Posted by artradar on May 11, 2010

Bessmertny's Causarum Cognitio Philosophicus
Courtesy Rossi & Rossi
RUSSIAN ARTIST TALK EXHIBITION
A technical impresario who underwent rigorous formal training, Konstantin Bessmertny has risen to become one of Macau’s foremost artistic ambassadors.
Raised in Far Eastern Russia on the Chinese border, Bessmertny learned the traditions of European painting while studying under Russian dissidents exiled eastward by the Soviets. Later moving to Macau, a city of Chinese and Portuguese history, perpetually shadowed by the bustling Hong Kong, Bessmertny is a creature of boundaries between times, cultures and places. He represented the Chinese enclave at the Venice Biennale in 2007.

Konstantin Bessmertny, La Battaglia di Anghiari dell'Opera Perduta di Leonardo (Copy after Leonardo No. 2) 2009
Bessmertny’s works address the many absurdities of contemporary living and our understanding of history. The paintings are lush, thick with coded allusions to high and low culture. They gleefully portray challenges of basic, almost universally accepted understanding of zeitgeist and history.
Rossi & Rossi, in association with Amelia Johnson Contemporary, is holding an exhibition of much anticipated new paintings and sculpture by Bessmertny — Causarum Cognitio or Knowledge of Causes.
The exhibition is to be held from May 7 to June 3 at Rossi and Rossi www.rossirossi.com. An artist’s talk was held on May 8 with Pamela Kember, a director of the Asia Art Archive, Hong Kong. Kember is a curator and historian of art. She has lectured at the Hong Kong Arts School and the Academy of Visual Arts in Hong Kong. She has contributed to Asian Art News, World Sculpture News and Art Asia Pacific.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue 52 pages in length.

Konstantin Bessmertny
Courtesy Museu de Arte de Macau
Pamela Kember
Courtesy Chelsea College of Art & Design
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Posted in Classic/Contemporary, Konstantin Bessmertny, London, Oil, Russian, Social, UK | Tagged: AAA, art, art exhibition, art news, art talk, artist talk, artist's talk, asia, Asia Art Archive, Asian art, Causarum Cognitio, Causarum Cognitio Philosophicus, Chelsea College of Art and Design, Chinese art, Chinese contemporary art, contemporary art, East Russia, Eastern Russia, exhibition, Far Eastern Russia, hong kong, Hong Kong Arts School, Konstantin Bessmertny, Macanese, Macanese artist, Macau, Museu de Arte de Macau, Painting, paintings, Pamela Kember, Rossi & Rossi, Rossi and Rossi, Russia, Russian artist, sculpture, Shin Hing Street, Soviet, USSR, Venice Biennale | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on October 29, 2008
ASIAN ART PRIZE
The Sovereign Asian Art Prize carries a first prize of US$25,000 and is in its 5th edition. This time the acceptance criteria have been broadened from all forms of painting to all forms of 2D media. Thirty finalists have been selected by a panel of experts from 1000 entries. A public prize is also awarded to the painting which receives the most votes from the public who attended the exhibition or cast their votes on the website.
The culmination of the prize is a public auction where it is hoped that funds will be raised to support charities and a ‘first of its kind in Hong Kong’ three year residency programme for international artists.
Judges are Uli Sigg (collector) Peter Aspden (Financial Times critic) Pamela Kember (art historian and critic) Victoria Lu(musem consultant) Pooja Sood(Director of Khoj Foundation) and Xu Bing (artist).
Finalists
Australia: Bundit Puangthong, Chris Wake, China: Collette Fu, Hou Yan Yan Hong Kong: Caroline Chiu, Chow Chun Fai, Man Fung-Yi, Gretchen So, Peter Steinhauer, Angela Su, Anothermountainman India:Seema Kohli, Indonesia:Terra Bajraghosa, Suroso Isur, Saputro Uji Handoko Eko, Japan: Yu Hara, Maiko Sugano, Noriko Yamaguchi Korea: Dongi Lee, Lim Taek Malaysia: Chan Kok Hooi, Hoo Kiew Hang, Myanmar: Mor Mor Philippines: Robert Langenegger Singapore: Mee Ai Om Taiwan: Chiu Chien-Jen Thailand: Jaratsri Prasongdee, Laura Spector, Sirat Ubolyeam Vietnam: Le Thiet Cuong
Radar’s picks

Lim Taek
Korean artist Lim Taek’s work is inspired by 18th century traditional Korean black and white ink drawings. Tael transforms these into 3D sculptures made of plastic and Korean traditional paper which he installs in a gallery. He then photographs animals trees rocks and people and places these images into the installation. His intention is to create a dreamlike sensation for viewers as they gaze at his imaginary world.

Maiko Sugano
Japanese artist Maiko Suganowas nominated by Asia Art Archive. She is interested in bridging barriers and misunderstandings by seeking common ground across cultures. In 2002 Sugano was presented with the Jack and Gertrude Murphy Fine Arts Fellowship sponsored by San Francisco foundation. She also runs an artist residency house called ‘YomoYama House’.

Angela Su
This work ‘Amorpha Juglandis’ is part of a series and drawings and embroideries in a project entitled ‘Paracelsus Garden’ – an imaginary location inhabited by insects and plants which on closer inspection reveal themselves to be a bizarre juxtaposition of bones muscles and organs. This work takes the form of a moth which uses the cochlear (part of the human inner ear) and scapulas(shoulder blades) as wings. The entire work is embroidered with fine polyester filament on silk.

Noriko Yamaguchi
Noriko Yamaguchi was born in 1983 and her work crosses over the mediums of photography and performance art. In the ‘Ketai Girl’ series Yamaguchi wears a bodysuit made of cellphone keypads a comment on today’s society where people are in constant telephonic touch but ache for physical connection. In 2004 she received the Panel of Judges Award at the 21st Century Asia Design Competition held by Kyoto University of Art and Design.
See
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Posted in Australian, China, Chinese, Emerging artists, Handicraft art, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Artists, Human Body, Indian, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Performance, Photography, Sculpture, Singaporean, Southeast Asian, Taiwanese, Thai, Thread, Vietnamese | Tagged: Anela Su, Anothermountaninman, Bundit Puangthong, Caroline Chiu, Chan Kok Hooi, Chiu Chien-Jen, Chow Chun Fai, Chris Wake, Collette Fu, Dongi Lee, Emerging artists, emerging artists in Asia, Gretchen So, Hoo Kiew Hang, Hou Yanyan, Jaratsri Prasongdee, Laura Spector, Le Thiet Cuong, Lim Taek, Maiko Sugano, Man Fung-Yi, Mee Ai Om, Mor Mor, Noriko Yamaguchi, Pamela Kember, Peter Aspden, Peter Steinhauer, Pooja Sood, Robert Langenegger, Saputro Uji Handoko Eko. Yu Hara, Seema Kohli, Sirat Ubolyeam, Sovereign Art Prize, Sovereign Asian Art Prize, Suroso Isur, Terra Bajraghosa, uli sigg, Victoria Lu, Xu Bing | Leave a Comment »