14 Ağustos 2012 Salı

K O S T A S SAHPAZIS @MELAS/PAPADOPOULOS Gallery, Athens

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Kostas Sahpazis, Let's Meet at 3am, 2012
Red and blue fluorescent tubes, canes, insulation
material, fittings, cabling and transformer
Photograph by Katy Hamer
For his first solo exhibition at Melas Papadopoulos Gallery in Athens, Greece artist Kostas Sahpazis (b. 1977) offers The Gift of Screws which opened on May 30th and is on view until July 30th, 2012. Working with various material constructs, the artist brings together such mediums as neon, leather, rubber and charred wood in what the gallery Press Release describes as reverieobjectified: a metonymy for the free fall of materials and their rapid rescue. In a direct reference to a 1863 poem titled Essential Oils by Emily Dickinson, Sahpazis references the final line in the first stanza, "It is the gift of screws". Where Dickinson is referring to (according to my online research) the essence of a rose after it has been pressed or "screwed" and the remaining oil that lasts beyond the death of the flower and even in some cases a person. What the artist references in his visual execution of the text is a claim of simplicity and a yearning for natural materials that can also be used to remind us of something else or a moment yet to occur. Here, molded iron alludes to curled or rolled leather, while neon is less about light and more about a dissection of space via a confluence of raw materials and perpendicular linear interjection of space. 


Kostas Sahpazis, Second Connection (foreground), 2012
Yellow fluorescent tubes, steel, leather,
plexiglass, fittings, cabling, transformer
Leathers, (background), 2012
Iron, spray paint
Photograph by Katy Hamer
Emily Dickinson: Essential Oils (1863)
ESSENTIAL oils are wrung:The attar from the roseIs not expressed by suns alone, It is the gift of screws.
The general rose decays;But this, in lady's drawer,Makes summer when the lady liesIn ceaseless rosemary. 
In a contemplation of time, along with remnants we leave behind, Kostas Sahpazis attempts to use contemporary pairings of materials that allow for a poetic interlude and even without the reference to the Dickinson poem, an intertwining of lyricism of life and death. Personal favorites are Let's Meet at 3am and Second Connection, both 2012, each containing neon light and not only glowing with an eerie presence in the gallery but also functioning as a drawing (the neon offering a linear interaction) and sculptural object.  Sahpazis has been included in group exhibitions at the gallery before but as stated previously, this is his first solo exhibition. His work was a pleasant surprise in Athens especially under the circumstances of the political/economic state. Reminding me of the recent Hanna Liden exhibition at Maccarone Gallery in New York, Sahpazis also is able to create an active dialogue in a gallery context with objects that are subtle, mostly monochromatic, and made of simple materials. I look forward to seeing more of his work, whether in Athens or beyond.
Thank you to Andreas Melas for meeting me by appointment in Athens and spending time at the exhibition and gallery.

Kostas Sahpazis, The Practice of Go (foreground), 2012
Leather, jesmenite, plexiglass, iron, varnish, wood
Untitled (background), 2012
Resin, polyester, leather, iron
Photograph by Katy Hamer

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D E S T E FOUNDATION: HYDRA & ATHENS, GREECE

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The DESTE Foundation, Project Space
Hydra, Greece, 2012
Photograph by Katy Hamer

The DESTE Foundation, Project Space, Animal Spirits
Small Side Gallery view
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012


