Showing posts with label Patronage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patronage. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2011

The art opening experience made over as art


Grant Stevens has been commissioned by Sydney's MCA to make a video work for the museum foyer to sit alongside the piece by Imants Tillers' featuring the names of the MCA's patrons. For between $1,000 and $20,000, a new generation of patrons can see their names in the video with its audio component echoing the conversations that might be heard at an opening.

Stevens says he is less interested in the politics of patronage than in drawing out the sometimes uncomfortable conversations between people in personal and social settings. "The starting point for the work is thinking about the experience of attending openings, specifically MCA openings, and my personal associations with the Imants Tillers painting in the foyer," he says. "Hovering above the crowds...the work has a slightly intimidating presence for me. It is a reminder that art's history is intrinsically linked with people and money."
Image: Grants Stevens, Crushing (2009), video still

Friday, September 23, 2011

Recipient of the Arts Foundation's Award for Patronage announced



The Chartwell Trust is the recipient of the Arts Foundation's 2011 Award for Patronage. The Arts Foundation provides $20,000 to the recipient to distribute to arts projects of their choice. As with previous awardees, the Chartwell Trust is donating $20,000 so that four $10,000 awards can be made to artists and/or arts organisations at the award ceremony on 11 October.

To date the award has gone to: Gus and Irene Fisher (2010), Adrienne, Lady Stewart (2009), Gillian and Roderick Deane (2008), Dame Jenny Gibbs (2007) and Denis and Verna Adams (2005).
Image: Clinton Watkins, Feedback (2011), video stills from a free art download project presented by Chartwell and Starkwhite at the 2011 Auckland Art Fair

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Promised Gift at the Auckland Art Gallery


When the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki opens again on 3 September 2011, visitors will have an eight-week opportunity to see for the first time the complete Robertson Promised Gift to the Gallery. The 15 works represent a number of major European artists of the modern era, including paintings by Matisse, Picasso and Dali.
Image: new gallery spaces at the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki