Donnerstag, 25. November 2010

Graduate Symposium Holland-America

A little plug for a graduate symposium organized by Wouter Davidts:

When Donald Judd had his first solo show at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, The Netherlands in 1970, a local newspaper headlined that the American artist was “glad that the whole European tradition was over and done away with.” Judd belonged to a generation that, in the wake of Abstract Expressionism, wanted to change the perception of modern American art as a meagre imitation of the European avant-garde and resolutely claimed a leading position for American art.

The two-day symposium Holland-America aims to investigate the artistic relationship and dialogue between Europe and the United States in 1950s and 1960s. While this liaison is all too often portrayed as one of rivalry and competition, epitomized by the waning of Paris and the rising of New York, it has equally well been one of association and exchange, taking place in then expanding international networks of artists, critics, and curators. The symposium Holland-America will focus on the role and position of the Netherlands played in this transatlantic exchange.

Whereas the Stedelijk Museum already showed important exhibitions of American abstract art in the 1950s, it was only with the advent of minimalist and conceptual art in the 1960s that other major Dutch museums welcomed the new art from the United States with large survey shows (New Shapes of Color, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1966; Compass 3: Painting after 1945 from New York, Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, 1967; Minimal Art, Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, 1968) and major one man exhibitions for key protagonists such as Judd, Robert Morris, Carl Andre and Dan Flavin. At the same time, Dutch artists increasingly found their way to the US.

The symposium Holland-America aims to unravel the complex history of the distribution and the reception of American art and artists in the Netherlands in the first two decades after World War II. Our aim is to investigate the interchange between two countries with a shared social and economical history yet with distinct art historical traditions. Who were the key players in the transatlantic traffic of people, ideas and artworks? Which exhibitions or art events could be identified as major moments of intercontinental exchange?

We seek papers that unpick dominant narratives of postwar European and American art history and uncover new perspectives and insights into the complex relationship between art, artists, and art institutions within the Netherlands and the United States; papers with a historical, theoretical, or critical focus as well as case studies qualify.

The symposium Holland-America takes place on 17 & 18 February 2011 within the context of the exhibition Abstract USA 1958-1968. In the Galleries at the Rijksmuseum Twenthe (Enschede, NL; www.rijksmuseumtwenthe.nl) It is organized by the Department of Art History, VU University Amsterdam (www.let.vu.nl) and the Netherlands Institute for Art History (RKD; www.rkd.nl). Please submit an application by January 5, 2011 to Wouter Davidts (w.davidts[at]let.vu.nl) and Jesse van Winden (jessevanwinden[at]gmail.com).

Graduate students working at any level—from MA to PhD candidates—are eligible. Candidates should include the following in their applications: curriculum vitae (maximum two pages), an abstract (maximum 350 words), and the name of a faculty adviser who will review the final paper and provide support in preparing the presentation. The abstract should be printed in eleven-point font, double-spaced, with margins no smaller than one inch. Papers must be written and presented in English.

Image: One of Frank Stella's Irregular Polygons, from Abstract USA 1958-1968. In the Galleries at Rijksmuseum Twenthe.

Dienstag, 9. November 2010

December 3: Seminar with Abigail Solomon-Godeau

On Friday, December 3, feminist photo historian Abigail Solomon-Godeau will conduct a seminar around the theme “Fetishism, Femininity and Contemporary Art.”

Abigail Solomon-Godeau has made important contributions to the theoretical discourse around both feminist thought and photography history. She teaches at the University of California Santa Barbara. She is the author of Photography at the Dock: Essays on Photographic History, Institutions and Practices (1992) and Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation (1997). Her essays, which have been frequently translated and anthologized, deal with feminism and art, contemporary art, photography, and nineteenth-century visual culture.

Feminist theorists and scholars have persuasively demonstrated how Freud’s concept of fetishism underpins and structures many forms of mass culture, advertising, and the visual arts, while Marxist scholars have long elaborated on Marx’s concept of commodity fetishism as presented in the first part of Capital. In many respects, the work of art can be seen to be inflected or shaped by both forms of fetishism. However, art work by modern and contemporary women artists, both before and after the re-emergence of feminism in the late 60s, could be said to collectively produce their own analyses, critiques, and subversions of the fetish character of art, of the commodity, and (hardly least) the fetishistic representation of femininity. This talk examines a number of these works by women artists that work to dismantle or denaturalize the very conventions that perpetuate fetishistic desire in both of its forms.

