The inaugural circuit of the event took place this Saturday,
July 22, at 3:00 p.m., starting at the Biblioteca Lúcio Craveiro da Silva. The
circuit toured the following places: 3:30 pm in the Roman Baths of Alto da
Cividade; 16h00 in the Palace of Raio; 4:30 p.m. in the Livraria 100 Page; 17:00
in the Gallery Mestre Alberto Vieira; 17:30 in the House of the Riddles; 18h00
in the Castle Building; 18h30 in the Museum of the Image and 19h00 in the
Gallery of the Old Station CP.
#sculptor #manuelpereiradasilva #artblog #contemporaryartblog #art #abstractart #abstractsculpture #artexhibition #artist #contemporaryart #contemporarysculpture #sculpture
Monday, July 24, 2017
Sunday, July 23, 2017
ART-MAP inauguration ceremony at the Lúcio Craveiro Library
Braga
ART-MAP inauguration ceremony at the Lúcio Craveiro Library
Art-Map "Thinking
Baroque" is an artistic project
that aims to map Portugal with art. The project organizes annual exhibitions of
large-scale contemporary art in different cities, inviting Portuguese and
foreign artists, known and emerging, to fascinate with the authenticity of the
localities, to live the history and to exhibit in the best galleries.
This year, from July 22 to September 9, Art-Map presents
itself in Braga with 270 works in nine historical buildings of the city:
paintings, sculptures, installations, photography and video art, sound art and
artists' books. The event also includes several artistic residencies,
conferences with artists, workshops, a performance by the Spanish theatrical
duo Balázs Várnai and Mercé de Rande and a concert of the legendary Wheat Man.
The 80 participating artists were selected from 311 proposals
received to exhibit in Braga and are representatives of 21 countries, including,
in addition to the EU, Israel, India, Dubai, USA, Cuba, Canada, Brazil and
Costa Rica. Among them are Portuguese artists such as Alberto Vieira, Carlos
Araújo, Carlos Teixeira, Costa Araújo, Patrícia Ferreira and Manuel Pereira da
Silva.
"Thinking
Baroque" was the challenge proposed to the
artists to revitalize in their creations the motives of the baroque, studying
the style and its concepts and how it can be manifested in contemporaneity.
This Festival-Route of the Arts invites visitors to be guided
by the map and, one day, to visit the nine spaces in the city center, taking
advantage of the contemporary art exhibition curated by Madina Ziganshina.
Labels:
Art Blog,
Art Books,
ART-MAP,
Exhibition,
Manuel Pereira da Silva
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
ART-MAP in Braga
Sculptures by Manuel Pereira da Silva exhibited in the
entrance hall at the Palácio do Raio in Braga.
Monday, July 17, 2017
Invitation for the inauguration of ART-MAP in Braga
We have a pleasure to invite all the admirers
of the artwork of Manuel Pereira da Silva for the Inauguration Party, which
will take place on July 22, at 15h, starting at the exposition hall of the
Library Lúcio Craveiro, the ceremony will visit all the exhibition venues.
Monday, July 03, 2017
'International Art Exhibition', thinking the Baroque "Braga summer of 2017"
Four sculptures of Manuel Pereira da Silva were
selected to participate in the 'International Art Exhibition', thinking the
Baroque "Braga summer of 2017", which will run from July 21 to
September 9, organized by ART-MAP and Braga Municipal Council.
The event will include such landmark places as
the famous Palácio do Raio (Gallery of Misericórdia), Museum of the Image,
Gallery of the Station, INATEL Building, Centésima Pàgina (creative bookstore),
Library Lúcio Craveiro and a private gallery of Mestre Alberto Vieira. These
authentic historic buildings, testimonies of original Portuguese baroque now welcome
contemporary art.
This year the project received 311 proposals
with about 820 artworks, about 65 artists were selected to for the exhibition
or for interventions/conferences
Partner institutions:
INATEL of Braga
FLUP (Faculty of Letters of University of
Porto)
23 Miles – a cultural transformation project of
the municipality of Ílhavo
Braga Jazz School
Gallery of Mestre Alberto Vieira
Saturday, June 10, 2017
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Monday, March 20, 2017
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Saturday, December 03, 2016
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Wednesday, November 09, 2016
Friday, November 04, 2016
Wednesday, November 02, 2016
Monday, October 24, 2016
Friday, June 24, 2016
Friday, March 25, 2016
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Nuno Crespo
Nuno Crespo, in ípsilon, the best 2014
In 2014, there was an insistence on anthological
exhibition and a shift of attention in the works for attention on the artist.
