Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Ruven Afanador


Posted: 28 Aug 2011 10:37 PM PDT
artwork: Ruven Afanador photographer works on Exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Bogotá through October 9th.

BOGOTA, COLUMBIA - After twenty years of strong presence in international publications, Colombian photographer Ruven Afanador returns to his homeland to show his essence at the Museum of Modern Art in Bogotá: eighty portraits of figures like Hillary Clinton, the Duchess of Alba and Courtney Love, among others. Until October 9th, on the walls of this museum in Bogotá, known as MamBo, will hang a selection of images chosen by the artist called "I'll be your mirror, Ruven Afanador: 80 Photo Portraits," which he defined "as a diary." 

Friday, 26 August 2011

Gilbert & George display Jack Freak Pictures Show


Posted: 25 Aug 2011 05:34 PM PDT
artwork: Gilbert & George - Lacewood, 2008. - The Baronian Francey Gallery will open the exhibition of works from the latest series to date by Gilbert & George: Jack Freak Pictures.
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - The Baronian Francey Gallery will open the exhibition of works from the latest series to date by Gilbert & George: Jack Freak Pictures. In this latest series, which contains the largest number of pieces so far, Gilbert & George continue to explore themes that have been precious to them for a number of years. For them, everything concerning life is a potential subject for their art. In these recent works they have continued to break down the rules of social propriety with a calmness and a detachment that are very English.

Loss of Control: Crossing the Boundaries to Art from Félicien Rops to the Present


Posted: 25 Aug 2011 05:39 PM PDT
artwork: Jacques Charlier - Stamp Belgique - Belgie, 2000 - Briefmarke, Reproduktion, 53 x 43 cm. - Foto: Laurence Charlier Copyright: Jacques Charlier
HERFORD, GERMANY.- In his extensive farewell exhibition at the Marta Herford Museum, founding director Jan Hoet presents a multiplicity of artistic perspectives and aspects on the theme of loss of control: “Loss of Control: Crossing the boundaries to art from Félicien Rops to the present. Obsession, sexuality, madness and death – the continuing exchange between art and life is the theme of the exhibition LOSS OF CONTROL.  After an eight-year engagement as the inspirational founding director of the Marta Herford museum, Jan Hoet is saying farewell with a show comprising over 400 works. All the pieces speak about the artistic search for authentic means of expression above and beyond societal norms, and convey in unprecedented depth the varying aspects of loss of control, boundary crossing, and madness.

Art Taipei 2011 is a Major Art Fair for Chinese and Asian Arts


Posted: 25 Aug 2011 07:30 PM PDT
artwork: Lian Dong Ya -  "Wandering Dream 9", 2010 -  Inkjet print on Photo Paper, 100 x 76 cm. - Courtesy of LDX Contemporary Art Center

TAIPEI, TAIWAN - Art Taipei, formerly known as Taipei Art Fair International, is the longest-standing art fair in Asia. It has been organized by Taiwan Art Gallery Association since 1992. The 18th annual event, Art Taipei 2011, will be held during 26th to 29th August, 2011, at Taipei World Trade Center. This art fair is the most important link for trading Chinese and Asian arts. The art market in Taiwan has become more and more mature since the 80's, and today's Taiwanese collectors, many of whom brought up in this established environment, are considered to be the best collectors in the Chinese community. Taiwan's art galleries also pride themselves with great understanding of works and relationships with artists. Not only do galleries from Korea, Japan and Southeast Asia gather at Art Taipei each year, European and North American participants are also no strangers to the event. Furthermore, with the gate opened between Taiwan and China since 2000, galleries from China and Hong Kong at the event have increased and Art Taipei is now genuinely the most important platform for Chinese arts.

