Archive for May, 2009

Future Visions In Architecture, Saturday May 23

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Futurist Visions in Architecture for Shanghai
featuring Shanghai Expo2010 Dutch Pavilion designer and artist John Körmeling; visual artist Alicia Framis; artist-architect collective Speedism; and architect Koon Wee.

Host: Arthub Asia
Date: Saturday, May 23, 2009
Time: 2:00pm - 4:00pm
Location: Bund 18; 4F, 18 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu, near Nanjing Lu.

A session on architecture, speed, motion, and urgency. We will get together to discuss dynamic ideas for a new kind of an architecture for the city of Shanghai. Playful, provocative, lively.
Please join us!

About Futurist Visions in Architecture for Shanghai

Performa continues the celebration of the centenary of the publication of The Futurist Manifesto, this time with a session on architecture, speed, and motion, in collaboration with Bund 18 Creative Art Center in Shanghai. (Worth noting: The Futurist Manifesto was published in Shanghai in 1921, and had an enormous influence on the designers and artists of the period.)

To explore “Futurist Visions in Architecture for Shanghai,” Shanghai Expo Dutch Pavilion designer, architect and artist John Körmeling will join together with visual artist Alicia Framis, artist-architect collective Speedism, and architect Koon Wee to discuss dynamic ideas for a new kind of architecture for the city. With a keen eye on the present and future state of architecture in Shanghai, their discussion will both review the conceptual underpinnings that inform their respective practices
and tackle such questions as: What issues in architecture today relate to social change and cultural activism? How to imagine a city that values visionary architecture over commercial real estate? How to bring about more playful and provocative strategies that explode our notion of architectural practice and the limits of reality? Can architects work more with contemporary artists to galvanize public interaction? Neville Mars of Dynamic City Foundation will moderate the panel.

This study session is a dynamic continuation of the research on Futurism’s influence in China that was begun in March09 with the discussion Graphic Design and Typography in China as part of the Shanghai International Festival, where panelists Lynn Pan, Ou Ning, and Pan Jian Feng elaborated on the challenge of capturing ideas for visual record and provided an overview of 100 years of design history in China, and continued with “Inner Noise from New Asia,” an evening of noise music that used the Futurist manifesto, The Art of Noises, as a historical reference point and featured new work by contemporary performers from different parts of Asia (Otomo Yoshihide, Sachiko M, FEN and Shanghais Asthma Writers Union, and MTDM).

BIOS:
Alicia Framis (born 1967 in Barcelona, Spain. Lives and works in Shangai) is currently working on the democratization of the moon as part of her ongoing exploration of new ways of living together, after previous projects such as Guantanamo Museum or New Buildings for China (2008). Framis has exhibited her work in international venues such as the MOCA Museum, Shanghai, Mass MOCA, North Adams, the MUSAC, León, or the Palais de Tokyo, Paris. She was part of Utopia Station, curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist in 2004 and of the 2003 Venice Biennial.

Architect, engineer, visual artist and freethinker John Körmeling (b. 1951) is the designer of the Dutch pavilion, Happy Street, at the World Expo Shanghai 2010. His designs contain ironic observations of our often uniform tastes and habits, combining almost cartoon-like forms with such trivial items as fairground lighting and advertising. Körmeling’s recent projects include ‘Hot Spring’ a 25 meter high map in the Japanese town Matsunoyama that visitors could climb at the Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennal in Japan; ‘Drive-In Wheel’, a giant Ferris wheel for cars on which drivers can briefly escape the traffic jam.

Speedism is the duo Julian Friedauer and Pieterjan Ginckels. They work in the field of architecture, architectural theory, visual arts, visual theory, urban tactics, imagineering, visual arts and scriptwriting. Currently in residence at CrystalCG as visual artists and architects, Speedism develops visual universes, theoretical landscapes, denkraume, narratives and scenarios, blurring the line between their imagined cities and possible Chinese real-life counterparts.

Along with his two partners, Koon Wee runs sciSKEW Collaborative, an art, architecture and design firm with offices in New York, Shanghai, and Singapore. Using their theoretical research as a platform, sciSKEW’s recent work in China focuses on the rapidly expanding high-end lifestyle market. Evolving out of a need to reconcile the triangulated geographies, the initial disparity between the three cities became raw material that feeds the work. sciSKEW seeks to create architecture that can bridge, critique and translate between systems and societies. Their work ranges from art and media installations, residential and commercial developments, to master-planning and consulting.
for public engagement and inspiration.

