Friday, 28 February 2014

A London

at Ping
Andy Warhol had photography running through his whole practice. From the screen prints of famous people, to the soup cans, he used photography in a diaristic way taken one to three films a day. A combination of expressions about life; an interest in the non-hierarchical of contemporary life and everyday life things, and also on the reproducibility of the image. His work alludes to the reproducibility of the image, like a wall of mirrors, of photographic reproduction. By stitching images together (like the ones of the ice cream van, in the photo below) he produces a unique art work. With a sculptural quality. With him we see "famous" people laying together with, positioned on the same level of recognisable objects, brands, those desirous things/wants that define the society where we find ourselves immersed in on an historical level. He said things about life, sex, playing, felling both ways with music and things we can't say about food and about you, it is about two, three, the night and day be together.
at Rum Kitchen
Andy Warhol's Ice Cream van photographs at The Photographers' Gallery

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Art14 London

Art14 London view
Fung Lam (b. Hong Kong), The Tiananmen Square Project (1989-2014), 2014 [Jealous Projects]
Romuald Hazoumè (b. Benin), Rat Singer: Second Only to God!, 2013 [October Gallery]
Art14 London view
Art14 London' Collectors Lounge
Art14 London view

Monday, 24 February 2014

Sensing Spaces - Architecture Reimagined

Sensing Spaces - Architecture Reimagined
Royal Academy of Arts


«How do spaces shape our lives?
How do they make us feel?


Experiencing architecture involves moving within and around it, absorbing its qualities through our bodies and senses. We react, consciously or not, to the characteristics of different materials, vistas, volumes, sounds, spatial relationships and proportions. As well as engaging physically with space, our experience of it is also informed by our memories and habits.

Human responses to architecture range from awe to feelings of comfort, safety, pleasure, excitement or unease. We frequently shape the spaces around us - from making dens as children to placing furniture in a living room. Ultimately, architecture connects us to time, place, and people.

This exhibition invites you to explore built space directly. The installations all highlight different aspects of architecture - from the manipulation of light, mass and structure to the transformations brought about by use, movement and interaction.» 


[exhibition text]
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Pezo von Ellrichshausen
Diébédo Francis Kéré
To move forward, people need to be inspired: they need buildings that enhance their creativity into their own hands. - Diébédo Francis Kéré
Diébédo Francis Kéré
"I believe it is important to engage people in the process of building so they have an investment in what is developed. Through thinking and working together people find that the built object becomes part of a bonding experience."
Diébédo Francis Kéré
Eduardo Souto de Moura
"For me, architecture requires continuity; we have to continue what others have done before us but using different materials and methods of construction."
Kengo Kuma
"I always start with something small, breaking down materials into particles or fragments that can then be recombined into units of the right scale to provide comfort and intimacy."
Kengo Kuma
Li Xiaodong
"According to the ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Zi, what is important is what is contained, not the container."
Li Xiaodong
Li Xiaodong
Li Xiaodong
Li Xiaodong
Li Xiaodong
Grafton Architects
When are you aware of spaces you inhabit? Thresholds are places where we naturally become more aware. For me this occurs each time I leave the quite complex of Trinity College in Dublin. - Yvonne Farrell, Grafton Architects
Grafton Architects
"There is a sense of pleasure in moving from darkness to light or vice versa because as human beings we're cyclical. How light reflects and how light is contained is the stuff of architecture."
Álvaro Siza Vieira

Saturday, 22 February 2014

Door Between Either and Or

Os sapatos ditam a forma em como um extrapola a estrutura, a habilidade para separar as funções políticas, as prácticas de planeamento contraditório das estruturas. Se é importante a compreensão do facto da presença disciplinar de diferentes sapatos nas instituições! o poder manifestasse na personificação individual representada por cada qual. O não alinhamento é importantíssimo para caracterizar a mobilidade e fluidez do que é ditado pelo conhecimento e a operação da imposição do poder, como identidade. Diferentes sapatos introduzem o “e” ou o “ou”. É de dentro da ideologia de imposição: working shoes, shoes from the xx century rural workers, ballerina shoes, training shoes, walking shoes, classic shoes, high-heal shoes, …

