Recent Films such as Django
Unchained directed by Quentin Tarantino and former Turner prize winner
Steve McQueen’s 12 Years have brought the horrific history of
slavery into focus. Talking at the Toronto press conference of the film McQueen
stated that “It’s one thing to read about slavery, to have these illustrations
– but when you see it on celluloid and within a narrative, it does something
different starts a conversation, wonderful, excellent, it’ll be about time…
Yes, race is involved, but it goes beyond that.” In fact McQueen goes even
further stating that the film, which includes harrowing scenes of extreme
violence, is a “film about love…there is a lot of pain in love sometimes and
you have to get through it. It’s the journey of Solomon Northup, who gets back
to his family.”
Sunday, 22 December 2013
Saturday, 2 November 2013
Daniel Silver’s Dig
Katee Woods examines a derelict site near Tottenham Court Road and comes to some surprisingly Freudian conclusions about the lost civilisation she finds there.
Emerging from the derelict remains of the old Odeon site,
Artangel’s latest commission Dig is
presented as an archaeological excavation, unearthing hundreds of culturally diverse
statues of human-like form. The arrangement of limbs and partial body parts is both
museum-like and reminiscent of a butcher’s shop, yet without the context of the
larger sculpture (that is to assume these are parts of a whole), these cuts of
meat often remain unidentifiable. This sense of mystery and the unknown
pervades throughout the exhibition.
Sunday, 27 October 2013
Nathan James' Punchlines
Garageland reviewer Joe Turnbull pays a visit to Nathan James' exhibition Punchlines at KK Outlet and asks: 'just because the punchline's obvious, does that make it any less hilarious?'
It has been estimated that we are exposed to over 3000
advertisements every day. Small wonder then that our brains develop certain
filtering mechanisms to deal with such a bombardment of images. Nathan
James is all too aware of this, and in Punchlines
he exploits it ruthlessly. On first glance his lush oil paintings Turning on the Water Works, Spring Break
Fo'ever and Picnic Panic depict
the voluptuous, too-perfect curves of a typical airbrushed ad or Hollywood pin-up.
It's only once you take a step back that you realise these seductive figures
are topped with grotesque cartoon faces, often contorted into guffawing poses.
Turning on The Water Works (2013) and Hey Girl (2013) |
Monday, 21 October 2013
A Conversation with Beth Fox
Garageland reviewer Gala Knörr catches up with an old classmate to ask about the pitfalls of one-liner art and for some logistical solutions to transporting oversized Toblerone pieces.
I met Beth Fox whilst studying in the Central Saint Martins College of Art Master of Fine Art program a couple of years ago, a course on which numerous personalities, styles, mediums collided into one big ball of stress, nicotine addiction, thesis writing and art critiquing.
I met Beth Fox whilst studying in the Central Saint Martins College of Art Master of Fine Art program a couple of years ago, a course on which numerous personalities, styles, mediums collided into one big ball of stress, nicotine addiction, thesis writing and art critiquing.
Her work always stuck out
when walking around the studios – extremely aware of its own flaws, almost
innocently proud of its lack of craftsmanship and reflective of a humorous approach
to how ridiculous life on the frontiers of the art world can sometimes be. When
needed to give a lecture about her work to her peers, she simply imitated word-for-word
the lecture of her previous classmate in front of the incredulous faces of her colleagues. From that moment on, I knew she would be
one to watch.
Friday, 18 October 2013
A Snapshot of Frieze London
Friday, 11 October 2013
Fragile but Never Tenuous
Recalling the exhibition In This Fragile Place at Vyner Street Gallery, Joe Turnbull asks what it was that wove the works together so well when so many group exhibitions fall flat.
Ineffectively
curated multi-artist exhibitions either hang together awkwardly, tenuously
strung up by a single common thread, or are crassly bunched together by a
homogenising theme. In this Fragile Place
at Vyner Street Gallery does both and neither at the same time. The result of a
long and collaborative process by the three exhibiting artists, the show
benefits from this more organic way of working, making the symbiosis between
the pieces feel natural and complimentary rather than forced. And it is this
sense of process which shines through, albeit in a haunting milky half-light,
in each of the finished works.
Sunday, 6 October 2013
Casually Perfect: Jo Addison at Tintype Gallery
Burrowed between a taxidermist and a nail
parlour on Islington’s Essex Road, Tintype’s new gallery space is holding its
first exhibition, Jo Addison’s Not Trees and People. Travis Riley braves the
startlingly middle-class Islington Streets to find out more.
