DU 3 octobre au 14 décembre 2020 https://www.musee-rochechouart.com/index.php/fr/ Pour envisager l’œuvre de Samuel Richardot, il faut penser celle-ci comme une traversée, un voyage initiatique, qui prend pour cadre des espaces picturaux où se rejoue le théâtre du monde. Cela commence par un blanc. Surface rectangulaire où la couleur fait front. Un jeu de cache-cache s’opère sur la toile, un théâtre des opérations dispose les obliques, barrant les plus petits rectangles, vert sur rouge ou rouge sur vert. L’œil soutient difficilement la brillance des teintes, pourtant nettes, dont l’équivalence annule presque la différence à la frontière de la partition de leurs espaces respectifs. Le vibrato coloré, valeur d’ondes lumineuses que la couleur incarne, agit littéralement sur la surface blanche de la toile apprêtée. Une autre ligne, hasardeuse et floue, formée d’une multitude de points, passée sans doute à la bombe, crée un contre-point qui est une sinusoïde. Celle-ci renforce le bord cadre du rectangle dessus et dessous les deux triangles colorés. Plus qu’un flou, la trace crée une ombre arrêtée. Un arrêt sur image, le noir arrête l’image. Et ce faisant, le noir invente des horizons multiples et contrariés sur la surface plus large de la toile. Que dire du jaune latéral, lui aussi ombré par un noir flouté sur les bords ? |
Art Latino-Américain
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Hilma af Klint Paintings for the Future
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (NEW YORK, NY— November 20, 2018)—The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum will extend its hours until 8 pm during the holiday season, providing an additional opportunity for audiences to experience exhibitions on view, such as the groundbreaking Hilma af Klint: Paintings for the Future. From December 26, 2018, to January 6, 2019, the museum will be open every day from 10 am to 8 pm, with the exception of New Year’s Day, Tuesday, January 1, when the museum will open at 11 am. On Christmas Eve, Monday, December 24, museum hours will be from 10 am to 4 pm, and the museum will be closed on Christmas Day, Tuesday, December 25. The Guggenheim Store will be open for an additional half hour before and after museum hours. From December 26, 2018, to January 6, 2019, The Wright restaurant will be open from 11 am to 3:30 pm and will open at 11:30 am on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Day. For more information, visit guggenheim.org/plan-your-visit. Visitors to the Guggenheim may also view new paintings by contemporary artist R. H. Quaytman in the exhibition R. H. Quaytman: + x, Chapter 34, presented in conjunction with Hilma af Klint: Paintings for the Future, as well as modern masterpieces from the Guggenheim’s collection in the Thannhauser Collection galleries, and sculptures by Constantin Brancusi on Tower Level 2. |
Sonia Delaunay Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
Sonia Delaunay Les couleurs de l’abstraction Cette monographie qui suit l’évolution de l’artiste de l’aube du XXème siècle à la fin des années 1970, met en lumière l’importance de son activité dans les arts appliqués, sa place spécifique au sein des avant-gardes européennes, ainsi que son rôle majeur dans l’abstraction dont elle figure parmi les pionniers. |
Sonia Delaunay |
Le parcours chronologique, largement documenté, illustre la richesse et la singularité de l’oeuvre de Sonia Delaunay marquée par un dialogue soutenu entre les arts. L’ensemble des oeuvres choisies révèle une approche personnelle de la couleur, réminiscence de son enfance russe et de son apprentissage de la peinture en Allemagne.
SPILLING OVER PAINTING COLOR IN THE 1960s WHITNEY MUSEUM
SPILLING OVER: PAINTING COLOR IN THE 1960S TO OPEN AT THE WHITNEY MARCH 29 Whitney Museum of American Art |
Steve Mccurry theatre de la photographie et de l image Nice
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Steve McCurry s’est fait remarquer en 1979 par son reportage photo réalisé en Afghanistan. Son sens des couleurs, de la lumière, sa sensibilité et sa poésie ont porté son œuvre bien au-delà des frontières journalistiques, pour devenir une référence en photographie contemporaine. Il sait percer l’âme d’un peuple ou d’un pays. Sa jeune réfugiée afghane aux yeux verts (Pakistan, 1984) qu’il a d’ailleurs retrouvée vingt ans plus tard, est l’une des plus célèbres icônes mondiales de la photographie.
