Cluj-Napoca is, yet
again, amazing. During the whole month of December, the city is filled with
light artworks. With the help of “Lights on Romania”, we will be enjoying these
neon or plastic applications all through the center of the city, in very
various places. “Lights on Romania” is a private initiative meant to bring
light artworks into the public space. Some of the most well known parts of this
project are the light bulbs web hanging in the whole Museum Square that truly
capture the Christmas vibe, The Endless Light column at Samsara Foodhouse which
is a beautiful recourse to Brancusi’s art and work, the installation on the
Elisabeth bridge that says “I miss you”, that is appreciated even by the most
rageful drivers that stop, stare and smile at it, and the moon inside the
Piarist Church which is the ultimate uplifting experience for the individual
and the soul. So, forget about the cold wind and go be mesmerized about these
unique creations that will make you really happy, warm and fuzzy on the inside.
The posts on this blog are conceived by the students of The History and Theory of Art programme of The University of Art and Design in Cluj-Napoca, Transylvania, as outcomes of the "Writing about Art" circle.
Dec 9, 2018
Five easy pieces, by Madalina Matei, Ist year ITA
There’s a small exhibition in town, hosted by White
Cuib gallery, also a small blank space right in the heart of Cluj-Napoca. The
exhibition is called “Five easy pieces”, which is also the name of a movie from
the 70’s. The name of the movie comes from the piano exercises that the main
character does in his childhood. There a huge gap between what the pianist in
the movie could have become and what he does in the present. The artist decided
to take a step back from the art space, a few years ago, but that’s the only
resemblance between him and the pianist. His name is Cristi Pogăcean and he studied sculpture at the Art and Design
University in Cluj-Napoca. There are five art pieces in the exhibition, as you
might have guessed. They’re apparently simple objects but they stick with you
because of their contemporary aesthetics and the fact that they are
recognizable symbols at an universal level. I
recommend you go see them for yourself, from 6 to 9 pm, until the 28th
of November.
Beauty. Performance in a painting, by Andreea Bruma, Ist year ITA
choreography and concept: Ruxandra Enache
sound and light design: Cătălin Filip
producer: Simina Corlat
“Beauty. Performance in a painting” is a contemporary dance show in which the sole protagonist, Ruxandra Enache, paints a very vivid story about what it means to be a woman in the contemporary consumerist society. She manages to do that by using the graceful movements of her body, and a little bit of acting. As expected, the main theme of this show is the woman, and her struggles as she is trying to reach the unattainable beauty standards. We can say that by doing so, she is entrusting her self-worth to the people around her, drawing happiness from the compliments regarding her looks. The human female learns, at least intuitively, from an early age that the prettier she is the more she is socially accepted.
The show is full of metaphors and hidden messages, as it presents various hypostases in which today’s woman seeks, within herself and the people she encounters along her way, trust, confirmation and love. It exemplifies the exciting and long-lasting, profoundly feminine rituals of beauty.
This performance addresses a very important issue: accepting yourself as you are, flaws and all. Everyone should treasure themselves for who they are and not give their appearance too much thought, because, after all, your heart should be the most beautiful thing about yourself.
Cultural event co-funded by the National Cultural Fund Administration, carried out with the support of the City Hall and the Local Council Cluj-Napoca.
sound and light design: Cătălin Filip
producer: Simina Corlat
“Beauty. Performance in a painting” is a contemporary dance show in which the sole protagonist, Ruxandra Enache, paints a very vivid story about what it means to be a woman in the contemporary consumerist society. She manages to do that by using the graceful movements of her body, and a little bit of acting. As expected, the main theme of this show is the woman, and her struggles as she is trying to reach the unattainable beauty standards. We can say that by doing so, she is entrusting her self-worth to the people around her, drawing happiness from the compliments regarding her looks. The human female learns, at least intuitively, from an early age that the prettier she is the more she is socially accepted.
The show is full of metaphors and hidden messages, as it presents various hypostases in which today’s woman seeks, within herself and the people she encounters along her way, trust, confirmation and love. It exemplifies the exciting and long-lasting, profoundly feminine rituals of beauty.
This performance addresses a very important issue: accepting yourself as you are, flaws and all. Everyone should treasure themselves for who they are and not give their appearance too much thought, because, after all, your heart should be the most beautiful thing about yourself.