Moderator:

Neville Mars is architect and chairman of the Dynamic City Foundation, an international urban research and development platform specialized in rapidly changing environments, in an effort to combat what he calls “the present dream and the future nightmare” of people-packed mega-cities in China. He is the author of “The Chinese Dream - a society under construction” (010 Publishers, Rotterdam ‘08).

The session is organized by Performa Curator Defne Ayas.

Special Thanks to Dynamic City Foundation, Arthub Asia, CrystalCG, Maximin Berko, PK Design.

PERFORMA09 (November 1-22, 2009), the third biennial of new visual art performance, will take the 100th anniversary of the publication of F.T. Marinetti’s “Futurist Manifesto” in 1909 as its point of departure. The biennial will look back to the radical propositions of the Futurists a century ago, and forward to a vision for the twenty-first century as imagined by today’s artists. Using the Futurist template of manifestos-for-the-future in all disciplines, PERFORMA09 will explore exciting new ideas in visual art, film, noise, music, sound, poetry, graphic design, dance, architecture and urbanism. The city of New York itself will be featured as an evolving ignition of ideas and limitless dimensions, its streets, walls, transportation and airwaves providing a platform for public engagement and inspiration.

Creative Community: It’s Not About Place, it’s About People

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Please join us for an evening of stimulating dialogue as part of an ongoing series by, 3S ReUnion (7th edition)

Time: 19:30~21:30, May 15, 2009

Speakers: Dr. Michael Keane, Queensland Univ., Australia

Panels: Jutta Friedrichs and Pia Johanson from [the studio] / Markus Fuhrmann, Bloggerinsight/ Chen Xu, Xindanwei

Organized by Liu Yan and Aaajiao of 3S Media Center
In collaboration with [the studio]

The primary language of this event is English. Although it is free of charge, we do require you to register via email or SNS sites to reserve a seat. We can be reached at the following emails: aaajiao@gmail.com, liuyan.datong@gmail.com

For more information, please visit: http://www.we-need-money-not-art.com/ and http://www.thestudio.cn/ just contact us directly。

About 3S Media Center:
3S Media Center is an interdisciplinary center for art, media technology and academic research based in Shanghai。An independent not-for-profit organization for experimentation, research and development in art, social and cultural, economical and political embedding of new media in the urban context.

About Dr. Michael Keane:
Senior Research Fellow of Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation, and Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.

Dr Michael Keane’s research interests include creative industries internationalisation and innovation in China; audio-visual industry policy and development in China, South Korea, and Taiwan; and television formats in Asia. He is the author of Created in China: the Great New Leap Forward (2007), a study of China’s creative economy, and how television, animation, advertising, design, publishing and digital games are reshaping traditional understanding of culture. His most recent co-authored book (with Anthony Fung and Albert Moran) is New Television, Globalization and the East Asian Cultural Imagination (2007), a major study of the evolving landscape of television in China, Hong Kong SAR, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan

His article about Chinese Creative Cluster published last December in Urban China can be read at http://orgnets.net/urban_china/keane

About Pia Johanson:

Pia Johanson is an artist, arts advocate, and community organizer. She believes that life is art. Her educational background is predominantly in Community Development and Cultural Sustainability with a breadth in Curatorial Practice and Visual and Critical Studies. As an independent curator working in Denver, Colorado, she co-directed the Assembly, an arts complex and creative collective supporting emerging contemporary artists. The Assembly addressed the misconception of artists as insular creators by providing all of their represented artists studio space contiguous to the exhibition spaces, encouraging collaboration, and engaging the greater community in a challenging dialogue about the role of artist originated creative culture in sustainability, urban vibrancy and gentrification.

About Markus Fuhrmann:

Co-founder of web2Asia and BloggerInsight. BloggerInsight is the portfolio company of Web2Asia. It conducts online focus groups with expert Chinese bloggers to provide clients the necessary information to make smart decisions. The network of bloggers spans a variety of industries and has been hand picked to represent some of the top, independent thinkers in their respective fields. BloggerInsight gives bloggers a new method for monetizing their knowledge while providing clients a cost effective way to get tailored, independent advice.

Address: the Studio, 796B Julu Road ( near Fumin Road) rear entrance with the red door via lane 786, Jing’an District, Shanghai