« De manière inconsciente, je crois, je guette un regard, une expression des traits ou une nostalgie capable de résumer ou plus exactement révéler une vie ».
Sylvie Blum Naked Beauty MOCA BANGKOK
Sylvie Blum : Naked Beauty (1st time in Asia) Jan. 25 – 25 Mar. 2020 at MOCA BANGKOK From Muse to Master into the Museum MOCA Museum of Contemporary Art The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCABANGKOK) will be showing Sylvie Blum’s work titled “Naked Beauty” with a grand opening on January 25th, 2020. Public viewing is open until March 2020. Sylvie Blum’s Photography exhibition is the very first of it’s kind in Thailand. Austrian-born Sylvie Blum started her career as a model prior to taking the helm as a photographer. Sylvie has worked for 16 years in front of the camera with photographers such as Helmut Newton, Jeanloup Sieff and many more. She has published five books. Her 5th book “Naked Beauty” by TeNeues was followed by a joint exhibition with Herb Ritts at the Fahey Klein Gallery in Los Angeles. Since 2005 Sylvie Blum works and lives in Los Angeles. Sylvie Blum is an exceptional photographer driven by passion and the love for photography. Sylvie Blum is at the forefront of the female force. She is the Ansel Adams of the female form. |
Sylvie Blum daily walk 2 - 2008 © Sylvie Blum |
Tate Liverpool Exhibition Don McCullin
Don Mccullin, fishermen playing during their lunch break, Scarborough, Yorkshire 1967 © Don Mccullin |
16 September 2020 – 9 May 2021 TATE LIVERPOOL This one-way route guides you from the Main entrance and through to the exhibition. There will be access to toilets, our shop and an opportunity to buy food and drink during your visit. Discover the work of legendary British photographer Don McCullin (b. 1935). See more than 200 iconic photographs captured over the last 60 years. The exhibition includes poignant images of international conflict. These will be shown alongside photographs of the UK, which depict scenes of working-class life in the industrial north and London’s East End. On display will be some of McCullin’s most recent landscape photography taken in the artist’s home county of Somerset. In addition to the images shown at Tate Britain, there will be a special selection of photographs depicting life and industrial scenes of Liverpool and other northern towns and cities during the 1960s and 70s. Alongside these photographs, all printed by McCullin himself in his own darkroom, you’ll have the opportunity to see his magazine spreads, contact sheets, helmet and the Nikon camera which took a bullet for him in Cambodia. |
Tate Modern London The EY Exhibition Picasso 1932
The EY Exhibition Picasso 1932 – Love, Fame, Tragedy In March 2018 Tate Modern will stage its first ever solo exhibition of Pablo Picasso’s work, one of the most significant shows the gallery has ever staged. The EY Exhibition: Picasso 1932 – Love, Fame, Tragedy will take visitors on a month-by-month journey through 1932, a time so pivotal in Picasso’s life and work that it has been called his ‘year of wonders’. More than 100 outstanding paintings, sculptures and works on paper will demonstrate his prolific and restlessly inventive character. They will strip away common myths to reveal the man and the artist in his full complexity and richness. 1932 was an extraordinary year for Picasso, even by his own standards. His paintings reached a new level of sensuality and he cemented his celebrity status as the most influential artist of the early 20th century. Over the course of this year he created some of his best loved works, including Nude Woman in a Red Armchair, an anchor point of Tate’s collection, confident colour-saturated portraits and Surrealist experiments, including thirteen seminal ink drawings of the Crucifixion. His virtuoso paintings also riffed on the voluptuous sculptures he had produced some months before at his new country estate. In his personal life, throughout 1932, Picasso kept a delicate balance between tending to his wife Olga Khokhlova and their 11-year-old son Paulo, and his passionate love affair with Marie-Thérèse Walter, 28 years his junior. The exhibition will bring these complex artistic and personal dynamics to life with an unprecedented range of loans from collections around the world, including many record-breaking works held in private hands. Highlights will include Girl before a Mirror, a signature painting that rarely leaves The Museum of Modern Art, and the legendary The Dream, a virtuoso masterpiece depicting the artist’s muse in dreamy abandon, which has never been exhibited in the UK before. |
