In the islands of the Strait of Hormuz off the southern coast of Iran, a distinctive local culture has emerged as the result of many centuries of cultural and economic exchange, the traces of which are seen not only in the material culture of these islands but also in the customs and beliefs of their inhabitants. Central to these is a belief in the existence of winds—generally thought of as harmful—that may possess a person, causing her to experience illness or disease, and a corresponding ritual practice involving incense, music and movement in which an hereditary cult leader speaks with the wind through the afflicted patient in one of many local or foreign tongues in order to negotiate its exit. While their exact origins are unclear, the existence of similar beliefs and practices in many African countries suggests that the cult may have been brought to the south of Iran from southeast Africa through the Arab slave trade.
Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology. The original photographs were taken during protests in France, Cirio collected these images and created an online platform containing a database of the 4000 police faces that the AI program isolated. The artist crowdsourced their identification by name and then publicly exposed the officers by printing their headshots and posting them throughout Paris.
For the two-channel work Asking the Repentistas – Peneira & Sonhador – to remix my octopus works Shimabuku asked two Brazilian street singers to compose a ballad about his previous works with octopi (in which he created traditional Japanese ceramic vessels to catch octopi, with a fisherman who took him on his boat to test them out as we can see on one of the channel). In the Brazilian singers’ ballad, Shimabuku is transformed into a fisherman, the greatest fisherman in Japan, but a kindly fisherman who returns his catch to the sea. The artwork thus becomes facilitator for an interaction between different cultures and interpretations.
The ongoing “Sea Paintings” series is central to the practice of Jessica Warboys. The series plays with the notion of ritual, performance, nature and consequence. The artist realises her “Sea Paintings” on the Zennor coast, near St Ives, where she emerges the canvas in the seawater, allowing the waves and the wind to mix the raw mineral pigments that have been applied by hand to damp folded canvases.
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest. The area is renowned for its roof tile factories, and the cup aims to celebrate the factory worker’s physiques, sculpted by intense, daily, physical labor. Togar based the idea of the cup on the simple notion of collectivity.
7-headed Lalandau Hat by Yee I-Lann is an intricately woven sculpture evoking the ceremonial headdress worn by Murut men in Borneo. The materiality and form of this traditional headpiece represents the strength and fierceness of forest warriors. Their ‘chimneys’ on top are intended to resemble trees in the jungle onto which hornbill feathers would once have been stuffed.
Francisco Herrero Peñuela uses old forms to make his elaborate, richly textured surfaces. Practicing a form of marquetry common in 15th century Italy—intarsia—Peñuela pieces together fragments of wood to create abstract images in warm tones of gold, brown, and black. While original Italian intarsia would have been representational, embedding landscapes, objects, and narrative scenes directly into walls, Peñuela’s compositions hedge away from direct representation, with shapes and pattern emerging organically out of his carefully arranged wooden pieces.
Taking the same name as their most recent solo show at the Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen in Düsseldorf, siren eun young jung’s video work Deferral Theatre intertwines various threads from the last decade of the artist’s research into the Yeoseong Gukgeuk theatrical form, in which all of the roles are played by women, as well as performance-based modes of queer resistance in South Korea. The radical and temporally border-crossing qualities of gender fluidity, and lineages of queer subversion within performative spaces, animate Deferral Theatre through a critical deconstruction of Korean history, tradition and gender norms. One particularly powerful scene depicts a young drag king performer tearing at their suit and tie as they lip-sync passionately to a song in English, while the frame lilts with an ecstatic languor, as if the operator of the camera were staggering feverishly.
PANGKIS by Yee I-Lann is a looped video performance. The work is named after the triumphant warrior cry, an animistic guttural call, which punctuates the traditional Dusun Sumazau dance. For this work, the artist collaborated with Tagaps Dance Theatre, a group of young dancers whose practice merges traditional and contemporary styles.
