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Bruce
Mae Project

Massive Change is a project
by Bruce Mau Design and the Institute without
Boundaries, commissioned and organized by the
Vancouver Art Gallery.
Design has emerged as one of the world's most powerful forces. It
has placed us at the beginning of an new period of human possibility,
where all economies and ecologies are becoming global, relational,
and interconnected.
Massive Change online is moving into a new phase, from communication
to action. Join the project and connect with people around the world
to share your ideas, discuss the critical issues, and collaborate
on changing the world.
Massivechange.com
Nov 30, 2005
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Donald
Judd's Chinati Foundation

The Chinati Foundation/La Fundación Chinati
is a contemporary art museum based upon the ideas
of its founder, Donald Judd. The specific intention
of Chinati is to preserve and present to the public
permanent large-scale installations by a limited
number of artists located in Marfa, Texas. The
emphasis is on works in which art and the surrounding
landscape are inextricably linked. As Judd wrote
in the foundation’s catalogue:
It takes a great deal of time
and thought to install work carefully. This should
not always be thrown away. Most art is fragile
and some should be placed and never moved again.
Somewhere a portion of contemporary art has to
exist as an example of what the art and its context
were meant to be. Somewhere, just as the platinumiridium
meter guarantees the tape measure, a strict measure
must exist for the art of this time and place.
The Chinati Foundation is located
on 340 acres of land on the site of former Fort
D.A. Russell in Marfa, Texas. Construction and
installation at the site began in 1979 with initial
assistance from the Dia Art Foundation in New York.
The Chinati Foundation opened to the public in
1986 as an independent, non–profit, publicly
funded institution. Chinati was originally conceived
to exhibit the work of Donald Judd, John Chamberlain
and Dan Flavin. The collection has since been expanded
to include work by a limited number of other artists.
Today the collection on permanent view consists
of 15 outdoor concrete works by Donald Judd, 100
aluminum works by Judd housed in two converted
artillery sheds, 25 sculptures by John Chamberlain,
and an installation by Dan Flavin occupying six
former army barracks. Also on view are pieces by
Carl Andre, Ingólfur Arnarsson, Roni Horn,
Ilya Kabakov, Richard Long, Claes Oldenburg and
Coosje van Bruggen, David Rabinowitch, and John
Wesley. Each artist’s work is installed in
a separate building on the museum’s grounds.
Temporary exhibitions feature modern and contemporary
art of diverse media.
The
Chinati Foundation Online
Artnet.com – Donald
Judd
Nov 29, 2005 |
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Ingo Maurer's
Snowflake

Ingo Maurer is well-known in the world for his
unmistakable lighting fixtures: designs with strong
emotional resonances and a seemingly universal
appeal. Maurer, trained as a typographer and graphic
designer, has long been fascinated by the bare
light bulb. In 1966 he designed his first lighting
fixture, titled "Bulb", which was, in
fact, a bulb within a bulb. The bulb remains a
recurrent theme in Maurer's work, as does paper,
which Maurer considers the most becoming of all
materials.
This year Ingo Maurer designed a Unicef Crystal
Snowflake with Baccarat crystal.
Upon arrival in New York City on the weekend of
November 19, the fixture will be suspended above
the intersection of 5th Avenue and 57th Street
and anchored by four of New York's most prestigious
retailers: Tiffany & Co.; LVMH & Louis
Vuitton; Bergdorf Goodman; and The Crown Building.
It will be lit on November 28 during an outdoor
ceremony open to the general public.
Ingo-maurer.com
Unicef
Article
Nov 28, 2005 |
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Issey Miyake
Miyake was born in Hiroshima,
Japan in 1938. He established the Miyake Design
Studio in 1970 and started to show his line at
the Paris Collections in 1973. Miyake's basic tenets
for making clothes has always been the idea of
creating a garment from 'one piece of cloth', and
the exploration of the space between the human
body and the cloth that covers it. His approach
to design has always been to strike a consistent
balance between tradition and innovation, handcrafts
and new technology.
PLEATS PLEASE, which was born
in 1993, is a radical but eminently practical and
universal form of contemporary clothing that combines
technology, functionality and beauty. PLEATS PLEASE
is exhibited at the Pompidou Center, Paris as the
firstexample of clothing design, currently on view
as part of an exhibitionentitled: BIG BANG: Destruction
et Creation dans l'art du XX Siecle show.
In 1998, Miyake embarked upon
a new project called A-POC (A Piece of Cloth) with
Dai Fujiwara and a team of young designers. He
is challenging the way in which clothing is made
using new process that harnesses computer technology
to industrial knitting or weaving machines to create
clothing beginning with a single piece of thread.
Miyake established the Miyake Issey Foundation
with the authorization of the Ministry of Education
and Science, in February of 2004.
Issey
Miyake
Pleats
Please Collection
Nov 27, 2005 |
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Egon Schiele
at Neue

