"THE BLACK&WHITE PROJECT" Publication.
"The Black and White Project" is an ongoing exploration that started as a curatorial post on the LOOK&LISTEN blog. In 2014 it was expanded into an exhibition at the L&L gallery, presenting works by 30 international artists. This publication includes works by 100 artists from around the world.
Organized by : Yifat Gat / Design : Studio Vincent Verdeile / Text : David Rhodes
Thank you : Lydia Rump, Erin lawlor, Julia Gat.
HARD COVER COPY
http://www.blurb.com/b/6482193-the-black-white-project
SOFT COVER COPY
http://www.blurb.com/b/6494915-b-w-soft-cover
Participated artists : Andrew Bick, Don Voisine, Katherine Bradford, Matthew Deleget, Eve Aschheim, Alain Biltereyst, Amy Feldman, Rob de Oude, Ky Anderson, Tilman Hoepfl, Yevgeniya Baras, Erin Lawlor, Daniel Levine, Didier Petit, lydia rump, Brian Cypher, Claire collin collin, Tobias Wenzel, Laurence De Leersnyder, Ward Schumaker, Emily Berger, Guy Yanai, Gabriele Herzog, Karl Bielik, Armelle de Sainte Marie, Rene Korten, Corinne Laroche, Shawn Stipling, Rosaire Appel, Per Adolfsen, Mary Judge, Lina Jabbour, Andrea Heller, Jonathan Higgins, Heidi Pollard, Mikhail Lezin, Katrin Bremermann, Douglas Witmer, Dan Devening, Sharon Butler, Charles Williams, Playpaint, Sigrid Calon, Hadas Hasid, Elissa Marchal, John Tallman, Matthew Wong, Lael Marshall, Rieko Koga, Jérémie Delhome, Michael Voss, Jai Llewellyn, Meg Lipke, Richard van der Aa, Ekaterina Zhadina, Gary Petersen, Debra M Smith, Paul Pagk, Rachel Beach, Lisa Solomon, Carleen Zimbalatti, Andrew Seto, Yoav Efrati, Cecilia Vissers, David Rhodes, Clinton King, Justine Frischmann, Jaanika Peerna, Mark Wethli, Valerie Brennan, Paul Behnke, Marian Bijlenga, Pascale Hugonet, Vicki Sher, Pete Schulte, Benjamin Gardner, Daniel G. Hill, Michel Barjol, Catherine Haggarty, Vincent Hawkins, Ian White Williams, Katrina Blannin, Beatrice Beha, Sarajo Frieden, Anne Russinof, Matthew McLemore, Nelio, Brian Edmonds, Janet Meester, Hooper turner, Peter Shear, Cary Smith, Sara Bright, Laura Charlton, Perry Kopchak, Espen Erichsen, Kale Tunnessen, Jeremy Laffon, Yifat Gat, Judith Braun.
'Format Raisin' - Studio visit / Izabela Kowalczyk
As part as the the preparation for 'format raisin' , Michel Barjol sent me to visit Izabela at her studio near Palais Lonchan , Marseille.
http://www.galeriemartagon.com/galerie_martagon/Formats-raisin-1-evenement-20.html
ARTBNB - CURATORIAL PROJECTS
Artbnb is a curatorial project initiated by LOOK&LISTEN. The project advocates the idea of collaborations between artists and airbnb apartments willing to provide their walls and serve as exhibition spaces. L&L provides exhibition organization and curating services for apartments eager to participate and support the Artbnb project. L&L also propose the idea of artists in residence at Airbnb apartments, concluding the residency with an exhibition of the resulted artworks. Artbnb seeks to initiate meetings between apartment owners, travelers and artists; to encourage connections between the art world and the travel environment, two domains capable of immense service to each other.
ARTBNB #3: PAPER WORKS
What: 10 international structures (galleries association, artist run projects) exhibit a variety of contemporary drawing.
Where: The space is a street level show room in a small street in front of Carreau du Temple in the 3e arrondissement in Paris, where the 10th edition of the Drawing Now is happening during that week.
When: During the week of "dessin contemporain" in Paris, the weekend of 2-3 April 2016.
ARTBNB #2: JORIS & IZABELA
Opening 24 January 2016 14h-19h
"Best Place to Stay in Marseille"
29 rue Pavillon, 13001 Marseille, France
Izabela Kowalczyk & Joris Brantuas are the first couple in a series of intimate duo expositions at an ARTBNB apartment in the center of Marseille.
Joris’s work is bursting, colorful, and provocative. He is preparing a HUGE exhibition over 4000m space @Sète. A week before his grand opening, he has agreed to contribute to our intimate duets series alongside the most opposite partner imaginable: Izabela - her work's magic is graphic, mindful and self contained.
