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#Cristine Brache
luckyacid · 1 year
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Cristine Brache Jailer's Keys 2016, White Mother of Pearl, red abalone, green turban, stainless steel 4 × 4 in
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mybeingthere · 1 year
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Dietmar Busse (b. 1966) lives and works in New York.  He was born in Stolzenau, Germany and as a young man learned the world of photography in Madrid before relocating to New York in 1991. 
Busse’s practice is steeped in the history and materiality of photography.  The photographs that serve as the starting point for the work depict the residents of the small farming village in northwestern Germany where the artist was raised and where his family still lives. The black and white images recall August Sander’s iconic Face of Our Time in their shared simplicity and direct and honest investigation into human archetypes.   If Sander used photography as a declarative tool, seeking and naming truth via image, Busse plumbs the psychological depths both behind and within the image, creating a fantastical vision that extends beyond the camera’s grasp.
https://fierman.nyc/cristine-brache
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cosmicanger · 5 months
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Cristine Brache, America’s Sweetest Dream , 2023
1980s television, digitized super 8 film overlaid with late night television commercial audio and AI generated jingles and AI text-to-speech (generated from the artist’s poetry)
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x----tine · 7 months
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Move over Netflix. This Miami art museum is launching its own streaming service
Miami’s flagship art museum is getting into streaming.
Pérez Art Museum Miami launched PAMMTV, a “first-of-its-kind” streaming service of the museum’s collection of video art and films, with 15 works from local and international artists. The free service is available on web browsers, mobile devices and Apple TV. (Users need to create a free account to watch content.)
The museum is celebrating PAMMTV’s launch Thursday evening with a screening of South Florida films and video art featured on the platform. Visitors can enjoy free museum entry and watch the videos displayed on a 60-foot floating screen in the bay. The foray into streaming is part of PAMM’s push to engage with audiences digitally while highlighting artists, said Jay Mollica, the PAMM Director of Digital Engagement. Last year, PAMM launched “New Realities,” the museum’s virtual augmented reality gallery of commissioned artworks.
“One of the main thrusts of our strategy is to turn the museum inside out and democratize access to the collection,” said Mollica.
While the museum’s entire video art collection won’t be available on PAMMTV at once, the streaming platform will update with a smattering of video art every few months to give viewers “a slice into the collection,” Mollica said. “We’re fusing the user experience of Netflix with the intimacy of a museum gallery,” he said. Alongside selections from guest curators and film festivals, PAMMTV features work by boundary pushing artists from South Florida, the Caribbean, Latin America and the African diaspora, who are “often left out of the history books,” said program manager Lauren Monzón. The inaugural selection of video art available on PAMMTV includes pieces from the museum’s permanent collection, works from South Florida and films curated by Third Horizon Film Festival. Films include “I Saved My Belly Dancer,” directed by Youssef Nabil and starring Salma Hayek, and “Conga Irreversible” by Los Carpinteros.
The launch party event will include live music by Suzi Analogue and Adobe Deejay, activations by local poetry organization O, Miami and screenings of lauded works by South Florida artists. There’s “Reeds/Wozo: Movement Study I” by Monica Sorelle, a meditative film of women dancing, praying and working. “CARMEN” by Cristine Brache, which won the Made in Miami award at this year’s Miami Film Festival, is a haunting short film on how domestic violence affects mother-daughter relationships. And “From Fish to Moon” by Kevin Contento, a documentary film about a small supermarket in the Florida backwoods, is making a splash in the film festival circuit, Monzón said.
“I’m really excited about inverting that pilgrimage model for viewing art within the walls of museums and for people to be able to have access to worldclass video art wherever they are,” Monzón said.
Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/entertainment/visual-arts/article279113519.html#storylink=cpy
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fettesans · 2 months
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Left, Rachel Harrison, No Menus, 1997, Wood, polystyrene, acrylic, and chromogenic prints, 188 x 109,2 x 25,4 cm. Via. More. Right, Cristine Brache, Almost Blue, 2024, Oil, ink and encaustic on cotton and wood, 14 x 17,5 x 1 5/8 inches. Via.
