HOT ON DIGITAL ART’S TRAIL IN VENICE

Two of Cao Fei’s video works are included in the show Space Force Construction – Contemporary and Soviet Art in Dialogue, organized by V-A-C Foundation in the Palazzo delle Zattere. The exhibition gathers nearly two dozen artists whose works deal with questions like “What thoughts or actions can art demonstrate, for which publics and in what spaces of display?” Chinese artist Cao Fei places Marx, Mao and Lenin together in the online virtual world Second Life, where they live a utopian existence in the contemporary sense of the word. Read more about the exhibition here.

The Recycle Group presents an augmented reality installation at the Russian Pavilion. Out of geometrical 3D forms on the wall and the floor parts of human-like figures appear, resembling a contemporary rectangular version of Michelangelo’s Prisoners and Slaves at Academia in Florence or maybe even Quayola’s Captives. However, through a tablet or smartphone with a special app, naked human male figures in dynamic poses appear in a thermal image aesthetics on the screen.

The exhibition “HYBRIS—Hybrids and Monsters in Contemporary Art” (Multimedia Exhibition) is curated by Silvia Burini, Guiseppe Barberini, Anna Frants and Elena Gubanova and organized by CYLAND International Media Art Lab at Ca’ Foscari Zattere in Venice. Carla Gannis’s project A Subject Self-Defined, here installed as a three-channel video installation, is a huge project of Selfie Drawings that also exist as digital drawings with augmented reality versions. 52 complex images embed the virtual self of the artist into different narratives, reflecting contemporary topics of the digital sge and art historical references, drawing up a fresh rebrand of women’s depictions in today’s selfie culture. Explosion of a Can of Condensed Milk after the Water has Evaporated is a monumental media installation by Anna Frants with an open framework structure that conceptually references a computer grid. It houses images from art history, little robots with moving eyes, Ipads to take selfies with or sculptures. The spectator can (partly) interact with this bizarre agglomeration of things that encourages him or her to poetically reflect about the different versions of the self-displayed or mirrored here in the installation.

Pastorale by Ludmila Belova includes 3D printed figurines of shepherdesses on a screen with a pixilated video imitating a flowery meadow. The sounds derive from music by Jean-Baptiste Lully and electronic bird chirping.

Artist William Latham presents the generative artistic VR experience Mutator. Synthetic organic forms randomly reshape and evoke the setting of an underwater reef with digital corals and little fishes swimming around. The VR user can attract them via glowing telephone cords (aka his HTC Vive controllers) and dive to the black ground of the sea. Further, he can shift endlessly between different versions of the setting—each slightly differs from one another.

“The HyperPavilion seeks to explore the ways in which the digital and physical worlds have merged to create an entangled hybrid reality that encompasses us globally, and now offers a new aesthetic with new consequences and new organization,” as curator Philippe Riss writes in his statement. Aram Bartholl’s installation Weeping Angels shows a mirrored anti-riot police truck on a huge carpet with logos from internet marketing and user tracking companies. Two fully equipped, very serious-looking guards protect the vehicle with mirrored shields. The work “tries to capture the dark age we are about to enter, with ever growing surveillance, terror attacks and cyber-war accusations on a daily basis. While we drink our beloved cheap hot coffee and chill on our fluffy carpet at home thousands of companies retrieve and deal with our personal data, violating our personal rights”. (text taken from the accompanying guide).

Claire Malrieux’s dynamic generative software drawing Climat Général is constantly self-evolving and ever changing. The artist uses imagery from meteorological phenomena, major human activities and the world of Gaїa, the Greek goddess impersonating the Earth. The images deal with the Anthropocene and they intertwine, superimpose or aggregate on the 360 degree panoramic surface of the installation.

Theo Massoulier’s work Anthropic Combinations of Entropic Elements consists of a large number of small hybrid sculptures out of different, appealing, shiny or colorful materials. They resemble plants, minerals, rocks or tiny animals.

Theo Triantafyllidis’s generative live simulation How to Everything combines elements like a rock, a little dinosaur, a smart phone, a watermelon, a hand or a plant in front of a landscape- like colored monochrome background. The elements playfully yet unpredictably interact which each other while being randomly sorted anew in this simulated environment. For more information please visit www.hyperpavilion2017.com.

The Faurschou Foundation at San Giorgio Maggiore presents the exhibition New Media (Virtual Reality Art) with artistic VR experiences by Paul McCarthy, who usually is best known for his often nightmarish or obscene huge spatial installations and dynamic sculptures, and Copenhagen-based sculptor, film and performance artist Christian Lemmerz. In his two VR pieces, McCarthy creates a cube-like space with (dressed) female figures floating around, dirty talking, intensely looking at the viewer (when he comes close). In one of the works, the walls of the space constantly move and float towards and into each other so that the viewer constantly finds himself in new versions of a steadily shifting cube in between the appearing and vanishing floating females. Christian Lemmerz’s work is very different. There, the spectator faces a golden yet suffering monumental Jesus nailed onto an invisible cross (La Apparazione, 2017). For more information and images on this show, please read Scott Indrisek’s article here on Artsy.

