Sunday, September 12, 2010

details

Friday September 17 / 5:00 Live Cinema in the Round / Contemporary Art from
the East Mediterranean + INCIDENCE Ziad Antar + Inci Eviner + Gülsün Karamustafa + Hassan Khan + Maha Maamoun + Christodoulos Panayiotou
exhibition opening at Philadelphia Museum of Art + a live music and video performance by artist Hassan Khan at the Slought Foundation
Saturday September 18 / 1-5
Live Cinema Live
an afternoon of conversations between artists, curators + writers including Nora Alter + Hassan Khan + René Marquez + November Paynter + Adelina Vlas + Brian Kuan Wood Trabant Theater / University of Delaware
+ Thursday September 16 / 3:30 Christodoulos Panayiotou Artist Talk Sharp Lab Room 130 / University of Delaware

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Panayiotou Group Exhibition.


An exhibition in Seoul featuring an all star cast of fresh, young artists amongst others Christodolous Panayiotou will kick off its opening reception September 7th and continue until November 17th. This from the site:

To connect with the rest of the world, we invest a certain amount of trust in various relations. Trust is by default an ambiguous notion, it is one grounded in good faith as much as in doubt. As individuals we not only have these relations to our fellow citizens, but also increasingly with modes of connection. With proliferating forms of media, information comes to us in many guises, and the message is more and more opaque; marketing poses as friendship, solitude as community, populism as democracy.


Instead of simply stepping up to the speed of technology, the curatorial team of Media City Seoul 2010 proceeds from a desire to pause, reflect, and critique the transitions and transformations of our social contexts. The exhibition is propositional by nature. Trust interprets media broadly—as a tool for engagement within a shifting terrain where political, national or religious identities are being re-charted; where means of distribution creates real and imagined communities; and where private interpersonal space share the same platform as global political issues of the day. As forms of media become more accessible and varied, we enter an era that seemingly allows more room for self-expression and individuality. Yet, what is at stake when media channels are more concentrated and powerful? How do these networks create new spaces of alienation and control? How do we reconcile the desire for changing social models, with a desire for new communities?

The exhibition works against the rhetoric of technology as progress and promise, offering instead a recalibration of its definition. Many of the artists in the exhibition are not known as media artists, but use various forms of media (printed material, urban detritus, photographic and video technology, documentary and fictional forms) to counter the generalizing of experience by dominant narratives. Trust investigates notions of community, representation and perception in a world that is continuously being retold and reconfigured. In this light, how are stories, histories and myths construed? How is collective experience represented through multiplicity and difference? The exhibition emphasizes artistic practices that play with documentary conventions, fictional forms, espousing for imagination, subjectivity and localities as underpinnings of contemporary experience. Sometimes revealing the underlying constructs of mediated stories, and at other times obscuring them. Trust does not aim to meticulously dissect the matters at hand, or present a scientific or intellectual study of our current mediascape. Instead, Trust offers a broad interpretation of media and invests in a humanistic and individual response to contemporary experience.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Googoosh


Tell me this isn't beguiling.

Anybody raised in the Middle East will certainly be aware of Googoosh, but (to our great discredit), to a western ear, it may be foreign. The Iranian pop singer and actress is a national treasure over in Iran and mayhaps the country's finest singer of all time.

In the 1960s and 70s, Googoosh was considered the most celebrated recording artist in Iran and much of the Middle East. In addition to music, Googoosh was also an actress in many Persian films of the 1960s and 1970s. She is more widely known as a singer than as an actress. After the Iranian Revolution in 1979, she is famously known for remaining in Iran until 2000 and not performing again due to the ban on female singers. Still, her following grew. Younger people have rediscovered her music via bootleg recordings. Outside of Iran, she has a significant following in many Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries, and has even caught the attention of western media and press.. Googoosh is rumored to reside in an estimated $16 million valued estate near Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, and continues her career, albeit in a limited manner.



“I have come here to be the voice for the sad mothers who lost their loved ones in peaceful demonstrations,” said the singer. “I have come here to be the just voice of the grass-roots and spontaneous movement among my compatriots and to show my solidarity.” Source New York Times.com

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Can Bantam Books do no Wrong?


