David Gryn

Archive for the ‘Film and Video’ Category

Art Basel Miami Beach 2012 – Art Video Nights

In Art, Art Basel Miami Beach, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Cinema, David Gryn, David Zink Yi, Film and Video, Gryn, Jesper Just, Miami, MOCAtv, Nicholas Abrahams, Ragnar Kjartansson, Sam Samore, Theaster Gates, Video, Video Art on 26/11/2012 at 9:41 am

Art Video Nights

Running from December 5 to 8, Art Video Nights will showcase 60 film and video works on the 7,000-square-foot outdoor projection wall of the Frank Gehry-designed New World Center in SoundScape Park. Presented by participating galleries of Art Basel Miami Beach, the program features works by artists including Julieta Aranda, Daniel Arsham, Guy Ben-Ner, Theaster Gates, Jesper Just, Mauricio Lupini, Ryan McGinley, Rashaad Newsome, Robin Rhode, Sam Samore, Adam Shecter, and Hu Xiangqian. Art Video Nights will also feature a special dusk-to-dawn screening of the 12-hour long film Bliss by Ragnar Kjartansson, presented by Art Basel in collaboration with the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) North Miami and the New World Center on Saturday, December 8 at 6pm. Art Video is organized in association with David Gryn, Director of London’s Artprojx.

www.artbasel.com/videonights

www.artprojx.com

See the full e-flux announcement

http://www.facebook.com/artbaselmiamibeach/events

http://www.fadwebsite.com/2012/11/26/art-video-nights-at-art-basel-miami-beach-2012/

Art Video at Art Basel Miami Beach 2012 – list of works

In Adam Shecter, Art, Art Basel Miami Beach, Art Fair, Art Salon, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, David Gryn, Film and Video, Jesper Just, Josiah McElheny, Julieta Aranda, Mauricio Lupini, Miami, Nicholas Abrahams, Rashaad Newsome, Ryan McGinley, Sam Samore, Screenings, Takeshi Murata, Team, Theaster Gates, Video, Video Art, White Cube on 23/11/2012 at 12:08 am

 

 

 

 

 

 

Art Video – Art Basel Miami Beach

A full list of the works being screened as part of Art Video Nights and within the Miami Beach Convention Center.

For the second consecutive year, Art Video will present works by some of today’s most exciting artists across two venues, inside the Miami Beach Convention Center and in the outdoor setting of SoundScape Park. Organized in association with David Gryn, Director of London’s ArtprojxArt Video Nights will showcase 60 film and video works on the 7,000-square-foot outdoor projection wall of the Frank Gehry-designed New World Center. Selections drawn from the participating galleries of Art Basel Miami Beach include works by a wide array of artists, both emerging and established, from Latin America, the United States, Asia and beyond.

Flyer Art Video 2012 (PDF)

Mauricio Lupini
 | Repeat after reading (O BA), 2011, 1’29” | Ignacio Liprandi Arte Contemporáneo
Working with Brazilian Bossa Nova and Venezuelan Onda Nueva, the series of videos Repeat after reading explores the onomatopoeic words found in both musical “new waves.”

Evandro Machado | Desmaterial, 2011, 7′ | A Gentil Carioca
With objects, drawings and photos, this animated video in black and white conjures up a simple stroll through an imaginary world.

William Kentridge | Anti-Mercator, 2010/11, 9’45” | Goodman Gallery, Marian Goodman Gallery, Lia Rumma
Anti-Mercator explores the artist’s ability to suspend time and resist the spatial linearity presented by scientists such as the cartographer Gerardus Mercator (1512-1594).

Adam Shecter | Hydra, 2006, 2’50” | Eleven Rivington
This work shows partial views from the motion study of a re-imagined, animated hydra.

Ana Prvacki | The Greeting Committee, 2012, 3′ | Lombard Freid Gallery
Ana Prvacki addresses topics such as first impressions and body language. Her characters re-enact awkward situations, such as how to point out spinach in someone’s teeth during a business lunch.

Amar Kanwar | A Love Story, 2010, 5’37” | Marian Goodman Gallery
Amar Kanwar’s short film A Love Story follows the break-up of a romance and encapsulates it in music, words, pace and visual sequences.

Sam Samore | Compendium of Perplexities, 2011, 7′ | Team Gallery
Compendium of Perplexities is a film composed of many non-narrative threads. One character continuously jumps from a balcony, but is always restrained from falling. Another eternally digs a ditch. Two men pass an unconscious woman back and forth between them.

Robin Rhode | Open Court, 2012, 1′ | Lehmann Maupin
A racket-holding actor hits snowballs against a Richard Serra sculpture.

Marie Bovo | Subak, 2010, 4’50” | kamel mennour
A watermelon rolls down narrow streets of a neighborhood in Seoul.

Hans Schabus | Echo, 2009, 3’45” | Zero…
The protagonist of Echo is on the run. Through abandoned wetlands he stumbles into the brush wood, tumbling into the wet mud.

Tim Davis | Counting In, 3’30”, 2012 | Greenberg Van Doren Gallery
Tim Davis filmed bands in their practice spaces and extracted the sections where the songs are counted in. By linking them together, Davis created a piece about the anticipation we feel for a work of art.

Simon Dybbroe Møller | The Loud Speaker, 3’55”, 2012 | Galerie Kamm
“The Loud Speaker takes place in an endless white space. An isolated relationship, between object and human. Between man and woman. We see and we hear the stuff that these relations are made of. The material. The fabric. It is laid out in front of us. The loud speaker is a giant. It is loud. It is masculine. It understands its situation. It also knows that it is helpless. Here it is. Being screamed at by a beautiful woman. An object of desire. An object made man. A man made object.” (Simon Dybbroe Møller)

Ryan McGinley | Varúð, 2012, 8′ | Team Gallery
The Icelandic band Sigur Rós gave a dozen artists the same modest budget and asked them to create whatever came into their heads when they listened to songs from the band’s new album, valtari. Varúð is Ryan McGinley’s contribution to the project: a young woman wearing a shiny golden wig skips barefoot through downtown New York.

Adam Shecter | Mysteries of Love, 2002, 3’02” | Eleven Rivington, Antony and the Johnsons
Part One of animation artist Adam Shecter’s trilogy of flash music videos for Antony and the Johnsons, featuring imagery from children’s storybooks but with an adult pop-cultural twist.

Ragnar Kjartansson | Ég anda, 2012, 6’15” | i8 Gallery, Luhring Augustine
Ég anda (“I Breathe”) is a video clip by Ragnar Kjartansson for the Icelandic band Sigur Rós. It is a training film for saving someone from choking on food.

Adam Shecter | The Lake, 2003, 4’48” | Eleven Rivington, Antony and the Johnsons
The second part of Adam Shecter’s trilogy of animated videos for Antony and the Johnsons. Lyrics for The Lake were adapted from Edgar Allan Poe, while Shecter’s images conjure up an ironic cartoon fairy tale.

