Camera d’Arte

19
Nov

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. Pulse

In the Hirshhorn’s largest interactive technology exhibition to date, three major installations from Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Pulse series come together for the artist’s DC debut. A Mexican Canadian artist known for straddling the line between art, technology, and design, Lozano-Hemmer fills the Museum’s entire Second Level with immersive environments that use heart-rate sensors to create kinetic and audiovisual experiences from visitors’ own biometric data. Over the course of six months, Pulse will animate the vital signs of hundreds of thousands of participants.

With Lozano-Hemmer’s trademark sensitivities to audience engagement and architectural scale, each installation captures biometric signatures and visualizes them as repetitive sequences of flashing lights, panning soundscapes, rippling waves, and animated fingerprints. These intimate “portraits,” or “snapshots,” of electrical activity are then added to a live archive of prior recordings to create an environment of syncopated rhythms. At a time when biometry is increasingly used for identification and control, this data constitutes a new way of representing both anonymity and community.
The exhibition begins with Pulse Index (2010), which is presented at its largest scale to date. The work records participants’ fingerprints at the same time as it detects their heart rates, displaying data from the last 10,000 users on a scaled grid of massive projections. The second work, Pulse Tank (2008), which premiered at Prospect.1, New Orleans Biennial, has been updated and expanded for this new exhibition. Sensors turn your pulse into ripples on illuminated water tanks, creating ever-changing patterns that are reflected on the gallery walls.
Pulse Room (2006) rounds out the exhibition, featuring hundreds of clear, incandescent light bulbs hanging from the ceiling in even rows, pulsing with the heartbeats of past visitors. You can add your heartbeat to the installation by touching a sensor, which transmits your pulse to the first bulb. Additional heartbeats continue to register on the first bulb, advancing earlier recordings ahead one bulb at a time. The sound of the collected heartbeats join the light display to amplify the physical impact of the installation.
Three short documentaries of Pulse works are also on view, showing the breadth of the series through video footage of various other biometric public-art interventions in Abu Dhabi, Toronto, Hobart, New York, and Urdaibai, Spain (2007–2015).
Curated by Stéphane Aquin, Chief Curator with curatorial assistance from Betsy Johnson, Assistant Curator.
In conjunction with the Hirshhorn exhibition, the Mexican Cultural Institute of the Embassy of Mexico in Washington, D.C. presents the Washington debut of Lozano-Hemmer’s 2011 work, “Voice Array,” on loan from the Hirshhorn’s collection, a gift of the Heather and Tony Podesta Collection in 2014. On view from Oct. 31 through Jan. 31, 2019, the interactive work records participants’ voices and converts them into flashing lights that come together to visually and aurally depict the cumulative contributions of the last 288 visitors. This is the newest project from Hirshhorn in the City, the Museum’s initiative to bring international contemporary art beyond the museum walls and into Washington’s public spaces to connect artists and curators with the city’s creative communities.Continue Reading..

07
Nov

Hito Steyerl. The City of Broken Windows

Hito Steyerl (Monaco, 1966) è una tra gli artisti e teorici più attivi del nostro tempo e le sue riflessioni sulla possibilità di pensiero critico nell’era digitale hanno influenzato il lavoro di numerosi artisti. Ha rappresentato la Germania alla 56. Biennale di Venezia nel 2015. La sua opera si concentra sul ruolo dei media, della tecnologia e della circolazione delle immagini nell’era della globalizzazione. Sconfinando dal cinema all’arte visiva e viceversa, l’artista realizza installazioni in cui la produzione filmica viene associata alla costruzione di ambienti immersivi ed estranianti. In occasione della mostra nella Manica Lunga del Castello di Rivoli, Steyerl crea una nuova installazione multimediale basata sul suono, sul video e sull’intervento architettonico. Steyerl presenta in anteprima The City of Broken Windows (La città delle finestre rotte, 2018), nata dalla sua ricerca attorno alle industrie di AI (artificial intelligence), sulle tecnologie di sorveglianza e attorno al ruolo che i musei d’arte contemporanea svolgono nella società oggi. L’artista indaga il modo in cui l’intelligenza artificiale influenza il nostro ambiente urbano e come possano emergere atti pittorici alternativi in spazi pubblici. Schermi, finestre, cristalli liquidi e non liquidi si legano tutti insieme in questa nuova installazione, la prima realizzata dall’artista dopo Hell Yeah We Fuck Die (Eh già cazzo moriamo, 2016), nella quale Steyerl esaminava la performatività e la precarietà dei robot. Creata per la Biennale di San Paolo, l’installazione Hell Yeah We Fuck Die è stata recentemente esposta a Skulptur Projekte a Münster (2017), è attualmente in mostra al Kunstmuseum di Basilea ed è stata acquisita per le Collezioni del Castello di Rivoli.