Cultural event co-funded by the National Cultural Fund Administration, carried out with the support of the City Hall and the Local Council Cluj-Napoca.
Nov 20, 2018
Sticlografii (Glass-o-Graphs) by Alexandra Mureşan by Roberta Nagy,ITA,1st year
Alexandra Mureşan is a visual artist and a PhD student at the University of Art and Design in Cluj-Napoca where she
studied Ceramics. Her creations have been on display in a lot of exhibitions all over the country but also abroad.
This exhibition of mesmerizing glass art was
organized at the cultural café Espresso Studio (at street Baba Novac 27), the
café of International Festival of Contemporary Ceramics. The opening was on 25
October at 7 pm, but the exhibition can be visited until December 1st
every day, during the café’s program.
Intermediate between us and the world, glass objects have become quite scarce today and the artist Alexandra Mureşan breaks this absence by melting her glass into visible tangible ideas and objects which embellish
our everyday life. Unfortunately, the dual nature of glass– both its beauty
and fragility – makes it vulnerable to breakage. If you own or collect glass art
sculpture you may find yourself in need of glass restoration or repair.
There are more techniques used for glass
making such as glass blowing which uses a combination of sand and soda lime,
along with colouring agents, to produce a raw material, which will be melted
together to form molten glass. Another technique is hot sculpting which is used after a solid metal rod gathers the molten glass from the furnace; the glass is then shaped with special tools. The hot sculpting process tends to make
much larger solid pieces of glass art. Alexandra Muresan joins the select group of European and American masters of this art.
Nov 19, 2018
News from Bianca Vitcu ITA-2018 SOTTOBOSCO
I would like to introduce you to a special exhibit, meant to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the great master Ioan Sbarciu, that happens as we speak in our city. It is called SOTTOBOSCO. Already sounds mystical, doesn’t it? At least to me it does.
This project actually sums up three exhibitions, each of them using as a title an expression connected to the forest. The master Ioan Sbâciu, the iIalian painter Enzo Cucchi, and their special guest Markus Lüpertz, worked together at one of the parts named “The murmur of the forest and of the wind”, which is actually my favorite, and have created some absolutely wonderful, huge paintings in dark tones and hues, with a frenetic mix of colors, amazing dynamics of rhythm, introducing you to the enchanting world of the bosco.
This project actually sums up three exhibitions, each of them using as a title an expression connected to the forest. The master Ioan Sbâciu, the iIalian painter Enzo Cucchi, and their special guest Markus Lüpertz, worked together at one of the parts named “The murmur of the forest and of the wind”, which is actually my favorite, and have created some absolutely wonderful, huge paintings in dark tones and hues, with a frenetic mix of colors, amazing dynamics of rhythm, introducing you to the enchanting world of the bosco.
The other two exhibitions represent the work of two different generations of artists, one set of them born in the 70-80's,the other one in the late 80's, mid 90's. Some of the works have the same theme as the main exhibit, the forest, other works having a different topic, from childhood memories to adult ones.
I truly recommend it to anyone seeking a deeper fountain to hydrate our dry, urbanized environment of our minds.In the dinosaurs' world stars are green by Ingrid Dan, ITA, Ist year
On the 7th of October the opening of Tincuța Marin’s exhibition “In the dinosaurs' world stars are green” took place at Atelier Patru, and it stayed open until the 16th of October. The young artist showed a few pieces of her work, both paintings and drawings, that her depict her personal creative style.
Her work explores the limit between reality and the realm of the absurd, by reinterpreting parts of the real world in the artist’s own perspective. This way, she created the dream-like atmosphere of a magical world filled with atypical, deformed characters. Through her pieces, the artist creates a metamorphosis of reality and beauty into a distorted area of fantasy full of grotesque elements. She introduces to the viewer a new creative way of perceiving the real world, and encourages creating an individual reality through exploration of the concrete facts and forms.
Nov 6, 2018
"DEAR" – PAUL MUREȘAN, by Alina Grozav, Ist year ITA
This exhibition signed by the Romanian artist Paul Mureșan (29 years old) opened its gates to the public on October 13th and took place in the Forum House, Alba Iulia. The whole exhibition is dedicated to forced relationships, quarrels and loneliness felt in a relationship. In this project the artist made a sincere confession through his artworks, in an attempt to explore his most hidden thoughts, to know and understand his own feelings.A small collection of artworks made up of 23 paintings, brought to the public by MozaiQ, tell a love story, a story that the author shared in the simplest words because "There is no need for big words to express deep feelings." They show the life and dynamics of a gay couple and the fear of sharing your life with a wrong person.
