Tagged with Contemporary Art

TÓXICO CULTURA: PARTNER PLATFORM FOR THE PRESTIGIOUS FUTURE GENERATION ART PRIZE

 

 

Tóxico  is happy to be one the the international Partner Platforms for “The Future Generation Art Prize“. Established by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation, its aim is to discover, recognize and give long-term support to a future generation of artists up to 35 years of age, investing in the artistic development and new production of works. The Main Prize will be awarded to one artist who will receive the amount of US$ 100,000 from the international jury in the context of an exhibition. The Prize will be split in US$ 60,000 in cash and US$ 40,000 for the investment of new work production.

Besides, “to encourage this new generation of artists, a group of renowned Mentor Artists has committed its long-term participation in the Prize. These artists will provide in-person counsel and support to the prize winners, and one of the Mentor artists will have a parallel show at the same time as each shortlist exhibition. The 2012 Mentor Artists are Andreas Gursky, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons and Takashi Murakami.”

The jury is composed by Ai Wei Wei, Daniel Birnbaum, Ivo Mesquita and Robert Storr, among others.

We have sent over a list with our recommendation of  talented artists that will skip the preliminary rounds; and we hope many more will apply.

Do click here to find out more; the application process is now open.

 

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DESCENDING INTO MEXICO CITY No. 004: ANTONIO VEGA MACOTELA

 

“Going dancing, visiting a prostitute, watching a son’s first steps, getting drunk at the baptism of a nephew: These are the kinds of ordinary pleasures and transgressions that make up everyday life, and artist José Antonio Vega Macotela has partaken of all of these experiences. There’s nothing remarkable about that – except that in each case, the life Macotela was living belonged to someone else. Neither the son nor the nephew was his, he didn’t know the woman with whom he went dancing, and he limited his interactions with the prostitute to conveying a greeting from somebody else. Over the course of his project Time Divisa (Time Currency), 2006-10, Macotela acted as a …”

–Excerpt from article by Chus Martines, from last month`s ArtForum Magazine

**

Oh yes. Toñito is back in town for some weeks–nopal accomplice, bisabuela medium, and artist extraordinaire;  Mexico city boy, but now living in Amsterdam for a couple of years, since he was awarded the ultra prestigious Rijksakademie Residency scholarship.

The image above is part of the Time Divisa project, in which he would exchange time with prison inmates: while he was in the outside world doing errands on their behalf, they would simultaneously and under his instructions create an art work–many of which had to do with measuring the passing of time… here: a book of “The Count of Monte Cristo”, continuously scratched with a single fingernail by a prisoner while Toño did his deeds.

You can read more about it an interview I did with him right here.

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CACA GRANDE

Images of “Caca Grande”, a new book for children by Carlos Amorales, renowned Mexican artist.

It was a couple of years ago that the amazing Vanessa Eckstein—founder of Blok Design, and also our esteemed partner in “The Blok+Tóxico Film Project”—told me about a dream of hers: to create an editorial project for children, in collaboration with acclaimed and imaginative international artists.

And finally. It is here. Poop. Grand poop. The First one.

“Poop in the air, poop in the trees, poop on your chin, poop on your knee: Mexican artist Carlos Amorales’ children’s book revels in the stuff, rendering these scenes in bold, scatological brown and black silhouette. Amorales (born 1970) has already established an impressive reputation as an artist working in a variety of media–animation, performance, video, sculpture, photography and works on paper–and here explores that singular niche within artists’ publications: the artist’s book sort of for children and definitely for adults. Caca Grande plays fast and loose with the brown stuff, dispatching it to places it had previously never been, with joyous abandon.”

Amorales likes the fact that it is an open-ended book that leaves much room for children’s imagination, for mental creativity, touching upon adult’s taboos with a certain humor and even a certain darkness that is so much a part of childhood.

Mmm. We like that too.

