Archive for the ‘Utah’ Category

Ephraim City Evicts Central Utah Art Center. CUAC Board views eviction as censorship.

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

Scroll down to read about Edgar Arceneaux and Kurt Forman at the SLC Public Library on July 26

Links to articles about the eviction:

Salt Lake City Weekly

Salt Lake Tribune

KPCW

KUER

Salt Lake Magazine

We are on our way out of Ephraim. We have been pioneers for contemporary art in Utah. We are looking for a new venue so we can continue to do what we do. If you want to help us out, we are working on a couple things 1) we’re looking for a new venue; 2) we need to make up the money we’re short from Ephraim City (make a donation); 3) we’ll have an online petition (Check back soon). For more details, check out the press release below:

Ephraim City Evicts Central Utah Art Center
CUAC Board views eviction as censorship

After 20 years in Ephraim’s Pioneer Square, the Central Utah Art Center (CUAC) received a surprise eviction from the Mayor and Council of Ephraim City on June 20, 2012. Without warning, the government of Ephraim has given notice for CUAC to vacate the building that the CUAC saved from impending demolition and converted into a leading venue for contemporary art in the State of Utah. Although the eviction letter claims lack of support for local arts education and artists, the CUAC Board of Directors views the eviction as a response to the artwork that CUAC exhibited and an attempt to censor the material in a way that violates First Amendment rights.

In conversations with their constituents, the Mayor, City Manager, and several Council members of Ephraim have commented that they feel CUAC exhibitions aren’t “Sanpete appropriate.” Contemporary art of the caliber that CUAC has exhibited is not always intended for viewing by minors, but the CUAC Board maintains that the residents of Sanpete County and the state of Utah deserve exposure to art that challenges, compels, and elevates a viewer who has reached maturity. “That the surprise eviction comes at a time when CUAC is exhibiting three photographs which depict women’s breasts in an exhibition that explores racially-based civil injustices is no coincidence,” said CUAC Director Adam Bateman. “Ephraim City has moved to censor the artwork available to the people of Sanpete County.”

In 1992, Ephraim City planned to raze the ZCMI Granary and co-op building at Ephraim Pioneer Square. A group of citizens raised money and oversaw renovations to save the buildings and start the Central Utah Art Center. At that time, CUAC was a co-operative gallery that showed Sanpete County artists, received approximately 450 visitors annually, and received free rent from Ephraim City. In 2005, CUAC’s focus turned from exclusively showing local artists to exhibiting the best of local, national, and international contemporary artists, a move which brought international recognition, a tenfold increase in financial support, and a twenty-fold increase in visitors (9,000 annually). Ephraim City increased their support of CUAC at that time to include $30,000 annually. CUAC operates under a $130,000 annual budget, the majority of funds coming from private donors and foundation support which includes the prestigious Andy Warhol Foundation.

CUAC has a history of supporting local artists and local arts education. Over the last seven years, 32% of artists exhibiting at CUAC have been from Sanpete County. CUAC has offered classes that target elementary students, occurring an average of more than twice a month for approximately 15 students each. CUAC has also developed a curriculum and been in conversation with Ephraim Elementary School and Snow College to implement an arts education program in the school that would benefit 300 elementary students at least eight times per semester, scheduled to begin this school year. CUAC has also provided art scholarships and internships for Snow College students, and organized and funded travel and accommodations for four or five visiting lecturers per semester for Snow College’s Visiting Lecture Series.

CUAC’s contemporary art format not only brought more people to Ephraim, who, together with CUAC, spend approximately $200,000 a year in Ephraim, but also artwork from internationally-acclaimed artists like Julian Opie, Kerry James Marshall, Jack Smith, Bek Stupak, Rashawn Griffin, Xaviera Simmons, Mariah Robertson, Angela Ellsworth, and Andrea Galvani. This list includes artists who have exhibited in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennale, the Guggenheim, MoMA, UMFA, Getty Center, and the Saatchi Gallery, artists who have been featured on the seminal televised art series Art 21, and artists who have received many residencies and awards, including prestigious Guggenheim fellowships. While exhibiting internationally-acclaimed artists, 32% of CUAC’s exhibiting artists were from Sanpete County, providing an unparalleled opportunity for Utah’s best local artists to be associated with the world’s most celebrated contemporary artists.

