Monday, 9 May 2011

Exhibition Roundup - May 2011

An occasional, and highly selective, pick of current and forthcoming exhibitions.
Tracey Emin: Love is What You Want



The first major survey of Tracey Emin's work, Love is What You Want, will be at the Hayward Gallery from 18th May until the 19th August. Read Monica Ali's article: Tracey Emin: 'What you see is what I am'.
Mark Leckey, GreenScreenRefrigerator 2010
Mark Leckey, Turner Prize winner 2008, presents See, We Assemble, at the Serpentine Gallery from 19th May until 26th June. Leckey's approach is described on the Serpentine website as a multi-disciplinary practice that encompasses sculpture, sound, film and performance. For example, the work illustrated is described as follows: In the recent performance piece 'GreenScreenRefrigeratorAction' (2010), Leckey sought to communicate the inner life of a ‘smart’ fridge – one that keeps an electronic tally of its contents – and to render audible its ‘voice’. In his bid to become one with the appliance, the artist inhaled refrigerator coolant and draped himself in a green cloak that, at a certain point in the performance, allowed him to morph into the green-screen backdrop against which the fridge was set. Advancing the notion that we can be in constant communication with every aspect of our environment, that everything feels alive, Leckey’s universe is mediated on multiple levels.
Mitch Epstein, Biloxi, Mississippi  2005
Two new photography displays have been opened at Tate Modern: Photography: New Documentary Forms will be on show until 31st March 2012 and Burke + Norfolk: Photographs From The War In Afghanistan, until 10th July 2011. The first comprises the Tate's acquisition of the work of 5 photographers: Luc Delahaye, Mitch Epstein, Guy Tillim, Akram Zaatari,and Boris Mikhailov.Mitch Epstein (illustrated) was recently awarded the Prix Pictet (see below).
Simon Norfolk, Kabul, 2010
Burke + Norfolk: Photographs From The War In Afghanistan presents the fruit of a project following Norfolk's discovery of an album of photographs by John Burke, seen in the National Media Museum in Bradford and thought to be the first photographs taken inside Afghanistan: In October 2010, Simon Norfolk began a series of new photographs in Afghanistan, which takes its cue from the work of nineteenth-century British photographer John Burke. Norfolk’s photographs re-imagine or respond to Burke’s Afghan war scenes in the context of the contemporary conflict. Conceived as a collaborative project with Burke across time, this new body of work is presented alongside Burke’s original portfolios. (From Tate Modern website). Read article by Ian Jack and In Conversation: Paul Lowe and Simon Norfolk
John Burke, Landholders and labourers, Afghanistan, c1880
Simon Norfolk, A team from the mine ­detection centre, Kabul, 2010?
Michael Craig-Martin, Hearing Things, 2003
Michael Craig-Martin: Drawings 1967 - 2002 is at Alan Christea until 4th June and is the first exhibition of drawings by the artist. Read interview with Stuart Jeffries.
Callum Innes, Untitled No.21, 2011
 Callum Innes: New Paintings and Watercolours is at the Frith Street Gallery, 13th May - 31st July.
Ian Hamilton Finlay, Zimmerit, 1992
Ian Hamilton Finlay: Definitions is at Victoria Miro until 1st June.
Ai Weiwei, Moon Chest, 2008
Ai Weiwei's work will be shown at the Lisson Gallery, 13th May - 16th July. As noted on the gallery's website, the whereabouts and situation of the artist remain unknown following his arrest in China: Ai Weiwei was detained by authorities in Beijing while trying to board a flight to Hong Kong on 3 April, and has not been seen or heard from since. Lisson Gallery, along with all his supporters in the UK and around the world, is alarmed by the detention of Ai Weiwei and greatly concerned for his safety. Read the gallery director, Nicholas Logsdail, writing in the Guardian: It feels rotten putting the show on in Ai Weiwei's absence. Read Where is Ai Weiwei? by Adrian Searle, and more articles about the artist here.
John Salt, Pontiac with Tree Trunk, 1973
An exhibition of paintings by the photorealist John Salt is at the Ikon Gallery until 17th July. Though I have long been aware of Salt's work it was something of a surprise to learn that he is not, in fact, American, but was brought up in Birmingham and was actually the first artist to be exhibited at the Ikon back in 1965.
Tadasu Takamine, God Bless America (video), 2002
 Also showing at the Ikon until 17th July is Tadasu Takamine: Too Far to See. God Bless America is a video in which ‘the artist and his wife wrestle with two tons of clay over a period of 17 days'. Read Laura Cumming's review of this Japanese artist's first European show. 
Atkinson Grimshaw, Boar Lane, Leeds
Atkinson Grimshaw: Painter of Moonlight is at the Mercer Art Gallery, Harrogate until 4th September.
Finally, 3 recent graduates of University of Gloucestershire, Martin Abrams, Hannah Stoney and Richard Taylor, and a current lecturer, Paul Rosenbloom are featured in Curatorial Contrast 2 at BayArt Gallery in Cardiff, until 27th May. Four established artists, Cherry Pickles, Andreas Rüthi, Sue Williams and Paul Rosenbloom have each been invited to nominate emerging artist whom they have taught. The installation shot, below, shows work by Richard Taylor.



Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Turner Prize 2011 - shortlist

The artists shortlisted for this year's Turner Prize are: Karla Black, Martin Boyce, Hilary Lloyd and George Shaw.
Karla Black, What to Ask for Others, 2011
Karla Black uses a wide range of, sometimes unconventional and often fragile, materials  (medicines, packaging, clothing, carpets, foodstuffs, toiletries, make-up) to make sculptures which evoke feelings about the body and psychological fragility.
Martin Boyce, A Library of Leaves




Martin Boyce's installations have the character of Modernist design and create what he describes as 'a peculiar landscape: a collapse of the interior and the exterior world'.
Hilary Lloyd, Man, 2010
Hilary Lloyd works in film and video and makes the hardware of projection an integral part of her installations. Images which, at first, appear to be still prove to be in perpetual motion.
George Shaw, The Resurface, 2010
George Shaw paints mundane urban landscapes using Humbrol enamel paints. I enthused about his atmospheric, photo-realist scenes from the Tile Hill estate in Coventry when listing his (still current) show at the Baltic (see below). See a short video of Shaw at his Baltic show. I vote Shaw to win!

The 2011 Turner Prize exhibition will be held at the Baltic in Gateshead. 
Read Adrian Searle's response to the shortlist.

Saturday, 30 April 2011

Photography Awards - Sony, Deutsche-Börse

Bruce Davidson,  Kathy and Arty at the Ocean Time Bar, Coney Island, 1959
Bruce Davidson has received the Outstanding Contribution to Photography Award at this year’s Sony World Photography Awards. A retrospective exhibition is showing at Somerset House until 22nd May and selected work will be on show at Chris Beetles from 4th to 28th May. Read feature by Sean O'Hagan and an interview from 2006 at American Suburb X.
The Sony World Photography Awards Photographer of the Year Award (L’Iris D’Or) went to Alejandro Chaskielberg for his portfolio of pictures taken while living with islanders in the Paraná river delta, Argentina.
Alejandro Chaskielberg, The Hunter
For full details of all category award winners see The Sony World Photography Awards website. Below is a selection of images from some of the portfolios:
 
Javier Arcenillas, from Citizens of Despair - winner: Photojournalism & Documentary: Current Affairs
Tomg Meng, Wella Professionals for Marie Claire  - 3rd place: Commercial: Campaign 
Liz Loh-Taylor, Coexistence #1- winner: Commercial: Travel
Frank Bayh & Steff Rosenberger-Ochs, Don't Touch My Universe #6 - 2nd place: Commercial: Lifestyle
Alnis Stakle, from Lost: Paris - winner: Fine Art: Architecture
Florence Iff, Post Arcadia 5 - winner: Fine Art: Landscape
 
Charles Emerson, A Rose from Auschwitz - 3rd place: Fine Art: Still Life

The Deutsche-Börse prize for photography, 2011, has been awarded to Jim Goldberg for his project Open See,  documenting the experiences of refugees, immigrants and displaced people. (See also entries below)
Jim Goldberg, Democratic Republic of Congo, 2008: "His radio is the sole possession he took with him while escaping a rebel attack in his village. He now lives in a refugee camp with 60,000 other people where poverty, disease and crime run rampant." 

Monday, 25 April 2011

Spomenik - by Jan Kempenaers

Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.1: Podgarić, 2006
I have only just stumbled upon Jan Kempenaers' photographs of the extraordinary and rather wonderful 'spomeniks' - or monuments - in the former Yugoslavia. Apparently these structures were built in the 1960s and 1970s in Tito's Yugoslavia to commemorate the Second World War. Between 2006 and 2009, Jan Kempenaers explored the region using a 1975 map of the memorials. The resulting pictures have been published as a book: Jan Kempenaers (2010) "Spomenik", Roma Publications.
Above and below is a selection of the images - see more here; read a review of the book by Guy Lane and an article by John Bailey

Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.2: Petrova Gora, 2006
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.5: Kruševo, 2007
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.9: Jasenovac, 2007
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.11: Niš, 2007
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.16: Tjentište, 2007
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.18: Kadinjača, 2009
Jan Kempenaers, Spomenik No.19: Mitrovica, 2009

Sunday, 24 April 2011

Tim Hetherington, 1970 - 2011; Chris Hondros, 1970 - 2011

Two outstanding photojournalists, Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros were killed on 20th April, 2011, by an explosion in Misrata while covering the conflict in Libya. Read an obituary for Tim Hetherington, and Roger Tooth and Sean Smith on the challenges of war photojournalism. 
Tim Hetherington, militants, Nigeria, 2006
Tim Hetherington, a man carries a child wounded during an American helicopter attack, Afghanistan, 2007
Chris Hondros, A child felled by a mortar, carrying a bag of cassava leaves back to his family.
Chris Hondros, A child soldier  in Monrovia, Liberia

Saturday, 23 April 2011

Exit Kit - Xposed Club 29th April

Poster by Mark Unsworth
Xposed Club will be hosting an event at The Playhouse Theatre, on Friday 29th April as part of the Cheltenham Jazz Festival.
Chris Cundy will lead a performance by his new group Exit Kit, featuring Xposed Club founder Stuart Wilding on drums, Olie Brice on double bass and Mark Sanders on drums, they are joined by innovative guitarist John Bisset, who will also perform a short solo set.
The Playhouse Theatre, 8-10pm, Friday 29th April, £10 (Book at Cheltenham Festivals)

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

John McCracken, 1934 - 2011

John McCracken died on 8th April, 2011.
McCracken brought a West Coast sensibility to Minimalism with his gorgeously coloured, mirror-glossy planks and slabs. 
Read the obituary by Michael McNay. The images, below, are from David Zwirner gallery website.
Red Plank, 1967
Swift (left) and Vision (right), 2007
Interval, 2004
From left to right: Plain (1993), Diamond (1993), Fulcrum (1990), and Center (1989). Installation view of John McCracken at Hochscule für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna, 1995
Guardian, 1995