The Museum of Modern Art - MoMA
New York
11 West 53 Street
212 7089400
WEB
Paul Sietsema
dal 29/9/2009 al 14/2/2010
212 708-9752

Segnalato da

Kim Donica


approfondimenti

Paul Sietsema



 
calendario eventi  :: 




29/9/2009

Paul Sietsema

The Museum of Modern Art - MoMA, New York

Exhibition Includes Figure 3, Sietsema's Most Recent Film, and Related Drawings. Artist's films, drawings, and sculptures engage moments in art history and various genres of visual cataloguing. Out-of-print midcentury exhibition catalogues, archaeological manuals, and explorers' diaries all provide visual source material for direct appropriation and a more subtle gleaning of editing, framing, and presentation styles.


comunicato stampa

The Museum of Modern Art presents Paul Sietsema, the first New York exhibition of the artist’s most recent body of work, on view from September 30, 2009, through February 15, 2010. Sietsema’s films, drawings, and sculptures engage moments in art history and various genres of visual cataloguing. Out-of-print midcentury exhibition catalogues, archaeological manuals, and explorers’ diaries all provide visual source material for direct appropriation and a more subtle gleaning of editing, framing, and presentation styles. This exhibition features his third film, Figure 3 (2008), and drawings related to the film, including new works from the series on view for the first time, and selected works from MoMA’s collection. Paul Sietsema is organized by Connie Butler, The Robert Lehman Foundation Chief Curator of Drawings, The Museum of Modern Art.

Figure 3 grew out of Sietsema's collection of images documenting ethnographic objects from Africa, Indo-Asia, and the South Pacific region of Oceania. It reflects his particular interest in the ways these objects have been represented in different contexts, including anthropological photographs and museum displays. For the film, the artist reimagined various historical artifacts from diverse cultures and time periods as sculptures, then captured the handmade objects on 16mm film. The result is mostly black-and-white moving images that slip between abstraction and representation.

Sietsema’s Figure 3 drawings (2005–09), part of the same conceptual project as the film, create a similar tension between their physicality and the traces of their making. Many of the drawings were made with techniques adopted from predigital photo retouching and inkjet printing. The drawings capture a range of subjects, illustrating the marred surfaces of the artist’s workspace as well as carefully selected newspapers disrupted by paint splatters from the studio. Considered together, the drawings and film are an examination of the ways in which certain images are constructed and taken up into history.

Sietsema (American, b. 1968) lives and works in Los Angeles. He received his BA from University of California, Berkeley (1992) and MFA from UCLA (1999). He has had solo exhibitions at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid (2009), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco (2008), de Appel arts centre, Amsterdam (2008), and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2003). He has also been included in a number of group exhibitions including Life on Mars: 55th Carnegie International at the Carnegie Museum of Art (2008), 5th Berlin Biennial for Contemporary Art (2008), and Le Mouvement des images at the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2006). He is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2005) and a DAAD Artists-in-Residence Fellowship (2008).

PUBLICATION:
Paul Sietsema: Figure 3 situates the artist’s latest project in the broader context of his work of the past ten years and is illustrated with stills from Figure 3 and related drawings and objects. An essay by Connie Butler and an interview with the artist by Bruce Hainley, a contributing editor of Artforum, explore Sietsema’s unique approach to looking as well as the relationships between his drawings, object making, and film. Paul Sietsema: Figure 3 is published by The Museum of Modern Art and is distributed to the trade through Distributed Art Publishers (D.A.P) in the United States and Canada, and through Thames + Hudson outside North America. It is available at the MoMA Stores and online at MoMAstore.org. Paperback. 8 x 10 in.; 80 pp.; 50 ills. Price: $29.95. ISBN: 978-0-87070-776-6

This publication is made possible by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Jill and Peter Kraus, de Appel arts centre, and Dean Valentine and Amy Adelson.

Image: Still from film Figure 3, 2008. 16mm film (black and white and color, silent), 16 min. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Fund for the Twenty-First Century. © 2009 Paul Sietsema.

Press Contact: Kim Donica, (212) 708-9752 or kim_donica@moma.org

Opening September 30, 2009

The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street, New York, NY 10019
Hours: Wednesday through Monday: 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Friday: 10:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. - closed Tuesday
Museum Admission: $20 adults; $16 seniors, 65 years and over with I.D.; $12 full-time students withcurrent I.D.
Free for children 16 and under. Free for members.
Admission includes admittance to Museum galleries and film programs.
Free admission during Target Free Friday Nights 4-8 p.m.

IN ARCHIVIO [491]
Susan Howe and David Grubbs
dal 30/11/2015 al 1/12/2015

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede