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    • Paul Pfeiffer: Jerusalem

      Paul Pfeiffer: Jerusalem

      Jerusalem

      June 27- September 27, 2014

       

      An online project commissioned and produced by Artangel and The Space, supported by Arts Council England, The Company of Angels, and The Heritage Lottery Fund.

       

      Further information

    • Akram Zaatari at the New Museum

      Akram Zaatari at the New Museum

      Here and Elsewhere

      New Museum, New York

       

      Further information

    • Phillip King an Outdoor Exhibition of Sculpture

      Phillip King an Outdoor Exhibition of Sculpture

      At Masterpiece London on display at Ranelagh Gardens, Chelsea, and open throughout the summer

      Admission Free 

    • Anya Gallacio: SNAP, Art at the Aldeburgh Festival

      Anya Gallacio: SNAP, Art at the Aldeburgh Festival

      Anya Gallacio 

       

      SNAP: Art at the Aldeburgh Festival

      Installations in Orford Ness & Snape Maltings, Suffolk

      13- 29 June 2014

      More information

       

    • Glenn Ligon at the Berlin Biennale

      Glenn Ligon at the Berlin Biennale

      Berlin Biennale

      May 29- August 3, 2014

      More information

       

    • Michel Francois: Pieces of Evidence, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham

      Michel Francois: Pieces of Evidence, Ikon Gallery, Birmingham

      Michel Francois: Pieces of Evidence 

      Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, UK

      April 30- June 22, 2014

       

      Ikon presents the first UK survey of work by Belgian artist Michel François, comprising sculpture, film and photography. It exemplifies the artist's conviction that the meanings of a work of art are determined through its combination with others in relation to an exhibition space. Visitors to Ikon encounter numerous pieces to be read as a whole, integrated with the entire building.

       

      The exhibition title, Pieces of evidence, refers to François' fascination with a netherworld, drawing comparisons between the ingenuity of artists and criminals. The key installation here involves a projected film in which we see the hands of a magician skilfully examining everyday objects - drinks cans, cosmetic bottles - before revealing hidden compartments and illegal substances within. The objects themselves are exhibited in vitrines nearby. Another work, Stumbling Block II (Wall) (1989), is a large rectangular block of polystyrene secured to the wall with strips of brown tape, a sculptural translation of a convicted smuggler's failed attempt to conceal drugs by strapping them across their body. An art object is likened to contraband.

      The idea of crossing international frontiers - illegally or otherwise - is conveyed by Surveying(1993), a video of an inchworm walking over a map of the world. This funny creature signifies the artist's free spirit with respect to art as much as his geographical itinerancy, a kind of energy that spurs us to keep moving, keep looking, and keep asking questions.

       

      Likewise,Golden Cage 1 (2008-2009), considers the notion of frontiers. A large free-standing steel box, from which A4-sized sections have been uniformly cut, it is a structure on the verge of collapse. It is a cage with walls that resemble the gilded left-overs of a manufacturing process, with cut out shapes scattered within. François presents this work as symbolic of human migration across the Mexican/US border, the hollow dreams of finding a better place, the cage being desirable in a way that its contents are not.

       

      A further work, Self-Portrait Against Nature (2002), shows the artist, seen from above, walking around on a hard concrete floor and smoking while empty wine bottles drop and smash around him. It suggests a kind of solitude and self-destructiveness that throw any hints of joy into sharp relief. Broken Neon Lights (2003), has a similar edginess as François stamps his feet through a path of neon tubes, laid widthways, resulting in lots more broken glass. The action is transgressive and the feeling one of anger.

       

      The exhibition is accompanied by a new publication featuring a text by writer and critic Martin Herbert.

      Michel François' exhibition Pieces of evidence is supported by The Henry Moore Foundation;Wallonie-Bruxelles International; Lafarge Tarmac; Bortolami Gallery, New York; Galerie Carlier Gebauer, Berlin; Galerie Kamel Mennour, Paris; Thomas Dane Gallery, London and Galerie Xavier Hufkens, Brussels.

       

       

      Further information

       

    • Steve McQueen: TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential People

      Steve McQueen: TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential People

      Steve McQueen has been named one of TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential People, 2014. 

       

      Further information

       

    • Steve McQueen: New Work at Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo

      Steve McQueen: New Work at Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo

      Steve McQueen

      Espace Louis Vuitton Tokyo 

      Tokyo, Japan

      April 26- August 17, 2014

       

       

      Further information

       

    • Lynda Benglis Honoured at New Museum Spring Gala

      Lynda Benglis Honoured at New Museum Spring Gala

      Our congratulations to Lynda Benglis on the occasion of her being honored at the 2014 New Museum Annual Spring Gala. 

       

      New Museum Annual Spring Gala 

      Cipriani, New York 

      April 1, 2014

    • Amy Sillman at the Whitney Biennial 2014, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

      Amy Sillman at the Whitney Biennial 2014, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

      The Whitney Museum is proud to present two works by Amy Sillman at the 2014 Whitney Biennale; 'Mother', a painted work by the artist and 'Fells', a three-dimensional collaboration with sculptor Pam Lins.

       

      On view on the fourth floor of the 2014 Biennial, 'Fells' began with a question posed by sculptor Pam Lins about how to incorporate a painting into a sculpture, a proposal that she has been working for the past decade. Amy Sillman suggested that Lins begin a new work by taking and responding to one of Sillman's own canvases, and this began an ongoing back-and-forth exchange between their two studios. They continued this chain of moves and responses for over a year, Lins adding a form, Sillman changing a painting in reply, Lins painting a panel, and so on. The result is a hybrid structure in which the parts appear somehow coordinated and disjointed at the same time, its sculptural components challenging us to think about three-dimensional space even as its pictorial elements seem to disrupt that solid reality.

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