Nick Abrahams | ekki mukk, 2012, 10’30” | Courtesy of the artist
A modern fairy tale charting the brief friendship between a man and a snail, as they journey beyond a field and into the woods.

Ari Marcopoulos | Detroit, 2010, 7’32” | Kavi Gupta Gallery, Marlborough Fine Art
Two teenage boys, the children of friends of the artist, improvise an incongruously aggressive composition on a collection of guitar pedals.

Mauricio Lupini | Repeat after reading (BADA DIDI), 2006, 58” | Ignacio Liprandi Arte Contemporáneo
Working with Brazilian Bossa Nova and Venezuelan Onda Nueva, the series of videos Repeat after reading explores the onomatopoeic words found in both musical “new waves.”

Drew Heitzler and Sam Sharit | ZERO, 2012, 2’30” | Blum & Poe
Drew Heitzler presents an animated version of a dream he had. The animation recalls maritime and prison tattoos..

Josiah McElheny | Island Universe, 2005-08, 19′ | White Cube
The film explores the origins of the universe, the Big Bang theory, and J. & L. Lobmeyr’s space-age chandeliers for New York’s Metropolitan Opera House.

Daniel Steegmann Mangrane | 16mm, 2008/11, 4’52” | Mendes Wood
16mm was shot on a motorized camera advancing through the southwestern Brazilian rainforest. The result is a continuous single take, a long traveling shot at constant speed through the jungle for the duration of the film reel.

Pedro Reyes | Baby Marx TV Series (Episode 1: On Surplus Value), 2011, 7’04” | Labor
Standing in front of Andy Warhol’s painting Sixteen Jackies (1962), the founders of communism and capitalism, Karl Marx and Adam Smith, debate how much praise Andy Warhol deserves.

Ruben Ortiz Torres, Emmanuel Lubezki | Como TV, 1985, 3’31” | Galería OMR
The artists recorded images from news channels directly from the monitor. As the recording process is repeated multiple times, the color and quality of the images change.

David Zink Yi | Huyano y fuga detras, 2005, 3’43” | Johann König, Hauser & Wirth
The film was shot at the market of Huancy in the Peruvian hills. The camera rotates 360 degrees, following the movement of a musician and keeping in focus his hand gestures.

Chen Xiaoyun | Love You Big Boss, 2007, 4′ | ShanghART & H Space
Love You Big Boss features an orchestra made up of a disparate group of performers in an empty theater. Each musician attempts a recital of the American anthem.

Mauricio Lupini | Repeat after reading (DIBA DUDA), 2006, 55” | Ignacio Liprandi Arte Contemporáneo
Working with Brazilian Bossa Nova and Venezuelan Onda Nueva, the series of videos Repeat after reading explores the onomatopoeic words found in both musical “new waves.”

David Adamo | Anniversary Waltz, 2007, 3’54” | Ibid
The video is the result of a careful study of a video blog in which a middle-aged woman dances to Strauss’s Anniversary Waltz. Dressed in a white tuxedo, the artist plays the part of the woman’s fantasy dance partner.

Jesper Just | Sirens of Chrome, 2010, 12’38” | James Cohan Gallery, Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Galerie Perrotin
Shot in Detroit with a cast of African-American women, Sirens has a two-part structure. The first follows a car with four women as they drive across a depressed urban landscape. The second sees the women in a mysterious balletic showdown in a deserted parking lot.

Jack Early | What to do with a drunken sailor?, 2011, 5’44” | McCaffrey Fine Art
What to do with a drunken sailor? is a short film written and performed by artist Jack Early, featuring the song “It Don’t Rain in Beverly Hills.” Presented in the format of a 1980s video clip, the artist – as the sailor – disembarks from a ship and travels to Brooklyn.

Takeshi Murata and Billy Grant | Night Moves, 2012, 6’01” | Salon 94
In Murata’s new video, a collaboration with Billy Grant, computer generated scans are utilized to recreate an everyday environment in high tech 3D. The result can be seen as an homage to both Walt Disney’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice and Bruce Nauman’s Mapping the Studio.

Terence Gower | New Utopias, 2010, 17′ | Labor
New Utopias depicts a lecture, filmed in the style of 1950s Walt Disney documentaries, in which different utopias are analyzed.

Sefer Memişoğlu | Breeze, 2011, 8’18” | NON
The film starts with an iconic scene from the film The Seven Year Itch in which Marilyn Monroe is standing on a subway grate. This is followed by historical images found on the internet.

Michael Sailstorfer | Raketenbaum, 2007, 1’30” | Johann König
In the middle of a field, fruit trees are catapulted into the air by compressed air cartridges attached to their roots.

Mauricio Lupini | Repeat after reading (SA BA DA BA), 2011, 1’29” | Ignacio Liprandi Arte Contemporáneo
Working with Brazilian Bossa Nova and Venezuelan Onda Nueva, the series of videos Repeat after reading explores the onomatopoeic words found in both musical “new waves.”

Guy Ben-Ner | Foreign Names, 2012, 4’48” | Konrad Fischer Galerie
Foreign Names employs a candid camera. The artist records waiters who are equipped with a microphone, calling the customers by their names to take their order. Editing all “foreign” names together, a poem is created.

Cao Fei | Shadow Life, 2011, 10′ | Lombard Freid Gallery
Using techniques of traditional Chinese shadow puppetry, Cao Fei references memories of a Chinese Spring Festival Gala celebration that ran on China’s Central Television during her childhood.

Mircea Cantor | Sic Transit Gloria Mundi, 2012, 3’43” | Yvon Lambert
The trajectory of a flame running along a wick, which a woman unwinds across the hands of beggars bowed down in a circle.

Andrea Bowers | Shadows (Aztec Dancers at Protest March, Los Angeles, 2011), 2012, 5’05” | Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Praz-Delavallade, Andrew Kreps Gallery
The video footage for Shadows focuses on a group of traditional Aztec Dancers. The camera highlights the shadows of the dancers rather than their bodies. This piece continues the artist’s interest in dance as a political gesture.

Rashaad Newsome | Shade Compositions (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Preview), 2012, 25′ | Marlborough Gallery
Combining improvisatory orchestral music and live video-mixing, Newsome divides his twenty-one black female performers into groups akin to instrumental sections. The performers then enact his choreographed sound score comprised of repeated sequences of culturally specific or stereotypical gestures, movements, and vocalizations

Daniel Arsham | Tearing up the Museum, 2011, 2’16” | Galerie Perrotin
Using a scale replica of the New Museum in New York, Daniel Arsham appears to be tearing up the museum: the video is played in reverse in order to achieve this effect.

Mauricio Lupini | Repeat after reading (BIM BOM), 2006, 47” | Ignacio Liprandi Arte Contemporáneo
Working with Brazilian Bossa Nova and Venezuelan Onda Nueva, the series of videos Repeat after reading explores the onomatopoeic words found in both musical “new waves.”

