Sentences with phrase «curatorial premise»

The exhibition is not based around a linear curatorial premise, which sets out a beginning and an end.
So there's not like a hard rigorous curatorial premise for the bigger show, it's more just to show the strength and the diversity and the creativity that's happening here right now.
Collaboration as curatorial premise is actually rather fascinating and connects extremely well with our Zeitgeist, exemplified in movements such as 15 - M in Spain, Occupy Wall Street, and even The Arab Spring.
Welles's story is an enticingly dramatic and multilayered corpus from which Cooper and Yedgar's curatorial premise feeds.
«Unfinished» is problematic not so much because it lacks a strong curatorial premise but because it aims to include almost everyone and please nearly everybody.
With Conner now removed from the equation, this marketing strategy / curatorial premise seems stripped.
Team Gallery's sprawling, two - venue group exhibition Black Cake takes the cake for the dumbest curatorial premise ever: cake, literally.
In a speculative way, Manuel Cirauqui's curatorial premise also incorporates documents alongside pre-Columbian artifacts that Artaud may or may not have encountered, putting them in dialogue with the work of local and international artists such as Germán Cueto, Lucio Fontana, Maria Izquierdo, José Clemente Orozco, Nancy Spero and Javier Tellez.
Actively engaging with the present social discourses that inform South Africa, the exhibition's curatorial premise asks both the artists and viewers to reflect on the future: is it possible to envisage a future based on principles of humanity and equality, rather than on exclusion and division?
The Forever Now's flaws can be described succinctly; it was a conservative showing of poorly chosen works by mostly good painters, loosely strung together by a thin curatorial premise.
Curated by artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset (Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset), the curatorial premise poses a series of questions asking if a good neighbor is, «a stranger you don't fear,» «from a neighboring country,» and «leaving you alone,» to name a few.
So the way in which a season could constitute a curatorial premise or five solo shows over a period of time might build into a constellation or something like a curatorial gesture.
«The curatorial premise of the 21st Biennale of Sydney is an exhibition that will explore multiple viewpoints in search of a state of equilibrium.
Rather than presenting us with the curatorial premise, the press includes a text that reads:
Nick Fisher, who brews beer inspired by the curatorial premise of each Arturo Bandini show, is traveling to Marfa to serve his latest concoctions at the opening reception for Grey Goo Gardens.
The curatorial premise brings artists together whose work concerns «automated empathy, new age philosophy, digital death and the rise of artificial intelligence in contemporary society.»
An exhibition of painting, sculpture, video and installation, the curatorial premise «fantasizes the cultural aftermath of the colonization of Mars,» where current politics and geographies are explored through non-linear narrative within both the physical and present - day realities of inhabiting Earth as well as the desire for a Martian landscape.
She is co-founder of 1@111, a series of process - oriented conversations that focus on a single work, text, curatorial premise or proposition.
At the center of the show's curatorial premise are the connections that can be made between the selected works and the daily happenings of the market.
Different printing techniques and and traditional methods are at the core of the curatorial premise, bringing together artists who are invested in the relationship between making and physical materiality, and its close proximity to what the press release calls «a painterly gesture.»
But a mournful Lapsarian narrative, of loss, foreclosure and ennui, is written into the show's curatorial premise.
The curatorial premise underlying this exhibition is that dominant discourses of contemporary art history, such as the one that began with Primary Structures, have been created at the expense of the rich diversity of art created globally.
The curatorial premise inverts the process of the exhibition, arranging and including works pertaining to the camera's «ideal point of view» first, a process Griffiths explains is when «the image and reality are doing the same thing.»
The show evoked, for me, the Jewish Museum's curatorial premise.
The artists» exhibition purposely has no press release or description of the curatorial premise, but includes an accompanying text that reads as a type of prayer, excerpted below:
The 2006 Whitney Biennial had the potential to harness a subversive undercurrent with only a slight (if radical) reinterpretation of its curatorial premise, Day for Night.
Most exhibitions organized at The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts feature a curatorial premise relating to the building as muse.
A New York - based curator, she is co-founder of «1@111,» a series of process - oriented conversations that focus on a single work, text, curatorial premise or proposition.
The curatorial premise for this group exhibition is to reflect the wide - ranging practices of artists in the Kingston region and is meant to provide a forum in which to compare artistic modalities from one year to the next.
The curatorial premise for this group exhibition is to reflect the wide - ranging practices of artists in the region and to provide a forum in which to compare patterns emerging in those practices from one year to the next.
The exhibition is based on the curatorial premise of selecting artists whose work is characterised by oppositions such as utopia - dystopia; critical - contemplative; segregation - consistency.
The curatorial premise behind Lucky Number Seven — SITE Santa Fe's seventh international biennial, curated by Lance Fung — is to invite a host of emerging artists, all sponsored by international institutions, to create new commissions that are ephemeral and site - inspired.
Appropriately, the exquisite publication (meticulously conceived by designer Will Holder), resists resorting to the often reductive practice of subsuming artworks under the curatorial premise, and instead tells, in the manner of a deconstructed primer, the abridged story of the Western mind grappling with that which escapes its cognitive grasp.
Touting Laura Mulvey's essay «Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema» as the curatorial premise of its group show, The Female Gaze: Women on Women, Cheim & Read promises a look into how women see themselves and other women, surveying self - portraits, portraits, and female nudes, all by women artists.
The panel will focus on the curatorial premise of the exhibition as it relates to the individual practices of the artists.
These are some of the persistent questions that arise when approaching the curatorial premise of curator, art historian, and critic Barbara Rose's ambitious Painting After Postmodernism, organized with the integral assistance of the Brussels gallerist Roberto Polo.
Gioni's curatorial premise, not to mention Allora & Calzadilla's installation, seems to take this notion to heart, reminding humankind that new systems of sustainability are inevitable on a planet that has been irrevocably altered by the careless endeavors of its inhabitants and also suggests that earth's only hope for survival may be found within the unpredictable landscape of the mind.
The show was entitled Color Chart: Reinventing Color from 1950 to Today and the curatorial premise was that the use of color corresponded to a readymade.
In this go - round the curatorial premise has changed from giving emerging artists an opportunity to showcasing artists who've emerged since 2000.
Also in Brisbane, the Gallery of Modern Art's exhibition «Contemporary Australia: Women» may have divided audiences with its curatorial premise but nonetheless included highlights by Sandra Selig, Agatha Gothe - Snape and Justene Williams.
While the curatorial premise, detailed on a gallery wall, is fairly pedestrian — that contemporary artists have continued Guston's obsession with «formless matter» and «living presence» — it becomes inconsequential for the works themselves.
Perhaps it is only my subjective opinion, but the 2006 Whitney Biennial had the potential to harness a subversive undercurrent with only a slight (if radical) reinterpretation of its curatorial premise, Day for Night.
But with a curatorial premise based on a survey of mostly emerging talent, through one curator's eyes, interest focuses on both the process and potentially prickly protocol of profiling new art from newer artists.
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