Dec 4, 2013

Falls of Solitude at Manalo Projects in Berlin

Manalo Projects presents
JAANIKA PEERNA
in a site specific installation titled:
FALLS OF SOLITUDE
November 22 - December 15, 2013 on view 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Vernissage and Finnisage Friday 13 December 2013
18h - 21h (6 - 9 p.m.) with a short artist talk at 19h (7 p.m.)
Bergstrasse 16, 10115 Berlin, Germany

Contact: isabelmanalostudio@gmail.com, +49 (0) 15 2075 80647
For more info click here:

Winter Newsletter is Out from Berlin Studio

Published on December, 2 2013 
@Jaanika Peerna Studio Berlin

-trips
-exhibitions
- new representation
-holiday gift offer


if you would like to view the newsletter click here
if you would like to sign up for future newsletters (which come about 5 times a year with few additional special announcements in between) please sign up here:

Happy White Holidays! 


Nov 21, 2013

Takt Academy presents: Takt Talk with Jaanika Peerna

Jaanika Peerna's practice is informed by processes found in the natural world. Drawing between light and line, video and paper. Expressing continual flux; of a story that was always there and always will be; a process with no start or end. 

The artist will discuss her current work and plans for new exhibitions in Europe.

http://www.jaanikapeerna.net/

Takt Talk at Kunstraum Tapir, Weserstraße 11, 10247 Berlin-Friedrichshain Wednesday 27th November 2013, 18.00-19.00
photo credit: Ave Talu

Sep 29, 2013

Announcing New Studio in Berlin in the first Newsletter


to view the newsletter released on September, 24 in Berlin click to the link HERE

If you would like to receive Jaanika Peerna  newsletters in the future sign up: HERE


Enjoy,
Jaanika Peerna

Sep 19, 2013

REAPPEARANCE OF ABSTRACT ART : exhibition review by Heie Treier

Published in KesKus in September 2013, p. 16

REAPPEARANCE OF ABSTRACT ART
by Heie Treier

Let us first shed some light on the background of the current exhibition since abstract art and its status still need some explanation.

Censoring abstraction

Abstractionism, that is the theory or practice of abstract art, has generally had a fixed meaning in the art history of 20th century, associating with the triumphal culmination of Modernist movement where the art of painting lost figurativeness and took an interest only in its intrinsic issues (colour, line, canvas) and the metaphysics of idealistic philosophy. During the era of the Cold War, abstract painting also had a hidden political meaning, designating the economical, political and cultural hegemony of the United States of America along with the opposition to the attack of Socialism. In the Soviet Republic of Estonia in 1960s there were several cases where abstractionists were censored and one of the most charismatic abstract artists living in Tartu, Lola Liivat, was labelled as an American spy without her even knowing it. The form or aesthetics of art according to Modernist standards was almost a matter of life and death.

No wonder that at the end of the Cold War, during the era of the so-called Postmodern art in 1980s and 1990s, abstract art as formalism was pushed aside from the frontline of art since the new art theory with the background of social sciences was unable to give abstract art an appropriate meaning. And now, in the 21st century, reappearance of abstractionism in the field of art can be observed, together with the actualization of modern art, both locally and internationally.

The abovementioned should serve as a prologue to the co-exhibition of Jaanika Peerna's drawings and Tuuli Mann's paintings in Haus gallery, Tallinn, Estonia. Jaanika Peerna's work is especially interesting considering the fact that after graduating from the academy of arts in Tallinn the artist moved to New York where she also obtained a degree of fine arts; thus, Peerna has indirectly joined the former political opponents of the Cold War while interpreting abstract art in a totally different way. And oddly enough, her work reflects both the traditions of Estonian female printmakers as well as American triumphal abstract expressionism.

