Showing posts with label ArtCube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ArtCube. Show all posts

31 October 2008

Still life with silver

Images of the show with the silver works and still lifes of Simon Anderton at ArtCube gallery (more photos).

Justice

Still live with bird, eggs and books.

Sweet rum

Allah

Marvelous marbles

Food was a beautiful and delicious still life too

The artist Simon Anderton with silver expert Fred Brom from Steltman after his speech.
Photos ©Marisa Polin

Also a collection of older paintings of Marisa Polin (Culinaria 1994) as a bidimensional still life.

21 October 2008

Old work as new

Simon Anderton asked me to hang my Culinaria paintings all in one wall for the exhibition at ArtCube gallery (for more photos), it is an old series from 1994. I never thought of showing these 'old' paintings and/or hanging my work like that. It was nice seeing it again, and it was 'new' for all the visitors to the exhibition.

Marisa Polin (Culinaria 1994)

01 April 2008

Ever, ever?

The opening at ArtCube of 'Ever renovating city' was cozy and friendly even though I always get nervous. I suppose not many people see it, but I was nervous.
The works of Willem van der Hofstede shined on the sunny Saturday afternoon.
I have no photo's of the event, but from yesterday as the Sun stroke on walls and paintings:

23 March 2008

Willem van der Hofstede at ArtCube.nl


This is the invitation to the next exhibition by ArtCube.nl.

INVITATION
Ever renovating city: Willem van der Hofstede
paintings

27 March-25 May 2008
opening Saturday 29 March 4 pm

ArtCube.nl gallery / artcube@tiscali.nl / www.artcube.nl / The Hague
open: 27-29 March, 3-5, 17-19 april,15-17, 22-24 May from 2-5 pm and by appointment.

The theme of the paintings is the city and specially the renovating city. For years Van der Hofstede has been painting and taking photographs of the skyline of The Hague and the buildings that are being destroyed.

28 January 2008

The interview and the opening of Sexagesima


On Saturday as I arrived at De Balie where De Hoeksten Live! takes place, I was told that Els van der Plas -who normally makes the art interviews- was sick and I was asked if I could interview Marsel Loermans and Anton Spruit my self. From one moment to another instead of coaching and standing next to "my artists" I became the one who would ask the questions. We solved it making it some kind of friendly conversation. We forgot the 'studio' and for the half an hour that the program lasted we were as if at home, talking to each other with a microphone in our hands. I had no idea of the time, no one was there to hurry me, and I didn't dare to look at my watch while I had the camera on me, that is why it lasts nearly 30 minutes.
We were very happy of the result, homely but very focused. Here is the link to the interview and start on minute 11'. If you have any trouble you can ask it "on demand": Salto; the "stream on demand"; and then searching date 26 January, at 23 hours 11 minutes and you start directly on the show.

Yesterday, just before the opening started, Mariette interviewed me on the choice of artists and photographs.

I said a few words...

and then I gave the microphone to Jody Cath who told a bit about the life of some of the photographed people. Nearly 100 persons saw the exhibition yesterday. Marsel, Anton and I were very satisfied.

At the end some friends stayed for a big bowl of pasta made by Hans. On the last photo is my friend Elena de Santis (LNA).

26 January 2008

Already the third exhibition at ArtCube

I am very happy that the third show at ArtCube is about to start. It is of course a lot of work and more than what you imagined but it is energy spend with a lot of pleasure. The show is ready the photographs are hanging and I am very proud of it. We'll see what happens at the opening.
As a starter I invite you to see the interview and I wrote a little text about the works. Hope to see you there.

sexagesima invitation
Marsel Loermans | Anton Spruit.
A fine line between independant work and working on commission.
Photography exhibition.
24 January - 17 February 2008
ArtCube invites you to the reception: Sunday 27 January from 3 pm.