And so welcome into the world, Lampyro. An editorial project by Blok Design and Editorial RM, with contributors selected by Patrick Charpenel and Ana Elena Mallet. Books for children–and the not so children too.  By visual artists, architects,  composers and filmmakers. Soon on their way: Francis Alÿs, Liam Gillick, Herzog and de Meuron, Robert Staedler, Melanie Smith, Marcel Dzama, Pipilotti Rist and Sanaa. Impressive list. Can’t wait for more. Childhood will never be quite the same again it seems…

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EVIL VARIATION 1, AND SUSTAINED WASHES OF SOUND

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/11334968[/vimeo]

By Carlos Casas (ES)
Music: Andrea Belfi (IT)

EVIL  03:46   |  Prix Ars Electronica 2010  |

Says Carlos:

Evil (3:30) Evil variations 1

is part of a archive works I ve been developing to uncover a certain ghostly fluid inherent in film, a way to deconstruct and use archive material as mortar for a new audiovisual matter. These works are only a way to give new life to this material, as well as constructing a new vision. Evil uses samples expands or extends the opening shot of Touch of Evil, by Orson Welles.  Considered the most remarkable long shot in the history of cinema, it also includes  an amazing sound design work, and music, that at it s time was more than revolutionary and was only understood and applied years later when Walter Murch reedited the film through Welles´s notes.  Evil is the first on a series of variations developed with italian musician and drummer Andrea Belfi.   It is trough these notes that I found inspiration to rework and recompose these scene.

Orson Welles: “In scoring the picture, it was planned to use, for the most part, rock and roll and latin-american rhythm numbers. The streets of a border town are always noisy with the blare of various loudspeakers, broadcasting from the entrance of night clubs…bars and cantinas. Considerable use was to be made of this. It is very important that the usual rancheros and mariachi numbers should be avoided and the emphasis should go on afro-cuban rhythm numbers. …This rock and roll comes from radio loudspeakers, juke boxes and in particular, the radio in the motel. It is very important to note that in the recording of all these numbers–which are supposed to be heard through street loudspeakers–that the effect should be just exactly as bad as that. The music itself should be skillfully played, but it will not be enough in doing the final sound mixing to run this track through an echo chamber with a certain amount of filter. To get the effect we’re looking for, it is absolutely vital that this music be played through a cheap horn in the alley outside the sound building. After this is recorded, it can be then loused up even further by the basic process of re-recording with a tinny exterior horn….  And since it does not represent very much in the way of money, I feel justified in insisting upon this, as the result will really be worth it.” “All the above music of course is “realistic”, in the sense that it is literally playing during the action. For the purpose of clarity in these notes, this music will be referred to as ‘background music’, as distinguished from ‘underscoring’, a term which will be used to designate that part of the music which accommodates dramatic action and which does not come from radios, night clubs, orchestras or juke boxes. In other words, the usual dramatic music (used) in a picture. This underscoring, as will be seen, is to be most sparingly used, and should never give a busy, elaborate, orchestrated effect. What we want is musical color rather than movement; sustained washes of sound rather than…melodramatic or operatic scoring.”

***

(Carlos Casas is a Tóxico padrino, constant accomplice, fellow list maker–with more projects joint coming soon. He also gave a fabulous cinema workshop for “La Incubadora”–a multidisciplinary program created by Tóxico for the 12 best students of a private university in Mexico City.)

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THE WORLD’S FIRST NON-VISUAL RESIDENCY PROGRAM FOR ARTISTS

Manifesta 8 will be holding the world’s first non-visual residency program for artists:

“For one week each, five artists will be selected to live and work in a dark, visually distorted exhibition space. To support them in their life and work for the week, the artist will collaborate with a local Murcian assistant who is blind. In cooperation with her/his assistant, the artist will use the one-week residency to create a guided tour of the non-visual space and experience in which s/he is living. The guided tour will take place on the last day of the residency and will be open to the biennial audience. The blind assistant will be the guide of this work in darkness.”

Yes. Darkness. Complete darkness, for 7 days. Sight deprivation escalating other senses, disorientation as method, and another type of collaboration that turns normal hierarchies on their head… how could all of this not result in different creative processes: confronting ‘the night of the world’. I do believe it will be an incredibly interesting experiment, challenging normal artistic processes, and also becoming a curious personal experience that possibly won’t ever be repeated in your life.

And then, yes, the minute the residency is over–the meeting again with the visible world.

(Applications close August 15th, so hurry up.)

(More info right here.)

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NOMADIC PLANTS THAT EAT POLLUTION

contaminated river

Colossus roared in devastation, it’s cloudy foam slowly undermining life within. Underwater chemicals consume the last living forms that the river contains . In the edge of this dump, one small force clenches to life, ripe in decay. This plant walks along the river, consuming toxic water, generating energy from the decomposition of it’s poison, and once in a while, when bored, screaming in it’s unique voice.