Materialized nature

JaanikaPeerna won't mystify the birth of her artwork – in her public performances, the artist has revealed her creative process, willing to teach it to the audience. She seems to give both her mind and body to the forces of nature – the wind, the sea, the air, and the sound waves (high quality audio recordings of the sounds of nature) – while drawing lines on paper according to these forces. The images on paper are the occasional yet regular visualizations of materialized energy. Jaanika uses special soft graphite pencils that register the flow of energy either through delicate or strong movements. Jaanika tunes herself in hypersensitivity; she collaborates with other artists, including choreographers and dancers, even scientists such as her husband David Rothenberg - a philosopher and musician who has studied and documented the sounds of nature, the music of animals, birds and insects.

In the context of art history, there is the hypersensitivity characteristic to Estonian female printmakers of various generations (Marju Mutsu, Naima Neidre, Ülle Marks and others) in Jaanika's work; and on the other side, there is the painting technique similar to the one by Jackson Pollock who also placed his canvases on the ground during the painting process. In contemporary times, it is not a precondition for an artist to live in USA, to be male and to get drunk for working with a painting in order to release one's subconsciousness in a Freudian way. Abstract painting or drawing is no longer necessarily associated with emotional suffering (that was required from the artists in 1950s) nor with the interpretation of the aesthetics of Immanuel Kant where art had to be the symbiosis of ultimate spiritual suffering and ultimate joy in order to achieve sublimity.

Jaanika Peerna's delicate drawings have been born out of lightness while pursuing the surrounding processes and atmospheric vibrations that function the best when observing the course of line within the whole artwork.

The secure idea of the forest

The paintings of young artist Tuuli Mann are perfectly accompanying the abovementioned ideas – her artwork studies the phenomenon of Estonian forest that is inseparable from the natural and cultural identity of the country. In her abstract paintings, Mann depicts the forest mainly as a green, peaceful and secure place, following the deepest psychiological needs of a human being. What is probably being the objective here is to find the essence, the idea of the forest instead of its physical appearance. Indeed, it is an astonishing fact that the forest  (similarly to the sea) as a phenomenon has not been studied that much in Estonian art; perhaps the reason is that for local people the forest is too self-explanatory and common – but it is not so.

The combination of Peerna's and Mann's artwork is harmonious – both artists have chosen nature to be their primary source of inspiration, elevated into aesthetics.

Jaanika Peerna's and Tuuli Mann's co-exhibition „The Silence of Forest Sounds“ in Haus gallery is open until September 27, 2013.

translated from Estonian: Maris Karjatse




Sep 5, 2013

Drawn to Experience : group show at POP gallery, Brisbane Australia

An International Drawing exhibition featuring works on paper, video and live performance.

Drawn works by Gosia Wlodarczak (Australia), Morgan O’Hara (New York), Tony Orrico (Chicago, US), (Mar Serinya (Barcelona, Spain), Jaanika Peerna (New York/Estonia)William Platz (QCA Australia/ New York),Rebecca Kinsey (Byron Bay, Australia) and (myself )Kellie O’Dempsey (Australia) will exhibit drawing as an immediate and direct mode of art making. Drawn to Experience is an open inquiry into where Performance Drawing may fit into a broader understanding of contemporary art production.

POP Gallery (Postgraduates and Other Projects) Queensland College of Art | Griffith University

84 Merivale Street,
South Brisbane,
Queensland 4101
Exhibition Dates:                          Thu, 12 September 2013 – Sat, 21 September 2013
Opening Event:                               Fri, 13 September 2013
Gallery Opening Hours:                 11am – 4pm, Thurs – Sat
Drawn to experience is a group exhibition of performed drawings that discuss multi-disciplinary practice of drawing: an active, expansive and inclusive act.
This exhibition endeavors to identify understandings and methods of image generation through performed drawing or Performance Drawing.  Performance Drawing, is physical, gestural and  enables an inclusive form of cultural interaction, which incorporates the artist, the act of drawing as performance and the body as conductor, audience, participant and/or model.
As an interdisciplinary exhibition Drawn to Experience will consist of works on paper, digital drawings, photographic/video performance documentation and a live drawing performance.
As a mode of investigation Performance Drawing unravels and explores notions of public and private space, corporeality and immediacy. Drawn to Experience considers the aleatoric process of drawing as an inclusive and interconnected form of cultural interaction between the artist, the act of drawing as performance and the audience/or model.

