Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

The work of Tobias his recent exhibition at the Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens in Belgium has now moved on and is on show at the Pilar Corrias Gallery in London. The show carries the title: Sex and Friends

Tobias his conceptual art installation set up at Pilar Corrias Gallery explores again the conflict between functionalism and aesthetics and again questions and plays with the notion of art and its various strategies. The main key element of this specific installation is transformation. This key element is not only linked to the change of the space itself but also to the transformation during a specific time frame and especially the transformation of the viewer, his/her behaviour and thoughts.

The series of sculptures in this installation seem abstract and find their “ghost-image” counterpart in the amorphous shadows they project on the walls. The art works transmit words and patterns onto the surfaces around them. The sculptures and their shadows are dynamic in a reversed way. They encourage the viewer to move and look at them from various perspectives. By doing that they shift and transform themselves. During brief moments of the day the shadows come together and form a “hidden” message. The visual message itself becomes less important as the event is basically already known and announced to the viewer who visits the gallery space, however what is important in this conceptual installation is that the upfront announced “hidden” feature/message does right away influence and transform the viewers behaviour and thoughts.

 Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Tobias Rehberger | Sex and Friends | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Sex and Friends is running until February 17, 2012 at Pilar Corrias Gallery, London.
You can read more about Tobias Rehberger and his work in this, this and this article on the Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog.

Photos by: Tobias Rehberger | Pilar Corrias Gallery

Douglas Gordon | Exhibition | MMK Frankfurt

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Douglas Gordon | Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Douglas Gordon | Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main

The oeuvre of Scottish conceptual artist Douglas Gordon comprises of films, large video installations, photographs, texts, sculptures and sound installations.
With his analyses of images drawn from the collective memory and everyday culture, Gordon exposes basic patterns of perception. Within this framework, his works often revolve around phenomena of duplication and reflection. Meanings of mirroring and fragmentation are also evoked on a formal level, for example in large scale film and video installations which are presented on two or more screens.

At this moment the Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main (MMK) is showing a major solo exhibition of the artist titled “Douglas Gordon”. The exhibition shows new pieces and prominent works of the past years and provides a concentrated and impressive overview of this multifaceted artist’s oeuvre. It will run untill the 25th March 2012.

In the below videos the artist and staff of the Museum explain more about the works.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Douglas Gordon | Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main

 

Photos Douglas Gordon and MMK Frankfurt | Video top: Institut für Kunstdokumentation | Video bottom: MMK Frankfurt | MMK website

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals | Conceptual art installation | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals | Conceptual art installation | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

“The Seven Seals” is a work by Chinese contemporary artist Tsang Kin-Wah. It is a fascinating ongoing series of seven  conceptual digital video art installations using texts and computer technology to show Tsang’s thoughts on various issues of the day. “The Seven Seals” draws its reference from various sources such as: existentialism, metaphysics and politics. With this work Tsang Kin-wah attempt to articulate the complex situation  of the world and the dilemmas that people are facing while approaching “the end of the world”.

Animated phrases and short sentences appear, move and float, sometimes, like a murmur and sometimes like an admonition that reveals the nature of human beings and the changes of our emotions. Without a clear beginning or end, each installation in the “The Seven Seals” creates different cycles of text on continuous loops that appear to repeat without end; echoing the concept of “eternal recurrence” whereby all the issues and dilemmas of daily existence are seen perpetually recurring for an infinite number of fleeting instances, even though we recognize and are aware of them for a longer time.

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals | Conceptual art installation | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals | Conceptual art installation | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Tsang Kin-wah | The Seven Seals | Conceptual art installation | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Photos and videos from the The Fifth Seal installation which is part of the Seven Seals project.

Videos and Photos by: Tsang Kin-wah | Tsang Kin-wah website | Mori Art Museum, Tokyo

 

Body Pressure | Conceptual performance art by Bruce Nauman

Body Pressure | Conceptual performance art by Bruce Nauman | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Body Pressure | Conceptual performance art by Bruce Nauman | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Body Pressure is an art piece by Bruce Nauman from 1974 which basically is a mix between conceptual text art and performance art. The work invites the spectator to become the performer. The physical form of the work is a simple poster which serves more as an igniter as it gives the performers a set of typed out instructions for merging their bodies with an architectural surface. Body Pressure is, aside from the physical experience, also a mental journey which challenges the performers to think about the physical aspects and limitations of their own bodies and travel beyond these limitations in their minds.

 Body Pressure | Conceptual performance art by Bruce Nauman | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Below follows the text of the poster:

Body Pressure

Press as much of the front surface of
your body (palms in or out, left or right cheek)
against the wall as possible.

Press very hard and concentrate.

Form an image of yourself (suppose you
had just stepped forward) on the
opposite side of the wall pressing
back against the wall very hard.

Press very hard and concentrate on the image pressing very hard.

(the image of pressing very hard)
press your front surface and back surface
toward each other and begin to ignore or
block the thickness of the wall. (remove
the wall)

Think how various parts of your body
press against the wall; which parts
touch and which do not.

Consider the parts of your back which
press against the wall; press hard and
feel how the front and back of your
body press together.

Concentrate on the tension in the muscles,
pain where bones meet, fleshy deformations that occur under pressure; consider
body hair, perspiration, odors (smells).

This may become a very erotic exercise.

Bruce Nauman, Body Pressure, 1974, (c) 2002 Bruce Nauman /Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Work by Bruce Nauman | Photos by Bruce Nauman, top: Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, centre: Jacob Birken

 

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Each year Monumenta invites an internationally renowned artist to turn their vision to the vast Nave of Paris’ Grand Palais and to create a new artwork especially for this space. The first challenge was met by German artist Anselm Kiefer followed by American artist Richard Serra in 2008 and French artist Christian Boltanski in 2010. For its fourth incarnation, the French Ministry for Culture and Communication has invited Anish Kapoor to produce a new work for the Nave’s monumental space.

The artist describes the work he is creating for Monumenta as follows: “A single object, a single form, a single colour.” “My ambition”, he adds, “is to create a space within a space that responds to the height and luminosity of the Nave at the Grand Palais. Visitors are invited to walk inside the work, to immerse themselves in colour, and it will, I hope, be a contemplative and poetic experience.”

The work is not merely speaking visually, but it leads the visitor on a journey of total sensorial and mental discovery. It questions what we think we know about art, our body, our most intimate experiences and our origins.

leviathan by Anish Kapoor will be on display untill 23rd June 2011 at the Grand Palais, Paris, France.

 Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Anish Kapoor | Monumenta 2011 | Leviathan | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Photos top 1 to 5 by: Designboom | Photos bottom 6 to 7 by: Anish Kapoor, Didier Plowy and Monumenta |