Posted on Leave a comment

Chanel…. a still continuing story

Claudia Schiffer by Karl Lagerfeld

Chanel is arguably the most iconic fashion label of all time and the classic fashion of Coco Chanel and the great designers that worked for this fashion house resulted not only in some of the ultimate fashion of all time, but also in some of the greatest in house publications by a fashion label . The period of the late Eighties and early Nineties resulted in catalogues photographed by the very best of Fashion photographers and worn by the greatest of all famous models. Specially the photographs by Karl Lager field of his muse Claudia Schiffer belong to the very best of fashion photographs ever. www.ftn-books.com has bought a small collection of Chanel publications and can offer there’s now on its site.

Posted on Leave a comment

Maarten Ploeg at the KUNSTMUSEUM

Last Friday the exhibition MAARTEN PLOEG opened at the Kunstmuseum in Den Haag with impressive personal speeches by Ryu Tajiri and Rogier van der Ploeg. After the speeches it was time to visit the exhibition. Far too busy to have a good look at all these timeless works, but the day after I returned to make some photographs for my personal archives. Part of these I share now with you with just one reason……to encourage you to visit this exhibition. HET PAROOL reviewed the exhibition and concluded that beside the art of Marlene Dumas, Rob Scholte and Rene Daniels other great art was made by Maarten Ploeg….. a well-deserved retrospective.

www.ftn-books.com has some nice Ploeg books available.

Posted on Leave a comment

Michel Seuphor (continued)

Michel Seuphor

There is a reason to write another blog on Michel Seuphor. Not only because his growing importance for Modern Art as we know it nowadays, but also because I just added a signed limited edition to my inventory. The book was published. by Galerie Het Mondriaanhuis in 19889 in an edition of 150 copies only . Numbered and signed by Seuphor. The book is published on the occasion of his 88th birthday and is dedicated to the 64 Hexagramms of the Yi-King. A highly collectible item and a rare occasion to add this to your collection.

Posted on Leave a comment

Jiro Sugawara (1941)

Jiro Sugawara

Jiro Sugawara was largely inspired by the 1960s. Artistically, the decade began with the twin movements of Pop and Minimalism emerging alongside each other. On one hand, Pop espoused the visual culture of the mainstream and mass media, and of products and consumerism. The work of art by artists like Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Tom Wesselmann and Claes Oldenberg was inspired by the popular culture of the fast developing Capitalism of the United States, taking things like advertising, comic books and ideas surrounding celebrity culture as their main visual inspiration. A parallel movement was established on the West Coast in California – a strain that also related to language in art, and is viewed as the very first blossoming of conceptual art. The 1960s were a sensational decade internationally, witnessing a great increase of modernist philosophies and trends. It was the era of Kennedy and Kruschev, and the start of the Cold War, which would endure for most of the second half of the twentieth century, and was epitomised most symbolically by the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961. The Iron Curtain divided Eastern and Western Europe, both ideologically and literally, and student political uprisings took place across the globe. Psychedelia, an massive increase in consumerism, and the associated trends of marketing and advertising further defined the era. Minimalism developed a formal language with no external references, predicated solely on line, colour and geometric form as key elements of both painting and sculpture.

The main figures of Minimalism included Frank Stella, Donald Judd and Agnes Martin. Colour Field painting, as practiced by Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland and Helen Frankenthaler, further developed some of the expressive philosophies of Abstract Expressionism, but reduced much of the rhetoric, instead approaching a more rule-based approach to surface and colour that associated this practice with Minimalism. Pop Art was a prominent offshoot of minimalism, a discipline made famous by through the work of artists like Victor Vasarely and Bridget Riley. Globally, a number of artistic movements echoed the artistic concerns of the previously mentioned movements, often with regional fortes and nuance. In Italy, Lucio Fontana and Piero Manzoni established Spatialism, and in Germany the Zero group under the leadership of Gunter Uecker adopted similar ideas. The influential school of Existentialist Philosophy was an important source of creativity for creatives, with artists like Francis Bacon and Alberto Giacometti achieving international prominence for their idiosyncratic approaches to the human form and the angst related to the human condition.

