Bi-annual Dutch/Flemish Prize for Young Art Criticism 2020

The bi-annual Dutch/Flemish Prize for Young Art Criticism (Prijs voor de Jonge Kunstkritiek) for art critics under 35, was awarded in December 2020 in Amsterdam. AICA Netherlands actively supports the Prize by translating the text of one of the laureates, artist Claire van der Mee (1992), into English, in order to give it a wider resonance.

This essay was originally written in Dutch. The text refers to a ‘broedplaats’ which literally translates into ‘incubator’ or ‘breeding ground’, however this translation does not grasp the full meaning of the Dutch term, broedplaats. A broedplaats: (plural form in Dutch is ‘broedplaatsen’) is a collectively shared building for artists and entrepreneurs in the cultural and creative field and in the year 2000 policy for developing and creating such spaces was brought into place. This policy was formed in response to the rapidly declining (squatted) free-spaces throughout the city in order to preserve space for creative experimentation. In contrast to autonomous free-spaces, however, a broedplaats is a city appointed building often including a number of subsidized studios.

 

The Artificial Community, by Claire van der Mee

'The sign placed in front of Broedplaats Lely by the municipality reads: “Now, we are building new houses and facilities here and redesigning the public space. Later, this will be a lively residential and working area. For more information visit: Am…

'The sign placed in front of Broedplaats Lely by the municipality reads: “Now, we are building new houses and facilities here and redesigning the public space. Later, this will be a lively residential and working area. For more information visit: Amsterdam.nl/Lelylaan”'
Photograph by the author.

Right before the ‘intelligent lockdown’ was broadcast on national news, as a result of the Covid19 pandemic, I handed in my thesis about the artist community in which I reside. The fact that this announcement took place just after handing in my thesis was not only ironic because that what previously withheld me from having any social contact (completing my thesis) had now been replaced by a mandatory lockdown- but it was also ironic because the coronavirus put a lot of what I had been criticizing in my thesis, in a different perspective. I was arguing that the artist community in ‘Broedplaats Lely’ in Amsterdam was an artificial community and I posed the question if this could rightfully be called a community at all.

Changes that coincide with crises often cause instability. Recently that led to the closing down of many organizations in precarious positions. This was also the case for organizations located in Broedplaats Lely. At the same time, major changes can also uncover opportunities in, what previously seemed, to be an impenetrable system. I had just concluded my research on the artist community in Broedplaats Lely - a study critiquing the false pretenses under which these communities are established and the rigid frameworks in which the artist is expected to maneuver. The consequences of the pandemic, however, underlined the value of a community; displaying how communities operate and why now, more than ever, it is crucial to save space for the formation of sustainable and lasting communities.

 

Feelings of togetherness are important to us. This was made clear by recent advertisements assuring us that we were all forced into isolation in order to help each other, we were all isolating together. In the supermarkets songs on the radio were interrupted by emotional requests laden with sentimental, cinematic music; requesting us to keep distance and to do so together. Companies have of course been using people’s desire to feel connected as promotional means for years and the interest of community is, currently, being applied more frequently as a reason to establish social projects.

            As a person in my late twenties with an income quite below average, I would often stumble upon such community projects throughout my search for housing. In Amsterdam it’s difficult to find affordable housing but there are arrangements where, for example, you can receive rent reduction in exchange for community service. Perhaps this turn to community is a response to the growing individualism of our society or perhaps it is an answer to our disappearing welfare state, nevertheless, the coronavirus crisis made apparent how many people live in isolation and experience loneliness.

Members of a community take care of and support each other, and communities contribute to people feeling like they are a part of something. Still, when the supermarket is using sentimentality to connect me to my fellow consumer (who is hopefully keeping 1,5-meter distance in the narrow shopping aisles) I likewise wonder what the underlying intention is of housing corporations or organizations when they are promoting the establishment of community projects.

 

Artists being utilized as tools of gentrification has become a well-known phenomenon. To quote Ronald Mauer, member of the Amsterdam city council in 2017, in newspaper Trouw: “First the artists and creatives come; their arrival attracts cafés and other establishments, and this makes the neighborhood attractive to a new kind of inhabitant. That way an entire area receives a boost.”[1] Theorists Jon Coaffee and Stuart Cameron have distinguished current urban regeneration as ‘third wave’ gentrification: in the so-called ‘first wave,’ the artists moved to the periphery in search of larger and affordable studio spaces, in the ‘second wave’ this art and the artist’s surroundings get turned into private commodities and in the ‘third wave’ there is a “more explicit public policy engagement and link to regeneration” taking place with an emphasis on the public consumption of art in order to give specific areas this so-called boost.[2]  

As a professional artist I am of course pleased that the local city council acknowledges the importance of art. This allows opportunities for living and working in the city for artists like myself. The problem with the current system is that it offers little flexibility. The artist may live, work and create within frameworks put into place by institutions like the municipality, housing corporations and broedplaats-managers. An example of this problematic policy is Broedplaats Lely, where I live together with over fifty other artists.

In the year 2017, the selected artists moved into the broedplaats, a former school building located in a quickly developing area in the west of Amsterdam. Part of the application procedure of the broedplaats managers, Urban Resort, consisted of sending in a portfolio and writing a proposal for a public program that would take place in the large auditorium of the old school building. We received a three-year contract and within this timeframe our artistic plans were expected to unfold. As soon as the construction of the surrounding area would subside the artists could make space for ‘a new kind of inhabitant’; in this case middle- and higher-income residents. Even though we were all selected on the basis of our promising proposals, in actuality, very few would be executed. Every now and then the venue was used but mainly by the arts institutions that were also tenants in the building, such as De Appel Arts Centre[3] and the electro-instrumental studio STEIM[4]. For individual artists the threshold somehow turned out to be too high.

 

The Amsterdam broedplaats policy was constructed in the year 2000; within the quickly developing city the initiators of the policy noticed that spaces for creative experimentation were rapidly disappearing. This policy came into place to preserve space for the low earning ‘free spirited’ inhabitants so that they too could hold a space in the gentrifying city of Amsterdam. However, this format received a lot of criticism. The bureaucracy behind the policy made it too complicated for artists to establish their own broedplaats. In response to this, the broedplaats management organization, Urban Resort, was formed[5]. Composed of a group of people with origins in the Amsterdam squatting scene but likewise possessing the required bureaucratic knowledge, they could serve as the link between municipal institutions and the artist. In this way, despite the disappearance of free-spaces, (designated spaces reserved for creative experimentation established through squatting) space for experimentation could still be safeguarded.

Yet the most important element of experimenting is perhaps the possibility of failing and in Broedplaats Lely there is little space to fail. For this city’s standards, the rent per square meter in the building is relatively low, but for a majority of tenants the rent amounts to over €600, - per room. To give an impression of what most artists earn; the TOZO (a temporary income support system for self-employed entrepreneurs and freelancers, set up as a result of the pandemic) of €1.050, - was quite a major relief in comparison to their standard income. Even though Broedplaats Lely is an example of relatively affordable housing, there is still little space for the artist to make mistakes. In order to cover these bills, multiple side jobs are often needed and that does not yet include the costs of financing your own art. We were a selected group of individual artists, put together in a building and deemed a community. But there is no room to care for one another when you are struggling to keep your own head above water.

