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There is a long history of photography as sculpture in art but most don’t think of Robert Mapplethorpe’s work. They will now.  Maybe one of the most interesting shows (possibly ever conceived) of the two exhibitions now up in Paris of Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs.

“If I had been born one hundred or two hundred years ago, I might have been a sculptor, but photography is a very quick way to see, to make sculpture,”

Robert Mapplethorpe 

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“I see things like they were sculptures. It depends on how that form exists within the space”. Robert Mapplethorpe

In a single exhibition, the Musée Rodin brings together two forms of expression – Sculpture and Photography – through the works of two major artists: Robert Mapplethorpe and Auguste Rodin. Thanks to exceptional loans from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, this exhibition presents 50 sculptures by Rodin and a collection of 102 photographs, in a bold dialogue revealing the enduring nature of these great artists’ favourite themes and subjects.

There would appear to be little similarity between these two renowned figures, even though Mapplethorpe continually sought to sculpt the body through photography and Rodin used photography throughout his career.

Robert Mapplethorpe sought the perfect form, while Rodin attempted to capture a sense of movement in inanimate materials. There is no spontaneity in Mapplethorpe’s work, everything is constructed, whereas Rodin retains the traces of his touch and takes advantage of the accidental. One was attracted to men, the other to women, obsessively in both cases. But this did not stop Mapplethorpe from photographing female nudes, or Rodin from sculpting many male bodies.

Here, however, the differences between these two artists are instantly transformed into an unexpected dialogue. The curators have chosen seven themes, common to the work of both, revealing connections in form, theme and aesthetic. Movement and Tension, Black and White/Light and Shadow, Eroticism and Damnation are just some of the major issues running through the works of the two artists.

This exhibition invites visitors to challenge the dialogue established by the curators, and to make their own comparisons. This “sculpture and photography” approach is unprecedented, the first time such a confrontation has been presented, and looks at both photography and sculpture from a new angle. In parallel with this, the Réunion des musées nationaux is organising a Mapplethorpe retrospective at the Grand Palais, from 26 March to 13 July 2014.

Exhibition curators

  • Hélène Pinet Head of Photography Collections at the Musée Rodin
  • Judith Benhamou-Huet Art critic and journalist
  • Hélène Marraud Assistant curator, responsible for sculptures at the Musée Rodin

 

via Musée Rodin

 

Mapplethorpe & Rodin Exhibition / Paris

The winners of the World Photography Awards were announced this past week.  My Light Projections were lucky enough to be included with this very talented bunch. 10 winners were chosen from over 140,000 entries worldwide. Touring Exhibition with hard cover book.  Nice online magazine of winner images and project descriptions here.  My Award is here.

wpa

 

A few press articles below:

http://www.bbc.com/news/in-pictures-27237898

http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2014/may/01/sony-world-photography-awards-in-pictures

http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/30/travel/gallery/sony-world-photography-awards/

http://www.bjp-online.com/2014/05/sony-world-photography-awards-announces-winners/

http://petapixel.com/2014/05/01/world-photography-organisation-announces-this-years-winners-of-its-14-categories/

http://fotografiamagazine.com/winners-of-2014-sony-world-photography-awards/

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/10798780/In-pictures-Professional-winners-of-2014-Sony-World-Photography-Awards.html

 

 

 

 

World Photography Awards Winners Announced!

Going well beyond the simple document and using time as a visual key into the work, Amy Elkins has made an astounding group of images about capital punishment titled: Black is the Day, Black is the Night.

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Photographer Amy Elkins has won the 2014 Aperture Portfolio Prize for two bodies of work exploring capital punishment. The Aperture Foundation announced the prize today.

For her series “Parting Words,” Elkins utilized the text of the last words of executed prisoners to reconstruct their mug shots and portraits. “These briefest of statements resonate with the micro-narratives of entire lives, tragic crimes, and opportunities and potential squandered,” writes Aperture Books Publisher Lesley A. Martin in a statement announcing Elkins’ award.

To create her second series on capital punishment, “Black is the Day, Black is the Night,” Elkins corresponded with death-row inmates and created images based on those conversations. In her series she combines these images with photographs of the physical letters, and with portraits of the inmates which she obscures digitally according to the amount of time the inmate has been incarcerated. “As viewers, we are invited to puzzle over an assortment of clues, including reenactments, exhibits submitted for our considerations, partial evidence, and statements both leading and misleading,” Martin writes.

via PDN

 

 

Amy Elkins Wins Aperture Portfolio Prize

Music Break: Kelis

March 30, 2014 — Leave a comment

The down home Diva Kelis showed up at SXSW 2014 with a new album called Food and a food truck. She is the real deal…

Here is what Rolling Stone had to say…

BEST REINVENTION, R&B DIVISION: Kelis

Ten years after her Neptunes-produced sugar-bomb “Milkshake” and four since her EDM diva turn on Flesh Tone, Kelis has morphed again — this time into an earth mother R&B priestess more about sustenance than confections. Fronting a big band — including a four piece brass/wind section and backing singers — in robes and gold-dust makeup, thick mane of hair to her waist, she segued non-stop through a set of new soul vamps with an Afro-Caribbean undertow and an overall sound recalling 1970s Stevie Wonder. If the songs fell short of that mark, she put them over with spunk and charm, which should keep bringing the boys to the yard.

 

 

Music Break: Kelis

Just like Hollywood, when the art market focus’s its lens on you things can get crazy real quick. Oscar Murillo, fresh out of the Royal College of Art, has become virtually overnight the art world’s new darling. Why? When the big art collectors smell an opportunity there is money to be made – and quickly. The problem is can this young kid with good skills be allowed to develop his work, which for a painter normally takes about 10 years. The LA Times hit him pretty hard.The spotlight could change him…

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“lessons in aesthetics & productivity 5” (2013-14)

While Mr. Murillo is little known outside clubby contemporary art circles, and he has his share of skeptics, his fans have called him “the 21st-century Basquiat.” That night, after fierce competition, “Untitled (burrito)” sold for $322,870, more than six times its high $49,000 estimate. Only two years ago, Mr. Murillo, who was born in Colombia, was waking up at 5 a.m. to clean office buildings to cover his expenses at the Royal College of Art in London. Now, he is represented by David Zwirner, one of the world’s most prestigious galleries, and when a choice canvas comes up at auction or through private sale, it can fetch more than $400,000.

The story of how a young artist like Mr. Murillo soared from struggling student to art star — courted by blue-chip dealers, inundated by curators requesting a work for a museum exhibition or biennial — reflects the way investing in contemporary art has become a gamble, like stocks and real estate. Collecting works by rising artists like Lucien Smith, Jacob Kassay, Sterling Ruby or Mr. Murillo is a competitive sport among a growing number of collectors betting on future stars.

via Oscar Murillo Keeps His Eyes on the Canvas – NYTimes.com.

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Untitled, 2012

Process, not product, is the point Murillo makes, rather heavy handedly. Think Cy Twombly on a very bad day, his deft touch replaced with ham-fisted brutality. Or Donald Baechler sans the dopey kick of playful innocence.

Murillo’s four finished paintings are equally anemic. Each large piece is less compelling than a single square inch of anything Jean-Michel Basquiat ever touched.

The exhibition goes to great lengths — not to mention great expense — to shroud the reality of labor in the fantasy of artistic redemption. That’s the opposite of what Warhol was up to. Unfortunately, it defines our times, a kind of gilded age on steroids, when the past gets repackaged as farce.

via Art Review: “Oscar Murillo: Distribution Center” at The Mistake Room – latimes.com. murillo

 

The Over Night Success of Oscar Murillo