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Convocatoria Programa de Apoyo a la Producción e Investigación en Arte y Medios

•Se abre la Convocatoria en su tercera edición a partir del 11 de mayo y hasta el 4 de julio de 2008. Consulta las bases generales de participación en: http://cmm.cenart.gob.mx/convocatoria2008 Con la finalidad de estimular la creación e investigación en el campo de los medios electrónicos-digitales en nuestro país, el Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes a través del Centro Multimedia del Centro Nacional de las Artes, presenta la Convocatoria para su Programa de Apoyo a la Producción e… Continuar

Publicado por Centro Multimedia del CENART en May 9th, 2008 a las 3:22pm - No hay comentarios (Añadir)

Sobre Arte...

STATE OF PLAY With the nation once again focused on creativity and innovation, it's timely to see what our art school students are doing, Ted Snell writes May 03, 2008 Inside the nation's art schools students go about the important work of critiquing and subverting presumptions and preconceptions about art and life. Significantly they are also generating ideas and images that have commercial potential, at a time when the federal Government is pursuing an agenda of innovation and growth of t… Continuar

Publicado por Jorge Gardoni en May 9th, 2008 a las 7:52am - No hay comentarios (Añadir)

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Convocatoria Programa de Apoyo a la Producción e Investigación en Arte y Medios

•Se abre la Convocatoria en su tercera edición a partir del 11 de mayo y hasta el 4 de julio de 2008. Consulta las bases generales de participación en: http://cmm.cenart.gob.mx/convocatoria2008 Con la finalidad de estimular la creación e investigación en el campo de los medios electrónicos-digitales en nuestro país, el Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes a través del Centro Multimedia del Centro Nacional de las Artes, presenta la Convocatoria para su Programa de Apoyo a la Producción e Investigación en Arte y Medios; por medio del cual otorgará apoyos económicos hasta por $200,000.00 M. N. y/o acceso a la utilización de equipo y asesoría para la producción de obra artística y de investigación individual o colectiva. El programa de apoyo comprende el desarrollo de proyectos en las siguientes categorías: Investigación Contempla el desarrollo de proyectos inéditos de investigación y reflexión desde las disciplinas sociales, sobre la relación arte y tecnología, que brinden un análisis teórico de las prácticas artísticas contemporáneas que reflexionan sobre la tecnología y su uso. Producción Toma en cuenta la producción de trabajos inéditos artísticos con medios electrónicos como videoarte, arte sonoro, net-art, instalación, performance, artes escénicas y manifestaciones afines. Para mayor información comunicarse al 41 55 00 00 Ext. 1207, Departamento de Festivales y Convocatorias, o al correo: arteymedios@correo.cnart.mx La recepción de solicitudes será del 12 de mayo al 4 de julio de 2008 en días hábiles de 10:00 a 15:00 horas, o por mensajería a las oficinas del Centro Multimedia: Centro Multimedia del CENART. Av. Río Churubusco no 79. esq. Tlalpan. http://cmm.cenart.gob.mx

Sobre Arte...

