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Minotaure & Dali's modernist conflation of architecture and cuisine
Minotaure (1933 - 1939)
In 1933 Albert Skira, a young publisher of elegant art books, released the first two issues of a periodical which, though it would only last for 6 years, remains to this day one of the most impressive publications of its kind ever produced.
“Filled with colour and black and white reproductions of a technical excellence unusual for the time, Minotaure first appeared in June 1933, and continued through thirteen issues, ceasing publication at the onset of World War II. The publishers set themselves the difficult task of bearing witness to the different movements in contemporary art, through text and image, demonstrating the interaction between the visual arts, literature, and science. Thus Minotaure documented the vast panorama of the 1930s, and served as a forum for encounters and discussions…Each number of Minotaure included contributions from artists, writers, philosophers, critics, psychoanalysts, and ethnologists, and was meant to be read as a collective work, many-voiced.”
Looking at it now, all these years later, with the canons of modernity firmly and irrevocably established in our minds, the list of contributors to Minotaure is almost comical: Breton, Picasso, Éluard, Miró, Chagall, Bataille, Magritte, Lacan, Matisse, Queneau, Duchamp, Man Ray, de Chirico, Dalí, Giacometti, Ernst, Rivera, Masson, Balthus, Matta, Bellmer, Arp, Brassaï, Huxley, Kandinsky, Jung…and these are just some names any average person is likely to recognize, add to it the archeologists, sinologists, anthropologists, ethnologists, numismatists, musicologists, historians, etc, etc, and the pedigree becomes overwhelming.
via the phenomenal Nonist.
There's a dire lack of translated content from Minotaure online, although I was able to find an excerpt from a certain Dali article I sought “De la beauté terrifiante et comestible de l’architecture modern style,” Minotaure, no. 3-4 (1933), p. 74
In a surealist exposition of edible architecture, Dali explores a conflation between the two in a manner not dissimilar from his visual works.
He describes two Art Nouveau houses that Gaudi designed on the Paseo de Gracia in Barcelona, explaining how one was inspired by the ocean’s waves during a tempest, and the other by the tranquil waters of a lake.
“These are real buildings, veritable sculptures of the reflections of crepuscular clouds in water, made possible by recourse to an immense and mad, multicolored and gleaming mosaic of the pointillist iridescence from which emerge forms of poured water, forms of spreading water, forms of stagnant water, forms of mirroring water, forms of water curled by the wind, all these forms of water constellated in an asymmetric and dynamic-instantaneous succession of bicyncopated, interlaced reliefs, melted by the ‘naturalist-stylized’ nunuphars and nympheas concretized in impure and annihilating excentric convergences, thick protuberances of fear bursting from the incredible facade, simultaneously twisted by all the insane suffering and by all the latent and infinitesimally soft calmness equaled only by that of the horrifying ripe and apotheosic flakes ready to be eaten with a spoon—with the bloody, greasy, soft spoon of gamey meat that approaches.”
Minotaure was sold for 25 Francs when it was in print. Needless to say, I would hand over a lot more dough to get my hands on a boxed set today.
Below are some of Minotaure's fucking epic covers.
André Masson, Minotaure no. 12-13, 1939.
Diego Rivera, Frontispiece Minotaure no. 12-13, 1939.
Max Ernst, Minotaure no. 11, 1938.
René Magritte, Minotaure no. 10, 1937.
Henri Matisse, Minotaure no. 9, 1936.
Salvadore Dalí, Minotaure no. 8, 1936.
Joan Miró, Minotaure no. 7, 1935.
Marcel Duchamp, Minotaure no. 6, 1934.
Francisco Borés, Minotaure no. 5, 1934.
André Derain, Minotaure no. 3-4, 1933.
Gaston-Lois Roux, Minotaure no. 2, 1933.
Pablo Picasso, Minotaure no. 1, 1933.
WORDS > Visual Wordplay
A breathtaking video about WORDS by Everynone to accompany Radiolab's latest Podcast.
Everynon is a production house based in LA and NY. They are Will Hoffman, Daniel Mercadante and Julius Metoyer III. They worked with everyone from NPR to Mediacom, and I strongly suggest going to their website and watching their productions.
"Words have the power to shape the way we think and feel. In this stunning video, filmmakers Will Hoffman and Daniel Mercadante banded visual wordplay into a moving exploration of language set to an original score by Keith Kenniff."
via WNYC Radiolab.
Emi's Bento Lunch Delivery Aikun
Meet Emi, an artist and champion of sustainable food culture hailing from Hokkaido. Based now in Beijing, she has achieved in a very creative way what I'm still on my own quest to create; a perfect marriage of food and art. Hers is a version that ties in agriculture and anthropology in a recent project titled Delivery Bento Aikun that took place in the CBD over March, April and May.
For 25rmb, anybody working in the CBD could order her hand-prepared Japanese Bento boxes served in delicate bamboo baskets and wrapped in hand-embroidered kerchiefs. The veggies are sourced from her own patch of farmland on the outskirts of Beijing. Limited to 5 lunches per day, Emi's personal delivery of these boxes, the packaging and food were all a form of extended communication space, hoping to provide the means and inspiration for each of these people to reuse and bring their own lunches. She said, "If I do my job right, every time I deliver a lunch, I lose a customer."
Now this is blue ocean thinking, a business with the mind to put itself out of business, a project that uses bambo and bento to touch on greater topics of agriculture, sustainability, and disappearing food culture in our fast-paced lifestyles.
We joined Emi on Saturday at her wrap-up event, Gathering For Delivery Bento Aikun, hosted by Michael Eddy and Emi at the wonderful Vitamin Creative Space at Jianwai Soho. Great conversation, interesting minds, beautiful space, inspiring installations, and best of all; we learned how to make authentic onigiri balls with pickled ume and dried Japanese basil brought by her mother from Japan. I pretty much live off rice balls from 7Eleven, but after tasting Emi's onigiri, I don't know if I could ever go back.