Julieta Aranda | Springtime, 2010, 1’23” | Galería OMR
Julieta Aranda analyzes the way in which the accident as an unexpected event generates new forms of behavior.

Melanie Smith | Elevador, 2012, 7’49” | Galeria Nara Roesler
Elevador is a film shot in the building in Mexico City where the artist lives. Each time the door of the elevator opens, a tableau of escalating oddities appear.

Sam Samore | Glossary of Delusions, 2010, 6′ | Team Gallery
Meditating on passion, death and madness, Sam Samore presents a film of disconnected scenes where characters enact their own demises.

Dineo Seshee Bopape | The Problem Of Beauty, 2009, 7’19” | Stevenson
The 31-year-old South African artist Dineo Seshee Bopape describes her film as “an orchestral drama, a mess of sound and image.”

Julika Rudelius | Rituals, 2012, 14′ | Galerie Michael Janssen
Julika Rudelis filmed young, androgynous men posing amid traffic in the city of Guangzhou. The discrepancy between the poses and the surrounding scenery reveals the artificiality of the gesture itself.

Theaster Gates | Sun Salutation, 2011, 4’41” | Kavi Gupta Gallery
Sun Salutation was filmed during a performance at the Rubin Museum of Art in New York. It features singers and musicians from the Black Monks of Mississippi, who perform among the objects in the exhibition.

Yoshua Okon | Canned Laughter, 2009, 9’56” | Mor Charpentier
Depicting a fictional factory that produces canned laughter for sitcoms, the artist refers to the theory of laughter by French philosopher Henri Bergson, as well as to manufacturing sites in the Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez where the film was shot.

Jordan Wolfson | Untitled, 2007, 3′ | Johann König
Jordand Wolfson films a vintage Apple computer placed at the edge of a highway, and combines the footage with a text borrowed from the prologue of the documentary film Painters Painting. The New York Art Scene 1940-1970.

David Zink Yi | Pneuma, 2010, 1’23” | Hauser & Wirth, Johann König
Pneuma features Cuban trumpeter Yuliesky Gonzalez Guerra. In a single take, Guerra is seen walking from the blurry background directly toward the camera until his face fills the frame in perfect focus. The ancient Greek word “pneuma” means spirit, breath, and air.

Chen Xiaoyun | Bi, 2007, 5’30” | ShanghART & H Space
A row of trucks is circling a person stuck in mud/sludge: a metaphor for the feeling that there is no way of getting out or changing the world.

Sam Samore | Archipelago of Enigmas, 2012, 16′ | Team Gallery
A shaky handheld camera follows a young woman moving around Bangkok. As the film progresses, her character transforms. The protagonist’s travels via ferry or taxi are set against the turgid, muddy Chao Praya River and the city’s heavy monsoon days and nights.

Hu Xiangqian | The labor song I night, 2012, 7’12” | Long March Space
In The labor song I (looks like “ich”) night the artist performs an a cappella song with three hired actors, all wearing security guard uniforms.

Pierre Bismuth | Following the left hand of Jacques Lacan, 2012, 5′ | Team Gallery
Pierre Bismuth’s Following the left hand of Jacques Lacan traces the furious movements of the French psychiatrist and philosopher’s right hand as he delivers a lecture.

Eija-Liisa Ahtila | Fishermen (Etudes, no. 1), 2007, 5’40” | Marian Goodman Gallery
The first of a series of short studies or etudes, this film was shot in West Africa and observes the local fishermen, who attempt to overcome the strong and heavy waves to launch their boats out to sea.

Jumana Manna | Blessed Blessed Oblivion (censored), 2010, 23′ | CRG Gallery
Inspired by Kenneth Anger’s Scorpio Rising (1963), Blessed Blessed Oblivion (censored) weaves together a portrait of male thug culture in East Jerusalem, manifested in barbershops, auto shops, and body building.

Nate Boyce | Reliquary House (excerpts), 2011, 2’58” | Altman Siegel
Reliquary House (excerpts) is a video that was part of a multimedia performance. Boyce uses computer-generated imagery to transform sculptures from the Museum of Modern Art New York’s collection into kinetic apparitions.

Ragnar Kjartansson | Bliss, 2012, 12 hours | i8 Gallery, Luhring Augustine
Special screening in collaboration with Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) North Miami and New World Center. International premiere.
Bliss is a 12 hour video work by Ragnar Kjartansson, filmed at his performance at Performa 11 in New York in 2011. It features the final aria of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro, with full cast in period costumes, scenery and orchestra.

Kudzanai Chiurai | Creation, 2012, 5’16” | Goodman Gallery
“The spaces within which conflicts have been taking place vary to the extent of our own understanding of what defines conflict. Our understanding of resolution is therefore also brought to the fore as we question the validity and nature of force used in our attempts at peace.” (Kudzanai Chiurai)

Shilpa Gupta | Untitled, 2012, 3’42” | Chemould Prescott Road
The video by Mumbai-based artist Shilpa Gupta features an endless stream of thread being released from the ground below.

Karl Haendel (in collaboration with Petter Ringbom) | Questions for My Father, 2011, 11’17” | Yvon Lambert, Harris Lieberman, Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects
The film builds upon a series of drawings Karl Haendel began in 2007. The subjects face the camera and ask things they always wanted to know about their fathers but never voiced.

Stanya Kahn with Llyn Foulkes | Happy Song for You, 2011, 5’07” | Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects
A collaboration between Stanya Khan and Llyn Foulkes, this work features Foulkes as he is covered in blood and dust, and also includes a headless figure wearing a wig and carrying a mummified dog.

Gonzalo Lebrija | The Distance Between You and Me II, 2008, 2′ | Travesía Cuatro
The artist stands in a deserted landscape with his back to the camera and appears to be running away, distancing himself from the viewer as quickly as possible in a reflex action that seems to result from an almost animal-like instinct.

Jessica Mein | Blackout, 2012, 2′ | Galeria Leme
The video animation Blackout is a short sequence of over 700 drawings, collages, frames and visual material of power lines in Dubai and its surroundings, produced and manipulated by the artist.

Muntean/Rosenblum | Performance at Galerie Georg Kargl, 2010, 5’44” | Team Gallery
A video of a performance in which a young man shouts through a megaphone while standing on top of a pile of broken crates and used art-packing materials.

Gigi Scaria | Panic City, 2007, 3′ | Chemould Prescott Road
In Panic City, a city rises and falls according to a programmed symphony. It seems as if the buildings gasp for breath as they move to the music.

Ruben Ortiz Torres | Retrospective in a New York Minute, 2011/12, 3’04” | Galería OMR
This video is the result of an attempt to present a retrospective of Rubén Ortiz Torres’s work to busy pedestrians in Manhattan.