sexagesima interview
"De Hoeksteen Live!" *:
Ik interview Marsel Loermans and Anton Spruit on their photo exhibition at ArtCube gallery saturday 26th of January 2008 at 23 hours. (exactly starting at 23:11 hours)
You can follow it on internet 'on demand':
-Surf to the website of "De Hoeksteen live!":
http://hoeksteen.wordpress.com/ or www.hoeksteen.dds.nl
-Or surf to Salto: http://www.salto.nl/ and follow these steps; A2 or A1; stream on demand; zaterdag 26 januari 2008; 23.00 uur.
*Amsterdam television and internet program now also on Second Life.

sexagesima text
The moment I saw the first photo of the series, I was completely fascinated by its strength and sincerity. I loved the picture that was telling a complete story of that person. The sitter let the photographer see his life and then the photographer translated that life and that moment to me. I wanted to see more of these open but at the same time intriguing characters, who where playing their own life.

This happened nearly two years ago and what I saw then was the first black and white amplification proof for the whole project. The project was still taking form. At that time I had my studio above Marsel Loermans’ and I had no idea I would be having the exhibition space of ArtCube. We talked plenty about portraits, photography and this specific project.

A year later I was moving and I knew I wanted him to exhibit the portrait series at ArtCube. I had no doubt. Marsel knew of my interest on the portraits and last autumn he presented me the little “Momentopnamen van nu” (“Time shoots from now”) book. This small object is full of more than 1600 hundred lives in the form of black and white photo portraits. As I have it in my hands it makes me think of the Bible or of some kind of dictionary of faces: all different. The contradictory quality of the book is that at the same time it gives the impression that all people photographed are the same, same size, same color, same illumination, all are alike.

After two months Marsel called and we set dates, by the way, it was not ‘his’ project but ‘theirs’, only then I met Anton Spruit, the second half of the makers of the portraits. Anton has a very different personality than Marsel and as I learned they can work very well together.

It was only this week that I saw for the first time the beautiful large as life color portraits that now hang. Thanks to the invitation card we sent I had some idea of the choice of photographs that were going to be brought but I did not imagine the straightforward power of these photographs. My first thought was the link the images had with the traditional Dutch photography. A word came to my mouth: ‘Rembrandt’, the dark background, the ‘decorating’ clothes that seem to be there only to test the artist’s control on drapery, all these factors are there only to emphasize the faces with a falling light from the left, and that brings me to another word: 'Vermeer'.

Some of the people who have seen the photographs with me have told me they thought seeing from the outside that they were looking at paintings. Others noticed the relaxed posing of the sitters in contrast to the appearance of having being taken at a studio. But what I hear the most is the word ‘purity’. These real people in their most pure way are photographed with perfectionism and sensitiveness. Both artists Marsel Loermans and Anton Spruit talk about each photo by their subject names with a clear empathy, and they told me stories about each one of those that are hanging. They have respect for their achieved result and all their subjects. You have to remember they were 1614 portraits of people and who knows how many photographs were taken.

As you can observe at the photographs, it seems as the people are looking at you, expecting you to discover their lives and feel what they feel. They are alive and present. Sadly enough one of the most impressive sitters of one of the best photographs has already passed away. And that brings me back to the title of the little book, the photographs had made of them permanently ‘moments from now’.

I wanted to share with you my aesthetic experience with these photographs and consciously without going into the details of the commission they were made for or the institution that commissioned it. The history and stories are an added value to the photos but for me they are strong enough on their own.

sexagesima press release (in Dutch)
een dunne scheidslijn tussen autonoom en werk in opdracht
Marsel Loermans | Anton Spruit

De samenwerking tussen Marsel Loermans, fotograaf en Anton Spruit, vormgever bestaat sinds 1988. Aanvankelijk maken zij fotografische illustraties en band-dia programma’s in opdracht. De laatste jaren krijgt hun werk een meer autonoom karakter.
De dunne scheidslijn tussen werk in opdracht en autonoom bleek volledig te verdwijnen bij een opdracht van de instelling voor mensen met een verstandelijke beperking, ’s Heeren Loo, (voorheen Boldershof-Waalborg). Bij gelegenheid van het honderdjarig bestaan portretteerden zij 1614 medewerkers en cliĆ«nten. Zo ontstond een serie portretten die -indirect- de maatschappelijke positie van mensen met een beperking ter discussie stelt.