Paul Muresan is a young animator, director and illustrator with a solid and diverse artistic experience. His short films have been selected and awarded at festivals around the world such as Annecy, ITF Stuttgart, Cannes and Anim'est. Paul is the author of several personal exhibitions not only in Romania but in Europe too, and is known especially for the animated shorts "Nap" (2014) and "Mom, Dad, I Need to Tell You Something" (2016).
ZAIN 2018, by Alexandra Chartin, ITA, 1st year
This year, ZAIN, a Cluj based design festival, opens its doors to the public from 19 to 28 October. Celebrating its 4th year on the Cluj art scene, 40 events are set to take place all over the city, from different art areas such as design and fashion, but also dance and theatre.
Over 100 exhibits of Romanian artists are to be shown in the 800- metre exposition space built in the central square. This year, ZAIN granted 2500€ in scholarships for young artists, whose art can be seen Saturday, October 20, in the central square. The program is available on the festival's official page.
Oct 26, 2018
Ludomir Franczak's Atlas of Sounds by Laura-Gabriela Carpov-Hriṭac, 1st year ITA
On the 11th of October 2018 the Paintbrush Factory presented Atlas of
Sounds, a multimedia performance by Ludomir Franczak, a Polish visual artist based
in Lublin . It
was a Memory as a Vision project, organised by the Cluj Cultural Centre.
The audio recordings employed by the artist came from his personal
collection. He used a camera to record the movement of various objects. While
this collage was being presented on a projective screen, a montage of
photographs and text was projected on a canvas on the other side of the stage.
Sound is the common element of the ever-changing story collection. Varying
the speed of the narrative every time, each story uses different methods to
take us to a private world with weird memorabilia and impossible archives.
The performance was followed by a workshop of the Polish artist on the
12th of October. The participants had to create signs for the following show,
Walden, which took place on October 13th.
Oct 22, 2018
Romania in 100 Faces Collaborative Mural Painting by Carolina Beu, 1st year ITA
A
new mural painting was unveiled earlier this month on the walls of the
“Onisifor Ghibu” high school in Cluj. Non-profit organisations Launloc and
BLANĂ submitted the project for city funding on the occasion of the Romanian
centennial, with the aim of reminding us about 100 people that made a change in
their fields of expertise, from arts to science, literature, politics and
medicine.
The
concept is signed by urban artists Kero Zen and Ocu, already known for other
projects around town, and a hundred people helped them complete this
collaborative mural. The unveiling was done through a show of video-mapping
that animated the painting, accompanied by live experimental music, performed
by “Cercul Întreg”.
Regarding
the work of art, organisers transmitted that “The shape of Romania is more than
one of a fish, Romania’s shape is outlined by the people that inspire us, that
left beautiful things behind”.
“Romania
in 100 faces” can be visited anytime at the high school situated in Grigorescu
neighbourhood, on Alexandru Vlahuță street 12-14.
May 29, 2018
"YOLO" - Anca Andreea Cobzaru, by Daniela Sand
Anca Andreea Cobzaru is studying graphics (she is in her third
year of university) at University of Arts and Design Cluj-Napoca. Her
exhibition, "YOLO", was part of the Expo Maraton Cluj 2018,
a competition for exhibition projects which takes place each May of the year.
The exhibition was held at Galeria Casa Matei on May 10th.
The subject of the exhibition focuses on
the unjustified hedonism of these days and the artist’s works present real
aspects of the society. Central to these works is the phrase yolo
(you only live once) which is so overused nowadays in so many contexts
and is every time related to positive and very joyful things. It seems that the
young generations are often mistakenly using the phrase, they tend to give it
wrong meanings, so the real meaning of
the concept is therefore misunderstood. They tend to send messages with no
essence because they don’t always assume the things they do and the absence of
justification lead to a partially assumed state of hedonism.
