Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

LAST SUPPER twist

In my research for the Religion exhibition at WHcreation, I came across a few refreshing remakes of the iconic painting Last Supper by Leonardo Da Vinci.

We exhibited the beautiful LAST SUPPER IN GAZA by Indian Artist Vivek Vilasini:


Here are a couple more examples I respect

Last Supper by Russian artist Raoef Mamedov:
























The Three Realms by Chinese Artist Cui Xiuwen:


Thursday, November 24, 2011

THE ONE AND ONLY - BILL VIOLA

I can not write a blog about art and design which inspires me without featuring my idol, Bill Viola. This video artist needs no introduction. He is internationally recognized as one of today’s leading artists in the field of video art.

In 1994 I was lucky enough to sit at his lecture. Listening to this humble man talk about his process as a video artist, completely changed my view on contemporary art.

I thought it would be interesting to post here a few of his online interviews about his work. It gives a gimps to his thought and work process.

artist website: http://www.billviola.com/index.htm








Saturday, November 19, 2011

The Clock, 2010 by Christian Marclay

Duration: 24 hours

a few weeks ago I was fortunate enough to watch a piece of the video art masterpiece The Clock by the American artist Christian Marclay currently based in London.

Produced over the course of two years, Christian Marclay's The Clock combines clips from thousands of films into a 24-hour video collage that also functions as a working clock.

It is so rare to experience an art work and feel you have just witnessed a current masterpiece which will profoundly make its imprint on art history. I will never forget the experience of sitting on the floor in a crowded room watching all the movie bits patched together into a captivating statement about time and western culture.







Monday, November 7, 2011

Charles Crafft - contemporary souvenirs

American artist Charles Krafft utilizes the traditional techniques and materials of decorative Delft ceramic painting to explore the sometimes-Orwellian realities of our times. Images of natural and socio-political catastrophes decorate his ceramic objects. In addition to ironic commemorative plates and plaques, Krafft makes porcelain weapons and ammunition.

Krafft's insidiously clever juxtapositions of traditional ceramic technologies with his darkly humorous commentary on world events and media manipulation have brought him significant international acclaim.









Monday, October 24, 2011

ZBIGNIEW LIBERA - Lego. Concentration Camp, 1996

Zbigniew Libera is a Polish artist. His works - photographs, video films, installations, objects and drawings - piercingly play with the stereotypes of contemporary culture. His work  "Lego Concentration Camp is designed to reveal the mechanisms of upbringing, education and cultural conditioning.


Lego. Concentration Camp, 1996

Set of 7 boxes of LEGO bricks, different sizes
Each box contains a set of bricks, that can be used to build the element of a concentration camp as shown on the box. All elements in the sets as well as those depicted on the boxes have either been taken from the mass-produced sets of LEGO bricks, or have been slightly altered by the artist. The prisoners are played by smiling skeletons from the "Pirate" set, while slightly modified figurines from the "Police Station" set appear as tormenters. We also encounter the captain of the camp and the psychopathic doctor, conducting experiments on prisoners.

from the artist website: 



lecture by Zbigniew Libera:





images of Lego. Concentration Camp


































Sunday, October 23, 2011

BOOGIE - confronting photography


Boogie was born and raised in Belgrade. Boogie began documenting rebellion and unrest during the civil war that ravaged his country during the 90s. He has been living and working in NY since 1998.

online interview with BOOGIE by Keith McQuirter:

a warning sign for a snitch put up by the Latin Kings. Brooklyn, 2005

















Sonia, seconds after taking a hit of crack. Brooklyn 2004
















Martie, a crack addict mother of 4, bathing her newborn. Brooklyn, 2005
















from the skinheads series
















artist website: http://www.artcoup.com/

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Leonardo Erlich - inspirational visual tricks


the SWIMMING POOL, 2001 by Erlich

Leandro Erlich, born in 1973 in Buenos Aires, has been exhibiting his work internationally for over ten years. He represented Argentina at the 49th Venice Biennale (2001), where he showed “Swimming Pool”

Erlich has constructed a full-size pool, complete with all its trappings, including a deck and a ladder. When approached from above, visitors are confronted with a surreal scene: people, fully clothed, can be seen standing, walking, and breathing beneath the surface of the water. It is only when visitors enter the basement that they recognize that the pool is empty,







LA TORRE, 2007 by Erlich


LE CABINET DU PSY, 2005 by erlich

check out the artist's website: http://www.leandroerlich.com.ar/




Monday, March 8, 2010

EMERGENCY ROOM – artists give emergency treatments to current events

Emergency Room is a constantly changing exhibition space commenting on current events. Emergency Room creates a hotline to the public and mass media. Everyday there is a new reaction and new reasons for audience and media to tune back in. It is an international movement, from internationally acclaimed artists to local upcoming artists – all meeting each other on location, working together to meet their deadline. ER is encouraging artists to collaborate and become part of the energized community by tearing down the limitations and boundaries of the traditional customs of the art world.

