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31/12/2016

EXPO – ’0 + 0 = 0′ – Christchurch Art Gallery (NEW ZEALAND) – 16 Dec. 2016 – 2 Avr. 2017

Classé dans : Exposition/Exhibition,GALERIES,Lisa WALKER (DE/NZ),Nlle Zelande (NZ),www Klimt02 — bijoucontemporain @ 14:08

0 + 0 = 0 by Lisa Walker

Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu presents an exclusive exhibition of new and recent works by this internationally acclaimed artist, who received the prestigious Françoise van den Bosch Award in 2010 and became an Arts Foundation Laureate in 2015

Lisa Walker Artist Talk.  Wednesday, 15 February 2017 / 6pm
Artist Lisa Walker’s extreme, iconoclastic jewellery has been described as ‘the physical manifestation of the mental and virtual baggage of living NOW’.

0 + 0=0 by Lisa Walker Exhibition  /  16 Dec 2016  -  02 Apr 2017 - Christchurch Art Gallery -  Place     Cnr Worcester Blvd and Montreal St     Christchurch     NEW ZEALAND: (Lisa Walker Necklace: Untitled, 2016 Fabric, stuffing Courtesy of the artist and Funaki Gallery, Melbourne)

It might be tempting to say that Lisa Walker makes jewellery out of any old thing – but it isn’t true. The eclectic objects that form her distinctive necklaces, brooches and other body-adornments are meticulously selected and shrewdly modified before they see the light of day. She salvages her materials from an unlikely cornucopia of sources – re-presenting objects such as car parts, animal skins and even kitchen utensils through the frame of body adornment’s long history. Tiny Lego hats, helmets and hairpieces – of the kind that clog vacuum cleaner nozzles in children’s bedrooms around the world – are strung on finely plaited cords like exotic beads or shells; trashy gossip magazines are lashed together to yield a breastplate befitting our celebrity-obsessed culture; dozens of oboe reeds donated by a musician friend bristle round the wearer’s neck like the teeth of some unimaginable deep sea leviathan.
Walker’s work doesn’t sit comfortably within the contours of conventional jewellery – it squirms, fidgets, stretches and unravels. ‘I want to make pieces that don’t fit any of those jewellery recipes, yet still make sense as jewellery,’ she once said.1 In a field known for refined finishes and seamless construction, her audaciously sized, deliberately low-tech pieces inject a blast of pure creative oxygen, wilfully disobeying established jewellery conventions and confounding audience expectations. Despite their bodged-up, glued-together appearance and gleefully tacky origins, Walker’s works are anything but haphazard – rather they are elevated by her acute sense of colour and composition and healthy sense of irony. The new and recent pieces included in her Christchurch Art Gallery show, 0 + 0 = 0, explore a range of critical concerns; confronting jewellery-specific preconceptions about wearability and craftsmanship, they also investigate the politics of value, identity and appropriation.
…..
While some of Walker’s materials are amassed close to home – she once made a necklace from six months’ worth of detritus collected from her studio floor – she also ranges more widely, combing the world of the non-precious for idiosyncratic treasures. Together with physical objects, she collects memories and associations, a process made explicit in Trip to Europe 1973 (2011), a necklace, constructed from the postcards, train tickets, concert programmes and other souvenirs a ‘cultured couple’ offered for sale on Trade Me. For Walker, having just returned home after fifteen years spent living in Germany, the mementos spoke of New Zealand’s complex history of arrivals – including those of Māori and European settlers – and of how cultures are transported, translated and transformed. Recent pieces such as Pendant (2016) reflect her interest in (and ambivalence about) exchange and appropriation and especially how these might play out within a New Zealand context. Assembled from pounamu offcuts given to Walker by a sculptor friend, Pendantcombines varied surfaces cut from several different stones, offering a beautiful, but deliberately problematic, addition to the tradition of Māori taonga.

