Time in art

Chrono Shredder (2007) – Susanna Hertrich

Blog of Danièle Pérez (french)

“Three thousand six hundred times an hour, the second whispers: Remember.” This verse by Baudelaire could be used as an epitaph, as the anguish of time that passes is so universal. Art in all its forms (cinema, photography, contemporary art) will probably never stop questioning it.

«Trois mille six cents fois par heure, la seconde chuchote: souviens-toi.» Ce vers de Baudelaire pourrait figurer en épitaphe tant l’angoisse du temps qui passe est universelle. L’art sous toutes ses formes (cinéma, photographie, art contemporain) n’en finira sans doute jamais de l’interroger.

CHRISTOPH 1990-2011 BERLIN – Irina Werning
PANCHO 1983-2010 BUENOS AIRES – Irina Werning
By stretching the initial 1h49 into a slower show, the projection of the modified film then extending over 24h (2 frames per second instead of 24), Gordon plays with time!

Appel à contribution de la revue Marges
Les temps de l’art
/ Time of Art

Il sera question d’interroger les différentes temporalités des mondes de l’art contemporain dans leur articulation et leur confrontation. Il s’agira de questionner les rapports temporels – de synchronie et/ou de diachronie – entre la conception, la production et la réception des différentes pratiques artistiques contemporaines. L’un des enjeux de la (des) temporalité(s) de l’œuvre d’art est de relever son action pragmatique, ses conséquences factuelles, sociales, sur une culture qui tend à se globaliser. Quelles sont les conséquences des temporalités des œuvres d’art sur leur mode d’existence, sur les rapports entre l’artistique et l’esthétique ?

Time again

New YorkSculptureCenter is pleased to present Time Again, an exhibition that explores the language of repetition, bringing together works that destabilize conventional ways of seeing and considering what is past and what is present. Engaging gesture, image sequence, material affect, and displaced narrative, the works on view create disjunctions with the way the time of the present is experienced, challenging our understanding of what it means to be contemporaries. For a full exhibition description please view the Press Release. The Curator’s essay is available to download here. Curated by Fionn Meade, Time Again will be on view May 9 – July 25, 2011. An opening reception will take place Sunday, May 8th, 5-7pm and is open to the public.

Pages out of time

Sara J. Schechner and a few friends have assembled a multivenue exhibit called “Time & Time Again.” Through the lens of such craftily juxtaposed artifacts, the exhibit jars viewers into thinking about how time is measured and how conceptions of it change across cultures and epochs.

(opens in a new tab)”>Article in The Harvard Gazette >

Illustration for the “Sunwatch,” a portable sundial that never needs winding, Ansonia Clock Co., New York, c. 1930. Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments/Harvard UniversityAnsonia sunwatch

Guide to “Time & Time Again” Exhibits throughout the Harvard Museums of Science and Culture (HMSC)

“Time & Time Again” at The Movies

“Time & Time Again” Exhibit Catalogue

Designing Advertising | 04–06.04.2019

 

Teachers: Ignazio Morello, Lucas Conte
Mantra: Sell less teach more

Exercice Who / What / Why for my project
Share fundamental questions of the humanity with the public with scenography and storytelling through a beautiful exhibition ! (around the topic of time)

Golden Circle (Simon Sinek) | USP definition

© Ignazio Morello, Lucas Conte

What do you fight for?
I fight for the knowledge
I fight for the education
I fight for the passion
I fight for the heritage
I fight for the memory

What do you fight against?
I fight against other exhibitionsI fight against ignorance
I fight against knowledge loss

Whom do we fight for or with?
We fight for the public
We fight for the memory / heritage of old scientists / researchers / …

Whom do we fight against?
We fight against other museums

What you fight with?
I fight with scenography, exhibition, knowledge

Rallying cry?
Exhibit fundamental questions

Exercice with my project
Exercice with the project CityWise of Wei-Yi

In the left, the Golden Circle give a new vision of the project, it’s creativ, that’s open.
The word “Agora” (Greek history, meeting point in the village) give quick informations about the topic. We have images and emotions with the last sentence “Our roots are the future” (Rallying cry).

The teachers gave us their feedback on our project by choosing a TV advertising. For me, they chose Montblanc’s advertisement “The beauty of a second” made by Wim Wenders!

 

Nautilus Magazine

A new view of time
Introducing the Nautilus Time Project.
Beth Jacobs & Lee Smolin

Geology Makes You Time-Literate
A scientist tells us how her field instills timefulness.
Marcia Bjornerud

The End of Time
In the fundamental physics of the world, there is neither space nor time.
Carlo Rovelli

To Understand Your Past, Look to Your Future
An alternative to the Newtonian worldview promises to help explain quantum weirdness.
Ken Wharton & Huw Price

Let’s Rethink Space
Does space exist without objects, or is it made by them?
George Musser

Life is a Braid in Spacetime
How to see yourself in a world where only math is real.
Max Tegmark

Making Good Use of Bad Timing
We bend time to make our world make sense.
Matthew Hutson

The Mystery of Time’s Arrow
Past and future may not be what they seem.
Julian Barbour

Actually, There Is a Time Like the Present
Think there’s no time like the present? Modern physics begs to differ.
Mark Shumelda

Is It Time to Get Rid of Time?
The crisis inside the physics of time.
Marcia Bartusiak