Posts Tagged ‘Art’

‘Very long dong’ mural bolsters German media rivalry

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The “Very-Long-Dong” is not a North Korean rocket, but rather a mural on the side of a Berlin office building.

Berlin artist Peter Lenk created the “mural” some months ago at the behest of the TAZ newspaper, as a “shot at the bow” so to speak and to mock the Bild, whose building is right across the street.

It is more specifically aimed at the Bild editor a Mr Kai Diekmann  – an unfortunate “parody rich” phallic last name in English were one wishing to go that route…. which we are not about to do here.

This all concerns a massive phallus attached to an image of Mr Diekmann which extends upward about 4 stories. His longer than life “member” features in the centre of a huge satirical mural on the outside wall of the TAZ newspaper building.

Bild has  probably more than 3 million daily readers [or look at the pictures at least] and offers its buyers the usual middle of the road-pabulum of sex, sport, crime and milk-toast right wing political reporting.

The nearest English-language equivalent could be the British “Sun”.

Its motto of being “independent” and “non-partisan” are prominently displayed below its logo . However, as with most newspapers who feel the urge to prominently advertise this particular fact - they are just the opposite.

TAZ [Tagezeitung] sells circa 65,000 papers a day and appeals mainly to leftwing and non-mainstream alternative life styles readers.  It has a history of posturing and doing anything to raise the ire of the conservative German establishment – most of whom live far outside of Berlin.

Four months ago, Taz hired Ms Ines Pohl, as its new editor. She has been hired to steer the paper back to its left-wing origins, and feels [rightfully] that the joke is now over and let’s move on to being a serious paper again.

She has now openly rejected the mural and wants it removed. However it seems it may be a hard sell to some of those in the paper who want “the penis to stay!”

Tedious Werner Herzog honored by being appointed head of BERLINALE jury-panel

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The German film-maker Werner Herzog, aged 67, will head the committee that select the winners of the 2010 Golden and Silver Bear awards next February.

Werner Herzog is perhaps the most mediocre, vacuous and tedious of modern German directors – not as cerebral and intellectual as his German contemporaries directors Rainer Werner Fassbaender and Volker Schlöndorff and not as popular and dynamic as Wim Wenders or Margaretha von Trotta.

In spite of his limited talents Werner Herzog has made more than 50 films in almost 50-years of movie making. His feature films inculde; Aguirre – The Wrath of God, Nosferatu the Vampyre, and Fitzcarraldo. Two of his films were entered in the Venice film festival of this year; Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans – with Nicolas Cage, and My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done, with Willem Dafoe and Michael Shannon.

The Berlin film festival -in German known as the Berlinale – is considered in international film-makers importance just below Cannes and alongside Venice.  Scotish actress Tilda Swinton hosted last year’s Berlinale.

The Berlinale will run in 2010 from February 11th til 21st.

Berlin Wall, Israeli Wall and Mexican Border wall – All wrong!!!

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

What is probably the most interesting, compelling and artistic commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall is the WALL PROJECT taking place in Los Angeles.

Artists have provided works that show clear analogies between the Berlin Wall and the wall the Israelis have erected along the border with the occupied Palestinians and the wall the US has erected along the Mexican border.

This Berlin Wall anniversary remembrance is being organized by the Wende Museum, a private entity, in collaboration with the City of Los Angeles.

Included will be “The Wall Across Wilshire,” scheduled for the 8th November in which a 20m replica of the Berlin Wall will be re-constructed on a part of Wilshire Blvd. in front of the County Museum of Art at midnight.

This commemoration has put the former US president/actor and Hollywood resident Ronald Reagan’s famous slogan “Tear down this wall!” into historical perspective as a somewhat opportunistic rant – while the US government is complacent in the building of the Israeli wall and actually building the wall on the Mexican border.

Private Soviet art exhibition in Berlin

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

For the first time in Europe, a private art exhibition is being presented, followed by an auction,which is focused specifically on narrating the art historical period of Socialist Realism in the former Soviet Union.

On 6 November   BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN – Art of Socialist Realism will open at the Jeschke-Van Vliet in Berlin. This exhibition will display a collection of 300 classics of this genre.   It may very well be the beginning of a revival of interest in a form that up to now has often been dismissed by arrogant Western art critics as at best “well made kitsch”, and at its worst “political propaganda”. The truth lies elsewhere because much of these works are very moving and all are well painted.

These paintings represent an extraordinary cross-section of the everyday life of that time in the Soviet Union and conjure up the anxieties and emotionality of artists in an atmosphere of apparent calm and determination

From the web site of the the Gallery:

These works are primarily representations of labor in all areas of life [in agriculture, in industry, in schools, etc.] and additionally, landscapes, portraits and history paintings of epic scenes reaching from the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 up to works dealing with World War II. The paintings were created between the end of the 1930s and the 1980s in the U.S.S.R. and are part of a sizeable and unconventional private Italian collection, which consists of 600 works that have been collected over the years.

The purpose of the exhibition is to present this period in the absence of any political motive: Artists in the Soviet Union were civil servants and were therefore not permitted to sell or give away their works, because these were legally the property of the state, as the patron that had commissioned them. Every artist managed to create a space, in which to express his or her humanity and world-view, despite working for the state on official commissions. Because of this, those viewers who are willing to search carefully, will find interesting elements that can be drawn from various details in the works. Extraordinary discoveries were made in the course of restoration and conservation work. These discoveries offer sufficient evidence to prove the importance of this historical period and its art:

The canvases are made of crude materials: mostly burlap or pieces of canvas taken from military tents and sewn together. These materials were adapted for their new function by hand on the basis of traditional techniques.

Industrial products were not used to prime the majority of the canvases either instead, this was done by hand with crude materials such as cement powder from construction sites or boiled vegetable oil.

Even though they were executed according to precise instructions from the political leadership of the U.S.S.R., the artworks testify to humanity and individual experience to an extraordinary and exciting mixture of struggle, joy and sorrow. They were often carried out with an amazing mastery of technique: Special analyses have revealed that there are no preliminary drawings under the paint surface. This offers a clear proof of the talent of these artists, who maintained proper proportions and produced stylistically consistent works, even while working with a palette knife in a virtuoso painterly manner on gigantic paintings of up to 10 m². A large number of notes on the reverse sides of the canvases relate anecdotes about various talented artists, who had to work at other jobs in order to feed themselves and their families: an interesting and poetic trace and indication of lived history. (Excerpt from a written statement by the curators of the exhibition)

To view the paintings on the Internet:

http://www.kunstauktion-berlin.de/aktuelle_auktion.html

World Art Prices on way down!

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

“Art is essentially the affirmation, the blessing, and the deification of existence,” once said the German philosopher Friedrich Nietsche. What he didn’t mention is that art is also a luxury, one that many people nowadays unfortunately can no longer afford.

The renowned Miami-based French art dealer Emmanuel Perrotin’s windows are now shut, with only the promise to reopen in December for Art Basel Miami Beach. Sotheby’s has fired workers. Christie’s modern, impressionist and contemporary art auction pieces sold at often 50% less than their estimated values. 2009′s Moscow World Fine Art Fair, a marker of Russia’s recent rise in status, has been canceled. Every you look, art sales are suffering.

Despite this rather bleak international outlook of art sales that glares at one at the first glance, there are a few bright spots. One such is the Bridge Art Fair which is planning to come to Berlin again this year. OTA-Berlin was the home of the Berlin ArtFair in 2008.

Author: CA

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