15.12.2009
Artists on Their Bicycles New York: 2010 Calendar

Forty years after Joe Goode's legendary calendar LA Artists in Their Cars (1969), the East Coast strikes back. Artists on Their Bicycles New York establishes a new connection between artists and mobility, portraying them with their eco-friendly vehicles. Swiss photographer Lukas Wassmann, commissioned by Emma Reeves and Gianni Jetzer for the Swiss Institute, captures vibrant everyday scenes. Some artists navigate the Manhattan grid as urban flaneurs, while others take advantage of biking as an effective means of transportation. This limited edition project harnesses the artistic will to operate outside the lanes of constraint.
Format 12" x 14.375"
Limited Edition of 500, numbered
Price: 45 USD
Buy Online
January Philip-Lorca diCorcia
February Collier Schorr
March Ugo Rondinone
April Richard Phillips
May Amy Granat
June Rainer Ganahl
July Rita Ackermann + Aurel Schmidt
August NN
September Maurizio Cattelan
October Ryan McGinley
November Pierre Huyghe
December David Byrne + Cindy Sherman
Editors Emma Reeves and Gianni Jetzer for Swiss Institute
Photography Lukas Wassmann
Design Li, Inc.
Thanks to all the artists for their time and support
Publisher Swiss Institute / Contemporary Art, New York
About Swiss Institute / Contemporary Art New York
Swiss Institute / Contemporary Art is a not-for-profit contemporary art gallery operating in New York City since 1986. As a truly international space for contemporary art, we occupy an ambitious, boundary-crossing role in NYC, fostering interaction between American, Swiss and European artists and audiences. Our institution works like a European Kunsthalle, presenting cutting-edge art within a forward-thinking intellectual framework. Because we have no collection and no responsibilities to the art market, all our energy goes towards the realization of artistic and curatorial projects. An additional vital part of our programming is an ambitious series of events creating crucial opportunities to weave contemporary art into the fabric of everyday life.
http://www.swissinstitute.net
03.12.2009
WORKSHOP ON-LINE POST-OIL CITIES

Objetivo del taller
El objetivo de este taller es analizar y proponer intervenciones para independizar nuestras ciudades del petróleo ante los retos del Peak Oil y del Cambio Climático.
Autores
Ecosistema Urbano - www.ecosistemaurbano.com
David Juárez - Straddle3 - www.straddle3.net
Laura Cantarella - www.lauracantarella.it
Bea Ramo - STAR Strategies + Architecture - www.s-t-a-r.nl
Carlos Sant’Ana - S’A Arquitectos - www.sa-arquitectos.com
Daniel Gómez - ASPO - www.aspo-spain.org
Lluís Sabadell Artiga - www.postoilcities.org
Fechas y duración
Modalidad 1 - Del 9 al 23 de diciembre de 2009
Horas lectivas: 34 horas
Duración: 14 días
Modalidad 2 (Intensivo libre) - A escoger entre el 9 y el 23 de diciembre de 2009
Horas lectivas: 34 horas
Duración: Mínimo 7 días
Fechas: a escoger entre el 9 y el 23 de diciembre (la fecha de inicio máxima será el 17 de diciembre y la fecha de finalización máxima será el 23 de diciembre) Esto quiere decir que las unidades didácticas serán las mismas para ambos cursos pero los alumnos de la modalidad 2 podrán empezar el curso en cualquier momento (como muy tarde el 17 de diciembre) y finalizarlo en cualquier momento (siempre antes del 23 de diciembre).
A quién va dirigido
Arquitectos, urbanistas, diseñadores, ingenieros, artistas, biólogos y a cualquier persona interesada a investigar como independizar las ciudades del petróleo.
Idiomas
Las unidades didácticas están editadas en castellano y catalán y las tutorías se podrán realizar independientemente en castellano, catalán o inglés.
Precio
100€ (Información sobre becas y descuentos aquí)
Información e inscripciones
Más información e inscripciones aquí.
