Monday, 29 December 2008

Tom Ford

Pure style: MTV Vogue Madonna

Greta Garbo, and Monroe
Deitrich and DiMaggio
Marlon Brando, Jimmy Dean
On the cover of a magazine

Grace Kelly; Harlow, Jean
Picture of a beauty queen
Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire
Ginger Rodgers, dance on air

They had style, they had grace
Rita Hayworth gave good face
Lauren, Katherine, Lana too
Bette Davis, we love you

Ladies with an attitude
Fellows that were in the mood
Don't just stand there, let's get to it
Strike a pose, there's nothing to it


Thursday, 25 December 2008

ArtInfo.com's 2008 in Review: Stories of the Year


The art world is rarely at a loss for great stories, but 2008 may have provided even more than usual. Below, what we considered to be the top 5 (actually, 6) stories in an exciting and turbulent year.


1. Hirst’s First (and Last?)Although he is not without his competitors, by 2008 perennial art world prankster Damien Hirst had emerged as the leading heir to Warhol, heading up a movement that views art less as solitary pursuit than corporate venture. This fall Hirst pulled off his latest, perhaps most audacious stunt: a straight-from-the-studio auction of primary market material (all from 2008) — and this shortly after announcing that he would be discontinuing his spin and butterfly series, instantly increasing their value. Well, everything in that sale turned out to be valuable. The three-session auction earned £111,576,800 ($200,953,342), a number that easily eclipsed the combined pre-sale high estimate of £98 million. Not bad for a year’s work. Then a funny thing happened. The event that threatened to upend the way business is done in the art world (dealers, who needs dealers?) was superseded by bigger events, namely a global financial crisis that made multimillion-dollar animal carcasses in formaldehyde look — what’s the word, garish? unnecessary? silly? overpriced? — and with a single stroke Hirst’s bold auction was transformed from avant-garde to rearguard, a quaint sort of swan song, the let-them-eat-cake moment of what will someday be known as the great art market boom of the early 20th century.

2. An Art World BailoutOn November 19, just after the New York contemporary auctions tanked and it seemed like art-world news couldn’t get much more depressing, the Los Angeles Times reported that the city’s revered Museum of Contemporary Art was in deep financial crisis and possibly looking to merge with another institution. The first donor to speak out after the initial shock wore off was mega-collector and philanthropist Eli Broad, who penned an op-ed piece in the Times offering to bail out MOCA to the tune of $30 million. The museum’s board of trustees remained relatively quiet in the face of this mega-proposal, until some three weeks later, when, on the day before they were set to meet, the head of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Michael Govan, stepped out of the shadows and put forth a different proposal: a merger between the two institutions.
After much deliberating, MOCA’s board accepted Broad’s offer, which involves a matching grant system for half of the money and the donation of the other half in $3 million installments over five years. But more important than the crisis’s resolution is what it revealed about MOCA, namely that the trouble had been mounting long before the economy went south: Director Jeremy Strick had been overspending and dipping into the museum’s reserves for nine years, and past trustees had gone so far as to leave in protest of his excessive habits.
Now Strick has resigned, and the museum has brought in its first ever CEO, UCLA chancellor emeritus Charles Young; the hope is that under new leadership, the museum will get itself back on track. But the experience has been a scary one for MOCA, as well as the entire art community, and hammers home the all-too important reminder that a museum’s health hinges on much more than just its exhibitions and reputation. As the country’s arts institutions collectively brace for a recession predicted to be the biggest in more than half a century, we can only say, hopefully, lesson learned.

3. Art World Goes for the GoldThe art world dips its toe in many a water in the name of inspiration, collaboration, and, well, business, venturing into the worlds of fashion, say, (see Chanel’s [one-time] roaming art pod) or politics (Shepard Fairey’s ubiquitous Obama portrait). But one area art has generally left untouched is sports. That is, until 2008, when the largest sports happening on earth just so happened to be taking place in what is (or was, anyway) also one of the art world’s most exploding markets — an opportunity that was not lost on that event’s hosts.For this year’s summer Olympics in Beijing we saw the Chinese government pouring billions of yuan into putting its best cultural foot forward in hundreds of new or updated museums and galleries. Chinese artists Ai Weiwei and Cai Guo Qiang also got in on the spectacle, and Western dealers like Pace and James Cohan hoped to stake their claims in a new frontier. But what will come of all those shiny new spaces now that the athletes have returned home?

4. A Tale of Two TransitionsWhen the Metropolitan Museum of Art named little-known Thomas P. Campbell as the successor to outgoing director Philippe de Montebello, the art world let out a collective gasp: Who? The choice of an obscure, bookish tapestries scholar to lead America’s, and perhaps the world’s, leading arts institution came as a shock in the era of… well, Thomas Krens, the controversial, high profile, celebrity-courting Guggenheim director who announced in Februrary that he was stepping down from his post. With his eye toward blockbuster exhibitions and global expansion, and his eccentric taste (motorcycles, anyone?), Krens practically reinvented the role of museum director — from gentleman scholar to swashbuckling, globetrotting, and, according to some, irresponsible rainmaker/entrepreneur. But as the stately de Montebello began to lobby on his successor’s behalf, the logic of the choice came into focus: Campbell was a vote for continuity, in favor of de Montebello’s steady stewardship and against the Krens CEO model. Meanwhile, the Krens resignation marked the end of a drawn-out power struggle between grandiose ambition and the limits of the possible — a battle whose many casualties have included former board chairman Peter B. Lewis, former Guggenheim Museum director Lisa Dennison, and numerous half-baked projects across the globe. With the appointment as Krens’s successor of Richard Armstrong, a former curator in the Campbell model, the Guggenheim seemed to indicate that it would be moving in a more subdued direction. And yet Krens soldiers on — in pursuit of his most quixotic project to date: a sprawling arts complex on a remote desert island.

5. U.K. Tries to Keep Its Titians (Or, What’s Good for Main Street)While Hirst racked up more than £111 million in a couple of days this fall, the English and Scottish national museums, have spent months trying to raise the £50 million it would take to keep a prized Titian painting, Diana and Actaeon, from going on the open market. If they succeed, the work’s longtime owner, the Duke of Sutherland, who decided this summer to take advantage of the booming market, will throw in the chance to raise £50 million all over again, for the sister work Diana and Callisto. Which is actually a deal: The pair are estimated to be worth more than £300 million together. Dozens of British artists have spoken out in support of the government effort, including Lucian Freud, whose own work sells for almost that kind of money, and Sex and the City star Kim Cattrall even stripped in support of the campaign, but at last check the Brits were still scrambling (although the original December 31 deadline has now been pushed to January). The story recalls Austria’s similar struggle, in 2006, to keep Gustav Klimt’s 1907 masterpiece Adele Bloch-Bauer I. The country was not successful, and the work is now in the private collection of American cosmetics magnate Ronald Lauder, who paid the then market rate of $135 million.
And an honorable mention goes to... It's Not Easy Being GreenAny story involving an Italian politician on a hunger strike, a sculpture of a crucified frog, and the Pope deserves at least an honorable mention. When Italian official Franz Pahl launched a hunger strike in July over a piece by Martin Kippenberger, Zuerst die Füße (Feet First) (1990), which depicts a crucified frog holding a mug of beer in one hand and an egg in the other, he took indignation over a controversial artwork to a new level. Though it’s hard to see what all the fuss was really about — the artist said the piece depicts his internal struggle at the time that he made it, and it is, after all, just a frog — the story ended in hospitalization for Pahl, an erroneously reported intervention by the Pope, and the eventual firing of Corinne Diserens from her post as director of the state-funded Museion Museum of Contemporary Art, where the work was displayed. Local officials promised that Diserens’s dismissal was merely the result of “the difficult financial situation” and had nothing to do with her refusal to take down the foggy-eyed amphibian, but her supporters are not entirely convinced.David Grosz, Jillian Steinhauer, and Kris Wilton contributed to this article.

