News

KERLIN GALLERY at

ABU DHABI ART FAIR 2011

16 November 2011 - 19 November 2011

Abu Dhabi Art, Saadiyat Island´s Cultural District, Abu Dhabi


Kerlin Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Sean Scully at Abu Dhabi Art. 

Sean Scully is widely regarded as one of the most important abstract painters of his generation.  The development of Scully’s signature style of abstraction, ‘horizontal and verical stripes’ can be traced back to his first visit to Morocco in 1969 and the impact and importance of this visit is documented in his monograph; ‘Sean Scully’, by Maurice Poirier, Hudson Hills Press, New York, 1990 and in the 1992 BBC documentary ‘Artist’s Journey: Sean Scully on Henri Matisse’.

Since then Scully has revisited North Africa many times and  evidence of the direct and fundamental infuence that Arab and Islamic culture has had on Scully’s painting practice can also be found in the  title of such paintings  as ‘Morocco’, 1969, ‘Araby’, 1981, ‘Fes’ 1981,, ‘Mata-Mata’, 1991, ‘Taza’, 1992 and ‘Tetuan’,1991-93 The most recent of these is the majestic  double triptych ‘Tin Mal, 2010’ that will be premiered at Abu Dhabi Art 2011 


Tin Mal

‘Tin Mal (2010) is the second triptych I have painted as a series of major works, dedicated to important spiritual sites. The first was Iona (2004-06), which is now in the Philadelphia Museum. This will be a continuing project.

Tin Mal is a very important site on the Atlas Mountains in Morocco. I visited the village twice in 1996 when I stayed in the mountains. I took many photographs of the mosque, which was under restoration, and so open to the public. The site, the mosque and the village, plus its location had a significant effect on me. I wanted to remember it with a major rhythmical work. Which is also accompanied by a triptych of pastels, Tin Mal (2011), which remind me of the dry sand surfaces of the architecture, and it’s silence.’


Sean Scully
24 December 2010
 

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Tin Mal

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Tin Mal

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Tin Mal

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Tin Mal

 

Liam Gillick

Goeteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art

10 September 2011 - 13 November 2011

Various venues throughout Gothenburg, Sweden

International artist Liam Gillick will be showing at this year's Goeteborg Biennial 2011.

Construction of One is a manuscript that Liam Gllick has worked on since 2005, through a series of texts, exhibitions and films. Included in the manuscript are reflections on the revised working practices deployed by Volvo in the early 1970s. In the manuscript, Liam Gillick avoids documentary strategies in favour of interwoven narratives, speculation and eco-political fantasies. Based on these, he presents a sound piece inspired by the early factory radio programs as well as a series of readings.

goteborg.biennal.org/en/the-biennial-2011/artists/

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Mirrored Image: A Volvo Bar, 2008; Lapdog of the Bourgeoisie

 

Phil Collins

La Chanson

21 July 2011 - 13 November 2011

Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo, Seville

Phil Collins, amongst others, presents in this group exhibition, La Chanson, which brings different visual and sound installations together, takes its name from the French musical movement of the 1950s and 60s led by Edith Piaf, Jacques Brel, Boris Vian, Serge Gainsbourg, Juliette Gréco, Georges Brassans and Léo Ferré, among others.

While the influence of rock music on contemporary art has been studied in a number of exhibitions in the past, the contribution of this show lies in its way of re-evaluating the crucial importance of popular music movements-and especially of Chanson-in the changes occurring in the second half of the 20th century. These changes are, on the one hand, cultural, involving individual and group habits, and ways of experiencing sexuality, of dressing, of relating to other people, of thinking and of sharing certain moments. And also of a social nature, be it political (events triggering or associated with particular workers' struggles and collective reactions, for example) or economic (the birth and development of an exceedingly powerful cultural industry over the years, as well as the breeding ground and subsequent propagation of immaterial capitalism).

As a group exhibition what La Chanson sets out to investigate, then, is how to combine the personal and the political through a musical format-the pop song-reused as an expedient by numerous contemporary artists.

www.juntadeandalucia.es/cultura/caac/english/exh/projects/frame_chan11.htm

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dunia tak akan mendengar

 

Sean Scully

EROI (HEROES)

19 May 2011 - 06 November 2011

GAM Civic Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art,
Turin, Italy

Sean Scully is among a number of highly acclaimed international artists presenting work in the exhibition “Eroi (Heroes)” curated by Danilo Eccher and with contributions from Alessandro Rabottini, which opens 19 May at the GAM Civic Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art.

The exhibition explores the work of artists who carry out daring choices to the point of becoming the carriers of new social values through their own art. The selection has deliberately included several impressive large-scale works, some of which have been specifically conceived for this exhibition. In the postmodern age—which is often associated with the collapse of great ideals and established ideologies—Art becomes itself an act of individual resistance, gathering its own strength from the accumulation of knowledge. Today, the “heroic” act must thus be re-elaborated within an analytic scenario, in which heroism can not just be interpreted as the solitary struggle of one man: any sensational deed is immediately absorbed as news item, or it rapidly becomes a television event swallowed by the great machine of global communication. Heroism is thus brought back to its original qualities—will and ambition—and it takes on the task to rebuild a new ethics and new models, as possible social alternatives.

Invited artists Marina Abramović, Pawel Althamer; Georg Baselitz; Christian Boltanski; Louise Bourgeois; Francesco Clemente; Latifa Echakhch; General Idea; Ilya and Emilia Kabakov; Anselm Kiefer; Sigalit Landau; Mark Manders; Mario Merz; Mike Nelson; Hermann Nitsch; Michelangelo Pistoletto; Pietro Roccasalva; Jenny Saville; Sean Scully; Thomas Schütte; Cy Twombly; Francesco Vezzoli; Danh Vo.

www.contemporaryart.com/gam-torino/eroi-heroes/

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Sean Scully (installation view)

 

KERLIN GALLERY at

VUE: National Contemporary Art Fair

04 November 2011 - 06 November 2011

Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin

Special Preview: Thursday 3 November 2011, 6 to 9pm

Kerlin Gallery is delighted to take part in the inaugural Vue: National Contemporary Art Fair, taking place at the RHA Gallery in Dublin from Friday 4 November - Sunday 6 November 2011.

Join us at Booth 19 in the Charles Gallagher Gallery, where we will present work by Dorothy Cross, Mark Francis, David Godbold, Elizabeth Magill and Brian Maguire. 

Vue brings together over 15 contemporary art galleries from Dublin and Belfast under one roof to showcase new and recent work by Ireland’s leading artists.

Participating galleries include Rubicon Gallery, Kerlin Gallery, Jorgensen Fine Art, the Peppercanister Gallery, Graphic Studio Gallery, Taylor Galleries, The Green on Red Gallery, The Paul Kane Gallery, Oliver Sears Gallery, Oonagh Young Gallery, Cross Gallery, Molesworth Gallery, Stoney Road Press, Talbot Gallery & Studios the Fenderesky Gallery in Belfast, as well as the Irish Museum of Modern Art. This art fair was previously part of the Interiors Show at the RDS which takes place each May.

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House for Singing

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Bowl with Band

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Fracture

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Whale Flower I

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...Wolfed down a light yogurt

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Localise

 

David Godbold and William McKeown

Twenty at IMMA

27 May 2011 - 31 October 2011

Irish Museum of Modern Art
Kilmainham
Dublin 8

As part of the celebrations marking the Irish Museum of Modern Art’s 20th anniversary, Twenty, an exhibition featuring twenty artists, opens to the public on the 28 May 2011. The exhibition presents a younger generation of Irish and international artists whose work is seen increasingly on the international stage. Commonalties and dialogues appear between the artworks in Twenty, but the exhibition seeks to allow sufficient space that each artists’ work may be viewed as an individual practice.

The show includes installations, photography, painting and sculpture, and featured are artworks from IMMA’s Collection by Orla Barry, Stephen Brandes, Nina Canell, Fergus Feehily, Patrick M FitzGerald, John Gerrard, David Godbold, Katie Holten, Paddy Jolley, Nevan Lahart, Niamh McCann, Willie McKeown, Perry Ogden, Liam O'Callaghan, Niamh O'Malley, Alan Phelan, Garrett Phelan, Eva Rothschild and Corban Walker. The exhibition also features a borrowed piece by Irish artist Sean Lynch.

Many of the Irish artists, or artists based in Ireland during their career, now live in New York, Berlin, Vienna, London; and it is interesting to reflect on the idea of how nationality is no longer bound by geography. Also, the significance of IMMA’s Artists’ Residency Programme established in 1994 is evident as many of the artists included in Twenty have participated in the programme at some point, such as Orla Barry, David Godbold, Liam O’Callaghan, Niamh O’Malley, Sean Lynch, Paddy Jolley, Katie Holten, Nevan Lahart, Alan Phelan and Garrett Phelan.

www.imma.ie/en/page_212365.htm

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William McKeown: Tomorrow

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David Godbold: 'Increase the Peace'

 

Liam Gillick

A Game of War Structure

07 September 2011 - 31 October 2011

The Courtyard, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin

British artist Liam Gillick presents a site-specific work especially commissioned for IMMA in the form of a newly-designed version of The Game of War (Le Jeu de la Guerre). In 1977, the French Situationist Guy Debord founded the company Strategic and Historical Games, with the goal of producing the Kriegspiel, a ‘game of war’. Inspired by military theory and the European campaigns of Napoleon, Debord’s game is a chess-variant played by two opposing players on a game board of 500 squares arranged in rows of 20 by 25 squares.

The game is located in the public areas of IMMA adjacent to the courtyard. An instruction booklet and the game pieces may be borrowed from the Museum. In addition, specialist gamers will be invited to play during the course of the installation.

This exhibition has been made possible by an anonymous philanthropic donation. It has received a stipend from the American Friends of the Arts in Ireland (via philanthropist Cormac O’Malley) towards an accompanying lecture.

www.imma.ie/en/page_212423.htm

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A Game of War Structure

 

Dorothy Cross, Felim Egan, Sean Scully

Gravity

15 July 2011 - 29 October 2011

Crawford Art Gallery, Cork 

The exhibition presents over 50 works by 29 celebrated artists from Dorothy Cross who presents a new sculptural work, Whale (2011), that physically embraces the materiality and suspension of gravity, to Marina Abramović and Ulay´s 16mm film Rest Energy (1980); which is abundant with relational gravity.

Spanning several mediums of painting, drawing, photography, film, print and performance, this show provides a fertile area within which practitioners explore aspects of gravity.

The idea of gravity as both an actual physical force, and also a metaphor for living, is pervasive. People often refer to the ‘gravity´ of a situation, while the term gravitas is used to describe a somewhat ponderous dignity. However, the way in which artists, both historic and contemporary, work with this physical reality reveals much about how the world is viewed, experienced and interpreted.

There will also be a unique off-site video installation of Dorothy Cross's Stalactite, at Heineken Ireland, the former Beamish & Crawford Brewery, Cork, from 15 - 22 July, daily screenings from 6 - 9pm.


 

www.crawfordartgallery.ie/ComingExhibs.html

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Dorothy Cross: Whale

 

In Search of the Miraculous: Ten Days of Film, Video and Photography

17 October 2011 - 28 October 2011

Crawford Art Gallery, Cork

Guest-curated by Rachael Thomas, Senior Curator: Head of Exhibitions, Irish Museum of Modern Art

In Search of the Miraculous: ten days of film, video and photography is a group exhibition of Irish and International artists set in the historic site of the former Beamish and Crawford Brewery in Cork. The exhibition presents works in the medium of film, video and photography and reflects the artists’ engagement with the idea of the miraculous exploring their search for the inexplicable in uncanny, humorous and often disturbing ways. The works vary from conceptual and romantic to poetical and highly personal.

The exhibition features Stalactite (2010) a video by the internationally renowned Irish artist, Dorothy Cross. The work shows the Great Stalactite of Doolin Cave, County Clare, which has grown over the course of a million years in its black chamber. A boy soprano stands beneath the stalactite, singing nonverbal sounds in a curious juxtaposition of the paces of human and geological time.

In association with Gravity exhibition, 15 July – 29 October.

Exhibiting Artists:
Bas Jan Ader, Dorothy Cross, Keren Cytter, Clare Langan, A.R., Anri Sala, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Ryan Trecartin

www.crawfordartgallery.ie/exhibitionsupcomingAnswerMe.html

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Stalactite

 

Kerlin Gallery

Frieze Art Fair 2011

13 October 2011 - 16 October 2011

Booth E13
Regent's Park, London


We are delighted to announce that at this year's Frieze Art Fair 2011, we will present a different booth each day.

Day 1:
Wednesday, 12 October, preview day
DAVID GODBOLD | SIOBHÁN HAPASKA
 
Day 2:
Thursday, 13 October 
DOROTHY CROSS | EOIN MC HUGH
 
Day 3:
Friday, 14 October
MARK GARRY | CALLUM INNES
 
Day 4:
Saturday, 15 October
JAKI IRVINE | SAM KEOGH
 
Day 5:
Sunday, 16 October
MERLIN JAMES


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The World at Daybreak

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System

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Before the page is turned

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Monuments for Subjects to Come

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Things Happen (Nightfall version)

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Mark Garry

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5.30 AM

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Untitled No. 64

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Shark-Heart Submarine

 

Phil Collins

Ostalgia

14 July 2011 - 25 September 2011

New Museum, New York  

This summer, the New Museum in New York will present “Ostalgia,” an exhibition that brings together the work of more than fifty artists from twenty countries across Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Republics. Contesting the format of a conventional geographical survey, the exhibition will include works produced by Western European artists who have depicted the reality and the myth of the East. “Ostalgia” is curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Associate Director and Director of Exhibitions, and will be on view at the New Museum from July 14 through September 25, 2011, occupying all three gallery floors.

www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/440

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Phil Collins: marxism today

 

Barrie Cooke at IMMA

14 June 2011 - 18 September 2011

Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin

Organised to mark Barrie Cooke’s 80th birthday, this exhibition includes some 70 paintings and sculptural works from the early 1960s to the present. It draws from the Museum’s own significant holding of his works, including Slow Dance Forest Floor , 1976, Megaceros Hibernicus , 1983 and Electric Elk, 1996, as well as loans from various private and institutional collections.

Nature in its infinite variety and irresistible flux are Cooke’s chosen subject matter, as well as the nude figure.  Although primarily a painter, the exhibition includes examples of a series that he produced during the 1970s of 'bone boxes' in perspex. The show also feature collaborations through the years with a number of prominent poets, including Seamus Heaney, the British Poet Laureate Ted Hughes, and John Montague, all of whom have shared his fascination with the elemental.

The exhibition is organised by IMMA and is curated by Karen Sweeney. It will travel to the Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, in November.

www.imma.ie/en/page_212319.htm

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Megaceros Hibernicus

 

Interlude

Aspects of Irish Landscape Painting

22 July 2011 - 29 August 2011

Douglas Hyde Gallery (Gallery 1), Dublin

This exhibition – the first such show to take place at the Douglas Hyde Gallery since 1990 – is an informal gathering of Irish paintings that have been inspired, in various ways, by landscape. Intended to have an air of lightness and ease, it is also a reflection of darker, more ambiguous, moods and currents in the world.

To give the exhibition a particular focus, artists were asked to propose two or three works that might throw some light on the idea of ‘liminality’ – in-between places, edges, thresholds, points at which something is transformed – and the final image was chosen from their suggestions.

Artists taking part in the exhibition:
Michael Canning, Fergus Feehily, David Godbold, Patrick Hall, Elizabeth Magill, Eoin McHugh, Stephen McKenna, William McKeown, Paul McKinley, Nick Miller, Ciarán Murphy, Gavin O’Curry, Mairead O’hEocha, Kathy Prendergast, Marc Reilly, Tony Swain

www.douglashydegallery.com/exhibition.php?intProjectID=152

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Stephen McKenna: Lighthouse in Mist

 

Paul Seawright

Detonating Rough Ground

21 July 2011 - 27 August 2011

Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast

A photographic exhibition that brings together artists whose work, in differing ways, engages with the experiential representation of trauma and memory and the sensory aspects of conflict as laid into ‘haunted’ rubble.  The exhibition includes new work by Paul Seawright and Sophie Ristelheuber.

It has been stated that Paul Seawright’s( N.Ireland) new photographic works in ’Volunteer’ ( 2011), shot in the USA,  bring together the two major themes of his practice, contemporary cities and the representation of conflict . The exhibition will allow for examination of how ‘Volunteer’ extends his previous work, interrogating how contemporary conflict might be represented at a distance from the battlefield without  ‘… recourse to drama-centric imagery ‘  in selected US sites where the rebounding trauma and tension of the war in Afghanistan is registered. He presents the landscape of the American city as a type of battlefield where the spectre of war in the Middle East is tangible on every street corner, college campus, town square and front yard.

‘Volunteer’ is a survey of sorts, landscapes from today’s fraying, centreless post 9-11 North American cities. Each photograph made at the location of amilitary recruiting station, where a different battle is being fought – to find young men and women to volunteer for service in Afghanistan.  These new works comment not just on the ongoing war and the battle to recruit new soldiers, but the contemporary North American city, a landscape littered with thrift stores, gun dealerships, fast food outlets, nightclubs, car dealerships, strip malls and pawn shops.  It is in these spaces on the margins of small towns and cities that the recruiters move amongst the unemployed, immigrants, ethnic minorities and students to find the volunteers of tomorrow.

www.ormeaubaths.co.uk/exhibitions/current-exhibition-3/

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Container, from the Volunteer series

 

The Golden Bough: Sean Shanahan

Oasery, Tracery

19 May 2011 - 21 August 2011

Dublin City Gallery, The Hugh Lane, Dublin

Sean Shanahan's installation for the Golden Bough is neither a painting nor a sculpture, but an open space: an interludium inviting reflection upon the social function and authority of the museum and the canons it values. Painting and drawing, placing and framing are the nuts and bolts of his response to gallery 8.

