BÁO CHÍ & XUẤT BẢN
Klara Kristalova, born in Prague in 1967 and now based in a rural town north of Stockholm, draws on the imagery of northern European stories — such as those of Hans Christian Andersen, Selma Lagerlöf, and Gösta Berling — to construct dreamlike narratives in which adolescent girls and boys find themselves alone, physically altered, or out of place in nature.
Read MoreThree generations of artists converge within the frame of Jonathan Monk’s studio, with an exhibition aptly titled "Perfectly Concocted Context" at Che
Read MorePolice are investigating a burglary in the latest incident of crime at festival
Read MoreGalerie Rüdiger Schöttle, Munich presents an exhibition of works by artist Goshka Macuga which is currently on view at the gallery space.
Read MoreWorks across the island are inspired by memory, loss, consumerism, and modern-day tribes.
Read MoreAs The Marciano Foundation opens in Los Angeles, we look at 11 exceptional private collections open to the public — from a chain of art malls to a museum built into a rock face
Read MoreThe private collection-turned-public museum may not be a new phenomenon, but it is one that keeps growing. Museums grab headlines with splashy new buildings by star architects or impressive renovation projects of historic industrial buildings. But beyond their often-impressive exteriors, each private museum functions as an extension of its founder’s personality and taste, in how the collection is presented, and how the museum engages with its surrounding community.
Read MoreArtist Jim Shaw has a cold. Curator Philipp Kaiser is jetlagged, having just flown in from Venice, Italy, the night before.
Read MoreChan + Hori Contemporary, Singapore, is hosting an exhibition, titled 'Knives in the Water', by Speak Cryptic.
Read More10 Exhibitions Opening This Week
Read MoreJason Logan’s Toronto Ink Company isn’t an art project, he says, but it tells the story of its city in a vivid, ever-expanding palette.
Read MoreThe Artist Pension Trust, a mutual assurance fund that provides long-term financial security for artists, withdrew eighteen lots from an upcoming auction at Sotheby’s London after several artists decided that the sale “was not in their best interests,” Colin Gleadell of The Telegraph reports.
Read MoreSkate art from around the region, and a video installation showing Singapore shophouses head to major art platforms.
Read MoreWhen Columbia Records introduced the first LPs in 1948, they didn't just change how we listen to music. They also changed how we see it by popularizing illustrated album covers. (Before WWII, most records typically came in generic sleeves.)
Read MoreLast week, 18 lots estimated to sell for as much as £200,000 were withdrawn from a contemporary art sale in London.
Read MoreCeramics first emerged in Japan in the Jomon period - the prehistoric era - making it one of the first art forms in the country, and one of the oldest ceramic traditions in the world.
Read MoreDocumenta 14 is so vast, dispersed, and enigmatic, that it is literally impossible to experience all of it (not to mention that the other half of the quinquennial exhibition has yet to take place, in Kassel, Germany). Yet the earnest visitor should make the effort, while in Athens, not only to take in what he or she can of the international offerings of documenta, but to wander off the beaten path of the biennial map, and sample what the local art scene of Athens has to offer.
Read MoreThe Big Issue yesterday unveiled the April 3 edition which is an art special, spearheaded by guest editor/artist Charming Baker, one of Britain’s most celebrated contemporary artists.
Read More10 Exhibitions Opening This Week
Read MoreArtworks by Heather Phillipson and Michael Rakowitz have been commissioned for Trafalgar Square’s Fourth Plinth in London, writes The Telegraph’s Anita Singh.
Read MoreA curator curating artists who curate other artists. It doesn’t get any more meta than that. The artworks collected in “The Artist’s Museum,” a nesting box of an exhibition organized by Dan Byers, are, in essence, collections themselves.
Read MoreWildly popular British artist David Shrigley will present the first large-scale show of his work in New Zealand, when the exhibition David Shrigley: Lose Your Mind comes to CoCA.
Read MoreThe selection of Rotterdam-based Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) as the Manifesta 12 team for urban studies in Palermo, Sicily, has been followed up by the appointment of an international, interdisciplinary team of four creative mediators.
Read MoreThe fifth edition of the once-a-decade Münster Sculpture Projects, taking place in the north German town of Münster from June 10 to October 1, has released its participating artists list.
Read MoreFor the 2017 edition of The Armory Show, the fair invited curator Jarrett Gregory to reinvent its Focus section.
Read MoreBob and Roberta Smith commission among 20 announced for UK event.
Read MoreLike the weather in early March, in New York, Armory Week is at once thrilling, blustery, exhausting, and it just might make you go numb. There is so much happening, that it’s easy to feel that there’s no way to get a handle on it. By our estimates there are over 650,000 square feet of art fairs alone—that’s like six and a half Manhattan city blocks worth of art—and that doesn’t count the museums, gallery openings or art auctions that you’ve got to make it to. To help you prioritize your to-do list, we have run down some of the essentials of the New York art scene’s spring awakening.
Read MoreDuring the first weekend of March, Independent returns to New York City for its eighth consecutive year. The fair has become known in both its New Yor
Read More“Surgery,” artist Chloe Piene’s third solo exhibition, is being hosted by Galerie Barbara Thumm in Berlin. It will be on view till March 11, 2017.
Read MoreThe 2017 Venice Biennale, opening on May 13, has revealed the list of one hundred and twenty artists participating in the international exhibition “Viva Arte Viva,” curated by Christine Macel.
Read More
Chloe Piene received a BA from Columbia University in New York and an MFA from Goldsmith's College in London. Selected exhibitions include Rotwand Gallery, Zurich, Switzerland (upcoming 2010); Alon Segev Gallery, Tel-Aviv, Israel (upcoming 2010); Barbara Thumm Gallery, Artforum Berlin, Berlin, Germany (2009); Elles, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France (2009); Imprisonment, Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Germany (2008); Chloe Piene & Hans Bellmer, Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Paris, France (2007); Chloe Piene: Carre D'Art, Musee D'Art Contemporain, Nimes, France (2007); Witte de With, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (2007); Bodies of Desire: Works on Paper by Willem de Kooning and Chloe Piene, curated by Klaus Ottman, Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, PA (2007); Sandroni Rey, Los Angeles, CA (2005); Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert, Inc. (2004); Marianne Boesky Gallery, (2004); Videodrome, New Museum of Contemporary Art (2002). Chloe Piene work was exhibited in the Whitney Biennial 2004 at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Selected Public Collections include Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, Whitney Museum of American Art, NY, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, San Francisco Museum of Art, San Francisco, CA, FNAC, France, FRAC, France, Sammlung Hoffman, Berlin, Germany, Centre National D'Art et de Culture George Pompidou, Paris, France and Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA. Chloe Piene is currently represented by Alon Segev Gallery, Israel, Galerie Barbara Thumm, Germany, Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Paris, France and Sandroni Rey, Los Angeles, CA.
Chloe Piene lives and works in New York, NY.
For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art