The Yamaki 1991 catalog is now available at www.ftn-books.com

Posted on Leave a comment

Igor Ganikovsky (1950)

Igor Ganikovsky

IGOR GANIKOWSKIJ HAS TAKEN PART IN MORE THAN 50 ONE- MAN SHOWS, 13 OF THESE IN MUSEUMS, AND 100 GROUP EXHIBITIONS.  HE HAS EXHIBITED AT ART-BASEL, ART COLOGNE, ARCO MADRID , ART LA AND ART LONDON.  HE HAS BEEN WIDELY PUBLISHED, WITH 11 SOLO-CATALOGUES AND MORE THAN 300 ARTICLES ON HIS ART IN BOOKS, MAGAZINES, NEWSPAPERS.  HIS WORK IS REPRESENTED IN THE COLLECTIONS OF MORE THAN 35 MUSEUMS.

www.ftn-books.com has the gaslerie Julia Tocaier catalogue from 1989 available

Posted on Leave a comment

Robert C. Morgan

Robert C. Morgan

Throughout his 50-year career Robert C. Morgan has been lauded as an author, lecturer, curator, and art historian. For decades he has maintained a rigorous studio practice in parallel to writing, showing his work in exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art (1976), White Columns (1987), and the 49th Venice Biennale (1999) to name a few. Despite these lofty achievements, his acclaimed reputation as a writer preceded his other modes of production. At Proyectos Monclova, the exhibition Robert C. Morgan: Concept and Painting highlights Morgan’s vibrant artistic achievements through a survey of his dedicated studio output.

Morgan is an undisputed authority on conceptual art, having written numerous books and countless articles on the subject. Yet in his studio he consciously sets aside predetermined methodologies that cast the artist as a researcher whose creative efforts require the support of an index of footnotes to be fully revealed. Instead he favors an approach to art-making that prioritizes the notion of what exists between concept and painting to inspire in the viewer an elucidatory moment of intrapersonal profundity. 

The pieces on view draw from a range of media—among them documentation from Morgan’s early body performances, calligraphy, drawing and collage. Despite the differences in media, these works all exemplify an approach to painting where the forms seem to vibrate in living stillness. In his hard-edge geometric abstraction Morgan tunes in to the longing for spirituality hidden by the feedback loop of distraction that characterizes the present day.

Philosophical ruminations on presence, absence, space, gesture and organizational hierarchies take center stage in Morgan’s paintings and drawings, which operate with a strict focus. Their unwavering austerity demands that viewers confront and reexamine preconceived notions about what they assume contemporary art today to be (much less do). He highlights the values, priorities, and distractions that constitute post-internet space and social constructs by refusing to assume a reactionary position to them. Thus, he draws a parallel between space in painting and architectonic, psychological or even metaphorical space as construct rather than axiomatic.

Taking root in both western and eastern traditions, including phenomenology and Taoism, the interplay between presence and absence, reflection and absorption, in Morgan’s work suggests that dualistic forces are complementary aspects of the same thing, unified rather than opposed. For example, though he is committed to a practice of abstraction, the body isn’t dismissed. There is a subtle intimacy to be found in the scale of his paintings and drawings, which is deliberately chosen to reflect the concept of the body in space; his performances from the early 1970s highlight and reflect the corporeal forces and movements that constitute his forms. While the early calligraphy pieces are predicated on gesture—as the form demands—the geometric series seek to paint the space of a gesture.

www.ftn-books.com has now the artist book LEARNING TO SWIM from 1976 available

Posted on 2 Comments

Maarten Ploeg ( continued )

Maarten Ploeg

A very good reason to write a blog again on Maarten Ploeg. Next Saturday a large retrospective exhibition will be opening in the KUNSTMUSEUM in Den Haag. The museum will be hosting a Maarten Ploeg exhibition after almost 40 years since he was part of the exhibition DE KEUZE VAN DE KUNSTENAAR. In the Schamhart building Maarten Ploeg presented some very large paintings of which one has become part of my personal collection. The “OK hoofd” will be an important part of the exhibition in which some other 90 paintings will be presented together with drawings, comics, video’s and photographs. A well deserved tribute to one of the most creative artists from the 80’s .