Kuwait Museum of Modern Art


It has no
official website, no signs on the streets directing to it and no paved roads leading to it, but once you have reached your destination, you are magically transported into a world that not many people know exists


Located just off Arabian Gulf Road in the Sharq district of Kuwait in one of the very few surviving pre World War Two era structures in the old capital, the Modern Art Museum in Kuwait offers visitors one of the only permanent displays of modern Arab and international art in the region. This imposing buildinghas always been an educational institution; it was built in 1939 to house the Madrasa Al Sharqiya, or Eastern School in which generations of prominent Kuwaitis studied including the current Emir Sheikh, Sabah Al Ahmad


When the National Committee of Culture, Arts and Literature took over the building two decades ago it went about carefully restoring it from the heavy damage incurred during the 1990 invasion and transforming it into a fitting home for its art collection comprised of purchases and donations. Photos of the restoration process, which lasted until 2003, can still be seen along with black and white pictures of students from the various classes. Upon arrival, a traditional wooden doorway leads visitors to an open airhoash or lobby that can be found in most large houses in the region where the museum administration offices are located. Then walking through a short corridor through a glass door the visitor passes the temporary exhibition hall where artists are invited to hold exhibitions of their latest works. Then another large lobby appears, this one covered in a transparent roof as beneath it dozens of sculptures dating back several decades are on display. This lobby is surrounded by several classrooms on the ground and first floors with large rectangular windows overlooking it, these classroms have now been transformed into art galleries divided into themes


The ground floor lobby along with the classrooms is dedicated exclusively to Kuwaiti art including paintings and sculptures by Essa Sagr, Khazal Al Gaffas, Sami Mohammed and Thuraya Al Baqsami who are counted amongst the pioneers of the modern art movement not only in Kuwait but also in the Arabian Gulf region. An elevator that looks as though it has come out of a Mahmoud Hammad painting transports visitors to the first floor where Gulf, Arab and international art can be admired including the UAE's Abdul Qader Al Rais who studied in Kuwait, Lebanon's Paul Guiragossian, Syria's Nazir Nabaa and Bahrain'sJamal Abdul Rahim offering a different perspective on various issues in the Arab world. There must be at least a couple of hundred artworks showcased in this magnificent museum that has so far received scant attention from the region's media.


The Kuwait Modern Art Museum sadly offers very little explanation of the art on display and no book or audio guide, but it more than makes up for it for those who are willing to visit with an open mind and a little imagination allowing themselves to be enchanted by its unrivalled architectural, historical and artistic treasures.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Couldn't Resist


...I really couldn't.

An Isfahani in New York (1972)


An Isfahani in New York is the story of a young man (Nosratolah Vahdat) who, at the request of his father (Arham Sadr) travels to New York searching for his playboy brother to find out whether he is seriously attending school. New York is a very strange place for the young Isfahani. During and after his journey he encounters very funny and strange individuals and scenarios. 80% of the film was shot in New York and the other 20% was shot in Isfahan using real locations.


This humorous yet touching film became a great hit during the 1970’s. Even to this day it is still shown as a memorable film. The film’s cinematographer, Petros Palian, was awarded the first Persian film award in Cinematography(Sepas). The film was praised by critics such as Zane Rooz magazine and The Tehran Journal.

Saturday, July 31, 2010


Nowhere


Body


Here

Evening with Salman Rushdie and Christopher Hitchens


Sit back, relax, and enjoy the company of Salman Rushdie and Christopher Hitchens in this delightful conversation that has been so thoughtfully published by Emory University.


Novelist Sir Salman Rushdie, Emory professor Dr. Deepika Bahri, filmmaker Deepa Mehta and writer Christopher Hitchens discuss love, sex, writing, stories and friendship. The conversation was inspired by Rushdie's assertion in his 1999 essay on the anniversary of the fatwa that "love feels more and more like the only subject."

Beirut Terraces by Herzog and de Meuron


Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron have designed this apartment tower with overhanging floor plates and terraces for Beirut, Lebanon.


The design of Beirut Terraces was quite literally influenced by the layers of the city’s rich and tumultuous history. The most immediate historical event, which those from Beirut will remember for generations to come, is that of the assassination of the Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, which occurred when his car detonated in front of the St.Georges Hotel, its ruins are still visible as a daily reminder. Adjacent to the site there is a vast landfill of war-debris and trash from the several bombings since the 1970’s, but in the future this will change. Despite the scarred history, there is a clear vision to rehabilitate the area, the current masterplan already well under way aims to rebuild and bring life back to this part of Beirut. The site is located in a portion of the masterplan dedicated to building office and residential high rise buildings and is closely related to a new yachting marina.