Lisa Walker Dick Necklace 2016  Lisa Walker Dick Necklace 2016

Despite the irreverence of its title, and the ubiquitous banality of the phallic graffiti that inspired it, another, equally serious, reclamation prompted the creation of Dick Necklace (2016).
I live with the challenges of a patriarchal world and [its] hideous anti-women history. I’m intrigued by the online activity of the younger feminists. I was always impressed by Louise Bourgeois’s giant bronze cast penis sculpture [Filette (1968)]. Many years ago I saw a postcard of her as a 70-something year old woman, standing next to it with her hand gently, but authoritatively, resting on the giant penis. ‘Dick and balls’ drawings are a cultural phenomenon; we grow up with these scrawlings everywhere. The penis can be symbolically positive and negative; fertility and love, but also rape, misogyny, imbalance of power. As a feminist I now take, claim, and interpret it for myself, twisting its symbology into something else.
‘I learned a long time ago that you don’t have to find the answers. It’s enough for the works to keep asking the questions.’
The thorny issue of copying and influence has long fascinated Walker, gaining new relevance as social media allows for the increasingly unrestricted distribution and repurposing of imagery of all kinds. She joined Instagram, the online image-sharing service, in 2015 and describes it as a ‘huge hunting ground’,2 admitting she is now influenced more by what she finds online than by actual, ‘real world’ objects. A posted shot of Masturbine (1984), a well-known work by the renowned contemporary Swiss duo Peter Fischli and David Weiss, prompted her own Fischli & Weiss Bracelet(2016), which replaces the original’s whorl of expensive leather footwear with budget heels from her local Number One Shoes warehouse. A photograph of a cellphone bound up in the twisted cord of an old-school desk phone, uploaded by the Los Angeles-based artists Mitra Saboury and Derek Paul Boyle under the Instagram nomenclature ‘Meatwreck’, proved irresistible. Walker recreated it, almost exactly, in the form of an oversized pendant and, though she remains delighted with the piece, doesn’t shy away from the questions about ownership and creative license this kind of borrowing provokes. In fact, the discomfort inherent in such appropriation is shared by artist and collectors, since Walker’s works are primarily designed not to be displayed politely indoors, but to travel with their wearers out into the wild, wide open of the public domain. ‘I learned a long time ago that you don’t have to find the answers,’ she says, ‘It’s enough for the works to keep asking the questions.
  If the eclectic forms of Walker’s work reflect the democracy and limitless possibility of our new open-source world, her ‘more is more’ aesthetic also suggests the sense of chaos and overload it can provoke. With every online image potentially linked to thousands more, how could you ever see it all? Excessive, oversized, popping at the seams with look-at-me impudence, Walker’s works draw upon and reflect the unrelenting abundance of modern life. And yet, taken one piece at a time, they’re much more than thrown-together clickbait. At its most anarchic, jewellery that is created to be worn still requires its maker to take into account a series of considerations that don’t constrain other art forms, like painting or sculpture. As she creates her pieces, often concealing traditional jewellery processes beneath contemporary kitsch, Walker thinks about weight, scale, durability, and how her pieces will relate to the yet-unknown body they are destined to adorn. Having thrown out the rulebooks in her early practice, she now values the technical challenges these self-imposed limits present, enjoying how they slow things down and distil her attention, demanding mindful focus in a fast-moving world. In discussion, it soon becomes apparent that this process fuels, rather than suppresses, Walker’s high-voltage imagination. Recalling a project in which she turned an entire building (City Gallery Wellington) into a brooch by clipping a giant mild-steel safety chain to its ceiling and attaching the other end to a wearer via an enormous pin, she mischievously refers to it as only her ‘second largest work’. She’s not kidding; the scale of that audacious project is effortlessly eclipsed by another one. Existing, so far, in solely conceptual form it features a chain, pinned to its wearer, with planet Earth on the other end.  Felicity Milburn, Curator

Lisa Walker Pendant: Untitled, 2016 Pounamu, silver, thread Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Biro, Munich: Lisa Walker Pendant: Untitled, 2016 Pounamu, silver, thread Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Biro, Munich
Lisa Walker Necklace: Untitled, 2015 Plastic, thread Courtesy of the artist and Masterworks Gallery, Auckland: Lisa Walker Necklace: Untitled, 2015 Plastic, thread Courtesy of the artist and Masterworks Gallery, Auckland
Lisa Walker  Pendant: Untitled, 2016  Egg beater, thread.  Courtesy of the artist and The National, Christchurch: Lisa Walker  Pendant: Untitled, 2016  Egg beater, thread.  Courtesy of the artist and The National, Christchurch
Lisa Walker  Necklace: Trip to Europe 1973, 2011  Documents, brass, string  Courtesy of the artist: Lisa Walker  Necklace: Trip to Europe 1973, 2011  Documents, brass, string  Courtesy of the artist
Lisa Walker Fischli & Weiss Bracelet 2016. Shoes. Courtesy of the artist  Lisa Walker Fischli & Weiss Bracelet 2016. Shoes. Courtesy of the artist
Christchurch Art Gallery
Cnr Worcester Blvd and Montreal St
Christchurch
NEW ZEALAND
Mail:  info@christchurchartgallery.org.nz

 

15/07/2016

Mari Funaki award 2016 – EXPO at Gal. Funaki (AU) – 23 Aout-24 Sept. 2016

2016 Mari Funaki Award for Contemporary Jewellery

The winners of the Mari Funaki Award  will be announced at the opening on Tuesday 23 August 2016.

The Mari Funaki Award for Contemporary Jewellery is a biennial international Award that showcases excellence in international and Australian contemporary jewellery. Thirty-five artists have been shortlisted from an international field of 413 entries from 48 countries.