 

Surprisingly, the corona crisis changed this. The implemented restrictions did lead to most of us suddenly being unemployed, but this instability created space for solidarity, bringing us closer together. Broedplaats Lely felt like (excuse the perhaps inappropriate comparison in this case) a cruise ship offering a variety of daily activities. We started organizing our own yoga lessons, hosted movie nights and played games together, we suddenly had time to focus on art and try out new ideas, we spent time gardening and even started a compost pile. A fellow tenant stated what we were all feeling: we could temporarily and free of guilt, take time for ourselves and for our art.

            As an autonomous artist you are always in search of the next project or assignment and this makes it a challenging and diverse profession. Of course, when there is financial shortage then the search for the next project can be stressful. Being self-employed means that the responsibility always falls on you; you can always do more, work harder, search further. But we could not do a thing about the corona crisis. The TOZO benefit, as mentioned earlier, was a relief for many but not everyone was eligible for this. The tenants got into contact with each other, there was talk of a rent strike in solidarity with those who were financially affected the most. Our thoughts on the rent strike and how to proceed differed, but for the first time a collective movement was brought into place.

            A collective email address was formed in name of the tenants, a letter was put together addressing our landlords and a representative from each wing of the building helped in writing it. The meetings suddenly drew a large attendance, in contrast to the previous meetings over the years that had been hosted by the building’s managers. But I do not want to make it sound better than it is – after a couple of months the community started to crumble. Many of us went back to our side jobs, bills needed to be paid and the attendance of our gatherings started to decline. We were back to being a group of individual artists living amongst each other.

 

This essay is not about whether or not the proposed rent strike succeeded. For those who are curious, the answer is not really; there was no lasting strike, but the efforts did lead to a payment plan for those affected most. But this text is about what these circumstances have made clear to us. Never before had I felt so connected to my fellow tenants. During the lockdown there were two aspects that led to collective action: we had a common goal and we had time. Still, this equation lacks stability and space which led to our collective withering away just as quickly as it had been formed.

Members of a community stand up for each other, but what signifies a community is that it creates and defines itself. The tenants of Broedplaats Lely were already deemed a community, but ironically this was only actualized once its members stood up against the organization that had labeled them so. A community is not established through a top-down structure determining the frameworks through which the community can maneuver. Communities are formed through trust and in order to gain trust one needs time, space and support. In temporary living situations, like Broedplaats Lely, the inhabitants hardly get a chance to ground themselves. By the time the artists get to know each other and understand how they can be of use to each other and their surroundings, it will be time for them to leave.

We seem to be caught in a vicious circle. The municipality determines which projects are allowed to happen where and for how long, the broedplaats managers receive temporary space based on their promises to establish beautiful artist communities that will help boost the neighborhood, and the artist participates in this contest, putting into words what is expected of them in order to get through the application procedures that will grant them a space in the evermore competitive city of Amsterdam. To create sustainable connections with the city its inhabitants likewise need sustainable living and working opportunities. If the duration of a space, working conditions and participants are predetermined by an institution, that leaves no space for its members to form their own definitions, have agency or autonomy.

Communities are legitimate answers to the growing individualism of our society and preserving space for experimentation is a fantastic way to keep a city creative and diverse. However, a predefined community is an artificial community and from experimenting without failing, you are left with, at most, mediocre art.


[1] “Eerst komen er kunstenaars en dergelijke. Hun komst trekt horeca en andere voorzieningen. En dat maakt een buurt aantrekkelijk voor een nieuw soort bewoner. Zo kan een hele buurt een boost krijgen.” – Ronald Mauer, D66 bestuurder.

From: Obbink, Hanne. “Broedplaatsen voor kunstenaars laten Amsterdam bruisen.” Trouw (Amsterdam), June 11, 2017.

https://www.trouw.nl/nieuws/broedplaatsen-voor-kunstenaars-laten-amsterdam-bruisen~bed7b427/

[2] Cameron, Stuart, and Jon Coaffee. “Art, Gentrification and Regeneration – from Artist as Pioneer to Public Arts.” International Journal of Housing Policy 5, no. 1 (2005):39-5

[3] https://new.deappel.nl/nl/

[4] Recent budget cuts have led STEIM to terminate their lease at Broedplaats Lely and the future of the organization is unclear: https://steim.org/2020/11/the-future-of-steim/

[5] https://urbanresort.nl/over-urban-resort/

NEWS from AICA PAKISTAN: Karachi Biennale Trust welcomes the Curator of KB22

Karachi Biennale Trust is very pleased to announce Pakistani artist Faisal Anwar as the curator for the Third Karachi Biennale KB22 scheduled to take place in October / November 2022.

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Born and raised in Pakistan, Faisal attended the National College of Arts and later The Habitat New Media Lab at the Canada Film Center. He has garnered acclaim for his hybrid art practice that connects the digital with the physical. Faisal is currently a curator and artist based in Toronto, Canada.

“When the Karachi Biennale trustees approached me and we started conversations and discussions,” says Anwar, “two points really grabbed my interest.

The first was the idea to create public art presence and connect with cities and communities throughout, and the second was their vision to be experimental and explore digital and contemporary mediums. This vision of keeping digital art in focus interests me a lot. For me, it is fascinating to live and work in recent art movements and experience how technology is progressing, especially in the past two decades.”

KBT will soon start its online residences, workshops and educational projects. Stay tuned: http://karachibiennale.org.pk/

Elisabeth ‘Lieba‘ Jappe (1934-2021)

We received the sad news of the death of  Lieba Jappe on 22 January.

We will always remember her as the main organizer of the12th congress and the 29th general assembly of the AICA in Cologne in 1977, dedicated to ‘The Art of the 1970s‘. For the ca. 150 participating members she showed herself a patient, modest, generous and, above all, competent host. But she herself only became an AICA member in 1988, after she had published several articles about contemporary art.  Her main field of interest was performance art, for which she recieved the basis during her studies in art history, theatre, production design and costume design. Born of Dutch parents in France in 1934, as Hermine Cornelia Elisabeth Kluytenaar, she studied first in Paris and later in Amsterdam, where, in 1961,  she married the theatre historian, art critic and later professor for aesthetics and poet, Georg Jappe, whose speciality was optical and acoustic language. It was obvious that she had to create a connection between art and theatre - and there it was: performance art, which became her field as curator, project manager, programmer, translator and writer. She soon gained international recognition for this latest form of artistic expression. From as early as 1975 she succeeded in promoting performance art as a seperate genre at art fairs and theatre festivals, such as in Bremen, Germany, in 1978. This was by no means straightforward in those days, but soon she found a wider audience for her projects. It lead to the establishment, in 1981, of the Moltkerei Werkstatt in Cologne, as an avant-garde centre, mainly for performances and workshops by international artists. It still exists. At first, she ran it herself, as the director, but after a while Christan Merscheid took over from her. In 1994/95 they both published a survey of their activities, which included – after the fall of the Berlin Wall - performances by young artists from Eastern Germany. She and Georg Jappe also organized the travelling exhibition Ressource Kunst, which went to Berlin, Saarbrücken, Munich and Budapest. This ended up in 1989 as a publication with the same title, with the DuMont-Verlag, in Cologne.  Prior to this, she had  taken the decisive step towards introducing a  wider, international public to performance art  through the  section she curated for documenta 8, in Kassel, in 1987. This work, in turn, culminated  in  abook appearing under he own name under the title of Performance Ritual – Prozess, Handbuch der Aktionskunst in Europa (Performance – Ritual – Process: Handbook of Action Art in Europe, Munich, 1993), which has since become a standard work. What would performance art be wthout the tireless work of Lieba Jappe? After Georg Jappe’s death she retired from her professional life and stopped giving lectures. The extensive archive of Georg and Lieba Jappe – only dealing with performance art - was entrusted to the Archive of the Avantgarde, founded by Egidio Marzoni and donated to the  Dresden State Art Collections, Germany,  in 2016.

