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The Getty Museum's ever-growing collection of photographs celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. This exhibition gives viewers the opportunity to see new additions that reveal points of intersection with works already owned by the museum.
Convergences is inspired by the book of essays, Everything That Rises: A Book of Convergences, in which author Lawrence Weschler explores visual associations between images of wide-ranging content and uncovers “uncanny moments of convergence…”
By juxtaposing contemporary and historical photographs, this exhibition proposes convergences between disparate works. Whether related by direct influence or visual affinities of a more tenuous nature, these groupings reveal the rich diversity of approaches to subjects that have engaged photographers for more than a century, while underscoring a sense of continuity throughout the history of the medium.
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CastMarch 13th-May 17th
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 13th, 6pm
Dru Donovan presents an investigation of mourning in her book, Lifting Water. The tableaus explore the rituals of caregiving while shifting perspectives between the caregiver and the cared for. Donovan focuses on the psychological weight of physical proximity alongside emotional isolation.
Black is the Day, Black is the Night by Amy Elkins is a conceptual project surrounding the correspondence between several men serving Life and Death Row sentences throughout the United States and the artist. The text pieces, digital composites, appropriated images and portraits are constructed or digitally manipulated through formulas specific to each inmates shared story. The works are inspired by an evolving relationship; as pen pals, confessionals, strangers and comrades. In another regard, the works are meant to bring light to our nations prison systems and use of capitol punishment.
Tarrah Kranjak’s South Sound was made during the winter of 2013 while the artist was living & working out of a small family cabin on the Puget Sound. Using the library and collections of photographs contained within the cabin as a spine, Kranjak juxtaposes image and book covers which are meant to be suggestive rather than expository, relying on the formal & material qualities of the objects within them, as well as their mysterious textual & photographic contents, in order to elicit responses in the viewer that range from synthetic story-making to mute, impassable aporia. But the idea was never to narrate the story of my family using photographs and books – it was more about the way we felt at the cabin, about what Tarrah was able to do with the materials she had at hand, the results of an alchemical experiment she ran in my grandfather’s strange laboratory.
For her “Lucky Tiger” series, Laurel Nakadate took photos of herself in pinup poses, then hired men on Craigslist to look them over with ink-stained fingers and exhibited them with the salacious smudges of her observers. The series touches on voyeurism, loneliness, the manipulative power of the camera, and the urge to connect with others, through, within, and apart from technology and the media.
In Pinar Yolacan’s series Mother Goddess, the artist turned her attention to bodies, in particular those belonging to the Anatolian women of her own ancestry, whose voluptuous shapes are immortalized in pre-neolithic sculptures of Mesopotamia, such as Mother Goddess figurines and other fertility idols. Yolaçan roamed the Turkish countryside for subjects whose body types fit this timeless mold, costumed them in masked, custom-fitted, head-to-toe catsuits, and shot them reclining in classical poses on vivid color fields. The resulting images allude as much to art history and visual anthropology as to contemporary club and fetish subcultures and to the luxury industry. Perverse but dignified, Yolaçan’s brand of objectification is one that Leigh Bowery might have enjoyed.
This exhibition is made possible with support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
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Prix Pictet 05Consumption
c 128 pp., Hardcover with jacket
c. 100 color and b/w photographs
Text in English
Item No.: 79814 ISBN: 978-3-8327-9814-7 Format: 9 5/6 x 12 3/5 in. Publication date: 06/15/2014
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This volume will accompany the exhibition featuring the finalists at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London in May 2014
- Shortlisted photographers: Adam Bartos, Motoyuki Daifu, Rineke Dijkstra, Hong Hao, Mishka Henner, Juan Fernando Herrán, Boris Mikhailov, Abraham Oghobase, Michael Schmidt, Allan Sekula, and Laurie Simmons
- The title is also available in German and in French!
The Prix Pictet has rapidly established itself as the world’s leading prize in photography and sustainability. The award aims to uncover outstanding photography that confronts the most pressing social and environmental challenges of today. The theme of the fifth cycle and this volume is “Consumption.” Consumption is a multi-faceted theme, rich with creative potential. We are all consumers. We have invented new forms of building, industrial production, farming, and energy. We have emptied the seas and ravaged the land in our relentless drive to satisfy our unquenchable desires. We have sustained this through the sometimes thoughtless exploitation of the world’s poorest people. This book will showcase photographs of high artistic quality that also bear powerful messages about global sustainability.
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This volume will accompany the exhibition featuring the finalists at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London in May 2014
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Vanitas: Fashion and Art
March 13–June 20, 2014Bass Museum of Art2100 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach, FL 33139
www.bassmuseum.org
Vanitas: Fashion and Art examines the theme of vanitas as expressed by avant-garde ready-to-wear and haute couture fashion, and contemporary artworks. Traditionally used to refer to a type of still life painting popular in the Netherlands during the seventeenth century, the term ‘vanitas’ has become more generally associated with art that meditates on the ephemeral character of earthly pleasures and worldly accomplishments, and highlights the fragility of our desires in the face of the inevitability of death. With its accelerated cycle of obsolescence, explicit manifestation of status and material success, and potential for narcissistic self-regard, fashion is a particularly apt medium through which to explore this exhibition’s central theme.
Vanitas artworks usually incorporate particular types of imagery that allude to the transience of life, as well as often including more explicit representations of momento mori. In order to draw out these connections, the exhibition’s curator Harold Koda has subdivided the exhibition into sections according to the allegorical imagery often found in vanitas works, such as skulls, butterflies and poppies. Works featuring these themes include Jason Salavon’s Still Life (Vanitas) which presents a photo-realistic rendering of a candlestick and mammal skull, with the latter imperceptibly ‘evolving’ to represent a range of different animals; Mat Collishaw’s Insecticide photograph of crushed winged insects; and a poppy hat by Jasper Conran and Philip Treacy.
Pieces by Isaac Mizrahi, Elsa Schiaparelli and Alexander McQueen will also be on display, alongside dresses by Yohji Yamamoto and Iris van Herpen, among others. These pieces from the world of fashion will be juxtaposed with film and video works by Sam Taylor-Johnson and Greta Alfaro; photographs from Pinar Yolacan’s “Perishables” series; and Ori Gersht’s Blow Up, a large scale photograph of an elaborate floral arrangement captured at the moment that it explodes, based on a nineteenth-century still life by the French painter Henri Fantin-Latour.
The exhibition is curated by Harold Koda, an award-winning curator and scholar, who has been Curator in Charge of the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art since 2000. He has published widely and his recent exhibitions include The Model as Muse: Embodying Fashion (2009), Schiaparelli and Prada: Impossible Conversations (2012) and the upcoming Charles James: Beyond Fashion (May 2014).
This exhibition is generously funded by Vogue México & Latin-America.
For additional information please contact Melissa Brown:
melissa.b@greenroomsocial.com / T 305 347 1787 x304 / T 540 588 7268
http://www.e-flux.com/announcements/vanitas-fashion-and-art/
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