The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, June 19, 2013
SFMOMA Presents World View of Five Distinctive Photographers in Face of Our Time
Jacob Aue Sobol, Untitled #23, from the series Sabine,1999-2002; gelatin silver print; 16 in. x 20 in. (40.64 cm x 50.8 cm); Collection SFMOMA, Accessions Committee Fund purchase; © Jacob Aue Sobol, courtesy Yossi Milo Gallery, New York.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- From July 2 through October 16, 2011, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) presents Face of Our Time: Jim Goldberg, Daniel Schwartz, Zanele Muholi, Jacob Aue Sobol, Richard Misrach, an exhibition that features the work of five distinctive photographers who share an interest in making pictures that capture what the world looks like now. They describe poetic truths and complex, open-ended social realities within the context of current political events.

The title of the exhibition refers to the book Face of Our Time, published in 1929 by August Sander, a major German photographer of the 1920s. His project was to convey his historical moment through the faces and comportments of his contemporaries, in order to reveal the character and culture of Germany before the Second World War erupted.

Similarly, the photographers in this exhibition are aligned by their committed interest in making pictures about our world; each artist presents a personal understanding through their private visual responses. Goldberg gives voice to the experiences of refugees in socially and economically devastated African countries. Schwartz studies the cultural, economic, and political effects of globalization across central Asia's ancient Silk Route in majestic pictures of everyday life there. Muholi provides a visual identity for the queer black population so often marginalized in her native South Africa. Aue Sobol combines observations of the rural hunting culture in a remote Arctic village with intimate portraits of his girlfriend Sabine. Misrach photographs the graffiti left behind in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.

SFMOMA Senior Curator of Photography Sandra S. Phillips says, "We are pleased to present this major work by these important artists, each one offering an opportunity for us to witness their reflective views of the contemporary culture we live in."

Danish artist Jacob Aue Sobol is a member of the Magnum Photographic Agency. Like other young Magnum photographers, his work examines cultures beyond his own, often with a deeply personal inflection. In 1999, Aue Sobol went to live in the tiny fishing village of Tiniteqilaaq in east Greenland, aiming to immerse himself in the life of the Inuit and observe the rural hunting culture unique to the area. Entitled Sabine, the series is a personal visual diary of his relationship with his Greenlandic girlfriend, her family of fishermen, and the harsh climate and difficult work of staying alive. His photographs, intimate and lyric, also reveal perceptive changes in the local way of life and the divide between two different cultures.

Jim Goldberg, a San Francisco–based artist, is committed to examining and extending traditional documentary photography. His photographs in Face of Our Time are from his recent series, Open See, which addresses the issue of migration and the desire for escape on a global scale. Initially commissioned by the cooperative photography agency Magnum, Open See investigates the new European immigrants, who often enter the continent illegally, from the socially and economically devestated territories of the former Soviet Union, India, Bangladesh, and North Africa—places from which people are desperate to escape. Goldbergʼs presentation at SFMOMA focuses on the African countries from which these refugees come: Liberia, Senegal, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Composed of both large-scale work and small Polaroids on which the refugees often voice their experiences through writing, Goldberg's pictures are grand in their scope and intimate in their attention to poignant details. In April 2011, Goldberg was awarded the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize for his Open See exhibition at The Photographers' Gallery, London, in 2009 and 2010.

South African photographer Zanele Muholi identifies herself as a Zulu African artist and lesbian activist who uses her powerful pictures to project a queer black African identity. For her series Faces and Phases, she made straight-on, black-and-white portraits of lesbians and transgenders—people who too often remain invisible, especially in black South Africa. In this way, she proposes to enumerate their presence and form a visual community. The women photographed are friends and acquaintances who all play different roles within black queer communities. Together they complicate and challenge traditional assumptions about the visual expression of sexuality and gender. "Although they are quiet pictures, they are powerful and willfully political, forcing her often-invisible subjects into the public sphere," Phillips explains. Many of those depicted here have suffered violence and hate crimes, including "correctional rape," which often goes unpunished, since there are no laws for hate crimes in South Africa. Begun in 2006, the project was published in 2010 on the 20th anniversary of the Gay Pride celebration in South Africa.

