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Archive for June 18th, 2007

Paul McCartney mag met pensioen

June 18th, 2007 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Dutch News

LIVERPOOL – Paul McCartney mag officieel stoppen met werken. Vandaag viert de voormalig Beatle zijn 65ste verjaardag. Maar stoppen met werken zit er voorlopig nog niet in.
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Fenster für Deutschland – Yoko Ono – Bremen (Until Aug. 5th)

June 4th, 2007 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Events
June 13, 2007 11:00toAugust 5, 2007 18:00

Yoko Ono is going to have an art exhibition entitled “Fenster für Deutschland (Window for Germany)” from June 13th to August 5th, 2007 at Kunsthalle Bremen.
Yoko seems to have a performance on June 13th, ‘07, the opening day of the exhibition.
Year 2007 is definitely for Yoko!!!
http://www.kunsthalle-bremen.de/ (Kunsthalle Bremen Homepage)
http://www.kunsthalle-bremen.de/Presse/
Dienstag, 12. Juni 2007, 11 Uhr:
Yoko Ono – Fenster für Deutschland (13. Juni – 5. August 2007)
Press Information

A View through the Window: Yoko Ono in the Kunsthalle Bremen
The artist is opening an exhibition showing conceptual Instructions for Paintings and a poster-action in urban space
Composer, filmmaker, Fluxus artist: Yoko Ono made an international name for herself with happenings and performances in the early 60s. But Ono also worked conceptually and has been exhibiting her Instructions for Paintings since the beginning of the 60s. The Kunsthalle Bremen will be showing around 90 sheets, on which the artist set down her ideas for painting in written sentences. For the first time, it will be possible to see 30 unique, hand-written works in German. Pieces in Japanese and English, as well as video and audio works, supplement the exhibition. Yoko Ono will be opening the exhibition with a performance on 13th June, at 6 pm.
Instructions for Paintings
Since 1955, Yoko Ono (born in Tokyo in 1933) has been working on text pieces with the character of orders. She published more than 150 of these works in the compendium Grapefruit in 1964; they included the Instructions for Paintings. 30 Instructions from this publication are now experiencing a world premiere in the Kupferstichkabinett of the Kunsthalle Bremen. They have been translated into German for the first time and transposed onto hand-written paper by the artist herself, using pen and ink. In addition, an English version of Xeroxed copies and a Japanese variant from 1962 are exhibited; the latter consists of 19 positive and 16 negative Photostat copies of transcriptions by Ichiyanagi Toshi. Alongside these deliberations on painting, it will also be possible to see the Instructions for Films from 1964–68 and the Instructions for Photographs from 1961–71/97, the piece of music Cough Piece and a video work related to the Instructions for Paintings.
Production of Producers
As the author of the Instructions, Yoko Ono is the giver of ideas for paintings. The addressees function as the takers of ideas, following the instructions and so completing the works. The artist uses the imperative of every Instruction and means of reproduction such as transcription, copy, translation, exhibition and exhibition catalogue to extend her circle of addressees and authors. The same applies to the poster that Yoko Ono has designed for public space in Bremen. In large black letters on white paper, we read the word “Fenster” (window), below it the initials “y.o.”, and the year “2007”. In formal terms, the poster is minimalist, yet it adopts a concept of painting dating from the Renaissance: at that time, the art theorist Leon Battista Alberti compared a painting to the view through an open window. Yoko Ono’s poster also alludes to this idea. Window is a purist area for projection, its silent imperative being Imagine.
Word Games with all the Senses
The few words of Yoko Ono’s affirmations are chosen so precisely that they may become poetry. In Lighting Piece from autumn 1955, she provides the instruction: Light a match and watch till it goes out. The consonance and onomatopoeia of “match” and “watch” enable us to hear the sizzle of the match as it lights up, burns and goes out. The play with words is the instruction for a game with the senses, stimulating our eyes, ears and nose. The sentence is a tense link between emergence and passing; as it is written, it conveys something about the game with the match and ultimately about the players, whose life is equally limited in duration. It represents a tryst between the laconic and the serious, between poetry and performance, when the reader of the poem becomes the creator of a fleeting still-life.
A publication including 30 facsimiles of the hand-written Instructions for Paintings from 2007 will appear in conjunction with the exhibition, as well as a brochure with texts by Jon Hendricks, Wulf Herzogenrath and Frank Laukötter.
13th June – 5th August 2007
Yoko Ono: Window for Germany
Kunsthalle Bremen

Rare Beatles photos on display (Dundee – until July 11th)

May 24th, 2007 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Events
May 25, 2007 11:00toJuly 11, 2007 18:00
Shots taken during filming of ‘Help!’

A rare collection of photographs of The Beatles are to go on display in Scotland for the first time.
The snaps were taken during the filming of the movie ‘Help!’ in 1965 by photographer Michael Peto.
The 500 images were left to the University Of Dundee when Peto died in 1970. They were archived and forgotten about for years until they were rediscovered in 2004.
They are set to be displayed at the University’s Queen Mother Building from May 25 through to July 11.
University archivist Patricia Whatley told the BBC: “Michael Peto’s photographs of The Beatles give us a remarkable behind-the-scenes look at a band which was at the height of its power and fame.”

Beatles Photo Exhibition – Norwich (Until Sept. 1st)

May 15th, 2007 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Events
June 1, 2007 10:00toSeptember 1, 2007 18:00

A batch of previously unseen photos of legendary pop combo The Beatles will be unveiled for the first time ever at an exhibition in Norwich.
The city’s St Giles’ Street Gallery has secured a world scoop by obtaining never-seen-before images of the most famous band ever recording their most famous album nearly 40 years ago.
Taken at London’s Abbey Road Studios in 1967, the photos include the Fab Four relaxing during the recording of the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts’ Club Band LP and eating lunch with producer George Martin.
They were taken by Sunday Times photographer Frank Herrmann hours before the band posed for the cover of Sgt Pepper, and were previously thought to have been lost.
But thanks to modern technology, the shots, which show the group happily drinking tea, chatting and taking a break from recording, have been restored from the original contact sheets.
The gallery will exhibit the 24 original black and white prints from June 1 to September 1, as well as a selection of Mr Herrmann’s photos which were used in the limited-edition Summer of Love book.
Photographer David Koppel, who founded the gallery and whose friendship with Mr Herrmann helped secure the exhibition, said: “The photos are really amazing and there’s been a huge amount of interest in them already. My favourite is the one where George (Harrison) is pouring a cup of tea, which shows all the four Beatles and George Martin.”
The images of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr and George Martin were taken when Mr Herrmann visited Abbey Road studios on March 30.
Twelve of those images were made into original artwork for the Summer of Love book, but the rest remain unseen.
Books and prints will be available for sale for the duration of the exhibition.
The gallery was founded after exhibiting successfully in its former incarnation, Frames of Norwich. The building was formerly the St Giles Post Office which closed in 2004 as part of a cull of branches across Norfolk.
The gallery is open Monday to Saturday, from 10am to 6pm, admission free.
For more information, go to www.sgsgallery.com