On view Oct 21, 2005 through Feb 20, 2006
Egon Schiele was born June 12, 1890, in Tulln, Austria. After attending
school in Krems and Klosterneuburg, he enrolled in the Akademie der
Bildenden Künste in Vienna in 1906. Here he studied painting and
drawing but was frustrated by the school’s conservatism. In 1907,
he met Gustav Klimt, who encouraged him and influenced his work. Schiele
left the Akademie in 1909 and founded the Neukunstgruppe with other
dissatisfied students. Upon Klimt’s invitation, Schiele exhibited
at the 1909 Vienna Kunstschau, where he encountered the work of Edvard
Munch, Jan Toroop, Vincent van Gogh, and others. On the occasion of
the first exhibition of the Neukunstgruppe in 1909 at the Piska Salon,
Vienna, Schiele met the art critic and writer Arthur Roessler, who
befriended him and wrote admiringly of his work. In 1910, he began
a long friendship with the collector Heinrich Benesch. By this time,
Schiele had developed a personal expressionist portrait and landscape
style and was receiving a number of portrait commissions from the Viennese
intelligentsia.
Seeking isolation, Schiele left Vienna in 1911
to live in several small villages; he concentrated
increasingly on self-portraits and allegories of
life, death, and sex and produced erotic watercolors.
In 1912, he was arrested for “immortality” and “seduction”;
during his 24-day imprisonment, he executed a number
of poignant watercolors and drawings. Schiele participated
in various group exhibitions, including those of
the Neukunstgruppe in Prague in 1910 and Budapest
in 1912; the Sonderbund, Cologne, in 1912; and
several Secession shows in Munich, beginning in
1911. In 1913, the Galerie Hans Goltz, Munich,
mounted Schiele’s first solo show. A solo
exhibition of his work took place in Paris in 1914.
The following year, Schiele married Edith Harms
and was drafted into the Austrian army. He painted
prolifically and continued to exhibit during his
military service. His solo show at the Vienna Secession
of 1918 brought him critical acclaim and financial
success. He died several months later in Vienna,
at age 28, on October 31, 1918, a victim of influenza,
which had claimed his wife three days earlier.
Neue
Galerie
Nov 26, 2005 |
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Fernando and
Humberto Campana

05 Degrees of Separation
Presented by Moss Gallery, in conjunction with design.05 Miami
On view December 1-5, 2005
Establishing within the 16,000 foot space 5 distinct "theatrical
zones", each containing numerous "stages" of
varying dimension, Moss will present the work of
5 design artists/studios: "XXXL, Monumental
work" by Gaetano Pesce (USA/Italy), special
studio pieces from the "Sushi" and "Banquette" series
by Fernando and Humberto Campana (Brazil), Tord
Boontje's (France) one-off studio pieces and "couture" pieces
created with fashion designer Alexander McQueen,
the limited-edition, prototypical stereolithography "C2" chair
by Patrick Jouin (France), and 14 one-off "burned" iconic
classics from Carlo Molino, Frank Lloyd Wright,
Charles Renee MacIntosh, Charles and Ray Eames,
and Achille Castiglioni, from the evolving work
entitled "Where There's Smoke", created
by Dutch artist Maarten Baas.
The exhibition will be open for the duration of
design.05 & Art Basel Miami Beach and all pieces
are made available for sale.
Design.05
Miami
Sponsored
by Moss
Campana
Interview
Campana
official website
Nov 25, 2005
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SAFE: MoMA

On view October 16, 2005 through January 2, 2006
at the Moma in New York City
SAFE: Design Takes On Risk, the first major design exhibition at MoMA
since its reopening in November 2004, presents more than 300 contemporary
products and prototypes designed to protect body and mind from dangerous
or stressful circumstances, respond to emergencies, ensure clarity of
information, and provide a sense of comfort and security. These objects
address the spectrum of human fears and worries, from the most mundane
to the most exceptional, from the dread of darkness and loneliness to
the threat of earthquakes and terrorist attacks.
The exhibition covers all forms of design, from
manufactured products to information architecture.
Featured products include refugee shelters, demining
equipment, baby strollers, and protective sports
gear. Designers are trained to balance risk with
protection and to mediate between disruptive change
and normalcy; good design goes hand in hand with
personal needs, providing protection and security
without sacrificing innovation and invention. SAFE
redirects the pursuit of beauty toward the appreciation
of economy of function and technology.
Organized by Paola Antonelli, Curator, and Patricia
Juncosa Vecchierini, Curatorial Assistant, Department
of Architecture and Design.
Moma.org – Safe
Exhibition
Momastore.org – Safe
Exhibition Catalog
Nov 24, 2005 |
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| Richard
Tuttle at the Whitney

On view Nov 10, 2005 through Feb 05, 2006 at the
Whitney Museum in New York City
The Art of Richard Tuttle is the first full-scale
museum retrospective spanning the nearly forty-year
career of this leading American artist of the post-minimalist
generation. Respecting Tuttle’s practice
of working in series, the exhibition covers some
fifteen bodies of work from the mid-1960s to the
present that both blur and enhance the categories
of sculpture, installation, painting, works on
paper, and artist books.
The exhibition was organized by the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art. A national tour will include
stops in major American cities through the summer
of 2007.
Whitney
Museum
Sperone
Westwater
San
Francisco Musuem of Modern Art – Tuttle
preview
Nov 23, 2005 |
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