Peter Greenaway's New Film Offers Criticism of Today's Visual Illiteracy


Posted: 20 Aug 2011 07:38 PM PDT
artwork: Peter Greenaway's new film J'Accuse leads us through Rembrandt's paintings into 17th-century Amsterdam. Photo: Victor Arnolds.
AMSTERDAM.- 'J'Accuse' is an essayistic documentary in which Greenaway's fierce criticism of today's visual illiteracy is argued by means of a forensic search of Rembrandt's "Nightwatch". Greenaway explains the background, the context, the conspiracy, the murder and the motives of all its 34 painted characters who have conspired to kill for their combined self-advantage. Greenaway leads us through Rembrandt's paintings into 17th-century Amsterdam. He paints a world that is democratic in principle, but is almost entirely ruled by twelve families. The notion exists of these regents as charitable and compassionate beings. But reality was different. 

History of Industrial Photography


Posted: 20 Aug 2011 09:17 PM PDT
artwork: George Hunter - Dofasco and Steelco Mills. Hamilton, Ontario, 1954 - Dye transfer print, 31 x 42 cm.- Gift of the artist. - © Art Gallery of Ontario.

TORONTO, ON.- A new exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario traces the history of Canada’s changing industrial landscape through the lens of some of the country’s most extraordinary photographers from the past 150 years. Songs of the Future: Canadian Industrial Photographs, 1858 to Today opens August 20 and includes more than 100 photographs by such artists as Alexander Henderson, William Notman, John Vanderpant, E. Haanel Cassidy, Ralph Greenhill, George Hunter and Edward Burtynsky. The exhibition, on view through April 29, 2012, comprises chiefly works from the AGO collection, augmented by a selection of key loans — marking the first time that the Gallery has displayed its vast collection of Canadian industrial photographs. 

New Book Featuring the Work by Diane Arbus

Posted: 20 Aug 2011 10:32 PM PDT
artwork: Diane Arbus - Backstage at the Follies, 1938 - © Estate of Diane Arbus, 1966

NEW YORK, N.Y.- Diane Arbus: A Chronology (October, 2011) reads like a contemporaneous diary by one of the most daring, influential, and controversial artists of the twentieth century. Drawn primarily from Arbus’s extensive correspondence with friends, family, and colleagues; personal notebooks; and other unpublished writings, this beautifully produced volume exposes the private thoughts and motivations of a photographer whose astonishing vision revolutionized the medium. Further rounding out Arbus’s life and work are exhaustively researched footnotes that amplify the entire Chronology. A section at the end of the book provides biographies for fifty-five personalities, family members, friends, and colleagues, from Marvin Israel and Lisette Model to Weegee and August Sander. 

Her powerful, sometimes controversial, images often frame the familiar as strange and the strange or exotic as familiar. This singular vision and her ability to engage in such an uncompromising way with her subjects has made Arbus one of the most important and influential photographers of the twentieth century.

In 1972, a year after she committed suicide, Arbus became the first American photographer to have photographs displayed at the Venice Biennale. Millions of people viewed traveling exhibitions of her work in 1972–1979.  In 2003–2006, Arbus and her work were the subjects of another major traveling exhibition, Diane Arbus Revelations. In 2006, the motion picture Fur, starring Nicole Kidman as Arbus, presented a fictional version of her life story.

Although some of Arbus's photographs have sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction, Arbus's work has provoked controversy; for example, Norman Mailer was quoted in 1971 as saying "Giving a camera to Diane Arbus is like putting a live grenade in the hands of a child."

During the 1960's, she taught photography at the Parsons School of Design and the Cooper Union in New York City, and the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island. The first major exhibition of her photographs occurred at the Museum of Modern Art in a 1967 show called "New Documents" which was curated by John Szarkowski and which also featured the work of Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander. Some of her artistic work was done on assignment.  Although she continued to photograph on assignment (e.g., in 1968 she shot documentary photographs of poor sharecroppers in rural South Carolina for Esquire magazine), in general her magazine assignments decreased as her fame as an artist increased.  Szarkowski hired Arbus in 1970 to research an exhibition on photojournalism called "From the Picture Press"; it included many photographs by Weegee whose work Arbus admired.

