Showing posts with label Neon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neon. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Joseph Kosuth - Sprüth Magers

Joseph Kosuth, Four Colors Four Words, 1966
Joseph Kosuth: Amnesia: various, luminous, fixed is at Sprüth Magers London until 14 February 2015.
This exhibition comes as something of a surprise: I have long been familiar with Kosuth's dryly witty conceptual art; I have, too, long been aware that he made work in neon; nevertheless, I have never really thought of him as a 'colourful' artist. Installation pictures of this show prove otherwise.
Kosuth is one of the pioneers of conceptual art: his 1969 essay Art after Philosophy is one of the foundational texts of the movement: All art (after Duchamp) is conceptual (in nature) because art only exists conceptually... Works of art are analytic propositions. That is, if viewed within their context – as art – they provide no information whatsoever about any matter of fact. A work of art is a tautology in that it is a presentation of the artist’s intention, that is, he is saying that that particular work of art is art, which means, is a definition of art. Thus, that it is art is true a priori (which is what Judd means when he states that “if someone calls it art, it’s art”).
Works in this exhibition include characteristic tautological propositions as well as meditations on the works of Sigmund Freud and Samuel Beckett.
Watch a short video about this exhibition featuring an interview with Kosuth; read a reviews by Waldemar Januszczak and J.J. Charlesworth.
Joseph Kosuth, What (Does This Mean?), 2009
Joseph Kosuth, Self-Defined Object (Green), 1966 (Wittgenstein Series)
Joseph Kosuth, Self-Described Twice (Cobalt Blue), 1966
Joseph Kosuth, installation view, Sprüth Magers
Joseph Kosuth, installation view, Sprüth Magers
Joseph Kosuth, installation view, Sprüth Magers

Saturday, 15 November 2014

Chris Bracey, 1954 - 2014

Chris Bracey died on 1 November 2014.
I confess that I had not heard of Chris Bracey ('the Neon Man') until I read his obituary. However, as a fan of neon (see blog entry below on the centenary of neon) I found his story interesting. As a young man he worked for his father's company Electro Signs making neon signs for circuses and amusement arcades; Chris' innovation was to take the business to Soho and the sex industry. For 20 years he supplied the neon 'glamour' for sex shops and clubs. In the 1980s an art director of film saw him erecting a sex shop sign and commissioned him to do work for film sets - his work has been used in Batman, Blade Runner, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Eyes Wide Shut and many others. In 1998 he saw the Bruce Nauman exhibition at the Hayward Gallery and was astonished to discover that neon works could be art! Since then, in addition to his own creations he has made work for artists including Martin Creed (the whole world + the work = the whole world). To be sure Bracey's own work is more kitch and 'Vegas' than Nauman or Creed, but his workshop and collection - "God's Own Junkyard" in Walthamstow looks like an amazing place.
Read obituaries in The Guardian  and The Telegraph.
Vlick on images to enlarge.

Sunday, 28 August 2011

Neon


Joseph Kosuth, Neon, 1965
It is the centenary of neon, more or less, as I have learned from a feature by Peter Conrad in the Observer. Neon was discovered in 1898, but it was 1910 when Georges Claude demonstrated a  commercial application for neon lighting, which he patented in 1911 - hence the cetenary.
Below is a selection of examples of both commercial and fine art neon.
Piccadilly Circus (1950s?) Photograph: Rex Features
David Noble, Night Scene, Butlin's Skegness John Hinde Ltd (1960s?)
Bruce Nauman, The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths, 1967
'Nathan's Famous' photographed by Kirsten Hively - see her Project Neon and Flickr site

Michael Craig-Martin, installation on Kunsthaus Bregenz, 2006

Ian Hamilton Finlay, Ici On Danse, 1996
Mark Kelly, Nothing Is So Important That it Needs To Be Made In Six Foot Neon, 2009
Stephen Atonakos, Incomplete Neon Square,1977
Tracey Emin, Love is What You Want, 2011
Martin Creed, Work No.240, Fuck Off, 1999