Saturday, July 24, 2010

Bidoun

In the marketplace of ideas, there are no figures so sad, yet so hopeful, as mid-list authors pushing not-so-recently published books.
Gary Dauphin, "Have Pamphlet, Will Travel"

BAZAAR: a theme so nice, we used it twice.

Last issue,
Bidoun delved into the business of the art world, a somewhat rarified realm, with its auctions and parties and oh-so-critical discourse. This time we wanted to get our hands dirtier. Mucky, even. So one thing we did was seek out the details — good, bad, and gory — of how work works. What the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is doing for beauty salons in America. How the protests in Thailand have affected red-dye manufacturers in Karachi. Why the Iraq War has been a bonanza for health clubs in occupied Baghdad.

The whole BAZAAR business originated on a trip to Dubai, the Las Vegas of the Middle East. Or rather, a trip to the Las Vegas of the Las Vegas of the Middle East. At the Indian mall in the down-market Karama district, the prime real estate belongs to
Las Vegas Fashion LLC, a clothing store whose windows are lined with bedoo-rag'd mannequins in b-boy poses. Fittingly, Adham Alshorafa, the man behind Las Vegas, is the subject of one of the fifteen profiles, interviews, and as-told-to accounts that comprise our portfolio, How's Business — along with a hash-dealing ex-cop in Cairo, a scrap metal recycler in Bangalore, a defense contractor in Kandahar, and many more stories from the annals of globalization.

The globe itself is the canvas for
Simon Anholt, the reluctant magician of nation branding. In "Your Brand Is My Brand," Babak Radboy considers the feedback loop that powers the multimillion dollar business of national identity. Bonus: a ragtag team of amateur nation branders examine brands from across the Bidounosphere, asking the age-old question, "Is that an atom hovering over the I in Israel?"

There are more and more reporters who have no experience covering war, much less participating in it… I can't blame the reporters for being naive. I blame the editors for sending them over in the first place… Are you going to send someone with a BA in literature to interview the mechanic at a nuclear power plant, when they don't know a piece of wood from a piece of coal? It's the same thing with conflict reporting.
Lt. Col. Robert K. Brown, publisher of Soldier of Fortune

In the
Magazine Bazaar, we discuss the business and pleasure of being a niche magazine, with a quartet of trade publications servicing mercenaries, utility contractors, haunted house owners, and disgruntled artists.

Now people write to ask me for permission to write about Africa. Be frank, they say, be candid… It's almost a sexual thing. They come crawling out of the unlikeliest places, looking to be whipped. I am bad, Master Binya, beat me. Oh!... They seem quite disappointed when I don't. Once in a while I do, and it feels both good and bad, like too much wasabi.
—Binyavanga Wainaina, "How to Write About Africa II: The Revenge"

Plus:
Binyavanga Wainaina on becoming spam. Fatima Al Qadiri on ill-gotten goods. Indie-rock, Iranian style with Hypernova. Gary Dauphin on the prehistory of infotainment. Kaelen Wilson-Goldie on the enigmatic art of Mohamed Soueid. The wit and wisdom of the 1982 Kuwait stock market crash. And so on.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Miral

Here's something we can all probably get excited about. Julian Schnabel's upcoming film chronicling Hind Husseini's efforts to establish an orphanage in Jerusalem after the 1948 Partition of Palestine which subsequently led to the 1948 Civil War. I'm tickled pink after seeing the trailer and looks like Dame Vanessa Redgraves is in it as well, if you haven't seen Ken Russell's "The Devils," I'd strongly recommend it, her performance is breathtaking.


Elsewhere in Hollyweird or, more appropriately, Great Britain, Christopher Morris the multiple BAFTA winning comedic genius behind Brasseye and some of the most caustic politically incendiary comedy in the last fifteen years has just come out with his latest directorial masterpiece "Four Lions," a film that follows a group of young Muslim men living in Sheffield who become radicalized and decide to become suicide bombers. Morris claims to have spent 3 years researching the project by speaking to terrorism experts, imams, and normal muslims. The film premiered at Sundance earlier this year to all types of laudation and foofaraw. Here's the trailer for it.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Hassan Shamaizadeh - Bishtar Bishtar

we end up spending hundreds of billions of dollars a year on building new prisons and treating these people with expensive prescriptions and mind-altering drugs, when we could be giving it all to Hassan Shamaizadeh. tssk tssk.

