Connect with us

Entertainment

Hold my beer can: Museum says a worker thought unique art installation was trash

Published

on

Hold my beer can: Museum says a worker thought unique art installation was trash

One man’s art is another man’s trash?

That was the case for a Netherlands museum, which says a maintenance worker mistook hyperrealistic art pieces for garbage. Last week, LAM museum detailed the now-viral chain of events involving an elevator technician and beer cans created by French artist Alexandre Lavet.

Lavet created the installation, titled “All the good times,” in 2016 as a way to commemorate the friends he made when he moved to Brussels, according to his website. Its pieces, including the beer cans, are made of acrylic paint on aluminum and varnish, and could be found in unexpected corners at LAM.

The museum, which focuses on food art, said on its website that Lavet’s work was showcased “inside the museum’s glass lift shaft, as if left behind by construction workers.” Museum director Sietske van Zanten said the unconventional display was meant to help “keep visitors on their toes.” However, it seems one person didn’t get that memo.

LAM explained that the elevator technician who unknowingly trashed Lavet’s work was filling in for the museum’s regular technician, “who is well acquainted with the building and its exhibits.” The Oct. 1 statement clarified that the museum holds “no ill will towards the lift technician.”

Advertisement

“He was just doing his job in good faith,” Van Zanten said. “In a way, it’s a testament to the effectiveness of Alexandre Lavet’s art.”

The museum says it began a “thorough” search for Lavet’s discarded pieces after its curator realized the cans were missing from their display. The curator found Lavet’s work “in a binbag, ready for disposal.”

The cans have since been recovered, cleaned and temporarily re-homed “in a place of honour” near the entrance of the museum. Instead of sitting atop a glass elevator, Lavet’s work is now on a traditional plinth. However, that won’t be the case for long, curator Elisah van den Bergh said.

“We enjoy surprising our visitors, so no space is off-limits,” she said.

A week after detailing the mishap, LAM and its employees have been basking in its virality. On social media, the museum shared a video compilation of coverage, pondering the question: “ART OR TRASH?”

Advertisement

A representative for Lavet did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment Wednesday, but a spokesperson for LAM said the international frenzy of attention has been “overwhelming.”

French artist Alexandre Lavet’s beer-can art is displayed atop a glass elevator at LAM museum in the Netherlands.

(LAM)

In an email to The Times on Wednesday, the spokesperson said the museum has become “considerably busier,” especially with visitors inquiring specifically about Lavet’s work.

Advertisement

“Visitors take their time and immerse themselves in the work to discover all the details. Great conversations arise about what art is,” the spokesperson said. “People often say that they are so surprised that something that looks so ordinary at first glance turns out to carry so much craftsmanship and stories that they recognize.”

Movie Reviews

Vettaiyan Movie Review – Telugu360

Published

on

Vettaiyan Movie Review – Telugu360

Final report
Vettaiyan is another award-winning league film that skillfully incorporates Rajini’s signature stardom elements. It is a decent one-time watch. Directed by critically acclaimed ‘Jai Bhim’ filmmaker T.J. Gnanavel, the movie delivers a thoughtful narrative that tackles themes of society-enforced encounters and the online education industry. This crime drama boasts standout performances from Rajinikanth, Amitabh Bachchan, Rana Daggubati, and Fahadh Faasil. The dialogues are sharp, and Anirudh’s two songs add to the film’s appeal. This isn’t your typical fan boy crowd-pleaser, yet it manages to achieve the same effect in a unique way. Flip side, it runs on a single thread and preachy at times.

Go watch it for the stellar casting, Good script and thought provoking dialogues

Positives:

  • Superstar’s Swag is intact
  • Superb screen presence & Performances of Amitabh, Fahad and Rana
  • Direction,Subject & Dialogues
  • Good production values
  • Negatives:

  • Runs on single thread
  • Preachy at times
  • First Half Report:
    The first half of #Vettaiyan stands out as one of the best scripts in recent times. Director TJ Gnanavel has crafted a crime investigation story that blends elements of social responsibility with thought-provoking message. If you’re seeking pure mass entertainment, this isn’t the film for you. However, its fast-paced screenplay and direction keep you hooked to the screen throughout. Rajini, Amitab and Fahad are simply superb.