Wednesday, 24 December 2008

Ron Arad at the Pompidou Centre in Paris



For the first time in France, the Centre Pompidou dedicates a retrospective exhibition to the British industrial designer and architect Ron Arad. Today his works are everywhere, so it was a natural decision by the Centre Pompidou which has been a pioneering space for the presentation of the most outstanding contemporary designers, with exhibitions dedicated to Ettore Sottsass, Philippe Starck, Charlotte Perriand in the past, to have this exhibition.

Born in Tel Aviv and trained at the Jerusalem Academy of Art, followed by the Architectural Association School in London, Ron Arad settled in London in 1973, where he has since produced a very varied range of creative objects based on sinusoidal, elliptical and oval forms, as unique pieces, limited series and mass-produced objects.

The name of Ron Arad immediately conjures up pieces such as the Bookworm bookcase (1993) and the Tom Vac chair (1997), but his surprising work goes beyond any easy classification and expresses a free creative spirit working without constrictions or frontiers in design, architecture and the plastic arts. Ron Arad defines himself as belonging to "No discipline".The retrospective of his work proposed by the Centre Pompidou presents major and emblematic works, prototypes accompanied by audiovisual documents, limited series and mass-produced objects, along with numerous architectural projects.



Hedi Slimane's collaboration with Prada

When Hedi Slimane quit from Dior Homme, he kept expressing his huge artistic talent through photography. The former artistic Director of Dior Homme will work with Prada this time and has shot Prada Homme's Spring/ Summer 2009's ad campaign.

Louis and Claude, sons of Paul Simonon, bassist of The Clash are his new models for this campaign. Hedi Slimane respects his black and white's style in these shots that we should see everywhere quickly.

Thursday, 18 December 2008

Christie's glamourous' sale of photographs in NY

Marilyn Monroe by Richard Avedon in 1957 in New York. ©D.R


On 16 and 17 December, Christie's NY will sell glamourous photographs from The Constantiner Collection. This collection gathered by Leon and Michaela Constantiner is beautiful. Avedon, Newton, Penn, Warhol, Lindbergh's photographs of fashion icons and sex symbols of Kate Moss, Stéphanie Seymour, Monica Belluci or Madonna, next to Marilyn Monroe and James Dean will be offered to the buyers.
The sale is estimated to reach between 7,5 -11 million dollars. Among these 320 lots, there 5 great themes. Helmut Newton's oeuvre is showcased through fashions photographs, Playboy's archive's cliches, « Sex & Landscapes » 2002's exhibitions polaroïds shots.
The second big theme is "A Golden Era of Elegance", with illustrations from the 30's to today with Irving Penn or Richard Avedon's pictures with the famour Stéphanie Seymour's shot, estimated to reach between 85 000 and 128 000 €.
Third main section of the colelction: Hollywood, which emphasizes cinema icons such as James Dean, Ava Gardner, Faye Dunaway, Marlene Dietrich, Raquel Welch or Charlotte Rampling. Marilyn Monroe, absolut icon, will be the star of this sale with photographs by Andy Warhol and Richard Avedon.
New York City will highly be in that sale as well with photographs of the big Apple by Karl Struss or Hiroshi Sugimoto.

We'll all be looking forward to getting the results of it !

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

Mexico City Gets New Contemporary Art Museum


MEXICO CITY—A new contemporary art museum, the Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo (MUAC), has opened in Mexico City, the Art Newspaper reports. The museum joins a cultural center, several other museums, and a national library as part of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.
The 270 million peso ($20 million) contemporary art museum, which boasts 3,300 square meters of gallery space, was designed by leading Mexican architect Teodoro González de León. It will house international exhibitions and installations, and chief curator Guillermo Santamarina hopes it will become the home to Mexico's largest public collection of contemporary art.

Graciela de La Torre, the former director of the Museo Nacional de Arte of Mexico, will head the new museum. She raised 90 million pesos to fund MUAC's opening exhibitions, which include Cantos Civico, a sprawling installation by Miguel Ventura that includes walls carpeted with swastikas and dollar signs. MUAC will have only rotating exhibitions, to be drawn from its permanent collection as well as loans from other institutions. The museum's annual budget is not yet confirmed.

To learn more: www.artinfo.com

Monday, 15 December 2008

Unlimited Chanel


Chanel has launched a new collection of accessories. Entitled Unlimited, this chic new range of bags shows "Paris, 31, Coco, Chanel...."'s prints inside and outside, which I find really classy.

To learn more: http://www.chanel.com/

John Cale to Represent Wales at the Venice Biennale



"Although John Cale is best known as a founder of the band the Velvet Underground, it was announced last week that he will represent the Welsh Pavilion at the contemporary art Venice Biennale. Born in Wales, Cale studied music at Goldsmiths College in London before traveling to New York, where he created the Velvet Underground with Lou Reed. He also collaborated with musicians such as Patti Smith, The Stooges, and Happy Mondays, as well as having a solo career.

Cale's work at the biennale will be a collaboration with artists, filmmakers, and poets, with the main focus of the piece on his relationship with the Welsh language. Cale said he was "surprised and honored" to be chosen to represent Wales. He added, "It offers an occasion to address certain pernicious issues in my background that had lain dormant for so long. There are certain experiences uniquely suited to the exorcism of mixed media, and I am grateful for this opportunity to address them."Alun Ffred Jones, heritage minister in the Welsh assembly, said, "John Cale is a bard in the widest sense — an artistic craftsman whose work is firmly rooted in Wales's cultural history."

To learn more: www.labiennale.org/en

Have we judged Victoria Beckham too fast ?

Have we made a mistake judging Victoria Beckham an annoying and tasteless mother ? Given the tone and aesthetics of the new video of her collection, we can wonder.

After the critical acclaim that her collection received during the New York's Autumn Fashion Show, Victoria Beckham put her collection of dresses on sale on December 4 2008 in Selfridges, the exclusive department store of London (and other selected shops in the world such as Harrod's in London, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Gooman in New York).