This is Gilberto Esparza´s project “Nomadic Plants”. Making a metaphor of subsistence, adaptation, and energetic migration; he created a low-cost-symbiotic energy robot that searches rivers for pollution, recycles and cleans water via bacteria, nourishes a plant, and generates energy in the process.

Gilberto´s machine not only works as a symbolic art piece, it is also a working life protector, and an example of research in bacteria-generated energy. It´s nomadic status, transforms the unanimated condition of plants into active “instinct” driven forces that, in a large scale, could draw a transforming architecture of landscape.

-Emilio Bassail, writing from Postopolis DF!-

*

Take a look at an amazing short documentary on these plants here.

(Gilberto Esparza presentó este proyecto en Postópolis DF! como invitado de We Make Money Not Art)

(Emilio es parte de Tóxico In Vitro, una nueva plataforma de colaboraciones multidisciplinarias integrada por talentosos estudiantes)

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MARINA ABRAMOVIC MADE ME CRY

45 min.

12 min.

34 min.

14 min.

45 min.

62 min.

44 min.

These are portraits taken during the MoMA’s exhibit of  ”Marina Abramović: The Artist Is Present”: one of the longest art performances on record.

Abramovic sat in silence–for 7 hours every day, until yesterday she reached her 700th hour– as museum guests sat across from her, one at a time, staring; and (if one can correctly surmise from the resulting images) letting emotions flood the body through the strange and mysterious meeting of the eyes.

Ah, sí, Abramovic is definitely an expert in creating and provoking all sorts of intense feelings with her intense presence. I remember my own feelings as I write this when, some years back, while I was still at the visual arts department at Fabrica on a scholarship, we were working on a show curated by her and Oliviero Tosacani. Even though the show got vetoed by the Vatican and never came to happen, hearing her comments about both her work and our own was an amazing experience. In fact, even just seeing her walk into a room and take command and kick-start the crackling electricity hidden in the air: a sight to behold and never forget.

So I see these pictures–only a tiny fraction of the total–and I understand, and I remember.

More pictures here.

(Gracias Alinka)

And an interesting NYT article after the break: “A 700-hour silent opera”

Continue reading

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AND SHALL WE WRAP THAT UP FOR YOU, MRS. VERMEULEN?


‘Wrapped Up” is an ongoing photo series of recent building developments in Detroit, by Corine Vermeulen. These images were published in Imaginary Cities, a publication by The Museum of Contemporary Art in Detroit (MOCAD).

***

The House.

(A little story à propos by Mark Powell.)

Shuttered and quiet the house has a few leaves blowing around and a sparrow has flown up the backside of a small bush near the front door. I kick the bush and instead of moving like a bird should and fly away, the sparrow scurries like a rat and runs to the dark underside of a car parked nearby.

Should I ring? Why should I even think of ringing? I want to ring. The door bell light struggles to seduce me. It is a weak light.

They say babies are born and start remembering past lives, they don’t mimic their parents to learn, they just remember. I stand and look through the hole of a torn curtain in the door and see the dinning room, a crystal chandelier catches a bit of light and twinkles it, showing the dust everywhere, flying around like excited small fruit flies.

It is hard to buy a house at some point, because the buyer may think that this will be the last house he will ever buy. This will be the kind of house where he will end up confined to a soft chair, stiff, staring out a front window everyday, unable to go outside.

This is a nice house and a good price. Yet, I step away–This time.

***

(Corine Vermeulen is an Dutch artist and a Tóxico partner in crime, with whom I have done a couple of personal projects. She is now in Colombia for a two-month residency, and we hope to post some of the results here, very soon.)

(Mark Powell is a photographer and–yes, we just discovered recently–also a writer; born in Detroit and now living in Mexico City. Mark took the Tóxico Martin Parr Master Class and the Stefan Ruiz workshop. And he has a new website which we think is great.)

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A MAN NOT ESCAPED

Cooking Grill No. 1

Cooking Grill No.2

Glass, plate, spoon

Weapons

Weapons made with the border of windows

—-

A few days ago we watched A Man Escaped, by Robert Bresson: a film–based on a true story– that recounts a man’s escape from prison by turning ordinary and seemingly innocent objects into his means to freedom: that turning something into something else.