Unkk (2013) |
Through
the gallery’s colossal new front window a display of eight small pieces, simply
hung, can be seen. The most obtrusive work in the show, the satisfyingly named Unkk (2013), is a plywood protrusion
from the left wall, in the shape of a semi-circular prism. Whilst the bottom of
the work is suspended just off the floor, the flat top of the piece is at seat
height and a bite has been taken out of its edge.
Saturday, 5 October 2013
A Conversation with Teresa Grimes of Tintype Gallery
Travis Riley talks with Teresa
Grimes co-director of Tintype Gallery about the benefits and the bores of
moving a gallery across London.
Morgan Wong's Performance: Filing Down a Steel Bar Until a Needle is Made at Tintype's new gallery space. |
My first visit to Tintype found
me wandering the backstreets of Clerkenwell. It took three passes up and down
St Cross Street to find the gallery, hidden away in a little upstairs room.
The gallery’s new home,
resplendent on Islington’s Essex Road between a taxidermist and a nail salon
does not succumb to the same criticism. Before its conversion to gallery the
property was a haberdashery shop called ‘Sew Fantastic’ – though in its new
guise this is tough to imagine. The gallery’s façade, framed in ornate stonework, has been fitted with a colossal new
window, looking in on pristine white walls.
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
The Devil In All Of Us: Michael Landy’s Saints Alive
On a visit to the National Gallery, Garageland reviewer Bethany Pope notices a peculiar change befall the viewers of Michael Landy's self-flagellating saints.
Saints Alive by Michael Landy is an astonishing mixture of the new and the
old. The theme is startlingly appropriate for an artist who made his first mark
with a work centered around a saint-like rejection of material
goods, his startling performance piece Breakdown (2001).
Michael Landy gathered all of his belongings together, from furniture and books
to birth certificate, piled them into a pyre, and set them alight – a visible rejection
of the consumerist world. One could view this accessible National Gallery piece
as a natural continuance of that theme.
Friday, 30 August 2013
A Distant Echo of the Body Electric
Stopping off at Calvert 22, East London's foundation for Russian and Eastern European art, Garageland Reviewer Joe Turnbull finds he has to listen very closely to hear the whispers of the body electric.
What was once a vociferous mantra of anti-communism is now
just a whisper; a muted spectre of Cold War propaganda. Nevertheless, it
remains imprinted on the western cultural psyche like a faded tattoo. Nowhere
is this more manifest than in the curation of exhibitions containing artwork
from the wrong side of the Iron Curtain. When presenting work from the former
Soviet states, galleries all too often either exhibit work that is tantamount
to state-funded propaganda or, as has been the case more recently, present work
that stiflingly critiques the censorship and oppression of those regimes through
coded Aesopian symbolism.
Friday, 23 August 2013
The Animal in the Gallery
Over the years a veritable menagerie of live animals
has been introduced into gallery spaces in the name of art. In an exploration
of the topic Travis Riley meets some birds, a coyote, a fox, an elephant and 12
horses.
In his work Untitled, 1967 shown at Rome’s Galleria l’Attico, Jannis Kounellis exhibited paintings with artificial
flowers and birdcages containing live birds. In images of the exhibition the
cages are shown stacked on either side of a canvas with three, cotton,
leaf-like forms stuck to its centre. The cages form a
considerable part of the material of the installation; black and white
photographs show the walls of the gallery space marked with a grid of shadows. What
the pictures cannot show is the inevitable clamour and aviary aroma that comes
with the presence of the animals.
Wednesday, 21 August 2013
Der Blaue Reiter at Lenbachhaus, Munich
Visiting Munich Garageland reviewer Liza Weber takes in Gabriele Münter's staggering expressionist donation to Lenbachhaus and wonders where exactly Kandinsky's pianist has got to.
Franz Marc, Blaues Pferd I (Blue Horse I), 1911 |
On turning eighty years old Gabriele Münter
gave, rather than received, an inestimable gift. In 1957 to Munich’s Lenbachhaus
or, more accurately, to the world, she donated 90 oil paintings, 24 glass
paintings, 116 watercolours and coloured drawings, 160 drawings, 28 sketchbooks
and an entire collection of prints. Their corners confessed not the signature
of her modest umlauted ‘M’ however, but rather nine upper case letters spelling
that reddened name ‘KANDINSKY’.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Like A Monkey With A Miniature Cymbal
Rhys Coren, Smile/Drop the base soundscape, 2013 |
All of the works in this show hold a sense of the continuous. Loops populate the gallery space, they are seen in film and paint, in sound and action, but in each instance, just before the loop becomes an exercise in futility, everything is transformed and filled with a sense of obsessive enjoyment. Paintings are worked over again and again and references are made to the heroic and to simple everyday endeavours.
