Berlin Art Guide - January

Berlin Art Guide - January

Recommendations of what to see in the art world this month by our local guides in Berlin. Explore more in a private art tour.

I.

Exhibition: The Crack-Up
Artists: Claire Fontaine
Venue: Neue Berliner Kunstverein (n.b.k.)
Dates: Until January 28th, 2018


Collective Artist. Art & Politics. Ready-Made. Authorship. Capitalism. Foreignness. 

IMAGE Credits: Claire Fontaine, The Crack-Up, exhibition view Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, 2017 © Neuer Berliner Kunstverein / Jens Ziehe

IMAGE Credits: Claire Fontaine, The Crack-Up, exhibition view Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, 2017 © Neuer Berliner Kunstverein / Jens Ziehe

II.

Exhibition: FOREVER
Artist: Barbara Krüger
Venue: Sprüth Magers
Dates: Until January 20th, 2018


“You know that women have served all these centuries as looking glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.”

Image Credits: Barbara Kruger, Forever. Installation view, SPRÜTH MAGERS BERLIN, 2017Photo: Art Tours Berlin

Image Credits: Barbara Kruger, Forever. Installation view, SPRÜTH MAGERS BERLIN, 2017
Photo: Art Tours Berlin


III.

Exhibition: 3612,54 M³ VS 0,05 M³
Artist: Monica Bonvincini
Venue: Berlinische Galerie
Dates: Until February 26th, 2018

“You can avoid people but you can’t avoid architecture.“

Image Credits: Monica Bonvicini, Passing, 2017, site specific installation. Courtesy the artist and König Galerie, Berlin; Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zürich; Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Mailand, Ausstellungsansicht, Berlinische Galerie, 2017. © Monica…

Image Credits: Monica Bonvicini, Passing, 2017, site specific installation. Courtesy the artist and König Galerie, Berlin; Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zürich; Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Mailand, Ausstellungsansicht, Berlinische Galerie, 2017. © Monica Bonvicini und VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017. Photo: Jens Ziehe

London Art Guide - January

London Art Guide - January

I.

Exhibition: Cezanne Portraits  
Artist: Cezanne
Venue: National Portrait Gallery
Dates: Until February 11th 2018 


I love Cezanne and I will go see this exhibition again so many times before it ends. Each portrait bears so much brutal sincerity. The best get away from our Instagram filters. 

cezanne.jpg


II.

Exhibition: Monochrome: Painting in Black and White
Artists: Rembrandt, Ingres, Picasso, Richter, Eliasson, and more
Venue: The National Gallery
Dates: Until February 18th 2018


Grey gives you so much to imagine from, notice and appreciate. It's always so incredible to see how many artists are drawn to experiment with shadow and light. It's beautiful and it's bold. 

ingres.png


III.

Sir John Soane Museum  
(Open all year, no specific exhibition) 


My favourite cabinet of curiosities, Sir John Soane has an incredible eye and a thirst for knowledge. Every wall, every corner is covered with art and antiques. The dream for an art collector. 

soanes.jpg

Notions of Modernism from 1818 to 2018

Notions of Modernism from 1818 to 2018

2017 has been an exciting year for us over here at Oh-So-Arty! It marked our first year as an international platform with local guides in over 20 international cities. Because of this we’re oh-so-looking forward to 2018 and all that the new year has in store for us. That is why we were so excited to hear about Maya Attoun’s new art book which celebrates 2018 through the form of a weekly planner.

maya attoun.png

As the planner organizes 2018 it also looks back 200 years to 1818 and the publication of Mary Shelley’s novel, Frankenstein. “Frankenstein was published on the first day of 1818 and I wanted to address this date by creating a book which starts exactly 200 years later,” Attoun explained when asked why she chose the medium of a weekly planner for her work. Shelley’s ominous and at times eerie novel has been interpreted into 160 pages of beautiful graphite illustrations. While the correlation between 2018 and 1818 may seem indistinct, Attoun beautifully describes the innate relationship between these years two centuries apart:

“I think there is an interesting correlation between the neo-gothic times which were the beginning of modernism and our times which are the disintegration of modernism.” She continued, “I feel that the monsters we confront today are the blasting of digital and visual information; the condition of post-truth where true or false, important and marginal lose their hierarchy.”

Attoun in her studio in Tel Aviv

Attoun in her studio in Tel Aviv

As we enter a new year we grapple with our own fears or monsters and it is exactly these mundane models of modernity that are dissected in Attoun’s intricate illustrations.