Mari Funaki award 2014Mari Funaki award 2014

The selected exhibitors are:
Blanche Tilden (Au) / Céline Sylvestre (Fr) / David Bielander (CH/De) / Doris Betz (De) / Dovile Bernadisiute (Lithuania) / Ela Bauer (Nl) / Emi Fukuda (Jp) / Florian Milker (De) / Frieda Doerfer (De) / Genevieve Howard (Irl) / Henriette Schuster (De) / Inari Kiuru (Fi/Au) / Karl Fritsch (De/NZ) / Katie Collins (Au) / Katja Prins (Nl) / Katrin Feulner (De) / Lauren Tickle (USA) / Léa Mazy (Fr) / Lisa Walker (NZ) / Manon van Kouswijk (Nl/Au) / Melanie Isverding (De) / Melinda Young (Au) / Melissa Cameron (Au) / Michihiro Sato (Jp) / Nadja Soloviev (De) / Naoko Inuzuka (Jp/Au) / Paul Adie (UK) / Shachar Cohen (Il) / Sarah Johnston (Au) / Selen Özus (Tr) / Sophie Baumgärtner (De) / Thanh-Truc Nguyen (De) / WenMiao Yeh (Tw) /
Yong Joo Kim (S. Kr) / Yu Fang Chi (Tw)

 Kiko Gianocca, Veneer #2 neckpiece, 2014, wood veneer, balsawood, brass. Winner of the 2014 Mari Funaki Award.Kiko Gianocca, Veneer #2 neckpiece, 2014, wood veneer, balsawood, brass. Winner of the 2014 Mari Funaki Award.

Melissa Cameron. Piece: Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomyot, 2016. Powdercoated steel hand trowel, stainless steel, ribbon, various dimensions. Necklace, brooch, pin. - selected for Mari Funaki award 2016: Melissa Cameron. Piece: Ruchnoy Protivotankovy Granatomyot, 2016. Powdercoated steel hand trowel, stainless steel, ribbon, various dimensions. Necklace, brooch, pin

David Bielander. Bracelet: Cardboard, 2015. Patinated silver, white gold. Photo by: Dirk Eisel. - selected for Mari Funaki award 2016: David Bielander. Bracelet: Cardboard, 2015. Patinated silver, white gold. Photo by: Dirk Eisel

Genevieve Howard. Necklace: The Song of the Chanter, 2016. Laser cut Japanese linen paper, elastic. - selected for Mari Funaki award 2016: Genevieve Howard. Necklace: The Song of the Chanter, 2016. Laser cut Japanese linen paper, elastic

Yong Joo Kim. Necklace: Crossing the Chasm, 2016. Velcro® hook and loop fastener, thread. - selected for Mari Funaki award 2016: Yong Joo Kim. Necklace: Crossing the Chasm, 2016. Velcro® hook and loop fastener, thread

Manon van Kouswijk. Necklace: Figures. Porcelain. - selected for Mari Funaki award 2016: Manon van Kouswijk. Necklace: Figures. Porcelain

Léa Mazy (FR) -  Beneath the surface -  2016  Léa Mazy -  Beneath the surface -  2016 – Léa is a young French designer studying at Design Academy Eindhoven.  Léa ’s jewelry collection “Beneath the Surface” is the result of a research on materials around the notions of intimacy, preciousness, fragility, surprise, but most of all on the beauty lying underneath the surface. Combined, the individual story of each broches and rings creates a personal narration and landscape.

 

Mari Funaki was a unique and passionate advocate for contemporary jewellery in Australia, both through her own remarkable practice and her establishment and directorship of Gallery Funaki.
This Award aims to celebrate Mari’s legacy by rewarding the skills and vision of jewellers both here and overseas and by providing a platform for outstanding new work to be shown here in Australia. A panel of three judges will award prizes in both established and emerging categories, with total prize money valued at AUD$11,000.

 

Gallery FUNAKI
4 Crossley Street
Melbourne, Victoria
Australia 3000
PO Box 24142
Melbourne, Victoria
Australia 3001
Email
tel +613 9662 9446

 

03/11/2015

EXPO ‘LISA WALKER ONE WEEK EXHIBITION’ – Platina Gallery, Stockholm (SE) – 3-11 Nov. 2015

LISA WALKER
ONE WEEK EXHIBITION
November 3-11, 2015
Welcome to the reception on Tuesday Nov 10, 17-19.

LISA WALKER ONE WEEK EXHIBITION

During Lisa Walkers visit in Sweden, she will give a lecture at Nordiska museet, Nov 11, 18.30
The lecture is organized by Iaspis, Konstnärsnämnden and Nordiska Museet.
She is one of the invited for the seminar About Time, Nov 7 at HDK, Gothenburg

LISA WALKER ONE WEEK EXHIBITIONLisa Walker neckpiece

LISA WALKER ONE WEEK EXHIBITIONLisa Walker  brooch

LISA WALKER  red broochLISA WALKER  red brooch

LISA WALKER lego neckpieceLISA WALKER lego neckpiece

LISA WALKER  neckpiecesLISA WALKER  neckpieces

 
Lisa Walker is an artist/jeweller/designer mostly working in the area of contemporary jewellery.
She exhibits and is involved in projects with museums, galleries, and other venues around the world. She is regularly invited to teach workshops and give lectures.
Her work is a study into the differences between an accepted notion of beauty or stereo-type, and something else – the search for a quality that we hardly ever see, but nevertheless perhaps recognise. Walker says « I don’t want to make pieces that are easily steered through our established channels, I want people to be forced to work on new syllogisms, analogies and positions. » She is continually pushing towards the extreme – a method which enables an expansion in thinking and ways of working.
Walker uses a large range of materials and techniques.
She makes reactionary work, consciously active with influences from all walks of culture and life. The pieces are often laced with references to contemporary jewellery of the last forty years, questioning and researching what jewellery means, what it can be.
Walker largely positions her work around the history, future, and boundaries of jewellery. She makes pieces for the future.
« Everything is food for art ».
After many years spent living in Munich, Germany, Walker is currently based in her city of birth Wellington, New Zealand.
LISA WALKER ONE WEEK EXHIBITIONLISA WALKER - canvas neckpiece
Platina
Odengatan 68,
10232 Stockholm (Sweden)
tel +46 8 30 02 80

