Josephine Meckseper.New York-based artist Josephine Meckseper Josephine Meckseper (b.1964, Lilienthal, Germany) is an artist based in New York. Meckseper studied at Berlin University of the Arts in Berlin from 1986-1990, and completed her MFA at the California Institute of the Arts in 1992. will be included in the Lyon Biennial of Contemporary Art. opening in September. She is currently preparing for solo shows at GAVLAK, West Palm Beach; Elizabeth Dee Gallery, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of ; and Spain's Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Castilla y Leon. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 1 "THE WORLD IS EVERYTHING THAT IS THE CASE" Viennese quantum physicist Anton Zeilinger Anton Zeilinger (born on 20 May 1945 in Ried im Innkreis, Austria) is a professor of physics at the University of Vienna, previously University of Innsbruck. He is also the director of the Vienna branch of the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI). recently managed to create and move matter using crystals and light photons, paving the way for what we once mocked as "beaming" on Star Trek 2 EMPTY salons, corridors, salons, doors, doors, salons, empty chairs, deep armchairs, stairs, steps, steps, one after another, glass objects, empty glasses, a dropped glass, a glass partition, letters, a lost letter, keys on rings, numbered door keys, 309, 307, 305, 303, chandeliers, more chandeliers, pearls, mirrors, corridors without a soul in sight in Last Year at Marienbad (1961). Alain Robbe-Grillet's screenplay/nouveau roman take on Kierkegaard's 1843 existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism n. A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the narrative Repetition. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 3 LOUISE BOURGEOIS'S AND MARC CAMILLE CHAIMOWICZ'S USE OF MEMORY I'm thinking of Bourgeois's 1993 piece Cell (You Better Grow Up), which she once described as "a seven-by-seven-by-seven-foot cube, with mirrors reflecting many difficult realities, one worse than the next," and of the walls in her house on Twentieth Street, decorated with faxes and invitation cards dating from at least the '50s--faded but somehow still immediate. Chaimowicz revisits his "things past "Things Past" is an episode of , the eighth episode of the fifth season. Plot Sisko, Odo, Dax and Garak find themselves on Terok Nor during the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor. Odo admits letting 3 Bajorans be executed despite knowing they were innocent of their crimes. " brilliantly in Partial Eclipse, 1980-2003, a 180-slide projection about the loss of experience, interiors, bodies, smells, and emotions, and more famously in his scatter installation Celebration? Realife Revisited, 1972/2000. Aside from using recollection and perfume bottles in their work, these two artists have in common family ties to mathematics and the textile industry. 4 ROBERTO OHRT'S PHANTOM AVANTGARDE Considering that Debord left us marveling at enigmatic phrases like "I will never give any explanations. Now you are all alone with our secrets," it only seems fair that this impressive analysis of the Situationist International The Situationist International (SI) was a small group of international political and artistic agitators with roots in Marxism, Lettrism and the early 20th century European artistic and political avant-gardes. (to be published in English this fall by Lukas & Sternberg) devotes an entire chapter to the terminology of "situation," which Ohrt--citing Hegel, Adorno, Kierkegaard, Sartre, and Heidegger--locates somewhere between ethics and skepticism. Mean-while, the Hamburg-based Ohrt pursues his own clandestine operations: He runs the modest artist-book empire Silverbridge (with Paris-based artist Juli Susin), recently launched the magazine Matiere Premiere, and is the brains behind the eighty-six-square-foot postcontemporary portable gallery Nomadenoase. 5 ISA (1) (Instruction Set Architecture) See instruction set. (2) (Interactive Services Association) See Internet Alliance. (3) (Internet Security and Acceleration) See .NET. GENZKEN'S SLOT MACHINE Casually left on the floor at David Zwirner earlier this year, this ready-made, ready-to-use vintage slot machine seemed out of place among the rest of Genzken's work--highly crafted assemblages, low-relief wall pieces, and extraordinary sculptures made from toys and party supplies. The Berlin artist provided no further explanation, but the gallery kept a jar of change at the front desk for would-be gamblers. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 6 PROMISE LAND This animated short about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
act of terrorism, terrorism, terrorist act - the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political , Ali the rioter), and three Israelis (Eitan the thug, Aaron the settler, Gaddy the soldier), this traditionally drawn cartoon tops South Park for crass humor. If only it could become a television series, amplifying animation's status as one of the last refuges for political satire in the US. One hopes Promise Land creator Gili Dolev, a thirty-year-old former Israeli Army conscript, already has some offers. 7 YES TO ALL Seen recently in the form of a rain-bow-colored neon sign at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris, this seemingly affirmative slogan has become a recurring theme for Sylvie Fleury--a backhanded comment on a consumer culture in which customization has become the only "alternative" to branding and mass production. I find Fleury's ideas more relevant than ever, as we enter the Warhol-predicted era when "all department stores will become museums, and all museums will become department stores." MoMA versus MoA (Minneapolis's Mall of America Mall of America (also MOA, MoA, or the Megamall) is a shopping mall located in the Twin Cities suburb of Bloomington, Minnesota. It is just southeast of the junction of Interstate 494 and Minnesota State Highway 77, and is across the interstate from the ) comes to mind, yet Fleury has already prescribed a metaphorical solution for our latecapitalist plight, having once staged a shopwindow installation entitled Tout doit disparaitre (Everything Must Go). [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 8 INTO THE STREETS True artistic revolution sometimes finds its ideal form not in the place of production, the museum, or the gallery but in the streets. For example: Valie Export's Tap and Touch Cinema, 1968, in which the artist, a box attached to her naked chest, invited pedestrians in several European cities to "visit the cinema"; or when Daniel Buren, for his 1975 piece Seven Ballets in Manhattan, sent people into the street carrying his striped signs, as if to protest an abstract cause. More recently, Aleksandra Mir hid a sound system in a Copenhagen square that played prerecorded pre·re·cord tr.v. pre·re·cord·ed, pre·re·cord·ing, pre·re·cords To record (a television program, for example) at an earlier time for later presentation or use. Adj. 1. male wolf whistles (Pick Up [Oh Baby!], 1997). 9 BIDOUN Conceptually indebted to Edward Said's "case against" Orientalism, this new, high-gloss magazine rejects traditional Western misconceptions of the Middle East. Depicting Cairo "war panoramas" and featuring Arab underground chic, Iranian editor Lisa Farjam and her staff succeed in making sheiks look like rock stars, cities like Dubai and Beirut like places to be, and the rest of us like fools, stuck with our cliches. 10 NEW YORK'S BEST PERMANENT EXHIBITION At Laundrobot on East Sixth Street, owner Yuri Blanarovich, in collaboration with Cooper Union student Robin Randisi, displays single socks found in his facility. Framed and hung over the washers and dryers, the display reminds me of the absurdly reductionist re·duc·tion·ism n. An attempt or tendency to explain a complex set of facts, entities, phenomena, or structures by another, simpler set: "For the last 400 years science has advanced by reductionism ... explanation of entropy (socks strewn strew tr.v. strewed, strewn or strewed, strew·ing, strews 1. To spread here and there; scatter: strewing flowers down the aisle. 2. about a room) I was given in high school, which still haunts me from time to time. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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