domenica 31 ottobre 2010

Fuck you! The giant middle finger made by Cattelan will not be removed from Milan


the mocking sculpture made by Maurizio Cattelan in front of the stock exchange in Milan should have been removed on October 25th. However after a telephone conversation between the artist, who was in New York, and the Mayor of Milan Letizia Moratti, it was chosen to keep the masterpiece there at least until Christmas. Cattelan welcomed the decision with surprise and said that was a sign of how Milan is a really avangarde city.

venerdì 29 ottobre 2010

John Baldessari presents: "The Giacometti Variation"

John Baldessari and sketches for two mannequins

row of Giacometti mannequins revisited and disguised by Baldessari inside the industrial space of the Prada foundation

particular one of the installations inspired by Giovanna D'Arco

photographer Manuela Pavesi

Miuccia Prada

architect Cino Zucchi

the incredible slide made by artist Carsten Holler connecting Miuccia Prada’s office to the car park inside the Prada headquarter in Milan

Milan_Californian artist John Baldessari has designed a totally new project for the Prada Foundation, entitled "The Giacometti Variations." It consists in a series of massive figures, about 4.5 meters high, inspired by the imagery of the Swiss sculptor, who will be dressed and accessorized with items and clothes, designed by himself, to form a hypothetical parade.


"I’ve always wanted to do tall paintings and sculptures. I suspect it’s because I am quite tall. I’ve had little opportunity since most galleries have wall heights that mirror the wall heights of collector’s homes. A few years ago, I was invited to show in Haus Der Kunst, Munich. Since the entrance hall is extremely tall, I began thinking about tall work I could do there to capture the space. One of my ideas was the idea that I have proposed to the Prada Foundation. My plan is to elongate standing Giacometti sculptures and clothe them with garments. To extend an extreme existing idea to it’s logical conclusion has been a working method for me. Giacometti figures are the most skinny and emaciated sculpture that exist. Why not push that further? Also there currently is a blurring of art and fashion. Furthermore it is au courant, almost de rigueur that fashion model be extremely tall and thin. Why not fuse the two- art and fashion since that idea is in our zeitgeist? I’m sure I was also inspired by the Degas Ballerina sculptures clothed with real tutus. The finished work would be the row of columns (at the foundation building)
alternating with clothed attenuated pseudo Giacometti figures. Is this parody? I’m not sure. I hate categories and definitions- I certainly am borrowing. Isn’t this what artists do? Doesn’t art arise from art? What I am doing is furthering an idea- that is the requirement of any good art.”
John Baldessari, December ’09

The exhibition is at Fondazione Prada in via Antonio Fogazzaro 36 (Milan) from 29th october to 31st december 2010

domenica 24 ottobre 2010

Is There Art on YouTube? Guggenheim Wants to Find Out



On October 21, the top videos selected by the YouTube Play jury were revealed and celebrated at the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The videos, which can be viewed on youtube.com/play, will be presented at the Guggenheim Museums in New York, Bilbao, Berlin, and Venice on October 22–24, 2010. They comprise the ultimate YouTube playlist: a selection of the most unique, innovative, groundbreaking video work being created and distributed online during the past two years.

sabato 23 ottobre 2010

"La gemella diversa" by Lucio Schiavon

"Togliamo il ponte della libertà! Confonde le idee." Anonimo







"La gemella diversa", the title of the show dedicated to the relationship beetwen the Venice's Islands and the mainland, Mestre and Marghera; the author is a young illustrator Lucio Schiavon that tell anxieties, expectations, wonders to us; the historic and problematic double life of Venice.

The exhibition is at Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa in Palazzetto Tito (Venice) from 22nd october to 24th november 2010

domenica 17 ottobre 2010

Venice Suite by Peter Blake





Sir Peter Blake, known to many as the father of British Pop Art, has created twenty new prints, entitled The Venice Suite, inspired by his recent experiences in the Italian city.
Depicting an imagined, fairytale vision of the city, the prints draw from a host of source material and were inspired by the artist’s 2007 visit to the Venice Art Biennnale. Blake’s trademark collage style incorporates images culled from postcards, photographs and second-hand books, including details from familiar old masters alongside illustrations from vintage children’s books.
The prints reveal fantastical scenes of the city against backgrounds of blues, greys, greens and muted yellows, evoking the magical atmosphere of a place enshrouded in myth and romance and imbued with Blake’s wonderfully surreal sensibility.

The exhibition is at GalleriaMichelaRizzo in Palazzo Palumbo Fossati (Venice) from 9th october to 31st december 2010

sabato 2 ottobre 2010

Williamsburg: the metropolitan zoo

Williamsburg bridge

private parking in Bedford avenue with a strange stuff composition

rhinoceros murales on a roof