Pablo Picasso The Dream (Le Rêve) 1932, |
Tate St Ives Exhibition The Casablanca Art School
TATE ST IVES EXHIBITION THE CASABLANCA ART SCHOOL
Mohamed Melehi Untitled 1983 © Mohamed Melehi Estate |
UNTIL 14 JANUARY 2024 A major exhibition about the artists of the renowned Casablanca Art School Tate St Ives will be the first museum in the UK to explore the intense period of artistic rebirth that followed Morocco’s independence, forged by the experimental teaching methods of the Casablanca Art School in the 1960s and 1970s. Led by Farid Belkahia alongside Mohammed Chabâa, Mohamed Melehi and others, this pioneering school paved the way for a new generation of socially engaged modern artists who formed an influential avant-garde network. Works by 22 artists will be brought together to demonstrate the wide variety of the Moroccan ‘new wave’, from vibrant abstract paintings and urban murals to applied arts, typography, graphics and interior design. The exhibition will also include a selection of rarely-seen print archives, vintage journals, documentary photographs and films. This exhibition is a collaboration between Tate St Ives and Sharjah Art Foundation, where it will open in February 2024. It is also part of a key moment of international research into the Casablanca Art School, which includes a collaborative project initiated in 2020 between KW Institute for Contemporary Art and Sharjah Art Foundation, in partnership with Goethe-Institut Marokko, ThinkArt and Zamân Books & Curating. Tate St Ives Porthmeor Beach St Ives Cornwall TR26 1TG |
A Brief Guide to the Casablanca Art School | Tate |
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Tatiana Wolska Galerie de la Marine Nice
EXPOSITION Tatiana Wolska – Habitat potentiel pour une artiste 59, quai des Etats-Unis – Nice Tous les jours de 11h à 18h, sauf le lundi 04 93 91 92 91 ou 93
Tatiana Wolska développe depuis 10 ans des projets de sculpture en grand format, toujours liés aux lieux qui l’invitent. L’artiste fabrique de la sculpture en jouant avec toutes sortes de matériaux de récupération : chutes de bois, plastique thermoformé, métaux et objets abandonnés qu’elle découpe, décortique, réordonne et assemble à nouveau. L’exposition propose une expérience physique et cognitive d'une architecture spécifique, à la fois vivante, organique et relationnelle. En se penchant sur l’architecture temporaire qui peut revêtir plusieurs rôles (culturel, évènementiel, social), l’exposition recouvre une diversité de potentiels. Elle est autant l’expression d’une liberté que celle d’une nécessaire survie car bien souvent, le temporaire rime avec l’urgence. Elle pose aussi la question de l’inscription potentiellement durable de ces structures dans la fabrique de la ville. Tatiana Wolska est née en 1977 en Pologne. Elle est diplômée de l’ENSA de la Villa Arson en 2007. Elle vit et travaille à Bruxelles. Elle est représentée par les galeries Claudine Papillon, Paris, Catherine Issert, Saint-Paul de Vence et Irène Laub, Bruxelles. Elle est lauréate en 2014 du Grand Prix du 59e Salon de Montrouge consacré à la jeune création émergente. |
Tatiana Wolska Nomadisme, FRAC CORSE, 2016, |
The Costume Institute's spring 2020 exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Costume Institute's Spring 2020 Exhibition to Costume Institute Benefit on May 4 with Co-Chairs (New York, November 7, 2019) The Metropolitan Museum of Art announced today that The Costume Institute's spring 2020 exhibition will be About Time: Fashion and Duration, on view from May 7 through September 7, 2020 (preceded on May 4 by The Costume Institute Benefit). Presented in The Met Fifth Avenue's Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Exhibition Hall, it will trace more than a century and a half of fashion, from 1870 to the present, along a disruptive timeline, as part of the Museum's 150th anniversary celebration. Employing philosopher Henri Bergson's concept of la durée—time that flows, accumulates, and is indivisible—the exhibition will explore how clothes generate temporal associations that conflate the past, present, and future. The concept will also be examined through the writings of Virginia Woolf, who will serve as the "ghost narrator" of the exhibition. Michael Cunningham, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his novel The Hours, which was inspired by Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, will write a new short story for the exhibition catalogue that reflects on the concept of duration. |