The video relates a lot to the ads she did with Marc Jacobs (a bag on the model's head), but the quality of it and the funny background make it interesting enough... We'll see who will want to wear the dresses though.

Sophia Kokosalaki: 10 years anniversary


Sophia Kokosalaki celebrates her 10 years' anniversary"career". For this special occasion, the fashion designer has picked up 10 Summer creations and 10 Winter pieces that she did in the past.

Since 1999, Sophia Kokosalaki has become the master of the little black dress and her works on materials such as leather for instance, made her one of the most respected fashion designers. She's Greek but went to Central St Martins' School in London. We all remember Björk's Medulla album's cover and her performance at the opening ceremony of the Olympics' Games in Athens.

So happy birthday Sophia !

GSK Contemporary at the Royal Academy in London - Interview of Malcolm McLaren on William Burroughs

From The Times
December 15, 2008

Malcolm McLaren on William Burroughs
The author of Naked Lunch - artist, film-maker, writer, junkie and provocateur - has long been a hero to me

William Burroughs, who died in 1997, was the visionary author of Naked Lunch and a key member of the Beat Generation. Famed as a social critic, film-maker, artist and essayist as well as a novelist, his ideas are celebrated at the Royal Academy in a new exhibition, Burroughs Live. It includes footage of him reading his own works to camera, his paintings, works made in collaboration with other artists and portraits of him by Robert Mapplethorpe, Annie Leibovitz, David Hockney and Damien Hirst. Malcolm McLaren, whose new Burroughs-inspired film Shallow is part of the exhibition, has felt the profound influence of Burroughs all his life.

William Burroughs was iconic as a pop-cultural figure. He was an intellectual, a thinker. He stood for ideas and attitudes, for protest, and truthfully I can say that I have felt a connection with him in a big way all my life. I've lived with this man in my heart and I don't think I could have become the “godfather of punk” without him. He represented something very deep. Even as a teenager, I knew his book Naked Lunch. He was someone who connected all the dots in the disparate muddled world of a teenager.

The name William Burroughs was really imprinted on my consciousness when I went to art school in the latter half of the 1960s. I was at Goldsmiths College, and his name was very much current in the protest movement with which we grew up. He was a part of the zeitgeist because he represented a kind of outlaw spirit. He was a very good protester, and an intriguing one. He didn't produce a lot of products - he didn't write a large number of books, he made some films and sound works, paintings and experimental art - but his influence was more that of an attitude. He was always provocative, and his transformative ideas constantly appeared in your frame of reference if you were an art student at that time.

That is why I think this exhibition is so good, because it is not so much about finished products, about spin paintings or pill boxes; it's more about transformative ideas and debate. There is a brilliant film by Gus Van Sant of Burroughs reading his Thanksgiving Prayer, and it's such a powerful indictment of middle-class values in America. It's so relevant to today, and so potent because it shows how the world has shifted towards Burroughs's ideas.

Burroughs became part of the radical movements that proliferated in the late Sixties in Europe. He was a member of the Situationist International, a group of leftist artists and intellectuals. They were agitators who developed artistic and political avant-garde ideas but were also concerned with the anti-commodification of the planet. Burroughs's work was rooted in literature, but he crossed all spheres, and he was one of the warriors fighting with his mind against this juggernaut that he saw coming at us, representing the commodification of culture. It was the first radical movement to see that the planet could not be sustained with the kind of consumer society that was already growing at that time. It took the rest of us 40 years to see it, but they were banging on about it back in the 1960s. The point was to stand against it and he gave support and passion to that kind of thinking.

I remember 1968 so well. Burroughs was one of the most creative of the subversives and we drank up his ideas. It's funny that I was so involved with Burroughs at this time, whereas Vivienne [Westwood] was at that time still a prim young girl from a Derbyshire village who was attending Sunday school every week and was completely unaware of all this. She was leading a blameless life, while I was getting involved as much as I could in what protest movements there were.

There used to be a little bookshop in Camden called Compendium Books and we'd go there and find the pamphlets and manifestos and dialogues of the Situationists. They were the creative spark that led to the 1968 crisis that spilt over to London. And we as art students gave our response and support.

In those days there were no mobile phones or iPods, none of those sorts of signs and signals for showing who you were, and you used to proclaim your allegiance by having a copy of Naked Lunch or of Thomas de Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater just sticking out of your pocket. De Quincey was, I think, the 19th-century equivalent of Burroughs, a cultural outlaw who took a lot of drugs and had a mind churning with radical ideas.

The first time I was completely seduced by Burroughs was when I was living in Paris in the 1990s and I heard a tape recording of him reading from Naked Lunch. The book was published in 1958 in Paris because American and British publishers wouldn't touch it. Publishing was more liberal in Paris and he had found an imprint called Olympia Press, run by Maurice Girodias who had also published Lolita and the works of Alexander Trocchi. Burroughs did the reading in a little Paris bookshop. He was a brilliant performer of his own work. His voice was incredibly hypnotic and I remember being particularly struck by a passage called Bradley the Buyer, all about Mexico and narcotics agents. The way he salivates as he reads it is completely gripping.

I never met him, sadly, although I almost did. It was in the 1980s when I was working for Stephen Spielberg in Hollywood. I was dating Lauren Hutton at the time and, through her artist friends and New York friends, she knew Burroughs. There was a plan for me to meet him, and I think he was curious to meet me too. Unfortunately, Hollywood being Hollywood, my work prevented that from happening and I never got another chance.

Burroughs grew up in the Midwest, which was a place where guns were completely normal. It was part of the old frontier idea of protection. Everyone in that part of the world knew how to use a gun, and when he accidentally shot his wife [Joan Vollmer, while playing a game of William Tell] it must have affected him very deeply. It must have affected his whole life and work. It was probably due to his having been out of his head at the time, which was not unusual. His drugtaking was part of some kind of deal with the Devil.

His influence has been profound for artists, writers, musicians and many others. His cut-up technique was particularly influential. This involved cutting up and randomly rearranging words or phrases into new sentences in his books. He employed the same methods with the images and sound bites in his films. David Bowie used Burroughs's methods for the lyrics of his songs. Bowie used to write out his lyrics and then cut up each word individually. He would throw the whole lot up into the air, and then string them together again according to the way they had landed on the floor. Procol Harum did the same with A Whiter Shade of Pale. The lyrics of that song are pretty bizarre, and this is why.

I used his cut-up technique for my film Shallow, Musical Paintings, 1-21, which is showing in this exhibition. It's a personal and subjective history of pop culture. I've grabbed and snatched at verses and a chorus here and there through the decades, and then put them together randomly. The music was done first. I then found those old films made on 8mm of the ordinary folk who played a part in the sex films before sex cinema was turned into an industry. The film clips are from the days when you had preambles before the act, when there was still a naivity and an innocence to them. These are ordinary people, guys struggling to get their ties off and then strutting around like peacocks waiting to perform their act, or hoovering the carpet waiting for a knock on the door. I slowed down the films and I think there are some revealing moments, like portraits, of these ordinary people.