STATE OF PLAY With the nation once again focused on creativity and innovation, it's timely to see what our art school students are doing, Ted Snell writes May 03, 2008 Inside the nation's art schools students go about the important work of critiquing and subverting presumptions and preconceptions about art and life. Significantly they are also generating ideas and images that have commercial potential, at a time when the federal Government is pursuing an agenda of innovation and growth of the creative industries. Although there is a great deal of discussion about the concept of creativity, and about intellectual property as an exploitable resource, surprisingly the role of the visual arts in advancing this has been marginalised during the past decade. While other disciplines and professions have adopted the concepts of creativity and innovation, and used those words with tedious frequency, the visual arts sector has stepped back from the plate with the result that others have taken guardianship of these concepts. So, with the Review of the National Innovation System in full swing, a survey of what is happening in the nation's art schools is timely, to judge the veracity of the sector's claims to innovation. The Hatched National Graduate Show at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts presents the results of three to five years of focused work by 61 graduates from 20 schools. All show the flexibility, adaptability and boundary-hopping that is at the core of innovation and many are generating exciting content for the new distribution networks. As Christopher Frayling from London's Royal College of Art has written, "it is the established practices of painting, sculpture, photography and crafts together with those of the moving image, new media and live art that drives the creative industries". With the need for more and more creative content to feed these delivery platforms, and with the requirement that all employees in every profession must now be creative and innovative thinkers, it is time for the contemporary visual arts to claim a leadership role. The art school as a place of licence is well established in the public imagination. Just think of the vast numbers of rock groups, film directors, fashion designers, and collaborations in design and architecture, that have emerged from them: all are evidence of vibrant tertiary arts education. Indeed, visual arts is the engine that drives the creative industries because without it there is no significant content, no quality and no excitement. As well as giving an overview, surveys such as Hatched set up the expectation of new trends and ideas, or at least an indication of who could be the next Shaun Gladwell, Patricia Piccinini or Brook Andrew. Visitors will be looking for insights into the mysteries of creativity, and a revealing glimpse of what tomorrow's world might look like. There is the hope that we will be entertained and stimulated by the most exciting minds in the county. In some years, the storm of emotions is unleashed, making for rather heavy going; other years, the student offerings are more formally esoteric. This year, the exhibition is an altogether lighter affair. As a result, it is hard to identify any viral ideas that have mutated and spread throughout the nation's art schools and that will soon have an effect on our lives; although there is evidence of an interest in beauty and a wicked sense of humour in much of the work. That in itself may be an indication of a shift in thinking. Sally Stewart's floating lotus flowers in the main gallery and Rose Skinner's playful The Bubblegum Factory next to it are indeed beautiful. Both artists have relished the opportunity to play, and to share their obvious enjoyment of colour and materials. Stewart, from the School of Communications and Contemporary Arts, Edith Cowan University, in Western Australia, has filled a large swimming pool with plastic flowers. It is a joyous work, best seen from the balcony above where the slow movement of the large flower forms can be traced as they bob gently along. The work is about Eastern and Western cultural symbols, and "exploring the continual, multidirectional flow of cultural traffic and the exchange of symbols and icons whose meanings blur or are lost when translated and fused within new cultural dimensions". Whether the concept is successfully translated into art is a moot point. But the result is very pretty. On the other hand, Skinner (School of Art, Design and Media, Central TAFE, WA) is happy for us just to enjoy the sensory and visual pleasures of engaging with her plastic found objects reconfigured into a sanctuary of light, colour, sound and taste. Visual art is an agent of change and so it's not unexpected that graduates have a sense of urgency and high expectation about their work. Jonathan McBurnie (Queensland College of Art, Griffith University) obviously loves comic books and he is also drawn to the angst and passion of romanticism. He has brilliantly synthesised his interests into a series of comic book covers made from ink and correction fluid.Pain Comics, Printmaking Armageddon! -- My Painting was Cheap and (my personal favourite) Faith -- I loved a Dadaist are wonderful works that, in his words, "create a strange friction between traditional high and low cultural forms". Whatever McBurnie does next, it is likely he will exacerbate that friction and will find an outlet in some of the new distribution networks. In a world where the distinctions between the real and the virtual are becoming increasingly blurred it's reassuring to see that art schools are also places where the act of making is given value and meaning. To enter into the presence of the extraordinary glass forms by Kristel Britcher (South Australian School of Art, University of SA) is a profound experience that demands a considered response. Their dark misty colours, the relationship of the components to each other and the resonances of place they evoke are so beautifully nuanced it is impossible not to pause, ponder and contemplate. It's so refreshing when the artist's comments offer insight and extrapolation instead of obfuscation. Britcher's works have a physical presence like sacred monuments. That love of making, leading to new meaning, is also evident in the work of Douglas Haslem (School of Art, RMIT University, Victoria), another young artist with a fine turn of phrase. "These two pieces are about my grandparents, Jack and Francie Dell," he writes. "The dancer is Gran, pirouetting in a Savlon tube that represents her talent for soothing my grazed knee -- with a dab of ointment magically appearing on the end of her finger. Jack is the cat playing the music for Gran to dance to." The two rings Haslem has made accurately illustrate his story but the craftsmanship and attention to detail, the juxtaposition of made and found objects, and the whimsy and deep affection with which he imbues them, sets them apart as very special objects. Three artists are making a strong claim for prominence at Hatched 08: Elise/Jurgen (actually a pair of artists from the Department of Art, Curtin University of Technology, WA), Jack Robins (Tasmanian School of Art), and Lucy Quinn (School of Art, Australian National University, ACT). I have to state here that the John Curtin Gallery, where I work, purchased Elise/Jurgen's work from their degree exhibition last year: an indication of my assessment of it as an outstanding work. Although a simple idea, the video of the two artists blowing puffs of white powder back and forth between them is a haunting image when projected on thin cloth hovering in a darkened room. In the video the artists emerge from the eddying clouds of powder, sometimes supportively, sometimes in competition, to create a highly charged and deeply moving work that continues to resonate long after you leave the gallery. In the studio next door, Robins has fabricated an intimidating space that effectively engages each participant in the wider discourse that surrounds George Bush's climate of fear. Like Elise/Jurgen he uses very simple means to examine how this mechanism of control has so profoundly changed our world and modified the ways in which we operate communally. Within the room Robins has constructed cantilevered partitions that project into the space and physically and metaphorically weigh down and disrupt movement. At once elegant and threatening, the work evokes a tangible sense of uncertainty and alienation. At first sight Quinn's installation -- a video of what appears to be a CAT scan of the internal organs of a human body, and a shelf of intriguing glass objects -- seems oblique and rather esoteric. Dark forms, often barely legible from the inky darkness of the screen, eventually open into an absorbing field of swirling patterns that hint at human organs, the movement of blood through veins or fluids through the stomach. These organic forms are replicated in the glass objects lined up in front of the screen and together they create a rather eerie and elusive sense of humanness. Not all the work in Hatched 08 is likely to rivet you to the floor but there is enough to ensure plenty of enjoyment and entertainment. It's impossible not to be entranced by Heidi Kenyon's Everything you Can Think of is True, a series of carved leaves. In an extraordinary feat of value-adding, Kenyon (South Australian School of Art, University of SA), has transformed the leaves of an avocado tree into exquisite small sculptures suspended just out from the wall to sharpen their cast shadows. With poetic titles that spark personal narratives and evoke a sense of place, each small leaf acts as a catalyst for private reverie. Equally engaging are the photographs by Sofi Basseghi (School of Art, RMIT) from her Soldiers in a Bathhouse series, taken in Iran. The intrusion of the uniformed men moving through the tiled interiors, past graceful columns and arches in this once grand historical site brings the social and political disruption of contemporary Iran into sharp focus. When Hatched lost its main sponsor, Healthways, there was a fear that this important annual survey of tertiary art education would disappear. Fortunately Charles Morgan has stepped forward to sponsor the event this year and for at least another two. So we will continue to see what comes out of these incubators of new ideas where students explore possibilities, question orthodoxies and propose new solutions, with a passionate belief in the power of art to change the world. Hatched 08 is a preview of the ideas and images that will soon reverberate through the culture. Pics http://www.pica.org.au/hatched/ The Australian Copyright 2008 News Limited. All times AEST (GMT +10).

