Thursday, 30 April 2015

Christopher Williams - Whitechapel Gallery

Christopher Williams, Model: 1964 Renault Dauphine-Four, R-1095, 2000 (See full caption, below)
Christopher Williams: The Production Line of Happiness is at Whitechapel Gallery until 21 June 2015.
Christopher Williams achieves something remarkable: technically immaculate photographs that are simultaneously seductive and witty critiques of the role of photography in consumer culture. The playful conceptualism and critical acuity of this ‘capitalist realism*’ reflects the fact that he studied at CalArts (The California Institute of Arts) where he was taught by the pioneering Conceptual artists John Baldessari and Douglas Huebler.
In addition to his creative examination of the nature and uses of commercial photography, Williams also takes a wry approach to gallery display. The installation is carefully and precisely organised and integrates walls removed from previous exhibitions; no explanatory texts are provided in the gallery but the captions from the previous exhibition (of abstract art) have been allowed to remain! Pedantically exhaustive captions are provided in the (almost) unillustrated catalogue. (See examples, below.)
(*Williams was shortlisted for the 2012 Deutsche Börse Photography Prize (see below) for his exhibition Kapitalistischer Realismus at Důmumění České Budějovice, Budweis, Czech Republic.)
Read reviews by Sean O'Hagan and Laura Cumming; read reviews of New York MoMA and Art Institute of Chicago showings by Peter Schjeldahl, Roberta Smith and Lori Waxman.
Watch short videos of Williams talking about The Production Line of Happiness and Kapitalistischer Realismus?
(Click on images to enlarge.) 
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Bergische Bauernscheune, Junkersholz / Leichlingen, September 29th, 2009. 2010. Pigmented inkjet print. Paper: 20 x 24″ (50.8 x 61 cm); framed: 32 7/8 x 37 1/16″ (83.5 x 94.1 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Committee on Photography Fund. Courtesy of the artist; David Zwirner, New York/London; and Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Bouquet for Bas Jan Ader & Christopher D’Arcangelo, 1991. Lorrin and Deane Wong Family Trust, Los Angeles. © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Standardpose [Standard Pose] 1,0 Zwerg-Brabanter, silber, Düsseldorf, 2013 (Vera Spix, Elsdorf). Ring number: EE-D13 13-901, green Studio Rhein Verlag, Düsseldorf November 21, 2013, 2014. Inkjet print on cotton rag paper 26 x 33 inches (66 x 83.8 cm). Courtesy David Zwirner, New York/London and Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne. © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Untitled (Study in Yellow and Red/Berlin). Dirk Schaper Studio, Berlin, June 21st, 2007 (No. 2), 2008. C-Print, 20 x 16 inches (50.8 x 40.6 cm). WILCH0252. © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Kodak Three Point Reflection Guide / © 1968, Eastman Kodak Company, 1968 / (Meiko laughing) / Vancouver, B.C. / April 6, 2005. 2005. Chromogenic color print. Paper: 20 x 24″ (50.8 x 61 cm); framed: 34 x 37 3/4″ (86.4 x 95.9 cm). Glenstone. Courtesy of the artist; David Zwirner, New York/London; and Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Untitled (Study in Gray); 1967 Citroen DS. Serial number: DS851360a. Color code: AC 138. Color name: gris dandy. Color year: 1966. Studio Rhein Verlag, Düsseldorf, November 7, 2013, 2014. Inkjet print on cotton rag paper, 20 x 25 inches (50.8 x 63.5 cm). Courtesy David Zwirner, New York/London and Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne. © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Untitled (Study in Gray) 1967 Citroen DS Serial number: DS851360a. Color code: AC 118. Color name: gris etna. Color year: 1966. Studio Rhein Verlag, Düsseldorf, November 11, 2013, 2014. Inkjet print on cotton rag paper 20 x 25 inches (50.8 x 63.5 cm). Courtesy David Zwirner, New York/London and Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne. © Christopher Williams
Christopher Williams (American, born 1956). Model: 1964 Renault Dauphine-Four, R-1095 / Body Type & Seating: 4-dr-sedan–4 to 5 persons / Engine Type: 14/52 Weight: 1397 lbs. Price: $1,495.00 USD (original) / ENGINE DATA: / Base Four: inline, overhead-valve four-cylinder / Cast iron block and aluminum head. W/removable cylinder sleeves. / Displacement : 51.5 cu. in. (845 oc.) / Bore and Stroke: 2.23 × 3.14 in. (58 × 80 mm) / Compression ratio: 7.25:1 Brake Horsepower: 32 (SAE) at 4200 rpm / Torque: 50 lbs. at 2000 rpm. Three main bearings. Solid valve lifters. / Single downdraft carburetor / CHASSIS DATA: / Wheelbase 89 in. Overall length, 155 in. Height: 57 in. / Width: 60 in. Front thread: 49 in. Rear thread: 48 in. / Standard Tires: 5.50 × 15 TECHNICAL: / Layout: rear engine, rear drive. Transmission: four speed manual / Steering: rack and pinion. Suspension (front): independent coil springs. / Suspension (back): independent with swing axles and coil springs. Brakes: / front/rear disc. Body construction: steel unibody. / PRODUCTION DATA: / Sales 18,432 sold in U.S. in 1964 (all types) / Manufacturer: Régie Nationale des Usines Renault; Billancourt, France / Distributor: Renault Inc., New York, NY., U.S.A. / Serial number: R-10950059799 / Engine Number: Type 670-05 # 191563 / California License Plate number: UOU 087 / Vehicle ID number: 0059799 (For R.R.V.) / Los Angeles, California / January 15, 2000 (No. 6). 2000. Gelatin silver print. Paper: 11 x 14″ (28 x 35.6 cm); framed: 26 × 30″ (66 × 76.2 cm).  © Christopher Williams