OPEN TU-FR 11-18, SA 11-15

23/09/2015

EXPO during JOYA Barcelona OFF 2015 : ‘To Recover’ – Klimt02 Gallery, Barcelona (ES) – 7 Oct.-7 Nov. 2015

exhibition being part of « OFF JOYA » 2015

http://www.joyabarcelona.com/images/Prensa/logo_joya.jpg

To RecoverKlimt02 Gallery

Opening : 7 October from 19 h.

To Recover Exhibition  / 07Oct - 7Nov2015 Klimt02 Gallery  (Ted Noten Superbitch Bag, 2000 / Superbitch Bag Revisited, 2015)

Artist list   Simon CottrellKarl FritschGésine HackenbergKarin JohanssonJiro KamataSari LiimattaStefano MarchettiTed NotenNoon Passama –  Annelies PlanteydtTore SvenssonLisa WalkerManon van Kouswijk

Manon van Kouswijk Pearl Grey necklace, 2008 / Pearl Grey Revisited necklace, 2015 Glass elements (saucer, hand formed cup handle with attached glass beads), diverse glass and plastic beads, polyester thread, glue.  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Manon van Kouswijk Pearl Grey necklace, 2008 / Pearl Grey Revisited necklace, 2015 Glass elements (saucer, hand formed cup handle with attached glass beads), diverse glass and plastic beads, polyester thread, glue.  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015

The original « Pearl Grey » of 2009 was an assemblage work consisting of found and made elements of porcelain, glass, wood, plastic and pearl. It referenced a traditional cup and saucer of which the cup had been magically replaced by a bead necklace. For this new work I have translated that idea to the typology of a glass ‘saucer and cup’. It is again a combination of found and made elements but this time the work is completely transparent; almost like an x-ray of it’s predecessor

Gésine Hackenberg Still Life, 2009 / Pink Balancing Glass brooch, 2015 Glass by Theresienthal, silver  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Gésine Hackenberg Still Life, 2009 / Pink Balancing Glass brooch, 2015 Glass by Theresienthal, silver  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015

The ‘Still Life’ Brooches that I have made between 2009 and 2012 can be seen as a contemporary interpretation of 17th and 18th century Dutch Still Life paintings. This subject was preferable used to portray items of daily life that were emotionally and economically significant for people of that time.  Within my ‘Still Lifes’, I sliced existing glasswork and rearranged them into new compositions. They represented a perfect translation of the three dimensional to the two dimensional, the realistic vista of the glasses to the medium of jewellery. The body is taking on the role of the canvas as it were…  Within the new work I explored another way of looking at tableware than in a static composition: I wanted to express a certain precarious dynamic that is inherent to drinking glasses during a sociable meal. I tried to catch this moment of a glass tumbling, undecided yet if it is going to fall or stay upright.

 Sari Liimatta But I love Him object, 2005 / But they don´t love him pendant, 2015 Glass beads, metal link, thread (polyamide), a plastic toy  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Sari Liimatta But I love Him object, 2005 / But they don´t love him pendant, 2015 Glass beads, metal link, thread (polyamide), a plastic toy  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015

Just as men are not just men, and women just women, meat is never just meat. It has it´s past and origin, a story which is so often simply forgotten. Living creatures which are very much alive until they are nothing more than materials, for those who still choose to use them. Even the life before their death is so often more than problematic, as we all know. As we all know.

 Annelies Planteijdt Beautiful City - Pink Stairs necklace, 2001 / Beautiful City-Pink Stairs Black Crystal necklace, 2015 Gold, Tantalum, pigment  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Annelies Planteijdt Beautiful City – Pink Stairs necklace, 2001 / Beautiful City-Pink Stairs Black Crystal necklace, 2015 Gold, Tantalum, pigment  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015 

 I started to re-consider a piece from 2001, that never has been sold, although I liked it very much, ‘Beautiful City – Pink Stairs’.  This piece is really symmetrical, so I decided to look for a way to separate it in two parts and finish both parts in a different way, in order to get two different pieces. I have re-collected parts of other (unsold) pieces from about the same time (1999 and 2000) and have been re-approaching and re-thinking them: I made ‘Crystals’ with them, like I did in my most recent work. So I have been mixing time and thinking. And size: the sizes I used earlier were different from the sizes I used in the later ‘Beautiful City’ series, they wouldn’t have fit. But because the ‘Crystals’ are liquid (they adapt to the square) the size of the elements was not importantanymore. So I could re-take these old pieces into the new time now, I have re-used them, re-connected them.
This ‘expansion’ offered me more possibilities: I re-used the material I already had without loss of material or time. The possibility to re-make the old pieces still exists. And it gave me two new pieces. So I multiplied my possibilities. A new life.