On the walls of Casa Matei the works
stand out pretty clearly and from the first glance they don’t look like
anything that is related to the phrase yolo
that you see or hear elsewhere - and that’s because the artist is mocking
this popular phrase and uses not so positive depictions of it. Every work is centered
around a single figure - for example one of
them represents a person, who seems very bored, staying on a sofa with a
remote control in her hand - and another one depicts a man sleeping in his
bed. We know nothing more about the characters from these appearances; we
can only assume things about them. The irony is emphasized when the artist
mentions the definition of yolo from
the urbandictionary.com - "carpe diem"
for stupid people. Carpe diem is also
written on the work with the person sleeping. To my surprise, the exhibition is
pretty rich in color and the background music that the artist chose to
accompany the works creates a distinct atmosphere, especially in combination
with the space at Casa Matei.
I encourage readers to go visit Anca’s
works of art - if you didn’t see "YOLO", the exhibition will be probably reopened on another occasion. She will also participate in another exhibition in
Bucharest on May 19th at Manasia Hub.
May 22, 2018
Rubens: The Power of Transformation, by Vlad Joldis
It's
amazing how big of a difference it makes seeing a painting in real life
compared to seeing it on your desktop, even if it's on a very high resolution.
The stiffness of our desktop steals from the
magic of art and it serves as an appetizer
at best, preparing us for the "face to face" confrontation
with a given artist or image.
That's the conclusion that I came to when I
visited the Städel Museum in Frankfurt am Main earlier this year, and that's
how I related to the title of the exhibition, "The Power of
Transformation":
The sheer
force of a painting when seeing it in a controlled environment; the way it can transform your perception of
it and tattoo a mark of genius on your
retina.
The
Städel Museum in Frankfurt hosted an exhibition showcasing the work of Peter
PaulRubens, arguably the most influential painter of the Flemish Baroque era.
The exhibition started on 8 February 2018 and ended in 21 May 2018, and I was
lucky enough to be in the city during this interval and visit it.
The air was getting thicker as I was getting
closer to the location, and I felt so small in front of the Museum, an imposing
building that breathes the history of beauty
through its every pore.
The Städel was honoured as “Museum of the Year
2012” by the German art critics association AICA in 2012. In the same year the
museum recorded the highest attendance figures in its history, of 447,395
visitors.
Entering the building I was impressed by the
tidiness of it and the modern atmosphere it created. It might not seem like
that big of a deal but it was my first visit to an international museum, that
looked the way a 21st century museum should look like.
I visited the permanent collection which is a
chronological order through art history hosting huge names and works across
centuries . This first encounter which, mind you, lasted for more than six hours
got my eye more than calibrated for the cherry on top, the aforementioned
Rubens exhibition.
The entirety of the museum was bright and well
lit, creating a sort of neutral atmosphere in which every work of art could
express itself in its own space, but when i entered the Rubens exhibition the
light became dim and intimate.
The space was a bit constricted, with small
rooms, allowing the huge paintings to tower over the man and swallow your whole
being into them.
The light bonded with the paintings' palette
making them seem like an organic whole, and making the oil on them literally
glow. This picture was completed by the blue
and dark green walls that contrasted with Rubens' warm colors.
That space at that time felt like a limbo, like a
self-governed heaven where the paintings tell you all you need to know and give
you all that you need, as long as you don't break eye contact.
The exhibition consisted of roughly 100 items, 31
paintings and 23 drawings by the master. Those were completed by contemporaries
and precursors such as Titian, Tintoretto or Rembrandt to complete Rubens' dialogue with his era in
his 50 years of production.
Among
paintings and drawings, there were sculptures and prints. Some of the paintings
exhibited here were: Prometheus, a collaboration with Frans Snyders, 1612-1618;
The Entombment, c. 1612; The Head of Medusa, 1617/18; Crown of Thorns (Ecce
homo), c. 1612; Death of Hippolytus, 1611-1613 and Self-Portrait, 1638. The works I mentioned are based on my
personal taste, and not named in a specific order.
I must have completed anywhere from three to five
laps around the exhibition trying to grasp my mind on every detail, and not
necessarily because I felt an aesthetic need to do so, but because I felt the
presence of Rubens' genius, and when you get to encounter it, it forms a black
hole in which you let yourself desintegrated with a smile on your face.
May 21, 2018
Vlad Nanca, In the natural landscape the human is an intruder, by Tania Turcan
The Modern
and the individual. What is the connection between these two? The response of
the inquiry is offered by Vlad Nanca in his exhibition "In the natural landscape the human is
an intruder" at Galeria Sabot, Centrul de
Interes, in Cluj-Napoca, between 30.03-12.05.2018.