artwork: Diane Arbus - 'Identical Twins' - Roselle , NJ - 1967

Using softer light than in her previous photography, she took a series of photographs in her later years of people with intellectual disability showing a range of emotions.  At first, Arbus considered these photographs to be "lyric and tender and pretty," but by June 1971 she told Lisette Model that she hated them. Among other photographers and artists she befriended during her career, she was close to photographer Richard Avedon; he was approximately the same age

artwork: Diane Arbus - "Lady at a Masked Ball with Two Roses on Her Dress" Silver gelatin print, 1967 40.5 x 50.5 cm. © Diane ArbusDescribing the Chronology in Art in America, Leo Rubinfien noted that “Arbus. . . wrote as well as she photographed, and her letters, where she heard each nuance of her words, were gifts to the people who received them. Once one has been introduced to it, the beauty of her spirit permanently changes and deepens one’s understanding of her pictures . . . ”

The material in Diane Arbus: A Chronology originally appeared in Diane Arbus Revelations. The new publication offers, in an accessible, paperback volume, Arbus’s insights into her life and work in her own words. It is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the artist, her photographs, and her world.

Diane Arbus (1923–1971) is widely recognized as one of the most iconic artists of the twentieth century. In addition to Chronology, four volumes of her work have been published posthumously and have remained continuously in print: Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph (1972), Diane Arbus: Magazine Work (1984), Untitled: Diane Arbus (1995), and Diane Arbus Revelations (2003).

Elisabeth Sussman (coauthor, chronology and footnotes) is the Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography at the Whitney Museum of American Art. She served as guest co-curator for the retrospective Diane Arbus Revelations.

Doon Arbus (coauthor, chronology and footnotes) is the eldest daughter of Diane and Allan Arbus; since her mother’s death she has managed The Estate of Diane Arbus.

Jeff L. Rosenheim (author, biographies) is curator of photographs at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Exhibition on View: Coinciding with the publication of A Chronology is an international traveling exhibition premiering at Jeu de Paume, Paris. With over two hundred photographs, this first major retrospective of her work in France reveals the origins, scope, and aspirations of a wholly original force in photography.

• Jeu de Paume, Paris, October 18, 2011–February 5, 2012
• Fotomuseum, Winterthur, Switzerland, March 2–May 28, 2012
• Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, June 21–September 24, 2012
• FOAM, Amsterdam, October 25, 2012–January 13, 2013

Sony World Photography Awards Winners


Posted: 19 Aug 2011 07:35 PM PDT
artwork: Frank and Steff Bayh and Rosenberger-Ochs Germany, 2011. - Sony World Photography Awards Winner.

LONDON.-
 The Sony World Photography Awards Winners’ Showcase is the flagship exhibition of the World Photography Festival. Showcase theme 'From Chaos into Order' mirrors the process by which we make sense of photographs in the world. All of the World Photography Organisation’s Festival exhibitions run from April 26 through May 22, at the prestigious Somerset House, London. 

Contemporary Artists From China


Posted: 18 Aug 2011 11:50 PM PDT
artwork: Weng Fen - "Future-Beijing", 2009 - Photograph - 100 x 100 cm. - Courtesy of  the artist. On view at the CSU Northridge Art Gallery in "Tales of Our Time: Two Contemporary Artists From China" from August 29th until October 8th.

Los Angeles, CA.- The California State University, Northridge (CSUN) Art Gallery is proud to present "Tales of Our Time: Two Contemporary Artists From China", on view from August 29th through October 8th. Curated by Dr. Meiqin Wang, Assistant professor of art history at California State University Northridge, there will also be an artists reception on Friday, September 9th from 5–7pm, a talk at the gallery on Monday, September 12th from 10am and an artist lecture on Wednesday, September 14th from 11am. The exhibition explores urbanization and its impact in contemporary China through the art of internationally established Chinese artists Chen Qiulin and Weng Fen. The exhibit presents about forty photographic and video works created by the two artists since the beginning of the twenty-first century—a decade that witnesses the dramatic movement of urbanization and modernization of the Chinese world. 

MoMA's Annual Photography Series Highlights Six Emerging Contemporary Artists


Posted: 18 Aug 2011 09:02 PM PDT
artwork: George Georgiou (British, born 1961) - "Mersin", 2007 - Pigmented inkjet print, 70.5 x 104 cm. - Courtesy of the artist © 2011 George Georgiou.

NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) announces the 26th annual New Photography exhibition, running September 27, 2011, through January 16, 2012, in The Robert and Joyce Menschel Gallery. This year, the exhibition expands to feature six artists—Zhang Dali, Moyra Davey, George Georgiou, Deana Lawson, Doug Rickard, and Viviane Sassen. These artists, hailing from Canada, China, England, Holland, and the United States, exemplify the diversity and international scope of contemporary photographic work. New Photography 2011 is organized by Dan Leers, The Beaumont and Nancy Newhall Curatorial Fellow, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art. 

5,200 People Pose Naked


Posted: 18 Aug 2011 08:02 PM PDT
artwork: Nude people raise their hands as they gather on the steps of the Sydney Opera House while they pose for a photo by Spencer Tunick on Monday, March 1, 2010. 5,200 people stripped off for the commissioned photo that is title "Mardis Gras: The Base." (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)
SYDNEY, AU (REUTERS).- Some 5,200 Australians posed naked in front of the Sydney Opera House on Monday for a photo shoot by New York-based artist Spencer Tunick for another signature installation of nudes against urban backdrops. On a chilly, overcast, first day of autumn, the mass nude photo shoot was titled "Mardi Gras: The Base" and meant to celebrate Sydney's Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras last weekend. 

Photographs by Lalla Essaydi on View at the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum


Posted: 21 Aug 2011 07:39 PM PDT
artwork: Lalla Essaydi - Les Femmes du Maroc #1, 2005 - Chromogenic print mounted to aluminum, ed. 15, 40 x 30 inches. Lent by the Artist, Courtesy of the Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York, New York and the Howard Yezerski Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts.
NEW BRUNSWICK.- Born in Morocco into a conservative Muslim family and educated in Europe and the United States, Lalla Essaydi is poised at the intersection of two cultures. She is one of several contemporary Islamic women artists whose subjects are informed by feminist perspectives and personal experience. Her work has garnered increasing acclaim in Europe and America; in 2011 she will be the subject of a mid-career survey at the North Carolina Museum of Art.

Photoquai Exhibition of World Images


Posted: 21 Aug 2011 07:56 PM PDT
artwork: Charles Lim - "Survivor Bus Stop". - © Charles Lim. - © musée du quai Branly, Photoquai 2011.

PARIS.- Created in 2007 by the Musée du quai Branly and dedicated to non-Western photography, the 3rd edition of the PHOTOQUAI biennial exhibition of world images takes place on the quays of the Seine alongside the Musée du quai Branly, extending for the first time into the museum garden. Acclaimed since its first edition for its quality, originality, ambition and relevance, in PHOTOQUAI will continue to pursue its original mission: showcasing artists whose work is little known in Europe, stimulating communication and allowing for an exchange of world views. On exhibition 13 September through 11 November.

Tracey Emin Dazzles 10 Downing Street with "More Passion" Neon Light


Posted: 21 Aug 2011 10:40 PM PDT
artwork: Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, right, greeting British artist Tracey Emin. A new message is greeting visitors to the home of Britain's prime minister: "More Passion" -  The words, rendered in dazzling neon, are a work by artist Tracey Emin that is now hanging in 10 Downing St.

London - "More Passion", a neon installation by Tracey Emin now has pride of place in one of the most prestigious settings inside No 10, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal. It now hangs outside the Terracotta Room, lighting up a dark hallway and making the entrance to the room, according to one insider, "look like a nightclub".
Tracey Emin, who was in Downing Street last week putting the finishing touches to the installation, was invited to contribute a piece by David Cameron, a big fan of her work, last year. A No 10 spokeswoman confirmed that "More Passion" had been donated to the Government Art Collection by Emin, 48, a former enfant terrible of the art world who is now a Royal Academician. Similar Emin installations regularly fetch tens of thousands of pounds.

Jerry Uelsmann's Photography


Posted: 24 Aug 2011 07:15 PM PDT
artwork: Jerry Uelsmann - Untitled photo - Courtesy of the Harn Museum of Art -  © Jerry Uelsmann.