Nearby the vaporetto station Arsenale, the Dutch media art initiative Dropstuff that is specialized in creating public experiences, show The Fair Grounds, an interactive multimedia installation involving Virtual Reality. The location they chose is a public place on the street, where Biennale visitors, tourists, the occasional remaining citizens or crewmembers of the yachts nearby mix. The installation consists of six nostalgic so-called ‘kiddy rides’ lined up like a train and colored in the template of De Stijl. The spectator takes a seat on one of the moving rides and wears a head-mounted display to then take a virtual high-speed ride through the cities of Venice or Amsterdam. In their work, Dropstuff experiments to connect popular culture, technical innovations and artistic translations. “This in an attempt to search for ways of ‘inclusivity’ instead of ‘exclusivity’ in times of cultural and political polarization”, as media artist René van Engelenburg and media designer Gijs ten Cate state about their project.

by Tina Sauerlaender

Arte Fuse May 22, 2017

THE 57th INTERNATIONAL ART EXHIBITION AT THE VENICE BIENNALE

Robinson, Viva Arte Viva Kicks Off: The 57th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale

The 57th International Art Exhibition will open to the public starting Saturday, May 13, and will run until November 26. Curated by Christine Macel and organized by the Venice Biennale under the presidency of Paolo Baratta, this year’s edition is titled Viva Arte Viva and features the participation of 120 artists from 51 countries, including three making their debut: Antigua and Barbuda, Kiribati, and Nigeria.

“The lives of both visitors and artists will be at the center of this Biennale, filled with colors, emotions, sensations, and joie de vivre,” the curator revealed during the presentation of what can be expected at the Giardini, the Arsenale, and other venues throughout the city.

The event will be featured on the cover of the upcoming issue of Robinson, available with La Repubblica newspaper on Sunday, May 7.

by Valentina Tosoni

La Republica May 5, 2017

SOFA FOR LOVERS OF LEISURE AND ENTERTAINMENT

The 8th edition of the Hall of Leisure and Fantasy (SOFA) 2016 has opened its doors, awaiting thousands of fans and curious visitors to gather around entertainment, trends, and new entrepreneurial alternatives in Latin America’s creative, artistic, and social connection industries.

With 13,000 square meters and over 300 activities, SOFA provides a space full of opportunities to enjoy free time and experience one of Colombia’s most important platforms for alternative cultural management.

More than 100 exhibitors and nearly a hundred active communities—including animatronics, cosplayers, urban athletes, K-pop dancers, Robotic People, geeks, gamers, among others—will be part of SOFA 2016. Culture, fun, and entertainment will take over 12 pavilions and open-air stages during these four unforgettable days.

Visitors will be able to enjoy:

*Circo SOFA * Cosplay Arena * Art Toys * SOFA Forest * Bubble Soccer * Cyberfest * Cosplay Parade * Photography Exhibitions * Floor Art * Flatland * Women’s Soccer * Graffiti * Adoption Campaigns * Pokemon Go * SOFA Ring, among many other events.

Special Guests:

Juandres Vera, a Mexican artist, illustrator, set designer, and “madonnaro,” is known for his 3D street art in countries like the U.S., U.K., Italy, Dubai, and Mexico. He will be at Pavilion 3, Level 2 in Corferias until October 30, where visitors can watch live chalk painting performances.

Enzo Fortuny, a renowned Mexican voice actor and director with over 25 years of experience, is known for iconic roles like the second voice of Arnold in Hey Arnold!, Drake Bell in Drake & Josh, Inuyasha, Inuzuka in Naruto, Yukito in Cardcaptor Sakura, Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings, and more. He will appear in the SOFA Auditorium on Sunday, October 30 at 4:30 p.m.

Romina Marroquín, Mexican voice actress and singer, is famous for voicing Princess Anna in Frozen, Giselle in Enchanted, Princess Cadence in My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, Rosetta the fairy in the Tinker Bell films, and Nagisa Misumi in Pretty Cure, among others. She will appear in the SOFA Auditorium on Saturday, October 28 at 4:30 p.m. and Sunday, October 30 at 5:00 p.m.

Reika Arawaka, a cosplay queen and icon from Japan, began as an anime and manga fan and became internationally recognized through social media for the quality of her work. She’s now a global inspiration for many cosplayers. She will be present Saturday, October 29 at 6:00 p.m. in the SOFA Auditorium.

Marte García, a Mexican artist, works as a colorist for major Marvel comics including Captain America, X-Men, and Guardians of the Galaxy, and has illustrated covers for Deadpool and Spider-Man. He is brought to SOFA by Comeek, an online comic and collectibles store, and will be in Pavilion 8, Level 1 until October 30.

Anna Frants, a renowned new media artist whose work has been exhibited at top international biennials such as Venice, Moscow, and St. Petersburg. She is co-founder of CYLAND Media Art Lab. Her interactive 3D work is on display in Pavilion 8, Level 1 until October 30.

Jours de Papier (Paper Days), what started as a fun exchange between two lovers in 2012 has become a digital hit across Latin America with thousands of followers and nearly 300,000 daily website visits. Created by Mexicans Tania Camacho and Esteban Martínez, they’ll be among the international guests in Pavilion 8, Level 1 until October 30.

From Argentina, renowned juggler Gonzalo Purvis and Mara will showcase their artistic act and teach visitors the art of juggling in Pavilion 3, Level 2, from October 27 to 30.

by Esneyder Negrete

Confidencial Noticias October 28, 2016