Stephen Willats | Still Life with Vases and Diagrams, 2011, 3’53” | Victoria Miro
The objects featured in this film – vases, for example – are monumental as contemporary buildings and symbolically representative of people.

Nina Yuen | The School, 2012, 4’10” | Lombard Freid Gallery
Through a diaristic series of events and original voices, themes such as memory, childhood, rites of passage and loss are re-examined as the artist narrates the film using a varied collection of found texts and original material.

Contact:

David Gryn

Artprojx

david@artprojx.com

+447711127848

Artprojx presents Penny Siopis films at Prince Charles Cinema

In Art, Artprojx, Cinema, David Gryn, FAD, Film and Video, Frieze Art Fair, Penny Siopis, Prince Charles Cinema, Stevenson, TJ Demos on 10/10/2012 at 10:02 am

AN ARTPROJX – FRIEZE ART FAIR WEEK – SPECIAL CINEMA SCREENING

Artprojx presents Penny Siopis at the Prince Charles Cinema

ARTPROJX PRESENTS

‘THIS IS A TRUE STORY’: FOUR SHORT FILMS BY PENNY SIOPIS.

Thursday 11 October 2012, 8.15-9.45pm (doors open at 8pm).

Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, London WC2H 7BY.

With TJ Demos and Penny Siopis in conversation and introducing the films.

FREE BEER & POPCORN.

Tickets £10 (discount £5 for artists, students, curators and PCC members).

Box office: +44 (0)20 74943654 www.princecharlescinema.com

(Each ticket is entitled to one free beer and popcorn).

Frieze VIP’s contact artprojxcinema@gmail.com

STEVENSON and ARTPROJX are pleased to present four short films by Penny Siopis at the Prince Charles Cinema in London as part of the Frieze Art Fair VIP programme. The screening will be introduced by writer/curator TJ Demos in conversation with the artist.

www.artprojx.com

http://www.stevenson.info/

twitter.com/artprojx

http://www.facebook.com

http://friezelondon.com/

Penny Siopis screening preview on FAD written by Yvette Gresle http://www.fadwebsite.com/2012/09/22/frieze-penny-siopis-at-prince-charles-cinema/

For more information on Penny Siopis please contact press@stevenson.info

For more event information contact David Gryn at Artprojx david@artprojx.com +447711127848

Artprojx Events and News Update Oct 2012

In Art, Art Basel Miami Beach, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, Artupdate, David Gryn, Film and Video, Frieze Art Fair, IKON, Jane Bustin, London, MOCAtv, Prince Charles Cinema, Screenings, TJ Demos, Video Art on 05/10/2012 at 2:49 pm

ARTPROJX EVENTS & NEWS UPDATE OCT 2012 …

Artprojx presents a special screening during the Frieze Art Fair Week: ‘THIS IS A TRUE STORY’: FOUR SHORT FILMS BY PENNY SIOPIS in association with Stevenson. Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema on Thurs 11 Oct http://davidgryn.wordpress.com/2012/10/03/artprojx-presents-penny-siopis-films-frieze-art-fair-week/

Penny Siopis films are magical, mesmerising and harrowing – and explores what she calls the ‘poetics of vulnerability’  …

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Film and Video at Art Fairs – a panel discussion at Moving Image – the Contemporary Art Fair on Fri 12 Oct. With Amanda Coulson, Michael Hall, Elizabeth Dee / Jayne Drost Johnson,  David Gryn and Janet Biggs.

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David Gryn / Artprojx curates for:

The Voice and the Lens’ at IKON, Birmingham, Nov 2012. Artists: Terry Smith, David Blandy, Rashaad Newsome, Mel Brimfield, Kota Ezawa, Dara Friedman, Martha Rosler www.ikon-gallery.co.uk/

The launch of MOCAtv. Artists: Meredith Danluck, Jesper Just, Kerry Tribe, Matthew Stone, Nick Abrahams, Stuart Croft, Sam Samore and Thomas Nordanstad, Shoja Azari, Jumana Manna, Hans op de Beeck, Nicholas Provost, Susanna Wallin http://www.youtube.com/mocatv

&

Art Video at Art Basel Miami Beach 2012 - selected by David Gryn / Artprojx – programme soon to be announced.

also

Jane Bustin is currently in the John Moores Painting Prize, Jerwood Dawing Prize and will be in the MOSTYN Open 18 in 2013 – see www.janebustin.com

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David Gryn, Director & Founder of Artprojx - a leading brand that screens, curates and promotes artists’ moving image projects, working with leading international contemporary art galleries, art fairs, institutes and artists.

Artprojx projects have included: Art Basel Miami Beach, MOCAtv, Gagosian, White Cube, Sadie Coles HQ, Lisson Gallery, The Modern Institute, Whitney Museum, Tate Britain, ICA, Frieze Art Fair and artists have included: Christian Marclay, Dara Friedman, Santiago Sierra, Mark Wallinger, Christian Jankowski, Tracey Emin, Susan Hiller, Dexter Dalwood, Jeremy Deller, Wilhelm Sasnal, William Eggleston, Natalie Djurberg, William Kentridge, Luke Fowler. www.artprojx.com

Contact David Gryn for more information: david@artprojx.com +447711127848

Artprojx and Stevenson present Four Short Films by Penny Siopis 11 Oct

In Art, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, David Gryn, FAD, Film, Film and Video, Frieze Art Fair, London, Penny Siopis, Prince Charles Cinema, Screenings, Stevenson, TJ Demos, Video, Video Art, Yvette Gresle on 19/09/2012 at 8:45 am

Penny Siopis: Four Short Films

ARTPROJX & STEVENSON PRESENT

‘THIS IS A TRUE STORY’: FOUR SHORT FILMS BY PENNY SIOPIS.

11 October 2012, 8.15-9.45pm (doors open at 8pm).

Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, London WC2H 7BY.

With TJ Demos and Penny Siopis in conversation and introducing the films.

FREE BEER & POPCORN.

Tickets £10 (discount £5 for artists, students, curators and PCC members).

Box office: +44 (0)20 74943654 www.princecharlescinema.com .

Gallery, Frieze and Artprojx guests contact events@artprojx.com

(Each ticket is entitled to one free beer and popcorn).

Penny Siopis screening preview on FAD written by Yvette Gresle http://www.fadwebsite.com/2012/09/22/frieze-penny-siopis-at-prince-charles-cinema/

STEVENSON and ARTPROJX are pleased to present four short films by Penny Siopis at the Prince Charles Cinema in London as part of the Frieze Art Fair VIP programme. The screening will be introduced by writer/curator TJ Demos in conversation with the artist.

www.artprojx.com

http://www.stevenson.info/

twitter.com/artprojx

http://www.facebook.com

http://friezelondon.com/

For more information on Penny Siopis please contact press@stevenson.info

and for the event contact Artprojx events@artprojx.com

FLAMIN Productions – a major commissioning scheme – apply now

In Artprojx, Ben Rivers, Film and Video, Film London, FLAMIN, Video on 04/09/2012 at 1:36 pm

Film London Artists’ Moving Image Network (FLAMIN) has launched the latest round of FLAMIN Productions, a major commissioning scheme offering up to £360,000 over 3 years in production funding to the capital’s artist film-makers.