Surreal, David Bailey (British, born 1938), |
THE JEAN-PAUL GETTY MUSEUM LOS ANGELES PRESENTS MANET AND MODERN BEAUTY
First major museum exhibition to focus on Édouard Manet’s late work, featuring more than 90 At the Getty Museum, Getty Center LOS ANGELES—Édouard Manet (1832-1883) is best known today for provocative, large-scale paintings that challenged the old masters and academic tradition and sent shockwaves through the French art world in the early 1860s. In the late 1870s and early 1880s, he shifted his focus and produced a different, though no less radical, body of work: stylish portraits, luscious still lifes, delicate pastels, intimate watercolors, and freely brushed scenes of suburban gardens and Parisian cafes. On view at the J. Paul Getty Museum October 8, 2019 through January 12, 2020, Manet and Modern Beauty explores for the first time in a major museum exhibition the artist’s last years, after his rise to notoriety in the 1860s and the formal launch of the Impressionist movement in the early 1870s. The exhibition will feature more than 90 works of art, including an impressive array of genre scenes, still lifes, pastels, and portraits of favorite actresses and models, bourgeois women of his acquaintance, his wife, and his male friends. |
THE MENIL COLLECTION PRESENTS PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE SURREAL IMAGINATION
THE MENIL COLLECTION PRESENTS PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE SURREAL IMAGINATION Events During Houston’s FotoFest Biennial 2020 Include Talks by Artist Allison Janae HOUSTON, TEXAS, February 24, 2020 – Drawn from the Menil Collection’s renowned holdings of Surrealist art and from extraordinary loans from Houston collections, the exhibition Photography and the Surreal Imagination is on view at the Menil Collection now through June 14, 2020. Tirée des collections renommées d’art surréaliste de la collection Menil et des prêts extraordinaires des collections de Houston, l’exposition Photography and the Surreal Imagination est à l’affiche à la collection Menil jusqu’au 14 juin 2020. Présentant 62 œuvres qui couvrent les années de l’éruption du surréalisme dans des années 1920 à nos jours, l’exposition révèle comment les photographes pendant et après le mouvement surréaliste ont exploré et déformé la forme humaine, manipulé la surface photographique et utilisé l’appareil photo pour transformer le familier en inquiétant. La tension inhérente à la photographie entre documentation et invention émerge dans l’exposition comme la force génératrice qui a rendu ce médium si productif pour les artistes travaillant dans le sillage du surréalisme. |
George Platt Lynes, Untitled, 1941. Gelatin silver print, |
The Met Fifth Avenue Everything Is Connected Art and Conspiracy
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Dramatic Indian Sculptural Masks
The Metropolitan Museum of Art | 1000 5th Ave at 82nd Street | New York | NY | 10028 Dramatic Indian Sculptural Masks to be Featured in Exhibition on Theme of Vishnu at Metropolitan Museum Exhibition dates: December 19, 2015–June 5, 2016 Five rare wooden sculptural masks made in India—recently acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art—will be the highlighted works in the special exhibition Encountering Vishnu: The Lion Avatar in Indian Temple Drama, opening at the Met on December 19. Worn by actors in dramatic plays that were presented during religious festivals in southern India, the masks represent a largely unrecorded category of late medieval devotional art from India. The appearances of Vishnu in many guises, known as avatars, are most famously celebrated in his Ten Avatars (Dasavatar). In this exhibition, Vishnu's Narasimha (man-lion) appearance will be celebrated with several dramatic sculptural depictions. They all explore the theme of Vishnu in his man-lion form, revealing himself at the court of an evil king in response to the king's attempts to slay his own son for his unwavering devotion (bhakti) to Vishnu. A frightful battle ensues in which Narasimha finally overcomes the protective magic that the evil King Hiranyanatakam surrounds himself with, and Narasimha disembowels the king. Order is thus restored to the universe. |
Narasimha, South India (Tamil Nadu), |