Aug 12, 2013

"The Silence of Forest Sounds" / Jaanika Peerna &Tuuli Mann in Tallinn, Estonia

Exhibition "The Silence of Forest Sounds" by Jaanika Peerna and Tuuli Mann and  is opening at Haus gallery in Tallinn on August, 21 at 18.00/ 6PM. The exhibition will be on view until September, 27.

There will be a live drawing performance by the artists at the gallery on August 27 at 18.00/6PM

Tuuli Mann is an artist based in Tallinn; Jaanika Peerna was born in Tallinn but has lived and worked as an artist in New York since 1998.

Tuuli is exhibiting her green watery acrylic paintings depicting types of forest in an abstract way while Jaanika brings her balck and white graphite and wax pigment drawings  of air movement  to the exhibition . Sound installation consisting of recordings of wind and forest sounds will be bonding the previously mentioned work into a new whole. Local/personal meets global/ all encompassing in this exhibition: the deep rooted trees meet with high winds in the sky.


gallery hours 
M-F 10-18
S 11-16

Haus Galerii

6419 471
Uus 17, Tallinn


May 13, 2013

Performance within The Expansive Field, Long Island, NY

Join SoFo artist in residence Christine Sciulli for a special evening of
multidisciplinary performance work within her installtionThe Expansive Field.
Sciulli has invited artist Jaanika Peerna to explore drawing with
movement in the light of her Barn Studio installation
as well as musician-author David Rothenberg to create a musical
collaboration  with the creatures of dusk and Sciulli’s projections in
the field.

Saturday 25 May 6-9 pm

The Expansive Field at South Fork Natural HistoryMuseum, 377 Sag-Bridge Tpk, Bridgehampton, Long Island, NY USA

see video of the performance here:

Detail from an article on the performance at the Southampton Press, May, 23 2013
Jaanika Peerna performing: collaboration with Christine Sciulli's light installation /photo Sciulli

Jaanika Peerna performing: collaboration with Christine Sciulli's light installation/ photo Sciulli

Jaanika Peerna performing: collaboration with Christine Sciulli's light installation /photo Sciulli
 Jaanika Peerna performing: collaboration with Christine Sciulli's light installation /photo Rothenberg

May 5, 2013

Silence Within Storms: video screening in East Village, NYC

Pop-Up, ONE NIGHT ONLY: May 10th, 9pm-10pm
Outdoor Video Screening
Corner of Avenue A and 2nd Street
East Village, NY

SILENCE WITHIN STORMS: Dianne Bowen and Jaanika Peerna

Reception:
May 10th, 2013, 9pm-10pm
2A Lounge, (upstairs)
65 Avenue A @ 2nd Street
East Village, NY

For further information  contact FreeEmerson@gmail.com

Artists Dianne Bowen and Jaanika Peerna are pleased to present a one night only pop-up video screening, “Silence Within Storms” featuring, “Speaking In Tongues”, by Dianne Bowen and “Vanishing Silence”, collaboration between Jaanika Peerna and Jane Thornquist. The Videos will be projected onto the side of a brick building on the corner of 2nd Street and Avenue A in The East Village, New York City. Using an outdoor platform, the works which were initially inspired by nature, return to the outdoors yet new surroundings. (Sound can be heard during the reception in the upstairs lounge from 9:30 pm -10 pm)

Dianne Bowen and Jaanika Peerna’s new work reveal the connecting line between the two artists; what lies within the silence of nature, time, elucidation of space, moments unnoticed. They investigate similar ideas from distinctly different perspectives. Jaanika Peerna explores the forces in nature that extend into the silence within, while Dianne Bowen investigates the audible and inaudible natural or man-made systems of communication and miscommunication. Working in multi-media including; drawing, installation, performance and video, Peerna incorporates dance and choreography. Bowen incorporates words influenced by the moment and process. There is a unique poeticism found in each as they push the boundaries of their chosen mediums. Their curiosity and sensitivity to the subtle or overt shifts of their environments allows these influences to inform the works direction as a compass seeking true North.