Más información en www.postoilcities.org
30.11.2009
International Summer School of Arts and Sciences for Sustainability in Social Transformation (ASSiST)
Cultura 21 have the pleasure to announce his upcoming international project, launched in collaboration with the International Council for Cultural Centers (I3C) and the Latin American Network of Art for Social Transformation : the firstInternational Summer School of Arts and Sciences for Sustainability in Social Transformation (ASSiST). The event is planned for August 2010 in Bulgaria, in the beautiful Balkan mountains.
The theme of the first edition of the summer school will be:Walking and Places: building transformations.
Call for workshop proposals. Please note the deadline for sending in your proposal: December 20, 2009 !
At a later stage (in December 2009), a ‘call for participants’ will be disseminated, for the selection of participants at the summer school. As soon as it will be available, this call will be available here as PDF file... Thank you for your patience.
PREPARATORY WORKSHOP
REPORTED TO FEBRUARY 13-14 2010
On February 13th -14th 2010, a preparatory workshop will take place in Copenhagen, discussing suggested methods, workshop proposals and future development of the summer school.
BACKGROUND
Not only the ecosystems, but also human societies, i.e. social justice, democracy, cultural vitality and the welfare of citizens, are put at risk by the continuing trend of an unsustainable development: The challenge of achieving sustainability, in the face of a complex crisis of civilization combining ecological, social, cultural and economic dimensions, demands integrated understandings and responses. As the famous Einstein quote goes, “the problems of the present cannot be solved with the thinking that created them”. The atomized, specialized islands of knowledge and of practice in contemporary societies, shall be turned into a common ground from which responses to the global crisis may emerge. We argue that artists and scientists, in putting together their resources of inquiring and re-thinking, in an exchange with civil society, can make an important contribution in the coming decades, before climate change, biodiversity breakdown and other global phenomena would turn into a civilizational collapse. However, in order to do so, artists and scientists urgently need adequate places and moments where and when they can trespass disciplinary boundaries and the routines of their trade.
The Summer School hopes to address the issue of distance and lack of dialogue and cooperation between scholars/researchers, communities and arts practitioners. The Summer School is thus dedicated to the productive dialogue and mutual teaching/learning processes (with workshops given by each for the other) among all cultural practitioners and scholars engaged in change processes for sustainability. The process is expected to be one of mutual enrichment, which can lead to rethinking the opinions and work approaches of each group and of individuals and then get ramified in a series of new approaches to inspire projects in communities around the world.
The Summer School aims to encourage scientists and artists to transform their own working processes, thanks to the insights gained from the other participants. The Summer School is also expected to stimulate the inquisitiveness, the inter- and transdisciplinary openness and the critical reflexivity of participants, allowing them to confront the complexity of today’s global crises and unsustainable developments, with creatively and effectively integrated perspectives. Navigating through the insights of cross-disciplinary dialogues, the summer school participants will discover islands of common experience, on the way to a shared transdisciplinary common ground as the long-term destination of the summer school.
The Summer School will contribute to an understanding of the role of community spaces and organizations dedicated to the arts and how the work of these organization in national and international networks can create a dynamic of sustainable social transformations propelled by a widely spread creativity among generations and across intercultural boundaries.
VISION = A BREEDING PLACE FOR TRANSDISCIPLINARY AND TRANSFORMATIVE ART&SCIENCE
The Summer School hopes to generate a high-quality learning experience for all participants, generating innovative methodologies, knowledge and agendas in art, (re)search and action. The vision is to create a framework for a truly creative process for the methodological empowerment of both artists and scientists working for sustainability/social transformation. The event will not merely be a collection of workshops and discussions, but a “school” in the noblest sense of the word: a place for learning, teaching, sharing and evolving together.
