Vienna Fair

At the turn of the last century, artists declared a war on traditionalism in art. Employing slogans like “Make it new!” and “Subjectivity is the new reality”, they initiated an irreversible artistic transformation. Famously, Marcel Duchamp, the inventor of “ready-mades” long before Andy Warhol took up the idea, even proclaimed the death of art.

A recent event in Vienna re-opened the case: ViennaFair, the city’s annual contemporary art show at the Messe Wien Congress Center May 12 – 15 and Austria’s largest international trade fair for contemporary art, presented a comprehensive body of evidence: 127 exhibitors from more than 20 countries showcasing virtually every known area of fine art, from graphic art, sculpture, photography, painting, and installation, to media and performance art. The Austrian art scene was represented by both flegling and established galleries, such as Ernst Hilger, Mario Mauroner, and Kerstin Engholm among many others. While some of the Austrian exhibitors ignored the focus on Eastern Europe, others highlighted their long-standing engagement with the region. Gallerie Hans Kroll, for instance, entertained and arrested visitors with Russian artist Ivan Brazhkin’s DVD “Rebel Karaoke”, which encourages viewers to sing along to the chants of protesters in Moscow and Paris. Among the German exhibitors, Barbara Thumm, Antje Wachs and Gregor Podnar were the most prominent contributors. Also represented were Chez Valentin from France, Bernard Jordan and Eva Presenhuber from Switzerland, Visor and Palma Dotze from Spain, and Carbon 12 Dubai from the United Arab Emirates. Accordingly, apart from the high quality of the works on show, it was the diversity of contributors that resonated most among critics: Sabine Vogel, for instance, writing for Die Presse The global focus seems to have struck a cord with collectors, who rallied particularly around the Eastern European exhibitors: Romanian artist Adrian Ghenie’s works, for example, showcased by the Galerie Charim under the headline “Communism never happened,” sold out even before the fair officially opened. It seems, indeed, that communism did little to detract from Eastern European gallerists’ commercial acumen. The focal point of the fair is to support participating galleries in their business endeavors and to attract international collectors, especially those from Eastern and South-Eastern Europe, in whose collections Western European art has been so far under nurtured. “The Vienna School of Collecting Theory” program advised collectors with critical opinions of major art theoreticians, artists, critics and curators in the relaxed atmosphere of the center’s VIP lounge and outside of the ViennaFair’s marketplace. he has seen a constant rise both in the number of visitors and in purchasing demand over the years. Seemingly, contemporary art is finally gaining prominence in the eyes of the public, and at least in part due to ViennaFair’s own outreach efforts; The Fair has made it a priority to help artists gain recognition across Europe, educating audiences, and building bridges between art producers and the wider public. Artists today can no longer complain about neglect and lack of patronage – at least not in Austria; as in previous years, ViennaFair was able to rely on Erste Bank as its main sponsor. “The world is all that is the case,” Ludwig Wittgenstein once said. The ViennaFair seems to prove that in world of art, “all that is the case” is, if anything, expanding.Contemporary art in Europe, toying with political issues for decades, now seems more serious. Many artists focus on globalization and mass consumerism, often in the setting of a modern urban metropolis. Some works express explicit social criticism, while others hint at an existential dilemma. Artists like Santiago Borja, Szilard Cseke and Onur Gulifidan extensively explore these topics in their works.

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Vienna Fair

Famously, Marcel Duchamp, the inventor of “ready-mades” long before Andy Warhol took up the idea, even proclaimed the death of art. To this day, however, the autopsy has been inconclusive: while some maintain that we are once again witnessing the



When brothers share a canvas
When brothers share a canvas

It's part graphic design, and part art history, and part contemporary culture, storytelling, narrative. We always refer to the paintings as abstract narratives. People have constantly tried to put it into some sort of historical context.



TED: Who? What? Where? Why?

The first TED conference was actually held in 1984, but only as a one-time event created by architect and graphic designer Richard Saul Wurman and fellow graphic designer Harry Marks. The goal, then and now: to make information accessible and




Narration Problems: The Narration Doesn't Include the Main Ideas

Selecting the main ideas from a passage is one of the most foundational skills of reading. If you don't grasp the main idea in what you've read, you really haven't understood it at all. Narrating a homeschool lesson will obviously include telling the main idea of the passage along with supporting details. But what if your child struggles to identify the main idea? 

This page is one in a five part series about narration problems. The links to the other articles are below. 

Question:

When narrating, my child cannot seem to distinguish the main ideas from the reading passage. She gives some details but often omits the whole point of the text.

Answer:

This is a huge problem. A narration simply isn't correct if it doesn't cover the main idea. But fortunately, identifying the main idea is a skill that can be taught.

1.  Ask Different Questions

Maybe the problem is the term "main idea." Try using other terminology instead.

What is the point? What's the most important idea here? What do you think is the big idea? What is the author trying to say? What is the purpose of what we read?

2. Give Examples

Try to point out main ideas in day to day life

After a cartoon or television show, discuss the "main idea" it tried to convey. After someone tells a story, point out the one main idea and the secondary details.

3. Use Highlighters

Give the student a copy of the text which he can mark on. Look for repeated words and mark them. Those are clues to the main idea. The most repeated word is probably the topic. Have your child look for what is being said about the topic. 

Often the main idea is stated clearly somewhere in the passage. Other times the main idea is implied . In that case, , the reader must come to a conclusion on his own based on the details given. This situation is the most challenging for finding the main idea. It requires a much higher cognitive (thinking) function than merely identifying a clearly stated main idea.

4. Check Yourself

When you have a possible main idea, ask if every part of the passage works to express that. If not, you may have selected a supporting detail instead of the main idea.

5.


Main Idea Graphic Organizer - Bookshelf

30 Graphic Organizers for Writing, Grades K-3 [With Transparencies]

30 Graphic Organizers for Writing, Grades K-3 [With Transparencies]

Memory Makers Graphic Organizer Skills Connection Type of Writing— narrative Publishing—drawing pictures and writing captions to show main ideas Bloom's ...

30 Graphic Organizers for Reading

30 Graphic Organizers for Reading

Display the Why That Ending Overhead and write the title and the main idea of the story at the top of the graphic organizer. 3. Then distribute copies of ...

Content-Area Graphic Organizers for Language Arts

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Organizers help you analyze what you are reading. You can use them to recognize patterns in your reading, such as identifying the main idea of a story or an ...

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Lesson In My Own Words Graphic Organizer Skills Summary • The In My Own Words ... Have students write the main idea of the passage as well as list the ...

Drawing a Blank, Improving Comprehension for Readers on the Autism Spectrum

Drawing a Blank, Improving Comprehension for Readers on the Autism Spectrum

The reader can color-code the text, highlighting the main idea in one color and ... Graphic Organizers A graphic organizer is a visual tool used to organize ...

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Graphic Organizer
All rights reserved. Graphic Organizer. Determining Main Idea Chart. NAME. CLASS. DATE. Topic. Important. Details. Main Idea. Topic. Important. Details. Main Idea ...

Main Idea/Supporting Ideas Graphic Organizer Printouts ...
Main Idea/Supporting Ideas, Diagram Graphic Organizer Printouts.

Free Printable Graphic Organizers - Freeology
Nearly 100 free, printable graphic organizers for a wide variety of topics.

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Main Idea. Main Idea 4details. Mouth & Teeth (Topic) Nonfiction Study ... Sites where some of these graphic organizers were found, others were created by ...

Graphic Organizers | National Center on Accessible ...
This graphic organizer is made up of a series of shapes in several rows. ... slanted line at the top right of the graphic organizer is the label "Main Idea. ...