 

Antje von Graevenitz, Amsterdam.

AICA INTERNATIONAL WEBINAR: Du document au livre, de l'artiste au critique, 11.2.2021, 18h (Paris)

Une Collection de livres critiques dans une série d’autres experiences éditoriale. A Collection of Critical Books in a Series, and Other Editorial Experiences - From the document to the book, from the artist to the editor

avec / with: Jean-Marc Poinsot

en conversation avec / in conversation with: Antje Kramer-Mallory, Henry Meyric-Hughes

Modération / Moderation: Jacques Leenhardt

11.02.2021, 18h - 6 pm (Paris)

Langue / Language: Français / French only

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Lors de cette conversation, Jean-Marc Poinsot, fondateur et directeur des Archives de la Critique d’Art de Rennes depuis 1989, évoquera les publications qu’il a réalisées au sein de l’AICA dans le cadre du programme ‘Art Critics of the World’ et les convictions qui les ont suscitées.

Jean-Marc Poinsot est professeur émérite d’istoire de l’art contemporain à l’université Rennes 2. Il a publié et dirigé des ouvrages et revues dont la revue Critique d’art (1993) . Il a contribué à la Biennale de Paris (1971), au CAPC, musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux, ainsi qu’au Nouveau Musée Villeurbanne (1999). Il a été par la suite à l’initiative de la création d’institutions dédiées à l’art contemporain comme le FRAC Bretagne (1980), les Archives de la critique d’art (1989), il a également mis en place un enseignement spécialisé (Master Métiers de l’exposition, 1984). Membre de l’AICA depuis 1974, il y assure la direction de la collection Art Critics of the world depuis 2012.

En conversation avec Antje Kramer Mallordy (Archives de la Critique, Rennes) et Henry Meyric-Hughes (Honorary President, AICA International)

Modération: Jacques Leenhardt (Honorary President, AICA International)

Veuillez vous inscrire jusqu’ au 8 février par mail: aicainternational.webinar@gmail.com

During this conversation, Jean-Marc Poinsot, founder and director of the Archives de la Critique d'Art de Rennes since 1989, will talk about the publications he produced within the framework of the AICA’s editorial project 'Art Critics of the World', as well as the ideas and choices that gave rise to them.

Jean-Marc Poinsot is professor emeritus of History of Contemporary Art at the University of Rennes 2. He has published and edited books and reviews including the review Critique d'art (1993).  He has contributed to the Paris Biennale (1971), to the CAPC, Museum of Contemporary Art of Bordeaux, as well as to the Institute of Contemporary Art of Villeurbanne (1999). He took part in the initiative of the creation of institutions dedicated to contemporary art such as the FRAC Bretagne (1980) and the Archives de la critique d’art (1989). He also created a Master in Exhibition Metiers (1984).  Member of AICA since 1974, he has been in charge of the Art Critics of the World collection since 2012.

He'll be in conversation with Antje Kramer-Mallordy (Archives de la Critique d'Art, Rennes) and Henry Meyric-Hughes (Honorary President, AICA International)

Moderator: Jacques Leenhardt (Honorary President, AICA International)

Registration until February, 8th at aicainternational.webinar@gmail.com

Tribute to Gertrud Købke Sutton

A dedicated AICA member with an acerbic pen has passed away

Gertrud Købke Sutton (8.7.1921 - 29.12. 2020)

Gertrud Købke Sutton (8.7.1921 - 29.12. 2020)

The art historian and art critic Gertrud Købke Sutton, who would have turned 100 in July, passed away on the night of 29 December 2020.

Gertrud had a classical education and an exquisite and precise use of language, but she was anything but old-fashioned and took a lively interest in everything new, both in art and in the changeable society which surrounded her. She was also a beautiful human being, who believed that one could always retain a youthful spirit if one was constantly in love with the world. She could easily put things in relief.

She did not tolerate pretentiousness, stupidity or superficiality. She believed one had to make an effort in all walks of life. Despite being born only three years after the end of the First World War, Gertrud was free-spirited and liberated throughout her being, and her dry, sharp sense of humour never deserted her.

Gertrud loved nature, which she observed with great empathy. Outside the windows of the apartment in inner Copenhagen, nest boxes hung, and roses grew on the house wall. Since 1962, she spent the summers at her country house near Bovbjerg in West Jutland. Here she experienced the large and small dramas of nature by just looking out of the window.

Gertrud studied art history at the University of Copenhagen in the 1940s. She set out on her first educational journey in 1947, observing the bombed-out cities of Europe from the window of her wretched railway carriage.  In Paris, in February, she stepped out down the Champs-Élysées in freezing temperatures, wrapped up in her in her warm woollen jeans and lambskin coat. The French women, with their bare blue stockinged legs, looked far away from this new, Nordic style icon.

During an art tour she gave in English in 1951 at a museum in Copenhagen, she met the charismatic British art critic Denys Sutton, whom she later married. This led to a number of years alternating between London and Westwood Manor House, near Bath. The English years gave Gertrud her international education. Here she became personally acquainted with many international artists, including Francis Bacon, who was part of the Suttons’ circle. The couple travelled a lot, especially in Italy, and on one of their trips they visited Emil Nolde and his second wife Jolanthe in Seebüll, one winter’s day. When the Suttons were about to move on after dinner, the car was snowed in and they borrowed a shovel from Nolde to dig it free. Back at home in London, they found "Nolde's shovel" in the boot of the car, as a readymade in the best tradition of Marcel Duchamp. Denys Sutton had also been one of the initiators behind the International Association of Art Critics, AICA, which was formed in 1949 under the auspices of UNESCO. This organization came to play an important role in Gertrud Købke Sutton's career, as she chaired the Danish Section and became its sole honorary member, to this day.

After her divorce from Denys Sutton, she returned to Denmark and met her next husband, the mediaeval historian, Tage E. Christiansen. The couple were married in 1961. After working as an art critic at the Danish weekly Weekendavisen from 1978 to 1980, she went on to work as an art critic at the independent daily newspaper Information until 2003. Here she enjoyed a great reputation for her sharp, carefully honed reviews, which were characterized by their thoroughness and deep professional insight.

Gertrud Købke Sutton published a large number of articles for art catalogues, in addition to monographs on the Danish modernist artists Erik Hoppe (1992), Jens Søndergaard (1996) and the modern, Italian still life painter Giorgio Morandi (2002). She also curated exhibitions in art associations and institutions at home and abroad and was one of the initiators behind TICKON - Tranekær International Centre for Art and Nature, on which she published a book in 2012. Art in a natural environment - or Environmental Art - was one of this nature loving art historian’s specialities.