Thursday, 8 August 2013
Their Own Special Creations
Alex Michon raids her dressing up box of
reminiscences to review Club to Catwalk at the Victoria & Albert Museum, an exhibition full of fashion-tastic hedonism.
'That's
the effect of living backwards,' the Queen said kindly: 'it always makes one a
little giddy at first--'
'Living backwards!' Alice repeated in great
astonishment. 'I never heard of such a thing!'
'--but there's one great
advantage in it, that one's memory works both ways.'
'I'm sure MINE only works
one way,' Alice remarked. 'I can't remember things before they happen.'
'It's a
poor sort of memory that only works backwards,' the Queen remarked.’ Alice
Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Carroll
Tuesday, 6 August 2013
The Trouble with Counter-Culture
Garageland Reviewer Joe Turnbull's report from The Trouble
with Counter-Culture talk at the ICA, in which it turns out that counter-culture
is indeed very troubled.
The trouble with counter-culture is that it's difficult to define.
Any attempts to pigeonhole and demarcate could arguably be the first step in
the mainstreaming process that neuters and assimilates it.
The trouble with counter-culture is its hegemonic cultural
counterpart is not monolithic but fluid and diffuse. Counter-culture must constantly change
and adapt to remain effective.
The trouble with counter-culture is it is such a complex and
diverse concept that a one and a half hour talk could never satisfyingly
address it.
Friday, 2 August 2013
Museum of Contemporary African Art
Garageland Reviewer Marianna Michael takes us on a guided tour of Meschac Gaba's banknote-stuffed Museum of Contemporary African Art and leaves us time to play with the board games and building blocks.
The Draft and Architecture Rooms |
The mingling sounds of building blocks crashing to the ground and playful laughter radiate from entrance of Meschac Gaba’s much anticipated exhibition at Tate Modern, a bewildering draw proffered to those about to enter.
Born in 1961 Cotonou, Benin, Gaba conceived the
concept of the Museum of Contemporary African Art during a residency at
the Rijksakademie, Amsterdan in 1996. The now completed work, a 12-room
display, was developed between 1997-2002 and has recently been acquired by Tate
Modern.
Wednesday, 31 July 2013
A Beautiful World of Googly Eyes and Jelly Fish
A visit to Tate Modern finds Cathy Lomax pondering the existence of an underwater black Atlantis. This is her review of Ellen Gallagher's AxME, a show about a world of beautiful liberation.
Ellen Gallagher employs multiple art-making personalities in order to convey the concerns that interest her. In AxME (say it out loud to get it) her solo show at Tate Modern, she paints, prints, collages, draws, sculpts, films and installs in order to tell us about the strange and cruel stereotyping of being other (and more particularly black) and her fantasy about escaping this and becoming immersed in a world of beautiful liberation.
Ellen Gallagher, Wiglette from DeLuxe, 2004 |
Ellen Gallagher employs multiple art-making personalities in order to convey the concerns that interest her. In AxME (say it out loud to get it) her solo show at Tate Modern, she paints, prints, collages, draws, sculpts, films and installs in order to tell us about the strange and cruel stereotyping of being other (and more particularly black) and her fantasy about escaping this and becoming immersed in a world of beautiful liberation.
Monday, 29 July 2013
Suppose a Salon
Alex Michon visits the grand confines of Chelsea College's banqueting hall, the meeting place of the Suppose a Salon /Symposium, and learns of a recipe that she's eager to try out.
Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas |
Where
do stoner culture, lesbian sex, food, burlesque nipple tassels and high art modernism converge? These items were all on the agenda at the Suppose A Salon /Symposium which was held in conjunction with the Suppose An Eyes
exhibition currently at Transition Gallery.
Friday, 26 July 2013
Love, Language and Contagious Diseases
After a circuit of Heather Phillipson's corporeal Baltic Centre exhibition, Garageland reviewer Iris Priest leaves the art behind for a guided tour of Newcastle's backstreets.
I
am sat with three strangers, all of us deeply inclined on pillows. My spot is
still warm from the previous occupant and their lingering body heat stirs a
simultaneity of comfort and unease in me.