Designed by the artist and fabricated in collaboration with Kashmiri artisans in India, Baseera Khan’s Psychedelic Prayer Rugs combine visual iconography traditional to Islam, such as the crescent moon and lunar calendar, with brightly coloured symbols of personal significance to the artist: a pair of embroidered sneakers, a fragment of an Urdu poem, and the Purple Heart medal. Visually seductive yet charged with political and symbolic associations, the rugs bridge elements of American popular culture with aspects of Islamic worship that may be poorly understood in contemporary secular contexts. Encouraged by Khan to take their shoes off and interact with the rugs, viewers participate in a decolonizing process as they meditate on their poetic allusions or perform the traditional salat, the daily prayers that constitute one of the five pillars of Islam, the others being faith, charity, fasting, and pilgrimage to Mecca.
Yang Song’s Die features a clay mask of the artist himself slowly dissolving into water. Clay returns to clay. Clay originates from and returns to earth, becoming a metaphor for life.
Mika Tajima’s Pranayama sculptures are built from carved wood and chromed Jacuzzi jets and are presented as artefacts. The title refers to the control of the breath, ‘prana’ in Ayurvedic practice, as the regulation of the vital life force. According to the artist, the sculptures, mediating between two spaces, serve “as membrane, portal or filter between the immediate and the beyond.
Daniel Boyd’s work WTEIA3 is part of a series of paintings that reference the stick charts used by indigenous communities on the Marshall Islands. These charts were made in order to navigate the Pacific ocean by canoe and thus crucially depict ocean swell patterns. These highly individualised maps were rarely intended for mass use but instead for memorising, and transmitting between the community, the maps were not taken to sea but instead memorised in advance.
Motoyuki Shitamichi launched his Torii project in 2006. He proceeded to visit and photograph torii that are situated outside Japan’s current national border. Expansionist Japan constructed numerous torii during its occupation of the Northern Mariana Islands (now a U. S. territory), Northeast China (former Manchuria), Taiwan, South Korea, and Sakhalin (the eastern most area of Russia).
Sombras de los Valles (Shadows of the Valleys) is part of a series of works created by Bayrol Jiménez in which he is influenced by hand-painted signs and large billboards in Mexico. From small artisanal store-front insignia to widespread symbols and lettering, Jiménez looks at how this iconography shapes Mexican cultural identity. It is worth noting that the hand painted signs especially are highly unique, especially in an age of homogenised digital images and reproduced typefaces.
Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)
Hama Goro works with a traditional method called the Bogolan technique, which is inspired by a method used in Mali to color clothes. The ingredients of the various colors originate from natural products such as clay, leaves and bark. The colors had a symbolic significance and were used during ritual ceremonies.
Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)
Lam Tung Pang created Sketches from train ride Chicago to San Francisco during his travels through the United States researching American curatorial strategies for representing traditional Chinese painting in museums and cultural institutions. The drawings incorporate both traditional and contemporary Chinese landscape techniques to reflect on the memory, history, and aesthetic practices of the Chinese laborers who played a prominent role in the American westward expansion. By representing the Western landscape according to Chinese aesthetics, Lam calls attention to the distortions and cultural specificity of American representations of the Western landscape and non-Western cultures.
Lyrics 1, 2, 3 is part of siren eun young jung Yeoseong Gukgeuk Project (2008–). The work closely follows first and second generations of Yeoseong Gukgeuk actresses, who later became an important source of inspiration for the artist. Formally, this genre of theater draws from Westernized aspects of traditional Korean music performance, as well as from adaptations of pansori , a Korean genre of musical storytelling, to create a staged version of traditional Korean opera.
