Tuesday, September 30, 2008

About Curating Practice

This info can be read in full at the following source: http://www.contemporaryartsreview.com/?cat=13

How do you create a Biennial pavilion? by Robert Fleck (Austria)

In the anecdotes and stories shared by artists relating to their participation in the Venice Biennial, their respective preparatory trips to Venice hold a special position. Typically, the preparatory trip usually takes place about eight to ten months prior to the Biennial – assuming that the nomination process in the respective country allows the artist(s) and the commissioner any such lead time. That said, this has long been the practice in Austria as it has in other countries with important national pavilions at the Biennial. Many of the 35 or so nations who showcase their own entries in Venice with their own pavilion do not nominate the artists or commissioners until much later in the day.


Curators: Best Practice in Project Management by Noel Kelly (Ireland)

In recent years the definition of the role of the curator has undergone both a dramatic change, and continues still to be refined and challenged. With this change there is also the associated re-definition of the relationship between artist and curator, thereby implying a direct impact on the relationship between artist and audience. In this text we will look at some broad definitions of curator, take a very specific position on curatorial best practice, and look at the potential pitfalls that may lie on the way for the inexperienced artist or curator.


THE LAST EAST EUROPEAN SHOW: DEFINING MODES OF MOVEMENT THROUGH A GLOBAL ART SYSTEM by Marko Stamenkovic

.....What makes this project different in comparison to others of the similar nature, dealing with the fundamental reason behind the interest in this region’s cultural production, is a self-addressing reflection on how it is positioned within the contemporary production conditions. This is a concept involving the radical shift of positions not only in art production but also in art reception. It is all the more significant for re-thinking the status of contemporary curatorship, because it introduced an explicit theoretical and productive curatorial model, which could serve as a platform for future projects and exhibitions, but also as a good example of international curatorial co-operation for the region in general. This approach might have been provoked by strict policy demands which determine the existence, development and programming of cultural institutions in general, and influence the ways in which contemporary art is understood in the government reform priorities. The proposed course of analysis is necessary for an adequate treatment of contemporary art and contemporary art collections primarily because of the regulatory changes that need to be introduced and implemented for the benefit of the proper understanding and preservation of both modern and contemporary art from former Eastern Europe. How this curatorial model evolved and developed in the very condition of new political and cultural context?.....


NEW SITES-NEW FIELDS AT LEITRIM SCULPTURE CENTRE

NEW SITES-NEW FIELDS AT LEITRIM SCULPTURE CENTRE

‘New Sites-New Fields’ is an experimental project set up at the Leitrim Sculpture Centre in Manorhamilton that develops new models of arts practice and research that respond to the social and ecological concerns arising from human interaction with the environment. It investigates the changing meanings, values and perceptions of landscape that have consequently emerged.

Partcipating artists include: Alan Counihan, Andrew Dodds, Andrew Duggan, Anna Macleod, David Spence, Elaine Reynolds, Christine Mackey, Gareth Kennedy, Jennie Moran, Mairin Kelly, Michelle Horrigan and Sarah Browne. Opening is on Friday 3 October 2008 from 6pm at the Leitrim Sculpture centre gallery. Site-specific projects can be visited from the following day until 31 October 2008.
www.newsitesnewfields.com

CULTURE AND THE CITY CONFERENCE AT NATIONAL GALLERY

CULTURE AND THE CITY CONFERENCE AT NATIONAL GALLERY

On 21 October 2008 from 9am to 5pm Temple Bar Cultural Trust will host a conference on the theme of ‘Culture and the City’ at the National Gallery of Ireland, in partnership with Dublin City Council.

This one-day conference will provide a platform for discussion, debate and exchange of experience from Irish and international practitioners around some of the key issues affecting cultural development in Dublin. The conference will explore ways of achieving a more integrated approach to planning and development for culture in Dublin city. It will also explore ways of enhancing the level of civic engagement and public participation in the cultural life of the city.