The DESTE Foundation, Project Space, Animal SpiritsFolkert de Jong, Sculptural installationPhotograph by Katy Hamer, 2012
The Deste Foundation Project Space was founded in 2009 on the small, yet chic Greek island Hydra. Currently on view in the former slaughter house is a group exhibition from Dakis Joannou permanent collection. The exhibition presents a selection of works from contemporary artists ranging from digital drawings by Paul Chan to a zombie head from Folkert de Jong. Animal Spirits, at once leads the viewer into the "Slaughter house" expecting to find remnants of all the animals that had been killed years earlier. It is said that while still active, there was a steady mixture of blood and water spilling out into the nearby sea by way of a pipe that still extends from the small structure. Instead Animal Spirits is a rather political show focusing on a selection of works including, but not limited to, Tom Sachs reproduction of the Presidential symbol, Paul Chan's graphite drawing of Saadam Hussein (also part of an illustrated iBook and exhibition called "How to download a Boyfriend), and a series of Adam Helms silk screened militia soldiers, whose images are pilfered from the vast supply of deceased representations of soldiers and terrorists online. Maybe in this case the "Animal" is the one that lives inside us all; the being that can reveal itself as quiet as a mouse, as kind as a friendly dog, or as cunning as a venomous snake. The exhibition was put together in replacement of another that was to feature Urs Fischer and Josh Smith which was postponed until 2013. However, Animal Spirits comes at a time in Greece when stray dogs are still being fed yet running wild and unlike the rest of the year, as I've been told, the political actions/reactions and/or animal spirits, specifically in Athens, have been kept at bay....since "even protestors need to rest during the summer". 


Animal Spirits is on view at the Deste Project Space until September 2012.  

The group exhibition includes works by: Huma Bhabha, Paul Chan, Folkert deJong, Sam Durant, Adam Helms, Christian Holstad, Cameron Jamie, KimJones, Panos Koutrouboussis, Dominique McGill, Tom Sachs, William Scott,Dash Snow, and Kelley Walker. 

The DESTE Foundation Project Space, Animal SpiritsAdam Helms, Installation viewPhotograph by Katy Hamer, 2012
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Pawel Althamer, Massimiliano, 2012
Plastic on metal wire construction
polyurethane foam, acrylic resin
Installation view DESTE Foundation, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer

Pawel Althamer, Dakis, 2011
Plastic on metal wire construction
Installation view DESTE Foundation, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer
The exhibition at the DESTE Foundation Athens is quite different from the show in Hydra.  On the second floor is work by Pawel Althamer (b. 1967). The first gallery presents a several sculptures from the series titled Almech, making direct reference to famous art world personalities, including Dakis Joannou himself. The second and third galleries on this floor offer a more broad look at the career of the artist and his performative gestures that usually result in free-standing sculptures. Also hanging in the third room are metallic paintings by young, American artist Jacob Kassay made using photo chemicals on canvas. It was in the first gallery, where my attention was held the longest and I felt a giddy sickness, later learning it was the fault of Urs Fischer's Death of a Moment, 2007, permanently installed paneled mirrors that subtly move with the power of hydraulics and give the space a the feeling of being on a slow moving ship. For Althamer's Almech, originally commissioned by the Deutsche Guggenheim for an exhibition in 2011 and continued into 2012, the artist made molds of his subject's face, then constructed what could be thought of as a bizarre body forms, somewhat robotic in gesture, frozen in whiteness. Recognizing New Museum curator Massimiliano Gioni, along with artists Jeff Koons, Urs Fischer, Maurizio Cattelan and others assisted in making each piece oddly humorous. Althamer's work tends to focus mostly on the male gender, but it would have been nice to see Marina Abramovic or Marilyn Minter hanging out with what feels like a "boys club" taken at face (ahem) value. Regardless, the way that the artist has focused on and formed each sculpture is humorous. The artists are identified by first name only via the title of the each sculptural work and hint towards a monumentalizing of the subjects but also rather than lending to a heavy sense of substantial grounding, the works seem somewhat delicate as if they could easily be  knocked down.  In fact, the sculpture of Massimiliano Gioni, one of the most interesting and powerful curators-also curating the 2013 Venice Biennale, is shown as a "Christ-like" figure on a fallen cross. However, rather than poking fun at his subjects, Althamer allows each figure the opportunity to have an outer body experience, becoming a ribbon, floating and sometimes falling. Dakis Joannou, portrayed as an American indian chief, seems to survey the scene and as a admirable chief should, bows his head in humble approval, appearing to say "Όλα είναι καλά".  