Saturday, 25 April 2015

Sonia Delaunay - Tate Modern

Sonia Delaunay, Propeller (Air Pavilion), 1937
(Detail – click on image to see whole picture; see, also, installation shot below)

Sonia Delaunay is at Tate Modern until 9 August 2015.
Sonia Delaunay arrived in Paris, aged 20, in 1905 (from Ukraine, via St Petersburg and Germany). She absorbed the avant-garde currents of the moment, including the wild colour of Van Gogh and the Fauves (1904-8), the formal radicalism of Cubism (1908-14) and the Futurists’ romance with speed and technology (launched in Paris, 1909).
Along with her husband Robert she developed a strain of Cubism which emphasised colour (in contrast to the muted tones of Braque and Picasso) and was named Orphism by Guillaume Apollinaire. Drawing on the colour theory of Eugène Chevreul, who identified the phenomenon of simultaneous contrast, the Delaunays developed a purely abstract art which dispensed with form in favour of rhythmic patterns of vibrant colour: Simultanism.
Sonia Delaunay moved easily between mediums and is notable for remarkable work in painting, collage, book binding, textile design, applied design and fashion. Although the chauvinism of the history of art has generally only acknowledged her as a footnote to accounts of her husband Robert, this exhibition will show that, in fact, Sonia was one of the key figures in one of the key periods of European Modernism
Read reviews and features by Adrian Searle, Laura Cumming, Kathleen Jamie, Alastair Smart, Karen Wright, Lara Prendergast, Ben Luke; read interviews with Juliet Bingham, curator of the exhibition: All You Need to Konw About Sonia Delaunay and Sonia Delaunay - Planes, Prints and Automobiles.
Click on images to enlarge.
Sonia Delaunay, Yellow Nude, 1908
Sonia Delaunay, Electric Prisms, 1913
Sonia Delaunay, Simultaneous Dresses (The Three Women), 1925
Sonia Delaunay, Rhythm Colour no. 1076, 1939
Sonia Delaunay, Simultane Playing Cards, 1964
Sonia Delaunay, Syncopated Rythmn, 1967
Installation view showing 2 of the Air Pavilion murals, 1937
Installation view
Installation view
Sonia Delaunay, clothes and matching Citroen B12, 1925
Two models wearing fur coat designed by Sonia Delaunay and manufactured by Heim, with the car belonging to the journalist Kaplan and painted after one of Sonia Delaunay’s fabrics, in front of the Pavillon du Tourisme designed by Mallet-Stevens, International Exposition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts, Paris 1925 
Sonia Delaunay, paint scheme on Matra 530A, 1968

Carol Bove - David Zwirner / Henry Moore Institute

Carol Bove, Untitled, 2014 (detail) Peacock feathers on linen
Carol Bove: The Plastic Unit is at David Zwirner until 30 May 2015; Carol Bove / Carlo Scarpa is at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds until 12 July 2015.
New York sculptor Carol Bove is a new name to me, but images of her shows at David Zwirner and HMI look impressive. The work has a Minimalist, formalist appearance but uses a wide range of materials - including wood, steel, concrete, brass and... peacock feathers! - and assumes an equally wide variety of forms. She evidently takes particular care over the relationships of the individual pieces in the gallery installation. In the Leeds show her work is shown alongside furniture, sculpture and architectural models by Carlo Scarpa (1906-78). According to HMI's exhibition text, both artists are bound by concerns for the object and its environment, the nature of encountering sculpture and the ways by which objects are given meaning.
Read a review by Adrian Searle; read Carol Bove's guide to being an artist!

Works at David Zwirner
(Click on images to enlarge)
Carol Bove, Lingam, 2015 Petrified wood and steel
Carol Bove, I, quartz pyx, who fling muck beds., 2015 Concrete and brass
Carol Bove, Noodle, 2015 Stainless steel and urethane paint
Carol Bove, Self Talk, 2015 Stainless steel and urethane paint
Carol Bove, Cow, Watched by Argus, 2013 Steel
Carol Bove, Open Screen, 2014 Steel
Carol Bove, The Plastic Unit, installation view
Carol Bove, The Plastic Unit, installation view

Works at Henry Moore Institute

Carol Bove, Hysteron, Proteron, 2014 Brass and concrete
Carol Bove, Heraclitus, 2014 Seashell, feather, found objects, steel and concrete
Carol Bove / Carlo Scarpa installation view
Carol Bove / Carlo Scarpa installation view