NEWS

 
 

NEWS

 
Forbes : In Conversation With Japanese Artist Chiharu Shiota Who Uses Thread To Form Monumental Architectures.

By Y-Jean Mun-Delsalle, Feb 24, 2022,10:30am EST.

Known for weaving webs of thread and wool to create dreamlike, immersive environments that reveal human emotions, Berlin-based Chiharu Shiota represented Japan at the 2015 Venice Biennale and the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo held a major retrospective of her work in 2019, which has since become a traveling exhibition. Now the Guimet Asian Art Museum in Paris will be giving her carte blanche from March 16 to June 6, 2022 in her first solo museum show in France. Exploring anxiety in the COVID-19 era as our everyday lives shrank and we experienced isolation in our doll’s houses, she tackles themes of immobility, silence, confinement and an uncertain future. I sit down with her to discuss her artistic practice.

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gabriela ancoChiharu Shiota
Barron's : Second Part of Macklowe Collection Could Realize $200 Million.

The second part of a vast collection of contemporary art acquired over decades by the real estate mogul Harry Macklowe and his former wife, Linda, was revealed on Friday by Sotheby’s.

The auction house will sell 30 additional pieces from the Macklowe collection—including landmark works by Mark Rothko, Gerhard Richter, and Andy Warhol —at a standalone sale on May 16 in New York that is expected to achieve in the region of US$200 million.

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gabriela ancoGerhard Richter
E-flux : Résister, encore.

Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne (MCBA). February 18–May 15, 2022.

Artists: Miriam Cahn, Banu Cennetoğlu, Michel François, Philip Guston, Thomas Hirschhorn, Amar Kanwar, William Kentridge, Kimsooja, Sigalit Landau, Nalini Malani, Teresa Margolles, Zanele Muholi, Félix Vallotton, Fabrice Gygi.

Withdrawal, silence, resilience, outcry, indignation, protestation, action, reflection, satire, humor...this collective show exemplifies the forms of resistance artists have developed when faced with the great challenges of our age—those forms amount to survival strategies.

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The Art Newspaper: Gerhard's Geburtstag: Richter to mark 90th birthday by curating exhibition of his work in Dresden

Germany’s most famous living artist turns 90 on 9 February and he is mounting an exhibition to mark the occasion in Dresden, the city where he was born. Focusing on Gerhard Richter’s portraits, glass and abstract works, the exhibition will extend over three rooms at the Albertinum, where the artist’s work is already on permanent display. It opens on 5 February and runs until 1 May.

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American songwriter : Yoko Ono is a Genius on Twitter

When Peter Jackson’s docu-series The Beatles: Get Back premiered in 2021 over Thanksgiving weekend on Disney+, the world got a new picture of Yoko Ono, the Japanese artist who married John Lennon and somehow earned a shoddy reputation thanks to many untruths about her relationship to the band.

Now, Ono is growing a new reputation. Recently Japanese Breakfast covered one of her songs (see below) and fans have commented how she has been treated poorly these past few decades.

But Ono probably doesn’t care much about all that. Because she didn’t care what anyone had to say prior, either. At least not in any way that deterred her art, her activism, or her work.

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gabriela ancoYoko Ono
Euronews Culture : Swedish film festival experiments on audience members with hypnosis.

The largest film festival in Scandinavia is offering its spectators the opportunity to attend screenings under the influence of hypnosis.

Audience members spend 20 minutes in Gothenburg Film Festival's "hypnotic cinema" before observing a screening of 'Land of Dreams' by the Iranian-American director Shirin Neshat.

The session takes place under the supervision of hypnotist Fredrik Praesto, and sensations ranging from heightened concentration to a state of stupor have been reported.

The avant-garde move has proven popular with filmgoers.

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gabriela ancoShirin Neshat
Dallas Contemporary : Shilpa Gupta in conversation with curatorial associate Emily Edwards

Shilpa Gupta was born in 1976 in Mumbai, India. She studied sculpture at the Sir J. J. School of Fine Arts, Mumbia. Recent solo shows include the Ishara Art Foundation in Dubai, United Arab Emirates 2019; Yarat Contemporary Art Center in Baku, Azerbaijan, 2018; Museum Arnhem, Netherlands, 2012; and Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, 2010. Gupta presented a solo project, ‘My East is Your West,’ at the Gujral Foundation in Venice, Italy, in 2015. Additionally, she participated in the 2019 58th Venice Biennale.

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gabriela ancoShilpa Gupta
Financial Times : Shilpa Gupta at the Barbican — voices of persecuted poets.

“How bitter language has now become/and how narrow the door of the alphabet”. Those words, written by Adonis, the Syrian poet who was jailed in 1955 for his political activities, are especially poignant now. In 2020, according to campaigning organisation Freemuse, a record number of artists and writers found themselves in trouble with oppressive regimes. Those lines by Adonis are just one chord in an orchestra of voices that comprise “For, In Your Tongue, I Cannot Fit”, a sound installation by Shilpa Gupta.

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gabriela ancoShilpa Gupta