    Advertisement
    Continue Reading

    Movie Reviews

    Movie Review: 'White Bird' – Catholic Review

    Published

    on

    Movie Review: 'White Bird' – Catholic Review

    NEW YORK (OSV News) – Fans of the 2017 film “Wonder” may recognize the character of Julian Abans (Bryce Gheisar), a student on whose adjustment to a new school the opening scenes of the touching wartime drama “White Bird” (Lionsgate) focus. Julian was the bully who persecuted the facially deformed but heroic-hearted protagonist of the earlier movie.

    Having been expelled for his misconduct, Julian is navigating his present environment and wavering between the proffered friendship of an outsider and the somewhat reluctant patronage offered to him by a callous member of the private academy’s elite. Opportunely, Julian’is grandmother, Sara (Helen Mirren), decides to intervene at this decisive point.

    A celebrated artist visiting Julian’s native New York from Paris for a retrospective of her work, elderly Grandmere believes that Julian will profit from her own life lessons. So, in a series of flashbacks that make up the bulk of the story, she recounts to him for the first time the travails she endured as a young Jewish schoolgirl (Ariella Glaser) in occupied France.

    Initially pampered at home and popular among her peers, youthful Sara is gifted but selfish and ethically neutral. Thus, although she refrains from joining in the persecution of her school’s main outcast, partially-crippled polio victim Julien Beaumier (Orlando Schwerdt), neither does she come to his defense. Instead, like most of those around her, she simply shuns him.

    As the domination of her homeland progresses, however, Sara’s life and outlook change dramatically. Soon German soldiers are rounding up local Jews, both adults and children alike, and Sara is suddenly separated from her loving parents — Max (Ishai Golan) and Rose (Olivia Ross) — and forced to flee into the woods.

    Advertisement

    Desperate to stay one step ahead of her pursuers, Sara finds that the only person willing to come to her aid is Julien. Not only does he put himself at risk by helping her evade those hunting her down, he also provides her with long-term shelter in his family’s barn.

    With the active help of his father (Jo Stone-Fewings) and mother (Gillian Anderson) — who eventually come to regard Sara as their adoptive daughter — Julien succeeds in concealing Sara over the weeks and months that follow. As the two youngsters mature, meanwhile, their bond of friendship is gradually transformed into a burgeoning romance.

    A paean to kindliness and the power of imagination, director Marc Forster screen version of R.J. Palacio’s 2019 graphic novel — “Wonder” was also based on Palacio’s work — lacks subtlety at times. Yet, as scripted by Mark Bomback, “White Bird” effectively tugs at the heart by showcasing altruistic heroism in the face of dire evil.

    The picture’s formative moral impact, moreover, outweighs its few problematic elements, making it a valuable experience for teens as well as grownups. Both age groups will find themselves rooting enthusiastically for the central pair and joining in the screenplay’s recurring slogan: “Vive l’humanite!”

    The film contains mostly stylized violence with a few brief images of gore, mature themes including ethnic persecution, a single crude term and a couple of crass expressions. The OSV News classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG-13 — parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

    Advertisement

    Read More Movie & TV Reviews

    Copyright © 2024 OSV News

    Continue Reading

    Entertainment

    Julia Bullock and Davone Tines, both 37, reinvent the old song recital for a new generation

    Published

    on

    Julia Bullock and Davone Tines, both 37, reinvent the old song recital for a new generation

    The old-fashioned song (or Lieder) recital — a singer in formal attire stoically standing next to a grand piano delivering art songs in foreign languages, unamplified in a concert hall far too large for intimacy — has obviously long needed refreshing. Indeed, it has all but disappeared from American stages.

    But enter Julia Bullock and Davóne Tines. Each came through town recently with a highly personal and revealing recital program of intense intimacy and theatrical originality, boldly proclaiming a new generation’s profound rebirth of the medium.

    Bullock took a spectacular deep dive into a seldom-heard song cycle by Olivier Messiaen, an hour of agony and ecstasy full of obscurities about the European Tristan myth, using a French text peppered with Quechua, an indigenous South American language. Tines’ spectacular deep dive was into the magnificent 20th century Black singer, actor and activist Paul Robeson.

    Bullock and Tines are names that easily pair. They are the same age. They are Juilliard trained. They both came under director Peter Sellars’ wing early, and he gave them their first major exposure, particularly when he was music director of the 2016 Ojai Music Festival. About to turn 30, they displayed such a sense of life-force that they seemed certain to become the leading singers of their generation.

