Fashion and Textile Museum London|| Exhibition: MADE IN MEXICO: The Rebozo in Art, Culture & Fashion || until 31.08.2014

The exhibition is ending today. You still have time to attend… “Made in Mexico: #Rebozo in #Art, #Culture & #Fashion.”

#StoMouseio

This summer the Fashion and Textile Museum stages the first-ever exhibition on the rebozo – the classic Mexican shawl made famous in 20th century culture by artist Frida Kahlo. Made in Mexico explores the key role textiles have played in promoting Mexican culture worldwide from the 17th century to the present day. Rebozos on display include major loans from: the Franz Mayer Museum, Mexico City; the Museum of Textiles, Oaxaca; the British Museum and rebozos from private collections that have never been shown in public before. Contemporary Mexican and UK artists, photographers, fashion and textile designers also present new work created in response to the rebozo and Mexican textiles – including Francisco Toledo, Graciela Iturbide, Carla Fernandez, Zandra Rhodes and Kaffe Fassett.

Tickets
Tickets may be purchased in person on the day of the visit.

£8.80 adults*
£6.60 concessions*
£5.50 students

Book online or call 0844 248 5076

50%…

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Tate Britain || British Folk Art || until 31.08.2014

Today is your last chance to explore the British #Folk #Art Exhibition in #Tate Britain in London.

#StoMouseio

Discover the extraordinary and surprising works of some of Britain’s unsung artists in the first major exhibition of British folk art.

Steeped in tradition and often created by self-taught artists and artisans, the often humble but always remarkable objects in this exhibition include everything from ships’ figureheads to quirky shop signs, Toby jugs to elaborately crafted quilts.

You will find an intricate sculpture of a cockerel, made out of mutton bones by French POWs during the Napoleonic wars. There is a larger-than-life-size figure of King Alfred made out of thatch. There are examples of the mysterious ‘god in a bottle’ – votive offerings suspended in bottles of clear liquid – as well as naive paintings, tin trays covered with ornate fragments of crockery and much more besides. The show exemplifies the energy, variety and idiosyncrasy of British Folk Art.

Folk art has often been neglected in the story of British art: by…

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Nationalmuseum Stockholm (at Konstakademien) || Selfies – Now and Then || until 31.08.2014

If you are a fan of #selfies and are currently in #Stockholm try not to miss visiting the #exhibition “Selfies – Now and Then” at the Nationalmuseum Stockholm. Today is the last day.

#StoMouseio

Selfies–Now and Then lifts the debate on self image and identity. The museum’s collection of portraiture shows parallels between now and then and discusses the ways in which people have desired to be seen throughout history.

Selfies – Now and Then is a part of the exhibition Highlights.

On view May 15 – August 31, 2014

The selfie, a self-portrait taken at arm’s length using the camera of a mobile phone, has been seen as an egotistical contemporary phenomenon. However, when traditional portraiture from the collection comes face to face with today’s selfies, the comparison reveals that the selfie is based on the Western portrait tradition.

Integral affirmation

The search for affirmation is often seen as narcissistic, and as an effect of a superficial, consumption- and self-centered culture. But the search for affirmation is also a search for connection with the collective. Being seen with an affirming gaze is an important…

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Stadsmuseet Stockholm || United Stockholms of America || until 31.08.2014

*Last day* of the exhibition.

#StoMouseio

See Stockholm like you’ve never seen the city before. Indeed, there are at least eight variants in the U.S. alone. 

In his work with the photo project ”United Stockholms of America” Swedish photographer Charlie Bennet has traveled among the communities in the U.S. that carry the Swedish capital’s name, documenting wildly varying degrees of Swedishness.

Most of these towns are now sparsely populated, desolate yet beautiful resorts that do not have much in common with Stockholm in Sweden. In the south of Texas only a sandy graveyard remains, while Stockholm in Minnesota is a shadow of it’s former self. But in Anderson’s Store in Maine, however, one can meet gentlemen with Swedish sounding names like Lundqvist, Anderson and Bondeson. One of them even speaks Swedish. Another Stockholm, in Wisconsin, is now an beautiful tourist destination that attracts visitors in droves.

“You ‘ll find surprisingly many traces of the Swedish heritage and a couple of resorts are strikingly beautiful. But in some of…

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Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona || The Listening Eye ~ Eugeni Bonet: Screens, Projections, Writings || until 31.08.2014

If you are enjoying the last day of summer in #Barcelona, you might as well want to visit the #exhibition “The Listening Eye ~ Eugeni Bonet: Screens, Projections, Writings” at the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona. Today is your last chance.

#StoMouseio

Eugeni Bonet (Barcelona, 1954) is undoubtedly one of the main theoretical referents in the fields of cinema, video and digital media in Spain. For forty years his writings have shown the evolution of these disciplines, establishing genealogies, working methods and the links between four different generations of artists. At the same time, his audiovisual programmes introduced subjects and tendencies that were practically unknown at each successive moment, to the point where many of them became authentic and indispensable textbooks. Moreover, Bonet has also followed a notable trajectory as a curator of exhibitions and artist, with various videos and experimental and feature films to his name.

