Sunday, December 6, 2009

THE WINTER SALON


Dec 12 2009 - Jan 20th 2010
Opening Reception Dec 12th, 2009 - 1:00pm - 7:00pm


B j ö r n R e s s l e A r t P r o j e c t s
1 Great Jones Street

New York, NY 10012

RAYMUND ABRAHAM – WILLIAM ANASTASI – CARL ANDRE – STUART ARENDS – AUGUSTA ATLA – ROBERT BARRY – CARLO BERNARDINI – JOSEPH BEUYS – DOVE BRADSHAW – ROSEMARIE CASTORO – YU CHEN-TA – CHUCK CLOSE – GEORGE CONDO – DINORAH DELFIN – MARK DeMURO – LINDA DiGUSTA – ROBERT G. EDELMAN – JACOB EL HANANI – CRIS GIANAKOS – RON GORCHOV – OSANG GWON – CHRISTIAN HAUB – NANCY HAYNES – DAVID HIGGINBOTHAM – JENE HIGHSTEIN – GARY HILL – MARY HRBACEK – NEIL JENNY – DAVID KAPP – KIKA KARADI – LINDA KARSHAN – ALEX KATZ – HA RHIN KIM – MIRU KIM – SONGYI KIM – SOL KJØK – TADAAKI KUWAYAMA – SOL LEWITT – ROBERT MANGOLD – ROBERT C. MORGAN – ANDY MOSES – GERARD MOSSÉ – RAKUKO NAITO – RICHARD NONAS – DENNIS OPPENHEIM – JANET PASSHEL – GEORGE QUASHA – GRACE RIM – WALTER ROBINSON – CONDY RYMAN – WILL RYMAN – KAREN SHIFF – ANNE SENSTAD – HOWARD SMITH – SUSAN SMITH – MAXWELL STEVENS – ALI VAN – BERNAR VENET – MERILL WAGNER – JOAN WALTEMATH – MARJORIE WELISH – MARK WIENER – THORNTON WILLIS – MARK ZIMMERMANN


Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Seeing As Believing: Phosphene Visions - Exhibition Dec 5th - Jan 24th 2010

Exhibition: Phosphene Visions - Dec 5 2009 - Jan 24th 2010
Curated by Koan Jeff Baysa
Video installation; Light Writes Always in Plural, Light Displacement - Section 2, 2009
Single Channel Video, 8,20 min
Edited and Sound Design by Manuel Sander
Below: stills from video installation




Saturday, November 14, 2009

Eva Peron Museum exhibition - The Reason for My Life


Anne Katrine Senstad - LA RAZÓN DE MI VIDA

NOVEMBER 25 – 29TH 2009

A video installation by Anne Katrine Senstad at the Eva Peron Museum

Curated by Andrew Utt in conjunction with Video Arte Internacional Buenos Aires Festival/VIBA Festival

OPENING RECEPTION THURSDAY NOVEMBER 26th, 7 - 9 PM

Eva Peron Museum/Museo Evita

Lafinur 2988 (1425), Buenos Aires, Argentina

http://museoevita.org


The exhibition is made possible with the generous support from the Royal Norwegian Embassy


BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA – La Razón de Mi Vida/The Reason for My Life is an installation of work by Anne Katrine Senstad, a Norwegian artist, on display at the Evita Museum from November 25-29 2009. The installation, a projection of “La Razón de Mi Vida” in multiple languages, carries the legacy of Eva Peron’s mission and reminds us of conviction in one’s own beliefs, one’s mission.

The site-specific installation, an experience of light and words projected onto the historic Museo Evita building, is a further development of her previous Neon Sentence works exhibited at Zendai MOMA, Shanghai and Gallery Nine5 in New York. In this presentation, Senstad plays with the meaning of words, transforming them by breaking up letter combinations and creating new meanings through differing languages. Thus, Senstad plays with Wittgenstein’s ideas of perception and the mapping out of language. Language and words are transformed and given new weight in process.

The profundity of the sentence “The Reason For My Life”, combines the intensity and poetry of Eva Peron’s life with Wittgenstein’s essential idea of Language as Philosophy, captured in one sentence. Senstad adds the notion of language variables by including Chinese, English and Spanish, to add to the layers of symbols and direction of grids and patterns – thus exemplifying the universality of the meaning of words and language.

The work will be presented during Video Arte Internacional Buenos Aires Festival, VIBA Festival. Senstad’s work at VIBA Festival includes her recent video work “Light Writes Always in Plural, Light Displacement – Section Two” 2008. It will be exhibited from November 22-29 at VIBA Festival (www.vibafestival.com) in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the first video art festival of Buenos Aires. “La Razón de Mi Vida/The Reason for My Life” will be publicized through VIBA Festival in conjunction with the Eva Peron Museum.

Anne Katrine Senstad is a Norwegian artist who lives in New York and Oslo. She has exhibited widely internationally, including Elga Wimmer LLC, Bjorn Ressle Gallery, Gallery Nine5 and Gary Snyder Projects in New York, The Noorderlicht institution in Holland, The Nobel Peace Center in Oslo, BOZAR Museum in Brussels, the Ministry of Culture in Monaco, Zendai Moma in Shanghai, KK Projects in New Orleans, Artfairs include PhotoMiami, DIVA Paris, Scope Miami amongst others.

Curator: Andrew Ütt : a at andrewutt.com

VIBA Festival: Marina Reyes Franco : marina at vibafestival.com

Friday, October 23, 2009

The Sugarcane Labyrinth Opening Oct 24th 2009

The Sugarcane Labyrinth Opening Oct 24th 2009 - Theriot, Louisiana
A Site - Time - Situation Specific - Agricultural Land Art Project by Anne Katrine Senstad
With Generous support from The Royal Norwegian Consulate General Houston
Please see September 2009 on the blog for more extensive information on the project


Sunday, October 18, 2009

ART ZONE TV Shanghai interview for Zendai MOMA exhibition

Interview on ART ZONE TV in Shanghai for the exhibition with ZENDAI MOMA; Light Words White Neon, 2008

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Norwegians, Volume Two - Women



DARKNESS DESCENDS: Norwegian Art Now Runs Through Oct. 9 in the Grossman Gallery
Exhibition explores darkness inspired by mythology and nature
EASTON, Pa.(www.lafayette.edu), September 2, 2009 — DARKNESS DESCENDS: Norwegian Art Now, running through Oct. 9 in the Grossman Gallery, delves into the uniquely Norwegian style of neo-romanticism in contemporary art. The exhibition brings together a multidisciplinary group of artists to explore the fascination with darkness inspired by mythology and a close relationship to nature.

The exhibition includes drawings, photographs, paintings, sculpture, video, and sound pieces by Thora Dolven Balke, Halvor Bodin, Lars Elling, Anki King, Sol Kjøk, Ingvild Langgård, Are Mokkelbost, Rune Olsen, Anne Katrine Senstad, Elise Storsveen, Kjersti Vetterstad, Marius Watz, Liz Wendelbo, Jana Winderen, Monica Winther, and Munan Øvrelid.

From curator Christina Vassallo's statement: These photographs are the continuation of Senstad's series of male Norwegian portraits; in both series, Senstad channels the public perception of Norwegian culture and identity as they are formed through fact and fiction.


A quote from Thure Erik Lund's essay "On the Hell of Being Norwegian," which was included in Senstad's first book, is the best way to end this description of DARKNESS DESCENDS, although it further mystifies an understanding of Norwegian art: So, who are we really, we who claim to be real Norwegians? As a consequence of our nature, we extremely rare really genuine Norwegians are, strangely enough, not interested in defining ourselves, as either one or the other type of Norwegian.