Here is the text the KUNSTMUSEUM published on the occasion of this Maarten Ploeg exhibition:

Painting was rediscovered in the exhilarating 1980s. Maarten Ploeg (1958 – 2004) caused a sensation as an artist and musician at the time. He was awarded the Royal Prize for Painting in 1982, and in the late 1980s he emerged as a pioneer of computer art. Yet his name is not well known and little of his work is held in museum collections. The 1980s are associated above all with artists like René Daniëls, Rob Scholte and Marlene Dumas, but there was a lot more going on besides. The work of Maarten Ploeg is of a very high standard and played a much greater role than previously thought. It is the job of a museum to correct such omissions, so Kunstmuseum Den Haag is proud to host the first retrospective of his work since his untimely death in 2004.

“What do I want for my art? The same thing I want in life! Excitement & calm, love & hate, order & chaos, success & deception. Basically EVERYTHING, so NOTHING. So ‘my art’ isn’t going to take me anywhere; I will simply go somewhere and then move on from there”, Ploeg wrote during his time as a student at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy. In the same piece, he described ‘tradition’ as nothing more than a series of pictures gathered by art historians, and things in books at museums. He wondered what had been left out. Kunstmuseum Den Haag bought work by Ploeg in the 1980s. “This exhibition will demonstrated that Maarten Ploeg absolutely deserves a place in Dutch art history”, says director Benno Tempel.

Search for abstraction
The exhibition at Kunstmuseum Den Haag will feature a cross-section of his entire body of work. As well as seventy paintings, it will also include videos and abstract video art. In his early days as an artist Ploeg was one of the Neue Wilde, making neo-expressionist work that was raw and colourful. Later, he developed his own unique visual idiom, richly imaginative and often humorous. Ploeg was in search of abstraction, often opting for vibrant colours and simple, largely geometric shapes. The digital forms he later discovered in his computer art influenced his painting. In contrast to the dominant trend at the time, his work grew more abstract, encompassing elements of De Stijl, Picasso and cubism, and suprematism (Paul Mansouroff). Ploeg never achieved full abstraction in his paintings. A face always crept in somehow, as he said himself at the time.

Groundbreaking video art
From 1987 Ploeg explored the potential of the Amiga computer, the first home multimedia computer. He actually used it as a new way of painting, and this did enable him to create fully abstract images. This took his career to a new visual and substantive heights, and served as an inspiration to many new computer and video artists. His Ophthalmology series (1992 – 1995) is like a sensual hypnotic journey through the visual brain of the computer. Ploeg’s computer art could be viewed at night on Park 4DTV, which he had helped to launch in 1991, after previously making innovative TV for the pirate broadcaster P.K.P. TV and the Avro and VPRO broadcasting organisations. At a time when it was unusual for computer art to reach a wide audience, Ploeg managed to achieve just that, broadcasting on local television channels in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Berlin and New York, and on the internet.

Big role for music
Music had played a big role in Ploeg’s life since the 1970s, and he was a member of three bands. He founded the successful art punk band Soviet Sex with Peter Klashorst; his brother Rogier and, later, singer Ellen ten Damme and painter Bart Domburg were also members. Ploeg was the singer and guitarist in InteriorBlue Murder and Astral Bodies. Their videos bear the clear hallmarks of a visual artist, with Maarten moving around the sets like a Dutch David Byrne, the Talking Heads’ frontman. The exhibition will include a compilation of music videos with art direction by Ploeg.

Maarten Ploeg (whose name was actually Maarten van der Ploeg) trained in the audiovisual department of the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, where he met his partner Ryu Tajiri. He later continued his training at Ateliers ’63. Ploeg was awarded the Royal Prize for Painting in 1982 and in 1985 received the Prix de Rome basic prize for painting. He started teaching at the Formerly Audiovisual department of the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in 1991, where he and Peter Mertens established the MediaLab workshop and introduced the Amiga computer.