31 October 2007

Photographs for Esli jewellery

Last Monday Ilse Versluijs and I photographed Nayeli Peregrino for Ilse's invitation to ArtCube. Here is the result:


It was a satisfying evening.

05 October 2007

Out tip

I was very glad to find out that The Dutch Financieele Dagblag recommends the exhibition. I rather like how they described the exhibition giving a clear emphasis on portraiture.

03 October 2007

The photographer and the models


The photographer asked Wim Pijbes who was opening the exhibition, the artist (me) and the sitter from the invitation: Rkia El Yazidi, to pose for him. It is very representative trio about the exposition.
Rkia was accompanied by his children (both artists) and her daughter in law Emilie Patijn. I think Rkia was a little bit overwhelmed by all the attention she had but she told me she liked the painting.
Actually it was Hicham Khalidi (curator digital media TAG), her son who suggested that his mother should be part of this project of mine 'Mederlanders'. It was already in december 2005 that I met her and photographed her. I still agree with Hicham, she belongs in the group.
I hoop at the end of the year to have all 7 portraits ready.

The article appeared today at AD Haagsche Courant (Newspaper of The Hague).
Text: Gijsbert Spierenburg (in Dutch).
Photograph: Guus Schoonewille. Click on the image for a larger version.

01 October 2007

For good weather there is no one to thank

Even though the weather report anticipated a clear day we couldn't believe it. But as the time for the opening approached the sky cleared, the wind settled and sunshine reflexed in high contrast colors through the domes on the paintings and the garden plants.
At 3 pm friends and neighbors streamed into the gallery.
By the moment Wim Pijbes (Kunsthal, Rotterdam) started his speech, gallery and garden were full of people.
Wim Pijbes' opening speech. In Dutch.
Marisa Polin's thank you words. In Dutch.

Charlotte Huygens, Willem van der Kaay, Rob Nederlof, Karin Doeksen, Soraya Nederlof, Femke Boersma, Frits Bolkestein, Marisa and Wim Pijbes. NF

Here I am talking to Frits and Femke a few seconds before Wim started with the opening words. GF

Naema Tahir, me and Wim Pijbes. GF

Gerrit Zalm asking himself when is he going to be able to see the exhibition? GF

Femke and Frits just in front of a corner of his portrait. C

The Rio series. MP

The Summer drawings. MP

Frea and Ivo Bouwman talking to Wim Pijbes. GF

A full gallery. NF

This is the front room facing the street. In the middle Naema in front of her portrait talking to Charlotte and Wim. NF

The Die Hards. Those who stayed until the end enjoying pizza, conversation and music. GF

Hans Hoogervorst, Rita and Edzo Doeve. GF

After the storm. MP

MP
Photo credits: Nick Farmer NF, Concha C, Gabriel Foncerrada GF, Marisa Polin MP. (Thanks!)

26 September 2007

As a passer by

At night looking trough the cube face into ArtCube.

15 September 2007

The Catalogues

These are the covers of ID igital, Mederlanders and Simil.




08 September 2007

New Work


To enlarge click on the image.

You are invited to the presentation of the last portraits and photo work of Marisa Polin at ArtCube.
Mederlanders is a series op paint portraits on all dutch people represented by the old and the young, women and men, known and less known, religious and not.

Simil is a photographic project on people with alike looks consciously or by coincidence. The photographs had been taken in many different countries as Brazil, Italy, Spain, Hungary or The Netherlands.

ID igital is a visual research on self portrait on internet, based on an internet group of 'friends' of young people in Mexico City.

On the photo series Rio we see lonely odd balconies with swimming pools.