Sunday, November 18, 2018

ELEMENTS II - He Xiangning Art Museum



































SCENE UNSEEN - In the Subtropics: 
Contemporary Design from 
Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden
亚热带
未有的景象——
北欧四国
( 丹麦\ 芬兰\ 挪威\ 瑞典)
设计展




12/2/2018 - 3/3/2019



展览总监 EXHIBITION DIRECTORS
LE Zhengwei, CAI Xianliang

主策展人 CHIEF CURATOR
FENG Boyi

策展人 CURATORS
Erlend Høyersten, Juha Huuskonen + Ian Yang, Bjørn Inge Follevaag, CHEN Shuyu, YU Xiangzhi

WITH SUPPORTED FROM
Embassy of Finland Beijing
Norwegian Consulate General Guangzhou
Embassy of Sweden Beijing



参展设计师 PARTICIPANTING ARTISTS
Åsa Jungnelius
Anne Katrine Senstad
benandsebastian
Jenny Nordberg
Katja Pettersson
Kivi Sotamaa & Tuuli Sotamaa
Lasse Andersen & Jens Lee Jørgensen
Laura Juslin & Lilli Maunula
Lise Bjerre Schmidt & Sofie Trier Mørk & Helle Vibeke Jensen
Michael T. Nartey
Petter Knudsen & Anders Berg & Steinar Hindenes
Philipp von Hase
Sami Niemelä & Simone Rebaudengo










I will be participating in the exhibition SCENE UNSEEN at He Xiangning Art Museum in Shenzhen, Guangzhou, China - opening December 2, 2018 with an immersive, experiential and perceptual light sculpture installation; ELEMENTS II, 2018, and a new neon text piece as part of my linguistic calligraphy and philosophical text based practice (Arabic, Farsi, Chinese, English, Spanish). 

灵魂以北 存在以南 North of My Soul South of My Existence is the curatorial title of the Norwegian section of the Nordic exhibition and a collaboration with curator Bjørn Inge Follevåg.  






ELEMENTS II, 2018

A perceptual and architectural light sculpture environment.
Dimensions Variable


'With its eternal presence, light represents the perceptual experience of the infinite and deepest elements of our shared humanity'

Anne Katrine Senstad
































亚热带未有的景象——北欧(丹麦、芬兰、挪威、瑞典)设计展 Scene Unseen in the Subtropics: Contemporary Design from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden

主办:何香凝美术馆
支持:芬兰驻中国大使馆、瑞典驻华大使馆、挪威驻广州总领事馆

展览总监
:乐正维、蔡显良
主策展人:冯博一
策展人:艾伦·霍尔斯顿、约翰·胡斯克宁+杨杨、比昂·弗雷瓦格、陈淑瑜、余湘智
助理策展人:吴姝妍、王婉秋
开幕式:2018年12月1日(周六)16:00-18:00
展期:2018年12月2日-2019年3月3日
地点:何香凝美术馆4-8厅

研讨会
主题:不可能的设计——国际设计学术研讨会
策划人:王晓松
时间:2018年12月2日(周日)9:30-12:00 ,14:30-17:30
地点:何香凝美术馆报告厅

OPENING CEREMONY:2018.12.1(Saturday)16:00-18;00
EXHIBITION PERIOD:2018.12.2 – 2019.3.3 
PLACE:He Xiangning Art Muesum Hall No.4-No.8

SEMINAR
TOPIC:Impossible Design ---- International Academic Seminar
SEMINAR PLANNER:WANG Xiaosong
TIME:2018. 12.2 (Sunday) 9:00-12:00 , 14:30-17:30
PLACE:He Xiangning Art Museum Lecture Hall

