Tag Archive | "Centro Cultural Borges"

A Belgian’s View of Patagonia


Photo courtesy of Bruselas, Belgica en Buenos Aires
Father and son return to Belgium

Patagonia has been a land of inspiration for many. Already in 1893, William Henry Hudson wrote Idle Days in Patagonia, a book that has been a reference for the Fundación Patagonica, a group of more than 40 Belgian artists who also used the Argentine region as a muse and without ever having set foot in the area.

Everything started 20 years ago, on a rainy afternoon, in Brussels. To escape the boredom, the musician Dirk van Esbroeck decided to tell his friend Dree Peeremans about his childhood spent in Buenos Aires. It came out that, for Dirk, Patagonia has always been a remote place and expensive to visit. The two founders of the association remained fascinated by the Argentine region. Due to its difficult access for Europeans, they decided to create a virtual Patagonia. A territory were everything is possible, a country of liberty and full of fantasy.

Exhibiting their work in Buenos Aires had been a dream shared between all the artists of the association. For a month, the Centro Cultural Borges will show the application of the Belgian surrealism to this virtual Patagonia.

To give a better overview of what the exhibition was to be, artists presenting the exhibition had the original idea to finish the press conference in music. Journalists had the privilege to hear the foundation’s anthem. For a moment I thought I was in Belgian café and only missed a good beer. This feeling has been recurrent while I roamed around the exhibition and I also quickly recalled the humour so particular to Belgian comics. The artwork presented relates to themes like the end of the world and the Patagonian wind. Penguins are given a place of choice here as they are seen as the main inhabitants of the region.

Photo courtesy of Bruselas, Belgica en Buenos Aires

Also, if you are familiar with the country of beers, chocolate, and comics, you will appreciate the recurrence of “under the belt” references. A good illustration of this would be the transformation of Michelangelo’s the creation of Adam, in which, the artists dissimulated a fart joke (the old good pull my finger and I fart, will probably speak to some). Furthermore, you will have the chance to learn about the common sexual coercion between seals and penguin (you could also look up “’Sex pest’s seal attacks penguin” on the BBC website if you want to know more). Talking about penguin sex, my interest focused on a can of penguin testicles. Although, I did not have the chance to check the inside of the can, I was pleasantly surprised to see they were hand collected.

If this gives adds an important entertainment touch to the Fundación Patagonica’s collection, the curiosity does not stop there.

The Minds of Glass is a project of eleven videos showing the encounter of two artists of the new and the old world. The two artists originally started their work independently, however, Dirk Schreurs a Belgian musician, saw a reflection of the evolution of his compositions in the work of the Argentine Marta Graciela and vice versa. This project is not only original by the way in which it was created but also by the use of different mediums to get to the final result. For instance, Marta’s work comes out of original hand made drawings she manipulated with the help of her computer for about ten years.

Photo courtesy of Bruselas, Belgica en Buenos Aires
Dirk Van Esbroeck-Alfredo Marcucci-JuanMasondo

Bruselas Belgicá en Buenos Aires will please to everybody as it does not requires specific knowledge of one culture or the other. The variety of the work and its alliance with the Belgian humour makes the exhibition much more accessible if you are not familiar with surrealism or modern art. The Exhibition will definitely give you an enjoyable time and help you to understand surrealism. You might even see Patagonia differently.

Bruselas Belgicá en Buenos Aires, Centro Cultural Borges, Viamonte y San Martín. From 29th October to 18th November 2009. Opened Mondays to Saturdays from 10am to 9pm. Sundays 12pm to 9pm

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A Whole New Angle: World Press Photo


Photo by Callie Shell
Michelle Obama napping on President Obama’s shoulder during a train ride on the campaign trail

World Press Photo is an independent, non-profit organisation founded in Amsterdam in 1955. Every year since then a travelling exhibition of its photos has toured the world, visited annually by over two million people in 45 countries. The images selected are the winners of the prestigious competition run by the organisation, which aims to promote high standards in professional photojournalism. The exhibition is currently in its Buenos Aires residence, the Centro Cultural Borges, until 4th October.

The photos on show are presented as singles or in series, roughly grouped into categories such as spot news, general news, people in the news, sports action, sports features, daily life, stories, portraits, contemporary issues, arts and entertainment and nature. Each exhibit is accompanied by an explanatory panel in both English and Spanish, listing the photojournalist, the news agency for which they work, the prize they won and the relevant background information.

The exhibition is not for the faint-hearted. Many photos feature distressing scenes from international news stories, such as the Russia-Georgia conflict or the Sichuan earthquake. It requires a certain degree of morbid fascination to stomach images of floating corpses, bleeding hands or a military boot resting on the face of a Kenyan man contorted with fear. This makes the photos all the more testament to the courage of the prize-winning photojournalists, who risk their own lives for the perfect shot.

