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Sunday, February 05, 2006

{art} Crusading – A Multi-disciplinary Network

Crusading – A Multi-disciplinary Network
2006-02-03 until 2006-05-01
BildMuseet
Umeå, , SE Sweden

The ”Crusading” project is a network involving a multi-faceted series of events and activities: Exhibitions, seminars, on-line discussions, workshops and publications. These are aimed at the historical crusades, at understanding how the Middle East and the borders of Europe became the place for struggles over power and control, and at contemporary conflicts and political culture across the globe, influenced or illuminated by the concept of the crusades.

” The Crusades” was the common name for a series of military actions, initiated and executed by European forces from many nations, aimed at establishing and expanding the hegemony of the West over the known world and the supremacy of Christianity as a system of power and rule.

The First Crusade was launched in 1095 by Pope Urban II with the goal of gaining control of Jerusalem and ousting the Muslims. In July 1099, Jerusalem was conquered, establishing the Kingdom of Jerusalem as the first Crusader state. The Crusades were an important ground on which the modern Europe was erected. As such, the imaginary and ideology of the historical crusades has followed us to the present.

From a contemporary perspective, the word ”crusade” has both literal and metaphorical use. Outside of the real consequences of the historical crusades, traced to the present, or the way their ideology lives as an imaginary force in contemporary consciousness, the concept is also metaphorically employed by, for example, anyone who follows a passionate path for or against something - "crusading for children's rights", "crusading against evil". In such contemporary rhetoric we might claim that the cross, initially employed by the historical crusaders, is seen more as a banner.

In addition, the ”Crusading” project is concerned with issues of mapping and representing, how we – including the deconstruction of we - deal with Others and to which extent the gaze of Others also outlines our own identity and establishes our belonging.

As a project, ”Crusading” forges a network of international institutions and individuals, committed to explore and work with these topics.

Initiated by Swedish-Uruguayan writer and social anthropologist Ana Valdez and museum director Jan-Erik Lundström, the project is organized and administered by Bildmuseet, a museum of contemporary art and visual culture at Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.

Crusading is supported by Stiftelsen framtidens kultur.

Exhibition: Susan Meiselas/Cecilia Parsberg The two photographic projects by photographer Susan Meiselas and Swedish artist/activist Cecilia Parsberg both explore conflicts of power in a historical perspective.

Susan Meiselas ”Re-Framing History” presents the responses and reactions by Nicaraguans when in 2005 being confronted with Meiselas photographs – presented as billboards on the exact sites where they originally were photographed – of the Nicaraguan revolution in 1978 and 1979.

Cecilia Parsberg’s works maps the Palestinian refugee camp Jenin. She photographed its destruction in 2002, through the invasion of the Israeli army. Through several re-visits, she has followed its reconstruction up to the present. Her film ”A Heart from Jenin” tells the story of the heart, donated from a young Palestinian boy, shot to death by Israeli soldiers, to a young Israeli girl, whose life it saves. The exhibition opens at Bildmuseet in February 2006. In September, 2006, it will be presented at Fotografins Hus, Stockholm.

{art} Call for Artists: Art of Photography Show 2006

Call for Artists: Art of Photography Show 2006
2006-02-03 until 2006-02-10
Lyceum Theatre
San Diego, CA, USA United States of America

The Art of Photography Show 2006 is an international exhibition of photographic art which will take place April 20 - June 4, 2006 at the elegant two-floor gallery within the Lyceum Theatre, located in the historic Gaslamp Quarter of downtown San Diego. Arthur Ollman, the Director of the Museum Of Photographic Arts, is the Judge for this exhibition. $3,000 in Cash Awards will be given out. And there will be a very nice Show Catalog, in which each artist in the show can have info about themselves and their photography business.

The Prospectus and entry details are available here.

Also, were executing a massive marketing and publicity strategy in order to achieve substantial media attention and sales results for the Shows participants. Images created via any form of photography will be accepted for consideration (i.e. shot on film, shot digital, unaltered shots, alternative process, mixed media, digital manipulations, montages, etc.), so long as part of the image is photographically created. A four minute QuickTime clip of the 2004 exhibit can be viewed here. For more information please contact the Curator, Steven Churchill: steven@artofphotographyshow.com or (858) 793-0900


ris Orfescu: NANOART

"Cris Orfescu: NANOART"
2006-02-03 until 2006-02-28
Infusion Gallery
Los Angeles, CA, USA United States of America

Cris Orfescu will show his NANOART work at Infusion, Los Angeles Gallery Row's largest private art gallery with over 8,000 square-feet of exhibition space. NANOART is a new art form where micro/nano-sculptures created by artists/scientists through chemical/physical processes and/or natural micro/nano-structures are visualized with powerful research tools like Scanning Electron Microscope and Atomic Force Microscope.

Since there is no light involved in the creation of the images of these structures/sculptures, Nanoart is different than Photography where the images are created by the particles of light, called photons. Nanoart images are created by different kinds of particles. For example, in Scanning Electron Microscope, the images are created by electrons (electrically charged particles) which penetrate dipper in the structure generating images with more depth, more natural 3D than the photographic images. Artist/scientist Cris Orfescu is taking further steps, mixing the realistic images of the micro/nano-structures with abstract colors, digitally painting the monochromatic electron scans and printing them with archival inks on canvas or fine art paper (giclee prints). This way, the scientific images become artworks and could be showcased for a large audience to educate the public with creative images that are appealing and acceptable.