This is an apt beginning to Heather
Phillipson’s exhibition at the Baltic centre Yes, surprising is existence in the post-vegetal
cosmorama a show that oscillates between states of bodily and intellectual uncertainty,
playfully testing the boundaries of self and other and occasionally obsessing
over issues of personal hygiene and love.
Sunday, 21 July 2013
An Ascent of the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion
Today we follow Marianna Michael on a precarious clamber up the 2013 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion designed by Sou Fujimoto.
Walking through the green fields of Kensington Gardens my eye is caught by the distant emergence of a white scaffold. Squinting through the blinding sun it is just possible to make out people trespassing on the construction site. On coming closer, however, the structure represents something entirely different. It is a building, a work by architect Sou Fujimoto, and an irresistibly delicate piece of architectural design.
Walking through the green fields of Kensington Gardens my eye is caught by the distant emergence of a white scaffold. Squinting through the blinding sun it is just possible to make out people trespassing on the construction site. On coming closer, however, the structure represents something entirely different. It is a building, a work by architect Sou Fujimoto, and an irresistibly delicate piece of architectural design.
Tuesday, 2 July 2013
Parker Portending: Cornelia Parker at Frith Street Gallery
Liza Weber ducks into Cornelia Parker's Frith Street Gallery exhibition to escape Soho's sudden influx of riot police.
It was the drone of a police helicopter overhead, not the Star of Bethlehem, that led me to Frith Street Gallery 17:00 BST on the 11th June 2013. Paying homage to British sculptor and installation artist Cornelia Parker was, befittingly, met with breaking news of local criminal activity: 'Riot Police Storm Soho G8 Protest Squat'.
It was the drone of a police helicopter overhead, not the Star of Bethlehem, that led me to Frith Street Gallery 17:00 BST on the 11th June 2013. Paying homage to British sculptor and installation artist Cornelia Parker was, befittingly, met with breaking news of local criminal activity: 'Riot Police Storm Soho G8 Protest Squat'.
Prison Wall Actract (A Man Escaped), 2012-2013 |
Where Parker was exhibiting – amongst other works – Prison Wall Abstract (A Man Escaped) 2012-13 in Frith Street, a stone’s throw away in Beak Street, protesters were staging a ‘Carnival Against Capitalism’. It seemed that in Soho the heretofore unnoticed was, quite literally, being rallied into high relief. For Cornelia Parker’s Pavement Cracks (City of London) 2012-13 are not forgotten underfoot, but are rather elevated to ankle level. We walk precariously amongst the fractures.
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Easy Does It
A visit to Aid & Abet in Cambridge in which Corinna Spencer meets a toothless patchwork snake and a money cactus.
Kevin Hunt, The Money Cactus, 2013 |
Leaning, balancing and quietly standing while the trace of 'us' is caught just out of the corner of the eye. This is what happens when visiting Easy Does It at Aid & Abet.
These objects are familiar and have an air of ease about them. Their installation is beautiful and uncomplicated. It avoids any hint of clutter or sense that they are detritus. They have been purposefully and painstakingly placed in relation to one another, and to the space, and the approaching visitor.
Wednesday, 26 June 2013
Notes From Venice: The Natural History Museum
Annabel Dover, our Garageland Venice Correspondent, continues her guided tour of this year's Venice Biennale. Today we enjoy a very educational trip to the Natural History Museum. Click here for previous Notes From Venice (Manet Returns to Venice & Bedwyr Williams' The Starry Messenger).
The Natural History Museum of Venice is a fantastic place to visit with or without Biennale art. A long thin room with bottle-glass windows houses ceiling high cabinets of flayed geese, legions of finches, herbariums and rocks. It also houses the least successful artwork, a twee paper cut out of plant silhouettes, draped over a botanical album.
The Natural History Museum of Venice is a fantastic place to visit with or without Biennale art. A long thin room with bottle-glass windows houses ceiling high cabinets of flayed geese, legions of finches, herbariums and rocks. It also houses the least successful artwork, a twee paper cut out of plant silhouettes, draped over a botanical album.
Friday, 21 June 2013
Venetian Magic: An Overview of This Year's Biennale
As a Venice first timer I found the whole experience of the Biennale pretty exciting. I am also suffering from the feeling that I have missed out on so much, and desperately want to go back.
One of the first openings I went to really set the scene, an enchanting Antoni Tàpies exhibition hosted at the Museo Fortuny. Tàpies work was shown alongside the museum collection, a stunning selection of mysterious artefacts, dresses and paintings that belonged to the nineteenth century designer and art collector Mariano Fortuny.
