November 23, 2007

City and transparencies - Adrienne Arth photographies
Opening Saturday November 24th from 06pm

Opening Saturday November 24th from 06pm (musical background by Dalila Khatir and Frédérique Wolf-Michaux, singers and lectures).


In the exhibition "City and transparencies" Adrienne Arth is going even further than usual in her stagging of the real world. Here, it's the movement and the race, the mass and the colour that are captured.

Legs, feet, bodies, faces, stolen moves on a metro exit, in a building reflection, in a train... We're witnessing a dislocation, a ripping of the reality. A sudden roar burst, a town is appearing: Paris, scarefied with humans, lives, traces... Photographs becomes a game of matters and shapes of many layers. The human being becomes a shape in space, a fulcrum where the eye stops and bounce back. In her work, the abstraction look is dominating, but also a definitive modern approach and a more radical photogrphic aesthetic.

City and transparencies - Adrienne Arth photographies
From November 24th to December 15th, 2007

L’Atelier Tampon-Ramier
http://www.ateliertampon-ramier.over-blog.com/
14, rue Jules Vallès
75011 Paris
Tel : 0143735346

Free entrance

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Mirror, mirror on the wall...
Opening on Saturday November 24th at the Galerie du Lucernaire

Opening and complementary "Tea Party", on Saturday November 24th at the Galerie du Lucernaire from 03pm to 06pm with the artists attending.

This exhibition is presented by the galerie du Lucernaire within the « Le 6ème, ateliers d’artistes » open doors week in Paris.

3 photographers…
Paul Muse is born in England in 1960. Photographer since he is eleven year old. After some litterature, Photo and cinema studies, he briefly worked in advertising before leaving the country for a two year stay in Sudan, then Portugal for 3 years. Moving to Paris in 1990, he since devoted himself to street photography and published his first solo exhibition in 1996. Since the summer of 2006, he works on the "Today" project, a daily newspaper in pictures and words, published on his website.

Frances Ryan settled down in Paris after years spent wandering around the world. It is only when she discovered the work of Ansel Adams and Edward Weston she decided to work exclusively in black and white. She runs through Paris, her city of adoption, to share with us the hidden secrets and her personnal vision of the city.

After studying Spanish litterature and Art History in Madrid and Paris, Laurence Toussaint worked for about 10 years at the contemporary art library Artcurial. Passionate for photography, she specialized in gardens and landscape and illustrate books about the wonders of nature.

Mirror, mirror on the wall...
Photographies by Paul Muse, Frances Ryan, Laurence Toussaint
from november 19th to december 2nd, 2007

Galerie du Lucernaire
http://www.lucernaire.fr/galerie.html
53, rue Notre Dame des Champs
75006 Paris
Free entrance (1st floor)
Monday to Saturday from 10am to 10pm
Sunday from 02pm to 10pm

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Xavier Zimbardo. The apparitions' genius
Opening on November 28th, 2007 at the Albert Benamou Gallerie

Opening on November 28th, 2007 from 06pm to 09pm

Since he escaped, twenty years ago, the verb archipelago where his teaching profession restricted him in order to give full time to his role as image creator, Xavier Zimbardo reported from his vagabondages through continents and worlds a stunning collection of photographic works. Nothing to do with documentaries cliches, anecdotal, quaint or exotic pictures. Each of his images has to be seen as an apparition, where the share of imagination, random effects and the inspirationnal impromptu haunt the scope of reality.

Whether views, scenes, portraits, this flash from another world make the snapshot iridescent. The aim of the artist is not to duplicate what he technically has under the eyes, but to subjectively produce what makes, from the bottom of his eye to the abbyss of the hypothalamus, the singular illumination of the captured image. From the shoot to the impression, through work on negative or the screen every Zimbardo's work is as accomplished as a dance on your optic nerve. Always with a need to dive his focal, mental, libidinal objective beyond visible, inviting our gaze to bear on the side of the wandering soul of things, living and worlds. That earned him the title of shaman photographer.



Xavier Zimbardo. Le génie des apparitions (The apparitions' genius)
Exhibition from November 29th, 2007 to January 10th, 2008

Albert Benamou Gallerie
www.benamou.net
24, rue de Penthièvre
75008 Paris
Tel : 01 45 63 12 21
Fax : 01 45 63 22 11
18h-21h

Email : albertbenamou@gmail.com

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MISS VAN - ATAME : SOLO SHOW
Opening Saturday November 24th, 2007 at the Magda Danysz Gallerie

Opening Saturday November 24th, 2007 from 06pm to 09pm

MissVan has become one of the major street artist. Having shown her work all around the world she stays true to her subject and follow on depicting her slightly autobiographical dolls. In the recent years the flashy colors and imediateness of her paintings have opened up on more emotion, showing the fragility of being provocative. In her biggest solo show of the year, she will explore these mixed feelings...