 Noon Passama Formal Research - A necklace, 2015 / Formal Research - H rings, 2015 Rigid clay, silver, gold  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Noon Passama Formal Research – A necklace, 2015 / Formal Research – H rings, 2015 Rigid clay, silver, gold  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015

 Formal Research – A necklace (2015) composing of six chain units is the starting point of the group of six rings. A closed-end loop of each ring was divided in sections, one / two / three /… / six, by the difference between the fat and thin parts. The works were made under the following keywords: dividing / sequencing / sizing.
Formal Research initially focused on one classical type of jewellery: the chain. The project is mainly about the form of each connecting chain unit and how the unit connects to its neighbours.
During the sculpting process, the shapes were transformed because of them being in the hand and through time. I did not edit the outcomes and will present the rings as they are. The try-outs are the finals and vice versa.

 Stefano Marchetti Untitled brooch, 2007 / Untitled Revisited brooch, 2015 Silver, silver and titan powder, epoxy resin  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Stefano Marchetti Untitled brooch, 2007 / Untitled Revisited brooch, 2015 Silver, silver and titan powder, epoxy resin  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.:

 In the Nineties, in the making of the older brooch, my goal was to control the metal, to have the metal do whatever I wanted. In this latest brooch, made a few days ago, I let instead the metal take control over myself, and let it take me wherever its will would go.

Tore Svensson Mr. T brooch, 2011 / Mr. T Revisited brooch, 2015 (5 different versions) Veneer wood, acrylic paint, silver  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015.: Tore Svensson Mr. T brooch, 2011 / Mr. T Revisited brooch, 2015 (5 different versions) Veneer wood, acrylic paint, silver  New work designed for Klimt02 Gallery in occasion of the exhibition To Recover, Barcelona, October 2015

The reason why I chosen my self-portrait, is that it is probably one of my most well known pieces of jewellery. It is made in steel and etched.  The material and techniques I mostly work with. For the Re-version I saw out the silhouette in 2 mm veneer, divided the image in 3 parts and painted them in similar but for each piece different colours, before I glued them together. The fact that they are divided in three parts, with the dark sawing-line between, gives them a comic-like impression.
This impression is even emphasised by the bigger size, which is possible by the lightness of the material, and is completely different from the original steel-one. While the surface of the steel-portrait and other previous work was the key technology for building the image, the colour for some years been a part of my jewellery.

 

To revisit, remake, salvage, reinterpret, adapt, convert, converse, rethink…
  Why have we asked some of the artists we work with as gallery owners to reinterpret one of their works? We could say it’s because we’re interested in talking about time. And by “revisiting” we mean discussing the notion of time. But in what way? That’s the question.
Time passes, it is made, interpreted, felt and suffered, it escapes, drifts away, becomes trapped or stretched, sometimes it is intelligently ignored and, why not, it is exercised. Reinterpreting a work, a fiction or precis is a way of addressing time, a way of exploring a landscape in order to try and understand it. And we thought this exercise would provide an interesting opportunity to discuss time.
Revisiting in order to reflect… an exercise for the artist.
  Are there any changes in these artists’ works? Should there be? Is time involved? Without a shadow of a doubt, the answer is yes. But that barely scrapes the surface of what we want to know.
We’re more likely to find out what we want to know if the work enables us to answer questions such as: What kind of time is involved? Is there any usefulness? Is there any spirituality? Are there any aesthetics? Is there any abstraction? Is there any progress?
The exhibition is also designed to be understood through an analysis of the different types of answers provided by the works as a whole. As you will see, there are answers that simplify, offering minor changes, non-answers, coherent answers (if you have prior knowledge of the artist’s trajectory), inspired answers, uninventive answers… As we have said, evaluating the “revisits” as a whole provides additional knowledge.
When it comes down to it, what we most value is the sensation we observe and feel when the artist takes some distance and moves away from the centre stage in an attempt to provide an answer. As observers, we believe this circumstance helps to achieve universality and thus provide an intellectual satisfaction, that of communicating and objectifying the creation to the full in order to express and play with a more authentic reality.
Revisiting in order to look afresh… the viewer’s exercise.
We switch from observation to understanding, and vice versa. We observe in order to find differences between similar things and we understand when we find similarities between different things. Accustomed as we are today to viewing several pieces in a highly random fashion, pausing to stop in order to take a fresh look at a work “inaugurated” some time ago is another exercise we wish to propose. This exercise may help us assimilate better in this era of accumulation and, on occasions, superficiality. There can be no doubt that the way in which a work attracts and engages us is based on the knowledge we may have of it.
Knowledge without criticism is an indication of the end of everything. Yet, on the other hand, what can be said of criticism without knowledge? Are we capable of enjoying what these workers of art offer us? Will we be capable of evaluating what they show us? Can we offer knowledge-based criticism? Frankly, we find there is a lack of humility on the part of the viewer. And we’re all viewers.
Let’s enjoy this opportunity.

