The Lady of Shalott 1888 Oil on Canvas John William Waterhouse |
Saturday, 20 November 2010
“[T]hings things always and memories I say them as I hear them murmur them in the mud” –– Samuel Beckett, How It Is (1964)
Miroslaw Balka’s box of darkness is disturbing in its historical echoes but beautiful as well. The Times
Miroslaw Balka’s black hole at Tate Modern is terrifying, awe-inspiring and throught-provoking. It embraces you with a velvet chill. The Guardian
The Unilever Series How It Is by Polish artist Miroslaw Balka is a giant grey steel structure with a vast dark chamber, which in construction reflects the surrounding architecture - almost as if the interior space of the Turbine Hall has been turned inside out. Hovering somewhere between sculpture and architecture, on 2 metre stilts, it stands 13 metres high and 30 metres long. Visitors can walk underneath it, listening to the echoing sound of footsteps on steel, or enter via a ramp into a pitch black interior, creating a sense of unease.
Underlying this chamber is a number of allusions to recent Polish history – the ramp at the entrance to the Ghetto in Warsaw, or the trucks which took Jews away to the camps of Treblinka or Auschwitz, for example. By entering the dark space, visitors place considerable trust in the organisation, something that could also be seen in relation to the recent risks often taken by immigrants travelling.
Balka intends to provide an experience for visitors which is both personal and collective, creating a range of sensory and emotional experiences through sound, contrasting light and shade, individual experience and awareness of others, perhaps provoking feelings of apprehension, excitement or intrigue.
Monday, 15 November 2010
annie
Cattrell works with a variety of materials and skills. She is drawn to working with glass because of its transparency and ability to reveal. Using different techniques she pushes the boundaries of can be achieved with glass, both physically and conceptually. Making the invisible visible and the ethereal solid, Cattrell offers a view of what is inside us and around us.
Her work captures moments in time, fleeting things, clouds on a particular day, a breath inside a human lung. Her subjects stem from her interest in areas such as neuroscience, anatomy and meteorology, and she is drawn to the fusion between science and art.
'I choose the familiar, for example a cloud, so whatever language you speak there is a kind of universal understanding. It is the transformation and freezing into three-dimensions of this iconographic subject matter that interests me: what happens when you contemplate something you think you know but shouldn't really be seeing this way. This three-dimensional vantage point allows the viewer to examine the subtle shifts and rhythms which ceaselessly occur in the natural world and within the body.'
iniva
(Institute of International Visual Arts)
Good online resource for talks, events, exhibitions, books and contemporary artists - both renowned and/or recently established.
http://www.iniva.org/home
e.g
Good online resource for talks, events, exhibitions, books and contemporary artists - both renowned and/or recently established.
http://www.iniva.org/home
e.g
Nilbar Güres (because it makes me smile)
Playing with a Watergun 2010 Photograph 180 X 120cm Nilbar Güres |
Using a variety of media including photography, collage, drawing, and textiles, Güres produces theatrical tableaux of women, moving between performance and the everyday. Her first solo show in the UK will run from 10 Dec - 5 Jan 2011.
Sunday, 14 November 2010
ernest
This is a picture of a picture of Gregorio Fuentes, the fisherman in The Old Man and the Sea - a story which Hemmingway wrote in Cuba in 1951 and which was the final work published in his lifetime, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954. He said it was 'the best I can write in all of my life'.
Found in a small fishing village, 2 hours from Havana |
I love this picture. I love the act of him throwing the net into the wind and the freedom with which it then moves, as if the great force of the sea is instilled within it. The power of the wind echoes that of the tide so that the net embodies the traveling white horses, that dance on the surface with the delicacy of lace despite the rising power beneath.
hemmingway
I visited his house in Cuba in the summer. It was wooden and there were cats and trees and globes and books. Infact there was the most exquisit collection of objects, preserved and suspended in time.
Tuesday, 9 November 2010
Thursday, 4 November 2010
Wednesday, 3 November 2010
after
Untitled (from Vanishing Point) 1998 Beeswax, porcelain, aluminium Valeska Soares |
Brazilian-born artist Valeska Soares has consistently transformed neutral environments into works of art, but unlike most installation art to date, Valeska’s work focuses on what happens beyond the space and time of the exhibition itself. In a way, her installations work as life-size models, oddly-scaled metaphors for events that could have happened long before the exhibition ever takes place. In Valeska’s installations, the spectator/participant seems to experience a split between real and representational time; you become aware of the immensity of your own daydream. Through a seemingly inexhaustible range of techniques, themes and strategies, Valeska’s work oscillates between materiality and memory, desire and decay, sensation and intoxication. Although she keeps a studio in Brooklyn, most of her work involves traveling and exposure to the environments for which she will produce works.