地处斯堪的那维亚地区的北欧,包括丹麦、芬兰、挪威、瑞典、冰岛五个国家,其设计及工艺制作有着悠久的传统和历史。同时,这些北欧国家制定了保护传统手工艺的策略,力求将传统的手工艺与现代工业设计相结合,并使传统作为一种内在的精神理念,从极富现代感的设计中呈现出来,体现了北欧设计师在设计美学中的追求。从而使北欧设计取得了杰出的成就,被誉为“全球设计的典范”。
关注和举办国际设计艺术展览一直是何香凝美术馆学术定位之一。为此,我们主办了题为“亚热带未有的景象——北欧四国(丹麦、芬兰、挪威、瑞典)设计展”。我们试图通过中国及四国策展人联合举办展览,研讨会、公共教育推广等活动的方式,结合深圳和国内的设计现状,为深圳的观众和设计界提供一次深入了解北欧四国的整体设计生态,特别是他们在不同设计领域的最新进展,并建立深圳及国内与北欧四国设计界进行交流、对话、探讨的机会。也是检视我们自身设计的特殊性和差距性,以及解决面临的相关问题。其目的是希望能提高中国本土设计的整体水平,并与国际设计领域实现多维度的接轨。
在此,谨向北欧四国的合作方、支持机构,四国的参展艺术家、策展人,以及所有为此次展览、研讨会等项目付出辛勤工作的工作人员表示由衷的谢意!


Scandinavia is a region in Northern Europe which covers five countries of Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden and Iceland and boasts great tradition and long history in design and craftmanship. Meanwhile, these Nordic countries have developed strategies to protect traditional handicraft and spared no effort to combine traditional handicraft with modern industrial design. The tradition, as an inherent spiritual philosophy, is presented in the form of modern design, and embodies the design aesthetics of Nordic designers. Thus, Nordic design has made great achievement and is reputed as the “Global Design Paradigm”.

It has been one of the academic orientations of He Xiangning Art Museum to focus on and hold the international design art exhibition. Therefore, we hold an exhibition themed with “Unseen Vision in Sub-tropical Area—Four Nordic Countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden) Design Show”. With the effort of curators from China and the four Nordic countries, we co-host exhibition, seminars and public education promotion activities combining the current design status in Shenzhen and China at large. We aim to offer an opportunity for the public and design industry professionals to learn about the panorama of design industry in these four Nordic countries, especially their latest progress in different design fields, so that Shenzhen and China at large could communicate and discuss with the design professionals in these four Nordic countries. From that, we could learn about our strength and weakness of our own design and resolve problems confronting us. Our goal is to improve the general standard of Chinese local design and encourage it to connect with international design in different dimensions.

We would like to express our sincere thanks to the partners and supporting institutions, artists and curators from the four Nordic countries, and all staff who contribute to the exhibition, seminars and related activities! 








Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Kinesthesia for St Brigid - Ottawa, Canada











ACADEMIC JOURNAL ARTICLEAfterimage

Article excerpt


Luminous Fields 

The Canadian Museum of Nature, St. Brigid's Centre for the Arts, and Patrick Mikhail Gallery 
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 
The exhibition "Preternatural" dealt with a liminal conceptual space, between objectivity and the metaphysical, and made palpable in several contemporary art forms. Though not organized as such, several themes permeated the exhibition; science invoked to show the extraordinary; the spiritual made manifest and sensual; and subtleties that delivered surprising multivalance. Curator Celina Jeffery tested epistemological limits and even offered compelling counterexamples to James Elkins's observed disconnection between spirituality and contemporary art. It was fitting to frame a show about unconventional perceptions in three idiosyncratic spaces: a deconsecrated Catholic basilica, a white-box gallery in a strip mall, and a natural history museum. 
The former St. Brigid's Cathedral, now St. Brigid's Centre for the Arts, is the most obvious space to evoke the spiritual. In a site-specific performative intervention in the basilica, Anne Katrine Senstad transformed the structure's east and west ends with a light-and-sound installation, "The Kinesthesia of Saint Brigid" (2011). The references to light organs were unmistakable as Senstad projected colors near the church's architecturally scaled pipe organ, comprised of shifting luminous fields that caused retinal apparitions. At this size, the saturated projections were an attempt to impress upon viewers something of the numinous grandeur evoked in color-field paintings the ineffable claimed by Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko. among many others. The accompanying music by J.G. Thirlwell added cinematic majesty through its modulated, meditative monotones.

