Posts Tagged: Modern


1
Feb 10

DUYURU

2. Söbütay Özer Resim Yarışması resim teslim tarihi: 23 ŞUBAT 2010 tarihine kadar uzatılmıştır. Eser Toplama Merkezi : Cer Atölyeleri Modern Sanat Müzesi (CER MODERN) (CSO Arkası)/ Ankara

5
Nov 09

2. SÖBÜTAY ÖZER RESİM YARIŞMASI

afis_2010

2. SÖBÜTAY ÖZER RESİM YARIŞMASI

Uzun yıllar Gazi Üniversitesi Gazi Eğitim Fakültesi Güzel Sanatlar Eğitimi Bölümü Resim-İş Eğitimi Anabilim Dalı öğretim üyesi olarak görev yapan, başarılı eğitimciliği ile pek çok öğrenci yetiştiren, aynı zamanda çağdaş resmimizin önemli isimlerinden olan Söbütay Özer ( 1949-2007) adına ÇAĞSAV (Çağdaş Sanatlar Vakfı) ve CER MODERN ( Cer Atölyeleri Modern Sanatlar Merkezi) tarafından
2. SÖBÜTAY ÖZER RESİM YARIŞMASI düzenlenmiştir.

Yarışmanın amacı, örnek kişiliği, tutarlı eğitimciliği ve sanat tutkusu ile yücelen Söbütay Özer’in anısını yaşatmak, sanat eğitimi alan öğrencileri ve “28 yaşından gün almamış” genç sanatçı adaylarını desteklemek, bu amaçla ortaya konan çalışmaları toplumumuza sunmak, sanatımıza kalıcı eserler kazandırmaktır. Yarışmaya katılmak için güzel sanatlar alanındaki fakülte veya yüksek okullarda lisans öğrencisi olmak, lisans bölümünden mezun bulunmak, lisansüstü çalışmalarını sürdürmek veya bitirmiş olmak yeterlidir.

Konu: Serbestir.

Katılım Koşulları :
*Her ressam yarışmaya daha önce herhangi bir yarışmada ödül almamış en çok iki eserle katılabilir.
*Teknik sınırlaması olmamakla birlikte, ressamlar boya resmi kapsamında kendi anlatım biçemlerine uygun teknikleri seçmekte serbesttir.
*Yarışmaya katılanlardan derece alan ve sergilenmeye değer görülen eserler bir katalogla belgelenecektir. Bu nedenle yarışmacıların resimleriyle birlikte, resimlerinin basım tekniğine uygun yüksek çözünürlükte digital olarak çekilmiş görsellerini, biyografilerini, portre fotoğraflarının yer aldığı bir CD ile birlikte önlü-arkalı nüfus cüzdanı fotokopisini de teslim etmeleri gerekmektedir.
*Yarışmaya gönderilen resimlerin uzun kenarları 200cm’yi geçmemeli, kısa kenarları 70cm’den az olmamalıdır.
*Dereceye giren resimlerin FSEK’nuna göre tüm kullanım hakları ÇAĞSAV’a aittir. Dereceye giren resimler sahiplerine iade edilmeyip ÇAĞSAV Resim Koleksiyonu’na dahil edilecektir.
*Resimlerin sergilenmeye hazır şekilde teslimi ve sergi sonunda geri alınması resim sahiplerinin kendi sorumluluğundadır.
*Yarışmaya gönderilen resimlerin, sergi bitiminden itibaren bir ay içinde sahiplerince teslim alınması gerekmektedir. Teslim alınmayan resimlerden, ÇAĞSAV ve CER MODERN sorumlu değildir.
*Yarışmaya katılacak resimler elden teslim edilebileceği gibi, ücreti sahibi tarafından ödenmek üzere, yarışmanın son teslim tarihinden önce ulaşacak biçimde posta ve kargo ile adrese teslim olarak gönderilebilir. Resim tesliminde meydana gelebilecek gecikmelerden ve teslimat öncesi meydana gelebilecek olası hasarlardan ÇAĞSAV ve CER MODERN hiçbir şekilde sorumlu tutulamaz.
*Yarışmaya katılanlar, yarışma koşullarını aynen kabul etmiş sayılır.

Resim teslim tarihi: 15 Ocak 2010- 1 Şubat 2010 tarihleri arasındadır.

