon became the first port of call for Museum curators looking for willing lenders. Many of the works on offer are recently returned from a ground breaking tour of Japan, the first retrospective of Hans Coper's work in that country. Some pieces have also been shown at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Issey Miyake's Design Foundation in Tokyo, The Barbican in London, The Museum Angewandte Kunst in Vienna and The Gardiner Museumin Toronto amongst others.

"The Berkeley Collection is legendary amongst Museum curators and collectors alike. Geof Walker and Harley Carpenter were always willing to lend their cherished collection and shared with many an aim to bring this important work to a larger audience. Almost accidentally, many of the pieces which we now have the pleasure of offering have become some of the artist's most iconic works, representative of a uniquely creative period in the development of British ceramics and a once in a lifetime opportunity to acquire a piece that represents what are widely regarded as being the pinnacle of these two artist's distinguished careers." Ben Williams, Contemporary Ceramics Specialist, Design Phillips de Pury & Company.

Highlights of the ceramics section include:

Hans Coper, The Swinton School Mural, 1962 £50,000  £70,000

Hans Coper, The Swinton School Mural, 1962,estimated at £50,000  £70,000

Hans Coper, Black bud pot with grey base, estimated at £30,000  £40,000

Lucie Rie, Monumental blue vase, estimated at £30,000  £40,000

Lucie Rie, Bowl with pink inlaid design, £5,000  £7,000

Lucie Rie, Vase with golden glaze, terra cotta on the shoulder, £6,000  £9,000

Lucie Rie, Large pale yellow bowl with inlay and golden lip £8,000  £12,000

Lucie Rie, Large oval bowl with blue and pink pitted glaze £12,000  £16,000

THE SWINTON SCHOOL WALL
The Swinton School Wall is the only lot in the section that comes from a source other than The Berkeley Collection. Designed and installed in 1962 the Swinton School Wall commission was initiated by Sir Alec Clegg, the innovative Chief Education Officer of the West Riding of Yorkshire County Council. It sat largely unnoticed for four decades in the school entrance hall until it was rediscovered by Maya Nishi, Japanese curator of a major Hans Coper retrospective and Ben Williams, Ceramics Specialist at Phillips de Pury. An offer of a loan to the exhibition was quickly agreed as the school was due to be demolished and there was a real risk that the piece may have been bulldozed. A team of art handlers visited the school, and removed the 18 discs from the wall before having them cleaned and re installed at Phillips de Pury. The wall has since been on loan to the exhibition that has toured Japan and has been a centerpiece of the show. The school is now selling the wall, the planned demolition of the old school building has been put on hold but they will benefit from the proceeds of the auction and intend to commission a replica for the new building once it is completed.

NOTES TO EDITORS

LUCIE RIE AND HANS COPER
Widely regarded as the two most important ceramic artists working in the post  war period Lucie Rie (1902 1995) and Hans Coper (1920 1981) both arrived in the UK during the late 1930's as refugees fleeing Nazi persecution in their homelands of Austria and Germany. Already established as a potter before her arrival in London Rie set up her workshop beneath her living quarters in Albion Mews, near Marble Arch in London. Wartime years, and those immediately after were dedicated to the production of ceramic buttons and tablewares, the buttons were sold to couturiers who were unable to source buttons as all the major manufacturers were supplying the demand for uniforms. Hans Coper, with no previous ceramics training, arrived at Rie’s workshop looking for work.

Soon they were collaborating on a series of tablewares thrown by Coper and decorated by Rie. For some time Rie developed a crisis of confidence and had turned her back on the austere Modernist cylinders to experiment briefly with Bernard Leach's orientalist approach to ceramic production. Hans gave Lucie the confidence to break away from attempting to follow Leach's aesthetic, leading to a completely new approach to ceramics, instantly recognisable bowls and vases with unique timeless forms and often a strong use of colour, it was a developing style that continued evolving throughout her long career. Coper's early work tended toward large, powerfully thrown forms. Sadly, throughout his life he was plagued by debilitating Ankylosing Spondylitis and later, Motor Neurone Disease, the work necessarily decreased to a scale that was manageable to him, this last group of works, of which there are four examples on offer are collectively known as the 'Cycladic' series, incredibly rare, tiny, beautifully composed objects that are greatly prized by collectors.