MISS VAN - ATAME : SOLO SHOW
from Novembre 24th to December 29th, 2007

Magda Danysz Gallerie
www.magda-gallery.com
78, rue Amelot. 750011 Paris
M° Filles du Calvaire
open tuesday through friday from 11am to 7pm and saturday from 2 to 7pm
Contacts T. 01 45 83 38 51
Mail: magda@magda-gallery.com

Free entrance

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Americans in New York
Opening Saturday, November 24th at the Michel Rein Gallerie

Opening Saturday, November 24th 4-9 pm

Once upon a time in America and again, once upon a time, America is eternally back as if Nietzsche was presiding over its destiny. In the contemporary landscape, the American city remains an emblematic place, at the crossroad of all kinds of encounters and attempts, a true barometre of financial and artistic activity.New York is not the capital of the USA but it is without any doubt the centre of contemporary art in the world. There is no avoiding New York, and it is unlikely it will ever lose its place in spite of what people from the outside may wish. In the metropolis, artists are coming from all parts of the world, from all corners of the USA, and emulation is what breathes energy into the New York art scene. In nowadays context one has to admit that the forces of globalisation that can be found in the art world too, paradoxically offer a wide berth to opposing cultural horizons. It is said that New York is not America, but America needs New York for its global existence. This is what this small show will try to demonstrate through a few slices of today’s art steeped in identity.

MATTHEW DAY JACKSON
Born 1974 in Panorama City (California), lives in Brooklyn, New-York.
Matthew Day Jackson's work takes the form of antimonuments that turn a critical eye on our cultural icons to address the romanticization of America's past, current political events. Inspired by the Russian Constructivist notion of "art for the proletariat", Jackson employs materials scavenged from his past, his studio, and culture at large as well as imagery culled from American history, Native American mythology, and art history. Each element, whether material or symbolic, carries a significance at once personal and universal. When brought together, they create a narrative structure that illuminates the artist's belief in the redemptive possibilities of seemingly outdated ideals.

MARC GANZGLASS
Born 1973 in Washington D.C, lives in Brooklyn, New-York.
Marc Ganzglass will present his installation "Meteorite Inclusions". Working at the Kohler plumbing manufacturing facility in Kohler, Wisconsin; I collaborated with factory chemists and technicians to embed iron fragments from the Sikhote Alin Meteorite (Siberia 1947) within a limited production run of Kohler cast iron drinking fountains. Marc Ganzglass "Meteorite Inclusions" embodies two divergent histories of iron, one story of iron formed in space and the other of iron developed here on earth, a social material. This work continues his investigation into the sublime ironies of material and industry. Its subtle, conceptual elegance immediately suggests a play on Duchamp's Urinal.

JILL MAGID
Born 1973 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, lives in New-York.
A graduate of MIT, Jill Magid was an artist-in-residence at the Rijksakademie Amsterdam. She has had solo shows in various institutions around the world including the Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei (2003), Tate Liverpool (2004), the Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam (2005), Sparwasser, Berlin (2007) and the Centre D’Arte Santa Monica, Barcelona (2007). To realize “Auto Portrait Pending”, Jill Magid signs a contract with a company to become a diamond when she dies. The contract specifies the agreement for her transformation and the details of her eventual diamond. Upon her death, the diamond will be created from the carbon†of her cremated remains. It will have a round cut, weigh one carat, and be set in a gold ring setting. Until the diamond's creation, the empty ring setting, the corporate contract, the artist’s preamble, and the Beneficiary Contract constitute the artwork. Auto Portrait Pending awaits a Beneficiary.