The Summer School addresses the HOW questions of art & science for sustainability: For example: How can academic research contribute to community artists and contemporary artists developing new social, aesthetic and community approaches? How can the experience of post-modern off-balance dance contribute to a rethinking of democracy? How can scientists enhance their reflexivity and their creativity thanks to insights from the arts? How can artists effectively work in communities and at other levels of social reality, for social transformation together with academics? In order to address these questions, the Summer School will explore: How do artists and scientists from a diversity of backgrounds, do their work today? Which methods and approaches do they use and how can these be transfered and transmuted to other artists and scientists around the world? And which cross-breedings between these different approaches should be further developed?
The Summer School will also foster thinking at a paradigmatic and normative level and link the WHY and the HOW questions, in order to avoid mere instrumentality. That ‘deeper’ level will address issues of spirituality, epistemology, ontology, aesthetics and introspection, and critically reflect the orientations and values we vest in ‘social transformation’ and in ‘sustainability’. Art and philosophy, conceived not only as vehicles, but also as possibilities to step outside ourselves, will contribute to this deeper, epistemological and ‘more than rational’ level of the Summer School’s methodology.
The Summer School aims to provide an intense and insightful learning experience to all participants, which is interdisciplinary, engaged and intercultural:
a) The Summer School aims to facilitate the cross-breeding of arts and sciences in their efforts to renew their methods and their paradigms towards social transformation for sustainability. It also aims to exchange these insights with organizations from civil society. Concerned are the fields of art and science in a wide sense, including on the one hand the whole spectrum of the academic world, from natural sciences and social sciences to philosophy and humanities, and on the other hand a wide variety of artistic practices, from eco-art and community arts practitioners to social sculpture, media art and others ; from the side of civil society practitioners, concerned are NGOs working in communities and for sustainable development. The summer school’s focus cuts across established disciplines, pursuing inter- and transdisciplinarity, but also affirms a proactive and normative, yet self-reflexive and critical framework.
b) The Summer School aims to train effective agents of change, not mere observers of contemporary crises nor uninvolved prophets of doom. The Summer School aims to foster social transformations towards a more sustainable civilization: i.e. resilient human cultures advancing social justice, economic well-being, ecological integrity and cultural diversity. It is intended for artists, researchers and practitioners who acknowledge and support the values of engaged (i.e. normative) and self-reflexive, concrete and theoretically informed, positive and critical practices in science, art and civil society.
c) The Summer School aims to facilitate transcontinental exchanges, comparisons and critical explorations of experiences across the world, with participation of researchers and practitioners from the continents of Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania and South-, Central and North-America.
d) The Summer School aims to enable the conceptualization and drafting of possible future partnerships and projects among artists, scientists, and practitioners.
e) The Summer School aims to generate a transdisciplinary process allowing the pluralistic and diverse, yet united and overarching burgeoning of a transdisciplinary culture in the arts and in the sciences:
- Inspiring scientists to reach beyond the limited types of formal rationality traditionally catered to in the Western scientific tradition. New approaches and new tools, inspired by artistic methodologies and artistic (re)search practices and theories, shall carve new avenues of explorations for the participating scientists.
- Inspiring artists to enrich their current practices. New methodologies for action and (re)search, e.g. interdisciplinary work with scientists and activists, shall open further perspectives for the participating artists.
- Enabling participants to develop varied ways to work transdisciplinarily, no longer only as determined ‘artists’, ‘activists’ or ‘scientists’, but, as artiscientists, artivists, intellectactors, i.e. shaping new identities for a new culture.
An overarching theme is proposed for the first edition of the Summer School: Walking and Places: building transformations
Walking, as a practice for exploring, learning, mapping, and intervening, in urban and in rural contexts, will be explored. This practice brings up insights highly relevant to the summer school’s focus on action-based research – and constitutes a field which has grown rather directly out of a relation to practice, rather than as a theoretical problem held by science for itself. Traditional as well as new ‘déambulation’ practices (e.g. in postmodern dance or among traditional pastoralist communities) mark the relationships between cultural practices and their social and ecosystemic environments. Furthermore, in the recent past, walking-based (re)search practices have flourished both in the arts and sciences (e.g. in contemporary art practices or in the new discipline of “Promenadologie”), opening up spaces for inter- and transdisciplinary explorations, which the summer school will further develop and interconnect.