His exhibition at MACBA brings together a selection of Bonet’s audiovisual programmes. The works can be seen as a meticulous register of all the changes endured for almost three decades by the audiovisual media in Spain, as well as the museum institutions that…

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MHVL – Musée d’ Histoire de la Ville de Luxembourg || Atelier Weyer ~ Posterdesign in Luxembourg after 1945 || until 31.08.2014

For all those in #Luxembourg, today is your last chance to visit the #exhibition “Atelier Weyer ~ Posterdesign in Luxembourg after 1945”. Try not to miss.
#posters #design #MHVL

#StoMouseio

Exhibition and workshops organised in the context of ATELIER LUXEMBOURG (exhibition series on show in six Luxembourg Museums in 2012/2013, aiming to give an insight into the artistic creation in Luxembourg after 1945).

The exhibition presents a selection of some seventy posters created by Lex Weyer, Pit and Anne Weyer as well as by Lex Weyer junior. The term “atelier” or “studio” is particularly apt to describe the remarkable production of a family committed to graphical creation in Luxembourg from generation to generation. Along with Pe’l Schlechter (born in 1921), Raymond Mehlen (1914 – 1983) and Maurice Benoy (1921 – 1987), Lex Weyer senior (1914 – 2005) is one of the pioneers of the advertising poster in Luxembourg. He quit his job as a typographer in 1950 and designed his first posters for the country’s National Lottery, International Fair and tourism promotion. Pit Weyer began to work in the studio…

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Scuderie del Quirinale || Exhibition: Frida Kahlo ||until 31.08.2014

Today is your last chance to visit the exhibition “Frida Kahlo” at the Scuderie del Quirinale. Try not to miss. #FridaKahlo

#StoMouseio

Frida Kahlo the rebel, the ocultadora, the sardonic pasionaria of art, is the very symbol of the artistic avant-garde and exuberance of Mexican culture in the 20th century.
The exhibition at the Scuderie del Quirinale, explores Frida Kahlo’s artistic career from start to finish, bringing together her absolute masterpieces from the most important public and private collections in Mexico, Europe and the United States: over forty fabulous portraits and self-portraits, including her extremely celebrated Self-portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird painted in 1940 which is on display in Italy for the very first time, and her Self-portrait Wearing a Velvet Dress 1926, which she painted at the age of only nineteen for her beloved Alejandro Gòmez Arias and in which her elongated neck recalls the aesthetic of Parmigianino and of Modigliani.
 
The exhibition is rounded off by a selection of drawings including the Sketch for the “Henry Ford…

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The #Benaki Museum || #Exhibition: Καπνός | Tobacco 101 notes on oriental tobacco || until 31.08.2014 #Athens

If you are in #Athens, it’s your last chance to see the exhibition “Καπνός | Tobacco 101 notes on oriental tobacco” at the Benaki Museum.

#StoMouseio

The exhibition «ΚΑΠΝΟΣ | TOBACCO» views oriental tobacco from a variety of historical perspectives and presents it as a multifaceted commercial product. From the needles used in the stringing of the leaves, the spiking process in the villages, the ‘tonga’ process for bundling tobacco leaves and the wooden chests used in commercial processing, to the imposing tobacco warehouses of northern Greece and the intricately made cigarette cases and packs in Athens and Thessaloniki, the exhibition presents the history of tobacco and, through it, an important part of the history of Greece. 

The exhibition illuminates the different aspects of tobacco through rare objects from collections abroad, records from Greek archive holdings and photographic material from private and public collections.

Duration: 11 June-31 August 2014

Hours: Wednesday, Friday: 9:00 – 17:00
              Thursday, Saturday: 9.00 – 24.00
              Sunday: 9:00 – 15:00

Opening reception: Tuesday…

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The Parthenon marbles are the world’s most beautiful art – and that’s why we should give them back

These consummately beautiful sculptures demand a proper setting – and a trip to Athens has convinced me the Acropolis Museum is that place

 

What can you do with the world’s most beautiful art? Where does it belong? How should it be cared for and displayed?

The art in question is the array of sculpture created in Athens in the 5th century BC to decorate the Parthenon, the temple to Athena that still, today, dominates the skyline of the Greek capital.

Notoriously, the best-preserved stone carvings that survived on the temple in the early 19th century were removed by Lord Elgin and brought to London, where they have been a fixture of the British Museum ever since. Equally notoriously, Greece wants the Parthenon marbles (aka the Elgin marbles) back – and in 2009 opened a state-of-the-art museum beneath the Acropolis hill on which the Parthenon stands, to house them.

Where do the Parthenon sculptures really belong? To get to the just, right, sensible answer I have to start from my opening claim: this is the world’s most beautiful art. It has only a handful of rivals in the highest rank of artistic achievement – think Leonardo da Vinci, think Michelangelo.

