oddtag's posterous

    • 0
      17 Mar 2011

      Buon compleanno, Italia

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      links: - 150° anniversario dell’Unità d’Italia

      - Constitution of Italy - wikipedia

      Se voi volete andare in pellegrinaggio nel luogo dove è nata la nostra Costituzione, andate nelle montagne dove caddero i partigiani, nelle carceri dove furono imprigionati, nei campi dove furono impiccati. Dovunque è morto un Italiano per riscattare la libertà e la dignità, andate lì, o giovani, col pensiero, perché lì è nata la nostra Costituzione.

      (Piero Calamandrei Discorso ai giovani tenuto alla Società Umanitaria, Milano, 26 gennaio 1955)

       

      txt: Costituzione della Repubblica italiana

      Articolo 1. L'Italia è una Repubblica democratica, fondata sul lavoro. La sovranità appartiene al popolo, che la esercita nelle forme e nei limiti della Costituzione.
      Articolo 2. La Repubblica riconosce e garantisce i diritti inviolabili dell'uomo, sia come singolo sia nelle formazioni sociali ove si svolge la sua personalità, e richiede l'adempimento dei doveri inderogabili di solidarietà politica, economica e sociale.
      Articolo 3. Tutti i cittadini hanno pari dignità sociale e sono eguali davanti alla legge, senza distinzione di sesso, di razza, di lingua, di religione, di opinioni politiche, di condizioni personali e sociali. È compito della Repubblica rimuovere gli ostacoli di ordine economico e sociale, che, limitando di fatto la libertà e l'eguaglianza dei cittadini, impediscono il pieno sviluppo della persona umana e l'effettiva partecipazione di tutti i lavoratori all'organizzazione politica, economica e sociale del Paese.
      Articolo 4. La Repubblica riconosce a tutti i cittadini il diritto al lavoro e promuove le condizioni che rendano effettivo questo diritto. Ogni cittadino ha il dovere di svolgere, secondo le proprie possibilità e la propria scelta, un'attività o una funzione che concorra al progresso materiale o spirituale della società.
      Articolo 5. La Repubblica, una e indivisibile, riconosce e promuove le autonomie locali; attua nei servizi che dipendono dallo Stato il più ampio decentramento amministrativo; adegua i principi ed i metodi della sua legislazione alle esigenze dell'autonomia e del decentramento.
      Articolo 6. La Repubblica tutela con apposite norme le minoranze linguistiche.
      Articolo 7. Lo Stato e la Chiesa cattolica sono, ciascuno nel proprio ordine, indipendenti e sovrani. I loro rapporti sono regolati dai Patti Lateranensi. Le modificazioni dei Patti accettate dalle due parti, non richiedono procedimento di revisione costituzionale.
      Articolo 8. Tutte le confessioni religiose sono egualmente libere davanti alla legge. Le confessioni religiose diverse dalla cattolica hanno diritto di organizzarsi secondo i propri statuti, in quanto non contrastino con l'ordinamento giuridico italiano. I loro rapporti con lo Stato sono regolati per legge sulla base di intese con le relative rappresentanze.
      Articolo 9. La Repubblica promuove lo sviluppo della cultura e la ricerca scientifica e tecnica. Tutela il paesaggio e il patrimonio storico e artistico della Nazione.
      Articolo 10. L'ordinamento giuridico italiano si conforma alle norme del diritto internazionale generalmente riconosciute. La condizione giuridica dello straniero è regolata dalla legge in conformità delle norme e dei trattati internazionali. Lo straniero, al quale sia impedito nel suo paese l'effettivo esercizio delle libertà democratiche garantite dalla Costituzione italiana, ha diritto d'asilo nel territorio della Repubblica secondo le condizioni stabilite dalla legge. Non è ammessa l'estradizione dello straniero per reati politici.
      Articolo 11. L'Italia ripudia la guerra come strumento di offesa alla libertà degli altri popoli e come mezzo di risoluzione delle controversie internazionali; consente, in condizioni di parità con gli altri Stati, alle limitazioni di sovranità necessarie ad un ordinamento che assicuri la pace e la giustizia fra le Nazioni; promuove e favorisce le organizzazioni internazionali rivolte a tale scopo.
      Articolo 12. La bandiera della Repubblica è il tricolore italiano: verde, bianco e rosso, a tre bande verticali di eguali dimensioni.
      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      10 Mar 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Wales

