Dancers From the Deep Sea Shine on the U.N. for Climate Week

SUPERFLEX | New York Times

“A Danish arts collective spotlights the bizarrely beautiful siphonophore, which performs a vital role in removing carbon from the atmosphere.”

By Arthur Lubow

Published Sept. 14, 2021Updated Sept. 16, 2021

A little-known but crucial agent of carbon removal from the atmosphere — the siphonophore, which lives in what’s known as the twilight zone of the sea — will be highlighted during U.N. Climate Week in a video projection from a Danish arts collective.

The siphonophore is a bizarrely beautiful creature. Like a coral reef, it is composed of individual parts, known as zooids, which perform specialized functions. “Some are digesters, some are swimmers, some are reproducers,” Heidi Sosik, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, said. “But they all get together. It is an interesting metaphor for humanity to think about.”

Next week, Sept. 21-24, in a light projection more than 500 feet high on the entire northern facade of the U.N. Secretariat building, a siphonophore will perform a sinuous, pulsating dance nightly between 8 and 11 p.m. Coinciding with the meeting of international delegates, who will discuss how to counter human-caused climate change, the video, “Vertical Migration,” is intended to draw attention to the animal’s deep sea carbon removal system.

The artists reappropriating 'feminine crafts' through a queer lens

Judy Ledgerwood | Creative Bloom

Judy Ledgerwood, Visigothic, 2021

Judy Ledgerwood, Visigothic, 2021

“Chicago-based abstract painter Judy Ledgerwood's work considers domestically created decorative work made by women across cultures, using circles, quatrefoils, and seed-like shapes organised within triangles and chevrons that "she perceives as a womanly cypher symbolic of feminine power," according to the gallery.”

San José Museum of Art Announces 86 New Acquisitions by 27 Artists

Pae White | Artfix Daily

Noisy Blushes (2020) Installation view at San José Museum of Art, photo by Fredrick Nilsen

Noisy Blushes (2020) Installation view at San José Museum of Art, photo by Fredrick Nilsen

“Building on SJMA’s commitment to celebrate the creative impact in the South Bay, this group of acquisitions features Pae White’s Noisy Blushes (2020), the largest artist’s commission in the Museum’s history. The sculpture comprises 12,000 hexagonal stainless-steel disks suspended within SJMA’s atrium and unveiled to the public in October 2020 to celebrate the Museum’s 50th anniversary.”

Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul (Photo Story)

Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul. On view from June 16th – August 15th, 2021.

Installation view, Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul“Pranayama Typhoon combines the word “pranayama,” a breathing technique that dates back to ancient India, with the word “typhoon,” a catastrophic weather phenomenon, which is also the name of a state-of-the- art fighter plane. The title of the exhibition hints at the collision of human breath with the unpredictable, destructive forces of nature. Banner conceived the work in Pranayama Typhoon during the Covid lockdown in the UK."

Installation view, Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press: Pranayama Typhoon at Barakat Contemporary, Seoul

“Pranayama Typhoon combines the word “pranayama,” a breathing technique that dates back to ancient India, with the word “typhoon,” a catastrophic weather phenomenon, which is also the name of a state-of-the- art fighter plane. The title of the exhibition hints at the collision of human breath with the unpredictable, destructive forces of nature. Banner conceived the work in Pranayama Typhoon during the Covid lockdown in the UK."

SUPERFLEX: Super Reef a New Kind of Urbanism

Superflex Infomail

640w_SuperReef_1622559793.jpg

Sometimes, the best way to care for other species is to collaborate with them on new projects. In that spirit, SUPERFLEX is working on a master plan to build at least 55 km2 of reef along the coast of Denmark. Super Reef is a large-scale collective undertaking involving scientists, fish, marine biologists, policy makers, local communities, and seagrasses. Together we can increase biodiversity, clean the air, boost the fish population, make art, and imagine forms of symbiotic living.

Over the last century, Denmark has lost huge areas of stone reef. Humans have extracted tons of stone for construction and coastal protection, decreasing biodiversity and leaving parts of the seabed as empty as a desert. Reefs are crucial partners in a flourishing world: not only do coastal ecosystems help prevent erosion, they have the potential to remove carbon dioxide from the air even more efficiently than terrestrial forests.