Friday, 21 February 2014

Thursday, 20 February 2014

David Buckingham: Under the Influence

David Buckingham
Under the Influence
Scream

Exhibition view: Colour Study #94 (The Train Song) (hand-welded found metal, 127x96.5x7.6cm), and Colour Study #95 (Theoretical Chaos) (hand-cut and welded stainless steel and found metal, 106.6x106.6x7.6cm), 2014
Was it good? Sort of! To easy… just another writer under the influence of wanted-to-be-a-visual-arts-practitioner…

PRESS RELEASE:
Scream is proud to present LA-based artist David Buckingham’s inaugural solo exhibition in the UK. David Buckingham uses found metal as his artistic medium. The making of his sculptures and wall reliefs are a profound journey of discovery and adventure. Sheet metal is scavenged from abandoned cars and trucks and other machinery that Buckingham finds in the Californian desert. This method of appropriation and regeneration is reminiscent of the work of Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008), one of the forerunners of the Pop art movement, where found objects and unusual mediums were incorporated into works with innovation and skill. In the same vein Buckingham hand-welds all the sourced metal and with a deft eye combines the colourful shards of metal into graphic signs and symbols that challenge, amuse and provoke the viewer.

Buckingham’s previous career as a professional writer infiltrates his work with the use of text and language as a powerful mode of communication. Buckingham wants the viewer to react and interact with his work. Imbued with irony, humour and provocation the works in this exhibition offer a dialogue and insight into the artist’s influences and inspirations. The artist comments, “I love language in all its forms: chance remarks I heard decades ago reverberate in my head like I heard them yesterday. Classic American TV shows, slang, snippets of film dialogue. A refrain from an obscure song. A smart-ass comment. Any of that can make its way out of my head and into my work.” Excerpts from movies, song lyrics such as Lou Reed’s ‘Walk on the Wild Side’, and comic book sound effects burst from the gallery walls and act as sound bites from contemporary and pop culture. Looking closer at these film and song quotes such as ‘Me So Horny Me Love You Long Time’ [Full Metal Jacket] and ‘Hey, Where The White Women At?’ [Blazing Saddles] the artist has deliberately appropriated quotes and lyrics that have an implied prejudice or discrimination that is initally disguised from the viewer as the humorous recognition of the movie line or song lyric prevails. But the actual statements that stand rusted and imposing from the walls reveal Buckingham’s empathy with the “outsiders” or the persecuted minorities of society and hold a mirror up to these universal assumptions and preconceptions that we can all be guilty of. The global reach of these ideas that infiltrate us all through the media, film, music and advertising is powerfully conveyed. Buckingham also explores the potency of colour seen in his ‘Colour Study’ series and plays with the language of signs and symbols that has a global reach. The artist is also interested in the role of the gun in American culture and produces large-scale wall reliefs of guns using the manipulated metal. The guns are based on actual weapons used by notorious criminals and assassins such as ‘Phil Spector’, or guns used in film and television such as ‘Butch Cassidy’ or he references political and divisive figures. Buckingham raises a challenging debate on the use and ownership of arms and presents the gun as a seductive yet menacing symbol.

The title of the exhibition refers to the artist’s previous substance abuse but also alludes to his new addiction, or ‘magnificent obsession’ as he describes it – making artworks. The artist comments, “My work, in general, is about boundaries: finding where the line is, and then gently crossing it. Most of my work is very personal”. Buckingham’s approach is uncompromising and can collectively be interpreted as a stream of consciousness. His work “absorbs, muses upon, mirrors, and upends the public language of his country, chewing on the word-image of Pop art and the imaged words of the Internet and spitting them out as profane illuminations, banners of defiance and provocation, calls to arms and calls to a peaceable future.” (Peter Frank). Buckingham’s practice acts as a monument to the language, refrains and symbols of our time, worn and weathered with the physical signs of wear and tear. The transformation of the discarded junk into hand-crafted sculptures and works of art is perhaps symbolic of the artist’s ascent from addict to artist. But these works also become relics of contemporary culture and linguistics that ensure our epoch will endure and remain.