Emergency Room has been successfully launched in New York, PS1 / MOMA 2007 ; Berlin, Galerie Olaf Stueber 2006 ; Denmark, Nikolaj Contemporary2006 ; Athens, Ileana Tounta Gallery 2007 ; Napoli , PAN 2009 ; Paris , Galerie Taïss (2008 ), Hanoi at the university of fines art 2009


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, January 19, 2010


ART INTERACTS


For more than a decade artists experiment with new media to create art which explores its existence with the viewer‘s participation. In this post I would like to show different type of artistic experiments which stretch the boundaries of relevant media with a large and contained audience, on the street exploring actual and virtual tourism, two photographers using a live blog to share and explore blindness and photography, and experimenting with social media like Facebook and YOUTUBE.

Enjoy…

TaxiLink Project (by Lila Chitayat and Alon Chitayat )is an interactive installation which enables users to experience an authentic distant taxi ride. ‬ Sitting in the static TaxiLink booth, the ‬passengers‭ join a live tour in and around the old city of Jerusalem, experiencing a personal interaction with a real-life taxi driver.‭ Through live video and audio transmitting from the driving cab ‭, ‬the ‬passenger‭ can now experience a genuine back seat ride of Jerusalem and its breath taking surroundings.














THRUYOU by Kutiman. Kutiman is a brilliant musician who edits different YOUTUBE music videos made by common people and makes it his own music. With great imagination he combines little pieces of sound from YouTube, using social media with all its hidden treasures to make excellent music and funny music videos. No words can describe it, just take a look and listen:















Placement / Displacement (by Edo Paulus and Luna Maurer) is a model in which people simulate the logic of a computer system. This living model consists of entities (spectators) that are bound by rules. When the rules cause the individual entities to react on each other, a whole comes into existence that is constantly in motion.















PHOTOTALK is a project of two photographers – Laetitia Boulud and Alex De Jong, who discuss each other’s photographs. They develop a joint body of work named: ‘Seeing Is Touching’. The main focus of their joint work is the interplay between seeing and not seeing in their photographic practice:

Laetitia Boulud can see, Alex De Jong is blind.












COMMENT LIKE SHARE (Facebook art) - During one week artists Alice Schwab & Sara Bomans visualized the Facebook profile of the exhibition-visitor and their mutual connections.

It is a social mapping of that precise week; COMMENT-LIKE-SHARE becomes a report about friends and their connections, the profile of invisible and hidden links. A growing wall, created by the user and inviting privacy to share.





Wednesday, January 6, 2010


2010 | the year of DO IT OURSELVES

On the 1st of January 2010 I read in a respectful newspaper, a list of the HOT trends that will define the new decade. One of the HOT trends is a new movement of DO IT OURSELVES. It was written that this tendency is expressed by individuals volunteering to develop services and applications for public use, usually non-profit.

Although I already wrote about WHcreation in this blog, I would like to present it again in this context of the DO IT OURSELVES trend. I think these new initiatives in the art scene are worthy of appreciation, so here are some examples you can enjoy.

WHcreation is a non-profit international online art gallery, I created with my partner Limor Weisberg.
Exhibiting multimedia artistic discussion by artists and designers from around the world. Including: painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, video art, performance, installation, design, architecture, commix, illustration, animation, graphic art, and sound.
Each subject is presented as a WH question in a call for entries sent by email.

The first exhibition “WHat is authentic?” Is now available at: http://www.whcreation.org/

















Bertha Mag is an online non-profit photography magazine: http://www.berthamag.com/index.php?/2/statement/







PechaKucha Night was devised in Tokyo in 2003 as an event for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public. It has turned into a massive celebration, with events happening in hundreds of cities around the world, inspiring creatives worldwide. Drawing its name from the Japanese term for the sound of "chit chat", it rests on a presentation format that is based on a simple idea: 20 images x 20 seconds. It's a format that makes presentations concise, and keeps things moving at a rapid pace.


PechKucha global site: http://www.pecha-kucha.org/

PechKucha in TLV: http://www.pechakuchatlv.com/













A5 magazine, presenting art and design from around the world in an A5 printed magazine. Each issue has a different concept and design. http://www.thea5magazine.com/
















Forno is an independent printed magazine dedicated to the art of sex. Each issue presents a different sex aspect. Forno invites artists of all media to participate by creating one double spread according to the concept of the issue. http://www.forno-magazine.com/