From the Museo Fortuny collection |
Sunday, 16 June 2013
Notes From Venice: Caffè Florian and Bedwyr Williams' The Starry Messenger
Annabel Dover, our Garageland Venice Correspondent, continues her guided tour of this year's Venice Biennale. Today we enjoy a dalliance in Caffè Florian followed by a visit to Bedwyr Williams' exhibition. Click here for previous Notes From Venice.
As I walk past the heavy damask curtains of Caffè Florian I see the glittering diamond necklace and bitten lip of an illicit affair. The lagoon fills St. Mark's square past my knees and the couple are stranded in a red velvet booth, surrounded by the heavy scent of bougainvillea and cigarillo.
Friday, 14 June 2013
Quarry at IMT Gallery
Corinna Spencer's sense of discovery and adventure take her to IMT Gallery, where Charles Danby and Rob Smith are showing an examination of Robert Smithson's 1969 work Chalk Mirror Displacement.
This collaboration between Charles Danby and Rob Smith seems to be one of travel, seeking, doing and perhaps some longing for Robert Smithson's notion of 'non site', something that may well be unattainable. The project is based upon an exploration of the site of Smithson’s 1969 work Chalk Mirror Displacement.
I imagine excavation and discovery but with a methodical zeal and delight. The main room of the gallery is deceptively empty, but looking closer you can see the Smithson quarry in a huge barely visible image on one long curved wall. The rotating panoramic view moves across the walls, then onto the smooth side of a split chalk, then across the floor and over me.
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
Art of Ephemera
Camden Arts Centre’s posthumous exhibition of Dieter Roth’s
work is headlined by his video diaries (Solo
Scenes, 1997-8). The room is filled with TV sets, stacked five-high on
simple wooden shelving units. The footage is at once banal and compelling. Roth
goes about his day-to-day life – eating, sleeping, working and using the toilet
– with a tragicomic circularity and lack of incident. His age is apparent, as
is our knowledge that this is the margin of his life; that he died making this
work somehow doesn’t seem incidental.
Dieter Roth, Flat Waste, 1975-6/1992 |
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Eli Cortiñas: Awkward Studies and a Decent Take on Serious Matters
Confessions With an Open Curtain, 2011 (still from single-channel video) |
The film Confessions with an Open Curtain is my favourite piece in this show. So much can be gleaned from the back of a person, perhaps she is waiting for someone, or someone has just left her alone. Maybe she has entered a room to find it unexpectedly empty. Even emotions like shock and sadness can be seen through a posture viewed from the back. All of these are possibilities for the women on the screen.
Friday, 7 June 2013
Notes From Venice: Ostaria al Garanghelo and Manet Returns to Venice
Annabel Dover, our Garageland Venice Correspondent, gives us her guided tour of this year's Venice Biennale. Today we start with Manet and a light meal; stay-tuned, there's more to come.
'Food first, then morality' Bertolt Brecht.
When I posed in the RA life room years ago, my fellow subjects were the flayed smuggler in a case and Stubbs' horse cast, respectively crouching and standing nobly. These two figures bring to my mind Venetian speciality cuisine: Sfilacci di cavallo (frayed, dried horse) a smugglers treat, and the mud loving goby fish with its gormless expression, floating open mouthed along the milky waters of Venice, squeezed into a net and onto the plates of Ostaria al Garanghelo, a small, cosy restaurant furnished with knick-knack tat, Venetian glass lights and friendly waiters and waitresses.
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
The Scandalized Mask at Josh Lilley
A couple of strides in from the door of Josh Lilley Gallery is
a faux-wood, round-legged, knee-high coffee table. Its surface has been
causally strewn with Hello and Men’s Health magazines. Behind it, bright-blue
upholstered chairs with grey legs are arranged in twos, back-to-back. More
seating lines the walls, breaking at the corner to make room for a potted
plant. This is, without doubt, the quintessential waiting room, but there is no
receptionist sat at the gallery’s white desk, and the space is eerily still.
Friday, 31 May 2013
Subodh Gupta: What does the vessel contain, that the river does not
Cast ashore Savile Row’s Hauser & Wirth, Subodh
Gupta’s What does the vessel contain,
that the river does not is driftwood…Keralan found, London abounding.