Timelines: group exhibition at Matteawan Gallery Beacon, NY

Timelines 
March 9 – April 29, 2013

curated by Karlyn Benson

Matteawan Gallery, Beacon NY USA

Opening Reception Saturday, March 9, 6-9 pm

Beacon, NY, March 4, 2013 - Matteawan Gallery is pleased to present its inaugural exhibition:
Timelines, featuring work by Matt Frieburghaus, Richard Kroehling, Jaanika Peerna, and Susan
Walsh. Timelines, which will run through April 7, 2013, deals with temporal issues and time-based art
making.

Matt Frieburghaus's work on the left and Jaanika Peerna Storm Series graphite drawing on the right / Timelines group show 2013

Mar 22, 2013

Vanishing Silence I solo exhibition

BeART
Garrison, New York

March 16 – April 7, 2013

By appointment only

For inquiries and appointment contact Kaija Korpijaakko
kaija@beart.us
917-612-4349

The exhibition consists of drawings tiny and big, room size video installation and site specific light installation.The artist is acting as an alchemist in the midst of the forces of nature and transforms wild winds, falling waters and tender air flow into works of art. Live dance/draw performance by Peerna and  Jane Thornquist adds another layer to Peerna's new exhibition.

 Jaanika Peerna is an Estonian-born artist living and working near New York since 1998. Her work encompasses drawings, videos and light installations often dealing with the theme of transitions in light, air, water and other natural phenomena. She is often involved in collaborative projects working with designers, dancers and musicians. She has exhibited her work extensively in the entire New York metropolitan area as well as in Paris, Tallinn, Lisbon, Sofia, Dubai, Honolulu, Novosibirsk and Rome. Her work is in numerous private collections in the US and Europe and was recently acquired by Fonds National d’Art Contemporain, Paris. Her work is represented by Masters & Pelavin Gallery in NYC, ARC Fine Art in CT and Haus Gallery in Tallinn, Estonia. www.jaanikapeerna.net

Video by NeinFilms of the opening celebrations: CLICK HERE



Feb 11, 2013

PARK: Toivo Raidmets & Jaanika Peerna : Exhibition/Live Performance

------------------------------------------------------------
Exhibition PARK
Toivo Raidmets- urban furniture
Jaanika Peerna - wall drawings/ performance

opening reception with live drawing performance
Feb. 19th 2013 at 17.00

Architecture- and Design Gallery,
Pärnu mnt 6, Tallinn, Estonia

the exhibition ends March, 10 2013

video of live drawing performance on the gallery window: click here
press for the exhibition:
Estonian TV evening NEWS : click here
Estonian State Radio interview: click here
Estonian Cultural Weekly interview: click here
------------------------------------------------------------
 Live drawing performance by Jaanika Peerna  at the opening of PARK.Photo:Ave Talu.
Jaanika Peerna's wall drawings and Toivo Raidmet's urban furniture designs

Architecture and Design Gallery from outside with window drawing

Opening of PARK, February 19th 2013 in Tallinn, Estoania

Peerna's wall drawings of air movement along the gallery walls



Looking out from the gallery through Peerna's window drawing
Arlene Tucker's review of the exhibition:

Benches
Arlene Tucker
March 23, 2013

 The inside has turned outwards.  Characteristic of their environmental and structural designs, Toivo Raidmets and Jaanika Peerna’s collaborative exhibition, titled “Park,” at the Architecture and Design Gallery in Tallinn, Estonia achieves visual inversion.  Understandings of interior are twisted out in their works, which combine design with fine art; they both challenge and engage viewers by actively juxtaposing action with stillness, organic lines with rectilinear lines and forms, the real and the imagined.  Despite the great force both Raidmets and Peerna carry from their prolific individual backgrounds, their debut exhibition sings of sweet harmony and graceful partnership.  During their creative process, they were in contact via the Internet.  New York based Peerna would email Raidmets in Tallinn who, in turn at times, would scan letters to convey his thoughts.  By carefully developing their digital dialogue, they were able to create a virtual creative play-space.  That is what you are supposed to do in a park. So play they did.

