The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Tuesday, May 21, 2013
 
University of Michigan Museum of Art to present five contemporary photographers in Face of our Time
Jim Goldberg, Making Fire, Democratic Republic of Congo, 2008; chromogenic print; 30 in. x 40 in. (76.2 cm x 101.6 cm); Collection SFMOMA, purchase through a gift of Nicola Miner and Robert Mailer Anderson; © Jim Goldberg.
ANN ARBOR, MICH.- From November 12, 2011 through February 5, 2012, the University of Michigan Museum of Art will present 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. 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 his or her 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 Road 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.

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 work in Face of Our Time 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. Many of those depicted here have suffered violence and hate crimes, including “correctional rape,” which often goes unpunished since there are no laws against 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 Road 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.

A native of Los Angeles, Richard Misrach has lived in northern California for many years and has devoted most of his career to photography of the American West. Whereas much of his work is large scale and generally in color, the prints featured in Face of Our Time include 69 photographs of smaller size and more austere tones. 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

November 11, 2011

Exhibition at Vienna's Albertina presents an extensive tribute to René Magritte

Robert Mapplethorpe's "Shoe" expected to bring $30,000+ to lead Heritage Auctions' sale

Sale of American paintings, drawings & sculpture announced at Sotheby's in New York

Exhibition of the history of video games opens in renovated gallery at the Grand Palais

Marlborough and Steinitz Gallery present unique, off-site installation: Le Cabinet de Curiosités

Modern and Contemporary art from an important private collection at Sotheby's Milan

Cranbrook Art Museum to reopen after two-year, $22 million restoration and expansion

Sotheby's London auction of fine Chinese ceramics and works of art brings £12.3 million

Erik Frydenborg opens second solo exhibition at Cherry and Martin in Los Angeles

After $70 million renovation, a transformed New-York Historical Society reopens to the public

Vignos Estate auction achieves over $3 million, Jasper Francis Cropsey sells for $660,000

Haunch of Venison New York presents "Castellani e Castellani" by Enrico Castellani

Technical, economic and structural possibilities of timber explored at the Pinakothek der Modern

The Whitney Museum of American Art presents Sherrie Levine: Mayhem

Artist Jeanette Doyle performs a dematerialized act at The Warhol Museum

William Vareika to exhibit pair of rediscovered John La Farge paintings for the first time in 75 years

LAMA announces the most important selection of California design ever offered in one auction

With the stroke of a finger, drawing app Doodley races up the Apple App Store rankings list

Moscow Museum of Modern Art opens Ignacio Burgos retrospective exhibition

November 10, 2011

Clyfford Still masterpieces soar in Sotheby's contemporary art evening sale in New York

J. Paul Getty Museum acquires seventy-two photographs by Andreas Feininger

Christie's New York, Post War and Contemporary art evening sale realizes $247,597,000

A centennial celebration of Roberto Matta's work opens at The Pace Gallery

Paul Noble: 15 year drawing series presented in London for first time in 7 years

Modern masterpieces from Brazil and Mexico lead the Autumn Latin American sale at Christie's New York

Renaissance Painters of Passion and Power from the Kunsthistorisches Museum at the de Young Museum

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2011 winners announced in London

Sundaram Tagore New York presents "Written Images: Contemporary Calligraphy from the Middle East"

McNay Art Museum announces "Andy Warhol: Fame and Misfortune" to open in February 2012

New report shows Chinese contemporary art market confidence higher than US & Europe

Bonhams breaks world records for Inro and Netsuke sold at auction in Japanese sale

Yale University Press announces publishing of new book on American folk art

Royal Academy of Arts presents new environmental sculpture installation by John Maine RA

Art Dealers Association of America announces 2012 Art Show

Journey through memories and fantasies at Vizcaya with Jungle Sweat, Roseate by Naomi Fisher

Exhibition deals with socialization and the current state of people and behavior

Solo shows by Allan Sekula and Dan Perjovschi at Galerie Michel Rein in Paris

W.R. Leigh's Home, Sweet Home (1932) sets record with $1.195 million price at Heritage Auctions

Studio Museum invites one hundred artists to create new works of art inspired by Romare Bearden

November 9, 2011

Renaissance artist Leonardo Da Vinci gets celebrity billing with National Gallery show

Sotheby's Zurich sale of Swiss Art to present a major landscape by Ferdinand Hodler

Rare Revolutionary War map, expected to exceed $1 million, to be offered at Christie's New York

Royal Castle in Warsaw shows Rembrandt paintings from the Lanckoronski Collection

Hans P. Kraus Jr. Fine Photographs to present Julia Margaret Cameron and other early portraits at Paris Photo

Phillips de Pury & Company's New York Contemporary Art Part 1 auction totals $71,292,500

Sotheby's London to offer an unpublished autograph manuscript by Charlotte Brontë

First loan exhibition of Chinnery's work in Britain for over 50 years on view at Asia House in London

Pangolin London presents figurative sculptures by British artist Anthony Abrahams

LACMA'S Inaugural Art + film Gala honors Clint Eastwood and John Baldessari and raises $3 million

Exhibition at the Design Museum in London celebrates Puma’s new football kit designs

Julien's Auctions sale featuring rare artifacts and photographs of Marilyn Monroe