Shanahan’s work is concerned with foreground and background, light and colour and the power of colour quantities to morph the apprehension of space. The installation creates an unbounded wall-painting that is both parasite in and protagonist to its cultural and architectural setting. Each gains meaning according to the other and this reciprocity mirrors our potential dialogue with the artwork. An understandable aesthetic pleasure is thus evoked but the de-materialised nature of the work also interrogates the exhibiting function of the institution and its values.

www.hughlane.ie/forthcoming/342-the-golden-bough-sean-shanahan

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Sean Shanahan

 

Sean Shanahan

In Light of the Cross

16 April 2011 - 10 August 2011

Lercaro Museum, Bologna, Italy

In Light of the Cross: Ancient and Contemporary Art in comparison, which opens Saturday, April 16, 2011 at the Foundation Lercaro by Andrea Dall’Asta SI and Fabrizio Lollini, Ede Palmieri, Elena Pontiggiae Francesco Tedeschi, dedicated to the cross, the symbol par excellence of the Christian, wants to think about an issue that has fueled countless reflections in the history of philosophical and theological.

Originally a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, the symbol of the cross has since characterized the European culture, placing the roots of Western civilization. The exhibition shows works by contemporary artists such as Kengiro Azuma, Lawrence Carroll, Peter Coleman, Mario Fallini, Jannis Mirko Marchelli, Marcello Mondazzi, Hidetoshi Nagasawa, Mimmo Paladino, Arnulf Rainer, Nicola Samorì, Sean Shanahan, Ettore Spalletti.

Most of the works have been specially made for the exhibition. The works of these artists are displayed together with some of them authors of the last century in the collection Lercaro as Floriano Bodini, Vittorio Tavernari, to which was added the beautiful etching by Georges Rouault, Christ en Croix (1936). The exhibition is complemented by some ancient works.

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In Light of the Cross

 

Dorothy Cross

Stalactite

15 July 2011 - 22 July 2011

Heineken Ireland, former Beamish and Crawford Brewery, Cork
Daily: 6 - 9 pm


The Crawford Art Gallery is pleased to announce a unique off-site video installation of Stalactite 2010 by Dorothy Cross at the old Malt Grain Store on the historic site of the former Beamish and Crawford Brewery, South Main Street, Cork.

The Malt Grain Store has never been accessed for an art installation and this project marks the Irish premiere of Stalactite (previously shown at Frith Street Gallery). Curated by Rachael Thomas, this site-specific project sets up a spatial and temporal dialogue between the building and the artwork.

Stalactite is a video of the Great Stalactite of Doolin Cave, County Clare, which has grown over the course of a million years in its black chamber. Here, a boy soprano stands beneath the spectral object, singing nonverbal sounds in a curious juxtaposition of the paces of human and geological time. The poetic outline of this work is the weight of time set seamlessly against the ethereal and material, all disseminated through this enigmatic work.

Cross’s work often examines the place of human beings within the natural world. Often using materials associated with the sea including pearls and shark skin, she makes objects that blur the boundaries of both territories.

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Stalactite

 

KERLIN GALLERY AT ART | 42 | BASEL

15 June 2011 - 19 June 2011

Kerlin Gallery is delighted to welcome you to our booth at this year's ART | 42 | BASEL, where we will present new work by Willie Doherty, Liam Gillick, Siobhán Hapaska, Callum Innes, Eoin Mc Hugh and Brian Maguire.

ART | 42 | BASEL 
HALLE 2.1 | BOOTH K9
15 - 19 June 2011

Open to invited guests, Tuesday 14 June 2011, 11am - 9pm.
Open to the general public, Wednesday 15 June to Sunday 19 June 2011, daily from 11am - 7pm.

www.artbasel-online.com/index.php5?id=162267&fid=809d93f7cfef804baf1404ded9bb9680&offset=0&highlight=kerlin&bc_id=be92b8aea94164a51a5ed48ec90b243c&compact=0&path=Home&Action=showCompany

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Brian Maguire: 'Heart of a Heartless World'

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Eoin McHugh: 'Detail'

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Willie Doherty: 'Dead Pool II'

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Siobhan Hapaska: 'a great miracle needs to happen there'

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Callum Innes: 'Untitled No. 48'

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Liam Gillick: 'REGISTERED EXPANSION'

 

Elizabeth Magill

Green Light Wanes...

25 March 2011 - 19 June 2011

Towner
Devonshire Park
College Road
Eastbourne
East Sussex
BN21 4JJ

The shadowy terrain of memory and protean landscape of thought is evoked in the UK premiere of a new exhibition by Elizabeth Magill, Green Light Wanes... Towner, the award-winning contemporary art museum for the South East, is pleased to announce the first UK showing of this new body of work by Magill, who also features in the Towner Collection. Each painting is a dense world, its landscapes flickering in and out of view, mirroring the way we all see the world through the filter of personal memories and changing emotions.

Relatively small in scale compared to previous work, Magill’s new paintings are an exciting departure in the evolution of her practice. Narrative and form slip in and out of recognition and focus, creating a series of sweetly melancholic and compelling ‘mindscapes’; a hybrid of glimmering abstraction, haunting figuration, romantic landscape, and an ever creative and engaging play between depiction and suggestion.

www.eastbourne.gov.uk/towner/

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Flying Car Pet

 

Dorothy Cross at Pangolin London

Women Make Sculpture

19 May 2011 - 18 June 2011

Pangolin London

Despite the huge success of a handful of sculptors such as Barbara Hepworth, Elisabeth Frink and Louise Bourgeois, women still find themselves under-represented in major ‘blockbuster’ shows. Coinciding with the centenary year of International Women’s Day, Pangolin London will celebrate female achievement in sculpture with the exhibition Women Make Sculpture, an all female show highlighting the diversity and creativity of women sculptors today. The exhibition will bring into the spotlight a number of established female artists including Dorothy Cross, Ann Christopher and Alison Wilding as well as emerging names such as Polly Morgan, Abigail Fallis, Rose Gibbs and Briony Marshall.

Women Make Sculpture provides an opportunity to focus on a selection of sculpture inspired by topical issues that concern women today such as war, mental health, sex, childbirth and science. Director of Pangolin London, Polly Bielecka, notes: “The exhibition is not intended to tackle gender superiority; rather it hopes to question whether female artists bring something different to contemporary British sculpture.”

www.pangolinlondon.com/exhibitions/women-make-sculpture

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Finger Crab

 

Willie Doherty

ANGRY: Young and Radical

22 January 2011 - 13 June 2011

Nederlands Fotomuseum
in Las Palmas Building
Wilhelminakade 332
NL-3072 AR Rotterdam

ANGRY focuses on the interpretation of the angry and obstinate adolescents. Protest, resistance and (radical) action in our society is shown from three different aspects: by the youth themselves, by the media and through the interpretation of artists and photographers.

What is radicalisation? Who is radical and who says so? Is radicalisation a threat to our society? 

In the exhibition ANGRY radicalism is shown from three different perspectives: by young people, by the media and through the eyes of artists. Among these artists are important (inter)national photographers, and filmmakers: Rineke Dijkstra, Willie Doherty, Joel Sternfeld and Allan Sekula. A series of video portraits show various generations of (ex)radicals who talk about their motives. ANGRY looks at the uncompromising power and idealism of youth as a driving force for changes in our society. The exhibition contains photo’s, video installations, web-based art, video portraits, photo’s and videos. The complete project ANGRY consists of this rich exhibition, the website a-n-g-r-y.nl, an educational program and several debates, films and lectures.

www.nederlandsfotomuseum.nl/component/option,com_nfm_agenda/task,view/id,276/Itemid,/lang,en/

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NON-SPECIFIC THREAT V (Nauseating Barbarity)

 

Willie Doherty

The Visitor

23 February 2011 - 05 June 2011

Gallery Eleven: The Screening Room
Dublin City Gallery
The Hugh Lane
Charlemont House
Parnell Square North
Dublin 1
Ireland

Following on from the screening of Michael Hamburger by Tacita Dean, the Gallery continues to showcase recent acquisitions in film and time based media.

First exhibited at the Douglas Hyde Gallery in 2008, The Visitor was shot on location in Belfast in early 2008 and revisits some of Doherty's recurrent themes and preoccupations with place, landscape and memory. In this piece the camera moves between the trees of a small forest and scrutinises the surfaces of a block of flats. The Visitor features an enigmatic figure whose intentions and origins are unclear. In addition a voiceover speculates about the role and nature of the unnamed visitor. 

The Visitor by Willie Doherty was acquired by Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane in 2010. At the Border II (Low Visibility) by Willie Doherty also part of the Hugh Lane's permanent collection is on view in Gallery 12

www.hughlane.ie/whats_on_detail.php?id=594

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The Visitor

 

Kerlin Gallery at ART HK 11

26 May 2011 - 29 May 2011

Kerlin Gallery, Dublin is delighted to participate for the first time at this year's ART HK 11, from 26 - 29 May 2011.

Hong Kong International Art Fair 2011
Booth 1H07
Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Centre
 


Exhibiting Artists:
Mark Francis, Liam Gillick, Elizabeth Magill, Isabel Nolan, Norbert Schwontkowski, Sean Scully and Hiroshi Sugimoto.


Opening Hours:
Thursday 26 May - Saturday 28 May: 12 noon - 7pm.
Sunday 29 May: 12 noon - 5pm

ART HK 11 is opened to invited guests on Wednesday 25 May.

www.hongkongartfair.com

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Liam Gillick: REGISTERED EXPANSION

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Mark Francis: Mimas

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Hiroshi Sugimoto: Black Sea, Inebolu

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Norbert Schwontkowski: Bass

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Isabel Nolan: Colourhole

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Elizabeth Magill: Localise

 

Liam Gillick | Lawrence Weiner

A syntax of dependency

03 February 2011 - 22 May 2011

MuHKA - Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen
Leuvenstraat 32
2000 Antwerpen
Belgium


Liam Gillick and Lawrence Weiner:
A syntax of dependency

A duplicate portrait of two influential artists both based in New York; one icon of conceptual art and one emblematic representative of the neoconceptual réveil of the nineties - and for both it is the first ambitious exhibition in Belgium for years.

Gillick and Weiner know each other for more than twenty years, and during this time have been involved in an intense intellectual and artistic dialogue; and it is M HKA's ambition to recreate that dialogue. 

www.muhka.be/toont_beeldende_kunst_detail.php?la=en&id=3060&subbase=komende&jaartal=

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A syntax of dependency

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A syntax of dependency

 

Sean Shanahan

Only Colour

11 June 2010 - 11 May 2011

Villa Mondolfo,
Como, 
Italy 

One of the most radical painters of his generation,'Only Colour' is Sean Shanahan's most recent exhibition.  

At the 17th century lakeside villa in the heart of Como, 'Only Colour' brings together for the first time selected paintings from the past ten years, with new projects on paper and four wallpaintings. This exhibition allows for seeing Shanahan's work in it's many different facets. A work of apparent reduction, the exhibition reveals the variety, complexities and subtlety of these, so called, limited means.

Seven galleries ranging from white cube to ornate stuccoed grandeur, the work is a spellbinding articulation of and in space. 'Only Colour' is the sixth in a series of prestigious annual exhibitions curated by the Di Santis family.

Sean Shanahan, 'Only Colour', Villa Mondolfo, Como, Italy until May 2011.

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Paul

 

Sean Scully

Works from the 1980s

29 January 2011 - 08 May 2011

Wilhelm-Hack-Museum
Berliner Strasse 23
D-67059 Ludwigshafen am Rhein



In the early 1980s, Scully re-introduced colour, space and texture through the application of multiple layers of paint and thereby added an expressive element to his work. He introduced relief elements in his paintings, broadening the expressive range of his work with a more emphatic, physical quality: 'I liked the idea of looking at a painting that you could not look at just from the front but had to move around.' At the same time stripes widen and become more pulsating, colour intensifies and black is often used to evoke feelings from solemn to sinister.

By the mid 1980s Scully had gained international recognition and many major museums began to acquire his paintings. This exhibition focuses on Scully's work from the 1980s, together with works on paper from the artist's own collection. This period has not been reflected in recent gallery exhibitions but holds a very special place in the development of his art.

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River

 

William McKeown

The Golden Bough

03 February 2011 - 01 May 2011

Dublin City Gallery
The Hugh Lane
Charlemont House
Parnell Square
Dublin 1
Ireland


William McKeown is highly regarded for his paintings, drawings, watercolours and constructions/installations that express his concern about humanity's ongoing relationship with nature both outside and within. For The Golden Bough McKeown will create a new installation titled 'The Waiting Room', focusing on the chapter between Heaven and Earth.

Originally from Tyrone, Northern Ireland, McKeown now lives and works in Edinburgh
.
 

www.hughlane.ie/whats_on_detail.php?id=596

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The Waiting Room, The Golden Bough

 

Sean Shanahan

Placery, Tracery

17 March 2011 - 28 April 2011

Dum Umeni / House of Art
Namesti Premysla Otakara II.38
370 01 Ceske Budejovice
Czech Republic

art.tvorba.com/dumumeni/en/vystavy/?idm=162

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Placery,Tracery

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Placery, Tracery

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Placery, Tracery

 

Siobhan Hapaska and Liam Gillick

MODERN BRITISH SCULPTURE

22 January 2011 - 07 April 2011

Royal Academy of Arts
Burlington House
Piccadilly
London W1J 0BD


Siobhan Hapaska will present work alongside other prestigious artists at the Royal Academy of Arts, the first exhibition for 30 years to examine British sculpture of the twentieth century. The show will represent a unique view of the development of British sculpture, exploring what we mean by the terms British and sculpture by bringing the two together in a chronological series of strongly themed galleries, each making its own visual argument.
  
The exhibition will take a fresh approach, replacing the traditional survey with a provocative set of juxtapositions that will challenge the viewer to make new connections and break the mould of old conceptions.
 
Through these and other works, the exhibition will examine British sculpture's dialogue within a broader international context, highlighting the ways in which Britain’s links with its Empire, continental Europe and the United States have helped shape an art that at its best is truly international in scope and significance.

www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibitions/modernbritishsculpture/

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Under Lying

 

Phil Collins

The Talent Show

12 December 2010 - 04 April 2011

MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Ave at the intersection of 46th Ave
Long Island City, NY 11101

Phil Collins is among the 18 artists who are presenting work in the 'The Talent Show' at MOMA's PS1. In recent years, television's reality shows and talent competitions have offered people a conflicted chance at fame, while various kinds of Web-based social media have pioneered new forms of communication that people increasingly use to perform their private lives as public theater. During the same period, governments worldwide have asserted vast new powers of surveillance, placing unwitting "participants" on an entirely different kind of stage.

Against this backdrop, The Talent Show examines a range of relationships between artists, audiences, and participants that model the competing desires for notoriety and privacy marking our present moment. Ranging from seemingly benevolent partnerships to those that appear to exploit their subjects, many of the works in the exhibition animate the tensions between exhibitionism and voyeurism, and raise challenging ethical questions around issues of authorship, power, and control.

Featured in the exhibition are 18 artists: Stanley Brouwn, Chris Burden, Sophie Calle, Peter Campus, Graciela Carnevale, Phil Collins, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Tehching Hsieh, David Lamelas, Piero Manzoni, Adrian Piper, Amie Siegel, John Smith, Andy Warho, Gillian Wearing, Hannah Wilke, Shizuka Yokomizo, Carey Young.

www.ps1.org/exhibitions/view/318

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free fotolab

 

Sean Scully and Liliane Tomasko

The Shadow of the Corner of the Wall

12 February 2011 - 03 April 2011

Haus am Luetzowplatz
Berlin 
Germany


The House on Ludwigplatz begins the New Year on a high point with an exhibition of works from the Swiss painter Liliane Tomasko and Dublin born painter Sean Scully.

In her small formed paintings, Liliane Tomasko examines the transient light and shade on arrangements of forms and objects which are observed in our everyday life but appear marginal, such as pockets and paper bags, window frames, folds of clothes and parts of walls, etc. With her use of light and colour the pictures take on a mystical air, in spite of their everyday appearance.

In this exhibition Sean Scully presents a large work on paper ‘6.21.09’, as well as his photographs.  The composition ‘6.21.09’ is made out of ten similar sized dark and light strips of colour which are characteristic of Scully’s work of the late 1970s. In his photographs of urban structures facades, doors and parts of buildings etc expand the dimension of his abstract paintings.

www.hausamluetzowplatz-berlin.de/ausstellungen/1102_galerie.htm

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6.21.09

 

Dorothy Cross

gehen bluehen fliessen Naturverhaeltnisse in der Kunst

29 January 2011 - 03 April 2011

Stadtgalerie Kiel
Germany

'Gehen bluehen fliessen Naturverhaeltnisse in der Kunst' is about movement and development, of fascinating observations, striking experiments and remarkable studies. The exhibition presents artists’ depictions of the changing processes of nature such as growth and fluidity, or the representations of peoples’ appearances or gestures.