Because underwater creatures like variety, just as humans do, Super Reef will be constructed from a range of materials, from repurposed stones to specially-designed fish-friendly pink bricks. Acknowledging the importance of an interspecies perspective, SUPERFLEX is including marine life in both scientific and aesthetic decisions. Perhaps algae can tell us what they want, if only we learned to listen.

Humans built our cities with material taken from the ocean, and now we are developing a sculptural infrastructure to build cities for fish. Super Reef is a new kind of urbanism, premised on an expanded notion of collaboration and knowledge-sharing: between humans as well as between species. 

Super Reef is a project derived from the Deep Sea Minding research which was originally supported by TBA21-Academy. 

SUPERFLEX Upcoming Exhibitions

SUPERFLEX Infomail

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea, installation view. maat – Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (Lisbon), 2021. Courtesy of EDP Foundation. Photography by Francisco Nogueira

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea, installation view. maat – Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (Lisbon), 2021. Courtesy of EDP Foundation. Photography by Francisco Nogueira

Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea
A selection of Pink Elements is being exhibited at MAAT in Lisbon as part of the exhibition Aquaria – Or the Illusion of a Boxed Sea. Pink Elements consists of varying configurations of pink, coral-friendly bricks that stand as future-ruins turned fish metropolis. The bricks are materially aligned with the needs of underwater creatures, their pink color scientifically known to propagate coral polyp growth.
Aquaria examines how the ocean has washed up inside our cities, homes, and cultural institutions, and questions how we have interiorised the notion of an ocean kingdom. 
Pink Elements are based onthe Deep Sea Minding research, supported by TBA21–Academy.

Works exhibited:  Pink Element no. 1/Revolving Corner, Pink Element no. 4/Penthouse, Pink Element no. 7/Corner District and Vertical Migration
Location: Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (MAAT), Lisbon
Closing date: 6 September 2021
For more information visit https://www.maat.pt/en

 
Sharity - teilen, tauschen, verzichten
Alle Daten Dem Volke is showing at the Kunst(Zeug)Haus in Rapperswil-Jona as part of the exhibition Sharity – teilen, tauschen, verzichten. The work points to the asymmetry in the current access to data and to the right of all people to information and distribution of power, on which democracy depends. 
The exhibition deals with sharing, an archetypal form of our existence that has advanced to become a lifestyle. It questions the reasons why and what we share and how our society is changing as a result of this.

Work exhibited: Alle Daten Dem Volke    
Location: Kunst(Zeug)Haus, Rapperswil-Jona
Closing date: 16 May 2021
For more information visit : https://www.kunstzeughaus.ch


Every End Is A New Beginning / Gravmonumenter
For the exhibition Gravmonumenter at Kunsthal Aarhus, we made a proposal for an interspecies burial monument that challenges standardized perceptions of post-living arrangements. The organically shaped monument defines the systematic grid in cemeteries by moving across several graves. By taking a shape that is neither end nor beginning, it becomes a continuously growing sculptural infrastructure that manifests our interspecies relations.
Gravmonumenter is a catalog of inspiration for how we, as citizens and society, can incorporate contemporary art on several levels - even when death occurs.

Location: Aarhus Kunsthal, Aarhus
Closing date: 9 May 2021
For more information visit: https://www.kunsthalaarhus.dk


One Two Three Swing! / Real DMZ Project
One Two Three Swing! at Dora Observatory in South Korea went online with the Virtual Real DMZ Project exhibition. One Two Three Swing! is an installation of three interconnected swings affixed to an orange steel line, extending beyond the gallery walls and stretching into the landscape, and potentially beyond into the wider world. 
The virtual exhibition shows three-dimensional renderings of works by internationally acclaimed artists in the setting of a virtual demilitarised zone that is replete with numerous dreams yet to be achieved. Tune into YouTube for a virtual exploration of the Real DMZ Project https://youtu.be/DKolRBF19Mc

Work exhibited: One Two Three Swing!
Location: Dora Observatory, South Korea
Closing date: 23 May 2021

Pae White on Hyde or Practise Podcast

Pae White | Hyde or Practise

S 4 Ep 5: Artist Pae White Interview!