As the movie ended, I remembered an incredible project by Toño Vega Macotela, wonderful Mexican artist. I also remembered the day I accompanied him to one of Mexico City’s largest prisons, to help him take the pictures you see above. Ah. Sí. That turning something into something else. Not for escape: but for life inside jail. These objects you see in the images above where constructed (illegally of course) by the prisoners.

After the break you can read an interview that I did with Toño for Vice Magazine. where you will find a fuller description of his incredible project.

Continue reading

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TUNNEL

Screen shot 2009-11-24 at 12.31.48 PM

Tunnel, by Thomas Demand

Says The Exposure Project blog:

Ubuweb recently added a short film by Thomas Demand to their archives. Entitled Tunnel, the film, much like Demand’s photographs, is a meditation on the mass media’s pervasive influence over the viewing public. Ubuweb states:

“The film presumably shows a fast-paced tracking shot through the tunnel in which Lady Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales, died in a car crash. At first the viewer seems to remember seeing these images in the media. But in reality the set is a true to life, cardboard mock-up of architectural details. Under closer inspection, one also realizes that instead of reproducing reality Thomas Demand creates a perfectly-constructed model world. The cleverly-lit cardboard scenery takes up an incident of recent history and, in doing so, mirrors the illusionary features of what appear to be familiar images. The film literally reflects upon the model of our relationship to images from the mass media. In the process, the construction, representation and repetition of reality create a complex weaving of connections. That the accident used as the theme was the result of a hectic, car chase caused by paparazzi lends the work yet another aspect of the reflection of the media.”

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BULLETPROOF

guayabera

corduroy

mezclilla

playera

devestir

Images by Milagros de la Torre. From the series Bulletproof.

It is said that Milagros de la Torre investigates the censored and the forgotten along with the fearful, the painful, and the fragile. And the underlying violence that begets these states and sensations is often hidden in the fold of certain unassuming objects. Such as clothes.

These  in particular, in the imges above, were designed by Miguel Caballero: the ‘Armani of the armored clothing’.

Says the ICP website:

“Throughout her career, Milagros de la Torre has explored the traces of hidden and often violent narratives to reveal their broader social and political implications, particularly within Latin America. Her most recent series, Bulletproof (2008) reflects her fascination with objects that reveal histories of violence and power. Beguiling in their apparent simplicity, these photographs use a straightforward approach to record what appear to be everyday articles of clothing—a t-shirt, blouse, or sports jacket. These are in fact armor-plated designer garments sold in luxury boutiques, whose purpose is to inconspicuously protect the wearer from gunshot wounds. Photographed on their hangers against a blank background and printed at life-size, these disembodied garments float in the frame as though awaiting the viewer to claim them. Small clues reveal their true function: a hint of the armored breastplate is just discernible under the light blouse, the small zipper on the t-shirt’s hemline provides a clue as to how the armor plate is inserted and removed, the “platinum” garment labels indicate the level of protection provided. Currently worn by politicians (including, allegedly, President Obama on Inauguration Day) and the rich and famous, such bulletproof clothing caters to an elite clientele that has come to expect the discrete protection offered by these armor-plated garments.

***

Bulletproof is included in Dress Codes: The Third ICP Triennial of Photography and Video, on view through January 17, 2010. Other artists include Barbara Kruger, Laurie Simmons, Lorna Simpson, Martha Rosler, Cindy Sherman and Hu Yang, among many others. So if any one is around New York…

(We will soon meet and chat with Milagros here in Mexico City; expect a Tóxico interview soon.)

(Gracias Milagros por las imágenes)

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UNEARTHING IMAGES IN IMAGES, FOLD BY FOLD

Centrepoint

Mount Robson

woodsmen

N.o.10

Piccadilly NY

By Abigail Reynolds.

Last three images from “The Universal Now”. Says the artist about this series:

I collect second hand tourist guides. Within the century of printed photographs that they contain, I search for plates that have been printed at similar scale, taken from a similar view point. When I find a near match between book plates, I cut and fold the pages into a new single surface. The dates written on each work give the publication dates of the books I have used. Whichever has been used as the ‘base’ image is listed first. The patterns I use to cut the two book pages into one single surface are such that all of both sheets of paper are preserved. If you were to fold all the flaps in or out, the entirety of each image will be seen. The act of folding one image into the other pushes them out into three dimensions in a bulging time ruffle. The Universal Now works operate as a resurrection of the unregarded book plates and forgotten photographers that have stood in the same places at a different times, bringing these moments into a dialogue and into the present. The Universal Now takes its title from debates about time continuum in quantum physics.

