29/05/2020

...the words of James Baldwin


I have worked for Velvet Film for years, on and off since 2006, mainly as a researcher on Karl Marx, Haitian and African colonial history, Malcolm X, Frantz Fanon, etc. One of the must see films is now on Netflix and on YouTube Film:


"Told entirely in the words of James Baldwin, through both personal appearances and the text of his final unfinished book project, I Am Not Your Negro touches on the lives and assassinations of Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., and Medgar Evers to bring powerful clarity to how the image and reality of blacks in America today is fabricated and enforced."

#USA #NoToRacism


28/05/2020

The Markaz Review


How to turn bad into good news.
Looking forwards to this!
More soon...

The Markaz is closing, but the Middle East arts center will return as an online publication


Jordan Elgrably, left, a co-founder of the Markaz, pictured at a Moroccan culture night 
with guest Bouchra Azizy and dancer Rosa Rojas, at the Markaz in 2015.
(The Markaz)

The Markaz, a Los Angeles arts center devoted to showcasing Middle East culture through lectures, film screenings, performances and exhibitions, has announced that it is shutting down. 

“With the pandemic adversely impacting artists and arts organizations everywhere, we have no other option but to shut down the Markaz definitively,” read a statement published to the organization’s website on Tuesday.

Jordan Elgrably, a co-founder of the organization, said the closure of the Markaz, in its current form, is permanent. 
“With the disease, unfortunately we’re not going to see the season open up again,” Elgrably said. “We don’t have a vaccine. There may never be a vaccine.”

Instead, he said, the Markaz is going online — but in a new guise. In the fall, the center will resurface as “The Markaz Review,” an online culture journal.
“It will be multilingual and multinational,” said Elgrably. “We have correspondents in the U.K., France, Lebanon. We’re working on getting a correspondent in Morocco.”

Founded as the Levantine Center in 2001, the organization changed its name to the Markaz — which means “the center” in several Middle Eastern languages — in 2015. The group, whose main mission was to promote “a greater understanding of the Middle East and North Africa by presenting artistic and educational programs,” staged musical performances, lectures, film screenings and even a comedy night.

For many years, it occupied a storefront on Pico Boulevard in Mid-City. But in 2016 it gave up the space, functioning instead as a roving arts organization, producing occasional events in locations around Los Angeles. 
In late March, the Markaz was scheduled to present a one-night theatrical event inspired by Lebanese author Joumana Haddad’s novel “The Seamstress’ Daughter” at the Odyssey Theatre. That presentation was cancelled when Gov. Gavin Newsom issued the safer-at-home order on March 19. 

Elgrably says that without a dedicated space or the possibility of being able to stage live events for the foreseeable future, it didn’t make sense to try to continue as they had. He is hopeful that the online journal will be a new chapter — one with even greater scope. 

“We are,” he said, “working on making it more global.”


Lianne La Havas - 'Paper Thin'




Lianne La Havas - 'Paper Thin'






Lyrics

Paper-thin
God only knows the pain you're in
But the future's bright
You've got God on your side, He's listening
Love yourself
Or else you can't love no one else
I know your pain is real
But you won't let it heal
Paper-thin
If you're trying to lose, you'll never win
It's your life
But you're not the only one who's suffering
That's enough, I know you're made of better stuff, baby
You gotta roam free, please
Don't forget about me
Oh, give me the other key
Oh, your heart's wide open
There must be another key
Left your heart wide open
Just give me the other key
Your heart is an open door
So let me love you
I just wanna love you
Paper-thin
You understand the pain I'm in
Slipping in and out 
Of such confidence
And overwhelming doubt
But if I love myself
I know I can't be no one else, oh no
Don't go
'Cause I need you so
Oh, give me the other key
Oh, your heart's wide open
There must be another key
Left your heart wide open
Just give me the other key
Your heart is an open door
So let me love you
I just wanna love you
They say they're scared of you
I'm like, "Me too, me too"
("Me too, me too") "Me too"
You say you're scared of me
We both just want to be free
(Be free, be free) Be free
Oh, give me the other key
Oh, your heart's wide open
There must be another key
Left your heart wide open
Just give me the other key
Your heart is an open door
Let me love you, uh
Your heart's wide open
Your heart's wide open (just give me another key)
Your heart's wide open 
(Just give me another key)
Your heart's wide open
Just give me another key
Your heart is an open door
So let me love you
I just wanna love you

Songwriters: Lianne Charlotte Barnes / Matthew Nicholas Hales
Paper Thin lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc, Universal Music Publishing Group

25/05/2020

The Vortex Paintings - Fabienne Verdier - October 2020



Fabienne Verdier: Vortex 


6 October - 17 November 2020
Waddington Custot
11 Cork Street
London, W1S 3LT
Fabienne Verdier, Vortex, 2020, acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 72 x 53 1/8 in, 183 x 135 cm. Courtesy the artist and Waddington Custot 

