Informações:
Sinopsis
Curators, scholars, and artists discuss modern and contemporary art. To view images of these artworks, please visit the Online Collection at moma.org/collection. MoMA Audio is available free of charge courtesy of Bloomberg.
Episodios
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: Pinar Yolaçan (4 of 7)
03/12/2010Part I of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include Xaviera Simmons, David Benjamin Sherry, Pinar Yolaçan, Erin Shirreff, and Michele Abeles. Moderated by Christopher Lew, Manager of Curatorial Affairs, Exhibition Funding Liaison, MoMA PS1.
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: David Benjamin Sherry (3 of 7)
03/12/2010Part I of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include Xaviera Simmons, David Benjamin Sherry, Pinar Yolaçan, Erin Shirreff, and Michele Abeles. Moderated by Christopher Lew, Manager of Curatorial Affairs, Exhibition Funding Liaison, MoMA PS1.
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: Xaviera Simmons (2 of 7)
03/12/2010Part I of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include Xaviera Simmons, David Benjamin Sherry, Pinar Yolaçan, Erin Shirreff, and Michele Abeles. Moderated by Christopher Lew, Manager of Curatorial Affairs, Exhibition Funding Liaison, MoMA PS1.
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: Amir Mogharabi (5 of 7)
03/12/2010Part II of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include David Brooks, Liz Magic Laser, Ryan McNamara, Amir Mogharabi, and A.L. Steiner. Moderated by Eva Respini, Associate Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art.
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: Ryan McNamara (4 of 7)
03/12/2010Part II of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include David Brooks, Liz Magic Laser, Ryan McNamara, Amir Mogharabi, and A.L. Steiner. Moderated by Eva Respini, Associate Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art.
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Conversations with Contemporary Artists: Artist's Choice I: Danh Vo and Julie Ault
03/12/2010Monday, May 10, 2010 6:30 PM Artist Danh Vo invites artist Julie Ault to join him in a conversation about his practice and the contexts he explores in his work, as well as various points of connection between both artists' creative practices.
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The Scroll and the Story of the Three Gorges
03/12/2010December 07, 2009, 6:00 PM Almost every year, MoMA’s Library Council publishes a specially printed artist’s book to explore the genre and to benefit the Library and Museum Archives. This year, as an alternative form of artist’s book, the Council has cast a hand-printed and mounted scroll by artist Yun-Fei Ji. The scroll addresses the damaging impact of China’s Three Gorges Dam, the construction of which has had devastating effects on the Chinese landscape and displaced over one million people living in that area near the Yangtze River. On the occasion of the publication, MoMA presents this program exploring the artistic, social, and cultural meanings of and responses to this site. Jonathan Spence, Sterling Professor of History Emeritus, Yale University, addresses the history of both the river and the scroll form, and how reading and visualization may be understood as an extended spatial experience. Wu Hung, Professor, Department of Art History, and Director, Center for the Art of East Asia, University of Ch
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Conceptual Art and Photography: James Welling in Conversation with Jan Dibbets
03/12/2010October 5, 2009, 6:30 P.M. Many artists include photography in their work, but they very often do so using a non-traditional approach. Dutch artist Jan Dibbets does not consider himself a photographer, although he has used the process extensively in his conceptually based work since the 1960s. James Welling, on the contrary, manipulates many of the technical elements of the medium, like light filters, and turns others, such as screens and gelatin, into the subjects of his work. Following an introduction by Anne Rorimer, independent scholar and curator, the artists discuss their varying approaches to conceptual art and photography with Christophe Cherix, Curator, Department of Prints and Illustrated Books, The Museum of Modern Art, and organizer of the exhibition In & Out of Amsterdam: Travels in Conceptual Art, 1960–1976.
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Gabriel Orozco
03/12/2010Thursday, February 11, 2010 12:30 PM Gabriel Orozco (Mexican, b. 1962) emerged at the beginning of the 1990s as one of the most intriguing and original artists of his generation—and one of the last to come of age in the twentieth century. He resists confinement to a single medium and deliberately blurs the boundaries between the art object and the everyday environment. This talk addresses the current MoMA exhibition and the artist’s merging of "art" and "reality.” Paulina Pobocha is a curatorial assistant in the Department of Painting and Sculpture at MoMA.
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Mobile Matrix and Other Experiments
03/12/2010Tuesday, February 9, 2010 6:30 PM Mobile Matrix, one of Gabriel Orozco's most ambitious projects, involved the retrieval and transformation of a whale skeleton now on view at MoMA. Marco Bassols, Mexico City–based curator and exhibition designer; Molly Nesbit, Professor of Art History at Vassar College and a contributing editor of Artforum; join the artist in discussing this as well as other site-specific and sculpture works. The discussion is moderated by Pablo Helguera, Director, Adult and Academic Programs, Department of Education, The Museum of Modern Art.