In 2009, Gertrud Købke Sutton received the greatest honour that artists can bestow on an art historian: the N.L. Høyen Medal, in recognition of her significant contribution to art historical research and dissemination.

Gertrud Købke Sutton is survived by her two sons, Caspar and Thøger. All honour to her memory!

In Memorian written by Lisbeth Bonde, longtime friend and colleague, 30 December 2020.

WEBINAR - Discussion autour de « Habiter l'exposition. L'artiste et la scénographie »

Avec: Mathilde Roman, Chantal Pontbriand, Alexandra Baudelot

18 janvier 2021 à 18h

Language: French

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A l'occasion de la sortie du livre de Mathilde Roman Habiter l'exposition. L'artiste et la scénographie, préfacé par Chantal Pontbriand, présidente d'AICA Canada, ce webminaire engagera une discussion en français entre les deux auteurs, dans un dialogue mené par Alexandra Baudelot. La discussion reviendra sur les manières dont les pratiques artistiques contemporaines envisagent de plus en plus l'exposition comme un format dynamique, comme une relation entre des œuvres, des corps et des espaces, comme un milieu habité, vivant, accueillant une diversité de sensibilités. Alors que la scénographie a longtemps été maintenue hors du champ de l'art, elle est aujourd'hui réévaluée et intimement associée à la conception des expositions, à travers des dialogues avec des scénographes mais aussi une intégration de ses codes, de ses outils et de son histoire dans la pratique de l'artiste.

Intervenants :

Mathilde Roman est docteur en arts, critique d'art, trésorière d'AICA International depuis 2016. Elle est professeur au Pavillon Bosio, Art&Scénographie, Monaco depuis 2006, et mène régulièrement des projets d'exposition. Elle a publié fin 2020 Habiter l'exposition. L'artiste et la scénographie aux éditions Manuella.

Chantal Pontbriand est présidente d'AICA Canada, commissaire d’expositions et d’événements, muséologue, et écrivaine. De nombreux événements, festivals, expositions, projets d’édition, revues et autres, et plus de vingt-deux-livres comptent parmi ses réalisations, dont la revue d’art contemporain PARACHUTE et le FIND (Festival international de nouvelle danse). Son travail explore des problématiques de mondialisation et d'hétérogénéité artistique.

Alexandra Baudelot est commissaire d'exposition et critique d'art, et vit à Paris. Elle a fondé en 2009 la plateforme de création contemporaine et centre d'art indépendant ROSASCAPE et co-dirigé les Laboratoires d'Aubervilliers de 2013 à 2019. Elle est l'autrice de nombreux articles sur les arts visuels, la danse et la performance, et a publié plusieurs ouvrages dans le domaine de l'art contemporain.

Plus d’information sur la publication ICI

Veuillez vous inscrire par mail avant le 13 janvier 2021: aicainternational.webinar@gmail.com

ELECTION RESULTS: New International Board 2021 - RESULTADOS DE LAS ELECCIONES: Nueva Junta Internacional 2021 - RÉSULTATS DES ÉLECTIONS: Nouveau Conseil d'administration International 2021

We are happy to congratulate the new elected members of the AICA International Board!

  • Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brazil) has been re-elected as International President for the next term (2021-2023)

  • Firat Arapoglu (AICA Turkey), Malgorzata Kazmierczak (AICA Poland), Anselmo Villata (Open Section) are the three elected International Vice-Presindents (2021-2023)

  • Jean Bundy (AICA USA), Maria Luz Cardenas (AICA Venezuela), Juan Carlos Flores Zuniga (Open Section), Rui Gonçalves-Cepeda (AICA UK), Felicia Margarita Grullon Perera (AICA Dominican Republic), Robert-Jan Muller (AICA Netherlands), Susana Sulic (AICA France), Ramon Tio Bellido (AICA France), Ellen Wagner (AICA Germany), Esra Yildiz (AICA Turkey) are the ten elected International Board Members (2020-2021)

  • Rafael Cardoso (AICA Germany) has been appointed new Chair of the Censorship and Freedom of Expression Committee.

Thanks to everyone who participated in this year elections, and good luck to the new Board: we are looking forward to working together in the next term.

Nos alegramos de felicitar a los nuevos miembros electos de la Junta Internacional de AICA!

  • Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brazil) ha sido reelegida como Presidente Internacional para el próximo período (2021-2023)

  • Firat Arapoglu (AICA Turkey), Malgorzata Kazmierczak (AICA Poland), Anselmo Villata (Open Section) son los tres Vicepresidentes Internacionales elegidos (2021-2023)

  • Jean Bundy (AICA USA), Maria Luz Cardenas (AICA Venezuela), Juan Carlos Flores Zuniga (Open Section), Rui Gonçalves-Cepeda (AICA UK), Felicia Margarita Grullon Perera (AICA Dominican Republic), Robert-Jan Muller (AICA Netherlands), Susana Sulic (AICA France), Ramon Tio Bellido (AICA France), Ellen Wagner (AICA Germany), Esra Yildiz (AICA Turkey) son los diez miembros elegidos de la Junta Internacional (2020-2021)

  • Rafael Cardoso (AICA Germany) ha sido nombrado nuevo presidente del Comité de Censura y Libertad de Expresión.

Gracias a todos los que participaron en las elecciones de este año, y buena suerte a la nueva Junta: nos alegra mucho tener la posibilidad de trabajar juntos en el próximo período.

Nous sommes heureux de féliciter les membres nouvellement élu.e.s du Conseil d'administration international de l'AICA !

  • Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brazil) a été réélue comme Présidente Internationale pour le prochain mandat (2021-2023)

  • Firat Arapoglu (AICA Turkey), Malgorzata Kazmierczak (AICA Poland), Anselmo Villata (Open Section) sont les trois Vice-Présidents internationaux élus (2021-2023)

  • Jean Bundy (AICA USA), Maria Luz Cardenas (AICA Venezuela), Juan Carlos Flores Zuniga (Open Section), Rui Gonçalves-Cepeda (AICA UK), Felicia Margarita Grullon Perera (AICA Dominican Republic), Robert-Jan Muller (AICA Netherlands), Susana Sulic (AICA France), Ramon Tio Bellido (AICA France), Ellen Wagner (AICA Germany), Esra Yildiz (AICA Turkey) sont les dix Membres Internationaux élu.e.s du Conseil d’administration international (2020-2021)

  • Rafael Cardoso (AICA Germany) a été nommé nouveau Président du Comité Censure et Liberté d'expression

Merci à tous et à toutes qui ont participé aux élections de cette année, et bonne chance au nouveau conseil d'administration : nous nous réjouissons de travailler ensemble au cours du prochain mandat.