“We interviewed Pae White and Alexis didn't spontaneously combust so in general, that's a huge win! She talks to us about finding community in unlikely places during the pandemic, building her studio up from a solo venture to the multinational operation it is now, learning about contracts and looking to friends for advice. Also mushrooms, a lot of mushrooms. This is an incredibly informative and generous interview and hearing her talk about her journey is beyond rewarding. She casually drops working on her piece at the Venice Biennale...I mean...what more do you want?“

Petra Cortright: ‘Predator Swamping’ Digital Paintings Based on Appropriated Photographs

Petra Cortright | Art Now LA | Jody Zellen

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“Petra Cortright is a master at manipulating digital files and incorporating stock digital effects. She seamlessly moves back and forth between creating animated and printed images and is as adept with programs like Photoshop as she is with compositing video footage. Cortright first came to prominence in the mid 2000s for webpages filled with low-brow animated GIFS appropriated from a wide range of online sources. She was also celebrated for short video performances captured by her computers webcam and posted to YouTube where they were available to stream, as well as purchase for a price based on their number of views. In many of these purposely manipulated, kitschy and campy performances, she posed for the camera to act out ‘girly’ fantasies. The poster for her current exhibition, Predator Swamping, is a fragmented image of her looking suggestively out at the viewer and alludes to those more performance-based works. Instead, Cortright presents digital paintings based on appropriated photographs of the landscape, many of which are incorporated into wall-sized tableaux.”

Ana Prvački’s Pandemic Trilogy

BOMB I Ana Prvački I Regine Basha

I’ve always been fascinated by artists employing humor in times of crisis. Surrealists and Dadaists, for instance, turned to absurdist humor during the war and postwar years; their creative audacity helped us to recognize collective trauma and inertia. At the start of the pandemic last year, following a major cultural mood swing, many artists and performers had to ask themselves whether the use of humor was still appropriate.

I watched artist Ana Prvački boldly facing our shared fear with a trilogy of video works (which was presented virtually as part of the 2020 Gwangju Biennale) just as COVID-19 began to grip the globe and the death toll was rising. Prvački released three wry videos over the course of several months, offering coping strategies for our bleak and awkward new social reality. Titled MultimaskEnergetic Tickle, and The Splash Zone, they are poetic ruminations on anxiety and wellness. 

A conceptual and performance artist, Prvački was born in Serbia and raised in Singapore. After living in Spain and the US, she currently works from Berlin, Germany. She is innately connected to Eastern European avant-garde history, including Fluxus and conceptual performance (she occasionally collaborates with Marina Abramović). Most of Prvački’s work confronts behavioral conventions, such as social and gender etiquette, and proposes ways to improve mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing. She researches these topics with utmost seriousness but delivers her findings with a twinkle in her eye, and sometimes tongue in cheek. Her background in theater, music, and architecture, as well as beekeeping and traditional masked acting, brings a singular edge to Prvački’s practice; her humor is subtle, even elusive, and is often laced with the erotic.

Prvački’s Pandemic Trilogy takes us into a near future. Balancing sincerity and absurdity, she uses the sonorous inflections of her speaking voice and meticulously calibrated expressions of her eyes to guide us: “You do not need to look human, just friendly.” Multimask, the first in the trilogy (released in May 2020), employs 3-D rendering for an all-over face mask that, in Prvački’s words, “reimagines quarantine and isolation as a time for renewal, personal growth, consciousness, and beauty while providing a safe way to interact with others in a social environment.” The emoji-like face with beady eyes provides an experience of slight sensory deprivation—because how much more input can we bear?—and encourages internal reflection and self-study. The video operates between a public service announcement, an infomercial, and a beauty tutorial, and is so convincing that a number of people thought the mask was an actual product that could be ordered online. 

For many of us who are not essential workers, the lockdown has brought a sense of isolation and a hyperawareness of our inner lives. For Prvački, our current collective anxiety sharpened her work’s focus on enduring social concerns. In a prescient performance from 2007, titled At the Tips of Your Fingertips, the artist methodically, and enthusiastically, cleaned one-dollar bills with what she called “money-laundering wet wipes.” A witty nod to the germ-ridden symbol of capitalist interconnectivity, this work sailed to the top of my mind as soon as the pandemic hit.

In Energetic Tickle, the trilogy’s second video, Prvački instructs the viewer on how to overcome the “energetic, emotional, and physiological implications” of social distancing. To the sound of an accordion, Prvacˇki calmly enacts a new way of greeting our fellow humans with the help of sensed energy flowing from and to the fingertips. Choreographed like a dance, the work puts non-touch to the test: Can it indeed reach us and titillate?