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BLAST No 8021. AND OTHER POSSIBILE MIND PARTICLES DOING THEIR DANCE

(“Blasts”, by Japanese artist Naoya Hatakeyama)

(“I will construct a life, my little world, and wait for something outside myself to then throw all my planning and conniving into thrilling chaos.”

-Barbara Ess, I Am Not This Body)


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NON-LINEAR STATE No. 010: IN SEARH OF THE MIRACULOUS

thoughts_o

Oh. Señor Bas Jan Ader, wonderul him.

In his little boat, this little boat here.

(Image found via but does it float)

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INDEX OR CONSTRUCTED BY WAY OF EXPERIMENT, AND A MAP WITH WHICH TO READ ANOTHER MAP

picture-12

picture-2

By José León Cerrillo, Mexican artist

***

(Cannibalism alone unites us. Socially. Economically. Philosophically…

It is because we never had grammar books, nor collections of old vegetables. And we never knew what urban, suburban, frontiers and continents were. We were a lazy spot on the world map of Brazil…

Down with the reversible world and objectified ideas. Cannibalized. The curtailment of dynamic thought. The individual as victim of the system. The source of classic injustices. Of romantic injustices. And the forgetting of interior conquests.

—Oswald de Andrade, Manifesto Antropófago, 1928)

***

Says Triple Canopy:

index or constructed by way of experiment was conceived by José León Cerrillo as the Internet-based variation of an existing sculpture, “having to do with suspended symbolic efficiency” (2008). First exhibited at Dispatch Projects in New York, that work is composed of a rack of posters emblazoned with archetypal abstract and architectural forms, drawn from the modernist idiom and the cities of Latin America, respectively. The posters are semi-transparent, and as viewers flip the windows of the rack, they obliterate images as others emerge…

Andrade’s manifesto is a touchstone for Cerrillo. The Brazilian poet suggested, ironically, that in order to develop their own literature, his countrymen should learn from the natives who had cannibalized the first European colonists in order to acquire their strengths. If Brazilians were to apply that method to the arts, surely they would soon have a respectable national style. Of course, this parodic proposal predicted the shape that LatinAmerican architecture and urbanism would take over the course of the twentieth century.

Cerrillo’s work echoes these cannibalizations and acquisitions. “Tudo esta visto,” reads the text cascading down one frame (a quotation from Augusto de Campos’s revision of the cannibal figure in Andrade’s manifesto): Everything is seen, but no orientation emerges. The work is, in Cerrillo’s words, “a map with which to read another map.”

(See the web-based project here)

(Thanks López for the tip)


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QUOTE OF THE DAY

“Visionary”.  Imagen de Adonis Flores, artista cubano.

Más sobre él aquí.

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LIGHTNESS OF BEING: A REALM DEVOID OF AIR AND NO LINEAR DIRECTION OR GRAVITY, FLOATING IN POETIC MEMORY

thelightnessofbeing_1-copy

thelightnessofbeing_5

thelightnessofbeing_9

Images by Alinka Echeverría, Mexican artist. From the series Lightness of Being.

And take a look at her mesmerizing video on the same subjet right here.

(The music of the video is by the fantastic Ariel Guzik, with whom we worked on a project while I was still with Laboratorio 060)

***

(“The brain appears to possess a special area which we might call poetic memory and which records everything that charms or touches us, that makes our lives beautiful… I have said before that metaphors are dangerous. Love begins with a metaphor. Which is to say, love begins at the point when a someone enters their first word into our poetic memory.”

-Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being-)

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TARYN SIMON: AN AMERICAN INDEX OF THE HIDDEN AND UNFAMILIAR

Taryn Simon

Nuclear Waste Encapsulation and Storage Facility Cherenkov Radiation
Hanford Site, U.S. Department of Energy
Southeastern Washington State
Submerged in a pool of water at Hanford Site are 1,936 stainless-steel nuclear-waste capsules containing cesium and strontium. Combined, they contain over 120 million curies of radioactivity. It is estimated to be the most curies under one roof in the United States. The blue glow is created by the Cherenkov Effect which describes the electromagnetic radiation emitted when a charged particle, giving off energy, moves faster than light through a transparent medium. The temperatures of the capsules are as high as 330 degrees Fahrenheit. The pool of water serves as a shield against radiation; a human standing one foot from an unshielded capsule would receive a lethal dose of radiation in less than 10 seconds. Hanford is among the most contaminated sites in the United States.

