首页
登录
职称英语
Virtually every day of the year sees another art biennial opening somewhere
Virtually every day of the year sees another art biennial opening somewhere
游客
2024-11-27
19
管理
问题
Virtually every day of the year sees another art biennial opening somewhere in the world. The role of these exhibitions is to showcase contemporary art, attract affluent tourists and stimulate local culture. Most biennials are a sprawling mess and the worst look like commercial art fairs studded with brand-name trophies. However, those that succeed in making sense of some aspect of global culture can be both enlightening and memorable. This year’s Istanbul Biennial is a case in point. Poignant, relevant and intellectually engaging, it has managed to create a coherent exhibition out of works by 130 artists from 41 countries a rare achievement.
The Istanbul Biennial is held in two huge former warehouses on the banks of the Bosporus. Untamed, the buildings would force viewers into a monotonous marathon of spectatorship. But the biennial’s curators, Adriano Pedrosa and Jens Hoffmann, enlisted the help of a master of exhibition design, a Japanese architect called Ryue Nishizawa, who has introduced new energy into the space by creating rooms of different sizes and marking off "exterior" spaces with corrugated-steel walls.
As curators, Mr. Pedrosa and Mr. Hoffmann have also adopted an effective premise. Rather than using a theory or theme as a unifying rubric, the biennial has a muse Felix Gonzalez-Torres, an artist who died in 1996 and who was selected posthumously to be the official American representative at the 2007 Venice Biennale.
Born in Cuba and educated in Puerto Rico, Gonzalez-Torres made minimalist conceptual works that were aesthetically innovative and politically sophisticated. Like its muse, the Istanbul Biennial is thoughtful rather than aggressive or sensationalist. "Activists spoon-feed messages but artists create works with layered meanings," explains Mr. Pedrosa.
The biennial also has an intelligent structure. There are five group shows around the main themes that inspired Gonzalez-Torres’ work love, death, abstraction, contested histories and territories. Each group show occupies a large grey room and acts as a hub for a cluster of solo shows featuring 50 artists, all in smaller white rooms. The elegant solution to the spaces stands in contrast to the names of the group shows, which repeat "Untitled" in an awkward manner. Nevertheless, it is moving to walk through the room called " ’Untitled’(Ross)" named after the artist’s longtime lover, Ross Laycock, who died in 1991 of Aids-related causes, like Gonzalez-Torres himself.
The curators are right not to let themselves be overly distracted by the latest thing: work made yesterday is not always the art that is most relevant to the present. They have chosen to include a range of historical artworks by women who they believe deserve greater recognition. For example, they have installed photo collages from Martha Rosler’s "Bringing the War Home" series, which were made during the Vietnam War between 1967 and 1972, but which still resonate because of America’s continuing presence in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Istanbul Biennial also gives solo shows to a number of exciting emerging artists. Many visitors were impressed with "Cabaret Crusades: The Horror Show File", a video by Wael Shawky, an Egyptian artist, in which marionettes act out the story of the crusades from an Arab point of view. Also much discussed were "Tin Soldiers" by Ala Younis, a Jordanian, and "Historical Record Archive" by Dani Gal, an Israeli artist.
It is interesting to view these works against the background of the recent political upheavals in the Middle East and to see the unexpected interaction between Arab artists and those from South America. Both areas are on the periphery of European modernity and the biennial’s artists have found much common ground over urban decay, disenfranchisement and the arbitrariness of national borders. Mr. Pedrosa and Mr. Hoffmann have played to their strengths, choosing more artists from South America than any other continent. It is a testament to the Turkish philanthropists who underwrite the biennial, particularly the Koc and Eczacibasi families, that the curators came under no pressure to include more local artists. Indeed, the stylish internationalism of the Istanbul Biennial feels entirely natural. [br] The biennial has all the following features EXCEPT
选项
A、ingenious layout.
B、reflective content.
C、special perspective.
D、popular themes.
答案
D
解析
推断题。由题干中的biennial,features定位至第五段。第五段第二句指出“There are five groupshows around the main themes that inspired Gonzolez—Torres’s work--love,death,abstraction,contestedhistories and territories.”,其中并未提及“popular”的主题,所以[D]是该艺术双年展没有的特点,故为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3862731.html
相关试题推荐
Whichofthefollowingitalicizedpartsisaderivationalmorpheme?A、Opening.B、
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
Virtuallyeverydayoftheyearseesanotherartbiennialopeningsomewhere
AnothermilestoneonthejourneytowardsdigitalcashwaspassedonNovember
AnothermilestoneonthejourneytowardsdigitalcashwaspassedonNovember
AnothermilestoneonthejourneytowardsdigitalcashwaspassedonNovember
随机试题
Ifacatcomestooclosetoitsnest,themockingbird______asetofactionsto
[originaltext]Acoupleofmonthsago,Iwenttoadepartmentstoretobuya
ManyofhiscolleagueseventuallyagreedthatEinstein’stheorywastenable.A、te
Whatarethespeakersmainlydiscussing?[br][originaltext]M:Howdoyouandy
《公路工程质量检验评定标准》包含检验标准和( )两部分内容。 A.检查项目
食品检验事关千家万户,根据我国法律的规定,下列关于食品检验的叙述,不正确的是()
注册会计师在执行内部控制审计时,下列有关预防性控制和检查性控制的说法中,正确的是
施工过程中发生如下事件: 事件1:基础工程施工中,遇未探明的地下障碍物。施工
变电所内电缆隧道设置安全孔,下述哪项符合规范规定?()A.安全孔间距不宜大于7
某施工单位承建一港内码头工程,工程内容包括:两个5万吨码头泊位、集装箱堆场和散货
最新回复
(
0
)