Thursday, October 25, 2018

BACK AND FORTH



Octavia Art Gallery Houston
3637 West Alabama Street, Suite 120
Houston, TX 


www.ocaviaartgallery.com


Opening Reception Nov 8th, 6-8 pm



Back And Forth 
Curated by Kasey Short


November 8th 2018 to January 4th, 2019

























Title: CK4A5.2, 2012
Photographic C print from original color til negative 
Size: 50 x 60 inches
Edition 1/3





For immediate Release:

Octavia Art Gallery is pleased to present Back and Fortha group exhibition including works by Gil Bruvel, Jerry Cabrera, Bradley Kerl,Jeffrey Pitt, Mason Saltarrelli, Regina Scully, Anne Senstad and Ken Tate. In celebration of our 10-year anniversary this exhibition celebrates the past, present, and future of Octavia Art Gallery.

Established in 2008, Octavia Art Gallery expanded in 2013 from its Magazine Street location onto Julia Street in the heart of the New Orleans Arts District and
opened a second location in the River Oaks community in Houston, Texas.Over the years, Octavia Art Gallery has continued its commitment to showcasing the work of local, national, and international emerging and established artists along with modern masters, emphasizing the preservation and conservation of unique and authentic artistic cultures worldwide. The gallery also continues to offer a broad selection of works from 20th century artists. 

Out of the group of artists featured in our Back and Forth exhibition, 4 of these artists have been an integral part of Octavia Art Gallery’s program for several years including Gil Bruvel, Jerry Cabrera, Jeffrey Pitt, and Regina Scully. Their works explore various concepts such as perception, movement and energy, time and space, and the current state of our environment and our world. Although their unique styles vary vastly, these artists all use distinguishing forms of abstraction to express their individuality and to tell their stories.

Additionally, we are pleased to present the works by Bradley Kerl, Mason Saltarrelli, Anne Senstad, and Ken Tate. These artists offer a unique diversity for the present climate of the gallery’s program. Their works lean towards a more literal and representational visual language, focusing on themes such as metaphorical narratives, relatable idyllic still lives, experimental expression and the phenomena of ocular perceptions.

In addition to showcasing dynamic art exhibitions, over the past 10 years Octavia Art Gallery has grown to provide art consulting services for corporate, legal, hotel, and healthcare facilities, as well as offering fine art appraisals. Looking to the future, the gallery is excited to invigorate and enhance our gallery program, provide literary services, and perpetually stay abreast of current trends and opportunities to exhibit the world’s best talent while maintaining our distinctive identity and aesthetic. 

The Octavia Art Gallery staff is honored to work with such amazing artists, clients, and institutions. We thank you and look forward to our next 10 years!

Saturday, September 29, 2018

Feature story in KUNST/Norway - October 2018 issue


KUNST - Norway


Anne Katrine Senstad - Imagine all the Eye Cannot See - by Frøydis Hågvard. 


A 6 page feature story on my practice in the leading Norwegian art magazine KUNST.











Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Art Frontier Magazine - China



Art Frontier Magazine, Beijing - Fall 2018 issue. 
Pages 100-111. 
By Tansy Xiao and Patrick Rolandelli.