Kill. Push. Art.


kill


push


art

The Glorious Gongs of Haimuwele


My quest to get in touch with the essence of contemporary middle eastern art and culture has led me to this interesting recording by British-based musicians, Harrapian Night Recordings.

From The Boston Phoenix:

The trappings of exotic field recordings are all over this mysterious production: pictures of Balinese shadow puppets, references to the suspicious-sounding Kadamba Forest and one "Dr. Syed Kamran Ali," and a folk-friendly label known for its association with Sun City Girls musicians (who expanded awareness of the old, weird world with their Sublime Frequencie releases).


Don't be fooled by the half-hearted imposture, though: this is to ethnographic recordings what Captain Beefheart's early albums were to the old blues — at once loving homage and blatant forgery. Some of the selections are decently executed pastiche (Arab-esque: "Bare Cairo," "Headless Mule"; Africanish: "Memoria Makhnavischina"), but there are less-derivative instrumentals as well ("Bully Kulta").

The sounds range from an interesting cross of gamelan and pre-Velvets John Cale ("Lila Dederba") to straight-up art-space-squat improv noise (opener "Mal de Ojo" and closer "Redeyes, Noose and Goad"). If there is a tribal ritual that goes with this music, it probably involves chanting
Arthur-magazine record reviews out loud and passing around Alice B. Toklas brownies while watching Ira Cohen's Invasion of Thunderbolt Pagoda.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

2 Minutes of Cultural Displacement


Here's a brief, free, yet revealing sneak peak at the work of Turkish Artist and Filmmaker Gülsün Karamustafa, one of several artists whose work will be featured in LIVE CINEMA LIVE.


for those whose appetites remain unslaked nor slarn, here's an interview from her most recent exhibition in Vienna.

Letters to Palestine Facebook Group


Join the Facebook Group for the "Letters to Palestine," and get involved in the experiences of Arabs outside of Palestine in the increasingly intimate venue of Facebook.


Letters to Palestine is a documentary film which will gather the voices of various Arabs who are sending their unread letters to the Palestinian people living under occupation in current day Palestine.
It will capture the stories which never had the opportunity to reach the homes and the families of the Palestinians living under occupation.
From young to old, the Arabs captured in this film will have the chance to send their love, their stories, their aching for Palestine to the homes, families and children of Palestine

I'm not sure if anyone who visits this blog will ever see this film, but I've directed you all the the facebook group because of the capacity for lively and intimate discussion. Just negotiating one's way through the information it presents is quite interesting to say the least.

Art History Graduate Lecture Series


Are you worried that although you're having a great summer, that you now have to begin worrying about what art history lectures you're going to attend in the fall? Well the University of Delaware has done all the worrying for you and has already coordinated an intoxicating brew of sexy, exciting young Art History Graduate Lectures that are guaranteed to blow your mind all over your face! (assuming it hasn't already been blown by the events it's been scheduling this summer)

With 3 outstanding scholars agreeing to to speak on their new research in contemporary art, this fall promises to be one of the best the University has ever had!

Jonathan Katz (who will speak on "The Sexuality of Abstraction," about Agnes Martin);

Kaja Silverman (who will be joining Penn in the fall, and who is currently working on the Norwegian artist Knut Asdam) and

Barbara London, Curator of Video & Media at the Museum of Modern Art.

The department couldn't be more tickled about this roster of speakers. In the meantime, we're doing all the work for you right here at UD's Live Cinema Live Blog which will be giving you detail up to the minute on exhibitions and upcoming events on The University of Delaware campus.

Ali Akbar Sadeghi


Ubuweb has just posted some beautiful animations by Ali Akbar Sadeghi!!!


Sadeghi has been artistically active since the 1950s. His style is a kind of Iranian surrealism, based on Iranian forms and compositions of traditional paintings, the use of Iranian iconography, and the use of Persian cultural motifs, signs and myths, full of movement and action, in prominent and genuine oil colors, in large frames, very personal, reminiscent of epic traditional Persian paintings and illustrations, with a conspicuous decorative style.