This narrative is dramatically represented in sculptures and painting, and when staged it is given heightened drama by the wearing of these powerfully expressive masks. This temple drama, known as Hiranyanatakam, is still performed in the Kaveri delta region of Tamil Nadu, in villages around Thanjavur in southern India. Along with the masks, the exhibition will present works in bronze, sandstone, and wood, as well as miniature paintings, lithographic devotional prints, and early photography, all of which illuminate the theme of Vishnu's divine appearances. Dating from the 6th to the 20th century, the 30 works will be drawn from the Met's collection, as well as private collections, and will include an extraordinary seated sandstone Narasimha from the sixth or seventh century. The exhibition is made possible by The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Foundation Fund. The exhibition will be organized by John Guy, Florence and Herbert Irving Curator of the Arts of South and Southeast Asia. |
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Exhibition of Magnificent Modern and Contemporary Ceramics
Exhibition of Magnificent Modern and Contemporary Ceramics Celebrates Gift from Shapes from Out of Nowhere: Ceramics from the Robert A. Ellison Jr. Collection celebrates an extraordinary gift to The Met of 125 modern and contemporary ceramics from Robert A. Ellison Jr., given to the Museum in honor of its 150th anniversary. The exhibition will present a selection of over 75 works from this unparalleled collection that charts the evolution of abstraction in clay from the second half of the 20th century through the present. |
The Metropolitan Museum of Art New-York Max Beckmann
Max Beckmann in New York, Opening at The Met on Exhibition Dates: The Metropolitan Museum of Art Opening October 19, 2016, the exhibition Max Beckmann in New York at The Metropolitan Museum of Art will put a spotlight on the artist's special connection with New York City. It will feature 14 paintings that Beckmann created while living in New York from 1949 to 1950, as well as 25 works, dating from 1920 to 1948, from New York collections. The exhibition assembles several groups of iconic works, including self-portraits; mythical, expressionist interiors; robust, colorful portraits of women and performers; landscapes; and triptychs. The exhibition is made possible by The Isaacson-Draper Foundation. It is supported by an Indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. In late December 1950, Beckmann set out from his apartment on the Upper West Side of New York to see his Self-Portrait in Blue Jacket (1950), which was on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in the exhibition American Painting Today. However, on the corner of 69th Street and Central Park West, the 66-year-old artist suffered a fatal heart attack and never made it to the Museum. The poignant circumstance of the artist's death served as the inspiration for the exhibition. |
Max Beckmann (German, Leipzig 1884-1950 New York). Self-Portrait in Blue Jacket, 1950. Oil on canvas. Saint Louis Art Museum, Bequest of Morton D. May. SL.9.2016.24.1, © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn |
The Metropolitan Museum of Art video Gerhard Richter
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Watch a video preview of Gerhard Richter: Painting After All, on view at The Met Breuer from March 4 through July 5, 2020. The exhibition, which considers Richter's six-decade-long preoccupation with the dual means of representation and abstraction to explore the material, conceptual and historical implications of painting, spans the entirety of Richter's prolific and innovative career, and presents over one hundred works that focus on his specific commitment to the medium, as well as his related interests in photography, digital reproduction, and sculpture |
The Metropolitan Museum presents Gerhard Richter
Exhibition Spanning Gerhard Richter’s Prolific Six Decade Career to Open at The Met Breuer Exhibition Dates: March 4–July 5, 2020 The Met Breuer The Met will present a major loan exhibition devoted to the work of one of the most renowned artists of our time: Gerhard Richter (German, born Dresden 1932). On view at The Met Breuer from March 4 through July 5, 2020, Gerhard Richter: Painting After All will consider the entire span of the artist’s career through some 100 works including paintings, glass sculptures, prints, and photographs. Conceived in close collaboration with the artist, the exhibition will reveal Richter’s six decade-long preoccupation with the dual means of representation and abstraction, and his continual exploration of the material, conceptual, and historical implications of painting. This will be the first major U.S. survey on the artist in nearly 20 years. The exhibition is made possible by the Barrie A. and Deedee Wigmore Foundation. Corporate sponsorship is provided by Morgan Stanley. Major support is provided by David S. Winter and the Modern and Additional funding is provided by Angela A. Chao and Jim Breyer, |