Nature in art has always been an exhaustible source of inspiration and material for artistic insight. As an environment, nature is part of a political agenda and the artists featured examine and challenge these agendas by presenting works that approach methodically the process of nature in order to develop their own processes of form.

The exhibition was curated by Frank Wagner on behalf of the forum for interdisciplinary studies at the Muthesius Art University in collaboration with the Stadtgalerie Kiel.

www.kiel.de/kultur/stadtgalerie/show_stadtgalerie.php?id=2394

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Jellyfish Lake

 

Phil Collins

marxism today (prologue)

04 February 2011 - 03 April 2011

BFI Southbank
Belvedere Road
South Bank
London SE1 8XT


Phil Collins' works in film, video and photography deftly dissect the political and aesthetic implications of popular visual formats, and often provide a platform for the disregarded and the overlooked. Shining a light on what is generally perceived as the losing side in the political and social upheavals of the past two decades, marxism today is an ongoing project that began by following the fortunes of former teachers of Marxism-Leninism in Communist East Germany.

Collins' short film marxism today (prologue) (2010), first shown at the 6th Berlin Biennale, mixes contemporary interviews alongside archive material in which snapshots of life in the old GDR are offset with the teachers' own recollections of the time, and their contrasting experiences after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Contemplative, engaging and affecting, the film is supplemented by a new companion video, use! value! exchange! (2010), that revisits key concepts in the toolkit of Marxist economic analysis, and introduces them, with exemplary vigour and concision, to a new generation of students.

marxism today is co-commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella, Cornerhouse, Abandon Normal Devices, Berliner Künstlerprogramm/DAAD, and Berlin Biennale. Produced by Shady Lane Productions.

www.bfi.org.uk/whatson/bfi_southbank/exhibitions/forthcoming_exhibitions_0

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marxism today (prologue) still

 

Solo Presentation by Paul Seawright

Kerlin Gallery at VIP ART FAIR

22 January 2011 - 30 January 2011

VIP Art Fair
International Contemporary Art Fair
Exclusively Online


We are delighted to announce that we will take part in the inaugural VIP Art Fair with a solo presentation of the 'Volunteer' Paul Seawright. This will be the first time that Seawright's new work will be made available prior to his forthcoming solo show at Kerlin Gallery. 

In our private viewing rooms we will have new work available by Phil Collins, Liam Gillick, David Godbold, Siobhán Hapaska, Callum Innes, Jaki Irvine and Elizabeth Magill including work from our current show 'Someone Else's Life' (http://www.kerlin.ie/exhibitions/Present-Exhibitions.aspx).

Paul Seawright - Volunteer

Paul Seawright’s new photographic works bring together the two major themes of his practice, contemporary cities and the representation of conflict. Volunteer extends his previous work, interrogating how contemporary conflict might be represented and discussed beyond the battlefield, without recourse to drama-centric imagery. He presents the landscape of the American city as a type of battlefield where the spectre of war in the Middle East is tangible on every street corner, college campus, town square and front yard. 
 

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'Container from the Volunteer series'

 

William McKeown

Five Working Days

19 November 2010 - 15 January 2011

Ormeau Baths Gallery
18a Ormeau Avenue
Belfast
BT2 8HS
Northern Ireland


The Ormeau Baths Gallery presents a major solo exhibition by Northern Irish artist William McKeown entitled ‘Five Working Days’. William McKeown (b.1962) is highly regarded for his paintings, drawings, watercolours and constructions/installations that express his concern about our ongoing relationship with nature both outside and within. He is interested in the sky around us; the air that we exist in and our daily emergence into light. His work is poetic, expansive and captures the essence of a time and a place. It is centred around issues of beauty, happiness, acceptance and freedom. For this new show, William McKeown will create five installations that use the Ormeau Baths galleries as metaphorical spaces for daily existence.
 
 

www.ormeaubaths.co.uk/home/

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Tomorrow

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The Morning Room

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The Waiting Room

 

Willie Doherty

Segura

09 October 2010 - 09 January 2011

Antigua Oficina de Correos y Telégrafos
Murcia
Spain

Willie Doherty's new video installation Segura will be shown at Manifesta 8 in Murcia, Spain, from 9 October 2010 until 9 January 2011.

Since 1985 Willie Doherty has produced a substantial body of photography and video in, and about, his native city of Derry. His work is deeply engaged with location and expands out of its immediate context to explore themes of individual and collective subjectivity, memory and responsibility.

www.manifesta8.com/manifesta/manifesta8.artist?nombre=Willie-Doherty&codigo=22

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Segura

 

Siobhan Hapaska

Thrice upon a time

11 September 2010 - 12 December 2010

Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall
Frihamnen
SE – 115 56 Stockholm
Sweden


‘Thrice upon a time’ is the largest exhibition to date for Magasin 3, with artworks taken exclusively from the Magasin 3 collection. It is presented in three parallel chapters featuring a total of 202 works, all of which have not previously been shown at Magasin 3. 66 artists fill the exhibition spaces with photography, drawing, painting, film and sculpture. Key works by established artists are shown alongside pieces by artists who have not previously exhibited in Sweden. Together these works give an unsurpassable insight into the Magasin 3 collection.

In the three different parts curators Elisabeth Millqvist, Tessa Praun and Richard Julin each present their own perspective on the collection. Art history, the artist, and collecting are their respective focal points.

 
Artists included: Absalon, Karin Mamma Andersson, Janine Antoni, Maya Attoun, Uta Barth, Lynda Benglis, Christian Boltanski, Ann Böttcher, Anna Camner, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Cecilia Edefalk, Marcel van Eeden, Jens Fänge, Robert Guillot, Rune Hagberg, Lova Hamilton, Carl Hammoud, Annika von Hausswolff, Siobhán Hapaska, Maria Hedlund, Anton Henning, Carl Fredrik Hill, Bror Hjorth, Rebecca Horn, Olav Christopher Jenssen, Ernst Josephson, Matti Kallioinen, Kimsooja, R.B. Kitaj, John Kleckner, Sigalit Landau, Matts Leiderstam, Maria Lindberg, Walter De Maria, Mark Manders, Truls Melin, Ohad Meromi, Jan van Munster, Jockum Nordström, Cecilia Parsberg, Gabriel Orozco, Chris Ofili, Tal R, Håkan Rehnberg, Gerhard Richter, Boo Ritson, Ulf Rollof, Glen Rubsamen, Fred Sandback, Tom Sandberg, Johan Scott, Jonathan Seliger, Miri Segal, Cindy Sherman, Ann-Sofi Sidén, Santiago Sierra, Lena Svedberg, Fredrik Söderberg, Johan Thurfjell, Richard Tuttle, Uglycute, Charlie White, Gunnel Wåhlstrand, Rémy Zaugg, Johan Zetterquist, Christine Ödlund.

www.magasin3.com/en/exhibitions/upcoming/

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Downfall

 

Richard Gorman

Mitaka & Ashikaga Museums, Japan

11 September 2010 - 01 December 2010

Mitaka City Gallery of Art
12-14
Kamirenjaku 6-chome
Tokyo

Ashikaga Museum of Art
2-14-7, Tori, Ashikaga, Tochig
Japan
 

Renowned abstract artist Richard Gorman will have two solo exhibitions in Japan this autumn . Beginning at Mitaka Museum on September 11 Gorman will exhibit a large body of recent paintings and prints and this show will travel to Ashikaga Museum opening on October 30. This will be Gorman’s sixth and seventh  solo museum exhibition in Japan since his first in 1997 and ,as such, marks a huge achievement for this hugely popular artist. A fully illustrated catalogue with an essay by Irish Times Chief Art Critic, Aidan Dunne, will accompany the exhibition.

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Ceruleum Shuffle

 

Phil Collins

marxism today (prologue) UK premiere

02 October 2010 - 28 November 2010

CORNERHOUSE

70 Oxford Street

Manchester


M1 5NH

Phil Collins' work in film, video and photography often provides a platform for the overlooked or the disenfranchised. Shining a light on what is generally perceived as the losing side in the political and social upheavals of the past two decades, marxism today is an ongoing project that began by following the fortunes of Marxist-Leninist teachers in the former Communist East Germany. Collins’ short film marxism today (prologue) (2010) mixes contemporary interviews with the ex-teachers alongside archive material, to form the centrepiece of this exhibition, which also includes a new video in which a number of concepts central to Marxist economic analysis are introduced to a new generation of students.

Cornerhouse’s exhibition is the UK premiere of marxism today (prologue), which was previously presented to critical acclaim at the 6th Berlin Biennale of Contemporary Art.

www.cornerhouse.org/art/info.aspx?ID=418&page=0

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marxism today (prologue)

 

Brian Maguire

400 Women

12 November 2010 - 28 November 2010

Shoreditch Town Hall Basement
380 Old Street 
London
EC1V 9LT

This ambitious project was conceived by artist Tamsyn Challenger in response to the brutal murder and rape of more than 400 women over a decade in the US border town of Ciudad Juárez and the region of Chihuahua in Mexico. Some 200 exceptional artists have each painted one of the murdered women, confronting us with and safeguarding in our memory the dead and disappeared. The exhibition raises important questions about the capacity of art to represent tragedy and commemorate the dead, as well as the potential for art to affect an audience and the collective nature of grief. The exhibition is curated by Ellen Mara De Wachter, a curator and writer based in London.

www.400women.tumblr.com

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Rebeca Contreras Mancha 2004

 

Siobhan Hapaska

Islands Never Found

28 June 2010 - 28 November 2010

Hellenic Ministry of Culture And Tourism
State Museum of Contemporary Art
Kolokotroni  21
Stavroupoli 56430
Thessaloniki
Greece


"Islands Never Found" (Isole Mai Trovate / Îles Introuvables), which features work by Siobhan Hapaska, amongst many others, focuses on the artist's journey — the actual, but mostly the inner journey and its itinerary, stopovers, objectives, living conditions, achievements and failures.

It is organised by the State Museum of Contemporary Art (
Τhessaloniki, Greece), the Musée d'Art Moderne de Saint-Étienne Métropole and the Comune di Genova/ Palazzo Ducale.

The exhibition currently presented in Thessaloniki was on show from March till June 2010 at the Palazzo Ducale in Genoa and will finally be presented from December 2010 – April 2011 at the Musée d' Art Moderne in St. Étienne.

The exhibition places centre-stage the artist's personality, which is rich but contradictory, in part deleterious and unreservedly self-destructive and creative, tormented and self-sufficient. 

The "islands" in question are those particular creative areas, unique and individual, within which all artists objectify and communicate their own unmistakable approach, their own language and system of symbols, and their own vision of the world. 

Participating artists: Marina Abramović, Alice Aycock, Marina Bolla, Louise Bourgeois, Yves Bresson, Tony Cragg, Danica Dakić, Latifa Echakhch, Jan Fabre, Hans Peter Feldmann, Gloria Friedmann, Carlos Garaicoa, Gilbert & George, Siobhán Hapaska, Rebecca Horn, Ilya Kabakov, Anselm Kiefer, Kimsooja, Jannis Kounellis, Maria Loizidou, Richard Long, Natsuyuki Nakanishi, Maurizio Nannucci, Luigi Ontani, Dennis Oppenheim, Orlan, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Lucas Samaras, Barthélémy Toguo, Stefanos Tsivopoulos, Costas Tsoclis, Mamoru Tsukada, Günther Uecker, Lois Weinberger, Dimitris Xonoglou.



 

www.greekstatemuseum.com/kmst/exhibitions/article/411.html

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Island

 

Siobhan Hapaska

Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast

24 September 2010 - 06 November 2010

Ormeau Baths Gallery
18a Ormeau Avenue
Belfast
BT2 8HS


The Ormeau Baths Gallery (OBG) will hold a major exhibition of the Belfast born artist Siobhan Hapaska, opening on the 24th September 2010. The exhibition will be the first in her native city and will include a combination of new and recent works.
  
 
Hapaska is renowned for her inventive and challenging mixed media sculptures and installations. Her art practice is multilayered and feelings of uncertainty, restlessness and change have marked her work and certain binary conditions such as nature and artifice; presence and absence; life and death have preoccupied the artist in the past. 
 
She has said of her practice ‘Uncertainty in my work is very important to me. I’m really not interested in definitive explanations of things – I find certainty so claustrophobic’.
  
Siobhan Hapaska’s work depth charges a number of cultural and socio-political issues. The Belfast exhibition will open up for assessment the extent to which biography/identity have been underpinning its development.
 
This exhibition forms part of the visual arts programme of the Belfast Festival at Queens, which runs from the 15th-30th October 2010

www.ormeaubaths.co.uk

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The Dog that Lost its Nose

 

Willie Doherty

Visions

26 March 2010 - 26 October 2010

Ulster Museum
Botanic Gardens,
Belfast
BT9 5AB

‘Visions – Spectacular Art from the Ulster Museum’ will feature major Irish artists of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries including Nathaniel Hone, Roderic O’Conor, Walter Osbourne, Sir John Lavery, Jack B Yeats, Paul Henry, Gerard Dillon, Louis Le Brocquy, Robert Ballagh and Hughie O’Donoghue. One of the museum’s newest acquisitions, Ghost Story by Turner Prize Finalist Willie Doherty, will be on display for the first time as part of an exhibition exploring contemporary Irish art.

The British and international highlights include work by JMW Turner, LS Lowry, Francis Bacon, Jean Dubuffet, Karel Appel, Bridget Riley, Gilbert & George, Graham Sutherland and Patrick Caulfield.

A new publication by the Ulster Museum’s Curators of Fine Art, Dr Eileen Black and Anne Stewart, detailing 100 of the best Irish works of art will be launched alongside the exhibition

www.nmni.com/um/What-s-on/Exhibitions/Coming-soon

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Ghost Story

 

Isabel Nolan

Instantaneous Personal Magnetism

09 September 2010 - 02 October 2010

Galway Arts Centre
47 Dominick Street
Galway

"Instantaneous Personal Magnetism"  is an enlightening exhibition featuringthe work of seven artists curated by Padraic E. Moore. The exhibition whichtakes place at the Galway Arts Centre in September is named after a selfhelp book published over 80 years ago by the International Magnetism Club. In this book idiosyncratic scientific theory is combined with details of physical and mental exercises conceived to enlighten the reader as to how they might  "apply personal energies so that they might become more  magnetic”. The exhibition highlights that while various advances have been made by numerous figures throughout history it would seem that there is little general knowledge, and perhaps little interest among the public, regarding the real nature of personal magnetism.
 

This exhibition comprises of works by a selection of such individuals whose personal investigations are worthy of attention. The exhibition brings together the talents of Sam Keogh, Eilis McDonald, Isabel Nolan, Ciaran Walsh, Linda Quinlan, Rory McCormick and Shana Moulton and is intended to trigger a re-appraisal of what we take as given in terms of the power and potential of cultural production. The curator, Moore said: "One of my many hopes is that those who view the exhibition will return to the outside world having been magnetised by their close encounter."

www.galwayartscentre.ie

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Portal Site

 

Isabel Nolan

King Rat

09 July 2010 - 04 September 2010

Project Arts Centre
39 East Essex Street
Temple Bar
Dublin 2
Ireland
  

Isabel Nolan is among various international artists showing in the forthcoming group exhibition, King Rat at the Project Arts Centre, Dublin.  

A dark and menacing exhibition, originally inspired by all things Gothic, King Rat presents a series of artworks by some of visual arts most original international voices.  The gallery will transform in to a space filled with a sense of unease and discomfort, the stuff that nightmares are made of. A carpet made of thousands of black pieces of paper will create a striking landscape from which sculptures rise, paintings hover above, tapestries loom and text speak.

GALLERY OPENING HOURS: MON - SAT, 11AM - 8PM (closed for public holiday on Monday 2nd August.

www.projectartscentre.ie/programme/whats-on/1069-king-rat

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A small place among visible things

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Only the tough-minded find themselves at home

 

Willie Doherty & William McKeown

Kilkenny Arts Festival 2010

06 August 2010 - 15 August 2010

Rothe House
Parliament Street
Kilkenny

10am - 7pm
 
Willie Doherty is showing at this year's Kilkenny Arts Festival at Rothe House, Kilkenny.

Since 1985, Willie Doherty has produced a substantial body of photography and video in and about his native city of Derry. His work is deeply engaged with location and expands out of its immediate context to explore themes of individual and collective subjectivity, memory and responsibility.

http://www.kilkennyarts.ie/events/details/willie-doherty/  


11 Patrick Street 
Kilkenny

10am - 7pm

William McKeown is also exhibiting a body of work at 11 Patrick Street, Kilkenny, for the Kilkenny Arts Festival.

"The paintings that I will be showing at Kilkenny have developed out of the theme of immersion that has preoccupied me for many years. The subject matter of the paintings is that in each human being there is a deep biological affinity with a state of non-separation. This surfaces constantly throughout our lives in many different situations, from sitting in the bath to diving into a swimming pool to drinking a glass of water to standing on the beach being mesmerised by the beauty of the ocean. This empathy with fluidity dissolves the learned boundaries that exist between what is external to us and what is internal and is a fundamental element in the potential healing of our relationship with the natural world."

http://www.kilkennyarts.ie/events/details/william-mckeown/  



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Willie Doherty, 'Buried'

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William McKeown, 'The Lane'

 

Sean Scully

Works from the 1980s

26 May 2010 - 08 August 2010

Leeds Art Gallery
The Headrow
Leeds
LS1 3AA

In the early 1980s, Scully re-introduced colour, space and texture through the application of multiple layers of paint and thereby added an expressive element to his work. He introduced relief elements in his paintings, broadening the expressive range of his work with a more emphatic, physical quality: 'I liked the idea of looking at a painting that you could not look at just from the front but had to move around.' At the same time stripes widen and become more pulsating, colour intensifies and black is often used to evoke feelings from solemn to sinister.

