Tuesday, May 25, 2010

PINTA DISTINGUISHED AT MOMA PS1 AS AN ARTISTIC SUCCESS OF THE PAST HALF DECADE


The launching of Pinta New York in 2007 has been showcased as one of the most important events to have occurred in the past half decade at Greater New York, the third iteration of the quintennial exhibition that MoMA PS1 is currently presenting. This distinction, which is part of a collaborative programme between one of the most influential institutions devoted to the advancement of contemporary art (the former P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center) and the prestigious Museum of Modern Art, MoMA, reaffirms Pinta New York’s leadership and its role in the generation of a broader vision of modern and contemporary Latin American art.

Since its inception, Pinta New York has included the participation of prominent galleries, curatorial projects with guest artists, and dialogue programmes that contribute to expand the understanding and knowledge of Latin American art of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, as well as a Museum Acquisitions Programme − an initiative that provides funds for museums to complement their permanent collections. Institutions such as El Museo del Barrio, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, the Harvard Art Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, among others, have endorsed the initiative of establishing a series of alliances and a matching funds system to this end. The establishment of  the Pinta Research Fund, a programme to fund scholarships for New York University (NYU) advanced students in the field of Latin American Art History, with the goal of ensuring a new generation of scholars, is another valuable contribution of Pinta to the city of New York.

Greater New York, organised by Klaus Biesenbach, Director of MoMA PS1, showcases the work of artists and collectives living and working in The Big Apple, and it also highlights some of the most important art events and exhibitions, performances and happenings that have taken place in the past half decade, through documents and printed material. On this occasion, from 23 May through 18 October, MoMA PS1's First Floor Painting Gallery will be dedicated to 5 Year Review, and this show will include memorable images of the inauguration of Pinta New York 2007 and of the large-scale work then commissioned to Fabian Marcaccio. This inclusion, recommended by a group of curators and critics, confirms the success of the three editions of Pinta New York in this epicentre of the art world. The nomination of the fair as one of the outstanding artistic events of the past five-year period, on the eve of the launching of Pinta London next June 3-6, allows us to expect a similar success in Europe.  


Pinta London 2010 will be launched in the capital of the Young British Artist (YBA) movement.with the participation of around fifty prestigious galleries − among them,  London’s White Cube and Haunch of Venison − and featuring a programme that includes tributes to pioneer artists Carmen Herrera and Carlos Cruz-Diez; art projects and solo shows, and a series of dialogues that will explore the position of Latin American art within London institutions. The degree of expectation can be gauged by the fact that Pinta’s leadership in the system of alliances with museums for the acquisition of Latin American artworks at the fair has incentivated the commitment of leading institutions such as Tate Modern, the University of Essex Collection of Latin American Art, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; Museu d'Art Contemporani.de Barcelona, MACBA; and the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, MIMA, England.




Media Relations
América:
Public Relations: Liana Pérez / liana@artcircuits.com / 1 – 786 262 1112
Media Relations: Carolina Ledezma / contacto@artcircuits.com / 1 – 347 901 6641
web site:  www.pintaart.com
Europa:
Relaciones Públicas: Giulia Constantini / giulia@gcmedialtd.com
Media Relations and Accreditations: Christina Freyberg /cfreyberg@hotmail.com/ +44 (0) 7780 705 262 or visit www.pintaart.com

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Dead or Alive

HARDCORE ART CONTEMPORARY SPACE

Néstor Arenas & Raul Recio en Lyle O. Reitzel Miami

Carlos Rigau Tonight at DV-

ThE FunnY GUY That Sticks His HAND IN the PAiNt BuckeT- Carlos Rigau
MAY 8TH  -  JUNE 19TH,  2010

RECEPTION SATURDAY, MAY 8TH,  2010,  7 - 11 P

Dimensions Variable is pleased to present ThE FunnY GUY That Sticks His HAND IN the PAiNt BuckeT, a solo project by Miami based artist Carlos Rigau. The exhibition will run from May 8th through June 19th, 2010. Dimensions Variable is located at 171 NE 38th Street in the Miami Design District.

Schools, gyms, hospitals, penitentiaries. Organized institutional behavior. Violence restrained for the sake of any institution. Its bathrooms, the break rooms, the classroom… the furniture. Holding areas for personal belongings. Places for excretion …and masturbation. Places where instincts are displaced and replaced.

Upon entering the exhibition the visitor will be encountering sound sculptures that propel them toward violence, frustration, and the general impotence that take place in these communal/corporate spaces. Objects like air conditioning shafts, lockers and urinal dividers to name a few, serve as compact models of the disciplinary mechanism.

“Discipline brings onto play its power which is analysis.” —Foucault.

Carlos Rigau was born in 1978 and was raised in Little Havana in Miami Florida. Carlos graduated in 2002 from F.I.U. with a double major in Fine Art and Television Communications. In 2009 Rigau completed Hunters MFA program in NYC. Carlos has exhibited his work in Berlin, New York, Chicago and Miami. His work is in the collections of Joseph S. Berg and Jefferson Godard.


ABOUT DIMENSIONS VARIABLE

Dimensions Variable is an exhibition space in the Miami Design District interested in innovative new projects in contemporary art.