While the overarching theme of the planner is Frankenstein, a major motif of Attoun’s oeuvre, not all of the illustrations are direct references to Shelley’s text. For example some images are taken from everyday photos that Attoun posted on her social media or her “instagram diary” as she refers to it. There are also depictions of plants, climate models, anatomical illustrations, graphs and other technical devices.

mayaattoun.png

The power of Attoun’s project resides in its interactive component. Each illustration is given a new purpose when acted on by whomever the planner belongs to. None of the 160 pages bound in this book are static works of art and each piece takes on a new meaning every time it is written on. Attoun described her choice of a planner, saying, “I go back to using a planner because I wanted to do something which is interactive in the sense that is really involving the viewer or user.”

mayattoun.png

Simultaneously an object, an illustration, an artist book and a piece of performance art, Attoun’s weekly planner has elevated keeping track of time to an art form for the modern age.

 

To learn more about the Tel Aviv art scene join a private art tour with us, here.


 

Textual Inspirations of Art World Professionals [Part 3]

Textual Inspirations of Art World Professionals [Part 3]

Inspiration - noun  in·spi·ra·tion  \ ˌin(t)-spə-ˈrā-shən , -(ˌ)spi- \

Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines inspiration as 'the action or power of moving the intellect or emotions'. It can strike at any time and its myriad sources differ amongst individuals. As we are constantly seeking out new creative outlets to inspire us, we decided to ask our local arty guides what texts have had a profound influence on them. Their answers ranged from ancient poetry to contemporary tomes. As professional art guides it is our passion to awaken the creative side of others through the astounding power of art. 

Follow along with this ongoing series of posts to learn more about our guides and gain some inspiration for yourself along the way.

Read Part 1 here and Part 2 here.

Local guide in Milan, Sara Cattaneo

Local guide in Milan, Sara Cattaneo

David Joselif, After Art, 2013, Princeton University Press

As the title says, After Art is an essay about what happens after the creation of a work of art. Joselif confronts the matter of contemporary art and architecture in an age of proliferating networks and technologies, questioning about the distribution of art and its implications: ethics, and on the temporal and spatial limitations of its circulation. His reflections are routed around the power of imagination, in order to predict its new development. Lately artistic innovations are brought about not by the seems they examine, yet by the connections they manage to create with the public: images open new ways of cultural diplomacy.

After Art made me reflect on the developments of contemporary art and architecture raising new questions, such as: how important is the cultural context in the era of globalization and digital technology? How important is the art distribution network in respect to the art itself?

A milestone for the understanding of art and architecture in the times of Google.

Ares Kalogeropoulos, 2012

Ares Kalogeropoulos, 2012

Bruno Munari, Art Theorems, 1961, Scheiwiller

“The biggest hindrance
 to understanding a work of art
is wanting to understand.”


Art Theorems is a collection of eighteen theorems about art. The first eleven were published around 1945 in different art magazines, with the intention of proving the falsity of some preconceptions about art, through logical deductions, while the remaining seven were instead written for this publication. 

The strength of these writings is that they are still very relevant after so many years from its first appearance, together with Munari's ability to condense such complex concepts in a few words. For me, this small book is a little manual to never lose the compass in such an immensity like the one of the contemporary art scene.

Munari, Casati, Pedeferri

Munari, Casati, Pedeferri

New York Art Guide - December

New York Art Guide - December

I.

Exhibition: David Hockney
Artist: David Hockney
Venue: The Met
Dates: Until February 26th, 2018


A retrospective of David Hockney at the Metropolitan Museum that explores 60 years of massive and diverse work by the great English-American painter. The show includes works from the early 60’s when Hockney was as a student at the Royal College of Art in London, His most famous paintings of L.A. leisure and good life scenes painted flat and geometrical. Collages from the 70’s and 80’s influenced by cubism are also included in this show and last but not least- his recent painting large, vibrant scenes of the Yorkshire countryside and his California garden that nod to the works of Van Gogh, Munch and Matisse.

david hockney.jpg

II.

Exhibition: Whiteout
Artist: Erwin Redl
Venue: Madison Square Park
Dates: Until March 2018


This immersive art installation is made up of hundreds of transparent globes illuminated by white LED lights that are suspended two feet off the ground. The lights  are programmed to flutter in an odd way. Erwin Redl is an artist that uses LEDs as the main medium of his work. Redi was born in Australia and is currently living in the United States. His work includes installations, videos, graphics, computer art and electronic music.

nyc.jpg

III.

Exhibition: The Holiday Train Show
Venue: Bronx Botanical Garden
Dates: Until January 15th, 2018


The Holiday Train show at the Botanical Garden is truly something you won't forget. Every year, the garden celebrates its collection of crafted trains that chug along a nearly half-mile track followed by 150 miniature of NYC landmarks. Established in 1891, The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG) is a National Historic Landmark that's 250-acre (100 ha) site's verdant landscape supports over one million living plants in extensive collections.

unnamed.jpg