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To both archive and maintain your own work is a reminder of the gap between current practice and public markers of success. It can feel like an exercise in futility: If this work was really worth it—if someone other than you believed in its value—wouldn’t you have the time and money and institutional support to do it right? A library would offer to acquire your letters, no? Or, perhaps, with awards, grant money or even profits, you could hire a professional? Beyoncé, for instance, has employed digital archivists since 2011. A GQ profile of the artist in 2013 revealed that inside her office there’s a “temperature-controlled digital-storage facility that contains virtually every existing photograph of her, starting with the very first frames taken of Destiny’s Child, the ’90s girl group she once fronted; every interview she’s ever done; every video of every show she’s ever performed; every diary entry she’s ever recorded while looking into the unblinking eye of her laptop.”
Joanne McNeil, from Authoring Your Life Story: Joanne McNeil on Self-Archiving and George Westren, for Filmmaker, December 15, 2023. Via.
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"documento" at Embajada
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ethans · 4 years
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mentaltimetraveller · 6 years
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Cristine Brache, No dice, 2017, porcelain, dog cage, wee-wee pad, dimensions variable
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muumuuhouse · 5 years
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sophieanneyasruddin · 6 years
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Made by Cristine Brache
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9classiquessouls · 6 years
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cod6tt6 · 7 years
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http://www.aqnb.com/2017/07/06/entangling-uncoded-realities-with-the-codette-presented-holons-night-of-readings-in-new-york-jul-6/
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neofung · 7 years
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Nekama @ Papay Gyro Nights 2017 in Bergen, Norway (Kjott)
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cosmicanger · 1 year
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Cristine Brache
Goodnight Sweet Thang, 2022
Super 8 Film (digitized, 2K, 10 min 20 secs), water, pool
96 × 26 inches
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x----tine · 7 months
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Pérez Art Museum Miami Launches PAMMTV,
Museum’s First On-Demand Streaming Service for Video Art Generously Supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, PAMM’s Latest Digital Initiative Provides Free Access to World-Class Films and Video Artworks
(Miami, FL — August 31, 2023) — Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is pleased to announce the launch of PAMMTV—a first-of-its-kind streaming service that delivers video art from our museum to the walls of your home. PAMMTV offers a free array of cutting-edge, international video art from the museum’s collection, alongside selections from film festivals, guest curators, and regional filmmakers. With a focus on boundary-pushing artists across South Florida, Latin America, the Caribbean, and African Diaspora, PAMMTV showcases the dynamic media ecosystem throughout the Global South. All videos on PAMMTV are free to access and only require an account to login; the streaming service is available on web browsers, mobile phones, and tablets, as well as Apple TV.
“Digital Engagement at PAMM means scaling the mission of the museum beyond the walls of the building. One way we are doing this is extending the museum’s galleries into virtual spaces,” said PAMM Director of Digital Engagement Jay Mollica. “With PAMMTV, we are granting unprecedented access to selections from our world class video art collection by fusing the familiar user experience of Netflix with the intimacy of a museum gallery.”
Viewers around the world will be able to access PAMMTV through their web browsers or mobile browsers, and Apple TV. The inaugural selections focus on video art from the museum’s permanent collection—including pieces by artists Wangechi Mutu, Youssef Nabil—as well as works from the region of South Florida, and films curated by Third Horizon showcasing cinema from the Caribbean and its Diaspora.
“In recent years, there have been substantial shifts in how people engage with art, underscoring the notion that art should be readily available and accessible beyond the confines of a museum’s physical space,” said PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans. “With the generous support from the Knight Foundation, we are able to extend the reach of PAMM’s ambitious programs to a global audience while growing the infrastructure for media arts across the Global South, expanding on the at-times forgotten original promise of more connectivity in a global world via the internet.”