Pawel Althamer, Jeff, 2012
Plastic on metal wire construction,
polyurethane foam, acrylic resin
Installation view DESTE Foundation, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer
Pawel Althamer with Urs Fischer, Jacob Kassay & Jacub Julian Ziolkowski is on view at the DESTE Foundation Athens, from June 20th - October 31st, 2012

Also at this location is:
Collecting Architecture - Territories: The Athens Minutes in collaboration with Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation

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KOUNELLIS & RONDINONE @MUSEUM of CYCLADIC ART, GREECE

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Jannis Kounellis, Installation view, Untitled work
The Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012

Jannis Kounellis was born in Piraeus, Greece in 1936. He studied fine art in Athens until 1956 when he moved to Rome to attend the Accademia di Belle Arti. Influenced by several other important artists of the time, he was originally inspired by Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana, Jackson Pollack and Franz Kline. However, by 1963, Kounellis was less interested in traditional applications including painting and began thinking in a more sculptural way, even using live animals in his exhibitions. Materials, especially those referring to the human experience became one of the most important elements of his visual oeuvre. This being said, it was in 1967 when Kounellis was first included in an exhibition in Genoa titled Arte Povera, a term that was originally conceived by Italian curator Germano Celant. Many artists of the time, specifically in Italy, were making anti-establishment artworks, with a desire to pull art off the walls and into the space. Each artist from the movement had a specific agenda, but also a connective element to the others involved which was to focus on humanity, dwelling space, mathematics of nature, and mediums of impermanence. Other artists involved in Arte Povera of the time included Mario Merz, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Giuseppe Penone, and Alighiero Boetti, to name a few. Within the last year, Arte Povera has had a resurgence of global appreciation and exhibitions have occurred and are currently taking place celebrating the movement which was and is so relevant and influential to contemporary art in venues in New York such as the Museum of Modern Art (Alighiero Boetti), Marianne Boesky & Pace Gallery (Pier Paolo Calzolari), Marianne Goodman (Guiseppe Penone) and now the unique Greek national of the group is being shown in his home country at the Museum of Cycladic Art, in Athens, Greece. It's stated that Kounellis originally started using burlap as a visual homage to artist Alberto Burri. However, rather than use the burlap stretched as canvas in frames, he uses the substance in strips wrapped around other materials and also in bag format. It is in this latter usage that we come across entering the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens.

Jannis Kounellis, Installation view, Untitled work
The Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012
Burlap is one of the many natural materials that Kounellis has used quite often in his career. Here it is filled with charcoal, top folded over and in circular formation. In the first gallery to the right of the entrance, one will discover the bags surrounding a large pile of eyeglasses. Plastic and metal frames merge into one as the glass and plastic lenses glimmer under the fluorescent lighting.  His work has such a strong human presence, without representing an iota of human form. The lyricism is quietly poetic and carries an emotional strength far more cunning in its subtlety than if outright didactic.

