At the request of Soil Ensemble, I developed a hand sewn book called Tale of Natural Large Stages and Sound Chips.
The book features a six-page story about monumental shapes a.k.a.
"stages". I am much indebted to bookbinder Caro de Bruin's
enthusiasm and advice. The book is presented this Fall (2011) in
concurrence with Soil shows, see: Soil for shows this Fall.
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Collaboration working on Artist Book 'G. and Me'
My quest to establish a connection with the artist G. and all the thoughts that surround him, is coming to an artist book titled G.and Me. Showing a collection of texts, staged photographs and drawings. A special edition of this book is shown @ the GIAB fair in Glasgow in 2012, called 'Getting ready for the Universe'. The staged photographs for this book have been made with the generous help of: Bram Lamers, Hans Keller and Peter Cleutjens.
Publication: Article in Public Art and Ecology by D.D. Lombardi featuring my work
"Repurposing with a Passion", by D. Dominick Lombardi in: Public Art and Ecology, due December 2011.
Excerpt of the article featuring my work:
The process of repurposing materials has immeasurable benefits. There are instinctive, economic, esthetic, philosophical, and even political reasons to recycle, and visual artists are a very big part of this process. In an attempt to bring together compelling examples of this trend, D. Dominick Lombardi asked a number of artists from various parts of the world to answer four questions with the hopes of clarifying this ever-increasing phenomenon of repurposing with a purpose.
[...]
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Isa Tenhaeff has her studio in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Her art plays the physical world against the psychological. Her compositions and installations conjure up all sorts of emotions and feelings that can be anywhere from political to playful, or mysterious to menacing. There is a frailty to her wok as well, a vulnerability that is quite compelling, and at times, puzzling.
Ms. Tenhaeff: For my art I collect used objects ranging from broken toys, precious clothing and building ornaments from the trash to fine art prints and my own academy drawings and paintings.
I look for “gem-quality” in the materials I collect: these things are often broken or worn-out but there is a spark - a classic sense of power or beauty that I can use. Also my objects have to bring up a lot of different (personal, public, historical) references.
I work from historical images and from a notion of historical continuum in which patterns, compositions, notions of proportion, etc. are repeated. As a sociologist I am trained at looking at people, seeing patterns in our behavior and in the material outcomes of this behavior. In rough lines images and structures are repeated over and over, though details may vary. I look for these kind of patterns in ‘old’ art and architecture and find absurd similarities to our world today. Similar to the idea of golden ratio, I search for the best ways to bring out these immaterial references through ordering materials.
History, meaning and beauty are not about power, status and priceless materials, but about ordering or arranging architecturally, finding the right “engine” for an installation and seeing.
About D. Domick Lombardi: click
About D. Domick Lombardi: click
Show: Maybe YES<>Maybe NO
Installations based on early Renaissance images, intuitively attached to today's patterns and occurences. When: First three Sundays of July / joined event on the first Sunday with sound performances and installations by Valentina Vuksic and Jan-Kees van Kampen in their [adjacent] studios. Where: my studio in the Bijlmer / Contact: isa[at]isatenhaeff[dot]eu
"I'm too Wild to tell you"
Photograph, Polaroid Original
Nuit Blanche Festival @ De Brakke Grond
On 18th of June two of my installations can be seen @ Nuit Blanche in De Brakke Grond from 19:00 - 04:00. More info click here
Part of BunkDonna, installed in one of the red rooms @ the theatre balcony of the Brakke Grond (2011)
Plaster, mdf, ceramics, cloth and photoprint
Dimensions ca. 300x300x200 cm
"The Legs are the Best part of a Man"
Tempera on Wood, pencil and tape on paper
180x70x150 cm
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