Waddington Custot is pleased to present The Vortex Paintings, a remarkable new series by the celebrated contemporary abstract painter, Fabienne Verdier. 
Through her work, Verdier gives physical form to the usually invisible and intangible forces within nature, incorporating a wide range of natural phenomena, from gravity and kinetic energy to sound waves and vibrations. In these large-scale paintings, seen for the first time at Waddington Custot, Verdier continues her exploration into the painting of sounds and music, in particular the visual representation of breathing techniques employed by sopranos performing Mozart’s arias. The Vortex Paintings are characterised by a single large, whirling helix, which dominates the composition and echoes the ascendant scaling sound of an aria. 
Verdier initiated The Vortex Paintings during her time as the first artist-in-residence at New York’s prestigious performing arts school, the Juilliard School. There, working on a smaller scale and in pen, Verdier captured in visual form the practice sessions and breathing techniques of prominent singers and musicians. She began to visualise the voices singing arias as columns of breath rising in the air, with each different piece of music engendering a unique vortex form. 
Typically for Verdier’s work, the form on canvas is created with giant brushes and tools of her own invention, which are suspended from her studio ceiling. For this new series, the artist has adapted her studio environment to incorporate a mobile platform. This enables her to stand directly above the painting, which is laid on the ground, and to paint new, fluid expressions from the centre of the canvas. 
In The Vortex Paintings, Verdier captures melodies and rhythms of individual arias through ascending curves, undulations, and frequencies that she detects whilst listening to the music. The resultant paintings have a sense of weightlessness, reflecting the lightness of emotion and the ‘lifting’ sensation experienced when listening to voices singing an aria. 
As Fabienne Verdier describes: 
“This series represents the energy of man and nature brought together in what becomes a state of total immersion. There is the dissolution of self into sound, into the environment, into the atmosphere. In my work I try to capture the invisible voice over soundwaves, to visualize energy and those things we feel but do not see”. 
The Vortex Paintings represent Verdier’s first new body of work following her major retrospective in France, held across three institutions including the Musée Granet in Aix-en-Provence. These new works reveal the evolution, depth and variety of Verdier’s practice, encompassing explorations into sound and geology within wide-ranging natural phenomena. 

About Fabienne Verdier 
Fabienne Verdier (b. 1962, Paris, France) is an abstract painter who explores the dynamism of forces in nature, movement and immobility by drawing on her intimate knowledge of techniques and traditions of both Western and Eastern art. Verdier paints vertically in ink, standing directly on her stretchers, using giant brushes and tools of her own invention suspended from the studio ceiling. Her work combines Eastern aspects of unity, spontaneity and asceticism with the line, action and expression of Western painting. 
As a young art school graduate, Verdier left France for China in 1985 to study the art of spontaneous painting and other Eastern traditions with some of the last great Chinese painters who survived the Cultural Revolution. Her adventure and immersion as an apprentice painter would last nearly ten years, recounted in her 2003 book, ‘Passagère du Silence’. 
Verdier’s work has been exhibited extensively in Beijing, Singapore, Taipei, Paris, Rome, Lausanne, Zurich and Brussels, among other cities. In 2011, she was included in an important group exhibition The Art of Deceleration, from Caspar David Friedrich to Ai Wei Wei at the Kunstmuseum in Wolfsburg, Germany. In 2012, the Hubert Looser Foundation of Zurich, having previously commissioned several works, selected Verdier for a group exhibition with Donald Judd, John Chamberlain, Ellsworth Kelly and Cy Twombly in Vienna’s Kunstforum. In 2013 the Groeninge Museum in Bruges, Belgium, held an important solo exhibition of Verdier’s work in conversation with Flemish Primitives such as Van Eyck and Memling. In 2014, she was invited to create an installation of seven works for Köningsklasse II, organized by the Pinakotek der Moderne of Munich, and participated in Formes Simples at Centre Pompidou-Metz in France. In addition to her current painterly research into possible links between music and painting, recent projects include Verdier’s conceptual collaboration with architect Jean Nouvel for the National Art Museum of China project in Beijing. In 2016, seven of Verdier’s works were acquired by Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich. Verdier was been invited to compose a visual partita for the 2017 edition of the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence, and won the commission to design the Roland Garros French Open official poster. In 2018, the artist set up a nomadic studio on Sainte-Victoire Mountain, renowned for its presence in several paintings by Paul Cézanne. The series was exhibited alongside the works of Cézanne at Verdier’s retrospective exhibition at Musée Granet, Aix-en-Provence, 2019. Fabienne Verdier lives and works in France and Canada. 

24/05/2020

A Special Saturday


What an incredible day, spent in the (virtual) company of some of the people I love the most (over the phone) and the most interesting artists.
People say they're bored in lockdown, but, boy, there is so much to do now... to prepare for, to debrief, to capture, to revisit, to forgive, to let go of, to comprehend, to grow from...
Among these many extraordinary people: Fabienne Verdier and lee Miller, still so intrigued by such strong creators, and my deepest love to the geniuses I've met in the past for real, an unforgettable experience...






When Lee Miller returned to New York from Europe in October 1932, newspaper reporters were waiting to greet her as her ship docked. Disembarking in a smart beret and fur-collared coat, she smiled for the journalist from the New York World-Telegram. When he referred to her as 'one of the most photographed girls in Manhattan', she retorted, 'I'd rather take a picture than be one.' Lee Miller is one of the most remarkable female icons of the 20th century. A model turned photographer turned war reporter, Miller chose to live her life by her own rules. This film celebrates a subject who defied anyone who tried to pin her down, put her on a pedestal or pigeonhole her in any way. It tells the story of a trailblazer, often at odds with the morality of the day, who refused to be subjugated by the dominant male figures around her.