The Splash Zone, the final work in the trilogy, is a poetic vignette that imagines a future, unexplained climate event. Prvački enacts a personal encounter, merging outer and inner life within “a space of both creativity and anxiety, analog and digital,” referred to by the artist as “the supralittoral zone.” Concerned with spiritual more than physical care, this piece poses the idea of humans having a porous relationship with water, our survival requiring an entirely transformed collective experience.

Might the heightening of the provocative and the absurd be a way out of our worrying minds? Can art’s liminal space—and in Prvački’s case, somatic space—be not an escape route but a proposed, valid solution during times of darkness and social duress? In her Pandemic Trilogy, Prvački meets us, much like a benevolent extraterrestrial, with cheery yet grave euphemisms to remind us that we have gone astray.

Interspecies Assembly SUPERFLEX x ART 2030

ART 2030 | SUPERFLEX

ART 2030 and SUPERFLEX are delighted to announce our upcoming collaboration: Interspecies Assembly, on this World Wildlife Day.

Against the backdrop of this critical moment of time – in which humans are waging war on nature, biodiversity is collapsing, and human activity is at the root of Earth’s descent towards chaos - Interspecies Assembly will mark the very first gathering of human and other species on earth, to address the future of our planet and promote interspecies dialogue and cooperation. The mission of Interspecies Assembly: to urgently lay the foundation for peace, harmony, and the right to a strong and sustainable future for all species on planet Earth. The project addresses today’s most urgent issue of protecting the diverse ecosystems and many forms of life across the planet, that are fundamental to global progress and achieving all Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.

Further details to be announced.

Interspecies Assembly is supported by New Carlsberg Foundation, The Obel Family Foundation, TBA21– Academy, Beckett Fonden, and Danish Arts Foundation.

For more information click here.

What Makes Artist-Run Spaces Flourish

Frieze | Brian Butler, Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer, and Diana Thater

Diana Thater The bedrock of the LA arts scene has always been its schools: CalArts, UCLA, ArtCenter College of Design. When my generation was starting to show work in the early 1990s, we were very ambitious because we had teachers like John Baldessari, Mike Kelley, Patti Podesta, Charles Ray and Nancy Rubins. None of us had any money but we didn’t care. Why not just have a show in your living room?

Brian Butler When the art-market bubble burst in 1989, I had just come back from Europe, where lots of gallerists – including Christian Nagel and Maureen Paley – were showing in domestic spaces. I found an available townhouse at 1301 Franklin Street in Santa Monica that just made sense. 

DT I think a lot hinged on the recession, followed by the Gulf War and the LA riots. The city went dark for a few years. The only pinpoints of light were those domestic spaces and the artists who showed in them, and congregated at Museum of Contemporary Art openings. We all knew each other: everyone was either a teacher, a student or a recent graduate. 

If you think about it, historically, experimentation always happens when there’s no market, there’s a recession or a war. In the 1960s, there was Fluxus and Judson Dance Theater: things that didn’t make money but advanced ideas. I think it’s during these low points in socio-economic history that our culture really leaps forward.

Conversation continued on Frieze.com

Ana Prvački in collaboration with Galina Mihaleva and Joyce Bee Tuan Koh at NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore

Ana Prvački | NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore

Mouthful (masked duet), 2021 9 Jan 2021, Sat - 7 Mar 2021, Sun The Vitrine, Block 43 Malan Road

Mouthful (masked duet), 2021 9 Jan 2021, Sat - 7 Mar 2021, Sun The Vitrine, Block 43 Malan Road

Activation: Mouthful (Masked Duet)
by Ana Prvački in collaboration with  Galina Mihaleva  and Joyce Bee Tuan Koh
Saturday, 23 January 2021, 5.00 – 7.00pm
Sunday, 24 January 2021, 5.00 – 7.00pm
Block 43 Malan Road

Installation, performance, and sound work

How to breathe deeply and sing expressively in this moment when the mouth and nose embody danger? How to have pleasure in music when in its essences it is airborne and moist?

Let us return power and agency to the mouth and voice while still protecting ourselves and others. Let us express our emotions freely into the air that we all share. The Mouthful mask is both conceptual and practical. It exposes the breath and gives us an earful and eyeful of air.  Mouthful projects a new sound which follows the guidelines of our time while it overcomes and embraces the obstacles we face with poetry and humor.

Mouthful is conceived by Ana Prvački, produced and manifested by Galina Mihaleva and activated by Reginald Jalleh and Zerlina Tan with original music by Joyce Bee Tuan Koh.

