Saturday, 22 February 2014

Art Around the Clock

Lately I have been running in to a lot of classical, practically Greek or Roman, sculpture and paintings. These are not original artefacts from centuries past and they are not artworks by Neoclassicist or Renaissance artists, these artworks are created by contemporary arts practitioners. 
Li Hongbo “Goddess of the Parthenon”, paper, 45 x 22 x 25 cm, 2013 (Courtesy Klein Sun Gallery, New York. © Li Hongbo)


Probably the most well known artist working in this way currently is Li Hongbo. It is almost impossible not to have run into his expanding paper art objects. Magical objects that contain the happy and joyous extravagance of the origins of the technique best known from chinese paper-lantern decorations where Hongbo's original inspiration is said to have come from. Currently you can see Hongbo's work at the KleinSun Gallery in New York in his exhibition: Tools of Study, which runs until March 2nd 2014. The sculptures themselves seem very pleasing in the way that having a cool new app on your iPhone is pleasing. 
Klein Sun Gallery
525 West 22nd Street New York
NY 10011
U.S.A.
Phone: (212) 255-4388
Monday through Saturday 10AM – 6PM
Li Hongbo / Tools of Study at Klein Sun Gallery from Colossal on Vimeo.

Another artist that caught my eye this week was Viggo Wallensköld who is currently having a  retrospective exhibition Variations (Variaatioita) at the Hämeenlinna Art Museum 22.2.–4.5.2014. Wallensköld paints figures who are often different, deformed, mutilated or part machine. There is a quality of unabashed loneliness and fragility to his work that is reminiscent of the Romantic Poets of the mid 18th century. 
Hämeenlinna Art Museum
Viipurintie 213200 Hämeenlinna, Finland
p. (03) 621 3017
Tue-Thu 11-18
Fri-Sun 11-17

Mondays closed
Helsingin Sanomat 22.2.2014
I also went to see a couple of exhibitions this week around and about Helsinki. There is some interesting miniature floating worlds for view currently at Gallery Sculptor by Jouna Karsi: 12.2.-2.3.2014. The sculptures are glances from contemporary culture, with scenes that resemble title sequences of movies. 

Vuoristorata, Jouna Karsi
I also saw the Roberto Pugliese exhibition at MUU Gallery The Space Of A Year. This exhibition consisted of a single installation utilising two video screens and an elevated floor, which viewers could use to create their chosen soundtrack. The exhibition was a lot of fun though visually it felt a bit anticlimactic. Still well worth a visit. The exhibition runs until March 2nd 2014.

The Space of a Year, Roberto Pugliese

I also went to Gallery G on a whim and I must say that I was surprised by the works of Kimi Pakarinen. In the past I have not been a fan of his paintings, but in this exhibition called Exploring My Realites, and despite the trite title of the exhibition, the paintings are riveting. They are made with colours that should not work and scribble like a teenagers first tagging of a wall and still they come together harmoniously. They remind me of a midlifecrises, there is anger, experience and some questionable decisions.

Kimi Pakarinen: L'Énigme d'un après-midi, 2013, öljy kankaalle, 160 x 200 cm


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