Articles

“I began to access corners of my imagination that were previously lying dormant” – an interview with Andrew Sendor
Article date: Friday, December 4, 2015

“I began to access corners of my imagination that were previously lying dormant” – an interview with Andrew Sendor

Andrew Sendor (1977, U.S.A.) is the type of artist who revels in the use of different and differing media, mixing the visual effects in such a way that the viewer must decipher not only the subject of the work, but also the technique. All of Sendor’s works give the impression that they have been taken out of context, appearing as the imprint of a moment from the artist’s narrative. It is up to the viewer to then build up the story around these presented moments.

The Floating Piers, Project for Lake Iseo, Italy
Article date: Thursday, December 3, 2015

The Floating Piers, Project for Lake Iseo, Italy

For 16 days in June 2016, Italy’s Lake Iseo will be reimagined. 70,000 square meters of shimmering yellow fabric, carried by a modular floating dock system of 200,000 high-density polyethylene cubes, will undulate with the movement of the waves as The Floating Piers rise just above the surface of the water.

Kimsooja 'To Breathe' in Centre Pompidou Metz - "My work has always been a response to violence and inhumanity"
Article date: Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Kimsooja 'To Breathe' in Centre Pompidou Metz - "My work has always been a response to violence and inhumanity"

Visiting an exhibition preview can impede an uninhibited view at the art at hand, but in the event of a large-scale installation that opens to the invitees at a specific time, it can also have a magical shine, as if you enter and explore a shrine together. However, this heightened sense of wonder can only partly explain why I was overwhelmed by a wave of goose flesh, even before I fully set foot in Kimsooja’s latest installation. That is the impact her art can have.

10 Questions: Toshio Shibata
Article date: Monday, November 30, 2015

10 Questions: Toshio Shibata

My personality and temperament are quite average, I think, but I am always aware of the unique world I can create.

"I would define good art as art that shakes our comfort zone" - interview with Noah Horowitz, Art Basel Miami
Article date: Saturday, November 28, 2015

"I would define good art as art that shakes our comfort zone" - interview with Noah Horowitz, Art Basel Miami

In August 2015, North America’s most comprehensive international contemporary art fair - Art Basel - announced the appointment of Noah Horowitz to the new position of Director of The Americas. The news regarding the appointment of the Armory director to take over the leadership of Art Basel Miami, less than six months prior to its next edition, stirred up the already restless art scene. Noah Horowitz talks with Artdependence Magazine about his own preferences in art, the sources for his inspirations, and the art market’s adaptation to change.

Carmignac Photojournalism Award: A retrospective
Article date: Friday, November 27, 2015

Carmignac Photojournalism Award: A retrospective

The Fondation Carmignac presented last 18th November at the Saatchi Gallery a retrospective exhibition of the Carmignac Photojournalism Award, showing for the first time a selection of the awarded projects since its creation in 2009. With the aim of bringing awareness to issues that may have been forgotten or underrepresented in mainstream news media, this award offers an artistic approach to photojournalism and a platform for it to be displayed both in an exhibition space and in a publication.

Swimming with the sirens: Mikhail Karikis talks about SeaWomen
Article date: Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Swimming with the sirens: Mikhail Karikis talks about SeaWomen

Jeju is a blackened island off the coast of Korea, an exotic upsurge of volcanic rock which in 2007 was named a World Heritage Site, thanks to its mysterious geology. It was here Greek/British artist Mikhail Karikis first heard the cry of the haenyeo. “I heard a very high-pitched sound coming from the sea. At first I thought it was a bird call or maybe seals,” he tells me via phone. “I asked my friend to stop the car and I saw a pod of black figures in the water.”

10 Questions: Caroline Corbasson
Article date: Monday, November 16, 2015

10 Questions: Caroline Corbasson

I’m mostly passionate and determined. I feel strong but not confident yet - I think it takes a while to get there. I’m also very demanding towards others and myself, and of course towards my work. I’m hardly ever satisfied, which is good on one hand and exhausting on the other.

Cristina Iglesias, the sculptor of water
Article date: Sunday, November 15, 2015

Cristina Iglesias, the sculptor of water

Cristina Iglesias has said on many occasions that she defines her practice as building, rather than as sculpting. Her work has in fact an architectural approach, not only for the technical requirements of her sculptures, but also due to the ambitious challenges she achieves.

Laying bare a visual logic is a crucial task of a curator - an interview with Samuel Saelemakers
Article date: Thursday, November 12, 2015

Laying bare a visual logic is a crucial task of a curator - an interview with Samuel Saelemakers

Samuel Saelemakers, Curator for Witte de With, is well aware of the careful balance that is required of curatorship - a balance between charging creativity and its controlled manifestation.

