O 4 INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL SPRING 2015 PROGRAM INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL CELEBRATING 40 YEARS OF ICI WELCOME Forty years ago, Nina Castelli Sundell and Susan Sollins came together to dream up a unique organization—one of the first ever to focus on the fundamental role of curators—with a prescient vision of a truly global and collaborative art world. They founded ICI, committed to the curatorial field and to making exhibitions accessible around the world. Since then, ICI has grown in its scope following the expansion of the curatorial field, producing exhibitions, publications, and events for broad audiences, as well as training programs and research initiatives for curators. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Welcome 2 Spring/Summer 2015 Calendar EXHIBITIONS 4 EN MAS’: Carnival and Performance Art of the Caribbean 6 Salon de Fleurus 8 Martha Wilson 10 do it 12 Project 35: Volume 2 14 Free Play 15 Harald Szeemann: Documenta 5 16 With Hidden Noise 17 Performance Now PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH 18 Curatorial Intensive 22 Alumni Updates 24 40 Years of ICI 26 Research Fellowships 30 Curator’s Perspective 32 Curatorial Hub NETWORK & ACCESS 34 Online Networks 36 Publications 38 Limited Editions 40 Annual Benefit 43 Support ICI 47 Thank You 48 Access ICI Today more than ever, the curator’s role is central to art scenes around the world: when connecting artists to one another and to an audience, curators create more than experiences; they support art practice and build communities—through exhibitions, publications, events, and by creating art spaces and leading institutions. In turn, by connecting curators in an international framework for collaboration, ICI expands the support structures they create. This dynamic network keeps growing, one collaboration at a time. ICI programs have already taken place in more than 400 cities and 55 countries since 1975. And this gives ICI a unique international perspective, while remaining connected to the specificities of local art scenes across the globe. This spring, we are thrilled to see so many individuals from ICI’s international network involved in the 56th Venice Biennale. Chief among them is Okwui Enwezor, this year’s Artistic Director of the Biennale, and the recipient of ICI’s 2007 Agnes Gund Curatorial Award, who is also featured in a conversation with Terry Smith in our upcoming publication, Talking Contemporary Curating. And dozens of curators, including several Curatorial Intensive Alumni, and artists are part of Enwezor’s exhibition, and several National Pavilions. This is a sign that ICI thrives as a meaningful force for cultural exchange internationally. And our efforts continue: in the coming months, ICI will hold a Curatorial Intensive for the first time in Marrakech, in collaboration with Dar al-Ma’mûn; for the second time in Bogota, held entirely in Spanish, in a renewed partnership with IDARTES; and in New York in September. These international professional development programs for curators provide new ways to create collaborative networks, while—critically—also providing unique opportunities and access in a world where borders, 1 language, visas and other economic factors remain obstacles to the sharing of knowledge. Shared learning and experiences are also generated by our exhibitions, which in the past year alone were seen in 37 art spaces in 16 countries. A new exhibition, EN MAS’, curated by Claire Tancons and Krista Thompson, debuts this March at CAC New Orleans, our partner in the project. And we are announcing ICI’s latest exhibition, Salon de Fleurus, which recreates a contemporary reconstruction of Gertrude Stein’s Parisian salon designed as a semi-private salon in Lower Manhattan from 1992 to 2013. The exhibition will be presented internationally with ICI, calling into question one of the main creation myths of Modernism, as one time capsule within another. As we celebrate ICI’s 40th spring, and continue building a unique organization for a truly global and collaborative art world, we would like to thank everyone who has been a part of the journey—first and foremost all who have served on ICI’s Board of Trustees over the past four decades (see a complete list is on page 47). And on behalf of all of us at ICI, I want to also thank everyone who makes our programs possible: the curators, artists, our collaborators at art spaces around the world, the foundations, and the many individuals who help us carry the mission. Thank You! Renaud Proch Executive Director SPRING/SUMMER 2015 2 SPRING/SUMMER 2015 CALENDAR MARCH EVENTS Curator’s Perspective: Naomi Beckwith Tuesday, March 10 7–8:30pm NYU Steinhardt New York, NY HUB EVENTS Some Thoughts on Culture and Revolution: Dread Scott and Ryan Wong Thursday, March 19 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY APRIL EVENTS Curator’s Perspective: Inti Guerrero Wednesday, April 8 7–8:30pm School of Visual Arts New York, NY ICI Conversations: Yinka Shonibare Wednesday, April 29 James Cohan Gallery New York, NY HUB EVENTS In the Canyon, Revise the Canon: Géraldine Gourbe Thursday, April 2 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY Felipe Mujica: Jugador Como Pelota, Pelota Como Cancha Tuesday, March 24 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY EXHIBITIONS do it February 23–April 3 The Episcopal Academy Newtown Square, PA do it & do it (archive) February 13–April 24 Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia Adelaid, Australia Domestic Revolution: Megan Witko with Alina Bliumis and Ben Kinmont Tuesday, April 7 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY A Conversation on Photography in Ethiopia and Guyana with Grace Aneiza Ali and Aida Muluneh Tuesday, April 28 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY EN MAS’ March 6–June 7 Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans New Orleans, LA Project 35 Volume 2 January 15–June 8 Art Gallery, University of Saint Joseph West Hartford, CT Free Play January 13–March 6 The College of Wooster Art Museum Wooster, OH With Hidden Noise February 24–May 3 Pasadena Art Center College of Design Pasadena, CA Harald Szeemann: Documenta 5 February 24–March 20 University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA do it February 23–April 3 The Episcopal Academy Newtown Square, PA do it & do it (archive) February 13–April 24 Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, University of South Australia Adelaid, Australia EN MAS’ March 6–June 7 Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans New Orleans, LA Free Play April 25–August 3 Art Gallery of Greater Victoria Victoria, BC, Canada EVENTS ICI Reception at Fabrica, 2015 Venice Biennale May 6–10 Venice, Italy ICI at NADA New York May 14–17 299 South Street New York, NY Curator’s Perspective: Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath Tuesday, June 2 7–8:30pm Hunter College MFA Campus New York, NY Martha Wilson February 20–April 30 Fales Library, New York University; Pratt Manhattan Gallery New York, NY EXHIBITIONS MAY/JUNE Patrons Trip: Garage Grand Opening June 9–15 Moscow, Russia Martha Wilson February 20–April 30 Fales Library, New York University; Pratt Manhattan Gallery New York, NY Project 35 Volume 2 January 15–June 8 Art Gallery, University of Saint Joseph West Hartford, CT With Hidden Noise February 24–May 3 Pasadena Art Center College of Design Pasadena, CA JULY/AUGUST EVENTS Summer Cocktails July New York, NY EXHIBITIONS do it May 22–July 31 KKW Kunst Kraft Werk Leipzig, Germany do it & do it (archive) June 19–August 30 Napa Valley Museum Yountville, CA CURATORIAL INTENSIVE Curatorial Intensive in Marrakech, Morocco May 19–25 Curatorial Intensive in Bogotá, Colombia June 17–23 HUB EVENTS EXHIBITIONS do it May 22–July 31 KKW Kunst Kraft Werk Leipzig, Germany EN MAS’ March 6–June 7 Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans New Orleans, LA Y.ES Collect Contemporary El Salvador Claire Breukel, Simón Vega, and Mario CaderFrech Thursday, May 28 6:30–8pm ICI Curatorial Hub New York, NY Free Play April 25– August 3 Art Gallery of Greater Victoria Victoria, BC, Canada do it June 27–September 5 Kunsthal Rotterdam Rotterdam, The Netherlands Project 35 Volume 2 August–January Garage Museum of Contemporary Art Moscow, Russia do it July 30–August 8 Nuevo Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Guatemala City, Guatemala With Hidden Noise June 5–July 27 University of Southern Florida Contemporary Art Museum Tampa, FL Project 35 Volume 2 January 15–June 8 Art Gallery, University of Saint Joseph West Hartford, CT 3 With Hidden Noise February 24–May 3 Pasadena Art Center College of Design Pasadena, CA do it June 27–September 5 Kunsthal Rotterdam Rotterdam, The Netherlands do it & do it (archive) June 19–August 30 Napa Valley Museum Yountville, CA With Hidden Noise June 5–July 27 University of Southern Florida Contemporary Art Museum Tampa, FL EXHIBITIONS EN MAS’ EN MAS’ EN MAS’: CARNIVAL AND PERFORMANCE ART OF THE CARIBBEAN Curated by Claire Tancons and Krista Thompson, co-organized with Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans EN MAS’: CARNIVAL AND PERFORMANCE ART OF THE CARIBBEAN is a pioneering exploration of the influences of Carnival on contemporary performance practices in the Caribbean, North America, and Europe. Conceived around a series of nine commissioned performances realized during the 2014/2015 Caribbean Carnival season across eight cities in seven different countries, the exhibition considers the connections between Carnival and performance, masquerade and social criticism, diaspora and transnationalism. EN MAS’ introduces performance art with a focus on the influence that Carnival and related masquerading traditions in and of the Caribbean and its diasporas have had on contemporary performance discourse and practice, in both the artistic and curatorial realms. Indeed, EN MAS’ takes into account performance practices that do not trace their genealogy to the European avant– gardes of the early twentieth–century but rather to the experiences of slavery and colonialism through to the mid–nineteenth century, the independence struggles and civil right movements of the mid–twentieth century and population migrations to and from the former colonial centers for most of the last century. Throughout the 2014/15 Caribbean Carnival season, EN MAS’ tracked nine artists as they engaged, transformed, or critiqued historical and contemporary Caribbean performance practices from Carnival in Santiago de los Caballeros, Port of Spain, Fort-de-France, Kingston, London and Brooklyn, to Junkanoo in Nassau and the New Orleans second line—or in their own imaginary cartographies and invented performance traditions. The resulting newly commissioned works took place according to different modes of public address and audience engagement including semi-private rituals at the margin of the festival celebrations and street processions in the midst of the carnival revelry. Marlon Griffith, Positions + Power, 2014, Port of Spain, Trinidad. ©Marlon James, 2014. Taking its title from a pun on “Mas” (short for masquerade and synonymous with carnival in the English-speaking Caribbean), EN MAS’ considers a history of performance that does not take place on the stage or in the gallery but rather in the streets, addressing not the few but the many. PUBLICATION An accompanying publication, co-published by ICI and CAC, and distributed by DAP, will include critical essays by the exhibition’s curators as well as Shannon Jackson and Kobena Mercer, monographic texts by an array of cultural and art critics, and extensive illustrations. In addition to the publication, a newly launched website hosted by ICI offers insights into each artist’s performance while tracking the exhibition tour. EN MAS’ ON ICI’S WEBSITE ICI has created a dedicated online platform to track the progress of EN MAS’ around the globe. Each artist’s performance is represented with detailed images, multimedia, project descriptions, and press. An interactive map charts the nine performances, and the tour as it travels internationally. Follow us on #enmas. 5 Charles Campbell, Actor Boy: Fractal Engagement, performance, April 21, 2014, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo: Marvin Bartley 4 CURATORS ARTISTS Claire Tancons is a curator, writer, and researcher with a focus on Carnival, public ceremonial culture, civic rituals, and popular movements. The Associate Curator for Prospect.1 New Orleans (2007-9), a curator for the 7th Gwangju Biennale (2008), Guest Curator for CAPE09 (2009), Associate Curator for research for Biennale Bénin (2012), and a curator for the Göteborg Biennial (2013), Tancons has developed genealogies and methodologies for thinking about and presenting performance—including reclaiming the processional as exhibitionary mode. She has written extensively about Carnival, the carnivalesque, performance and protest in NKA, Small Axe, Third Text, and the e-flux Journal. Tancons was most recently guest curator for Up Hill Down Hall: An Indoor Carnival as part of the 2014 BMW Tate Live series at Tate Modern. John Beadle, Charles Campbell, Christophe Chassol, Nicolás Dumit Estévez, Marlon Griffith, Hew Locke, Lorraine O’Grady, Ebony Patterson, Cauleen Smith Krista Thompson is Associate Professor of Art History at Northwestern University and the author of An Eye for the Tropics (2006). She has written articles in Art Bulletin, Art Journal, American Art, Representations, The Drama Review, and Small Axe. Exhibitions include the National Exhibition (NE3) (2006) and Developing Blackness: Studio Photographs of “Over the Hill” Nassau in the Independence Era (2008) at the National Art Gallery of the Bahamas. Her book Shine: The Visual Economy of Light in African Diasporic Aesthetic Practice on the intersection of popular photography, performance, and contemporary art in the circum-Caribbean will be published by Duke University Press in 2015. EN MAS’: Carnival and Performance Art of the Caribbean is made possible by an Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award. Additional support is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and the Institut français in support of African and Caribbean projects. BASIC FACTS Number of artists: 9 Number of works: selections to be made from the original commissioned performances, which form the basis of the exhibition at CAC New Orleans Tour dates: spring 2015–2018 For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 The Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) is a multi-disciplinary arts center, financially stable and professionally managed, which is dedicated to the presentation, production, and promotion of the art of our time. It expresses its mission by organizing world class curated exhibitions, performances, and public programs; educating and enlarging audiences for the arts; and encouraging collaboration among diverse stakeholders composed of artists, institutions, communities, and supporters throughout the world. SALON DE FLEURUS SALON DE FLEURUS is a contemporary reconstruction of Gertrude Stein’s Parisian salon that existed at 27 rue de Fleurus from 1904–34. It is a project that displays and references a story of modern art’s beginnings through one of the first gathering places for burgeoning young artists such as Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, and Stein herself. It was in Stein’s salon that paintings by Cezanne, Matisse and Picasso were seen exhibited together for the first time both by her peers and