Taryn Simon

White Tiger (Kenny), Selective Inbreeding
Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge and Foundation
Eureka Springs, Arkansas
In the United States, all living white tigers are the result of selective inbreeding to artificially create the genetic conditions that lead to white fur, ice-blue eyes and a pink nose. Kenny was born to a breeder in Bentonville, Arkansas on February 3, 1999. As a result of inbreeding, Kenny is mentally retarded and has significant physical limitations. Due to his deep-set nose, he has difficulty breathing and closing his jaw, his teeth are severely malformed and he limps from abnormal bone structure in his forearms. The three other tigers in Kenny’s litter are not considered to be quality white tigers as they are yellow coated, cross-eyed, and knock-kneed.

Taryn Simon

Playboy, Braille Edition
Playboy Enterprises, Inc.
New York, New York
The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS), a division of the U.S. Library of Congress, provides a free national library program of Braille and recorded materials for blind and physically handicapped persons. Magazines included in the NLS’s programs are selected on the basis of demonstrated reader interest. This includes the publishing and distribution of a Braille edition of Playboy. Approximately 10 million American adults read Playboy every month, with 3 million obtaining it through paid circulation. It has included articles by writers such as Norman Mailer, Vladimir Nabokov, Philip Roth, Joyce Carol Oates, and Kurt Vonnegut and conducted interviews with Salvador Dali, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Malcolm X.

Taryn Simon

Avian Quarantine Facility
The New York Animal Import Center
Newburgh, New York
European Finches seized upon illegal importation into the U.S. and African Gray Parrots in quarantine.

All imported birds that are not of U.S. or Canadian origin must undergo a 30 day quarantine in a U.S. Department of Agriculture animal import quarantine facility. The quarantine is mandatory and at the owner’s expense. Birds are immediately placed in incubators called isolettes that control the spread of disease and prevent cross-contamination by strategically placed High Efficiency Particulate Air Filters.Before each quarantined bird is cleared for release, it is tested for Avian Influenza and Exotic Newcastle Disease.

Taryn Simon

Research Marijuana Crop Grow Room
National Center for Natural Products Research
Oxford, Mississippi
The National Center for Natural Products Research (NCNPR) is the only facility in the United States which is federally licensed to cultivate cannabis for scientific research. In addition to cultivating cannabis, NCNPR is responsible for analyzing seized marijuana for potency trends, herbicide residuals (paraquat) and fingerprint identification. NCNPR is licensed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and also researches and develops chemicals derived from plants, marine organisms, and other natural products.

While 11 states have legalized the medical use of marijuana, a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision allows for the arrest of any individual caught using it for this purpose. Nearly half of the annual arrests for drug violations involve marijuana possession or trafficking.

(Taryn Simon is probably one of the most interesting contemporary artists in the world today. Her American Index of the Hidden and Unfamiliar explores those legal things in the USA that are nonetheless hidden and out-of-view.)

»I am always immensely grateful to people who do impossible things on my behalf and bring back the picture. It means I don’t have to do it, but at least I know what it looks like. So one’s first feeling on looking at many of these extraordinary images is gratitude (followed quickly by a momentary pang of envy: the sedentary writer’s salute to the woman of action).«

– Salman Rushdie on Taryn Simon–

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ELECTRONIC CLOUD

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42hgPLL8IrA[/youtube]

Muy bello. Via Tomo y Mr. G Rivero.