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A Conversation between Briony Fer, Gabriel Orozco, and Ann Temkin
03/12/2010Tuesday, December 15, 2009 6:30 PM Briony Fer, Professor of History of Art, University College, London, and Ann Temkin, The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture and organizer of the exhibition Gabriel Orozco engage the artist in a conversation about his practice and exhibition. Special thanks to the Mexican Cultural Institute and the Mexico Tourism Board of New York.
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Conversations With Contemporary Artists: Teresa Margolles
03/12/2010Thursday, July 9, 2009 6:30 P.M. Teresa Margolles, one of the foremost artists working in Mexico today, is representing her country at this year’s Venice Biennale. In this program, presented in collaboration with the Mexican Cultural Institute of New York, Margolles discusses how she explores death, and the relics and rituals that surround it, with her installations, objects, and other media. The evening is moderated by Pablo Helguera, Director, Adult and Academic Programs, The Museum of Modern Art.
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Greater New York 2010: Artists Present: Liz Magic Laser (3 of 7)
03/12/2010Part II of a series of talks by ten artists represented in MoMA PS1's Greater New York 2010 , (May 23–October 18), an exhibition of work by artists in the New York metropolitan area who engage in a wide range of art practices and mediums. In sessions consisting of short and dynamic presentations of twenty images, twenty-five seconds per image, loosely modeled on an informal Japanese presentation style, artists discuss their work, their creative process, and other issues in contemporary art. Presenting artists include David Brooks, Liz Magic Laser, Ryan McNamara, Amir Mogharabi, and A.L. Steiner. Moderated by Eva Respini, Associate Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art.
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Who's a Filmmaker? Cinema beyond the Darkened Room
03/12/2010Wednesday, May 6, 2009. 6:30 PM This program examines the fluidity of boundaries in film. Art and film critics and museum curators address the idea of cinema in the art world, where attitudes toward the moving image seem to differ from those toward "movies." Eleanor Heartney, contributing editor to Art in America and Artpress, addresses how artists borrow and manipulate actual cinematic works for different ends and how they use and subvert cinematic techniques, and Amy Taubin, film critic, discusses the construction of the temporal and social experiences in both a traditional cinematic environment and in art installations. Laurence Kardish, Senior Curator, Department of Film, and organizer of the exhibition, moderates a conversation.
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Knowing Kippenberger
03/12/2010Tuesday, April 14, 2009. 6:30 PM Martin Kippenberger's The Happy End of Franz Kafka's "Amerika" stages the scenario of America as the land of the job interview. In the spirit of this work, tonight's program takes the shape of a series of interviews between artists, art dealers, and friends of Kippenberger's. Together they help to form a collective portrait of this complicated figure. Participants include artists Rachel Harrison and Jeff Koons, art dealer Friedrich Petzel, and critic and art historian Jan Avgikos. Photo courtesy of Paula Court
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Myths of the West: Photographers, Filmmakers, and Writers
03/12/2010Tuesday, March 31, 2009. 6:30 PM In conjunction with Into the Sunset, which examines how photography has pictured the idea of the American West from 1850 to the present, this panel features photographers, a filmmaker, and a writer in a discussion of how their work elicits and contributes to our collective imagination and narratives of the West. Participants include photographer Katy Grannan, writer Annie Proulx, and photographer, filmmaker, and actor Dennis Hopper. Eva Respini, Assistant Curator, Department of Photography, and organizer of the exhibition moderates a discussion.
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5 x 20 x 20 (5/21/2009; Part 6 of 6): Q&A
03/12/2010Part 6 of 6: Q&A A special series of talks in the format of Pecha Kucha, an informal Japanese lecture style. In each session, approximately five artists who are represented in MoMA's collection discuss twenty slides of their work, twenty seconds per slide. This series celebrates a gift by the Judith Rothschild Foundation to the Museum of works by over 650 artists.
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5 x 20 x 20 (5/21/2009; Part 5 of 6): Stephen Sollins
03/12/2010Part 5 of 6: Stephen Sollins A special series of talks in the format of Pecha Kucha, an informal Japanese lecture style. In each session, approximately five artists who are represented in MoMA's collection discuss twenty slides of their work, twenty seconds per slide. This series celebrates a gift by the Judith Rothschild Foundation to the Museum of works by over 650 artists.
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5 x 20 x 20 (5/21/2009; Part 4 of 6): Simone Shubuck
03/12/2010Part 4 of 6: Simone Shubuck A special series of talks in the format of Pecha Kucha, an informal Japanese lecture style. In each session, approximately five artists who are represented in MoMA's collection discuss twenty slides of their work, twenty seconds per slide. This series celebrates a gift by the Judith Rothschild Foundation to the Museum of works by over 650 artists.
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5 x 20 x 20 (5/21/2009; Part 3 of 6): Joan Banach
03/12/2010Part 3 of 6: Joan Banach A special series of talks in the format of Pecha Kucha, an informal Japanese lecture style. In each session, approximately five artists who are represented in MoMA's collection discuss twenty slides of their work, twenty seconds per slide. This series celebrates a gift by the Judith Rothschild Foundation to the Museum of works by over 650 artists.