GAINESVILLE, FL.- The first critical retrospective of American photographer Jerry Uelsmann’s work opened at the Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida on June 14, 2011. Uelsmann, known for his iconic, surreal style and his innovative composite printing techniques, has spent more than 50 years challenging and advocating for the acceptance of photography as an experimental art form. The Mind’s Eye: 50 Years of Photography by Jerry Uelsmann, organized by the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts features 89 works from every phase of the artist’s wide-ranging career, including a selection of rare pieces that have never before been on public view. Additional works from the artist’s collection are on view only during this leg of the exhibition, open through September 11th. 

The Museum of the Moving Image Opens "Jim Henson's Fantastic World"


Posted: 23 Aug 2011 06:35 PM PDT
artwork: "Dark Crystal Mystic" - Still photo by John Lawrence Jones, © 2009 The Jim Henson Company. On view at the Museum of the Moving Image, New York in "Jim Henson's Fantastic World" until January 16th 2012.

New York City.- The Museum of the Moving Image is proud to present "Jim Henson's Fantastic World", on view through January 16th 2012. "Jim Henson's Fantastic World" celebrates the internationally known creative genius Jim Henson, whose work encompassed film, television, and puppetry. The exhibition features over 120 artifacts, including drawings, storyboards, and props, all of which illustrate Henson’s boundless creativity and innumerable accomplishments. Fifteen iconic puppets, including Miss Piggy, Kermit the Frog, Rowlf, and Bert and Ernie, are on view, along with photographs of Henson and his collaborators at work and excerpts from his early projects and experimental films. The exhibition spans Henson’s entire career, with drawings, cartoons, commercials, and posters produced during his college years in the late 1950s and objects related to the inspired imaginary world of his popular 1982 fantasy film, The Dark Crystal. 


The exhibition features artifacts from Henson’s best-known projects, The Muppet Show, The Muppet Movie and its sequels, Fraggle Rock, and Sesame Street, in addition to materials from Sam and Friends, an early show he created in the 1950s, and his pioneering television commercial work in the 1960s. "Jim Henson’s Fantastic World" was organized by The Jim Henson Legacy and the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in cooperation with the Henson family, The Jim Henson Company, The Muppets Studio, LLC, and Sesame Workshop.

artwork: "Jim Henson & Kermit the Frog" - Photograph: Courtesy of The Jim Henson Company. On view at the Museum of the Moving Image, New York until January 16th 2012.

The Museum of the Moving Image advances the public understanding and appreciation of the art, history, technique, and technology of film, television, and digital media. It does so by collecting, preserving, and providing access to moving-image related artifacts, screening significant films and other moving-image works, presenting exhibitions of artifacts, artworks, and interactive experiences, and offering educational and interpretive programs to students, teachers, and the general public. Each year the Museum screens more than 400 films in a stimulating mix of the classic and the contemporary. With live music for silent films, restored prints from the world's leading archives, and outstanding new films from the international festival circuit, Museum programs are recognized for their quality as well as their scope.

The Pinewood Dialogues, an ongoing series of conversations with creative professionals in film, television, and digital media made possible by the Pinewood (now Pannonia) Foundation, has brought to the Museum’s stage such leading figures as Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese, Sidney Lumet, David Cronenberg, Charles Burnett, Tim Burton, Todd Haynes, Daniel Day-Lewis, Paul Thomas Anderson, Forest Whitaker, Glenn Close, Jane Campion, Jim Jarmusch, Terry Gilliam, and David Mamet. Many of these conversations are available online. Engaging and immersive, Behind the Screen is the only exhibition in America that comprehensively explores how films and television shows are created, marketed, and exhibited. Behind the Screen has been thoroughly refurbished as part of the Museum’s renovation and expansion, with all new monitors, computers, interactive software, and lighting, as well as new exhibits of artifacts, artworks, and audiovisual material.

artwork: "Cantus and the rest of the gang down at Fraggle Rock" - Photo by John E. Barrett. © 2009 The Jim Henson Company. On view at the Museum of the Moving Image, NY