The City of Broken Windows ruota attorno a registrazioni alterate di suoni; come in una sinfonia atonale e disturbante, esse documentano il processo d’apprendimento dell’intelligenza artificiale alla quale viene insegnato come riconoscere il rumore di finestre che si rompono, una pratica comune all’industria e alla tecnologia della sicurezza nella nostra società. Il progetto di Steyerl offre un contributo cruciale e una prospettiva intrigante su come l’immaginario contemporaneo digitale plasmi le emozioni e l’esperienza del reale. Fra l’altro, Chris Toepfer, protagonista della nuova opera, occluderà il Castello di Rivoli con un dipinto trompe l’oeil. Le riflessioni di Steyerl sono contenute nei suoi numerosi scritti. Tra i suoi testi più importanti, ha pubblicato In Defense of the Poor Image (In difesa dell’immagine povera) nella rivista online e-flux nel 2009. Recentemente, i suoi scritti sono stati raccolti in volumi come The Wretched of the Screen (I dannati dello schermo), e-flux e Sternberg Press, 2012 e Duty Free Art. Art In the Age of Planetary Civil War, Verso Press, Londra e New York, 2017, pubblicato in Italia con il titolo Duty Free Art. L’arte nell’epoca della guerra civile planetaria, Johan & Levi, 2018.

La mostra sarà accompagnata da una nuova pubblicazione a cura del Castello di Rivoli per i tipi di Skira e da un simposio sull’intelligenza artificiale che si terrà il 12 dicembre 2018 al quale parteciperà tra gli altri Esther Leslie, Professore di Estetica Politica presso Birkbeck, University of London.

La mostra è realizzata con l’ulteriore sostegno di Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, Andrew Kreps Gallery, Collezione E. Righi, Marco Rossi, Fondazione per l’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea CRT.

Hito Steyerl. The City of Broken Windows / La città delle finestre rotte
A cura di Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev e Marianna Vecellio
1 novembre 2018 – 30 giugno 2019
Inaugurazione: 31 ottobre 2018, ore 19

Castello di Rivoli. MUSEO D ’ A R T E CONTEMPORANEA
Piazza Mafalda di Savoia – 10098 Rivoli (Torino) – Italia
tel. +39/011.9565222 – 9565280 fax +39/011.9565231
e-mail: info@castellodirivoli.org

Ufficio Stampa Castello di Rivoli
Manuela Vasco | press@castellodirivoli.org | tel. 011.9565209
Brunella Manzardo | b.manzardo@castellodirivoli.org | tel. 011.9565211

Consulenza Stampa
Anna Gilardi |anna.gilardi@stilema-to.it | tel. 011.530066
Valentina Gobbo Carrer | carrervale@gmail.com | tel. 338.8662116

06
Nov

Alberto Giacometti. A retrospective

This exhibition surveys four decades of production by Alberto Giacometti (b. 1901; d. 1966), one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. More than 200 sculptures, paintings, and drawings make up a show that offers a unique perspective on the artist’s work, highlighting the extraordinary holdings of artworks and archive material gathered by Giacometti’s wife, Annette, now in the Fondation Giacometti in Paris.  Giacometti was born in Switzerland to a family of artists. He was introduced to painting and sculpture by his father, the renowned Neo-Impressionist painter Giovanni Giacometti. Three heads done of him by the young Giacometti are seen on display here. In 1922 Alberto Giacometti moved to Paris to continue his artistic training, and four years later he set up what was to remain his studio until the end of his life, a rented space of just 23 square meters on the Rue Hippolyte-Maindron, close to Montparnasse. In that tiny narrow room, Giacometti created a very personal vision of the world about him. The human figure is a fundamental theme in this artist’s oeuvre. Over the years, he produced works inspired by the people around him, especially his brother Diego, his wife Annette, and his friends and lovers. The artist said: “For me, sculpture, painting, and drawing have always been means of understanding my own vision of the outside world, and above all the face and the whole of the human being. Or to put it more simply, of my fellow creatures, and especially of those who for one reason or another are closest to me.” Giacometti’s ideas on how to approach the human figure were to become crucial questions of contemporary art for the following generations of artists.

