"Grand Promenade": Various Venues.With its off-center position on the international art map, Athens could be an inspiring meeting ground for artists from around the world, allowing their works to be presented in a less hierarchical fashion than might be possible in the centers. "Grand Promenade" (curated by Anna Kafetsi, director of the still-unfinished National Museum of Contemporary Art This article is about National Museum of Contemporary Art, Romania. For other Museums named Museum of Contemporary Art, see Museum of Contemporary Art. The National Museum of Contemporary Art (Muzeul Naţional de Artă Contemporană ) included artists such as Janine Antoni Janine Antoni (b. January 19, 1964 -, in Freeport, Bahamas ) is an artist well known for her works of body art, particularly in the manner of translating everyday bodily activities (eating, sleeping, bathing, etc.) into art. , Christian Boltanski Christian Boltanski (born September 6, 1944) is a French photographer, sculptor, self-proclaimed painter, and installation artist. Christian Boltanski was born in Paris to a Jewish father of Ukrainian heritage, and a Corsican mother. , Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, Anish Kapoor Anish Kapoor (born 1954) is a Turner Prize winning sculptor. Kapoor was born in Bombay (Mumbai), India, and attended the Doon School, located in Dehra Dun, India. He moved to England in 1972, where he has lived since. , and Rachel Whiteread as well as many lesser-knowns. By showing a significant number of works with political content, this exhibition leaned slightly toward art from the peripheries created by artists and others for whom their work serves to reflect political violence and social concerns. Or perhaps it's just that works like Khalil Rabah's The New Palestinian Museum of Natural History and Humankind, 2006, stood out because they strongly resonate in a country that has had its own share of political instability and is geographically positioned close to the sites of current military conflicts. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The invited artists were asked to engage in a dialogue with Athens from positions of "Elsewhere and Otherness" by working in an "open museum," a scattering of sites along the Grand Promenade leading to the Acropolis acropolis (əkrŏp`əlĭs) [Gr.,=high point of the city], elevated, fortified section of various ancient Greek cities. The Acropolis of Athens, a hill c.260 ft (80 m) high, with a flat oval top c. , as well as spaces in various buildings around it, among them the seventeenth-century Turkish bathhouse and the Melina Mercouri Foundation, in the Plaka district. In a city bearing such a resonant past--indeed, having had a unique role in shaping Western culture--this posed a challenge, particularly for those who chose to insert their pieces directly into the Greek capital's urban fabric, with its jarring juxtaposition of modern and ancient architecture. The impact of the city was perhaps most obvious on Kapoor's Untitled, 2001-2005, placed along the Grand Promenade; its beautiful simplicity of form--a single piece of marble carved to appear at once concave Concave Property that a curve is below a straight line connecting two end points. If the curve falls above the straight line, it is called convex. and convex--conveyed a striving for perfection quite at odds with the serenity of the ancient stones around it. The Falling Angel, 2006, by the Kabakovs, escaped this fate, not because it fit well into the urban environment but precisely the opposite: because it so awkwardly failed to do so. A giant, humorously plump winged figure "dumped" inside a fenced area that looked like a dog run, the work appeared odd in its surroundings, while remaining connected in parodic fashion to Greek mythology. Indoor spaces served better to shield art from the imposing presence of ancient Athens. Works like Ernesto Neto's seductive sculptural environment It happens when the body is anatomy of time, 2000, which looked like a forest of elastic forms made of Lycra tulle Tulle (t l, Fr. tül), town (1990 pop. 18,685), capital of Corrèze dept., S central France. Firearms and other goods are made there. Tulle was built around a 7th-century monastery. and filled with aromatic spices, and Thomas Hirschhorn's U-Lounge,
2003, half office and half study, retained their visual autonomy in the
industrial compound called Technopolis. Yet it was Boltanski's
installation inside a Neoclassical ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism n. A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially: a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form, building belonging to the Association of Greek Archaeologists that perhaps best reflected the show's ambition to make an evanescent ev·a·nes·cent adj. Of short duration; passing away quickly. and yet poignant mark on the city of Athens. For The Exact Time (For Bia Davou), 2006, the artist had white sheets imprinted with the face of the late Greek artist, known for her innovative works inspired by computer flowcharts and the metrics of Homeric language, and hung them like window shades. Floating with the wind in and out of the room, the images of Davou's magnetic Mediterranean physiognomy physiognomy /phys·i·og·no·my/ (fiz?e-og´nah-me) 1. determination of mental or moral character and qualities by the face. 2. the countenance, or face. 3. appeared and disappeared; like multiples of Veronica's veil, they exposed their iconic fragility as if to remind us of the significance of remembrance--a need that eludes any city limits. |
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