THE MUSEO PICASSO MAGAGA
THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART NEW YORK RETROSPECTIVE FRANCIS PICABIA
THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART EXPLORES THE PROVOCATIVE AND PROLIFIC CAREER OF FRANCIS PICABIA WITH HIS FIRST U.S. RETROSPECTIVE IN NEARLY 50 YEARS
MoMA's First-Ever Monographic Exhibition of Picabia Brings Together Some 200 Works to Advance Understanding of the Artist’s Vital Place in 20th-Century Art
Francis Picabia: Our Heads Are Round so Our Thoughts Can Change Direction November 21, 2016–March 19, 2017 The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Exhibition Gallery, sixth floor
NEW YORK, November 3, 2016—The Museum of Modern Art’s Francis Picabia: Our Heads Are Round so Our Thoughts Can Change Direction, on view November 21, 2016–March 19, 2017, is the first major exhibition of the artist’s work in the US in nearly half a century, and the first ever to chart the full range of Picabia’s audacious, irreverent, and profoundly influential career. “Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction” is an aphorism coined by Picabia in 1922, and it aptly encapsulates the nonlinear, circular character of his artistic practice. This exhibition presents approximately 200 works in an array of mediums in order to advance understanding of Picabia’s unruly genius and its vital place within the history of modern art. Francis Picabia is organized by MoMA and the Kunsthaus Zürich. The curators are Anne Umland, The Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Curator of Painting and Sculpture at MoMA; and Cathérine Hug, Curator at the Kunsthaus Zürich; with Talia Kwartler, Curatorial Assistant, MoMA. Prior to its presentation in New York, the exhibition was on view at the Kunsthaus Zürich. |
Francis Picabia. Aello. 1930. Oil on canvas, |
Their Majesties The King and Queen visit the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden
Their Majesties The King and Queen with Barbara Hepworth’s Four-Square (Walk Through) at the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden in St Ives, Cornwall. Photo © Guy Martin / Tate |
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of Tate St Ives, Their Majesties The King and Queen visited the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden today. They were given a tour of Hepworth’s studio and garden, which is cared for by Tate St Ives, and were introduced to several people who have played important roles in Tate St Ives’s success over the past 30 years. The visit was hosted by Anne Barlow (Director of Tate St Ives) and Roland Rudd (Chair of Tate). Their Majesties began their visit in Hepworth’s beautiful studio space, filled with some of the artist’s most famous works in wood, bronze, marble and plaster. Dr Sophie Bowness (Barbara Hepworth’s granddaughter) introduced the history of the building, alongside Dame Jayne-Anne Gadhia (Trustee of Tate) and Sir Anthony Salz (Chair of Tate St Ives Advisory Council). The King and Queen then had a tour of Hepworth’s garden and the many sculptures on display there. Head Gardener Jodi Dickinson, who began his career in horticulture thanks to the support of The Prince’s Trust, described how he has worked to restore the garden to its former glory. Together they planted a penstemon shrub to celebrate the royal visit, and Their Majesties were presented with a gift of some rare seeds from a cineraria which was originally planted by Hepworth herself. |
Thomas Levy-Lasne Centre d'Art Plastiques Albert Chanot
Thomas Lévy-Lasne
Centre d'arts plastiques Albert Chanot
33, rue Brissard
01 47 36 05 89
Entrée libre
centreartchanot[at]clamart.fr
http://www.centrealbertchanot.com
Exposition HIC et NUNC du 20 septembre au 21 décembre 2014
«Outre qu'il est broyé et déçu par la vie quotidienne, s'agite bavard dans tous les sens comme tout le monde, le peintre est un type qui s'arrête et qui se tait.