 

 

Klimt02 Gallery
Riera de Sant Miquel 65
08006 -  Barcelona
Monday to Friday / 11 -14 and 16-19 h.

 

 

 

02/03/2015

EXPO ‘HAUTE COUTURE’ – Caroline Van Hoek Gallery, Bruxelles (BE) – 29 Janv.-28 Mars 2015

Caroline Van Hoek Gallery

UPCOMING SHOW ‘HAUTE COUTURE’
Opening 29/01  6-9pm

Caroline Van Hoek Gallery "Haute Couture"

Works by : Hermien CassiersFlorie DupontSam Tho DuongDaniel Kruger Felieke van der LeestFrancesco Pavan — Cornelia Roethel — Lisa Walker

DANIEL KRUGER - 1951 brooch, 2003 seadpearls, gold, thread 4,5x6,5cm 25,6gr DANIEL KRUGER - 1951 brooch, 2003 seadpearls, gold, thread 4,5×6,5cm

FLORIE DUPONT - 1984 prototype pendant,brooch or ring 2011 bronze, crystal, pearl 4x2,5x2cm FLORIE DUPONT – 1984 prototype pendant,brooch or ring 2011 bronze, crystal, pearl 4×2,5x2cm

SAM THO DUONG - 1969 Frozen, necklace silver, pearls, wireSAM THO DUONG – 1969 Frozen, necklace silver, pearls, wire FRANCESCO PAVAN - 1937` brooch gold, silver, alpacaFRANCESCO PAVAN – 1937` brooch gold, silver, alpaca

HERMIEN CASSIERS - 1991 bracelet, 2014 gold 38,10gr - 11,5x11,5x4cm HERMIEN CASSIERS – 1991 bracelet, 2014 gold 38,10gr – 11,5×11,5x4cm

 FELIEKE VAN DER LEEST - 1968 Prof. Dr. Kong, brooch, 2007 textile, plastic, silver, cubic zirconia 19x8,5x3,5cm FELIEKE VAN DER LEEST – 1968 Prof. Dr. Kong, brooch, 2007 textile, plastic, silver, cubic zirconia 19×8,5×3,5cm

 
Caroline Van Hoek Gallery
Rue Van Eyck 57
1050 Bruxelles
tel. +32 (0) 2 644 45 11
http://www.carolinevanhoek.be/

 

 

24/02/2015

EXPO ‘glAmour’ – Villa Stück, Munich (DE) – 7 Mars-6 Avril 2015

glAmour

Exhibition « glAmour », Villa Stück, Munich, D.
7.3-6.4 2015

« GlAmour with a capital »A« – putting the accent on the essential
and important deep feeling of love.
Which happens to be part of the phenomena of glamour.
Glamour is not something superficial. It is something profound.
That is what this show is about.
 »
Philip Sajet

Glamour

Par une nuit d’été sur le toit d’une vieille maison, dans le petit village de Latour-de-France, s’est tenue une discussion avec des artistes. Nous avons parlé de l’actuelle omniprésence du phénomène du glamour – comme si ce terme était applicable au monde d’aujourd’hui. Philip Sajet a tout de suite rappelé le mot amour qui se cache dans glamour. Une idée d’exposition était née.
Afin de mettre l’amour en relief, nous avons décidé d’utiliser dans notre contexte la lettre ‘A’ en majuscule. Il ne doit pas s’agir d’un simple jeu de mots, mais de l’expression de ce sentiment profond qu’est l’amour. Quelle que soit l’interprétation que l’on puisse lui donner, l’amour occupe une place importante dans cette exposition.Par Olga Zobel Biro, commissaire d’exposition.
(Extrait du catalogue).
 
En présence de  Robert BAINES –  Giampaolo BABETTO Peter CHANGGabi DZIUBA –  Robert SMIT Daniel KRUGERKarl Fritsch –  Gerd ROTHMANN –  Lisa WalkerPhilip SAJET  
 Giampaolo Babetto Spilla 2014, oro bianco, diamanti, zaffiri.   Foto Giustino Chemello - SCHMUCK 2015 "GlAMOUR" Giampaolo Babetto  Spilla/brooch 2014, oro bianco, diamanti, zaffiri.   Foto Giustino Chemello
gerd rothmann's 'four finger bangle' (1982)Gerd Rothmann‘s ‘four finger bangle’ (1982)
gerd rothmann - Museum Villa StuckGerd Rothmann
Daniel Kruger, Brooch, 2014Daniel Kruger – Brooch: Untitled, 2014 – Silver, acrylic glass, mirror, pigment
Robert Baines, broche - exposition glAmourRobert Baines, broche « Teddy »
ROBERT SMIT. - expo "GlAmour"Robert SMIT ring
EXPO GlAmour - broche peter Chang - plastique Peter Chang - broche – plastique
Prinzregentenstraße 60,
81675 München, Allemagne
Tel: +49 (0)89-45 55 51-0
Fax: +49 (0)89-45 55 51-24
E-Mail: villastuck@muenchen.de
 

17/01/2015

EXPO ‘Beauty of the Beast: Jewellery & Taxidermy’ – Museum Arnhem (NL) – 24 Janv.-10 Mai 2015

Beauty of the Beast: Jewellery and Taxidermy -  Museum Arnhem, Netherlands

The museum presents the work of more than 15 international designers and artists for the exhibition, Beauty of the Beast.  The displayed works explore the connection between taxidermy, jewellery and visual arts.