From India’s muddied docks, Gupta’s seventy-foot boat
has drifted upstream to this post-industrial, fluorescent-lit gallery space,
where the detritus of its migration is pellucid. That is, the artist’s
weathered vessel is the receptacle of a tired soul in transit. Caught between belonging
and displacement, arriving and departing, it is the embodiment of intermediate
existence. Liminality is Gupta’s poetry.
Tuesday, 28 May 2013
Scott of the Hepworth
William Scott (1913-1989) is one of the forgotten painters of twentieth century British modernism, something that The Hepworth Wakefield is trying to correct in a show that mainly focuses on his almost abstract work of the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Scott's paintings of this period feature reoccurring motifs – frying pans, pears, bowls, kettles and fish – but rather than depicting them in a downbeat kitchen sink manner they exemplify the thing that makes British modernism compelling, they bring a pragmatic realism into the abstract mix.
William Scott, Still Life with Orange Note, 1970 |
Wednesday, 8 May 2013
Four Sculptures on the Top Floor of Tate Modern
There is much more to the current exhibition of Saloua
Raouda Choucair’s work at the Tate than just four sculptures. Her geometric
paintings are evocative of traditional Islamic design and yet are curiously
contemporary and her nude studies are colourful, vibrant and patterned, yet
unremittingly flat and slyly redolent of recognisably famous compositions;
however, in the case of this blog post, there are four sculptures I would
like to focus upon, three of which are Choucair’s.
Poem Wall, 1963-5 |
Wednesday, 1 May 2013
Jimmy De Sana: Suburban Color Sex Pictures
Perfectly sparse in its hang, Wilkinson Gallery has given these photographs the right amount of room. The viewer has to move deliberately to the next photograph, there is no feeling of rushing on from one image to another. Often these works need, or even demand, a double take. What may at first seem ridiculous becomes serious and darkly violent before then tipping into the surreal.
Saturday, 27 April 2013
Jane and Louise Wilson: Unfolding The Aryan Papers
There are layers to this film but the work isn't enhanced by an attempt to unstick them. Trying to pick the separate narratives apart was only a distraction when I should instead have immersed myself in the visual illusion of the installation. When I allowed the stills, moving image and the voice of the actress to wash over me, slowly the retelling of fictional and real stories became defined.
In the film the actress Johanna ter Steege talks about her time with Kubrick during the original pre-production for his unfinished Holocaust film Aryan Papers, intercut with the story of a highly risky romantic relationship. At times the footage seamlessly illustrates the story or the memory, and at magical points, the images stretching out to the left and right of me into infinity manage to convey both.
Corinna Spencer
Thursday, 25 April 2013
On the Stage with Gert and Uwe Tobias
The way that Romanian twin brothers Gert and Uwe Tobias make
their art is akin to a ‘ballet’ explains the curator of their show at the
Whitechapel Gallery in London. This dance of making means that each brother’s
individual mark becomes indistinguishable in the twists and turns of process
that go towards their combined output, which includes print, sculpture and
collage.
Untitled, 2012 |
The gallery is painted in a nostalgic Farrow and Ball style teal,
which gives a tasteful 50s edge to the folksy atmosphere of the work. Blocks of
dense wood-blocked ink in midnight blue, mustard and the aforementioned teal
are the ground for figurative motifs – thistles, owls, strange duck-footed
creatures – characters from the grimmest of fairy tales. Other works
collage cut-outs against techno grids or are formed from misshapen hunks of
clay balanced with sprigs of brittle foliage. The spiky dried-out bones of
nature also appear as motifs on large prints where the balance between
figuration/abstraction and nature/culture is played out in a way that brings to
mind the mid-century British painter Graham Sutherland.
Untitled, 2012 |
The Tobias' fairy tale aesthetic resonates with layer on
layer references – Brueghel, colour field abstraction, Chinoiserie – but ultimately
it’s hard to avoid the feeling that the whole thing is retrogressive, wistfully
looking back to a time when artists created beautiful things for a bohemian
elite. The work averts its eyes from political turmoil and financial meltdown and
would much rather be costumes and backdrops for Diagaliev’s Ballet Russes. Of
course the Tobias brothers do investigate the oppositions between old and new and
nature and culture, but ultimately this is a classic case of (Eastern European
cabin in the woods) style over (meaningful concept driven) content.
Untitled, 2012 |
Cathy Lomax
Friday, 19 April 2013
Schwitters Speaks My Dialect
Schwitters was born in Hannover 1887, and died in Kendal 1948. My father was born in Hanover 1951. A Tibetan Buddhist Iconographer, he now lives in the Lake District and pops into Kendal for his printing.