The intention behind Dimensions Variable is to feature projects by individual artists and collaboratives. Rather than showcasing group or solo exhibitions in the usual format, we are interested in challenging individuals or collaboratives to address our space spicifically and produce one cohesive project. Dimensions Variable aspires to provide a forum for the introduction of unfamiliar, complex, collaborative and multidisciplinary practices to a Miami audience.

SPONSORS

+ Narragansett Lager

+ Dacra

+ Design District

+ Fulano

Thursday, May 6, 2010

We have as much time as it takes


We have as much time as it takes
CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts
Lower and Upper Galleries
May 6–July 31, 2010

We have as much time as it takes calls attention to the multiple conditions that determine artistic display in the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts. As an art gallery located within an educational institution, the Wattis Institute requires the steady production of tangible, professional results. Responding to this situation, We have as much time as it takes presents practices that expose, directly or symbolically, the often unquestioned and overlooked systems and economies related to such a situation. The show features 10 international artists and collectives working in a variety of media, including sculpture, installation, performance, and video. Many of the works are new, site-responsive commissions created especially for this exhibition.

We have as much time as it takes questions and highlights expectations of achievement, productivity, and established systems of management that make up the programs and academic mission of the Wattis Institute and CCA. The artworks converge and intersect in ways that confront exhibition-making's usual emphasis on visibility and timeliness, not to mention academic and institutional deadlines. The works embody circular processes, resist completion, welcome change, and refute demands for definable results and resolution. They challenge the conventional form of the art object and the traditional parameters of exhibitions.

The title comes from the 1957 film 12 Angry Men, a dramatic play that takes place entirely in a jury room where 12 men must agree on a verdict. At one point, juror number eight argues with his fellows for more time in order to adequately review the case. The exhibition's themes emphasize careful deliberation, cooperation, and consideration, and the title points out the complex processes behind the organization of an exhibition, especially given our added challenge of 12 curators needing to come to agreement. The title is indeed also a wry, tongue-in-cheek commentary on the finality of a graduate degree.

Lawrence Weiner's architectural intervention quite literally exposes the inner structure of the gallery while addressing issues of authorship and instruction. Nina Beier and Marie Lund, as well as Sandra Nakamura, expose the often-unquestioned systems underlying art, academic institutions, and their relative economies. Roman Ondák's work suggests a utopian no-time, a dream in which the calendar's demands are never met. Christine Wong Yap's shadowy statement satirically points to its own unobtainability. Jason Mena's constant movement and reorganization of common classroom objects refers to the human drive to create systems and questions the productivity of such behavior, thus resonating directly with the context of an educational space. David Horvitz's projects utilize existing systems of distribution and publication established by institutions and exhibitions. Zachary Royer Scholz engages with the detritus of the gallery and the materials of exhibition making to create temporary, conditional sculptures.

Two collectives will present newly commissioned pieces that engage directly with the venue. In an effort to define and call attention to the physical circumstances of CCA and the Wattis Institute, Tercerunquinto's work will involve changing existing spatial dynamics by manipulating the architectural elements of public and private spaces. Red76's central concern is to come to terms with the world and to redefine those terms—to imagine "what would happen if … ?"

We have as much time as it takes is curated by second-year students about to receive their master's degrees from CCA's Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice. The students are Jacqueline Clay, Nicole Cromartie, Courtney Dailey, Emily Gonzalez, Jacqueline Im, Kristin Korolowicz, Sharon Lerner, Katie Hood Morgan, Maria Elena Ortiz, Arden Sherman, Joanna Szupinska, and Josephine Zarkovich. The show has been developed with the support of Magali Arriola, adjunct professor; Julian Myers, assistant professor; and Claire Fitzsimmons, Wattis Institute deputy director. This is the first time that the program's thesis exhibition has been presented in the Wattis galleries, and its opening is timed to coincide with the openings of CCA's collegewide graduate thesis exhibitions. We hope in this way to deepen the relationship between our program, the Wattis's programming, and CCA's academic life, and to generate interdisciplinary discourses. Our status as students and curators-in-training within an educational institution and professional environment is underscored by the show's ambition to explore the possibilities, and the limitations, of its very specific setting.

Designed by Jon Sueda / Stripe, the exhibition catalog features interviews with each of the artists; a project by Matthew Rana, a student in the Graduate Program in Visual and Critical Studies; and texts by the local poet Jasper Bernes and the writers Erica Levin and Daniel Marcus. The publication is available as a downloadable PDF.

A dynamic series of public programs will take place over the exhibition's three-month duration, both inside and outside the gallery. On May 18 from 7–10 p.m. there will be a one-night-only screening of James Benning's 2005 film One Way Boogie Woogie / 27 Years Later accompanied by a reception and other events. There will also be workshops with participating artists Sandra Nakamura and Red76. Details to be announced soon.

Many thanks to the Getty Foundation for its support of Magali Arriola's participation in the Exhibition Project course.

Founding support for CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts programs has been provided by Phyllis C. Wattis and Judy and Bill Timken. Generous support provided by the Phyllis C. Wattis Foundation, Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund, Ann Hatch and Paul Discoe, and the CCA Curator's Forum.