Beauty of the Beast: Jewellery and Taxidermy 24 Jan-10 May 2015 Museum Arnhem, NL (Reid Peppard – Head Piece: Double Rat Headdress, 2008)

Artist list : Karley Feaver — Charlie Tuesday Gates — Kate Gilliland — IdiotsBenjamin LignelMärta MattssonKelly McCallum — Kate MccGwire — Ted Noten — Reid Peppard — Iris Schieferstein — Simei Irene Snyman — Tinkebell — Cecilia Valentine — Emily Valentine — Tanel Veenre — Christel Verdaasdonk — Lisa WalkerJulia deVille — Niels van Eijk — Miriam van der Lubbe

From high-concept shops to cocktail bars: every style-conscious place these days displays a mounted fox or peacock in the window. Taxidermy, the mounting of dead animals, is hot. But what happens when you apply taxidermy to contemporary jewellery design? In the exhibition Beauty of the Beast Museum Arnhem presents the work of more than 15 international designers and artists who make a connection between taxidermy, jewellery and visual arts. The exhibition presents, on the one hand, wearable jewellery and fashion accessories such as necklaces, brooches, bags, hats, hair ornaments and shoes. But it also includes more sculptural and autonomous work.

Märta Mattsson Brooch: Crash!, 2011 Taxidermy bird, walnut wood, silverMärta Mattsson Brooch: Crash!, 2011 Taxidermy bird, walnut wood, silver

 Märta Mattsson Brooch: Palindrome, 2014 Cicada wings, resin, crushed sulphur, silver, glitterMärta Mattsson Brooch: Palindrome, 2014 Cicada wings, resin, crushed sulphur, silver, glitter

Emily Valentine,Vijf broches, Deconstructed Budgie, 2010. Foto: John LeeEmily Valentine,Vijf broches, Deconstructed Budgie, 2010. Foto: John Lee

Benjamin Lignel Piece: Io ce l'ho d'oro (yeah...but mine's gold), 2007  .Benjamin Lignel Piece: Io ce l’ho d’oro (yeah…but mine’s gold), 2007 Fine gold 6,5 x 3,4 x 3,4 cm Beak extension for pigeon photo: Enrico Bartolucci, Paris  An experiment on the ambivalent use of accessories to either mock, or ape, the demeanour of our betters. .

Tanel Veenre. rooch: Forever Together, 2014 Seahorses, wood, gold leaf, silver Photo by Tanel Veenre .Tanel Veenre. brooch: Forever Together, 2014 Seahorses, wood, gold leaf, silver Photo by Tanel Veenre

 Julia deVille Brooch: Bird Skull, 2004 Bird Skull, cubic zirconia, sterling silver 5 x 2.5 x 3 cmJulia deVille Brooch: Bird Skull, 2004 Bird Skull, cubic zirconia, sterling silver 

Kelly McCallum broochKelly McCallum brooch

 

Museum Arnhem
Utrechtseweg 87
6812 AA -  Arnhem
NETHERLANDS
info@museumarnhem.nl
tel +31(0)26 30 31 400

02/09/2014

EXPO ‘Platina – 15 years of Jewellery’ – Färgfabriken, Stockholm (SE) – 11-14 Sept. 2014

PLATINA – 15 YEARS OF JEWELLERY ART

PLATINA CELEBRATES ITS 15TH ANNIVERSARY
at FÄRGFABRIKEN – LÖVHOLMSBRINKEN 1, STOCKHOLM
MINGEL PARTY SATURDAY 13TH OF SEPTEMBER 14-16
EXHIBITION WITH 17 JEWELLERY ARTISTS :
A5 (Romina Funtes, Adam Grinovich, Annika Pettersson) — Tobias Alm  – Yasar AydinSofia BjörkmanHilde De DeckerJenny Edlund Iris EichenbergKarl Fritsch Hanna Hedman Aud Charlotte Ho Sook SindingCatarina HällzonAgnieszka KnapKaren PontoppidanMiro Sazdic Lisa Walker.
 
Färgfabriken is an exhibition space and experimental platform for art and architecture as well as social and urban development. They seek to challenge, engage and create new connections and collaborations. Färgfabriken is a site to visit exhibitions, take part of discussions, workshops and attend talks.
Hanna Hedman - Platina 15 years ...Hanna Hedman photo Sanna Lindberg
©Miro Sazdic, photo Staffan Lövstedt©Miro Sazdic, photo Staffan Lövstedt
Aud Charlotte Ho Sook SindingAud Charlotte Ho Sook Sinding
Jenny EdlungJenny Edlund
Lisa WalkerLisa Walker
Tobias AlmTobias Alm
at

