Cool Hunting
Next Friday 23 May 2008 is the opening of the Tate Modern's Long Weekend, three days and nights packed with live events and performances. Projects centering around "States of Flux," will take place in the gallery and offer spectators a chance to become participants.
I am most excited about "Street Art" at the Tate Modern which opens during the Long Weekend and runs through 25 August 2008. Six artists/art collectives from around the world are going to paint the river façade of the gallery. The artists include Blu from Bologna, Italy, NYC's Faile, JR from Paris, Nunca and Os Gemeos, representing São Paulo, Brazil and Sixeart from Barcelona.
Nunca says, "This is the most important exhibition I have done until now and it is making a lot of people out here think about the importance of the art that is done by artists that use the streets like another tool—the richness of it, the creativity of these artists and the position the institutions have. It is the first time that the Tate Modern is using the outside walls of the building to do an exhibition, and it is the first time this institution is working with "Street Art" too."
The artists are already painting up a storm. Nunca continues, “Basically I spent three days to have the walls almost finished, I already painted all the colored places on the character that is a kind of wild head hunter man drinking tea on a very English way. In the next three days I will have finished the whole painting."
After the Tate show, Os Gemeos head to NYC for their show at Deitch, "Too Close Too Far," opening 26 June 2008. Stay tuned for more info on that.
Long Weekend
23 to 25 May 2008
Tate Modern
25 Sumner Street
London SE1 9TG map
tel. 44 020 7887 8888
"Too Close Too Far"
Opens 26 June 2008
Deitch Gallery
76 Grand Street
New York, NY 10013 map
tel. 1 212 343 2954
|
previous entry Schmap for the iPhone and iPod Touch |
next entry Nike Sportswear T-Shirt |
Artists best known for their work in public often have an entirely private body of work that doesn't make it out into view. Recognizing this, Michael DeFeo (the Flower Guy) assembled Behind the Seen, an international group show featuring rarely seen artwork not typically associated with the artists. Including work from Blek le Rat, Shepard Fairey, Ron English, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring, Maya Hayuk,...
To mark the 40th anniversary of the 1968 student protests that led to the eventual collapse of the De Gaulle government in France, London's Hayward Project Space is exhibiting "May 68: Street Posters from the Paris Rebellion," a collection of the protest's most iconic posters. Some of the most vibrant imagery ever linked to a political or social movement, the posters were produced entirely...
by Laurice Parkin The video art of Saskia Olde Wolbers is transfixing to watch not only for the dreamlike fluidity accompanied by surreal narrative, but also to see the intensely complex handmade models that the artists films. These miniature sets combine both the architectural space and uniquely constructed parts to bring the artist's imaginative landscape to life. Unpopulated and desolate, the worlds are beautiful, strange...
Galeria Fortes Vilaça, one of São Paulo's most important galleries (which represents such art heavyweights as Os Gemeos and Vik Muniz), is breaking in its new Galpão Fortes Vilaça archival space this weekend with an internationally studded group show called "God Is Design" curated by P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center's Neville Wakefield. The curator took cue from the industrial design of the building to inspire...
A look at the creative energy in modern China, China Design Now chronicles the recent cultural rebirth brought on by a combination of global influences and the rediscovery of China's pre-Socialist traditions. Opening 15 March 2008 at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the exhibit explores three cities beginning with Shenzhen, where graphic designers have been experimenting with new concepts since the 1990s....
On 11 March 2008, the irreverent ceramic artist Barnaby Barford will be exhibiting a new series of subversive objects at David Gill Galleries in London. The latest collection, "Private Lives," shows Barford treading into uncharted territory, repositioning figures from pop culture and cartoons for his witty mises-en-scènes. A graduate of the Royal College of Art in 2002, Barford has been working with found ceramics...