Designed by the artist and fabricated in collaboration with Kashmiri artisans in India, Baseera Khan’s Psychedelic Prayer Rugs combine visual iconography traditional to Islam, such as the crescent moon and lunar calendar, with brightly coloured symbols of personal significance to the artist: a pair of embroidered sneakers, a fragment of an Urdu poem, and the Purple Heart medal. Visually seductive yet charged with political and symbolic associations, the rugs bridge elements of American popular culture with aspects of Islamic worship that may be misunderstood in contemporary secular contexts. Encouraged by Khan to take their shoes off and interact with the rugs, viewers participate in a decolonizing process as they meditate on their poetic allusions or perform the traditional salat, the daily prayers that constitute one of the five pillars of Islam, the others being faith, charity, fasting, and pilgrimage to Mecca.
The artist films a horse dressage session at night, in a dimly lit manège. In this video the artist recalls the importance of traditional equestrian portraits in Spanish painting and relates to the repetitive passage between the rider and the mount. This effect of repetition is accentuated by the video played in a loop and the fixed framing of the image shot from the ground, with body posture and dressage themes as a method for training and obedience.
Acts of Appearance is an ongoing series by Gauri Gill consisting of lush, large-scale color portraits of the residents of a village in Maharashtra, in Western India, which is known for making Adivasi masks. Adivasi people are part of the tribal groups population of South Asia. Instead of requesting the likenesses of gods and demons, Gill asked the residents—including the master mask-makers Subhas and Bhagavan Dharam Kadu, their families, and fellow volunteers—to make masks that portray their own lives.
Lengüitas sagradas (Blessed Little Tongues) by Juliana Góngora is the result of a careful creative job between Juliana Góngora and the Koreguaje community and their workshop Masipai. During several months, the artist and the community leaders Juven Piranga and Yinela Piranga kept an essential communication to materialize one hundred miniature bags, knitted with cumare and containing tiger chocho and rattle seeds inside. Each ‘little tongue’ has been knitted using the colors that identify the clans that form the artisans of the Masipai group (wise people).
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest. The area is renowned for its roof tile factories, and the cup aims to celebrate the factory worker’s physiques, sculpted by intense, daily, physical labor. Togar based the idea of the cup on the simple notion of collectivity.
In collaboration with psychoanalyst and cultural theorist Leon Tan, Receding Triangular Square explores traditional Chinese and Taiwanese modalities of psychological healing as alternatives to dominant Western psychiatric and therapeutic practices. By juxtaposing the differing modalities, Hallberg and Tan make connections between psychological practices and histories of colonization and de-colonization. They challenge Western scientific standards of universality, rationality, and truth.
The video animation Falling Head 2 , hand-painted by Diego Marcon in 2015, consists of a close-up of a head caught on the threshold between sleep and wakefulness or maybe from wakefulness to sleep. The film is projected as a ten-second loop where the first and last frames coincide. Working mainly in video and film, Marcon is familiar with the consequences of eyestrain.
Leonardogillesfleur describe Action 3:02 as their “first New York blizzard storm at about 5am. The photographic moment of a photo album which could have been taken by anybody in any familiar situation with the intention to immortalize that moment.”
Lambri’s careful framing in Untitled (Miller House, #02) redefines our understanding of this iconic mid-century modernist building located in Palm Springs, California. Commissioned by industrialist J. Irwin Miller and his wife Xenia Simons Miller, and built by Richard Neutra in 1937, the Miller house’s open and flowing layout expands upon modernist architectural traditions. It features a flat roof, stone and glass walls, with rooms configured beneath a grid pattern of skylights and supporting cruciform steel columns.
Wind by Antonio Pichillá is a textile piece depicting the glyph that represents the element wind in the Mayan tradition. It is woven in the four colors of each of the cardinal points which, together, symbolize the entire universe. It is woven mostly with knots that the artist refers to as a “bond between two or more systems that also represents a closure […] the knot in the throat that submerges the voice.” This piece, like other works in Pichillá’s practice, is an attempt to reconcile the Maya Tz’utujil symbolic tradition with Western art historical categories and practices.
Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)
Deferral Archive is one of the archival extensions of siren eun young jung’s Yeoseong Gukgeuk Project (2008-), a decade-long ethnographic research project into the diminishing genre of Korean traditional theater known as Yeoseong Gukgeuk . The genre, which was popular in the 1950s-60s, has since been forgotten, without ever being established as either a traditional or modern form of Korean theater. The most distinctive formal trait of Yeoseong Gukgeuk is that the theater performers are exclusively women.
With a practice deeply engaged with feminism and LGBT rights issues, siren eun young jung reveals the subversive power of traditional culture, one unknown in the Korean modernization period, and provides unique perspectives and documentation of important communities...
Julian Abraham “Togar” is an artist, musician, and pseudo-scientist...
Designed by the artist and fabricated in collaboration with Kashmiri artisans, Baseera Khan’s Psychedelic Prayer Rugs combine visual iconography traditional to Islam, such as the crescent moon and lunar calendar, with brightly colored symbols of personal significance to the artist: a pair of embroidered sneakers, a fragment of an Urdu poem, and the Purple Heart medal...
Caroline Saquel was born in Chile and now lives and works in Paris...
Lam Tung Pang uses both traditional and non-traditional Chinese ink techniques and materials for his landscapes, referencing notions of collective memory that relate to specific sites...
Artist Paolo Cirio engages with legal, economic, and cultural systems of information...
Working with various mediums, from sculpture to installation, site-specific interventions, and readymades, Leonardo Engel addresses issues related to the climate, nature, traditional crafts, architecture, and popular culture of the Caribbean...
After graduating from Musashino Art University in 2001, Shitamichi traveled for four years throughout Japan and took photographs of war remains...
Hama Goro started his career in 1987, after studying at the National Art Institute of Bamako (INA), where he received his degree in drawing and visual arts...
Daniel Boyd is an indigenous Australian Pacific artist, in his practice he combines references to both Aboriginal art and international contemporary art, displaying a strong political commitment...
Japanese-American artist Mika Tajima creates sculptures, paintings, videos, and installations with a focus on techniques and technologies of control...
At the intersection of conceptual, staged and documentary image-making, Hoda Afshar’s artistic practice explores the representation of gender, marginality and displacement...
The artistic entity “leonardogillesfleur” is the alliance between two artists, Leonardo Giacomuzzo (b...
Gauri Gill is interested in the social contract of photography...
Virlani Hallberg is a video and photographic artist living and working in Berlin...
Born in 1969 in Kobe, Shimabuku is an artist who collects unusual encounters...
Yang Song was trained as a sculptor in both Western and Eastern traditions, which continue to influence his practice today...
Employing a variety of media including film, sculpture, ceramic, photography, found objects and sea paintings, Jessica Warboys (b...
Diego Marcon uses film, video and installation to investigate the ontology of the moving image, focusing on the relationship between reality and representation...
A Next-Generation Lunar New Year Party in Oakland | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Food A Next-Generation Lunar New Year Party in Oakland Alan Chazaro Feb 12 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Yăng Shēng, a multimedia project launched by Hanna Chen (left), aims to bring "third culture" children of immigrants from Asian diasporas together in the Bay Area...
Best and Worst Super Bowl Ads, 2024 | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint NPR Super Bowl Ads Played it Safe, but There Were Still Some Winners Eric Deggans Feb 12 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Cardi B...
Beyoncé Won the Super Bowl, Dropping Two New Songs | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint NPR Beyoncé Releases Two New Songs During the Super Bowl, Teasing More to Come Rachel Treisman Feb 11 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Beyoncé accepts the Best Dance/Electronic Music Album award for ‘Renaissance’ onstage during the 2023 Grammy Awards...
New electric BMW CE 02 is an eParkourer for the urban jungle | Wallpaper (Image credit: BMW Motorrad) By George Chapman published 10 February 2024 The new BMW CE 02 is the second all-electric scooter from the long-established German brand’s motorbike division, positioned as trend-setting urban transport for younger riders...
With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up Nastia Voynovskaya Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Frak at Billy Goat Hill in San Francisco on Feb...
