| Titre : | Art Monthly #420 : October 2018 | | Type de document : | texte imprimé | | Auteurs : | Patricia BICKERS, Auteur | | Editeur : | Londres [Angleterre] : Hali Publications Ltd. | | Année de publication : | 2018 | | Importance : | 60 p. | | Présentation : | ill. N&B et coul. | | Format : | 21 x 29,7 cm | | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 7123 | | Prix : | Don de artconnexion | | Note générale : | Art Monthly, published by the Art Monthly Foundation registered charity, is the UK’s leading magazine of contemporary visual art. Published ten times a year in bold black and white, it keeps you in touch with the complex and ever-evolving art world through in-depth features, interviews with artists, profiles on emerging artists and coverage of major trends and developments by independent critics.
In addition to the extensive reviews section covering exhibitions and books, Art Monthly is the only magazine with a regular column on Artlaw. Art Monthly also publishes regular reports from around the world in its ‘Letters from’ section.
| | Langues : | Anglais (eng) | | Catégories : | 3. Culture:3.50 Arts visuels:Arts visuels
| | Mots-clés : | revue, magazine, art, art contemporain, arts visuels | | Note de contenu : |
CONTENTS:
* INTERVIEW: Irritants
Mika Rottenberg interviewed by Tim Dixon
The Argentina-born, New York-based artist discusses artists as irritants, women’s hidden labour, and the difference between art and activism.
* FEATURE: Sincerity
Bob Dickinson finds it telling that artists are searching for new ways to express sincerity
In an era of fake news and famous fibs, the work of artists ranging from Anne Imhof and Isaac Julien to Brian Griffiths, Andy Holden and Ragnar Kjartansson all seem to raise the question: can sincerity be achieved without irony?
* FEATURE: Midnight at the Museum
Museums and curators are facing a crisis of identity and purpose argues Andrew Hunt
In the light of the current slew of new publications and conferences on museum discourse, is it time to ask what will the future be like after the new institutionalism?
EDITORIAL: Education, Education, Education
The Americanisation of British politics following Tony Blair’s quasi presidential reign is perhaps no surprise, given the connections between the UK’s political elite and US universities. But after all that education, couldn’t they figure out that US-style higher-education fees are regressive, both socially and economically?
* ARTNOTES: Tarnished
- Bangladeshi photographer Shahidul Alam, who has shown at Tate Modern and the Whitechapel Gallery, has been arrested and tortured in Bangladesh for ‘tarnishing the image of the state'
- Pussy Riot activist Pyotr Verzilov has been admitted into intensive care suffering symptoms that resemble nerve-agent poisoning
- Weisbaden Biennale has had its controversial statue of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan removed by authorities
- Belgian artist Jan Fabre has been accused of sexual harassment
- The number of pupils taking art GCSEs continues to drop
- The opening of Goldsmiths CCA is picketed by Justice for Cleaners protesters
- Dutch activists celebrate the end of Shell’s sponsorship of the Van Gogh Museum
- plus the latest news on galleries, appointments, prizes and more.
* BOOKS
- Chad Elias: Posthumous Images – Contemporary Art and Memory Politics in Post-Civil War Lebanon
- Inventory: The Counsel of Spent
* LETTER FROM VIENNA: Vertigo
The reason I was cycling through Klosterneuberg on that particular day was because I was en route to Museum Gugging, which houses the collection of Leo Navratil (1921-2006), a celebrated psychiatrist and author of Schizophrenia and Art.
* LETTER FROM ROTTERDAM: The Dutch Brooklyn?
I comment on how I find the work to be aggressively macho and masculine, which he seemed insulted by. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘we don’t have access to menstruation.’
* LETTER FROM KOREA: One Step at a Time
It is perhaps a curious inversion that Seoul-based chief curator, Sunjung Kim, invites us to ‘imagine’ borders when the hardest of hard borders – the mile-wide Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) no-man’s-land which separates the southern Republic of Korea from the northern Democratic People’s Republic of Korea – is so physically present.
* WORKSHOP: On Cripping
Cripness is far from an issue confined to the art world, and the wider social invisibility and political silencing effect of chronic illness was discussed by all four speakers.
* WAYS OF WORKING: Scarcity
From earliest times to the present, artists have developed ways of controlling the extent of their output, often out of necessity, partly as a creative decision, and sometimes with a weather-eye on their potential sales market.
* EXHIBITIONS
- Tai Shani: Semiramis / The Tetley, Leeds
- Lindsay Seers: Every Thought There Ever Was / Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea
- Mark Wallinger: The Human Figure in Space / Jerwood Gallery, Hastings
- Time After Time / John Hansard Gallery, Southampton
- Ways of Learning / Grand Union, Birmingham
- Surrey Unearthed / Surrey Hills
- Maggie Lee: Music Videos / Arcadia Missa, London
- Ana Vaz: The Voyage Out / LUX, London
- Hannover round-up / Sprengel Museum · Kunstverein Hannover · Kestnergesellschaft
| | En ligne : | https://www.artmonthly.co.uk/magazine/site/issue/october-2018 |
Art Monthly #420 : October 2018 [texte imprimé] / Patricia BICKERS, Auteur . - Londres (Angleterre) : Hali Publications Ltd., 2018 . - 60 p. : ill. N&B et coul. ; 21 x 29,7 cm. ISSN : 7123 : Don de artconnexion Art Monthly, published by the Art Monthly Foundation registered charity, is the UK’s leading magazine of contemporary visual art. Published ten times a year in bold black and white, it keeps you in touch with the complex and ever-evolving art world through in-depth features, interviews with artists, profiles on emerging artists and coverage of major trends and developments by independent critics.