Untitled (from Fall) 1994 Cast beeswax and red roses Valeska Soares |
Timeline 1 (detail) 2010 31 book pages, copper wire Length 19'10" Valeska Soares |
Untitled (from After, Mattress II) 2008 Hand carved marble Valeska Soares |
Tuesday, 2 November 2010
collective memory and consciousness
Unland: audible in the mouth 1998 Wood, thread, hair 800 X 750 X 3150mm Doris Salcedo |
Over a period of three years, Salcedo traveled to the northern heartland of Colombia’s civil war and spoke to children who had witnessed the murder of their parents. These testimonies inspired a series of three sculptures given the collective title Unland. Conjoining two fragmented tables, this work suggests the dysfunction caused by extreme trauma. "We spend our life around tables and their familiarity helps to draw you in", Salcedo has said. "Yet these objects have been forcibly united... and appear to be like the mutated remains of an accident".
While Salcedo's sculptures are concerned with the victims of violence in her own country, they are not bound by this frame of reference. In a much wider sense they deal with the life of anyone who has been bereaved and the manner in which those individual experiences can be conveyed and understood by others. At the same time, she is preoccupied by the formal language of sculpture and its material presence for the viewer.
Unland: the orphans tunic (detail) 1998 Wood, hair, woven cloth Doris Salcedo |
Salcedo addresses the question of forgetting and memory, taking ordinary household items and transforming them into memorials. The seemingly mundane table when considered closely, captures the viewer’s imagination in its unexpected, haunting visual and material presence. An everyday piece of furniture is in fact made of two destroyed tables joined together and covered with a whitish veil of fabric, presumably the orphan’s original tunic. Upon even closer inspection, hundreds of small human hairs appear to be the thread that is attaching the tunic to the table. The structure of the table can be equated to the body. If the tunic is like a skin then the table gains a metaphoric presence as body, not now of an individual orphan but an orphaned community. Salcedo’s Unland is a memory sculpture, presenting the past of her own country of Colombia to the international art audience.
“The way that an artwork brings materials together is incredibly powerful. Sculpture is its materiality. I work with materials that are already charged with significance, with meaning they have required in the practice of everyday life…then, I work to the point where it becomes something else, where metamorphosis is reached.” DS
“The silent contemplation of each viewer permits the life seen in the work to reappear. Change takes place, as if the experience of the victim were reaching out…The sculpture presents the experience as something present- a reality that resounds within the silence of each human being that gazes upon it.” DS
http://www.tate.org.uk/research/tateresearch/tatepapers/04spring/unland_paper.htm
fleet
Bourgeois’ new works express both fragility and anxiety, and ultimately optimism. As is typical of her art, they seek a reconciliation of opposites, of hard with soft, geometric with organic, enigma with familiarity, and trauma with restoration: ‘I am trying to seek a balance between the extremes that I feel. I want to be reasonable.’ A series of standing sculptures (all 2007) continue the processing of the contents of her wardrobe as raw materials, a practice begun by the artist in the mid-nineties. In these new works, Bourgeois has re-stitched, draped and stuffed her clothes to create abstract forms, which she has then cast in bronze and painted. The resulting works are reminiscent of her early personages of the 1940s and 1950s. Bourgeois sees the folds, knots and orifices of these bronzes as suggestive of maternal nurturing and warmth, yet the sculptures’ whiteness and extremes of shape are also unsettling.
Untitled 2007 Bronze painted white, steel 233.6 X 48.2 X 30.4cm Louise Bourgeois |
Hauser & Wirth also exhibited Nothing to Remember (2004 – 2006), two 22 page portfolios of coloured images and text on top of hand-drawn music manuscript paper. It followed from an earlier book, Ode à l ‘Oubli (Ode to Forgetfulness), which Bourgeois made entirely out of fabric, using the linens and clothing remnants from her past. The words and images in Nothing to Remember are tentative and delicate, conveying the significance and fleetingness of memories.
http://www.hauserwirth.com
process over object?
Gestures of Resistance
http://mocc.pnca.edu/exhibitions/1278/
Monday, 1 November 2010
droog
Knotted Chair 1996 Carbon and aramid fibres, epoxy resin 50 X 64 X 74cm Marcel Wanders |
This lightweight chair combines industrial techniques and handcrafting. A thread constructed of aramid and carbon fibres, is knotted into the shape of a chair and then impregnated with epoxy resin and hung in a frame to dry, leaving the final form in the hands of gravity.
body
curation
http://www.mariangoodman.com
This gallery comprises solo and collective exhibitions of some of my favourite artists.
This gallery comprises solo and collective exhibitions of some of my favourite artists.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)