SF IndieFest Is a Valentine to Movies and Movie Lovers | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List SF IndieFest Is a Valentine to Movies and Movie Lovers Michael Fox Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Steve Zahn in the SF IndieFest opening night film, 'LaRoy,' playing Feb...
A Baby Penguin Boom is Just as Cute as You Hoped | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture A Baby Penguin Boom at the Academy of Sciences is Just as Cute as You Hoped Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email African penguin chicks Alice and Nelson...
The Best Snacks for This Year’s Super Bowl | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Food Wings Cost Less and Beer’s Flat: Super Bowl Fans Are Expected to Splurge Scott Horsley Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Chicken wing prices have fallen for the second year in a row, in a windfall for Super Bowl snackers...
Book Review: ‘The Secret History of Bigfoot’ by John O’Connor | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Is Bigfoot Real? A New Book Dives Deep Into the Legend Gabino Iglesias Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email A moment from Hulu documentary series, 'Sasquatch'...
Happy Lunar New Year! 5 Things to Know About the Year of the Dragon | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Happy Lunar New Year! 5 Things to Know About the Year of the Dragon Rae Alexandra Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email The Year of the Dragon begins is upon us....
'Manahatta' to Make Bay Area Premiere | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List 'Manahatta' to Make Bay Area Premiere Nicole Gluckstern Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Shannon R...
‘The Taste of Things’ Review: A Moving Tale of Love and Food | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Food, Glorious Food (and Other Pleasures) in ‘The Taste of Things’ Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Benoit Magimel and Juliette Binoche in ‘The Taste of Things.’ (Stéphanie Branchu/ IFC Films via AP) The Taste of Things should come with a warning: Audiences may be tempted to abandon work as they know it and start a beautiful, calm new life in the French countryside devoted to the culinary arts...
Black History and Love Intertwine at February Bay Area Concerts | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Black History and Love Intertwine at These February Bay Area Concerts Andrew Gilbert Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Mary Stallings performs at Keys Jazz Bistro on Feb...
The Best Late-Night Crab and Garlic Noodles in San Bruno | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Midnight Diners Some of the Bay Area’s Best Garlic Butter Crab Is Served in San Bruno After Midnight Luke Tsai Thien Pham Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email The Dungeness crab and garlic noodles at San Bruno’s A-One Kitchen hold their own against any restaurant in the Bay — and they’re available until 1 a.m...
The First Known Photograph of the San Francisco Opera | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Newly Unearthed: The First Known Photograph of the San Francisco Opera Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email A detail from an October 1923 photograph of the San Francisco Opera company in the Civic Auditorium shows performers and family in pre-performance street clothes...
Interview: Chelsea Wolfe Talks Witchcraft and Her New Album | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Chelsea Wolfe Says Witchcraft and Sobriety Informed Her Latest Album Krysta Fauria, Associated Press Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Chelsea Wolfe performing in June 2022...
The 2024 Puppy Bowl: Team Fluff, Team Ruff Go Head-to-Head | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List The 20th Annual Puppy Bowl Pits Team Fluff Against Team Ruff — and Everyone Wins Mark Kennedy, Associated Press Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Some of the adorable participants in this year's Puppy Bowl...
Small Thrills, Smaller Skateboards at Fingerboarding Festival | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Small Thrills, Smaller Skateboards at Fingerboarding Festival Alan Chazaro Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Those hours spent in 8th grade Algebra class mimicking ollies with with a two-inch fingerboard? It’s all about to pay off...
A Pop-Up Black History Museum Receives $2 Million to Find a Home in Redwood City | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture A Pop-Up Black History Museum Receives $2 Million to Find a Home in Redwood City Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Carolyn Hoskins, third from left, holds a ceremonial check from Senator Josh Becker (center) at the Domini Hoskins Black History Museum...