“I don’t want to plateau as a painter; I don’t want to get comfortable” – an interview with Anj Smith
Article date: Tuesday, November 3, 2015

“I don’t want to plateau as a painter; I don’t want to get comfortable” – an interview with Anj Smith

Apparently surreal and fantastic, Anj Smith’s paintings approach very realistic elements and current human matters. Her largest solo exhibition ‘Phosphor on the Palms’, currently on show at Hauser & Wirth London, is the culmination of three years of work and the expression of a new phase for the artist who, after twenty years painting, feels more brave and bolder than ever. Artdependence talked with Anj Smith about painting, art, languages and fashion in an interview at Hauser&Wirth London last October.

“The encounter of an unprepared viewer with art is very important” - an interview with Zhanna Kadyrova
Article date: Wednesday, October 28, 2015

“The encounter of an unprepared viewer with art is very important” - an interview with Zhanna Kadyrova

Zhanna Kadyrova, (1981, Ukraine) forms part of the new generation of Ukrainian artists, who have been deeply influenced by the difficult period of national self-determination during the Orange Revolution of 2004, and who have experienced the entire burden of rethinking of the controversies of the past, reformulating present dangers, and representing hopes for the future. "Hope" also happened to be the name of the Ukrainian Pavilion at the 2015 Venice Biennale, in which Zhanna participated for the second time.

Article date: Thursday, October 22, 2015

Work by Roy Lichtenstein unseen on the market for 20 years

Christie’s is honored to announce the sale of an extraordinary, seminal, museum-quality work by Roy Lichtenstein unseen on the market for 20 years.

‘Losing the Compass’: the social and political dimension of textiles
Article date: Tuesday, October 13, 2015

‘Losing the Compass’: the social and political dimension of textiles

From a contemporary point of view, textiles are a powerful source of political and social symbolism. Textile crafting such as embroiderers, quilts or tapestries are a universal form of creative expression, present in the tradition of many communities around the world. Their nature as decorative and domestic elements and also its link with manufacturing processes makes them objects of artistic and socio-political representation.

3 Signals to the Mermaid: An Inadequate Reading of Costume En Face by Tatsumi Hijikata and/or Moe Yamamoto
Article date: Wednesday, October 7, 2015

3 Signals to the Mermaid: An Inadequate Reading of Costume En Face by Tatsumi Hijikata and/or Moe Yamamoto

It is not a book you can read because it was never meant to be read. The publisher describes it as a playscript, but it seems highly unlikely that anyone could use it without supplementary knowledge to produce the piece it purports to script. Costume En Face was meant to be used by its writer, and perhaps by others doing the same kind of work, to take the work deeper. Period. It is an archival object rather than a traditional piece of writing.

A History of Violence
Article date: Tuesday, October 6, 2015

A History of Violence

Reintroducing the body into his works, Imran Qureshi applies paint to the pain of a region under seize. As Rajesh Punj scrutinises the grief and grandeur of his inaugural show at ROPAC, Paris.

Article date: Tuesday, October 6, 2015

John Constable (1776-1837), The Lock, c.1824-5, oil on canvas

On 9th December this year, Sotheby’s London will offer for sale John Constable's The Lock - one of the small group of monumental landscapes.

Elton John Music: is Love for Lalique
Article date: Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Elton John Music: is Love for Lalique

LALIQUE, the French crystal maker, is proud to unveil a new collaboration with Elton John. The Elton John Music is Love for Lalique includes seven exceptional crystal sculptures: three limited editions and four unique pieces. The three limited edition sculptures are available from today at Lalique boutiques worldwide, with 10% of the proceeds to benefit the Elton John AIDS Foundation.

Fabrizio Moretti: “Jeff Koons will open the greatest world showcase  of Italian art”
Article date: Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Fabrizio Moretti: “Jeff Koons will open the greatest world showcase of Italian art”

The twenty-ninth edition of the Florence International Biennial Antiques Fair – BIAF – will be held from 26 September to 4 October. 88 dealers in ancient and modern art, including 27 foreign antiquarians, will come to Palazzo Corsini sull'Arno to display scrupulously selected works of impeccable quality.

Article date: Monday, September 21, 2015

EDWARD BURTYNSKY Manufacturing #17, Deda Chicken Processing Plant, Dehui City, Jilin Province, China, 2005

As a centerpiece of the October Photographs auctions, Phillips is pleased to announce the single owner sale, Innovators of Photography: A Private East Coast Collection.