The first thing the visitor
interacts with is the separation, the essential element of the exhibition. A
large wall in the middle of the exhibition space, on which 13 welded designs
are installed, makes you question: Me versus what? In the first half of the
exhibition, Vlad Nanca intervenes with the figures that result from enlarging de-humanized
micro-silhouettes as architectural sketches to a 1:1 scale.
This
initial narrative tries to offer an insight in the contemporary understanding
of a being, a creature immune to all the economic mash-up, but at the same
time, with large inquiries regarding the verticality of the modern structure.
The signs of the wall represent themselves another separation, as Vlad Nanca
puts it "the separation of modernism from functionalism'', signaling the
problematic of our obsession with the new. The signs look almost like a new
coded/extraterrestrial language of the modernism, an accumulation of disparate
forms and meanings that triggers the need to find out, what is on the other
side? Continuing his journey, the visitor interacts with the plant holders on
the other side of the wall, some of the artist's beloved elements used in other
exhibiting contexts, as well.
The
aesthetics become more striking, the narrative more significant. The modern is
present even in outer space, a thought especially suggested by the "The
sculpture of to-day" and "Colonisation of space". The human urge
to change everything depending on its needs and understandings can bring more
unwanted and unconscious consequences, accelerating the Anthropocene.
The
manner in which Vlad Nanca tries to send this message is quite subtle but is
more suggestive in the "Gaze into the Abyss".
Worth of our
consideration are also the empty spaces.
As one might think, there is a rather playful connection between the
lack of the interior of the de-humanized silhouettes and the obscure void of
the outer space. On the other hand, the three columns composing a grid are of a
main interest, apropos the verticality of the modern structure. We can see how the problematic is more
palpable in the second half of the exhibition, urging us to meditate more upon
the "invasion" of the natural space.
The
exhibition offers a rather insightful and updated picture of the reality. It is
also a good opportunity to see how an author such as Vlad Nanca handles the
notion of the modern sculpture and the exhibiting space in creating
connections. In the midst of the created atmosphere and the generated context,
the visitor has to give the last proposition.
Gaze into the Abyss
In the Natural Landscape the Human is an Intruder (Vlad Nancă) by Adriana Bicazan
Landscape,
space, silence, human, rationality...these are a few keywords that you could
use to describe artist Vlad Nancă’s exhibition at the SABOT art gallery in Cluj-Napoca,
Romania. The exhibition – which was on display between March 30th and
May 12th - took the public by surprise with its diversity as it
included installations of photography, mosaics, as well as sculptures.
Vlad
Nancă studied photography and video at the University of Arts in Bucharest,
which deeply influenced him. His documenting of the urban environment
symbolises this influence, with him using the many forms of art that I have
previously mentioned.
The
exhibition explores some of the less conspicuous aspects of Modernism in the 20th
century. In one half of the gallery, the artist is presenting an imaginary
world, populated with installations in the shape of long figures made out of welded
iron, painted black. The aesthetics of this exhibition is clearly showing a
preference towards minimalism, with the figures and signs having a very
contemporary feeling. When you first enter into the room, full of his art, you can
feel the aspects of pop culture, primitive art, and mythology which Nancă is
succeeding at portraying all at the same time. The symbols hung on the wall
facing the entrance have a very mystical feeling, yet at the same time are
reminiscent of the current generation due to geometrical signs becoming a very popular
trend in the past years - they are used as patterns for clothes, tattoos and in
other design projects.
In
the second part of the gallery, the feeling of modernist aesthetic is even
stronger, despite it not being clear at a first glance. The aspects of the
present-day are, at first, shrouded as you become distracted by the intriguing,
colourful mosaics with geometrical or spatial motifs. This modernist sensation
is being deeply accentuated by a wall full of plants, strategically placed as
if they were a part of a design show. Rationalistic and artificial sounds
conquer the silence of the exhibition. In this space, you truly feel like a
disturber of the peace - an intruder in the natural world.
One
of the best of Nancă’s installations is the constantly rotating anthropoid
forms. This is due to the fact that these humans, which are barely humanoid,
give you the strong feeling that they are lost in this landscape. They seem to
be directly communicating with the geometrical signs from the wall, giving you
the strong feeling that they are familiar, yet they are still mystical. Another
section that sparked my attention was the golden and silver Murano mosaic
plastered on medium-density fibreboard named “Colonisation of the space”. This
is because it is a hypnotic piece, representing a ship-like form ready to set
sail into very mystical, almost divine space.