FLAMIN Productions is the only scheme of its kind in the UK. It aims to support the most exciting, innovative and challenging moving image projects with production finance and bespoke mentoring opportunities. It commissions new, single screen works that are ambitious in premise and duration, with an emphasis on projects that have strong potential to reach audiences through gallery exhibition and screenings.

FLAMIN Productions will greenlight up to five new moving image artworks, with awards of £20,000 to £50,000 available per commissioned film.

The deadline for applications is 5pm, Wednesday 5 December 2012.

For more information and to apply, or to book an information surgery, please visit http://flamin.filmlondon.org.uk/flaminprods2012

 

MORE LINKS

www.artprojx.com   http://davidgryn.wordpress.com   twitter.com/artprojx   www.facebook.com

 

Artprojx and Stevenson present films by Penny Siopis 11 Oct

In Artprojx, David Gryn, Film and Video, Frieze Art Fair, London, Penny Siopis, Prince Charles Cinema, Screenings, Stevenson, TJ Demos, Video Art on 03/09/2012 at 4:06 pm

Penny Siopis – Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema – Thursday 11 October 2012

PRESS & LISTINGS RELEASE

ARTPROJX & STEVENSON PRESENT

‘THIS IS A TRUE STORY’: FOUR SHORT FILMS BY PENNY SIOPIS

11 October 2012, 8.15-9.45pm (doors open at 8pm)

Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, London WC2H 7BY

With TJ Demos and Penny Siopis in conversation and introducing the films

FREE BEER & POPCORN

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STEVENSON and ARTPROJX are pleased to present four short films by Penny Siopis at the Prince Charles Cinema in London as part of the Frieze Art Fair VIP programme. The screening will be introduced by writer/curator TJ Demos in conversation with the artist.

www.artprojx.com

twitter.com/artprojx

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Based in Cape Town, Siopis has been exploring ‘the poetics of vulnerability’ in various media, including painting and installation, since the 1970s. She made her first film, My Lovely Day, for the second Johannesburg Biennale in 1997, prompted by the artistic director, Okwui Enwezor, who later described it as ‘one of the masterpieces of the biennale’. Since then her films using old home-movie footage have come to play an increasingly prominent role in her oeuvre. In all of these, Siopis combines sequences of found 8mm film with sound and text (appearing as subtitles) to shape stories about people caught up, often traumatically, in larger political and social upheavals. Siopis writes: ‘The elemental qualities of these stories appeal to me as they speak to questions far beyond their specific historical origins.’

FOUR SHORT FILMS (1997-2012)

My Lovely Day [1997,21 min 15 sec]

My Lovely Day (still) – Penny Siopis

My Lovely Day combines spliced sequences of 8mm home movies that the artist’s mother shot in the 1950s and 1960s in South Africa to tell a story of displacement and migration. While the narrative ‘voice’ is that of Siopis’ maternal grandmother speaking of her literal and emotional journeys to Greece, England and South Africa in the early part of the 20th century, and to some extent overlooking the apartheid moment from which she speaks, the film has wider resonance as an allegory of globalisation and exile. The sound comprises traditional Greek music and an old 78 rpm record, made in 1955, of Siopis’ mother singing ‘This is my lovely day’. The uneven quality of the found footage dramatises the nature of the film as artifact and resonates with the fragmentary nature of memory.

Obscure White Messenger[2010,15 min 7 sec]

Obscure White Messanger (still) – Penny Siopis

Obscure White Messenger uses found home-movie footage to tell the story of Dimitrios Tsafendas, who assassinated the South African prime minister and ‘architect of apartheid’, HF Verwoerd, in 1966; it takes its title from a reference to Tsafendas in Nelson Mandela’s autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom. What drove Tsafendas, a man of mixed race, a migrant, working as a parliamentary messenger at the time, to commit this act? Siopis explores the intermingling of madness and political motive evident in transcripts of interviews with Tsafendas. Throughout the film there is the question of who the ‘illegitimate’ Tsafendas is and where he belongs; of what it means to be stateless in a world where citizenship all too often establishes and legitimates what it means to be fully human.

Communion [2011,5 min 30 sec]

Communion (still) – Penny Siopis

In Communion the story is about an Irish nun, Sister Aidan, who was also a medical doctor, Elsie Quinlan. She was murdered by a crowd of angry people in the Eastern Cape, who were protesting against apartheid laws during the Defiance Campaign in 1952 in South Africa. Many of the people in the crowd knew and loved Sister Aidan, but she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. In newspaper reports and scholarly articles, questions emerged about ‘common cause’ and culpability – which of the crowd committed the murder? Pathologists could not determine how she died, because parts of her body were missing, some allegedly eaten. Siopis situates Sister Aidan’s ‘voice’ (read as subtitles) in the first person: she narrates her own death, as if from the grave. Contingency is hooked to historical fact through Siopis’ selective use of text in combination with film sequences – anonymous home movies that do not connect in any way to the empirical facts of the story. The sound is an African lullaby.

The Master is Drowning [2012, 10 min 25 sec]

The Master is Drowning (still) – Penny Siopis

In The Master is Drowning the artist extends her use of found film beyond home movies to historical documentary, combining private and public film sequences to create a story that is both fictive and ‘real’. The narrative unfolds chronologically, culminating in the attempted assassination of the South African Prime Minister HF Verwoerd by David Beresford Pratt, a white liberal businessman and farmer. The attempt occurred in 1960 on the eve of the inauguration of the apartheid South African Republic, and is depicted through the inclusion of actual news footage from that time. Pratt went to the annual Agricultural Show in Johannesburg and shot Verwoerd twice in the face at point blank range following his opening address. Miraculously, Verwoerd survived, and in the ensuing court process Pratt, who suffered from epilepsy, was declared unsound of mind. The words in the video are Pratt’s, drawn from different sources including transcripts of his trial and newspapers of the time.

BIOGRAPHIES/PROFILES

Penny Siopis is a South African of Greek descent. She lives in Cape Town where she is an Honorary Professor at Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town. Siopis works in painting, film/video, photography and installation. Her work since the 1970s has covered different foci but her interest in what she calls the ‘poetics of vulnerability’ characterises all her explorations, from her earlier engagements with history, memory and migration to her more recent concerns with shame, violence and sexuality. She has exhibited widely, in South Africa and internationally, and has taken part in the biennales of Sydney, Johannesburg, Guangzhou, Havana and Venice.