He is among the first individuals involved in the Center for the Intellectual Development of Children and the Youth, and was among the founders of the Film Animation department of this institute. Films produced by Sadeghi have won more than 15 awards at International Film Festivals. Also, for his book illustrations he has won four international awards.


Damascus



Words from Inci Eviner


Hold

She cut her feet so that
She can hold them in her hands.
She cut her feet. It didn?t hurt.
There was a pair of white feet in her hands.
Her toes were folded in cotton pads.
"Unfold them" said somebody.
"Unfold them". It hurt.

1997


Germ


NYU Abu Dhabi?


New York University's Abu Dhabi campus pulled the curtain off their impressive class of 2014 yesterday, with admissions statistics on par with elite US institutions such as Yale and Harvard. While comparable to other prestigious Institutions of higher learning in the US, one student, Laith Aqel, hints at the unique significance of NYU Abu Dhabi:

"To me it represents a whole new paradigm of education. The whole international experience is invaluable. I don't think there has ever been a more diverse group assembled whether you're looking at the faculty themselves or the students. It feels like the world is shrinking. NYUAD will prepare me to be a citizen of the world, not just my country."

USA Today's International Correspondant Elizabeth Redden has a fantastic article on the context, significance and concerns of this exciting breakthrough in higher learning that can be found here


Wednesday, June 2, 2010

BBC Middle East Business Report: Affordable Art in Dubai

People may have less cash to spend at the moment, but the recession didnt stop one bidder paying more than 2.4 million dollars for a painting in Dubai recently. But, if none of that art is in your price range, how about something more affordable. In Dubai, there's a growing arts scene that's attracting more and more people to invest in art. Once the domain of the wealthy it could now come with a cheaper price tag. As Katy Watson has been finding out.

see it here


Rumor


Glory


Hair



40 Second Preview of Christodolous Panayiotou


Cyprus-born, Berlin-based Christodoulos Panayiotou is an artist who works across a range of media, including video, photography and sound installations, frequently enlisting the help of musicians and actors. As most of you may know, he will be coming to the University of Delaware next month to give a workshop and other activities TBD. In the meanwhile, here's a 40 second clip that I'm sure won't really clarify anything, but just some food for thought.

3...

2...

1...

Panayiotou is represented by the actor Max Mackintosh who wears a fetching jumper covered in Rupert in the Bear motifs. He reads a whimsical piece outlining the thematic similarities between childrens classic Mary Poppins and Pier Paolo Pasolinis decidedly more adult film Teorema (1968), in which a mysterious young man arrives at the home of a bourgeois family and affects the lives of all within. In-between mini-critiques of each film, he picks up a guitar and sings songs from Mary Poppins, including Just a Spoonful of Sugar, emphasising its ornithological themes, and later Lets Go Fly a Kite a hymn, he says, to the aesthetics of resolution.

In Cairo, someone will hear you scream.

"Don't hate us because we hate you, hate us because we're off pitch." I don't know if the members of the newest faction of the Complaint's Choir is saying this or not... but... how about "WE ARE CRANKY HEAR US HARMONIZE!!!"?????? This is the first time the Complaints Choir has infiltrated an area with actually challenging life circumstances... None other than Cairo Egypt. For those of you unfamiliar with the Complaint's Choir:

Complaints Choir is a community art project that invites people to sing about their complaints in a choir together with fellow complainers. The first Complaints Choir was organized inBirmingham (UK) in 2005, followed by the Complaints Choirs of Helsinki, Hamburg and St. Petersburg in 2006. The project was initiated by artists Tellervo Kalleinen and Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen. A video installation consisting of the documentation of the public performances of the four choirs were shown at Kiasma (Helsinki, Finland), S.M.A.K. (Ghent, Belgium) and Museum Fridericianium Kassel (Germany) among other venues. When the video clips of the choirs were distributed through online magazines and video sharing websites, the idea spread quickly to many other countries. To date additional Complaints Choirs have been organized in Bodø (Norway), Poikkilaakso primary school (Helsinki, Finland), Budapest(Hungary), Chicago (Illinois, United States), Juneau (Alaska), Gabriola Island (Canada), Melbourne (Australia), Jerusalem (Israel), Singapore, Breslau (Poland), Hong Kong,Philadelphia, and Tokyo (Japan).

Matt Bradley's great article about in "The National"

Mike Hannula's Article on the art of complaining


Judge for yourself