Catalina Bestard Rotger

3 posts

Tuesday, January 16 @ 6:30 Ulrike Müller

Dear All,

It is of great pleasure to invite you on behalf of the VALS team to our upcoming lecture of Ulrike Muller on Tuesday, January 16, 6:30.

Born in Austria, Ulrike Müller’s paintings explore precise geometric forms that engage with feminist and queer histories. She is also the editor of “Herstory Inventory: 100 Feminist Drawings by 100 Artists (2009–2012)”.

Frieze Article about Ulrike Müller’s work.
Bomb Magazine interview about “Herstory Inventory”, by Thom Donovan.

 


“In her artistic work, Ulrike Müller explores the relationships between abstraction and bodies through a conception of painting that is not limited to brush and canvas. Investigations of the visual strategies of modernism and of feminist practices of the 1960s and 1970s result in images that are closely related to current questions of body and identity politics. The geometries of figure and color in her compositions are never “purely” abstract. They carry erotic and sexual associations, they tease, touch, and penetrate each other without collapsing into binary logics. Müller uses abstraction as an idiom that can be figuratively appropriated, emotionally charged and politically connoted—depending on the context and the viewer.” – Manuela Ammer, Mumok, Vienna, 2015

“Ulrike Müller’s practice investigates form as a mode of critical engagement. Employing a wide range of materials and techniques, from text to audio and video, performance, publishing, and, most recently, intimately scaled drawings and paintings, it moves between different contexts and publics, invites collaboration, and expands to other realms of production in processes of exploration and exchange.” – Barbara Schröder, DF Press, New York, 2012

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Tuesday October 24 @ 6:30pm SONDRA PERRY

VALS is pleased to announce Sondra Perry on Thursday October 19.

Sondra Perry is a media artist whose work investigates the role of digital technology in the systemic oppression of black identity, often centering on the way blackness influences technology and image making. Perry explores the duality of intelligence and seductivity in the contexts of black family heritage, black history, and black femininity.

Interviews with Sondra:
http://www.artnews.com/2016/03/15/abstraction-isnt-neutral-sondra-perry-on-the-ncaa-subjecthood-and-her-upcoming-projects/

Thursday October 19 / Claire Bishop

Poster by Ana Rivera

VALS is pleased to announce Claire Bishop on Thursday October 19.

Bishop is currently a professor at CUNY (City University of New York) Graduate Center, and has taught at Warwick University and the Royal College of Art, in London. One of Bishop’s most iconic works of writing which remains relevant and urgent to this day is “Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics” (2004), an essay that presents a critique to Nicolas Bourriaud definition of relational aesthetics. Bishop is also the author of the book “Radical Museology” where she analyzes the role of contemporary public institution. In this book she portrays the problematics of the rise of the museum as entertainment and offers an alternative in a case study of three unique and self-critical European museums that have reinvented themselves beyond the spectacle.