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Thursday, March 3, 2016
Cai Guo-Qiang Curates...
Cai Guo-Qiang Curates Chinese Contemporary Show in Doha
BY Darryl Wee | March 02, 2016
Hu Zhijun sculpting in his studio, Beijing, China, 2015.
(Photo by Sang Luo, courtesy Cai Studio)
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But an upcoming exhibition opening March 14 at the Gallery Al Riwaq in Doha, Qatar hopes to demystify some of these impressions by returning to the artworks themselves, and the artistic motivations that underwrite them.
At one level, “What About the Art?” is a high-level exercise in cultural diplomacy: it is being held as one of the main events commemorating the 2016 Qatar-China Year of Culture, supported by the China National Arts Fund, Beijing Municipal Bureau of Culture, and Shanghai International Culture Association.
However, Cai himself has spared no effort in making this a thoroughly scholarly endeavor: the exhibition is the culmination of three years of extensive field research, during which he studied more than 250 key exhibitions of Chinese art, and interviewed over 20 art historians, curators, and art critics.
The result is a roster that justly reflects the diversity and dynamism of current artistic output in Mainland China. The 15 participating artists and groups are Jenova Chen, Hu Xiangqian, Hu Zhijun, Huang Yong Ping, Li Liao, Liang Shaoji, Liu Wei, Liu Xiaodong, Jennifer Wen Ma, Sun Yuan & Peng Yu, Wang Jianwei, Xu Bing, Xu Zhen, Yang Fudong, and Zhou Chunya.
One of the self-evident threads here is a certain lineage of Chinese conceptualism that can be traced from “Xiamen Dada” pioneering founder Huang Yong Ping, to the complex linguistic and cognitive investigations of émigré artist Xu Bing, and the more recent nihilistic shock tactics of Sun Yuan & Peng Yu.
Equally palpable in Cai’s selection is a razor-sharp instinct for marketing and commercial strategy, as seen in Xu Zhen’s canny co-opting of the contemporary visual language of design and throwaway consumerism, and Los Angeles-based creative director and video game designer Jenova Chen, whose thatgamecompany produces interactive digital entertainment — most notably “Journey,” which swept multiple awards at the Annual Game Developers Choice Awards and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 2013.
There are also some fairly offbeat inclusions: Hu Zhijun, a peasant farmer who is now into his sixties, makes his debut as an artist here with a series of 500 clay sculptures modeled after major contemporary Chinese works that were commissioned by Cai.
As an annex to the main exhibition, Cai has also invited the Chinese art scholar Wang Mingxian to curate a special section entitled “Timeline.” Bringing together a diverse array of archival materials and images dating from 1949 up until the present, Wang’s exhibition will shed light on the historical context underlying the development of Chinese contemporary art and its relationship to mainstream Chinese culture.
Concurrently, “What About the Art?” is accompanied by a documentary film with the same title, directed by Shanshan Xia, that explores the idea of creativity in contemporary China and abroad. Featuring dialogues that Cai conducted with various artists and scholars, this film expands on the premise of the main exhibition through revealing episodes drawn from the planning and making of the show, juxtaposing this with footage of contemporary urban Chinese environments that offer additional insight into the context of its artistic production.
“What About the Art? Contemporary Art from China” runs at the Gallery Al Riwaq in Doha from March 14 through July 16, 2016.
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- Cai Guo-Qiang
- Gallery Al Riwaq
- Jenova Chen
- Hu Xiangqian
- Hu Zhijun
- Huang Yong Ping
- Li Liao
- Liang Shaoji
- Liu Wei
- Liu Xiaodong
- Jennifer Wen Ma
- Sun Yuan & Peng Yu
- Wang Jianwei
- Xu Bing
- Xu Zhen
- Yang Fudong
- Zhou Chunya
- Wang Mingxian
- Shanshan Xia
- Darryl Jingwen Wee
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First Cultural Destruction Trial
POSTED March 1, 2016
Hearing Begins for First Cultural Destruction Trial at the Hague
In a hearing that begins today, jihadi leader Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi will be facing charges in the Hague that he destroyed nine mausoleums as well as the fifteenth-century Sidi Yahia mosque in Timbuktu, according to the Art Newspaper’s Anny Shaw. It’s the first time anyone will be facing war crime charges for cultural heritage destruction. His acts also apparently included the destruction of Sufi shrines and tombs. The buildings he destroyed were part of the “city of 333 saints,” in the words of UNESCO.Al-Faqi was reportedly associated with Ansar Dine, an Islamist group, as well as an anti-vice squad, Hesbah, which enacted sharia law in Timbuktu.