Read more here for a background information on the theme...
The following is subject to changes and is only a provisional overview.
The Summer School will alternate methodological workshops with open discussions. The preliminary planning of the first edition of the Summer School is as follows, for a total duration of 10 full days:
- 1 day of introduction
- 3 days of workshops
- 1 day of Open Space discussions
- Half a day of personal introspection
- 2 days and a half of workshops
- Half a day of Open Space discussions (morning)
- Two halves of days (i.e. afternoon + next morning) of work in groups on a ‘training the trainers’ workshop-prototype on ‘transdisciplinary teaching&learning for sustainability in social transformation’
- Half a day of conclusions and perspectives (afternoon)
The workshops offer shall be balanced, offering a large spectrum of arts-based and academic insights, a mix of challenging-critical and creative-constructive perspectives, and a diversity of international perspectives. The workshops shall be conducted under a principle of mutuality in learning:
- All participants shall commit themselves to following workshops from different fields or specializations than their own.
- Each workshop organizer shall also engage her or himself to also follow other workshops as a member of the learning community.
- Each participant will be considered as a learner-teacher.
The workshops will be offered in parallel, to keep small group sizes, and each workshop will be repeated, allowing all participants access to all workshops.
The day of open space discussions following the first three days of workshops will allow participants to explore the experience of the first workshops: In the first half of the day, they will be encouraged to communicate to each other, what has been experienced in the workshops, in their own words. In the second half of the day, they will be asked to look for common expressions for these experiences (also reflecting on the differences between their own words/ own cultures).
In the half-day of personal introspection, which is a very important step in process of the summer school, participants will be asked not to communicate with each other anymore, but to engage into individual self-reflection. They will be asked to reflect on their own practices, with the question: “How do I integrate other approaches, from different perspectives,into my own personal practice and (re)search?”
The second row of Open Space discussions and the last two days of discussions and prototyping, will address the question of transfer: How can the insights from the workshops be transfered and transmuted across disciplines, and to other artists and scientists around the world? Which cross-breedings between the different approaches presented should be further developed? In the half-day of open space discussions, the participants will be invited to explore how the transformed own practices can be forming a common ground for transdisciplinary work. In the workshop-prototyping, the participants will divide in smaller groups: Their task will be to conceive a concept of a workshop with educative elements to be re-used and which each participant can ‘take away’ from the summer school and on which they can further elaborate, back in their own contexts. In the half-day of conclusions, participants will exchange on the workshop-prototypes concepts and discuss them as a potential “seed” for a future edition of the summer school...
The Summer School participants will further exchange through an online platform, including a discussion forum, a space for sharing of blog spaces with multimedia content and a wiki (e.g. for further elaborating the workshop-prototypes). An evaluation of the first edition of the summer school will follow, that will raise insights for the opportunity and format of further editions of the Summer School in subsequent years. The appointed evaluation team will also prepare recommendations to be discussed by the organizers of the Summer School and addressed to other organizations in the academic and artistic fields. A publication will also be realized in order to further disseminate the insights from the First Summer School and from its evaluation. Furthermore, a video of the summer school experience will be realized and published on Internet.
The Summer School participants will include, besides the organizers of the event:
- The organizers of the 7-11 workshops selected by the international selection committee (7 to 11 persons)
- 15 participants coming from the academic fields
- 15 participants coming from the artistic fields
- 15 participants coming from civil society (cultural practitioners, NGOs; policy-makers)
The total number of participants will be limited to 60, in order to focus on the quality and intensity of the knowledge transfer and exchange of experience. A selection procedure for the participants will be applied, in order to ensure a diversity of disciplinary and international backgrounds. In order to allow participation from non-European countries, we aim to provide financial support to 20 participants for their travel, accommodation and visa costs. (Participants from European countries who are not conducting a workshop, will be expected to cover their own travel and accommodation costs by themselves.)