Eser Toplama Merkezi:
Cer Atölyeleri Modern Sanatlar Müzesi ( CER MODERN)
CSO Arkası /Ankara

Yarışma hakkında bilgi edinmek ve yazılı-görsel belgeleri göndermek için:
ÇAĞSAV -
Cevizlidere, Ceyhun Atıf Kansu Caddesi, 1246. . Sokak , Güzelyurt Apt. No:3/3
Balgat – Ankara
Telefon: (312) 473 60 62
Tel:0312 473 60 62
berrin@cagsav.org

Seçici Kurul: Yarışmaya katılan resimlerin değerlendirilmesi, aşağıda belirtilen Seçici Kurul tarafından kişisel puanlama yöntemiyle yapılacaktır.
Seçici Kurul:
Prof. Dr. Turan EROL (Ressam - ÇAĞSAV Mütevelli Heyeti Başkanı)
Şefik Kahramankaptan (Gazeteci-Yazar - ÇAĞSAV Yönetim Kurulu Başkanı)
Başaran Ulusoy (TÜRSAB Başkanı)
Zihni Tümer (CER MODERN Yönetmeni )
Azimet Karaman (Gazi Üniversitesi Resim- Heykel Müzesi Müdürü)
Yeşim Gökçe (CER MODERN danışmanı)
Prof. Dr. Şinasi Yavuzer (ÇAĞSAV Yönetim Kurulu Üyesi)
Yüksel Erimtan (Y. Mimar-ÇAĞSAV Yönetim Kurulu Üyesi)
Prof. Süleyman S.Tekcan (Ressam- IMOGA Başkanı- Işık Üniversitesi GSF Dekanı
Prof. Hasan Pekmezci (Ressam-Hacettepe Ün. GSF Öğretim üyesi)
Prof. Hayati Misman (Bilkent Ün. GSF Öğretim Üyesi)
Gültekin Serbest (Ressam-ÇAĞSAV Genel Sekreteri)
Uğurcan Özses (Koleksiyoner - ÇAĞSAV Yönetim Kurulu Üyesi)

Ödüller:

Başarı Ödülleri (3 eşit ödül) … 1000 . - YTL + Başarı Belgesi
- Londra Müzeler Gezisi ( Gidiş-dönüş ve konaklama)
- Stockholm’de Kültürhuuset’de 3 gün ( Gidiş-dönüş, konaklama, müze gezileri)
- CerModern’de “Sanatçı İkamet Programı” çerçevesinde altı ay süreyle işlik tahsisi

Mansiyonlar (3 eşit mansiyon) … 500. - YTL + Başarı Belgesi
Teşvik Ödülleri + Başarı Belgesi

Sergileme:
“Söbütay Özer Resim Yarışması Sergisi, Cer Atölyeleri Modern Sanatlar Müzesi’nde, sanatçının ölüm yıldönümü olan 24 Mart 2010’da açılacak, bir ay süreyle ziyarete açık tutulacaktır. Açılış, ödül töreniyle başlayacaktır.


24
Sep 09

Warsaw under construction


Warsaw under construction

Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw

03.10.2009 - 22.11.2009

The list of artists participating in the project:
Michał Budny
Carlos Bunga
Daniela Brahm
Cyprien Gaillard
David Maljković
Bartosz Mucha
Ahmet Ögüt
Toby Paterson
Katarzyna Przezwańska
Tobias Putrih
Joanna Rajkowska
Ariel Schlesinger
Magdalena Staniszkis/Jan Smaga
Superflex
Armando Andrade Tudela
Uglycute
Aleksandra Wasilkowska
Karol Żurawski

Projekty specjalne/ special projects:
Daniela Brahm
Tomasz Rygalik
Relax Studios

illustrations:
David Maljković, movie still "Images with their own Shadows", 2008
Tobias Putrih, "4th Gift (Warsaw)", 2009
Toby Paterson, bez tytułu (wystawa „Ever Growing Never Old”, Modern Institute), 2008

On Oct. 3 the Museum launches its feature project - "Warszawa w budowie" - "Warsaw under construction", a trailer of a new festival focused on designing. The trigger for this event was the City of Warsaw's request to have a new design festival. The Museum proposed to debate it's formula - is bringing beautiful objects into an ugly city worth the effort. Shouldn't we discuss the quality of the urban space instead? During the forthcoming two months of exbibitions and talks the Museum is looking for answers, how to redesign the public space in Warsaw in order to make it better.