UNESCO has been reconstructing Timbuktu’s mausoleums in the intervening years. If the hearing determines there is enough evidence, the case will move on to a full trial.
"VANTA black" is our's... Vantag galeria!
February 28, 2016
Artists Angered as Anish Kapoor Receives Exclusive Rights to VantaBlack
Artist Anish Kapoor, who has produced work using VantaBlack—the recently invented material created by Surrey-based company NanoSystems that absorbs 99.96 percent of light striking it—has now apparently been given exclusive artists’ rights to its usage, report Charlotte Griffiths and Ned Donovan for the Daily Mail. “A Surrey NanoSystems spokesman confirmed that only Sir Anish can use the paint. Sir Anish did not respond to requests for comment,” write Griffiths and Donovan. VantaBlack has been touted by its creators as the world’s blackest black.“I’ve never heard of an artist monopolizing a material,” said artist Christian Furr, one of the artists upset by the news. “We should be able to use it. It isn’t right that it belongs to one man.” Meanwhile, Shanti Panchal, an Indian artist, told India’s Telegraph, “I have not known of anything so absurd—in the creative world, artists, nobody should have a monopoly.”
The Daily Mail notes that NASA scientists are developing a similar paint, so artists may have another means of accessing pure black.
Kapoor spoke about the material previously to artforum.com, saying, “When we imagine our own interiors, we have a sense that each of us carries a dark, inner, and quiet, or not so quiet, place within ourselves. To have that out there phenomenologically in the world is quite unnerving.
Christie’s Sues Collector Jose Mugrabi
March 1, 2016
Christie’s Sues Collector Jose Mugrabi for Failing to Complete Payment on $37 Million Basquiat
Jean Basquiat, The Field Next to the Other, 1981, acrylic, enamel spray paint, oilstick, metallic paint and ink on canvas, 87 x 158 in.
According to Christie’s Supreme Court filing, Mugrabi bought the acrylic painting The Field Next to the Other, 1981, last May for thirty-seven million dollars, but has only paid the auction house five million. Christie’s has banned Mugrabi from attending upcoming auctions.
A spokeswoman for the auction house said, “We repeatedly attempted to resolve the matter with Mr. Mugrabi. Unfortunately, our efforts failed and Christie’s felt it had no other alternative but to litigate.”
Mugrabi owns eight hundred works by Warhol, and in 2015 he was named one of the world’s most important art dealers by The Times.
The Basquiat painting, which depicts a figure leading a cow in a pastoral setting, was completed in 1981 when the artist was only twenty years old. Christie’s calls this year “crucial” for his development as an artist and says that this work “positioned Basquiat to become the artistic voice of his generation.”
Christie’s filed the lawsuit for the remaining balance of thirty-two million as well as 16 percent interest.
Mugrabi and his lawyer declined to comment to the Post.
Geneva Public Votes Down Jean Nouvel’s $131 Million Museum Expansion
02.29.16
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POSTED March 2, 2016
Geneva Public Votes Down Jean Nouvel’s $131 Million Museum Expansion
Six years after its details were first unveiled, Geneva’s plan to enlist architect Jean Nouvel to revamp and expand the regional Musée d’Art et d’Histoire has been narrowly outvoted by 54.3 percent of the public, according to the Art Newspaper’s Nathalie Eggs and Hannah McGivern. Approved by Geneva’s municipal council last year, the $131 million project was to be funded both with private money from French-Swiss patron Jean-Claude Gandur and with sixty-four million dollars in public funds, but it provoked criticism across the political spectrum.
