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Posts Tagged ‘Mike Starn’

2011 Benefit and Auction Spotlight: Doug and Mike Starn

Friday, September 9th, 2011

BBVenice_5.26.11_3851 (2009-11) © Doug and Mike Starn

The 2011 Benefit Patrons’ Weekend on October 15 & 16 features many exciting and exclusive activities including a day trip to Beacon with a director-led tour of Dia:Beacon by Susan Batton and a tour of Doug and Mike Starn‘s laboratory studio at the former Tallix foundry spectacular space! The Starn’s moved to this studio to make the first Big Bambú experiment. This piece is formed by a network of more than 2,000 bamboo poles lashed together and is 40′ across 80 feet long and 50′ high. This installation creates a compelling dialogue with some of their current and early works articulated throughout the working space.

Shown above is a photograph of the Brother’s installation in progress, at the 54th Venice Biennale (May/June 2011). This original artwork is included in our Benefit Live Auction. In Venice, the Starns created a 50′ tall hollow tower of bamboo with a trail within its walls spiraling up to the top. The artists used as stem-cells, some fragments of their installation “Big Bambú: You Can’t, You Don’t, and You Won’t Stop,” which grew over 6 months on the roof of The Metropolitan Museum of Art last summer. That exhibition had ranked 4th in the world in 2010 for total attendance of contemporary art exhibitions and was the 9th most attended exhibition in the Museum’s history. Throughout the Met exhibit, the Starns and their crew of rock climbers continuously lashed and sculpted over 7,000 bamboo poles, a performative architecture of randomly interconnected vectors forming a section of a seascape with a 70-foot cresting wave above Central Park. Big Bambú suggests the complexity and energy of an ever-growing and changing living organism.

Doug and Mike Starn are identical twin American artists. First receiving international attention at the 1987 Whitney Biennial, the Starns are primarily known for working conceptually with photography for the past two and a half decades. They are largely concerned with chaos, interconnection and interdependence, time, and physics, and they continue defying categorization, effectively combining traditionally separate disciplines such as photography, sculpture, architecture and site-specific projects. The Starns were represented by Leo Castelli from 1989 until his death in 1999. Their art has been the object of numerous solo and group exhibitions in museums and galleries worldwide. They have received many honors including two National Endowment for the Arts Grants in 1987 and 1995; The International Center for Photography’s Infinity Award for Fine Art Photography in 1992; and, artists in residency at NASA in the mid-1990′s.

Click here for more information and to buy tickets to our 2011 Benefit & Auction

Click here to view our auction catalog and to bid online

Tour of the Starn Brothers Beacon Studio

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

3p1000681
Last Saturday, a group of Aperture interns and staff had the chance to visit Mike and Doug Starn’s gigantic new studio in an ex-Beacon foundry where they are creating the Big Bambú installation evolving around their photo-based projects. Big Bambú is an ever growing and changing sculpture by the Starn brothers, constructed from thousands of fresh-cut bamboo poles lashed together by a team of rock climbers working as high as fifty feet off the ground under the artists’ direction. Gaudéricq Robiliard, the director of the Starn studio and former Aperture intern, gave an engaging private tour of the studio in which some of the interns and staff even experienced climbing Big Bambú to the top!

Click here to view the album on facebook.

Click here to read the New York Times Magazine feature on the Big Bambú.

Click here to view the Starn brothers in Aperture magazine, issue 175.

We are currently receiving applications for the January-June 2010 Internship session, so check out details on our website. Young graduates from the United States and around the world can apply for an exciting and thorough experience in the editing, design, production, circulation, sales, and marketing of photography’s most significant publications; the development of major traveling exhibitions; the creation of web content; and all other business operations essential to a non-profit organization. The closing deadline to submit your application is October 1.

Big Bambú in Beacon, NY

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Big Bambú image via sternstudio.com

In their Beacon studio, twin brothers Mike and Doug Starn house their massive installation Big Bambú. Utilizing over 2,000 bamboo poles, the artists have created an extraordinarily intricate network system that bridges architecture and performance. The installation continues to evolve and adapt in the vein of a living, self-healing organism as the work takes on a life of its own, rather than a static creation directly from the artist.

According to the Starn brothers, Big Bambú is connotative of an autonomous, spontaneous, self-governing, disorganized network responding to itself to better navigate the environment. “It represents me – in that I am who I was, and, I am completely different than I was when I was a little boy,” Doug Starn writes.

Click here to view Big Bambú on facebook.

Click here to read the New York Times Magazine feature on the Big Bambú.

Click here to view the Starn brothers in Aperture magazine, issue 175.

Big Bambú will be open to visitors the 4th weekend in August  from 11AM to 4PM.

Should you plan to visit, kindly e-mail at: bb@starnstudio.com
Starn Studio Beacon (former Tallix Foundry)

310 Fishkill Ave
Beacon, NY 12508