Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Small Wars

Night Operations #7, from 29 Palms series, 2003-04

Stability Operations (Iraqi Police), from 29 Palms series, 2003-04

Small Wars (rescue), 1999-2002


An-My Le: "Small Wars" at the Museum of Contemporary Photography.
This exhibition comprises two photographic series by An-My Lê that explore the military conflicts that have framed the last half-century of American history: the war in Vietnam and the current war in Iraq and Afghanistan. The artist approaches these events obliquely. Instead of addressing her subject by creating reportage images of actual shocking events, she photographs places where war is psychologically anticipated, processed, and relived. Her series Small Wars (1999-2002) depicts men who spend their weekends reenacting battles from the Vietnam War in the forests of Virginia. Lê’s current series, 29 Palms (2003-present), documents a military base of the same name; located in the California desert, it is where soldiers train before being deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. These dramatizations of war—one a reenactment, one a rehearsal—allow her to create a unique kind of war imagery—one that is unexpected, removed, and revelatory.

Lê, who was born in Vietnam in 1960 and came to the United States as a refugee in 1975, created Small Wars to explore, as she describes it, “the Vietnam of the mind.”
The war games Lê photographed are elaborate. While her pictures present men—some of them veterans, others history buffs – as they simulate combat and war routines using detailed props such as grounded airplanes, tents, and uniforms, the images do not include any of the glaring anachronisms that may have been present. It is the landscape that provides the most telltale signs of falsehood: the flora is typical North American pine and oak forest, nothing like the dense, tropical jungle that covers much of Vietnam. Lê was often asked to participate in the reenactments, her ethnicity presumably adding an element of authenticity to the make-believe.

Lê’s pictures from 29 Palms in many ways subversively mirror the media’s sanitized view of the Iraq war. They present no blood, no gore, no cruelty, no shock; they simply show us preparations for battle. Like the forests of Virginia and the Studios of Hollywood (just 150 miles away), 29 Palms is a place where fictions are performed. On the base, marines both rehearse their own roles and play the parts of their adversaries: they are occasionally asked to dress up and act as Iraqi police and civilians, and linguists wearing traditional Iraqi clothing are sometimes brought in to create a ruckus in Arabic. The military housing is tagged with mock anti-American graffiti and fake villages are built of particleboard, their facades like the sets of old western movies. Lê feels that the presence of her camera also feeds the artifice – quite often she thinks it inspires the men to pose themselves to resemble what a “Marine” looks like. She has even heard the soldiers quoting scenes from war movies to one another during training. As Susan Sontag wrote in her 2002 New Yorker essay “Looking at War”, war photographs seem inauthentic if they look too much like a movie still. In a postmodern twist, by taking a documentary approach to the rehearsal for war, Lê asks us to question the very premise of “authentic” photography to begin with.
Karen Irvine, Curator


An-My Lê: Small Wars at MoCP

October 27, 2006 — January 6, 2007








via the brilliant letra corrida

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

You have to bring a T-shirt

'Make More Effort' • Elyce Semenec



Elyce Semenec will be performing the piece 'Make More Effort' during the Miami Art Fair Basel at Diaspora Vibe Gallery. The show is called Rituals,
'Make More Effort' ...is a silk-screening performance event exploring the ritual of making resolutions, whether daily, monthly or New Year's. In exchange for personal musings, ambitions and stories concerning these rituals, artist Elyce Semenec will silk-screen a personal resolution directly onto your T-shirt for future reference. The T-shirts are reminders of the fragility and resilience of humanity's ambitions while doubling as poetry in motion. The resolutions are intended to operate on multiple depths: personal, metaphorical, and literal.
You have to bring a T-shirt.

About Rituals
Rituals of various kinds are central to all cultures, past and present. From symbolic actions such as prayer, sacred ceremonies, and rites of passage to everyday gestures of greeting, walking, and eating, ritual exists in many forms. Repetition and the performative aspects of our daily lives will be explored in this exhibition that asks viewers to pay attention to the ways society and individuals create their own rituals, habits, and routines.

Curator
Rosie Gordon-Wallace

Opening Reception
Thursday, December 7, 2006
7pm-10pm

Show/Event Dates
December 7 - December 31, 2006
Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 4pm

Location
3938 N. Miami Avenue
Miami Design District





Monday, December 04, 2006

game inspired flags

US_invaders

nipong

pac_sweden

tetriss


by Vuk Cosic, shown at NEXT2006 conference, Copenhagen
pics taken by Régine

Sunday, December 03, 2006

The Brand Peep-Show

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Saturday, December 02, 2006

Double Bind • Nezaket Ekici

Nezaket Ekici, 2006, Performance Atropos at Sinopale 1. Sinop Biennale, Sinop Turkey, Photo by Umut Südüak



Nezaket Ekici, whose work we screened at Directors Lounge from the beginning, opens her Berlin solo exhibition "Double bind" tonight with the performance “Atropos

In the exhibition “Double Bind”, Nezaket Ekici presents four works, which are internally associated with each other. In a “double bind”-situation, two or more people have an intensive relation with each other, which is for at least one of the partners physically and/or mentally pivotal. Such a relation always constitutes an irrevocable pattern of dependency, which involves the individual in paradoxical communication.

In the performance, “Atropos”, the artist represents an act of self-liberation, by freeing herself, using a pair of scissors, from her hair, which is tied to the ceiling via long threads. She cuts one part of her hair off and thus dissociates herself from a part of herself. This artwork is an existential analysis with the wholeness of self, especially since hairs may count as symbols of life. The name of the performance-installation “Atropos” alludes to the Greek goddess of destiny of the same name, who cuts the threads of fate with scissors. In a certain sense, this work unites the aspects of the other works in itself and additionally transcends the pattern of the “double bind”-situation. It shows, with the radical act of hair cutting, a way out of the paradoxical self-communication brought along by double bonds. At least, the act of cutting can be evaluated as an attempt of liberation from the dependency of the self. (gallery text)

The solo exhibition runs parallel with the artist’s participation in the exhibition “Into Me / Out of Me” at Kunst-Werke Berlin, Auguststrasse 69.

NEZAKET EKICI
Double bind

02.12. - 21.01.2007
Opening on the 2nd December 2006, 7 p.m.
with the performance “Atropos”
DNA
Auguststraße 20
10117 Berlin

more about Nezaket Ekici here, here and here
Nezaket Ekici on Directors Lounge television here

Friday, December 01, 2006

Nest



Nest by Patricia Piccinini, 2006, fibregass. automotive paint, scooter parts and leather


In Another Life is all about possibilities. In another life it would be different, we might say, in another life it might be better, or perhaps worse, in another life we could get it right. In imagining another life we can remake the world as we would prefer, we can create a perfect life without having to see whether it would actually work, we can just trust that it would all turn out.

continue reading In Another Life
by Patricia Piccinini (2006) catalogue, Wellington City Gallery, Wellington, NZ



Patricia Piccinini is probably best known for her widely blogged work we are family shown at the Venice Bienale 2003

via

Penguins with Angst



Penguins have this typecast of being cute little Mammals in today's world.
Well forget what you know about this adorable Mammal and watch the plain truth here

via