Wednesday, December 31, 2014

HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM APARTE


. BE ICONIC . BE BOLD . MAKE A DIFFERENCE .
HAPPY 2015

                                                  i-D Magazine Cover Star Agness Deyn Photography Terry Richardson May 2008


Tuesday, December 9, 2014

ECHO HOME ❘ PHOTOGRAPHY BY JAMIE HINCE AT MORRISON HOTEL GALLERY
















































































Jamie Hince graduated in the early 90s from Goldsmiths College in London before forming post punk band Scarfo. In 2000 Jamie met Alison Mosshart while in London when she heard him playing guitar in the apartment above her, and they begun swapping cassettes of songs across the Atlantic. Upon Mosshart moving to England permanently, the two formed The Kills and have enjoyed a special musical partnership that has lasted over a decade. Having travelled the world with The Kills and always being a keen photographer, Hince now presents select works to the public.                                                                          via morrisonhotelgallery.com
                                                                        




Wednesday, December 3, 2014

CALL CENTER ❘ JOANA VASCONCELOS



Call Center, 2014
Analogue telephones, metallized and thermo-lacquered mild steel, sound system, oscillators driven by microcontrollers.


Joana Vasconcelos Website

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

DAN COLEN ❘ MIRACLE PAINTINGS

Ride of the Valkyries, 2013, oil on canvas, 89 1/2 x 119 inches (227.3 x 302.3 cm)







The Pastoral Symphony, 2012, Oil and pigment powder on canvas, 105 x 85 inches (266.7 x 215.9 cm)








Te Deum, 2013, Oil on canvas, 89 1/2 x 119 inches (227.3 x 302.3 cm)















Rite of Spring, 2013, Oil and pigment powder on canvas, 105 x 85 inches (266.7 x 215.9 cm)







O Fortuna, 2013, Oil on canvas, 89 1/2 x 119 inches (227.3 x 302.3 cm)















The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, 2013, Oil on canvas, 89 1/2 x 119 inches (227.3 x 302.3 cm)



The Miracle paintings continue an investigation that has been central to Colen's practice from the outset: to what extent does art come from the artist, and to what extent does it arise from forces independent of the artist?




"I wanted these paintings to reveal themselves during the making, similar to how the trash paintings came to be. I was thinking about alchemy. So there's this juggling act; I'm starting and often ending with an image, but the oil paint and the process of using that oil paint will open up the possibility for the artwork to take a new direction."

—Dan Colen

via gagosian.com


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

PIRELLI CALENDAR 2015 BY STEVEN MEISEL

     © by PIRELLI 
Photography 
Steven Meisel 
Stylist 
Carine Roitfeld 
 Hair 
Guido Palau 
Make-up 
Pat Mcgrath 
Models 
Adriana Lima, Natalia Vodianova, Gigi Hadid, Isabeli Fontana, Joan Smalls, Raquel Zimmerman, Carol Murphy, Cameron Russel, Karen Elson, Candice Huffine, Sasha Luss, Anna Ewers


Monday, November 10, 2014

ADVERTISEMENTS FOR MYSELF

Fifteen artists take on the challenge of marketing themselves.

In his review of Norman Mailer's 1959 book "Advertisments for Myself", Gore Vidal wrote: "Until very recently the artist was a magician who did his magic in public view but kept himself and his effects a matter of mystery." Wondering how far the art of self-promotion has come since then, we asked 15 artists to promote themselves in these pages. The result is reassuring to me. Rather than publicize some kind of inflated ego, many opted for a more intimate, humorous or social approach. At a time when certain extremes of art market are derailing our attention, these pages remind us that art remains a tool for awareness and conviviality. As the 'curator' of this project -  I use the term loosely, as nowadays people are asked to curate anything from a dinner to a funeral - I could not have better advertisments for myself than these pages, which, mingled together, offer magic, mystery and some healthy and funny forms of vanity.                                                                            by Francesco Bonami NYTimes.com



    CAROL BOVE is known for her assemblages of found objects. Her ad shows the first piece in a new series of work that combines constructed photography and collage








                                                                                                                       RYAN GANDER has dressed gallery invigilators in embroidered tracksuits and given a lecture series as part of his conceptual work, but here chose to promote the art school he is raising money to open in a Victorian building in Suffolk, England. 









 RACHEL FEINSTEIN was inspired for her ad by the ‘‘cringeworthy and nostalgic feeling’’ brought on by looking at her high school yearbook, which included a clipping from a magazine of herself as a young fashion model. 







                                                                                                                            FRANCESCO VEZZOLI ‘‘I immediately felt that it would be hilarious to see a real/fake prostitute ad in the pages of the most respected newspaper in the world.’’ 








JENNY HOLZER has used text since the 1970s in her art, which has taken forms including T-shirts, plaques and LED signs. In 2004, she started to source material from declassified government documents made available to the public through the Freedom of Information Act. ‘‘I live in the N.S.A.’s collection,” she wrote. 








DAN COLEN is known for his abstract paintings and sculptures that incorporate low-grade materials such as bubble gum and trash.








ED ATKINS works primarily with high-definition video and with text to subvert the conventions of moving image and literature. 








PAWEL ALTHAMER is known for his experimental sculptures and socially collaborative work. His ad features a self-portrait (‘‘not particularly successful,’’ as he writes in the top right corner) and portraits of him made by his youngest son and wife. 








RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA is a conceptual artist whose installations have included offering visitors Thai food cooked on site, making a facsimile of his apartment, creating a pirate television station and setting up a T-shirt print shop. 








KORAKRIT ARUNANONDCHAI recently created an installation designed to feel like a concept store for a lifestyle company whose first product is soap. ‘‘The ad is for the soap,’’ he wrote, and ‘‘depicts a moment of freedom and acceptance for oneself.’’








CAMILLE HENROT challenges the linear transcription of Western history through videos, films and reworked images. Her ad, which features a photograph of her at 17 climbing, along with a list of peaks she has summited, is ‘‘a sort of logo, as if the vita contemplativa were a brand.’’ 








PHILIPPE PARRENO is an artist and filmmaker. About his ad he writes: ‘‘It is alive / It hides us from the mechanism of its movement and tricks us into thinking that it is organic.’’ 








SHIRANA SHAHBAZI makes photographs that explore the relationship between images and their surfaces. 








TINO SEHGAL makes what he has described as ‘‘constructed situations.’’ 






















BARBARA KRUGER works with pictures and words.