transatlantic art experts who spread the word back home, eventually creating the American narrative of European modern art familiar today. Through 34 painted reproductions exhibited within a constructed interior, Salon de Fleurus questions where, why and how certain narratives of modern art originated through the salon structure that first canonized them. When one looks at Picasso here, they are viewing Picasso through the lens of Stein. Perhaps then, these reproductions are more significant and tell us more about history than the original artworks themselves by weaving fiction into history and leaving space to contemplate and reconsider the past. From 1992 to 2013 Salon de Fleurus existed as a semiprivate salon in lower Manhattan. It has appeared in fragments in Beirut, Paris and Los Angeles and will now be touring as a complete project by ICI. The exhibition contains painting reproductions as well as a library of publications, and training video for a “doorman” or raconteur to best evoke the story of the salon to visitors. Art spaces are invited to source local details such as furniture, decorations, and objects that further relate to early modernity, and to organize readings, talks, screenings and events that use the salon as a forum for discussing diverging art historical narratives. An additional PDF booklet including press from the Salon’s 20-year history and images of the full archive will also be available for circulation. ABOUT SALON DE FLEURUS Salon de Fleurus is an educational institution dedicated to assembling, preserving, and exhibiting memories on early modern art. Its permanent exhibit, titled from The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, located at 41 Spring Street, New York, was open to the public from 1992— 2013. A selection from the Salon’s permanent collection was part of the Fiction Reconstructed that was shown in Ljubljana, Belgrade and Budapest from 2000 to 2002. In 2002, Salon de Fleurus was included in the Whitney Biennial, Sydney Biennial, and exhibition Am Anfang der Bevegung stand ein Skandal in the Lenbachhaus Munich. Selections from the Salon’s permanent collection were also shown at the exhibitions What is Modern Art? (Kunstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, 2006),The Making of Americans (James Gallery, CUNY Graduate Center, New York) and Les Fleurs Americaines (Le Plateau, Paris, 2012). In 2011, the Metabolic Studio (Los Angeles) opened another version of the Salon de Fleurus, with a collection titled Portraits and Prayers that more closely resembles the early twentieth century Paris Salon and traveled to Ashkal Alwan in Beirut, 2014. BASIC FACTS Number of works: 34 paintings and a small, curated library of related publications Space required: approximately 400 square feet, or a similarly constructed interior space Tour dates: Fall 2015 through December 2018 For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 SALON DE FLEURUS Salon De Fleurus, Metabolic Studio, Los Angeles, 2011. Courtesy of Salon de Fleurus. EXHIBITIONS Salon De Fleurus, installation view, New York, 1992-2013. Courtesy of Salon de Fleurus. 6 7 Martha Wilson’s 40-year career encapsulates the key debates in feminist and socially engaged practices, wherein identity and positioning are not just self-defined or projected but also negotiated, disputed, and constantly reimagined. The complex nature of Wilson’s work encompasses her activities as an artist since the early 1970s, her position as the director of Franklin Furnace, and her music collaborations in DISBAND. Written into and out of art history according to the theories and convictions of the time, Martha Wilson first gained attention in 1973 through Lucy R. Lippard, who contextualized her early work within the parameters of conceptual practice, and among other women artist contemporaries. A year later, Judy Chicago denounced Wilson after a performance she presented at the Feminist Art Program at CalArts for “irresponsible demagoguery.” She has been regarded by many as prefiguring Judith Butler’s ideas on gender performativity through her practice, and in the words of art critic Holland Cotter, she was described as one of “the half-dozen most important people for art in downtown Manhattan in the 1970s.” Responding to the wide scope of Wilson’s career, Peter Dykhuis has assembled a diverse collection of works in this retrospective, which is intended as a flexible, modular, and collaborative exhibition. Curators at each presenting institution collaborate directly with the artist to select works from the overlapping stages of Wilson’s career. Selections include examples of her conceptually based performances, videos, and photo-texts, or focus on Franklin Furnace, an arts organization founded by Wilson to support the preservation and advocacy for the production of avant-garde, ephemeral, and alternative forms of art. Wilson has been working with curators of presenting institutions to further explore ways in which identity and contested histories can be shown in the context of their local constituencies and according to each venue’s programming priorities. In some cases, Wilson has selected works from the museum’s collection or worked with people in the community to develop an exhibition that explores the nature of visibility, or what feminism means now, or the role of the activist today. PERFORMING FRANKLIN FURNACE From February 26 to March 1, Participant Inc. hosted a series of performances organized by Martha Wilson and ICI to coincide with the final presentation of the exhibition Martha Wilson in New York. The series captured the spirit of Franklin Furnace as a physical space through a four-day series of screenings and live works, including performances by Michael Smith (who re-created a version of Baby Ikki, presented at Franklin Furnace in 1978), Coco Fusco (a Franklin Furnace alum who performed A Lecture by Dr. Zira, a recent work), and an evening of performances in-progress hosted by Clifford Owens and inspired by typical Sunday events at Franklin Furnace. Franklin Furnace serves the local, national and international community of activist artists—artists who have addressed urgent subjects such as war, poverty, disease, racism, sexism, and homophobia. In 1976, artist Martha Wilson founded Franklin Furnace in Lower Manhattan as a primary source for producing and mediating works vulnerable to neglect due to lack of institutional support, ephemeral nature, or politically unpopular content. Until 1996, when it moved online to its current digital platform, Franklin Furnace occupied a Tribeca storefront space that presented historical and contemporary exhibitions of artists’ books as well as temporary installations and performance art to the public. Coco Fusco, Observations of Predations in Humans: A Lecture by Dr. Zira, Animal. Curated by Peter Dykhuis Martha Wilson and clown performer at Performing Franklin Furnace, Participant Inc., 2015. MARTHA WILSON 9 Amanda Alfieri, Performing Franklin Furnace, Participant Inc., 2015. MARTHA WILSON Mike Smith, Baby Ikki, Performing Franklin Furnace, Participant Inc., 2015. EXHIBITIONS Installation view of Martha Wilson at Arcadia University Art Gallery, Glenside, PA, 2012. 8 To celebrate the twentieth anniversary of do it in 2013, Obrist and ICI collaborated on its newest iteration, stemming from a new publication, do it: the compendium—complete with the history of this landmark project and a selection of 250 artists’ instructions, including 80 brand new ones. A call to action, do it invites you to take part, to interpret, re-invent and generate ideas, creating new dynamic institutional and exhibition formats for years to come. Since May 2013, this latest iteration of do it has been shown in more than 16 art spaces internationally, with many more scheduled this year. New versions and projects were also generated in the past two years, and can be found on ICI’s website. Several of them, such as do it (homage), do it (archive), and do it (short), can even be shown alongside future presentations of do it. CURATOR Hans Ulrich Obrist is co-director of the Serpentine Galleries, London. Prior to this, he was the Curator of the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville, Paris. Since his first show World Soup (The Kitchen Show) in 1991 he has curated more than 250 exhibitions. Obrist’s recent publications include A Brief History of Curating, Project Japan: Metabolism Talks with Rem Koolhaas, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Curating But Were Afraid to Ask, do it: the compendium, Think Like Clouds, Ai Weiwei Speaks, Sharp Tongues—Loose Lips—Open Eyes—Ears to the Ground, along with new volumes of his Conversation Series. DO IT: EA Starting in the fall of 2014, The Episcopal Academy (EA) in Newtown Square, PA, has been the first school of its kind to become a hosting venue for do it. Developed by ICI trustee Susan Coote, this unique iteration of the project puts do it in the hands of pre-k through 12th grade students, their teachers, parents, and the school community. Through video-making, website and music production, performances, twitter conversations, and school-wide workshops or after-school clubs, students of all ages experience contemporary art first-hand, and are asked to consider art-making in a completely different way, through an understanding of the intentions of an artist. DO IT: THE COMPENDIUM By Hans Ulrich Obrist. Foreword and acknowledgements by Kate Fowle and Frances Wu Giarratano; introduction by Hans Ulrich Obrist; essays by Bruce Altshuler, Hu Fang, Virginia Pérez-Ratton, and Elizabeth Presa. Softcover, 448 pages. 8 x 10 inches. Co-published by Independent Curators International (ICI) and D.A.P., 2013. ISBN: 978-1-938922-01-5. $35.00 BASIC FACTS Number of artists or artists groups: 250 Number of works: 250 Space required: extremely flexible, though at least 1,000 square feet is recommended Tour dates: March 2013–December 2017 For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 do it instruction by Nicolás Paris, do it at The Episcopal Academy, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA, 2015. In the more than 20 years since Obrist, Boltanski, and Lavier mused over the potential of “scores,” or written instructions by artists, to create exhibition formats that could be more flexible and open-ended, do it went from a selection of 12 instructions to an ongoing project including over four hundred artists. Every time it was presented, in any of the more than 60 venues worldwide, do it was re-interpreted anew. Many new versions appeared, including do it (museum), do it (home), do it (TV), do it (seminar), and an online do it in collaboration with e-flux, among others. do it, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, 2014. What would happen if an exhibition never stopped? Since it began in 1993, with this question being asked by Hans Ulrich Obrist and artists Christian Boltanski and Bertrand Lavier, DO IT has become the longest-running and most far-reaching exhibition to ever happen—constantly generating new versions of itself. 11 do it instruction by Robert Ashley, do it at The Episcopal Academy, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA, 2015. Curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist do it Moscow, Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, 2014. Architect: Andreas Angelidakis. Photo: Anton Silenin. © Garage Museum of Contemporary Art DO IT Opening of do it at The Galleries at Moore College of Art and Design, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, 2014. DO IT EXHIBITIONS do it instruction by Lygia Pape, interpreted by Robert Hamblin, do it at The Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa, 2014. 10 PROJECT 35 VOLUME 2 GLOBALITY IN ARTISTS’ FILM & VIDEO In conjunction with the presentation of Project 35 Volume 2 at the University of Westminster (October 23–November 30, 2014), the Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media (CREAM) and the International Centre for Documentary and Experimental Film organized the symposium Globality in Artists’ Film & Video. The event addressed expanded geographies of research on artists’ moving image and experimental video and gathered together artists, researchers and writers including Shezad Dawood (an artist in Project 35 Volume 2), George Clark, May Adadol Ingawanij, Ozlem Koksal, Michael Mazière, Lucy Reynolds, Julian Ross, and Erika Tan. In 2010, ICI launched PROJECT 35, a program of single-channel videos selected by 35 international curators who each chose one work from an artist they think is important for audiences around the world to experience today. The resulting selection was presented in more than 30 venues around the globe, at times simultaneously, inspiring discourse in places as varied as Berlin, Germany; Cape Town, South Africa; Lagos, Nigeria; Los Angeles, California; New Orleans, Louisiana; Skopje, Macedonia; Storrs, Connecticut; Taipei, Taiwan; and Tirana, Albania. Following the widespread popularity and success of the first exhibition, ICI has collaborated with 35 more international curators to produce PROJECT 35 VOLUME 2. Taking advantage of the flexibility of video formats, Project 35 Volume 2 can be shown in almost any space worldwide. It can be projected in a gallery, featured in monthly screenings, or shown on a monitor running in a café or education room. A pamphlet accompanies the exhibition with a short introduction to each work by the selecting curator, along with the curators and artists bios. Since this second version launched in 2012, Project 35 Volume 2 has been on view in over 27 international art spaces from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to Jaffna, Sri Lanka to Montevideo, Uruguay, including a coordinated presentation across the Caribbean. These itinerant presentations have built a shared understanding of art practice by grasping the complexity of our contemporary landscape, and at the same time, generated diverse discourse inspiring artists and audiences all over the world. CURATORS Leezy Ahmady (Afghanistan / US), Meskerem Assegued (Ethiopia), Daina Augaitis (Canada), Defne Ayas (Turkey / The Netherlands), Regine Basha (US), Valerie Cassel-Oliver (US), Rosina Cazali (Guatemala), Stuart Comer (US / UK), Veronica Cordeiro (Brazil / Uruguay), Christopher Cozier (Trinidad and Tobago), María del Carmen Carrión (Ecuador / US), Rifky Effendy (Indonesia), Özge Ersoy (Turkey), N’Goné Fall (Senegal), Thirteen of the artists and ten of the curators in Project 35 Volume 2 are based in Asia. Reflecting on this, and in conjunction with the Asian Contemporary Art Week (ACAW), ICI hosted works from Project 35 Volume 2 on October 23, 2014. Selections were also screened at Asia Society during the ACAW Field Meetings series, organized by Project 35 Volume 2 curator Leeza Ahmady. Amirali Ghasemi (Iran), Vít Havránek (Czech Republic), Hou Hanru (US / China), Virginija Januskeviciute (Lithuania), Abdellah Karroum (Morocco), Pablo León de la Barra (Mexico / US), Maria Lind (Sweden), Yandro Miralles (Cuba), Srimoyee Mitra (Canada), Nat Muller (The Netherlands), Sharmini Pereira (Sri Lanka), Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez (France / Slovenia), Kathrin Rhomberg (Austria), Sun Jung Kim (South Korea), Mats Stjernstedt (Norway / Sweden), David Teh (Australia / Thailand), Philip Tinari (US / China), Christine Tohme (Lebanon), Raluca Voinea (Romania), Jochen Volz (Germany / UK), Adnan Yildiz (Germany) ARTISTS Jonathas de Andrade (Brazil), Marwa Arsanios (Lebanon), Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech Republic), Michael Blum (Israel / Canada) and Damir Nikšić (Bosnia / Sweden), Deanna Bowen (US / Canada), Pavel Braila (Moldova), Aslı Çavuşoğlu (Turkey), Park Chan-Kyong (South Korea), Chen Zhou (China), Josef Dabernig (Austria), Elena Damiani (Peru), Shezad Dawood (UK), Annika Eriksson (Sweden), Antanas Gerlikas (Lithuania), Annemarie Jacir (Palestine), Jin-Me Yoon (Korea), Lars Laumann (Norway), Aníbal López (A-1 53167) (Guatemala), Reynier Leyva Novo (Cuba), Basim Magdy (Egypt), Cinthia Marcelle (Brazil), Bradley McCullum & Jacqueline Tarry (US), Ivana Müller (France / The Netherlands / Croatia), Ahmet Ögüt (Turkey), Jenny Perlin (US), Agnieszka Polska (Poland), Sara Ramo (Spain), Wok the Rock (Indonesia), Sona Safaei (Iran), Heino Schmid (The Bahamas), Sun Xun (China), Prilla Tania (Indonesia), Alexander Ugay (Kazakhstan), Dale Yudelman (South Africa), Helen Zeru (Ethiopia) Sara Ramo, A Banda Dos Sete (Band of Seven), 2010. Film Still. Courtesy of the artist. ICI has once again drawn from its extensive network of curators to trace the complexity of regional and global connections among practitioners and the variety of approaches they use to make video. 