His recent afternoon visit to me in London
found him on an RA exhibition epic – Constable et al. Manet, Mori – followed by
commercial Cork Street, where we happened upon Schwitters at Bernard Jacobson
Gallery. He recalled how thirty years ago, portfolio in hand, he walked this same
street to make it big, only to find he did not fit. His story is not unlike
Schwitters’ who, decades earlier on the neighboring steps of Trafalgar Square,
jotted in his notebook, ‘Why did the director of the National Gallery not even want to see me? He
does not know that I belong to the avant-garde in art. That is my tragedy.’
Das Kegelbild, 1921 |
I would like to think that Schwitters’
sense of belonging grew out of his artistic metamorphoses of materials. He
belonged to Merz, his ‘principle of
equal evaluation of the individual materials’. He fitted somewhere in amongst
his old bus tickets, miniature plastic dogs, paper doilies, and scrubbing
brush, and through collage, the process of sticking it all together, he found
harmony. Yet within the arcade game aesthetic of Das Kegelbild (The Skittle Picture, 1921) wooden bobbins lie like cannons with miniature toy sheep as their
fodder. Schwitters’ art was a sacrificial game.
Indeed what Tate Britain fail to mention
in their current large-scale retrospective of Schwitters is that he was
pitifully poor, having once traded a portrait of local, Francis O’Neill, now
hanging in Kendal’s Abbot Hall Art Gallery, for a loaf of bread. To buy an
apple was a big deal. Dealers at Bernard Jacobson Gallery now value his smaller
than A5 ‘fourth one from the left’ collage at ‘forty’ – that is, my father and I
overheard their receptionist quote to a briefcase customer, forty thousand pounds. Oh how Schwitters must be
laughing, with Ursonate’s fümmsböwötääzää and rakete rinnzekete’s, from his beyond, for Schwitters
espoused British sarcasm; chewing on his success at an annual Ambleside flower
show he once spat, ‘Mrs Vartis's roses got the first prize and Mr Bickerstaff's
Chrisanthemum [sic] the second. So I got two prizes. The only thing is that the
prizes are low 1½ gns. But the honour! People here know now that I am able to
paint flowers.’
Flowers, portraits, Lake District fells, Schwitters
could paint. But what will he be remembered for? The Curator Emma Chambers
choice of Schwitters publicity image seems somewhat of a spent salute to pop art;
EN MORN’s (1947) Barbie is the Tate’s
toy. She kindly paves the way for the pop generation of Richard Hamilton and
Eduardo Paolozzi. Yet when Chambers, recently in her blog, opened up her
search of the mystery Barbie to her readers, she soon received an answer from a
Mr John Eaton who
found the advertisement ‘These are the things we are fighting for’ for Community
Silverplate cutlery in which she appears as a teacher representing ‘the right to teach
truth … not propaganda’. The question is, is the Gallery’s advertisement
of a ‘retrospective’ truth or propaganda?
These reservations are unfounded, for the Tate
methodically tracks Schwitters life history. Yet, like the Gestapo, they seem
to be forever chasing his tail. Schwitters has fled Norway for Edinburgh before
he has even flown the Nazi nest and their totalitarian sticky ‘Entartete Kunst’
(‘degenerative art’) tags. Until of course he runs face first into British
Internment. Got ‘im! Nicely captured in Douglas Camp, Isle of Man. Conceived as
one of the ‘pioneers of European Modernism’, is it not quaint that Kurt Schwitters
is exhibited at Tate Britain not Modern?
Despite his shackles - physical,
psychological, or otherwise - Schwitters does not slot into a single ‘school’
of art. Rather, his paradoxical lot (I like to think of his work as organised chaos) finds
him at the margins of mainstreams, in his final years he was working, quite
literally, in his hillside shed at a remove from the water. If he was broken,
for the world around him certainly was, then ‘new things had to be made out of
the fragments’.
Where the bow of his three-dimensional
collage Merzbarn Wall (1947-48) (into
which found items were slotted and then covered with plaster and paint) was drawn
towards the small window in his Elterwater barn, the arc of his career never
left its cobbled floor, often flooded with water. An artist always working
towards the light, his adopted country repeatedly obscured him from view:
imprisonment, poverty, and pneumonia. Until now, our Nation’s indifference was
his tragedy.