The EXHIBITION presented at the Museum’s temporary HQ and in the neighbouring locations (the pedestrian passage in front of it, the Honorary Tribune on the Defilad Sq. and inside the Palace of Culture) comprises of works by artists, who relate their practice to design and urban planning and who borrow from their languages. They offer no solutions, do not yield to the demand for functionality. Instead, they bring into focus the particularities of Central-European urban space. The key-words to that world are: temporariness, decay, non-durability, anarchy, the validity of urban utopias. Where complex solutions are bound to fail, makeshift replaces designing and becomes an alternative way of satisfying needs. Temporariness, remaining half-way characterizes Warsaw just as other metropolises of the dynamically developing regions – Asia, Middle East or Latin America.

http://www.warszawawbudowie.pl/

http://warszawawbudowie.blox.pl/html


14
Oct 08

The National

Bridge over troubled water
Last Updated: October 02. 2008 2:57PM UAE / October 2. 2008 10:57AM GMT
Detail from Cindy Sherman's Untitled FIlm Still #17, currently on display at Istanbul Modern's Held Together With Water. Courtesy Cindy Sherman / Metro Pictures
As Istanbul Modern prepares to turn four, a new show finds it coming into its own. Kaelen Wilson-Goldie reports.
A city of 15 million people splayed over the joint between Europe and Asia, Istanbul boasts a thriving art scene replete with commercial galleries, public institutions, private museums, studios, residency programs, project spaces and a handful of serious art stars such as Kutlug Ataman and Haluk Akakçe. The international art world has deigned to recognise the city since 1987, when the Istanbul Biennial was born. Nonetheless and however absurd, Istanbul is still regarded as peripheral to the art world’s centres in Europe and North America. Among artists and curators, anxieties over occidental versus oriental influence persist. The exhibition Held Together with Water, on view at the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art until January 11, features two videos that confront these anxieties head on.
The first piece is Nil Yalter’s 1974 video La Femme sans tete ou la danse du Ventre (The Headless Woman or the Belly Dance). A groundbreaking work by a Turkish artist who was born in Cairo and has been based in Paris since the 1960s (a columnist for Turkey’s Today’s Zaman newspaper recently likened her art to a national treasure fit for the official archives), the piece frames the artist’s bare midriff as she uses a felt-tip pen to write passages from a text on eroticism in winding circles around her navel. When her skin is all but covered in ink, she begins to dance, oriental style, cleverly collapsing a set of competing clichés about the drive for women’s sexual liberation (in the West) and the desire for old-school exotic seduction (in the East).
The second piece is Sener Özmen and Cengiz Tekin’s uproarious 2004 video The Meeting or Bonjour Monsieur Courbet. Deliciously irreverent, the work presents three men who meet in a wasted rural landscape, insult one another and, in a final crescendo, exchange blows over ludicrous claims about realism, revolutionaries and the bourgeoisie. While Yalter’s piece skewers the feminine mystique, Özmen and Tekin’s playfully ridicules masculinity. Yet both works strike an important chord that situates the exhibition in a specific place and time.
Detail from Francesca Woodman’s Untitled (Providence, Rhode Island, 1975-1976/1997-2000). Courtesy George and Betty Woodman
Istanbul Modern, as the museum is widely known, turns four in December. It opened its doors to much fanfare in late 2004, when its inauguration was politically fast-tracked to coincide with the announcement that summit talks would soon take place on Turkey’s European Union membership bid. (Recip Tayyip Erdogan, the country’s prime minister, addressed the press amid the white walls of the newly minted museum.) Istanbul Modern is in many ways regarded today as a showcase for Turkey’s European ambitions, though it is notably not a state institution.
Many of Istanbul’s museums and art spaces are private initiatives backed by major banks – such as the Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center and the Yapi Kredi Kazim Taskent Sanat Galerisi. Others are financed by corporations, holding companies or the estates of business tycoons – such as the Pera Museum (funded by the Koç family) and the Sakip Sabanci Museum (which organised Picasso in Istanbul, a 2005 exhibition billed as the first of its kind for a western artist in Turkey, and is currently hosting a blockbuster show on Salvador Dalí).
Istanbul Modern is inextricably linked to the Eczacibasi family, industrialists and cultural philanthropists who in 1973 established the Istanbul Foundational for Culture and Arts. In addition to Istanbul Modern, the foundation oversees the Istanbul Biennial, several jazz, film and theatre festivals and a series of smaller, more intimate cultural events. The Eczacibasi family prised Istanbul Modern’s venue from the state – a boxy, 8,000 square metre space in a former customs warehouse that edges the bustling Bosporus. But it financed thebuilding’s $5 million (Dh18.3m) renovation alone.