Anne Senstad - A Postmodern Folklore















Thursday, August 30, 2018

The New Orleans Gambit Art Review

































D. ERIC BOOKHARDT Aug 27, 2018 - 12:00 pm


The parallels between visual art and music always have hidden in plain sight, yet that topic rarely is mentioned in art history books. Like music, visual art can resonate harmonically, or not, and even some carefully curated exhibitions can come across as tone deaf. Others maximize visual polyphony in ways that enhance how we experience even very diverse works, as we see in this 10th anniversary exhibition at Octavia Art Gallery featuring work by 10 artists. Regina Scully sets the tone with Inner Journey (pictured), a composition that subtly suggests a city inundated by massive blue waves that seem to frolic as playfully as dolphins. What it means is up to us, but as a composition it flows like an orchestral tone poem. Blue tones also permeate Philemona Williamson's Limbs canvas, where two kids seem to float amid entangled tree limbs under a dreamy azure sky. In the most famous 20th-century music-based painting, Piet Mondrian's Broadway Boogie Woogie, colored squares pulsate to the artist's inner rhythms, but here Mason Saltarrelli takes colored patches on a meandering walk on the wild side in an untitled work that visually evokes an edgy modern jazz riff. James Henderson's Flowers — a spray-painted outline of a man in a bow tie with a collage of old photos where his face should be — reads like graffiti, but look again and those brown, purple and yellow splotches on a ragged green background suggest a nihilistic — or abstract jazz — take on Andy Warhol's iconic flower prints.

Conversely, Anne Senstad's minimal Soft Geometry light sculpture rendered in crimson, purple and turquoise neon glows with an otherworldly resonance that contrasts with the aura of a hot tungsten filament — or Miles Davis high note — in Jerry Cabrera's minimal acrylic painting Haven. Both differ from with the smoldering tones in Jeffrey Pitt's Nuclear Power painting ironically rendered in patterning reminiscent of Victorian velvet wallpaper. These works may come from very different places, but their placement in such a visually attuned installation allows for an unusually expansive and self-explanatory viewing experience.

Through Sept. 29. Octavia Art Gallery, 454 Julia St., (504) 309-4249;

www.octaviaartgallery.com.


Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Interview in Eazel Magazine by Tansy Xiao


Published in Eazel Magazine, Korea

Art and People

Anne Katrine Senstad


Last May, Anne Katrine Senstad, a Norwegian artist living in New York, unveiled her latest work, ‘Elements’ as part of ‘Through the Spectrum’—a group exhibition at Athr Gallery in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia presenting Senstad's work alongside that of James Turrell, Carlos Cruz-Diez, and Robert Irwin. Senstad views 'Elements' as the culmination of her lifelong project of exploring light as a medium, narrative, and connection between space and environment. Throughout her career her sculptures and installations have invited the viewer to a meditative spatial experience.

