Videoinsight® Magazine 2016|6
Videoinsight® Magazine 2016|6
Videoinsight® School Project
Education as Intuition, Care, Nourishment
The Project Videoinsight® School, curated by Tita Giunta and Lucia Centurelli, and supervised by Rebecca Russo, President of the Videoinsight® Art and Science Foundation, led contemporary art in Primary School for the first time: video art and performance were the basis for an innovative educational and instructional path. Today, Videoinsight® Magazine is presenting the first experience, closely linked to the video “Lux Mater”, documentation of an art performance by Beatriz Millar.
Learning, generally, appears suddenly, accompanied, in the subject, with a pleasant, and sometimes ecstatic, feeling to have finally achieved a genuine understanding. An acquisition of this kind can be taken internally as a real mode and can contribute, therefore, to transfer our consciousness towards new situations. Such a process is based, as well, on a kind of global insight: it’s like a foundational structure, the foundation of our evolution.
The memory tracks, in fact, are not isolated elements, but arranged agglomerates, blocks. They constitute full figures in continuous changing and in constant expansion: construction sites. Understanding of change and novelty is not an add of new signs to our store of knowledge, but a transformation to one form into another. Here is the original successful mutation, which can arise from experience or occur as a result of reflection, over time. In the case of artistic enjoyment, privileged sphere of the Videoinsight® Method created by Rebecca Russo, the latter two cases fit together.
The etymological root of the concept of education collects and mixes significantly the Latin versions of e-ducere (whose meaning is “get out”, “give birth”, “lead outside”) and edere (feed). education paradigm is the cure understood as help, guidance, orientation, design, support.
Not surprisingly, the first reference video for the Videoinsight® School Project curated by Lucia Centurelli and Tita Giunta, both Videoinsight® Method cuartors, was “Lux Mater” by Beatriz Millar. In this video, a documentation of an art performance, the artist mixes flour and ingredients, bakes cakes and bread. Reflecting on creative gestures and rituals, Beatriz Millar found in the preparation of bread, and through its gift as an elementary nourishment, the feminine power of creation. The artist questions, through this simple and atavistic gesture, about role-mutated, lost or acquired, in contemporary societies.
The Videoinsight® School Project has foreseen the Videoinsight® proposal and experience to pupils in elementary classes. The project was defined on the basis of psychological and individual needs, both individual and collective. After careful consideration on the specific needs of each group, realized through preliminary meeting with the reference teachers, the vision of Contemporary Art images of Videoinsight® High Impact has been proposed for the very first time to young students. Spontaneous narrative results and individual or collective interpretations from a first approach to contemporary art have been evaluated by the Videoinsight® experts and, later, conceptually and creatively reworked by children through bodily expression through theater-therapy settings.
In the case of this work based on Beatriz Millar’s videos – the first of three experiences of the Videoinsight® School Project – for the theater-setting prepared by Tita Giunta, the children were welcomed into a space, in front of a circle of dishes – each containing a loaf of clay. At the center, a rope creates a circular shape, with three large knots. Clay is a symbol of creation, intended as the mother earth. Before being used, it has been divided into many small pieces. With care and dedication, the students had to mix it with their oiled hands. It was proposed to mix the loaves of clay just like Beatriz Millar does in her video performance. The students had to create their own world: a ball with their favorite features: cracks, grooves, capes, holes. Then, it started an exchange: with the right hand, each participant has given his creation to his companion, with his left hand has received the gift of the companion; the worlds continued to circle until everyone got back his own world. Everyone explored carefully the world of the others, focusing on the diversities, specificities and uniqueness. Finally, the children were asked to place their own world on the rope. It was explained to them that the rope represented the class and that every child had to place his own world, by maintaining contacts with the rope: where was the position of every student in relationship with his own class and with the others?
Ivan Fassio
Maria Jose’ Arjona | Artissima 2016
Prestige Magazine 2016
Dipartimento Rizzoli – Sicilia | Bagheria
LES PHOTAUMNALES 2016
LES PHOTAUMNALES 2016
‘Love Stories’
13ème edition BEAUVAIS Picardie France
Le Quadrilatere | Galerie Nationale de la Tapisserie
October 8 2016 | January 1 2017
Codirection artistique:
Fred Boucher et Adriana Wattel
Curators: Paul Ardenne et Barbara Polla
Artists: Janet Biggs | Morgane Callegari | Henri Cartier- Bresson |
Enna Chaton | Mat Collishaw | Iris Crey | Alix Delmas | Aurélie Dubois | Mounir Fatmi | Shaun Gladwell | Lauren Fleishman | Dana et Sandra Hoey | Ali Kazma | Adriana Lestido | Tuomo Manninen | Robert Montgomery | Gianni Motti | Mads Nissen | Anders Petersen |
Pierre et Gilles | Gérard Rancinan | Kiah Readding et Pamela Arce | Olivier Rebufa |
Rebecca Russo et Georges H. Rabbath |
Andres Serrano | Tejal Shah | Malick Sidibe’ | Mathilde Troussard | Joel-Peter Witkin
Rebecca Russo et Georges H. Rabbath I woke up in Beirut 2015
Collectors 3 Magazine
Pau Golano’ | RISO Palermo | 2016
Palazzo Gondi |Firenze
29 September 2016
Palazzo Gondi | Florence
‘Paradise’
by Videoinsight® Foundation
Videoworks from Videoinsight® Collection
Palazzo Gondi , one of the most elegant patrician palaces of the 15th century, stands on the corner of Via dei Gondi and Piazza San Firenze. The sober stone facade rises majestically, gradually passing from the projecting rustication in finely worked stone on the ground floor to the checkerboard stonework in lower relief on the first floor, to the smooth ashlars of the top floor. In its gradual transition from projecting to smooth stonework, the facade recalls that of Palazzo Medici Riccardi, built almost fifty years earlier. In its ground-floor revetment of finely worked rounded blocks instead of the rough-hewn ashlars of Palazzo Medici Riccardi, it resembles instead the contemporary Palazzo Strozzi, situated nearby. Work on Giuliano Gondi’s Palace began in 1489, to the design of Giuliano da Sangallo, and inaugurated in June of 1495 by the Duke of Urbino, during a visit to Florence. In 1600, the beautiful fountain in the courtyard was added. In the 18th and early 19th century, various restoration and embellishment projects were implemented to adapt some of the rooms to the taste of the time. In the 1870s the City of Florence decided to widen the street that passed between Palazzo Gondi and Palazzo Vecchio, and the architect Poggi was chosen to direct the work. Poggi demolished an old palace also owned by the Gondi family, which was contiguous with the one designed by Sangallo, and widened the building,completing the facade overlooking Via dei Gondi as well.
Rebecca Russo ® Brand
Rebecca Russo ® brand was deposited in classes 41 and 44.
Classe 41 : Psychological Counseling
Classe 44 : Psychological Therapies through the Vision of Artistic Works
The Studio Buzzi Notaro Antonielli d’Oulx defends the Rebecca Russo ® intellectual property, the Rebecca Russo ® brand and the Rebecca Russo ® image against infringers, counterfeiters, imitators and copiers.
Rebecca Russo by Ralph Rafferty 2016