I think all great artists are separated from ordinary artists by one thing. They are magicians. They are people who really change the culture. They have an alchemy that few of us possess and Burroughs was one of these.

As told to Joanna Pitman
Malcolm McLaren's film Shallow will be shown as part of the GSK Contemporary series at the Royal Academy, London W1 (dates and times at www.royalacademy. org.uk), until Jan 19. Life-File: The Private File-Folders of William S Burroughs is at Riflemaker, W1 (www.riflemaker.org), from tomorrow to Jan 17.

Thursday, 18 September 2008

Art: King of kitsch invades Sun King's palace

Angelique Chrisafis in Paris
The Guardian,
Tuesday September 9 2008

Rabbit (1986), one of the work lent for the Jeff Koons exhibition at Versailles
It has been deemed the most "turbulent" event of the Paris art season, an invasion of giant lobsters and inflatable rabbits that protesters fear will sully France's most popular chateau. Jeff Koons, the US sculptor and "king of kitsch", is due to unveil some of his most famous works at the Château de Versailles tomorrow, the first time a modern artist has graced the historic rooms and gardens that were the pride of the Sun King, Louis XIV.

But even before the show opens, controversy is raging. Rightwingers wrote to the culture minister, protesting that the "sacred" site of Versailles would be cheapened. Then the French media questioned whether the exhibition at a palace that symbolises the French revolution would benefit a billionaire French collector.

François Pinault, whose business empire includes Gucci and the Christie's auction house, is one of the most influential private collectors in the modern art world. Alongside several other private collectors, he is a key patron of the Koons exhibition, lending six of the 17 works on show, including the giant outdoor flower sculpture Split Rocker.

Le Monde warned of a "possible conflict of interest", saying that Koons's first French exhibition would see the value of the works soar, benefiting their private owners. It pointed out that the chairman of the Château de Versailles, Jean-Jacques Aillagon, used to run Pinault's private art foundation in Venice.

Aillagon, a former French culture minister, told the Guardian last night that Versailles was a "living" monument that made a perfect setting for contemporary art: "Koons is notorious worldwide and so is the chateau." He said all exhibitions affected the art market, not deliberately, but by extension.

"Has this exhibition been programmed to provoke a rise of Jeff Koons' works on the market? Of course not. This exhibition is a cultural act to make a great artist known and to show off the value of our heritage. Has this exhibition been put on to enrich myself? I firmly refute that. This exhibition was a cultural decision alone ... Jeff Koons' works had already reached great heights on the international market, long before Versailles presented them."

He said he was independent and the Pinault family had been patrons of Versailles for several years, part-funding important furniture acquisitions.

Yesterday, the leftwing paper Libération dismissed the conservative protesters as marginal "Catholic monarchists".

Paris is no stranger to rows over modern additions to historic spaces, from Marc Chagall's fresco at the Opéra Garnier to the glass Pyramid at the Louvre - both now hailed as masterpieces.
As Paris struggles to shed its image as a fusty "museum city" and compete with London, Berlin and New York's vibrant modern art scenes, there is a new trend for traditional museums to bring in controversial contemporary work. The Louvre now has a modern art curator and this year took the daring step of showing works by the Belgian artist Jan Fabre alongside masters such as Rubens. The Château de Fontainebleau is following suit.

Koons told Le Figaro he did not want "to be the agent provocateur", but simply to "create an abstraction".

Viktor and Rolf's catwalk on the web


V&R have announced that their next catwalk show will take place on the web. This is the new surprise of V&R for their summer collection 2009. The press will be invited anyway for the presentation of this new collection.
Last July Renzo Rosso, founding father of Diesel and became main investor of the brand Viktor & Rolf with its company The Brave.
I have to say that once again V&R are extremely creative and have managed to create a buzz. I love it.

To learn more: www.viktor-rolf.com/

Hirst’s Art Auction Attracts Plenty of Bidders, Despite Financial Turmoil

Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images“The Kingdom” by Damien Hirst sold on Monday for $17.2 million, well above its high estimate.

Hirst’s Art Auction Attracts Plenty of Bidders, Despite Financial Turmoil
From the New York Times

By CAROL VOGEL
Published: September 15, 2008

LONDON — Against a backdrop of reeling financial markets and nervous investors, Sotheby’s and the British artist Damien Hirst forged ahead with “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever,” a highly publicized auction of 223 works, all by Mr. Hirst and all made within the last two years.
In a gamble that could have ramifications for other artists, Mr. Hirst was bypassing his dealers — the Gagosian Gallery, based in the United States, and White Cube, based in London — and taking his work straight to auction with a sale that began here on Monday night and concludes on Tuesday afternoon.

And there were signs that the bet was paying off: the first session’s total was $127.2 million, above the high estimate of $112 million.

“I woke up this morning in the teeth of the gale of recession,” Mr. Hirst’s business manager, Frank Dunphy, said after the sale, “but we came out as confident as ever.”

Tobias Meyer, worldwide head of contemporary art at Sotheby’s, explained the total this way: “Damien Hirst is a global artist that can defy local economies.” Jose Mugrabi, a New York dealer, had another take: “Today people believe more in art than the stock market. At least it’s something you can enjoy.”

While Mr. Hirst risked flooding his own market, he had also spent several months courting potential buyers. Still, he could not anticipate the sale’s timing, amid news that Lehman Brothers had filed for bankruptcy and other serious changes on the financial landscape. Sotheby’s was said to be taking steps to ensure that the sale did not fall flat, like offering buyers a six-month grace period to pay for purchases.

Jay Jopling, owner of the White Cube gallery, could be seen in the audience bidding on works (and winning at least one, “The Triumvirate,” which features anatomical models, for $3.1 million). Word in the auction world was that Sotheby’s had given him an incentive to steer his clients to the sale. Sotheby’s declined to comment on any of the financial arrangements.
The headlines had little effect on the scene outside the salesroom here. The street was filled with television camera crews; fans hoping to spot celebrities like Bianca Jagger; and a crowd of collectors, dealers and curiosity seekers waiting for the doors to open. Inside later it was standing room only. But most of the action was on the telephone, with Sotheby’s flying in employees from all over the world to handle the bidding.

Over the past last 11 days nearly 20,000 people have flocked to Sotheby’s New Bond Street premises to see what looked like a polished retrospective. For sale were variations on all of Mr. Hirst’s best-known themes: dead animals, including several sharks, a calf, a zebra and doves, all submerged in formaldehyde; glass cabinets filled with diamonds, cigarette butts and practically everything in between; and paintings and drawings with his signature skulls and dots, swirls and butterflies.