A political coalition that included everything from nationalist conservatives to Communists campaigned against the project, calling it too opaque, reports Telerama. Questions were also raised about Gandur’s involvement, with critics referring to the museum as “a space to his glory.” Finally, some called it “already dated” while preservationists decried the “irreversible disfigurement” of a monument. No one was happy, meanwhile, with the fact that the project’s costs had ballooned from forty million dollars to its current figures.
This CEO Made His Company Successful By Firing His Entire Management Team
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This CEO Made His Company Successful By Firing His Entire Management Team
If you fired your management team today, would you be better off? Steve McKean did just that and was better off for it.
By Kevin Daum
An Inc. 500 entrepreneur with a more than $1 billion sales and marketing track record, Kevin Daum is the best-selling author of Video Marketing for Dummies and Roar! Get Heard in the Sales and Marketing Jungle. Full bio
Inc. 500 entrepreneur and best-selling author@KevinJDaum
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When a company is struggling with success, it's hard to know exactly the right next move. Many leaders feel inclined to simply cut losses and move on to the next venture. Restructuring can be hard work, and even then there is no guarantee it will work.
Serial entrepreneur Steve McKean, CEO of BillShark, faced exactly such a dilemma with his previous lead generation company Acceller, Inc. During a recent episode of my podcast, 10 Minute Tips from the Top, McKean related how Acceller went into a tailspin that put it in a precarious situation. He was then forced to make the decision of letting the company die or finding a solution to keep it going.
McKean, a member of the Young Presidents' Organization (YPO), eventually opted for a full restructure of the company, making a number of difficult decisions that he never anticipated along the way. Eventually he got the company back on its feet and was able to secure a merger with a competitor, Bridgevine, which does customer acquisition and retention in the home services industry. The company has now exceeded expectations for all stakeholders.
Here are McKean's tips on the best way to get things back on track and moving towards success.
1. Seek advice from other leaders.
It's difficult to be objective about your company when in a fast decline. Looking for advice from outside experts helps gain fresh perspective. "I spoke to two dozen YPO members and Verne Harnish of Gazelles," said McKean about his first steps toward restructuring. Talking to Harnish allowed him to realize that he had a bigger problem than he suspected and needed to gain mental clarity to devise a real solution instead of just a band-aid.
2. Be transparent with your team.
Talking to your team members about such a difficult circumstance is a tricky situation for any leader. Remaining silent is unfair to employees who might otherwise get an opportunity to look for a safer landing, while opening up could push them away as well. For McKean, transparency was of utmost important. He laid out the scenarios to his team and let them know what was at stake. This way he could openly work with them to find solutions to the problem.
3. Re-evaluate the leaders in your company.
When the company is in trouble, leaders might be unable to focus on how the situation is affecting those around them. McKean, however, was quick to note that the adversity surfaced the shortcomings of his existing management team. "When my management team, essentially the top four guys of the company after me, when they are telling you, 'I don't want to take a pay cut and I don't care if you're bankrupt,' they're sending you a message. The message is we don't care about your company." McKean fired those very team members.
4. Build culture together.
When rebuilding his company, McKean worked with the next level down of management to ensure a smooth transition. The key to working with this new team was to create a strong culture. "I had worked with this team quite a bit... I didn't stay isolated as a leader. I was very engaged. We did a lot of education...And we focused on culture. We committed to win together or die together as a team.
Each week on his podcast, Kevin has conversations with members of the Young Presidents' Organization (YPO), the world's premiere peer-to-peer organization for chief executives, eligible at age 45 or younger.
Serial entrepreneur Steve McKean, CEO of BillShark, faced exactly such a dilemma with his previous lead generation company Acceller, Inc. During a recent episode of my podcast, 10 Minute Tips from the Top, McKean related how Acceller went into a tailspin that put it in a precarious situation. He was then forced to make the decision of letting the company die or finding a solution to keep it going.
McKean, a member of the Young Presidents' Organization (YPO), eventually opted for a full restructure of the company, making a number of difficult decisions that he never anticipated along the way. Eventually he got the company back on its feet and was able to secure a merger with a competitor, Bridgevine, which does customer acquisition and retention in the home services industry. The company has now exceeded expectations for all stakeholders.
Here are McKean's tips on the best way to get things back on track and moving towards success.
