Tag Archive | "Art Piece"

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Intoxicating Art: Erwin Wurm’s "Drinking Sculptures" Will Get Viewers Sloshed at Miami’s Bass Museum


by Julia Halperin
Published: November 24, 2011

“For centuries, alcohol has played an important role in the art scene,” says Austrian artist Erwin Wurm. It has certainly been integral to the success of champagne-fueled art fairs like Art Basel Miami Beach. So it’s appropriate that the artist’s latest series, “Drinking Sculptures,” is getting its United States premiere at the Bass Museum of Art in a solo show, “Beauty Business,” that opens the same day as the fair. The sculptures appear to be reconstructed vintage nightstands, credenzas, and closets that open to reveal bottles of liquor. But there’s a catch: Wurm considers them complete only when the viewer is drunk.

Before the exhibition’s opening, the artist will stock the sculptures with whatever liquor he chooses. (Extra bottles of alcohol will be stored in the back, just in case.) Museum guards will act as bartenders. It’s unclear at this point whether visitors will be able to drink freely from the sculptures, or whether the Bass will hire performers to get drunk in the galleries instead. According to museum officials, it’s all up to Wurm. 

But why make an artwork that is, essentially, a bar? “Drinking was always an artistic tool,” explains Wurm, pointing to artists like Martin Kippenberger and Jackson Pollock, who struggled with alcoholism. “I found it interesting to address this in a specific art piece.”

In “Beauty Business,” the “Drinking Sculptures” join other sculptural works, made specifically for the exhibition, that focus on the home or dwelling. “Erwin has always been fascinated with the domestic and how to change things up,” says Dallas Contemporary director Peter Doroshenko, who curated the exhibition. After the show finishes up in Miami, it will travel to Dallas, were Doroshenko promises all museum visitors of proper drinking age will be able to imbibe. “I believe Texans might be able to hold their liquor a little better [than Floridans],” he says.

The works have already begun to cause a stir. When they made their world premiere in Antwerp’s Middleheimmuseum in May, intoxicated visitors got so rowdy that some of the sculptures were damaged and a portion of the exhibition had to be closed. (The Bass needn’t worry; the show still achieved record attendance, drawing an estimated 130,000 people.) Wurm was unfazed by the destruction. “It came with this expectation and a certain habit and change of personalities with alcohol,” he says of the work. “I like this idea very much.” 

 

 

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Intoxicating Art: Erwin Wurm’s "Drinking Sculptures" to Get Viewers Sloshed at Miami’s Bass Museum


by Julia Halperin
Published: November 24, 2011

“For centuries, alcohol has played an important role in the art scene,” says Austrian artist Erwin Wurm. It has certainly been integral to the success of champagne-fueled art fairs like Art Basel Miami Beach. So it’s appropriate that the artist’s latest series, “Drinking Sculptures,” is getting its United States premiere at the Bass Museum of Art in a solo show, “Beauty Business,” that opens the same day as the fair. The sculptures appear to be reconstructed vintage nightstands, credenzas, and closets that open to reveal bottles of liquor. But there’s a catch: Wurm considers them complete only when the viewer is drunk.

Before the exhibition’s opening, the artist will stock the sculptures with whatever liquor he chooses. (Extra bottles of alcohol will be stored in the back, just in case.) Museum guards will act as bartenders. It’s unclear at this point whether visitors will be able to drink freely from the sculptures, or whether the Bass will hire performers to get drunk in the galleries instead. According to museum officials, it’s all up to Wurm. 

But why make an artwork that is, essentially, a bar? “Drinking was always an artistic tool,” explains Wurm, pointing to artists like Martin Kippenberger and Jackson Pollock, who struggled with alcoholism. “I found it interesting to address this in a specific art piece.”

In “Beauty Business,” the “Drinking Sculptures” join other sculptural works, made specifically for the exhibition, that focus on the home or dwelling. “Erwin has always been fascinated with the domestic and how to change things up,” says Dallas Contemporary director Peter Doroshenko, who curated the exhibition. After the show finishes up in Miami, it will travel to Dallas, were Doroshenko promises all museum visitors of proper drinking age will be able to imbibe. “I believe Texans might be able to hold their liquor a little better [than Floridans],” he says.

The works have already begun to cause a stir. When they made their world premiere in Antwerp’s Middleheimmuseum in May, intoxicated visitors got so rowdy that some of the sculptures were damaged and a portion of the exhibition had to be closed. (The Bass needn’t worry; the show still achieved record attendance, drawing an estimated 130,000 people.) Wurm was unfazed by the destruction. “It came with this expectation and a certain habit and change of personalities with alcohol,” he says of the work. “I like this idea very much.” 

 

 

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Head Lights


What is this? Well it’s a slightly off-centre photo of a chandelier in the Lychee Lounge with Barbie doll style heads plonked on top of the bulbs to make them glow subtly. It doesn’t really throw out much light – the heads would probably melt. Purely an art piece, I reckon.

OK it’s a bit macabre…  but for me, having never been a fan of Barbie dolls, I love it!

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People: The "Work of Art" Exit Interview: Nao Bustamante


 ARTINFO spoke with the failed contestant about her “flamboyant” art piece, and how her time on the show was a form of “social sculpture.”

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Blarney’s Biblio-Art Awards


Closes on 14 May 2010
Choose a book from our selection, and convert it into an inspired art piece!
A selection of books will be made available for this event. You need to visit us to
select your book from those we have put aside for this event. If it is not convenient
or possible for you to visit us in the time frame, then please check out our website at
www.blarneybooks.com.au. All of the books are for sale, and the purchase of the
book is the entry fee to this event. The books will be priced at $10 each. You may
choose one book, or as many as you please. Books can be reserved in store, by
email, or phone, and can be posted if required. As you make the purchase, the title
of your book will be marked on a list, and your artwork must be inspired by your
choice. When it comes to exhibition and display, we will be requesting a few
explanatory lines about your piece, and if the book is not used directly in the
artwork, then we will ask that the book (or book image) be displayed alongside your
work.

The Blarney Books Literary Art Prize is a non acquisitive prize, and is open to all
types of medium.

Prizes

  • Barney Biblio-Art Award (non-acquisitive) – $1500
  • Storyteller’s Award – $250
  • People’s Choice – $250


Judging 2010

The winner is announced on Saturday 12th June 2010.

Fees:
Commission on sales is 20% and a 10%GST. Entry is the price of the book.

Contact:
For more information email jo@blarneybooks.com.au or call 03 5568 2174.

Venue:
Blarney Books and Art, 37 James Street Port Fairy VIC 3284

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