Multiple layers of dialogue are also clear in Peerna and Raidmets’ “Park.”  The façade of the gallery has large windows, essentially pulling the gallery’s interior into the street, but in this case all was covered with an opaque sponge-rolled white.  Locked out, the only parts to see in were through the striking hard lines Peerna made with the two artists’ names.  They appeared etched in a visual scream; loud, grating, high-pitched capital letters.  It was as if I could hear them shrieking, carved on both sides of the three-paneled wall of windows.  Clearly visible the names are intriguing; scratched high enough to both startle and entice bus passengers driving past Pärnu mnt 6, those in cars and pedestrians alike.  I took that call to action and headed inside.

As one enters the gallery, the sense of organization of the procession begins with Raidmets’ benches, which define the first space in an informal layout.  One is then greeted with a long rectangular shallow pool of water with an army of upright metal spears.  These elements combine to create the feel that one is now inside, yet outside, in a park.  This is a water fountain, here are the benches, somewhere in between are bushes and a bed of purple heathers.  My brain started to branch out and build on that iconic foundation of park elements as I walked through the grid of benches and stepped on imaginary pebbles.  The four-walled park, nonetheless, carried through to a public space’s fullest potential of being an area for congregation and relaxation.

From this pragmatic approach to displaying benches I could immediately sense that there were multiple dimensions to this gallery display yet also an immediate purpose for the show.  Indeed, the exhibition was to propose Raidmets’ bench designs for use in Tallinn's public parks.  He had asked Peerna to join him in creating an environment to display these benches.  They successfully created a space that simulates the happenings in a park- there were sitting, talking, pondering, and of course people watching.  The cohesive collaboration created a very interesting equation which I saw as ‘furniture design + fine art = city commission’.  To some worlds, whether it be the design, commercial, or fine arts, this is a taboo border to cross, but if one lets go their preconception of how art or even aesthetics at large should be, this interdisciplinary approach can produce more interesting work than traditional approaches.  Peerna, at first, was skeptical to the cross pollination of art worlds, but has now seen the merits after having worked on a few different projects that demand her to change hats from the snug fit of her fine art beret.  Raidmets breathed an air of comfort and confidence that makes him easy to work with.  Together they found a dynamic way of building.

 Even minutes before the gallery doors were opened a few last changes were made to the placement of the sleds.  Raidmets welcomed suggestions yet voiced his opinion on the necessity of straight lines, which in retrospect is perhaps his attraction to Peerna’s work, which bares no straight lines as opposed to his linear designs.  Nonetheless even in my short meeting with Raidmets I experienced a kind of dialogue and bodily banter where a sense of true collaboration was felt.  Peerna believes that this might come from his teaching background.  (Raidmets is head of Estonian Academy of Art’s Department of Interior Architecture and Furniture Design.)  Professors, good ones at least, always know how to ask the right question to pursue ideas, and Raidmets did that, but perhaps this is also just his way of letting curiosity be the impetus for creativity.  In the end, these constructed worlds create a stigma, but if given the chance it would be wise for makers and thinkers of all sorts to take the approach Raidmets and Peerna have and learn and grow from and with each other.  He is a doer and she is a doer- they are makers of the medium in the moment, separate and together.