In addition to the extensive reviews section covering exhibitions and books, Art Monthly is the only magazine with a regular column on Artlaw. Art Monthly also publishes regular reports from around the world in its ‘Letters from’ section.
Langues : Anglais ( eng) | Catégories : | 3. Culture:3.50 Arts visuels:Arts visuels
| | Mots-clés : | revue, magazine, art, art contemporain, arts visuels | | Note de contenu : |
CONTENTS:
* INTERVIEW: Irritants
Mika Rottenberg interviewed by Tim Dixon
The Argentina-born, New York-based artist discusses artists as irritants, women’s hidden labour, and the difference between art and activism.
* FEATURE: Sincerity
Bob Dickinson finds it telling that artists are searching for new ways to express sincerity
In an era of fake news and famous fibs, the work of artists ranging from Anne Imhof and Isaac Julien to Brian Griffiths, Andy Holden and Ragnar Kjartansson all seem to raise the question: can sincerity be achieved without irony?
* FEATURE: Midnight at the Museum
Museums and curators are facing a crisis of identity and purpose argues Andrew Hunt
In the light of the current slew of new publications and conferences on museum discourse, is it time to ask what will the future be like after the new institutionalism?
EDITORIAL: Education, Education, Education
The Americanisation of British politics following Tony Blair’s quasi presidential reign is perhaps no surprise, given the connections between the UK’s political elite and US universities. But after all that education, couldn’t they figure out that US-style higher-education fees are regressive, both socially and economically?
* ARTNOTES: Tarnished
- Bangladeshi photographer Shahidul Alam, who has shown at Tate Modern and the Whitechapel Gallery, has been arrested and tortured in Bangladesh for ‘tarnishing the image of the state'
- Pussy Riot activist Pyotr Verzilov has been admitted into intensive care suffering symptoms that resemble nerve-agent poisoning
- Weisbaden Biennale has had its controversial statue of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan removed by authorities
- Belgian artist Jan Fabre has been accused of sexual harassment
- The number of pupils taking art GCSEs continues to drop
- The opening of Goldsmiths CCA is picketed by Justice for Cleaners protesters
- Dutch activists celebrate the end of Shell’s sponsorship of the Van Gogh Museum
- plus the latest news on galleries, appointments, prizes and more.
* BOOKS
- Chad Elias: Posthumous Images – Contemporary Art and Memory Politics in Post-Civil War Lebanon
- Inventory: The Counsel of Spent
* LETTER FROM VIENNA: Vertigo
The reason I was cycling through Klosterneuberg on that particular day was because I was en route to Museum Gugging, which houses the collection of Leo Navratil (1921-2006), a celebrated psychiatrist and author of Schizophrenia and Art.
* LETTER FROM ROTTERDAM: The Dutch Brooklyn?
I comment on how I find the work to be aggressively macho and masculine, which he seemed insulted by. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘we don’t have access to menstruation.’
* LETTER FROM KOREA: One Step at a Time
It is perhaps a curious inversion that Seoul-based chief curator, Sunjung Kim, invites us to ‘imagine’ borders when the hardest of hard borders – the mile-wide Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) no-man’s-land which separates the southern Republic of Korea from the northern Democratic People’s Republic of Korea – is so physically present.
* WORKSHOP: On Cripping
Cripness is far from an issue confined to the art world, and the wider social invisibility and political silencing effect of chronic illness was discussed by all four speakers.
* WAYS OF WORKING: Scarcity
From earliest times to the present, artists have developed ways of controlling the extent of their output, often out of necessity, partly as a creative decision, and sometimes with a weather-eye on their potential sales market.
* EXHIBITIONS
- Tai Shani: Semiramis / The Tetley, Leeds
- Lindsay Seers: Every Thought There Ever Was / Focal Point Gallery, Southend-on-Sea
- Mark Wallinger: The Human Figure in Space / Jerwood Gallery, Hastings
- Time After Time / John Hansard Gallery, Southampton
- Ways of Learning / Grand Union, Birmingham
- Surrey Unearthed / Surrey Hills
- Maggie Lee: Music Videos / Arcadia Missa, London
- Ana Vaz: The Voyage Out / LUX, London
- Hannover round-up / Sprengel Museum · Kunstverein Hannover · Kestnergesellschaft
| | En ligne : | https://www.artmonthly.co.uk/magazine/site/issue/october-2018 |
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