35 curators from 6 continents each chose one work for this compilation, showcasing a variety of artists’ takes on the medium. ASIAN CONTEMPORARY ART WEEK (ACAW), NYC 13 Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech Republic), 40.000.000, 2010. Film Still. Courtesy of the artist. EXHIBITIONS Installation view of Project 35: Volume 2 at Fresh Milk, St. George, Barbados, 2013. Photo: Mark King EXHIBITIONS 12 14 EXHIBITIONS EXHIBITIONS DOCUMENTA 5 FREE PLAY HARALD SZEEMANN: DOCUMENTA 5 Curated by David Platzker Curated by Melissa E. Feldman “No vital periods ever began from a theory. What’s first is a game, a struggle, a journey.” —Guy Debord Even 40 years later, DOCUMENTA 5, the exhibition that was criticized in 1972 as being “bizarre…vulgar…sadistic” by Hilton Kramer and “monstrous…overtly deranged” by Barbara Rose, resonates today as one of the most important exhibitions in history. Both hailed and derided by artists and critics, the exhibition was the largest, most expensive and most diverse of any exhibition anywhere, and foreshadowed all large-scale, collaboratively curated, comprehensive mega-shows to come. HARALD SZEEMANN: DOCUMENTA 5, explores the many facets of this particularly controversial Documenta exhibition, which jumped outside the contemporary art sphere into an expanded realm of activity, a legendary extravaganza that invited both visceral criticism and praise. Seeking the initial moment described by Debord, FREE PLAY explores the work of artists who borrow from play and games to reveal social, philosophical, and cultural issues. From playfulness, to mathematical strategy, the artists in FREE PLAY have mined the significance of games, reinventing them to create experiences, often meant to be involving the viewer, and reflecting on the nature of participation in art. Cory Arcangel, Patrick Bernier and Olive Martin, Ruth Catlow, Mary Flanagan, Futurefarmers, Ryan Gander, Jeanne van Heeswijk and Rolf Engelen, Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican, Paul Noble, Yoko Ono, Pedro Reyes, Jason Rohrer, David Shrigley, Erik Svedäng CURATOR The arcade of games in Free Play include a version of Guitar Hero by Cory Arcangel, hopscotch by Mary Flanagan, and Ryan Gander’s version of blackjack— while the more mystically inclined may gravitate toward Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican’s divining game. Melissa E. Feldman is a Seattle-based independent curator and writer, and holds the position of Distinguished Visiting Faculty at Cornish College of the Arts. She is a frequent contributor to Art in America, Frieze, Third Text, Aperture, among others. Her recent exhibitions include Dance Rehearsal: Karen Kilimnik’s World of Ballet and Theatre (2012), organized by the Mills College Art Museum, Oakland, which traveled to the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, CO; Afterglow: Rethinking California Light and Space Art (2010), Wiegand Gallery, Notre Dame de Namur University Art Gallery, Belmont, CA and the Hearst Art Gallery at St. Mary’s College, Walnut Creek, CA; and Sampler: Textiles at Creative Growth (2007) at Creative Growth Art Center, Oakland. Feldman has taught at the California College of the Arts, the San Francisco Art Institute, and Goldsmith’s College, London, and is credited with organizing the first monographic exhibitions in America for Kilimnik, Martin Kippenberger, and Hiroshi Sugimoto in the early 1990s as curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), Philadelphia, PA. BASIC FACTS Number of artists or artists groups: 14 Number of works: approximately 17 Space required: extremely flexible For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 contemporary art scene of 1972, to see what this particularly fertile cultural moment produced. Venues might like to host an evening of local artists’ talks about contracts and rights, building from discussion of The Artists Reserved Rights Transfer and Sale Agreement, or could work with community groups to generate their own 100-day series of events. Harald Szeemann: Documenta 5, installation view, CAC Vilnius, 2011. David Shrigley, Your Parents, You, Your Wee Sister, and The Social Services, 2011. Image courtesy of Stephen Friedman Gallery. ARTISTS Artistic processes tied to game playing have historically attracted the avant-garde, most famously the chess master Marcel Duchamp. His every artistic move had his chess partner—the viewer—in mind. Games were also intrinsic to the work of war-addled Surrealists and Dadaists, the inventors of exquisite corpse and automatic drawing, in their quest to upend the bourgeois pretensions of art and free the artistic imagination. In the 1960s and 1970s, the countercultural and antiwar Fluxus group and the New Games Foundation questioned capitalism and corporate culture by staging massive public games in city parks. Moving away from the classical chess period of kings, queens, and bishops, the works Free Play do not represent medieval figures but strategies of decision making around contemporary issues. 15 CURATOR Documenta, a major international contemporary art presentation that takes place every five years in Kassel, Germany, is in its 14th iteration. This specific 1972 Documenta, chiefly curated by the influential Swiss curator, Harald Szeemann, was a pioneering, radically different presentation that was conceived as a 100-day event, with performances and happenings, outsider art, even non-art, as well as repeated Joseph Beuys lectures, and an installation of Claes Oldenburg’s Mouse Museum, among many other atypical inclusions. The show widely promoted awareness of a contract known as The Artist’s Reserved Rights Transfer and Sale Agreement, which protects artists’ ongoing intellectual and financial rights with regard to their production. This exhibition includes the catalogue, ephemera, artists’ publications and editions produced in conjunction with the exhibition, as well as published reviews and critical responses. The assembled materials provide a rich jumping off point for art history students, artists, and general audiences to plunge into the international David Platzker is Curator of Drawings and Prints at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. From 2004 to 2013 he was the director of Specific Object, an innovative gallery, bookshop, and storehouse for a range of items from artists’ publications, multiples and unique works of art, as well as literature, music, and counterculture. Before founding Specific Object, Platzker was the executive director of Printed Matter from 1998 to 2004, the nonprofit institution dedicated to the promotion of artists’ books and publications. His curatorial projects at Specific Object and Printed Matter included shows of John Baldessari, Hanne Darboven, Marcel Duchamp, Guerrilla Girls, Jenny Holzer, Yoko Ono, Raymond Pettibon, Ed Ruscha, and Claes Oldenburg. At The Museum of Modern Art he co-curated There Will Never Be Silence: Scoring John Cage’s 4’33” in collaboration with Jon Hendricks. BASIC FACTS Space required: extremely flexible Tour dates: January 2011—Indefinitely For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 16 EXHIBITIONS EXHIBITIONS 17 WITH HIDDEN PERFORMANCE NOW NOISE Curated by Stephen Vitiello Curated by RoseLee Goldberg, co-organized with Performa WITH HIDDEN NOISE is an exploration of sound art that asks gallery and museum visitors to spend time listening with ears they may not know they had… With too few yet important exhibitions focusing on the medium, sound art is made accessible to a wider range of venues across continents with the artist-curated exhibition. In her groundbreaking book PERFORMANCE ART: FROM FUTURISM TO THE PRESENT (1979), art historian and curator RoseLee Goldberg showed that performance is central to the history of twentieth-century art. In 2005, she launched PERFORMA 05, the first biennial of visual art performance, and predicted that performance would become “the medium of the twenty-first century.” Indeed, its time has come. CURATOR Featured artists in With Hidden Noise include legendary composer Pauline Oliveros as well as Steve Roden, Andrea Parkins, and the project’s curator, Stephen Vitiello. Titled after Duchamp’s readymade ball of string containing a mysterious sound-making object hidden in its folds, this exhibition brings together evocative sounds, some recognizable from traditional instruments and field recordings, and others masked through electronic processes. This self-contained sound-art exhibition pairs down the installation scale to a single set of surround-sound speakers (five speakers plus a subwoofer), adaptable to a wide range of spaces, allowing for many presentation possibilities. Also included are a number of books and catalogues on contemporary sound art that may be distributed around the gallery for those who would like to read more as they listen. A further reading list, videography, and programming suggestions are provided by the curator, making this exhibition as adaptable and expandable as desired. Stephen Vitiello is a sound and media artist whose sound installations have been presented internationally both in public spaces and museums. Among his recent projects, A Bell for Every Minute, a site-specific project commissioned by Creative Time for the High Line, New York (2010) was included in the Museum of Modern Art’s exhibition Soundings: A Contemporary Score (2013). Vitiello has collaborated extensively, working with artists such as Tony Oursler, Julie Mehretu, Joan Jonas, Steve Roden, Nam June Paik, and Ryuichi Sakamoto. Originally from New York, he is now based in Richmond, Virginia where is a professor in the Department of Kinetic Imaging at Virginia Commonwealth University. ARTISTS Taylor Deupree, Jennie C. Jones, Pauline Oliveros, Andrea Parkins, Steve Peters, Steve Roden, Michael J. Schumacher, Stephen Vitiello BASIC FACTS Number of artists: 8 Number of works: 7 Space required: extremely flexible Tour dates: March 2012–December 2015 For additional information and dates of availability, contact Alaina Claire Feldman at [email protected] or 212 254 8200 x127 CURATOR Installation view of Performance Now at Kraków Theatrical Reminiscences, Kraków, Poland, 2014. Installation view of With Hidden Noise at MADA Gallery, Monash University, Victoria, Australia, 2013. This is an exhibition about listening, wherein Vitiello traces a lineage for contemporary sound art in the charged silences of Fluxus performances, as in John Cage’s seminal 4’33”, which forced audience members to acknowledge the sounds of the concert space or of their own restless bodies. —Allison Young, Artforum Performance Now is a selection of works by artists from a vast repository of new performance from around the world since 2000, a period that has witnessed an exponential growth in the field. Bringing together some of the most significant practitioners today, Performance Now surveys critical and experimental currents in performance internationally, featuring key Performa commissions, and works by Marina Abramović, Jérôme Bel, Marvin Gaye Chetwynd, William Kentridge, and Clifford Owens, among others. Together, the works in the exhibition are an indication of the extent to which visual artists use performance as part of their creative process; how that process produces objects, installations, video, or photography; and how these mediums have been enlivened by the demands of recording performance in innovative ways. Exploring live performance, artists capture its ephemerality and transform it into new work that contains the power and content of the original. RoseLee Goldberg’s seminal study, Performance Art: From Futurism to the Present (first published in 1979 and now in its third edition) is regarded as the leading text for understanding the development of the genre and has been translated into more languages (including Chinese, Croatian, French, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Russian) than any other book of its kind. When director of the Royal College of Art (RCA) Gallery in London, Goldberg established a program that pioneered an integrative approach to curating exhibitions, performance, and symposia, directly involving the various departments of the RCA in all aspects of the exhibitions program. As curator at The Kitchen in New York she continued to advocate for multi-disciplinary practices to have equal prominence by establishing the exhibition space, a video viewing room, and a performance series. It was here that Goldberg curated the first solo exhibitions of Cindy Sherman, Sherri Levine, Robert Longo, Jack Goldstein and The Kipper Kids, among others. Most recently, her vision in the creation of Performa has set a precedent for performance art that is now impacting museum programming and diverse audiences across the U.S. and abroad. In 2010 she was awarded the ICI Agnes Gund Curatorial Award and in 2006 named a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters. Since 1987, Goldberg has taught at New York University. ARTISTS Marina Abramović, Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla, Yael Bartana, Jérôme Bel, Guy Ben-Ner, Marvin Gaye Chetwynd, Nikhil Chopra, Nathalie Djurberg, Claire Fontaine, Christian Jankowski, Jesper Just, William Kentridge, Ragnar Kjartansson, Regina José Galindo, Liz Magic Laser, Kalup Linzy, Nandipha Mntambo, Kelly Nipper, Clifford Owens, Santiago Sierra, Laurie Simmons, Ryan Trecartin CURATORIAL INTENSIVE ICI’s CURATORIAL INTENSIVE was established in 2010 as the world’s first shortcourse, low-cost training program for curators. Intended to bring working professionals together to gain new skills and perspectives on pragmatic aspects of curating, as well as to increase dialogue in curatorial ideas, the Intensive supports early- to mid-career curators working independently or institutionally in emerging and established art centers around the world. Programs are held at ICI in New York, and around the world in collaboration with institutional partners. The Curatorial Intensive consists of a weeklong schedule of seminars, workshops, advisement meetings, and site visits developed by ICI and taught by leading curators, artists, critics, and directors. Participants apply with an exhibition proposal to workshop through the program, the outcomes of which are presented to a public audience on the last day. Through their intensive engagement with each other during the sessions, participants realize opportunities for developing new