Montag, 19. Juli 2010

Paradise - 11th International Garden Festival in Les Jardins de Métis / Reford Gardens

le balto invites Kai Schiemenz
Bois de biais: Ces jours-ci je suis fier de mon petit paradis
I’m So Proud of My Paradise These Days


June 26 to October 3, 2010

An Ambitious Program of Gardens
Recognized as one of the world’s leading garden festivals, the International Garden Festival features conceptual gardens that are at the crossroads of landscape architecture, garden design, architecture, design and environmental art. The event will take place on the site of Les Jardins de Métis / Reford Gardens from June 26 to October 3, 2010.

The 11th edition of the Festival will present 21 ephemeral gardens created by 65 designers from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, United States and the United Kingdom. The lineup of conceptual gardens includes three new gardens by designers selected by a jury following an international competition and four new gardens created by designers from Berlin invited to take part in the Festival.






A garden is a space, in which we realize our beliefs in and our visions of social and natural ideal(s). It is an island, not a fathomless place such as Utopia. The garden is a showcase space, 1:1 implemented in the ground. It does not separate imagination from reality. For the 5th year of their garden called bois de biais, atelier le balto invited the Berlin based artist Kai Schiemenz to complete their landscape architecture. He suggested for their garden, which over time has almost become a forest of willows and poplars, to build a walkable structure out of wood. It paraphrases a type of a “folly”, where the visitor can enter and climb the stairs to the platform, to get an overview of the garden. But during the summer the trees will outgrow the structure and make it partially disappear. The sculpture works as an allegory that rewrites the beauty of a garden that grows into a forest.



scetch of I'm so proud of my garden, Collage



New Forms of Paradise
Since the beginning of time humans have imagined paradise on earth as a garden. These places, by evoking our senses, have pulled us out of our everyday world to experience the sublime. What does paradise look like today?

Building on emerging practices in landscape architecture, participating designers have been invited to imagine their garden of paradise; inspired by the history of gardening and exploring philosophy, religion and history and incorporating aspects of contemporary society and their own personal history to bring to life new forms, tastes, fragrances and paradisiacal landscapes.

Participating for the second time in the International Garden Festival, Berlin-based garden architects atelier le balto invited Kai Schiemenz to work with them for the 2010 International Garden Festival in the Jardin de Médis, Redford Gardens near Québec, Canada to install a folly in their previously designed garden "bois de biase".

The International Garden Festival is the leading contemporary garden festival in North America. Presented since 2000, the Festival has exhibited more than 115 gardens on the festival site and in Montreal, Toronto, France, Italy and the United Kingdom.



first modell

final modell

http://www.refordgardens.com/english/festival/garden-5-ces-jours-ci-je-suis-fier-de-mon-petit-paradis-bois-de-biais.php?EC=1

LUSH LIFE - at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

We are not here to make friends
Iris Flügel und Kai Schiemenz

LUSH LIFE – Chapter 4: Let it Die at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

An exhibition inspired by Richard Price's novel of the same title
Featuring Artists in Nine Lower East Side Galleries, New York




Lehmann Maupin announces its participation in LUSH LIFE, an exhibition curated by Franklin Evans and Omar Lopez-Chahoud and inspired by Richard Price's 2008 novel of the same title. LUSH LIFE includes 60 artists, and nine Lower East Side galleries, including Lehmann Maupin. Each gallery will feature a sub-exhibition reflecting the idea of one of the nine chapters in the novel. Evans and Lopez-Chahoud selected one artist from each gallery and solicited additional artist recommendations from each of them to participate in the exhibition.




Detail of, We are not here to make friends
Foam Core Board, Wood, Spanish Moss, Orchids, Oyster-Mushrooms


I‘m not here to make friends is built as a model of an air-garden, an air-garden of decay in an open cubic structure. Air plants, for instance Tillandsia and orchids, which take their nutrition out of the air and oyster mushrooms, which once they are seated in a cultur medium need no further nutrition.

A forest, growing at its own over years, decades, yet all the plants are rooted in the air. You can actually sit there and contemplate about Charles Darwin, everyday, every week, watching those slow and ancient roots push deeper and deeper into the earth. Worms crawl, as if through space, forming tunnels – underground landscapes of air.





Lehmann Maupin will represent Chapter Four: Let it Die and will exhibit the work of Jackie Saccoccio, Jessica Dickinson, Matthew Weinstein, Dani Leventhal, Rashid Johnson, Claudia Weber, Jose Lerma, Kai Schiemenz, Iris Fluegel, Robert Beck, Robert Melee, Tommy Hartung, Nina Lola Bachhuber, Cynthia Lin and Amy Longenecker-Brown. Chapter four in Price's novel addresses the attempt to ignore and let a story die, to allow for a neighborhood's history to die, and to actively bury the past and the difficulty of finding a fairer answer/resolution to a complex situation.

Both Jackie Saccoccio and Jessica Dickinson offer works that through their process-based painting and drawing emphasize the physical layers of residue to a literal past. Saccoccio's work looks to an earlier era (mid-century New York abstraction). Dani Leventhal's blood/skinning drawings, Matthew Weinstein's death-tracking skeletal hand and frisbee, and Rashid Johnson's literal death reflection mirror present the subject as non-elusively and frontal.

Claudia Weber, Jose Lerma, Kai Schiemenz, Iris Fluegel, Nina Lola Bachhuber, and Amy Longenecker-Brown will be making work specific to the consideration of both history passing (its death) and the neighborhood in transition, both themes of Price's novel. Robert Melee's and Tommy Hartung's sculptures challenge the ease to which a past can disappear and/or morph into a new form. Cynthia Lin's larger-than-life distorted drawing of skin has an allusion to a possible lifeless state. While, Robert Beck's site-specific shrine alludes to the shrine in the novel that emerges after the murder and erodes in a short week.

Collective Opening Reception
A collective opening of all participating galleries will take place on Thursday, July 8th from 6–9 pm, however, exhibition dates throughout June and July will vary for each gallery.

About the Novel
Price's novel is set in the contemporary Lower East Side and, through a murder investigation, exposes the dynamically changing community of the neighborhood, which despite its evolution retains a ghostly and vital link to its layered past. The deep and varied history of the neighborhood now includes the Lower East Side galleries as new community members. The premise of community is reflected in the cooperative nature of the galleries' and artists' participation in the exhibition, which uses Price's novel to critically consider concepts of neighborhood and change. LUSH LIFE will be the present for what will become a living ghost to the future form into which the Lower East Side will inevitably morph.

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Media Contacts:
Lehmann Maupin
Bethanie Brady
212 255 2923
Bethanie@lehmannmaupin.com