By the mid 1980s Scully had gained international recognition and many major museums began to acquire his paintings. This exhibition focuses on Scully's work from the 1980s, together with works on paper from the artist's own collection. This period has not been reflected in recent gallery exhibitions but holds a very special place in the development of his art.

 

Organised by Leeds Art Gallery, accompanied by a special exhibition publication 

www.leeds.gov.uk/artgallery/Leeds_Art_Gallery/Exhibitions.aspx

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River

 

Phil Collins

6th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art

11 June 2010 - 08 August 2010

KW Institute for Contemporary Art Auguststrasse 69
D-10117
Berlin
Germany

Phil Collins, whose new commission for the 6th Berlin Biennale 2010, Marxism Today (Prologue), delivers his reliable mix of political nous, human insight and humour. This talking-heads documentary features three women who taught Marxism in the GDR, whose frank and funny recollections veer from an impassioned belief in communism to finding meaning in the world of dating agencies.

The 6th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art 2010 is curated by Kathrin Rhomberg and will be held in various venues across Berlin until 8 August 2010.

www.berlinbiennial.de/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=158&Itemid=217

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marxism today (prologue)

 

Liam Gillick

One long walk... Two short piers...

01 April 2010 - 08 August 2010

Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland,
Bonn

The Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland presents a major and comprehensive survey show of Liam Gillicks work to date.

A catalogue will be published on the occasion of the exhibition.

www.kah-bonn.de/index.htm?ausstellungen/liamgillick/index_e.htm

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One long walk... Two short piers

 

Brian Maguire

Ni Una Mas (Not One More): The Juarez Murders

15 May 2010 - 16 July 2010

Leonard Pearlstein Gallery
Drexel University
33rd and Market Streets
Philadelphia, PA, 19104

Ni Una Mas is a powerful Drexel University-wide collaboration of academic, student and institutional departments intended to raise awareness about gender violence and, in particular, crimes against women in the Mexican bordertown of Juarez. The cornerstone of Ni Una Mas is an art exhibition featuring over 70 works of art by twenty international artists, including Yoko Ono, Kiki Smith, Nancy Spero, Irish activist painter Brian Maguire and local artists Arlene Love and Jen Blazina. Work of noted forensic artist and Philadelphia native Frank Bender will also be included in the exhibition.

The exhibition will run May 15th — July 16th at the site of the new Leonard Pearlstein Gallery (3401 Filbert St.)

www.drexel.edu/juarez/

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Rebeca Contreras Mancha 2004

 

A Project by Felix Gonzalez-Torres and William McKeown

A certain distance, endless light

05 March 2010 - 04 July 2010

mima
Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art
Centre Square, Middlesbrough
TS1 2AZ

The exhibition, inspired by the theme of AV Festival 10, energy, will bring together two extraordinary artists, Cuban born American artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres, and Irish artist William McKeown. Both artists’ work answer the theme of energy in different ways. For this two-person project McKeown is making two new installations, 'The Dayroom' and 'The Daisy Field' (http://www.visitmima.com).

William McKeown will also make a major new solo show entitled 'The Day's Eyes/The Night's Eyes' at Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast from November to January 2010/11.

www.visitmima.com/exhibitions/current.php

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William McKeown

 

The Armory Show 2010

03 April 2010 - 03 July 2010

Kerlin Gallery is delighted to announce its participation in the Armory Show, New York.

The Armory Show
Piers 92 & 94
Twelfth Avenue at 55th Street
New York City

The Armory Show 2010 Opening Day takes place Wednesday, March 3rd for invited guests.

Opening Hours:
Thursday, March 4 - Saturday, March 6 Noon to 8 pm
Sunday, March 7 Noon to 7 pm


With support
from

cul
ture ireland | cultúr éireann

promoting the arts abroad

cur chun cinn na n-eadaíon thar lear

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Pavo

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Three little words

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Section

 

Mark Francis

Arena

20 March 2010 - 03 July 2010

Abbot Hall Art Gallery
Kendal
Cumbria
LA9 5AL

Mark Francis belongs to a generation of primarily non-objective painters. His work draws on a wide range of previously unavailable scientific images now in general circulation due to the invention of the electron microscope and advances in telescopic technology. This exhibition will showcase some of his most recent work which explores the use of the grid format and the dynamic between the man-made and the natural.

Supported by - Arts Council England, Northern Rock Foundation

www.abbothall.org.uk/current-exhibitions

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Quanta

 

Paul Seawright

Teaching Photography

17 April 2010 - 30 June 2010

Museum Folkwang
Museumsplatz 1
45128 Essen
Germany


Paul Seawright is one of six teachers exhibiting in 'Teaching Photography', an exhibition and symposium on the theme of teaching photography in order to encourage discussion on photographic training in Europe, organised by the Museum Folkwang, in cooperation with, and with the support of the Wuestenrot Stiftung.

The exhibition presents the artistic work of six teachers, complemented by a projection of their students photographs and videos. The selection concentrated on art photography and thus follows a development in which applied photography is increasingly losing importance in training.

The symposium offers the possibility of getting to know and to discuss various opportunities for training and teaching methods in European institutions.

Paul Seawright (University of Ulster, Belfast) employs photography to describe everyday social realities. 


http://www.museum-folkwang.de/en/exhibitions/current-exhibtions/teaching-photography.html

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Untitled (man)

 

David Godbold

Sovereign European Art Prize

09 June 2010 - 20 June 2010

Barbican Centre
London

David Godbold is amongst 30 finalists from different countries chosen for the 2009-2010 Sovereign European Art Prize.

The shortlist was selected by this year’s judges Sir Peter Blake (artist), Tim Marlow (White Cube), Philly Adams (Saatchi Gallery), Gavin Turk (artist), Robert Punkenkhofer (Art & Idea), Joseph Backstein (Moscow Biennale) and Nasser Azam (artist).

Not only did the entries show a strong return to painting, but as Robert Punkenhofer said, “more than 350 entries clearly documented the wonderful diversity and strength of Europe´s artistic scene. The prize will certainly raise the visibility of some of the most promising painters and photographers from the continent.”

The Sovereign Art Foundation is now asking the public to select this year’s prize winner, by logging onto their website and choosing their favourite artist.

This year's exhibition will be held at the Barbican Centre from the 9-20th in London in June, where the judges will decide the winner of the 25,000 euro prize.

www.sovereignartfoundation.com/art-prizes/europe/gallery/?year=2009

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It gets darker with the day, II

 

Merlin James

Another Country, London Painters in Dialogue with Modern Italian Art

28 April 2010 - 20 June 2010

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art
39a Canonbury Square
London N1 2AN

An exhibition dedicated to the response of ten London-based painters (Tony Bevan, Arturo di Stefano, Luke Elwes, Tim Hyman, Andrzej Jackowski, Merlin James, Glenys Johnson, Alex Lowery, Lino Mannocci and Thomas Newbolt) to the work of a selection of modern Italian artists, including Giorgio Morandi, Carlo Carrà and Mario Sironi. The paintings created by these artists for the exhibition will establish and highlight connections, both in terms of ideas and practice, with the work of Italian artists of the twentieth century.

www.estorickcollection.com/exhibitions/forthcoming_exhibition.php

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Bird, Branch, House

 

Maureen Gallace

2010 Whitney Biennial, New York

25 February 2010 - 30 May 2010

Whitney Museum of American Art
New York
USA


Maureen Gallace is one of fifty-five artists exhibiting at this years 2010 Whitney Biennial, curated by Francesco Bonami and Gary Carrion-Murayari.

This year marks the seventy-fifth edition of the Whitney’s signature exhibition. While Biennials are always affected by the cultural, political, and social moment, this exhibition “simply titled 2010” embodies a cross section of contemporary art production rather than a specific theme.

To underscore the idea of time as an element of the Biennial and to demonstrate the influence of the past on 2010, familiar and less well-known artists from previous exhibitions are brought together in Collecting Biennials, an accompanying installation drawn from the Museum’s collection on view on the fifth floor. Balancing different media ranging from painting and sculpture to video, photography, performance, and installation, 2010 also serves as a two-way telescope through which the Whitney’s past and future can be observed.

The artists selected for this year’s exhibition provide diverse responses to the anxiety and optimism characteristic of this moment. 

www.whitney.org/Exhibitions/2010Biennial/MaureenGallace

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Early August Cape Cod

 

Eoin McHugh

Installation - Eoin McHugh - Lewis Glucksman Gallery

20 April 2010 - 09 May 2010

Lewis Glucksman Gallery
University College Cork


The Lewis Glucksman Gallery is currently exhibiting an installation by Eoin McHugh, a two-part project commissioned by the gallery in response to the current exhibition Thingamajig: the secret life of objects.

As part of his research for the project, Mc Hugh spent time at UCC photographing laboratories and specimens in the departments of Chemistry and Zoology, Ecology and Plant Sciences.

The first part of the project consists of a series of black and white watercolour drawings that will be integrated into the displays of the Thingamajig exhibition. The drawings respond to the exhibition themes of how objects are collected, narrated, and transformed over time as well as representing the artist's ongoing interest in the psychology of imagery.

The second part of the project will be a limited edition artist book, to be published in late 2010.

www.glucksman.org/events.html

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Installation by Eoin McHugh at the Glucksman Gallery, Cork

 

Sean Scully

Works from the 1980s

05 February 2010 - 01 May 2010

 Sean Scully is one of the most significant abstract painters working today. An internationally renowned artist, he has recently exhibited in New York, Barcelona, Duisburg and Munich.  This exhibition will concentrate on paintings from the 1980s; an important period in the artist’s life and oeuvre, as well as hitherto unseen works on paper from the artist’s own collection.

Rejecting the meticulous, precise gridded paintings he made in the 1970s, Scully's work took a dramatic turn in the early 1980s. He began to make paintings with relief elements in an attempt to broaden the expressive range of his work. By making his paintings three-dimensional he gave them a more emphatic, physical quality: 'I liked the idea of looking at a painting that you could not look at just from the front but had to move around.' At the same time, stripes began to grow wider and become more pulsating. Colour gained in intensity and black would often be used to evoke feelings ranging from the solemn to the sinister.

The 1980s, a period, which has not been reflected in recent museums exhibitions, holds a very special moment in the development of Scully’s art. His great achievement, realised for the first time in these great works, is the reinvigoration of abstract painting with the metaphorical, the philosophical and the sublime, simultaneously delighting the viewer with the primitive and visceral power of pure paint. Ultimately, Scully's art has probed the very nature of human existence - its pleasure, pain and paradox.

This exhibition is part of a touring programme organized by Leeds Art Gallery and Sean Scully, Curated by Tanja Pirsig-Marshall.

www.visualcarlow.ie

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River

 

Kathy Prendergast

The Black Map Series

18 February 2010 - 10 April 2010

PEER
99 Hoxton Street
London N1 6QL, UK

Kathy Prendergast uses a range of materials in her work, from ordinary domestic objects to cast bronze, and from chalk or marble to human hair. Since the early 1990s Prendergast has also used maps and ideas around mapping as a key point of departure for a number of series of works.

Prendergast’s current series of Black Maps, exhibited at Peer, are produced by a laborious process of inking-out vast areas of road maps from countries around the world, leaving visible small white dots that denote areas of habitation.

At close inspection, roads, place names and geographical details can still be discerned underneath the densely hatched lines of black marker, giving these works a strong sense of having been crafted by hand. Viewed from a distance, each work has the appearance of a star chart – constellations of small villages, large towns and major cities all represented by hundreds of uniform-size single white marks. 

In some countries, such as Poland and the Ukraine, the distribution of dots across the density of black is fairly evenly spread, suggesting a balanced distribution of population across a geographical area. One could also infer from this that these communities also have roughly equal areas of land for agriculture around them. By contrast, two maps of western USA show lines of clustered of dots and leave large areas totally blacked out, suggesting arteries or routes of passage through less agrarian landscapes. In these works, Prendergast has effaced the functionality of the map as an indicator of the topographies of the land, and has re-cast it to a chart that indicates only our impact and imposition onto it. She recently commented, ‘The map is an expression of the landscape but over and above that, it is an expression of us on the landscape.

Maps are employed in Prendergast’s work as both subject and as object – for their conceptual dexterity and for their functional matter-of-factness. She does not attempt to transform her source material into a pristine, finished object. Her hand as the maker is very present and any imperfections in her methodical process, as well as the integral creases of the map that reveal its original, shop-purchased form are left untouched.

http://www.peeruk.org/projects/prendergast/kathy-prendergast.html

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The Black Map Series

 

Phil Collins

soy mi madre

11 February 2010 - 20 March 2010

DAAD Galerie, Berlin

A telenovela—a television serial melodrama—is one of the most popular and world–famous cultural products of Latin America. The story usually revolves around the romantic narrative of star–crossed lovers, with various sub–plots involving social, cultural, and class–related obstacles to their love. Mexico is among the leading producers and exporters of telenovela, which are subtitled and broadcast in Russia, Eastern Europe, and the Far East. Some of the first ever prime–time dramas in this genre were produced there in the 1950s. Most telenovelas, regardless of where they are produced, tend to have white, blond, blue–eyed stars. Whenever ‘ethnic’–looking people appear, they are usually of lower–class origins and have jobs such as janitors, maids, or cleaners, while all the higher–class jobs are reserved for white actors.

Phil Collins's soy mi madre employs the telenovela format to address the Latino and immigrant populations of the Roaring Fork Valley, a sizable percentage of which hails from northwestern Mexico. For Collins, these particular demographics constituted the main focus of his interest in the region. A major recreational complex and one of the most economically vital areas in the United States, the Roaring Fork Valley heavily relies on the network of hospitality, professional service, and property maintenance industries, the employee structures of which are characterized by a prevalence of immigrant labor. In Aspen itself this community exists mainly as a non–resident work–force, dispersed through a ring of satellite towns from which it commutes daily.

soy mi madre was loosely inspired by Jean Genet’s The Maids, first performed in Mexico in 1959. Considered one of the seminal texts of the theatre of the absurd, Genet’s play is a violent exploration of the intricate power dynamic that exists between unequals. Revolving around the ideas of role–playing and performance, masks and mirrors, symbols and rituals, The Maids posits social identities as volatile and unbalanced, constructed through the complex layering and manipulation of their inherent potential for theatricality—a notion from which soy mi madre departs as well.

Collins’s film is a study in the aesthetics of telenovela, the related melodramatic genres, and their most prominent authors, such as Pedro Almodóvar, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Ingmar Bergman. soy mi madre is produced with some of the leading Mexican television actors and film crew—including Patricia Reyes Spindola, Zaide Silvia Guitérrez, Veronica Langer, and Salvador Parra—as well as non–actors, members of the transsexual–prostitute community in Mexico City. The closing credits include El Immigrante by the Argentinean pop–star Fernando Diamant, a song that poetically addresses the loneliness and the anguish of immigration.

Phil Collins: soy mi madre will be published by the Aspen Art Museum later this year. 
Including contributions by Carlos Monsiváis, Mexico’s leading cultural analyst, Magali Arriola, writer and curator, and an in-depth interview with the artist by Aspen Art Museum director Heidi Zuckerman-Jacobson.

Zimmerstraße 90/91
10117 Berlin

www.daadgalerie.de

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soy mi madre

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soy mi madre

 

Phil Collins

AUTO-KINO!

05 February 2010 - 14 March 2010

Temporäre Kunsthalle Berlin
presented by Phil Collins

Experimental films, essay films, art videos, docu-dramas, melodramas, krimis, and everything in between – from the warm leatherette of a passenger- or driver's seat. British artist Phil Collins turns the Temporäre Kunsthalle Berlin into a stationary indoor drive-in cinema. In a cluster of secondhand cars installed in the space, individual vehicles serve as booths or box-seats, offering the audience an intimate situation in which to enjoy a rotating program of artists' videos and film classics. In a playful way, this questions the set-ups in which video art is usually encountered, and reflects on perceptions of the public and the private.

In the 1950s the then extremely successful drive-ins were considered seedy "passion pits" and a moral hazard to youth. In Germany and Europe drive-ins never achieved the same popularity as in the USA: car-ownership was too scarce, ticket prices too high, and winter-month temperatures too low.

Auto-Kino! incorporates the attractions of this now almost extinct mode of spectatorship. Phil Collins and Siniša Mitrović, who jointly run the visual arts company Shady Lane Productions (Berlin/Glasgow), have programmed more than 100 titles covering a broad range of film and video, from the 1920's onwards, which generally relate to two main concerns. On the one hand, the works revolve around the sensual circuitry and emotional impact of moving images, positioning the viewer as a desiring subject. On the other, they explore the duality of authenticity and manipulation embedded in cinematic representation. The simultaneous erection and abolition of cinema's visual pleasures lie at the heart of significant parts of both contemporary filmmaking and visual arts – a traditionally maintained distinction which Auto-Kino! proposes is as blinkered as it is obsolete. Engaging the far-reaching implications of the phenomenon of drive-ins, Auto-Kino! offers the audience a fresh perspective on the promiscuous liaisons between film and the moving image in other visual media.