1. Seek advice from other leaders.
It's difficult to be objective about your company when in a fast decline. Looking for advice from outside experts helps gain fresh perspective. "I spoke to two dozen YPO members and Verne Harnish of Gazelles," said McKean about his first steps toward restructuring. Talking to Harnish allowed him to realize that he had a bigger problem than he suspected and needed to gain mental clarity to devise a real solution instead of just a band-aid.
2. Be transparent with your team.
Talking to your team members about such a difficult circumstance is a tricky situation for any leader. Remaining silent is unfair to employees who might otherwise get an opportunity to look for a safer landing, while opening up could push them away as well. For McKean, transparency was of utmost important. He laid out the scenarios to his team and let them know what was at stake. This way he could openly work with them to find solutions to the problem.
3. Re-evaluate the leaders in your company.
When the company is in trouble, leaders might be unable to focus on how the situation is affecting those around them. McKean, however, was quick to note that the adversity surfaced the shortcomings of his existing management team. "When my management team, essentially the top four guys of the company after me, when they are telling you, 'I don't want to take a pay cut and I don't care if you're bankrupt,' they're sending you a message. The message is we don't care about your company." McKean fired those very team members.
4. Build culture together.
When rebuilding his company, McKean worked with the next level down of management to ensure a smooth transition. The key to working with this new team was to create a strong culture. "I had worked with this team quite a bit... I didn't stay isolated as a leader. I was very engaged. We did a lot of education...And we focused on culture. We committed to win together or die together as a team.
Each week on his podcast, Kevin has conversations with members of the Young Presidents' Organization (YPO), the world's premiere peer-to-peer organization for chief executives, eligible at age 45 or younger.
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The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
Published on: Mar 2, 2016
... easy strategies to manage a difficult manager
Yes, Your Boss Is Crazy
In his research, Nassir Ghaemi, M.D., professor of psychiatry at Tufts Medical Center and author of A First-Rate Madness, has found a connection between mental illness and great leaders. In times of crisis, he says the most effective leaders have often suffered from mild depression and bipolar disorder. Well, that confirms it. Your boss is crazy. Here are some easy strategies to manage a difficult manager.
Identify The Boss's Management Style
Executive coach and author of Make Difficult People Disappear, Monica Wofford says managers usually fall into one of four categories: a commander, focused on results; an organizer, focused on accuracy and process; a relater, focused on getting along; and an entertainer, focused on being appreciated.
Understand The Boss's Needs
Once you've determined the boss's style and personality, you should be in a better position to understand what they want from you. Someone focused on results wants to see you get results or talk to you about how to get them. A people-person boss might want to connect on a more personal level.
Photo: None/None
Communicate In A Language They Will Understand
You have to meet the boss where they live. Don't offer a diatribe if your boss only wants the highlights. Similarly, if your boss gets defensive when you ask pointed questions, soften the way you ask and frame them.
Consider Timing
When broaching difficult issues, pick your timing carefully. Your boss may prickle by being challenged in front of others. Instead, pull them aside one-on-one at a time that is calm and not stressed by deadlines.
Set Boundaries
It's important to set boundaries to establish conditions that will help you be successful. If your boss interrupts you constantly by stopping by your desk, ask politely if you could finish the project and then meet at a specific time to speak. If you are being overburdened with assignments, remind the boss of what you're working on and ask which are priority.
Ask Questions
When dealing with a manager who doesn't give specific instructions or expectations or changes their mind frequently, ask questions that will make it easier for them to articulate what they want. For example: When would you like the proposal? About how many pages were you thinking? In the same format as the last one?
Don’t Take It Personally
For an emotionally explosive boss, it's critical not to take it personally. Usually they need to get something out of their systems and are over it in 20 minutes, says Wofford. However, if you do take it personally and react, it may only fuel the tantrum and escalate it further.
Point Out Mixed Messages
If you're dealing with a two-faced boss and don't know what you're going to get from moment-to-moment, Wofford suggests helping the person understand their behavior by, politely, pointing out contradictions.
Ask For Constructive Feedback
If you don't know where you stand with the boss or feel ignored, ask for feedback on a project-by-project basis. It could be framed as: How would you rate my performance on that project on a scale of one to 10? How could I get closer to 10 on the next one?
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