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| « | April 17, 2008 - May 17, 2008 | » |
04 / 17
(all day)
Start: 19/10/2007 - 12:00pm
End: 20/04/2008 - 6:00pm
Catherine Sullivan
Triangle of Need
‘Triangle of Need' is a multi-channel video installation, in which Catherine Sullivan orchestrates a complex set of ideas and participants to weave a nuanced story about evolution, class, wealth and poverty, and the inequalities and injustices in our global economy.
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
(all day)
Start: 15/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 18/04/2008 - 5:00pm
Design the symbiosis of digital components and clothing
A world class team, consisting of Leah Buechley, the very creator of the Lilypad Arduino, and wearable computing experts Maurin Donneaud and Vincent Roudaut, guide workshop participants in the development of their own eFashion item or hybrid wearable. In four days participants conceptualize and materialize their project prototype, assisted by fashion designer Anouk Wipprecht as well as physical computing specialist and Fritzing developer Dirk van Oosterbosch.
Start: 10:00 am
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
Start: 10:00 pm
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00pm
End: 18/04/2008 - 6:00pm
The Guattari Effect: The Life and Work of Felix Guattari 1930-1992 An International Conference 17 and 18 April 2008 Drawing Room, Mansion Building Middlesex University Trent Park Bramley Road London N14 4YZ Directions for getting to Trent Park available here Supported by the Cultural Service of the French Embassy Advance registration only: Two day registration: £48 waged, £25 students (£15 CRMEP students), includes refreshments, lunches and reception. One day registration (subject to availability): £30 waged, £15 students (£10 CRMEP students). This 2-day international conference, organized by the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University, will be the first devoted to the work of the French psychoanalyst, philosopher, and political activist Felix Guattari. Its primary aim will be to gauge the contemporary significance of a theorist whose status as an ‘extraordinary philosopher’ was proclaimed by his collaborator Gilles Deleuze. To that end, it will bring together 3 internationally renowned experts on Guattari (Gary Genosko, Brian Massumi, Peter Pal Pelbart) along with 7 other philosophers, psychoanalysts, historians, sociologists, anthropologists and artists, all of whom have been profoundly influenced by Guattari. The goal will be to explore the full spectrum of Guattari’s work, from his early political engagement as an activist in the French mental health system, through to his critique of Freudian-Lacanian psychoanalysis and his conception of a ‘micro-politics of desire’ (which challenged the then dominant theoretical paradigm of ‘structure’ with the concept of ‘machine’), finally considering his later elaboration of a ‘new ethico-aesthetic paradigm’, where ‘subjectivity’ was to be considered ‘from the point of view of its production’. While acknowledging the importance of Guattari’s influential collaborations with Gilles Deleuze (Anti-Oedipus, Kafka, A Thousand Plateaus, What is Philosophy?), one of the primary purposes of the conference will be to give due weight to Guattari’s own independent and highly innovative contributions to a variety of fields, including linguistics, pragmatics, aesthetics, ecology, architecture and media theory. Among the questions the conference seeks to explore are: Why did Guattari turn his attention to these fields, and what did he produce in them? What forms did his activism take in the 1970s and 80s, and of what relevance are they today? Rare archival film and audio footage from these periods will be screened to accompany discussions of Guattari’s adventures in media activism.
|
04 / 18
(all day)
Start: 19/10/2007 - 12:00pm
End: 20/04/2008 - 6:00pm
Catherine Sullivan
Triangle of Need
‘Triangle of Need' is a multi-channel video installation, in which Catherine Sullivan orchestrates a complex set of ideas and participants to weave a nuanced story about evolution, class, wealth and poverty, and the inequalities and injustices in our global economy.
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
End: 5:00 pm
Start: 15/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 18/04/2008 - 5:00pm
Design the symbiosis of digital components and clothing
A world class team, consisting of Leah Buechley, the very creator of the Lilypad Arduino, and wearable computing experts Maurin Donneaud and Vincent Roudaut, guide workshop participants in the development of their own eFashion item or hybrid wearable. In four days participants conceptualize and materialize their project prototype, assisted by fashion designer Anouk Wipprecht as well as physical computing specialist and Fritzing developer Dirk van Oosterbosch.