INTERNATIONAL MEMBERS 2020-2021 : CANDIDATES PRESENTATION

On the General Assembly of December 14th, we will elect ten International Members (2020-2021)

Lors de l'Assemblée générale du 14 décembre, nous élirons dix Membres Internationaux (2020-2021)

En la Asamblea General del 14 de diciembre, elegiremos diez Miembros Internacionales (2020-2021)

The candidates are Les candidat.e.s sont Los candidatos son :

Jean Bundy (AICA USA)

Maria Luz Cardenas (AICA Venezuela)

Rafael Cardoso (AICA Germany)

Juan Carlos Flores Zuniga (Open Section)

Rui Gonçalves Cepeda (AICA UK)

Margarita Grullon Perera (AICA Dominican Republic)

Robert-Jan Muller (AICA Netherlands)

Susana Sulic (AICA France)

Ramon Tio Bellido (AICA France)

Ellen Wagner (AICA Germany)

Esra Yildiz (AICA Turkey)


Their CVs and complete applications’ statements can be found in the MEMBER ACCESS, under ELECTION DOCUMENTS

Leurs CVs et candidatures sont accessible dans la section MEMBER ACCESS, sous la rubrique ELECTION DOCUMENTS

Sus CVs y candidaturas se encuentran en el MEMBER ACCESS, en ELECTION DOCUMENTS

NEW ISSUE - The international review for art criticism #55

Fall/Winter 2020 issue is out now!

Editorial: “The Global Now”: Apotheosis and Decline

Maria Stavrinaki

“Are we in the process of already freeing ourselves from the grip of the “global”? In the Anthropocene age, when human beings are casting themselves, in real time, in the triple role of agents, witnesses and historians of the interactions of climate, living world and geology, the epistemological “too human” category of the “global” is experiencing both its apotheosis and the beginning of its decline, in favour of the “planetary”. To be sure, the two categories are far from being incompatible, and what Anna Tsing has mischievously called “the charisma of the global” is brandishing its effectiveness more than ever in the human sciences, as is illustrated by the recognition this notion is enjoying in western institutions and in one or two extremely interesting publications reported in this issue of Critique d’art. But this “charisma” is qualified, not to say flawed, by new questions which are currently exercising knowledge, discourse and art praxis and, needless to add, the political word […]”

Articles:

A Rhythmic-Cosmic Language: Folk Art as a Global Resource, by Marina Dmitrieva

Habeas Corpus: a Body of Art from the Incarcerated America by Anna Iatsenko

Radio Art, Between Autonomy and Hybridation by David Christoffel

Drawing and Scientific Environments, from Ruskin to Rover by Anne-Lyse Renon

Portraits:

Brook Andrew by Menene Gras Balaguer

Hubert Duprat by Jean-Marc Huitorel

Interview:

Anselm Franke, About Kanon-Fragen by Maria Stavrinaki

Translation:

« Le Dilemme décisionnel », ¡Presente! The Politics of Presence by Diana Taylor, introduced by David Zerbib

Essay:

The Countryside, the Future: Art and Rurality in Times of Crisis by Camille Azaïs, introduced by Elitza Dulguerova and Adeline Blanchard

Revisiting History:

Across the Past and Present of Engaging with Colonial Contexts in the Arts and in Cultural Institutions by Felicity Bodenstein

The Exhibition. Theories and Practices by François Aubart

Considering Duchamp, Again by Marc Décimo

In Real Life – A Reflection on the “Online Exhibition” by Adeena Mey and David Morris

The Exhibition as Hypothesis by Jean-Marc Poinsot

Archives:

Germano Celant: Archive as Practice by Lara Conte

Reviews:

Read more: http://journals.openedition.org/critiquedart

Print journal – 240 pages – Bilingual

16 €

269 reviews on books and catalogues at: journals.openedition.org/critiquedart

Biannual frequency – 38 € the subscription (for Europe) combining the print and the electronic journals.

If you’d like to subscribe or just buy this issue, please simply write to: aca-editions@univ-rennes2.fr

INTERNATIONAL VICE-PRESIDENTS 2020-2023 : CANDIDATES PRESENTATION

On the General Assembly of December 14th, we will elect three International Vice-Presidents (2020-2023)

Lors de l'Assemblée générale du 14 décembre, nous élirons trois Vice-Présidents Internationaux (2020-2023)

En la Asamblea General del 14 de diciembre, elegiremos tres Vicepresidentes Internacionales (2020-2023)

The candidates are Les candidat.e.s sont Los candidatos son :

Carlos Acero Ruiz (AICA Dominican Republic)

Firat Arapoglu (AICA Turkey)

Jean Bundy (AICA USA)

Malgorzata Kazmierczak (AICA Poland)

Susana Sulic (AICA France)

Anselmo Villata (Open Section)

Karen Von Veh (Open Section)


Their CVs and complete applications’ statements in the three AICA official languages can be found in the MEMBER ACCESS, under ELECTION DOCUMENTS

Leurs CVs et candidatures dans les trois langues officielles de l’AICA sont accessible dans la section MEMBER ACCESS, sous la rubrique ELECTION DOCUMENTS

Sus CVs y candidaturas completas en los tres idiomas oficiales de la AICA se encuentran en el MEMBER ACCESS, en ELECTION DOCUMENTS

AICA ONLINE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2020

Artworld, Reflexes and Alternative New World

25 - 27 November

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The first AICA Online International Conference 2020 which will take place on 25 – 26 – 27 November 2020 via the following link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88064815504. 

Organised by AICA Turkey, this international online conference titled “Artworld, Reflexes and Alternative New World” will investigate topics such as Art in the Time of Pandemic, Impact of COVID-19 on Art and Culture, and Global Art World and Its Response to Coronavirus. The language of the Conference is English.

For further information you can visit the conference’s website: www.aicaon2020.com and AICA Turkey’s website: www.aicaturkey.org

Full programme HERE

BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION OF ART CRITICS ABCA - POETIC RESISTANCE

ART, CRITICISM AND HUMAN RIGHTS 25-27 NOV

Registration is now open for the ABCA Journey, which will take place in an online format on the 25th, 26th and 27th of November.

 
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In the 2020 edition, the theme “Poetic resistance: art, criticism and human rights” meets the need to achieve a transdisciplinary look at art, artists, works, as well as the relationship among new geographies in the art system. The event is sponsored by PAEP/CAPES public notice and will be held in partnership with the Federal University of Southern Bahia (UFSB), by the Pro-Rectory of Extension and Culture (Proex) and UFSB’s art courses. The ABCA Journey’s mission is to promote the approximation and exchange between its members and researchers working in the areas of history, art theory and criticism, encouraging interdisciplinary studies and contributing to the sphere of visual arts and to the fields of education, science and culture. In addition to the round tables bound by the Journey’s central theme, there will be an art exhibition of the digital residency “CARA” – Artistic Co-Creations – Resistances and Ancestries, organized by KOKIR collective and the NGO Thydêwá, and which will gather art and indigenous students from UFSB. PDF summaries of texts will also be available on the event website to be published in its proceedings.

The art courses at UFSB favor in their genesis and methodologies the prominence of voices excluded from the history of art, and the effects and issues arising from the construction of subalterization and the rejection of the non-Eurocentric. However, beyond the simplistic rupture of exchanging the colonial for the non-colonial, they mainly propose a continuous and dynamic movement to ensure the multiplicity and heterogeneity of knowledge and practices that inhabit the contemporary scene. The aim of the 2020 Journey is to treat this theme from a plural perspective, which promotes intercross between aesthetic and social expressions, and odds for the understanding of a “sharing of the common good”.

That is, just as the revision of human rights involves the reinvention of its universal character, the construction of a new artistic paradigm should be established from the spaces of subjectivities and their possible insertions in communities and daily life. Based upon the understanding of the bond between human rights and the arts set by everyday social relations, culture and local and autonomous sensibility, the journey’s nature is of a heterogeneous space for listening and dialogue.