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MATHIAS GOERITZ DIX IT

“Estoy harto de la pretenciosa imposición de la lógica y de la razón, del funcionalismo, del cálculo decorativo y, desde luego, de toda la pornografía caótica del individualismo, de la gloria del día, de la moda del momento, de la vanidad y de la ambición, del bluff y de la broma artística, del consciente y subconsciente egocentrismo, de los conceptos inflados, de la aburridísima propaganda de los ismos, figurativos o abstractos. Harto también del griterío de un arte de la deformación, de las manchas, de los trapos viejos y pedazos de basura; harto del preciosismo de una estética invertida que festeje la exteriorizada belleza de lo destruido y podrido; harto de todas estas texturas interesantes y de los juegos vacíos de una educación puramente visual o táctil. No menos harto estoy de la abundante ausencia de la sensibilidad que, con dogmas oportunistas, sigue presumiendo, todavía, de ser capaz de sacar jugo a la copia o a la estilización de una realidad heroicamente vulgar. Estoy harto, sobre todo, de la atmósfera artificial e histérica del llamado mundo artístico, con sus placeres adulterados.”
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THINGS+THINGS+THINGS

Says the You Might Like This Blog:

“Hong Hao is a Chinese artist who likes organising and grouping things. In this photographic work “my things”  thousands of scanned images are arranged together on a massive scale. when placed on a black background they become micro universes; personal-size objects to create distant galaxies or river deltas across a rubbish strewn landscape.”

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OFFICE BY NIGHT

Office At Night, by Edward Hopper

Victor Burgin‘s series Office At Night, inspired by the iconic Edward Hopper painting.

More about this project here at
The Separateness of Things“.
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PLÁTICA DE COLECCIÓN/FUNDACIÓN JUMEX

(La Colección/Fundación Jumex es uno de los principales patrocinador de Tóxico.)

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ANISH KAPOOR

(Ese otro mundo que se presiente en la esquina externa de la vista. A veces. Ciertas noches, otros días, en algunas caminatas por la ciudad viendo por las ranuras de las coladeras o dentro de las pupilas de los extraños o asomándose con un ojo cerrado por las ramas de los árboles o removiendo el café, express y con un poco más de leche por favor.)

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PLÁTICA EN LA FUNDACIÓN / COLECCIÓN JUMEX

Actividades en torno a la muestra An unruly history of the readymade
FRANCIS ALŸS CONVERSA CON MARK GODFREY
Fundación/Colección Jumex

Domingo 5 de octubre de 2008; 12:30 hrs.
Galería Fundación/Colección Jumex

Fundación/Colección Jumex les invita cordialmente para que nos acompañen en la primera charla de Gente del Arte, un espacio en el que artistas contemporáneos de reconocida trayectoria en México y el mundo son entrevistados por destacados críticos de arte y periodistas a manera de un retrato personal. Sus obras forman parte del acervo de La Colección Jumex y de la actual exposición.

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PLÁTICAS CON ARTISTAS DE “AN UNRULY HISTORY OF THE READYMADE”

Minerva Cuevas platica con Bettina Funke, y Eduardo Costa con Terence Gower como parte de las actividades de la nueva expo de La Fundación/Colección Jumex. La entrada a las conversaciones es gratuita, sólo hay que confirmar asistencia al 57 75 81 88.

(Las actividades internacionales de Tóxico son posibles gracias al apoyo de La Fundación/Colección Jumex.)

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AN UNRULY HISTORY OF THE READYMADE

An Unruly History of the Readymade es la sexta interpretación de La Colección Jumex. Esta exhibición parte de la aportación que hiciera Marcel Duchamp con el readymade y presenta una desalineada (desobediente, argumentativa y posiblemente contradictoria) historia de las consecuencias de dicho acto. Más de 100 piezas creadas por 80 artistas exploran este tema que se mantiene constante y que ha sido reenergizado, redescubierto y repensado hasta nuestros días. La exhibición es curada por Jessica Morgan, Curadora de Arte Contemporáneo del Tate Modern, London.

(La Colección/Fundación Jumex es uno de los principales patrocinadores de Tóxico, y tiene una importante colección de arte contemporáneo internacional.)

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A TINY GROWING COAT, THEN KILLED

“A tiny coat built out of living mouse stem cells that was a part of the “Design and the Elastic Mind” show at MoMA was killed because it was growing too fast. Paola Antonelli, a senior curator at the museum, had to kill the coat. “It was growing too much,” she said. The cells were multiplying so fast that the incubator was beginning to clog. Also, a sleeve was falling off. So after checking with the coat’s creators, a group known as SymbioticA, at the School of Anatomy & Human Biology at the University of Western Australia in Perth, she had the nutrients to the cells stopped.”

(And now, we wonder, that art and science are taking their next steps into the creation of “things” made out of living matter, will new Humane Organizations stop popping up to organize protests and defend the rights of the mute little coats and their friends?)

(Thank you Julia for the tip)

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