------------------------------------------------------------


Eazel: Anne, congratulations on the inclusion of your light installation, Elements in the group exhibition, Through The Spectrum at Athr Gallery in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia this summer. Tell us about the exhibition and what it feels like to show work alongside such prolific artists as James Turrell, Robert Irwin, and Carlos Cruz Diez.
Anne Katrine Senstad (Anne): Thank you! Well, it has been an honor and a dream come true as the artists you mention are inspirational figures in the art world that I have looked up to for many years. And Athr Gallery is the largest, and arguably the most important, gallery in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. With three floors, as well as outdoor space dedicated to presenting installation work, I would say it functions more like a museum than a gallery. Considering such, the curators of the exhibition designed an experience that serves as a visual-perceptual journey from one installation to the next—a labyrinth of light and color, so to speak. The participating artists’ respective visual, textual, and aural languages span generations and cultures in their exploration of the relationship between the West and the Middle East.
Speaking to Elements, I view this work as a continuation of my exploration of the foundational elements of light, sound, and spatial relations with special attention paid to how the viewer perceives their various interrelations. At the same time the exhibition is something of a new chapter as it represents the most complete form of light sculpture I have executed to date, building upon previous works. With Elements I have effectively merged several of my modes of expression.
In executing the installation I was interested in exploring the idea that light can be presented simultaneously as form in the abstract, as well as form in spacetime—a dense spectrum of frequencies and temperatures that invoke the subjectivity of color and the sensorial realm of the viewer’s experience. 
Eazel: You have described yourself as a baroque minimalist. Which artists have influenced you in this regard? 
Anne: Baroque minimalism is something of a playful contradiction of terms—as minimalism represents a reductive sensibility, commonly speaking in a monochromatic language to define space and object, while Baroque connotes maximalist expression of form and color. My installation and photographic works have always sought to test the reasonable harmony between light and color, pushing the terms of this harmony with saturated colors that respect their spatial context. In this sense, my work is about exploring the sensorial and cognitive realms of perception, decoupling form and concept and transcending designations such as line, shape, void, and color.
I have been exploring the perceptual interrelations between light and color, and object and space across various disciplines for over 25 years. My artistic practice has also been informed by land art—like Michael Heizer’s semi-architectural land interventions, Robert Smithson’s diverse land works and mirror installations, and Dan Flavin’s fluorescent tubes in various sculptural forms—which to me are all about the spatial context of the light object. The kinetic movement in Latin America of the 1950’s is another major influence. And of course there’s James Turrell and Robert Irwin. I love Irwin’s garden installations, and his hyper-minimalist perceptual works in particular.
Sound and literature also contribute to my visual language. I’ve been working with composer, mathematician, and philosopher, Catherine Christer Hennix for the past 6 years. Her work in sound composition and technology pushes the boundaries of experimental drone sound emulations. JG Thirlwell is another collaborator whose cinematic and boisterous aural language complements the baroque aspect my work rather well.
Eazel: It would seem your aesthetic sensibility connects elements of architecture with aspects of nature on a fundamental level. How does nature inform your practice as an artist?
Anne: As an artist I am inspired by context and space—as well as our relation to nature, both as a force and as material. I like to explore large, open spaces charged with historical narratives for my site-specific installations. I find that the aesthetics of nature have a way of articulating certain harmonies that inform my artistic sensibilities. For example, in 2012 I was invited by Mexico City-based British architect, Matthew Holmes to create a site-responsive installation entitled Projections of the Surreal—a series of time based abstract color projections onto the crumbling concrete architectural surrealist structures at The Edward James Foundation's The Surreal Gardensin Las Posas, Mexico. Artcollector Edward James built the gardens in the 1950s as an escape from what he saw as the oppression and constraints of formal society—a sort of feverish vision of the Versailles gardens in the jungle. Under the auspices of the foundation, the mission of the project spoke to the evolving relationship between nature and the structures that humankind realizes within its domain. In this case, the aim of the installation was to raise awareness for the need to preserve James’s culturally significant landscape also leading to a short film with the same title which examined the history of Mexico's intertwined pre and post colonial history—my multiple color interventions serving as the main symbolic protagonist and narrative vehicle in this regard.
I further explored this practice in Saudi Arabia as part of my collaboration with the German architect, Dr. Anna Klingman who developed an art and architecture program for the preservation of traditional stone and mud buildings in historic villages in the Asir region of southern Saudi Arabia. This project would eventually lead me to another project in Saudi Arabia, Time Beyond Place over the course of 2016 and 2017 in which I initiated a women-run artist platform to champion contemporary art practices, social engagement, and to the preservation of the cultural heritage of rural Southern Saudi Arabia—with particular attention paid to the historic architecture of the region, as well as its pre-Islamic women's artisanal practice of Qut wall painting.
