Upcoming Shows & Exhibits

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those mohair shoes look really cool...

and i really wanted to see the murakami show - too bad it's in California...lucky for those on the west coast...
 
the new museum has finally opened in downtown nyc

http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/4 New Museum
235 Bowery
New York, NY 10002
212.219.1222 show map
directions: car subway bus

  • Wednesday 12-6 PM
  • Thursday and Friday 12-10 PM
  • Saturday and Sunday 12-6 PM
  • Monday and Tuesday closed
  • The Museum is closed to the public on Monday and Tuesday, except for pre-scheduled group tours on Tuesday.
  • CIT Free Thursday Evenings (from 7 PM to 10 PM).
    Sponsored by
  • General Admission: $12
  • Seniors: $8
  • Students: $6
  • 18 and under: FREE
  • Members: FREE
more info
Calendar

Ongoing Exhibitions:
 
the murakami exhibit is coming to NY...:clap:

from fashionweekdaily

Murakami Mania Hits Brooklyn

Kanye West & Jay-Z sign up for gala; Louis Vuitton to reprise pop-up shop
Friday, February 15, 2008
(NEW YORK) Takashi Murakami mania is about to hit the East Coast. Following the debut of his retrospective, ©Murakami, at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles in October, the exhibition is preparing for its New York premiere at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, which will host more than 90 works by the Japanese artist from April 5 to July 13. On April 3, a gala, much like the star-studded one in L.A. that was attended by Marc Jacobs, Linda Evangelista, Cindy Crawford, Christina Ricci, and Tom Ford, will take place at the museum's Eastern Parkway locale adjacent to Prospect Park. And at Thursday night's (Auction) Red gala at Sotheby's, Murakami revealed that his friend Kanye West, who performed at the MOCA gala, will reprise his role with a mini-concert, while Jay-Z has signed on as a co-chair. What's more, the Louis Vuitton brand, which made retail history with its first-ever pop-up shop within MOCA to herald the exhibit, plans on installing a similar concept at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. "I will be introducing new characters," Murakami promised.
 
wow :woot:

i'm going to be in NY this weekend!!
am currently trying to convince my cousin to try to squeeze it in with me :shifty:
 
TruthBeauty
Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945


February 2 - April 27

3womenbig2e6021by9.jpg

Elias Goldensky
[Portrait of three women], c. 1915
platinum print
George Eastman House Collection, Gift of 3m Company, Ex-collection Louis Walton Sipley


Really lovely , atmospheric exhibition on the movement of Pictorialism @ the Vancouver Art Gallery
The focus is photography but there is a room with a few vintage posters

I was just there
Was amazed there were photographs taken on heavy watercolour paper
I was jotting some notes down too :blush:
like some of the artists would mix a photosensitive chemical with watercolour pigment and gum arabic... so when their photos developed, they could alter it with water and a paintbrush (since watercolour is not permanent) --and it gave this hazy effect

They also have two books
Unfortunately there were no other materials related to the exhibition at the gallery store ... The only postcard was a portrait of Aubrey Beardsley

will be an interest to fashionistas too.. if you like this time period

http://www.vanartgallery.bc.ca/the_exhibitions/exhibit_truthbeauty.html
 
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bdonline.co.uk
Skin + Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture – April 24 to August 10

Future_Syst_Selfridges_ready.jpg


As the debut show in Somerset House’s new contemporary arts space, Skin + Bones will feature work by 46 architects including David Adjaye and Zaha Hadid and fashion designers including Boudicca and Alexander McQueen. Skin + Bones celebrates what happens when fashion and architecture collide.

Skin + Bones: Parallel Practices in Fashion and Architecture – April 24 to August 10
Somerset House
Strand
London WC2


somersethouse.org.uk

T: 020 7845 4600
E: [email protected]
For more info, check out the Skin + Bones thread :flower:
 
April 29 - September7, 2008
2nd Skin: Imaginative Designs in Digital & Analog Clothing


The Exploratorium, San Francisco’s popular, quirky museum of science, art, technology, and human perception hosts an event where science, technology, art, and fashion converge. Demonstrations of the latest trends in heated clothes, electroluminescent wire, soft circuitry, green innovations, and new materials will be presented. Wear or bring your own full-body, wearable art and receive half-off museum admission to this event. The Exploratorium, San Francisco, CA.
metropolismag

Read more @ exploratorium.edu
 
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May 29 - September 28, 2008
Yves Saint Laurent

This exhibition focuses on this virtuoso of haute couture, whose unique style blends references to the world of art with allusions to pop culture and social revolution. Structured around four themes, the exhibition develops the body of work that has marked both the past and the present with a new definition of femininity and left a signature that transcends fashion. The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
metropolismag

Read more @ mmfa.qc.ca
 
Arbiters of Style: Women at the Forefront of Fashion
May 21 to November 8, 2008

Arbiters of Style: Women at the Forefront of Fashion celebrates an array of female creators, promoters and clientele who have shaped the course of fashion. This fashion exhibition features work by female designers as well as clothing and accessories worn by female department store executives, influential clients, magazine editors, muses and models. Women have played a significant role in the history of fashion and they continue to be a driving force as tastemakers and industry leaders.