Although distinctly different in their aesthetic they were bound by a number of shared principles  both artists made everything on the wheel, and many of their works are composites comprising of several individually thrown elements, the body is always fully integrated with the layers of applied glazes or painted slips that make up the surface of their pots. In preparation for the joint exhibition of their work at The Boijman's Van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam they wrote... 'A pot is a container. More: it must be a container ­ whether of coffee, flowers, soup, or cigarette ash  in order to be a pot at all. A pot is also an object. Therefore it can offer something  let us say, aesthetic merit by itself, in its own right’. Inspired by this attitude towards the necessary functionality of their work and by Harley Carpenter's period photographs taken of the inside of Lucie Rie's apartment displaying rows of Hans Coper pots brimming with flowers Phillips de Pury in partnership with Paul Thomas will recreate and explore this aspect for the first time in their auction catalogue.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

DESTE Foundation Prize

THE DESTE PRIZE

The DESTE Prize was established in 1999 and is awarded every two years to a Greek artist living in Greece or abroad. The Prize aims to showcase the work of a new and emerging generation of artists and it is an integral part of the Foundation’s policy for supporting and promoting contemporary art in Greece.

A six-member Selection Committee comprising of Greek curators, critics, collectors and artists nominate 36 candidates (up to 40 years of age). From these candidates, six artists are shortlisted for the DESTE Prize and participate in the DESTE Prize exhibition. An international Jury of five members comprising of a distinguished team of museum directors, curators, art critics and the President of DESTE, Mr. Dakis Joannou, select the winner, who is presented with the amount of 10.000 Euros during an award ceremony. DESTE Prize winners are marked in italics
DESTE Prize 1999
METRO: New Trends in Contemporary Greek Art

Shortlisted Artists:
Maurice Ganis, Alexandros Georgiou, Kostas Ioannidis, Despina Isaia, Panos Kokkinias, Deanna Maganias, Lina Theodorou, Dimitris Tsoublekas, Panayota Tzamourani

Selection by Dan Cameron

Jury Members: Dakis Joannou, Iwona Blazwick, Dan Cameron, Katerina Gregos, Rosa Martinez
 

Panayota Tzamourani, Mad Object / Maddened Subject, 1997, Video still

DESTE Prize 2001

Shortlisted Artists: Christos Athanasiadis, Despina Christou, Sia Kyriakakou, Dimitra Lazaridou, Eleni Lyra, Georgia Sagri, Andreas Savva

Selection Committee: Katerina Gregos, Sania Papa, Efi Strousa, Nikos Tranos, Nikos Xydakis

Jury Members: Dakis Joannou, Alison Gingeras, Jennifer Higgie, Christos M. Joachimides, James Rondeau
 

Georgia Sagri, In the Shop-Window, 2001

DESTE Prize 2003

Shortlisted Artists: Nikos Alexiou, Apostolos Georgiou, Dimitris Kozaris, Nikos Navridis, Maria Papadimitriou, Nikos Tranos

Selection Committee: Marina Fokides, Katerina Koskinas, Constantine Papageorgiou, Rena Papaspyrou, Yorgos Tzirtzilakis

Jury Members: Dakis Joannou, Tuula Arkio, Maurizio Cattelan, Massimiliano Gioni, Lars Nittve
 

Maria Papadimitriou, T.A.M.A.
Sentimental, 2002
Video, Installation View

DESTE Prize 2005

Shortlisted Artists:
Kostis Velonis, Dora Economou, Christodoulos Panayiotou, Stefanos Tsivopoulos, Poka-Yio, Dimitris Foutris

Selection Committee: Orestis Doumanis, Christoforos Marinos, Gregory Papadimitriou, Maria Papadimitriou, Yiannis Toumazis, Augustine Zenakos

Jury Members: Dakis Joannou, Nicolas Bourriaud, Urs Fischer, Pauline Karpidas, Scott Rothkopf

Christodoulos Panayiotou, Truly, 2005
Video installation, Installation view

DESTE Prize 2007
Shortlisted Artists:
Loukia Alavanou, Nikos Arvanitis, Savvas Christodoulides, Socrates Fatouros, Yiannis Grigoriadis, Eleni Kamma

Selection Committee:
Nadja Argyropoulou, Harry David, Elpida Karaba, Margarita Pournara, Kostis Velonis, Despina Zefkili

Jury Members:
Dakis Joannou, Pawel Althamer, Laura Hoptman, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Amanda Sharp

Loukia Alavanou, Chop Chop tale, 2007
Video still, double screen video installation, 5min

DESTE Prize 2009

Shortlisted Artists:
Athanasios Argianas, Eirene Efstathiou, Haris Epaminonda, Rallou Panagiotou, Vangelis Vlahos, Yorgos Sapountzis

Selection Committee: Sandra Marinopoulou, Xenia Kalpaktsoglou, Alexandra Koroxenidi, Sotiris Bachtsetzis, Stefanos Tsivopoulos

Jury Members: Dakis Joannou, Lisa Phillips, Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Jeffrey Deitch, Thomas Struth

Eirene Efstathiou, Epitafios, 2009
Oil and Acrylic on 3 panels, total dimensions 68x23 cm

Friday, January 28, 2011

no money... no honey...

