THE WALKER LEONARDO DA VINCI EXHIBIT
Tuesday, 30 April 2019
30/04/19 bluecoat
BLUECOAT DISPLAY CENTRE EXHIBITS
SURVEY - Survey is the largest review of contemporary art practise in Jerwood Visual Art's 12 years of programming, spanning a breadth of disciplines including film, performance, ceramics, installation and painting.
a track with no name - |
2018 - simeon barclay |
acrylic, aluminium, vinyl - |
softlad - neon - 2018 - joe fletcher orr |
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landing good sync will pay dividends - |
routed mdf, emulsion, painted steel, microphone, stands, headphones and wiring - |
2016 - milly peck |
decoy - acrylic, aluminium, vinyl - 2018 - simeon barclay |
we gathered around the puddle, smiling patiently - rock, stones, pond material, fake rocks, water, fans, fake plants, grass, sticks, plasticine model and film - 2018 - hazel brill
the world of mouse (grok your cornea gumbo) - video 20 minutes, video 12 minutes - 2018 - thomas goddard
30/04/19 the tate
TATE EXHIBITS
sculpture - transformation - materiality - trauma - minimalism - process - feminism - humble/poor materials - entropy - ritual - abjection - environment - performance - chance - accumulation - action - surrealism - energy - body art - indeterminacy
drawing no.4 'path of movement of a point' after k. malevich (1922) - sand-blasted mirror glass - 2003 - goshka macuga |
plank piece I-II - 2 photographs on paper on board - |
1973 - charles ray |
Ray was part of a wave of artists during the 1970's who addressed sculpture as an activity rather than as an object. In the iconic two-part photographic work Plank Piece, the artist documents the use of his own body as the sculptural component. the static photograph belies the performative nature of the activity presented. Contrived through a complex balance between weight and gravity the artist suspended his body using only a plank of wood, creating a minimal, graphic image that is at once humorous and unsettling.
relation of aesthetic choice to life activity (function) of the subject - lithograph on primed canvas with neon gas tube - 1961-2 - billy apple |
desire - abjection - body - gender - objectification - surrealism - automatism - feminism - fragmentation - psychoanalysis - sexuality - homosexuality - nude - part object
Ernst studied philosophy and psychology in Bonn and was interested in the alternative realities experienced by the insane. this painting may have been inspired by the psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud's study of the delusions of a paranoiac, Daniel Paul Schreber. Freud identified Schreber's fantasy of becoming a woman as a 'castration complex'. The central image of two pairs of legs refers to Schreber's hermaphroditic desires. Ernst's inscription on the back of the painting reads: 'the picture is curious because of its symmetry. The two sexes balance one another.'
"op art in focus"
A major development in art that emerged in the 1960's, op art - short for optical art - uses bold contrasting colour, lines and geometric shapes to dazzle the eye. Its leading figures included Bridget Riley, Jesus Rafael Soto and Victor Vasarely. drawing on colour theory, they experimented with perception to create effects ranging from the subtle, to the disturbing and disorientating. This display presents an expanded and more international account of op art, showing how its effects continue to influence artists today.Julio Le Parc introduced kinetic elements into his works, including 1963's Continual Mobile, Continual Light. Le Parc saw the viewer as an active participant, intending to expand the role of individual perception in the meaning of his works. Heinz Mack similarly created works that opened up new forms of perception, responding to the technologically-driven optimism of space age.
white field - painted nails on canvas |
and board - 1964 - |
gunther uecker |
Ueker began to make reliefs using nails in the late 1950's. The white composition allows the nails to create patterns of shadow across the surface, responding to the light in the room but also seeming to change in relation to the viewer's own position. Ueker, as with others in this op art display, was a member of the artist's group, Zero. The group aimed to establish a new beginning in art and culture and its name related to its last point in a countdown before a rocket is launched.
continual mobile, continual light - |
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painted wood, aluminium, |
and nylon thread - 1963 - |
julio le parc |
After moving from Buenos Aires to Paris at the end of 1958, Le Parc began to paint pictures with simple geometrical forms because he considered them more neutral than irregular forms, therefore closer to his aim of removing all trace of the artist's touch and of subjective points of view. He soon started experimenting with movement and chance by suspending plastic or metal shapes on thin nylon threads in front of a contrasting background.