    And so they are. Sellars brought them to John Adams’ attention, and they starred together, with brilliant theatrical verve, in his 2018 opera, “Girls of the Golden West,” a performance of which, recorded with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, was released this year on Nonesuch. Bullock’s first recital recording, “Walking in the Dark,” released on Nonesuch late in 2022, stunned the vocal world with its passion and won a Grammy. Tines now has his first Nonesuch recital recording, “Robeson,” just out, another Nonesuch knockout and obvious Grammy contender.

    Advertisement

    Bullock and Tines are also members of American Modern Opera Company, a collective of young artists in multiple fields reinventing opera. The AMOC production “Harawi” is directed by company co-founder Zack Winokur and features the company’s dancers Or Schraiber and Bobbi Jene Smith and pianist Conor Hanick. While not produced by AMOC, “Robeson” was conceived by Tines and Winokur, who commissioned it for his new summer festival on Manhattan’s Little Island in June.

    The Ojai festival, where Bullock first performed as a student in 2011, was to have premiered “Harawi” in 2022, but that had to be canceled when Bullock contracted COVID-19. It has since triumphed at the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence before arriving Oct. 1 at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills (in collaboration with Ojai) and in Berkeley before that. Bullock said in a post-concert panel discussion that it’s been on her mind for some 15 years.

    A lot has been made of the circumstances of Messiaen’s hourlong cycle, for which he wrote his own song texts. At the end of the Second World War, the French composer, who had been held for a year in a prisoner of war camp, found his wife had had a mental breakdown and was in declining health.

    Shortly after, he fell in love with a young pianist and became obsessed with the Tristan myth, in whom love and death become existentially intertwined. In “Harawi,” he began to develop a new musical language. Strange and complicated rhythm structures and overheated harmonies, along with mystic bird calls in the piano all bespeak the magic of his young love.

    But it is the singer who takes this to a new level, as she leaves one world and enters a spiritual new one. She becomes a new being without leaving the old one behind.

    Advertisement

    Dancer Bobbi Jene Smith, singer Julia Bullock and dancer Or Schraiber on the Wallis stage with pianist Conor Hanick.

    (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times)

    Bullock embodied all the contradictions of that spirit of love and death, and Hanick, the reality. The dancers — the electric leaping of Schraiber and enveloping movements of Smith — seconded this on a stage that was bare but for a bench and striking lighting. As the dozen songs progressed, Bullock, who is a sensual dancer, absorbed grief and joy, each emotion ever more intense. Each word, whether French or Quechuan, seemed to hold double meaning, so full-bodied was her vocal production. She made “Harawi” into a beauteous yet dark landmark of singing.

    “Robeson” holds equally powerful personal meaning for Tines. But the structure of his 70-minute performance, which opened the Monday Evening Concert’s 85th season at the Colburn School’s Zipper Hall last month in downtown L.A., was more awkward. Instead of a pre- or post-performance discussion, he took breaks from performing numbers that Robeson made essential listening and joined Hamza Walker, the director of the nonprofit art space the Brick (formerly LAXArt), in unpacking the program.

    Advertisement

    The subtitle of “Robeson” is, in fact, “Unpacking a Classical Americana Electro-Gospel Acid Trip.” Throughout his career, Tines, who can hold the world in his hands like no other singer I know today, had been compared to Robeson, who was said to have done the same thing. But rather than be Robeson, Tines explained, his need has been to liberate himself from the great singer.

    Tines started out Robeson-esque performing “Some Enchanted Evening,” speaking Othello’s final monologue and singing African American spirituals, becoming angrier and yet also more ecstatic as he progressed. “Lift Every Voice” rose to rapture. “Let it Shine” was the thrill of a lifetime, the actual embodiment in song of an acid trip, or maybe enlightenment. Only after reaching that height could he then find the grace to to make “Old Man River,” sung as a new hymn of somber inspiration, his epilogue, the acid trip’s final, meaningful passage.

    All acid trips need spiritual guides. Tines had Khari Lucas, a multi-instrumental sound artist, and jazz pianist John Bitoy. With them, he created an inspiring new sound world, finding a new man river, which freed Tines to transcend Paul Robeson without eradicating him.

    Advertisement
    Continue Reading
    Advertisement

    Trending