Happenings

Happenings provides references on art events, exhibitions, biennales, art fairs and festivals, with a focus on Abstraction in Action artists and post-90s abstraction from Latin America.

Ricardo Alcaide, Darío Escobar & Gabriel de la Mora: Líneas de la Mano

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Artists: Esvin Alarcón Lam, Ricardo Alcaide, Darío Escobar, Gianfranco Foschino, Juan Fernando Herrán, Harold Mendez, Gabriel de la Mora, Ronny Quevedo, and Ana Maria Tavares.

Líneas de la Mano
May 12 – July 3, 2015
Sicardi Gallery
Houston, TX, USA

Featuring artists from Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, and Venezuela, Líneas de la mano (lines of the hand, lifelines) takes as its premise the idea that geometries connect the quotidian moments of our daily lives. Indeed, a line connects two points, A and B, start and finish, end and beginning; lines are defined by this function of connection, even as they continue to move past the points they connect

The artists in the exhibition use the languages and conceptual frameworks of modernism and abstraction to suggest poetic connections: between people, between historical referents, between political experiences, and between places. The line as connector becomes a way of skillfully addressing fraught histories, and of weaving a set of relationships. Líneas de la mano also considers the tactility of each object. The works exhibited demonstrate a strong relationship to materials and their histories, from the scrap metal of Guatemalan buses, to the thick, sooty texture of an archival photograph transferred to aluminum, to the fabric retrieved from vintage radio speakers.

The exhibition title playfully alludes to palmistry; the connection is meant to highlight the actions of the hand, implicit in the creation of the work. Astrologer, numerologist, clairvoyant, and palm-reader Cheiro (William John Warner, 1866-1936) writes, “the hand… denotes the change going on in the brain, even years before the action of the individual becomes the result of such a change.”  Read in a different context, it is a compelling statement about the artistic process.

Silvia Gurfein: La fuerza débil

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Artists: Cecilia Biagini, Verónica Calfat, Ignacio Fanti, Pachi Giustinian, Mimi Laquidara, Martina Quesada, and Agustina Quiles.

La fuerza débil
Curadora: Silvia Gurfein
June 2 – July 10, 2015
Fondo Nacional de las Artes
Buenos Aires, Argentina

Dentro del marco del Ciclo Recorridos Descentrados, se presenta la muestra “La fuerza débil” curada por Silvia Gurfein.

Imagen: Cecilia Biagini, “Multiplicidad potencial”, 2012, Pintura vinílica sobre madera, 48 x 57 x 10 cm.

Mauro Giaconi: Estado fallido (État défaillant)

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Artist: Mauro Giaconi

Estado fallido (État défaillant)
May 15 – June 20, 2015
Bendana Pinel Art Contemporain
Paris, France

Siendo el dibujo su principal medio de investigación, expandiéndolo hacia la escultura, hacia el video y la instalación, Giaconi presenta en “estado fallido” una serie de obras que se desprenden de sus últimos años de investigación artística, donde la destrucción y la reconstrucción son un constante mantra que modifica, redefine y excava el entorno subjetivo del artista.

La arquitectura, el cuerpo, las fronteras y la memoria son algunas aristas de un bloque de obras con el que Giaconi se propone hacer foco en la tensión entre conceptos opuestos, reflexionando y desdibujando los límites entre construcción y destrucción, peso y levedad, nacimiento y muerte, sueño y despertar. Borroneando sus bordes, desgastándolos, modificándolos, es como Giaconi rasca y busca instancias liberadoras, energías redentoras, instantes de fe.

El termino “estado fallido” es acuñado por periodistas y politólogos para referirse a un estado soberano en crisis que deja de cumplir con las garantías básicas y que presentan un evidente fracaso social, político, y económico. Giaconi utiliza este termino fundiéndolo con su significado con literal, con la falla, con el estado de error, de accidente, de residuo, generando reflexiones en torno a la permanencia, a la vida y a la muerte.

Estado fallido, estallido de abrazos.

dibujar la piedra, desdibujar los muros

que son de todos, como los errores

cada quién que junte sus cenizas

que levante su propia fortaleza

donde quiera

donde quepa

para todos.

Estado fallido, muertos sin cuerpo.

nadie merece tumbas vacías

son llantos tan anchos que se muerden la cola.

desdibujemos el estado, el confort.

desdibujemos la patria

una para cada quien

donde quepa

para todos.

m.g.

Richard Garet: Sounds of Times Square

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Artist: Richard Garet

Sounds of Times Square
June 1 – 30, 2015
Times Square Arts
NYC, NY, USA

For this “Midnight Moment” project Richard Garet proposes to use sounds captured from the area of Times Square as a tool to generate a visualization of the sonic environment. Then the artist will remove the audio leaving just the moving image signal creating an experience of sound through vision that would change and pulsate according to the properties of the sonic composite. The viewer then is pulled into lavish landscapes of continually reconfigured color and mood.

“In my processes establishing the material is key, and from there it becomes a reductive process where a vast number of possibilities and outcomes are explored until the work reaches proper momentum, purpose, and significance. Moreover, objectifying the ordinary and reinventing the character of found mundane things in life is very interesting to me.” -Richard Garet

Click here to see video

Screenshot 2015-05-26 16.16.04

More info here

Clarissa Tossin: How does it travel?

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Artist: Clarissa Tossin

How does it travel?
May 29, 2015
Samuel Freeman Gallery
Los Angeles, CA, USA

How does it travel? brings together photographs, sculptures, prints, and site-specific works that analyze movements and their resulting displacements and transformations. She tracks materials, ideologies, and bodies that travel by foot, by car, by plane, and by her own hand. Using two primary nodes, Brazil and the United States, Tossin finds generative ground in transpositions that yield compelling misregistrations.