Continue Reading..

31
Ott

Mario Merz. Igloos

“Igloos”, la mostra dedicata a Mario Merz (Milano, 1925-2003), tra gli artisti più rilevanti del secondo dopoguerra, riunisce il corpusdelle sue opere più iconiche, gli igloo, datati tra il 1968 e l’anno della sua scomparsa.
Il progetto espositivo, curato da Vicente Todolí e realizzato in collaborazione con la Fondazione Merz, si espande nelle Navate di Pirelli HangarBicocca e pone il visitatore al centro di una costellazione di oltre trenta opere di grandi dimensioni a forma di igloo, un paesaggio inedito dal forte impatto visivo. Mario Merz, figura chiave dell’Arte Povera, indaga e rappresenta i processi di trasformazione della natura e della vita umana: in particolare gli igloo, visivamente riconducibili alle primordiali abitazioni, diventano per l’artista l’archetipo dei luoghi abitati e del mondo e la metafora delle diverse relazioni tra interno ed esterno, tra spazio fisico e spazio concettuale, tra individualità e collettività. Queste opere sono caratterizzate da una struttura metallica rivestita da una grande varietà di materiali di uso comune, come argilla, vetro, pietre, juta e acciaio – spesso appoggiati o incastrati tra loro in modo instabile – e dall’uso di elementi e scritte al neon. La mostra offre l’occasione per osservare lavori di importanza storica e dalla portata innovativa, provenienti da collezioni private e museali internazionali, raccolti ed esposti insieme per la prima volta in numero così ampio.

Mario Merz. Igloos
a cura di Vincenzo Todolì
25 ottobre 2018 – 24 febbraio 2019
in collaborazione con Fondazione Merz

Pirelli HangarBicocca
Via Chiese 2
20126 Milano
T (+39) 02 66 11 15 73
info@hangarbicocca.org

report gallery by amaliadilanno

30
Ott

Jan Fabre: The Castles in the Hour Blue

I Castelli nell’Ora Blu , è la prima mostra personale a Milano dell’artista, creatore teatrale e autore Jan Fabre, curata da Melania Rossi.
In mostra una selezione di lavori – in gran parte in anteprima assoluta perché provenienti dalla collezione dell’artista, e messi ora a disposizione del pubblico- realizzati da Jan Fabre dalla fine degli anni Ottanta, incentrati su due temi particolarmente significativi per l’artista: i castelli e l’Ora Blu. Disegni, collage, film e opere fotografiche compongono un percorso nell’immaginario più “romantico” e poetico, ma sempre radicale e simbolico, di uno degli artisti più interessanti della scena contemporanea.
Se il castello è il luogo della favola romantica per eccellenza, i castelli di Jan Fabre hanno qualcosa di diverso, sono infusi del personale romanticismo dell’artista, che si definisce “cavaliere della disperazione e guerriero della bellezza”.
La tonalità dell’inchiostro Bic ricorda all’artista l’atmosfera di quell’ora speciale tra la notte e il giorno, tra il sonno e la veglia, tra la vita e la morte. L’Ora Blu, teorizzata da Jean Henri Fabre, considerato il padre dell’entomologia, è un momento di totale silenzio e perfetta simmetria in natura, quando gli animali notturni si stanno per addormentare e quelli diurni si stanno svegliando, in cui i processi di metamorfosi hanno atto.
Anche nei grandi formati in mostra, l’attenzione si concentra naturalmente su piccole porzioni di disegno per seguirne le linee ora più lievi, ora più marcate, oppure trova un immaginario punto di fuga negli insetti-foglia applicati sulla carta, che formano profili di torri castellane. Come di fronte al grande telo in seta di quasi diciassette metri (Un Castello nel Cielo per René, 1987) che è esposto all’interno della Basilica di Sant’Eustorgio, al cospetto della scultura nella Cappella Portinari o nell’opera site specific che l’artista ha realizzato sul lucernario di BUILDING, siamo dentro il disegno, che diviene spazio, casa, castello.

Jan Fabre: The Castles in the Hour Blue
a cura di Melania Rossi
22 Sep 201822 Dec 2018

BUILDING
Via Monte di Pietà 23, Milano
Mar – Sab, 10:00 – 19:00

Basilica di Sant’Eustorgio e Cappella Portinari
P.zza Sant’Eustorgio 1, 20122 Milano
Lun – Dom, 10:00 – 17:30
Ingresso Capella Portinari: €6

English below

BUILDING is pleased to present The Castles in the Hour Blue, the first solo exhibition ever held in Milan of the visual artist and theatrical author Jan Fabre. The exhibition, curated by Melania Rossi, will open to the public on 22 September, with site specific installations at BUILDING; it will also feature ad hoc installations in two institutional places of the city of Milan, such as the Basilica of Sant’Eustorgio and the Portinari Chapel.