The CUAC Board intends to follow the instructions of the eviction letter while continuing to examine legal options available. The CUAC is evaluating alternative locations for the Art Center’s permanent home and plans to sponsor a series of pop-up exhibitions in Utah in the interim.

A private “Farewell, Ephraim” event has been scheduled at the current CUAC location at 8pm on Saturday, August 18, which will include dancing, a live DJ, and a screening of Footloose. Free tickets to the event are available by emailing [email protected]; please include your name and number of guests. CUAC’s pARTy Bus will be available to transport CUAC supporters to and from the event. PARTy Bus tickets are $15 and include transportation, video art, and free drinks; tickets available at cuartcenter.org. The Bus will depart Salt Lake City’s 1300 South TRAX station parking lot at 5:30pm, and depart Ephraim at 11:30pm.

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Press contact:
Andrew Shaw, 801-502-3128
[email protected]

CUAC welcomes Edgar Arceneaux and Kurt Forman for screening of Hulk Alter You! at Salt Lake City Public Library

Friday, July 13th, 2012

 

To coincide with the exhibition superHUMAN, curated by Jorge Rojas and David Hawkins, Central Utah Art Center (CUAC) is pleased to welcome LA based artists Edgar Arceneaux and Kurt Forman for the premier screening of their collaborative filmic mash-up project Hulk Alter You!

 

WHO: Free and open to the public

WHAT: Screening of Edgar Arceneaux and Kurt Forman’s collaborative filmic mash-up project Hulk Alter You! Q&A with the artists will follow the screening.

WHEN: Thursday 26 July, 2012, 7 – 8:30pm

WHERE: Main Library Auditorium

210 East 400 South

Salt Lake City, Utah 84111

 

Hulk Alter You! is a mash-up of three Science Fiction films—Altered States, The Incredible Hulk, and Youth Without Youth—that visualize scientists/professors mutated by chemicals, radiation, and/or genetic engineering in an attempt to recreate themselves into super men with hyper-awareness, or hyper-physical powers. As LA based artists, both Forman and Arceneaux are interested in the ways Hollywood renders evolution into an entertainment vehicle for mass consumption, and how cinematic exaggeration and distortion influence the way in which people perceive themselves. Hulk Alter You! is a structural composite that overlaps frames of each film thematically to produce a fourth film that contains the original iterations, but also transcends them. The film attempts to scramble the codes of Hollywood cinema that render the hysterical human body through the lens of hyperbolic special effects—all while producing a subtle and sophisticated critique of the metamorphosis of science into mass entertainment.

 

The superHUMAN exhibit is currently on display at CUAC in Ephraim, Utah through August 3rd and will travel to Aljira, A Center for Contemporary Art in Newark, New Jersey, where it will be on exhibit from September 6 through December 22. The exhibition explores the work of more than a dozen contemporary artists who utilize speculative art forms—drawing from classic Greek myths, comic books and graphic novels, to sci-fi literature and film, to create new hybrid styles that provide the artists with an important means for exploring serious cultural issues. By incorporating elements of the mythical and fantastic, the artists in superHUMAN compel audiences to look beyond our contemporary notions regarding race, gender, cultural rituals, science, and even art itself.

 

 

Biographies

Kurt Forman was born in Coshocton Ohio in 1965 and currently resides in South Pasadena, California where he works as an artist and filmmaker. He received a B.A. in Art Theory from the University of California at San Diego, a Master’s Degree in Art History at the University of California at Riverside, and an M.F.A. in painting from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. He recently founded Green Cabin Films, an independent production company specializing in Experimental Horror and Science Fiction films, and his first live action short, Cannibal Cult Holocaust, was screened at the Reel Scary Horror Film Festival in Oklahoma. He has just completed his second live-action short, Missing Island, set to debut this summer at Jaus Gallery in LA. His reviews on Hollywood cinema have recently appeared in Artillery Magazine and he currently serves as an Adjunct Professor of Humanities at Pasadena City College where he teaches a course on Contemporary American Science Fiction and Horror Films.

