Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,485,186 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Inez van Lamsweerde.


Inez van Lamsweerde's photography was the subject of a recent survey (with husband Vinoodh Matadin) at the Groninger Museum in Groningen, Netherlands. Their advertising work includes campaigns this season for Balenciaga, Helmut Lang, and Gucci.

1 ERIC ROHMER, L'ANGLAISE ET LE DUC I have no idea when it will be released, but I can't wait to see this eighty-year-old French writer/director's first digitally shot period movie. Apparently all the scenes are filmed against a blue screen, with the characters dropped into hand-painted sets in postproduction. It seems quite a departure from Rohmer's naturalistic depictions of suburban love triangles for which the gorgeous actresses--he likes a specific type of girl with wavy hair, extraordinary eyes, and a thin mouth--usually style themselves, create the sets, and sometimes decide on the music as well. None of his movies, though, lacks for brilliant, sensitive conversation that gives way to a literary investigation into the female psyche caught up in a web of coincidence and desire.

2 SEBASTIAAN BREMER Finally this October we'll be able to see this young painter's work in full force at his first New York solo show, at Roebling Hall in Brooklyn. Well, painter... Bremer turns photographs, found or snapped, of himself and his family into trippy, dusty memories that, thanks to his layered pointillist technique, reveal the subconscious and the real world in the blink of an eye. By laboriously painting his poetic braille over fast snapshots, Bremer slows down time to render hauntingly beautiful interior landscapes.

3 BRUCE STERLING, TOMORROW NOW Forget the '60s sci-fi optimism and the '90s apocalyptic vision of the future. Tomorrow, according to Sterling, could never be worse than today. His novels are clever sociological reviews of the future that take their beginnings from fantasizing on an in-depth knowledge of the technological, medical, cultural, and political transformations that drive social change. His idea of the look and feel of the twenty-first century will be written up in this next work, which he calls a "nonfiction book of anticipation."

4 PAUL VERHOEVEN, CHRIST, THE MAN It takes a Dutchman, of course, to become simultaneously a blatantly mainstream representative of and a subversive underground figure in America's number one cultural product: The Movies. The man who gave us films like Turkish Delight, Basic instinct, Total Recall, Showgirls, and Starship Troopers now turns his ruthless point of view on religion. Having given his diagnosis of American society, he is about to hold a mirror to our perception of the mystery man of all time. Although Verhoeven has flirted with the figure of Christ before--he's even called his RoboCop an American Jesus--the new film is supposed to give a serious account of the political, economical, and cultural context of Jesus, based on fifteen years of methodical research.

5 BJORK, VESPERTINE This Icelandic girl, of such radical and generous spirit, has produced an entire new album herself, working with a 120-member choir and orchestra at the same time. It's an album about finding paradise at home, in the smallest things, just as she did while creating it. Appearing with her are friends like Matmos, Opiate, and Harmony Korine, some of whom will join her on tour. The first single, "Hidden Place," is pure elegance and intimacy on an epic scale.

6 STEPHANIE COHEN, CAMILLE JUDITH CLAIRE June will see the first novel by this brilliant young writer who in my opinion will revolutionize French literature French literature, writings in medieval French dialects and standard modern French. Writings in Provençal and Breton are considered separately, as are works in French produced abroad (as at Canadian literature, French).

Medieval Literature



Until the 12th cent. A.D. most forms of writing in Gaul were in Latin. Old French emerged from the Latin vernacular of the south known as the langue d'oïl.
 as we know it. With Camille Judith Claire, Cohen's publisher Denoel is inaugurating the series "Format Utile," dedicated to atypical literary work. Unique is what I would call Cohen's fragmented, confrontational, partly autobiographical, and uncompromisingly beautiful way of handling language on paper. Apart from all that, the book contains one of the most breathtaking descriptions of love ever penned.

7 M/M, CAFE MONTORGUEIL Ever wanted to have a drink in a bar in Paris that didn't look like a leftover from the Napoleonic era? Plan a trip to France in October, which is when the latest project by Paris-based art directors Michael Amzalag and Mathias Augustyniak, in collaboration with artists Pierre Huyghe and Philippe Parreno, will be completed. A cafe commissioned by the Costes family located at the Rue Etienne Marcel, the place will feature a robot DJ that forever plays the 2,001 songs the four boys chose to be programmed into its brain at the time of construction.

8 NICOLAS BOURRIAUD, PALAIS DE TOKYO The French are really getting it together by appointing Bourriaud as the codirector of the new museum of contemporary art in Paris opening at the end of the year (see interview, pp. 47-48). He describes the Palais de Tokyo as a kunsthalle-cum--production company that will address global issues yet remain driven by the problematics of contemporary art. There will also be the Pavilion, an international program for artists, serving as an experimental satellite. Before going so large-scale, Bourriaud was responsible for putting young French artists into context in his book Esthetique Relationnelle, in which he verbalizes the current generation's obsession with producing art that allows one to experience a time and space rather than creating material objects that remain at a remove from the social world--a personal art that reinvestigates the relation between human beings and the larger system.

9 CHRIS CUNNINGHAM, NEUROMANCER I can't wait. It's about time someone made a film out of William Gibson (person) William Gibson - Author of cyberpunk novels such as Neuromancer (1984), Count Zero (1986), Mona Lisa Overdrive, and Virtual Light (1993).

Neuromancer, a novel about a computer hacker/criminal "cowboy" of the future helping to free an artificial intelligence from its programmed bounds, won the Hugo and Nebula science fiction awards and is credited as the seminal cyberpunk novel and the origin of the term "cyberspace".
's brilliant cyberpunk A futuristic, online delinquent: breaking into computer systems; surviving by high-tech wits. The term comes from science fiction novels such as "Neuromancer" and "Shockwave Rider." novel, and who better than Cunningham, the director of such insanely beautiful music videos as Aphex Twin's "Windowlicker" and Bjork's "All Is Full of Love"? Scheduled to be released God knows when, this one should be so full of visual overdrive that it could influence decades of fashion, art, and lifestyle in general. Gibson's Neuromancer imagines the emergence of a mass digital collective consciousness in an unspecified future. These data take a shape that, when artificial intelligence is inserted into the mix, becomes some sort of deity. Can't wrap your head around it? Try making it into a film.

10 WORLD PEACE I can't wait for this one either.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Apr 1, 2001
Words:1001
Previous Article:PUBLIC RELATIONS.(Nicolas Bourriaud)(Interview)
Next Article:UP THE ORGANIZATION.(Joep Van Lieshout, Atelier van Lieshout)(Interview)



Related Articles
Inez van Lamsweerde. (Dutch photographer's works)
Photographers Inez van Lamsweerde/Vinoodh Matadin, designer Veronique Leroy.
Claude Wampler. (performance at the P.S. 122, New York)
Best of 2000.
GILLES AND THEM.(graphic artists Mathias Augustyniak and Michael Amzalag)(Brief Article)
Archaeology of Elegance, 1980-1999: 20 years of fashion photography; Deichtorhallen. (Hamburg).(Brief Article)
HONORED TEACHER TO BE SEEN ON STYLE NETWORK SPECIAL.(News)
Brush stroke: David Rimanelli on John Waters and Bruce Hainley.(Art--A Sex Book; Crackpot: The Obsessions of John Waters)(Book Review)
Inez van Lamsweerde.(My Pop)(Brief Article)(Interview)
FOR MISS VAN, KIDS' MISTAKES ARE PART OF REACHING NEW HEIGHTS.(News)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles