Sunday, October 21, 2012

CONGRATULATIONS to writer Craig Davidson, to literary arts & the written word!               

2012 London Film Festival "Best Picture" award goes to French-Belgian movie Rust and Bone  based on the short story collection of the same title as the movie and authored by Craig Davidson


(Photographs of the writer)

Goddamn, I'm tough.

Craig Davidson is a Canadian writer of short stories and novels.

His first book, The Preserve, was a horror novel written under a pseudonym.

Craig's first short story collection, Rust and Bone, was published in September 2005, by Penguin Books Canada.

(Below is an image of Canadian edition of the book, plus another picture of the author on the right)




Here, a poster of the award-winning French-Belgian movie...





(an old photograph of the writer)








Rust and Bone, Jacques Audiard's soaring French-language movie about love, loss and killer whales, won the best picture award at the London Film Festival on October 20, 2012.

This cinematic thriller/melodrama tells the story of a boxer (played by actor Matthias Schoenaerts) and a whale trainer (played by Oscar Award-winning actress Marion Cotillard), how the guy fells in love even as the woman suffers a tragic accident at work.

Rust and Bone (French language: De rouille et d'os) is a French-Belgian film based on Craig Davidson's  short story collection with the same name. The tale is of an unemployed 25-year-old boxer in love with a killer whale trainer.

My Recommendation
I highly recommend that we all read the book first before watching the movie adaptation.
Impressive new art center for Asia! On Oct. 6, 2012 afternoon, I made my first visit to Singapore's Gillman Barracks art area and spent over 3 hours there.






This art lover is so very impressed with the visionary, entrepreneurual and cultured government of Singapore for this new project to convert the former British colonial era Gillman Barracks into a complex for international and Singaporean art galleries and other artistic establishments.

Economic progress indeed isn't enough without cultural and spiritual renaissance!

This city-state of Singapore is serious about its bid to outshine Hong Kong an d others to become the arts hub of Asia.

Not all the art galleries and facilities have opened, but from what I have already seen during my October 6 afternoon visit, this Gillman Barracks will be a great success!

By the way, not many Singaporeans know yet the exact location of this place whether young or old, because it is a new redevelopment. But I was lucky to ride a taxi with a middle-aged driver who knew exactly the address I gave him, when I asked why he knew the place, he replied that he used to be a soldier and those were their military barracks! :)



Gillman Barracks
Address: 9 Lock Road, Singapore 108937
Opening Hours: 11:00-20:00 (Sunday until 18:00)
Closed on Monday
http://www.gillmanbarracks.com








Here are some of the galleries and works I saw in the Gillman Barracks complex (I went to all!):


This is a work by a Japanese artist inside a hall, all by itself....

kusama.jpg

Space Cottonseed

Address: 47 Malan Road, #01-24, Singapore 109444

This South Korean gallery has an on-going exhibit titled "Prelude" and will last up to today October 21, 2012. One of the artists I admire there based on his beautiful works is that of Lee Sea Hyun. Below is one of his works:

LEE SEA HYUN
Betweenn Red-84, 2009


Sundaram Tagore Gallery Singapore

Address: 5 Lock Road, #01-05, Singapore 108933

New York's Sundaram Tagore Gallery has numerous impressive works in Singapore, like some works below from "The Big Picture" photography exhibit now on-going up to Nov. 10, 2012. The photographs range from images of Hollywood and other celebrities to landscapes of various places worldwide, etc. Astounding variety, range and quality of works!

Photograph by SEBASTIÃO SALGADO
Sahara, Algeria (Man Praying), 2009




Photography by ANNIE LEIBOVITZ
David Bryne, Los Angeles, 1956





Hiroshi Senju at Sundaram Tagore Gallery Singapore
Photo below of his work by Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop




ROBERT LIDORI
Salle de Crimée Sud, (99) ANR.02.036, Salles de I'Afrigue, Aile du Nord - 1er étage, Château de Versailles, France, 1985





Mizuma Gallery

Address: 22 Lock Road, #01-34, Singapore 108939

This Tokyo-based gallery's Singapore branch in Gillman Barracks was showing a Korean artist Hyung Koo Kang's works when I visited, and I lingered on for quite a while to admire the paintings. I even bought an autographed book! Titled "Crossing Gazes", the solo exhibition of the newest pieces in Korean painter Hyung Koo Kang’s series of huge bigger-than-life portraits was quite impressive. Among my favorites were the paintings of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and others.



HYUNG KOO KANG
Audrey Hepburn, 2012



HYUNG KOO KANG
Gandhi, 2012




Partners & Mucciaccia

Address: 6 Lock Road, #02-10, Singapore 108934

From Picasso to the New Roman School The never-ending cult of beauty in contemporary art



GIORGIO DE CHIRICO
Italian Square, 1947/1972


The Drawing Room

Address: 5 Lock Road, #01-06, Singapore 108933

Exhibition

Short Memory

This event surveys most of the artists exhibiting with The Drawing Room, and gathers major works that represent dynamic inquiries into artistic formats and practices that happen within the mingling of cosmopolitan and arcane cultures in Manila. The artists' critical and experientially-grounded methods portray a specific Philippines in constant flux.

KAWAYAN DE GUIA
Self and the Other (2012)


Silverlens

Address: 47 Malan Road, #01-25, Singapore 109444

Silverlens' first art exhibit, which I was able to see on my visit, was that of Philippine artist Luis Lorenzana.
Photo below of his work by Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop




Other Gillman Barracks images below...