"Fantastic Voyage": A Guided Walk with Kerry Tribe

Kerry Tribe | Orange County Museum of Art

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Join visual artist and filmmaker Kerry Tribe for a 10-minute guided walk suitable for all ages and levels of mobility. Walk slowly around your home or briskly around your neighborhood — any time and place you can get ten minutes without distraction.

Making the Invisible Visible Ann Veronica Janssens

Ann Veronica Janssens | Ark Journal | Karen Orton

Installation view, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art 2020

Installation view, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art 2020

Growing up in Kinshasa, Ann Veronica Janssens would often watch the sunset and sunrise, specifically the deep shades of violets, yellows, pinks and reds that swept across the sky, over the nearby mountains. She left the Congo aged 13 but five decades later, the intensity of those colours and perspectives are still woven throughout the Belgian artist’s immersive sculptural works, whether rainbow-coloured, annealed- glass panels, prism-like aquariums or installations of light and colours projected into a space.

“I’M INTERESTED IN SERENDIPITY, THAT IS A BIG PART OF MY WORK. JUST BY CHANCE, TO LOOK AROUND ME OR TO READ SOMETHING, AND THEN TO START TO DEVELOP SOMETHING WHICH COULD BE INTERESTING.”

This interview is featured in Ark Journal VOL III along with a 16-page portfolio of Ann Veronica Janssens’ artworks.  In partnership with Louisiana Museum of Modern Art.

Studio Berlin: artworks replace dancing bodies in the legendary Berghain club

Rirkrit Tiravanija | Financial Times | Kristina Foster

‘Tomorrow is the question’ (2020), art work by Rirkrit Tiravanija, outside Studio Berlin © Rirkrit Tiravanija/Noshe

‘Tomorrow is the question’ (2020), art work by Rirkrit Tiravanija, outside Studio Berlin © Rirkrit Tiravanija/Noshe

No image captures the gloom of Covid-19’s impact on Berlin’s cultural life like an empty dance floor. An unfamiliar quiet has descended on the German capital since its clubs closed down in March. While it’s still unclear when revellers will hear the call of thumping bass again, a new alliance between the city’s art and music worlds will allow the public to visit its most revered techno institution once more — but not to dance.

For an exhibition at the legendary Berghain club, art replaces the writhing bodies of its past. Studio Berlin features work by 115 Berlin-based artists spread across the cavernous spaces of the 3,500-square-metre structure, filling up its enormous Halle and spilling across its bars, staircases, even its bathrooms. Berghain owners Michael Teufele and Norbert Thormann approached German collectors Karen and Christian Boros with the idea for an exhibition back in June. The project throws a much-needed lifeline to creative workers, helping some of the club’s employees return from furlough (many have been retrained as gallery staff) as well as providing a platform for the city’s artists. The show’s extensive roster is the result of three months of studio visits that have allowed organisers to bring new talent alongside major names such as Olafur Eliasson, Wolfgang Tillmans and Tacita Dean. “Creative collaborations are more important now than ever,” says Karen Boros, who hopes that such interdisciplinary approaches will provide a model for the future and demonstrate ways of overcoming the new barriers put in place by the pandemic. “Studio Berlin is a perfect example of making the impossible possible.”

Many of the featured artists have likewise taken up the theme of hybridity in their treatment of the club’s infrastructure as canvas. Nigerian artist Emeka Ogboh plays recordings of a Lagos street through the Berghain sound system. A piece by Katherina Grosse, known for her large-scale architectural paintings, offers a rare burst of colour against the building’s industrial walls. On the back of a bathroom stall, those with keen eyes will spot Cyprien Gaillard’s engraving of The Land of Cockaigne, Bruegel’s warning against gluttony set in a mythical land of plenty.

