Showing posts with label amsterdam exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amsterdam exhibitions. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2016

JAPAN MODERN

The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam presents 170 Japanese prints from the Elise Wessels Collection, picturing Japan’s rapid modernization during the opening decades of the twentieth century. Alongside prints, the exhibition will feature kimonos and lacquerware from the Jan Dees and René van der Star Collection and posters on loan from the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo.Japan modernized rapidly in the first half of the 20th century. The growing international trade and booming economy had a great impact on Japanese society. This is reflected in graphic art of the period. At the beginning of the 20th century two new print movements arose. The innovative soak hang (creative prints), which focused on modern city life, and the more traditional shin hanga (new prints), which was more often informed by nostalgia and commerce.
This exhibition presents a selection of the Japanese woodcut prints from the extensive collection of Elise Wessels.
In the early 1900s, Japan was booming. Its modern urban centres offered a fertile climate for burgeoning industries and gave rise to new forms of leisure. As in Europe and America, women were pushing back old boundaries, forging a new model of the ‘modern girl’. Alongside optimism, there was also a prevailing sense of nostalgia, fed by feelings of uncertainty. In this era of vast change, the past was glorified as an ideal. With Japan in the midst of this whirlwind development, a devastating earthquake struck in 1923, ravaging the city of Tokyo and many towns and villages for miles around. Work immediately began on reconstruction of the country’s capital, putting the pace of modernization into an even higher gear. Synthetic fabrics made clothing, including kimonos, more affordable, and in their window displays the new department stores showcased the latest fashions to tempt shoppers. By 1930, Tokyo was a modern world metropolis that bore little resemblance to the city it had been just a few decades earlier. The new image of women was widely disseminated by advertisements for the rapidly growing cosmetic industry, and was subsequently embraced by writers and artists. In practice, however, the situation was quite different as most Japanese women still wore kimonos. Sometimes they combined this with a new hairdo, for instance a bob style, or chose a kimono with a contemporary pattern.
(Until September 11- Rijksmuseum - Amsterdam)





Prints from this period offer an unparalleled window into this turbulent time. Japan already had a long tradition of printmaking, but the early twentieth century saw the emergence of two new artistic currents known as Shin hanga (‘new prints’) and Sōsaku hanga (‘creative prints’). Artists within these two movements each applied traditional woodcutting techniques in their own specific ways. Shin hanga artists used time-honoured methods and pictorial content that dovetailed with Japan’s centuries-old printmaking tradition, choosing subjects such as idealized female portraits and evocative landscape prints. Sōsaku hanga artists, by contrast, were avant-gardists with innovative ideas about the role of the artist and the creative process, whose subject matter revolved around the modern world, city life and industry. Weaving together these two strands of Japanese printmaking, this exhibition tells the story of a society in transformation.













These posters announce the opening of the first section of the extensive underground network in Tokyo. The clothing worn by the passengers suggests that this new form of public transportation was primarily used by the city's more affluent inhabitants.

Tuesday, August 16, 2016

BANSKY AT MOCO MUSEUM-AMSTERDAM

Bansky "Lough Now" exhibition.
This exhibition at Moco Modern Contemporary Museum, contains around 50 original works by Street Art-legend Bansky. For the first time in history there is a Bansky exhibition in a museum.
In fact Bansky is well know for his outdoor art, you can find his street pieces around the globe.
Not everyone knows that Bansky also makes indoor art. Original and unique works on materials like canvas and wood. At Moco museum you can see his indoor art, owned by collectors who bought these works at Banksy's exhibitions. There are also a few of Banksy's street pieces at Moco, these were rescued and preserved from buildings that were torn down.


















Saturday, August 13, 2016

AVERY SINGER-STEDELIJK MUSEUM

For her first exhibition in the Netherlands, American artist Avery Singer (New York, 1987) developed a number of new paintings, which are shown in the VandenEnde Foundation Gallery along with the recently acquired installation , Untitled (2015), and other recent work. As an introduction to Scenes, the artist selected a number of works from the Stedelijk collection, on display in the IMC Gallery. Singer has gained reputation for her original use of contemporary design techniques in the development of paintings. She uses the 3D design softwares SketchUp and Blender to create digital compositions., which are then projected onto canvas and coloured in using an airbrush. Her color palette is mostly limited to grab scale, in reference to the longstanding tradition of the grisaille. Another important theme in Singer's work is the art world-the network of curators, collectors, critics, and galleries. With a sense of irony she depicts the relations between artists and the world as well as its rituals and behaviours. Her abstract figuration also references the formal aesthetics of early twentieth-century art movements, such cubism.
An illusion of three-dimensionality arises not only from the troupe l'ceil effect, the size, and the placement of Singer's paintings, but also from their production process. Generated within digital space, her work represents a lack of materiality while simultaneously giving this digital world a physical, tangible shape.
until October 2, 2016






Friday, August 12, 2016

STEDELIJK-900's DESIGN EXHIBITION

The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam is the largest museum for modern and contemporary art and design in the Netherlands. The original 1895 museum building has been fully renovated and expanded with a futuristic new wing on Museum Square, affording the Stedelijk more space than ever before to present its world-renowned collection.
One of the most interesting section of this museum is the area dedicated to the 900's design.
You can see a lot of iconic pieces from the most uncommon to the most common everyday objects.
 GROUND FLOOR, HISTORIC BUILDING: DESIGN Organized by theme, an impressive survey of the design collection features furniture, glass, ceramics, jewelry, posters, printed matter, and textiles from 1900 to the present. enjoy applied art and industrial and graphic design by internationally acclaimed figures.
Bel air chair by Ettore Sottsass 1982



Brionvega RR126 by Achille Castiglioni 1965

Philips record player Ufo Age Space 1970 by Patrice Dupont
Verner Panton chair by Verner Panton 1960



Chaise Longue PK 24 by Poul Kjaerholm 1965



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