Ryan Mosley

Ryan Mosley
Alison Jacques Gallery

Exhibition view: Audubon's Last Aviary (oil on canvas, 210x275cm), 2014
It can be a recurrent theme, but, sometimes, a Press Release can be much more strong than what it is referring to!

PRESS RELEASE:
'Ryan Mosley is one of the most inventive of the younger English painters at work today, and you can feel the ghostly presence of Picasso here ceaselessly at work… Mosley is a fantasist, a maker of wild, irrational, dancing imagery, who seems to have learnt lessons from every modern movement.'
– Michael Glover, The Independent, 2013

In Ryan Mosley’s third solo exhibition at Alison Jacques Gallery his narratives within narratives and worlds within worlds feel even more transgressive and irreverent than those we’ve previously been invited to explore. Rich with art-historical devices and painted asides, his vocabulary is now unmistakably Mosleyan, and his characters not only veer well beyond the boundaries of societal norms, but are willing us to get lost with them.

In the large painting, Audubon’s Last Aviary (oil on canvas, 210x275cm, 2014), a skull whose entire torso is constructed from its falling beard conspires with a humanoid spearhead and a vine-stem-face in a yellowing cave. They are surrounded by a flock of abandoned and undiscovered subspecies of bird – hunchbacked and monochrome as if their subterranean existence has made colour, flight and even birdsong distant redundancies. Elsewhere, two courtiers – also with only skulls for faces but resplendent in afros and harlequin-chequered garments – are held in some pre-Quattrocento heraldic pose, carrying boules as orbs and standing within a living coat of arms which is itself part giant skull, part disturbing Botticelli-twin-fantasy.

Among the other larger works, a figure within a twilit rural paintscape communes with the faces emerging from the smoke of his pipe, then in turn from one another’s. He seems quite content to be guided, lead and mislead by these smoky profiles, despite their having emanated from him. In The Educationalist (oil on linen, 220x190cm, 2014) a cacophony of colourful bananas have congregated to form the shape of a figure, whose only other features resemble the head of an owlet, suspended in what has become both their classroom and stage. In the side space, a gathering of ghostly latter-day troubadours seem to eschew conversation, lost in their own whimsies and faraway thoughts before another performance on their travels.

The charlatans and reprobates in the exhibition’s smaller paintings are just as fractured and compelling. Busy Head (oil on canvas, 6x56cm, 2014) stares manically like the startled androgynous offspring of a Berserker and Roman Centurion, and the multi-faced moustachioed Duchess of Oils (oil on linen on board, 66x56cm, 2014) is both camp and macho – as much painterly muse as a formidable, buxom monster. Her transgendered grandeur is matched only by the twin courtiers’ white wigs that diagonally bisect the canvas of Headswill (oil on linen, 100x80cm, 2014), while Dead Leg (oil on linen, 60x50cm, 2014) provides a humourously chilling reminder of where all this revelry ultimately ends.

Ryan Mosley (b. 1980) graduated from an MA the Royal College of Art and lives & works in London and Sheffield. Notable solo presentations include Susanne Vielmetter Projects, Los Angeles (Forthcoming, September 2014), Thoughts of Man, Tierney Gardarin, New York (2013), Reversed Limbo, Eigen + Art, Berlin (2012), Alison Jacques Gallery, London, (2011 & 2010), and Painting Seánce, Grand Arts, Kansas City, Missouri (2010); while selected group shows include Zero Hours, S1 Artspace, Sheffield (2013); Nightfall, Modem Museum, Hungary (2012); London Twelve: Contemporary British Art, City Gallery, Prague (2012); Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London (2012); Merging Bridges, Museum of Modern Art, Baku (2012); and Newspeak: British Art Now, at The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg (2009), The Saatchi Gallery, London, (2010), and Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide (2011). Mosley’s paintings are included in the Arts Council Collection, UK, the Saatchi Collection, London and Falckenberg Collection, Hamburg.