As part of his sales pitch, Mr. Hirst said that he would no longer be making spin or butterfly paintings and that there would be far fewer dead animals and almost no dot paintings.
On Monday, the evening’s star was “The Golden Calf,” a white bullock preserved in formaldehyde, with hoofs and horns made of 18-carat gold and a gold disc crowning the head. The work was estimated at $15.8 million to $23.6 million and drew three bidders. It went for $18.6 million to a buyer on the phone.

Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images

A work along similar lines, “The Black Sheep With the Golden Horn,” had just two bidders, with the winner paying $4.7 million, in the middle of its $3.9 million to $5.9 million estimate. Three potential buyers vied for “The Kingdom,” another formaldehyde-preserved work, this one a tiger shark. It sold for $17.2 million, well above its high estimate of $11.8 million.
(Final prices include the commission paid to Sotheby’s: 25 percent of the first $20,000, 20 percent of the next $20,000 to $500,000 and 12 percent of the rest. Estimates do not reflect commissions.)

Also in the spotlight were Mr. Hirst’s glass-front cabinets, like “Fragments of Paradise,” filled with manufactured diamonds. After a bidding war that included Mr. Jopling, the work went for $9.3 million, well above its $2.9 million estimate. The winning bid was taken on the phone by Alina Davey, a Russian-speaking Sotheby’s representative based in London. Another diamond-filled cabinet, “Memories of/Moments With You,” went for $4.7 million, more than twice its high estimate of $2.3 million. But “End of the Line,” a cabinet filled with medical supplies, sold for $2.4 million, less than its low estimate of $2.9 million.

The auction room at Sotheby's during Mr. Hirst's auction. The first session’s total was $127.2 million, above the high estimate for the entire sale, $112 million.

“The Kingdom” by Damien Hirst sold on Monday for $17.2 million, well above its high estimate.
Skulls were incorporated in several of the pieces. “Beautiful Maat Intense Fetishistic Painting (With Extra Inner Beauty),” a work with the colorful impact of his swirl canvases, featured a skull in its center. It sold for $868,127, above the high estimate of $790,000. And “Transience Painting 2” had a skull nestled on a leather armchair with bubbles surrounding it. Priced at a high of $1.1 million, it sold for $1.8 million to a bidder on the phone.

Other paintings had butterflies, as well as diamonds, scalpel blades, rosaries, crucifixes and religious medals. These included “Sometimes Life Can Be Really, Really Dark,” which brought $1.3 million, above the high estimate of $1.1 million.

Mr. Hirst also produced works that resemble stained-glass windows in churches. The round, butterfly-covered “Rose Window, Durham Cathedral” carried a high estimate of $1.7 million but sold for more: $2.2 million. Four bidders sought “Calm,” a red canvas also using butterflies to create a stained-glass effect. It sold for $1.2 million, just above its high estimate of $1.1 million.
Dot paintings were on offer too, in a variety of colors and sizes. “Myristoycholine Iodide,” a 6-foot-by-7-foot-11-inch canvas, was estimated at $990,000 to $1.3 million. But it went for $868,126, a sign that perhaps there have been too many dot paintings for sale in the past year.
One of his more macabre works, “Devil Worshiper,” a canvas with dead flies, didn’t sell. And neither did “Theology, Philosophy, Medicine, Justice,” which featured four bullsharks floating in two tanks.

Mr. Dunphy said that while Mr. Hirst wasn’t at Sotheby’s, he was following the results via phone — while playing snooker.

To learn more:
www.nytimes.com/2008/09/16/arts/design/16auct.html?pagewanted=1

Steve Forrest for The New York Times
The head auctioneer calling for bids on Monday, the first day of the auction in London.

Thursday, 4 September 2008

Cy Twombly at Tate Modern, London run as it's almost over...


If you haven't seen the exhibition of Cy Twombly's paintings and sculptures, then you need to rush as you have only until the 14th September to enjoy it.

Tate Modern presents a major exhibition of works by Cy Twombly, one of the most highly regarded painters working today and a foremost figure among the generation of American artists that includes Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol. Twombly rose to prominence through a distinctive style characterised by scribbles and vibrantly daubed paint. This is his first solo retrospective in fifteen years, and provides an overview of his work from the 1950s to now.

Twombly emerged as a painter at the height of Abstract Expressionism, then in 1957 he left America for Italy, where he drew inspiration from European literature and classical culture. At the heart of the exhibition is Twombly’s work exploring the cycles associated with seasons, nature and the passing of time. Several key groups are brought together for the first time, such as Tate’s Four Seasons 1993–4 with those from the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The exhibition also explores how Twombly is influenced by antiquity, myth and the Mediterranean, for example the violent red swirls in the Bacchus 2005 paintings which bring to mind the drunken god of wine.

This exhibition provides a unique opportunity to see the full range of Twombly’s long and influential career from a fresh perspective



To learn more: www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/cytwombly/default.shtm

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Kate Moss is just the best...



Kate Moss made a triumphant return to walk the catwalk in her first show in more than four years.



The model appeared at The House Of Blue Eyes fashion show in Shepherd's Bush last night as a favour to her friend, designer Johnny Blue Eyes at his first fashion show.

Kate grabbed a top hat and cane to join Beth Ditto of The Gossip in the show which was hosted by Scissor Sisters' singer Ana Matronic, and attended by a cheering posse of the model's friends including boyfriend Jamie Hince.



She's simply rock'n'roll !

This makes me want to show you the Manifesto by Stefano Pilati for YSL where the beautiful Brit is featured. Enjoy





Monday, 1 September 2008

Jean Paul Gaultier and Angelin Preljocaj working together



Two of my idols have decided to collaborate together. Angelin Preljocaj, that I know and truly admire from "Personne n'epouse les meduses", beautiful and genius choreographer, has called Jean Paul Gaultier for an exclusive collaboration for his new ballet : "Snow White" which will premiere at the Dance Biennale, in Lyon, France from 25 September to 4 October.






Here is an interview (in French though) of Jean-Paul Gaultier on his inspiration and work with Angelin in the French daily newspaper Le Monde from the 20 August 2008.


"Travailler avec Preljocaj, c'est une histoire d'amour intéressée"

LE MONDE 20.08.08 16h12 • Mis à jour le 20.08.08 16h12



Le couturier Jean Paul Gaultier crée les costumes du spectacle Blanche-Neige, chorégraphié par Angelin Preljocaj, inscrit au programme de la Biennale de la danse de Lyon, du 25 septembre au 4 octobre. A la demande du directeur du Ballet Preljocaj-Centre chorégraphique d'Aix-en-Provence, Gaultier, le plus strictement extravagant de sa génération, partenaire de création de la chorégraphe Régine Chopinot de 1983 à 1993, a relevé le défi de ce conte ultra-féminin entre cruauté initiatique et relooking Disney.