Färgfabriken

Lövholmsbrinken 1,
117 43 Stockholm
 
Platina
 Odengatan 68

10232 Stockholm
tel +46 8 30 02 80

20/06/2014

EXPO ‘glAmour’ – Espace Solidor, Cagnes-sur-Mer (FR) – 20 Juin-5 oct. 2014

glAmour

Exposition du 20 juin au 5 octobre
Vernissage vendredi 20 juin à 18h -

Cagnes sur mer - GLAMOUR

Par une nuit d’été sur le toit d’une vieille maison, dans le petit village de Latour-de-France, s’est tenue une discussion avec des artistes. Nous avons parlé de l’actuelle omniprésence du phénomène du glamour – comme si ce terme était applicable au monde d’aujourd’hui. Philip Sajet a tout de suite rappelé le mot amour qui se cache dans glamour. Une idée d’exposition était née.
Afin de mettre l’amour en relief, nous avons décidé d’utiliser dans notre contexte la lettre ‘A’ en majuscule. Il ne doit pas s’agir d’un simple jeu de mots, mais de l’expression de ce sentiment profond qu’est l’amour. Quelle que soit l’interprétation que l’on puisse lui donner, l’amour occupe une place importante dans cette exposition.Par Olga Zobel Biro, commissaire d’exposition.
(Extrait du catalogue).
 
En présence de  Robert BAINES –  Giampaolo BABETTO Peter CHANG Gabi DZIUBA –  Robert SMIT — Daniel KRUGERKarl Fritsch –  Gerd ROTHMANN –  Lisa WalkerPhilip SAJET  
Daniel Kruger, Brooch, 2014Daniel Kruger – Brooch: Untitled, 2014 – Silver, acrylic glass, mirror, pigment
Robert Baines, broche - exposition glAmourRobert Baines, broche « Teddy »
EXPO GlAmour - broche peter Chang - plastique Peter Chang - broche – plastique
 
 
Espace Solidor
place du Château
06400, Cagnes-sur-Mer – France
Tél : 04 93 73 14 42
espace.solidor@orange.fr

25/02/2014

EXPO ‘WUNDERRUMA’ – Galerie Handwerk, Munich (DE) – 7 Mars-17 Avril 2014

SCHMUCK 2014 – Munich – 12-18 Mars 2014

WUNDERRUMA - Jewelry from New-Zealand

Bijoux de Nouvelle-Zélande
Ausstellungseröffnung : Donnerstag, 6. März 2014, 18.30 Uhr
Katalogpräsentation  mit Karl Fritsch und Warwick Freeman Freitag, 14. März 2014, 11 Uhr

WUNDERRUMA - schmuck-  7 mars au 17 avril 2014 Bijoux de Nouvelle-Zélande Galerie Handwerk  (Peter Madden)

 

exhibitors : Brian Adam — Billy Apple — Fran Allison — Georg Beer — Rachel Bell — Pauline Bern — Renee BevanBecky Bliss — Kobi Bosshard — Trevor Byron — Hamish Campbell — Jacqui Chan — Fran Carter — Chris Charteris — Octavia Cook — Ann Culy — Mary Curtis — Karren Dale — Andrea Daly — Cath Dearsley — Peter Deckers — Gillian Deery — Jane Dodd — John Edgar — Ilse-Marie Erl — Ruth Evans — Sharon Fitness — Warwick FreemanKarl Fritsch – Elena Gee — Suni Gibson — Caroline Griffin — Jason Hall –  Niki Hastings-McFall — Louisa Humphry — Sinead Jury — Lynn Kelly — Richard Killeen — Rangi Kipa — Owen Mapp — Kelly McDonald — Peter McKay — Craig McIntosh –Matthew McIntyre-Wilson — Peter Madden — Ross Malcom — Doug Marsden — Paul Mason — Roy Mason — Bob Mitchell — Neke Moa — Kate Newby — Stephen Mulqueen — Shelley Norton — Kelly O’Shea — Michael Parekowhai — Amelia Pascoe — Alan Preston — Stanley E. Rea — Sarah Read — Donn Salt — Moniek Schrijer –  Joe Sheehan — Frances Stachl — Inia Taylor — Rob Upritchard — Francis Upritchard — Emily Valentine — Tobias Vodanovich — Lisa WalkerSarah Walker-HoltRaewyn Walsh — Camille Walton — Rohan Wealleans — Areta Wilkinson — Jess Winchcombe

EXPO WUNDERRUMA - Louisa HumphryLouisa Humphry
Alain Preston
Alan Preston White Foreshore Fragment Pin, Shell fragment, Silver
Frances StachlFrances Stachl
Emily ValentineEmily Valentine
Ross MalcolmRoss Malcom

Jane DoddJane Dodd

EXPO WUNDERRUMA - Chris CharterisChris Charteris
EXPO WUNDERRUMA - Lisa WalkerLisa Walker
EXPO WUNDERRUMA - Ross MalcolmRoss Malcolm
EXPO WUNDERRUMA - Bob Mitchell Bob Mitchell
 Shelley NortonShelley Norton – bracelet – plastic

 

Galerie Handwerk
Max-Joseph-Straße 4
Eingang Ecke Ottostraße
80333 München
Tel. +49 (0)89 511 92 40
wolfgang.loesche@hwk-muenchen.de
hwk-muenchen.de/galerie

 

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