Eazel: I’ve read that your work has been influenced by the architectural philosophy of Snøhetta.
Anne: I appreciate Snøhetta's philosophy and vision. I worked with them on my largest public art commission for the Wolfe Center for the Arts at BGSU in Ohio from 2009 to 2010. Their practice—I have found—is oriented around discovering new aesthetics without imposing postmodern ideas on nature. They are probably some of the most humane and innovative architectural firms around—alongside BIG from Denmark.
Eazel: The synesthetic nature of light installations would seem to invoke the subjectivity of color—that is, the degree to which the elements of light and space combine in the viewer’s perception. What are your thoughts on how the notion of the viewer’s perception relates to the outside world?
Anne: In Bachelard’s The Poetics of Space, there is a quote by Rainer Maria Rilke, “The world is large, but in us it is as deep as the sea.” I believe the overarching project of the artist is to explore the parameters of the human being’s sensorial experience of the world around her—to lead her to becoming more self-aware and cognizant of her own perception of this outside world, abstracting its elements on their own terms.
Artists of all disciplines live in the space between interpretation and creative expression. We’re sensitive people with a deep curiosity about this transcendent interstices. Ultimately the perception of art hinges on how its experience inspires the viewer to see new things and connect with her environment in new ways. In this regard, I believe art has the potential to drive change in social and ecological contexts. 
Speaking to how I have practically executed on this idea, my work mixes analogue techniques and materials such as celluloid film that directly records light and color, and neon light tubes as opposed to artificial LED lights—to name a couple of specific examples. For me the materiality of the tools I use in my work is an important part of my process. For example, neon has this organic quality that I find to be stronger and more pleasant than LED light—both in terms of the physical, as well as the psychological spaces it creates. In working with neon, I’ll manage color variations by adapting various combinations of gases and different types of glass tubes. I find that with neon the color temperatures are purer and the light frequencies may be experienced synesthetically in navigating the physical space they create—the electric currents in the gasses create a soft atmospheric glow the viewer feels all over her body. 
In other works such as Universals, my sculptures derive from the project of solidifying light, whereby I realized light and color interventions by projecting my abstract color video work, Color Synesthesia I-VII, onto architectural structures, recasting physical and psychological aspects of these spaces. With Universals I was inspired by Plato’s various concepts of perception, as well as Malevich’s essays on Suprematism—drawing from these works’ views of art as perception—that is, art being a representation of an object or idea—rather than the actual idea itself.
Eazel: In contrast to your work with light, your text art would seem to convey a playful sensibility—like Forget Flavin in Shanghai and Gold Guides Me at the Bruges Art and Architecture Triennial. What are your thoughts on the contrast between the direct communication of the latter and the subtle modality of the former?
Anne: In approaching light as a medium I’m thinking more on a technical level with the objective of creating an atmosphere or feeling in the viewer. This is more of an iterative process that entails problem-solving related to execution of a given installation. With text works I’m still thinking in these terms as I’m utilizing light through neon signs or the aesthetics of large advertising signage; however, in realizing an experience my process is focused more on how to best engage with the reality of the sociopolitical issues my work is addressing. This is where I get to employ my wit and humor in adapting phraseology from history and literature to create new meanings.
Eazel: Anne, thank you so much for sitting down with us. To conclude, I was wondering if there is place in the world you dream about as the location for a site-specific installation that is still gestating in your imagination? 
Anne: There are quite a few places I dream about; however, there is one in particular that continues to pique my imagination—The Park Avenue Armory here in New York City. I envision something comparable to Turrell’s transformation of the Roden Crater—a structure that connotes humankind’s civilization of the Earth while manifesting aspects of the cosmos beyond and connecting these spaces to the universality and depth of the human psyche. It would entail my light and color vocabulary—perhaps including sound, textiles, and semi-transparent mirrors.
I have also thought about an installation making a statement about humankind and its relationship to technology near the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland. I have studied its circular architecture and have ideas for connecting its shape to themes related to the Russian Cosmism movement’s search for utopia. There are many possibilities for this location and I have thought a lot about connecting its current cultural significance to ideas of transhumanism, notions of the eternal through art, the relationship between art and science, and the dynamics between society and technology.

This article has been published simultaneously across Raincoat Society (raincoatsociety.com), Art Frontier (艺术汇, China), and Eazel. 

Tansy Xiao is an independent curator, artist, poetry translator, and founder of Raincoat Society—a non-profit group that helps artists across cultural backgrounds better express their ideas. Having lived and traveled throughout 50+ countries, Xiao received her art education in hundreds of museums and thousands of streets worldwide before settling in New York. 

All images courtesy of the artist unless otherwise indicated.