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      curator: Tom Rowland artist: Tim Davies venue: Ludoteca Santa Maria Ausiliatrice - Castello Venezia on Google maps link: Art Council of Wales - Wales at the Venice Biennale  

      txt: about Tim Davies - www.artscouncilofwales.org

       

      Tim Davies is part of a constituency of artists, working transnationally, who are committed to ‘place’ but also function in the world, who do not prescribe our understanding nor privilege their own by adopting an avant-garde position. Davies works by unpicking the locks of human experience, from a position already beyond Modernism, rather than leading any sort of futile charge against it. He asks that we explore the nature and meaning of that experience with him. He also embodies, in his practice, a role for the artist which has both intimacy and, at the same time, the wider reach necessary to access the individual and collective public mind and it is this which makes it a new, necessary kind of ‘public’ art (essay in The Butler Gallery’s Kilkenny Shift catalogue, 2009).

       

      video: Poem in October by Gerald Conn on vimeo.com

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      28 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Denmark

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      "Speech Matters" curator: Katerina Gregos link: The Danish Arts Agency  

      txt: Danish Pavilion 2011 Curator's statement

       

      The exhibition aims to provoke a considered debate and to complicate the issue of freedom of speech which seems, more and more, to be used as an empty slogan for political purposes, and subjected to a very simplified, biased or populist debate when in fact it is an extremely complex, often ambivalent issue which is contingent on subjective political, social, cultural, religious and personal circumstances. The discussion around freedom of speech is therefore not only complicated but also highly relative and debatable, and the exhibition aims to highlight these intricacies, ambiguities and grey areas, emphasizing the fact that freedom of speech cannot be exercised or applied in any programmatic or strictly proscribed manner. Why an exhibition on freedom of speech at this time? Because it is one of the key issues in the current public debate and one that is becoming increasingly contested given the steady erosion of civil liberties, even in the 'freer', Western world. Apart from the fact that it relates to Denmark specifically, it is also highly relevant in relation to much of what is happening in the world today from press intimidation and censorship in Russia and elsewhere, to the recent Google episode in China, down to other issues such as increasing surveillance in the UK and the USA, and highly charged debates on the limits of freedom of speech in several European countries such as the Netherlands. Finally, it also touches on the essence of visual artistic practice per se, which fundamentally entails conditions of freedom.

       

      video: Katerina Gregos - The Elastic Documentary (part 1) - kask on vimeo.com

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      25 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Australia

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      links: - Australian pavilion - Australia Council for the Arts Curator: Anne Ellegood Artist: Hany Armanious txt: (.pdf) Hany Armanious to represent Australia at Venice Biennale 2011

       

      Hany’s work is provocative and enigmatic, said Venice Biennale Commissioner, Doug Hall. ‘It confronts the traditional notions of sculpture. The richness and depth of Hany’s work is greatly admired both here and internationally. I’m confident that international audiences will respond to it with keen interest. It will build on the strong presence of Shaun Gladwell and the other artists represented in the Once Removed exhibition presented in Venice in 2009.’ ‘The Venice Biennale is a crucial high-profile platform for visual artists the world over,” said Australia Council CEO Kathy Keele. ‘Of the reported 375,000 visitors to the 2009 exhibition, over 220,000 of them visited our Australian pavilion. Presenting to such a large audience is an immense opportunity for any artist. This time that honour falls on just one Australian artist, and I’m confident that Hany will build on Australia’s long presence at Venice and impress our international audiences with his unique and engaging works.’

