portrait of GIORGIO DE CHIRICO
René Magritte: The Pleasure Principle
René Magritte (1898–1967) is one of the most revered and popular artists of the 20th century. This summer, Tate Liverpool presents René Magritte: The Pleasure Principle, the biggest exhibition of the Belgian surrealist’s work in England for twenty years. www.tate.org.uk
AMIE DICKE: Infinitely Suffering Thing
Dissolving floors of memory, 2007
Artist Amie Dicke, from Rotterdam, transforms magazine pictures into intriguing works of art and so much more. On view now at the Venice Bienalle see close to 27 gallons of foundation get dumped and sprayed over an environ specially constructed by the artist.
Detail Destruction of Memory, Infinitely Suffering Thing, 2008
Violent Contradiction, 2008
Effacement, 2008
Infallible, Close-Up
"One hundred liters of foundation (make-up) is going to be sprayed automatically by spray-guns that hang above an interior I have set up in the middle of the industrial environment of the former AkzoNobel factory. This room mirrors my private memories. Most of the objects which I have (re-)used would normally be thrown away, but some stuff just tends to stay, because you keep carrying them with you either mentally or physically. In a way they have become physical reminders of our inability to let go of life. The many layers of foundation will cover up the original colors or patterns of the objects and eventually the whole room will be in one tone, concealed under a thick layer of foundation, like a strange make-up. The interior will be changed into a skin colored "flesh", like a radical makeover that will turn the dead objects into a self-portrait."
www.amiedicke.com
Overpainting in Twentieth Century Press Photography
Before the invention of photoshop in 1991, it was commonplace for press agencies and the photographic departments of newspapers and magazines to enhance, crop and embellish their press photographs prior to publication. An upcoming exhibition, entitled Overworked: Overpainting in Twentieth Century Press Photography, at Flash Projects UK explores the ways in which photographs were worked-over in paint, gouache, watercolour and pencil prior to their publication, challenging the veracity of the image.




www.flash-projects.co.uk
Style: Bardot

Alexander Rodchenko: Revolution in Photography
Fotomuseum Winterthur presents Alexander Rodchenko: Revolution in Photography, on view from May 28th until 14 August 2011. www.fotomuseum.ch
Adarsha and Clark at Coney Island
Photo by Jordan Bree Long
Aoi Kotsuhiroi's Exotic Regrets...Chapter III
Aoi Kotsuhiroi has just turned the page to a new chapter of her new collection entitled Scar of Memories and Naked Solitude.

Read Pas Un Autre's interview with Aoi Kotsuhiroi here.
Dieter Rams: As Little Design as Possible
A comprehensive monograph on highly influential product designer Dieter Rams. As head of design at Braun from 1961 to 1995, Rams created some of the most iconic objects of the twentieth century. www.phaidon.co.uk
Burning Camera: Fernell Franco's Prostitutes
Fernell Franco worked as reporter and advertising agent. Throughout his career his professional duties crisscrossed constantly with brilliant results. The series Prostitutes is the starting point of an exhibition that encompasses his analysis of urban life as well as his experimental take on temporal processes. On view until July 4 as part of Photo España 2011 at the Bellas Artes De Madrid. www.bellasartesdemadrid.com
Givenchy
2011 Fall/Winter Accessory collection. www.givenchy.com
No Encores....New Photography by Carlos Nunez
If You Want To Reach Me
Gwilym Gold is a DJ and musician based in the UK. Gold has a new single, "Flesh Freeze", out now on a bespoke self remixing platform developed by Gold called Bronze. www.gwilymgold.com
MP3: Bullion : "If You Want To Reach Me (Gwilym Gold Remix)"
[audio:http://www.solidgoldrags.com/music/Bullion_-_If_You_Want_To_Reach_Me_Gwilym_Gold_RMX.mp3|titles=Bullion - Gwilym Gold Remix]
Henry Wessel: Vintage Photographs
Since the 1960s, Wessel has photographed vernacular scenes of the American West, particularly in California. Immediately drawn to the quality of light he encountered during a visit from New York to Los Angeles, Wessel moved cross-country to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1971. From stretches of dusty highway to modest California bungalows framed by telephone poles and palm trees, Wessel's often spare and solitary images capture the idiosyncrasies and irony of American life with a wry objectivity. His photographs of parking lots, beach-goers, and shrubbery -- all illuminated by the brilliance of Western light -- find beauty and intrigue in the commonplace and document the social landscape in a manner that is casual yet formally compelling. Pace/MacGill Gallery is presents Henry Wessel: Vintage Photographs, on view April 21 through July 8, 2011. The exhibition marks Wessel’s first show at the gallery and features over 30 vintage gelatin silver prints made between 1968 and 1987. www.pacemacgill.com
In Praise of Leonora Carrington
"I didn't have time to be anyone's muse... I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist."-Leonora Carrington, April 6, 1917 – May 25, 2011
[PHILOSOPHY] Contextualizations of a Genius
To honor the 60th anniversary of the death of Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein the Shwules Museum (Gay Museum) in Berlin is holding a special exhibition. Wittgenstein was a giant in 20th century philosophy–the exhibition explores his jewish identity, his coming to grips with his family and the suicides of his three brothers, and his unique dialectics. Ludwig Wittgenstein: Contextualizations of a Genius is on view until June 13. www.ludwig-wittgenstein.com
Life in Photographs
O2.tif
Phillips de Pury & Company is announces Life in Photographs a "selling exhibition" of 26 photographs by Linda McCartney. The exhibition, a selection of highlights from an archive of 200,000 will showcase the work of a exceptionally talented photographer, capturing spontaneous and moving moments of her life. The exhibition is curated in close collaboration with Paul McCartney and the McCartney family. On view from June 7 to June 16 in London. www.phillipsdepury.com
FLUXUS and the Essential Questions of Life
Ben Vautier, Let's Fuck
It could be said that John Lennon and Yoko Ono's "bed-in" for peace movement was the ultimate expression of Fluxus performance art. Yoko One is of course one of the most famous of the Fluxus artists. John Lennon actually met Yoko at a Fluxus performance and fell in love that very night. The Fluxists are sort of like modern Dadaists. Fluxus and the Essential Questions of Life, a major traveling exhibition based on the Hood Museum of Art’s George Maciunas Memorial Collection of Fluxus art, is "designed for visitors to experience the radical and influential cultural development that was Fluxus, and maybe learn something about themselves along the way." Fluxus was an international network of artists, composers, and designers that emerged as an art (or ―anti-art‖) phenomenon in the early 1960s and was noted for blurring the boundaries between art and life. The Hood’s exhibition runs from April 16 through August 7, 2011. www.hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu
Man Ray and Lee Miller, Partners in Surrealism
From 1929 to 1932, Man Ray and Lee Miller -- two giants of the European Surrealism movement -- lived together in Paris, first as teacher and student, and later as lovers. Their mercurial relationship resulted in some of the most powerful work of each artist's career, and helped shape the course of modern art. Combining rare vintage photographs, paintings, sculpture and drawings, a new exhibition at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts, tells the story of the artists' brief but intense association and reveals the nature of their creative partnership. On view from June 11 to December 4, 2011. www.pem.org
Yves Saint Laurent Resort 2012 Collection

