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Palais Coup.


MIRIAM ROSEN ON THE CENTRE DE LA JEUNE CREATION

PARIS'S NEWEST CONTEMPORARY ARTS CENTER The Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) is a pioneering contemporary art museum located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The CAC is a non-collecting museum that focuses on new developments in painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, performance art and new media.  won't open until September Until September is a 1984 romantic drama set in France. It stars Karen Allen as an American tourist in Paris who falls in love with a married Frenchman (Thierry Lhermitte). External links , but it's already making waves on the French arts scene, if in ways not necessarily anticipated by its initiators. As announced by Minister of Culture Catherine Trautmann Mme Catherine Trautmann (born on 15 January 1951 in Strasbourg) is a former Minister of Culture of France and now Member of the European Parliament for the East of France.

She was elected as mayor of Strasbourg in 1989, re-elected in 1995, then defeated in 2001.
 last April, the Centre de la Jeune Creation will be a showcase for young, edgy French art. With about five million dollars in seed money, the new center will take up some 3,000 square meters of exhibition space in the now-vacant west wing of the Palais de Tokyo The Palais de Tokyo is a contemporary art museum in Paris, France. The museum is situated in the eponymous building, the "Palais de Tokyo" ( , the 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,
 complex built in 1937 to house the Musee National d'Art Moderne mo·derne  
adj.
Striving to be modern in appearance or style but lacking taste or refinement; pretentious.



[French, modern, from Old French; see modern.]

Adj. 1.
 (which moved to the Pompidou in 1977) and the Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris Ville de Paris may refer to:
  • Paris
  • French ship Ville de Paris (1764)
  • HMS Ville de Paris
 (MAMVP), which still occupies the east wing.

The idea of such a center--on the model of London's Whitechapel Art Gallery, Rotterdam's Witte de With, or New York's P.S. I--was developed by Guy Amsellem, head of the ministry's visual arts department. While acknowledging that the stately Palais de Tokyo is perhaps not the ideal site for an alternative space, Amsellem stresses the center's innovative aspects relative to existing public institutions in France--autonomous status, minimal staff and funding, and, above all, directors who are to be recruited from outside the usual arts-administration circuit and limited to three-year, nonrenewable tenures.

One of the first responses to the announcement of the future center was a petition, signed by some 150 artists of greater and lesser renown, calling on Trautmann to take the ministry's initiative to its logical conclusion and put an artist in charge of the new space. Several months later, Suzanne Page, director of the MAMVP, which has had its own showcase for contemporary art (l'ARC) since 1967, launched a pre-emptive strike on her future neighbor by inviting the rising stars of the alternative art scene (who would not normally be seen in that institutional setting) to participate in a show, "Zones d'activation collective."

For its first three years, the center will be entrusted to a team of independent curator-critics, Nicolas Bourriaud and Jerome Sans, after their joint proposal was selected over eight others. Sans envisions the west wing as "a space of experimentation rather than consecration." While the program is not yet public, he indicates that the vast quarters will permit a staggered calendar of events, juxtaposing visual arts, music, fashion, film, design, architecture, and literature. "An institution isn't necessarily a mausoleum mausoleum (môsəlē`əm), a sepulchral structure or tomb, especially one of some size and architectural pretension, so called from the sepulcher of that name at Halicarnassus, Asia Minor, erected (c.352 B.C. ," Sans maintains. "I've always thought that it's possible to rethink everything, to reinvent everything from the inside."
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Author:ROSEN, MIRIAM
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2000
Words:422
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