05/08/2014

What Not to Miss When in French Riviera

Fondation Maeght is a destination in itself: it is an art gallery and an exhibition area on the hill above Saint-Paul-de-Vence, between Cannes and Nice. It is one of the world’s finest and most beautiful small museums, a temple of the XX century art. Above all it is known for its extensive collections of Giacometti and Miró sculptures. Various works by other artists can also be seen, with painting, drawings and sculptures represented in equal measure, as well as exhibits showing how the artists worked. It was founded in 1964 by an art dealer, a collector and a publisher Aimé Maeght and his wife Marguerite.

Fondation Maeght Art Museum prides itself not only in one of the most outstanding collections of the XX century art, but also in an unusual architectural design, created by the Catalonian architect Josep Lluís Sert. It was Miró who introduced Maeght to Sert, who had already designed his studio in Spain and worked with Le Corbusier before spending time in the USA. The Maeght building itself is interesting and attractive, with a whitewashed modern style and quarter-circle roofs to allow diffused light to enter the galleries, that integrate very harmoniously with the natural environment.

Aimé wanted a contemporary, functional and effective design that would invite the visitors to truly appreciate the collection. As nature lovers, the museum’s founders wanted the foundation to be integrated into a large Mediterranean garden, as well. Thus Sert had to adapt a building functional to its natural landscape, “installing a museum inside nature” as he put it. His overall design was made of a series of inter-connected, one to three story buildings that respected the slope of the land and which were set comfortably amongst the pine trees. The different roof shapes, levels of rooms and terraces, and the combination of materials (concrete and pink hand-thrown bricks) offer variety to the eye. Sert tamed and harnessed the Mediterranean light with quadrantal cylinder windows. Their parabolic curve traps and transmits the even and constant light directly on to the exhibition walls at the height of the paintings. Moreover, he discussed the precise lighting requirements with Braque, Chagall and Miró, in order to display their pictures to the greatest advantage. The unusual form of the roof in some exhibition halls gives a feeling of being inside a cathedral. They remind us of the Spanish Pavilion for the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1937, also designed by Sert, where Calder, Miró and Picasso had exhibited their work, among which was the groundbreaking ‘Guernica’.

In addition, several walls open to the outdoors, overlooking the sculpture gardens, terraces, lush lawns, light blue and green-tiled pools and woods. And in the double-height exhibition space, two large window-screens, with built-in shutters, serve to break up and diffuse the sunlight. In contrast to the light traps and expressed vaults, the largest building is capped with two, large, u-shaped, twentieth century impluvia that visually lighten the whole exterior. These white, concrete basins collect valuable rainwater, which is distributed to the pools and fountains and is also used to humidify the interior air. A small chapel, sited next to the main building, takes pride in stained glass windows, designed by Braque. Its ruins were discovered during the construction works, and Maeght decided to restore it. Separate museum rooms are devoted to Miró and Chagall, sculpture garden presents Pol Bury’s steel fountain and a mosaic by Braque adorns a pond, while furniture of a small garden café is designed entirely by Giacometti. The sightseeing spots of the sculpture garden offer a visual advantage, allowing the visitors to admire the scenic beauty of the nature and art – all at the same time. 

Images and words by Giulio Ghirardi 
04/08/2014

Style Suggestions: Summer Wedding

Summer weddings can be tough to dress for so we suggest to keep it simple and comfortable. Don’t opt for the typical dress; a pair of shorts are fresh and chic, especially when topped off with the perfect accessories.

Blouse: J.W. Anderson, Shorts: Chloé, Shoes: Giambattista Valli, Clutch and necklace: Marni

Styling by Vanessa Cocchiaro 

04/08/2014

Guest Interview n°57: Raffaella Cortese

For our weekly art spot we have decided to change the point of view from who creates art to who deals and sells it, meeting Raffaella Cortese, one of the most eminent Italian gallerists. Waiting for the great, choral opening with Keren Cytter, Kimsooja and Marcello Maloberti, with her distinctive elegance and savoir-faire, she told us about her special career, from the beginnings to its latest evolution, which brought her to open a third art venue in Milan.