Changing exhibitions at the Museum have ranged from "Hot Circuits: A Video Arcade" (1989), the first exhibition of video games ever presented in a museum, to "Interactions/Arts and Technology" (2004), presented in conjunction with Ars Electronica (Linz, Austria). As part of its expansion and renovation, the Museum has a new 4,100-square-foot gallery dedicated specifically to temporary exhibitions, as well as a new amphitheater for changing video presentations, and a 50-foot-long wall in the lobby on which panoramic video works can be projected. After opening with Real Virtuality—an exhibition featuring six experiments in art and technology by artists including Bill Viola, Pablo Valbuena, and Marco Brambilla. The Museum’s curriculum-based education programs are a major resource for of middle- and high-school students and their teachers. Most are from the New York City public schools and surrounding area, although the Museum regularly provides programs for international students as well. Through guided tours of its exhibitions, educational screening programs and hands-on workshops, the Museum will serve approximately 60,000 students each year in the new Ann and Andrew Tisch Education Center. The Museum also offers professional development seminars and workshops for teachers, and after-school programs that develop academic and technical skills. The Museum maintains one of the world’s largest and most comprehensive collections of the material culture of the moving image. It provides public access to the collection through the core exhibition, Behind the Screen, and through its online Collection Catalog. Scholars may also conduct research in the collection by appointment. Online projects, such as Moving Image Source, The Living Room Candidate, and Sloan Science and Film, made available on the Museum’s website, reach a global audience. Visit the museum's website at ... http://www.movingimage.us 

SMU's Pollock Gallery Presents Simen Johan's "Until the Kingdom Comes"


Posted: 23 Aug 2011 10:29 PM PDT
artwork: Simen Johan - "Untitled #153", 2010 - Digital c-print - 63" x 63" - Courtesy of the artist and Yossi Milo Gallery, NY. - On view at the Pollock Gallery of the Division of Art at SMU’s Meadows School of the Arts in “Simen Johan: Until the Kingdom Comes” from August 29th until October 8th.

Dallas, TX.- The Pollock Gallery of the Division of Art at SMU’s Meadows School of the Arts is proud to present “Simen Johan: Until the Kingdom Comes,” an exhibition by renowned photographer Simen Johan, from August 29th through October 8th. Born in Norway in 1973 and raised in Sweden, Johan has lived and worked in New York City since 1992. He has received international recognition for his enigmatic large-scale photographs that investigate the often-uneasy relationship between the natural world of animals and the confusion and chaos created by human activity through his hauntingly beautiful scenes of animals seemingly adrift in dreamlike landscapes. 


The exhibit will include works shown in the recent Simen Johan exhibition at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville, Tenn., and several works from private collections. In an essay that accompanied the catalogue for the Nashville show, Mark Scala, chief curator for the Frist Center, wrote, “Johan’s images are completely without people….Yet the works clearly relate to human processes, beliefs, and illusions. The presentations are staged, with animals posing expressively for the camera like actors. Questions of authenticity versus artificiality arise when one recognizes that these are not all animals living in their natural habitats. Some were photographed on location in zoos or wildlife parks, farms, and museums, others show roadkill or taxidermied specimens, posed and Photoshopped into landscape, still others were taken in the wild. Which are alive, and which are uncanny imitations of life? Such ambiguity is symptomatic of the universal dualisms that give life its sense of being contingent, unfixed.”

In his photographs, Simen Johan explores darkly the human proclivity towards fantasy and our attempts, knowing or otherwise, to craft alternate realities for ourselves. Merging traditional photographic techniques with digital methods, Johan creates each of his images from as many as one hundred negatives, having first constructed or discovered each element and photographed it on film. Across his body of work, the viewer is urged to ponder the relationship between the real and the artificial or imagined.

artwork: Simen Johan - "Untitled #140", 2007 - Digital c-print - 63" x 63" Courtesy of the artist and Yossi Milo Gallery New York.

