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Since the beginning of China's economic boom in the late 1980s and
its ever-increasing influence on globalized society, the country's
burgeoning contemporary art scene has attracted great attention
around the world. However, despite the Chinese art market's
emergence as a highly prolific industry and a growing international
recognition of contemporary art from China, there is a remarkable
lack of Chinese women artists represented in (inter-)national
exhibitions and publications. Stepping Out! is the first
comprehensive publication in 25 years to present a broadly
representative selection of the work of contemporary Chinese female
artists, including pioneering as well as emerging artists thus far
little known abroad. Through an enormous wealth of perspectives,
the artists reveal personal and social fears, contradictions, and
hopes in the tense field occupied by powerful tradition, and shed
light upon the search for identity both as a woman and as an artist
within a rapidly changing Chinese society. Stepping Out! features
more than 100 artworks by 27 artists born between 1960 and 1994
living in mainland China, including Wen Hui, Cao Fei, Lin Tianmiao,
Xing Danwen, Yin Yiuzhen, Ma Qiusha, Xiao Lu, Luo Yang and Tong
Wenmin.
At the Tipping Point Taking a deliberately kaleidoscopic approach,
the exhibition 1.5 Degrees and the accompanying catalogue encourage
us to address the climate crisis in a curious, innovative,
participatory, and active way. More than 30 international artists,
including melanie bonajo, Laure Prouvost, Julian Charrière,
Otobong Nkanga, Marianna Simnett, Ernesto Neto and the collective
SUPERFLEX, explore the complex interdependencies between humans,
nature and technology, and search for solutions, from plants as
data repositories, algae as energy sources and microorganisms as
empathic dialogue partners. Including all parts of the museum
collections as well as new outdoor installations at the National
Garden Show BUGA, the book presents various models of how to use
the means of art to reshape the coexistence of species and
emphasizes the hope-giving potential of creativity and innovation.
The title Present Perfect ambiguously relates to an “ideal
present” on the one hand culminating in a “perfect” moment,
and on the other hand to the English tense referring to a state or
an action that began in the past and continues to the present. An
allusion to the photography’s utopian attempt to enshrine the
present moment, when it is only ever able to capture a moment in
the past. Echoing a plethora of attentive everyday observations,
Eidinger’s photographs capture oftentimes paradoxical scenes of
mundane life including people’s ambivalent behaviour. In a
society of singularities, reality has become a colossal
photomontage. Behind it lies an abysmal world entangled in
contradictions. Eidinger depicts the lonely emptiness of modern
life’s non-places, provisionalities, garishly out-of-place
oddities. His confrontations with insufferable incongruities turn
into symbolic images of an era of exhaustion. Present Perfect
assembles new images captured with his mobile phone, as well as
images taken with a reflex camera, tracing Eidinger’s
photographic self-explorations over the past 20 years.
Martin Eder's new body of work is inhabited by ghostly hybrid
creatures. Blurring the transition between humans, animals, and
supernatural beings, Eder explores the motif of the boundary and
its transgression in his oil paintings. His subjects allude to an
encounter with the underworld and recall Dante's Inferno. A
symbolism that both reflects a (post-)pandemic unease and hints at
the encounter of reality and illusion. Eerie and fascinating at the
same time, the paintings outline a space marked by the collapse of
a shared perception. In addition to studio insights and paintings,
the volume includes an elucidating text by art historian Thomas
Elsen as well as a conversation between Eder, Damien Hirst and Tim
Marlow, director of London's Design Museum.
You can find him on the stage or in front of a film camera, in the
director’s chair or at the mixing board—Lars Eidinger has many
faces, and not just as an actor. His performances testify to a
sheer, inexhaustible energy that makes every appearance a tour de
force that infects and electrifies the audience in an almost
magical way. No less can be expected from his photographic works,
which are gathered together here for the first time in a
publication. As diverse as the subjects of the pictures are, they
still allow us to recognise Eidinger’s signature: elements of fi
m and theatre unite to form a unique rhythm that transforms the
everyday into a paradoxical world essence. Only one word can
suitably describe the richness of these visual spheres and the way
of seeing that they articulate: epic.
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