ABOUT THE ORGANIZER
The organizational strength of the first International Summer School of Arts and Sciences for Sustainability in Social Transformation, benefits from the convergence of the expertise of the three international, non-governmental organizations initiating this event:
- The International Council for Cultural Centers (I3C) brings to the project its expertise and commitment in the establishment and coordination of the global network of national networks of community cultural centers (with e.g. the European Network of Cultural Centers), thus I3C contributes a vision and practical experience in network dynamics, trans-continental cooperation, and yet the grassroots realities of small spaces dedicated to community development through the arts. Thematically, I3C has been developing expertise in the safeguarding of intangible cultural heritage and cultural diversity synchronized with UNESCO’s Conventions. I3C further acts as the host and organizer of the first edition of the Summer School, in August 2010, following its International Forum on Heritage Safeguarding and Community Arts for Social Transformation and launch of the Trans-Continental Network of Community Cultural Centres (in May 2010).
- The International Network Cultura21 (‘Cultural Fieldworks for Sustainability’) brings to the project its expertise in art & science based action & research for “cultures of sustainability”, as well as its network of scientists, academics, artists and other cultural practitioners (with its national Cultura21 organizations in Germany, Italy, Mexico and Nordic-European countries). The German organization “Cultura21 Institut e.V.” and the Denmark-based “Cultura21 Nordic” organization act as partners of the I3C in the preparation and organization of the Summer School and in the follow-up evaluation of the event (evaluation team).
- The Latin American Network of Art for Social Transformation brings to the project its expertise in transformative artistic practices in communities as well as its extensive network of community arts organizations across South and Central America. The AFST net will contribute with information and connections with outstanding art for social transformation practitioners within arts and sciences.
WWW.CULTURA21.NET
23.11.2009
A Constructed World, photo de la performance 'Trees' 2009, SOS 48 Festival, Murcia

Cneai = Vous invite à la traversée de Paris, du Cneai à la Ferme du Buisson, dans le RER A.
Programme des performances :
13h30 Chatelet rdv quai RER A dir. Saint-Germain en Laye
14h-14h25 Chatelet > Chatou - Jochen Dehn - The summer of love was the year after I was born
14h40-15h30 Cneai - Exposition Fleuves
15h50-16h30 Chatou > Nation - A Constructed World - Speech and Trees and Free Texts
16h45-17h10 Nation > Ferme du Buisson - Vincent Thomasset
17h20-18h La Ferme du buisson - Visite d'une exposition en cours de préparation (TREASURES FOR THEATRE)
19.11.2009
GHOST FOREST Trafalgar Square
Ghost Forest is an original and ambitious project by Angela Palmer that seeks to raise public awareness of the connections between deforestation and climate change. It involves taking a series of 10 rainforest tree stumps, most with their buttress roots still attached, from a regulated, commercially logged tropical rainforest in Ghana.

The tree stumps will be presented as a “ghost forest” firstly in Trafalgar Square in London, and then in Copenhagen to coincide with the UN Cop15 Climate Change Conference in December.
Ghost Forest is a carbon neutral project - following input from Climate Care, Ghost Forest's carbon footprint will be offset, see here for details.
Ghost Forest Art Installation - Trafalgar Square, London, U.K. 16-22 November 2009
Ghost Forest Art Installation - Thorvaldsens Plads, Copenhagen, Denmark 7-18 December 2009

Source : http://www.ghostforest.org/
17.11.2009
CDG 2 CPH - Paris 2 Copenhagen
Guillaume Dimanche 1300 kms 22 Novembre - 06 Décembre

On Sunday, December 6 will arrive in Copenhagen by plane all politicians, lobbyists, companies, etc.. participating in CoP15. I'll get to that place, accompanied by many cyclists and environmentalists after 15 days in 5 European countries (France / Belgium / Netherlands / Germany / Denmark) traveled between autonomy and exchange.
