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27/01/13

Prossimamente Frieze NY



A pochi mesi dalla seconda edizione Frieze New York presenta i progetti che si svolgeranno durante l'evento con cinque giovani artisti oltre all'interessante proposta di un ricordo al progetto di Gordon Matta-Clark e Carol Goodden del noto "ristorate" Food, era il 1971, che sarà rivisitato negli spazi della fiera. Ci sarà anche un intervento "letterario" con Ben Marcus. 


Ecco il comunicato stampa:

Frieze announced today the Frieze Projects program of specially commissioned works to be realized at Frieze New York, 2013. The fair is located in the unique setting of Randall’s Island Park, overlooking the East River.

The five artists participating in the Frieze Projects program this year are: Liz Glynn, Maria Loboda, Mateo Tannatt, Andra Ursuta, Marianne Vitale. The program will also feature a special tribute to legendary artist-run restaurantFood, originally conceived by Gordon Matta-Clark and Carol Godden in 1971, and an original text by novelist Ben Marcus. The Frieze Projects program is realized annually at Frieze New York and is curated by Cecilia Alemani.

The program includes seven specially commissioned projects, three of which are situated outdoors in Randall’s Island Park. The participating artists have been invited to conceive site-specific works that either react to the exceptional location of Randall’s Island or engage with the experience of the fair. Some projects confront the unique landscape of the site by inserting incongruous presences within the island’s landscape, including a color-coded garden, a speakeasy, and a cemetery. Others play with quotidian acts via folkloric traditions and formalist preoccupations. Together the seven projects envision new, temporary spaces for participation in everyday rituals.

Cecilia Alemani said of the program, ‘For the second edition of Frieze Projects in New York, I asked the commissioned artists to intervene in the fair and its surrounding landscape by staging challenging works that play with everyday habits and collective behaviors. Basic actions such as eating, drinking, speaking and praying serve as the starting point for a series of site-specific installations that engage the ritualistic dimension of the fair and the unique landscape of the island.’
Frieze Projects presents newly commissioned artworks by international artists. The artists commissioned by Frieze Projects will use Frieze New York as a site to realize ambitious ideas.
Frieze New York will take place May 10–13, 2013 and will present over 180 of the world’s leading galleries. Frieze New York is sponsored by Deutsche Bank.


2013 Projects
Liz Glynn (b. 1981, Boston. Lives in Los Angeles.)
In a series of large-scale sculptural installations often assembled with inexpensive materials such as wood and cardboard, Liz Glynn builds impromptu architectures and creates gathering spaces that incorporate fictional references to historical civilizations such as ancient Egypt and the Roman Empire. For Frieze Projects, the artist will use the grid of the fair to hide a secret bar inspired by 1920s prohibition-era speakeasies. Decorated like an old bank vault, the bar will be accessible through a secret door. Inside, bartenders will perform magic tricks while serving cocktails to guests.

Maria Loboda (b. 1979, Krakow. Lives in Berlin and London.)
Maria Loboda’s work analyzes systems of communications, underscoring the transformative power of languages and codes. Reflecting upon the relationship between nature and verbal communication, Loboda has realized a number of works in which nature is analyzed through the lens of language. Taking as inspiration the lush parkland of Randall’s Island, the artist will turn an area of the park’s green lawn into a color-coded garden, an exact replica of a color plate of a European interior design motif from the 19th century. Interested in the exacting precision of color mapping, the artist translates the two-dimensional image into a living landscape of plans, flowers and shrubs, highlighting the relationship between interior and exterior, between two and three-dimensional landscapes.

Mateo Tannatt (b. 1979, Los Angeles. Lives in Los Angeles.)
Mateo Tannatt uses sculpture as a platform for performance, video, photography and painting, creating landscapes of objects and props that are often brought to life by actors and performers. For Frieze Projects, Tannatt will craft seven individual sculptures that interrupt and punctuate the fair. Each of these seven situations will be activated by scripted performances and written texts. Viewers will be invited to sit and use the sculptures as part of the performance. Based on the subjective association of color and the effect and use of public sculpture, this project not only offers moments for viewers to rest but also provides temporary stages for public theater, bringing the monumental into the everyday.

Andra Ursuta (b. 1979, Salonta. Lives in New York.)
Andra Ursuta’s work merges references to the traditional folklore of her native Romania with an investigation of feminine identity through a series of sculptures, installations and immersive environments. For Frieze Projects, Ursuta departs from the idea that art fairs have become temporary sites of pilgrimage. As part of an imaginary art village, the artist will construct a missing part of the everyday life of an art fair: a quaint little cemetery where art goes to die. As art fairs do not allow room for the afterlife of art, Ursuta will erect a group of marble slabs in the bucolic landscape of Randall’s Island, turning the site into a place of worship.

Marianne Vitale (b.1973, East Rockaway. Lives in New York.)
Known for her large-scale wooden sculptures of burnt bridges, barns and outhouses, Marianne Vitale combines a reflection on contemporary American sculpture with an investigation of vernacular art and architecture. For Frieze Projects, the artist will reimagine a number of 19th-century weathervanes – the admirable, playful folk objects crafted by anonymous artists – by stripping them down, bulking them up and divesting them of their perceivable use value; their movement. These noncompliant forecasters will be on display indoors to disrupt the atmospheric conditions for fairgoers. 




Food 1971/2013

In 2013, Frieze Projects will organize a special tribute to Food, the legendary restaurant opened in October 1971 by Gordon Matta-Clark and Carol Goodden in collaboration with other artists. Sited outside the fair, this tribute will take the form of a temporary restaurant where the history and legacy of Food will be celebrated. A meeting space, a restaurant, a total work of art, Food was driven by the energy of the people that run it and that gathered there. In the same spirit, Food 1971/2013 at Frieze will be a dynamic platform where each day a different artist will be invited to cook in a convivial environment which will double as a restaurant and a performance stage, a space where food is made and art is discussed, inspired and produced. In 2012, with a homage to Fashion Moda and a presentation of John Ahearn’s work, Frieze Projects started a series of tributes to historical artist-run spaces and initiatives that have defined and transformed the cultural and artistic life of New York City. Food 1971/2013 is the second project in this series.



Ben Marcus (b. 1967, Chicago. Lives in New York.)

In 2012, Frieze Projects inaugurated Frieze Story – a new platform for writers and novelists who are invited to develop short stories that expand upon the unique location of the fair – with a short text by Rick Moody. For 2013 Frieze Story, novelist Ben Marcus has been invited to contribute with an original composition which will add another voice to the polyphony of Frieze Projects. Associate Professor at Columbia University, Marcus is the author of a number of novels and short stories, including The Flame Alphabet (2012), Notable American Women(2002), and The Age of Wire and String (1995).