Lors du premier essayage des costumes au Pavillon noir, lieu de travail de Preljocaj, Gaultier remet son ouvrage sur le métier à chaque costume. Ses décisions sont rapides et simplement autoritaires, saisies dans le souffle de l'inspiration. Entretien virevoltant dans sa maison de couture parisienne avec un réactif passionné qui associe les images et les idées plus vite que son coup de crayon.




Pourquoi l'étape du premier essayage est-elle si tendue ?

C'est un moment difficile, celui où je vois pour la première fois sur un corps humain les costumes que j'ai imaginés et dessinés. Tout d'un coup, on découvre parfois que non seulement, ce n'est pas la bonne matière, mais pas la bonne couleur. Je suis dans un état de choc nerveux. Il faut trouver une direction, analyser, rebondir.

On effectue toujours un parcours par rapport à un costume qu'on a dessiné. Heureusement, sa concrétisation passe par d'autres mains et me permet d'avoir une réaction très libre. Le réaliser moi-même m'empêcherait de prendre du recul. Lors d'un essayage, il y a des agencements qui reviennent, des expériences déjà vécues, qui heureusement font partie des commodités du travail. Mais on veut aussi changer, trouver du nouveau. S'adapter à un spectacle, à un chorégraphe, ça aide aussi à aller autre part.



Pour quelles raisons collaborez-vous avec Angelin Preljocaj ?

Je ne travaille qu'avec des gens que j'admire. C'est un luxe. Qu'il s'agisse de Régine Chopinot, qui m'impressionne toujours autant, ou de Madonna, je suis amoureux du travail et j'apprécie la personne. Mais une nouvelle aventure doit me faire aller ailleurs. C'est une histoire d'amour intéressée en quelque sorte. Je connais Angelin depuis quelque temps. J'ai vu certains de ses spectacles comme Eldorado, visuellement magnifique. Les apparitions des danseurs qui sortent de cadres comme par un procédé de morphing sont proches de ce que j'aime.



Que représente "Blanche-Neige" pour vous ?

Je travaillais depuis quelques mois pour mes collections sur des histoires de princes et de princesses, sur les contes : celui de La Petite Sirène, de Peau d'âne. Lorsque Angelin a évoqué Blanche-Neige, c'était l'évidence pour moi, ce que je cherchais sans y avoir pensé : l'archétype du conte de fées.



Quel personnage préférez-vous dans "Blanche-Neige" ?

Blanche-Neige évidemment. Mais aussi la méchante reine, qui est assez fascinante dans le registre Cruella. Il me semble plus intéressant de montrer non seulement la femme romantique et douce mais aussi la femme forte, décidée. Les femmes sont plus fortes que les hommes dans les moments difficiles. Nous sommes souvent lâches. Pendant que les petits garçons vont jouer au football, les filles commencent déjà à parler des problèmes qui les intéressent. Mais les hommes se construisent souvent grâce et par les femmes.



Vous aussi ?

Ma grand-mère a été très importante. Adolescent, j'ai connu des filles avec lesquelles je pouvais parler. Madonna aujourd'hui symbolise pour moi la post-libération de la femme. C'est pour elle que j'ai imaginé un soutien-gorge aux seins pointus, très agressifs. Les seins qui tuent en quelque sorte.



Quelle a été votre méthode de travail avec Angelin Preljocaj ?
Il avait des idées précises sur le décor. Lorsque nous avons évoqué la scène de bal, j'ai vu des costumes qui n'en seraient pas vraiment, à la fois historiques, avec des rappels du passé, les codes vestimentaires du conte, mais modernisés et surtout adaptés aux mouvements de danseurs. Il faut aller vers ce que désire l'autre. C'est un très bon exercice.



Cette complicité a-t-elle influencé votre recherche ?
Peut-être, à force d'avoir le nom de Preljocaj dans la tête... Dans Preljocaj, il y a le mot "cage". Pour ma collection d'hiver 2008, il y a beaucoup de cages, de crinolines, des structures qui se posent sur des robes comme une décoration extérieure, une protection qui change le volume du corps. Comme j'ai pu concevoir des corsets en ne gardant que les baleines, j'ai imaginé des crinolines avec justes des arcs.



Vous vous effacez derrière le ballet. Est-ce facile ?
Ce serait ridicule de me mettre en avant. Une histoire, un ballet, un film, sont avant tout des ensembles et le costume doit s'intégrer dedans. Lorsque je travaille avec quelqu'un, je le respecte, je le flatte, je suis même servile. Peut-être trop parfois tellement j'ai envie d'aller dans son sens, de servir l'histoire. Ça peut d'ailleurs me faire oublier des idées précises que j'avais sur le sujet. Mais sans être prétentieux, j'ai le sentiment que mon style est suffisamment fort pour résister.



Quel rapport entretenez-vous avec le spectacle de danse et plus généralement le spectacle vivant ?

Enfant, j'ai adoré le feuilleton télé L'Age heureux, d'Odette Joyeux, qui se déroulait à l'Opéra de Paris. J'avais une dizaine d'années et nous rejouions des scènes avec ma cousine.

C'est à travers le film Falbalas, de Jacques Becker, qui mettait en scène des défilés de mode, qu'est né mon désir de mode. On y voyait les vêtements en mouvement. Je ne les imagine d'ailleurs jamais qu'en mouvement. Sur cintres, ils sont morts. Lorsque j'étais chez Cardin, le défilé était un vrai spectacle, très théâtral.

Mais c'est au Châtelet, où ma grand-mère m'avait emmené voir Rose de Noël, avec Luis Mariano, que j'ai eu aussi un choc. Le rideau rouge qui s'ouvrait... Mon approche de la mode vient aussi de ce moment-là : au théâtre, les gens sont vraiment là, il y a du vivant, on se montre, on fait, on dit.



Blanche-Neige, d'Angelin Preljocaj. Biennale de la danse, Lyon. Du 25 septembre au 4 octobre. Tél. : 04-72-26-38-01. De 26 € à 35 €.www.biennale-de-lyon.org

Propos recueillis par Rosita Boisseau



To learn more:

Sunday, 31 August 2008

Exclusive interview with light artist Patrick Rochon



Patrick Rochon, worldwide famous artist has agreed to answer my quick interview. Enjoy !

1- How would you describe yourself and how would you describe your art?
Light painting is an interesting form of art different then "traditional"photography because the artist is actively creating by hand in front of the camera instead of being behind looking trough the camera to take a picture.
So as a light painter you are active and add a dimension to photography. Personally I never think as myself as an artist, I'm just a guy who like trying new things and light painting is something I do. I was doing photography in college and heard about light painting so I played with it and saw magic in the result. I thought it was unexpected and intuitive.




2- What other artists, designers, architects do you feel close to?
For inspiration I more and more turn towards nature and meditation. I find nature to have all answers and every influence an artist needs. If you get into the spirit of things and the very essence of nature you discover your greatest teacher.

What I look for in people's art is transformation. I think most artist are exploring and searching but eventually the artist's transformation should come trough and become the viewer's transformation. If the artwork stays with me long after I experiencing it, then it's good art.

