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	<title>Art Agenda &#187; Elba Benítez Gallery</title>
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		<title>galeria elba benitez at Art Basel Miami Beach</title>
		<link>http://www.art-agenda.com/shows/galeria-elba-benitez-at-art-basel-miami-beach/</link>
		<comments>http://www.art-agenda.com/shows/galeria-elba-benitez-at-art-basel-miami-beach/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Nov 2011 18:03:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Elba Benítez Gallery</dc:creator>
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galería elba benítez is pleased to announce its presence at Art Basel Miami Beach, where the gallery presents work by: 

Ignasi Aballí (Barcelona, Spain, 1958) traces the elusive marks left by the passage of time in works that use an eclectic range of unconventional materials such as dust, corrosion, newspaper clippings, shredded banknotes or typewriter correction fluid: the delicate visual poetry that emerges is instilled with a haunting yet unsentimental sense of absence and ephemerality. Aballí's diverse work includes language-based pieces, conceptually-orien­ted sculptures, paintings and photographs.

Carlos Bunga (Oporto, Portugal, 1976) creates process-oriented works—installations, performances, video, drawings—that refer to and intervene in their architectural surroundings.]]></description>
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<span>Carlos Garaicoa, Prêt-à-porter, 2011.</p>
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<h1>galeria elba benitez at Art Basel Miami Beach</h1>
<p><strong>Hall A, Booth K05</strong></p>
<p><strong>Opening:</strong><br />
Wednesday, November 30, 2011</p>
<p>Thursday, December 1–Sunday, December 4, 2011</p>
<p><a href="http://www.elbabenitez.com">www.elbabenitez.com</a></p>
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<p>galería elba benítez is pleased to announce its presence at Art Basel Miami Beach, where the gallery presents work by:</p>
<p class="Pa2"><strong>Ignasi Aballí</strong> (Barcelona, Spain, 1958) traces the elusive marks left by the passage of time in works that use an eclectic range of unconventional materials such as dust, corrosion, newspaper clippings, shredded banknotes or typewriter correction fluid: the delicate visual poetry that emerges is instilled with a haunting yet unsentimental sense of absence and ephemerality. Aballí&#8217;s diverse work includes language-based pieces, conceptually-orien­ted sculptures, paintings and photographs.</p>
<p class="Pa2"><strong>Carlos Bunga</strong> (Oporto, Portugal, 1976) creates process-oriented works—installations, performances, video, drawings—that refer to and intervene in their architectural surroundings. While often using ordinary, unassuming materials such as packing cardboard and adhesive tape, the resulting finished works involve an extreme degree of aesthetic care and delicacy, as well as a conceptual complexity derived from the inter-relationship between doing and undoing, between unmaking and remaking. At this moment is having a solo show at the Hammer Museum in LA.</p>
<p class="Pa2"><strong>Carlos Garaicoa</strong> (Cuba, 1967) see image above. Creates work that is characterized by an intense engagement with contem­porary architecture and cities, and in particular with his native Havana. Incorporating architectural models, photos, drawings, video and language, Garaicoa&#8217;s wide-ranging yet highly personal work is at all times imbued with an exquisite execution and a carefully-controlled aesthetics that manage to invoke poetry as well as politics.</p>
<p class="Pa2"><strong>Mario García Torres.</strong> The research-driven work of Mario García Torres (Mexico, 1975) approaches art history as an artistic material in itself. His  work includes photographic presentations, conceptual installations and language-based pieces, and frequently revisits the overlooked interstices in the art of recent generations. But while rooted in research, Garcia Torres&#8217;s lively and intriguing finished works actively invoke the artist&#8217;s individual presence, thus entering in, partaking of and ultimately extending the very history under revi­sion.</p>
<p class="Pa2"><strong>Cristina Iglesias</strong> (San Sebastian, Spain, 1956) has compiled a rich and varied body of sculptures, sculptural environ­ments and photo-based works that combine material texture, literary sources, light and shadow. In Iglesias&#8217;s work, intentional ambiguity and the viewer&#8217;s immediate physical presence combine to create a nuanced interaction with architectural settings. Major public commissions include the ceremonial gate to the Prado Museum in Madrid, Estancias Sumergidas (an underwater sculpture in Baja California), and Deep Fountain at the Leopold de Wael&#8217;s square, in Antwerp, Belgium.</p>
<p><strong>Vik Muniz</strong> (Sao Paulo, 1961) creates meticulously crafted visual puns and games, delighting viewers with his invention and playfulness while at the same time raising more thoughtful questions about the nature and mechanics of illusion and representation. Muniz frequently draws with unusual materials such as chocolate, ash, dirt, or bits of paper, creating trompe l&#8217;oeill renderings (often of iconic artworks and photographs) which he later photographs into his own, final art work.</p>
<p><strong>Francesc Torres </strong>(Barcelona, Spain, 1948) A pioneer of installation art in the 1970&#8242;s, he has been a key contributor to international art for the last four decades. Torres&#8217;s work has ranged from his early, conceptually-structured and poetically-oriented sculptural installations to his more recent extensive multi-media projects that explore themes of memory, power, politics and history.</p>
<p>For further information and visuals, please contact the gallery. During the fair we can be reached at +1 786 253 9823, +1 305 505 3411.</p>
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		<title>Carlos Garaicoa&#8217;s Party! Not Tea Party</title>
		<link>http://www.art-agenda.com/shows/carlos-garaicoas-party-not-tea-party/</link>
		<comments>http://www.art-agenda.com/shows/carlos-garaicoas-party-not-tea-party/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Feb 2011 05:02:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Elba Benítez Gallery</dc:creator>
		<logo><![CDATA[<img width="220" height="72" src="http://www.art-agenda.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/wpid-1296761419image_mail.jpg" class="attachment-client-logo" alt="Carlos Garaicoa&#039;s Party! Not Tea Party" title="wpid-1296761419image_mail.jpg" />]]></logo>
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		<description><![CDATA[San Lorenzo 11
28004 Madrid
T (34) 91 308 0468
F (34) 91 319 0169
info@elbabenitez.com
www.elbabenitez.com

