Felice Varini | Point of view

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 Felice Varini was born in 1952 in Locarno, Switzerland. and currently lives in Paris. He creates fascinating optical art.
His field of action is architectural and urban space and everything that constitutes such spaces. These spaces are and remain the original media for his painting. He works “on site”, each time in a different space and his work develops itself in relation to the spaces he encounters. The paintings are characterized by geometric shapes and by a single vantage point from which the viewer can see the complete painting, while various ‘broken’ fragmented shapes are seen from various other view points.

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbo

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbo

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Felice Varini about his work:

“I generally roam through the space noting its architecture, materials, history and function. From these spatial data and in reference to the last piece I produced, I designate a specific vantage point for viewing from which my intervention takes shape.

The vantage point is carefully chosen: it is generally situated at my eye level and located preferably along an inevitable route, for instance an aperture between one room and another, a landing… I do not, however, make a rule out of this, for all spaces do not systematically possess an evident line. It is often an arbitrary choice. The vantage point will function as a reading point, that is to say, as a potential starting point to approaching painting and space.

The painted form achieves its coherence when the viewer stands at the vantage point.When he* moves out of it, the work meets with space generating infinite vantage points on the form. It is not therefore through this original vantage point that I see the work achieved; it takes place in the set of vantage points the viewer can have on it.

If I establish a particular relation to architectural features that influence the installation shape, my work still preserves its independence whatever architectural spaces I encounter. I start from an actual situation to construct my painting. Reality is never altered, erased or modified, it interests and seduces me in all its complexity. I work “here and now”.”

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

 

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Felice Varini | Point of view | abstract art | designer fashion blog |  Warmenhoven & Venderbos

Photos by: Felice Varini | Video by: Christophe Loizillon | Felice Varini 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

Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life 

 

Vangelis Paterakis is a Greek photographer and artist. For his commissioned work he collaborated often on editorials for magazines and with advertising companies.

Shadow life is a second series of art photos after his shadow series.
Vangelis Paterakis says himself about this work:
“It is a second creation of organisms that make up an unnoticed realm of life as we don’t know it”
With Shadow Life Vangelis Paterakis continues seeking bodies that give birth to new figures and shadows that rise new souls. His pictures remain familiar and their figures emit an instant mood for creation, annihilating the stillness of the picture offering to the spectator a side of life far from its daily perception. He gives shape to the human shadow that immaterial element of us all an indefinite subject that appears when light strikes a surface only to then melt away and blend in with the surrounding surfaces. The concept and images create a fascinating space for philosophical reflections and remind us of a line written by the Swiss thinker Carl Justav Jung:
“Contact with our shadows allows us to identify more closely with ourselves and touch a profound part of very being.”

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | Vangelis Paterakis | Shadow life

Photos Vangelis Paterakis | Studio Paterakis | Shadow and Shadow life series

Robert Mapplethorpe retrospective

The NRW Forum in Düsseldorf has organised a major retrospective of Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs. Mapplethorpe (1946-1989) dominated photography in the late twentieth century and paved the way for the recognition of photography as an art form in its own right. Both during his life and since his death, Mapplethorpe’s work has been the subject of much controversial debate.His radical portrayals of nudity and sexual acts were always controversial; some of his photos caused a stir and frequently resulted in protests outside exhibitions. Above all, Robert Mapplethorpe developed his own photographic style that paid homage to the ideals of perfection and form.

 ‘I look for the perfection of form. I do this in portraits, in photographs of penises, in photographs of flowers.’

 The fact that the photographs are displayed on snow-white walls underpins this view of his work and consciously moves away from the coy Boudoir-style presentation of his photographs on lilac and purple walls a dominant feature of exhibitions of Mapplethorpe’s work for many years and opens up the work to a more concept-based, minimalist view of things.

The exhibition in the NRW Forum covers all areas of Mapplethorpe’s work, from portraits and self-portraits, homosexuality, nudes, flowers and the quintessence of his oeuvre the photographic images of sculptures, including early Polaroids. It will run until 15 August 2010.

 

Trailer of the film Robert Mapplethorpe “Shapes”  by Ralph Goertz | IKS-Medienarchiv

 

 

Top photo: Robert Mapplethorpe at his Whitney Retrospective 1988 by Jonathan Becker, Vanity Fair

Photos by Robert Mapplethorpe | Top Photo by Jonathan Becker, Vanity Fair | Video by Ralph Goertz