Unsurprisingly, there are many such references to the club’s pre-Covid excess. Turkish artist Nevin Aladag created the indentations in her sculpture Stiletto by donning a pair of high heels and dancing on a metal plate. Anna Uddenberg’s pleather-clad raver clambers across a bar, revealing much. A suspended sex harness by Monica Bonvicini hangs down from a ceiling in a cascade of rubber and chains. More innocently, Chinese artist He Xiangyu equates his eye-opening Berghain experience with his first taste of Coca-Cola, positioning a plaster sculpture of himself as a child opening a can in his favourite spot next to a bar. The club is both star and setting, an Arcadia of sexual awakenings and decadent pleasures. Most of the artworks were made during lockdown, which also imports an unlikely sense of introspection into this temple of hedonism. An intimate series of Polaroids by Georgian artist Ketuta Alexi-Meskhishvili captures the flowers she bought daily during isolation. Verena Issel conjures the domestic space by using household items such as cleaning cloths, wine bottles, brooms, plastic glasses — ciphers for our quarantined existence — to transform a corridor into a jungle-like enclosure. Images of deserted cities also capture the eerie stillness that fell over the world’s capitals during the pandemic. Raphaela Vogel’s sculpture and video installation fills the Halle’s lower level with large models of monuments; the Statue of Liberty, Arc de Triomphe and Tower Bridge all huddle together in a dim-lit basement, seemingly abandoned.

This sprawling exhibition serves as a synecdoche for the Berlin art scene in its irreverence, multiculturalism and density (the exhibition’s organisers claim that Berlin has a higher density of artists’ studios than any other European city). It also highlights that repurposed spaces are at the heart of the city’s cultural scene. Studio Berlin is just one of many events launched during the trifecta of Gallery Weekend, Berlin Art Week (both ran to September 13) and the Berlin Biennale (September 5-November 1) which takes place in a recycled building. The disused Tempelhof airport provided a temporary home for Positions art fair, while KINDL, a brewery-turned-art-space, reopened with a string of group exhibitions. The Boros collection itself is housed in an old second world war bunker which was also the erstwhile location of Teufele and Thormann’s fetish club night, Snax.

But if Studio Berlin is the Berlin cultural scene’s view of itself, it is also a nostalgic one. This collaboration harks back to the creative ferment of the 1990s, when experimental art and music went hand-in-hand. The show’s impromptu atmosphere also recalls the art scene’s early scrappiness and recalls a time when there was less red tape involved in staging exhibitions. Recent real estate spats between collectors and developers threaten an exodus of prestigious collections such as that of Friedrich Christian Flick, leaving many questioning Berlin’s future as an art city.

But Boros dismisses such concerns as “naive”. “Even though some private collections have closed their houses to the public, or left the city, it doesn’t mean Berlin will lose any of its potential,” she says. She believes that the city still offers prime art making conditions: “there is no better place for an artist to thrive than in Berlin . . . they themselves are the source for all art infrastructure”. If nothing else, Studio Berlin reasserts that Berlin’s days as a laboratory of creativity are far from over. The Berghain has retained some of its old rules such as its strict no-photo policy, which Boros hopes will allow for a more “personal experience” with the works. Crucially, however, visitors will now be able to circumvent the club’s notoriously selective bouncers with a pre-booked ticket and time slot guaranteeing entry, as well as the opportunity to take guided tours. This circumscribed experience might be a poor substitute for those craving the return of sweaty, feverish gatherings, but the image of having bodies on the dance floor once more is, at least symbolically, a hopeful one.

Cutting-Edge Art Takes Over Soon-to-Be-Obsolete New York Phone Booths in Outdoor Exhibition

Rikrit Tiravanija | ARTnews | by Maximilíano Durón

Rirkrit Tiravanija, Ohhh... untitled 2020 (remember in november), for "TITAN," New York City, October 12, 2020–January 3, 2021.

Rirkrit Tiravanija, Ohhh... untitled 2020 (remember in november), for "TITAN," New York City, October 12, 2020–January 3, 2021.

Can a phone booth become an art space? That was the question artist Damián Ortega and Bree Zucker, director of New York’s Kurimanzutto gallery, had in mind when they organized “TITAN,” an exhibition in which 12 artists’ works are situated in phone kiosks on Sixth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan (through January 3).

The art spaces will be temporary in more sense than one. Sometime early next year, after the show ends, New York City, which took over ownership of the kiosks from the now-defunct Titan, will remove the booths, rendering obsolete what has long been an integral part of the city’s landscape. (In their place will be kiosks offering wifi.)

hoosing booths between 51st and 56th Streets was intentional. For Ortega and Zucker, the location represents an important “circuit” of the city, with the Museum of Modern Art and Radio City Music Hall, various public sculptures, and, most importantly, large corporate buildings all situated nearby.

“For us, this avenue is a microcosm and a perfect arena for study,” Zucker told ARTnews. “The location is far from arbitrary—it was an incision that was made into the map of Manhattan to highlight a specific artery of the city.”

Ortega added, “We couldn’t cover the city or all of Sixth Avenue, but we can do an acupunctural intervention.”