The exhibition is being organized in collaboration with the Maarten Ploeg Trust.
A publication on the artist’s life and work, PLOEG + WERK 1958-2004, is available at the museum shop

Posted on Leave a comment

Joep van Lieshout / Atelier van Lieshout (1963)

Joepm van Lieshout

Atelier Van Lieshout is the studio founded by sculptor and visionary Joep van Lieshout. After graduating at the Rotterdam Art Academy Van Lieshout quickly rose to fame with projects that travelled between the world of easy-clean design and the non-functional area of art: sculpture and installations, buildings and furniture, utopias and dystopias.

In 1995, Van Lieshout founded his studio and has been working solely under the studio’s name ever since. The studio moniker exists in Van Lieshout’s practice as a methodology toward undermining the myth of the artistic genius. Over the past three decades, Van Lieshout has established a multidisciplinary practice that produces works on the borders between art, design, and architecture. By investigating the thin line between manufacturing art and mass-producing functional objects, he seeks to find the boundaries between fantasy and function, between fertility and destruction.

Van Lieshout dissects systems, be it society as a whole or the human body; he experiments, looks for alternatives, takes exhibitions as experiments for recycling, and has even declared an independent state in the port of Rotterdam AVL-Ville (2001)—a free state in the Rotterdam harbour, with a minimum of rules, a maximum of liberties, and the highest degree of autarky.  All of these activities are conducted within Van Lieshout’s signature style of provocation—be it political or material.

Van Lieshout combines an imaginative aesthetic and ethic with a spirit of entrepreneurship; his work has motivated movements in the fields of architecture and ecology, and has been internationally celebrated, exhibited, and published. His works share a number of recurring themes, motives, and obsessions: systems, power, autarky, life, sex, and death—each of these trace the human individual in the face of a greater whole such as his well-known work

www.ftn-books.com has several van Lieshout now available

Posted on Leave a comment

Centre Pompidou in Malaga

Last Month Linda and I visited Malaga, Cordoba and Ubeda. In Malaga the big surprise was the Pompidou museum . Situated near a pier at the harbour it has clear views over the harbour and the sea, making the colored glass panes by Daniel Buren stand out at a distance. The museum itself is not very large , but the collection is over some 200 works of art of many were well worth to study and admire. Among the many highlight were some grat paintings by Matisse and Leger , but the one that stood out for the both of us was a small painting by Frantisek Kupka.

An early painting of a storefront and in front of it a sleeping dog. A few brush strokes with maximum result.

www.ftn-books has some great titles on Kupka available.

Posted on Leave a comment

Hannah Villiger (1951-1997)

Hannah Villiger

Born in 1951, Villiger trained in sculpture but discovered photography at the end of the 1970s. From 1981 until her death in 1997 she concentrated on taking photographs of herself. She emphatically believed in the power of the body even though, or rather because, she was already coping with the isolation caused by tuberculosis, which she had contracted at the age of 29. She believed not only in a life lived to excess, but also in the idea that photography can somehow renew the physical self.

A retrospective of Villiger’s photographs is somewhat overdue, given her significance within the realms of body art. This show opened with the single pieces, then groups of works entitled ‘Work’ from the early 1980s, and led into the ‘Sculpturals’ from the 1980s and 90s. Villiger arranged single photographs into blocks that defy the logic of the original image. The result is a broken, anagrammatical body, twisted and dislocated by the photographic act. You can imagine this approach as a kind of performance, whose only viewer is the artist herself. The 15 panels of the blocks condense into a kaleidoscopic inquiry into subjectivity and sexual difference. Almost unidentifiable extremities – an embraced neck, a stimulated clitoris – were at the mercy of the artist’s camera. Sigmund Freud and Marshall McLuhan described the camera as a type of prosthesis, an extension of the body’s organs; it’s a viewpoint that becomes abundantly clear in Villiger’s work.

In the way they reveal and construct poses these photographs recall the early work of Cindy Sherman or John Coplans. If occasionally Villiger reached for little hand mirrors, like Beckett’s Winnie, her intention was not so much to learn to recognize herself better, as to disrupt the act of looking, directing the camera to places where she couldn’t reach, the remotest parts of her body, ‘the outside of it, the inside of it, traversing it’.

www.ftn-boks has currently the most important book on Villiger from the Kunstmuseum Basel available.