Artist: Gabriel Acevedo Velarde
Estado Sincopado, Concierto y charla
August 11, 2015
Tupac Asociación Cultural
Lima, Peru
Estado Sincopado es mi proyecto de banda musical, hasta hora de una sola persona, yo. Hago letras a partir de diferentes fuentes, casi todas referentes a aspectos del contexto social o político peruano, a manera de collage. En esto hay algo de los cut-ups de William Burroughs y de cierta tendencia del hiphop de rimar palabras más por su sonoridad que por su sentido, como en el trabajo de Victor Vásquez (Kool A.D.). En los conciertos, proyecto videos que explican de dónde viene cada fragmento y yo canto sobre bases musicales pre-elaboradas, añadiendo elementos electrónicos en vivo. (Gabriel Acevedo)
Sobre Gabriel Acevedo Velarde
Gabriel Acevedo Velarde nació en Lima, Perú, en 1976. Después de vivir por distintos periodos en Ciudad de México, Sao Paulo y Berlín, regresó para vivir en Lima en enero del año pasado. Entre sus exposiciones individuales destacan: “Ciudadano Paranormal” (Museo Reina Sofía), “Interruptions on decrees and stages” (Mori Art Museum), “Quorum Power” (Museo Carrillo Gil, Ciudad de México), y ”Cone Flow” (Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas). Ha participado en las siguientes exposiciones colectivas: Bienal de Lyon, Bienal de Sao Paulo, Trienal de Guangzhou, Auto-Kino (Temporäre Kunsthalle, Berlin), entre otras.
August 18, 2015 Eduardo Costa: International Pop https://abstractioninaction.com/happenings/eduardo-costa-international-pop/Artists: Delia Cancela, Eduardo Costa, Ushio Shinohara, Keiichi Tanaami, as panelists for the talks.
International Pop
April 11–August 29, 2015
Curators: Darsie Alexander with Bartholomew Ryan
Walker Art Center
Minneapolis, MN, USA
International Pop, a groundbreaking historical survey featuring some 125 works from more than 13 countries on four continents that chronicles the global emergence and migration of Pop art from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s. Organized by the Walker and on view April 11 through August 29, International Pop will travel to the Dallas Museum of Art and the Philadelphia Museum of Art through 2016.
Among the most broadly recognized phenomena of postwar art, Pop was strikingly nomadic, spreading not only through Britain and the United States but also Japan, Latin America, and both Eastern and Western Europe. From its inception, Pop migrated across borders, seizing the power of mass media and communication to reach a new class of viewers and adherents who would be drawn to its dynamic attributes. Yet, as this exhibition reveals, distinct iterations of Pop were developing worldwide that alternatively celebrated, cannibalized, rejected, or transformed some of the presumed qualities of Pop advanced in the United States and Britain. While Pop emerged in reaction to the rise of a new consumerist and media age, it also emerged in specific socio-economic contexts that inflected its development and reception: from postwar Europe to the politically turbulent United States to the military regimes of Latin America to the postwar climate of Japan with lingering United States occupation to the restricted pop cultural palette of countries in East Central Europe.
Curated by Darsie Alexander with Bartholomew Ryan
Curatorial consultants: Erica Battle, Hiroko Ikegami, Godfre Leung, Luigia Lonardelli, Ed Halter, and María José Herrera
International Pop Cinema
The exhibition includes an ambitious dedicated in-gallery cinema program curated by Ed Halter of Light Industry, Brooklyn.
Opening day talks, April 11
Livecast on the Walker Channel
Introduction
Speaker: Darsie Alexander (lead curator, International Pop)
The Internationality of Pop
Panelists: Erica Battle (associate curator, Philadelphia Museum of Art), Dávid Fehér (associate curator, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest), Hiroko Ikegami (associate professor, Graduate School of Intercultural Studies at Kobe University, Japan), and Christine Mehring (department chair and associate professor of art history, University of Chicago)
Moderator: Darsie Alexander
Argentine Pop and Its Dematerialization
Panelists: Delia Cancela (artist, Buenos Aires), Eduardo Costa (artist, Buenos Aires), and María José Herrera (director, Museum of Art, Tigre)
Moderator: Bartholomew Ryan
Tokyo Pop
Panelists: Hiroko Ikegami (associate professor, Graduate School of Intercultural Studies, Kobe University, Japan), Ushio Shinohara (artist, New York), and Keiichi Tanaami (artist, Tokyo)