quinta-feira, 27 de janeiro de 2011

WALK YOUR TALK

Hyuro- Spain

Blog de Daniela Labra

O juízo de valor dos Tops

A plataforma e editora britânica Arts Media Contacts anuncia a seleção dos 10 melhores blogs de arte, de acordo com seus critérios. Há coisas bem legais, mas quase todos estão na categoria-mãe “Blogs Comerciais” – o que não é exatamente um problemão.

Desta vez, o artesquema.com não entrou na lista…

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The Arts Media Contacts Top Art Blog 2010 Awards

Contact editorial@artsmediacontacts.co.uk
Jessica Wood
www.artsmediacontacts.co.uk

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1. VANDALOG
Top Art Blog of the Year
blog.vandalog.com

A perfect blog. Regular and interesting postings about street art across the world have created a genuine international community interested in this art form. To date there are just under 4000 followers, who are active in debating and posting and it is all very nicely brought together by its editor, RJ Rushmore. If you are looking to set up a blog to promote a specialist art form, then use this one as a model.

2. ARTS JOURNAL
Art News Blog of the Year
www.artsjournal.com

With its daily digest of the art news, seventeen highly qualified bloggers and a huge following, Arts Journal wins a top prize here. The sections are divided into clear sections such as: architecture, issues, art, music, culture, ideas, and the bloggers include leading figures in the academic and art world. The content is intelligent and the debate real. A guaranteed good read every day.

3. JONATHAN JONES ON ART
Art Blogger of the Year
www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/jonathanjonesblog

Jonathan’s short blogs fuel your brain and tell you exactly what you should go and see. We particularly liked his recent piece ‘The streets have stolen a march on modern art’. Working for The Guardian, his brief must be to feature events of ‘national interest’, but he manages to weave into this an eclectic mix of shows across the country in all sorts of places and not just the big names and brands. Other journos on the nationals should follow suit. We had many votes for Jonathan sent in to us, and the number of daily comments on his site shows that he a serious community of followers.

4. THE ART NEWSPAPER – FAIRS
Art Magazine Blog of the Year
www.theartnewspaper.com/fairs

If you did not received The Art Newspaper’s Daily bulletins from this year’s art fairs then you have missed out. The well-designed and up-to-the-minute newsletters drop into your inbox feeding you with news, opinion and gossip on the daily events at Frieze and Miami. For a moment in your morning you too are under canvas rubbing shoulders with oligarchs and celebrity collectors.

5. CATHEDRAL OF SHIT
Art Polemic Blog of the Year
cathedralofshit.wordpress.com

If you like a bitter rant against the art establishment with lots of expletives, then this blog is for you. It is very active, with plenty of anonymous researchers on the ground picking holes in government policy and exposing in-fighting, hypocrisy and nepotism in the art world. Examples are favourable reviews by national art critics of work by their personal friends. The design is pretty basic but the comment notable.

6. 1000 WORDSPHOTOGRAPHY
Photography Blog of the Year
1000wordsphotographymagazine.blogspot.com

This photography blogs highlights a sensational array of photographers, many of whom are relatively unknown. The blog, written mostly by Tim Clark, offers a mixture of well-written book and exhibition reviews, advice to photographers and news of fairs and competitions. The organisation also runs events in places such as Fez. Truly international.

7. SELF SELECTOR
New Art Blogger of the Year
selfselector.co.uk

Absolutely loads of people put forward Lorena Muñoz-Alonso for art blogger of the year. She clearly has a passionate group of followers. Lorena reviews exhibitions in such a way that you feel that you have been there. She asks enough questions about the art to challenge it, but she is not deliberately controversial or egotistical. She draws together exhibitions from public, commercial and alternative spaces, in a thematic way that makes you look at wider cultural issues.

8. ARMAGHOCLOCK
Artist’s Blog of the Year
armaghoclock.wordpress.com

There are so many good artists’ blogs that this is very difficult to choose. We were very careful not to select any artist that we represent or know as we don’t want to be outed in ‘Cathedral of Shit’. We have a preference here for the artist blogs that simply bring you behind the scenes as we are not artists ourselves. This blog was put forward by a subscriber and is an excellent example of an artist writing a journal on the development of a project. It brings you into the making of the work over the course of a year with clever use of images and sound. Unpretentious, clearly written and interesting.

9. ART RABBIT
Art Listings Blog of the Year
www.artrabbit.com

So many listings sites let us down because the searches don’t work or give you too much information or the content is out-of-date. This one doesn’t. It is beautifully designed and works perfectly – commendations to the graphic and software designers as well as the editors. The opinion pieces are nicely-written and the email blogs give you exactly the information you want on your selection of exhibitions opening or closing across the globe. A big thank you to Art Rabbit for bringing so many visitors into galleries and museums this year.

10. ART FAG CITY
Urban Art Blog of the Year
www.artfagcity.comCurator, lecturer and journalist Paddy Johnson goes around New York’s galleries and events and reports on art in the city with a fair amount of gossip and news too.

Visit www.artsmediacontacts.co.uk to read an extended list of the Top Arts Blogs 2010

talking a little about Brasilia

foto carla meurer magalhães: túnel entre ruas


well,

talking a little about Brasilia:

- Green City
-organized
-idealized.

-non-organic
-non-tourist
-little-flagged

Scares a little by little human dimension, like a city of passage, at least for those who are passing through there,
the feeling that we are excluded from a story every day, its buildings are guarded by armed guards greatly, the buildings are empty and are uninviting to the public (outside the malls and road), there are niches to sit without having to seek block or closer to the closest park.

Where are the children, people who want to make history? ... What they want to visit the museums and cultural centers, simply because they were passing by and decided to go ...?

But they have strengths: the books at the bus stops and the green belt of the city!

Idea: It would be interesting maps spread across Brasilia, assisting in bus routes and understanding the courts, etc ... in other languages too!

Carla Meurer Magalhães

Brasília: cidade capital


foto carla meurer magalhães

bom,

falando um pouco sobre Brasília:

- cidade verde
-organizada
-idealizada.

-não ôrgânica
-não turística
-pouco sinalizada

Assusta um pouco pela dimensão pouco humana, parece uma cidade de passagem, pelo menos para quem está de passagem por lá,
a sensação de que somos excluídos de uma história todos os dias, seus prédios são guardados por guardas extremamente armados, as construções são pouco convidativas e são vazias de público (fora os shoppings e rodoviária), não existem nichos para sentarmos sem ter que procurar a quadra mais perto ou o parque mais perto.

Onde estão as crianças, as pessoas que querem fazer a história? ...Que querem visitar os museus e centros de cultura, simplesmente porque estavam passando por lá e resolveram entrar...?

Mas têm pontos positivos: os livros nas paradas de ônibus e o cinturão verde da cidade!

Ideia: seria interessante mapas espalhados por Brasília, auxiliando nas rotas de ônibus e no entendimento das quadras, etc...em outras línguas também!

carla meurer magalhães