Let’s start from the beginning, how and when did you decide to become a gallerist?
The first prophetic sign came when I started collecting the book series “I maestri del colore” (The masters of colour) as a child. I loved looking at the images and that was definitely the first signal. In my family no one dealt with art, but I wanted to take up artistic studies, which was an important experience thanks to a stimulating atmosphere and great teachers, such as Gianni Colombo. When I realized that I had to do something related to art, but I wasn’t an artist, I started working for free at Françoise Lambert, who had a gallery in Milan at that time. During the first 80s we opened an extraordinary exhibition of Robert Mapplethorpe, but we didn’t sell anything since photography wasn’t yet considered a rightful artistic media. There was still scepticism about the means and, of course, the subjects of the artist. Another important experience was at the Fonte D’abisso gallery where I worked with modern art, especially avant-garde. After five years spent there I was ready for my own ordeal. As many other colleagues, I started in my flat, which was always in this area. The big change arrived with the exhibition of Roni Horn that I was able to do thanks to the support of some collectors, who have remained with me until today, becoming close friends. After that show I could afford another apartment in the same building – I remember the efforts to move the works from one floor to another – where I opened a project room. I love this part of Milan; I think it is very liveable, so I found this space [ed. via Stradella 7] in the same area. It was a mess, but I saw the prospects, I knew it would become a great art venue: versatile, a bit dark and cosy. Then we went for a brighter space adding via Stradella 1 a few years ago.

So at this point I cannot avoid asking why opening a third space in such a hard period, when everybody seems to leave or wants to leave our country?
I didn’t have the urge to escape from this country so far because I love it deeply. When I feel political and social crisis is getting too deep, I go to see the Scrovegni chapel by Giotto to breathe and gather courage. Italy is a wonderful country with an extraordinary culture, and even if I’m aware of its set of problems I want to try to resist them. I have to say that we are always criticizing ourselves, even though we have excellent collectors who are still interested in art and not just investments. During the years I’ve met a lot of interesting people and I’ve helped them to grow their collections in a reciprocally fruitful way. Art fairs are important to meet new people and to have an international showcase, but everything is fast and superficial there, while the gallery is still a crucial place to meet each other and establish long lasting relationships that need to be nurtured. It’s not just a matter of trade. Of course, market is important, but it is much more than speculation, which I’m not interested in.

What are the characteristics of an artist that make you get into his/her work? How much does “the person” influence your opinion about the artist?
Firstly I fall in love with the work of an artist and I usually follow it for some years, seeing exhibitions, looking for confirmations and affinities between the investigated topics and my artistic path. There are some recurrent themes such as the issue of identity and nature along with a certain sensibility that you can track down in the work of my artists. Of course, it is important to know the artist in person and get closer to him/her, finding the right harmony or a passionate dialogue.

But what about the female figure? Even if you have men in your creative roster, we can see this issue in a lot of your artists…
Yes, you are right. I feel close to women because they are still underestimated, not least from an economical point of view. Just look at Louise Bourgeois, who is one of the most famous and high-priced women, though her works cost less than the ones of less-deserving men. I like the way women work because they don’t have the reliance on power at any cost, typical of hardened men. I can see it clearly in my activity; most of my powerful colleagues are men, but we are not moved from the yearning of control, we just want to do things always better and better.

You work with artists, who handle different media, from photography to installation passing through video etc. Which is the media you feel closer to?
Actually I can tell you which is the less emotional media for me: painting. I’d love to be more involved in it and get closer to a media that up to now I found repetitive and self referential. Well, actually I consider Jessica Stockholder a painter besides being a sculptor because of her strong pictorial value. Anyway, yes, my interests range from photography to video and I also like to encompass different generations, going, for instance, from Joan Jonas to Keren Cytter, to unveil the apparent generational distance. This makes me feel alive!