For the outdoor show, Ortega and Zucker have gathered together a significant group of artists, including Kurimanzutto artists Minerva Cuevas, Jimmie Durham, and Rirkrit Tiravanija, as well as Hans Haacke, Glenn Ligon, Zoe Leonard, Yvonne Rainer, Patti Smith, and Renée Green. Each artist has their own dedicated phone booth, which features their work on the three exterior sides of the kiosk, in place of advertisements. (The exhibition is also accompanied by its own dedicated website, which includes a map of where to locate each booth and an artist statement for each work.)

Many of the works in the exhibition are text-based, like Cildo Meireles’s which features some of the Beatitudes from the New Testament’s Gospel of Matthew. On one side, the sixth Beatitude is highlighted: “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.” Anne Collier has retrofitted her 2011 series “Questions,”  handsome images that present the dictionary definitions (on color stock paper) of words like “evidence” and “supposition.” And Rirkrit Tiravanija is presenting big block-letter phrases like “Febreze for Fascism.”

Other artists repurposed some of their best known work for the show. Hal Fischer is presenting examples from his well-known 1970s photo-text series “Gay Semiotics,” and Jimmie Durham has created a simple map with a big red dot saying “You Are Here” (seemingly a reference to his ongoing “A Pole to Mark the Center of the World” series).

Though it feels attuned to the cultural climate of 2020, the outdoor exhibition’s development, including its use of old phone booths, predates the pandemic, as the show has been in the works for over a year. Its genesis began when Ortega last came to New York and visited Kurimanzutto’s Upper East Side gallery and the surrounding neighborhood. “TITAN” presented an opportunity, Ortega said, to allow artists to contribute to something that was not taking place digitally, particularly as the art world’s online fatigue has grown in the past few months.

“In a time where people are locked in their houses or isolated in their own spaces, this idea of coming together in the streets to see a show that you can see in the middle of the night is a direct response to the pandemic,” Zucker said.

Though Kurimanzutto is now recognized as one of Mexico’s leading blue-chip galleries, Ortega said that this exhibition is a return to the gallery’s earliest days in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when its founding artists would stage exhibitions in non-conventional spaces—from a fruit market to an abandoned furniture store—across Mexico City.

“We were trying to escape the white cube and follow the energy of the city,” said Ortega, who was one the 13 artists that founded Kurimanzutto alongside its owners, Mónica Manzutto and José Kuri.

Zucker added, “There was this energy of a community, building a project together in a space that maybe hadn’t been yet understood or recognized as a space to show art. Rather than remain within the walls of the cabinet we had created in New York, there was this move to get back into the vein of the city, into the channel of communications.”

The phone booths were ideal spaces for the project because they “were already public-facing, but they were not noticed,” Zucker said. “They’re angles of space that were somehow invisible but are everywhere in the city, though they’re passed by without a real understanding of them being a space.”

esrawe studio and SUPERFLEX unveil vibrant ARCA warehouse in miami

SUPERFLEX | designboom | by Kat Barandy

Image: César Béjar

Image: César Béjar

wrapped in a colorful facade by SUPERFLEX, stone manufacturer ARCA presents a design warehouse in wynwood, miami, with a gallery-like experience by esrawe studio. crossing through the vibrant exterior art piece, visitors enter a showroom collection of natural and technological materials and cultural activations. commissioned to imagine the arca’s new façade is danish artist group SUPERFLEX, three artists known for intersecting art, science, and activism. the facade, entitled ‘like a force of nature,’ is comprised of arca’s ceramic tiles designed by hector esrawe.

esrawe studio and SUPERFLEX work together to generate a facade installation that vibrantly expresses fibonacci sequence patterning along the ARCA miami warehouse. following a color palette inspired by the tones of banknotes, the work of art underlines the overwhelming experience of the world’s current economic systems as natural as volcanoes or tsunamis, almost like a force of nature. hector esrawe comments: ‘unlike its colorful façade, the interior is designed as a neutral space to shift the focus onto the material collections. ARCA wynwood is presented as a museum-grade experience where the materials are showcased as unique works of nature, creating an opportunity for visitors to have an interactive, sensory experience with ARCA’s products.’