 

Edgar Arceneaux was born in 1972 in Los Angeles, California, where he continues to live and work. He received a BFA from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and a MFA from the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia. In addition, he’s participated as an artist in residence at Art Pace in San Antonio, TX, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine, Project Row Houses in Houston and at the Fachhochschule Aachen in Germany. Previous solo exhibitions of his work have been featured at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, the Kitchen, NY, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects and The Studio Museum of Harlem, New York. Current exhibits of Arceneaux’s work include solo shows at the Museum für Gegenwartskunst in Basel, Switzerland and in “Marking Time”, the inaugural re-opening exhibition of the Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, Australia. His work has been included in the 2008 Whitney Biennial and California Biannual 2008, and resides in public collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art, Walker Art Center, Hammer Museum and Museum of Modern Art, New York. Arceneaux has received many prestigious awards including the United States Artists Award, William H. Johnson Award, Creative Capital, Joyce Foundation Award, American Center for the Arts, LEF Foundation Grant, the Pat Hearn Award, the California Community Foundation Individual Artists Award and the 2012 REDCAT Award.

 

Since 1999 Arceneaux has been the Director of the Watts House Project, an artist driven neighborhood redevelopment project centered on the historic Watts Towers.

Edgar cares about the relationship between art and the social space and has committed his professional life to its exploration.

Art21 is partnering with the CUAC to show a FREE pre-screening of season 12

Friday, March 30th, 2012

when: Friday, March 30, 6-7:30 pm

where: CUAC, 86 N Main, Ephraim Ut

what: Pre-screening segments of Art21 Documentary Season 12

who: Everyone!! This event is free and open to the public!

The Central Utah Art Center, In partnership with Art21 as part of its Access ’12 initiative, presents a sneak preview in advance of the premiere of the sixth season of Art in the Twenty-First Century, the only prime time national television series focused exclusively on contemporary art, on Friday, March 30, 6-7:30 at the CUAC. The event features 3 segments from the award winning series and will run around an hour. This event is free and open to the public.

Art21 Access ’12 is an international screening initiative created to increase knowledge of contemporary art, ignite dialogue, and inspire creative thinking through hundreds of public screenings and events that tailor the ideas presented in series to the interests and concerns of local audiences. The season premieres on PBS April 13th with a new episode each Friday during the April and May at 9 pm (check local listings). Through in-depth profiles and interviews, the four-part series reveals the inspiration, vision and techniques behind the creative works of some of today’s most thought-provoking artists.

ABOUT ART21
Over the last decade, Art21 has established itself as the preeminent chronicler of contemporary art and artists through its Peabody Award-winning biennial television series Art in the Twenty-First Century. The organization has used the power of digital media to expose millions of people of all ages to contemporary art and artists and has created a new paradigm for teaching and learning about the creative process.

Utah Ties Winners!

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Congratulations to the winners of the 2012 Utah Ties Juried Exhibition. Our Juror, Max Presneill, selected three winners:

  • 1st Place: Noah Coleman, Sisyphus
  • 2nd Place: Bruce Case, Vessels
  • 3rd Place: Daniel Barney, If the Odds Are Good, Take That Risk You’ve Been Considering

Daniel Barney

Bruce Case

Noah Coleman


Utah Ties Juror’s Selections to be announced @CUACtails this Saturday!

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

 

What do you get when you add the CUAC with cocktails? You get CUACtails, an informal party sponsored by the Central Utah Art Center. This month CUACtails is at The Spot, a friendly neighborhood bar in downtown Salt Lake. There will be dancing, and art-ing, and oh yeah we will be announcing the artists selected to be in the 2012 Utah Ties Juried Exhibition. (Don’t worry if you entered the show and you can’t make it to the party, you will receive email notification.)