3069 white dots on an oval background - wood, nylon, and motor - 1966 - pol bury
Bury was interested in what he called an 'aesthetic of slowness', creating mechanical constructions that were characterised by almost imperceptible movement. In this specific piece, white dots move intermittently in front of a plain surface. Sudden twitches of movement are often caught on the periphery of the spectator's vision, creating a sense of disorientation. The work is activated once a button is pushed [ on the wall beside the piece].
light dynamo - aluminium, glass, wood and motor - 1963 - heinz mack
Mack founded the group Zero with fellow artist Otto Piene in 1957 in Dusseldorf, Germany. Zero felt their approach to art making, which used light and motion, opened up new forms of perception aligned with space-age aesthetics. In this relief, an aluminium disc decorated with a reed pattern rotates under glass that had been moulded with a similar pattern. The movement itself cannot be perceived, but the disc appears to dissolve into a rippling light. Through optical illusion, this seems to be continuously reforming itself as an oval while, at the same time, remaining a circle.
love is the message, the message is death - video, colour and sound - 7 min 25 sec - authur jafa
American artist and filmmaker Arthur Jafa's Love is The Message, The Message is Death is a video portrait of black American identity expressed through archival and viral footage. The work alternates scenes of everyday life, among which are acts of racism, and clips including musical performances, and sporting excellence. It uses material from an array of sources including news broadcasts, Youtube clips, and Jafa's own footage, set to musician Kanye West's hip hop-gospel Ultralight Beam 2016. Love is The Message, The Message is Death, demonstrates the resilience and creativity of black culture in the face of violence and discrimination. For Jafa, it constitues a new form of black cinema fused with 'the power, beauty and alienation of black music'.
Wednesday, 17 April 2019
16/04/19 huddersfield art gallery
HUDDERSFIELD ART GALLERY VISIT
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painted wood on formica - mary martin - 1967 |
Mary Martin was a british sculptor and painter, known for her abstract paintings and constructions. originally exhibiting still life and landscape paintings, martin painted her first abstract picture in 1950, made her first relief work in 1951 and her first free-standing construction in 1956. Permutation of five is part of a series of works made in the mid to late 1960's in which the artist created and arranges half-cubes, cut diagonally, on a square base. in this piece there are five rows, five columns and each shape has five faces. Blocks have been arranged so that the station of each shape is not repeated on any column or row. The angled mirrors in the work reflect the lines of the inner sculptural surfaces, and the shape and light within the gallery space, creating a complex, painterly effect. This piece exhibits a multitude of angles, reflecting the light to produce abstract perspectives on the steel. Applying this to my own work in perspective, this allows the eye to experience something new, regardless of the section of the piece you're looking at. It's angled shapes bring interest and an abstract sense to the piece.
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pot - |
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falling warrior - bronze - |
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henry moore - |
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1956/7 - |
"The idea for 'the warrior' came to me at the end of 1952 or very early in 1953. It was evolved from a pebble i found on the seashore in the summer of 1952, and which reminded men of the stump of a leg, amputated at the hip. just as leonardo says somewhere in his notebooks that a painter can find a battle scene in the lichen marks on a wall, so this gave me the start of 'the warrior' idea". Whilst Henry Moore is one of the best loved and most respected british artists of the twentieth century, the purchase in 1958 of this sculpture by the huddersfield art gallery in 1958 provoked controversy. One letter to the local press stated: "When this ugly distorted depiction of the human body is installed in the art gallery, sited so that the monstrous form may be viewed from all angles, may i suggest that the plaque be removed and a new one bearing the words 'huddersfield rate-payer' be attached?" Personally, its distorted depiction is one of the biggest aspects about this piece the inspires and intrigues me greatly. Its imperfections create a sense of relatability that allows the viewer to form its own personal narrative that they can connect to this piece. the perception of this piece is that of a 'monstrous' nature, however if we warp the perspective/s of an object / image, it can release a hoard of emotions that are connected to both the piece and audience.
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einstein and the jealous monk - oil on canvas - chris gollon - 2004 |
"einstein dressed as robin hood
with his memories in a trunk,
passed this way an hour ago,
with his friend the jealous monk...
...you would not think to look at him,
but he was famous long ago,
for playing the electric violin
on the desolation row..."
This brightly coloured painting also depicts gallon's sense of a place: that of desolation row. as the critic and visual arts writer laura gascoigne noted: "... A quote from 'desolation row', used by Gollon as a random imaginative trigger in the same way as actors use free-association in improvisation...his influences are as eclectic as his sources. Stylistic references to El Greco, Ribera,Goya and Backmann mix on equal terms with a range of pictorial devices from early renaissance gold grounds to comtempary speech bubbles or animation backdrops: the distant mountain ranges in his new pictures owe more to looney tunes than to mantegna. As a painter he wants his work to be readable, and as a voracious consumer of visual ideas he has acquired the vocabulary to make it."
The image in my opinion refers to religion vs science. the perspective of religious backgrounds may add to the emotion and facial expressions that are present on the monk's face. The contrast between modern and traditional views are present and can express varied impressions/portrayals through this painting, depending on the viewer's personal beliefs and possible bias views.
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final piece
FINAL PIECE
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DE-PERSONALIZATION a state in which one's thoughts and feelings seem unreal or not to belong to oneself. De-personalizat...
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FINAL PIECE