To prepare for the seminar, students are required to read Sigmund Freud’s essay “Fetishism” (1927) and Laura Mulvey, “Thoughts on Theories of Fetishism in the Context of Contemporary Culture”, October, vol. 65 (Summer 1993), pp. 3-20. These texts will be sent to all participants in advance of the seminar.

The seminar will take place at the University of Amsterdam, Oudemanhuispoort, room ek.01A from 2-4 p.m. There is only room for a limited number of participants; MA students can make a reservation via their teacher/local PMK contact.

Montag, 1. November 2010

November 27: Seminar with Brian Holmes and Charles Esche

On Saturday, November 27, Platform Moderne Kunst presents a discussion with American theorist Brian Holmes and Van Abbemuseum director Charles Esche. The seminar is intended for MA students specializing in modern and contemporary art.

Brian Holmes is an art critic and cultural theorist who engages in collaborative research around the world. Last year a collection of essays entitled Escape the Overcode, Activist Art in the Control Society was published by the Van Abbemuseum and the curatorial collective WHW. Over the last decade he has worked with activist artists such as Ne Pas Plier, Bureau d’Études, Makrolab, Hackitecura and the 16 Beaver Group. He has contributed to many journals, magazines and web venues, including Multitudes, Springerin, Open and Nettime. Previous publication include Hieroglyps of the Future: Art & Politics in a Networked Era (Zagrabe, WHW & Arkzin, 2002) and Unleashing the Collective Phantoms: Essays in Reverse Imagineering (New York, Autonomedia, 2007).

Charles Esche is a curator and writer. Between 2000 and 2004 he was the Director of Rooseum Center for Contemporary Art, Malmo, Sweden and since 2004 he is Director of the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Netherlands. Esche has co-curated several international exhibitions and biennials. He is co-founder and co-editor of Afterall journal and Afterall Books. Esche is a theory advisor at the Rijksakademie, Amsterdam and visiting professor at NABA, Milano.

The seminar takes place in the light of a symposium The Artistic Device organized by the Van Abbemuseum with Brian Holmes, which includes a performance-lecture Möglichkeitsraum by the artist Angela Melitopolous on Saturday afternoon, in which Brian Holmes participates. The discussion with Brian Holmes and Charles Esche will focus on Holmes’ reading of Melitopolous’s documentary and activist modes of artistic practice. To this end participating students must read the text “The Artistic Device” (http://brianholmes.wordpress.com/2006/04/08/the-artistic-device) and “Extradisciplinary Investigations: Towards a New Critique of Institutions” (http://transform.eipcp.net/transversal/0106/holmes/en).

The seminar will take place in the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, from 11:30am to 1:30pm. There only is room for a limited number of participants. The invitation will be distributed to MA students of the various universities by email; if you would like to attend, you can contact the teacher who sent you the mail.

Montag, 27. September 2010

The 2010/2011 academic year



The spring and summer of 2010 were packed with activities that proved to be both enjoyable and intellectually rewarding: the seminar with T.J. Demos and the Graduate Symposium as well the Autonomy Summer School, in which we participated. An illustrated report on the Summer School can be found here: http://theautonomyproject.ning.com/group/summerschool/

Now that the new semester is well underway, the Platform Moderne Kunst is finalizing its graduate programme for this academic year. All activities well be announced here, so keep an eye on this space.

Image: The Autonomy Summer School in Session.

Donnerstag, 6. Mai 2010

The Autonomy Project


The Onderzoekschool Kunstgeschiedenis and the PMK are participating in the Autonomy Project, a collaboration between a number of institutions - including the Van Abbemuseum, where the Autonomy Summer School will take place from 28 June to 2 July. Attempting to redefine autonomy in contemporary art, the project involves both art and art history students, hence the crucial role played by art schools and universities. A web site - a NING, to be precise - has been created, with discussion groups that participants can join. Unfortunately, the PMK group and most other Dutch groups are still dormant (whereas the Hildesheim group in particular contains a lot of material), but hopefully this will change.