Liza Weber
Monday, 8 April 2013
Marcel Dzama: Sister Squares
Amongst the many works of Marcel
Dzama’s show Puppets, Pawns, and Prophets at David Zwirner is the premier of the video installation Sister Squares (2013). The work is named
after Marcel Duchamp’s Opposition and
Sister Squares Are Reconciled (1932), a chess handbook with a focus on pawn
and king endgames.
A disco drumbeat invites viewers
into the gallery. It is an accompaniment to Death
Disco Dance (2011) a video shown on two-stacks of monitors facing-out into
the street, filling the gallery’s windows. Dancers clothed head-to-toe in black
and white, polka-dot leotards perform a choreographed game of musical statues;
dancing simple disco routines in unison, halting with the rhythm of the
drum.
Death Disco Dance, 2011 |
The first room of the show is
filled with Dzama’s watercolours. Drawn in the vernacular of theatrical
diagram, the palette of the images is limited to rich midnight blue, crimson
red and chocolate brown. Scenes depict surreal backstage and onstage scenarios;
costumed mobsters chat idly with Batman and Robin; strange multi-headed
monsters take part in a frothy dance number and a rather macabre hanging scene forms
the backdrop to a salacious revolution.
Further compositions take the
form of costume schematics and diagrammatic images. Linear sequences of dots
running across the surface of the watercolours create the impression of a score
for a play or dance. Across all of the images there are some unusual recurring
characters; strange, black and white costumed, faceless creatures, just like
those from Death Disco Dance. They
are chess pieces, and they are brought to life in Sister Squares.
The Renowned Union Jackoff, 2013 |
Four monochromatic projections
are arranged as a grid on the gallery wall, and are musically accompanied by
dramatic flamenco, which drifts in to the surrounding gallery spaces. The video
contains more than just a hint of silent-movie aesthetics.
Two gentlemen sit down to a
chessboard on a deserted, rubble-strewn street and a game commences. The act
takes place in the bottom left projection, and aside from the occasional
cutaway, from this point on the projection rests mainly upon an animated
birds-eye-view of the chessboard, a diagram of the battle.
The three remaining projections cut
between the flamenco musicians at work, an audience of rattle-wielding,
white-masked spectators, their features oversized and frozen in state of
voyeuristic pleasure, and a dramatic dance battle with much posturing, and
eventually much spurting blood.
Sister Squares, 2012 |
The black and white chequered dance-floor is provides the perfect board for the chess-piece dancers. The
pawns (who we have met before) are spry, spotted ballerinas, the rooks are
relentlessly spinning circular robots and the queen is a sharp-edged monster
with triangular eyes and spiky hands.
As the game heads towards its
conclusion a black pawn is queened in a ritualistic coronation and the white
ballerinas advance towards her, side-on and on-point, to begin a formidably
elegant final fray. The match ends, however, with a macabre twist. An unknown
sniper-wielding gunwoman (who suspiciously, might be one of the black pawns)
assassinates one of the gentleman players before the game can be concluded. A
black pawn dances amongst the rubble of white pieces and takes a bow, and the
vacuous spectators wave their rattles triumphantly.
The Queen’s Head, 2012 |
Though the chess match will never
reach its endgame, the video succeeds as an ecstatic and eccentric
dramatisation of an on-board battle, pushing and pulling seamlessly between the
connotations of war, the internal dance of the chess match and the placid
players moving the pieces.
Upstairs in the gallery are
multi-coloured tin masks and hanging tin puppets, many more opulent
watercolours and a set of beautifully intricate, small-scale dioramas. Despite
the illustrative quality of the drawings, and the prop-like attributes of the
sculptures, they are quite evidently not just preparatory works for the video.
In their complexity and richness they provide a labyrinthine, theatrical
mythology that surrounds and buoys the video work, only adding to the sense of
an inexplicably cohesive yet completely unfathomable allegory at work in the space.
Travis Riley
Wednesday, 27 March 2013
Richard Ducker: Dark Matter
Ducker's ink drawings have
a creeping heartbreak about them. In each, smoke rises from intimated
destruction. In some images there is more than one point of impact; more than
one trail rising slowly up, thick and black.
The drawings are numerous
and arranged methodically. Looking at one after another is reminiscent of the
evening news, daily horror, peppered with the 'stop and take
notice' punctuations of certain images.
Dark Matter's sculptures can be experienced in this way. Sharp edged objects that cut through the smoke and remind the viewer of the solid objects twisted, charred, destroyed and hidden.
Corinna Spencer