Please come and enjoy yourself with your fellow artists and also pick up some discounted tickets for the pARTy Bus! And FYI CUACtails is just a precursor to the opening reception which is on Feb 10 in Ephraim. So many art parties!

when: Saturday, Feb 4, 9:30pm-1am

where: The Spot, 870 South Main Street, Salt Lake City

what: dancing, drinks, Utah Ties Announcement, discounted party bus tickets

who: 21+

VIDEO: A Mid-Opening Performance by Mariah Robertson & An Installation View

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Mariah Robertson plays with the projections, parading a tabletop through the gallery space.

 

 

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A corner view of the downstairs gallery.

Across Process-A Group Exhibition from Salt Photo Society

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

curated by Lindsey Winkel

Exhibition Dates: December 2-Februaury 3

CUAC Annex

 

Participating artists

Morgan Donovan

Anna Hansen

Greg Hebard

Etsuko Kato

Tyler Lynch

Michael Marcinek

Sarra Nordesen

Anikó Sáfrán

Guinnevere Shuster

 

Salt Photo Society is a group of artists supported by the University of Utah who work to connect academic and community art practices. Across Process is a collection of works by members of Salt Photo Society who have roots in analog photography. The processes they currently work with help record the possible digressions, or continuations, of meat-and-potatoes film practices during a time when the disposition of their foundational medium is uncertain.”

Visit their website here.

New Director at BYU MOA

Friday, October 28th, 2011

On October 21 Brigham Young University’s dean of the College of Fine Arts announced Mark Magleby as the Museum of Art’s new director. Dr Magleby will officially take over this position beginning January 1. Dr Magleby has been a faculty member in the Art History Department at BYU since 1997. His scholarship focuses on 18th century art and architecture, 20th century European art, and contemporary theory and criticism.

The addition of Dr Magleby is only one of the many changes BYU MOA has under went in the past year. Other changes occurred in the education, PR and design departments. Dr Magleby is a strong proponent of his staff remarking they “create concrete exhibitions from the most ephemeral ideas.” It will be interesting to see the imprint Dr Magleby will have on Utah’s art community. The CUAC extends our support to Dr. Magleby as he begins his position as the Director of BYU MOA.

“Are We Having Fun Yet?” New work from Fay Ku

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

Exhibition Dates: October 14 - November 25

“Are We Having Fun Yet?” takes current political and economic events as a point of entry to explore ideas of security, passivity and general anxiety for the future. Although these concepts are serious, the result is not without humor. Comprised of new works on paper, the works in this exhibition are a product of loosely associated images as mediations rather than projecting any one ideology or thesis.

Taiwanese-born American Fay Ku graduated from Pratt Institute with an MFA and a Master’s of Science in Art History. The faux-naïve nature of her illustrative style is exemplified by her use of watercolour, ink, and graphite on paper. Her choice of subject matter has evolved over the years, yet she retains the elegant juxtaposition of seriousness and puerility of her earlier art. Conscious of the fact that her unconscious is largely at work when she creates, her recent illustrations demonstrate a somewhat playfully cynical view of society. Her Darger-esque drawings present relevant socioeconomic commentary via images of modern-day youth of the glitterati living a neo-Rococo lifestyle, provoking the viewer to contemplate economic stability of the future and the results of passing the torch to a generation that seems to be more concerned with role-playing as rather than becoming adults.

Documentary Fiction Installation Views

Friday, September 16th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Oct 7
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Main Gallery and CCAspace

Participating artists:
Josh Azzarella
Ben Thorp Brown
Ben Dean
Laura Heyman
Ann Hirsch
Sara Jordenö

Recur: New work from Roland Thompson

Thursday, July 28th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: Aug 12 - Sept 2, 2011
Opening Reception: Aug 12, 2011 7-10pm
CUAC Upper Gallery

|riˈkər|from Latin recurrere: to run back
This group of artwork is part of ongoing research into the concept and application of recursion, which is generally associated with computer science, linguistics, and mathematics; but has also been applied to the visual arts. Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines recursion as “the determination of a succession of elements (as numbers or functions [or lines]) by operation on one or more preceding elements according to a rule or formula involving a finite number of steps.” The aspect of my paintings that is recursive is the structure. Each design is produced by a particular predefined motion along a path. So far I have produced three different types of recursive structures. One which is recorded along a singular path as in Circuitous Melody; two, moved along a distinct path during each cycle as in Flammeum Gladium; third, a path is started, terminated, and restarted in a new position multiple times to produce a cluster of enclosed shapes as in Ventus Turbinis.