Mark Flood

Mark Flood
Stuart Shave / Modern Art


Exhibition view: Untitled Surfboard (Capitalism Hurts Trees) (surfboard and spaypaint, 291x58x30cm), and Youtube Blur (UV ink on canvas, 142.4x238.1cm), 2014
two rabbits, on top of each other, at the corner of Stuart Shave's Modern Art room

PRESS RELEASE:
Modern Art is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of new works by Mark Flood. This is the American artist's first solo show with Modern Art, and is the first exhibition of his work in Britain.

Since the early 1980s, Mark Flood has been making and exhibiting paintings, collages, sculptures, videos, and music. For the first 20 years of his career he barely showed outside Texas, working in studios in relative obscurity in his native Houston. Flood’s paintings and collages of the 1980s and 1990s transform pervasive corporate, pornographic and celebrity imagery into provocative and knowing grotesques of the colliding worlds of art and consumer culture using adulterated found materials: signs, advertisements, flea-market paintings, and magazines. The character of Flood’s work is not the critique of a detached and ironic appropriationist, but rather more a tirade of extreme opinion in a heated argument about culture.

Over recent years, Mark Flood's influence has increasingly been felt in the work of younger generations of American artists. His current practice's most recognisable work is that of ongoing series’ of paintings. Since 2000 he has produced a body of 'lace paintings' – wilfully beautiful canvases luridly coloured and richly patterned with impressions of decorative lace. His text paintings on monochrome canvases or found panels overspray lettering in missives urging the exploration of sexuality, the committing of suicide, or deadpan self-description. Most recently, a new series of paintings lift corporate logos from websites in low resolution and blow them up on canvas into a degraded image of massive pixels.

For this exhibition at Modern Art, Mark Flood presents a group of new lace paintings, and a group of new logo paintings.

Mark Flood was born in Houston, Texas, USA, in 1957, where he continues to live and work. He studied at Rice University, Houston, Texas, graduating in 1981. In 2016 Mark Flood’s work will be the subject of a solo survey exhibition at the Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, TX, USA.

Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Kharkiv School of Photography: Roman Pyatkovka

«Ghosts of the 30s (1989) are the portraits of those people who suffered from the repressions conducted by Stalin and the 'Hunger' of 1932-1933. These are the faces of people who look at us from those terrific times. Some of the faces are the paraphrase of the typical portraits in ‘hero-style’ from the honours board of the totalitarism, the others look like already yellowish photos from the family iconostasis hanging on the wall of the village house.»

Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Kharkiv School of Photography: Vladimir Starko

© Vladimir Starko, Untitled, 1986
«While Kharkiv photographers were experimenting with montages, overlays and hand-colouring thus changing the look of traditional photographic images, Vladimir Starko (b. 1956) chose to work exceptionally with b/w film and even consciously refused to crop his images. He printed them full-frame or not at all.»
© Vladimir Starko, Untitled, 1986
© Vladimir Starko, Flock, 1983
© Vladimir Starko, Prostrated, 1983

Kharkiv School of Photography: Yevgeny Pavlov

© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976
«Yevgeny Pavlov (b. 1949) started his engagement in photography in late 1960's. He was one of the founders of the Vremya Group in 1971. His b/w The Violin series (1972) depicting a happening of young nude male hippies was published in Fotografia magazine in Poland in 1973, which was considered an ideological diversion by the KGB.»
© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976
© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976
© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976
© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976
© Yevgeny Pavlov, Love' series, 1976

Kharkiv School of Photography: Kochetovs

© 1988, Kochetovs
«Victor (b. 1947) and Sergey (b. 1972) Kochetovs are father and son who sign there work jointly no matter which of them took the photo or when it was taken.»
© 1983, Kochetovs
© 1982, Kochetovs
© 1977, Kochetovs