(all day)
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
End: 6:00 pm
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00pm
End: 18/04/2008 - 6:00pm
The Guattari Effect: The Life and Work of Felix Guattari 1930-1992 An International Conference 17 and 18 April 2008 Drawing Room, Mansion Building Middlesex University Trent Park Bramley Road London N14 4YZ Directions for getting to Trent Park available here Supported by the Cultural Service of the French Embassy Advance registration only: Two day registration: £48 waged, £25 students (£15 CRMEP students), includes refreshments, lunches and reception. One day registration (subject to availability): £30 waged, £15 students (£10 CRMEP students). This 2-day international conference, organized by the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University, will be the first devoted to the work of the French psychoanalyst, philosopher, and political activist Felix Guattari. Its primary aim will be to gauge the contemporary significance of a theorist whose status as an ‘extraordinary philosopher’ was proclaimed by his collaborator Gilles Deleuze. To that end, it will bring together 3 internationally renowned experts on Guattari (Gary Genosko, Brian Massumi, Peter Pal Pelbart) along with 7 other philosophers, psychoanalysts, historians, sociologists, anthropologists and artists, all of whom have been profoundly influenced by Guattari. The goal will be to explore the full spectrum of Guattari’s work, from his early political engagement as an activist in the French mental health system, through to his critique of Freudian-Lacanian psychoanalysis and his conception of a ‘micro-politics of desire’ (which challenged the then dominant theoretical paradigm of ‘structure’ with the concept of ‘machine’), finally considering his later elaboration of a ‘new ethico-aesthetic paradigm’, where ‘subjectivity’ was to be considered ‘from the point of view of its production’. While acknowledging the importance of Guattari’s influential collaborations with Gilles Deleuze (Anti-Oedipus, Kafka, A Thousand Plateaus, What is Philosophy?), one of the primary purposes of the conference will be to give due weight to Guattari’s own independent and highly innovative contributions to a variety of fields, including linguistics, pragmatics, aesthetics, ecology, architecture and media theory. Among the questions the conference seeks to explore are: Why did Guattari turn his attention to these fields, and what did he produce in them? What forms did his activism take in the 1970s and 80s, and of what relevance are they today? Rare archival film and audio footage from these periods will be screened to accompany discussions of Guattari’s adventures in media activism.
|
04 / 19
(all day)
Start: 19/10/2007 - 12:00pm
End: 20/04/2008 - 6:00pm
Catherine Sullivan
Triangle of Need
‘Triangle of Need' is a multi-channel video installation, in which Catherine Sullivan orchestrates a complex set of ideas and participants to weave a nuanced story about evolution, class, wealth and poverty, and the inequalities and injustices in our global economy.
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
(all day)
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
|
04 / 20
End: 6:00 pm
Start: 19/10/2007 - 12:00pm
End: 20/04/2008 - 6:00pm
Catherine Sullivan
Triangle of Need
‘Triangle of Need' is a multi-channel video installation, in which Catherine Sullivan orchestrates a complex set of ideas and participants to weave a nuanced story about evolution, class, wealth and poverty, and the inequalities and injustices in our global economy.
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
(all day)
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
|
04 / 21
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
(all day)
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
Start: 11:00 am
End: 4:00 pm
Location: Ben Pimlott Building, Seminar Room, Digital Studios, Goldsmiths University of London, New Cross SE14 6NW
This one-day workshop lead by Armin Medosch and Adnan Hadzi, uncovers and examines some of the challenges and opportunities faced when creative artistic practice is undertaking research. The challenge is to find ways of re-embedding useful aspects of free and open source methodologies in academic practice-based arts and technology research. How do we incorporate and negotiate research in those areas of work which are strongly inter- and trans-disciplinary? The workshop will address and discuss some of the generic, rather than discipline-specific, challenges of undertaking practice-based research within academia. It will draw on open and collaborative (FLOSS) methodologies by proposing and discussing a diverse range of taxonomies and practices.
|
04 / 22
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
(all day)
Start: 12/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 25/05/2008 - 6:00pm
Encompassing painting, drawing, computer animation, and sculpture, Craig Mulholland's show at Spike Island presents three new bodies of work. In "Paths of Resistance", "Resistance Rising" and "Peer to Peer" Mulholland refers back to the epic human struggles depicted in the historical painting of the French Salon. His contemporary updates depicts a mythical landscape in which works of art battle against each other as the task of the Surveillance Operator is staged against a Futurist Opera.
(all day)
Start: 17/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 22/06/2008 - 8:30pm
Hosted at the Plymouth Arts Centre, Estrategia brings together a group of Brazilian artists connected by their focus on systems and technology. Currently in Brazil there is an emergence of appropriated technology in contemporary art and culture. The agenda of these artists is to break the mould, play with systems and create new ways of operating.
|
04 / 23
(all day)
Start: 29/02/2008 - 12:07pm
End: 06/06/2008 - 12:07pm
The Art of Rent
Spring 2008 University of London, Queen Mary
http://www.generation-online.org/other/artofrent.htm
As part of an ongoing collective project, the organisers of this seminar series seek to promote a discussion on the rise of rent as a form of capitalist appropriation and the way that new levels of association in the arts and culture, in information and communication, in public taste and ambience have made this rise possible, and from the perspective of private accumulation, necessary. To this end, the seminar brings together various perspectives on the Art of Rent taking in analysis of cognitive capitalism, of the financialisation of the quotidian and the bodily, of gentrification and the metroversity, of new international division of labour and of governance. The seminar will conclude with a special two-day event in September on the cultural industries.
(all day)
Start: 04/04/2008 - 11:00am
End: 01/06/2008 - 6:00pm
"What do you want?" features five female artists who are living in India, working amongst a new generation of artists with political/activist concepts. Challenging popular cultural opinion, contemporary political issues and controversial social situations, the artists use photography, performance, objects, video and new media to analyse problems faced by indian women and those living within traditional family structures.