       

      link: Uncanny Valley, 2009 - Hany Armanious, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery  

      video: The Uncanny Valley Popscivideo on youtube.com

       

       

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      19 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Iceland

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      link: Icelandic Art Center Comissioner: Dorothée Kirch Curator: Ellen Blumenstein Artists: Libia Castro and Ólafur Ólafsson

      txt: Libia Castro and Ólafur Ólafsson represent Iceland at Venice Biennale 2011

       

      The Spanish-Icelandic artist duo Libia Castro & Ólafur Ólafsson have been chosen to exhibit on Iceland’s behalf at the 54th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia 2011. Their work is characterised by their at once attentive and critical, analytical and emotional gaze and their interest in identifying the many questions that the present raises. The trans-cultural tendency in today’s world and the complex relationships that spring from it is one of the artist’s main concerns, exploring relationships among art, everyday life, politics and transculturality. Castro, born in Madrid, and Ólafsson, born in Reykjavík – based in Rotterdam and Berlin and aptly referred to as “citizens of the world” – met in the Netherlands in 1997 and have been collaborating since.

       

      video: Libia and Olafur sample - SalvageFreedom on youtube.com

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      18 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Germany

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      links: www.deutscher-pavillon.org MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main  

      Curator: Susanne Gaensheimer Artist: Christoph Schlingensief  

      txt: the German Pavilion of the 54th Venice Biennial in 2011

       

      Dr. Susanne Gaensheimer, Commissioner of the German Pavilion of the 54th Venice Biennial in 2011 and Director of MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt/Main, has announced that the work of Christoph Schlingensief will be presented in Venice despite his untimely death. [...] In early May 2010, Christoph Schlingensief himself commented on his invitation to the Venice Biennial in the following words: “I have worked in many different fields, as a director in film, theater and opera, producer, solo entertainer, human being, also as a sick human being and Christian, and equally so as a politician and performer, and I have always taken an interest in those artists who felt almost compelled to practice their art, and in so doing did not necessarily separate their compulsion from that of having or wanting to live. A kind of schizophrenia has always been typical of my work and my life. If I limited myself to one thing only I would simply get bored, my mind would be starved of inspiration. Between music and image, people and language, the healthy and the infirm, the funny and the sad I always need to be given the chance to state the opposite too. To my mind, everything in the world is ambiguous. The task of using the German Pavilion, which very much looks like a representative building, not for the purpose of representation but for art, simply fits the bill – a heavy burden, yet art makes light what would otherwise be heavy. And yet perhaps it is precisely what makes it so positive. I, for my part, love those cracks and opposites, and over the coming months I intend to seek out the most productive opposites for Venice, the German Pavilion, and Burkina Faso.”

       

      video: Wa(h)re Kunst: Die Museumsdirektorin Susanne Gaensheimer | euromaxx on youtube.com

       

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      17 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Finland

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      link: FRAME Finnish Fund for Art Exchange - Venice Biennale  

      Artist: Vesa-Pekka Rannikko Curator: Laura Köönikkä  

      txt: Vesa-Pekka Rannikko Represents Finland at the 2011 Venice Biennale

      My choice was influenced by the versatility and re-inventiveness of the artist as well as his ability to take charge of architectonic space. Rannikko’s international fame will also enhance Finland’s visibility at the multinational Biennale”, says exhibition curator Laura Köönikkä. Amongst Vesa-Pekka Rannikko’s most recognisable works are sculptures that reproduce objects in three dimensions, mimicking paintings. Rannikko has also created several location-specific works where the usual boundaries between viewer, work of art and space are blurred. His works challenge the limits of viewing and experience: an image becomes a material object while the space of the work becomes an image. Viewers feel impelled to question the veracity of many of the works, due to the juxtaposition of their theme and the way they are realised. For Rannikko, one starting point for the exhibition at the Venice Biennale is the Aalto Pavilion in Venice. Ceated by Alvar Aalto, it was originally meant to be a temporary structure. Now Rannikko is keen to explore its role and character as a stage for what is Finnish.