Open by rdv: lookelisten@gmail.com
ARTBNB #1: FAMILY BUSINESS
November 28th, 2015 - January 31st, 2016
"Best Place to Stay in Marseille"
29 rue Pavillon, 13001 Marseille, France
Family Business is a collective exhibition including the artists Henry Amistadi (US) / Carolle Benitah (FR) / Julia Gat (IL/FR) / Melissa Kagerer (US) / Ilka Kramer (CH) / Julien Magre (FR) / Dominique Mérigard (FR) / Christiana Rifaat (US). Curated by Julia Gat and organised as part of the artbnb project by LOOK&LISTEN, Family Business presents a variety of photographers whose body of work focuses on the context of family life.
Open by rdv: lookelisten@gmail.com
Meg Lipke , Catherine Hall, Patricia Sinclair Hall - the story of three generations. told by catherine Hall
Patricia was orphaned in her teens, and had little formal education. She experienced insecurity and poverty living with an older sister near Manchester, England. But she was beautiful and vivacious, and married my father, a wealthy textile mill owner, shortly before the Second World War. Thereafter, she was imprisoned in a marriage that had the outward trappings of glamour but was dominated by the tyrannical rule of my father, upon whom she was totally dependent.
She was a stay-at-home mother (she didn't even drive a car) and was devoted to her children and house. She encouraged her four children to paint and draw, and gave me my first oil paints when I was 10. Both my sister and I went to art school when we were 16 and 15 respectively. But around that time the textile industry in Britain collapsed, and the mill went into bankruptcy. My father transferred his business to our dining room table, and the house began to fill with the yarns that he bought at auction from other mills that were closing down.
My mother wound the yarn sample cards and my father and older brother sold the fancy yarns to hand-loom weavers. I learned to make a tapestry loom and made one for my mother. Soon she was making wild weavings and embroideries with the materials close at hand (much to the disapproval of my father, who had conservative tastes).
Above: Patricia Sinclair Hall, Untitled Tapestry, circa 1975, yarn and cloth on burlap, 42 x 28 inches
After attending art school and the nearby university, desperate to escape from the confines of home, I came to the United States on a fellowship as a graduate student. In my second semester of a MA in art history I married a professor, and had our two children, Meg and Dan, shortly afterwards.
I started making art again, at first using materials I was familiar with from the textile mill of my childhood: fibers, dye, and wax resist. Like many female artists of my generation, after the publication of Germaine Greer's The Obstacle Race (1979), I wanted to prove that it was possible to be a serious artist with a rigorous studio practice, a career as a professor and a committed mother. I was a founding member of the Vermont Women's Caucus for Art and my connections with other feminist artists were instrumental to my critical awareness.
Above: Catherine Hall, Red and Black, 1985, Japanese gauze paper, wax and dye mounted on silk.
As my commitment to teaching and exhibiting increased, my marriage failed; I realized it had become as constricting as my mother's had been. However, I didn't have to stay in my marriage as she had felt she had to in hers. I needed freedom after my children were grown up to pursue my work full time. Granting myself the time to make art was my lifeline.
In the meantime, my daughter Meg had started on an artistic path of her own. She had spent every summer in England and traveled there alone at 11 to be with her cousins and -especially – my mother Patricia. She dyed and painted cloth, wound sample cards, sewed dolls and did art projects with Patricia and my sister, Liz.
Meg Lipke in Brooklyn studio, 2014. Photo by John Silvis.
Her childhood memories of her grandmother and mother have been a big influence on her work. I feel my mother's spirit has continued to blossom in my daughter's amazingly inventive art.
Above: Meg Lipke, Surplus, 2015, featuring yarn from William Hall and Co, beeswax and batiked and sewn cloth with wool stuffing, 27 x 30 x 6 in.
I see my daughter struggling to find a balance between studio practice, family, and life with admirable courage and confidence in her place in the art world; moreover to create her own supportive community of like-minded artists. Her work is fearless, uninhibited, experimental and joyful and because of the changed circumstances for women, her artistic "voice" is liberated from the confines of the patriarchal system that suppressed the voice of my mother.
Shawn Stipling
"Opaque Transparency" a project by ParisCONCRET Curated by Richard van der Aa July 2015
Curated by Richard van der Aa July 2015
Louise Blyton (au)
Henk Delabie (be)
Barbara Gaile (fr)
Kyle Jenkins (au)
Daniel Levine (us)
Janet Meester (nl)
Paul Raguenes (fr)
Patrick Sauze (fr)
Clary Stolte (nl)
John Tallman (us)
Richard van der Aa (fr)
Cecilia Vissers (nl)
Werner Windisch (de)
Douglas Witmer (us)