Sunday, April 20, 2008

Robyn Voshardt & Sven Humphrey upcoming events


New & Improved, 2007, 2'21min, HD single channel video/sound, dim. variable

24 April - 28 April 2008

Around the Coyote Video Lounge at Artropolis:
Curated by LiveBox

Merchandise Mart, Chicago, 8th floor
(concurrent with Art Chicago & NEXT)


PREVIEW TONIGHT 24.04.08, 6 to 9pm
Through Monday 28.04.08

Solo artist installations:
Robyn Voshardt / Sven Humphrey, Blake Carrington, Fabienne Gautier, Tim Geers, and Julia Oldham

Screening Room:
Marlo Bodzick, Christopher Bruchansky, Ellen Lake, Pierre St Jacques, Elizabeth Riley, Chie Yamayoshi

Around the Coyote, as a cultural partner of The Artist Project at Artropolis, brings you the Around the Coyote Video Lounge curated by LiveBox. ARTropolis is Chicago’s citywide celebration of arts, antiques and culture. The Video Lounge will open for the preview celebrations on April 24th, and run concurrently with Art Chicago through April 28, 2008.

Since the rise of You Tube and the use of video as a communication language, there has been talk about the death of video art. For many it is becoming increasing difficult to access the artistic quality of video art when the format represents entertainment and cheap reproduction. Very recently though, there has been talk of Video as “New.” New York times critic Holland Cotter wrote in January 2008, “At present it is shaped by a combination of pop fantasy, ingrained cybersmarts, neo tribalism and the angst-free take on contemporary life that marks attention-deficient internet culture.” Cotter was talking about a collection of rising video artists who were creating stunning original video. You Tube habitation and the like had liberated these artists to create fearless work. The ARTropolis Video Lounge is a celebration of video as a seminal medium for young artists today.

1 May - 24 May 2008

vt2
International Digital Art Projects
The Block
Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
Creative Industries Precinct, Kelvin Grove, Australia

This exhibition reflects a global commitment to exploring cultural identity through leading professional arts practice in digital media. Building on 2007’s Vernacular Terrain exhibition, VT2 presents vibrant, innovative screen-based and photo-media works from international and Indigenous Australian new-media artists.

through 10 April, 2008

Utopia of Space: Post for Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyz National Museum of Fine Arts, Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republik

Curated by Latitia Norkeit and Maxim Neroda

How does one bring international art into a country which does not have the financial means required to organize an international exhibition? Latitia Norkeit and Maxim Neroda, two artists from Germany who currently live and work in Bishkek, met this challenge by creating a project in cooperation with the Kyrgyz National Museum of Fine Arts, giving it the provocative title “Post for Kyrgyzstan.” For the past few months, packages have been arriving at the museum from artists all over the world. The exhibition will give visitors access to a wide variety of contemporary art otherwise not available, and also show that art does not necessarily involve expensive materials and immense effort. Plans are underway for a new incarnation of the exhibition in Nürnberg and Berlin.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Claudine Kraan at tcb in Melbourne



Voyeur member Claudine Kraan will have video work in 'Informal Rituals' 9-19 April 2008.
Curated by Alex Vivian and Helen Johnson

TCB Art inc
level1/12 Waratah Place
Melbourne

Opening Hours: wed-sat 12-6pm

Friday, April 4, 2008

Kim Collmer screening in USA and Australia



Kim Collmer's video Berlin Skin will be featured in the following screenings:

April 3 2008
'Our Friends are Electric', part of the Urban Screens Conference and Berlin's MediaFacades, Federation Square in Melbourne, Australia.

http://www.fedsquare.com/index.cfm?pageID=299

April 5 2008
Artistic Mediums: Revelations of the Invisible, Museum of New Art, Detroit- Opening April 5th, organized by Mary Lucking and Andrew Sempere

http://pushbuttonsfirst.com/artisticmediums/artists.html

May 8 2008
Echo Park Film Center, Los Angeles- May 8th. Organized by LiveBox, Chicago

Erica Eyres at Rokeby Gallery in London

Erica Eyres is interested in the human condition; through her drawings and videos she examines human nature, how we perceive others, how others perceive us and how we portray ourselves to others.

The disquieting female characters that Eyres depicts in stark ballpoint pen, self-consciously pose for the viewer awkwardly, clumsy, vulnerable and bashful; their flaws and blemishes openly on display whether in states of undress, or contrived sexual poses. In each instance the viewer is persuaded to engage in the power games instigated in watching and being watched though the experience is never wholly satisfying. Rather, through identification with the character, one is left with a sense of fracture, conscious of ones own flaws and deficiencies. As described in theories of The Uncanny, the viewer at once experiences both the familiar and the unfamiliar resulting in a sensation of cognitive dissonance whereby one simultaneously feels empathy and revulsion.

Similarly, in her videos, Eyres often borrows from the aesthetic and artificiality of low budget television or film. The addition of a psychological intricacy results in incongruous reactions in viewers who express both repulsion and compassion towards the characters portrayed. In her video’s Eyres is the actor who subjects herself to the scrutiny of the viewer, however it is the viewers scrutiny of their own self-image that is reflected in her struggling characters; we recognise the fact that this self-image is not necessarily the same as that in which others perceive us.

The artist’s videos and drawings are equally, and sometimes grotesquely, contrived; characteristics are exaggerated and physical attributes amplified in such a manner that the viewer is surprised to be led to any truth concerning human nature. Such is the insight and honesty that Eyres reveals.



Private View: April 04, 2008, 18:30 - 20:30
Exhibition: April 04, 2008 - May 09, 2008
Gallery opening hours: Tuesday to Friday 11:00 - 18:00

ROKEBY
37 Store Street
London, WC1E 7QF
+44 (0)20 7168 9942
+44(0)7968 027 505
beth@rokebygallery.com
www.rokebygallery.com

For more information about Erica Eyres please visit www.ericaeyres.com