You’ve been dealing with art for a long time, is there something in the art system, which disappointed you? What do you think about the way this world is changing year by year?
Well, a lot of things changed in 20 years, especially with the arrival of new technologies. I started working in a gallery when we had to write the address for invitations by hand, but I think the most prominent phenomenon of the latest decade is the speculation, which has imposed itself thanks to big auction houses that annex aspects of our field: they arrange auctions, post auctions, cocktail parties etc. with higher resources. Moreover, some art players, like the fairs, get strengthened but also more cynic: except from the hard core of galleries and blockbusters, which generate interest among the viewers, other galleries are a sort of a dressing, which has to be constantly changed to have always-new proposals, like pawls of a selfish machine. It’s not just the management of art world that has changed, look at the education… most of the young people involved in this world are first economist, more interested in financial aspects of art than in its cultural issues, who often enter a gallery or a museum for the first time in their life after graduating.

What’s the show you would love to arrange?
I’d love to arrange an exhibition of all the artists that I loved but I couldn’t work with. Running a gallery means also collecting some failures and missed occasions because maybe you arrive too late. There are so many good artists…

…a name?
Tacita Dean is a great artist and I love her a lot. I would have loved to work with her. I met her during a journey in Iceland with Roni Horn (they are friends), but it was too late, it didn’t make sense at that point. There are so many romances that don’t close in.

Interview by Monica Lombardi – Images courtesy of Agota Lukyte 
01/08/2014

Chunky Sandals Anyone?

If you think about all that stuff your mum probably forced you to wear decades ago, you will realize they are, more or less, back in fashion right now. Back then you would probably cry your eyes out rather than wear them, and now you crave for buying the most luxurious version. Well, this is just the endless power for fashion, and we all know it.

The so-called chunky sandals are the matter of the question right now. Flat or characterized by a platform, they are so fashionable now that it would be a pity not to buy at least one pair. The history of the trend has to be traced back to the 70s, when they were called “fisherman shoes”, recalling those specific sandals worn by them. Composed by two or more strips, they are way more comfortable than classic flip-flops and easier to match with your clothes. We saw them back during 80s, when extreme and tacky accessories touched their peak. After that, in the middle of 90s, they were still there, underlining a bit of 80s nostalgia and simplified by the minimal wave of the time.

There are different styles you can go with: a more vintage oriented, which implies flat or wedge models, preferably in natural and neutral colors, or a more contemporary one, with complex heels and strong nuances, like white and metallic, for another fashion item that has the power of dividing people.

Francesca Crippa 
31/07/2014

An Excuse for Curiosity: Music Festivals II

An electronic music festival displaces an experience that we may ordinarily associate with urban environments and neon lights, putting it instead in the broad light of day, in the middle of a field, under a winking star. We are used to hearing this kind of music in clubs, or, increasingly, in spaces devoted to the development and production of experimental music. This is because somehow incorporated into the broad church that we call electronic music can be almost any kind of experimentation with sound or multimedia, with technology and the integration of old and new, classic and avant garde, so that a harpist whose performance is made also of the unpredictability of an interactive video accompaniment belongs as much to this category as a regular DJ playing 4/4 beats at 180 BPM. Or whatever it is that they do.

Here at The Blogazine we have found a few festivals which use this sense of displacement in the genre of electronic music to its best effect, by taking the audience outside of the normal club environment and by twisting and turning our expectations of the genre, combining music with new media, using new technologies to develop new sounds, or by simply using a variety of electronic equipment, which most musicians do. The digital era brings many new iterations of the music festival because it has both increased the rate of experimentation with new technology and also to some extent made people cherish these rare opportunities to hop off the internet and find one another.

Dekmantel , Amsterdam Amsterdamse Bos, Netherlands, 01\08\2014 – 03\08\2014
Dutch electronic music festival now in its second year which will feature Joy Orbison, Blawan & Surgeon, Robert Hood, Shackleton, 3 Chairs, Mount Kimbie, Daphni,, Plaid, Mortiz von Oswald Trio featuring Max Loderbauer & Tony Allen, Hessle Audio label showcase with Ben UFO, Pangaea and Pearson Sound and more.

Strøm, Copenhagen various venues, Denmark, 11\08\2014 – 17\08\2014
An electronic music festival in Copenhagen, Denmark, with shows and workshops by artists such as Copeland, Cooly G, Bonobo, Derrick May, Holly Herndon, Kuedo, John Talabot, Caspa and more.