collaborations and networks. In 2015, ICI has established new international sites for the Curatorial Intensive and developed partnerships with institutions such as: Prospect and the Contemporary Arts Center in New Orleans, LA; Dar al-Ma’mûn in Marrakech, Morocco; and Gerencia Distrital de las Artes (IDARTES) in Bogotá, Colombia. Bolstering ICI’s involvement in Southeast Asia, the Curatorial Intensive will also take place in Manila, the Philippines in October 2015. MARRAKECH, MOROCCO Program Dates: May 19–25, 2015 This May, ICI in collaboration with Dar al-Ma’mûn, presents the inaugural Curatorial Intensive in Marrakech, Morocco. Following the Curatorial Intensive in Addis Ababa with the Zoma Contemporary Art Center (ZCAC) in 2014, and in Johannesburg with The Bag Factory Artists’ Studios in 2013, ICI continues its commitment to supporting curatorial training in Africa and to developing regional networks. The program will focus on the cultural landscape of West Africa and the Maghreb while also exploring the role of curators working for both local and international audiences. INSTRUCTORS AND ADVISORS Omar Berrada and Julien Amicel (co-funders of Dar al-Ma’mûn), María del Carmen Carrión (Director of Public Programs & Research, ICI), Hassan Darsi and Florence Renault-Darsi (Founders, La source du lion, Casablanca), Koyo Kouoh (Founding Artistic Director, RAW Material Company, Dakar), Renaud Proch (Executive Director, ICI), Mohamed Rachdi (independent curator, Marrakech), Shuddhabrata Sengupta (artist, New Delhi), Bisi Silva (Founder/Director, Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos), and Christine Tohme (founder, Ashkal Alwan, Beirut), among others. The Curatorial Intensive is made possible in part by grants from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation and the Hartfield Foundation, and by generous contributions from Toby Devan Lewis, the ICI Board of Trustees, ICI’s Leadership Fund for Africa, and the supporters of ICI’s Access Fund. Scholarships for curators from Turkey will be supported by SAHA. BOGOTÁ, COLOMBIA Program Dates: June 17–23, 2015 This June, ICI in collaboration with Gerencia Distrital de las Artes (IDARTES), presents the second Curatorial Intensive in Bogotá. Following the success of the last Curatorial Intensive in Bogotá in November 2013, ICI is pleased to continue its active programming in Latin America and offering professional training opportunities for emerging curators in Spanish. The Curatorial Intensive is made possible in part by grants from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation and the Hartfield Foundation, and by generous contributions from Toby Devan Lewis, the ICI Board of Trustees, the ICI Gerrit Lansing Education Fund, and the supporters of ICI’s Access Fund. The Kurimanzutto Scholarship for Latin American curators will be offered to one successful applicant. For more information on the instructors, advisors, and schedule, as well as past Curatorial Intensives, visit ICI’s website, curatorsintl.org, or contact Kimberly Kitada at [email protected]. CURATORIAL INTENSIVE 19 Curating Now, Curatorial Intensive in New York, seminar with Holland Cotter, September 21–30, 2014. PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH 18 REPORT: NEW YORK Program Dates: September 21–30, 2014 Last September, the Curatorial Intensive in New York: Curating Now offered curators the opportunity to discuss, among colleagues, the concepts, logistics, and challenges of organizing exhibitions, public programs, and other discursive formats. Topics under discussion included social practice, community engagement, and alternative exhibition formats, among others. The program explored independent practices and spaces in New York, such as Participant Inc, and gave curators the opportunity to engage with independent and institutional curators based in the city, as well as one of New York’s leading voice on contemporary art, Holland Cotter. INSTRUCTORS AND ADVISORS María del Carmen Carrión (Associate Director of Public Programs & Research, ICI), Stuart Comer (Chief Curator, Department of Media and Performance Art, The Museum of Modern Art, New York), Holland Cotter (Cochief Art Critic and Senior Writer, The New York Times, New York), Reem Fadda (Associate Curator of Middle Eastern Art, Abu Dhabi Project, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York), Lia Gangitano (Founder/Director, Participant Inc., New York), Andrea Geyer (artist, New York), Elizabeth M. Grady (Director of Programs, A Blade of Grass, New York), Larissa Harris (Curator, Queens Museum of Art, New York), Tumelo Mosaka (independent curator, New York), and Renaud Proch (Executive Director, ICI) The Curatorial Intensive is made possible in part by grants from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, the Hartfield Foundation, and by generous contributions from the ICI Board of Trustees, the ICI Gerrit Lansing Education Fund, and the supporters of ICI’s Access Fund. Scholarships for this Curatorial Intensive were generously provided by SAHA. Curatorial Intensive in New Orleans, seminar with Franklin Sirmans, Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, January 18–24, 2015. CURATORIAL INTENSIVE NEW ORLEANS Program Dates: January 18–24, 2015 In January 2015, ICI inaugurated the Curatorial Intensive in New Orleans in collaboration with Prospect and the Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans. This program represented the first 8-day Intensive in the U.S. outside of New York, which is part of an ongoing series of programs engaging with curatorial and artistic practices around the Gulf of Mexico—including exhibitions and curatorial research fellowships. The Intensive brought together emerging curators from across the South and around the world for the opportunity to exchange ideas, develop their exhibitions and projects, and explore Prospect.3 Notes for Now, the international biennial curated by Franklin Sirmans. INSTRUCTORS AND ADVISORS Andrea Andersson (Chief Curator of Visual Arts, CAC New Orleans), María del Carmen Carrión (Director of Public Programs & Research, ICI), Tumelo Mosaka (independent curator, New York), Beatriz Santiago Muñoz (artist, San Juan), Valerie Cassel Oliver (Senior Curator, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston), Elvira Dyangani Ose (Lecturer in Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London and Curator of the 8th Edition of the Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art, GIBCA 2015), Renaud Proch (Executive Director, ICI), Franklin Sirmans (Artistic Director, Prospect.3, New Orleans and Terri and Michael Smooke Department Head and Curator of Contemporary Art, LACMA, Los Angeles), and Claire Tancons (independent curator, New Orleans) PROSPECT NEW ORLEANS Prospect New Orleans was conceived in the tradition of the great international exhibitions, such as the Venice Biennale and the Bienal de São Paulo, to showcase new artistic practices from around the world in settings that are both historic and culturally exceptional, and contribute to the cultural economy of New Orleans and the Louisiana Gulf region. Prospect.3: Notes for Now, the third edition of the New Orleans International Contemporary Art Biennial, is on view through January 25, 2015. CAC NEW ORLEANS The Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) is a multi– disciplinary arts center dedicated to the presentation, production, and promotion of the art of our time. Formed in 1976 by a passionate group of visual and performing artists when the movement to tear down the walls between visual and performing arts was active nationwide, the CAC expresses its mission by organizing world class curated exhibitions, performances, and public programs that educate and enlarge audiences for the arts while encouraging collaboration among diverse stakeholders composed of artists, institutions, communities, and supporters throughout the world. The Curatorial Intensive is made possible in part by grants from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation and the Hartfield Foundation, and by generous contributions from Toby Devan Lewis, the ICI Board of Trustees, the ICI Gerrit Lansing Education Fund, and the supporters of ICI’s Access Fund. 21 Curatorial Intensive in New Orleans, seminar with Andrea Andersson, Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, January 18–24, 2015. CURATORIAL INTENSIVE 20 NOTES FROM NOLA Program Dates: January 18–24, 2015 Coinciding with the closing week of the Prospect 3 Biennial: Notes for Now, curated by Franklin Sirmans, the vibrant art scene in New Orleans proved to be a dynamic context for the first Curatorial Intensive in the Crescent City. Tumelo Mosaka opened the week with a seminar asking the curators to consider their motivations, their goals, and the urgency of their work. Andrea Andersson, newly appointed Chief Curator of Visual Arts at CAC, incorporated the publication aspect of curatorial work by focusing on the book format, and looking at exhibitions as a “visual essay.” One remarkable highlight of the week was a site visit to L9 Center for the Arts, where the artists Chandra McCormick and Keith Calhoun, provided us with a glimpse into their work. Participants also received an internal perspective on the planning, development, and realization of the P.3 Biennial from Brooke Davis Anderson, Executive Director of Prospect New Orleans, and Franklin Sirmans, Artistic Director of P.3. Sirmans spoke about his conceptual starting point of an existential journey by way of Walker Percy’s novel The Moviegoer, and shaping the biennial to reflect the local content and the current moment. Claire Tancons, a New Orleans-based independent curator, and curator of EN MAS’ spoke of her practice and projects and joined by Delaney Martin to discuss Public Practice: An Anti-Violence Community Ceremony, a project the two co-organized in October 2014 during the opening events of P.3. Later in the week, Elvira Dyangani Ose, curator of the 8th Edition of the Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art (GIBCA), spoke about the Lubumbashi Biennial. And on the final day of seminars, Valerie Cassel Oliver, Senior Curator at CAMH, discussed her interest in moving image and performance-based practices through the lens of several past exhibitions. Another international perspective from Beatriz Santiago Muñoz brought the artist’s voice to the conversation as she discussed her own practice. She also co-founded Beta-Local in San Juan, Puerto Rico: a collective, visionary project to generate a new model for discussion, engagement, and community within an art space. The final symposium at CAC provided the participants with an opportunity to present their exhibition proposals to a public audience. Based on their proposals, the topics of presentations included social and economic inequality, contemporary implications of the civil rights movement, and new models for audience engagement. Following the day of presentations, a member of the audience, impressed with the curators and quality of the program, made an anonymous donation to fund a travel fellowship for several participants to attend the 56th Venice Biennale in May 2015. The curators will receive a travel stipend, invitations to events organized by ICI Collaborators in Venice, and have the opportunity to meet dozens of colleagues and alumni from around the world at a reunion and meeting organized by ICI in partnership with Fabrica, held at the Italian foundation’s grounds in Treviso. Freya Chou (Summer NY ’11) was appointed as the first Curator of Education and Public Program at Para Site, Hong Kong. Sally Frater (Summer NY ‘12) curated 1972 at Pollock Gallery, Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, on view October 10−November 8, 2014. There are currently 327 alumni of the Curatorial Intensives, based in 61 different countries and 22 U.S. states. ICI remains in contact with alumni through the Curator’s Network, and is updated on the exhibitions and projects that become fully realized after the Intensives, as well as the alumni’s other public programs and curatorial endeavors around the world. In Santiago, Chile, Soledad García (Bogotá ‘13) cocurated Block Mágico at Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (October 11, 2014−January 25, 2015). Nazli Gurlek (Derry ‘13 and Istanbul ‘13) curated Common Ground: Water at Borusan Contemporary in Istanbul, Turkey (November 29, 2014−March 22, 2015). Ivan Isaev (Moscow ’14) was appointed as the new curator for the young art platform START at CCA Winzavod in Moscow, Russia. Priscila Fernandes, For a Better World, 2012. Installation image, Pratfall Tramps, Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, February 6–April 11, 2015. Photo: Jan Rattia. EXHIBITIONS AND PROGRAMS DEVELOPED THROUGH THE CURATORIAL INTENSIVE Jesse van Oosten The Value of Nothing September 4–November 16, 2014 TENT Rotterdam, The Netherlands Rachel Reese Pratfall Tramps February 6–April 11, 2015 Atlanta Contemporary Art Center The Value of Nothing springs from long-term research initiated by TENT into shifts in thinking about value and economics, and the role that art can play therein. In the aftermath of the global economic crisis increasingly urgent questions arise that are related to neoliberal values seeping into almost every aspect of our lives. The Value of Nothing presents artists who contribute to the current debate on commodification in society, expose the underlying mechanisms, or propose alternative strategies. How do we begin to qualify and draw connections between artists and artworks dealing with or about ‘funniness’ as subject matter, however individualized? Pratfall Tramps investigates an artwork’s comedic desire, through the work of Tammy Rae Carland, Jamie Isenstein, Sara Greenberger Rafferty and Mary Reid Kelley. These four women artists have developed strong practices that reference mainstream comedy’s systems and authors, while reflecting on issues of gender in comedy and the art world they occupy. Each artist takes a comedic approach, uniquely tied to their personal visual styles and narratives, as a means to explore their work and their deviations from norms (whether cultural, social, logical, or linguistic). João Laia (Derry ‘13) is on the Curatorial Committee of the 19th Contemporary Art Festival Sesc Videobrasil, to be held October 6−December 6, 2015 in São Paulo, Brazil. Tess Maunder (Tokyo ‘13) has joined the team of The Institute of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia as Public Programs and Publications Officer. Yameli Mera (Mexico City ‘14) curated the exhibition of Beatriz Santiago Muñoz, Matrulla: Landscape and Memory at Sala de Arte Publico in Mexico City, on view September 4−November 23, 2014. Sofia Olascoaga (Inhotim ’12) has joined the curatorial team for the 32nd São Paulo Biennial, scheduled for September 2016. Sidd Perez (Tokyo ‘13) curated Articles of Disagreements at the Lopez Museum & Library, Pasig City, Philippines (September 19−December 20, 2014). Balimunsi Philip (Addis Ababa ’14) and Robinah Nansubuga (Johannesburg ‘13) were part of the curatorial team for the 2014 Kampala Contemporary Art Festival, October 4−31, 2014 in Kampala, Uganda. TransHisTor(ia), a collective comprised of María Sol Barón Pino and Camilo Ordóñez Robayo (Mexico City ‘14), curated Con Wilson...dos décadas vulnerables locales y visuales at Galería Santa Fe, Bogotá, Colombia (October 17−November 14, 2014). Adnan Yildiz (Fall NY ’11) was named Director of Artspace, Auckland, New Zealand. For more information about the Curatorial Intensive and the program’s