Political ideologies come and go, one after the next, as if what were involved were no more than exchanging one hat for another, the new fitting with alarming ease into the space and structures left by the old. What does this tell us about the nature of political ideology itself? Does it consist merely of a single repeating structure, a type or mold devoid of any genuine content beyond an ingrained need to impose and reproduce and re-fabricate itself? Such questions have become increasingly germane in the current historical juncture, when the hard dialectics of political ideology supposedly came to an end with the end of the Cold War, yet where political rhetoric around the world grows increasingly fragmented, increasingly polarized, increasingly confrontational, and increasingly laced with violence.

Carlos Garaicoa's exhibition Party! Not Tea Party at the Elba Benítez Gallery contains a running and frequently sardonic commentary on the structures today's political ideology uses to sustain itself. In this respect the exhibition (consisting entirely of new work created for the occasion)  is an extension of Garaicoa's ongoing examination of structures—especially architectural and urbanistic, but also linguistic, social and artistic—and at the same time displays yet again his characteristically meticulous aesthetic that allows him to invoke poetry as well as critique and to suggest intimacy as well as provocation.

Prêt-à-porter, the central work in the show, is a large-scale installation organized around the motif of hats and containing sculpture-like wooden hat maker's molds, drawings of hats on newspaper photographs of world leaders, and a series of hats, created in collaboration with Mabel Sanz, a Madrid-based hat designer. Hats, in the context of politics and power, acquire a heightened symbolism, especially when forming part of uniforms: at the same time, they occupy the head, the crowning point of the body, and the most immediately recognizable part of the public self. Approaching such loaded symbolism so directly yet with such irreverent means, Prêt-à-porter functions as a critique of media representations of power and of the simplistic perceptions such representations foster.

Heads or Tails consists of a series of specially manufactured silver coins, placed strategically on mirrored shelves in corners throughout the gallery. The opposite sides of the coins bear ostensibly oppositional words and images, such as the images of leaders of opposed political parties, or icons of hostile cultures. These small, discreet objects reflect the manipulated oppositions and tensions that increasingly characterize contemporary political discourse, exemplified by (but not limited to) the Tea Party in the United States, even as the genuine political content of such discourse becomes thinned and reduced to  consumer-oriented slogans bordering on demagoguery.

A third element in the exhibition is a series of photographic dyptichs in which images of otherwise unrelated urban sites are overlaid. The resulting juxtapositions are poetically suggestive and reveal a genius loci or spirit of the place already latent within the sites, almost as if the sites themselves are imbued with a desire to be something other than what they in fact are. 

Finally, The Tree of Abundance is a sculpture of a magnet-tree: the work achieves completion when visitors toss coins at the tree while making their private, silent wishes. Literally involving the spectator, the work adds an element of interactivity to the exhibition, while at the same time it maintains the motif of coins—and by extension, the commentary on the current economic crisis provoked in great measure by economic wishful thinking—that runs throughout Party! Not Tea Party.

Carlos Garaicoa (Cuba, 1967) has had solos shows at the ICA in Philadelphia, MOCA in Los Angeles, the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin and other museums internationally, and he has participated Documenta 11, the Sao Paulo Biennial and the Venice Biennial. Party! Not Tea Party is his third individual show at the Elba Benítez Gallery.