Arguably the many levels and this year will be marked
by the end of BES and for any consequences that end. In the visual arts the
bank's failure brought the end of Avenue 211, one studios and exhibition space
with outstanding quality, diversity and where they could watch the remarkable
exhibition that hardly find another context to develop.
What prevails is the crisis and in this scenario the
question that more recurrently all ask is: how long? And this is not only a
question for the recovery of health and dynamism of the art market, but
essentially a question by another institutional context in which works, authors
and public can relate to a freer way, diverse and risky. And one of the
expressions of this lack of risk is the lack of group exhibitions, research,
where monographic attention on the authors gives way to the construction of a
thought to and from unique works of art.
There are known exceptions in other geographies of art
and the world are brought to debate, but in general we are witnessing a shift
of attention in the works for attention on the artist and an insistence on
anthological exhibition, in affirming the authority of an author, in
confirmation of a route.
This is not to diminish the individual authors and the
key role that some of them have to get through their works, brighten any time
and a generation together with his afflictions and transformations, but it is
to note the domain of a typology expository and draw consequences. This is a
situation to which all contribute - newspapers and their idea of information,
criticism, the directions of museums and art centers and the predominance of
the statistical analyzes, their obsession with the public as the main criterion
of cultural management and programming etc. - And where predominates the
prejudice of success: the exhibition spaces are now places of the success
stories of where they are absent experimentation, research, exploratory
projects and the risk associated with them.
The first consequence of this transformation is that
the art exhibition are today mainly reflects the market dynamics and not
expression of the uniqueness of artistic proposals, nor does it materialize
lines of thinking about reality, which is questioned, investigates and attempts
to change . And often driven by strong financial constraint, it is the market
that enables exhibitions, are their agents that through generous sponsorships
allow and enable exhibitions, catalogs pay, offer works in return for the promotion
and enhancement of certain set of artists. And the exhibits that require more
research, more time, greater risks are placed second and forgotten. It is the
predominance of the successful artist (where the success criteria are many and
varied) and the absence of exposures to think our present condition, i.e.
exhibits that without security and without the guarantees of art history, of
its established events and away from the main protagonists to risk thinking the
paradoxes of everyday life.
In an important text Alison Gingeras, known historian
of American art, said a major art magazine, ArtForum, about an artist: as far
as thinking about his works, they are immune to all that they say about,
because the person who through the mythology about him forged and succeeded,
managed to make his works indifferent to any dispute and thereby ensure the
history of Olympus a prominent place for all his work. The text of Gingeras is
about Jeff Koons, but it serves here as an illustration and symptom of
displacement of the attention we have been describing in which the authors put
under his shadow his work and thus the eclipse.
Labels:
Art Blog,
Nuno Crespo
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Martha Rosler
Martha Rosler, was 20 when the twentieth century came
in the 1960s attended the transition from what was left of the modern world and
the new contemporary world. Change after change. "If we want some kind of
revolution, we have to do manifestations, be out there, to organize ourselves,
we devote ourselves." And this is not even activism. It is
"citizenship," said to the Portuguese newspaper Público in an
interview on the sidelines of the Future Forum in Oporto, where he was guest
lecturer.
She began his lecture by explaining that, in the
1940s, when Jackson Pollock was doing his abstract paintings, or the artists or
the art public could imagine the intrinsic link between their world and the
major international financial flows.
How Pollock worked the screens on the floor, had
anything to do with the idea of territory and territorial possession. Indeed,
the fact that he give up the perspective - that was what made his painting -
binds with the history of land ownership. There is this and the most obvious: the
relationship with money, which intensified a lot, because it has become much
more visible. Pollock was part of the first generation of artists in the world
financial markets had focused in the United States and had become completely
hypertrophic. All this and the emergence of celebrity culture weighed much
about the abstract expressionists, most of which were part of a culture of
bohemian outsider vaguely impoverished.