On view will be a “world premiere” selection of artworks – for the main part, never seen before since part of the artist’s collection, now available to the public for the very first time – made by Jan Fabre since the late Eighties, focused on two themes which are particularly important to the master: castles and the Hour Blue. Drawings, collages, videos and photographic works bring together a journey in the most “romantic” and poetic – but always radical and symbolic – imagery of one of the most important artists on the contemporary scene. The aesthetic and ethical fusion of the two themes in the conception of Jan Fabre, declared in the title of the show, is evident in the exhibited artworks, starting from Tivoli(1990), one of the works that consecrated the artistic career of Jan Fabre at an international level. In this case, Fabre had completely covered the Tivoli castle (Mechelen) in sheets all drawn in blue Bic, which had been left transforming under the sun light and bad weather. A real architectural performance that the artist had been recording during day and night, releasing a 35 mm short movie that will be on view at the gallery. “Sometimes the castle has a purple reflection, sometimes more towards the red, then a silvery glow, to then turn into intense blue bic again. (The sculpture-drawing trembles and lives with its enigmas)”, Fabre writes in his nocturnal diary during the realization of the work.
The tone of the Bic ink reminds the artist of the atmosphere of that special hour between night and day, between sleep and awakening, between life and death. The Hour Blue, a sublime moment of complete silence and perfect symmetry in nature, when nocturnal animals are about to fall asleep and the diurnal ones are waking up, in which the processes of metamorphosis take place. Theorized by Jean-Henri Fabre, considered the father of entomology, the Hour Blue has inspired Jan Fabre a production of Bic pen drawings of different sizes, but it is mostly in the large works that the eye is completely immersed in the dense blue lines, where it is difficult – if not impossible – to embrace the work in its entirety. The drawing, in this production by Fabre, acquires a dignity which is not only autonomous but also three- dimensional, becoming sculpture, architecture; it is not a mere preparation for a painting or a draft sketch for a sculpture, it is an immersive artwork that reveals the most intimate, true and instinctive feeling of the artist’s thought. On this idea Jan Fabre has been working since his beginnings, since the birth of his “bic art”. “I want my viewers to be able to abandon themselves to the physical experience of drowning in the apparently calm sea of my blue bic drawings”, the artist writes in 1988. Even in the large formats on display, the attention is naturally captured by small portions of drawing in order to follow the lines, now subtler, now more marked, or it finds an imaginary point of escape in the leaf-insects applied on the paper, which form profiles of castle towers. As in front of the large silk installation displayed inside the Basilica of Sant’Eustorgio, in presence of the sculptures in the Portinari Chapel or in front of the site specific work that the artist will make at BUILDING, we are inside the drawing, which becomes space, house, castle. If the castle is the place of the romantic fairytale par excellence, Jan Fabre’s castles have something different, they are infused with the personal romanticism of the artist, who defines himself “a knight of despair and a warrior of beauty”. The first aim, the only creed of the artist, is to defend the beauty and fragility of art. Jan Fabre is a contemporary knight who makes castles in the air, castles of cards, rests in his castle and dreams. Tivoli, Wolfskerke, Monopoli, are the castles on which the artist has taken action with his blue sign and which are represented in the artworks on display, covered in the typical light of that special moment in which we can dream of owning a castle, still being in a chivalrous era made of values for which to fight strenuously. The “way of the sword” is “the way of the art”, the true avant-garde of the artist who, while dreaming, draws, writes and invents a personal universe starting from the great tradition that precedes him. Fabre fights to the point of exhaustion in defense of the most authentic, tragic, mad and heroic spirit of the artist and of the man.

Basilica of Sant’Eustorgio and Portinari Chapel
Mon – Sun, 10:00 AM – 5:30 PM
Entrance to Portinari Chapel: €6
P.zza Sant’Eustorgio 1, 20122 Milan

Jan Fabre: The Castles in the Hour Blue
Curated by Melania Rossi

Tue – Sat, 10 AM – 7 PM

Additional venues:
Basilica of Sant’Eustorgio
Portinari Chapel