alumni, visit ICI’s website, www.curatorsintl.org, under the Curatorial Intensive section. Balimunsi Philip at the Curatorial Intensive in Addis Ababa, May 13–19, 2014. Diana Campbell (Inhotim ‘12), Director of the Samdani Art Foundation, announced the third edition of the Dhaka Art Summit, which will take place from February 5–8, 2016 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Ivan Isaev at the Curatorial Intensive in Moscow, August 3–9, 2014. ALUMNI UPDATES ALUMNI NEWS 23 João Laia at the Curatorial Intensive in Derry~Londonderry, May 19–25, 2013. ALUMNI UPDATES TransHisTor(ia), María Sol Barón Pino and Camilo Ordóñez Robayo, at the Curatorial Intensive in Mexico City, June 30–July 7, 2014. PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH 22 INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL 40 YEARS OF ICI 40 YEARS OF ICI Martha Wilson Sourcebook: 40 Years of Reconsidering Performance, Feminism, Alternative Spaces, were not ICI’s first partnerships with the artist. Just three years after ICI was established, and at the same time as Wilson founded the alternative space Franklin Furnace, ICI produced Artists’ Books U.S.A., a unique survey exhibition of artists’ publications, co-curated by Wilson and Peter Frank. The show included well over a hundred examples of book art—showing a broad range of attitudes towards publishing, from ad-hoc to ephemeral, experimental to activist. From 1978 to 1980, it expanded the often-informal distribution of these publications to reach broad audiences in art spaces across North America. ICI has remained committed to supporting independent publishing as an artistic and curatorial practice, and regularly organizes panel discussions, events, and book launches, at its Curatorial Hub and beyond. Since 1975, ICI has been a pioneering organization focusing on the role of the curator as a contextualizing force for contemporary art. With exhibitions, events, publications, curatorial training and research, ICI today is the only art organization of its kind to be active in every U.S. state and over 40 countries—from California to Indonesia, wherever partnerships are activated. With this unique perspective, ICI works with curators, artists, and art spaces, to supports independent practice. One collaboration at a time, we foster the local structures and expand the regional networks that allow for cultural exchange in a global world. Collaboration is at the core of ICI’s approach to supporting curators and creating access to contemporary art and discourse for broad audiences. As they travel to art spaces internationally, many ICI exhibitions are the basis of collaborations with the hosting venues and curators that generate new content, even new publications, and new experiences with local audiences in mind. ICI exhibitions such as do it (1997–2001, and 2013–present), FAX (2009–12), and Living as Form (the Nomadic Version) (2012–14), actually grow as they travel, gathering new local contents that are then taken to international contexts. ICI’s training and research programs for curators also rely on the power of working together, sharing knowledge, and learning from one another. The Curatorial Intensive is the first-ever professional development and training program to build a growing, active network of peers for continued learning among curators. Each Intensive held outside of New York City is developed by ICI with a partner institution, around ideas selected by both for their relevance to the local, regional and international contexts. Even ICI’s Research Fellowships allow curators 40 YEARS OF ENCOURAGING INDEPENDENT PRACTICE Over the past 40 years, ICI has built an unparalleled network of collaborators—curators, artists, and art spaces of all sizes—with the goal to support independent practice locally, and encourage the sharing of independent thought across the globe. This has been true since day one, and ICI today continues to build upon this rich history of support to independent projects. Take for example ICI’s current collaboration with Martha Wilson, which has roots in the late 1970s. Martha Wilson —an evolving retrospective of the artist’s work—and the ENERGIZING CURATORIAL NETWORKS, AND FOSTERING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AROUND THE WORLD Recognizing the critical issues faced by emerging curators working in different contexts across the U.S. and around the world—including cost, time, and access to resources—the Curatorial Intensive was developed in 2010 as a weeklong, low-cost program that can take place in collaboration with art organizations around the world. Just like with many ICI exhibitions, the program is adapted to each local partnership, promoting a better understanding of the local context. Curatorial Intensive in Mexico City, Public Symposium at Museo Jumex, July 7, 2014. ICI’s founders, Susan Sollins and Nina Castelli Sundell, defined in 1975 the vision behind one of the first organizations in the world to be dedicated to curators. Their work together shaped their understanding of how an international network of curators, artists, and art spaces could emerge through collaboration and serve to advance curatorial practice and the presentation of contemporary art. to conduct the research that is critical to their practice in conversation with ICI staff, and with access to ICI’s international network of collaborators. Workshop at TEOR/éTica, Costa Rica led by Pablo León de la Barra. WORKING COLLABORATIVELY WITH CURATORS, ARTISTS, AND ART SPACES 25 Meskerem Assegued at the Curatorial Intensive in Addis Ababa, May 13–19, 2014. 24 And just like ICI’s first exhibition catalogue in 1975 was published in Spanish and Portuguese, translation remains a critical consideration at ICI, in order to address issues of access in the curatorial field. Since 2013, the Curatorial Intensive was organized in 3 cities in Latin America, conducted entirely in Spanish. The upcoming Intensive in Marrakech, Morocco, will be conducted in English, but also in Arabic and French, following a new model developed with our partners, Dar al-Ma’mûn, an art space whose activities include educational and translation programs. In addition, key curatorial resources will be translated into French and Arabic for the first time for the occasion. International iterations of ICI’s programs and the Curatorial Intensive in particular have also shown to give broader access to emerging curators, recognizing that opportunities are still often curtailed by borders, visas, and other political and economic factors. PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH 26 RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS The Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (CPPC) Travel Award, the ICI/SAHA Research Award, and the French Institute Fellowship support curators in providing opportunities for in-depth research. View of abandoned oil facilities, Aruba, June 2014. Photo: María Elena Ortiz 2015 CPPC TRAVEL AWARD CENTRAL AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Application guidelines for the CPPC Travel Award can be found on ICI’s website. Independent curators and those with institutional affiliations may apply. Applications from established and emerging curators (3+ years of professional experience) will be considered. A jury of professionals who live in, or have extensive knowledge of the region, will select the successful applicant. The inaugural CPPC Travel Award was granted in 2012 to Pablo León de la Barra, who conducted research trips to the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Panama, and Puerto Rico with the aim to reread seminal historical moments in the region that have acquired new relevance in the current political and economic reality. The 2013 recipient, Remco de Blaaij, set out to research women activist practices in the countries of Guatemala, Jamaica, Nicaragua, and Suriname. The 2014 awardee, María Elena Ortiz, explored film and video practices in Aruba, Martinique, the Bahamas, and Trinidad and Tobago. Application Deadline: April 1, 2015 In 2015, The Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (CPPC) and ICI continue their partnership with The 2015 Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Travel Award for Central America and the Caribbean. In its fourth edition, this travel award will support a contemporary art curator based anywhere in the world to travel to Central America and the Caribbean to conduct research about art and cultural activities in the region. Intended to generate new collaborations with artists, curators, museums, and cultural centers in the area, this award will cover curatorial residencies, studio visits, and/or archival research. The CPPC Travel Award will support a curator to visit either one or multiple locations in Central America and the Caribbean. The travel period can be anywhere between three weeks and three months, and take place between May and November 2015. The grant will cover costs of up to $10,000. Thank you to the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (CPPC) for their generous support of this fellowship. CPPC works to increase the understanding and awareness of Latin America’s contributions to the history of art and ideas, and to support innovation, education, and research in the field of Latin American art. View of Théâtre Aimé Césaire, Martinique, July 2014. Photo: María Elena Ortiz RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS 27 2014 CPPC TRAVEL AWARD María Elena Ortiz was selected as the third recipient of the CPPC Travel Award for Central America and the Caribbean. She visited new and established contemporary art centers, artist initiatives, and film festivals in the Caribbean countries of Aruba, the Bahamas, Martinique, and Trinidad and Tobago. She conducted interviews with local cultural producers and studio visits with artists to investigate film and video practices with the aim of strengthening the ties between art in the Caribbean and the Diaspora, particularly in the local community of Miami, Florida. In the Bahamas an artist mentioned to me, “I enjoy not feeling the burden of cultural history.” I found this creative attitude in many places in Nassau, as I came across a locality always in action, generating compelling art that questions the cultural pillars that formed this young nation, while also tracing their history in provocative exhibitions. During my stay, I visited the National Gallery of the Bahamas, the city’s well-established artist-run spaces, and met with a group of artists actively shaping contemporary art in Nassau. I had studio visits with various artists, some of whom participated in the exhibition at the National Gallery. I met with Tessa Whitehead and Heino Schmid, who have been working collaboratively, and creating a series of works focused on sculpture and time-based experimentation, in which the artists use found materials to make improvised sculptural works. Also, I spoke with Holly Parotti, an artist working in video and photography to address notions of identity, landscape, sexuality, and gender. I had the opportunity to visit with John Beadle, one of the most important artists working in the Bahamas. Beadle is known for using found materials to create formal arrangements that question tradition and representation. — María Elena Ortiz To read more from María Elena Ortiz’s travel-log, please visit the Research section of ICI’s website. FELLOW María Elena Ortiz currently works as Assistant Curator at the Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM). Previously, she was the Curator of Contemporary Arts at the Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros in Mexico City. Ortiz has also collaborated with institutions such as TEOR/éTica, San Jose, Costa Rica; Tate Modern, London; the Museum of Craft and Folk Art, and New Langton Arts, both in San Francisco. RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS ICI / SAHA RESEARCH AWARD Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez, 2014 ICI / French Institute Fellowship recipient. Photo: Jure Eržen Closed-Door Think Tank with Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez, ICI Curatorial Hub, New York, October 22, 2014. 28 Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez is the third ICI / French Institute Fellow. The fellowship program offers a French curator a new opportunity for international research and the development of professional networks. The program spans over a period of 6 months and includes research trips to the U.S. and now to other cities throughout the international network of ICI collaborators. Petrešin-Bachelez’s research focuses on cooperative practices in curating and on common urgencies, solidarities, empathy and antagonisms of dynamic networks, including collaboratively-run spaces, advocacy groups, and artist-activist groups. In October 2014, Nataša furthered her research in New York by facilitating a closed-door discussion at the ICI Curatorial Hub with María del Carmen Carrión (Director of Public Programs & Research, ICI), Reem Fadda (Associate Curator, Middle Eastern Art, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Project), Julia Knight (Operations Director, apexart), Nitin Sawhney (Assistant Professor of Media Studies, The New School for Public Engagement), and Nato Thompson (Chief Curator, Creative Time). Nataša also traveled to Mexico City, where she met with artists Julia Rometti and Victor Costales, curators Magali Arriola, Julieta Gonzalez (Senior Curator, Museo Rufino Tamayo), and Cuauhtemoc Medina (Chief Curator, MUAC) as well as the critic Susanna Vargas. I chose to embark on the short but intense investigation and comparison into the common urgencies, solidarities, empathy and antagonisms that drive some of the more visible institutional networks in the contemporary art world in Europe, U.S., and also more transnationally, including cooperatively-run spaces, advocacy groups, and artist activist groups. Having just begun to work as the managing editor of L’Internationale Online, the new online platform of the confederation of European museums and art institutions, the idea about the research on cooperative practices in curating and in the institutional politics has been in the forefront of my current interests. The recipients of the 2013 ICI / SAHA Research Award were Gürsoy Doğtaş (Turkey) and Alejandra Labastida (Mexico), who participated in the Summer 2013 Curatorial Intensive in New York. Their research aimed to explore the impact of the military regime in the 1980s Turkish Republic, focusing on Zeki Müren (1931–1996), a Turkish poet, composer, and singer who was banned from performing on stage for several years. The curators are using his work as an example to reveal the often little-know history of artistic repression during this time. Aside from the institutional work on the mutualization of resources, solidarity and working together on the basis of affinities, L’Internationale can be taken as a starting point. One can detect through its organisation what are the possibilities of participation today, in the global exchange of ideas, the spectacularization of the art institutions and wild speculation of art market. L’Internationale is a confederation of six modern and contemporary art institutions; it proposes a space for art within a non-hierarchical and decentralized internationalism, based on the values of difference and horizontal exchange among a constellation of cultural agents, locally rooted and globally connected. —Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez FELLOW Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez is an art critic and independent curator based in Paris, France. She is currently managing editor of the online platform of L’Internationale, which is hosted by KASK/School of Arts in Ghent. Since 2011, Petrešin-Bachelez has been chief editor of Manifesta Journal. Thank you to l’Institut français in Paris, and the Cultural Services of the French Embassy for generously supporting this fellowship. L’Institut français in Paris promotes French culture abroad and the Cultural Services of the French Embassy provides Americans access and resources to engage with French culture. Images for Zeki Muren research and publication. Image by Gürsoy Dogtas and Alejandra Labastida. 