So what is it all about? In part that's for the participants to decide, but here's a short introduction, taken from the site:

The word 'autonomy' sounds outdated. In an artistic field, this term finds itself unfortunately wedged between two possibilities: the romantic notion of the isolated Artist, developing works in a studio, unaffected by the socio-political beyond his walls; or the cold reality that to operate within those same socio-political arenas an artist and the mediators involved in a creative action are only there to facilitate a public agendas or to smooth social process. These two positions are not mutually exclusive. The current state of contemporary art practice in the Netherlands and other Western European countries is multicultural, globalised, professionalised. And it is within this multi-faceted geographic and cultural context that the Autonomy Project seeks to facilitate a number of events over the coming years (including a public debate and formal symposium) in different locations, bringing the issue and practice of autonomy back into debate.

And as for the structure of the Summer School:

The week-long programme will mingle rhetorical and theoretical discussion around notions of Autonomy with active group work, as well as presentations by guest artists and speakers. The Summer School aims to equip the next generation of creative agents with the critical skills to articulate their position and practice in relation to the possibilities of Autonomy, while operating within the complex contemporary cultural field. The week will be loosely structured around a daily theme. Each day will offer several presentations by guests as well as an opportunity for discussion and workshop sessions. Participants are free to decide which discussions and activities they would like to join - our aim is to make it possible for participants to attend every presentation if they wish but also to create time for reading, group work, debate and production of work or responses. During the evenings we will also visit projects of interest around Eindhoven.

http://theautonomyproject.ning.com/

Image: Rafts by Robert Jasper Grootveld moored next to the International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam.

Sonntag, 2. Mai 2010

Second Annual Graduate Symposium


On June 8, the PMK will present its second annual Graduate Symposium. At this symposium, (Research) MA students specializing in modern and contemporary art will present their "theses in progress." Students from Amsterdam (UvA and VU), Groningen, Leiden, Nijmegen and Utrecht will participate in this second installment. The aim is to foster a 'graduate culture' and a spirit of exchange and debate among advanced students.

Last year, the first Graduate Symposium was hosted by Kitty Zijlmans in Leiden. This year's edition is a co-production of UvA (Rachel Esner) and VU (Sven Lütticken, with student-assistant Laura Prins). It will take place at the VU on June 8, from 10 AM to 5 PM, in room 12A-39 on the 12th floor of the main building (De Boelelaan 1105). Entrance is free, and no registration is required for audience members. All you need to do is show up!


Grotere kaart weergeven

Samstag, 1. Mai 2010

Platform Moderne Kunst Presents: TJ Demos


On Tuesday May 18, the Platform Moderne Kunst presents an afternoon with art historian TJ Demos of University College London. The seminar is organized for MA students specializing in modern and contemporary art.

T.J. Demos writes widely on modern and contemporary art and his reviews and essays have appeared in Grey Room, October, Artforum, Texte zur Kunst, and Art Press. He is also the author of The Exiles of Marcel Duchamp (MIT Press, 2007), which places Duchamp’s installations and mixed-media projects - including his “portable museum,” La Boîte-en-valise, in relation to geopolitical and aesthetic displacement during the early twentieth century’s periods of world war and nationalism.

During the seminar, T.J. Demos will discuss his current book project, provisionally titled Migrations: Contemporary Art and Globalization, which explores the relation of contemporary art – including practices from North America, Europe, and the Middle East – to the experience of social dislocation and political crisis. In particular, T.J. Demos will address the work of the Otolith Group, Steve McQueen, and Hito Steyerl. His presentation will be based on two of his recent essays: "Moving Images of Globalization" and "The Politics of Opacity: the Otolith Group's Nervus Rerum." Both essays will be made available on his website (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/art-history/staff/tj_demos) for downloading. Participants are expected to have read both essays in advance.

The session will take place in Leiden on May 18. There only is room for a limited number of participants; as usual, students can make a reservation via PMK members or their contacts in the various art history departments.

Image (edit): A snapshot from the seminar.