3- Why Light ?
We can observe in our modern world specially with technology that light is taking a new form and becoming present in a new way. Lasers are now everywhere in CD, DVD players and other devices. The internet is often connected with fiber optics transmitting data with light. Doctors, scientist, factories, the army are using lights and lasers to operate, cut, communicate...


4- What gallery do you work with?
I'm not working with galleries now but I'm open to do so.

5- Would you consider to do something else if you were not an artist?
You know if I wasn't an artist I would be somewhere in science. I think science is also an important voice in bringing clarity and answers for the human world.

6- Do you consider that "art is alive"?
Let's remember we have a big ball of light keeping us alive just next to the earth. So light becoming an art form, yes. No limits... and yes art is alive very much so.
Like waves in the ocean it comes and goes as an important part of cultures. Like waves in the ocean it comes and goes as an important part of cultures. Like Wade Davis said; "culture comes from imagination" (http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/wade_davis_on_endangered_cultures.html). We must keep it alive. It is a basic expression of what is is to be human, a manifestation of life.

7- To finish with, what would wish to this blog?
I find the internet an interesting way of spreading information. Blogs are doing a great job at it. I wish for the blog media to keep transforming and improving it self to share and show how interesting life is and that we are an active part of it.


To learn more: http://www.patrickrochon.com/

Saturday, 9 August 2008

Skin+Bones exhibition at Somerset House in London


This is the last day tomorrow to go to Skin + Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture, an exhibition at London’s Somerset House, which "is one such attempt to demystify how these two creative disciplines no longer operate in a cultural vacuum. Coinciding with a book of the same name, the exhibition charts from 1980 to the present day the increasingly shared dialogue between fashion designers and architects through the work of over fifty contemporary pioneers.


The fashion on show is a mix of high concept and high drama: Chalayan, McQueen, Miyake, Comme, Viktor + Rolf and Westwood together with architects of a similar calibre: Gehry, Hadid, OMA and Herzog & de Meuron to name just a few. It might seem outlandish to try and draw parallels between the two – but this is precisely where the exhibition succeeds. Rather than forcing similarities with grand, academic texts, the visuals are left to speak for themselves.
Both architects and designers are preoccupied with space, volume and providing a cover for the body, a protection from the environment and a vehicle for social and cultural comment. And these are the kernels at the heart of the exhibition, presented thematically with garments or catwalk videos on one side and architectural parallels opposite. " Wallpaper* magazine has declared.

Pure style: Madonna - Give It 2 Me

Friday, 8 August 2008

Liverpool Biennial 2008 Presents the fifth edition of the UK's festival of contemporary art


Liverpool Biennial 2008 20 September - 30 November 2008

The Biennale will be showcasing the best contemporary artists from around the world.
In 2008 the festival is bigger and better than ever, celebrating 10 years of ambitious and challenging new work as well as Liverpool's status as European Capital of Culture. Liverpool Biennial animates the whole city centre as a platform for the largest concentration of contemporary art anywhere in the UK.

The fifth edition of Liverpool Biennial's International Exhibition is MADE UP, an exploration of the ecology of the artistic imagination. MADE UP highlights art's capacity to transport us, to suspend disbelief and generate alternative realties. Consisting of around 40 projects by leading and emerging international artists – principally new commissions as well as several key works previously unseen in the UK – MADE UP will be presented across multiple venues: Tate Liverpool, the Bluecoat, FACT (Foundation for Art & Creative Technology) and Open Eye Gallery, with half the exhibition sited in public spaces across the city.

To learn more: http://www.biennial.com/

Zaha Hadid + Melissa

After Vivienne Westwood and Alexander Herchcovitch, it is the turn of the architect Zaha Hadid to design a pair of shoes for melissa, the Brazilian brand. "For thirty years now, I've been looking for different spheres of creativity in the design and architecture fields, and this project is a real challenge for me, not just because of the design but because of technical aspects.
There was a real synergy between us. I worked closely with melissa to transform my design into reality" said the architect. From this momentum a plastic footwear was born. "melissa + Zaha Hadid" will be produced in 8 colors (red, black, silver…). Fashionistas will only be able to buy this new "must-have" in September

melissa is known for its recyclable plastic shoes and will organise a launch event on September 18 during London fashion week. Zaha Hadid, famous for his avant-garde creations, recently collaborated with Chanel for a of contemporary art mobile museum, Chanel Mobile Art.



To learn more: www.zaha-hadid.com

Vanessa Paradis is the new face for Miu Miu

Vanessa Paradis, actress, model and singer, in a nutshell a proper person (and not only Johnny Depp's wife) is the new face for the Autumn campaign of Miu Miu. She used to be a model for Chanel n.5 when she was younger and is a close friend to Karl Lagerfeld but this doesn't mean she can't play in other Fashion's houses' campaigns.

Here is a selection :






To learn more: http://www.miumiu.com/

Sunday, 20 July 2008

César at the Cartier Foundation curated by Jean Nouvel

Fondation Cartier - César Anthologie par Jean Nouvel
8 July to 26 October 2008

The Fondation Cartier presents a major exhibition of the work of French sculptor César on the tenth anniversary of his death. Jean Nouvel —the Fondation Cartier’s architect and a close friend of the artist—has been invited to curate this exhibition, offering a fresh perspective on the work of an artist who passionately explored the formal and expressive possibilities of industrial materials. Through this exhibition, the Fondation Cartier will celebrate an artist who played a major role in its history, from its inception in 1984 until his death in 1998. It will include nearly one hundred of the most significant works from four major groups: the Fers, the Compressions, the Empreintes humaines, and the Expansions. Influenced by the examples of great artists of the past, yet imbued with a sense of the radical and innovative, César’s work defies conventional ways of thinking about sculpture and has profoundly impacted the art of today.



César, Expansion n°37, 1972, Polyester armé de fibre de verre et laqué, 105 x 90 x 115 cmSuccession César, © César / Adagp, Paris, 2008, Photo © Patrick Gries

Jean Nouvel and César employed the hydraulic press, expanded polyurethane foam and castings of the human body to realize works he called Compressions, Empreintes humaines and Expansions. These techniques led the artist to reduce the intervention of his own hand in the creation of his works, allowing him to seize upon reality in a direct manner. César’s formal training led him to question the significance of this new approach,which became the subject of many discussions with his friend Jean Nouvel concerning the nature of a work of art: “Can a work of art that does not show evidence of craftsmanship still be considered art?” César was faced with an inner conflict clearly described by Catherine Millet: “César, as classical as his spirit may be [...], as attached as he is to the importance of craft, has found himself caught in a dilemma; he has discovered that sculpture is not just an art of accurate proportions and beautiful materials to be touched, it may also be an idea.” Known for an approach to architecture that favors the immaterial and the minimal, Jean Nouvel has appropriately chosen to place particular emphasis on the conceptual aspects of César’s work. In a rigorous exhibition design, he has chosen to focus upon what he considers the most innovative bodies of the artist’s oeuvre, not according to chronology, but to genre.


