Tuesday, 5 October 2010

Martin Creed (and others) at the Cheltenham Literature Festival


Martin Creed, Work No.338: Things, 2004

The Cheltenham Literature Festival kicks off on Friday 8th October and features a handful of art related events. Most notably, Martin Creed (Turner Prize winner, 2001) will give a talk about his work at the Parabola Arts Centre, 12-1pm on Saturday 9th October.

Other art related events are more conventionally book oriented:

  • Picasso – talk by Christopher Riopelle, 2-3pm, Tuesday 12th
  • Lucian Freud – talk by Martin Gayford, 2-3pm, Wednesday 13th
  • Caravaggio – talk by Andrew Graham-Dixon, 12-1pm, Thursday 14th
  • Canaletto – talk by Charles Beddington, 10-11am, Friday 15th
  • Van Gogh –talk by Ann Dumas, 2-3pm, Friday 15th

For more details and booking information go to the Festival website.

Friday, 1 October 2010

Street Photography NOW



Coinciding with the publication of Street Photography Now, by Sophie Howarth and Stephen McLaren (soon to be available in Pittville Learning Centre), and in association with the Photographers Gallery, a year long project for street photographers to "record the world we live in" is launched today (1st October).


Olivier Laurent writing in The British Journal of Photography explains how it will work:

Each week, one of the 52 photographers featured in the book will issue instructions for street photographers around the world to follow. "These detailed instructions will act as a call to arms to photographers to look afresh at their immediate surroundings and to literally take to the streets," say the organisers. " All photographers will be encouraged to comment and respond to the images posted to the Flickr page."

Once the instructions have been issues, photographers will have six days to respond and upload one photograph to the Street Photography Now Project gallery on Flickr. At the end of the 52 weeks, "the photographer felt to have made the most outstanding contribution over the year will be awarded £1000 of Thames & Hudson books and have their work displayed on The Photographers’ Gallery digital Wall for All at the Gallery’s newly redeveloped space."

The first instructions (see above) have been issued by Magnum photographer Bruce Gilden.

For full details about how to take part see Street Photography Now Project.

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

Photography - Competitions

The following photography competitions are waiting to be won:

This competition invites the submission of between 3-6 images as an exhibition series. Images must fall into the criteria of reportage, fashion, documentary, landscape, wildlife, portraiture, or fine art photography. Terry O'Neill, himself, has an exhibition showing at the Richard Goodall Gallery in Manchester until16th October: Bardot, Bond, Beckham and Beyond: Photographs by Terry O'Neill.


Terry O'Neill, Brigitte Bardot

The theme for this year’s competition is: The New Austerity: Surviving without a safety net. Last year's winner was Gareth Kingdon from University of Wales, Newport.

One of Gareth Kindon's winning pictures: Andrew's House, Kibera Slum, Nairobi, Kenya.

Et enfin, si vous savez comment prendre des photographies en Français, pourquoi ne pas essayer cette compétition?

Thursday, 23 September 2010

Exhibition Roundup - October 2010

An occasional, and highly selective, pick of current and forthcoming exhibitions.

Klara Lidén, Self Portrait with the Keys to the City 2005 (See Serpentine, below)

The Liverpool Biennial continues through to 28th November. The theme is ‘Touched’, embracing the meanings both of physical contact and emotional effect. This is explored through a wide range of installations, events, talks and exhibitions (see website for full programme and map). Adrian Searle's review picks out the film work of Ryan Trecartin showing at 52 Renshaw Street as the highlight. The ‘Touched’ exhibition at Tate Liverpool features performance and interactivity in a show including: Magdalena Abakanowicz (Poland), Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan (Philippines), Nina Canell (Sweden), Wannes Goetschalckx (Belgium), Diango Hernández (Cuba), Jamie Isenstein (United States), Eva Kot’átková (Czech Republic), Otto Muehl (Austria), and Franz West (Austria). Concurrent with the Biennial in Liverpool are the Bloomberg New Contemporaries 2010 at The Coach Shed (18th Sept – 13th November) and the John Moores Painting Prize 2010 at the Walker Art Gallery (18th Sept. – 3rd Jan. 2011). (And the £25,000 winner is... Spectrum Jesus by Keith Coventry, below.)
Keith Coventry, Spectrum Jesus, 2009