Walking through the two story exhibition there is a duality hanging invisibly in the air; a presence of melancholia and hope. Kounellis hasn't exhibited in Greece since 2004 and even though he originally returned to the country in 1977 for exhibition purposes, he didn't stay and returned shortly thereafter to Italy. However the artist had a retrospective of his works in Greece in 1994 sponsored by the J.F. Costopoulos Foundation. The show took place on the cargo ship "Ionion", floating on the sea and very much in touch with Kounellis' own family history and a working class Greece. From curator Denys Zacharopoulos, Artistic Director of the Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Arts, Thessaloniki:
"The presence of Kounellis's exhibition in the Stathatos Manion, apart from referencing the fundamental principle of the artistic gesture's emancipation into free work and logos, also underscores the more recent history. His work comes to stand upright in the rooms of a historical building which rose together with the Greek bourgeoisie's dream of turning Athens into a city worthy of the principles of European civilization and the values of Enlightenment."
At a time when Greece is struggling with national debt and upcoming deadlines, there is looming doubt that they will be able to meet bond payment of €3.26 billion by August 20th unless they receive the next installment of bailout money ~from Forbes.com and Trade the News.  Jannis Kounellis left Greece for reasons that involved his career and his own personal desire for success. He may have found a home in Italy, but this exhibition in Athens, proves that much of his sensibility is derived from somewhere deeper than physical place, it is emerging from a state of mysticism and blood. It is a rooted, powerful, irreproachable and purposeful, a characteristic that we all carry and leads each and every one of us to where we are in the present, and that is the past. Kounellis is undeniably self aware and it is through this self awareness that he is able to communicate to the "every" man. His work is specific to history and all that have come before, but at the same time presents a universal meaning and/or understanding of our mortal existence, the relationships we share amongst ourselves, our communities, our families and our countries (both of origin and where one may call home). The semiotic language he uses taps into the most basic of human needs and without being too contrived he presents untitled works that represent a specifically universal moment of time. His is a prayer, wrought with silence and replete with a sense of satisfaction in uncertainty and while existential, optimistic for the future.

Jannis Kounellis, Installation view, Untitled work
The Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012

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Ugo Rondinone, nude (xxxxxxxxxxxx), 2011
Installation view, Museum of Cycladic Art, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012

Ugo Rondinone, divided heaven, 2012
Concrete, reinforcement, steel, 8 parts
Installation view, Cycladic Museum of Art, Athens
Photograph by Katy Hamer, 2012


Also on view at the Museum of Cycladic Art is nude by Ugo Rondinone. This exhibition is somewhat similar yet completely different from that of Kounellis' on the opposite side of the building. Here Rondinone exhibits seven life-size nude figures, molded bodies that have been assembled and made of various materials. The figures sit in moments of contemplative reflection and are constructed of wax and earth pigments. For this exhibition, the artist changed the entire wing in order to present and establish a certain mood and environment for the work to exist in. Years after the Cycladic period (dating 3000 BC) the renovation and sense of "newness" in the space feels refreshing and a subtle smell of a recent paint job and newly installed wooden floors hangs in the air. It gives his figures, which the press release describes as "resting" a particular place in time. While not necessarily  hinting at any visual reference of "contemporary" they exist within a period that is easily identifiable as the 20th, if not 21st century, although all dated 2011 & 2012. Kounellis and Rondinone offer the viewer a particular moment of contemplation but in completely different ways. Kounellis paints a portrait of an individual but also by shear number of objects including, coats, shoes or hats, the work also lends itself towards social presence. In nude, Rondinone speaks directly with the individual. He strips the body of garments and beyond a skull cap (in this case assumed it was needed during the mold process) hovers in a frozen state of vulnerability. Even if the body language of each figure appears comfortable rather than uncomfortable, each gaze is downcast and as if assembled poorly at a mannequin factory, some of the joints where shoulder meets arm, for example, look loose as if they could fall off. 
Both contemporary artists offer visual structures composed mostly of earth based hues and a focus on a literal and non-literal objective that make people who and what they are. With Rondinone's nudes several "bodies" are in space while with Kounellis hundreds of pairs of glasses may fill a particular area, a relic left behind. Each approach is a reflection, offering a moment of respite for any who might be wandering the hot summer streets of Athens, and take a minute (or a few hours) to step inside.
Jannis Kounellis is on view until September 30th, 2012
Ugo Rondinone nudes is on view until September 19th, 2012
The Museum of Cycladic Art
4 Neofytou Douka Str/ 1Irodotou & Vasilissis Sofias Ave.
Athens, Greece

Opening hours are: Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 10:00am - 5:00pm
Thursday 10:00am - 8:00pm and Sunday 11:00am - 5:00pm
Closed Tuesdays.