TJ Demos lectures in the Art History Department at University College London. He writes widely on modern and contemporary art, and is the author of Dara Birnbaum: Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman (Afterall Press, 2010), and The Exiles of Marcel Duchamp (MIT Press, 2007). He was recently the co-curator of Uneven Geographies: Art and Globalisation at Nottingham Contemporary in May-June 2010, and was director of the research-exhibition project Zones of Conflict: Rethinking Contemporary Art during Global Crisis in 2008-09.

STEVENSON is a gallery with spaces in Cape Town and Johannesburg. The gallery hosts solo and group exhibitions that engage with contemporary art practice in South Africa as well as Africa and its diaspora. In addition to giving (South) African artists access to the rest of the world, its FOREX programme, started in 2009, has brought the work of international artists like Francis Alÿs, Rineke Dijkstra, Thomas Hirschhorn, Glenn Ligon and Walid Raad to South Africa, often for the first time. Stevenson has an active publication programme that includes catalogues for many of its exhibitions and artists. Art fairs in 2012 include Frieze New York, Art Hong Kong, Art Basel, ABC – Art Berlin Contemporary, Frieze London, Paris Photo and Art Basel Miami Beach. http://www.stevenson.info

ARTPROJX over the last 10 years has become established as a leading brand that screens, curates and promotes artists’ moving image and other art projects, working with leading international contemporary art galleries, art fairs, institutes and artists. Artprojx has worked with: Art Basel Miami Beach, MOCA TV, Sadie Coles hq, Lisson Gallery, Gagosian, Whitney Museum, Tate Britain, ICA, Frieze Art Fair; and artists include: Christian Marclay, Dara Friedman, Mark Wallinger, Christian Jankowski, Jeremy Deller, Natalie Djurberg, Susan Hiller, Jesper Just, Martha Rosler. http://www.artprojx.com

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EVENT DETAILS

ARTPROJX & STEVENSON PRESENT

‘THIS IS A TRUE STORY’: FOUR SHORT FILMS BY PENNY SIOPIS

Thursday 11 October 2012

Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, London WC2H 7BY

8.15-9.45pm (doors open at 8pm)

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Tickets £10 (discount £5 for artists, students, curators and PCC members)

Box office: +44 (0)20 74943654 www.princecharlescinema.com

(Each ticket is entitled to one free beer and popcorn)

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For more information on Penny Siopis please contact press@stevenson.info and for the event contact events@artprojx.com

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http://www.facebook.com

Artprojx Cinema at SVA Theatre New York March 2012 images

In Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, AV-arkki, David Gryn, Erkka Nissinen, Film and Video, Liisa Lounila, Luke Fowler, New York, Pilvi Takala, SVA Theatre, The Modern Institute, Timo Vaittinen on 16/03/2012 at 1:13 pm

Artprojx Cinema in New York March 2012 images

 

http://www.artprojx.com

David Gryn

07711127848

Artprojx Cinema and AV-arkki presents Mystery Show feat. Liisa Lounila, Erkka Nissinen, Pilvi Takala, Timo Vaittinen – at SVA Theatre March 10

In Art, Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, AV-arkki, Chelsea, Erkka Nissinen, Film and Video, Liisa Lounila, New York, Pilvi Takala, SVA Theatre, Timo Vaittinen, Video Art on 28/02/2012 at 3:01 pm

ARTPROJX CINEMA at the SVA THEATRE, NEW YORK 2012

Saturday March 10 at 7pm and 8pm

Artprojx Cinema & AV-arkki, The Distribution Centre For Finnish Media Art presents

“Mystery Show”

Featuring Four Finnish Artists:

Liisa Lounila, Erkka Nissinen, Pilvi Takala, Timo Vaittinen
program 45 minutes (played twice) – followed by a reception and meet the artists

Supported by the Consulate General of Finland in New York, The Finnish Cultural Institute in New York and The Finnish Cultural Foundation.

at

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23rd Street (between 8th and 9th Avenues), New York, NY 10011
ENTRY IS FREE. RSVP artprojxcinema@gmail.com to reserve your seat and confirm which screening/s you prefer.
http://www.artprojx.com

Program:

Liisa Lounila: PLAY>> (2003)

Timo Vaittinen: In Da Club (2006)

Erkka Nissinen: Rigid Regime (2011)

Timo Vaittinen: Central Park (2012)

Pilvi Takala: Broad Sense (2012)

Liisa Lounila: GIG (2007)

Pilvi Takala: Players (2010)

Timo Vaittinen: Mystery Show (2007)

Artist info:

Liisa Lounila

(born 1976 in Finland) lives and works in Helsinki. She gained an MFA from Academy of Fine Arts in 2005 in Helsinki. Lounila has exhibited nationally and internationally, including at the 8th Istanbul Biennale; Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt; MAXXI, Rome; and Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, Helsinki. She represented Finland at the 50th Venice Biennale. Lounila is currently in residency at the ISCP in New York. Her works are also featured at VOLTA NY 2012. Lounila’s main mediums are experimental film/video, photography and painting. Her works usually deal with an obscure need for change, great expectations and places of potential. Usually her pictures, both still and moving, have their background in movies, yellow papers, lifestyle magazines and pop lyrics.

Erkka Nissinen

(born 1975 in Finland) lives and works between Helsinki, Hong Kong and Amsterdam. He studied in The Slade School of Fine Art in London and gained an MFA degree from the Academy of Fine Arts in 2001 in Helsinki. He went to Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten residency in Amsterdam in 2007. His works have been exhibited internationally, latest solo exhibitions at Ellen de Bruijne Project Space in Amsterdam, Smart Projects Space in Amsterdam, Helsinki City Art Museum’s Kluuvin Gallery and 1646 in Den Haag. He won the acclaimed Illy Prize during 2011 Rotterdam Art Fair. His latest work Rigid Regime (2011) was selected to the international competition of the Rotterdam Film Festival 2012. Erkka combines acting in an actual studio with simplified computer animations within his videos. His videos are characterized by absurdity, humor and deliberate clumsiness.

Pilvi Takala

(born 1980 in Finland) currently lives and works in Amsterdam. She received an MFA from The Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki in 2006. She went to Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten residency in Amsterdam in 2009-10. Takala’s works have been shown in museums and film festivals worldwide. She was awarded Prix de Rome 2011 for the work Broad Sense, of which a screening version will be included in the program. Her works are narratives based on site-specific interventions and actions, sort of exceptions in everyday life. The actions aim to reveal and question unwritten rules and shared truths of the specific social setting in a subtle way. The actual artworks produced based on the actions are mostly videos, but also photographs and publications.

Timo Vaittinen

(born 1976 in Finland) lives and works in Helsinki. He has studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki and gained an MFA in 2007. Vaittinen’s works have been recently shown in Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, Living Art Museum in Reykjavik, A.L.I.C.E. gallery in Brussels and Helsinki Art Museum. His latest latest solo show was held in Pori Art Museum in Finland. Timo Vaittinen works with collage and painting and turns this mixture into a moving, spatial animation. He likes to play around with the polarities of analog and digital, import painterly approaches to producing videos and confuse the material appearances of paintings.

