897 resultados para Contemporary Arts Museum (Houston, Tex.)
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Bibliography: p.168.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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[Conceptual Sketch], untitled. Ink sketch on tracing paper, 12x23 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Early Conceptual Sketches], untitled. Green ink sketches on steno pad paper, 6x9 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Early Conceptual Sketch], untitled. Brown ink sketch on shirt cardboard, 8 x 12 1/2 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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[Conceptual Sketch], untitled. Black, green and red ink and pencil sketch on black-line print of site plan, 20 3/4 x 31 3/4 inches [from photographic copy by Lance Burgharrdt]
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Solo exhibition of sculptural works that use the portrait bust as a vehicle for problematising notions of subjectivity, authority and representation. The exhibition comprised three life-sized figurative busts, each portraits of the artist, sparsely positioned throughout the gallery space to convey a sense of isolation and abandonment. By emphasising the fragmented nature of the bust format by removal of all supports (ie. Socle, plinth or alcove) the works sought to address the vulnerability that frmes this apparently authoritative Enlightenment portrait format. In so doing the exhibition aimed to offer, by example, a new way of seeing and interpreting the portrait bust in history. The exhibition was exhibited at the Institute of Modern Art (Brisbane) and the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts. Works fro the exhibition were included in group shows at Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery. Work from the exhibition was purchased for the collection of MONA, Hobart.The exhibition received favourable reviews in Eyeline, Art and Australia and Machine magazines.
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The exhibition consists of a series of 9 large-scale cotton rag prints, printed from digital files, and a sound and picture animation on DVD composed of drawings, sound, analogue and digital photographs, and Super 8 footage. The exhibition represents the artist’s experience of Singapore during her residency. Source imagery was gathered from photographs taken at the Bukit Brown abandoned Chinese Cemetery in Singapore, and Australian native gardens in Parkville Melbourne. Historical sources include re-photographed Singapore 19th and early 20th century postcard images. The works use analogue, hand-drawn and digital imaging, still and animated, to explore the digital interface’s ability to combine mixed media. This practice stems from the digital imaging practice of layering, using various media editing software. The work is innovative in that it stretches the idea of the layer composition in a single image by setting each layer into motion using animation techniques. This creates a multitude of permutations and combinations as the two layers move in different rhythmic patterns. The work also represents an innovative collaboration between the photographic practitioner and a sound composer, Duncan King-Smith, who designed sound for the animation based on concepts of trance, repetition and abstraction. As part of the Art ConneXions program, the work travelled to numerous international venues including: Space 217 Singapore, RMIT Gallery Melbourne, National Museum Jakarta, Vietnam Fine Arts Museum Hanoi, and ifa (Institut fur Auslandsbeziehungen) Gallery in both Stuttgart and Berlin.
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Under an Australian Research Council Linkage Grant, the partnering research organisations QUT, Creative Media Warehouse, The Brisbane Festival and The Queensland Orchestra undertook extensive reviews of many aspects of traditional and contemporary arts practice. We will publish excerpts from the findings soon. deepblue is committed to ongoing research as a part of the day to day operation and is currently working in partnership with John Kotzas and the team at QPAC on exploring new techniques for presenting and marketing deep blue.
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I created Experience Has No Shadow (2010) following a successful Ausdance Qld choreographic grant in 2010, which comprised of two solos and a video-dance at the Performance Space at the Judith Wright Centre. The aim of the Bell Tower III residency was to research and construct a Stage One Development that explored choreographic approaches to oral histories. Like many first generation Australians, oral histories are the way memories and experiences of distant homelands often offer the only connection to cultural origins. Consequently, I drew on auto-ethnographic references in the form of family stories – specifically those of my mother’s family - told and retold by my mother and her family as East German refugees during World War II. While working on the video, I explored a way to make a direct connection to the past stories by using a recording of my mother’s voice. She is re-telling a favourite story about Salamo the circus horse that was sold to my great grandfather as a work horse. Rather than representing the text literally, I attempted to capture the intensity of the storytelling which accompanied abstract footage of Avril Huddy filmed through perspex glass producing animal-like shapes that continually blur and morph in and out of focus. Strangely, by tying the story in with the filmed images a whole new story seems to emerge. Two distinct solos were created in collaboration with the performers, Expressions Dance Company’s Elise May and QUT’s Avril Huddy. These were performed at the Judith Wright Centre for Contemporary Arts, Performance Space, 1st April, 2010. The simplicity of its design became a key concept behind the work in terms of sets, spacing requirements, and costumes – almost minimalist. The choreographic process was conceived as highly collaborative, with commissioned music (and eventually lighting features) to act as equal partners in the performance.
