March UBS 12 x 12 at Chicago’s MCA Presents White/Light
CHICAGO, IL.- Experimental music duo White/Light — musician Matt Clark and sound engineer Jeremy Lemos — create an interactive music installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art (
MCA), Chicago, as part of the monthly
UBS 12 x 12: New Artists / New Work series. Two tape machines loop drone sounds and minimal electric guitar samples in the darkened gallery, while a glowing microphone entices visitors into the space which triggers a sensor that alters the sound frequencies. Acclaimed musicians — including Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth, Disappears from Chicago, Tim Kinsella of Joan of Arc, and Lucky Dragons from Los Angeles — join White/Light for special performances throughout the duration of the exhibition, that opens on the evening of March 5, 2010 during First Fridays and runs through March 28. The electro-acoustic drone music is inspired by the French Musique Concrète composer Pierre Schaeffer and features twelve tracks of taped loop recordings created by an analog synthes …
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Brooklyn Botanic Gardens Presents a New Body of Work by Emile Clark, Its First Artist-in-Residence
BROOKLYN, NY.- A series of lush, fluid watercolor and graphite amalgamations of flora and fauna are at the heart of My Garden Pets, a major new installation by New York-based artist Emilie Clark at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden (BBG). In the exhibition—on view from March 6 through May 23, 2010 as a featured presentation of BBG’s 2010 Centennial Celebration—Clark explores the work of the 19th-century American naturalist, Mary Treat, and the concept of ‘the beneficial insect.’ To create this body of work, Clark spent four months on site at the Garden as its first artist-in-residence, researching in its libraries and talking to BBG horticulturalists, scientists, and other staff members. Her project deftly combines works on paper in which galls, thorns, canes, beetles, aphids, nematodes, leaves and pods flow in and out of each other, in accumulation and transformation, with an audio piece drawn from the exten … More
Evidence of Mormon Participation in Mexican War Found
MEXICO CITY.- The recent finding of a 19th century silver bracelet in Alamo Mocho, in the desert of Baja California, represents the first material evidence of presence of the Mormon Battalion, which camped at the site before integrating to the 1847 Mexico-United States War (Mexican War). The discovery took place after a sandstorm uncovered archaeological material. Specialists of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) began exploration at the site afterwards. The jewel represents a clear testimony for Mexican and American historians that Mormons camped in Alamo Mocho approximately for 3 days, before their integration with the 1847 war, fact only stated in documents until now. Archaeologist Antonio Porcayo Michelini declared this at the Baja California Archaeology Analysis Table that took place recently in Tijuana, Baja California. He detailed that a bifacial stone knife was found as well, which could be more … More
Kemper Museum Acquires Two Magnolia Laurie Paintings from Causey Contemporary
BROOKLYN, NY.- Causey Contemporary announced that two paintings by Magnolia Laurie are being acquired by the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, MO for their permanent collection. Paintings, “November Charlie” (I am in distress and require immediate assistance) and “To Abandon My Vessel” (Alfa Bravo) were selected for the museum by curator Barbara O’Brien after visiting Magnolia solo exhibition at Causey Contemporary. The exhibition entitled “All After: All Before” opened on February 12, 2010 and runs through March 13, 2010 at the gallery’s 293 Grand St. Location in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Williamsburg. This acquisition will mark the first by a museum of Magnolia’s work. The two paintings headed for the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art each feature the color coded signal flags that ships use to relay messages to one another often when in distress. Thus suggesting that the structures de … More
News from the Near Future by Fiona Tan at Museum Kunst der Westkuste
AMSTERDAM.- Amsterdam-based photographer and video artist Fiona Tan (born 1966) has been a central figure on the contemporary art scene since the 1990s. In her video “News from the Near Future” (2003) a collage of historic film and audio material tells of man’s ambivalent relationship with water as a force of nature. Drawing on the archives of the Amsterdam Film Museum, Tan composed a narrative crescendo starting off with idyllic impressions of the watery world and building to increasingly menacing scenarios of an unleashed nature. Images of floods and churning seas, of wild winds and storms, parade before our eyes the destructive force of water. Tragedies at sea are reported in the style of old newsreels or radio shows, segueing into pictures of flooded cities that – as indicated in the work’s title – forebode future catastrophes. The cinematic repertoire of waves, tides and floods acts as an historical memory, presenting the sea as a metaphor for the flow o … More
The Weird and Wonderful Sydney Town Hall Collection Geso on Public Display
SYDNEY.- A treasure trove of intriguing items from around the world went on public display in Sydney Town Hall to help celebrate the official reopening of the iconic building. UNVAULTED features fascinating items from the Sydney Town Hall Collection, many on public display for the very first time, including a lock of Napoleon’s hair, a chair from the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and a lamp from one of the Japanese submarines which attacked Sydney Harbour in 1942. “There are some 3,500 invaluable items in our unique Sydney Town Hall Collection which is the largest civic collection in Australia,” said Lord Mayor Clover Moore MP. “We look forward to sharing this eclectic mix of official gifts and some of the fascinating stories behind them. This Collection demonstrates the City’s rich 160-year history and some of these items have been kept in vaults for over a century.” UNVAULTED is curated by City of Sydney historian Margaret Betteridge and is the inaugural exhibition in the … More
Wadsworth Atheneum Begins Much Anticipated Renovation
HARTFORD, CT.- The Wadsworth Atheneum announced the commencement of its highly anticipated renovation project, which will yield 8,000 square feet of refurbished gallery space in anticipation of the complete reinstallation of the museum’s permanent collection. The project is slated to be completed by the end of 2011. The Wadsworth Atheneum is America first public art museum and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Its five separate, but contiguous buildings were built over the span of 125 years. The renovation will address roof leakage problems and façade issues with the museum’s Morgan, Avery and Goodwin buildings, which date from 1910, 1934 and 1969 respectively. In addition to addressing structural issues, the renovation will also improve the overall visitor experience by providing a 14% increase in available gallery space, which will be home to both permanent collection installations and special … More