Roland Thompson was born in 1970 in Utah, where he continues to live and work. He received a B.F.A. from Brigham Young University in 1998 and an M.F.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2001. Thompson has been featured in over 60 exhibits, the most notable including: Hot & Sticky, The Painting Center, New York (2001); Random Order, White Columns, New York (2003); Reductive, Mahan Gallery, Columbus, Ohio (2006); and 24/7, Sego Art Center, Provo, Utah (2009). Thompson is recipient of numerous awards and scholarships, including a 2008 Utah Arts Council Grant, and teaches at Brigham Young University and Art Institute of Pittsburg-Online Division.

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

Here, Now

Thursday, July 28th, 2011


New and Re-visited photography
Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Dec 2
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Annex

Participating artists:
Andrea Cerveny
Bethany Davis
Rachel Call

These artists are establishing connections with people and places where there is an inherent disconnection in the relationship between artist and subject, and in the process discovering more about who and where they are as individuals.
Each are motivated by curiosity; by a need for deeper understanding of our various subjects. Andrea Cerveny’s House prints explore the assumptions and conclusions, correct or otherwise, we make when we see things only from the outside. Bethany Davis’ reproductions of old family photos allow her to connect with her 9 older siblings and parents in a way otherwise not possible, as she wasn’t yet born during their growing-up years. Rachel’s contact prints represent the details and nuances of individual people which are lost through the passing of generations.

Documentary Fiction: curated by Lizzie Gorfaine and Rachel Wetzler

Thursday, July 28th, 2011


Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Oct 7
Opening Reception: August 12, 7-10pm
CUAC Main Gallery and CCAspace

Participating artists:
Josh Azzarella
Ben Thorp Brown
Ben Dean
Laura Heyman
Ann Hirsch
Sara Jordenö

The artists in Documentary Fiction explore the tension between the perceived objectivity of the photographic image and their capacity to transform and manipulate, creating partial, even fictional, narratives from what appear to be recordings of reality. Drawing on the conventions of the documentary genre-photographs and videos that seem to testify to an actual event-these artists pose a direct challenge to our expectations of fidelity. Exploiting the gap between fact and fiction inherent in the creation of representational images, the works in the exhibition resist the assumption that an image is an accurate depiction of the world as it exists.

Josh Azzarella alters appropriated images found on the internet, digitally removing the central figures from the scene depicted. Often using iconic photographs of historical events, the resulting photographs are stripped of their function as historical documents, leaving behind only background details and compositional devices.

In his project Unseen (2011), Ben Thorp Brown addresses the gap between text and image, and the inherent subjectivity of a second-hand account. Attempting to reconstruct an archive of classified images taken by soldiers in Afghanistan charged with murdering civilians, Brown interviewed journalists who had seen the photographs, presenting their text descriptions in lieu of the censored images themselves.

Using computer rendering techniques, Ben Dean creates digital reconstructions of various landscapes, complicating the notion of what it means to document a particular place. For his projection Landmark (2003), he created a rendering based on the rock formation seen in the first propaganda video of Osama bin Laden, adding the sound of footsteps and the perspective of walking around the object to give the impression of traversing the landscape. Combined with ambient noise recorded in the artist’s studio, the dissonant elements that constitute Landmark form an ambiguous portrait of a place that is neither wholly real nor wholly fictional.

Laura Heyman: Drawing on the familiar trope of the artist’s lover as muse, Laura Heyman’s series The Photographer’s Wife presents a recurring female figure in intimate, domestic settings. However, the woman depicted is not the photographer’s wife, as the title might suggest, but the artist herself, challenging our expectations of the relationship between artist and model. Moreover, the photographs take on the status of a kind of fictive document of a relationship that doesn’t exist.