In addition to artwork from the museum’s permanent collection, PAMMTV features works by South Florida artists including Keisha Rae Witherspoon, Faren Humes, Monica Sorelle, Cristine Brache, and Kevin Contento. The South Florida works selected for PAMMTV seek to illustrate the multifaceted character of the region. Selected works from Third Horizon span documentary and fiction shorts celebrating formally radical and politically-focused cinema from the Caribbean and its Diaspora. Spanning Cuba, Antigua, the Dominican Republic, and beyond, featured artists include Miryam Charles, Dalissa Montes de Oca, Everlane Moraes, Amir Aether Valen, and Shabier Kirchner.
The launch of PAMMTV comes on the heels of various digital initiatives including a renovation of the museum’s website and virtual reality gallery, generously supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’s Digital Engagement Initiatives Grant. Launched in May 2022, all website content—including the entirety of the museum’s collection—is available in both English and Spanish, alongside visual descriptions to improve accessibility for visually impaired users. PAMM’s New Realities gallery, launched last year during Miami Art Week, showcases rotating commissions in augmented reality, accessible wherever the PAMM logo exists. With interaction at the core, this virtual reality gallery catalyzes participation in art rather than merely viewing it.
Anyone can access PAMMTV streaming service on web browsers, mobile phones, and tablets, by visiting https://pamm.tv or searching for it on Apple TV.
To commemorate the launch of PAMMTV the museum will host an event on September 14, 2023 from 6–10pm which will feature a special film screening of works from PAMM’s new service displayed on Ballyhoo Media’s 60-foot floating screen.
LINKS
PAMMTV: https://www.pamm.tv Apple TV: https://apps.apple.com/app/pammtv/id6463186701 More info: https://www.pamm.org/en/pammtv/
Launch event: https://www.pamm.org/en/event/pamm-tv-launch-event
PAMMTV LAUNCH PROGRAM
All videos on PAMMTV are free to access and only require an account, with films in each capsule available on a rotating basis for 4–9 months.
Curated videos from PAMM's permanent collection
● Wangechi Mutu, "Amazing Grace" ● Los Carpinteros, "Conga Irreversible" ● Sandra Ramos, "Acuarium" ● Luis Gispert, "Block Watching" ● Youssef Nabil, "I Saved My Belly Dancer"
Intertidal: Moving Images from South Florida
● Keisha Rae Witherspoon, "1968<2018>2068" ● Monica Sorelle, “Reeds/Wozo: Movement Study I” ● Cristine Brache, "CARMEN" ● Faren Humes, “Liberty” ● Kevin Contento, "From Fish to Moon"
Third Horizon Presents: A Celebration Cinema from the Caribbean and its Ever-expanding Diaspora
● Miryam Charles, "Song for the New World" ● Amir Aether Valen, "The Whisper of the Leaves" ● Everlane Moraes, "Pattaki" ● Dalissa Montes de Oca, "Pacaman" ● Shabier Kirchner, "Dadli"
PAMMTV Launch Event | September 14 | 5–10pm
Join us on the waterfront terrace for the launch of Pérez Art Museum Miami’s (PAMM) new video-on-demand gallery—PAMM TV. Enjoy video works from PAMM's permanent collection, selections by Third Horizon Film Festival, and films by South Florida filmmakers on Ballyhoo Media’s 60-foot floating screen. Prior to the video works, audiences can enjoy tours in the galleries, live music on the terrace, tables by community organizations, and happy hour drinks and specials at Verde.
Full Schedule
5–7pm | Live music and happy hour at Verde 7–8pm | PAMMTV screening 8–10pm | Afterparty and live music
This event is free with RSVP. Ongoing support for PAMM TV and PAMM’s other digital efforts is generously provided by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
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mybeingthere · 2 years
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More pink delights from  Dietmar Busse, a German born Artist/Photographer who lives and works in New York City. 
https://fierman.nyc/cristine-brache
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