Full programme timetable and on-line registration are available at:
www.templebar.ie/documents/event_themes/registration_form_final.pdf

Brief for Art Commission at Cornmarket

Dublin City Council
Brief for Art Commission at Cornmarket
Closing date 31 October 2008

Dublin City Council is seeking to celebrate the creative and digital energies of Dublin 8 through the commissioning of an electronic artwork for a new space to view video and digital artwork and cultural information at Cornmarket. It is hoped that artwork will include technical provision for the screening of cultural activity in the area and offer possibilities to engage a passing audience. Applicants are also asked to consider programme content and future curation of the screen.

This commission is financed by Dublin City Council and may require the collaboration
of an artist or artists working with professionals to include all or a number of the
following professions: curators, artists, designer, engineer, architect, landscape
architect etc.

The Commission
The artist is asked to incorporate an urban screen and to consider the design and
programme content to create a public viewing space. Urban screens are increasingly
popular in cities across the world and provide the potential to create audiences in
public spaces. This screen will be used for cultural purposes, and may include the
screening of artists’ films, information relating to cultural activity in the area and entertainment. It will not be used for advertising but rather is asked to make the viewer aware in some capacity that they have entered an area of the city known for both its cultural and digital communities.

Per Cent for Art Commissions

The Arts Department of Wexford County Council invites submissions for the
following Per Cent for Art Commissions:
Sculpture
N11 Gorey to Arklow Link €113,719
Bunclody Sewerage Scheme € 43,040
Cherryorchard Phase II Housing Scheme € 26,905
Multi Disciplinary Artist Panel
Submissions are invited from
A) Artists practicing in a range of art media for residency commissions
B) Sculptors.
Artist residency and sculpture commissions may arise during 2009, for
which panels will be formed. Budgets for residencies will range in value,
up to a maximum of €20,000. Budgets for sculptures will range in value,
up to a maximum of €59,850.
Full details, commission briefs and application forms available at
www.wexford.ie/arts or contact Sinéad Redmond, Public Art Administrator,
The Arts Department, Wexford County Council, County Hall, Wexford,
Telephone 053 9176440 / 9176369, Email sinead.redmond@wexfordcoco.ie
The closing date for receipt of submissions is
5pm Thursday, 30th October 2008.
Late and/or incomplete submissions will not be accepted.

Deadlines approaching for Impressions 2008

Impressions is one of Ireland's largest and longest running open submission print exhibition, taking place in Galway Arts Centre from December 11th 2008 - January 17th 2009.

Drop off points for collection of submitted prints and application forms are as follows: Cork Printmakers: November 12th, Limerick Printmakers: November 12th, Firestation Artists' Studios, Dublin: November 12th, Sligo Art Gallery: November 11th, Galway Arts Centre: November 13th, Belfast Print Workshop: November 11th.

Hans Ulrich Obrist part 2

Hans Ulrich Obrist part 1

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Zoo Art Fair 17–20 October 2008

Since 2004 Zoo Art Fair has identified and platformed emerging commercial and non-commercial art organisations including galleries, project spaces, artist collectives, curatorial groups and publications during London's Contemporary Art Week.

Zoo Art Fair is a non-profit enterprise, sponsored by established galleries, collectors, arts businesses and public funders as well as commercial brands and businesses.


 


17–20 October 2008

Monday, September 15, 2008


Kate Southworth  

Kate Southworth is an artist and researcher. With Patrick Simons she is a founding member of the art group Glorious Ninth - producers of distributed artworks, DIY installations and invisible networks. Current experiments into co-poetic relationships between code and ritual find form as aural-visual works, installations, performative presentations and texts, and expose their ongoing aesthetic and political attempts to evade systems of control.

Recent works, such as November and love_potion, use magic, tactical gardening and social networks to recover knowledge of herbs and healing from commercial control and to share it as common knowledge. Glorious Ninth’s work has been exhibited in academic, gallery and online contexts.