David Chipperfield Architects: Rockbund Project And Art Museum
A nice article on the architecture of Rockbund Project, where the Cai Guo-Qiang exhibit was held.
david chipperfield architects: rockbund project and art museum
Via Designboom.
Cai Guo-Qiang: China's Peasant Da Vincis and Parallels with Rural Microfinance
I was excited to see Cai Guo-Qiang's Peasant Da Vincis exhibit at the Rockbund Art Museum in Shanghai last weekend after reading about it on Designboom and hearing Lin Lin of Jellymon describe to me how inspired she was by the enterprising peasants in rural China.
Cai Guo-Qiang brings us what he calls "alternative da Vincis", Chinese peasants, who in their own space, reenact existing mechanical inventions that help them overcome their own human limitations. Think hand-built robots, home-made helicopters, submarines and race cars. Crude and simple, yet honest and hard headed, in many instances naively so, the peasants dedicating their entire lives to the vision of one day walking on water.
Each piece of machinery came with a story, these were stories of courage and determination in the pursuit of a peasant's dream. The theme of the exhibition was "Peasants- Making a Better City, a Better Life", a play on the 2010 Expo theme of "Better City, Better Life". What was interesting to me was the platform that it provided to discuss the social transformation of these hundreds of millions of peasants and how they contribute to and fit into the urban development and modernization process ofChina.
This theme runs so much in parallel with Wokai's mission as I think about the 300+ million peasants in China living under the poverty line, and how many dreams each of them have. Cai Guo-Qiang personally collects hundreds of these inventions and in some cases was the sole financial supporter of some of these aspirations. He said about one Li Yuming, "I was charmed by his artistry, yet I also realized that I needed to provide support so that he could continue his work." In the same way, Wokai aims to provide loan capital, just a tiny amount of seed funding that is the necessary first step to create.
By bringing these peasants onto the international platform of art and design, Cai Guo-Qiang is making a statement about the reality of Chinese agrarian society. In China's millennia-old history, peasants were not of low status. Because of collectivized land, the household registration system, the urban-rural wealth gap, and a great many other reasons, the standard of living in rural areas lost parity with urban cities. Peasants continued to suffer economic losses due to industrial policies and the added burden of a generation of rustication campaigns for educated youth during the Cultural Revolution.
Indeed they have been the greatest power source behind China's modern economic reforms, and on the grand platform of the World Expo, the contributions they made to this city and their creative genius running against the wall of the collective, are starkly apparent within these concrete walls.
Cai Guo-Qiang asked himself why he collects these things. "Is it because they retain a handcrafted charm? Or because they were born out of a desire to escape the gravity of one's circumstances? Perhaps most importantly, I have been gathering peasants' dreams, and within these dreams I see myself: I am a child of this land, I am a son of peasants- no- I am a peasant."
The theme of the exhibit "Peasants- Making a Better City, a Better Life", painted on bare concrete walls outside the gallery
"What's important isn't if you can fly"
Whimsical- gallery guards taking a break.
Suitman - the world traveller with a camera
Was reading Milk Mag today and saw an article on Suitman, aka Young Kim the traveller with a camera, and couldn't believe I hadn't come across him before! I took a look through his website was immediately impressed by the unintentional innocence, the intense feeling of alienation that shone through his otherwise muted photography.
Suitman started travelling with a camera almost twenty years ago, finding travel the best and most objective way to educate oneself. But his Korean-American identity caused his face and persona to experience lifelong alienation, no matter where he went. This kind of spoke to me, I mean, his artistic expression may have room to be more gracefully executed, but there's no denying that his passion is real and raw and bleeding off the page.
I've felt the same way. On the first day of school in Schwarzwald being the only kid without blue eyes or a Schultüte in tote, sitting at a banquet table ganbei-ing relatives I don't recognize in Guanghan, or quietly eating dhal bhat in a room of chattering Nepali children while the sun sets over the Annapurna. I may as well have been wearing a yohji yamamoto suit with horn-rimmed glasses and a souless stare.
Modern Art = I could do that + Yea, but you didn't
Caochangdi, billed the "spiritual promised land for Chinese contemporary art", an enclave of Chinese and international galleries on the outskirts of Beijing and one of the reasons I keep calling this a TRULY WORLD CLASS city, has last week confirmed rumours of demolition notices in the area. If you care about art, you should sign this.
Fortunately I'm still able to enjoy the area (hopefully for a lot longer), and bring you these photos from last weekend. The first set is from the Ullens Centre at 798- a much more commercial collection of galleries nearby, but that still presents some gems if you dig hard enough. I mean, where else can one find bauhaus architecture, golden bull testicles, and LED smoke installations all in one place?
A photography exhibition at Ai Weiwei's Three Shadows Gallery in Caochangdi. Note the man in butterfly space suit, dancing monkey, and awkward Chinese children.
Hello Kitty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! this little cutie was waiting for us at the entrance of a gallery and decided to pose for my camera in an array of attractive positions. Stray cats rawk!
I call this: Yarning for you. Pretty awesome right? I think the sole purpose of this installation which involved a few metric tonnes of yarn- yea, yarn is darned heavy (pun intended)- and a mirror, was to enable awesome avatars and profile pictures on FB, Renren and Kaixin.
In conclusion. MODERN ART = I COULD DO THAT + YEA, BUT YOU DIDN'T.Haute Tech Astral Projections
Watch it, and dream.
A Single Woman
a page of my moleskin
drawings on the wall
How awesome are the hanging window and chairs?