The evening and weekend programs present feature films from Germany's rich history of genre cinema, with an emphasis on the turbulent years of the 1930s and 1940s. Reimagining Schlossplatz/Marx-Engles-Forum as the site of a drive-in that never existed, Auto-Kino! brings together a selection of Ufa melodramas, West German thrillers and DEFA rubble films that invite the audience to look again at the relationship between the idea of national community, and the articulation of its social and political body in the light of cinematic representation.

Opening
9 pm, February 4 - 9 pm, February 5, 2010
24 Hour Psycho, Douglas Gordon (1993), 24 hours

Temporäre Kunsthalle Berlin

Schlossplatz, Berlin-Mitte

www.kunsthalle-berlin.com

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AUTO-KINO!

 

Jaki Irvine

City of Women

14 January 2010 - 27 February 2010

In 2008 The LAB and Draíocht invited Jaki Irvine to think about William Hogarth's 1732 series of prints, A Harlot's Progress.



City of Women is the work developed by Irvine in response to this invitation. Irvine's short film, City of Women, was shot on Foley Street, formerly Montgomery Street and now the site of The LAB, in June 2009.

The exhibition City of Women at the LAB will also include six original prints from Hogarth's series A Harlot's Progress, on loan from the Irish Museum of Modern Art.



Dublin City Council gratefully acknowledges the Irish Museum of Modern Art for the generous loan of the Hogarth prints from its collection.

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City of Women

 

Sean Scully

Constantinolpe or the Sensual Concealed, The Imagery of Sean Scully

24 October 2009 - 14 February 2010

Ulster Museum, Belfast

A MAJOR RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION 1973 - 2009

The Ulster Museum will re open after a major redevelopment with this landmark exhibition dedicated to the work of Ireland’s most internationally celebrated artist, Sean Scully.

Constantinople or the Sensual Concealed The Imagery of Sean Scully is a major retrospective of Scully’s work, charting his career from his early grid paintings of the 1970s to variations on the expansive and sensuously painted Wall of Light series that was shown to international acclaim at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 2006. The exhibition will also include new work.

This exhibition brings together over sixty paintings and additional works on paper to provide an authoritative and illuminating celebration of Scully’s career. The Ulster Museum will be the only British and Irish venue for this important exhibition. The title of the exhibition refers to the layered complexity of visual impressions that exist in all cities and have provided enduring and stimulating influences on Scully’s painting.

Organised by the Stiftung für Kunst und Kultur e. V Bonn, on tour from MKM Museum Kuppersmuhle für Moderne Kunst, Duisburg, Germany.

www.nmni.com/um/What-s-on/Exhibitions/Exhib-1

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Mirror Silver

 

Siobhan Hapaska

The Nose That Lost Its Dog

31 October 2009 - 30 January 2010

Glasgow Sculpture Studios

Exhibition of newly commissioned sculptural work by Siobhán Hapaska

Scottish deerskin, stainless steel, LED lights and fibreglass are amongst the materials being used by Siobhán Hapaska to make three new sculptures during a Production Residency at Glasgow Sculpture Studios (GSS).

Hapaska’s works propose a poetic play of imagery and ideas, of textures and colour…..interesting and serious, even when they seem playful.

For this, her first solo show in Scotland Hapaska has created three large-scale sculptures which continue her subtle exploration of themes of conflict and resolution, both domestic and political, juxtaposing natural and synthetic materials to create works that are unique and resonant. The works are united in this exploration, through their construction and choice of material and by their placement within the gallery space.

www.glasgowsculpturestudios.org

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The Dog That Lost Its Nose

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Downfall

 

Richard Gorman

Shuffle

01 October 2009 - 28 November 2009

Millenium Court Arts Centre, Portadown

Highlanes Gallery and Millenium Court Arts Centre are delighted to announce a new exhibition of paintings by painter Richard Gorman. The exhibition entitled Shuffle opens at Highlanes Gallery in July and then at Millenium Court Arts Centre in October and travels to the Ashford Gallery at the Royal Hibernian Academy in March, 2010.

Gorman's understated gift as a colourist has become more evident in recent years. His work has drawn much of its power from the compositional tension between increasingly prominent and boldly simplified, irregular blocks of colour. Gorman has exhibited widely and regularly since the mid-1980s, especially in Dublin, London, Milan and Tokyo. Frequent and extended visits to Japan have notably influenced his working methods and materials, most memorably in a series of highly successful large-scale works executed on handmade washi paper which he produced in western Japan in 1999.

www.millenniumcourt.org

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Shuffle Swing

 

Liam Gillick

The future always acts differently

07 June 2009 - 22 November 2009

German Pavilion
Biennale di Venezia 2009
53. Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte


Nicolaus Schafhausen
Curator

Liam Gillick will be the artist presented at the German Pavilion during the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009. The curator of the German Pavilion is Nicolaus Schafhausen, director of Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art in Rotterdam.

Liam Gillick lives and works in New York and London. The artist, who has produced much of his work in Germany, was early to address emergent post-socialist systems and new social models in Europe. His practice represents the ideal projection surface for contemporary art in the twenty-first century. His work operates on several levels of a multi-layered artworld. The theme of his work is the varied phenomena of social utopias that he stages via hypothetical social models, both visual and literary.

Nicolaus Schafhausen: "Through his need to play with the complexity of the contemporary terrain, Gillick has provided models of thought that are not merely binary. He has operated in parallel to known models of work - critic, designer and artist. And this has permitted him to provoke new questions without the necessity to offer simple solutions."

Liam Gillick: "My work requires a critical terrain that is both sophisticated and skeptical. I view this as a continuation of an ongoing dialogue. The question will be how to produce rather than merely how to present. I operate in the gap between the trajectory of modernity and the modernist self-consciousness. The work is both contingent and specific."

Liam Gillick and Nicolaus Schafhausen have been involved in a continuous dialogue since the end of the 1980s. Before the Biennale, between November 2008 and May 2009, the artist and curator will collaborate on a number of events that will take place in Germany, Europe and the United States. This year Liam Gillick has had solo exhibitions in Rotterdam, Zurich and Munich and has forthcoming group exhibitions at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam and The Guggenheim Museum in New York. Next year he will have a solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. - The exhibition at the German Pavilion is commissioned by the German Foreign Ministry and will be realized together with the Institute of Foreign Affairs (ifa).
Duration of exhibition: 7th June until 22nd November 2009.
More information: www.wdw.nl/persfoto/gillick/index.htm
 

www.deutscher-pavillon.org/Biennale%20Venezia/eng-deutscher-pavillon.org%202.html

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Installation View: How are you going to behave?
A kitchen cat speaks

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Installation View: How are you going to behave?
A kitchen cat speaks

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Installation View: How are you going to behave?
A kitchen cat speaks

 

Liam Gillick

Three perspectives and a short scenario

10 October 2009 - 10 November 2009

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

Liam Gillick emerged in the early 1990s as part of a re-energized British art scene, producing a sophisticated body of work ranging from his signature "platform" sculptures -- architectural structures made of aluminum and colored Plexiglas that facilitate or complicate social interaction -- to wall paintings, text sculptures, and published texts that reflect on the increasing gap between utopian idealism and the actualities of the world.

His work joins that of generational peers such as Rirkrit Tiravanija and Philippe Parreno in defining what critic Nicholas Bourriaud described as "relational aesthetics," an approach that emphasizes the shifting social role and function of art at the turn of the millennium. Gillick's work has had a profound impact on a contemporary understanding of how art and architecture influence, and are themselves influenced by, interpersonal communication and interactions in the public sphere.

This exhibition is presented in association with the Witte de With in Rotterdam, Kunsthalle Zurich, and the Kunstverein in Munich. It is the most significant and comprehensive exhibition of Gillick's work in an American museum to date, comprising a major site-specific installation in the gallery ceiling as well as a presentation of his design and published works, and a film documenting projects from the entirety of his career. The MCA is the only American venue for the exhibition.

The exhibition has a publication that reflects the unique nature of this survey of Gillick's work. This exhibition is curated by MCA Curator Dominic Molon.

www.mcachicago.org/

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Grouped Decided

 

Jaki Irvine

Seven Folds in Time

24 September 2009 - 31 October 2009

Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin

As part of Temple Bar Gallery's commitment to support and exhibit new work by leading Irish artists, we are delighted to present Jaki Irvine's Seven Folds in Time- a major new multi-screen video installation made specifically for Temple Bar Gallery in which the artist foregrounds the relationship between music and image which has long been a significant aspect of her practice.

Working with the musicians Marja Gaynor and Joe O'Farrell, Irvine has developed a work in which the editing process itself comes to the fore as an organising principal. Moving between overt musicality and the edges where a sound begins or ends, the artist focuses on the rigours and pleasures of playing an instrument that brings together the private space of practice with the possibilities of performance it anticipates.

This exhibition was made possible by project funding from Temple Bar Gallery and an Arts Council Artists Bursary.


www.templebargallery.com

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Jaki Irvine

 

Paul Seawright

Conflicting Account

27 September 2009 - 28 October 2009

Highlanes Gallery, Drogheda

New Work by Paul Seawright

The opening will take the form of an in-conversation where Paul Seawright will discuss his work practice with Megan Johnston, Arts Director, Millennium Court Arts Centre, Portadown.

www.highlanes.ie

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Police

 

Barrie Cooke
Dorothy Cross
Paul Seawright

Then & Now: Evolving Art Practices

23 July 2009 - 25 October 2009

The Lewis Glucksman Gallery, Cork

www.glucksman.org

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Udder Chair

 

Kerlin Gallery at Frieze Art Fair

Booth E12

15 October 2009 - 18 October 2009

We are delighted to announce that Kerlin Gallery will exhibit at Frieze Art Fair 2009.

Booth E12
Regent's Park, London


Professional View and Private View - Wednesday 14 October.

Opening Hours:
Thursday 15 October 11 am - 7 pm
Friday 16 October 11am - 7 pm
Saturday 17 October 11 am - 7 pm
Sunday 18 October 11 am - 6 pm

Entrance off Park Square West
 

www.friezeartfair.com

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britney #5

 

Willie Doherty

Three Potential Endings at Darklight X

08 October 2009 - 10 October 2009

Smithfield, Dublin

As part of the its 10th anniversary, Darklight will present Willie Doherty's Three Potential Endings.  

Smithfield Plaza. Daily 8 - 10 October

Dark light is also delighted to announce a very special event.

Willie Doherty in Conversation
Light House Cinema
Saturday 10 October. 3 pm

Willie Doherty discusses his film Three Potential Endings and his remarkable career to date. The interview will be bookended by screenings of two other notable Doherty works; Ghost Story (2007) and Buried (2009) created as with Three Potential Endings, in collaboration with renowned cinematographer Seamus McGarvey

Three Potential Endings was shot on location in Dublin during the summer of 2008.  The work presents a male figure besieged with the possibility of failure and uncertainty and was conceived as a response to the shifting architectural landscape of contemporary Dublin. It does not provide any explanation or rationale but rather places the man in direct confrontation with the architectural spaces where he finds himself. The three sequences are simultaneously fragmented and connected by a fourth sequence that shows the man pacing around a small, confined space. It is unclear whether he is lost in thought and deep in concentration or whether he is confused and oblivious to his surroundings. 

Three Potential Endings extends the artist's concerns with exploring the dynamics of specific urban spaces through the medium of video. Works, such as Re-Run, 2002, Non-Specific Threat, 2004, Closure, 2005 and Passage, 2006, are characterised by the use of the isolated human figure engaging in a simple but direct interaction with a given space. Like these works, Three Potential Endings also engages with conventional narrative structures as a means of locating the work within existing cinematic histories while expanding the possibilities for video installation within the gallery or non-gallery contexts.

Darklight is Ireland's foremost celebration of art, film and technology, a glorious three-day explosion of creative synergies: performances, screenings, workshops, seminars, symposiums, visual art happenings and much more. 2009 marks the 10th anniversary of Darklight: highlights include a public interview and workshop with legendary music video director Mark Romanek, graphic design legend Niall Sweeney's one-man show Revolver and a celebration of Oscar-nominated Irish animation company Brown Bag, plus collaborations with cutting-edge Irish companies thisisnotashop, Synth Eastwood, Nartystation and Performance Corporation, a discussion with Sweden's  Pirate Party, DIY movie spectacular Hotel Darklight, the Irish premiere of stunning Irish-lensed concert movie R.E.M. Live At The Olympia and the debut of Virtual Cinema 2.0, the Irish Film Board's latest round of cutting-edge on-line short films. Plus: the popular Straylight visual art strand, featuring a Performance Art Weekender curated by Amanda Coogan and Niamh Murphy.

www.darklight.ie

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Three Potential Endings

 

David Godbold

Butler Gallery

08 August 2009 - 04 October 2009

Butler Gallery, The Castle, Kilkenny

The Butler Gallery is pleased to present The end of the beginning of the beginning of the end, an exhibition curated for the Kilkenny Arts Festival featuring one hundred and twenty works from 1999 to the present, by internationally acclaimed artist, David Godbold.  

Godbold is an artist of great accomplishment – skilful in both drawing and painting with a keen intelligence; he makes work that is irreverent and thought provoking yet ultimately beautiful. Using found drawings and texts of unknown authorship, Godbold’s layered drawings employ appropriated images with ease and flair as an underlying foundation on which to add his own renderings and texts. This graphic matchmaking produces some unforgettable results, all of which form bold and iconoclastic commentaries on the philosophical struggle with daily life.


www.butlergallery.com

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100,000,000 angels singing

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Every evening I plan to enjoy the sunrise, and each morning I fail to get up

 

Brian Maguire

The Quick and the Dead

29 May 2009 - 27 September 2009

Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

Brian Maguire, Patrick Graham, Patrick Hall, Timothy Hawkesworth

The Quick and The Dead brings together four of Ireland’s most respected contemporary painters who emerged in the 1980s. In this period of uncertainty Patrick Graham, Patrick Hall, Timothy Hawkesworth and Brian Maguire consolidated their position by a dedication to a revival of painting and the search for existential meaning through aesthetic experience. Using the fundamental tools of colour and form these artists addressed not only the religious, political and social spheres of 1980’s Ireland but also the universal condition of existing in the modern world.

In 1986 the artists featured in Four Irish Expressionist Painters, a collaborative exhibition between Northeastern University and Boston College in the United States. Over two decades later, an exhibition by same the four artists is presented at an equally uncertain time in Ireland. The Quick and The Dead brings together for the first time a selection of work from the last decades of the 20th century with work from the present. In this time of economic, social and political flux, the works in this exhibition encourage a reappraisal of issues that remain unresolved, reconnecting viewers to a rich and subversive history.


www.hughlane.ie

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Nairobi - 28/01/07

 

Paul Seawright

Parrworld - The Collection of Martin Parr

30 June 2009 - 27 September 2009

Jeu De Paume, Paris
Curated by Thomas Weski.

Over the last thirty years, Parr has been documenting Western society, and in particular his fellow citizens of the United Kingdom. However, he is also interested in phenomena linked to globalisation such as mass tourism, consumerism and so-called leisure. His work is seen as a satirical look at contemporary life which unmasks the grotesque element behind banality.

As a member of the legendary Magnum agency, Parr is one of the most active and dynamic photographers at work today. Since the 1980s he has published some thirty books and shown his photographs in countless group and solo shows.

Produced in collaboration with the Haus der Kunst in Munich, the exhibition "Planète Parr” proposes a dialogue between the artist’s photographs (his latest series, "Luxury") and his vast collection of objects. It reveals the keenness of Parr’s vision and his fascination with the everyday, and features a mixture of the personal and the collective, with works by recognised artists alongside popular art.
This is the first exhibition to feature not only his extraordinary collection of photography books and prints by British and international photographers including Paul Seawright, but also large numbers of objects and curiosities closely reflecting political and social events (Saddam Hussein watches, Osama Bin Laden toilet paper and Margaret Thatcher teapots), or the absurdity and vacuity of our consumer society (the objects sought out and collected by Parr are dominated by the biggest packet of potato crisps ever sold).

Exhibition produced by Haus der Kunst, Munich, in collaboration with Jeu de Paume, Pari

www.jeudepaume.org

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Friday 25th May 1973

 

Dorothy Cross

A Duck For Mr. Darwin

10 April 2009 - 20 September 2009

BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art

Evolutionary Thinking & The Struggle To Exist

Charles Avery, Marcus Coates, Dorothy Cross, Mark Dion, Andrew Dodds, Mark Fairnington, Ben Jeans Houghton, Tania Kovats, Conrad Shawcross

A Duck for Mr. Darwin is a group exhibition of contemporary artists exploring evolutionary thinking and the Theory of Natural Selection. The exhibition focuses on the legacy of Charles Darwin’s ideas and is informed by the spirit of experimentation which was so distinctive to the time in which he lived.

www.balticmill.com

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forge

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sapiens

 

Phillip Allen

Classified: Contemporary British Art from the Tate Collection

16 June 2009 - 29 August 2009

Tate Britain

www.tate.org.uk/britain/

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Infinity Muse

 

Sean Shanahan

Newman House

05 August 2009 - 28 August 2009

Newman House, Saint Stephens Green, Dublin

At 85-86 Saint Stephens Green in Newman House this month an installation by Sean Shanahan rises through the stairwell from ground level to first floor and engages with the architecture of a Georgian building that contains rare samples of the finest 18th century plasterwork in Dublin.
 
The installation operates in a series of parallels, both direct and metaphorical, that opens up an opportunity for seeing the architecture and history anew in what for us has become otherwise familiar. A possibility opens for thinking about the relationship between history and actuality.
 
The interaction of the artwork with the space allows the viewer to imagine that it is not just us who perceive the world, but that the world too has its vision of us, and it can be discovered and set in motion by our departure from the established frameworks of history.
 
The history that accompanies the architecture of Newman House, attempts to achieve an environment that is suffused with high moral values reflecting an establishment of permanence and security. The ornate plasterwork of the staircase compounds this sense of permanence. Emphasizing the skin of the interior, it's very decorative nature, allows for an illicit aesthetic pleasure while it's defining space gives a safe boundary for reverie. The installation by Sean Shanahan attempts to highlight this, just as if a text where highlighted or underlined. The aim is to create dialogue rather than contrast – an indication of the continuity between the past and the present, between then and now.
 
Shanahan’s work captures the essence of a painted form: support and gesture, foreground and background, light and colour and the spatial power of colour to morph the apprehension of space. The modular nature of the design gives both an overall view of a decorative surface and a perplexing perspective within each singular repeated form, inviting us to reflect upon the relationship of the singular/individual to the ensemble/whole. Shanahan's installation is neither a painting nor a sculpture, but an open space inviting reflection.

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Sean Shanahan

 

Mark Garry

This is about you

22 May 2009 - 16 August 2009

Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art

mima has invited artist Mark Garry to create a new work for project space 1.

His site-specific installations are skilfully rendered using a range of materials including thread, beads and pins. As such each work is unique, a personal response to the individual character of the exhibition spaces. The visual impact of Garry’s installations is created through their gravity defying arrangement and spectrum of colour.

www.visitmima.com

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Installation View, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

 

Siobhan Hapaska
Isabel Nolan

FRAGILE - Fields of Empathy

15 May 2009 - 16 August 2009

Musee d'Art Moderne de Saint Etienne Metropole
touring to:
Accademia d'Ungheria, Palazzo Falconieri (Borromini), Roma
and
Daejean Museum of Contemporary Art, Korea

Curated by Lóránd Hegyi

The exhibition FRAGILE presents a selection of various artistic statements based on questioning the poetical potential of a new, intimate, immediate approach of human experiences in
micro-communities and micro-histories without any kind of universalistic legitimization by external, supra-personal – mythological, religious, ideological or political – value systems
or hierarchical determinations. This anti-monumental, antihierarchical,
anti-formalist, participative, empathic and open attitude creates a new kind of sensitive relation between different systems of organisation of life and work. It animates sensitive, emotionally rich human situations in which latent
capacities of generating values inside of micro-communities are possible. Fragility seems to be an esthetical and ethical entity connected with solidarity, empathy, capability of participation rather than a negative quality, a sign of weakness.

Fragility is a metaphor for participation, giving, sharing, empathy. The FRAGILE exhibition presents about 40 international artists whose activity manifests a subtle, poetical, intimate, anthropological vision on contemporary life experience and whose work neglects
any form of monumentalism or rigid formalism. Instead of rigorous absolutism through formal structures, the diverse methodology of these artists reflects subtle happenings and micro-narratives in the unlimited complexity of everyday life. They don’t reveal any expansionistic or moralistic strategies,
neither any external legitimacy based on ideology or religion - they rather celebrate the quality of empathy, solidarity, tolerance and the capacity of emotional participation and sentimental intensity. This fine, subversively poetic approach to so-called “micro-realities” creates new, sensitive constellations in the complex real context of “the concreteness of concrete selves” (Arthur C. Danto).

www.mam-st-etienne.fr

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Sometimes I imagine my love has died

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Pause

 

Willie Doherty

Requisite Distance

23 May 2009 - 16 August 2009

Dallas Museum of Art

On May 24, the Dallas Museum of Art will premiere Willie Doherty: Requisite Distance, an exhibition of works by one of the most important artists to emerge from Northern Ireland in the past three decades, and a two-time nominee for the Tate’s Turner Prize. The exhibition, described by the New York Times as “one of those little gems of a show, . . . an original curatorial effort presenting a body of new work by a major artist,” brings together for the first time Doherty’s Ghost Story—a tensely beautiful fifteen-minute media work based on landscape and memory, recently acquired for the DMA’s collections—and a selection of eleven powerful photographs of the Irish and Northern Irish landscape from the 1990s.

“Willie Doherty’s art joins history, memory, and language into an enveloping experience for the viewer, one that is rich in beauty and apprehension in the same measure,” says Charles Wylie, The Lupe Murchison Curator of Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art and the exhibition’s curator. “This is only the second exhibition on Doherty’s work to be organized by an American institution, and we are extremely honored to be able to bring this important work to our audiences.”

Willie Doherty’s interest in the Irish ghost story, as well as being born and raised in Northern Ireland during the time of the Troubles, informs the background for his video installation in this exhibition. Ghost Story powerfully evokes a mind at work trying to recall unsettling things, and the impact troubling memories have on the present day. Through a mesmerizing series of vivid imagery—including a lonely forest path with an ever-receding vanishing point, a darkened city underpass with a mysterious figure, and a pair of eyes perhaps looking to the past or the future—Doherty has created a masterful cinematic tale of quiet suspense whose evocative text (written by Doherty himself) is narrated by the renowned Irish actor Stephen Rea. Ghost Story was critically acclaimed when it appeared at the 2007 Venice Biennale, where Doherty represented Northern Ireland, and the Dallas Museum of Art is the only American museum to have acquired it for its collection.

Ghost Story is paired with eleven large-scale color photographs from the 1990s that depict the famed Irish landscape as a site of barriers and roadblocks set amidst lyrical beauty. Created well before Ghost Story, Doherty’s photographs from the 1990s act as precursors and complements to the video work and provide further evidence of the sense of quiet unease unique to his art. Together, these works offer a compelling comparison between how our vision and thought process still and moving images, and will provide an intensely absorbing experience of an undeniably beautiful yet still little understood landscape.

Willie Doherty: Requisite Distance is accompanied by a 96-page, full-color catalogue published and distributed through Yale University Press.


www.dallasmuseumofart.org/Dallas_Museum_of_Art/View/Future_Exhibitions/ID_249015

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Ghost Story

 

Tony Swain

Art Now

02 May 2009 - 26 July 2009

Tate Britain, London

Art Now will present a series of works by Tony Swain.

A sheet or pasted together page of newsprint gives Tony Swain both the physical base and conceptual starting point for his evocative and dreamlike paintings. The imagery is built up by painting over the collaged newspaper in layers, obliterating most of the original text and photography. The fragments that are allowed to remain are transformed by their inclusion in his imagined landscapes and abstracts. Swain has created new work for the Art Now space. He lives and works in Glasgow.

www.tate.org.uk/britain/

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Untitled

 

David Godbold

The Process Room

29 June 2009 - 12 July 2009

The Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin

David Godbold will present and exhibition of work in the Process Room.  It facilitates the display of work in progress by artists currently working on the Artists’ Residency Programme. The purpose of the Process Room is to reveal the processes involved in the creation, exhibition and consideration of contemporary art, which are often hidden from public view. The Process Room aims to display a flavour of what is ongoing in the studio environment and each artist on the work programme will exhibit their work for a two-week period during their residency.

www.imma.ie

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A change of plan

 

Willie Doherty

The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh

25 April 2009 - 12 July 2009

The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh

A major exhibition of films and photographs by Willie Doherty, one of the most significant artists of our times. Rooted in the political and urban landscape of his native Northern Ireland, Doherty’s work expands out of this context to address universal themes of individual and collective subjectivity and responsibility, creating a new framework within which to think about who we are and how we live.

www.fruitmarket.co.uk

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The Visitor

 

Dorothy Cross

In Search of Utopia

23 May 2009 - 06 June 2009

Galway Arts Centre

Galway Arts Centre  presents ‘In Search of Utopia’, a group exhibition featuring Dorothy Cross, Ailbhe Ni Bhriain, Louise Manifold, Michelle Browne, Cao fei and dennis del Favero, in the Nun’s Island Space of Galway Arts Centre from May 23rd to June 6th 2009. The exhibition will open at 2pm on Saturday 23rd May 2009, in Nun’s Island Theatre, 23 Nuns island, Galway. The exhibition takes as its starting point  the visually rich image of the teams, all from different countries – hurtling across oceans, rely only on themselves to compete against each other to reach the final destination. It can be seen as a metaphor for how we are constantly searching for something better, always moving towards what we see as a preferable situation to what we are currently in.

The exhibition includes two video works by  Dorothy Cross: ‘Ossicle’, recently exhibited in the UK as part of the Darwin bicentenary celebrations and ‘Selam’ which is a video portrait of Selam Kerasimbe: a shark-caller  from a village on the west coast of New Ireland in the South Pacific. He sings a song that he has only ever before sung alone out at sea in his canoe after catching a shark.  The film is a sensitive look at the dying out of  this tradition of  shark-calling. Ossicle shows a whale vertebra lying on a concrete floor is rocked by the touch of a hand: instead of slowly stopping the vibrations increase to infinity.

www.galwayartscentre.ie

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Selam shark-caller

 

Phil Collins

Tramway

17 April 2009 - 31 May 2009

Tramway, Glasgow

Tramway will present the first solo exhibition in Scotland by internationally renowned British artist Phil Collins. Relating to performance-based and conceptual approaches to video and photography, Collins explores the nuances of social relations in various locations and global communities. He often works in regions of social and political unrest, and employs elements of popular culture, low-budget television and reportage-style documentary to address the camera as an instrument of both truth and deception.

www.tramway.org

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the world won't listen

 

Paul Seawright

Conflicting Account

26 March 2009 - 30 May 2009

Millennium Court Arts Centre

MCAC is pleased to present newly commissioned work by internationally acclaimed artist Paul Seawright. Known best for his alternative visual analysis of locations and subjects dominated by mainstream media, Seawright examines in a series of new photographic works, the disparate and often conflicting narratives of Northern Irish history.
Working in school classrooms and political institutions representing both traditions, he has recovered visual fragments, which function as metaphors for the layering of narrative, the writing and re-writing of history, and the conflicting rhetoric of two traditions. Like much of Seawright’s early work from Northern Ireland ‘Conflicting Accounts’ adopts a quasi-forensic method of image making. 

In much of Seawright’s work the wider narratives of political situations are visually obscured, resonating instead through fragments and objects retrieved by the camera. In these new works everyday items, blackboards, curtains, footpaths, bridges and roads continue to form a vocabulary of separateness and contradiction.

www.millenniumcourt.org

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East

 

Mark Garry

Frequency

26 February 2009 - 17 May 2009

Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

Anachronistic in a secular society where almost every object has a defined function and end use, the works of artists Mark Garry, Pádraig Timoney and Hayley Tompkins expose and explore possibilities of contingency and transformation. 

The over saturation of information we receive in our hypermodern, post-global era continues to expand and accelerate. As witnessed in the fashions of the entertainment industry, the ever widening and rationalising sphere of technology results in the solidification and stagnation of our avenues of perception.

Frequency raises questions of ethics and value that emerges in the work of these artists and their relationship to aesthetics. It encourages a reappraisal of the established views of reality and provide us with points of departure for alternative frameworks with which we may rethink our perceived knowledge of the world.

Mark Garry’s work stems from a fundamental interest in observing how humans navigate the world and the subjectivity inherent in these navigations.


www.hughlane.ie

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Element 1 & 2 'Being Here'

 

Elizabeth Magill

The Russian Club

25 March 2009 - 07 May 2009

The Russian Club, London

www.therussianclubgallery.com

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Venus

 

Willie Doherty
Elizabeth Magill

Artists Conversation

07 May 2009 - 07 May 2009

Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

THURSDAY 7th MAY @ 4.30pm

Willie Doherty and Elizabeth Magill have been invited to join the Gallery’s Director Barbara Dawson to discuss the gallery’s centenary print collection. The print collection was a unique collaboration between the gallery and 13 contemporary artists in support of the Gallery’s purchasing fund. Each artist will discuss their approach to this commission and how it fits with their practice.
 

www.hughlane.ie

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Elizabeth Magill, Parlous Land (Thornbird Day)

 

Sean Scully

CONSTANTINOPLE OR THE SENSUAL CONCEALED

19 February 2009 - 03 May 2009

Museum Kueppersmuehle, Duisburg

The imagery of Sean Scully: MKM Museum Küppersmühle of Modern Art, Duisberg present a retrospective of the work of Sean Scully from 1974 until present day curatorated by Susanne Kleine, Bonn

www.museum-kueppersmuehle.de/index.php?id=89&L=1

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Small Chelsea Wall

 

Barrie Cooke

Butler Gallery

14 March 2009 - 26 April 2009

Butler Gallery, The Castle, Kilkenny

In sixty years of painting Barrie Cooke has made over twenty-five portraits of poets, writers and artists, all of whom are his friends. They make an illustrious gathering of cultural icons and include poets Seamus Heaney, John Montague, Ted Hughes, Núala Ní Dhómhnaill and Leland Bardwell; writers, John McGahern and Dermot Healy; artists, Dorothy Cross, Camille Souter and Nick Miller. These portraits have never before been exhibited together.

Cooke approaches the portrait as if it were a landscape – a bog to penetrate, a river to dive into.  He embraces the rigour demanded of painting portraits, a tradition he has favoured throughout his career, averaging about two a year.  All his portraits are from life.  The time spent working on a portrait can differ greatly and can take anything from two to twenty sittings, as was the case with the exceptional painting of John McGahern.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a full-colour catalogue.

www.butlergallery.com

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Seamus Heaney, Nobel Laureate Poet

 

Phil Collins

zasto ne govorim srpski [na srpskom]

06 March 2009 - 24 April 2009

National College of Art and Design/Gallery, Dublin

An Bord presents the inaugural exhibition of National College of Art and Design Gallery.

Phil Collins is one of the most important artists of his generation. He studied in Belfast, is now based in Glasgow and Berlin and has a growing international reputation. He often works in socially and politically contested regions, employing elements of popular culture, low budget television and reportage style documentary, to articulate a critical fascination with the ways in which contemporary media structure lived experience.  Recent projects include ‘The World Won’t Listen’ (2004 – 2007) – a Karaoke Video Trilogy produced in Colombia, Turkey and Indonesia with fans of the band The Smiths,  ‘The Return of the Real’ (2007) – a talk show confessional with former participants of reality t.v. in the U.K. Collins has shown work in major museums and key group exhibitions in the U.K., Europe and the U.S.

Shot in black and white 16 mm film, Phil Collins’ zašto ne govorim srpski (na srpskom)’ (2008)  weaves unbearably intimate close-ups into a fragmented and effective panorama of Kosovo’s recent past. Contributors include politicians, intellectuals and public figures as well as ‘ordinary’ people recounting in Serbian the reasons why they no longer speak the Serbian language. They range from attempts to historicize experience to deeply personal accounts of trauma and loss. This work can be seen as the artist revisiting central concerns of his practice and about Kosovo in particular as the country works to establish its nascent status as an independent state after internecine conflict.

www.ncad.ie

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zasto ne govorim srpski (na srpskom)

 

Kathy Prendergast

Desenhos [Drawings]: A-Z

06 February 2009 - 29 March 2009

Museu da Cidade, Lisbon

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Minnesota Road Atlas XVI

 

Isabel Nolan

Reach Out and Touch Faith

05 March 2009 - 28 March 2009

Gallery for one

Isabel Nolan and Mick Wilson

Two person exhibiton, the first in a series entitled 'Be not solitary, be not idle', curated by Vaari Claffey.

www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=133627570439

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Imaginary object

 

Paul Seawright

Solstice Gallery

19 February 2009 - 28 March 2009

Solstice Arts Centre, Navan

Paul Seawright is a photographer who has drawn heavily on his Northern Irish background to produce searching photographic investigations of aspects of its fraught political terrain. In his recent work Seawright has moved away from an overtly Irish context, focusing on what he has termed a ‘generic malevolent landscape’ represented by the uninhabited spaces at the edge of cities and forests throughout Europe. Awards include the prestigious Ville de Paris

www.solsticeartscentre.com

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Valley

 

Brian Maguire

isolated

30 January 2009 - 05 March 2009

Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast

The Golden Thread Gallery presents 'isolated', an exhibition curated by Peter Richards and featuring artists Gemma Anderson, Guy Ben-Nur, Cecily Brennan, Lisa Byrne, Ciara Finnegan, Phil Hession, Anna Konik and Brian Maguire

www.gtgallery.org.uk

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In Police Custody Brooklyn

 

Liam Gillick

Getting Even

14 November 2008 - 01 March 2009

Lewis Glucksman Gallery, Cork

Curated by Matt Packer and René Zechlin

Using performance, sculpture, film, photography and other art forms, the artists in this exhibition explore oppositions and dialogues that range global socio-political and cultural issues to domestic and environmental matters.

www.glucksman.org

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Literally Based on H.Z.

 

Mark Francis
David Godbold
Eoin Mc Hugh
Isabel Nolan
Kathy Prendergast

Into Irish Drawing

15 January 2009 - 27 February 2009

Limerick City Gallery of Art

Limerick City Gallery of Art will be the first venue to host this exhibiton of drawing from some of Ireland leading artists.

www.limerickcity.ie/lcga

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David Godbold, Spectacles, stupid!

