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Showing posts with label GUGGENHEIM BERLIN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GUGGENHEIM BERLIN. Show all posts

25.10.12

GABRIEL OROZCO | GUGGENHEIM BERLIN


Deutsche Guggenheim - "Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms",  2012
Deutsche Guggenheim – “Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms”, 2012
Memories.
Tokens.
Charms.
From a discarded piece of Bubblegum
To a scrap of string….
We are surrounded by a visual collaboration of individual memories and moments either washed up on shore or abandoned, deserted on a Mexican nature reserve. Gabriel Orozco has recycled these forgotten treasures into his own masterpiece that, “can be read both as a critique of current civilization and a poetic topography.” All these little artifacts are brought together perfectly like a constellation of stars in his exhibition Asterisms shown at Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin.
Asterisms – A prominent pattern or group of stars, typically having a popular name but smaller than a constellation.
Deutsche Guggenheim – “Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms”, 2012
“It is a two-part sculptural and photographic installation comprising thousands of items of detritus he gathered at two sites- a playing field near his home in New York where he has collected evidence of activities held there, and a protected coastal biosphere and wildlife reserve in Mexico that is also repository for flows of industrial and commercial waste from across the Pacific Ocean. Presented as a taxonomic study of material, shape, size and color, the exhibition underscores and amplifies Orozco’s subtle practice of subjecting each of his projects to personal idiosyncratic systems.”
“His studio is the world more than anyone, Gabriel Orozco embodies the ideal of the contemporary artist who travels constantly to research and create his work. Over the last thirty years, he has lived in Madrid; Berlin; London; Salvador, Brazil and San Jose, Costa Rica, and currently he divides his time among New York, Paris, and Mexico City. Just as he resists being pinned down to a permanent location, his work also refuses to be classified into the usual categories. While embracing his Mexican heritage, Orozco resists classification as a stereotypical ‘Mexican artist,’ part and parcel of his belief that national identities have become complex and ambiguous in the boundary-upending world we inhabit. The 1962 – born artist discovers the raw material for his poetic sculptures, photographic works, paintings, and found objectsalmost everywhere- in art history, or on the street, or,as in his project for the Deutsche Guggenheim, on the beach of a Mexican nature preserve and sports field in New York.”
Friedhelm Hutte, Global Head of Art, Deutsche BankAG
Deutsche Guggenheim - "Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms",  2012
Deutsche Guggenheim – “Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms”, 2012
One can always feel an innocent secret hidden within the aesthetics of a shimmering white sea shell. The mystery of the pearl, the age of the the shell itself, and the undiscovered secrets of the ocean hidden within its delicate exterior. These beautiful natural structures are as exciting as the miraculous science behind the lightbulb. Orozco skillfully brings together an exciting oxymoron of nature and manufactured science. The two elements harmonize in color, texture, meaning, and form to become elements of his perfectly positioned installation.
“The individual objects carry narrative connotations. Some of the bottles, for instance, have messages in them. Metal tins appear to contain wartime ammunition or food. Domestic- scale light bulbs once illuminated private homes and fishing boats, and the barnacle- covered buoys demarcated specific marine routes throughout the Pacific. Every item has a back story, a secret that is subsomed by the overwhelming narrative of accumulation and pollution. What does translate is a pronounced awareness of circulation, literally and figuratively. The multifarious items comprising this installation were operative in their respective worlds, their functions defined and their roles unquestioned. Once jettisoned and lost at sea, the objects were literally set in motion, carried along by the tide but with their lack of inherent worth or purpose abundantly clear. When Orozco recuperated them from the coast of Mexico, he put them back into the ecology of exchange but with vastly different conceptual and aesthetic intonations.”
- Friedhelm Hutte, Global Head of Art, Deutsche BankAG
Deutsche Guggenheim – “Gabriel Orozco: Asterisms”, 2012
Orozco’s Asterisms is a perfect collaboration of photographic images, installation, and digital media presenting a “beautiful, seminal, and profoundly human exhibition.” The Guggenheim even gives you the opportunity to see this exhibition every Monday for free so there is no excuse to miss it. Running until the 21st of October, everyone should visit the Mexican artist’s thrillingly colorful and perfectly installed Asterisms.

thanks to: 
http://blog.artconnect.com/2012/10/19/gabriel-orozco-at-guggenheim-berlin/



30.6.12

GUGGENHEIM BERLIN | BMW LAB


A Local Think Tank with a Global Perspective: BMW Guggenheim Lab Opens in Berlin




BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin. Design architect: Atelier Bow-Wow. Exterior view. Photo: Christian Richters © 2012 Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.

The BMW Guggenheim Lab opened in Berlin, the second stop on the project’s six-year global tour. Offering free programs from June 15 to July 29, 2012, the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin is a temporary public space and online forum encouraging open dialogue about issues related to urban life.

A local think tank with a global perspective, the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin focuses on practical making and doing, with programs designed to empower residents with tools and ideas to actively engage in city change. The Lab is located in Prenzlauer Berg at Schönhauser Allee 176 in the Pfefferberg complex, a converted nineteenth-century brewery. The Lab is open Wednesday through Friday, 2–10 pm, and Saturday and Sunday, 12–10 pm. All programs are free of charge and will be offered in German or in English with German translation.

“We are delighted to open the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin and begin a vibrant period of public discussion and debate about how citizens can shape the cities in which they live,” said Richard Armstrong, Director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation. “We look forward to welcoming residents from throughout Berlin as well as visitors from around the world to join us in this groundbreaking urban experiment.”

“Together with the city of Berlin and the Guggenheim Museum, we look forward to following the vibrant discussions to come at the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin,” said Frank-Peter Arndt, Member of the Board of Management, BMW AG. “During more than 40 years of worldwide cultural engagement, we have always believed in the value of public dialogue and the support of innovative and unconventional ideas. The Guggenheim is the perfect collaborator to provide and ensure an open forum for this critical, multi-disciplinary exploration of urban life.”

The BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin is presented in cooperation with ANCB The Metropolitan Laboratory.

BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin Programming
Under the umbrella of Confronting Comfort, the theme of the Lab’s first two-year cycle, programming for the Berlin Lab focuses on the importance of “doing and making” to bring about city change. The Lab explores issues of contemporary urban life, from infrastructure to technology to sustainability, through programs that encourage visitors to participate and share questions, answers, thoughts, and dialogue.

“The goal of the BMW Guggenheim Lab is to spark a conversation about the future of cities and to create a forum where people of all backgrounds can create and share ideas,” said Maria Nicanor, Curator, BMW Guggenheim Lab. “Berlin is the ideal city to develop the Lab’s philosophy further, precisely because of its deeply rooted system of citizen participation.”

Programs have been developed by the Berlin Lab Team (José Gómez-Márquez, Carlo Ratti, Corinne Rose, and Rachel Smith), an international, multidisciplinary group of innovators and experts led by Guggenheim curator Maria Nicanor, with contributions from local organizations. The schedule, which can be found on the BMW Guggenheim Lab website, will include more than one hundred events at the Pfefferberg site and throughout the city.

Programs concentrate on four main topics:

Empowerment Technologies (June 15–24)
José Gómez-Márquez, The Little Devices Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, and a pioneer in the field of health technology innovations, will lead a series of “do-it-yourself” workshops focused on building one’s own city by “hacking” and transforming urban spaces.

Dynamic Connections (June 27–July 6)
Rachel Smith, principal transport planner with AECOM, based in Brisbane, Australia, will lead programs focused on sustainable mobility and community-building.

Urban Micro-Lens (July 7–18)
Berlin-based artist and psychologist Corinne Rose, who works with photography and video and teaches at the Bern University of the Arts, Switzerland, will explore the intersection between psychology, architecture, and art with programs that address perception, communication, and emotions in city life.

SENSEable City (July 19–29)
Architect and engineer Carlo Ratti, who practices in Italy and directs the SENSEable City Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, will lead programs examining how new technologies are transforming the way we understand, design, and live in cities.

“The city of Berlin is proud to join the BMW Guggenheim Lab in advancing its goal of engaging the public to identify new ideas and strategies for the challenges cities face today,” said Klaus Wowereit, Mayor of Berlin. “The Lab is a pioneering initiative that encourages open dialogue and different points of view, and that’s what Berlin—one of the most creative and innovative cities in the world —is all about.”

“We welcome the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin to Prenzlauer Berg and are thrilled that the Lab’s free programming will address issues of particular relevance to the neighborhood and the city,” said Matthias Köhne, Mayor of Pankow. “The communities of Pankow and Prenzlauer Berg and citizens throughout Berlin will make an important contribution to the Lab and provide a special perspective to this global project.”

In addition to programs based at the Pfefferberg site, the Berlin Lab offers a variety of citywide explorations, such as guided tours, field trips, and walking workshops. Details can be found on the BMW Guggenheim Lab website.

Activities at the BMW Guggenheim Lab Berlin will be documented on the project’s blog, Lab | Log, which also will feature interviews with BMW Guggenheim Lab contributors. The public is invited to join the BMW Guggenheim Lab’s dedicated social communities on Twitter (@BMWGuggLab and #BGLab), Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, and Foursquare).

Source: Guggenheim

thanks to: http://www.artandcointv.com/blog/2012/06/a-local-think-tank-with-a-global-perspective-bmw-guggenheim-lab-opens-in-berlin/

24.1.12

FOUND IN TRANSLATION | GUGGENHEIM BERLIN


 

FOUND IN TRANSLATION

January 28–April 9, 2012
In our globalized world, with political, economic, and cultural issues intertwined across nations, boundaries between the local and global have all but disintegrated. The necessity, and the difficulty, of communicating across cultural and historical divides is now an unavoidable aspect of our lives. Within this context, translation, in both its linguistic and more figurative senses, has become a fundamental tool for making sense of reality. Unlike ever before, we must consider what can be lost (or gained) in translation, and what effects these endless transformations have on the world around us.
Found in Translation brings together recent works by nine artists who look to translation as both a model and a metaphor to critically comment on the past and to produce richly imagined possibilities for the present. For these artists, converting a text from one language to another exposes a discursive field in which the terms of identity—class, race, religion, sexuality—are negotiated, and meaning is generated. An apparently straightforward linguistic task therefore becomes a microcosm for the interaction between cultures, laden by power relations but also open to new aesthetic possibilities. Delving equally into history and fantasy, the works on view here investigate diverse political and social contexts; at their hearts, language continues to provide the crucial link between the cultures and temporalities they explore.
Because language is experienced in real time, Found in Translation prominently features the time-based mediums of video, film, and 35 mm slide installation, which are augmented by photographs and prints that incorporate language as a formal element. Acts of reading and speaking predominate: Siemon Allen, Alejandro Cesarco, Brendan Fernandes, and Lisa Oppenheim examine the various distortions that cultural changes can wreak upon works of literature. Sharon Hayes, Matt Keegan, and O Zhang look to language as a public forum, focusing on the politics of speech amidst shifting historical contexts. Patty Chang and Keren Cytter delve into the realm of fantasy, translating texts into cinematic explorations of melodrama and desire. Together these artists highlight ways that translation can illuminate the complex historical and political processes that govern life today.
—Nat Trotman
Associate Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York


Siemon Allen, Land of Black Gold II, 2004 (detail). Printed paper with correction fluid, mounted on foam board panels, 248.9 x 510.5 x 1 cm. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Young Collectors Council 2004.88