Mr Geroulanos (Greek Minister of Culture and Tourism) has send the message ...public sponsorship will be reduced 30% and the public museums and other cultural institutions should cover their needs on private "money".

As far as the museums are concerned, last year the budget was 12 million euros but due to the crisis it's cut in half...The New Acropolis museum will not receive any sponsorship as well as the Museum of Contemporary Art of Athens and Thessaloniki. Why is that?

Can someone tell me why they decided to sponsor the private Natural History Museum with more than half a million euros???

At Sotheby’s Sale, Titian Draws One Bidder

At Sotheby’s Sale, Titian Draws One Bidder

Despite the snow, all the usual suspects were present at Sotheby’s New York salesroom on Thursday morning to watch the fate of Titian’s “Sacra Conversazione: The Madonna and Child With Saints Luke and Catherine of Alexandria.”

The painting, which dates from around 1560, sold to a lone telephone bidder for its low estimate, $15 million, or $16.8 million, including Sotheby’s fees. The auction house would identify the buyer only as “a European collector.” The price was a record for the artist at auction, surpassing the $13.5 million paid at Christie’s in London in 1991.

(Final prices include the buyer’s commission to Sotheby’s: 25 percent of the first $50,000; 20 percent of the next $50,000 to $1 million; and 12 percent of the rest. Estimates do not reflect commissions.)

In addition to strong prices for works being sold by institutions like the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the big news on Thursday was the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s purchase of “The Holy Family With the Infant St. John the Baptist,” a painting by the Renaissance artist Perino del Vaga, for $2 million. It had been expected to bring $300,000 to $400,000.

On Wednesday the Met bought a rare drawing by the same artist, who was one of Raphael’s pupils. “It was a double sweep,” Keith Christiansen, the Met’s chairman of European paintings, said in a telephone interview. “Perino del Vaga is one of the very great Renaissance draftsmen, but the minute I saw this painting, I nearly keeled over.”

Though the work sold for more than its estimate, Mr. Christensen said the museum actually benefited from what he called “negative chatter” about it from dealers. Although the painting is in good condition, he said, it is filthy and will go on view only after it is cleaned. Paintings by this Renaissance master are rare.

A RUSSIAN FOR CHICAGO

An abstract canvas of bold geometric shapes floating on a white background by the Russian avant-garde artist Kasimir Malevich has been purchased by the Art Institute of Chicago.

The work, “Painterly Realism of a Football Player — Color Masses in the 4th Dimension” (1915), is the first example of Russian Suprematism to enter the museum’s collection.

“We’ve wanted a Malevich for a long time,” said Stephanie D’Alessandro, the curator of modern art at the Art Institute. “And this painting is from 1915, his breakout year, and it has all the remnants of the artist’s hands.”

The painting and four others by Malevich had hung for years in the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. In 2008, settling a longstanding dispute over ownership, the City of Amsterdam returned the works to the artist’s heirs, 35 grandchildren, nieces and nephews, in Russia and elsewhere. They in turn sold this painting to the Art Institute through the Gagosian Gallery for an undisclosed price. (Another abstract Malevich canvas, “Suprematist Composition,” from 1916, sold at Sotheby’s in 2008 for $60 million.)

BRIGHTENING THE OUTDOORS

The bleakest days of winter hardly seem like the right time to present new works of public art, but two installations have cropped up this season in different parts of Manhattan.

Two glass kiosks that served as pop-up holiday shops near the ice skaters in Bryant Park might have been dismantled, but instead they have been retrofitted into miniature art galleries.

Together the kiosks make up “Battle of the Brush: A Civil Re-enactment of Two Painterly States,” a showcase for eight artists that is on view through Wednesday. It is the brainchild of Alexander W. Glauber, a 26-year-old former curatorial assistant for Lehman Brothers who recently founded Corporate Art Solutions, which organizes temporary exhibitions for corporations.

“In my mind, nothing is more counterintuitive to outdoor public art, especially in January, than a painting exhibition,” Mr. Glauber said.

Inspired by Bryant Park’s rich history — during the Civil War it was used as an encampment — he has taken a lighthearted look at an age-old dialogue by filling one kiosk with realist works and the other with abstract canvases. (Because of climate controls, viewers can’t go inside.)

The show is another step toward bringing contemporary art to Bryant Park, which is known more for its performances and film screenings. In May, with the help of the nonprofit Public Art Fund, it presented Kate Gilmore’s “Walk the Walk,” in which seven women in identical yellow dresses and ivory pumps strode across an eight-foot-high yellow box — walking with purpose but with nowhere to go, really, except around the 100-square-foot surface, and into one another.

