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

 

Jesse Kanda | Dutch Wife

Jesse Kanda | Dutch Wife | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Jesse Kanda | Dutch Wife | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Jesse Kanda | Dutch Wife | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Dutch Wife is an experimental animated short film by London based graphic and motion designer Jesse Kanda. In this video he experimented with filmed footage of plant remains which floated around in a canal and a combination of various 3D models. The result is a fascinating experiment about distortion, liquid, transformation and the virtual human body.

Jesse Kanda | Dutch Wife | Warmenhoven & Venderbos BlogJesse Kanda | Dutch Wife | Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog

Video: directed, animated and sountracked by Jesse Kanda | Photos by Jesse Kanda | Jesse Kanda website 

 

Claudia Rogge | individualism, reproducibility and mass

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

In the contemporary art scene, German artist Claudia Rogge is an exceptional person. She continually photographs crowds of practically identical people , all dressed in the same way and holding the same pose to create a unique mass identity. Arranged either in repetition, tessellation or in choreographed groups, her figures represent the unique little tiles that form an intricate mosaic. Man himself turns into a pattern, into an ornament. At the same time there is the question of whether the conceptual classification is justified. Are they really patterns or ornaments? Might they not simply be masses or forms? It seems, however, that we can cope best with the conceptual term of pattern.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Although Claudia Rogge shows us patterns, her works no longer shows an indistinct and homogeneous element but one made up of minuscule differences that need to be sought out carefully in each single photograph. The disposition of the persons depicted reminds spectators of their own movements and postures, which are no mere coincidences but basic dimensions of the sense of social direction. Postures and emotions correspond with each other. Analysing the body language is helpful for a better understanding of other people. Claudio Rogge  plays with perception, which she carries on. She shows her wish to bring things closer together in terms of space and time. “If you pause motionless”, says photographer Robert Doisneau, “people will look at you.”

This is one of the elements which makes Claudia Rogge´s pictures so attractive. A motionlessness that repeats itself and thus appears to be movement within stillness.They can be approached in the same way one would approach a still life. With Vermeer, says philosopher Paul Virilio, the living world corresponds with a still life. With Claudia Rogge it seems the same yet with a slight difference: she has raised the living world of mere illusion to the status of an art icon. Our age, in which the mass media are left to themselves, has accomplished the step from the necessary to the superfluous. Claudia Rogge turns our gaze back to the aesthetic glossy print with its mass of people returning to us the individual within us.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

 

Photos by Claudia Rogge | Claudia Rogge website | Sources: Marianne Hoffmann

Diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

The above video gives a snapshot impression from the vernissage of various new exhibitions at the Verbeke Foundations of modern avantgarde art.

One of the fascinating exhibitions is Certified Copy.
In a world where numerous multinationals multiply data banks destined to the patented reproduction of genetic information, the Verbeke Foundation organised an exhibition on the notions of copying and cloning. The exhibition unites the works of over twenty international contemporary artists, like for example: L.A. Raeven, Jonas Vansteenkiste and Janieta Eyre,  who are concerned in the question of the reproduction of living and lifeless materials.

From delftware from the museum of Leiden over the masterpieces of Hirst, Murakami or Cattelan, to fluorescent transgenic fishes, all presented works give us the possibility to draw a parallel between both contemporary artistic and scientific practices. The characters of the Coco Chanel logo on the exhibition poster also evoke daily counterfeited products, and the expressions of Certified Copy, Carbon Copy and Creative Commons. In fact, the exhibition adopts a critical viewpoint on the motivations for reproducing works and living organisms, and on the stipulations of this reproduction in our globalised society.

Further exhibitions which opened at the vernissage are a retrospective of the works created by Mark Verstockt, Trou de Ville and De Wolkenbreier(s).

Certified copy, Mark Verstockt and Trou de Ville will run until 10th of April 2011.
Wolkenbreier(s) will run untill the 30th of Januari 2011.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

 Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Snapshot video diary 061210 | Vernissage Verbeke Foundation november 2010

 

Video and photos by Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Verbeke Foundation website

Permutations Software generating poems by Brion Gysin

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Designer fashion Blog | Permutations Software generating poems by Brion Gysin

New York based artist Joseph Moore wrote the software “Permutations” for the currently running exhibition Brion Gysin: Dream Machine on display at The New Museum for Contemporary Art in New York. The Exhibition is a retrospective of the work of the painter, performer, poet, and writer Brion Gysin (born 1916, Taplow, UK–died 1986, Paris). Working simultaneously in a variety of mediums, Gysin was an irrepressible inventor, serial collaborator, and subversive spirit whose considerable innovations continue to influence musicians and writers, as well as visual and new media artists today.

The “Permutations” software by Joseph Moore is a “version” of the program developed by Ian Sommerville and Gysin in 1960 to permute poems. Moore has attempted to create a realization of the work that is sensitive to the original and its process. At the same time, it is a new version, a collaboration done in the spirit of an artist whose work provides a critique of conventional notions of authorship. Moore believes that it is also in the spirit of the work to share copies of it and made his “Permutations” Software avilable to download from Github. The concept and artistic process of this project is fascinating.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Designer fashion Blog | Permutations Software generating poems by Brion Gysin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Designer fashion Blog | Permutations Software generating poems by Brion Gysin

 

Below you find a podcast of the original “I am that I am” poem.

 

Software by Joseph Moore | Brion Gysin: Dream Machine | Poem by: Brion Gysin | Ubuweb