Though Istanbul’s relationship to other cities in the Middle East is far from straightforward, the museum is an interesting case study for arts initiatives emerging elsewhere in the region. The current exhibition – which is bolstered by an enjoyable if fairly lightweight photography show (Human Conditions, featuring the Turkish artists Sitki Kösemen, Süreyya Yilmaz Dernek and Ergün Turan), a weightier video program (The City Rises, pairing the Turkish video artists Ali Kazma and Fikret Atay with vintage works by the Polish artist Zbig Rybczynski) and a film series dedicated to Tilda Swinton – is an opportunity to assess its achievements.
Held Together with Water features 116 works by 39 artists and retrieves much of its material from the vault that was 1970s feminism. There are examples of body art, performance art, video art and a slew of gender-bending experiments in which women photograph themselves as men and vice versa. There are rarely-shown works by well-known artists such as Cindy Sherman, Valie Export, Suzy Lake and Eleanor Antin alongside masterpieces by less-known artists such as Birgit Jürgenssen and Francesca Woodman.
Held Together with Water offers a glimpse of Cindy Sherman’s early efforts, such as the 16-milometer silent film Doll Clothes and several photographic series made before the artist’s landmark Untitled Film Stills. It sets feminist art in context rather than considering it in isolation. Named for a floor sculpture by Lawrence Weiner that is skillfully installed at the entrance to the show, Held Together with Water balances a certain intellectual austerity (Bernd and Hilla Becher, Gordon Matta-Clark, Fred Sandback) with a lightness of touch (a nine-channel video of Francis Alÿs tumbling over a stray dog in Mexico City) and subversive street cred (Nan Goldin’s gritty imagery, David Wojnarowicz’s Arthur Rimbaud in New York series).
The exhibition ponders the ways in which feminists, conceptualists and urban interventionists all broke with traditional methods of art-making such as painting and sculpting. It considers how these cracks and fractures extend from the 1970s to the present day. And it explores the critical turns that photography in particular has taken over nearly four decades.
Still, it is worth noting that Held Together with Water is as much a corporate merger as an artistic enterprise. All of the works in the show come from a collection that was established by Austria’s leading electricity company, Verbund, in 2004 (Philipp Kaiser of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and Marc-Olivier Wahler from Paris’ Palais de Tokyo sit on the Verbund collection’s board of advisors). Last year, Verbund entered into a joint venture with Turkey’s Sabanci Holding, and each company now holds a 50 per cent stake in EnerjiSA, which aims to acquire a ten per cent share in the Turkish electricity sector and hopes to be a player in a privatization process. So Held Together with Water, which represents the first public presentation of the Verbund collection outside of Austria, may be most cynically viewed as a signing bonus. This could be seen as cause for lamentation over the insidious intermingling of commerce and culture, but the collection is too strong for that. More generously, the exhibition might be a model for private sector involvement in the arts.
Levent Çalikoglu, Istanbul Modern’s chief curator, writes rather passionately in the exhibition catalogue about how Held Together with Water epitomises the museum’s mission, which is to promote Turkish modern art, introduce Turkey to contemporary international art and forge meaningful links between the two. Istanbul Modern’s previous exhibitions, eclectic to say the least, haven’t always been so effective. But it seems that the museum is somehow, somewhat, on the right track.
Recent changes in the creative and administrative staff, however, raise a few red flags. When Istanbul Modern first opened, Rosa Martinez was the museum’s chief curator. She organised 16 exhibitions in three years. A Spanish curator with considerable art world clout – she has organised countless high-profile biennials from Sao Paulo to Venice – Martinez has been heavily involved in Istanbul’s contemporary art scene since the late 1990s. In 2007, David Elliott, a British curator who held previous posts at Modern Art Oxford and the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo – joined her as Istanbul Modern’s new director. In interviews, he outlined a vision for the museum over a three-year tenure. But by the end of last year, both Martinez and Elliott were gone. Elliott reportedly resigned over a dispute with Oya Eczacibasi regarding the permanent collection (Oya Eczacibasi chairs Istanbul Modern’s board of directors, and a substantial portion of the museum’s permanent collection was donated, of course, by the Eczacibasi family). Now Elliott is on deck to curate the next Sydney Biennale. Istanbul Modern, meanwhile, has no director.