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Ticket Alert: Usher Is Coming to Oakland Arena in September | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Ticket Alert: Usher Is Coming to Oakland Arena in September Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Tickets for Usher’s North American tour ‘Past Present Future’ go on sale to the general public Feb...
What Jade Plants Can Tell Us About East Bay Gentrification | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture What Jade Plants Can Tell Us About East Bay Gentrification Alexis Madrigal Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email As a longtime resident of the East Bay, the jade plant is a marker of 'old Bay Area.' (Alexis Madrigal/KQED) While meandering down the street the other day, I noticed: the jade plants are blooming! They have happy little flowers, white stars, tinged with pink....
Swedish-Burkinabé artist Theresa Traoré Dahlberg on bridging past and present - arts24 Skip to main content Swedish-Burkinabé artist Theresa Traoré Dahlberg on bridging past and present Issued on: 01/02/2024 - 16:02 12:13 arts24 © FRANCE 24 By: Marion CHAVAL | Yinka OYETADE | Alison SARGENT | Loïc CHALAVON | Sonia PATRICELLI With a mother from Sweden and a father from Burkina Faso, visual artist and filmmaker Theresa Traoré Dahlberg grew up with a dual perspective...
Kenya breakdancing picking up but no federation to support it - France 24 Skip to main content Kenya breakdancing picking up but no federation to support it Issued on: 02/11/2023 - 12:50 Modified: 02/11/2023 - 12:53 01:33 While breakdancing will feature in the Paris 2024 Olympics, many enthusiasts in Kenya are attracting younger generations to this urban dance popular in the 1980s...
Resistance through art: Tunisia culture world stands with Palestinians - France 24 Skip to main content Resistance through art: Tunisia culture world stands with Palestinians Issued on: 02/11/2023 - 12:38 Modified: 02/11/2023 - 12:52 01:58 Video by: Lilia BLAISE Tunisia’s Carthage Film Festival, one of the oldest African film festivals, has been cancelled...
Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exposition — Slash Paris Connexion Newsletter Twitter Facebook Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exposition — Slash Paris Français English Accueil Événements Artistes Lieux Magazine Vidéos Retour Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle Exposition Vidéo À venir Sinae Lee, J’ai besoin de la chance, vue de l’installation vidéo à la biennale de la jeune création, Houilles © Marc Domage Sinae Lee Exposition personnelle Dans 8 mois : 2 → 23 mars 2024 L’ahah #Moret est heureuse d’inviter l’artiste Sinae Lee pour une exposition personnelle du 02 mars au 23 mars 2024...
Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle Exhibition Video Upcoming Sinae Lee, J’ai besoin de la chance, vue de l’installation vidéo à la biennale de la jeune création, Houilles © Marc Domage Sinae Lee Exposition personnelle In 8 months: March 2 → 23, 2024 L’ahah #Moret est heureuse d’inviter l’artiste Sinae Lee pour une exposition personnelle du 02 mars au 23 mars 2024...
The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum - France 24 Skip to main content The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum Issued on: 27/06/2023 - 17:31 Modified: 27/06/2023 - 17:38 02:24 Video by: Catherine VIETTE Follow The Louvre museum is hosting masterpieces from the Capodimonte museum in Naples, offering the world's largest exhibition devoted to the Italian Renaissance for six months, along with its own collections...
the amana collection Exhibit 02: Asako Narahashi, Rika Noguchi, Tomoko Yoneda | Exhibition | IMA ONLINE the amana collection Exhibit 02: Asako Narahashi, Rika Noguchi, Tomoko Yoneda 9 October 2018 - 16 November 2018 IMA gallery TAGS Asako Narahashi Rika Noguchi Tomoko Yoneda IMA gallery Share Tomoko Yoneda, Gandhi’s Glasses - Viewing a note written on his “Day of silence” shortly before his death, 2003 On Seeing: A photograph does not show some thing...
Lambri’s careful framing in Untitled (Miller House, #02) redefines our understanding of this iconic mid-century modernist building located in Palm Springs, California...