Over the last decade, Daniel Schwartz has traced the Silk Route in an effort to understand and reveal the multilayered histories of a region that is often misunderstood in the West. Travelling Through the Eye of History comprises his study of central Asia, Afghanistan, Iran, Kashmir, western China, and Mongolia between 1995 and 2007. Originally inspired after working in the region surrounding the Great Wall of China, Schwartz developed an interest in globalization and the ways in which histories from the time of antiquity and the contemporary world overlap. For this series, he followed maps, memoirs, and narratives along the route by which lapis lazuli, silks, and spices came to the West, and he discovered contemporary oil pipelines, fiber-optic systems, refugee camps, and drought. He refers to this region as the "global heartland" and to his pictures as "scattered stories which, pieced together gradually, came to form a distinct portrait." He works in a photographic form that is neither traditional photojournalism nor documentary, but a personal and complex extension of both. Schwartz's extensive studies of the region and the many trips he has made result in a personal form of photography: partly meditative, partly poetic, reinforced by a sense of the complexity of place and how the relentless pursuit of resources and military ambitions has marked both the past and the present. He observes: "My work is in the history of places. It is really history from which I draw inspiration, and it is history which helps me understand the present." This will be the first museum exhibition in the United States to feature this project.

A native of Los Angeles, Richard Misrach has lived in the Bay Area for many years and has devoted most of his career to photography of the American West. Much of his work is large scale, and his prints are generally in gorgeous color. This presentation features 69 photographs of smaller size and more austere tones, which were donated to SFMOMA by the artist and Fraenkel Gallery last year. For Destroy This Memory, Misrach used a point-and-shoot camera to photograph the graffiti scrawled on destroyed homes in New Orleans in the months following Hurricane Katrina. The small-scale pictures contain messages that vary from desperate to ironic; meant to be read as much as seen, they are humble pictures, records of chaos, almost without inflection. The real subject is the resilience of New Orleans's citizens in the face of the raw destructive power of nature and the imperfections of some of their fellow human beings.



Last Week News

July 2, 2011

Picasso's Artistic Development from His Arrival in Paris in 1900 is Focus of New Exhibition

Sotheby's to Sell a Set of Remarkable 18th Century Landscape Transparencies

Scientists Show Some Never-Before-Seen Dramatic 3-D Images of the Titanic

An Old Turkish Prison, built by the Ottoman Turks, Opens Briefly in Jerusalem

Sotheby's London to Sell Portrait of British Advocate for American Independence

A Rare Spitfire Warplane, Francis Bacon Lure Super-Rich to Masterpiece Fair in London

After Almost a Decade of Debate, Barnes Art Collection Nears Final Days at Old Home

Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery Opens "One Life: Ronald Reagan"

British Council to Install Sculpture of Yuri Gagarin Outside Its Offices in London

Brandeis University and Plaintiffs Settle Rose Art Museum Lawsuit; Focused on the Future

As Violence Pervades Mexican Society, Artists Confront It with a Brush

An Ultra-Rare 1952 Ferrari 340 Mexico Joins RM Auction's Monterey Sale this August

Maine House in Andrew Wyeth's "Christina's World" Now a US Landmark

New Display at the Brandywine River Museum Features Works Rarely on View

The Hepworth Wakefield Welcomes It's 100,000th Visitor

Frieze Film 2011: New Commissions Announced

Peter Katz Appointed Chief Operating Officer of MoMA PS 1

Fred Tomaselli: First Artist in Recent Times to Serve on Brooklyn Museum's Board

Luke Syson to Head Metropolitan Museum's European Sculpture and Decorative Arts Department

July 1, 2011

Photographer Hans-Christian Schink Exhibits at Kueppersmühle Museum of Modern Art

Cheim & Read Celebrate Their 15th Anniversary with Group Exhibition of Women Artists

Tony Shafrazi Gallery Exhibits Revolutionary Film Posters from the Era of Russian Constructivism

