Showing posts with label Lisson Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lisson Gallery. Show all posts

Friday, 18 July 2014

Where Were You? - Lisson Gallery

The Mekons, 1978: Where were you?
When I was waiting in a bar, where were you?
When I was buying you a drink, where were you?
When I was crying at home in bed, where were you?
When I watched you from a distance did you see me?
You were standing in a queue did you see me?
You had yellow hair, did you see me?
I want to talk to you all night, do you like me?
I want to find out about your life, do you like me?
Could you ever be my wife, do you love me?
Great band, great song. Listen here.
Where were you?, at the Lisson Gallery until 23 August 2014, explicitly takes its title from the Mekon's song. To be honest, I am not exactly clear about the connection between the song and the 'post-Minimalist' work on show which is described as follows:
"a group show of paintings, prints, relief objects and works on canvas that seem to require minimal intervention on the artists’ behalf, but actually belie the often complex ideas or extended periods of time spent contemplating, reworking and refining these processes... Where Were You? focuses on the work of nine artists, five of which have not shown in the UK before. Each of them articulates a minimalist aesthetic through abstraction, repetition or interruptions in surface and structure, foregrounding the intention, scale and execution of their gestures as both subjects for their work and as performative records of transient actions or incomplete thoughts." (Lisson Gallery)
Where Were You?, installation at Lisson Gallery
Of the artists featured - Allora & Calzadilla, Cory Arcangel, N. Dash, Robert Janitz, Paulo Monteiro, David Ostrowski, Michael Rey, Julia Rommel, Dan Shaw-Town  only the wonderfully named Cory Arcangel (see below) is at all familiar to me. But I like the sound of what they do - and I love the Mekons' song, so I am looking forward to this. 
Images below are 'illustrative', ie not necessarilly work in the exhibition.
Allora & Calzadilla, Shape Shifter, 2013 (sandpaper on canvas)
Cory Arcangel, Photoshop CS: 84 by 66 inches, 300 DPI, RGB, sqaure pixels, default gradient "Blue, Red, Yellow", mousedown y=2300 x=8600, mouseup y=2600 x=8600, 2011 (Chromogenic print)
N. Dash, installation view (2012) at Untitled, New York
Robert Janitz, Machaco, 2012
Paulo Monteiro, installation view in Sao Paolo
David Ostrowski, F (Dann lieber nein),2011
Michael Rey, [title unknown], 2014
Julia Rommel, Big Soda, 2012
Dan Shaw-Town, Untitled, 2011 (Graphite and spray enamel on paper with metal grommets)

Thursday, 12 July 2012

Julian Opie - Lisson Gallery

Julian Opie, Aniela 8, 2011
Julian Opie is at Lisson Gallery until 25 August. Read the gallery press release here, and an interview with Opie at Blouin Artinfo.
Julian Opie, Winter, 2012
Julian Opie, At church with Felicia, 2012
Julian Opie, Aniela disrobed 7, 2011
Julian Opie, Aniela at the spring, 2011
Julian Opie, Woman with shopping bag and scarf, 2012
Julian Opie, installation view, 2012
Julian Opie, Daisies, 2012
Julian Opie, Peeing boy and Galloping horse, 2012

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

Daniel Buren - Lisson Gallery

Daniel Buren, 5 Squares of Electric Light # 2, 2011
Daniel Buren, the artist who has, for over 40 years been making art out of  8.7cm wide white and coloured vertical stripes is showing new work at the Lisson Gallery: One Thing to Another, Situated Works. In the past Buren has made stripes in canvas, plexiglass, aluminium, wallpaper and many other materials. This exhibition features stripes made out of woven fibre optics, as well as A Perimeter for a Room, described as follows by the gallery:
The work traces a line following the full perimeter of the space. The horizontal transparent Plexiglas panels coloured with self-adhesive vinyl, lined up sequentially at a set height along the walls, alter our perception of space by introducing a new height within the room and by washing the walls with coloured shadows.  While the work uses a familiar vocabulary in Buren’s oeuvre: colour, light and black and white 8.7 cm stripes, A Perimeter for a Room defines an entirely new system in its treatment of interior space that opens the way for new developments. 
Judging by the pictures, the whole show looks beautiful.
Listen to Buren talking about his work for Frieze Foundation.
Daniel Buren, A Perimeter for a Room, 2011
Daniel Buren, A Perimeter for a Room, 2011
Daniel Buren, One Thing to Another, Situated Works, 2011
Daniel Buren, One Thing to Another, Situated Works, 2011