I think we can say that abstract expressionism was
destroyed by his relationship with money and fame. Still say that there is a
reason for the transcendence model he proposed can’t legitimately remain in the
postwar world: the economy. So we know more [about the relationship between art
and money] and the pressure intensified vastly. Everyone who now has something
to do with the art world, even at the popular level, realize the connection of
this world to the world of finance, especially in the United States. As someone
said, we have reached a time when some of the artists are as or richer as their
collectors. It's not exactly like that because some of the patrons of art are
immeasurably rich, but obviously there are artists who have become extremely
rich. The 'financialization' art shot up to the top of the roof [media] that
makes the art world. In publications [reference] as the New York Times auctions
are so history as [the exhibition] ... It's like professional sports - what you
really hear is money, who cost much, who is doing as what the great players got
the best contract and how many millions of euros or dollars a year makes.
The art world has become a sort of big annual sprint,
the hundred meter hurdles to see who gets the better end quoted market. It is quantification
and 'financialization' of anything we considered before being out of the
valuation of goods system [whose value depends on the laws of supply and
demand] and we now know to be completely inside. This started happening in the
last four or five decades. We can’t pretend it is new. But reached an
unprecedented point. Let's look at a more popular reference - the movies:
nowadays it is thought a movie ticket for their results. If a movie is a ticket
success, people did not even bother to mention the fact that whether or not a
good movie. Maybe later in the specialized column [in the press], but the big
immediate step is always, "No. 1 at the box office."
The painting was an art easel. After it became too big
to be on the easel. What Pollock did no one had done before was to make the
paint a representation of the landscape but in landscape. And there is a
certain irony in the fact that the canvas becomes a territory for action
[Action Painting] and this is a good window through which to see the
relationship between art and power. The lieutenant’s land can’t set your
property without a metric system. Nor can represent the landscape to look real
without perspective. Now, the history of painting is the history of the
development and the rejection of perspective - because the abstraction is the
rejection of perspective, the choice of two-dimensionality, still, ironically,
on territory. This is especially ironic in the case of Pollock, because he
paints with the canvas on the floor. His canvas is an area where we have come a
territory. And even when he, in the end, to put back the canvas vertically [the
wall] everyone realizes how there has been reached "meaning" derived
from the horizontal. Such as land tenure is the basis of capital accumulation,
these paintings also become a principle of capital accumulation. At the time, no
one was thinking about it, but I can’t help thinking.
The transcendence model proposed by Abstract
Expressionism could not take place in the world and in the post-war economy,
because artists depend on the ideas of its patrons. That's why I often speak in
the development of the bourgeois public from the late nineteenth century and
the theories that link the abstract, symbolism, etc., as a way to escape the
issues of realism, which led to the representation of the working classes and
militancy of the working class. Of course, the artists did a lot of that, but
mainly in the design and engraving. And those who did not turn very well paid
for it by its patrons, who actually wanted was to see other images.
The transcendence model corresponds to the fact that
the artists show us another world. It was a very important theory. But at the
time the center of the art world moves from Paris to New York, in the 1940s... The
patronage in the United States never was very interested in intellectual
specializations or representation theories, just want things very immediate. As
Rockefeller once said about Rothko [Mark's painting] - and I paraphrase, offers
a relaxing space to tired businessman. This is perfect! The space of
abstraction is a view of another world, without any specifics. But this could
not last, because art has become appreciated in a way more massif. When it
became a commodity, an expensive commodity, Jackson Pollock appeared in Life
magazine cover. Life magazine was practically in every American home! Was in
doctors' offices - was everywhere. Defined the image of the world. Before
television be in the home of everyone, was there a Life. And in case one day
appeared this artist who was dethrone Picasso as the most important artist of
the twentieth century. Pollock eventually died drunk in a very short time after
car accident and this idea that art is supposed to be about something else,
mysterious, transcendent ... It's a little Catholic doctrine, this. I do not
know...
The young artists today see themselves as producers of
tradable goods. Some project a successful career of about 10 years. It's like
the millionaires.com: had an idea that was purchased, if
reformed and had a happy life somewhere not to do anything that they did not
want. This is what many young people think of elite schools, for which they
paid a lot of money. They think: make a fortune and
disappear overnight.
Labels:
Art Blog,
Martha Rosler
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