Showing posts with label exhibits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibits. Show all posts

6/29/2012

Alighiero Boetti - Game Plan




Alighiero Boetti: Game Plan
July 1–October 1

The International Council of The Museum of Modern Art Exhibition Gallery, sixth floor. The Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium, second floor.

This retrospective, organized in collaboration with the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid and the Tate Modern in London, is the largest presentation outside of Italy of works by Italian artist Alighiero Boetti (1940–1994) to date. Organized chronologically, the exhibition spans Boetti's entire career, beginning with his sculptural works, or "objects," as he preferred to call them, comprised of everyday materials including wood, cardboard, and aluminum. While Boetti is often chiefly affiliated with the Arte Povera moment, Alighiero Boetti: Game Plan considers Boetti beyond these brief years. In 1969, Boetti began exploring notions of duality and multiplicity, order and disorder, and travel and geography, and he initiated postal and map works imagining distant places. The exhibition brings together these and other works related to travel, geography, and mapping, many of which relate to his extensive trips to Afghanistan, where Boetti collaborated with local artisans to produce his most iconic monumental embroideries. This exhibition celebrates the material diversity, conceptual complexity, and visual beauty of Boetti's art, and his notion that the artist, rather than inventing, simply brings what already exists in the world into the work.

6/17/2012

Studio Albori, 179 luoghi


Zones of Exclusion - Uranium Cells

PERPETUAL ARCHITECTURE: URANIUM DISPOSAL CELLS OF AMERICA


2393
Green River Disposal Cell, Utah. Image from CLUI Archive, with flight support from Lighthawk, 2012.


This exhibit features large glowing black & white LCD images, from the archives of the CLUI, of a selection of uranium disposal cells in the southwest. In addition, interactive touchscreen map displays have more images and information about these unique structures.
More than 30 of these disposal cells have been constructed over the last 25 years, primarily to contain radioactive contamination from decommissioned uranium mills and processing sites. They are time capsules, of sorts, designed to take their toxic contents, undisturbed, as far into the future as possible.

1/30/2011

Creating Schools

Opening of the Exhibition
"Flying Classrooms. We are creating Schools"

Opening: Wed, 02.03.2011, 7pm at the Az W
Exhibition: 03.03. - 30.05.2011

1/20/2011

Ben van Berkel at Harvard University

Opening of the Kenzo Tange Visiting Professor Ben van Berkel’s exhibition ‘Motion Matters’ at Harvard University.
Gund Hall Gallery, Harvard University Graduate School of Design
48 Quincy St, Cambridge, MA 02138
Thursday 20th Jan, 5.30pm - 6.30pm



On the occasion of Ben van Berkel’s appointment to the Kenzo Tange Chair at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, the exhibition Motion Matters will open in the Gund Hall Gallery on Thursday 20th January at 5.30pm.
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