LAUREL NAKADATE
Born 1975, lives in New-York.
“More of an exhibitionist than Madonna during one of her showcases and even more fakely innocent than Britney Spears in her “Oops I did it again” video clip, Laurel Nakadate has been exploring the stereotypes of her Asian-American feminine identity, ever since she graduated from Yale. She uses her Lolita-like body (despite her thirty years old of age) to emphasize the fantasies of the average male viewer, in a quite humorous fashion: she enters random men’s houses (in general, balding, paunchy bachelors who made a pass at her on the street) to dance with them to one of Britney’s tunes or she wears her Guide attire to have them sing a birthday song for her. In the video-based work “I Want to Be the One to Walk in the Sun” (2006), she travels across truckers’ America, from New-Orleans’ kinky hotels to Iowa’s gas stations, and confronts her Lolita character to landscapes (pole-dancing in an empty parking lot), average Americans and several animals (dressed as a French maid, she films a dog taking her leg for a mate).” Isabelle Alfonsi in « 02 », fall 2007

MIKA ROTTENBERG
Born 1976 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, lives in New-York
Mika Rottenberg creates, in her fixed or animated images, scenes and situations in which her characters play a sociological and fantasy-like theater which draws from the iconography of the fair. Her works present as a result a wunderkabinett in which labor, immigrants and especially women personify an American reality that is barely disguised. Mika Rottenberg received her MFA from Columbia University in 2004. In 2005, her video installation “Tropical Breeze” was included in “Greater New York” at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center. “Mary's Cherries” (video installation, 2004) was included in “New Works/New Acquisitions” at the Museum of Modern Art, New York and “Dough” (Oslo version) was included in “Uncertain States of America” at the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art in Oslo. “Americans in New York” will be her first show in Paris.

Americans in New York, curated by Ami Barak
with: Matthew Day Jackson, Marc Ganzglass, Jill Magid, Laurel Nakadate, Mika Rottenberg
Exhibition dates: Nov. 24, 2007-Jan. 12, 2008

Michel Rein Gallerie
www.michelrein.com
42 rue de Turenne
75003 Paris
tel: 33 1 42 72 68 13
fax: 33 1 42 72 81 94

Metro : Saint-Paul
Hours : 04 pm - 09pm
Mail: galerie@michelrein.com

Free entrance

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Fantasy - What Ever Happened to Your Dreams ?
Opening Saturday Novembre 24th at Galerie Les Filles du Calvaire

Opening Saturday Novembre 24th, 2007 from 3pm to 9 pm

The English term "Fantasy", which means both fantasy and the fantastic, serves as a guide to the exhibition What Ever Happened to Your Dreams ?
From November 24 to January 19, at the Galerie les Filles du Calvaire, Paris.

Erotical object and advetising privileged target, the child is often represented in contemporary art including photography and video. Adults (author or spectators of the image) have a tender and terrible glance to his World: sometimes seen as a double or a radical self, a mysterious being sometime hostile and cruel, nevertheless fragile and vulnerable, the child lives in a perfect or fantasy world where adults are projecting their fantasies.

The childlike universe, lures associated with an idyllic, fantastic or nightmarish virtuality, ideally takes shape in a fairy tale aesthetic. It is often referred to as a kind of lost Eden where fears and dangers, monsters and evil are hiding behind a prettiness display. It is that phantasmagoria that can be found in popular images.
In the latter, contemporary artists are allusively contributing while building on psychoanalysis and the contribution both cultural and technical of the photographic and film medium. If the works refer frequently and ambivalentely to the joys and anxieties related to the impulses of childhood - a time when dream / nightmare and reality are blending - affirmed staging, apparent or exaggerated digital manipulation are emerging as forms of symbolic resistance to the projections of desires and fears from adults and the roles they wish these childish figures will play.

The title of the exhibition at Galerie Les Filles du Calvaire: "What ever happened to your dreams?" is a direct reference to the 1960's Henry Farrell book adapted for the movies by Robert Aldrich in 1962, "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" It introduces the concepts of fantasy and duality between romance and terror, between purity and evil, embodied in the film by an aging Bette Davis locked in her child's wishes and lust for eternal youth, struggling with the perversity of Joan Crawford. This exhibition will put the emphasis on pieces illustrating the loss and the overwhelming desire for adults to preserve their dreams.

Fantasy - What Ever Happened to Your Dreams ?
from 24-11-2007 to 12-01-2008
Elke Boon, Maïder Fortuné, Julia Fullerton-Batten, Ellen Kooi, Mireille Loup,
Marie-France et Patricia Martin, Wendy McMurdo, Alessandra Sanguinetti, Santeri Tuori

Galerie Les Filles du Calvaire
Galerie les filles du calvaire
17, rue des Filles-du-calvaire
75003 Paris
Open from tuesday to saturday from 11:00 AM to 06:30 PM

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