2014 ICI / FRENCH INSTITUTE FELLOWSHIP Since 2012, SAHA and ICI have been collaborating on a $3,000 award for Curatorial Intensive Alumni to encourage productive networks between curators. 29 RESEARCH PUBLICATION The research conducted by Alejandra Labastida and Gürsoy Doğtaş led to a bilingual (Turkish and English) publication in the style of a fanzine. It served to present the preliminary state of research, with further contributions examining more detailed questions from the interviews, such as the significance of voice and his break with the heteronormative image of men. The full digital publication titled The Politics of the Melancholic Voice: Zeki Müren’s Kahir Mektubu is now available on the ICI website: curatorsintl.org/research/journals Thank you to SAHA for their generous support of this fellowship. SAHA aims to contribute toward the presence and visibility of art from Turkey and supports artistic projects and research working in contemporary art. CURATOR’S PERSPECTIVE CURATOR’S PERSPECTIVE Naomi Beckwith, Photo: Nathan Keay. UPCOMING EVENTS The CURATOR’S PERSPECTIVE is a free, itinerant public discussion series ICI developed as a way for international curators to share their interests and experiences with audiences in New York. These talks provide an opportunity to access information about a wide variety of international perspectives on art today. This year, ICI has invited curators based in Chicago, Hong Kong, Munich, and New York to speak about art, culture, and the exhibitions in which they are most interested, as well as the artists and the sociopolitical contexts that are shaping curatorial practice now. Naomi Beckwith is the Marilyn and Larry Fields Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. Prior to joining the MCA, Beckwith was a fellow at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, working on numerous cutting-edge exhibitions including Locally Localized Gravity (2007), which was an exhibition and program of events featuring over 100 artists whose practices are social, participatory, and communal. Beckwith was previously the Associate Curator at The Studio Museum in Harlem, where she focused on themes of identity and conceptual practices in contemporary art and artists of African descent, as well as managed the Artists-in-Residence program. Beckwith has curated key exhibitions such as 30 Seconds off an Inch at The Studio Museum in Harlem (2009–10), exhibiting work by 42 artists of color or those inspired by black culture. Inti Guerrero, independent curator and art critic. Courtesy of Inti Guerrero. Curator’s Perspective: Valerie Cassel Oliver, Hunter College MFA Campus, New York, September 10, 2014. Valerie Cassel Oliver, Photo: Eric Hester Valerie Cassel Oliver, Senior Curator at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, spoke at the Hunter College MFA Campus about her recent curatorial projects and ideas on exhibition-making. She discussed some of her key exhibitions from Splat Boom Pow! The Influence of Cartoons in Contemporary Art (2003) to Double Consciousness: Black Conceptual Art since 1970 (2005), as well as her recent Radical Presence (2012); and her relationship to the institution she has worked at for over a decade, and the audience that has followed its program. curated exhibitions for Tate Modern, London, UK; Museum of Art of Rio, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Para Site, Hong Kong; TheCube, Project Space, Taipei; ARKO art centre, Seoul; Kadist, San Francisco; and Bergen Assembly, Bergen. His writings have appeared in Afterall, ArtNexus, Metropolis M, Nero, Manifesta Journal, and Ramona, among other publications and exhibition catalogues. Naomi Beckwith Tuesday, March 10, 7–8:30pm NYU Steinhardt, Einstein Auditorium 34 Stuyvesant Street New York, NY 10003 PAST PROGRAMS Valerie Cassel Oliver September 10, 2014 31 Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath, co-founders of Art Reoriented. PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH 30 Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath Tuesday, June 2, 7–8:30pm Hunter College MFA Campus 205 Hudson Street Gallery, 2nd Floor New York, NY 10013 Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath co-founded Art Reoriented, a multi-disciplinary curatorial platform operating from Munich and New York, in 2009. Their past and ongoing exhibition, research and publication projects were presented internationally with institutions such as MoMA in New York, Mathaf in Doha, INHA in Paris, IVAM in Valencia, Casa Arabe in Madrid, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Gwangju, Tashkeel in Dubai, the China Art Museum in Beijing and BOZAR in Brussles. They are members of several art prize and residency committees such as Dar Al-Ma’mun in Marrakech and the Boghossian Foundation in Brussels. Bardaouil and Fellrath have held teaching positions at several universities such as the London School of Economics and the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. All events in the Curator’s Perspective series are free of charge and open to the public. For more information about upcoming events visit ICI’s website, curatorsintl.org, or contact Kimberly Kitada at [email protected]. The 2014 Curator’s Perspective program is made possible, in part, by grants from the Hartfield Foundation, the support of ICI’s Board of Trustees and ICI’s Gerrit Lansing Education Fund. Inti Guerrero Wednesday, April 8, 7–8:30pm School of Visual Arts 132 W. 21st Street, 10th Floor New York, NY 10010 Inti Guerrero is an art critic and curator based in Hong Kong. Until recently he was Associate Artistic Director of TEOR/éTica, San José, Costa Rica. Guerrero has PUBLIC PROGRAMS & RESEARCH CURATORIAL HUB CURATORIAL HUB Film Preview and Talk with Nitin Sawhney October 14, 2014 Nitin Sawhney spoke about his recent documentary Zona Intervenida, co-produced with the Andén Collective in Guatemala, with a limited sneak preview. Zona Intervenida is an artistic exploration of the historic memory of violence, civil war and apathy in Guatemala. He also briefly discussed his emerging curatorial research project, Guatemala Después. Curatorial Intensive alumna Megan Witko presents a panel discussion on social practice in the domestic sphere, featuring artists Alina Bliumis and Ben Kinmont. Megan Witko, who participated in the Moscow Intensive in August 2014, developed this proposal over the course of the program, which is also published on the ICI website under Alumni Proposals. The Curatorial Hub was established with the support of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and programs at the Hub are made possible in part by a grant from the Hartfield Foundation. Check ICI’s website, curatorsintl.org, for updates on Hub events. “You Belong Here”: Tavares Strachan in conversation with María del Carmen Carrión February 10, 2015 New York-based artist Tavares Strachan and ICI’s María del Carmen Carrión discussed the artist’s past and current projects to a full house, including the large-scale neon work, You Belong Here, commissioned for the Prospect.3 Biennial in New Orleans. Holeng: Lyrical Memoirs, ICI Curatorial Hub, New York, January 14, 2015. Domestic Revolution: Panel Discussion with Megan Witko Tuesday, April 7, 6:30–8pm Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Hartford Wash: Washing, Tracks, Maintenance (Outside), 1973; Part of Maintenance Art performance series, 1973-1974, Performance at Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT. Courtesy of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York. UPCOMING EVENTS To coincide with her new publication In the Canyon, Revise the Canon: Utopian Knowledge, Radical Pedagogy and Artist-run Community Art Spaces in Southern California, philosopher Géraldine Gourbe joins ICI from Paris to discuss her research and propose a framework for which we can continue to use feminism as a tool to engage with art and culture at large. Tavares Strachan, Polar Eclipse, 2013, Courtesy of the artist. Film Preview and Talk: Zona Intervenida // Colectivo Andén, directed by Nitin Sawhney, ICI Curatorial Hub, New York, October 14, 2014. PAST EVENTS Over the past year, ICI hosted 23 events in the Curatorial Hub, all of which were free and open to the public. Intended to better facilitate the informal exchange of ideas and experiences between professionals, the Curatorial Hub provides a flexible and discursive space for artist and curator talks, panel discussions, small press events, performative lectures, reading sessions, and training programs. It also houses a curatorial library of periodicals and books from institutions all over the world. Events at the Hub are announced throughout the year. IN THE CANYON, REVISE THE CANON: Géraldine Gourbe Thursday, April 2, 6:30–8pm 33 Spaces, Species and Situations: David Brooks and Meredith Johnson, ICI Curatorial Hub, New York, February 24, 2015. 32 Holeng: Lyrical Memoirs January 14, 2015 Holeng, an artist and curator from Singapore and currently based in Vienna, presented a talk titled Lyrical Memoirs: Cultural, criticism, and curating of photographic engagement of an existential space. The event focused on a visual ethnography project comprised of photographs and text by Holeng on the sociological processes of urban regeneration in Asia. Spaces, Species and Situations: David Brooks in conversation with Meredith Johnson February 25, 2015 Artist David Brooks, in conversation with curator Meredith Johnson, spoke about his expeditions, installations, and public work exploring the relationship between culture and the natural world. Brooks and Johnson considered how our communal and individual relationship to geologic time can be translated through the ephemeral language of the exhibition, and the role artists play in a political conversation that spans species and epochs. 34 NETWORKS & ACCESS NETWORKS & ACCESS ONLINE NETWORKS 35 ICI’s website offers access to more than the latest information on ICI exhibitions and programs. It is a curatorial resource that makes available recordings of ICI talks and conferences, commissioned writings, a 40-year exhibition archive, from anywhere around the world. It includes an online catalogue of the ICI Library, located at the Curatorial Hub in New York. And it hosts the Curator’s Network, ICI’s online professional membership program, which facilitates international exchange and dialogue for over 500 members from more than 60 countries. The Curator’s Network is ICI’s professional membership program and an online community of curators from around the world, with over 500 members from more than 60 countries, all professionals in the field, including recent alumni and faculty of the Curatorial Intensive. Members share a desire to build and enrich their interests and research through international connections. The Curator’s Network provides select access to professional resources, including a Reading Room, a Forum, and an online guide to sought-after opportunities. Through the Network, curators can access information on residencies, current job and fellowship opportunities, calls for exhibitions and conference papers, as well as articles on curating and source material for research. ONLINE RESOURCES: RESEARCH The Research section of ICI’s website offers an array of curatorial resources to professionals and broad audiences alike. The Journal section provides interviews with recipients of the Independent Vision Curatorial Award, as well as commissioned research texts from ICI collaborators and Curatorial Intensive alumni, in addition to reports and publications from our research fellows. Announcements on ICI’s fellowship opportunities are available in the Fellowships section. The Media Room contains audio recordings from ICI public programming such as The Curator’s Perspective and Curatorial Hub events, edited in collaboration with Clocktower Radio’s “Art on Air.” A growing archive of recordings also includes a series of video interviews with Curatorial Intensive faculty in Mexico City, conducted in Spanish. Membership also grants access to a quarterly newsletter with program updates, opportunities, suggested reading and articles, as well as exclusive offers from ICI; a closed group on LinkedIn; and to ICI’s Curatorial Hub and Library. International members of the Curator’s Network now will have access to NeueHouse as a base when they are in New York City. This new partnership offers the flexible workspace, meeting rooms, and networking opportunities needed when traveling. The fully tax-deductible annual subscription to the Curator’s Network is $100 per year. For more information or to register, visit ICI’s website, curatorsintl.org, under the Network section. For questions about the Curator’s Network, email [email protected]. ICI LIBRARY Like the Curatorial Hub that houses it, the ICI Library serves to document recent developments in contemporary art through the lens of international curatorial practice. It presents itself as a tool for research and an accessible resource for curators living in or coming through New York. The books in the ICI Library are non-circulating, but we encourage visitors to schedule an appointment to access this unique resource. You can begin by exploring the ICI Library holdings through our digital database, LibraryThing: www.librarything.com/profile/CuratorsINTL do it instruction by Nicolás Paris, do it at The Episcopal Academy, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA, 2015. ICI has developed specific online platforms for generative exhibitions such as do it, in order to make accessible the contents created by each iteration of the project. Similarly, the online platform for EN MAS’ contains of a wealth of documentation and materials tracking the development and production of the nine performances around which the exhibition is articulated. Ebony G. Patterson, Invisible Presence: Bling Memories, performance, April 27, 2014, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo: Monique Gilpin and Philip Rhoden CURATOR’S NETWORK Juan A. Gaitán at the Curatorial Intensive in Mexico City, Museo Jumex, June 30-July 7, 2014. ONLINE RESOURCES: DO IT AND EN MAS’ NETWORKS & ACCESS 36 PUBLICATIONS PUBLICATIONS For the past four decades, ICI has been dedicated to producing catalogues to accompany its exhibitions, as well as publications that reflect on the latest developments of curatorial practice. Since 2011, ICI also launched two new publication series: the SOURCEBOOK series of artists-edited publications; and PERSPECTIVES IN CURATING, which offers timely reflections on emerging debates in curatorial practice, and debuted with the best-seller Thinking Contemporary Curating. 