museum of new art
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MAYDAY! FOUR EXHIBITIONS AT ONCE! opening at The Museum of New Art
Saturday, May 1st from 6-10pm
email: detroitmona@aol.com |
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MAYDAY! with Yisook Sohn, Olaf Breuning, and Winjoon Choi
at the D C C P Detroit Center for Contemporary Photography
MONA is pleased to co-sponsor MayDay! an exhibition of work by Olaf Breuning, Yisook Sohn and Woojin Choi, in the first exhibition at the Detroit Center for Contemporary Photography. Titled not only in reference to the day of the exhibition’s opening, the multiple meanings of MayDay! resonate throughout the work on view. Originally a celebration of spring and the rebirth it represents, “Mayday” is also the distress signal used in times of emergency.
reception: 6-10pm, Saturday May 1st sponsored by MONA
All at once art exists. And it is desired and celebrated. It is also mocked, attacked, and rejected. Yet, its sudden existence provides the moment for creating a vision of something unexpected and confusingly new. It confuses us with its pronounced individualism and yet surprises us with its conflation of styles, both old and new. Simply put, this young art sets out to arouse the most disparate and the most contradictory of reactions.
Olaf Breuning:
In playful, surprising ways, Swiss artist Olaf Breuning combines the real and the illusory, the authentic and the contrived, the barbarous and the civilized. Brevity and intelligent humor make Breuning’s works subtle and comprehensible to the intellect, while always concealing the element of surprise and the ‘charm of simplicity’. In a typically postmodern way his works recount several stories at once: ‘Not just a story within the content of my images, but the story of my personal attraction to certain details floating in the mainstream – the details that “pop” for me, the story of the public’s obsession with codes that represent power, the story of our degenerated relationship to second-hand information: the story of photography, the story of future relations between art and the popular landscape of images.’
Yisook Sohn:
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PICASSO'S GARDEN
Picasso's camera, with its brittle stack of negatives and several discarded drawings eventually found their way into the hands of Swedish collector Peter Hallstrom. Hallstrom, guessing their importance, then directed the Bergen University professor Dr Åke Neilsen and his team of assistants to supervise the meticulous task of bringing them all back to life. The astounding results of these efforts have rewritten art history forever and have been on loan to be viewed by the public for the first time at the Museum of New Art. It is now with this unique camera, with its broken "cubist" lens, that the noted Norwegian photographer Stig Eklund has shot this short series currently on view, titled PICASSO'S GARDEN.
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JOHN MILLER & TOM PARR: New Paintings from Detroit
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CONNECTING
HIRST'S DOTS:
Post-Art in the
21st Century
We should really understand the history of art as the history of dialectical mutations and not just within a historical epoch, but also within the development of an artist’s individual work. The exciting development of art throughout the centuries shows the explosions, the dreams, the utopias, and the setbacks that keep recurring from generation to generation, from decade to decade: A titanic battle, seething with contradictions, before the walls of Paris and Berlin and New York, and no matter how these walls have been torn down by history, they still resurrect a revised vision and engage our minds.
7 North Saginaw Street
Pontiac, Michigan T +44 (248) 210-7560 detroitmona@aol.com hours: thurs - sat 1p-6p
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