Showing posts with label Psychedelia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychedelia. Show all posts

Monday, October 26, 2015

The Barricade and the Dance Floor: Aesthetic Radicalism and the Counterculture

Whole Earth Catalogue, July 1970

In Hjorvardur Harvard Arnason’s sweeping survey History of Modern Art, first published in 1968, a brief entry on psychedelic art completes his six-hundred-page tome. It seems a fitting way to conclude the book’s march through modernism, focusing as it does on the au courant style of the moment. As Arnason explains, “The recent appearance of psychedelic art may be accounted for in several ways: the easy availability and enormously increased use of psychedelic drugs; the mixture and confusion of appeals to several senses simultaneously in the so-called mixed media performances; the ethos of the hippies and flower-children; and the prevalent atmosphere of rebellion against ‘the establishment,’ whether in society in general or in art specifically.” 1 Arnason does not elaborate on these causalities, which, nevertheless, are instructive in their range of positions. The use of mind-altering and consciousness-expanding drugs such as LSD, mescaline, and psilocybin on the part of artists would seem to be an expected foundational definition of a psychedelic art. This “art under the influence” approach applied not only to some artists whose work was produced during drug-induced sessions but also for the many more who drew upon such episodes and experiences more symbolically or referentially, giving psychedelic art currency as both a form of process and representational art. Interestingly, Arnason does not parse the difference between the artist and the audience undergoing an altered state of consciousness, rendering psychedelic art also possible in the mind’s-eye of the beholder.


Text by Andrew Blauvelt

Read more : http://www.walkerart.org/feature/2015/aesthetic-radicalism-counterculture


"The Barricade and the Dance Floor: Aesthetic Radicalism and the Counterculture" is republished from Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia (Walker Art Center, 2015; Andrew Blauvelt, ed.). The exhibition is on view October 24, 2015 through February 28, 2015, before traveling to the Cranbrook Art Museum and University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.


Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Super Superstudio


PAC presents the work of Superstudio (1966-1978), the Italian group of radical architecture and radical design that has activated a revolution in the idea of design around the world.

The Superstudio have since the 70s historically animated the critique of modernism articulated through radical architecture, establishing themselves as the last great Italian avant-garde.

Co-curated by Andreas Angelidakis, Vittorio Pizzigoni and Valter Scelsi, the exhibition recounts how this group of Florentine architects has influenced not only great architects such as Zaha Hadid, Rem Koolhaas and Bernard Tschumi, but have definitely questioned the limits between contemporary art and architecture.

The exhibition will reconstruct Superstudio’s most important projects by bringing together its most representative pieces of design, installations and films, and by building – as a part of the total urbanisation model promoted by Superstudio itself – a dialogue with works by 21 contemporary artists, who have drawn the raw material for their oeuvre from the Florence group’s research: Danai Anesiadou, Alexandra Bachzetsis, Ila Beka and Louise Lemoine, Pablo Bronstein, Stefano Graziani, Petrit Halilaj and Alvaro Urbano, Jim Isermann, Daniel Keller and Ella Plevin, Andrew Kovacs, Rallou Panagiotou, Paola Pivi, Angelo Plessas, Riccardo Previdi, RO/LU, Priscilla Tea, Patrick Tuttofuoco, Kostis Velonis, Pae White.


Athens Community in the Kibbutz, 2011
Marble, ceramic, wood, acrylic, hardboard, veneer
20 x 30 x 10 cm 


Pac - Padiglione d'Arte Contemporanea
radical art and architecture
SUPER SUPERSTUDIO
11 October 2015 - 06 January 2016

The exhibition opens on the occasion of the 11a Giornata del Contemporaneo, scheduled for Saturday 10th October 2015 and promoted by AMACI - Associazione dei Musei d’Arte Contemporanea Italiani, of which the PAC is a founding member.