AMSTERDAM. Fino al 30 settembre The Merchant House ospiterà la mostra di Craigie Horsfield (1949, Cambridge) dove l’arte diventa esperienza condivisa esplorata nei concetti di relazione e tempo. Horsfield ha focalizzato la sua attenzione, per più di 45 anni, nel campo dell’arte contemporanea sociale aprendosi sui concetti di comunità e l’individuo.

Fotografia, cinema, suono, disegno, performance, installazioni, e altri mezzi di comunicazione sono utilizzati come strumenti per esplorare concetti come “relazione”, “tempo lento”, “presente”, “attenzione”, e coscienza.

 

Ninì Sgambati, Via Costantinopoli, Naples, May 2009.

 

 

AMSTERDAM. Across a group of his earlier and new masterpieces, the exhibition traverses the photographic oeuvre of Craigie Horsfield (1949, Cambridge): art as a shared experience rooted in his notion of “slow time”—imagined as attention to and expansion of an ordinary present of which the past is understood as a dimension, a deep present.

Horsfield, working over 45 years in the field of social projects in contemporary art, has opened significant conceptions of community and the individual. Photography, film, sound, drawing, performance, installation, and other media are used as instruments in the thinking of “relation,” “slow time,” the “present,” “attention,” and consciousness. Relation, the idea at the center of Horsfield’s life work, proposes that being is generated “between” individuals—simply expressed: we bring each other in to being—and that being happens, takes place, in each encounter, each meeting, each conversation. This is the sphere of relation as “telling,” significantly a double meaning in English, for Horsfield the sphere of arts’ working.

Lemons and pears. New York. July 2003.
Lemons and pears. New York. July 2003.

An Installation-in-Progress Exhibition. To further conflate this concept of creation and viewing, the program at The Merchant House is organized as an installation in progress starting on April 29 and culminating with a full view on September 15, 2016 (additional events to be announced). It also acts as a primer to the ideas that inform the exhibition of some of the most significant of Horsfield’s works of the last ten years, upcoming at the Centraal Museum in Utrecht at the end of October, 2016.

Craigie Horsfield:  Artist for the 21st Century. Exploring the artist’s ongoing research of the medium, the exhibition at The Merchant House will include: large black-and-white photographs from a group regularly seen in museums worldwide and in the Netherlands (the Stedelijk, Amsterdam in 1992 and van Abbe, Eindhoven in 2002); the so-called Irresponsible Drawings, differently, but nonetheless “photographically” made—that is by a light-trace from objects, such as flowers, food, or drinking vessels; and new works that employ digital print technologies developed by Horsfield and used in a most intense and creative attention to nature, the phenomenal world, and to others in portraits made as profound conversations.

Craigie Horsfield’s complex fusion of photographic possibilities, a veiled territory (seductive and risky) in the age of the digitally-stripped selfie and instant image exchange, has been a subject of extensive art writing. The show of these unquestionably 21st century works at The Merchant House would further insist on drawing lines of comparison with Dutch paintings on similar subjects but with a different union of idea and tableau. This likely intense gallery dialogue is in itself a way of seeing and thinking art.

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