|
PULL THE THREAD is a project of the ARTIUM
Collection, organised to commemorate the Museum-Center's 10th anniversary.
Three very different exhibitions are grouped under this
title: Mirror image,Visceral soul,
and Montage of attractions. Each exhibition
begins with the same work by Jorge Oteiza, which provides the starting
point in each case. The work in question is Homenaje a
Velázquez, the culmination of the "experimental proposal" of
this Basque artist: a study of the relationship between vacuum and matter,
the sacred and the human.
Mirror image South Gallery Curator: Enrique Martínez Goikoetxea
The exhibition echoes the dissection that art makes of its own
history, of the role of the artist, his context and functions. Mirror
image focuses on the needs of art to analyse itself in an effort of
self-regulation, knowledge and reference. The concept of the autonomy of
art, art for art's sake, which began with the idealistic aesthetic, become
one of its basic premises throughout the modern period and is still in
force today.
The authors selected for this exhibition include
names such as Pablo Picasso, Miquel Barceló, Pablo Serrano,
Prudencio Irazabal and Txomin Badiola.
Visceral
soul Lower East gallery Curator: Daniel Castillejo
The proposal is an approximation to the interior of the person, the
dark and transgressive side of our nature, a point of access to a greater
knowledge of oneself, following the need to create an image of the uneasy
nature of human beings, of their desires, anxieties and possibilities.
Introspection is one of the main generators of Visceral soul, with
works that go beyond social conventions and agreements, delving into those
that because of their grotesque, immoral or irregular nature have been
excluded from the common space.
The authors selected for this
exhibition include names such as Antoni Tàpies, Vicente Ameztoy,
Humberto Rivas, Antonio Saura, Juan Luis Moraza and Pérez
Villalta.
Montage of attractions North Gallery Curator: Blanca de la Torre
This third approach adopts the cinema as reference, establishing a number
of parallel stagings of exhibition and film editing in order to develop a
story used to review the collection in its social political aspects, with
any contradictions and complexities these might involve.
PRAXIS. Beatriz Olabarrieta. North Gallery, from October 16,
2012 until December Curator: Blanca de la Torre
On
this occasion, Beatriz Olabarrieta will create a piece associated with the
world of science fiction. This Bilbao-born artist will explore concepts
such as self-replication. Applied to robotics as an area of research within
the realms of science fiction, any self-replication mechanism that does not
make a perfect copy will lead to the creation of different variants that
will be subjected to a process of natural selection, as the variants that
best endure the environmental conditions will be the survivors.
The Praxis programme has links with the DIY (do-it-yourself)
culture and emerges as a laboratory or experimental workshop of a dynamic,
complementary nature and generates an alternative, independent module to
the annual programme. The process by which the project is being developed
can be followed on a daily basis via the blog.
And you, what do you collect?
(Educational exhibition) From 6 October 2012 to 29 June
2013 Curator: Charo Garaigorta
And you, what do you
collect? is an educational project that invites us to reflect on
different aspects of collecting on the occasion of the exhibitions
presented of the Museum-Center's permanent collection. It is also a space
for exchanging ideas, in which members of the public can interact and
contribute their own ideas by taking part in the two activities
proposed.
ARTIUM (2002–2012):
graphical and documentary report. (Bibliographic exhibition) Seminar gallery, from 6
October 2012 to 1 April 2013 Curator: Elena Roseras
Exhibition that documents the history of the museum since its
inauguration 10 years ago, through the catalogues, brochures, invitations
and posters it has published, as well as the graphical information and
newspaper articles written about the Centre.
Taking all the
graphical documentation relating to the origins of ARTIUM as its starting
point, a chronological review of the exhibitions and activities of the
Museum is proposed, offering the information that has been used to
organise, manage and disseminate these activities. This documentation may
be consulted through a virtual content manager.
GREY
FLAG East facade of the ARTIUM building, until December 2012 Curator: Blanca de la Torre
Grey Flag arises from the
need to demonstrate the existence of art as a necessity, seen through the
work of a number of artists who refer to the art world itself, its ideas
and situations and treated in all cases with a certain sense of humour,
irony or sarcasm.
The title of the project, Grey Flag,
derives from Black flag, the British anarchist newspaper and
white flag, the flag of surrender, thus combining a recovery of the
anarchist attitude and aesthetic and the need to see all shades of grey as
possible, especially in view of the current economic, political and moral
crisis.
Participating artists: Kepa Garraza, Juan Pérez
Aguirregoikoa, Laurina Paperina, Artemio and Francesc Ruiz, among
others.
Opening hours of the Museum-Center Monday to Friday, 11–2pm and 5– 8pm Saturdays
and Sundays, 11–9pm Non-holiday Mondays closed The ticket office will remain open until half an hour before closing
time
Library and Document Centre Monday to
Friday: 11–2pm and 4–7:30pm Saturdays:
10–2pm Sundays closed
|