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G H O S T S IN THE MACHINE @NEWMUSEUM, NY

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Stan VanDerBeek, Movie Drome, 1963-66
Photograph courtesy of the New Museum, New York
Photo: Benoit Paille
Ghosts in the Machine opened at the New Museum in New York on July 18th, 2012. The exhibition is the brain-child of Associate Director Massimiliano Gioni and Director of Exhibitions Gary Carrion-Murayari, Curator. It focuses on and highlights the relationship between man and machine in art throughout the years. Spanning over fifty years, most of the work in Ghosts in the Machine is from the 1960's and 1970's, offering a glimpse into early projections, simple, abstract, motorized works not competitive beyond their own specific artistic purpose. Time is evident in many pieces since technological advances have been so rampant in the last ten or more years. However, entering into the  environmental container Movie-Drome, 1963-66 by Stan VanDerBeek, viewers are invited to lay down on provided black pillows and take in the visuals. The imagery varied from egyptian sculpture stills, black and white film with people doing things, landscape and protest narrative. An abstract political thread seemed to be a consistent in all of the projections. Shapes overlapped, colors overlapped,  periods of time overlapped, although the technology used to create the entire installation was a reminder of and reflective of the time when it was made. I stayed in the installation for about 20 minutes, listening to the clicks and hums of the machinery and watching the images and the interaction of shadows as people entered and left the space. In his catalog essay about the exhibition, Gioni suggests:
"...VanDerBeek's Movie-Drome plunges its viewer-patients into a river of images that seems to portend the extreme voyeurism of the Internet. Might the global onanism of our social media be the latest incarnation--a transnational, corporate one, as befits this era--of the bachelor machine?"
Technology has given way to overstimulating and over abundance of visual information now readily available at our fingertips. At the time this work was made, the political and economic realm was intersecting with art and expanded upon by way of technology. Artists and theorists alike were exploring possibilities dealing with the machine in direct relationship with human feeling. Ghosts in the Machine is an exhibition dealing with an archive of visual occurrence documented and salvaged. IN answer to what is a bachelor machine, the exhibit references Harald Szeemann, "The Bachelor Machine", 1975 along with literary critic Michel Carrouges' interpretation that "a bachelor machine is a fantastic image that transforms love into a technique of death. (said regarding the exhibition and in reference to a work by Marcel Duchamp)." If as a whole, humanity is about love and machines are man made, the machine should equal love but what if love just equals death? It is here we find the conundrum of the what machine culture and it's assistance and corruption have resulted in. An international group of artists started forming in the early 1960's catapulting several movements and experiments falling under the titles "kinetic art", Concrete art", "Zero" and "GRAV".  A few artists included in this particular exhibition, part of the collective "Arte Programmata", started showing work in Italy in 1962. Again according to Gioni,
"The artists of Arte Programmata imagined art as a training ground of the senses, "a perceptual gymnastics" a necessary preparation for survival in a world overstimulated by ever-more-invasive advertising and technology."