The photos vary in tone, however. The arts and entertainment category ranges from the traditional tourism of an afternoon on a Baltic beach to its altogether more sinister counterpart at Birkenau concentration camp. Equally the contemporary issues pictured include persecuted Tanzanian albinos, transsexual prostitutes in Honduras, a victim of the rampant violence against women in Guatemala and homelessness in Mexico. These are provocative images, unsettling in their intrusion into a foreign other’s life. They offer a glimpse into another world courtesy of an intrepid lens.

Photo by Anthony Suau
Police officer making sure former owners of a foreclosed house are gone

The final shot in the exhibition is the winning photo, a black and white image by North American Anthony Suau for Time magazine. It depicts a police officer clutching a handgun as he wades through the debris of an abandoned house in Cleveland. The title is ‘US economy in crisis’, taking the vandalised house following eviction as emblematic of the country’s economic disarray which has dominated both national and international news over the course of the past year. Describing his experience shadowing Detective Robert Kale, Suau declared that “you never really knew what you would find…there was just this range of emotions which was as broad as you can imagine.”

They are powerful images which are on show, and some of the photos you may even recognise. I recall a Reuters image by Gleb Caranich of the Georgian war graced the cover of a British newspaper last summer. The photos in the exhibition provide a beguiling summary of the issues which sold papers in 2008. In some their merit stems from careful execution, testifying to a skillful photojournalist’s understanding of photographic technique and composition. Others impress with an incredible event immortalised on film, the successful result of a chance sighting and a camera to hand.

Above all, the exhibition’s charm derives from the many close-ups of individuals in remarkable situations. They humanise the headlines and translate facts into the emotive language of image. At times stark, at times moving, the World Press Photography exhibition is a fresh angle from which to view the life and times of the world we live in.

Photo by Carlos Cazalis
Homeless sleeping in Mexico City outside the exclusive Jockey Club

Photo by Luis Vasconcelos
Indigenous Honduran woman resisting the forceful eviction of her land

Photo by Carlos F Gutierrez
Chaitin’s volcanic eruption in Chile ignited a “Dirty Thunderstorm”

The World Press Photography exhibition is at the Centre Cultural Borges, Viamonte esq. San Martin until 4th October. Entry is $15. See http://www.ccborges.org.ar for more information.

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Celtic Festival: Weekends in October – 20.30 hrs


FESTIVA CELTA ~ 8ª Edición

Durante los  sábados y domingos de octubre próximo, a las 20:30 horas, se realizará el tradicional Festival Celta en el Centro Cultural Borges, institución que concibió uno de los primeros espacios en Argentina para la difusión del género.

La música celta en Argentina como propuesta artística, tiene un camino recorrido de más de veinte años de acrecentada experiencia, evidenciada en la calidad de los arreglos musicales, además de la diversidad de expresiones que en la actualidad ofrecen los cultores del género.

~ sábado 4 y domingo 26
Apertura y Cierre del Festival con la O’CONNOR CELTIC BAND,  fundada por María O’Connor y Hernán Pagola con la idea de difundir el espíritu de las ancestrales melodías celtas.

~ domingo 5
MAC MANUS canciones y baladas tradicionales irlandesas y escocesas con el nuevo sonido de la fusión.

~ sábado 11
Athy, Arpista Contenporáneo & Compositor nos propone un viaje para el alma, desde el ancestral sonido del Arpa irlandesa, a la contemporaneidad del Arpa eléctrica.

~ domingo 12
AVALON LAND El destacado grupo marplatense, liderado por Alejandra Mosquera vuelve a la escena porteña presentando “Samhain, un Espacio fuera del Tiempo” Video Arte – “Quimera Visual”

~ sábado 18
HerbadaboA – Las fuertes corrientes migratorias desde Galicia a Latinoamérica, abrieron un canal de ida y vuelta que el grupo recrea, proponiéndonos “viejas melodías para nuevos tiempos”.

~ domingo 19
Cantos y Encantamientos – Galardonado con el Premio “Estrella de Mar 2008″ Mejor Grupo Músical. Aida Delfino -Arpa Celta- Ale Mosquera -Música y Poesía-  Video Arte -  “Quimera Visual”

~ sábado 25
TUAN trío – Música irlandesa instrumental, jigs, reels, hornpipes, polkas, airs y slides, por notables intérpretes. Víctor Naranjo – Maximiliano Villalba – Alejandro Larocca.

FUNCIONES  a las 20:30 hs
Platea general $30.-
Venta telefonica Platea Net al 5236-3000

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