Note: The work Prêt-à-porter has been produced in collaboration with Mabel Sanz Hat Design Atelier]]></description>
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<img style="max-width: 510px;" src="http://www.art-agenda.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/wpid-1296761419image_mail.jpg" alt="Carlos Garaicoa's Party! Not Tea Party"><span></span> </p></div>
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<h1>Carlos Garaicoa&#8217;s Party! Not Tea Party</h1>
<p>		San Lorenzo 11<br />
28004 Madrid<br />
T (34) 91 308 0468<br />
F (34) 91 319 0169<br /><a href="mailto:info@elbabenitez.com">info@elbabenitez.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.elbabenitez.com">www.elbabenitez.com</a></p>
<p>Political ideologies come and go, one after the next, as if what were involved were no more than exchanging one hat for another, the new fitting with alarming ease into the space and structures left by the old. What does this tell us about the nature of political ideology itself? Does it consist merely of a single repeating structure, a type or mold devoid of any genuine content beyond an ingrained need to impose and reproduce and re-fabricate itself? Such questions have become increasingly germane in the current historical juncture, when the hard dialectics of political ideology supposedly came to an end with the end of the Cold War, yet where political rhetoric around the world grows increasingly fragmented, increasingly polarized, increasingly confrontational, and increasingly laced with violence.</p>
<p>Carlos Garaicoa&#8217;s exhibition Party! Not Tea Party at the Elba Ben&iacute;tez Gallery contains a running and frequently sardonic commentary on the structures today&#8217;s political ideology uses to sustain itself. In this respect the exhibition (consisting entirely of new work created for the occasion)  is an extension of Garaicoa&#8217;s ongoing examination of structures&mdash;especially architectural and urbanistic, but also linguistic, social and artistic&mdash;and at the same time displays yet again his characteristically meticulous aesthetic that allows him to invoke poetry as well as critique and to suggest intimacy as well as provocation.</p>
<p><i>Pr&ecirc;t-&agrave;-porter</i>, the central work in the show, is a large-scale installation organized around the motif of hats and containing sculpture-like wooden hat maker&#8217;s molds, drawings of hats on newspaper photographs of world leaders, and a series of hats, created in collaboration with Mabel Sanz, a Madrid-based hat designer. Hats, in the context of politics and power, acquire a heightened symbolism, especially when forming part of uniforms: at the same time, they occupy the head, the crowning point of the body, and the most immediately recognizable part of the public self. Approaching such loaded symbolism so directly yet with such irreverent means, <i>Pr&ecirc;t-&agrave;-porter</i> functions as a critique of media representations of power and of the simplistic perceptions such representations foster.</p>
<p><i>Heads or Tails</i> consists of a series of specially manufactured silver coins, placed strategically on mirrored shelves in corners throughout the gallery. The opposite sides of the coins bear ostensibly oppositional words and images, such as the images of leaders of opposed political parties, or icons of hostile cultures. These small, discreet objects reflect the manipulated oppositions and tensions that increasingly characterize contemporary political discourse, exemplified by (but not limited to) the Tea Party in the United States, even as the genuine political content of such discourse becomes thinned and reduced to  consumer-oriented slogans bordering on demagoguery.</p>
<p>A third element in the exhibition is a series of photographic dyptichs in which images of otherwise unrelated urban sites are overlaid. The resulting juxtapositions are poetically suggestive and reveal a <i>genius loci</i> or spirit of the place already latent within the sites, almost as if the sites themselves are imbued with a desire to be something other than what they in fact are. </p>
<p>Finally, <i>The Tree of Abundance</i> is a sculpture of a magnet-tree: the work achieves completion when visitors toss coins at the tree while making their private, silent wishes. Literally involving the spectator, the work adds an element of interactivity to the exhibition, while at the same time it maintains the motif of coins&mdash;and by extension, the commentary on the current economic crisis provoked in great measure by economic wishful thinking&mdash;that runs throughout <i>Party! Not Tea Party</i>.</p>
<p>Carlos Garaicoa (Cuba, 1967) has had solos shows at the ICA in Philadelphia, MOCA in Los Angeles, the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin and other museums internationally, and he has participated Documenta 11, the Sao Paulo Biennial and the Venice Biennial. <i>Party! Not Tea Party</i> is his third individual show at the Elba Ben&iacute;tez Gallery.</p>
<p>Note: The work <i>Pr&ecirc;t-&agrave;-porter</i> has been produced in collaboration with Mabel Sanz Hat Design Atelier
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