Stan VanDerBeek, Movie Drome, 1963-66
Photograph courtesy of the New Museum, New York
Photo: Benoit Paille
Ghosts in the Machine, uses machines both literal, metaphorical and in a direct representation manner in each of the artworks present in the exhibit. Born 1973 in East Jerusalem and currently based in New York, artist Seth Price is the most contemporarily relevant or at least youngest artist in the show. His piece "Film/Right", 2006 is a 16mm film in color, silently back projected onto a hanging screen. The work features a landscape and an ever changing sky, eerie and consistent. His inclusion in the show is a bit of a mystery however, as his is the only work, that is in direct communication with the present, even if obviously influenced by many of the other artists, now deceased, whose ghosts invisibly hover around every corner.  Followed by the second youngest artist Henrik Olesen, born 1967 in Esbjerg, Denmark and currently based in Berlin, Germany. Olesen contributes a series of computer made collages from 2009, along with two of my favorite works in the show, Apple (Ghost) (1), 2008 and Imitation/Enigma (2), 2008 the first being a computer from the 1980's wrapped in plastic and the latter a box (which could also be construed as a computer tower), with a crudely tied, heavy wool blanket covering the object. Both these works are sculpturally undemanding yet effective in their relationship to contemporary installation, the speed of technology and the concept of monumentalizing an object via the declaration of art. 
Thomas Bayrle, German artist born in 1937, caught my attention with his piece Madonna Mercedes, 1989 on the 3nd floor. The work is a black and white photocopy collage of the Madonna and Child, mounted on wood. Upon close inspection, it is possible to see that, as assumed by the title, the work consists of a myriad of the Mercedes Benz. As a whole, the recognizable image of the Madonna and Child communicates in an art historical stance, delving from the Renaissance and in turn being fast forwarded to a particular time, while not today, also not such a distant past. Bayrle also has work in DOCUMENTA (13) and has heavily relied on machines and the concept of human interaction along with repetition of images within his work. In this piece there is a two-dimensional interaction, a flattening of space within a flattening and compression of time. The work comments on status, the power of labels, the commercial identity of representation along with religion and class. 
Thomas Bayrle, Mercedes Madonna, 1989 (Left) & Claes Oldenburg, Profile Airflow, 1969 (Right)
Photograph courtesy of the New Museum, New York
Photo: Benoit Paille
It is on the 2nd floor where the viewer will come across some of the works from the "Arte Programmata" artists.  Spazio Elastico [Elastic Space], 1967-68 by Gianni Colombo is an installation in a square room. The piece consists of elastic cord, black light and an electric motor. Entering the space, one is challenged to pause and look at the elastic string. Very subtly it moves, stretching in a gridded format, dizzying inside the black cubed room. I leaned against the wall, and felt a bit off center but deliciously. Functioning as a record of time yet completely fresh and relevant in the moment, Colombo's piece offers a pure, crystallized interpretation of the umbrella concept of Ghosts in the Machine. The elastic and it's eerie movement performs as a ghost, it is a specific haunting within the context of a specific interior realm. Similarly to VanDerBeek's Movie Drome, Spazio Elastico is an artificial environment ahead of it's time, a foreshadowed look into a society now completely driven by computer networks and circuits.

Gianni Colombo, Spazio Elastico [Elastic Space], 1967-68
Photograph courtesy of the New Museum, New York
Photo: Benoit Pailley

Otto Piene, Hängende Lichtkugel, 1972 1967-68
Photograph courtesy of the New Museum, New York
Photo: Benoit Paille
What Gioni and Carrion-Murayari have done is composed and revealed an archive of sorts, raising the dead and reminding us that everything comes from something else.

Ghosts in the Machine, a major survey exhibition exploring the relationship between art and machines, opened on July 18th and will be on view until September 30th, 2012.

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AMELIE VON WULFFEN & LUCIO FONTANA @ASPENARTMUSEUM, CO

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Amelie von Wulffen, Installation view, 2012
Image courtesy of the Aspen Art Museum
Amelie von Wulffen, Ohne Titel, 2011
Watercolor, pastel, and oil on canvas
Image courtesy of the Aspen Art Museum and
Greene Naftali, New York
Recently opened at the Aspen Art Museum is the work of Berlin based painter Amelie von Wulffen and the not often seen ceramics of Lucio Fontana. The two exhibitions opened on July 27th and each offers a peek into the worlds of two very different artists. Amelie von Wulffen, born in Germany, 1966, is the 2012 Jane and Marc Nathanson Distinguished Artist in Residence at the museum and also is celebrating her first solo exhibit in an American museum context. Von Wulffen's work deals with fluid, organic areas of color. She takes her cue from a loose personal narrative but for the most part, allows the paint to dictate what arrives onto the canvas. Represented by Greene Naftali in New York, the work on view is a culmination of her time spent as an artist in residence in Aspen. Using her own practice to comment on the long-standing debate between abstraction and what some might call decorative art, Von Wulffen is able to skillfully use multiple mediums to play with our own perception of interior and exterior space. She delves into the surface, toying with her own skillful choice of rendering and revealing recognizable objects or instead choosing to use biomorphic shapes, allowing the viewer to make their own decisions.