Featuring over seventy looks from the Museum’s permanent collection, Arbiters of Style includes designs by Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, Sonia Delaunay, Jeanne Lanvin, and Claire McCardell and features clothing worn by influential women such as Vogue editor Diana Vreeland, photographer Louise Dahl Wolf, and actresses Lauren Bacall and Rosalind Russell. The historical importance of these women and many others will be revealed in the display of garments from the eighteenth century to the present.

[FONT=Verdana,Monaco,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]Arbiters of Style: Women at the Forefront of Fashion is organized by Molly Sorkin and Colleen Hill, along with Fred Dennis, Clare Sauro, Harumi Hotta and Lynn Weidner. [/FONT]
fitnyc.edu[FONT=Verdana,Monaco,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
 
Through June 25, 2008

Paper Transformed: Origami

Based on an 800-year-old tradition of paper folding, modern origami has grown into a highly sophisticated international art form. This exhibit brings together nearly one hundred works by some of the world’s leading contemporary origami artists and demonstrates the diversity of technique and wide range of interpretation possible in origami today. The Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, New York.
metropolismag

Read more @ parrishart.org
 
Elena Manferdini: Merletti
03.28.08 - 05.11.08

Elena Manferdini’s installation explores the intricacies of lace at a scale far beyond the intimate size commonly associated with the material. Made by the knotting and intertwining of multiple threads, the dynamic dance of lacemaking is brought to the scale of the SCI-Arc Gallery. The antique Venetian Merletti, the Italian term for lace, are the crenellations that create a complex interface at the top of defensive buildings.

This technique became an inspiration to Manferdini, the Los Angeles-based Italian architect; her project, which weaves itself along catenary supporting wires hung from above, engages the viewer at an intimate scale as the installation billows up through the space. Walking in the gallery, the viewer can appreciate the detail of each element that constitutes the overall form and the shadows cast on the floor. But the work best reveals itself—a surface that alternates between the two- and the three-dimensional—from the view from the catwalk above the Gallery, where the viewer is able to appreciate the entire interwoven, lace-like structure.

SCI-Arc Gallery, Los Angeles, CA.
sciarc.edu
 
May 18, 2008

Designing with Conscience: A Sustainable Fashion Symposium

As part of the on-going Year of Eco-Exhibitions, and in conjunction with the exhibition Fashion Conscious, curators Susan Taber Avila and Julia Schwartz present this speaker symposium which looks into the fashion industry and the move towards eco-consciousness. The dynamic line up of speakers includes Elissa Loughman, environmental analyst at Patagonia, Lynda Grose, consultant for the Sustainable Cotton Project, and Sasha Duerr, director and founder of Permacouture Institute. The final presentation will be a moderated panel discussion; four designers from the exhibition will address the compromises necessary to promote responsible design. Design Museum, Davis, CA.
May 15, 2008—July 13, 2008

Fashion Conscious: Designs that will Change the World One Garment at a Time

As part of the series, the year of “Eco-exhibitions” at the UC Davis Design Museum, this exhibition explores sustainability and how it relates to the clothes we buy, from the ecological impact of eco-friendly textiles to the re-evaluation of industrial manufacturing. Design Museum, Davis, CA.
metropolismag

Read more @ designmuseum.ucdavis.edu
 
Script
Fashion and interiors, from salon to house

Through 3 aug 2008

Presenting masterpieces from the history of fashion and interiors, the passage of time is central to the visitor’s experience of the new display ‘Script’. Historical dresses, cabinets and sofas as well as modern furniture by Gerrit Rietveld and contemporary fashion by designers such as Jean Paul Gaultier and Vivienne Westwood* are combined within a continuous filmic experience. Costume dramas from the last twenty years are the inspiration for film-sets displays, resulting in a new interpretation of Utrecht’s famous period rooms.

Fashion, film and interior
The fashion industry emerged in the late eighteenth century when the wealthy paraded their finery on the boulevards, at the opera and in the shopping galleries, thus demonstrating that they were à la mode. Wearing the most up-to-date fashions is still an important form of communication today in semi-public places such as restaurants, terraces and nightclubs. The fashions and interiors of a particular period are often related in terms of trends in colour, form and production techniques. Films, and now video games, can initiate or reinforce such trends.

From ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ to ‘Blade Runner’
In the films that are the starting point for ‘Script’, furniture and fashion represent important historical and cultural developments. In ‘Sense and Sensibility’ the interiors and costumes reflect the idealisation of simple rural existence versus depraved city life. Dziga Vertov’s 1929 film ‘Man with a Movie Camera’ is the cinematographic equivalent of Gerrit Rietveld’s 1924 Rietveld Schröder House. Not ‘nature’ but ‘culture’ was the rallying cry. There was a belief in the ability to shape the future. Within ‘Script’ highlights from the museum’s Rietveld collection are placed within an extraordinary modernistic environment. This Rietveld set is a sort of ‘sentinel’ – looking back at the past and ahead towards the future. It is remarkable that this future recycles so many aspects of the past. The science-fiction film ‘Blade Runner’ fused many historical styles and had a great influence on the cyber-punk look that was such a feature of 80s and 90s nightlife. The architecture of the dance scene in the film ‘Basic Instinct’ is employed to bring these influences together.

Everyone is a film star!
At the Centraal Museum everyone is a film star! ‘Script’ not only situates highlights from the collection within film sets, it also invites the visitor to step inside various sets and be photographed (no flash). Visitors can assume a role in: ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ (Stephen Frears, 1988), ‘Sense and Sensibility’ (Ang Lee, 1995), ‘Young Mr. Lincoln’ (John Ford, 1939), ‘Madame Bovary’ (Claude Chabrol, 1991), Monsieur Proust (Raul Ruiz 1999), ‘The Age of Innocence’ (Martin Scorsese, 1993), ‘India Song’ (Marguerite Duras, 1975), Gosford Park (Robert Altman 2001), ‘Man with a Movie Camera’ (Dziga Vertov, 1929), ‘Basic Instinct’ (Paul Verhoeven, 1992), ‘Blade Runner’ (Ridley Scott, 1982) and the computer game ‘Myst’ (Robyn and Rand Miller, 1993).

Script is designed by Concern/GillianSchrofer and Darlaine Heitinga

* Names subject to confirmation. Because of the conservation requirements of certain fragile costumes, the fashion exhibits in ‘Script’ will change every three months.

Centraal Museum Urtecht, the Netherlands
centraalmuseum.nl
 
"XX1st Century Man"

directed by issey miyake


PLACE: 21_21 DESIGN SIGHT (9-7-6 akasaka, minato-ku, tokyo)

DATE : 2008. 3. 30 (SUN) - 7. 6 (SUN)

TIME : 11:00 - 20:00 (Entrance until 19:30)

CLOSED : Tuesdays (Except April 29th and May 6th)

ADMISSION : General \1,000/ University Student \800/ High and Junior high school student \500/ Ages 12 and under may enter for free
(tax included, \200 discount for a group of over 15 people)




Participant:

sKoutarou Sekiguchi
Yasuhiro Suzuki
Ben Wilson
nendo
Dui Seid
Issey Miyake
ISSEY MIYAKE Creative Room



Special exhibitors:

Isamu Noguchi
Tim Hawkinson
Ron Arad





Eight years into the new millennium and the question arises: where are we headed, now that we live in the century once hailed as the future? This question is the springboard and theme for our third exhibition, starting on the first anniversary of 21_21 DESIGN SIGHT’s opening in 2007.

The "XXIst Century" in the exhibition title refers of course to the 21st century, and by "Man", to those of us living here, now. The title also expresses a desire to place our hope in the future.

In this show, we will focus on the 21st century and its people as a means by which to explore ideas for building a better future for this century and beyond. Exhibition director Issey Miyake has done extensive research to prepare for the show, which includes a wide spectrum of Japanese and international creators, all of whom address today's many doubts and insecurities through their own individual form of creative expression.





21_21 DESIGN SIGHT

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Ben Wilson
Product designer Ben Wilson, born in London in 1976, designed a “monocycle” for this exhibition.


2008xxicbenye8.jpg








yasuhiro suzuki
"garden of the beginning"

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Koutarou Sekiguchi
tower of newspaper and masking tape titled "departure on a starlit night"


xxicsekiguchipw2.jpg



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This will be the first exhibition in the true sense for Koutarou Sekiguchi (b. 1983), who juggles his art with the teaching at a special needs school. Using two everyday materials, newspaper and masking tape, Sekiguchi builds giant towers that measure up to 7m high. His work, which takes on various forms including those of people, plants and animals, plus a variety of manmade objects, is suffused with a spiritual, temple-like power, and a celebratory energy.
 
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