The purpose of this experiment is to demonstrate the importance of using modern means, but closer to nature, to the survival of our human community. Our decadence (waste) already causes too much loss of animal and plant species. Linking these two points (Paris / Copenhagen) 1200 km distance by road bike in 15 days, represents an important challenge since this action is in contradiction with the resources used by all political leaders and economic links the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen from December 7th 2009 (COP-15).
During the 15-day crossing to link Paris to Copenhagen, in the form of performance with photographic records and production of videos, between Roissy's and Copenhagen's airports by bike for the opening of the climate conference starting in December 2009.
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Filmer, photographier, rapporter chaque jour le trajet, la route, le paysage. Documenter entre l'art et la science une traversée de l'Europe.
Le dimanche 6 décembre arriveront à Copenhague, par avion tous les politiques, lobbyistes, entreprises, etc. participant au COP15. J'arriverai aussi à cet endroit, accompagné par de nombreux cyclistes & écologistes après 15 jours à travers 5 pays d'Europe (France / Belgique / Pays-Bas / Allemagne / Danemark) parcourus entre autonomie et échange.
Le but de cette expérience est de montrer l'importance d'utiliser les moyens modernes, mais au plus proche de la nature, pour la survie de notre communauté humaine. Notre déchéance (la production des déchets) entraîne déjà trop de disparition d'espèces animales et végétales. Relier ces deux points (Paris / Copenhague) distants de 1200 kilomètres par la route en vélo en 15 jours, représente un défi important dans la mesure ou cette action est en contradiction avec les moyens mis en œuvre par tous les dirigeants politiques et économiques pour relier la Conférence des Nations Unis sur le Changement Climatique à Copenhague à partir du 7/12/2009 (COP-15).
Pendant les 15 jours de traversée pour relier Paris à Copenhague, sous forme de performance avec relevés photographiques et réalisation de documents vidéos, entre l'aéroport de Roissy à celui de Copenhague en vélo pour l'ouverture de la conférence climat en décembre 2009.
Nadav Kander wins the Prix Pictet 2009
http://www.prixpictet.com/news/latest_news/nadav_kander_w...
Kofi Annan, Honorary President of the Prix Pictet, has awarded this year‟s Prix Pictet to British based photographer Nadav Kander and the 2009 Commission to American photographer Ed Kashi at the Passage de Retz, Paris.
Making the formal presentation at an awards dinner at the Passage de Retz in Paris, Kofi Annan said that the photographs were a compelling call for action to tackle climate change, the most serious humanitarian and environmental challenge facing the world today:
“Only weeks separate us from the decisive negotiations on climate change in Copenhagen. We are confronted with the vital need to prepare the political momentum necessary for a fair and effective post-Kyoto agreement. The images in front of us remind us of the fragility of our planet and the damage we have already done. When we see these photographs we cannot close our eyes and remain indifferent. Through our actions and voices, we must keep building the pressure to secure urgent action at Copenhagen and beyond.”
Ivan Pictet, Senior Managing Partner of Pictet & Cie said: "In only its second year, the Prix Pictet has established itself as one of the most important prizes in its field. While in naming Nadav Kander the Judges have chosen a very worthy winner, such was the quality of the field that any one of the twelve photographers on the Shortlist could have made it."

He added, "On behalf of the Partners of Pictet; I am delighted to announce that we have selected Ed Kashi as the photographer to fulfil Pictet's annual commission related to our charitable activities, this year in Madagascar, a country with a remarkable ecological heritage under threat and one of the poorest countries on earth."
Each year Pictet & Cie supports the work of a charity whose work mirrors the theme of the prize. For 2009 Pictet & Cie will support Azafady, a UK-based charity and Malagasy-registered NGO. Specifically Pictet & Cie will support Azafady‟s Voly Hazo project that aims to preserve the earth from degredation and the eventual desertification that is seen so widely in Madagascar with a programme of tree planting and preservation of the natural forest.
