We Are The World
June 25 – July 31, 2004
Opening Reception
Friday, June 25, 6 – 8 pm
8:30 pm: A Gala
Benefit Evening to benefit Amnesty International's project
to bring human rights to local New York City high schools.
More
information — call Chelsea Art Museum: 212-255-0719
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Kimiko Yoshida, "Marry Me," 2003,
DVD
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Oksun Kim, “Happy Together,” 2002,
photographic series |
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Jun Yang, "Jun Yang and Soldier
Woods," 2003, DVD
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Fiorenza Menini, "Resistance Forever," 2002,
DVD
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Fiorenza Menini “Perfect Life,” 2003,
series of small photography
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Patricia Piccinini, "Sandman," 2002,
photographic series and film
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Lee Mingwei, “A Hundred Days
with Lily,” 1996, photographic series |
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Mladen
Bizumic, “Hauturu,” 2003, DVD) |
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Jonathan Calm "Delta," 2004 DVD/ Digital
C-Print 20x30 |
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Jemima Stehli, "After Helmut Newton's
'Here They Come' II"
1999, 2 b/w photographs, dimensions variable |
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“One picture is worth a thousand
words” is a timeless adage and certainly applicable
to this group of young artists from all over the world, using
video, film and photography as their mediums.
Lee Mingwei writes a diary on life with a loved one (in
this case, a flower called “Lily”) with whom he sleeps,
eats, showers, writes, and meditates (“A Hundred Days
with Lily,” 1996, photographic series). Timur Celikdag
probes and investigates masculinity and personal style of
men of his native country (“Istanbul,” 2002,
photographic series), while Kimiko Yoshida interprets ancestral
customs and breaks them by becoming a modern-day nomad, vagabond,
fugitive (“Marry Me,” 2003, DVD and photographic
series). Daniel Blaufuks takes us on poetic journeys into
the past through old post cards with fictional messages by
French writer George Perec (“A Perfect Day,” 2004,
DVD and installation). Young protagonists defining their
place in forgotten suburbs and lost coastal towns are portrayed
by Patricia Piccinini (“Sandman,” 2002, photographic
series and film), and Olga Kisseleva explores the identity
and self-image of female factory workers in St Petersburg
(“Your Self Portrait,” 2002, DVD). Jun Yang investigates
the origins and transformations of his own name in the linguistic
gap between Mandarin and English (“Jun Yang and Soldier
Woods,” 2003, DVD).
Fiorenza Menini investigates young people’s
behavior in extreme situations (“Resistance Forever,” 2002,
DVD) and their dreams and hopes (“Perfect Life,” 2003,
series of small photography), whereas Alessandra
Sanguinetti
depicts two young cousins on the verge of entering adolescence,
staging playful renditions of “Ophelia,” “Othello” and
other dramatized situations of life and death (from “The
Adventures of Guille and Belinda and the Enigmatic Meaning
of Their Dreams,” 1998-2002, photographic series).
Jonathan Calm juxtaposes on a screen,
divided like a diptych, two people's lives headed in diametrically
different
directions from suburban to urban surroundings (“Delta,” 2004,
DVD). Oksun Kim captures in her portraits
the estrangement yet also strong connection between couples
with different
cultural origin (“Happy Together,” 2002, photographic
series). Mladen Bizumic shows a computer
animated representation of a conservation island’s
geographical shift from the Hauraki Gulf to the harbor of
Venice. Art, technology
and architecture from different parts of the world meet in
this project (“Hauturu,” 2003, DVD). Mika
Rottenberg
sees the world upside down through the eyes of an acrobat
walking on her hands on ice, a playful yet dangerous balancing
act (“Julie,” 2003, DVD). Ingrid Mwangi is
seen wearing various masks made out of her own hair
that has been draped, styled and braided over her face (“Neger
- Don’t Call Me,” 2000, video and sound installation).
Jemima Stehli plays on “The Critic
Sees”(Jasper
Johns, 1964) by exposing herself in a studio striptease to
the male gaze of critics, dealers, writers and curators (“Strip,” 2000,
photographic series).
The fascinating link between the young artists in “We
Are the World” is that they all have multi-cultural,
multi-ethnic and multi-national backgrounds, and none of
them live more than a small part of the time in their native
countries. Each of them tries to deal with past and present
by telling stories (realistic and/or fictional) that reveal
their anxieties, hopes, cultural heritage, coming to terms
with social and political tensions, and last but not least
their dealing with being the first true generation of “global
kids.” — Elga Wimmer
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Artists
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Mladen Bizumic
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(Yugoslavia/New Zealand)
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Daniel Blaufuks
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(Portugal/Germany) |
Jonathan Calm |
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(USA) |
Timur Celikdag |
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(Turkey/Germany) |
Oksun Kim |
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(Korea) |
Olga Kisseleva |
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(Russia/France) |
Fiorenza Menini |
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(France/Italy) |
Lee Mingwei |
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(Taiwan/USA) |
Ingrid Mwangi |
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(Kenya/Germany) |
Patricia Piccinini |
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(Australia) |
Mika Rottenberg |
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(Israel/USA) |
Alessandra Sanguinetti |
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(Argentina/USA) |
Jemima Stehli |
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(Australia/Great Britain) |
Jun Yang |
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(China/Austria) |
Kimiko Yoshida
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(Japan/France)
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Curator |
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Elga Wimmer |
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(Austria/USA) |
Click here for Installation Views
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