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

 

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow | conceptual photography | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow | conceptual photography | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Colors of Shadow is the first conceptual photo series which artist Hiroshi Sugimoto photographed in color and it shows his continuous interrogation of photography’s intrinsic nature; of light entering into a darkened or “dimmed chamber”, however, the light source remains out of view. The work is minimalist in nature. The photographic field is emptied of any superfluous detail, allowing stillness for meditation.
Colors of Shadow seems also to mirror the white cube, the gallery space, in its perpetual rhythm to lay bare its white walls to receive the work of art. Here the works reflect its surroundings; the detail is focused on what the viewer’s eye does not generally pay attention to. Brought into focus are the corners of the space, its ceiling and walls with different hues of whites due to the slightest alteration in lighting, and their cast shadows.

Subtle play of light and shadow as well as spatial composition are central in this work by artist Hiroshi Sugimoto. He explains it as following:

”I’ve learned many things from using my hands. While I’m still not sure about the nature of light—whether it’s waves or particles—I’ve learned something about shadows. Trying to devise a way of observing shadows, this project escalated into a major undertaking, requiring an entire hilltop penthouse in a Tokyo apartment. When surfaces receive light, the light effects vary according to the angle of exposure. Selecting three distinct angles—90°, 55°, and 35°—I had the walls surfaced using traditional Japanese shikkui (plaster finishing), which absorbs and reflects light most evenly. In the morning light, the shadows play freely over the surfaces, now appearing, now vanishing. On rainy days, they take on a deeper, more evocative cast. I’ve only just begun my observations, but already I’ve discovered a sublime variety in shadow hues.”

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow | conceptual photography | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow | conceptual photography | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Hiroshi Sugimoto | Colors of Shadow | conceptual photography | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Photos from top to bottom:
Colors of shadow c1020
Colors of shadow c1031
Colors of shadow c1028
Colors of shadow c1023
Colors of shadow c1019

Photos by: Hiroshi Sugimoto | Hiroshi Sugimoto website | source: Marian Goodman Gallery

 

Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception

Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 

 

Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Esther Stocker’s work mainly consists of paintings, photo’s and installations in an abstract and geometrical perspective, the various genres being closely related to each other.She works with a visually complex repertory of geometric sign and grid systems which explore the general conditions of perception and, in a broader sense, the effects of digital image technologies.
Esther Stocker’s reflexion is focused on the question: “How is a perfect system imperfect in reality?” Her geometric structures are based upon eternally self-repeating modules that create a seemingly ordered visual rhythm, to which the artist adds aberrations in order to generate an adjacent but new rhythm. This introduction of deviation in the optical balance, similar to 16th century’s mannerist architectural approach, creates surprise and emotion through the purposeful disruption of order and plane dimension.

Esther Stocker presents her work in her first solo show in France from the September 10 to October 15, 2011 at the Alberta Pane Gallery, Paris. This exhibition carries the title: Dirty Geometry.

Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 Esther Stocker | Geometric abstraction and perception | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Photos by: Esther Stocker, Sacha Georg, Michael Goldgruber, Jan Mahr | Esther Stocker website |

 

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 |

 

Marcel Broodthaers | The Marcel Broodthaers cabinet

Marcel Broodthaers | The Marcel Broodthaers cabinet | Het Marcel Broodthaers kabinet | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Marcel Broodthaers | The Marcel Broodthaers cabinet | Het Marcel Broodthaers kabinet | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 

MARCEL | The Marcel Broodthaers cabinet is a proposal to present the oeuvre of artist Marcel Broodthaers in the S.M.A.K. museum. The increasing significance of Broodthaers’ work as part of the collection gradually led to the idea of giving this oeuvre a permanent place in the museum. A place where the Broodthaers collection would not only be displayed, but also documented and set in a specific framework. Not as a monument or mausoleum in which the work is enclosed, but more like an intimate setting where encounters can take place and where Broodthaers’ work can be studied. To achieve this, in 2006 the museum held a competition in which three architects were asked to come up with a design for the project. The proposal ultimately selected was by architecten de vylder vinck taillieu. Their design devotes plenty of attention to Broodthaers’ work, but it combines it with the ease and practicality of a study centre. In terms of its form, the design clearly refers to the display cabinet, which Broodthaers used a great deal. This gallery is located on the boundary between the museum and the Floralia Hall behind it. This is also where the exhibition entitled MARCEL/Het Broodthaerskabinet will be held.
The exhibition in the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Gent Belgium will run until the 5Th of June 2011.

Marcel Broodthaers | The Marcel Broodthaers cabinet | Het Marcel Broodthaers kabinet | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 

Photos by: S.M.A.K. – Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst | Marcel Broodthaers |