Ed Kashi has been commissioned to visit Madagascar with the Azafady team in order to produce a series of photographs that will highlight many of the issues that Azafady are focusing on in this unique and endangered environment. An exhibition of the work made for the commission will launch the 2010 prize in the Spring 2010.
Mark Jacobs, Director of Azafady UK said “Madagascar‟s extraordinary biodiversity stems from the island‟s long isolation from other landmasses. With over 80 per cent of its plant and animal wildlife found only on this island it is as important as protected areas like the Galapagos Islands. But this unique ecosytem is under threat and poverty is playing a large part in the destruction of the country‟s natural environment. While international attention often focuses on the needs of mainland Africa, the island of Madagascar is rarely thought of. We are therefore delighted that Pictet & Cie have decided to support the work of Azafady.”
Francis Hodgson, Chairman of the Judges said “The quality of the entry this year has been exceptional. It has been an honour and a pleasure to try to find a winner from among so many outstanding candidates. The shortlisted photographers set the Jury an immense problem and I am grateful to my fellow judges for their insight, expertise and good humour. The photographers‟ determination to be heard is the foundation of everything that the Prix Pictet can achieve. As a result of their great skill the Prix Pictet goes from strength to strength. Although only in its second year it has clearly now found its niche as the world‟s premier prize in its sector. The environmental issues which it seeks to address are vital to all of us. That of course only adds to the fascination of being involved.”
13.11.2009
The Prix Pictet 2009, Earth
Passage de Retz, Paris
23 October - 23 November 2009
The complete exhibition of the Prix Pictet 2009 Shortlist will be at the Passage de Retz, Paris, where the winner of this year’s CHF100,000 Prix Pictet was announced as Nadav Kander by Kofi Annan on 22 October 2009. At the same time Ed Kashi was awarded the Prix Pictet 2009 Commission.
During the exhibition, the Prix Pictet will collaborate with FIAC (22 - 25 October), Paris’ major international contemporary and modern art fair, and Paris Photo, the world’s leading event for photography (19 - 22 November) to promote the award. The Prix Pictet will then tour to further international venues between late 2009 and early 2010.
Passage de Retz
9 rue Charlot, 75003, Paris
http://www.prixpictet.com/exhibitions/exhibitions/the_pri...
07.11.2009
PLATFORM - C Words: carbon, climate, capital, culture, How did you get here and where are we going?

A Commission by Platform for the Transport Planning Society
Exhibitions
Sat 3 Oct - Sun 29 Nov, 10am - 6pm (Closed Mondays)
Free
"The energy and climate-change crisis stands as a unique social and ecological challenge... Those least responsible for climate change are the worst affected by it..." Vandana Shiva, Indian Activist, 2008
Artist-activist group PLATFORM and their collaborators propose C Words, a two-month investigation into carbon, climate, capital and culture. Based on PLATFORM's 25 years of research, art and action, C Words cross-examines the present and looks to the next two decades. How did we get here? Where are we going? Who's deciding? Who's made invisible? Whose future matters? PLATFORM members will be in residence at Arnolfini throughout the project.
Over 25 events, installations, performances, actions, walks, courses, discussions and skills-sharing will build towards the moment of public departure to the protests at the contested COP 15 in Copenhagen. This isn't art which merely describes the problems of climate justice. C Words investigates how everything from carbon offsets and transport, to racism and bank accounts play their part in the carbon web. How will culture be produced in a low energy future? Can we imagine our way from here to there?
View a video from The Guardian's website, taken at C Words opening weekend.