César, Giallo Naxos 594, 1998, Photo : Aurelio AmendolaCourtesy: César Administration / Stéphanie Buzutil© Cesar © Adagp, Paris 2008


To learn more:
http://www.fondation.cartier.com/

Matthew Barney, this genius...

Fashion in the mirror: Photographer's Gallery in London


Fashion in the mirror: Photographer's Gallery in London

18 July - 14 September 2008

I recently went to this exhibition and I have to say it's quite good. I particularly enjoyed the photographs by Tim Walker always containing glamour, poetry and beauty. Many photographs in this exhibition are famous, for instance the gayish pictures by Steven Klein of Tom Ford that caused controversy.

"The international photographers in this exhibition undress the theatre of fashion and question the creation of perfect beauty. Fashion in the Mirror is an overview of their self-examination and a rare look behind-the-scenes of fashion photography from the 1950s to the present day.

Finding both comedy and poetry in the set-up of the studio, the exhibiting photographers turn their cameras on the processes and paraphernalia of the fashion shoot. Photographers become mirrored in their own work and, as viewpoints are inverted and gazes misdirected, cameras stare back out at us expectantly.

Revealing the fashion industry’s secrets and undermining its glamorous illusions, the photographers in this exhibition create work that exposes this world from within.

The exhibition will feature work by leading international photographers;
Mario Testino (Peru, b. 1954); Richard Avedon (US, 1923 – 2004); Nick Knight (UK, b.1958); Juergen Teller (Germany, b. 1964); Steven Klein (US, b. 1962); Bert Stern (US, b. 1929; Steven Meisel (US, b. 1954); Helmut Newton (Germany, 1920 – 2004); Irving Penn (US, b. 1917); Norman Parkinson (UK, 1913 – 1990), Terence Donovan (UK, 1936 – 1996), Melvin Sokolsky (US, b.1933), Tim Walker (UK, b.1970), Bob Richardson (US, 1928 – 2005), Grégoire Alexandre (France, b.1972), William Klein (US, b.1928), Harri Peccinotti (UK, b.1938), Jonathan de Villiers (UK, b.1968), and Saul Leiter (US, b.1923); John Rawlings ( US, 1912 – 1970); and Inez van Lamsweerde (The Netherlands, b. 1963) & Vinoodh Matadin (The Netherlands, b. 1961). "



To learn more: http://www.photonet.org.uk/

Saturday, 19 July 2008

Exclusive interview with photographer Yannis Bournias




Copyright Yannis Bournias

Yannis Bournias, Greek photographer and friend agreed to answer my questions in an exclusive interview. Enjoy his views on art, and fashion.


Can you introduce yourself and your background ?
I was born in Athens ages ago (1971). Studied photography at London College of Printing (now called London College of Comunication).
I 've always liked to observe and "watch" people and things in a voyeristic way. I guess that's why I became a photographer.

Where do you get your inspiration ?
I get inspired from everything that you can imagine. A movie, a painting, people in the streets, people in my fantasies, books, music.

Would you feel closer to the contemporary art world or to the fashion world ?
Art is the only truth I have ever met in my life (and love) but it has nothing to do with fashion. The fashion world is vain, superficial, ephemeral, stupid, loud, shallow, but wonderful. I don't know if I will be photographing fashion for ever. I don't believe it is something one should do forever. I believe though that I will be photographing people for ever.

How would you describe yourself and how would you describe your art?
I don't like to talk about myself. But, I am tall, handsome and with a big nose ! My art comes from inside. It is very honest. And tense. But simple.

What other photographers, artists, designers do you feel close to?
I don't feel close to any photographers, artists, or designers. I love Caravaggio, Turner, Rothko, Bacon, Schiele, Giacometti, Hopper and Moore. I love all the Russian avant garde. I ADORE MAN RAY. I believe that John Deakin was a great photographer. Francesca Woodman was very interesting. Nan Goldin is also one of my favourites. I repspect and admire the work of Lorca di Gorcia. I like very much Mario Sorrent and lately , I found the work of a painter called Timothy Sarson, in his first solo show called Nexus - amazing headdrawings - very interesting. (Astra Gallery, Athens.)

How far do you hope to go artistically speaking?
I dont know how far one can go , but I haven't been there yet.

Can you tell us about your current and upcoming projects ?
I have recently finished a project. It is a series of photographsall taken at night. It will probably be called Quiet City and hopefully exhibited soon!

Would you consider to do something else if you were not an photographer?
I would like to be a painter, or a film director. Sometimes a singer !



Do you consider that "art is alive" ?
ART WILL NEVER DIE. IT IS LIKE WARM BLOOD. ALWAYS MOVING.

To finish with, what would wish to this blog?
I wish to this blog to be alive and kicking !






Monday, 14 July 2008

Olafur Eliasson in New York

New York City seems to like Olafur Eliasson and I actually do too. First "Take your time: Olafur Eliasson" was on display at the MoMA from April 20–June 30, 2008 and it was a very impressive show. This exhibition is now over but I felt like telling you how great it was anyway.

"Take your time: Olafur Eliasson" was the first comprehensive survey in the United States of works by Olafur Eliasson, whose immersive environments, sculptures, and photographs elegantly recreate the extremes of landscape and atmosphere in his native Scandinavia, while foregrounding the sensory experience of the work itself.



Drawn from collections worldwide, the presentation spans over fifteen years of Eliasson's career. His constructions, at once eccentric and highly geometric, use multicolored washes, focused projections of light, mirrors, and elements such as water, stone, and moss to shift the viewer's perception of place and self. By transforming the gallery into a hybrid space of nature and culture, Eliasson prompted an intensive engagement with the world and offers a fresh consideration of everyday life.



Olafur Eliasson was born in Copenhagen in 1967, and grew up in both Iceland and Denmark. He attended the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen and currently divides his time between his family home in Copenhagen and his studio in Berlin. Studio Olafur Eliasson is a laboratory for spatial research that employs a team of 30 architects, engineers, craftsmen, and assistants who work together to conceptualize, test, engineer, and construct installations, sculptures, large-scale projects and commissions. He is perhaps best known for The weather project (2003) at Tate Modern in London, a giant sun made of 200 yellow lamps, mirrors, and mist that transformed the museum’s massive Turbine Hall and drew over 2 million visitors during its five-month installation. His work is currently the subject of a major mid-career retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art and PS 1 Contemporary Art Center in New York, on view through June 30.


Photo: Vincent Laforet for The New York Times

The second project in New York is the Waterfalls exhibition in various places of the City. The Public Art Fund commission involves four towers of scaffolding, ranging from 90 to 120 feet, situated in NYC's East River, including locations under the Brooklyn Bridge and on Governors Island. Olafur returns to his sources with these installations which focuses on water and their relationship with the New York landscape.