Leonardogillesfleur describe Action 3:02 as their “first New York blizzard storm at about 5am...
For the two-channel work Asking the Repentistas – Peneira & Sonhador – to remix my octopus works Shimabuku asked two Brazilian street singers to compose a ballad about his previous works with octopi (in which he created traditional Japanese ceramic vessels to catch octopi, with a fisherman who took him on his boat to test them out as we can see on one of the channel)...
In collaboration with psychoanalyst and cultural theorist Leon Tan, Receding Triangular Square explores traditional Chinese and Taiwanese modalities of psychological healing as alternatives to dominant Western psychiatric and therapeutic practices...
The ongoing “Sea Paintings” series is central to the practice of Jessica Warboys...
Drawing & Print
Lam Tung Pang created Sketches from train ride Chicago to San Francisco during his travels through the United States researching American curatorial strategies for representing traditional Chinese painting in museums and cultural institutions...
Lyrics 1, 2, 3 is part of siren eun young jung Yeoseong Gukgeuk Project (2008–)...
Francisco Herrero Peñuela uses old forms to make his elaborate, richly textured surfaces...
Acts of Appearance is an ongoing series by Gauri Gill consisting of lush, large-scale color portraits of the residents of a village in Maharashtra, in Western India, which is known for making Adivasi masks...
The video animation Falling Head 2 , hand-painted by Diego Marcon in 2015, consists of a close-up of a head caught on the threshold between sleep and wakefulness or maybe from wakefulness to sleep...
Designed by the artist and fabricated in collaboration with Kashmiri artisans in India, Baseera Khan’s Psychedelic Prayer Rugs combine visual iconography traditional to Islam, such as the crescent moon and lunar calendar, with brightly coloured symbols of personal significance to the artist: a pair of embroidered sneakers, a fragment of an Urdu poem, and the Purple Heart medal...
Mika Tajima’s Pranayama sculptures are built from carved wood and chromed Jacuzzi jets and are presented as artefacts...
Daniel Boyd’s work WTEIA3 is part of a series of paintings that reference the stick charts used by indigenous communities on the Marshall Islands...
Designed by the artist and fabricated in collaboration with Kashmiri artisans in India, Baseera Khan’s Psychedelic Prayer Rugs combine visual iconography traditional to Islam, such as the crescent moon and lunar calendar, with brightly coloured symbols of personal significance to the artist: a pair of embroidered sneakers, a fragment of an Urdu poem, and the Purple Heart medal...
Wind by Antonio Pichillá is a textile piece depicting the glyph that represents the element wind in the Mayan tradition...
Taking the same name as their most recent solo show at the Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen in Düsseldorf, siren eun young jung’s video work Deferral Theatre intertwines various threads from the last decade of the artist’s research into the Yeoseong Gukgeuk theatrical form, in which all of the roles are played by women, as well as performance-based modes of queer resistance in South Korea...
Sombras de los Valles (Shadows of the Valleys) is part of a series of works created by Bayrol Jiménez in which he is influenced by hand-painted signs and large billboards in Mexico...
Drawing & Print
Deferral Archive is one of the archival extensions of siren eun young jung’s Yeoseong Gukgeuk Project (2008-), a decade-long ethnographic research project into the diminishing genre of Korean traditional theater known as Yeoseong Gukgeuk ...
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest...
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest...
Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology...
7-headed Lalandau Hat by Yee I-Lann is an intricately woven sculpture evoking the ceremonial headdress worn by Murut men in Borneo...
Lengüitas sagradas (Blessed Little Tongues) by Juliana Góngora is the result of a careful creative job between Juliana Góngora and the Koreguaje community and their workshop Masipai...
In the islands of the Strait of Hormuz off the southern coast of Iran, a distinctive local culture has emerged as the result of many centuries of cultural and economic exchange, the traces of which are seen not only in the material culture of these islands but also in the customs and beliefs of their inhabitants...