       

      video: Finland Pavilion at Expo 2010 Shanghai: 2010

       

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 3
      15 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011 map / mappa della Biennale di Venezia 2011

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      Map of the 54th International Art Exhibition Venice Biennale 2011 (in progress).  

      Preview: June 1/3 2011. Official Opening: June 3, 2011. Public opening: from June 4 to November 27, 2011. Ticket offices: Giardini / Arsenale

      How to arrive - from Piazzale Roma / Railway Station to Arsenale: waterbus line 1, line 41 to Giardini: waterbus line 1, line 2, line 41, line 51, line 61 (from Piazzale Roma only)  

      link: www.labiennale.org (en)

      see also: - Venice Biennale 2011: the collateral events

      - Venice Biennale 2011 national participations: names, links, places

       

      [it] -----

      mappa (in aggiornamento) della 54° Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte Biennale di Venezia 2011 Vernice: 1-2-3 giugno 2011. Inaugurazione: 3 giugno 2011. Apertura al pubblico: dal 4 giugno al 27 novembre 2011 Biglietterie: Giardini – Arsenale Educational e Promozione Pubblico: Tel. 041 5218 828 - Fax 041 5218 732 promozione@labiennale.org

      Come arrivare: da Piazzale Roma / Ferrovia all' Arsenale: vaporetto linea 1, linea 41 per Giardini: vaporetto linea 1, linea 2, linea 41, linea 51, linea 61 (solo da Piazzale Roma)  

      link: www.labiennale.org (it)  

      see also: - Venice Biennale 2011: the collateral events

      - Venice Biennale 2011 national participations: names, links, places

       


      View Larger Map

       

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      14 Feb 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011: Austria

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      links: www.labiennale.at Venice Biennale 2011 Austria on Facebook  

      txt: Commissioner's Statement

       

      In his Venice project, Markus Schinwald examines the Austrian Pavilion built 1934 by Josef Hoffmann, an architectural landmark in and around the Giardini district. Markus Schinwald, who scored success with complex installations he realized mainly in museums and art institutions outside Austria, as for example in Zurich, Frankfurt, Brussels, and Budapest, has a comprehensive oeuvre to show for, with his works combining performative with painterly, sculptural, filmic and architectural elements. With subtlety and finesse, Schinwald explores dispositifs of control, disciplining, and self-improvement, which inscribe themselves in the human body, shaping and pervading it to re-emerge on the body surface as psychologically charged inner worlds, visible and palpable. This approach also makes itself felt in his Biennale contribution: the viewer turns into a performer, the pavilion into a closed stage. By dissecting the interior space along vertical axes, a new mode of perception emerges which makes the human body its structural frame of reference: “Although these constructional components are of course architectural elements, it suggested itself to use psychoanalytical terms for a concise definition; after all, the space created is dissociative rather than than actually fragmented: claustrophobic above and nothing below. Or, if you will, the mind in neurosis, the crotch in psychosis. However, unlike in the spatial sculptures of Bruce Nauman or Robert Morris, the space intervention is not an autonomous act here, but also a kind of stage system or environment for the display of different works. It is, for one thing, an attempt to establish various different elements and, at the same time, to avoid explicit categorizations through contrastive positioning”, Markus Schinwald explains.

       

      video: Approaching Venice - Jörg Heiser

       

       

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    • 6
      29 Jan 2011

      Venice Biennale 2011 first entries (update January, 2011)

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      This was an old release of the list.