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Isabel Nolan, Rug for a poet's bedroom floor # 1

 

Sean Scully

Made in Munich

21 November 2008 - 22 February 2009

Hausderkunst, Munich

From the middle of the 19th century to the end of the 1920s, Munich was considered to be a platform for avant-garde art.
Since the beginning of the 1970s Munich, next to New York and London, takes the lead in producing special editions and prints.
The exhibition 'made in munich' shows works produced by Munich galleries and distributed from the 1960s to today – rare works by International and German artists, created for galleries such as Heiner Friedrich, Sabine Knust, Fred Jahn, Schellmann & Klüser a.o. or for publishers Maximilian and Schellmann. for example, works by Georg Baselitz, Joseph Beuys, Marcel Broodthaers, Dan Flavin, Richard Hamilton, Blinky Palermo, Gerhard Richter, Fred Sandback and Sean Scully will be presented

www.hausderkunst.de

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Blue Fold

 

Isabel Nolan

Coalesce: Happenstance

10 January 2009 - 22 February 2009

SMART Project Space, Amsterdam

‘Coalesce’ is the title of an evolutionary exhibition project, initiated by curator Paul O’Neill in 2003. ‘Coalesce: Happenstance’ is the final version of the project and is the culmination of a six year research into exhibition-making as a form of artistic practice where the accumulation of actors and actions co-produce a single co-habited exhibition form. O'Neill has invited a vibrant selection of artists to take part as co-producers to develop new work in response to each other, to the overall exhibition structure and to its concept.

www.smartprojectspace.net

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Sometimes I imagine my love has died

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Sometimes I imagine my love has died

 

Dorothy Cross, Willie Doherty, Elizabeth Magill, Brian Maguire, Kathy Prendergast, Sean Scully, Sean Shanahan

Hugh Lane Centenary Print Collection

20 November 2008 - 08 February 2009

Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

A unique collaboration between Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane and Dorothy Cross, Willie Doherty, Barry Flanagan and Keith Milow, Louis le Brocquy, Ciarán Lennon, Anne Madden, Elizabeth Magill, Brian Maguire, Brian O’Doherty, Kathy Prendergast, Patrick Scott, Seán Scully and Seán Shanahan. Mindful of the concept and the ethos of Hugh Lane supporting contemporary practice, the resulting prints are as exceptional as they are rare.

www.hughlane.ie

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Sean Scully

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Dorothy Cross

 

Dorothy Cross

Struggle for Life

11 November 2008 - 31 January 2009

ERES-Stiftung, Munich

The STRUGGLE FOR LIFE symposium and exhibition deals with the process of acclimatization and obliteration from both a scientific and artistic point of view. Eight distinguished artists have been chosen to address such aspects as our evolutionary legacy, the winners of the present development as well as the species that have already been wiped out. They will also scrutinize scientific categorization and simulate new biological hybrids, not for better commercial results, but to create new art forms for their own sake.

An extensive catalog of both the exhibition and symposium and related activities will be published in the summer of 2009.

www.eres-stiftung.de/en

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Standing Foxglove

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Standing Foxglove (detail)

 

Barrie Cooke

Sean McSweeney Selects

05 December 2008 - 17 January 2009

Glór, Co. Clare

Continuing glór’s Selects…series of exhibitions, 2008 sees Seán McSweeney pull together a stellar line-up of artists. McSweeney himself is one of Ireland’s leading artists, whose bog pools and landscapes have become iconic images in Irish art.

Glór gallery is privileged to show McSweeney’s selection of Barrie Cooke, Pat Harris, Lorraine Wall & Jimmy O’Connor all artists highly regarded by critics and collectors alike.

www.glor.ie

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Didymosphenia Geminata

 

Phil Collins

life on mars, 55th Carnegie International

03 May 2008 - 11 January 2009

Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh

Curated by Douglas Fogle

zasto ne govorim srpski (na srpskom)
2008
16mm film transferred to DVD
black-and-white and colour, sound, 35 minutes

Acting as a director, photographer, interviewer, and producer, Phil Collins uses photography and video to explore individual and collective processes of representation and the ambivalent relationship between the camera and its subjects. He frequently sites his projects in geographical locations embroiled in social and political turmoil but avoids heavy-handed political messages in favor of intimate, vulnerable portrayals of individuals within a community. Through his work, Collins questions the ethical nature of visual media by offering his subjects the spotlight in exchange for control and ownership of their images. His most recent work, zasto ne govorim srpski (na srpskom), (2008), commissioned for this exhibition, is set amidst the political turmoil in Kosovo and its struggle for independence. Using the community's complicated relationship with the Serbo-Croat language as a reflection of its ambivalence toward its history and identity, Collins records testimonies by a number of contributors - from politicians, intellectuals and public figures to ordinary people - recounting in Serbo-Croat the reasons why they don't speak the language.

blog.cmoa.org/CI08/home.php

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zasto ne govorim srpski (na srpskom)

 

Siobhan Hapaska

Life?
Biomorphic Forms in Sculpture

27 September 2008 - 11 January 2009

Kunsthaus Graz am
Landesmuseum Joanneum


Recently questions on biology and genomics deal with topics of evolution, ethics and concrete fears of extinction. The show “Life?” at Kunsthaus Graz will look at these questions through the eye of contemporary sculpture, thereby finding forms of the organic, of the bio- and anthropomorphic as well as a new dimension of materiality: Can art help to understand the complex phenomenon of a “natural system” or the possibilities of changing nature through experiments?

 “Life” collects contemporary sculpture dealing with forms of the organic, echoing life and its fragile existence and will be displayed in the top floor of Kunsthaus Graz – the phenomenon of organic architecture in itself and starting point of the idea the exhibition.

www.kunsthausgraz.steiermark.at

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Becoming Cyclonic

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Speaker

 

Willie McKeown

Irish Museum Of Modern Art, Dublin

05 November 2008 - 11 January 2009

William McKeown’s work engages with the more delicate, indefinable qualities of nature, in particular the sky and the air above and around us, often with an emphasis on the emergence of daylight as experienced in the morning hours. McKeown’s work in recent years was defined by the artist’s highly crafted surfaces and meticulous application of thin washes of paint. This exhibition of new work comprised of oil on canvas, watercolour on paper and pencil drawings marks a distinct shift towards a more gestural, expressive brush work producing a more pronounced painterly effect. These paintings evolve McKeown’s remarkably refined sense of colour and understanding of light resulting in a body of work that is poetic, expansive and evocative of nature while remaining subtle and quietly restrained.

www.imma.ie

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Hope painting - ocean light

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Hope painting

 

Paul Seawright

Anxious Landscape

28 November 2008 - 10 January 2009

Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast

Anxious Landscape: Paul Seawright Selected Works, is an exhibition reflecting on work by Paul Seawright with a particular focus on his exploration of aspects of the political situation in the North of Ireland. The Golden Thread Gallery views Anxious Landscape as making a significant contribution to the gallery’s exhibition programme, which includes a comprehensive investigation into the construction of representations of post-war Northern Ireland. The exhibition examines a sense of how Seawright has responded to the heavily mediated story of ‘The Troubles’ by producing photographic investigations that have contributed alternative interpretations to the depictions of Northern Ireland in the national and international newspapers. The exhibition offers the viewer an opportunity to reflect on the journey taken by Seawright in the 1980’s & 1990’s “through the physical landscape of his native city, mapping out the cultural, political and social divides that exist in the mind of its inhabitants.”  Anxious Landscape features a broad selection works and will include his earliest work, Sectarian Murder, recently exhibited at Tate Britain.

www.gtgallery.org.uk

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Untitled (pylon)

 

Liam Gillick

theanyspacewhatever

24 October 2008 - 07 January 2009

Solomon R Guggenheim Museum, New York

During the 1990s a number of artists claimed the exhibition as their medium. Working independently or in various collaborative constellations, they eschewed the individual object in favor of the exhibition environment as a dynamic arena, ever expanding its physical and temporal parameters. Using the museum as a springboard for work that reaches beyond the visual arts, their work often commingles with other disciplines such as architecture, design, and theater, engaging directly with the vicissitudes of everyday life to offer subtle moments of transformation. This loose affiliation of artists, each of whom now boasts strong, independent careers, periodically and randomly joins forces to create a variety of projects. The Guggenheim Museum has extended an invitation to a core group of these artists—Angela Bulloch, Maurizio Cattelan, Liam Gillick, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Douglas Gordon, Carsten Höller, Pierre Huyghe, Jorge Pardo, Philippe Parreno, and Rirkrit Tiravanija—to collectively formulate a scenario for an exhibition, one that will reflect and articulate the unique nature of their practices. Organized by the museum’s Chief Curator, Nancy Spector, in close collaboration with the artists, the exhibition will present a genealogy of their shared history through site-specific installations of new, often self-reflexive works created on the occasion of this project.

This exhibition is sponsored by Hugo Boss
Additional support is provided by the Waldorf  Astoria Collection; The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; Etant donnés: The French-American Fund for Contemporary Art, a program of FACE; and The Grand Marnier Foundation.

The Guggenheim Museum gratefully acknowledges the Leadership Committee for theanyspacewhatever.

Liam Gillick, theanyspacewhatever signage system (prototype), 2008. Aluminum. Installation view, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2008. © Liam Gillick Courtesy Casey Kaplan, New York, and José Noé Suro, Guadalajara. Photo: David Heald

http://www.guggenheim.org/exhibitions/opening_soon/index.html

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theanyspacewhatever

 

Isabel Nolan
Siobhan Hapaska

Mediations Biennale

03 October 2008 - 03 January 2009

11th INTERNATIONAL BIENNALE OF CONTEMPORARY ART - POZNAN

"GARDENS AND ISLANDS"

The exhibition presents the newest, predominantly Central European, art. Its main idea coincides with the event’s key search for answers to the question of Central Europe’s identity, as well as their significance in the contemporary world. The author of the exhibition, the Hungarian Lorand Hegyi, is one of the most important European curators and art historians.

www.mediations.pl

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Where matter is, space is curved

 

Dorothy Cross

Riders to the Sea

27 November 2008 - 30 November 2008

English National Opera marks the 50th anniversary of the death of one of England’s best-loved composers, Ralph Vaughan Williams, with a major new production conducted by British music specialist Richard hickox and directed by the acclaimed actress Fiona Shaw. Riders to the Sea is set in the Aran Islands and is his most moving and compelling opera. The piece’s visual concept has been jointly devised by Irish multi-media artist Dorothy Cross and set designer Tom Pye

www.eno.org

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Riders to the sea

 

Siobhan Hapaska

THE BEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING
THE METAPHOR OF THE SPACE

14 September 2008 - 23 November 2008

LA BIENNALE DI
VENEZIA 2008
11th INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE EXHIBITION


Curated by:
Lóránd Hegyi (Director of Museum of Modern Art Metropole, Saint-Etienne)
Davide Di Maggio (Director of Fondazione Mudima, Milan)


The exhibition presents on the theme - Den Raum beleben -  paradigmatical exemples by contemporary women artists who are working at different  functional interpretation and very personal experiences of space has human, sociocultural context as well, as a field of possible interventions for creating new relations and new interferences. In this process the cultural tradition, memory, history, the conventional language system and the new, actual challenges, the human body and its energies create a new constellation in which mental, metaphysical, symbolical contexts are mixing up with concret, personal - and very often emotional - experiences of the micro - narrative.

www.galeriedavidedimaggio.com/exhibitions/la_biennale_di_venezia/

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Toughened in a waterfall of sorrow

 

Liam Gillick

Three Perspectives and a Short Scenario*

27 September 2008 - 16 November 2008

Kunstverein München

Three Perspectives and a Short Scenario* 

Work 1988 - 2008           
Mirrored Image:
A ‘Volvo’ bar


In autumn 2006 Liam Gillick and four international institutions decided to co-produce a mid-career retrospective in four acts. Earlier this year the first two exhibitions took place at, Witte de With, Rotterdam and Kunsthalle Zürich. Kunstverein München now presents the third act before the retrospective will come to an end at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in autumn 2009.
Instead of simply exhibiting previous works this multilayerd retrospective stands out due to it`s self-reflexive nature. Diverse exhibition formats and forms of presentation come into operation to negotiate Gillick`s work of the past 20 years and discuss the possibilities as well as the limits of a retrospective.
Within this context of this exhibition Kunstverein München is transformed into an active place of production. Produced will be a play titled “Mirrored Image: A ‘Volvo’ bar”, directed by Liam Gillick. Working with a group of young Munich actors within a structure, designed by the artist, a basic text will be developed and reworked into a series of performances that will take place during and within this exhibition.
Adapting the exhibition space as stage on which phenomena of the post-industrial society are played out, the exhibition at Kunstverein München presents a core aspect in Gillicks work: negotiating models of communality

www.kunstverein-muenchen.de/2008/en.01.0.php

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.

 

Isabel Nolan

Trance in Inaction

12 September 2008 - 18 October 2008

ARTSPACE
New Zealand


Curated by Brian Butler

Drawing is central to Nolan’s art practice; she describes it as catching a thought, a way to begin:

“Drawing is a great way of describing anything - an object, an idea or a feeling. Aesthetically I like its variability, it can be hard, soft, cold, warm, really conceptual or very emotive, often it is, or at least it appears, very direct and personal – the human touch.” says Nolan

Her drawings have been described by Declan Long as:

"Peculiar, inexplicable fragments of memory or narrative (a hand, a spider, two blue owls) combine with cryptic texts and abstract forms to create an effect that at times resembles the state of hypnogia, that period between waking and sleep when minor hallucinatory flashes are possible, when we are not all there."

During her stay in Auckland Nolan will be undertaking research at the Auckland War Memorial Museum. Nolan has exhibited widely in Ireland and internationally, including at the Project Arts Centre and the Goethe Institute, Dublin. She represented Ireland at the Venice Biennale in 2005 has participated in exhibitions at the Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva and the Irish Museum of Modern Art.

www.artspace.org.nz

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Miracle of the sun

 

Siobhán Hapaska and Isabel Nolan

Micro-narratives : tentation des petites réalités, Musée d'Art Moderne de Saint Etienne

07 May 2008 - 21 September 2008

Curated by Lóránd Hegyi

The exhibition 'MICRO-NARRATIVES' represents 85 positions by contemporary artists whose activity manifests an occupation with an anthropological orientation and tries to find the new narrative in the micro-communities, in the personal experiences, in the intimate and personal inmediate contexts, which resist again the monumental, hierarhic, universalistical explications of society and culture.

www.mam-st-etienne.fr/

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Siobhán Hapaska, Dry Spring

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Isabel Nolan, The unfolding moment

 

Sean Scully

Retrospective MACRO al Mattatoio, Rome/Danilo Eccher

10 May 2008 - 17 August 2008

A retrospective of the work of Sean Scully, who combines features of different pictorial styles - Geometrical Abstraction, Minimalism, Conceptual Art, Abstract Expressionism - to create a language of his own. By displaying his paintings, drawings and photographs together, we are able to see the consistency that gives meaning to his art. Curator Danilo Eccher, Macro, Rome. Catalogue Published by Thames and Hudson.

The exhibition travels from Miro Foundation, Barcelona to MACRO al Mattatoio, Rome (May-August 2008) and Musee d'Art Moderne de St. Etienne Metropole, France

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Helen

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Abala

 

Dorothy Cross

Stage

14 June 2008 - 26 July 2008

This work has been specially commissioned to mark the launch of the Shrewsbury Darwin200 celebrations commemorating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin.

Stage was made in the Galapagos Islands which Cross visited with the actor Fiona Shaw (a childhood friend and occasional collaborator) together they explore the current conditions on the Islands and reflect, in that context, on the evolution of art itself and the role for artists within a world facing increasing environmental and cultural changes.

Cross has also been shortlisted to create a permanent installation at London's Natural History Museum to celebrate the legacy of Charles Darwin. Her proposal will be on show at the museum from 4 June to 14 September 2008.

www.shrewsburymuseums.com

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Dorothy Cross

 

Paul Winstanley

Survey, 1990-2007, ARTSPACE, Auckland, New Zealand

26 April 2008 - 31 May 2008

Major survey exhibition of British artist Paul Winstanley's work.

Paul Winstanley is a painter whose commitment to the traditional categories of the still life, the interior and the landscape is allied with an acknowledgement of the centrality of the photographic image to contemporary life. At once methodical and melancholic, his painterly depictions of landscapes, deserted passages, lobbies and walkways, of empty college TV lounges and anonymous interview rooms, are generally rendered in a muted palette reminiscent of a blurred black-and-white snapshot. There is a sense of imposed order as well as an atmosphere of abandonment or expectation about these spaces of fleeting transit, or at best temporary occupation.

www.artspace.org.nz

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Veil 11

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Yellow Mountains 4

 

Willie Doherty

The Visitor, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin

18 April 2008 - 27 May 2008

The Visitor is a new video installation by Willie Doherty, made specially for The Douglas Hyde Gallery.
The Visitor was shot on location in Belfast in early 2008 and revisits some of Doherty's recurrent themes and preoccupations with place, landscape and memory. The camera moves between the trees of a small forest and scrutinises the surfaces of a block of flats.
The Visitor features an enigmatic figure whose intentions and origins are unclear. The work is driven by a voiceover that speculates about the role and nature of the unnamed visitor. This new installation expands upon the cinematic tropes and narrative conventions that Doherty has deployed in recent works such as Empty, 2006 and Ghost Story, 2007.