In his most recent images, from the series "Until the Kingdom Comes", Johan depicts animals in scenarios where their actions or demeanor mirror human conventions. The images allude to our inclination to anthropomorphize and domesticate what we see and find around us, and they speak to realms of emotion, our fears and desires, rather than reason. In his earlier work Johan explored the unique relationship that children have with the unknown, constructing complex photographic worlds that seem to grow wild from young imaginations. In some images the children are prominently featured, wrapped up in acts of play or ritual as the makers of their own worlds, while in others they've vanished completely, leaving only the enigmatic traces of their mischief.

Simen Johan's work has been widely exhibited internationally, and is in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Cleveland Art Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and other major institutions. Johan's first monograph, Room to Play, was published by Twin Palms in 2003. Born in Norway and raised in Sweden, Johan earned his B.F.A at the School of Visual Arts, in New York, where he currently resides.

artwork: Simen Johan - "Untitled #133", 2005 - Digital c-print - 63" x 63" Courtesy of the artist and Yossi Milo Gallery New York.

The Meadows School of the Arts, formally established in 1969 at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, has achieved prominence as one of the foremost arts education institutions in the United States. The Meadows School of the Arts offers instruction in advertising, art, art history, arts entrepreneurship and arts management, communication studies, dance, film and media arts, journalism, music and theatre. The goal of the Meadows School of the Arts, as a comprehensive educational institution, is to prepare students to meet the demands of professional careers. It is also committed to providing an ongoing opportunity for all SMU students to grow in the understanding and appreciation of the arts. The Meadows School of the Arts serves the public as a significant cultural center by presenting more than 400 events annually for the Dallas community and surrounding region. The cultural and intellectual partnership SMU shares with Dallas continues to flourish, and Dallas citizens form a devoted audience for the more than 400 music, dance and theatre performances, opera productions, and art exhibitions that the Meadows School of the Arts presents each year.  The Meadows Museum houses one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of Spanish art outside of Spain. The museum presents major works dating from the Middle Ages to the present, including masterpieces by some of the world’s greatest painters: El Greco, Velázquez, Ribera, Murillo, Goya, Joan Miró and Pablo Picasso. Highlights of the collection include Renaissance altarpieces, monumental Baroque canvases, exquisite Rococo oil sketches, polychrome wood sculptures, Impressionist landscapes, modernist abstractions and a comprehensive collection of the graphic works of Goya. The museum, located at 5900 Bishop Boulevard at the entrance to the SMU campus, also includes a gift shop, education areas and public event spaces, and offers membership and volunteer opportunities along with a range of public programs throughout the year. The museum also includes the Elizabeth Meadows Sculpture Collection featuring major works by such modern masters as Rodin, Maillol, Lipchitz, Henry Moore, David Smith and Claes Oldenburg. Sculptures are displayed both indoors and outside on the museum plaza. Visit the museum's website at ... http://www.smu.edu/Meadows

Monday, 15 August 2011

Works of Elizabeth King


Posted: 14 Aug 2011 07:42 PM PDT
artwork: Elizabeth King - Study for Animation: Pose 7, 1997-2005 - Chromogenic print, 24 X 24 in.

LINCOLN, NE - A mid-career survey, The Sizes of Things in the Mind's Eye presents approximately 65 sculptures, film animations, installations, drawings and photographs by Elizabeth King .

Friday, 12 August 2011

Selection of Photographs by Herb Ritts


Posted: 10 Aug 2011 07:56 PM PDT
artwork: Herb Ritts - Fashion and Transgression - (dijimon with octopus'), Hollywood, 1989 - © herb ritts photography inc.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- The Getty Museum announces the acquisition of 69 photographs by famed fashion and celebrity photographer Herb Ritts. Consisting of photographs of nudes, portraits, and images made for high-fashion ad campaigns, this acquisition is the most significant body of the artist's work on the West Coast. The majority of the acquisition comes in the form of a generous gift from the Herb Ritts Foundation. "It's exciting to have so many of Ritts's best photographs become part of our collection," adds Paul Martineau, associate curator in the Department of Photographs. "We are looking forward to displaying them in our galleries next spring for what will be the first significant exhibition on Ritts in over a decade."