      For updates and more details please see

      Venice Biennale 2011 national participations: names, links, places

       

       

      Argentina - Adrián Villar Rojas

      Armenia - Viktor Mnatsakanyan Armenian Pavilion Commissioner

      Australia - Hany Armanious

      Austria - Markus Schinwald

      Azerbaijan - A. Sadikhzade, A. Salakhova, A. Ousseinov, M. Abdurahmanov, K. Gasimov, Z. Azizov

      Belgium - Angel Vergara

      Canada - Steven Shearer

      Central Asia - Central Asia Pavilion

      Chile - Fernando Prats

      Denmark - Katerina Gregos curator of the Danish Pavilion

      Finland - Vesa-Pekka Rannikko

      France - Christian Boltanski

      Germany - Christoph Schlingensief

      Great Britain - Mike Nelson

      Greece - Diohandi

      Hungary - Hajnal Németh

      Iceland - Libia Castro and Ólafur Ólafsson

      India - Indian pavilion at 2011 Venice Biennale

      Ireland - Corban Walker

      Israel - Sigalit Landau

      Italy - Sgarbi as curator of Italian Pavillion at Biennale 2011

      Japan - Tabaimo

      Korea - Lee Yong-baek

      Lebanon - The Lebanon Pavilion

      Netherlands - J. Robaard, J. Schwartz, B. Visser, M. Mooren and EventArchitectuur

      New Zealand - Michael Parekowhai

      Nordic Pavilion - Sweden presents: Fia Backström and Andreas Eriksson

      Northern Ireland - Arts Council reviews participation at Venice Biennale 2011

      Norway - Norway at the 54th Venice International art exhibition

      Poland - Yael Bartana

      Russia - Andrei Monastyrsky and Collective Actions

      Scotland - Karla Black

      Serbia: Dragoljub Rasa Todosijevic

      Singapore - Ho Tzu Nyen

      Spain - Dora García

      Switzerland - Thomas Hirschhorn and Andrea Thal

      Taiwan: Hsieh Chun-te

      Turkey: Ayse Erkmen

      UAE - UAE pavilion: Vasif Kortun as curator

      United States - IMA: Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla

      Uruguay - Carlos Capelán, Magela Ferrero

      Wales - Tim Davies

       

      • views
      • Tweet
    « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 … 50 51 Next »
    • Search

    • Tags

      • text
      • culture
      • Venice
      • video
      • contemporary art
      • link
      • Venice Biennale
      • technology
      • Venice Biennale 2009
      • creativity
      • writing
      • venezia
      • internet
      • architecture
      • innovation
      • urban art
      • Social Media
      • Venice Biennale 2011
      • veneto
      • Venice Architecture Biennale
      • photo
      • Art
      • street art
      • map
      • 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale
      • media art
      • future
      • music
      • poetry
      • Punta della Dogana
      • advertising
      • banksy
      • copyright
      • remix
      • Google
      • art market
      • berlin
      • poesia
      • sharing
      • simplicity
      • sustainability
      • Biennale
      • Guggenheim
      • Venice Carnival
      • climate change
      • contemporary
      • facebook
      • graffiti
      • green economy
      • internet culture
      • life
      • london
      • vicenza
      • videogames
      • web 2.0
      • Christmas
      • Tate
      • Tokyo
      • Walter Benjamin
      • Wooster Collective
      • bevilacqua la masa
      • blogging
      • blublu
      • change
      • crisis
      • cultura
      • design
      • ecology
      • economics
      • featured
      • free
      • freedom
      • iceland
      • information
      • knowledge
      • love
      • market
      • media
      • network
      • open source
      • palladio
      • science
      • sigur ros
      • theatre
      • tourism
      • web
      • wisdom
      • youtube
      • Ars Electronica
      • Barack Obama
      • Biennale Venezia
      • CERN
      • Calatrava
      • Contemporary Music
      • Creative Commons
      • Creative Economy
      • Electrovenice
      • Fabrica
      • Frank Gehry
      • Geert Lovink
    • Obox Design
  • oddtag's posterous

    #contemporary #change #future @Venice area (Italy)

    256 Views
  • Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    Tumblr