Là où l'imagerie sert de référent, de signe, de symbole en profond rapport avec le langage; la peinture, elle, joue de présence. »
Topologie de l'absence CACN Centre d'Art Contemporain de Nîmes
CACN - Centre d'Art Contemporain de Nîmes Exposition du 7 octobre au 16 décembre 2017 Avec Caroline Bach, Anaïs Boileau, Audrey Guiraud, Guillaume Le Moine, Nelly Monnier, et Eric Tabuchi Lorsque nous avons pensé cette exposition, l’envie était d’abord de revenir à un format davantage épuré et une figuration résolument plus calme, « reposée ». Nous ressentions déjà en amont les interrogations, voire l’énigme théorique de ce thème, qui n’en est finalement pas vraiment un. Comme un entre-deux, nous nous interrogions sur le cheminement intrinsèque de chacune des pratiques présentées. Alors, afin de mieux comprendre les contours et les processus engagés auprès de cette sélection, quelques questions subsistent. Pourquoi mettre en avant ces architectures prosaïques ? Comment se fait-il que les personnes qui y vivent ou y travaillent disparaissent-elles du cadre ? |
Valérie Belin Centre Pompidou
VALÉRIE BELIN D’où provient ce sentiment d’inquiétante étrangeté que produisent les photographies de Valérie Belin ? De la carnation vivante de ses mannequins de vitrine, de la fixité du visage de ces femmes rencontrées dans la rue ? De l’aspect organique de ces carcasses de voitures, du caractère sculptural de ces boeufs écorchés ? Est-ce un sosie ou une statue de cire ?
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Valérie Belin |
Par le traitement de la lumière, des contrastes, les proportions des tirages et autres paramètres savamment orchestrés, Valérie Belin joue de l’incertitude. Devant ses images, il est souvent difficile de dire si ce que l’on regarde est doué de vie ou inanimé, réel ou virtuel, naturel ou artificiel.
Des détails subtils qui interrompent la continuité quotidienne, ramenant au concept d’inquiétante étrangeté de Sigmund Freud qui la définissait justement comme « Le fait de douter qu’une créature apparemment vivante soit animée, et à l’inverse l’idée qu’une créature sans vie pourrait bien être animée, en se référant à l’impression produite par les mannequins de cire, les poupées ou les automates réalisés avec art » [ Sigmund Freud, « L’Inquiétante étrangeté », 1919 ]. C’est cela précisément qui confère aux oeuvres de Valérie Belin une singulière puissance et le choix des oeuvres ici réunies, « Michael Jackson », « Black Women I », « Lido », « Meats», «Engines», …, illustre cet aspect spécifique de son travail. |
VIALLAT - HAAS - ERBELDING - COSKUN - SIGNES SENSIBLES
VIALLAT - HAAS - ERBELDING - COSKUN exposition SIGNES SENSIBLES Fascination contemporaine pour l'art pariétal vernissage de l'exposition sur invitation Visite commentée par , commissaire de l'exposition Laurence d'Ist Un catalogue est édité pour l'occasion
Renseignements : 01 70 56 52 60 culturel(at)mairie-gif.fr |
Voir le silence - Images de quiétude à la Fondation Beyeler
Fondation Beyeler, Beyeler Museum AG, Baselstrasse 77, CH-4125 Riehen Du 13 février au 19 avril 2020 La modernité en tant qu'ère du progrès technique se caractérise surtout par le mouvement et la vitesse, qui ont aussi trouvé des manifestations multiples dans le domaine de l'art. En parallèle s'est développé un désir croissant de décélération, qui s'exprime dans des images toujours nouvelles de calme et de quiétude. Par les temps d'accélération toujours plus poussée comme les nôtres, le besoin d'apaisement et de détente semble particulièrement fort. L'actuelle présentation de la collection de la Fondation Beyeler se concentre ainsi sur des œuvres d'art moderne et contemporain qui ont pour thème le calme