Due to the current COVID-19 pandemic issue, the theme addressed in this journey becomes even more relevant since a possible reinvention of artistic practice is envisaged for the near future. Significant social changes are already being reflected in the field of arts. Therefore, this journey, despite the subjective limitations of virtual meetings, aims to contribute significantly to the discussions around art in this uncertain and complex period. It will function as a space for discussions, to foster creation and reflection, and contemporary art dissemination, especially from the perspective of artists, researchers, teachers and students involved in thinking about new epistemologies and centralities in the arts, revealing other ways of existing and practicing artistic knowledge.


In recent years, ABCA has remained steadfast in order to promote national and international journeys aiming to expand the space for debate and research dissemination. In 2015, the “ABCA Journey: Latin American Art” took place in Sao Paulo; in 2016 the “ABCA Journey: Institutions and Critics – Interfaces and Art Reflections”, gathered specialists in Florianópolis. In 2017, the Archive and Memory Journey, at USP. In 2018, the Concrete Art and Constructive Strands Journey, at UFMG. In 2019, the Synthesis of Arts: memory and actuality, at UnB. Other milestones are the publications resulting from these meetings, such as the Research on Balance and Perspectives magazine (2013), published sponsored by CAPES (Council for Higher Education) and the University of Sao Paulo Pro-Rectory of Postgraduate Studies; and the edition of the magazine Concrete Art and Constructive Aspects: Theory, Criticism and History of Artistic Technique.

http://abca.art.br/jornada-abca-2020

WEBINAR - Une nouvelle panoramique de l’histoire de la critique d’art

Discussion avec / with Jesus-Pedro Lorente, Elisabeth Couturier et Paula Barreiro

AICA INTERNATIONAL WEBINAR, 2.12.2020, 6 pm (Paris)

Language: French

 

Is art criticism in crisis? It always has been, according to the title of this book, whose cover design represents art as something mental and interpreted by the critic, working alone.

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Criticism is indeed a solitary practice, although critics are fully part of the artistic system and professional networks. Their field of influence may be local, national or international, depending on the language of work; but these linguistic identities should not be closed reserves. AICA is an association that fosters links between art critics from different cultural contexts, bringing them together in multilingual events or, as in this case, inviting them to exchange in French around a book published in English by a Spanish author.

Based on the recently published book Great Art Critics (1750-2000) Emergence of a Profession in Permanent Crisis, this webinar proposes an exchange between its author Jesus-Pedro Lorente (Professor of Art History at the University of Zaragoza), Elisabeth Couturier (AICA France, President) and Paula Barreiro (Professor of Contemporary Art History at the University of Grenoble-Alpes).

La critique d'art est-elle en crise ? Elle l'a toujours été, selon le titre de ce livre, dont le graphisme de la couverture représente l'art comme une chose mentale et interprété par celui qui critique, travaillant seul(e).

La critique est en effet une pratique solitaire, bien que les critiques fassent pleinement partie du système artistique et des réseaux professionnels. Leur champ d'influence peut être local, national ou international, en fonction de la langue de travail; mais ces identités linguistiques ne doivent pas être des réserves fermées. L'AICA est une association qui favorise les liens entre les critiques d'art de différents contextes culturels, les rassemblant dans des événements multilingues ou, comme dans le cas présent, les invitant à échanger en français autour d'un d'un livre publié en anglais par un auteur espagnol.

A partir du livre récemment publié Great Art Critics (1750-2000) Emergence of a Profession in Permanent Crisis, ce webinare propose un échange entre son auteur Jesus-Pedro Lorente (Professeur d’histoire de l’art à l’Université de Saragosse), Elisabeth Couturier (AICA France, Présidente) et Paula Barreiro (Professeure d’histoire de l’art contemporain à l’Université de Grenoble-Alpes).

 

J. Pedro Lorente est Professeur d'histoire de l'art à l'Université de Saragosse, Vicepresident de l'Association internationale des critiques d'art, membre des conseils d'administration de l'Association espagnole des critiques d'art et de l'Association aragonaise des critiques d'art et directeur du magazine trimestriel de ce dernier (www.aacadigital.com). Son livre principal sur la critique d'art est Grandes críticos de arte (1750-2000). Surgimiento y desarrollo de una profesión en crisis permanente. Gijón, Trea, 2017 (publié en anglais par Mimesis International en 2020). Ses autres publications récentes incluent les livres : Arte público y museos en distritos culturales. Gijón: Trea, 2018 (version anglaise publiée en 2019 par Routledge), et Los museos de arte contemporáneo: noción y desarrollo histórico, Gijón, Trea, 2008 (édité en français par L'Harmattan en 2009, en anglais par Ashgate dans 2011, en turc par l'Université d'Istanbul en 2016).

Elisabeth Couturier est journaliste et critique d'art. Elle écrit régulièrement pour les magazines Art Press, Paris Match, l'Œil et Historia. Elle dirige la collection Le Guide aux éditions Flammarion dont elle a signé trois titres :  L'Art Contemporain, Le Design, et La Photographie Contemporaine. Elle produit des émissions et documentaires artistiques pour France 2, France 3, France 5 et Canal+. Elle a animé sur France Culture l'émission hebdomadaire Les  jeudis de l'exposition. Elle est l'auteure de la collection de films Les petits secrets des grands tableaux( 20 x 26 minutes) diffusée sur ARTE. Elle participe à de nombreux jury et donne régulièrement des conférences sur l'art contemporain. Elle est Présidente de l'AICA France . 

Paula Barreiro est Professeure d’histoire de l’art contemporain à l’Université de Grenoble-Alpes/Laboratoire LARHRA UMR 5190. Depuis 2007, sa carrière professionnelle s’est développée au sein d’institutions européennes telles que l'INHA à Paris, l'Université de Liverpool, l'Université de Genève et des institutions espagnoles telles que le CSIC et l’Université de Barcelone. Elle s’intéresse aux échanges artistiques, à la critique d’art, aux politiques et réseaux culturels en Europe et en Amérique latine pendant la guerre froide, analysant les développements multiples de la modernité dans un contexte déjà globalisé. Ses dernières publications sont Atlantico Frío: Historias transnacionales del arte y la política en los tiempos del telón de acero, 2019 (éditeur unique); Avant-garde Art and Criticism in Francoist Spain, 2017; Modernidad y vanguardia : rutas de intercambio entre España y Latinoamérica, 2015 (édité avec Fabiola Martínez); Crítica(s) de arte : discrepancias e hibridaciones de la Guerra Fría a la globalización, 2014 (avec Julian Díaz); La abstracción geométrica en España, 2009. Elle est membre du Comité Scientifique et Culturel des Archives de la Critique d'Art (Rennes) et du comité éditorial de Critique d'Art.

Please subscribe before November 30th at this address: aicainternational.webinar@gmail.com

Veuillez vous inscrire avant le 30 novembre à cette adresse: aicainternational.webinar@gmail.com

*CALL FOR CANDIDATES * APPEL A CANDIDATURES * CONVOCATORIA*

During our upcoming online Ordinary General Assembly on December 14th we will elect:

  • 3 Vice-Presidents

  • 1 Chair of the Censorship and Freedom of Expression Committee

  • 10 International Board Members.