“While in the past I have been cautious about emerging artists,” said Daniel A. Biederman, president of Bryant Park, “I am beginning to look at proposals.”

For Mr. Glauber the exhibition was an opportunity to give new life to the kiosks. “It’s about adapting existing resources,” he said. “And a way of finding new audiences for young artists.”

Meanwhile, at 50 West Street, just north of the entrance to the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, a new artwork envelops the site where a 500,000- square-foot glass tower will be erected. The artist, Kinga Czerska, has created “Life, Actually,” a mural of colorful swirls adapted from her paintings.

The work was produced by the Alliance for Downtown New York, a nonprofit business-improvement-district group, with a $1.5 million grant from the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation. This is the 20th such artwork that has been initiated by the alliance as a way of dressing up the area’s construction eyesores. “It’s really developing critical mass,” said Elizabeth Berger, president of the alliance.

The site’s developer, Francis Greenburger, chief executive of Time Equities, is an art collector who in 1992 founded Art-Omi, a three-week summer retreat for artists. It was there that he met Ms. Czerska, whose work he has since collected. Ms. Czerska said she put “Life, Actually” together from six paintings she had made in her Seattle studio.

“I’m an engineer and an artist, so I am particularly interested in how things fit together,” she said of the work’s undulating patterns.

For Mr. Greenburger, until his 65-story hotel and condominium is built, this project dresses up the site. “It’s the difference between giving someone a present in a brown bag or in beautiful wrapping paper,” he said.

A NEW GALLERY

Ann Freedman, the former director of the Knoedler Gallery, who resigned in 2009 after 32 years there, is opening her own space this spring at 25 East 73rd Street in Manhattan. The gallery will feature the work of artists she represents, including Frank Stella, Lee Bontecou and the estate of Jules Olitski.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

We've been through this thing before, and it doesn't go down easier the second time: Another Greek tycoon has rented (at no charge) the museum of whi


We've been through this thing before, and it doesn't go down easier the second time: Another Greek tycoon has rented (at no charge) the museum of which he is a trustee, in order to showcase his expensive art hoard.

Fifteen months ago I was the first to complain about the New Museum's judgment and ethics when it announced that it would be hosting "Skin Fruit", a show of work owned by Dakis Joannou.

I don't think I'm the first to complain this time*, since the news was reported by New York Times' Carol Vogel (once again the messenger, as she was for NuMU's plans) a week ago. That article reports the basic facts, that in the coming spring the Guggenheim Bilbao will be hosting "The Luminous Interval", a show of work owned by Dimitris Daskalopoulos, Unlike the article she wrote in 2009, this one asks questions, or rather it appears that the museum itself anticipated questions, defending its decision and arranging for their friendly big-deal collector to be available for a statement.

I'm not satisfied with the answers. While there may be no law against it, the ethical problems are obvious: installing a private collection exhibition in a public museum is just wrong, unless ownership of the work has already been transferred to the museum.

Museum directors should know this.

I know I may sound like a scold, but when it comes to the art world I really don't normally go out of my way to look for things to criticize. My experience of the last year or so has saddened me however, as I watch our museums making some very bad decisions. I'd rather be looking at art, or listening to or watching a performance, but it seems to me that museums are "acting up" (and not in the good way) a lot these days.

Maybe it's because of the ubiquity and curiousity of the internet that so many ethical missteps are being exposed within institutions we really cherish. Perhaps we're just more impatient with custom or superciliousness then we once were. It's even possible we've given up believing we can influence government behavior and so look to our own neighborhoods, our own family. Whatever it is, it's not easy to ignore these institutional failings, or the cant which tries to disguise them.

We have the right to expect better of the people who guard our heritage and our sacred spaces. Philip Kennicott, in his excellent Washington Post commentary on "Hide/Seek", published yesterday, describes the extraordinary importance of the museum to people who do not worship in a church, temple, mosque, or forest:

"The museum has become a quasi-sacred space, with rules as complicated and inviolate as any church liturgy. People who don't find the meaning of their existence in churches are often passionate about museums, where a set of fundamental values - openness, fearlessness, truthfulness - are celebrated with all the historical trappings.


ADDENDUM: Whoa! ARTINFO had the story two months ago. I'm sorry I missed both their scoop, and their complaint about how the Guggenheim stonewalled them:

When preparing the original scoop, "IN THE AIR" [an ARTINFO blog] contacted the Guggenheim for comment, which the museum declined to provide - relegating the news to "rumor" status despite multiple well-placed sources confirming the story, and the now-evident accuracy of its substance.

(http://jameswagner.com/2010/12/guggenheim_bilbao.html)

Athens Open studios

List of Artists that were involved in the Athens Open Studios