Yorkshire Sculpture Park brings structure by Aeneas Wilder crashing systematically to the floor

Large-scale installation by Jonathan Meese at Bortolami Gallery

First UK solo exhibition of US artist Laurel Nakadate at the Zabludowicz Collection

Powerful and complex, high-definition video by Elodie Pong at Mother's Tankstation

Christo donates two preparatory collages for Over The River Project to National Gallery of Art, Washington

Virginia Logan named Executive Director of the Brandywine Conservancy

Stunning Images of Kate Moss, Brigitte Bardot and Christy Turlington to sell at Bonhams

November 8, 2011

Thousands send money to Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei to help pay tax bill

MACBA opens first major exhibition organised under the cooperation agreement with la Caixa

Exhibition of recent paintings by British artist Howard Hodgkin at Gagosian Gallery

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences says cave painters were realists, DNA study finds

Monumental career of Daphne Mayo celebrated at Brisbane's Queensland Art Gallery

Bureau of Land Management approves Christo project over the Arkansas River; still needs local OK

Art Public: Art Basel Miami Beach to transform Collins Park with a record 24 public art works

Sotheby's Paris to sell important items owned by antiques dealer Adriano Ribolzi

A selection of Robert Graham's "Early Work 1963-1973" at David Zwirner in New York

Miami International Art Fair 2012 returns January and premieres sculpture Miami     

A Bigger Message: Conversations with David Hockney destined to become a classic

1932 classic movie poster, "The Most Dangerous Game" expected to bring $25,000+ at Heritage Auctions

Julien's Auctions presents: Icons and Idols, featuring the first Lady Gaga dress to ever come to public auction

Silk road luxuries glitter at the Smithsonian's Freer in newly renovated Gallery

Hermès Diamond Birkin, one of the most sought-after handbags in the world, expected to bring $80,000+

Ariella Azoulay "From Palestine to Israel" a photographic record of destruction & state formation, 1947-1950

Art by a new generation of artists from former communist countries at the Knoxville Museum of Art

Work by Ai Weiwei to be featured at Art Miami 2011

Steven Pearson creates "Amalgamations": Tracings of earlier paintings at Studio H

Turner Prize nominee, Karla Black limited edition bags to be auctioned off for charity

November 7, 2011

Artists' fascination with forests is the focus of exhibition at Kunsthalle Wuerth in Germany

Antico's rare Renaissance sculpture goes on view at National Gallery of Art, Washington

Art restorers find devil in detail of Giotto fresco in Italy's Basilica of St Francis in Assisi

The Montclair Art Museum presents exhibition dedicated to George Inness: Private Treasures

Jean Cocteau Severin Wundeman Collection Museum opens in Menton, France

Actress and film producer Lucy Liu, expands from Charlie's Angels to inspired artist

Exhibition of new works by Belgian painter Michaël Borremans at David Zwirner

Center for Chinese Studies at University of Michigan rediscovers rare Chinese art collection

Lehmann Maupin Gallery presents exhibition by artist and musician Billy Childish

German artist Cosima von Bonin's Cut! Cut! Cut! at Museum Ludwig in Cologne

San Francisco museum illuminates Haas atrium with new work by media artist Jim Campbell

Swann Galleries announces sale of American art & Contemporary art this November

American People, Black Light: Faith Ringgold's paintings of the 1960s at the Miami Art Museum

Mark Wolfe Contemporary Art presents Castigation

Exhibition of new work by Rome Prize winner George Stoll at Maloney Fine Art

Small sculpture, drawings and jewelry by Claire Falkenstein at Jack Rutberg Fine Arts

Patricia Piccinini and Victoria F. Gaitan open solo exhibitions at Conner Contemporary Art.

New series of large-scale photographs by Anna & Bernhard Blume at Buchmann Galerie

Astronomers say City lights could reveal extraterrestrial civilization

November 6, 2011

Spain's Prado Museum has the rare opportunity of hosting a large Hermitage exhibition

Archaeologist from University of Nebraska has grisly theory for Holy Land mystery

Major exhibition by German artist Andreas Gursky at Gagosian Gallery in New York

LACMA presents a groundbreaking exhibition of Spanish colonial art and its pre-Columbian origins

Mel Bochner's thesaurus works on view at the National Gallery of Art in Washington

Expert says North Atlantic Treaty Organization raids spared Libyan antiquities

MFA, Boston acquires works by African American artists from John Axelrod Collection

Capitain Petzel shows drawings that Amy Sillman makes with her little finger on an iPhone screen

United States authorities seize painting from Florida's Mary Brogan Museum of Art & Science

Posters for London 2012 Olympic Games by leading British artists unveiled

For Maurizio Cattelan: All, the Guggenheim Museum creates its first mobile app

Jewish Museum pays hommage to documentary photographers from New York's Photo League

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art exhibition delves into issues of same-sex marriage

Arte Essenziale: Sculptures and large-scale installations by eight international contemporary artists

Exhibition of surrealist and magic realist paintings at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

Getty Museum presents Narrative Interventions in Photography

First U.S. show of Cuban artist Vincench at ArtSpace/Virginia Miller Galleries

Amon Carter presents dynamic visions of city and sea in John Marin: Modernism at Midcentury

Paintings & Watercolours by David Jones at National Museum Cardiff

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

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

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

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

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



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