Chair of Committee applications must include a CV and a letter of intent, and need to be sent to the AICA International office before November 10th (aica.office@gmail.com).

and

International Members applications must include a CV and a letter of intent, and need to be sent to the AICA International office before December 11th (aica.office@gmail.com).

We will communicate Vice-Presidents applications in the coming days.

Find HERE the official Call for Candidates

~~~

Lors de notre prochaine Assemblée Générale qui se tiendra en ligne le lundi 14 décembre 2020,

nous élirons:

  • 3 Vice-Président/e/s

  • 1 Président.e du comité Censure et Liberté d’Expression

  • 10 Membres du Conseil d’Administration international

Les candidatures au poste de Président.e de comité doivent inclure un CV et une lettre d'intention, et doivent être envoyées au bureau international de l'AICA avant le 10 novembre (aica.office@gmail.com).

ainsi que les candidatures aux postes de Membres du Conseil d’Administration International doivent inclure un CV et une lettre d'intention, et doivent être envoyées au bureau international de l'AICA avant le 11 décembre (aica.office@gmail.com).

Nous communiquerons les candidatures des Vice-Président.e.s dans les prochains jours.

Trouvez ICI l’appel à candidature officiel

~~~

Durante nuestra próxima Asamblea General Ordinaria en línea, que tendrá lugar el lunes 14 de diciembre de 2020, elegiremos:

  • 3 Vicepresidentes

  • 1 Presidente del Comité de Censura y Libertad d’expresión

  • 10 miembros de la Junta Internacional

Las solicitudes para el cargo de Presidente del Comité deben incluir un currículum vitae y una carta de intención, y deben enviarse a la oficina de AICA Internacional antes del 10 de novembre (aica.office@gmail.com).

y las solicitudes de los Miembros de la Junta International deben incluir un currículum vitae y una carta de intención, y deben enviarse a la oficina de AICA Internacional antes del 11 de diciembre (aica.office@gmail.com).

Comunicaremos las propuestas de los Vicepresidentes en los próximos días.

Encuentra AQUÍ la convocatoria oficial

AICA INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS - 2nd ROUND

According to the first round results, Danièle Perrier (AICA Germany) and Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brazil) are the two candidates for the second round. The vote will open on November 2nd and close on November 12th.

All AICA paid-up members can vote for the AICA International presidential election! If you haven’t received your EBallot username and log-in password by November 2nd, please contact: aica.office@gmail.com

~~~

Según los resultados de la primera ronda, Danièle Perrier (AICA Alemania) y Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brasil) son las dos candidatas para la segunda ronda. La votación se abrirá el 2 de noviembre y se cerrará el 12 de noviembre.

Todos los miembros de la AICA que hayan pagado pueden votar en las elecciones presidenciales de la AICA Internacional. Si entre el 2 de noviembre no ha recibido su nombre de usuario y contraseña de acceso de EBallot, por favor contacte: aica.office@gmail.com

~~~

Selon les résultats du premier tour, Danièle Perrier (AICA Allemagne) et Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA Brésil) sont les deux candidates pour le second tour. Le vote s'ouvrira le 2 novembre et se terminera le 12 novembre. Tous les membres de l'AICA en règle peuvent voter pour l'élection présidentielle internationale de l'AICA ! Si, entre le 2 novembre, vous n'avez pas reçu votre nom d'utilisateur et votre mot de passe de login pour le vote électronique avec EBallot, veuillez contacter: aica.office@gmail.com

Click HERE for Danièle Perrier CV (in three languages) and presentation videos in French and Spanish

Haga clic AQUÍ para ver el CV de Danièle Perrier (en tres idiomas) y los vídeos de presentación en francés y español

Cliquez ICI pour le CV de Danièle Perrier (en trois langues) et les vidéos de présentation en français et en espagnol

 

Click HERE for Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves CV (in three languages) and presentation videos in French and Spanish

Haga clic AQUÍ para ver el CV de Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (en tres idiomas) y los vídeos de presentación en francés y español

Cliquez ICI pour le CV de Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (en trois langues) et les vidéos de présentation en français et en espagnol

Letter Philip Guston

The Censorship and Freedom of Expression Committee

October 23, 2020

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

The International Association of Art Critics (AICA) wishes to express disappointment over the decision to postpone the retrospective, Philip Guston Now, which was to open at the National Gallery Washington DC, June 2021 (other venues: Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Tate Modern, London, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). AICA is a global organization, established in 1948, comprising art critics who desire to improve international cooperation and fellowship in fields of artistic creativity, mediation and endeavor. AICA’s core value is freedom of expression and resisting any threat to it.

 

Philip Guston Now, rescheduled for 2024, could easily become a watered-down solo show. From the New York Times, September 25, 2020, “The decision came after museums organizing the exhibition decided that Guston’s familiar motif of cartoonish, haggard white–hooded Ku Klux Klansmen needed to be better contextualized for the current political moment.” 

 

AICA International urges the National Gallery Washington DC to desist from punishing artists for the peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of expression. AICA International strongly deplores the National Gallery Washington DC attitude is the opposite of the international rights to freedom of expression.

 

On behalf of AICA,

Lisbeth Rebollo GONÇALVES                                           Burcu PELVANOĞLU

President of AICA                                                                Chair of Censorhip and Freedom of Expression Committee

Campaing link: https://www.change.org/p/the-national-gallery-washington-dc-philip-guston-now/share_for_starters?just_created=true&tag_selected=human_rights

Downloadable pdf version of this lettere HERE

ONLINE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE organized by AICA TURKEY

ARTWORLD, REFLEXES AND ALTERNATIVE NEW WORLD 

In response to the Covid-19 pandemic throughout the world, AICA Turkey starts a fully online conference, enabling participants to carry out their academic research. Entitled “Artworld, Reflexes and Alternative New World”, the congress will investigate topics such as Art in the Time of Pandemic, Impact of COVID-19 on Art and Culture, and Global Art World and Its Response to Coronavirus. AICA invites academics and researchers dealing with interdisciplinary studies, engaged in research in art criticism and art history to join the online conference this November. The language of the Conference is English. The scientific committee of the conference consists of precious names.

For further information you can visit the conference’s website: www.aicaon2020.com


 

Conférence internationale en ligne organisée par AICA - TURQUIE

LE MONDE DE L'ART, LES RÉFLEXIONS ET LE NOUVEAU MONDE ALTERNATIF

En réponse à la pandémie de Covid-19 dans le monde, AICA Turquie organise une conférence entièrement en ligne, permettant aux participants de PRÉSENTER leurs recherches universitaires.  Sous le titre "Le monde de l'art, réflexions et nouveau monde alternatif", La Conférence  examinera des sujets tels que l'art en temps de pandémie, l'impact du COVID-19 sur l'art et la culture ou le monde de l'art et sa réponse  au  coronavirus.  L'AICA  invite des universitaires et des chercheurs issus de  champs d'études interdisciplinaires traitant de la recherche en critique et en histoire de l'art à se joindre à la conférence en ligne de novembre. La langue de la conférence est l'anglais.  Le comité scientifique de la conférence est composé de noms prestigieux.