AV-arkki

is the Distribution Centre for Finnish Media Art. AV-arkki’s main purpose is to distribute and promote Finnish media art to festivals, events, museums and galleries worldwide. AV-arkki has been a pioneering distributor for over 23 years and has opened up opportunities for artists to get their works recognized internationally. The activities of AV-arkki have contributed to the success that Finnish media art enjoys today. These activities are unique in both Finland and the other Nordic countries. http://www.av-arkki.fi

Artprojx promotes and screens artist’s film and video programs in the context of the cinema. Working in collaboration with galleries, artists, art museums and art fairs. Artprojx has worked with Art Basel Miami Beach, Frieze, ICA, Tate, Whitney Museum, Sadie Coles HQ, Gavin Brown enterprise, Gagosian, White Cube, Hauser & Wirth, Victoria Miro Gallery and many more leading international contemporary art galleries, art fairs and artists. http://www.artprojx.com http://davidgryn.wordpress.com

More Links

Mystery Show – Facebook link

http://www.facebook.com/events/247402388675388/

Artprojx at SVA Facebook link

http://www.facebook.com/events/387609651265201/

Artprojx Cinema facebook page

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Artprojx-Cinema/158768007533698

FAD website

http://www.fadwebsite.com/2012/02/29/artprojx-presents-luke-fowler-and-mystery-show-feat-four-finnish-artists-sva-theatre-ny-march-9-10/

Artist at Large

http://www.artist-at-large.com/2012/02/27/artprojx-cinema-presents-at-the-sva-theatre-new-york-2012/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+artist-at-large+%28artist-at-large%29

Artprojx website

http://artprojx.com/lukefowlerandavarkki.html

Artprojx Cinema at SVA Theatre New York 9-10 March 2012

In Artprojx, Artprojx Cinema, AV-arkki, David Gryn, Film and Video, Finland, Independent, Luke Fowler, New York, SVA Theatre, The Modern Institute, Timo Vaittinen, Video Art on 18/02/2012 at 10:52 am

ARTPROJX CINEMA PRESENTS
AT SVA THEATRE, NEW YORK

Friday 9 March 2012 at 8.30pm and 9.30pm
In association with The Modern Institute
A Grammar for Listening (Parts 1 – 3) & All Divided Selves by Luke Fowler

&

Saturday 10 March 2012 at 7pm and 8pm
In association with AV-arkki, The Distribution Centre For Finnish Media Art
“Mystery Show” – featuring Four Finnish Artists:
Liisa Lounila, Erkka Nissinen, Pilvi Takala, Timo Vaittinen
program 45 minutes (played twice)

at

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23rd Street (between 8th and 9th Avenues), New York, NY 10011
ENTRY IS FREE. RSVP artprojxcinema@gmail.com to reserve your seat. Mention which event and time you plan to attend.
Contact: David Gryn at david@artprojx.com and +447711127848 www.artprojx.com

MORE DETAILS:

The Modern Institute and Artprojx Cinema presents
Luke Fowler
Friday 9 March 2012 at 8.30pm and 9.30pm

A Grammar for Listening (Parts 1 – 3) 8.30pm
Silence dominated the experimental film of the 1960s. Sound or musical accompaniment was often dismissed as illustrative, manipulative or redundant. Instead, a return to experiments of early cinema concentrated on rhythm, structure and material and thereby considered film’s potential as a unique art form with its own grammar.

Prior to this tendency in film, composer John Cage had foregrounded silence within his 1953 composition ‘4’33’. Purging concerts of conventional musical content, he allowed the sounds from outside to come inside and become the focus of the audience’s attention.

These foundational ideas have led to a burgeoning music scene focused on environmental sound and field recording. Outlining some of the complexities between film and sound, Luke Fowler’s film cycle ‘A Grammar for Listening (parts 1-3)’ attempts to confront these contradictions through the possibilities afforded by 16mm film and digital sound recording devices. These three films, created in collaboration with sound artists Lee Patterson and Toshiya Tsunoda and composer Éric La Casa respectively, provide a series of collaborations and meditations on the issues raised, and propose a number of tentative navigations through.

All Divided Selves 9.30pm
The social and cultural revolutions of the 1960s were spearheaded by the charismatic, guru-like figure of Glasgow born psychiatrist R.D. Laing. In his now classic text ‘The Politics of Experience’ (1967), Laing argued that normality entailed adjusting ourselves to the mystification of an alienating and depersonalizing world. Thus, those society labels as ‘mentally ill’ are in fact ‘hyper-sane’ travelers, conducting an inner voyage through aeonic time. The film concentrates on archival representations of Laing and his colleagues as they struggled to acknowledge the importance of considering social environment and disturbed interaction in institutions as significant factors in the aetiology of human distress and suffering.

All Divided Selves reprises the vacillating responses to these radical views and the less forgiving responses to Laing’s latter career shift from well-recognized psychiatrist to celebrity poet. A dense, engaging and lyrical collage — Fowler weaves archival material with his own filmic observations — marrying a dynamic soundtrack of field recordings with recorded music by Éric La Casa, Jean-Luc Guionnet and Alasdair Roberts.

Luke Fowler
Luke Fowler (b. 1978) is an artist, filmmaker and musician based in Glasgow. His films, a collage of found footage and Fowler’s own recordings, have documented the work of British counter cultural figures including Scottish psychiatrist R. D. Laing and composer Cornelius Cardew. Through his collaboration with experimental musicians Toshia Tsunoda, Lee Patterson and Eric la Casa, he creates dynamic soundtracks of original compositions and field recordings for these works.

His new feature-length film ‘All Divided Selves’ is the third work to take up the legacy of radical psychiatrist R.D. Laing. It concentrates on archival representations of Laing and his colleagues as they struggled to acknowledge the importance of considering social environment as significant factors in human distress and suffering. The film premiered at Anthology Film Archive in New York in November 2011 and has been screened as part of the Berlin Film Festival this year.

The Modern Institute will be making a solo presentation of Luke’s new photographic prints at the Independent Fair in New York in March. His recent solo exhibitions include Inverleith House, Edinburgh; ‘All Divided Selves’, CCS Bard Galleries, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Serpentine Gallery, London; ‘A Grammar For Listening’, The Modern Institute, Glasgow; and ‘Warriors’, X Initiative, New York; Kunsthaus Zürich, Zürich. Forthcoming solo exhibitions include ‘The Poor Stockinger’ at The Hepworth, Wakefield. He participated in ‘Cornelius Cardew and the Freedom of Listening’, CAC Bretigny; ‘British Art Show 7: In The Days Of The Comet’, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham and The Hayward Gallery, London; ‘Radical Nature’, Barbican Art Gallery, London; ‘The Associates’, DCA, Dundee; ‘What You See is Where You’re At’, The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh; Kunsthaus Zürich, Zürich; and ‘Younger than Jesus’, New Museum, New York; In 2008 he received the inaugural Derek Jarman Award.