 An artist's focus can change in collaborative situations.  Since Peerna was creating an environment for the benches to nest in that became her modus operandi or her point of reference.  Her drawing performance that inaugurated the exhibition set the tone and context for how one can view and experience the benches and drawings.  In the middle large window, she drew/danced/etched her windswept lines through the white paint.  The windows were covered with white paint (specially concocted by Peerna) to create better illumination for the benches, but the play between positive and negative space from the scratchings let the right amount of light and vision seep through.  Peerna emphasizes that she draws not dances, but in my view it’s like the chicken and the egg- one cannot exist without the other.  And Peerna is such a visceral artist that the physicality of her art making process happens organically.  She moved fluidly all the while having a pencil connected to her arm reaching the window, her new canvas.  These movements left marks of the direction her body was going and puffs of powder flew as her strokes made contact with the other.  Peerna mentioned in her opening words at the gallery that the winds carry and hold.  In this case it brought her back to her native Estonia to celebrate her mother’s birthday and to create this piece with Raidmets.  Nature does override in the end, so you might as well take the back seat and let the weather lead the way.

 Reenacting that familiar feel of a park isn’t easy to do, but Raidmets and Peerna charmed that feat with the concept of less is more.  They honed in on the primary elements of what a park embodies and allowed the viewer to embellish it with their imagination through synesthetic experiences such as sitting on the benches, feeling the wood beneath them, looking a the hand drawn curves swaying on the walls and hearing a windy ambient sound piece created by Peerna for the show.  As with any environment, the hierarchy of sounds builds and as more people entered the music of the wind hushed and the people roared.  The space transformed from being a gallery to a practical and immediate testing spot for urban furniture.  Towards the end of the evening as the visitors trickled out I saw the body language on the benches mimic as if we really were in Tammsaare Park.  Some people were languidly draped over the benches with legs outstretched and ankles crossed while others remained composed.  The two sleds on display, reminiscent of Alvar Aalto and Otto Korhonen’s bending chair legs from solid wood, brought us back to the season of snow.  A white room can evoke many thoughts especially in the middle of an Estonian winter, yet in this setting green doesn’t seem so far away.

 For some reason when I speak with a designer I usually ask more why questions, but when I speak with an artist I ask how.  To Raidmets I wondered, “Why did you use this material?” and to Peerna I asked, “How did you want to convey that feeling?”  Here is the play between functional and emotional.  Raidmets' main and only criteria for urban furniture is that it can withstand a good beating from a baseball bat.  Seeing that they are zinc coated park benches made out of oak and pine, I trust that they would survive, but I suggested to Raidmets he let us test it out next time.  (Do not bring a baseball bat to the exhibition.)  Juxtaposed to the sturdiness of straight lines come Peerna’s curves that allow one to breeze their way through the different bench styles as they sit in stillness.  “Park” is an inter-disciplinary installation that has multiple practical functions and evoke just as many daydreams.  As you sit in the gallery it is easy to travel in your head or just enjoy the presence.  What would you like to see as you sit on this bench and who would you like to sit with?  You need to take a rest anyways so you might as well, and experience a future bench built for you.  Perhaps one day we can enjoy them in the open outdoors.


Arlene Huey Tucker is a Taiwanese American artist born in 1980 in
Kaohsiung, Taiwan based currently in Helsinki, Finland.







Jan 29, 2013

Interview with Jaanika Peerna at ScribbleBlog.com

Jaanika Peerna reveals on her Soviet area art schooling, creative process and freshest projects at hand:

read the interview and see images HERE


The Question if Slow in NYC, curated by Alison Pierz

Alison Pierz presents a new StandPipe Project, A Question of Slow, at Skylight Gallery in Chelsea.

Please join us for our opening reception this Thursday, Dec. 13, 6-9pm.

A Question of Slow features work by six emerging and mid-career artists, each of whom are actively engaged in “slow” art-making processes or slow, contemplative viewing practices. An outgrowth of the various slow movements of the past 20 years – slow food, slow money – the exhibition encourages a new consciousness about the relationship between time and aesthetics.

Artists include:

Sean Boggs
Dan Durso
Jaanika Peerna
Yadir Quintana
Taney Roniger &
Rob Swainston.

A Question of Slow runs through Jan. 11, 2013


artinfo review of the show: click HERE