Programmed as part of the Asia Triennal Manchester 2008, the first ever UK Asian Art Triennal.
(all day)
Start: 05/04/2008 - 10:00am
End: 15/06/2008 - 6:00pm
5th berlin biennial for contemporary art 05.04. – 15.06.2008 When things cast no shadow When things cast no shadow, the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, curated by Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic, brings together artists from different generations and nationalities in an exhibition by day and night that aims to trace the diversity of art practices today. Eschewing a singular theme, form, or temporality, and determined instead by a critical engagement with artists’ processes, When things cast no shadow could be said to take the form of an open structure in five movements without a plot. The day part of the 5th berlin biennial will be on view at four distinct venues and include mostly newly commissioned works by 50 artists, while the night part of the show will feature still more artists and cultural producers in 63 nightly events taking place in locations spread across the once-divided city. The exhibition spaces of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, founded in 1991 in Berlin-Mitte will hold, among other projects, films by Babette Mangolte, Michel Auder, and Patricia Esquivias as well as an intervention by Ahmet Öğüt that comments on state power and its means of control. The attic will be turned into a studio/installation activated by Tris Vonna-Michell’s storytelling. The iconic glass hall of Mies van der Rohe’s ultra-modernist Neue Nationalgalerie in former West Berlin has inspired various responses from artists. Among them, a film installation by Susanne M. Winterling explores the water condensation that flaws van der Rohe’s masterpiece, while Gabriel Kuri builds up a participatory sculpture that reorganizes one of the building’s regular service operations. Cyprien Gaillard brings an unpretentious public sculpture from a housing project in Paris to the terrace of the museum thus positioning a symbol for one failed social-architectural ideal on the grounds representing an opposed, triumphant architectural ideal. The outdoor exhibition site of the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum, in the area formerly adjoining the Berlin Wall, presents, among other works, a new community-based project by Kateřina Šedá, who goes over the fences that separate neighbors in her home village of Líšeň in the Czech Republic. Lars Laumann screens a film about a woman who married the Berlin Wall, while Ania Molska installs a sculpture used as a prop in her new film. The first of five alternating, artist-curated solo shows at the Schinkel Pavillon will feature works of Paris- based Swiss-born designer Janette Laverrière, presented by Nairy Baghramian. It will open on March 20, 2008, preceding the official opening of the 5th berlin biennial on April 5 and upsetting the demand for a single, spectacular biennial beginning. The night part of the biennial, entitled Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (My nights are more beautiful than your days), comprises 63 nocturnal acts involving artists and other thinkers and takes place throughout the city. Neuro-scientist Olaf Blanke demonstrates an out-of-body experiment, at the encouragement of artist Melvin Moti. The curatorial collective WHW holds a lecture on Modernism in the former Yugoslavia, and Augusto Boal, founder of the Theater of the Oppressed and this year’s Nobel Peace Prize candidate, runs a workshop according to his context-sensitive teaching method. Cameron Jamie screens his recent film JO at the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz with a live score by Japanese noise artist Keiji Haino, and more, night after night. A comprehensive publication has been conceived as an interpretative tool in parallel with the 5th berlin biennial. It includes a visual and textual anthology of source material submitted by participating artists. The visitors guided tours program Secret Service offers diverse formats of made-to-measure exhibition tours that enable the visitors to investigate the biennial from different angles. Further information and booking at www.berlinbiennale.de. Venues: KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststraße 69 10117 Berlin-Mitte Neue Nationalgalerie Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum Kommandantenstraße / Neue Grünstraße 10969 Berlin-Kreuzberg Schinkel Pavillon Oberwallstraße 1 10117 Berlin-Mitte Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours Every night except Mondays at various places in Berlin. Detailed program available soon at www.berlinbiennale.de. Curators: Adam Szymczyk and Elena Filipovic Director: Gabriele Horn The presence of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art at its various venues is made possible by a co-operation between Kunst-Werke Berlin e. V. and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (for the Neue Nationalgalerie), KUNSTrePUBLIK e. V. (for the Skulpturenpark Berlin_Zentrum), and the organizers of the Schinkel Pavillon (for the Schinkel Pavillon). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is organized by KW Institute for Contemporary Art and is funded by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes/German Federal Cultural Foundation. The publications accompanying the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art are generously supported by the LUMA Foundation. Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours, the night part of the 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art, is kindly supported by the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte (FABA). The 5th berlin biennial for contemporary art is supported by Peter Marino Architect. Further information: Maike Cruse T +49 [30] 2434 59 42 press AT berlinbiennale.de www.berlinbiennale.de
(all day)
Start: 10/04/2008 - 6:30pm
End: 18/05/2008 - 6:00pm
FILM AND READING LIBRARY I’ve got the books, you’ve got the brains…
Preview: Thursday 10 April,18.30-20.30 with a performative lecture by Petra Bauer.
Project continues: Sunday 18 May
Open Wed-Sun, 12.00–18.00
Location: Gasworks, 155 Vauxhall Street, London SE11 5RH
| |