The Whitney Presents Lyonel Feininger's Most Complete Retrospective to Date

Anja Kirschner and David Panos Open the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart's Archives for Exhibition

Important Turkish Shield Fetches £210,000 at Thomas Del Mar Ltd.'s Arms & Armour Auction

Catharina Manchanda Hired as Seattle Art Museum's New Curator for Modern and Contemporary Art

Sotheby's 'Artists for Serpentine Sale' Doubles Pre-Sale Estimate; Raises $7,313,991

Royal Ontario Museum's Newest Galleries Bring Ancient Empires Back to Life

Images by Two of France's Most Original Artists on View at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

OSTRALE 2011: In Its Fifth Year Presents Some of the Best Contemporary Artists

Art Institute of Chicago Awarded Major Grant by the Getty Foundation for Online Catalogue

Pfefferberg Complex in Berlin Selected as the Second Site of the BMW Guggenheim Lab

Landsmen: Eva Struble's Third Solo Exhibition of Paintings at the Lombard Freid Projects

Woodlawn Cemetery Designated National Historic Landmark

Smithsonian's Museum on Main Street Program Explores Importance of Work in American Life

Cooper-Hewitt to Present 'Graphic Design: Now In Production' Exhibition at Governors Island

A Celebrity Packard and a Transparent Pontiac at RM's Michigan Sale

New Paintings and Drawings by Craig Taylor at Sue Scott Gallery

Christie's International Real Estate Expands to the Asia Pacific

June 30, 2011

Sotheby's Establishes Highest Total for Any Sale of Contemporary Art Ever in London

Cheim & Read Celebrate Their 15th Anniversary with Group Exhibition of Women Artists

Tony Shafrazi Gallery Exhibits Revolutionary Film Posters from the Era of Russian Constructivism

The Whitney Presents Lyonel Feininger's Most Complete Retrospective to Date

Anja Kirschner and David Panos Open the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart's Archives for Exhibition

Important Turkish Shield Fetches £210,000 at Thomas Del Mar Ltd.'s Arms & Armour Auction

Catharina Manchanda Hired as Seattle Art Museum's New Curator for Modern and Contemporary Art

Sotheby's 'Artists for Serpentine Sale' Doubles Pre-Sale Estimate; Raises $7,313,991

Royal Ontario Museum's Newest Galleries Bring Ancient Empires Back to Life

Dramatic Images by Two of France's Most Original Artists on View at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Walter and Brigitte Kames Donate Lithographs by Honoré Daumier to Museum in Munich

FLAG Art Foundation Opens Exhibition of Sculpture and Photography by Roni Horn

Abstract Expressionism and Its Discontents at Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

'Ai Weiwei: New York Photographs' Exhibition Opens at the Asia Society Museum

Mother India at Metropolitan Museum Features Depictions of the Goddess in Indian Painting

Ossuary Belonging to a Daughter of the Caiaphas Family of High Priests Discovered

Bonhams Offers Rare Wine Collection with Label Designs by Famous Artists of the Day

Top Cartoonist Barry Fantoni to Sell Times Archive at Bonhams

Sahara in Vegas Donating Sign to Neon Museum

Cy Twombly and Nicolas Poussin: Arcadian Painters at the Dulwich Picture Gallery

Mexican Archaeologists Find Probable Prehispanic Maya Cemetery in State of Tabasco

Christie's Announces Sale Dates and Global Tour of The Collection of Elizabeth Taylor

Federal Researchers Use Sonar Technology to Map Civil War, World War II Shipwrecks

Sir Terence Conran Makes Major Gift to the Design Museum for New Development Project

Charismatic Art Historian James Fox Explores British Masters for New Series on BBC

Significant New Acquisitions to Tate's Collection on View at Tate Britain's Galleries

Recent Paintings and Sculptures by Takashi Murakami at Gagosian in London

Harun Farocki: Images of War (at a Distance) Marks the Artist's First Solo Exhibition in a U.S. Museum

British Creative Force and Renegade Artist Launches Her Neon Artwork

June 29, 2011

Second Highest Price Paid for a Work of Art at Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Sale

Cy Twombly and Nicolas Poussin: Arcadian Painters at the Dulwich Picture Gallery

Mexican Archaeologists Find Probable Prehispanic Maya Cemetery in Tabasco

Christie's Announces Sale Dates and Global Tour of The Collection of Elizabeth Taylor

Federal Researchers Use Sonar Technology to Map Civil War, World War II Shipwrecks

Sir Terence Conran Makes Major Gift to the Design Museum for New Development Project

Charismatic Art Historian James Fox Explores British Masters for New Series on BBC

Significant New Acquisitions to Tate's Collection on View at Tate Britain's Galleries

Recent Paintings and Sculptures by Takashi Murakami at Gagosian in London

Harun Farocki: Images of War (at a Distance) Marks the Artist's First Solo Exhibition in a U.S. Museum

Walter and Brigitte Kames Donate Lithographs by Honoré Daumier to Museum in Munich

FLAG Art Foundation Opens Exhibition of Sculpture and Photography by Roni Horn

'Ai Weiwei: New York Photographs' Exhibition Opens at the Asia Society Museum

Getty is First Museum to Provide Expanded Google Goggles Experience to Visitors

Chinese Sculptor Moulds Memory of Mao

National Gallery of Art Takes a New Look: Samuel F.B. Morse's "Gallery of the Louvre"

The British Museum Collection Reaches Record Audiences Worldwide     

Exhibition at the Lowry Focuses on the Most Alluring Divas of Andy Warhol's Time

Vancouver Art Gallery Exhibition Highlights the Surrealist Fascination with Indigenous Art

Beijing Tax Authorities Seek Nearly $2 Million from Outspoken Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei

Hungarian Photographers in Frame in United Kingdom's Royal Academy of Arts Exhibition

2011 Käthe Kollwitz Prize Awarded to Canadian Artists Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller

Martin Creed's Work No.1059, 2011 is the New Commission for the Scotsman Steps

Phillips de Pury & Company's June Contemporary Art Evening Sale Realizes $16,923,234

Early American Toys and Trains Raced Past their Estimates at Noel Barrett's Spring Sale

Against the Way Things Go at Gasser Grunnert

Bonhams & Butterfields Sells Indiana Jones, Tim Burton, Norma Shearer and Animation Art

Los Angeles Modern Auctions Becoming Choice Auction House for Modern Art on the West Coast

Museum of Fine Arts Houston to Launch Digital Archive of 20th-Century Latin American and Latino Art

Minneapolis Institute of Arts Appoints Mary Jane Drews Director of External Affairs

Bonhams to Sell Old Master Painting by Lucas Gassel that Shows Importance of Tennis

June 28, 2011

Christie's to Sell Most Outstanding Group of Lucian Freud Drawings to Come to Auction

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston to Retain Ownership of Eglon van der Neer Painting

Exhibition at Musée du Quay Branly Offers the Opportunity to Discover the Guatemalan Maya

One of the Greatest Venetian View Paintings by Francesco Guardi to Lead Sotheby's Sale

Nationalmuseum in Stockholm Announces New Acquisition: Elizabeth I by Nicholas Hilliard

Record for a Sale of Old Master & 19th Century Paintings and Drawings at Sotheby's

A Portrait of Holland: The Dutch Landscape in Art Since 1850 at De Hallen Haarlem

Beijing Tax Authorities Seek Nearly $2 Million from Outspoken Chinese Artist Ai Weiwei

Hungarian Photographers in Frame in United Kingdom's Royal Academy of Arts Exhibition

2011 Käthe Kollwitz Prize Awarded to Canadian Artists Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller

Martin Creed's Work No.1059, 2011 is the New Commission for the Scotsman Steps

Phillips de Pury & Company's June Contemporary Art Evening Sale Realizes $16,923,234

Early American Toys and Trains Raced Past their Estimates at Noel Barrett's Spring Sale