Conceiving of her work as a form of sociological investigation into subcultures of fame, Ann Hirsch injects herself into various media landscapes, adopting fictionalized personas that interact with the real world. For her project Scandalishious, Hirsch spent a year documenting her life as “Caroline”, a college student who went by the moniker Scandalishious, through videos she placed on YouTube. Interacting with various fans and detractors who were unaware that the videos were part of a larger performance and study, Hirsch uses the camera as a vehicle to create a fictional life, complete with inter-personal relationships via the Internet.

Sara Jordeno’s film The Set House (Hedvig), part of a seven-part series exploring various aspects surrounding Ingmar Bergman’s film Persona, takes the house in which the film was set as its subject, examining a place that exists simultaneously within the fictional space of Bergman’s narrative and the real life of Hedwig, the woman who presently occupies it, documenting both the temptation to recreate a favorite film and the ways in which Hedwig resists attempts at her fictionalization.

This exhibition is one of many at the CUAC that features highly acclaimed artists from around the United States and Utah. A review of our programming has recently been included in the highly influential international Flash Art magazine published in Milan, Italy. Artists who have shown at the CUAC over the last four years have been included in the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Biennial, collected by Charles Saatchi; they have been exhibited in the Getty Museum, Whitney Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Saatchi Gallery, major museums in Switzerland, Germany, Iceland, Korea, and Spain; They have shown in Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, Freight and Volume Gallery, the Drawing Center, and many other important New York, Los Angeles, and international venues.

CUAC Mission Statement:

The purpose of the CUAC is to educate Utahns about Contemporary Art through exhibitions of artists from three categories:

  1. Sanpete artists who demonstrate a high level of professionalism in their art;
  2. Utah artists who make art in a Contemporary genre who are emerging or well established;
  3. and artists who are exemplary of important trends in Contemporary Art worldwide.
  4. The CUAC maintains that good education about art starts with strong exhibitions of Contemporary Art that have relevance in content or image to our community. Education also includes outreach to the community in the form of classes for adults and children, lectures and critical dialogue about art, and an inviting, friendly environment that welcomes visitors and encourages questions and strives to provide answers.

Localized: Working in Proximity - Installation Views

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

June 10 - Aug 5

Artists:

Scott Allred

Amy Jorgensen

Adam Larsen

Brad Taggart

CUAC mentioned in Spanish Art Blog

Saturday, May 7th, 2011

Destacadas exposiciones con obras de artistas españoles en el exterior

Durante las dos pasadas semanas se han producido destacadas inauguraciones de exposiciones de artistas españoles en el exterior. Algunos de ellos ya fallecidos, como Pablo Picasso (Málaga, 1881 - Francia, 1973) y Joan Miró (Barcelona, 1893 - Palma de Mallorca, 1983). A estos hay que sumar las exposiciones de creadores internacionalmente reconocidos en sus distintas disciplinas como el arquitecto Santiago Calatrava (Valencia, 1951) y el fotógrafo Chema Madoz (Madrid, 1958). También han inaugurado exposición otros artistas como Ana Álvarez Ribalaygua (Santander, 1962), Fernando Navarro Vejo (Santander, 1977) y Fernando Villena (Bilbao, 1974). Además, como adelanto, destacar la exposición “Destino: Berlín / Zielort: Berlín” organizada por la Embajada de España en Berlín que del 25 de mayo al 17 de junio mostrará en el Studio 1 - Bethanien una selección de 21 artistas españoles residentes en Berlín, a cargo de la comisaria Creixell Espilla-Gilart. En su mayoría son artistas emergentes pero también se incluyen trabajos de artistas ya consolidados dentro del mercado internacional como son Ignacio Uriarte, Pablo Alonso, Javier Chozas, Paul Ekaitz, Cristina Gómez Barrio, PSJM y Jasmina Llobet & Luis Fernández Pons, entre otros.