But the sculptures of the Parthenon were created 2,000 years before the masterpieces of the Renaissance. They have a life, energy, calm and grandeur all their own. The figures of reclining goddesses from the east pediment, for instance, are daunting yet yielding syntheses of mass and grace that are more like dreams than objects. The veins that throb on the horse-flanks of a centaur; the pathos of animals lowing at the sky as they are led to be sacrificed; such details add up to a consummate beauty that is, I repeat, rivalled only by the greatest art of the Renaissance.

If the Sistine Chapel frescoes had been detached from their ceiling in the 19th century and hung on the walls of the National Gallery, would we appreciate them as much? No. We’d struggle to imagine the real power of Michelangelo’s paintings in their original location. We’d miss the thrill of stretching our necks and the excitement of walking through the Vatican to get to them, even the fuss of queuing. Context is all.

The sad truth is that in the British Museum, the Parthenon sculptures are not experienced at their best. For one thing, they’re shown in a grey, neoclassical hall whose stone walls don’t contrast enough with these stone artworks – it is a deathly space that mutes the greatest Greek art instead of illuminating it. So if the British Museum wants to keep these masterpieces it needs to find the money to totally redisplay them in a modern way.

acropolis museum

Greece’s new Acropolis Museum. Photograph: Stephen Moss

Or, it could give them to Greece, which has already built a superb modern museum to do just that. The great thing about the Acropolis Museum’s display of the Parthenon sculptures – which currently includes pieces left by Elgin, plus casts – is that it makes it easy to see how the sculptures fitted on the building, and how they work as an ensemble. It also has one advantage London can never rival – you can look from the sculptures to the museum’s glass wall and see the Parthenon itself, making a sensual connection between the art and its architectural home.

The first time I ever visited the Parthenon I was entranced by its unique lightness and perfection and thought it absolutely obvious that the Parthenon marbles need to be in Athens. Then I found out more about the campaign to return them. It seemed to be too much about national pride, and not enough about art. I don’t care about nationalism, only about the best way to show this stupendous art so everyone can feel its power. The way the Elgin Marbles debate has turned art into an ideological plaything is a terrible distraction from looking at the bloody things.

I got so alienated by the rhetoric surrounding the Parthenon marbles that I argued (at the Cambridge Union) against returning them. A lot of the Greek case remains untrue or unfair. At the new Acropolis Museum, for instance, a video denounces Elgin for “carrying off” the sculptures. It’s not as simple as that. An honest case for returning this art to Greece has to acknowledge that it has been looked after well by the British Museum. The pieces of the sculpture in London are in superb physical condition. You can see tiny details. That is not true of the examples in Athens – they have suffered severe damage from pollution and many have lost all but their rudimentary form.

But that’s in the past. In the 1970s when the Parthenon itself was getting corroded by bad air the sculptures were safer in London. Today, they belong in the Acropolis Museum.

Nationalist or not, Greece has proved it loves this art and sees it for what it is. It is Greece, and not the British Museum, that deserves to be custodian of the world’s greatest art, for the world. And for art.

 

Source: The Guardian  ( Monday 18 August 2014)

Fashion and Textile Museum London|| Exhibition: MADE IN MEXICO: The Rebozo in Art, Culture & Fashion || until 31.08.2014

This summer the Fashion and Textile Museum stages the first-ever exhibition on the rebozo – the classic Mexican shawl made famous in 20th century culture by artist Frida Kahlo. Made in Mexico explores the key role textiles have played in promoting Mexican culture worldwide from the 17th century to the present day. Rebozos on display include major loans from: the Franz Mayer Museum, Mexico City; the Museum of Textiles, Oaxaca; the British Museum and rebozos from private collections that have never been shown in public before. Contemporary Mexican and UK artists, photographers, fashion and textile designers also present new work created in response to the rebozo and Mexican textiles – including Francisco Toledo, Graciela Iturbide, Carla Fernandez, Zandra Rhodes and Kaffe Fassett.

Tickets
Tickets may be purchased in person on the day of the visit.

£8.80 adults*
£6.60 concessions*
£5.50 students

Book online or call 0844 248 5076

50% off full price ticket for Art Fund members
Art Fund tickets are available to be purchased in person with a valid Art Fund membership card and cannot be booked in advance.

Children under 12 are free.

Group Bookings
Please fill in the Group Bookings Form or contact the Museum with your requirements.

*Adult and Concession tickets includes a 10% voluntary charitable donation. Your donation will help the museum raise funds for future exhibitions and learning programmes. Please say when buying your ticket if you do not wish to make this charitable donation.

Concessions are available for senior citizens holding concessionary identification such as a valid rail or bus pass and ES40 holders.

Student admission applies to full or part-time UK students holding a current institutional student card or NUS card, and to international students with either an EU student card or an International Student Identity Card (ISIC).

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Source: Fashion and Textile Museum