Vlad
Nancă is an artist who created the proper setting and mood with his artworks,
hence convincing the public to really feel like an intruder in the gallery
space. Each piece of artwork was able to communicate his ideas and was very
well executed in the manner of a truly contemporary artist, being able to
gather together so many different art forms in one exhibition. The young artist
is definitely on the right track, being able to be so versatile and flexible in
his artworks.
Inaltari 2017, by Anesia Dican
Aren’t we all bored
with the same galleries that our city has to offer? Or with the same
exhibitions?
No worries, Jeydee gallery is here in Cluj and being at the
beginning of a journey, save the date on 27 December at 6 pm to be amazed by an
exhibition called "Inaltari".
The artists that will open the night will be Mirela
Traistaru, Ioan Augustin Pop, Dan Istrate and Maxim Dumitras. They are all
great painters, sculptors who graduated from the former Art Academy “Ion Andreescu” (today University of Art and Design) of Cluj Napoca . They are well known in Romania and also abroad having in
their repertoire numerous solo and group exhibitions. All of them have won
important awards during their career.
Mirela is well known not only for her paintings but also for her works in the field of costume design and interior
design. She's a very complex artist,
through her paintings you can escape from your day by day life and you can jump
right into a world full of fantasies.
Ioan Augustin Pop is a more dramatic painter, he gives you
the feeling of stability and force.
Dan Istrate thinks
that through his sculptures you can entirely manifest as a human being.
Maxim Dumitras likes to combine the past with the present,
the traditions with contemporaneity. His vital source of inspiration is
nature, the human soul, and divinity.
All in all,
all the works have a huge impact on the audience and they complete each other.
The main painting of the exhibition captures all of
the attention. The artwork that belongs to Mirela is composed of 5 large
panels. the main colors that she uses are black and blue, and in the center of
the painting, you can see that she painted colorful abstract flowers. This work
takes you on an exotic journey, perhaps a place like Eden.
The works of Dan Istrate are worth watching too. All of them
are made from marble and are quite imposing. Most of them are black and white,
the texture is smooth; all his works transports you to an unknown place and is
quite a feeling when you stand in front of them.
The exhibition “Inaltari” is impressive, not only
because is a unique opportunity to meet the artists but also you can get inside
of their mind through their exceptional artworks.
May 15, 2018
Step-Sebastian Danciu, by Teodora Raducan, II ITA
How’s Cluj art life
helping the young generation of artists? - a question often asked.
Sebastian Danciu is a young artist
from Hunedoara. He is in his second year of university- studying graphics at
University of Arts and Design Cluj-Napoca. His exhibition Step from 25 april 2018 was held in Atelier Patru, a small place on
Bulevardul Eroilor. The subject was a social study on the
relationship between artist-concept, artwork-performer and art product-viewer. Moreover, it integrates a documentation on the aesthetics of
hazard, the random, the synthetic and the organic. It presents an alternative
way to capture reality, the raw matter, before the light hits it and our brains
interpret the visual information. In addition, it tackles the matter of
printmaking, which ultimately is more than a way of multiplying an image. His
method was the following one: he used a plastic foil that he permeated with
ink, which acts as a buffer between the contact surface (paper) and the
deformed object (floor, tiles, parquet, etc.), the ink, therefore, is transferred to the paper; the remaining
traces are a sum of the interactions between man and the environment, reactions
that are going to be selected and archived by the artist.
The first impact over the onlookers
is not overwhelming. On four walls, that give you a claustrophobic sensation
and also builds a barrier between yourself and the outside, are nailed like
eight works of art, eight pieces of paper marked with different patterns and
colours. I consider that they become dependent on
the entire concept, in order for them to make sense and become art.
Contemporary art is no longer defined strictly formally, given the appearance
of the readymade, there intervenes another criterion – the embodied meaning –
that becomes mandatory for its understanding.
For this part, I appreciate the
correlation that Sebastian made between nonverbal communication, a
collective more or less close to him, group which becomes an auxiliary character
in his personal development and his creations, and graffiti, one of his main
sources of inspiration. The urban character and the close relationship with its
support questions an aesthetics at the limit between art and vandalism.