Kate received BA (Hons) in Fine Art and an MSc in Multimedia Systems. She has taught Media Art subjects at Universities in London, Dublin and Cornwall. Currently she is leader of the iRes Research Group in Interactive Art & Design at University College Falmouth where, for the last five years, she has been Course Leader of MA Interactive Art & Design.

iRes

iRes is a research cluster, based at University College Falmouth, that aims to develop experimental interactive artworks, designs, software tools and environments that contribute to and support ethical interaction with other human beings within the context of the so-called 'information society'.

Glorious Ninth

Glorious Ninth is a collaborative partnership between Internet and Interactive artist Kate Southworth and composer and sound artist Patrick Simons. Their work explores aesthetic, political, theoretical and conceptual approaches to knowing the world. The space between their different approaches is Glorious Ninth. 

 FREE BEER is a beer which is free in the sense of freedom, not in the sense of free beer.
The project, originally conceived by Superflex and students at the Copenhagen IT University, applies modern free software / open source methods to a traditional real-world product - namely the alcoholic beverage loved and enjoyed globally, and commonly known as beer.
FREE BEER is based on classic ale brewing traditions, but with addded Guaraná for a natural energy boost. The recipe and branding elements of FREE BEER is published under a Creative Commons (Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5) license, which means that anyone can use the recipe to brew their own FREE BEER or create a derivative of the recipe. Anyone is free to earn money from FREE BEER, but they must publish the recipe under the same license and credit our work. All design and branding elements are available to beer brewers, and can be modified to suit, provided changes are published under the same license (”Attribution & Share Alike”)
FREE BEER is based on Vores Øl v. 1. FREE BEER v 3.0 is currently under revision by Skands Brewery and is scheduled to hit the shelves in Denmark (and hopefully be available for purchase online) by mid june 2006. 

 To follow the latest FREE BEER news and development of FREE BEER:
http://freebeer.org

OUR BEER
The first open source beer "Vores Øl" (our beer) was made with a group of students at the IT-University in Copenhagen.
more on OUR BEER:
http://voresoel.dk  






Tuesday, September 2, 2008


http://www.aequalsaght.org/


A=AGHT // NOLA = TALLAGHT (Noh lae // Tahl lae) is:

A Concept, An Art Project, A Website, A Forum for Exchange , A Developing Pedagogy, A Traveling Exhibition
, A Metaphor, A Catalyst for an Alternative Economy, A Cultural Investment

A=AGHT is a project designed by lead artist Jackie Sumell under the South Dublin County Percent for Art Scheme. Ms. Sumell is currently artist-in-resident through In Context-3 Programme, based in Tallaght and has been working in New Orleans over the last 7 years.

A=AGHT is a semi-utopic virtual space/town whose rules, population and culture are generated by a facilitated exchange between youth from New Orleans and Tallaght. Adult artists and cultural workers from both cities will develop projects that encourage youth participants to explore historic moments, social grievances, ethnic and racial disparities in order to invent a place of creative resolve.

A=AGHT is a concept based on creating the same sound from two entirely different spellings. This serves as the conceptual catalyst for the process of identifying and extracting commoness in seemingly different communities. NOLA (New Orleans, Louisiana) and Tallaght (South County Dublin).

A=AGHT was initiated in March 2008, and will develop towards an exhibition and corresponding publication scheduled for December 2008. The exhibition, a Visitors Centre for the invented place/space/identity/website.

A=AGHT will be build by participants under the tutelage of Jackie Sumell, and intends to travel between to two corresponding cities (New Orleans and Tallaght).

A=AGHT hopes to encourage young people to consider and address immediate concerns through challenging questions and projects. Participants will interact with each other in a non-public forum with weekly provocations posted. The forum will be mediated by lead artist Jackie Sumell and project coordinator Anne Keenan.

A=AGHT hopes to inspire other educators to develop programmes that are compelling, challenging and constructive. The complex poetics of inventing a place that exploits commonalities instead of people is inherent to the project's concept. The overall objective is to encourage young people to construct an imaginary place where the trajectories of these principles will influence the real life decisions of generations to come.