Pour plus d'informations, vous pouvez visiter le site Web de la conférence: www.aicaon2020.com


Conferencia Online International organizada por AICA – TURQUÍA    

El MUNDO DEL ARTE, REFLEJOS Y NUEVO MUNDO ALTERNATIVO

En respuesta a la pandemia de Covid-19 en todo el mundo, AICA Turquía inicia una conferencia totalmente en línea, que permite a los participantes llevar a cabo su investigación académica. Bajo el título “El mundo del arte, reflejos y nuevo mundo alternativo”, el congreso investigará temas como el arte en tiempos de pandemia, el impacto del COVID-19 en el arte y la cultura o el mundo global del arte y su respuesta al coronavirus. AICA invita a académicos e investigadores que desde los estudios interdisciplinarios se ocupan de la investigación en crítica de arte e historia del arte a unirse a la conferencia en línea este noviembre. El idioma de la Conferencia es el inglés. El comité científico de la conferencia está formado por nombres prestigiosos. Para más información puede visitar el sitio web de la conferencia: www.aicaon2020.com

AICA International Presidential Elections 2020 - CANDIDATES PRESENTATIONS

*We are pleased to announce the candidates for our next INTERNATIONAl president’s election * Nos complace anunciar los candidatos para nuestra próxima elección de presidente Internacional * Nous avons le plaisir d'annoncer les candidat.e.s pour l’election de notre prochain.e président.e International.e*

Alfredo Cramerotti (AICA UK)

Alfredo Cramerotti (AICA UK)

Danièle Perrier (AICA Germany)

Danièle Perrier (AICA Germany)

Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves        (AICA BR)

Lisbeth Rebollo-Gonçalves (AICA BR)

Click on the candidates’ images to read their proposals and CVs

Haga clic en las imágenes de los candidatos para leer sus propuestas y CV.

Cliquez sur les images des candidat.e.s pour lire leurs propositions et CV.

In The Process: A project of AICA South Caribbean

In the Process: Artists Interviews

A project of AICA South Caribbean

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in the process is an online interview series developed by AICA Southern Caribbean, a regional chapter of the International Art Critics Association. Join our members each month as they spotlight the work of artists from the Caribbean. Conversations delve into the ideas and experiences of creative practitioners. Get insight into their art-making process and the ongoing work of creating and communicating meanings.

This new series will launch on Friday, September 18th at 1 pm EST (Eastern Standard Time), 6 pm BST (British Standard Time) when AICA Southern Caribbean president Allison Thompson will be in conversation with artist, researcher, and curator Alberta Whittle.

in the process est une série d’interviews en ligne,  développée par l’Aica Caraïbe du Sud, une section inter régionale  de l’Association  internationale des critiques d’art. Joignez – vous à nos membres pendant qu’ils valorisent le travail des artistes de la Caraïbe. Ces entretiens approfondissent les idées et les expériences des créateurs. Découvrez un aperçu de leur démarche artistique  et de leur travail continu de création et de transmission.

Cette série sera lancée le vendredi 18 septembre à 13H HNE ( heure normale de l’Est) soit 18H BST ( Britih summer time)  lorsque la Présidente de l’Aica Caraïbe du Sud, Allison Thompson, s’entretiendra avec l’artiste, chercheur et curator  Alberta Whittle.

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Alberta Whittle (b. 1980, Barbados) lives and works between Barbados, Scotland and South Africa.  Informed by diasporic conversations, Alberta considers radical self-love and collective care key methods in battling anti-blackness. Her practice involves choreographing interactive installations, using film, sculpture and performance as site-specific artworks in public and private spaces. Whittle’s recent solo exhibition How Flexible Can We Make the Mouth at Dundee Contemporary Arts in Scotland, focused on healing, writing and speech as means of self-liberation. Alberta was one of ten recipients of the 2020 Turner Bursaries, awarded this year in lieu of the Turner Prize nominations, to artists “chosen for their significant contributions to new developments in contemporary art.” She was a RAW Academie Fellow at RAW Material Dakar in 2018 and the Margaret Tait Award winner for 2018/19. Whittle is also the recipient of the 2020 Frieze Artist Award. She is a Committee Member at Transmission Gallery in Glasgow and a Board Member of SCAN (Scottish Creative Art Network). There are a number of exciting events coming up for Whittle including participation in the Liverpool Biennial and the British Art Show 9, both in 2021.

Alberta Whittle (née en  1980, à Barbade) vit et travaille entre la Barbade, l’Ecosse et l’Afrique du Sud.  S’appuyant sur des échanges en diaspora, Alberta considère que l’amour de soi et l’attention aux autres sont des  méthodes- clefs  contre la mouvance anti-blackness (1). Elle chorégraphie des installations interactives, utilisant le film, la sculpture et la performance  dans des oeuvres in situ présentées dans des espaces publics et privés. Sa récente exposition individuelle  How Flexible Can We Make the Mouth au Centre d’art contemporain de Dundee  en Ecosse , portait sur la guérison, l’écriture et la parole comme moyens d’auto- libération. Alberta a été l’une des dix récipiendaires des bourses Turner de 2020, décernées cette année en remplacement des nominations au Prix Turner, à des artistes « choisis pour leurs contributions importantes aux nouveaux développements de l’art contemporain ».

Elle a obtenu une bourse de la RAW Académie pour RAW material Dakar  en2018 et a été également lauréate du prix Margaret Tait pour 2018/19. Alberta  Whittle est aussi  lauréate du Frieze Artist Award de 2020. Elle est membre du comité de la Transmission Gallery de Glasgow et membre du conseil d’administration du SCAN (Scottish Creative Art Network). Un certain nombre d’événements passionnants sont au programme d’Alberta , y compris la participation à la biennale de Liverpool et le British Art Show 9, les deux en 2021.

(1)Blackness  : cette notion, difficilement traduisible en français, désigne la culture produite par des individus noirs (la négritude au sens large et pas seulement le mouvement historique) et l’africanité sociale et culturelle transcontinentale de la diaspora. La blackness serait alors la contribution noire à la culture, sans la faire reposer sur une évidence biologique et même, au contraire, en cherchant à comprendre les ressorts culturels et sociaux qui en sont la condition;  (Pedro Morais in Zero2)

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About AICA Southern Caribbean

AICA Southern Caribbean is a regional section of the International Art Critics Association with members in Barbados, Bermuda, Curaçao, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Jamaica, Martinique, Trinidad and Tobago as well as the wider Caribbean Diaspora. AICA brings together art critics who wish to develop international cooperation in the area of the creative arts, and in building awareness of artistic culture. Its aim is to promote the disciplines of art criticism and contribute to building firm methodological foundations. One of the main aims of AICA Southern Caribbean is promoting communication and interaction between art critics and artistic communities of the region, and the diaspora.

A propos de l’AICA CARAÏBE DU SUD

l ‘AICA CARAÏBE DU SUD  est une section régionale de l’Association internationale des critiques d’art avec des membres à  Barbade,  à Curaçao, en Guadeloupe, en Haïti, en Jamaïque, en Martinique, à Trinidad et Tobago ainsi que dans les pays de la diaspora caribéenne.  L’AICA réunit des critiques d’art qui souhaitent développer la coopération internationale dans le domaine des arts visuels et la sensibilisation à la culture artistique. Son objectif est de promouvoir les disciplines de la critique d’art et de contribuer à la construction de bases méthodologiques solides. L’un des principaux objectifs de l’AICA Caraïbe du Sud est de promouvoir la communication et l’interaction entre les critiques d’art et les communautés artistiques de la région, et la diaspora.