LOS VISITANTES // Ediciones Plan B

Hola, hace un momento, añadimos 2 archivos de audio con fragmentos de la lectura de Carlos Ramírez, realizada el jueves 13 de marzo. Ir al blog de LOS VISITANTES

 
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ARTEVEN.ORG | art networking - red de arte contemporáneo iberoamérica

Creamos esta red de arte -art networking- con el fin de facilitar al medio del arte contemporáneo de Iberoamérica un vehículo para establecer contactos, compartir su trabajo (fotografías, videos, noticias, textos, propuestas, etc.) y debatir e intercambiar ideas. Las membresías se otorgan exclusivamente por invitación… continúa… [Un proyecto de ARTEVEN.COM © 2008]

Foros

¿Y qué es arte contemporáneo?
6 contestaciones 

Está abierta la discusión para quien quiera participar...

Etiquetada: discusion, debate, foro, que es arte contemporaneo

Iniciada por arteven.org. Última respuesta de Dalia Chévez 20 Apr.

¿ cuando existe arte ?
6 contestaciones 

¿Cuándo empezamos a hablar de Arte?, esta pregunta no es lo mismo que ¿En qué tiempo empezamos a hablar de Arte?, si no, de cual es la consideración de éste, entonces la pregunta más precisa deberí... Continuar

Iniciada por juliocesarbrionesmoreno. Última respuesta de Dalia Chévez 20 Apr.

BECAS DE ARTES PLÁSTICAS FUNDACIÓN MARCELINO BOTÍN


Las Becas de Artes Plásticas de la Fundación Marcelino Botín son ayudas para formación, investigación o proyectos personales que se cierran con la organización de una exposición en Santander y la edición de un catálogo. La convocatoria esta abierta a personas de cualquier nacionalidad con el único límite de tener entre 23 y 40 años para las becas de formación. El plazo para presentar solicitudes finaliza el 9 de mayo de 2008. Becas de 16,000 y hasta 24,000 Euros. Ver y descargar la convocatoria en la sección correspondiente de ARTEVEN.COM.

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VIDEOS

Favor de cuidar la calidad de los VIDEOS. Los que se vean demasiado pixeleados, de baja calidad de imagen, serán eliminados por la ADMIN.

Creada por arteven.org Apr 12, 2008 at 8:37pm. Actualizada por arteven.org 7 May.

FOTOS

Las fotos deben de ser de 72 dpi de resolución y de 600 pixeles de tamaño por su lado mayor. De lo contrario nadie podrá apreciarlas adecuadamente.

Creada por arteven.org Apr 12, 2008 at 8:31pm. Actualizada por arteven.org 7 May.

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