The most important work is the one
with his own footprints, a self-portrait. The experiment took place in his working
studio, where he was the only one that passed through there, so as we looked,
there was just one kind of pattern imprinted on the paper.
The rest of
the works are situated around the city (Cluj-Napoca) where random people are
becoming part of the show and
everything becomes an erratic spectacle where actors are not aware of their
role.
Personally, I
was a bit disappointed with the place, only a room space for so many art works,
there was so little space to breathe between them, also it sent me the idea of anabandoned
place; the four white and shabby walls
from Atelier Patru are to be blamed.
I would
really like to affirm that Sebastian has a promising future in this art area,
he is a discursive artist and his work is relevant.
Helga Paris: Photography, by Sara Pleșa Popescu, ITA, II
An exhibition of the German artist Helga Paris, one of the most
famous contemporary photographers, opened at the Art Museum of Cluj-Napoca on
Thursday, April 19. The exhibition is
organized by the German Cultural Center in partnership with the Art Museum of
Cluj-Napoca and realized by the German Institute for International Relations
and it will last until May 12. At the
official opening were present Franziska Schmidt, cultural manager, art
historian, art critic and expert in photography, Ingo Tegge, director of the
German Cultural Center, prof. univ. dr. Lucian Nastasa-Kovács, director of the
Museum of Art Cluj-Napoca and dr. Dan Breaz, the commissioner of the exhibition
at the Art Museum of Cluj-Napoca. The opening was followed by an open public
debate on the theme of "The portrait of the daily life", between
Franziska Schmidt, Ingo Tegge and Cluj photographer Andrei Niculescu.
Helga Paris was born a year before the
outbreak of the Second World War, in 1938, in Pomerania. She studied fashion
design in East Berlin, and in the year of 1964,
she made her debut in photography. From 1996, she became a member of the
Academy of Arts in Berlin. After the fall of the Berlin wall, the photographer
embarked on an in-depth analysis of her own early wartime and postwar
experiences. Groups of works on this theme are also on show.
Helga Paris refers to her photos as
members of the family – while the people from those photos have forgotten her
long ago and the times are already gone, she carries with herself each photo
and each face from within. Each photograph functions as an anchor of the psyche
in the human origin of the self. The empirical knowledge, the artist’s empathy
and her interaction with the people behind the photos shape the compositions,
but never as much as to impair their authenticity. But besides all that, what
exactly makes Helga's art so special?
The works exposed evoke the memory of
the precarious times, far from the sign of good luck and a good living,
outlining the artist’s routing from the industrial town Halle, Georgia, Polonia
to Transylvania of the 80's. She captured unguarded aspects of everyday life,
beyond their poeticization or suppression of historical truth: "Houses and girls", "Children with masks", "The Bulgarian dancers" - are
just some of the topics covered by the artist in the 133 photos in black and
white presented at the exhibition. The middle social classes, with scenes of apartments
and dance halls, as well as the social underclass, with sanitation workers and
homeless people, the childhood and the uncensored youth, the maturity and its
related illnesses – all of these can be found in the artist’s works exposed at
the Bánffy Palace. People seen on the streets appear to realize only partially
the photographic moment: as they often gaze directly into the frame, at the
same time, they are absent, looking somewhere far away. There were, of course,
moments in which the closeness with those people has not been easy, as she
sometimes uses to mention. Negative reactions were most often encountered among
the beggars and the proletarian class, coming in response to the discontent of
their poverty and suffering in which they were often forced to live, but this
has not stopped the artist in her attempt to overcome together with them the
barriers of some preconceived ideas.
The exhibition is dramatic, of an
overflowing frankness – a truthful anatomy of the human melancholy. The artist’s
naturality emerges through her photos, producing an art reduced to the
deconstruction and the reconstruction of the simplest forms of existence. Her
pictures are not just an experiment in regard to the life of the socialist German and Eastern European countries, but
also a portal between two different times and worlds. In a century where the
aspirations poured one after another and the repercussions of the political and
social conflicts, wars and poverty were felt at every step of the way, away
from the promise of the absolute good and the utopia of an ideal world, the artist
dared to show the naked reality. Through her photos, Helga Paris created bits
of perpetual memories and stories, a string of a memory of a memory, expressing
through them the helplessness in front of the temporality of life, succeeding
at the same time to transpose the fears and worries, but also the hopes and
simple joys of the human being, beyond appearances and the circumstances of the
given cold times.
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