Willie Doherty first exhibited at the Douglas Hyde Gallery in 1993. His work has been shown in galleries and museums all over the world.

A publication, to be published after the exhibition, will document The Visitor.

www.douglashydegallery.com

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Still taken from The Visitor

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Still taken from The Visitor

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Still taken from The Visitor

 

Unique Act, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

Selected works by Sean Scully, Carmengloria Morales, Ruth Root, Seán Shanahan and Frederic Thursz

11 March 2008 - 25 May 2008

In celebration of the Sean Scully collection, presented by the artist in 2006, the Gallery presents Unique Act. At a time when almost everything around us is mass-produced in factories, this exhibition explores works that are painted out of necessity. A shift in context has inadvertently awarded abstract paintings a very special sort of position. It is upon this heritage that Sean Scully, Carmengloria Morales, Ruth Root, Seán Shanahan and Frederic Thursz engage in a dialogue with abstraction and open up new possibilities that challenge the theoretical impasse set up by American art critic Clement Greenberg. Essay by David Carrier.

www.hughlane.ie

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Shanahan

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Shanahan

 

Tony Swain

Impure Passports
Inverleith House, Edinburgh

16 February 2008 - 20 April 2008

New drawings made for Inverleith House by one of the artists chosen to represent Scotland at the 2007 Venice Biennale; the works in acrylic on newspaper have a dreamlike, surreal quality and have been installed by the artist throughout the first-floor.

www.rbge.org.uk

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Tony Swain

 

Isabel Nolan

Gallery 2, Douglas Hyde Gallery

14 March 2008 - 10 April 2008

Nolan works in a range of media that includes painting, drawing, sculpture, and video animation. Drawing equally on traditions of abstraction, figuration and the ‘imagetext’ the world evoked in Nolan’s work is a world of intimacies and oddities, of quiet desperation and compensatory joys. Usually modest in scale these works have little time for bombast or monumentality, preferring to explore by accumulating increments a kaleidoscopic array of everyday wonders and commonplace feelings such as loneliness, tenderness, frustration, fear and hope. The mundane particularities of the real are repeatedly enlivened in her work by the workings of a spirited, off-beat imagination.

www.douglashydegallery.com

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Death after life

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Jesus, you look so sad

 

Phil Collins

the world won't listen, Dallas Museum of Art

09 November 2007 - 23 March 2008

The Dallas Museum of Art will premiere Phil Collins’ completed three-part video installation the world won’t listen. Filmed in Colombia, Turkey, and Indonesia, the video trilogy features fans of the influential British indie-rock band The Smiths performing karaoke versions of tracks from their 1987 compilation album The World Won’t Listen. Along with the first-ever public presentation of Collins’ completed trilogy, the Dallas exhibition will also include a series of works based on letters that Morrissey, the band’s iconic lead singer, wrote as a teenager to London music weeklies.

www.dallasmuseumofart.org

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el mundo no escuchará

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dunia tak akan mendengar

 

Mark Francis

Pulse, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

20 January 2008 - 22 February 2008

Borrowing from scientific imagery and maps of both the natural and manmade world, Mark Francis’ recent work renews one’s interest in abstraction. The exhibition centres around three large diptychs, titledTimbre I, II, and III, in which Francis responds directly to sound and vibration. The paintings of Mark Francis present us with rhythmic compositions that seem part-electronic, part-organic. Cadences made material with forms strung on supports throbbing across the picture plane. The content is neither figurative nor abstract. What are they? Pictures of things from so close up, that they seem to pixelate.

www.hughlane.ie

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Timbre IV, (diptych)

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Timbre I, (diptych)

 

Callum Innes

From Memory, Museum of Contempory Art, Sydney

27 November 2007 - 17 February 2008

This exhibition of new and recent paintings by Callum Innes brings together the themes and preoccupations of his practice over the last fifteen years. Examples from his series of 'identified form', 'isolated form', 'repetition', 'monologue', 'resonance' and shellac paintings join a substantial body of 'exposed' paintings, from the earliest to the most recent, in a stunning exploration of the development of the artist's visual vocabulary. Callum Innes: From Memory is organised by The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh. The exhibition travels from Modern Art Oxford to the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney in November 2007.

Publication 256pp: From Memory
This substantial retrospective monograph traces the development of Innes's practice from 1990 to 2006 and features new essays by Michael Auping, Richard Cork, Paul Bonaventura and Eric de Chassey available from The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh.


www.modernartoxford.org.uk

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Monologue Seven

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Exposed Painting Cinnabar Green

 

Jaki Irvine

In a World Like This, Chisenhale Gallery, London

31 October 2007 - 08 December 2007

This multi-projection installation was shot at Eagles Flying, The Irish Raptor Research Centre in Ballymote. Co Sligo.
In a World Like This is concerned with the question as to how we might best proceed in circumstances which are not perfect but are possibly the best they're ever likely to be. At the raptor centre birds of prey sit out in the garden, and are at once both surreal and beautiful. Some of the birds have been damaged through misuse at other holdings, and have grown overly aggressive or are physically damaged as a result. Others arrived at the centre having been found with broken wings or other injuries. Here, alongside healing limbs and infections, new relationships have been built up with great care and patience. Tracing the sometimes hesitant flights and landings of the different birds to and from their handlers, the fragile lines between damage, beauty and trust slowly reveal themselves. Irvine's films and videos create elusive yet absorbing narratives that explore human interaction with the natural world, with the built environment and with other humans. Using a combination of image, sound and voice-over her films suggest fragments of larger untold narratives and evoke a place where the boundaries between realities and dreams, past and present and animal and human become fluid and permeable. The exhibition which has been produced in collaboration with Chisenhale Gallery, London and The Model Arts and Niland Gallery, Sligo, Ireland. A major new publication to mark the exhibition will be published in early 2008.

www.chisenhale.org.uk

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In A World Like This

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In a World Like This

 

Siobhán Hapaska

Camden Arts Centre, London

28 September 2007 - 25 November 2007

Siobhán Hapaska is best known for her futuristic fibreglass sculptures which juxtapose exotic natural elements and modern manufacturing techniques. In these new works she replaces high-sheen surfaces with objects such as leather, wood, buffalo skull and coyote skin. Siobhán Hapaska's first solo exhibition in the UK in ten years will include an outdoor sculpture created during a residency at Camden Arts Centre

www.camdenartscentre.org

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Dry Spring

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Speaker

 

Tony Swain

52nd Venice Biennale

07 June 2007 - 21 November 2007

Announcing details of Scotland and Venice 2007, Curator, Philip Long said: 'Scottish art is at one of its most progressive moments and our chosen artists represent this position in the form of six highly individual talents. As with the heterogeneous character of the Biennale, the work of Charles Avery, Henry Coombes, Louise Hopkins, Rosalind Nashashibi, Lucy Skaer and Tony Swain is diverse, exciting and unpredictable. Some on occasion use invented worlds to investigate their concerns; others make use of comparisons, real situations or look back into history. What is clear is that each artist works with such ability and often with such surprising and new means that they have the power to alter perceptions.'

Artist Merlin James comments on Swains work: '[His] semi-abstract designs, with chevrons and loose grids, and rudimentary evocations of perspective and spacial illusion, invite direct material and aesthetic response. He engages the viewer's physical and emotional empathy as much as or simultaneously with - intellectual speculation.'

www.labiennale.org

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Torn Rota

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Dipped in the Blood of a Car

 

Merlin James

52nd Venice Biennale

07 June 2007 - 21 November 2007

After the resounding success of previous presentations from Wales at the Venice Biennale of Art Richard Deacon, Merlin James and Heather & Ivan Morison have been selected to represent Wales at the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007. The Venice Biennale is widely regarded as the most important event in the contemporary art calendar. With over 70 nations participating, it provides the artists representing Wales with an outstanding international platform. The Wales exhibition is hosted by the Arts Council of Wales in partnership with the Welsh Assembly Government. The Wales Pavilion will be located in the same exhibition space as previous years, the Ex-Birreria on the island of Giudecca. This has proved to be an ideal exhibition venue. Hannah Firth the Curator for 2007 says I was delighted to be chosen to curate the 2007 show for Wales; selection has been extremely challenging and exciting due to the strength and range of work being produced in Wales and by Welsh artists. I am looking forward to working closely with all of the selected artists, to create an exhibition that will allow each of them to explore new ideas that will contribute to a dynamic overall show.


www.labiennale.org

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Squaw

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Tree and Building

 

Willie Doherty

52nd Venice Biennale

07 June 2007 - 21 November 2007

The Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the British Council have announced that Hugh Mulholland will once again be the curator for Northern Ireland's art exhibition at next year's 52nd Venice Biennale. Mulholland has selected Willie Doherty to represent Northern Ireland. Willie is one of Northern Ireland's highest profile artists and an established name in the international contemporary art scene. The artist and curator will work together to present a new body of work in Venice.

www.labiennale.org

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Ghost Story

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Ghost Story

 

Tadao Ando

Lecture: Creating Dreams

23 September 2007

Kerlin Gallery is delighted to announce that it is one of the sponsors of the first public appearance in Ireland by the internationally renowned Japanese architect Tadao Ando.

Tadao Ando (born 1941 in Osaka, Japan) has led a storied life, working as a truck driver and boxer prior to settling on the profession of architecture, despite never having taken formal training in the field. He works primarily in exposed cast-in-place concrete and is renowned for an exemplary craftsmanship which invokes a Japanese sense of materiality, junction and spatial narrative through the pared aesthetics of international modernism. In 1969, he established the firm Tadao Ando Architects & Associates. In 1995, Ando won the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize medallion; an award generally considered to be the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in Architecture. His work is known for the creative use of natural light and for architecture that follow the natural forms of the landscape, rather than disturbing the landscape by making it conform to the constructed space of a building.

This event is presented by The Irish Museum of Modern Art and the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland and sponsored by Kerlin Gallery in cooperation with Yoshii Gallery, New York and the Clarence Hotel, Dublin.

http://www.modernart.ie/en/page_170607.htm

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Tadao Ando

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Church on Water

 

Willie Doherty

Hamburg Kunstverein and Stadtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau, Munchen

19 May 2007 - 02 September 2007

Hamburg Kunstverein - 19 May 2007 - 2 September 2007
Stadtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau, Munchen - 29 September 2007 - 6 January 2008

Born in Derry, Northern Ireland, in 1959, Willie Doherty is one of the best-known artists of his generation and has been chosen to represent his home country at the Venice Biennale this year. In order to do justice to the evolution of this impressive oeuvre, the Hamburg Kunstverein and the Lenbachhaus Munich have developed two different, complementary exhibitions that give a representative showing of the slide installations and videos from the start of Doherty's career in the early 1990s to the present day.

The exhibition received financial support from Culture Ireland and University of Ulster
Curated by Yilmaz Dziewior and Matthias Mühling

The catalogue is published by Hatje Cantz with essays by Francis McKee and Matthias Mühling, an interview with the artist by Yilmaz Dziewior, and a videography documenting the filmic works from 1990-2007.

www.lenbachhaus.de

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Closure

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Empty

 

Phil Collins

gercegin geri donusu / the return of the real, Ausstellungshalle Zeitgenoessische Kunst, Muenster

02 June 2007 - 26 August 2007

For gercegin geri donusu / the return of the real (2005), originally produced for the 9th International Istanbul Biennial, Collins invited people who felt their lives had been ruined by appearing on talk-shows and makeover shows to tell their extraordinary stories at a press conference. Furthermore, Collins hired a director of a Turkish reality TV show to conduct hour-long interviews with the participants. By putting these individuals under scrutiny once again, Collins makes the ethics of further exploitation one of the main subjects of the piece.

 Phil Collins's art investigates our ambivalent relationship with the camera as both an instrument of attraction and manipulation, of revelation and shame. He often operates within forms of low-budget television and reportage-style documentary to address the discrepancy between reality and its representations. In his projects, Collins creates unpredictable situations and his irreverent and intimate engagement with his subjects - a process he describes as 'a cycle of no redemption' - is as important for his practice as the final presentation in the gallery.

www.muenster.de/stadt/ausstellungshalle/ausstellungen-aktuell.html

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gercegin geri donusu / the return of the real

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gercegin geri donusu / the return of the real

 

Willie Doherty

Ghost Story

31 January 2008 -

"Ghost Story (2007) is a new work by the master of paranoia and passive aggression, Willie Doherty, which introduces the use of a first-person voiceover (by the actor Stephen Rea) that details the speaker’s mounting anxiety as he is unable to order, much less interpret, his own fragmentary and sometimes violent memories.”
Marcia E. Vetrocq, Venice Biennale review, Art in America, Sept 2007

Screening at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, 18:30-20:00 followed by Willie Doherty and Tim Marlow in conversation.

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Ghost Story

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Ghost Story

 

Mark Francis

Book Launch

08 July 2008 -

This monumental monograph spans the artist's entire career to date, from his early landscapes to his current abstractions as well as considering the varied influences and sources of inspiration throughout his practice. This chronological survey also illustrates Francis' habit of revisiting the ideas of his earlier works and taking them in new directions.

Featuring essays and discussions by Richard Dyer, James Peto, Francis McKee and forward by Barbara Dawson, Director of Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane, this beautifully illustrated book includes over 200 colour plates celebrating the career of Mark Francis.

18.30-20.30
The Arts Club, Mayfair, London W1S 4NP

www.lundhumphries.com

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Mark Francis

 

Sean Shanahan

'interludium'

26 January 2010 -

A Public Lecture by Seán Shanahan
85-86 Saint Stephens Green in Newman House


Admission free, 17.00 - 18.00 pm

The installation by Sean Shanahan at 85-86 Saint Stephens Green in Newman House rises through the stairwell from ground level to first floor and engages with the architecture of the Georgian building that contains rare samples of the finest 18th century plasterwork in Dublin.
 
The installation operates in a series of parallels, both direct and metaphorical, that opens up an opportunity for seeing the architecture and history anew in what for us has become otherwise familiar. A possibility opens for thinking about the relationship between history and actuality. The interaction of the artwork with the space allows the viewer to imagine that it is not just us who perceive the world, but that the world too has its vision of us, and it can be discovered and set in motion by our departure from the established frameworks of history.

Emphasizing the skin of the interior, it's very decorative nature, allows for an illicit aesthetic pleasure while it's defining space gives a safe boundary for reverie. The installation by Sean
Shanahan attempts to highlight this, just as if a text where highlighted or underlined. The aim is to create dialogue rather than contrast – an indication of the continuity between the past and the present, between then and now.

Contact: Newman House: Ruth Ferguson, 85-86 Saint Stephens Green, Dublin 2. Tel: 00353 (0)1 475 7255

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interludium

 

Phil Collins

soy mi madre - Public Screening

14 June 2010 -

Belfast Film Festival
Studio Cinema
23 Donegall Street
Belfast

8pm - 9.30pm

Phil Collins will present a screening of his recent work soy mi madre, followed by an ‘in conversation’ with Dr Daniel Jewesbury about the work, and the route that his practice has taken since the early days of his career in Belfast in the 1990’s.

Shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 2006, Phil’s work deals with the nuances of social relations. He works in video and photography, often using elements of popular culture and forms of low-budget television and reportage-style documentary. Recent projects have included a disco-dance marathon in Ramallah; The World Won’t Listen, featuring young people in Turkey, Colombia, and Indonesia performing karaoke versions of Smiths songs; and a press conference with former reality–TV participants. 

TICKETS: £4/£2

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soy mi madre

 

Phil Collins & Jaki Irvine

Screening Room: Dublin

15 November 2011 -

Koelnischer Kunstverein, Koeln

Screening Room: Dublin is a programme curated by Regina Barunke, which presents a selection of artists films from Dublin galleries and art institutions.

Phil Collins and Jaki Irvine are amongst the Irish and international artists selected in the programme. Phil Collins' 2005 film 'the louder you scream, the faster we go' and Jaki Irvine's '56 inch Fantasy' (2009) will be screened on Tuesday 15 November 2011. A continuation of Screening Room: Dublin follows on Tuesday 29 November.

Participating Artists: Jesse Jones, Anita Di Bianco, Bea McMahon, Patrick Jolley, Phil Collins, Uri Aran, Lee Welch, Jaki Irvine, Atsushi Kaga, Gerard Byrne, Kate Davis, Aurelien Froment, Maeve Connolly, Charlotte Moth, Declan Clarke, Niamh O'Malley and Linda Quinlan

The programme begins at 7pm at Koelnischer Kunstverein, Kino in der Bruecke, Koeln.

Admission: €5, reduction rate €2.50, members free.

www.koelnischerkunstverein.de/portal/english/programme/current/2122.html

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the louder you scream, the faster we go

 

Sean Scully : Why this, Not that?

Film Screening

16 October 2011 -

Dublin City Gallery, The Hugh Lane, Dublin

Sean Scully is one of the most widely acclaimed and exhibited painters in the world. After a brief initial period of hard-edge painting Scully abandoned the masking tape while retaining his characteristic motif of the stripe. For over a quarter of a century since he has developed and refined his own instantly recognisable style of heroic geometric abstraction. (Dir. Michael Doyle, CutStone Productions, 2009, 53 mins)

This screening is free and open to the public. Early arrival is recommended as places are limited.

Sunday 16 October 2011, 1.30 pm


www.hughlane.ie/lectures/lectures-past/464-screening-whythisnotthat

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Wall of Light Alba