Archivi categoria: Schattenkunst

Isa Barbier

HIRONDELLES_ANDALOUSE2French artist Isa Barbier suspends gull feathers in geometric arrangements, determining each piece’s composition on site. The artist maintains the light and airiness of her chosen medium while presenting them as a geometric entity. There is a duality in her work that is seamlessly effective at exhibiting shape and form as well as abstract freedom. It is this visual juxtaposition of wispy feathers and uniform alignment that especially draws one’s attention to each hanging structure’s uniquely shaped components. Continua a leggere Isa Barbier

Rob Gardiner

cid_99B1FE00-6EAA-49A9-82D5-C635CAEE5BE5_jpg_940x2000_q85Though he is now widely regarded nationally as a pre-eminent collector and generous patron, administering a charitable trust he established several decades ago, you may not know that Rob Gardiner was for many years associated with the Waikato Society of Arts, an exhibiting community that helped play a key role in the setting up of Hamilton’s public art gallery – now incorporated into the museum. His role grew out of the fact that he was a committed painter, steadily working since the sixties, rarely exhibiting, though constantly researching. Continua a leggere Rob Gardiner

Jim Hodges

movements-stage-ii-2006-mirror-on-canvasAmerican artist Jim Hodges is known for his singular ability to infuse emotion and narrative into the objects of daily life, creating poignant studies based in temporality, life, and love. This is the first comprehensive survey to be organized in the United States on the work of the New York–based artist. Featuring some 75 pieces produced from 1987 through the present, Jim Hodges: Give More Than You Take brings together photography, drawing, works on paper, and objects rendered in mirror, lightbulbs, silk flowers, and glass alongside several major room-size installations. The exhibition is curated by Olga Viso, executive director, Walker Art Center and Jeffrey Grove, former senior curator of special projects & research, Dallas Museum of Art. The Hammer’s presentation is organized by Connie Butler, chief curator, and Aram Moshayedi, curator. Continua a leggere Jim Hodges

Moto Waganari

magical-shadow-art-6Real Virtuality is a visually complex project by German artist Moto Waganari that explores the definition of reality. Through the project, the artist challenges viewers’ understanding of space with his three-dimensional human forms intricately sculpted out of wire.

Some fragmented, some complete, some acrobatically frozen in time, and others delicately posed in seated or standing positions, all of the sculptures are brightly illuminated so that light shines through the thin, wire lines and casts dramatic shadows in all directions. The images along the walls can be described as the two-dimensional alter egos of the original sculptures. One reviewer said, “[Waganari’s] characters seem to visualize a surreal, parallel world filled with surprise and enigma.” Continua a leggere Moto Waganari

Barbara Kasten

kasten1Artist Barbara Kasten’s abstract geometric photographs gained traction amid the spirited postmodernist climate of the 1980s. Mashups of color, shape, and shadow, the pictures represented sculptural assemblages of objects and props in a two-dimensional format. Now, in “Barbara Kasten: Stages,” the first monographic exhibition of her work, approximately 80 pieces from the 1970s to the present are on view at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania. The show traces the artist’s early cyanotypes and works in fiber to her more recognized photo constructs and set design pieces, many of which have found inspiration in modern and contemporary architecture.  Continua a leggere Barbara Kasten

Louvre Abu Dhabi – Jean Nouvel

3cd6d8d143f22fd32479d6668d129a03The Louvre Abu Dhabi Museum, designed by Ateliers Jean Nouvel, aims at creating a welcoming world which associates lights and shadows as well as shimmers and calm places in a serene atmosphere. Its objective is to belong to its country, to its history, to its geography, avoiding being either a dull translation of this reality or a pleonasm meaning boredom and convention. It also aims at emphasizing the fascination generated by rare encounters. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Every climate likes exceptions. Warmer when the weather is cold, cooler in the tropics. Men have a bad resistance to thermal shocks, as do works of art. The Louvre Abu Dhabi Museum was influenced by such basic observations. It is rather unusual to find a built archipelago in the sea; it is even more uncommon to see that it is protected by a parasol flooded with a rain of lights.

It is not evident to access a museum by boat, or to find pontoons to reach it on foot from the coast, before being welcomed like a much-awaited visitor willing to see unique collections, to consult books in the tempting bookstores, or to stay longer and enjoy the teas, coffees, and local gastronomy. It is both a calm and complex place which clearly stands out in a series of museums that make a point of maintaining their differences and their authenticities.

(Source: http://www.archdaily.com/298058/the-louvre-abu-dhabi-museum-ateliers-jean-nouvel)

Russ and Reyn

831387ec8af39ecaf11cfe56056e9932Russ Ford and Reyn Soffe met in college at the University of Utah. Both moved abroad and eventually found themselves in NYC. Russ was a floor trader and Reyn was an Art Director in advertising. When they met up in 2007, they both understood there was something lost in digital photography. The Avedon and Irving Penn days of creating smart, witty, beautiful imagery was gone.

Following in their artistic legacy, Russ and Reyn venture beyond creative boundaries.  It has been their goal, to bring back what was lost, with the idea to broaden perspectives and influence the world of photography and film by creating imagery with a modernist tone – spare, cool minimalism, compositional clarity and economy – highly organized images that articulate the abstract play of line and volume, where form becomes style. Continua a leggere Russ and Reyn

Isaac Cordal

6a2e99778759ef5e206cad6be963c733In the spirit of the solar eclipse, spanish artist Isaac Cordal has sent designboom his project ‘cement bleak’, a street art intervention he first initiated a few years past in dalston, London, England. The urban public art installation employs the illumination from street lamps casting shadows upon manipulated metal cooking strainers, propped up by the handle of the piece. Three small faces have been modeled on metal sifters and as the light passes through the netted cookware piece, the end point of this luminosity a three-dimensional seeming face on the sidewalk.  Continua a leggere Isaac Cordal

Claudio Parmiggiani

2013072700535261cClaudio Parmiggiani produced his first “Delocazioni” in 1970, using powder, smoke, fire, soot, and ash to make imprints on paper and boards, a technique he has continued to mine for recent works on panel that depict veil-like forms of light, shade, and movement. In his collage, sculpture, installation, and photography, Parmiggiani explores ways of creating and manipulating images and objects, showing the influence of Giorgio Morandi, whose studio he frequented in the late 1950s, as well as Marcel Duchamp and Piero Manzoni. Continua a leggere Claudio Parmiggiani

Bohyun Yoon

IMG_7455p-sAt first glance, the installation artworks of Korean artist Bohyun Yoon appear to be merely suspended doll parts dangling in mid-air in an empty gallery space. Upon further investigation, however, the shadows behind his work come into focus, revealing a barrage of kinky imagery not safe for work. Continua a leggere Bohyun Yoon