1975 1987 1990 ICI’s first exhibition, VIDEOART U.S.A. was curated by Jack Boulton, and showcased artists who were pioneers of the new medium, including Lynda Benglis, Nam June Paik, Keith Sonnier, and Vito Acconci. The exhibition served as the American representation in the São Paulo Biennial, and was shown across Latin America from 1975-76. The accompanying catalogue was produced in Portuguese and in Spanish. A catalogue that accompanied ICI’s Morality Tales: History Painting in the 1980s, curated by Tom Sokolowski, this large publication reflects on the work of Ida Applebroog, Eric Fischl, and Leon Golub, among others, with an essay by Sokolowski reviving the concept of istoria, or history painting, to make sense of the times. Faced with the AIDS crisis of the 1980s, Sokolowski and other curators and artists looked at history painting to convey otherwise untold stories, largely ignored by the government and the media; and to set a record, one that is both historical and moral in nature. VIDEOART U.S.A. also provided the impetus for many other ICI exhibitions including the CAPS/ICI Traveling Video Festival curated by ICI Co-founder Nina Sundell (1981–84), and more recently Project 35 and Project 35 Volume 2 which have continued tracking contemporary approaches to the medium around the world. Out of print Five years later, Sokolowski, together with Robert Atkins, curated ICI’s From Media to Metaphor: Art about AIDS, which departed from Morality Tales’ focus on painting, and presented 60 works in all media to explore the intersection of art and activism. Artists included Kathe Burkhart, Keith Haring, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Robert Mapplethorpe, David Wojnarowicz, and Gran Fury. VIDEOART U.S.A. Sokolowski, Thomas W., Morality Tales: History Painting in the 1980s, ICI, New York, 1987. 40 Pages 14 x 11 in., hardcover. Published by Indian Publishing. Available through ICI’s website. $24.95 Lombardi’s drawings map the complex and densely interwoven narratives of our post-imperial, transnational economy. Included in the exhibition were several monumental drawings, as well as Lombardi’s archive of 14,500 index cards on which Lombardi recorded his research. Hobbs’ incorporation of source material in the catalogue, and the focus on a single artist provided a precedent for the development of ICI’s Sourcebook series, which launched in 2011 with Martha Wilson Sourcebook. Out of print 2013 Team Spirit ICI was founded by two art world pioneers, Susan Sollins and Nina Castelli Sundell, who together defined the vision behind one of the first organizations in the world to be dedicated to the work of curators. In 1990, they co-curated Team Spirit, which reflected on their own history of working together and focused on “the growing phenomenon of collaborative art.” At the cusp of a new era of collaborative practice ushered in the late 1980s, the exhibition drew a genealogy of international collaborations as a mode of production going back to the mid-60s, including, Equipo Cronica, General Idea, Gilbert & George, and Komar & Melamid, creating a foundation of and imperative towards collaboration that continues to this day. Morality Tales 37 Sollins, Susan and Sundell, Nina Castelli, Team Spirit, ICI, New York, 1990. Essays by Irit Rogoff and James Hillman. 84 pages. 9 x 11.5 in., softcover. Available through ICI’s website. $19.99 2003 Thinking Contemporary Curating Thinking Contemporary Curating is the first book to offer an in-depth analysis of the volatile territory of international curatorial practice and the thinking—or insight—that underpins it. In five essays, renowned art historian and critic Terry Smith describes how today curators take on roles far beyond exhibition making, such as reimagining museums, writing the history of curating, creating discursive platforms, and undertaking social or political activism, and rethinking spectatorship. The catalyst for the publication was “The Now Museum” conference that ICI produced in collaboration with the CUNY Graduate Center and the New Museum in New York in 2011. Over 30 leading artists, art historians, curators, museum directors took part such as Claire Bishop, Okwui Enwezor (Director, Haus der Kunst), Massimiliano Gioni (Associate Director and Director of Exhibitions, New Museum), Maria Lind (Director, Tensta Konsthall) – many of whom later responded to Smith’s argument for a second volume authored by him, Talking Contemporary Curating, forthcoming (2015). Mark Lombardi: Global Networks Mark Lombardi: Global Networks was an ICI exhibition that brought together for the first time twenty-five of Lombardi’s works spanning 1984 through 2000. Smith, Terry, Thinking Contemporary Curating, Independent Curators International (ICI), New York, 2012. Introduction by Kate Fowle. 272 pages, 54 B&W illustrations, softcover. Available through ICI’s website. $19.95 38 NETWORKS & ACCESS LIMITED EDITIONS LIMITED EDITIONS Since 1990, ICI has commissioned limited edition artworks to raise funds for its programs, by artists including Marina Abramovi´c, Jacob Kassay, Robert Rauschenberg, and Laurie Simmons. Most recently, ICI teamed with Robert Burnier to introduce a new exclusive limited edition sculpture. Robert Burnier Ne Aro, 2014 Primer on aluminum 8 1/2 x 7 1/2 inches, approximately 1 in a series of 20, each unique Robert Burnier‘s works are created within what he describes as an “anti-maquette” process. Sculpting the path of a visual landscape through bending, shaping, and warping material he aims to emphasize the non-linear, unpredictable relationship between the starting forms and ending results. The challenge is presented by the materials he chooses, in this case sheet aluminum, and through his unmeditated interventions and intersections the form takes shape. With Ne Aro he explores the issue of the identical, seeking multiple possibilities in a common basis. Each piece is made complete from the exact Jacob Kassay Untitled #1, 2011 Silkscreen on archival newsprint 24 5/16 x 27 inches, each Edition of 5 Louise Bourgeois Ear, 2002 Pink rubber 4 x 8 x 91/4 inches Edition of 20 with 3 APs Ernesto Neto Once in Love, 2010 Wood and stocking filled with beads 13 x 13 x 13 inches Edition of 20 with 5 APs Liz Glynn Untitled, 2013 Gold-plated Bronze, Silver-plated Bronze, and Plated Bronze necklace 7 x 1 inches 3 Editions of 9, each unique same beginning structure. The combinations, however, are more a product of circumscribed geometry, physical potential, and subjective decision than the space of set theory. Each edition is therefore unique. In titling the work, Burnier made use of L. L. Zamenhof’s universal language of Esperanto, developed in the late 19th Century. “Ne Aro”, translates roughly as “Non Set”. Esperanto borrowed from existing linguistic traditions in hope of providing a bridge to communicate. This organic approach appeals in its attempt at universality without erasure, without requiring a blank slate mentality, just as Burnier begins with a set structure of material. As well, the translation speaks to the exploration of what combinations are available to us with and also outside of a given discourse or architecture, similar to Burnier’s process. 39 ANNUAL BENEFIT Held at the prestigious Cunard Building, the benefit was crafted by New York’s event designers Jung Lee and Josh Brooks of FÊTE, who shaped a magical evening inspired by the venue’s history. Dinner & Cocktails were designed by Cipriani. Highlights also included a very special performance by Stephen Petronio Company which kicked off the after party. ICI’s 2014 Benefit Committee, championed by Co-chairs Ann Cook, Belinda Kielland, Noreen K. Ahmad, and Bridget Finn collaborated with ICI to create an unforgettable soiree that both celebrated ICI’s accomplishments and built support for its future. Some of the world’s leading curators and museum directors were in attendance to raise a glass to ICI and our honorees—Dimitris Daskalopoulos and Eva Barois de Caevel—including Richard Armstrong, Iwona Blazwick, Stuart Comer, Suzanne Cotter, RoseLee Goldberg, Lisa Phillips, Jay Sanders, among many others. BENEFIT COMMITTEE Benefit Host Committee: Richard Armstrong, María Constanza Cerullo, Agnes Gund, Dorothy Lichtenstein, and Svetlana Uspenskaya Benefit Committee: Adam Abdalla, Augusto Arbizo, Sarah Arison, Bethanie Brady, Jill Brienza, Jennifer Brown, Rafael de Cárdenas, Carter Cleveland, James Cohan, Pippa Cohen, Bridget Donahue, Brian Faucette, Jack Geary and Dolly Bross Geary, Kavi Gupta, Mackie Healy, Rhona Hoffman, Heather Hubbs, Anne Huntington, Tony Karman, Kate Krone, Sydie Lansing, Heidi Lee Komaromi, Rose Lord, Michele Maccarone, Liz Mulholland, Dimitris Paleocrassas, Simon Preston, Sangeetha Ramaswamy, Erica Redling, Nicole Russo, Ann & Mel Schaffer, Lisa Schiff, Mari Spirito, Susan Thompson, Courtney Treut Agnes Gund and Derrick Adams. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York CELEBRATING ICI Josephine Nash, Jimmy Armentrout, Bridget Finn, Trevor Paglan, Robert Longo, and Eddie Martinez. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. P hoto: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York On Monday, November 17, 2014 ICI welcomed over 300 guests to its Annual Benefit & Auction to celebrate and support the organization’s international network of curators, artists, and art spaces. The event was held at the historic Cunard Building, whose frescos of world maps and sea routes provided a fitting, and majestic, setting for the celebrations. LIVE & SILENT AUCTION The evening featured a Live & Silent Auction powered by ARTSY, and led by Gabriela Palmieri, Senior Vice President, Senior Specialist, Contemporary Art of Sotheby’s, New York. ICI is proud to have benefited from the generosity of artists who have consistently shown great confidence in ICI and support for its programs. The 2014 Auction featured lots generously donated by: Marina Abramović, Derrick Adams, Diana Al-Hadid, Renate Aller, Grimanesa Amorós, Helene Appel, John Baldessari, Judith Bernstein, Ryan Brown, Zoë Buckman, Lucky DeBellevue, Tara Donovan, David Flaugher, Rochelle Goldberg, Goldschmied & Chiari, John Gordon Gauld, Valerie Hegarty, Jennie Jieun Lee, Hanna Liden, Adam Marnie, Steve McQueen, Iván Navarro, Trevor Paglen, GT Pellizzi, Zoe Pettijohn Schade, Mac Premo, Nathaniel Mary Quinn, Analia Segal, Andres Serrano, Alyson Shotz, Dylan Spaysky, Kunié Sugiura, Peter Sutherland, Rikrit Tiravanija, Jeffrey Tranchell, Oscar Tuazon, Leo Villareal, Chuck Webster, Hank Willis Thomas, Saya Woolfalk, and Heeseop Yoon. Alaina Claire Feldman and Martha Wilson. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: Yuko Torihara for ICI ANNUAL BENEFIT 41 ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York NETWORK & ACCESS 40 NETWORKS & ACCESS NETWORKS & ACCESS ICI AWARDS LEADERSHIP COUNCIL At the Annual Benefit & Auction, ICI honored Dimitris Daskalopoulos with the 2014 LEO AWARD. The award was designed by artist Margaret Lee, and presented by ICI Trustee Emerita Agnes Gund. Independent Curator Eva Barois de Caevel, based in Paris and Dakar, was also honored with the 2014 GERRIT LANSING INDEPENDENT VISION AWARD, selected and presented by Nancy Spector, Deputy Director and Jennifer and David Stockman Chief Curator of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. EVA BAROIS DE CAEVEL 2014 Leo Award recipient Dimitris Daskalopoulos. Photo: Trevor Leighton 2014 Gerrit Lansing Independent Vision Award recipient Eva Barois de Cavel. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York DIMITRIS DASKALOPOULOS Dimitris Daskalopoulos is a collector of contemporary art, founder of the D.Daskalopoulos Collection (1994), and founder of NEON (2013)—a “foundation without walls”, which works to bring contemporary culture in Greece closer to everyone. He is also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Chairman of the Collections Council of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, and active member of the Tate International Council, the Director’s Vision Council of the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Leadership Council of the New Museum, and a founding partner of the Whitechapel’s Future Fund. With the Leo Award, ICI recognizes outstanding achievements in advancing the field of contemporary art. In recent years, Mr. Daskalopoulos created remarkably supportive environments for contemporary artists and curators through the D.Daskalopoulos Collection and NEON. Both entities promote the dissemination of contemporary art to broad audiences, treating the collection as an open resource, conceiving the organization as a vessel for exhibitions and education, and connecting artists, curators and audiences from across the globe. This echoes ICI’s core mission in so many ways. —Agnes Gund Eva Barois De Caevel is an independent curator based in Paris, assistant curator at Raw Material Company, Dakar, and co-founder of Cartel de Kunst, an international collective of emerging curators. Recent projects include: Avant-Garden, FIAC (2014); The Floating Admiral in Nouvelle Vagues, Palais de Tokyo (2013); Who Said It Was Simple, part of a series with Raw Material Company that explores culture, community, and sexual liberties in Senegal. Upcoming in 2015, Barois De Caevel collaborations with Raw Material Company’s artistic director Koyo Kouoh will continue with Body Talk - Feminism, Sexuality and the Body in the Work of African Women Artists at WIELS in Brussels and with Streamlines at the Deichtorhallen in Hamburg. Barois De Caevel graduated from the Universite de Paris-Sorbonne Paris IV in contemporary art history and curatorial training. Barois De Caevel was selected by Nancy Spector, Deputy Director and Jennifer and David Stockman Chief Curator of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum from a list of 15 emerging curators, each nominated by one of 15 curators and ICI collaborators from across ICI’s international network. 43 ICI’s extensive global presence would not be possible without the transformative role of the LEADERSHIP COUNCIL. Established in 2013, the visionary group develops new initiatives that will elevate ICI to the next level. The members of the Leadership Council share a passion for international perspectives on contemporary art and recognize the need for strong regional networks of curators and art spaces within ICI’s global scope. In this way, the Council works closely together with ICI to nurture the curatorial network from the inside out, and establishes the crucial foundations for the future of international exchange. VISIONARY INITIATIVES The Council is crucial to shaping the trajectory of ICI’s public programs, exhibitions, and professional training opportunities in a unique way that is specialized to each member’s vision of contemporary art. ICI has expanded curatorial research opportunities in regions such as Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean through the ICI Leadership Fund; and has allowed ICI to engage with the largest audience in the organization’s history through the redesign of ICI’s online platform. In the last year, the members of the Leadership Council were involved in nearly all of the many facets of the organization. The Leadership Council supported the broad reach of ICI’s exhibitions and publications, as well as pioneering programs in education and curatorial research. It also developed new fundraising opportunities and created scholarship funds that are critical for emerging curators to attend the Curatorial Intensive internationally. Nicole Gallo and Agnes Gund. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York 42 THE LEADERSHIP COUNCIL For more information about the Leadership Council, contact Jenn Hyland at [email protected]. Sarina Tang ICI Board of Trustee’s International Representative Peter Brant James Cohan Agnes Gund Alexei Kuzmichev and Svetlana KuzmichevaUspenskaya Dorothy Lichtenstein Julie Mehretu and Jessica Rankin Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Mercedes Vilardell Helen Warwick NETWORKS & ACCESS NETWORKS & ACCESS INTL FORUM The INTERNATIONAL FORUM brings together an exclusive group of people who share ICI’s mission and global reach. Whether near or far, patrons of the Forum stay connected to the curators and artists who shape the contemporary art world, and gain behind-the-scenes access to ICI programs in New York, select international exhibitions, biennials, and art fairs around the world. PAST EVENTS Guests at ICI’s Annual Miami Luncheon, with special guest Hans Ulrich Obrist, December 5, 2013. Photo courtesy of ICI. Join ICI’s International Forum and support a truly international art organization that is active in 44 countries with access to the curators, artists and art spaces that are keeping a finger on the pulse of contemporary art. In New York, the International Forum connects directly to ICI’s programs through ICI Conversations, a series of exclusive events, site visits, cocktails, and dinners with international curators and artists held throughout the year. As a member of the International Forum, you will receive recommendations on the places to visit and curators to meet when traveling independently. Finally, each December during NADA Miami Beach, the Forum meets with other ICI collaborators, Leadership Council members, the ICI Board of Trustees, guest curators, and artists at the Annual Miami Luncheon. UPCOMING EVENTS EXPO Chicago September 18–21, 2014 Venice Biennale May 6–9, 2015 ICI gathered in Chicago this fall on the occasion of EXPO, the Chicago Fair of Contemporary and Modern Art, and the fair’s IN/SITU section of large-scale installations, which was selected by ICI’s Executive Director Renaud Proch. International Forum members joined us for gallery walks, collection visits, and private dinners with curators and artists including: Glenn Kaino, Mickalene Thomas, and Franklin Sirmans. Together with Fabrica, ICI has invited curators from around the world to meet in Treviso on the occasion of the Venice Biennale to host a conversation between some of the contemporary art world’s most forwardthinking constituents. Forum members who are planning to visit the Biennale will receive ICI’s recommendations and invitations to special events. NADA Miami December 4–7, 2014 ICI hosted its Annual Miami Luncheon on the terrace of Canyon Ranch in honor of Chicago-based artist Robert Burnier. Guests enjoyed delicious food and cocktails to launch Burnier’s exclusive ICI Limited Edition Ne Aro. Patrons Trip to Moscow and St Petersburg June 9–16, 2015 The trip will coincide with the Grand Opening of Garage’s new museum building designed by Rem Koolhaas and give us behind-the-scenes access to some of the grandest museum collections in Europe, and to the latest in Russian contemporary art: meet the artists and curators who shape the scene, and experience Garage’s programs, which have fostered some of the most driven art and curatorial practices in Russia in the past couple of years. For more information about the International Forum and the spring calendar, contact Jenn Hyland at [email protected]. 45 THE INDEPENDENTS ICI connects curators, artists and art spaces to forge international networks and generate new forms of collaboration. THE INDEPENDENTS is an invitation-only membership group of dynamic individuals active in the contemporary art world who support the organization’s programs and vision for the future. The Independents is a membership group for cultural influencers and those actively connected to the contemporary art world. This invitation-only membership group offers insights into new approaches to contemporary art and culture by connecting with emerging and established curators, artists, collectors, and leading figures in the art world. nne Huntington. ICI Annual Benefit & Auction, November 17, 2014. Photo: David X Prutting / Billy Farrell Agency, New York 44 PAST EVENTS Video Screening & Cocktails with María Elena Ortiz January 29, 2015 Associate Curator of the Perez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) María Elena Ortiz presented her research into the Caribbean that resulted from the 2014 Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (CPPC)/ICI Travel Award at the Anthology Film Archive in New York. Ortiz presented Video Islands, a program of artists’ video works from Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Martinique, Trinidad and Tobago; which was followed by a conversation and Q&A moderated by ICI’s María Del Carmen Carríon. The event was followed with more private conversations about the work, with curators, artists, and other patrons at the nearby Experimental Cocktail Club. Discussion & Dinner with Tavares Strachan February 10, 2015 CONNECT TO ICI With direct access to ICI programs and professionals in ICI’s international network, the Independents gain a broader perspective on the latest developments in a global art world, through shared reading, educational programs and social events. The Independents also play a key role in supporting new engagement with ICI and its programs around the world, connecting in the process with ICI’s staff, Board of Trustees and other patrons. New York-based artist Tavares Strachan spoke about his work at the Curatorial Hub, and joined the Independents and their guests as well as ICI Trustees for a special dinner in Tribeca, and more intimate conversations about his practice. Following the success of his recent work You Belong Here at Prospect.3 in New Orleans, this was an opportunity to connect more directly with the artist on past and future projects. The Independents nominate new members on a regular basis. Individuals are selected to join based on their creative contributions and dedication to the contemporary art world. For more information about the Independents, contact Jenn Hyland at [email protected]. 46 NETWORKS & ACCESS PATRONS EVENTS Lucy Freeman Sandler, Ellen Staller, and Elizabeth Grady. ICI Summer Cocktails, July 16, 2014. Photo: Aria Isadora / Billy Farrell Agency, New York Yona Backer, Franklin Sirmans, and Michelle Coffey. ICI Conversations. March 24, 2014, New York. ICI CONVERSATIONS is a thought-provoking series of patrons’ events that give exclusive access to the people—artists, curators, critics, collectors, and museum directors—who influence contemporary art today. ICI CONVERSATIONS is a way for our members to gain an insider’s perspective on ICI, and is their access point to contemporary art from around the world. ICI hosts approximately 10–12 private events a year, which are dedicated to connecting our donors to the contemporary art community in meaningful and significant ways. UPCOMING EVENT HIGHLIGHTS Conversation & Champagne with Zoë Buckman March 7, 2015 Patrons are invited to join ICI in conversation with British artist Zoë Buckman as we walk through her solo exhibition, Present Life, at Garis & Hahn Gallery. Buckman will speak of her exploration of femininity and mortality. Discussion & Dinner with Naomi Beckwith March 10, 2015 Join Naomi Beckwith, Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, in New York for a Curator’s Perspective talk on her upcoming projects and research around black culture, nationalism, and race in the art world. The discussion will be followed by an intimate dinner with curators and patrons. Cocktails & Conversation with Yinka Shonibare April 29, 2015 James Cohan Gallery will host a cocktail reception and Q&A with London-based artist Yinka Shonibare and Smithsonian curator Karen Milbourne. In celebration of his exhibition, Rage of the Ballet Gods, ICI patrons will have the opportunity to meet with the artist, curator, and other guests. NETWORKS & ACCESS THANK YOU 47 We would like to thank all of the individuals and foundations whose generous contributions continue to make possible our programs worldwide. As we celebrate our 40th anniversary, we also pay homage to the leadership and generosity of the trustees who shaped ICI over the past four decades. ICI TRUSTEES FROM 1975 TO TODAY Burton Aaron, Jan Abrams, Diane Ackerman, Noreen K. Ahmad, Helen Allen, Steven Ames, Donna Ari, John Baldessari, Douglas Baxter, Jeffery Bishop, Jack Boulton, Catherine Brawer, Jill Brienza, Earle Brown, Jason Briggs, Leslie Cecil, Christo & Jeanne-Claude, James Cohan, Joseph Cohen, Ann Cook, Susan Coote, Douglas Cramer, Anne Dayton, Ann Ehrenkranz, T.A. Fassburg, Nina Felshin, Ann ffolliott, Arthur Fleischer, Jr., Susan Fleischer, Maxine Frankel, Hugh Freund, Tom Freundenheim, Gil Friesen, Jack Geary, Carol Goldberg, John Gossage, Jeannie Minskoff Grant, Hunter C. Gray, Marilyn Greene, Agnes Gund, Inmaculada de Habsburgo, Peter Halley, Susan Hancock, Robert Hardy, Jan Hashey, Sheila Isham, Jerry Jasinowski, Howard Johnson, Ruth Kainen, Dorothy Kidder, Belinda Buck Kielland, Elizabeth M. Klein, Luisa Kreisberg, Kenneth S. Kuchin, Gerrit Lansing, Sydie Lansing, Jo Carole Lauder, Ray Learsy, Caral G. Lebworth, Laure Lim, Isaac Lustgarten, Mary Maher, Penny McCall, Andrea Miller, Robin Moll, Vik Muniz, Richard E. Perlman, Michael Rea, Aaron Richardson, Dorothea Rockburne, Deedie Rose, Lela Rose, Alvin Rosenbaum, Ian Rowan, Ann Schaffer, Mel Schaffer, Irwin Schloss, Marcia Schloss, Douglas Schwalbe, Robert Shapiro, Patterson Sims, Martin Sklar, Susan Sollins, Nina Castelli Sundell, Melville Straus, James Sollins, Marcy Syms, Sarina Tang, Baraba Toll, Ken Tyburski, Arvin Upton, Robert Wallis, Robin Wright, Virginia Wright SPECIAL THANKS TO THE INDIVIDUAL DONORS, GALLERIES, ARTISTS, AND FOUNDATIONS THAT SUPPORT OUR PROGRAMS 47 Canal, Adam Abdalla, Marina Abramović, Eleanor Acquavella, Derrick Adams, Diana Al-Hadid, Renate Aller, Grimanesa Amorós, Helena Anrather, Helene Appel, Augusto Arbizo, Sarah Arison, Richard Armstrong, Tiqui Atericio, Annie Auchincloss, Elizabeth Baker, John Baldessari, Henri Barguirdjian, Patricia Bell, Barbara & Bruce Berger, Elizabeth Berman, Judith Bernstein, Linda Blumberg, Kerstin Brätsch, Jill Brienza, Blair Brooks, Nikki Brown, David Schwimmer & Zoe Buckman, The Buster Foundation, Catherine Cahill, Rafael de Cardenas, Katie Fischer Cherry, James Cohan, Pippa Cohen, Kari Conte, Paul Cossu, Christopher D’Amelio, Dimitris Daskalopoulos, Lucky DeBellevue, Lisa Dennison, Derek Eller Gallery, Tara Donovan, Josh Elkes, The Evelyn Toll Family Foundation, Fabrica, T.A. Fassburg, Bridget Finn, David Flaugher, Maxine & Stuart Frankel, Mary Garis, Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, John Gordon Gauld, Jack & Dolly Geary, Arthur & Carol Goldberg, Rochelle Goldberg, Suzanne & John Golden, Goldschmied & Chiari, Jay Gorney, Sarah Goulet, Taymour Grahne, Regina & Peter Gross, Victoria Gross, Agnes Gund, Holly J. Hager, Sabrina Hahn, Lynn & Martin Halbfinger, Susan Hapgood, The Hartfield Foundation, Mackie Healy, Valerie Hegarty, Lesley & Evan Heller, Astrid Hill, Jessica Hodin, Rhona Hoffman, Jenny Holmes, Stephanie Hoos, Alixandra Hornyan, Heather Hubbs, Anne Huntington, Phil Isles, Meg & Howard Jacobs, James Cohan Gallery, Kai Matsumiya Fine Arts Gallery, Tony Karman, Margie & Donald Karp, Joan & David Katsky, Kasia Kay, Susi Kenna, Belinda Buck Kielland, Marika Kielland, Kibum Kim, Sooja Kim, Michael L. Klein, Bettina Korek, Kristen Lorello, Susan Kroeger, Alexey Kuzmichev & Svetlana Kuzmicheva-Uspenskaya, Sims Lansing, Jo Carole Lauder, Heidi Lee, Jennie Jieun Lee, Pablo Leon de la Barra, Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, Daniel Lichtenberg, Dorothy Lichtenstein, Hanna Liden, Alexander Logsdail, Andrea Lounibos, Ellen Chesler & Matthew Mallow, Iris Marden, Marianne Boesky Gallery, Marian Goodman Gallery, Adam Marnie, Michael Maxwell, Matthew McNuty, Steve McQueen, Bee & Gregor Medinger, Turid Meeker, Julie Mehretu & Jessica Rankin, Metro Pictures, Mike Weiss Gallery, Jonathan Miller, Kalliopi Minioudaki, Celine Mo, Iván Navarro, Christina Pacetti, Trevor Paglen, GT Pellizzi, Ruth Miles Pite, Prada Foundation, Mac Premo, Louise Puschel, Nathaniel Mary Quinn, Sangeetha Ramaswamy, Erica Redling, Emily Reifel, Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, Aldo & Constanza Cerullo Rubino, Sterling Ruby, Jane Sadaka, SAHA Derneği, Andrew & Denise Saul, Barbara Schwartz, Analia Segal, Andres Serrano, Alyson Shotz, Katy Homans, Suzanne Slesin, Dylan Spaysky, James Stanton, Halsey Stebbins, Tasha Sterling, Heiko Stoiber, Jovana Stokic, Andrew Stone, Kunié Sugiura, Peter Sutherland, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Rebecca Taylor, Max Teicher, Carolee Thea, Rirkrit Tiravanija, The Toby Lewis Foundation, Leslie Tonkonow, Jeffrey Tranchell, Helen Tsanos Sheinman, Julie & Hans Utsch, Leo Villareal, Helen Warwick, Chuck Webster, Hank Willis Thomas, Oscar Tuazon, Virginia Wright Fund, WEBBCREATIVE, Saya Woolfalk, Heeseop Yoon, Joseph Yurcik, Paschalina Lilia Ziamou NETWORKS & ACCESS 48 ACCESS ICI ICI STAFF ICI BOARD OF TRUSTEES Renaud Proch Executive Director Gerrit L. Lansing** Chairman Emeritus Kate Fowle Director-at-Large Sydie Lansing Honorary Chairman María del Carmen Carrión Director of Research & Public Programs Patterson Sims Chairman Alaina Claire Feldman Director of Exhibitions Melville Straus** Barbara Toll Vice Chairs Frances Wu Giarratano Exhibitions & Publications Advisor Jeannie M. Grant President Jenn Hyland Executive Coordinator Ann Schaffer Vice President Heather Jones Exhibitions Coordinator Noreen K. Ahmad Jeffrey Bishop Jill Brienza Christo & Jeanne-Claude** Ann Cook Susan Coote Maxine Frankel, Trustee Emerita Jack Geary Carol Goldberg, Trustee Emerita Agnes Gund, Trustee Emerita Belinda Buck Kielland Jo Carole Lauder Caral G. Lebworth, Trustee Emerita** Laure Lim Isaac Lustgarten Vik Muniz Mel Schaffer Susan Sollins* Executive Director Emerita Nina Castelli Sundell* ** Trustee Emerita Sarina Tang International Representative Virginia Wright, Trustee Emerita Kimberly Kitada Public Programs & Research Coordinator Maya Castro Gutierrez Curatorial Intensive Coordinator Dexter Wimberly Director of Strategic Planning Bessie Zhu Administration & Communications Manager * ICI Co-founder ** In Memoriam Since 1975, Independent Curators International (ICI) has produced exhibitions, publications, training programs and research initiatives for curators—as well as hundreds of free events for everyone—in 400 cities and 55 countries. CONTACT ICI has supported over 1,000 curators, 2,600 artists, and worked with 550 art spaces; and there are 327 Curatorial Intensive alumni based in 61 countries who represent the future of the curatorial field. Our network keeps growing—one collaboration at a time. Independent Curators International 401 Broadway, Suite 1620 New York, NY 10013 T +1 212 254 8200 F +1 212 477 4781 [email protected] www.curatorsintl.org www.facebook.com/curatorsintl www.twitter.com/curatorsintl www.linkedin.com/curatorsintl www.instagram.com/curatorsintl Editors: Renaud Proch and Dexter Wimberly Designer: Scott Ponik Copy editor: Bessie Zhu Printing: Linco Printing, Queens, NY © 2015 Independent Curators International (ICI) and the authors. Reproduction rights: You are free to copy, display, and distribute the contents of this publication under the following conditions: You must attribute the work or any portion of the work reproduced to the author and ICI, giving the article and publication title and date. If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under a license identical to this one, and only if it is stated that the work has been altered and in what way. 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