Exhibition of Artist Will Barnet on View at Amon Carter Museum of American Art

A Date with Diamonds at Bonhams & Butterfields Fall Salon Jewelry Auction

Brent Glass, Director of the National Museum of American History, Announces Retirement

Famous Margaret Thatcher Handbag Auctioned for $40,000 at Christie's in London

Exhibition of Four Single Colour Paintings by Stuart Cumberland at The Approach

French Archaeologists Unearth Hundreds of Large Inscribed Limestone Blocks in Egypt

Raw and Unapologetic: Kim Dorland's Portraits of Wife Lori at Mike Weiss Gallery

Nachume Miller vs Danny Miller: A Father and Son Exhibition at Benrimon Contemporary

Top British Art Consultancy Targets Russian Collectors

Michael Jackson Thriller Jacket Sells for $1.8 Million at Julien's Auctions

The Dress that Caught the Prince's Eye Goes on View to the Public

Sotheby's to Offer Absolutely Stunning Imperials from a Classic Bordeaux Collection

Desroches Noblecourt, French Egyptologist, Dies

June 27, 2011

Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum Offers a Complete Overview of the Work of Antonio López

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston to Retain Ownership of Eglon van der Neer Painting

Exhibition at Musée du Quay Branly Offers the Opportunity to Discover the Guatemalan Maya

One of the Greatest Venetian View Paintings by Francesco Guardi to Lead Sotheby's Sale

Nationalmuseum in Stockholm Announces New Acquisition: Elizabeth I by Nicholas Hilliard

Record for a Sale of Old Master & 19th Century Paintings and Drawings at Sotheby's

A Portrait of Holland: The Dutch Landscape in Art Since 1850 at De Hallen Haarlem

Atlas Gallery Presents Exhibition of Celebrated Italian Artist Mario Giacomelli's "Landscapes"

Pablo Picasso's Cartoons on the Front Line on View at the Museo Picasso Málaga

Work by Snorre Ytterstad on View at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Oslo

Booth-Clibborn Editions Presents New Book on the History of The Saatchi Gallery

First New York Survey of the Work of California Artist B. Wurtz on View at Metro Pictures

Photographs of Cowboys in the 21sr Century Featured at Nailya Alexander Gallery

George Condo's Mental States on View at Rotterdam's Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

New Museum in Biarritz by Steven Holl Aims to Raise Awareness of Oceanic Issues

Chinese Premier Visits Shakespeare's Birthplace

First-Rate Selection of Important Works of Art at Kunsthalle Fridericianum

Billy the Kid Image Sells for More than $2 Million at Denver's Old West Show & Auction

Masterpieces on Paper: The Secret of Lines at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam

Luc Tuymans Exhibits for the First Time in Spain at Centro de Arte Contemporáneo Málaga

Hong Kong's Para/Site Art Space Appoints Cosmin Costinas First Curator of Contemporary Art

National Music Centre Reveals Much-Anticipated Design

From Romance to Rifles: Winslow Homer's Illustrations of 19th-Century America at the Dayton Art Institute

City of Radicals Exhibition Features Work by Van Gogh, Matisse, Gauguin and Signac

New York Academy of Art's 5th Annual Summer Exhibition at Flowers Gallery

Thai Leader Defends Leaving United Nations Heritage Site Body

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Investigators analyse ashes taken from the house of one of the suspects as Dutch heist paintings feared burnt

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- A team of twelve restorers inspect the "Isenheim Altarpiece" at the Unterlinden museum

4.- Russian scientists make rare find of 'blood' in carcass of female woolly mammoth

5.- Taliban criticise Kabul's pink balloon art project by 31-year-old artist from New York

6.- Gagosian Gallery in London presents a group of four tapestries by Gerhard Richter

7.- Archaeologists find Colonial and Pre-hispanic vestiges thought to be 500-1,000 years-old

8.- RM stuns market as Villa Erba sale realises more than $35 million; Ferrari sells for $12,812,800

9.- Indianapolis Museum of Art receives major painting by William-Adolphe Bouguereau

10.- Newly discovered prisoner journal donated to Auschwitz by widow of US lieutenant Clifford Hensel



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site