Nonesuch Records At BAM: Celebrating A Label Without Label, New York Brooklyn Academy Of Music, United States, 09\09\2014 – 28\09\2014
As part of BAM’s Next Wave Festival, a series of performances to celebrate 50 years of the label. The programme includes The Philip Glass Ensemble & Steve Reich And Musicians, Alarm Will Sound, Youssou N’Dour, Devendra Banhart, Stephin Merritt, Iron And Wine, Kronos Quartet, Landfall by Laurie Anderson and Kronos Quartet (23–27), Rokia Traoré, Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté, Caetano Veloso, Robert Plant And The Sensational Space Shifters and more.

Bozar Electronic Arts Festival, Brussels Palais Des Beaux-Arts Bozar, Belgium, 25\09\2014 – 27\09\2014
Brussels’ famed electronic and new music festival this year with Ben Frost, Nils Frahm, Kiasmos, Robert Henke, Tim Hecker, Young Echo, Powell, Thomas Ankersmit & Phill Niblock, Lumisokea, installations by Felix Luque Sanches, Quayola, Luc Deleu and more.

New Forms Festival, Vancouver Science World, Canada, 18\09\2014 – 21\09\2014
Digital music and art festival with performances by Murcof & Anti VJ, Helena Hauff, Inga Copeland, Hieroglyphic Being, Oneohtrix Point Never, Morton Subotnick, Scratcha DVA, Visionist, Bochum Welt, works, lectures and screenings by Lis Rhodes, Kevin Beasley and more.

Phono Festival, Odense, Various venues, Denmark, 10\09\2014 – 14\09\2014
Electronic music festival on the island of Funen in Denmark with Holly Herndon, NHK’Koyxen, Stellar Om Source, Roly Porter performing Life Cycle Of A Massive Star, Bass Clef, Torn Hawk & Karen Gwyer, Basic House, Wanda Group and more.

Fort Process , Newhaven Newhaven Fort, United Kingdom, 13\09\2014
Sound art and contemporary music one dayer with installations, talks, performances and more with Peter Brötzmann & Steve Noble, John Butcher, Max Eastley, Thomas Köner, Zimoun, The Artaud Beats, Sarah Angliss, Michael Finnissy, Poulomi Dessai, Part Wild Horses Mane On Both Sides, Philippe Petit and more.

Philippa Nicole Barr 
30/07/2014

Fashion East: Nurturing Young Talents

For some time now, cult fashion events have been happening far from the posh streets of Paris. Despite the strength and influence of established fashion routes, the discipline is seeking other venues and means of promoting young creative production. What better place than London, then, to build an innovative fashion culture.

Fashion East is a London-based non-profit institution that has become a beacon for young designers today. The organization was founded in 2000 by Truman Brewery with the aim of bringing forth and encouraging young designers who were just starting out, with the aid of Topshop, TOPMAN and the Greater London Authority. In 2005 Fashion East founded MAN meant to work as a menswear equivalent of the initial Fashion East. Each season three womenswear as well as three menswear designers are selected and given the opportunity to present a collection to the press during London Fashion Week. Designers are selected by Lulu Kennedy and a panel of fashion experts, and are provided venue, show production and mentoring.

Fashion East has become recognized for spotting talent and former designers include Craig Green, Lee Roach and Matthew Miller, while this year’s choice of Edward Marler was highly praised from the fashion world. His graduate collection from the Central Saint Martins was a homage to every girl and boy who ever dreamed of being a royal. Grand head attires shaped as crowns and luxurious materials were used in an ostentatious yet intriguing way, building hype and creating a definite expectation for his next work. Marler will join fellow designers Helen Lawrence and Louise Alsop, who are presenting second time around, for this year’s runway show. Establishments like Fashion East are important to keep the essence of fashion alive: by introducing someone new to the scene it adds to the dialogue of fashion, keeping it alive, fresh and critically engaged.