ARCA’s miami warehouse is conceptually designed by esrawe studio and SUPERFLEX to shift away from traditional retail space. instead, the project promotes learning, stimulates dialogue and knowledge, and offers an understanding of why and how architecture, design, art, and culture are generated worldwide. this is accomplished with the dual-purpose design of showcasing the materials for experience and ease of purchase.

on the ground floor of ARCA’s miami showroom, visitors are presented with a visual experience. videos of the quarries arca sources for its stone, processes it maintains and other sources of inspiration or creation of materials is projected at reception. in the double-height stone gallery, a curated display of massive slabs of marble sourced from around the world are presented. each slab on display is available for purchase, where an indoor crane will reach down and help the customer select the exact piece. the second floor offers a journey through the evolution of materials, from natural wood to manufactured wood, ceramics, tile and porcelain, with a room dedicated to each.

Fiona Banner's 1.5 tonne sculpture protesting industrial fishing removed by UK government

Fiona Banner | The Art Newspaper | by Louisa Buck

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The government may be turning a blind eye to industrial fishing in the UK’s Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), but it is quick to respond when an unwanted sculpture is deposited outside one of its Department Offices. Within hours of Fiona Banner and Greenpeace dumping her 1.5tn granite sculpture Full Stop Klang (2020) on the doorstep of the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to protest against the government’s failure to stop illegal fishing in protected waters, the police had mustered the forces of Westminster Council to remove the work. 

Ironically it was at almost exactly the same time as Banner’s other two Full Stop works were being craned onto the Greenpeace boat Esperanza over at Tower Bridge. There they began their journey to the North Sea to form part of a protective barrier at Dogger Bank. Klang, however, was hoisted rather less auspiciously onto a Council truck to be transported up the A12 to a facility in Dartford. Here it resides until its fate is decided.

“We hope to get the sculpture back” Banner tells The Art Newspaper, adding “perhaps your readers can suggest where it should go next?” 

Greenpeace drops 1.5 - ton rock outside Defra HQ in fishing protest

Fiona Banner | The Guardian | by Mark Brown

Fiona Banner artwork is part of group’s direct action campaign against illegal North Sea fishing.

Security had been told to expect an artwork for the secretary of state at 9am. Perhaps they were not expecting it to be an enormous chunk of granite painted with squid ink and so heavy it will need a crane to remove.

The artist Fiona Banner and a team from Greenpeace deposited the 1.5-ton artwork outside the Westminster offices of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) on Monday.

Titled Klang, it supports Greenpeace’s direct action campaign against destructive and illegal fishing in the North Sea, which has involved dropping huge boulders in the Dogger Bank area to disrupt trawlers.

The artwork was sculpted from granite taken from the North Sea, which brought its own challenges. “I was astonished to be working with material which was just so dense and heavy,” she said.

The original intention was to carve something perfect but “once I started I realised it was completely resistant to human intervention. In the end that is nature telling us that it cannot, will not, continue to bend to our will.”

She made three sculptures using a powerful robot-controlled diamond cutter. Two of them, Peanuts and Orator, are heading by boat to the North Sea to be dropped by Greenpeace while Klang will remain outside Defra until authorities decide what to do with it.

Banner described the illegal bottom trawling of the North Sea as “like taking a bulldozer through an ancient forest”.

She sees the debate as not just about fishing in the North Sea. “It’s the future of humankind,” she said. “Here we are still in a pandemic, viscerally aware of our vulnerability and the vulnerability of nature. We know we all really need to act. Deploying the sculptures in this way is I guess a way of recognising we need to act beyond language.”

Greenpeace has said it will remove the boulders it is dropping in the sea – including the artworks – if the government takes credible action. What happens to the one in Westminster remains to be seen. “It will be quite hard to move. They will probably have to get a crane,” said Banner.

Banner, who once installed a Harrier jump jet in Tate Britain, has been sculpting full stops over two decades.

These works are materially different in that they have been painted with sustainably sourced squid ink. “We can’t put anything in the water that is toxic,” Banner said, “but they do smell a bit fishy. I was in the house the other day saying what’s that smell, what’s been going on and eventually it was traced back to me.”

A Defra spokesperson said: “We are putting sustainable fishing and protection of our seas at the heart of our future fishing strategy. We have already set up a ‘Blue Belt’ of protected waters nearly twice the size of England and the Fisheries Bill proposes new powers to better manage and control our Marine Protected Areas and English waters.

“The Common Fisheries Policy currently restricts our ability to implement tougher protections, but leaving the EU and taking back control of our waters as an independent coastal state means we can introduce stronger measures.”