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Clipped was a solo developed from a showing of Stage One Creative Development: Experience Has No Shadow at the Judith Wright Centre for Contemporary Arts in 2010. The solo was choreographed for EDC dancer Elise May as part of EDC Solo Festival 2011. The solo showcased the twisting movement of the dancer, feminine and awkward, sensual and fragile, carving abstract images through the space. In the Courier Mail dance critic Olivia Stewart commented, “Artistic director Natalie Weir and Vanessa Mafe retrospectively gave EDC’s Riannon McLean and Elise May movement that harnessed their power and prowess” (2011, 54) In the The Australian dance critic Shaaron Boughen comments, “May's own performance in Vanessa Mafe's Clipped was mature and sophisticated, showing the breadth of skills that this young artist has developed” (2011, 19)
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'Unthinkable' is an installation comprising drawings and fabric works, which were placed onto a large-scale wall painting. This work engages with the gender politics of art criticism through strategies of redrawing, in particular the commentary that Helen Frankenthaler's painting practice was 'unthinkable' without Jackson Pollock. 'Unthinkable' was developed and presented as part of BEAF 2013: Brisbane Experimental Art Festival, curated by Rachael Parsons and Stephen Russell, held at the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts.
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The exhibition material matters brings together new works by Amy Commins, Jamie Behrendorff, Grace Kevill-Davies, Zoe Knight, Ruth McConchie and Courtney Pedersen – Brisbane-based artists whose experimental practices engage with materiality in specific ways. These works explore incidental viewpoints, suspended moments, constructed environments, cultural memory and repetitive processes. The artists in the exhibition investigate the temporal in terms of making and experiencing art in various modes – installation, sculpture, video, sound and works on paper. Through these material engagements, the artists question and re-imagine ways of connecting in the contemporary world, drawing together considerations of humour, history, politics, nature and everyday life. This exhibition was part of the 2014 Brisbane Experimental Art Festival, held at the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts.
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Essa dissertação é uma escrita performática que procura entender a arte como elemento para enxergar melhor o cotidiano; é um conjunto de observações e reflexões sobre trabalhos que lidam com regras autoimpostas pelos artistas; uma explanação sobre jogos que mudam os caminhos do cotidiano, transformando o olhar e a sensibilidade. Ações de artistas como Sophie Calle, Tracey Emin, Marina Abramovic, Tania Bruguera, entre outros, são analisados, junto a uma descrição e exposição dos trabalhos desenvolvidos pela própria autora. O capítulo I é dedicado aos modos como a fotografia serve às ações performáticas, a partir da exposição do trabalho Lhôtel, de Sophie Calle. O capítulo II pensa o lugar dos afetos na arte, como eles fazem parte da composição de trabalhos artísticos. O terceiro é um olhar sobre a exposição Cuide de você, de Sophie Calle, para refletir sobre o livro no campo expandido do espaço de exposição. No capítulo final, trabalhos das artistas cariocas Caroline Valansi e Julia Debasse, próximas da autora, são analisados, instigando o pensamento sobre como a proximidade entre artistas pode gerar criações artísticas
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O estudo desenvolvido nesta Tese de Doutorado trata da análise crítica da estética dos conceitos: forma, tectônica, funcionalidade, semiótica e afetuosidade, no âmbito da arquitetura, no programa de museus de arte contemporânea e centros culturais. Os museus de arte contemporânea e centros culturais, estudos de caso, selecionados para nossa Tese de Doutorado foram inaugurados na década de 1990. Como segue: Centro Cultural Jean-Marie Tijibaou (Nova Caledônia, França), de Renzo Piano; Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Naoshima (Japão), de Tadao Ando; Museu Guggenheim Bilbao (Espanha), de Frank O. Gehry; Museu de Arte Contemporânea Fundação Serralves (Portugal), de Álvaro Siza Vieira; Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Niterói (Brasil), de Oscar Niemeyer; Fundació Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona (Espanha), de Richard Meier; Museu de Arte Contemporânea Carré d'Art de Nimes (França), de Norman Foster; Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Lyon (França), de Renzo Piano; Centro Cultural Consonni (Espanha), ausência de um arquiteto autor do projeto. Tanto os estudos de caso como os arquitetos, autores dos projetos, são considerados de destaque no panorama da arquitetura internacional erudita contemporânea. Os teóricos que forneceram a fundamentação conceitual deste estudo multidisciplinar são, em primeiro lugar, o Professor Catedrático Luiz Felipe Baêta Neves Flores (Transdisciplinaridade) além da Professora Catedrática Maria Luisa Amigo Fernández de Arroyabe (Ócio Estético) e ainda, os também importantes, Manuel Cuenca Cabeza (Ócio Humanista), Charles Jencks e Gonçalo Miguel Furtado Cardoso Lopes (Crítica de Arquitetura), Jesús Pedro Lorente, Chris van Uffelen e Roberto Segre (Museus de Arte Contemporânea).