Victoria Edman 
30/07/2014

Through the Lens of Salemm

Images courtesy of Salemm 
29/07/2014

Melitta Baumeister – Casting Fashion

Originally from Germany, the young fashion designer Melitta Baumeister is now based in New York from where she is currently running her own brand. She recently received a MFA degree in Fashion Design and Society at Parsons – The New School For Design, and her Fall/ Winter 2014 capsule collection was presented by VFILES during New York Fashion Week. Her unique and innovative clothes made of uncommon materials like silicon, have been met with great critic acclaim, while trendsetting stars like Rihanna and Lady Gaga have embraced their highly artificial and futuristic appeal.

Melitta Baumeister merges fashion, objects, sculpture and installation in her work – influences and perspectives which are constantly present in her design. Her approach is to focus on different ways of looking at fashion, and try to push the ideas of what fashion may look like in the future – by using new materials and new manufacturing methods. For her latest collection the young designer wanted to explore the possibilities of tomorrow and combine that aim with the process of casted garments, the absence of color and the notion hyperreality. She has chosen to work with casted garments which get their shape of the mold they are cast into. The specific technique of casting a garment is based on the many layers of silicon which embodies the shape of the mold, a technique Melitta Beaumeister describes as something which is in process, alive and in an ongoing state, where she captures a certain moment of this process.The mold makes it capable of endless repetition, something she considers both a metaphor for the repetitiveness of the fashion industry as well as one of its possible futures.

Hanna Cronsjö 
29/07/2014

Exemplary: 150 Years of the MAK

Biedermeier, Thonet, Wiener Werkstätte: all these iconic styles and objects have a common house in Wien. The name of their prestigious dwelling is MAK, an acronym for Museum für angewandte Kunst, which happens to be not only the local museum for applied arts, but also a worldwide leading institution in the field of design conservation and curatorship.

Founded in 1864, at a time when emperor Franz Joseph was about to guide vast portion of Europe under domain of the Hapsburg realm, the museum hosts one of the major worldwide collections of furniture and housewares, spanning from the Middle Ages to present, including art works from prominent artists like Donald Judd, James Turrell, Gordon Matta-Clark, not to mention Frank West’s celebrated twelve sofas.Nevertheless, we would be way off if we considered MAK as an institution that is mainly devoted to the preservation of its huge heritage. Since the arrival in 1986 of its penultimate curator, legendary Peter Noever, the museum has extended its mission to analysis of contemporary issues that interconnect design and art through a common Weltanschauung.

In this spirit, the exhibition “Exemplary: 150 Years of the MAK” – now on show for the museum’s anniversary celebration – is seen as a privileged means to explore the dynamics that are influencing design mid term scenarios. According to curators Tulga Beyerle and Thomas Geisler, the exhibition looks for a possible answer to an apparently simple question: “Who or what was exemplary in the past, and where can we find (role) models today?”. Nine leading intellectuals, chosen among designers, curators, and trend-setters (Jan Boelen, Dunne & Raby, Stefan Sagmeister, Lidewij Edelkoort, Konstantin Grcic, Gesche Joost, Sabine Seymour, Hilary Cottam, Hans Ulrich Obrist) have been called to offer their point of view by establishing a dialogue between the museum’s collection and their visions.

The result is unstable and unpredictable, as these types of speculative enquiries should always be. While Konstantin Grcic puts on display his own “cosmos of the exemplary”, including Philippe Starck’s Jim Nature television and Jasper Morrison’s Plywood Chair, Fiona Raby and Tony Dunne choose a radically different approach, and thus present a selection of consultation texts on science fiction and social fiction by critics Edward Bellamy and Margaret Atwood. Finally, these examples seem to demonstrate a double law: if innovation in design is better expressed by a subjective, qualitative research, museums – no matter if ancient or contemporary – should be more and more committed to encouraging the expression of these voices.

Giulia Zappa 
28/07/2014

Style Suggestions: Poolside

Relax next to the pool this summer carrying only the essentials. Here are some of our suggestions to maximise your summer season.

Baseball Cap: Kenzo, Flip-flops: Havaianas, Sunglasses: Mykita, Swim Shorts: Orlebar Brown

Styling by Vanessa Cocchiaro