Link here FFI on C Words events, courses, talks and workshops
The C Words 16 page newspaper contains articles, essays and full C Words listings - pick up a copy from Arnolfini or download a pdf version here
www.platformlondon.org
gilles conan / tandem avec julio le parc

de prime abord, c’est un traitement plastique de la lumière qui caractérise les œuvres de gilles conan. carrousel 154 est par exemple composé de lampes infrarouges disposées en cercle au mur et s’allumant en fonction d’une programmation semi aléatoire – cet aléatoire renvoyant aussi bien à la rythmique des vers luisants qu’à la philosophie zen, à john cage ou aux procédés de l’art minimal et conceptuel. ce motif giratoire, que gilles conan reproduira dans une autre œuvre visible début 2010 sur la façade de l’espace edf bazacle à toulouse[1], rappelle certains indicateurs d’activité des outils informatiques et du web, généralement qualifiés de spinning wheel. cette rotation de spinning wheel, comme celle d’un carrousel, décontextualisée de ses applications habituelles et introduite dans le champ de l’art, se voit conférer une valeur symbolique qui peut notamment renvoyer à l’idée de cycle, de croissance et de décroissance. elle introduit par ailleurs un rythme dans l’espace d’exposition, rythme lumineux qui est susceptible de se faire vibration, en fonction de ses interactions avec la lumière naturelle ( variable selon les moments de la journée ) et avec les éléments architecturaux de l’espace croix-baragnon. en effet, l’œuvre devrait être placée prêt d’un escalier en colimaçon à barreaux métalliques, tant en référence au carrousel que dans un jeu d’interférences optiques, l’ombre de l’escalier pouvant se projeter dans l’espace sous l’effet du flux lumineux émis par les ampoules. pour parvenir à ce résultat plastique, gilles conan a dû choisir d’utiliser des lampes à incandescence, seules à même de produire les effets escomptés. ces lampes seront bientôt interdites en raison de leur mauvais rendement énergétique.
c’est pourquoi la consommation engendrée par les œuvres exposées à l’espace croix-baragnon y sera contrebalancée par l’extinction des radiateurs – permise grâce à la chaleur produite par les lampes – ainsi que par la surcompensation énergétique de l’œuvre qui sera conçue pour l’espace edf bazacle. au demeurant, les lampes à incandescence sont bien moins polluantes à la fabrication et au recyclage que les lampes à basse consommation, car elles ne contiennent pas de métaux lourds. si l’on prend en compte l’écobilan ( production-utilisation-recyclage ) de ce diptyque toulousain, on s’aperçoit alors que la maîtrise des enjeux écologiques est intégrée à la conception des œuvres de gilles conan, mais tout en évitant les raccourcis du green washing ambiant.
cette conscience environnementale, que l’artiste considère comme une conduite pragmatique face au réel, ne releverait toutefois que de la sphère technique ou de l’engagement civique si elle n’avait pas des conséquences esthétiques qui en font un élément à part entière de sa démarche artistique. ainsi le choix des matériaux – selon les cas : leds, lampes à incandescence,etc. – aussi bien que les procédés de compensation énergétique ont-ils des effets concrets sur notre perception de l’environnement dans lequel les œuvres se donnent à voir. en effet, l’usage d’un certain type de lumière plutôt qu’un autre, ou encore l’extinction d’éclairages en contrepartie de l’énergie consommée par les œuvres (cf. rollin ‘ ), sont autant de choix qui influent physiquement sur notre appréhension du monde alentour.
celle-ci est donc conditionnée par la technique, elle-même conditionnée par des choix politiques ou économiques comme en atteste entre autres la disparition prochaine des lampes et de la qualité de lumière ici utilisées par gilles conan. c’est aussi cela que son travail rend évident.
[1] rollin’ ( what goes up must come down )
jérôme dupeyrat / octobre 2009
espace croix-baragnon / 24 rue croix-baragnon / toulouse
du 29 octobre au 5 décembre 2009 du mardi au samedi de 12h à 19h
ouverture exceptionnelle de 13h30 à 20h30 / le 3,10,13,17,18,19,20,24 et 27 novembre ainsi que le1er, 3 et 4 décembre