et la quiétude. Il est frappant de constater à quel point ces œuvres diffèrent de par leur esthétique, leur contenu, leur forme, leur choix de médium et de matériau. Le musée lui-même apparaît en tant que lieu potentiel de silence et de réflexion. Chaque salle de l'exposition est consacrée à un aspect spécifique de la notion de calme et de quiétude, invitant le spectateur à une contemplation silencieuse: le calme statique et physique, le calme idyllique de la nature, le calme céleste et le calme avant la tempête, le silence et le vide, l'équilibre de la composition, la nature morte, le calme intérieur, se taire, la solitude et la méditation, et enfin le sommeil et le repos éternel sont les motifs autour desquels s'articulent les différents chapitres de l'exposition. Ensemble, les œuvres exposées déploient toute la richesse de la thématique, principalement dans les médias de la peinture et de la sculpture. Il s'y reflète par ailleurs une caractéristique essentielle des œuvres d'Edward Hopper, auquel la Fondation Beyeler consacre au même moment une grande exposition. |
Mark Rothko, Untitled (Red-Brown, Black, Green, Red), 1962, |
VOL - LA PEINTURE FIGURATIVE DE JUDIT REIGL MUSÉE DE KISCELL BUDAPEST HONGRIE
Werner Bischof MUSEE DE L'ELYSEE LAUSANNE
A l’occasion du centième anniversaire de la naissance du photographe suisse Werner Bischof (1916-1954), le Musée de l’Elysée présente une rétrospective de son travail intitulée Point de vue, produite par Magnum Photos (Paris). L’exposition propose près de 200 tirages originaux, parfois inédits, choisis dans la collection du Werner Bischof Estate (Zurich). L’exposition présentera également des planches-contacts, des livres, des magazines et des lettres personnelles. Une installation multimédia créée pour la circonstance permettra une approche contemporaine de son travail. L’exposition présentera l’ensemble de son œuvre en Suisse (1934-1944), en Europe (1945-1950), en Asie (1951-1952) et en Amérique du Nord et du Sud (1953-1954). |
Breast with grid, Zurich, Switzerland, 1941 © Werner Bischof / Magnum Photos / Courtesy Musée de l'Elysée |
Yoko Ono guggenheim Bilbao
Le Musée Guggenheim Bilbao présente du 14 mars-4 septembre 2014 |
Walking On Thin Ice (photogramme vide´o), 1981 © Yoko Ono |
Zao Wou-Ki Musée Cernuschi une donation exceptionnelle
ZAO WOU-KI MUSEE CERNUSCHI L’entrée dans la collection du musée Cernuschi de la donation de Madame Françoise Marquet-Zao est historique. Tout d’abord, elle rappelle que, dès 1946, les oeuvres de Zao Wou-ki avaient été présentées pour la première fois en France au Musée Cernuschi. Vadime Elisseeff, alors conservateur au musée, avait eu le discernement et l’audace de présenter au public parisien cet artiste à la fois jeune et inconnu ! La presse de l’époque avait tout de suite reconnu le talent de Zao Wou-ki. Deux ans plus tard, le jeune peintre chinois arrivait à Paris, une ville qui allait demeurer l’espace privilégié de sa création. Les oeuvres de la donation évoquent justement cette période clé au cours de laquelle Zao Wou-ki multiplie les expériences techniques et chemine de la figuration vers l’abstraction. Ainsi pour le seul travail sur papier, l’artiste pratique le fusain, l’aquarelle, la gouache et bien sûr l’encre. Il réalise quelques portraits d’un trait sûr aux accents matissiens, s’inspire aussi bien de modèles vivants nus que de gravures et d’estampages chinois antiques. Après quelques années de rupture, il retrouvera la voie de l’encre à partir des années 1970 et ne la quittera plus. La série de compositions abstraites datées des décennies 1970 à 2000, illustre avec précision les multiples facettes de cette recherche. |
Couverture © Petit Oeuvres de |