The Modern Institute
The Modern Institute has been described by Art Review as ‘a model for galleries around the world’. Since its foundation in 1998 it has played an important role in putting Glasgow on the world art map through its association with some of the most important names in contemporary art. The gallery represents 38 artists who are regularly exhibiting internationally in museums and institutions. These include four Turner Prize winners; Martin Boyce (2011), Richard Wright (2009), Simon Starling (2005), Jeremy Deller (2004) and two further nominees; Cathy Wilkes (2008) and Jim Lambie (2005). Several of the artists have exhibited at the Venice Biennale, with Martin Boyce representing Scotland with a solo presentation in 2009.

Artists represented include: Dirk Bell, Martin Boyce, Jeremy Deller, Alex Dordoy, Urs Fischer, Kim Fisher, Luke Fowler, Henrik Håkansson, Mark Handforth, Georg Herold, Thomas Houseago, Richard Hughes, Chris Johanson, Andrew Kerr, Jim Lambie, Duncan MacQuarrie, Victoria Morton, Scott Myles, Nicolas Party, Toby Paterson, Simon Periton, Manfred Pernice, Mary Redmond, Anselm Reyle, Eva Rothschild, Monika Sosnowska, Simon Starling, Katja Strunz, Tony Swain, Spencer Sweeney, Joanne Tatham & Tom O’Sullivan, Padraig Timoney, Hayley Tompkins, Sue Tompkins, Cathy Wilkes, Michael Wilkinson, Gregor Wright, Richard Wright.

The Modern Institute: Luke Fowler Solo Presentation 3rd Floor, Independent, 548 West 22nd St, New York, NY 10011. March 8-11, 2012

MODERN INSTITUTE www.themoderninstitute.com
INDEPENDENT www.independentnewyork.com/

The Modern Institute: Luke Fowler Solo Presentation 3rd Floor, Independent, 548 West 22nd St, New York, NY 10011. March 8-11, 2012

MODERN INSTITUTE
www.themoderninstitute.com

INDEPENDENT
www.independentnewyork.com/
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Artprojx Cinema & AV-arkki, The Distribution Centre For Finnish Media Art presents
“Mystery Show”
Four Finnish Artists: Liisa Lounila, Erkka Nissinen, Pilvi Takala, Timo Vaittinen
Saturday 10 March 2012 at 7pm and 8pm
followed by a reception with the artists

Liisa Lounila: PLAY>> (2003)
Timo Vaittinen: In Da Club (2006)
Erkka Nissinen: Rigid Regime (2011)
Timo Vaittinen: Central Park (2012)
Pilvi Takala: Broad Sense (2012)
Liisa Lounila: GIG (2007)
Pilvi Takala: Players (2010)
Timo Vaittinen: Mystery Show (2007)

Liisa Lounila
(born 1976 in Finland) lives and works in Helsinki. She gained an MFA from Academy of Fine Arts in 2005 in Helsinki. Lounila has exhibited nationally and internationally, including at the 8th Istanbul Biennale; Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt; MAXXI, Rome; and Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, Helsinki. She represented Finland at the 50th Venice Biennale. Lounila is currently in residency at the ISCP in New York. Her works are also featured at VOLTA NY 2012. Lounila’s main mediums are experimental film/video, photography and painting. Her works usually deal with an obscure need for change, great expectations and places of potential. Usually her pictures, both still and moving, have their background in movies, yellow papers, lifestyle magazines and pop lyrics.

Erkka Nissinen
(Born 1975 in Finland) lives and works between Helsinki, Hong Kong and Amsterdam. He studied in The Slade School of Fine Art in London and gained an MFA degree from the Academy of Fine Arts in 2001 in Helsinki. He went to Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten residency in Amsterdam in 2007. His works have been exhibited internationally, latest solo exhibitions at Ellen de Bruijne Project Space in Amsterdam, Smart Projects Space in Amsterdam, Helsinki City Art Museum’s Kluuvin Gallery and 1646 in Den Haag. He won the acclaimed Illy Prize during 2011 Rotterdam Art Fair. His latest work Rigid Regime (2011) was selected to the international competition of the Rotterdam Film Festival 2012. Erkka combines acting in an actual studio with simplified computer animations within his videos. His videos are characterized by absurdity, humor and deliberate clumsiness.

Pilvi Takala
(born 1980 in Finland) currently lives and works in Amsterdam. She received an MFA from The Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki in 2006. She went to Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten residency in Amsterdam in 2009-10. Takala’s works have been shown in museums and film festivals worldwide. She was awarded Prix de Rome 2011 for the work Broad Sense, of which a screening version will be included in the program. Her works are narratives based on site-specific interventions and actions, sort of exceptions in everyday life. The actions aim to reveal and question unwritten rules and shared truths of the specific social setting in a subtle way. The actual artworks produced based on the actions are mostly videos, but also photographs and publications.

Timo Vaittinen
(born 1976 in Finland) lives and works in Helsinki. He has studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki and gained an MFA in 2007. Vaittinen’s works have been recently shown in Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, Living Art Museum in Reykjavik, A.L.I.C.E. gallery in Brussels and Helsinki Art Museum. His latest latest solo show was held in Pori Art Museum in Finland. Timo Vaittinen works with collage and painting and turns this mixture into a moving, spatial animation. He likes to play around with the polarities of analog and digital, import painterly approaches to producing videos and confuse the material appearances of paintings.

AV-arkki
AV-arkki is the Distribution Centre for Finnish Media Art. AV-arkki’s main purpose is to distribute and promote Finnish media art to festivals, events, museums and galleries worldwide. AV-arkki has been a pioneering distributor for over 23 years and has opened up opportunities for artists to get their works recognized internationally. The activities of AV-arkki have contributed to the success that Finnish media art enjoys today. These activities are unique in both Finland and the other Nordic countries.

Supported by the Consulate General of Finland in New York, The Finnish Cultural Institute in New York and The Finnish Cultural Foundation.

AV-arkki
www.av-arkki.fi

Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/events/247402388675388/

Artprojx Cinema

Artprojx is a leading brand that promotes and screens artist’s film and video programs generally in the context of the cinema. Working in collaboration with galleries, artists, art museums and art fairs. Artprojx has worked with Art Basel Miami Beach, Frieze, The Armory Show, ICA, Tate, Whitney Museum, Sadie Coles HQ, Salon 94, Gavin Brown enterprise, Gagosian, White Cube, Hauser & Wirth, Victoria Miro Gallery and many more leading international contemporary art galleries and artists. www.artprojx.com davidgryn.wordpress.com

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