Amelie von Wulffen, Ohne Titel, 2011
Ink and acrylic on canvas
Image courtesy of the Aspen Art Museum and
Greene Naftali, New York

Her drawings, in contrast to the paintings, reveal the artist's interest in comic book illustrations and storyboard. Using psychological narrative she makes simple graphite sketches sometimes accompanied by colored areas, featuring characters with speech bubbles filled in active, provocative dialogue. Previously, Von Wulffen used photography and collage elements to arrive at her own visual solution when making work. Her most recent executions, express a departure from the "realism" of photography and find the artist an  otherworldly state, imagining environments and conversations as she sees fit, not relying on predetermined imagery.

From the Aspen Art Museum website:
Amelie von Wulffen's work has been exhibited internationally, including solo exhibitions at the Centre Pompidou, Paris; Kunstmuseum Basel, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Switzerland; and Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Düsseldorf, Germany; among others. She has participated in numerous group exhibitions, including the 50th Venice Biennale in 2003 and the 3rd Berlin Biennale in 2004.




Coinciding with these two recently opened exhibitions, the museum board also organized several events including ArtCrush, WineCrush and PreviewCrush. Each event invited prominent artists, curators, gallerists, collectors and philanthropists to celebrate the Aspen Art Museum. The wine tasting was sponsored by Dom Pérignon and artist Tom Sachs was presented with the AAM's Aspen Art Award for 2012. The event was hosted by chair Amy Phelan and her husband John. PreviewCrush presented a live auction including artists Jim Hodges, Ryan Gander, Rob Pruitt and others while the silent auction featured artists such as Slater Bradley, Michaël Borremans and Ellen Harvey, just to name a few. Valued prices generously ranged from $2,000 - $150,000 for a Tom Friedman piece titled "Which" from 2008. All sales support the Aspen Art Museum, including tickets to the various dinners, cocktail receptions, etc. held August 1st-3rd. 

Lucio Fontana, Dolphins, 1944, Collection of Darwin and Geri ReedyCopyright 2012, Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SIAE Rome.Image courtesy of the Aspen Art Museum

Lucio Fontana: Ceramics is a selection rarely seen ceramics made by the artist. This exhibition follows a recent, absolutely fabulous solo show titled Ambienti Spaziali in New York at Gagosian Gallery. Fontana (1899-1968),  is known to most art lovers for his works featuring perpendicular slashes on tough, dense canvas and burlap made during the 1950s and 1960s. For the exhibition at Gagosian, viewers were treated with, as the title alludes, Ambient Spaces, or rather painterly interiors that were in-between sculpture, installation, and environmental study. The work at the Aspen Art Museum is completely different. While mostly focused on painting and sculpture, commencing in the 1930s Fontana used clay to investigate and (from the AAM website) engaged the problems of both painting and sculpture in innovative and productive ways. The works vary between figuration and abstraction, a work titled Fondo del Mar circa 1940s, is an abstract unrecognizable form filled with indentations from the artists fingerprints. If not for the title which translates as Bottom of the Sea, we may never know that we are looking at the artists interpretation of what might be sea kelp, a swoosh of algae filled water, and sand. I would like to think of these particular works as studies or drawings. While multi-dimensional, they seem to be mindless sketches and exploratory ventures diving towards the realm and series of art that is intelligibly more subtle and strong, Concetti Spaziale. Lucio Fontana: Ceramics is the first museum exhibition dedicated solely to his ceramic works. The hope is that in providing these works for public consumption, we all might gain a richer understanding of the practice and artistic agenda of this seminal artist. 
*******************************************************************************Amelie von Wulffen and Lucio Fontanta: Cermaics are both on view until October 7th, 2012.

ASPEN ART MUSEUM590 North Mill Street
Aspen, CO 81611

Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.
Thursday, 10 a.m.–7 p.m.
Sunday, noon–6 p.m.
Closed Mondays and major holidays


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