KALEIDOSCOPE Magazine 18 — Summer 2013
Softcover, 228 pp. + three special inserts, offset 4/4, 220 x 287 mm
English edition
ISSN 2038-4807
Published by KALEIDOSCOPE Press
$12.00 ·
KALEIDOSCOPE Issue 18 (summer 2013), highlighting Andra Ursuta, Shanzhai Biennial, Sergei Tcherepnin, Yngve Holen and Petrit Halilaj; investigating an updated notion of materiality; exploring the curatorial practice of Massimiliano Gioni; featuring our regulars, tips, and three special inserts.
HIGHLIGHTS
The issue’s opening section of HIGHLIGHTS features Andra Ursuta, whose practice is understood by Joanna Fiduccia as committed to annihilating sculpture’s distance from our world; the fashion-label-cum-art-project Shanzhai Biennial, whose tangible products, explains Kevin McGarry, are eclipsed by their collateral evidence; Sergei Tcherepnin, described by Lawrence Kumpf as creating a complex system of bodily configurations and social situations; Yngve Holen, whose works are read by Pablo Larios as sentient beings concerned with frustrated circulation, technological growth and associative networking; and Petrit Halilaj whose practice is framed by Elena Filipovic as rejecting pathos in favor of an intimate and critical inflection of the political.
MAIN THEME
This section, titled Post-i-Meta-Hyper-Materiality, brings together a substantial group of artists who introduce the concept of emotional and bodily alienation within the discourse dominated by the readymade, corporate art pursued by many of their digital-native peers. The elusive sculptural works of Nicholas Deshayes, Steve Bishop, Marlie Mul, Magali Reus, Ben Schumacher and Alice Channer are framed by Karen Archey as deeply engaged with materiality and production processes and imbued with bodily allusions, while also commenting on issues of abstraction, dispersion, consumption and technology. A visual essay curated by fashion futurologist Veronica So reveals how, from sculptures designed by digital simulations to edible candies formed by human body scans, the appearance of 3D printing kicks off a range of playful experiments with technology and originality. Also in this section, Alice Channer talks to Rebecca Geldard about the starting point of each work, which she describes as “a moment of material seduction”; and artists Pamela Rosenkratz and Alisa Baremboym discuss physicality versus technology and the shifting boundaries between our bodies and the external world in a cross-interview by Ruba Katrib.
MONO
Comprising an essay by Jonathan Griffin, an interview by Francesco Manacorda and a photographic portrait by Ari Marcopoulos, this issue’s MONO is devoted to the Director of the International Art Exhibition at this year’s Venice Biennale, Massimiliano Gioni. Pragmatic bordering on opportunistic throughout his adventurous career, and yet described as “a hopeless romantic” by one of his most affectionate colleagues, Gioni states that his own failure to understand is what fuels his interest in art. Generally averse to chronological or historically comprehensive presentations and departing from the tautology of the masterpiece, he is instead a proponent of Outsider and self-taught art. His exhibitions, which he defines as products of a collective intelligence, are often concerned with the position of art within our image-based society, as well as the sites of an exploration of interior worlds, dream states and psychological visions.
REGULARS
Finally, it this issue’s REGULARS, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Simon Castets interview emerging artist Amalia Ulman; Gary Carrion-Murayari stages a three-way interview with Valentin Carron and Isabelle Cornaro; Felix Burrichter meets design critic Alice Rawsthorn; Leung Chi Wo, David Clarke and Lam Tung-pang engage in a round table about the art scene in Hong Kong then and now; finally, Laura McLean-Ferristraces the legacy of folk in British contemporary art from the exhibition Black Eyes and Lemonade to the practice of Jeremy Deller.
SPECIAL INSERTS
The edition is enriched by our seasonal TIPS on following, reading, listening, stopping by, meeting and visiting; as well as by three SPECIAL INSERTS, including a selection of paintings by Benjamin Senior, photographs by Jochen Lempert and collages by Sterling Ruby.
Alice Channer, Alice Rawsthorn, Alisa Baremboym, Amalia Ulman, amela Rosenkratz, Andra Ursuta, Ari Marcopoulos, Art, Ben Schumacher, Benjamin Senior, Culture, David Clarke, Distribution, Elena Filipovic, Felix Burrichter, Francesco Manacorda, Gary Carrion-Murayari, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Isabelle Cornaro, Jeremy Deller, Joanna Fiduccia, Jochen Lempert, Jonathan Griffin, KALEIDOSCOPE Press, Karen Archey, Kevin McGarry, Lam Tung-pang, Laura McLean-Ferristraces, Lawrence Kumpf, Leung Chi Wo, Magali Reus, Marlie Mul, Massimiliano Gioni, Nicholas Deshayes, Pablo Larios, Petrit Halilaj, Rebecca Geldard, Ruba Katrib, Sergei Tcherepnin, Shanzhai Biennial, Simon Castets, Sterling Ruby, Steve Bishop, Valentin Carron, Veronica So, Yngve Holen
C. Luser & Y. Holen & M. Mul, Fishfinder
Softcover, 150 pp., digital 1/1, 140 x 225 mm
Edition of 250
Published by onestar press
$50.00 · order wholesale
Hello! We are 3 artists that recently made a trip from Vienna to Reykjavik and back to amongst others take part in the Icelandic art festival “Sequences”, and an exhibition in Kunsthaus Graz, Austria. The trip was focused on documenting and drawing, which resulted in a travel blog, http://www.yngveholen.com/fishfinder/. Hand drawings by Constantin Luser (AT) and CAD drawings by Yngve Holen (NO), photography by Marlie Mul (NL). We are very interested in presenting the blog in printed form and thought One Star Press could be suitable for this. I would like to propose to meet you this week to explain the project and see if there are any possibilities to work with you, as we are in Paris until Tuesday. Hope to hear from you + kindest regards, Marlie Mul (email received by onestar press on January 12th 2007).
Constantin Luser, Marlie Mul, onestar press, Yngve Holen