The 4th Brighton Photo Biennial, runs from 2nd October until 14th November and will feature a series of exhibitions, New Documents, curated by Martin Parr as well as a full programme of talks and events, see BPB website for details. Alongside New Documents there will be an exhibition of Robert Mapplethorpe’s work at Towner in Eastbourne. (See Jonathan Jones: Robert Mapplethorpe: Sexual Terrorist). Like the Diane Arbus exhibition at Nottingham Contemporary (ends 3rd October), this exhibition of more than 60 photographs by Mapplethorpe is one of the Artist Rooms given to the nation by Anthony d’Offay.
Robert Mapplethorpe, Patti Smith, 1975

The big shows at Tate Modern, for October are Paul Gauguin (30th September - 16th January) and on 12th October the latest Turbine Hall installation (the Unilever Series) will be unveiled: this year the daunting commission has been given to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei.
Over at Tate Britain, the Turner Prize exhibition opens on 5th October and will run until 3rd January 2011. The shortlisted artists are: Dexter Dalwood; Angela de la Cruz, Susan Philipsz and The Otolith Group. The winner will be announced on 6th December. Continuing at Tate Britain are Eadweard Muybridge, Rachel Whiteread Drawings (both until 16th January 2011) and Fiona Banner’s installation of jet fighters (until 3rd January 2011).
Rachel Whiteread, Untitled (Double Mattress Yellow), 1991

The Arts Council's quinquennial survey of British art, British Art Show 7, begins its run on 23rd October in Nottingham, with shows at Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham Castle Museum and New Art Exchange. The exhibitions will be on until 9th January, 2011, after which they will tour to London, Glasgow and Plymouth. Subtitled In the Days of the Comet, the show is intended as a pulse check on the state of British art today.

For a more commercial take on the state of contemporary art the Frieze Art Fair (14th – 17th October) is the place to be.

The Ikon Gallery in Birmingham is showing an intriguing double bill of Kitagawa Utamaro and furniture by Donald Judd: A Good Chair is a Good Chair (both 22nd Sept – 14th Nov). Also in Birmingham, is Steve McCurry – Retrospective, at Birmingham Museum (until 17th October).
Kitagawa Utamaro , Lovers in the upstairs room of a teahouse, from Poem of the Pillow, 1788

The Serpentine presents the first major UK exhibition by Swedish artist Klara Lidén. Working with installation, video and architectural intervention Lidén explores spaces for living. (See article by Sam Thorne in Frieze Magazine.)

Right at the end of the month (from 29th Oct - 27th Nov) the 20th Hereford Photography Festival promises to be an exciting event.

Monday, 13 September 2010

Modern British sculpture in Gloucester


Sarah Lucas, Stanway John, concrete and bronze, 2008

Gloucester Cathedral, in association with Pangolin Editions (the sculpture foundry in Chalford, nr Stroud), is hosting an exhibition of modern British sculpture entitled Crucible. The 76 works on show include sculptures by an impressive list of artists, including, Sarah Lucas, Damien Hirst, Antony Gormley, Marcus Harvey, Lynn Chadwick, Eduardo Paolozzi, Phillip King...
The exhibition runs until 30th October, 2010.

Crucible, has been tagged, in its publicity, as the sculpture exhibition of the decade; while that remains to be judged, the Royal Academy of Arts has announced its forthcoming major survey show, Modern British Sculpture, which may well be the sculpture show of the next decade. It will run from 22nd January – 7th April 2011. More on that story, later.

Friday, 10 September 2010

An Important Message About the Arts - from David Shrigley

What might funding cuts mean for art and culture? David Shrigley debates the isssues in this animated film: An Important Message About the Arts.


















Cover of book by David Shrigley: Human Achievement, 2003, London: Redstone Press