En la sede neoyorkina de la Gagosian Gallery se inauguró la exposición que lleva por título “Picasso and Marie-Thérèse” y que está curada por John Richardson. Por su parte, la londinense Tate Modern ha organizado la retrospectiva “Joan Miró: The Ladder of Escape (La escalera de huída)” con con 150 óleos, acuarelas, dibujos y esculturas de diferentes museos y colecciones privadas. En su creación ha colaborado Teresa Montaner, curator de la Fundació Joan Miró. Además, la directora de esta última institución, Rosa María Malet i Ybern, y Vicente Todolí, ex-director de la Tate Modern, han ejercido como consultores. En la Neue Nationalgalerie en Berlín, bajo el título “Stella & Calatrava: The Michael Kohlhaas Curtain” se puede ver una obra de arte sin precedentes que fusiona una de las obras monumentales de Frank Stella (EE.UU., 1936) con una escultura de acero diseñada por Santiago Calatrava (Valencia, 1951). Estos dos creadores de dos disciplinas diferentes han usado sus trabajos individuales para crear una instalación que transforma dos obras en una. Esta instalación estará en Berlín hasta mediados del mes de agosto y después viajará al recién estrenado Instituto Aragonés de Arte y Cultura Contemporánea Pablo Serrano - IAACC de Zaragoza, donde formará parte de una ámplia selección de pinturas, dibujos y esculturas, que incluyen varias esculturas en movimiento nunca antes vistas y creadas de forma específica por Calatrava para la muestra. También en Alemania, en la ciudad de Colonia, en el espacio 100 kubik - Raum für spanische Kunst, que dirige la española, Carmen González-Borrás, se inauguró “Chema Madoz ‘La vida secreta de los objetos’. Fotografía” que supone la primera vez que se presentan obras de Chema Madoz (Madrid, 1958) en una galería alemana.

La fotógrafa Ana Álvarez Ribalaygua (Santander, 1962) inauguró la exposición “On y off” en el Museu Histórico de Santa Catarina de la ciudad brasileña de Florianópolis. Esta artista figura entre los artistas representados por la galería santanderina Espiral. El también santanderino Fernando Navarro Vejo (Santander, 1977) inauguró la individual “Para eso habéis nacido” en Galería Patricia Ready en Santiago de Chile. Navarro figura entre la nómina de artistas representados por la galería barcelonesa Sicart, con quien participó en un Solo Show de la última edición de JustMad 2011, y donde tuvo su última exposición individual en 2009. La pareja de artistas Cristina Calderón & José Luis Paulete, también representados por Sicart, tienen actualmente una exposición en Galería 713 - Arte Contemporáneo con sede en Buenos Aires.

Por su parte, Fernando Villena (Bilbao, 1974), a quien le representa la bilbaína Windsor Kulturgintza, inauguró una individual con nuevos trabajos en el Central Utah Art Center. Este 2011 Villena disfruta de una residencia en la Birch Creek Residency de Utah.

“Projeto Ideal” es el título de la colectiva que ha organizado el Centro Cultural Sao Paulo, donde se pueden ver obras de artistas como Santiago Sierra (Madrid, 1966), así como de otros, que tienen una significativa presencia en nuestro país como Regina José Galindo (Guatemala, 1974), Carlos Garaicoa (Cuba, 1967) y Jota Castro (Perú, 1964). También en Sao Paulo, en la sede del Instituto Cervantes se inauguró la exposición “Coleccionando o tempo”, comisariada por Berta Sichel , directora del departamento de audiovisuales del Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (MNCARS), desde 2000. La muestra reúne una selección de obras audiovisuales de la Colección Helena Fernandino y Emilio Pi. Por último, el próximo día 30 de Abril, se inagura “The Last First Decade” en la sede de The Ellipse Foundation Contemporary Art Collection, en la ciudad portuguesa de Cascais. En ella se podrán ver entre muchas otras obras pertenecientes a la Colección Ellipse las de artistas españoles como Ignasi Aballí (Barcelona, 1958) o Gonzalo Puch (Sevilla, 1950). Es reseñable que los fondos de esta colección -propiedad de Joao Oliveira-Rendeiro, presidente del Banco Privado Portugués- iban a depositarse en el MARCO - Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Vigo, según se anunció en junio de 2008, si bien, después de mantener avanzadas negociones para conseguirla, no llegó a alcanzarse un acuerdo. ARTEINFORMADO