Thursday, 29 May 2014

Interview with Sarah Pucill

29/05/14
Interview with Sarah Pucill
May 2014


Sarah Pucill (born 1961) has been making films for nearly 25 years. Amongst other things, her works explore the presence of and our relationship with the female body – our own and other, narcissism, queer sexuality, identity and sense of self. Certain motifs recur throughout, especially the mirror, which plays a key role in her latest work, Magic Mirror (2013), her first feature-length film, based on the writings and photographs of French Surrealist Claude Cahun (1894-1954).

Pucill’s visual language emerged in the 1990s in the context of experimental film, and her works have been screened at major international film festivals in London, Europe, Canada and the USA. Each new film she makes is a progression from the previous one, and many are born out of photographs or still images.


To read this interview, please go to: http://www.photomonitor.co.uk/2014/05/magic-mirror/





Friday, 23 May 2014

Portfolio: Fernanda Liberti

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Friday, 16 May 2014

Interview: Maxim Boxer

16/05/14
Maxim Boxer: interview
Russian Cosmism: modern and contemporary art exhibition and auction
Erarta Galleries, London
29 May – 3 June 2014
Auction: 3 June, 6.30pm

Opening to coincide with the first Russian Art Week during the UK-Russia Year of Culture, Russian Cosmism, presented by Moscow-based curator and gallery owner Maxim Boxer, is an exhibition and auction in one, bringing together 50 works – all for sale – by modern and contemporary Russian artists, exploring the philosophical and aesthetic movement that was born in Russia in the early-20th century. The first in a projected series of exhibitions and auctions, the aim is to attract European and Russian collectors and galleries. With lots priced between £500- £10,000, affordability is key to the concept.


Studio International spoke to Maxim Boxer in the run up to the event.





Thursday, 15 May 2014

Review of United Visual Artists: Vanishing Point at Towner Gallery, Eastbourne

15/05/14
United Visual Artists: Vanishing Point
Towner Gallery, Eastbourne
18 April – 22 June 2014

United Visual Artists (UVA) was formed in 2003 by Matthew Clark, Chris Bird and Ash Nehru. Since then, the practice has expanded and currently numbers 12. With team members coming from various disciplines, including visual arts, architecture, engineering, production and software programming, this is a collaboration that pushes the boundaries of contemporary art, producing works that incorporate sculpture, installation, live performance, digital art and architecture.


Working as a collective allows ideas to be challenged and developed throughout their creation. What all members share is a fascination with the physical presence of light and a desire to capture this ephemeral presence to create transient structures. “It’s the flexibility that light offers, especially in the context of digital control, that makes it so attractive. No other material is so easily and utterly controllable, while having such an enormous impact on a space, or surface.”







Review of Helen Benigson: Late Night Supermarket Shopping Live at Tenderpixel

14/05/14
Helen Benigson: Late Night Supermarket Shopping Live
Tenderpixel, 10 Cecil Court, London WC2N 4HE
9 May – 7 June 2014
Lured in by a female weightlifter performing in the window, once inside Helen Benigson’s Late Night Supermarket Shopping Live, it is like being in a parallel universe. Psychedelic pinks and fluorescent yellows spin from the kaleidoscopic film projections, depicting bikini clad women dancing, nipples with displaced mouths moving over them, bare midriffs and beach scenes. Sanitary protection, treadmills, group therapy sessions. All things which might play a role in the modern woman’s life. A voiceover declares repeatedly: “That’s so awkward!” and “That’s really intimate!” The figures are in an in-between state: part real, part computer generated. And the action spills over from the screen into the gallery space itself, where a pink yoga mat lays ready for use, and two small screens, with invitingly tropical beach resort imagery, are bedecked with sushi.







Monday, 5 May 2014

Interview with Alexander James

05/05/14
Alexander James: interview

Alexander James (b1967) is a photographer with a difference. Rather than capturing the moment spontaneously, James creates intricate sculptural compositions submerged in huge tanks of purified water as the object for his camera. The effect of light passing through, heightened against a darkened background, gives the resulting images a painterly appearance, recalling Dutch vanitas still lifes. This blurring of boundaries between photography, painting and sculpture renders James’s works uncategorisable as well as eerily beautiful.


Six months ago, James, who is usually based in London, moved his entire studio to Moscow to prepare for his current exhibition at the Triumph Gallery. Arriving not speaking a word of the language, he made his home and studio in a 250 sq metre space in the Red October, an island in the centre of the city that, under tsars and later Soviet authorities, housed a chocolate factory, but is now a hub for contemporary art. Working with live models suspended in water, the new works he created in situ develop many of his earlier themes, which were greatly inspired by John Millais’ Pre-Raphaelite masterpiece Ophelia (1851) and Paul Delaroche’s La Jeune Martyre (1855).

James found time to speak to Studio International about the process of relocation and creation, just after the opening of his exhibition, Rastvorennaya Pechal (Dissolved Ennui).









Friday, 2 May 2014

Book review of Cat Garcia: Our Time

02/05/14
Our Time
By Cat Garcia
Hardback, 250 pages
ISBN 9780992821708
Published by Cat Garcia
£35 retail

Creativity spans a broad spectrum of means and forms, or, as Cat Garcia notes, in the foreword to her new, self-published photographic collection, Our Time: ‘Creativity will not be pinned down.’ Accordingly, the book, which presents photographs of creatives, each of whom Garcia and her camera spent a day with, includes a range of 60 well-known (and some less well-known) artists, designers, illustrators, editors, performers, photographers, writers, musicians, florists and, well, anyone for whom ideas serve as currency. The photographs are at once private and public. They do not pander to celebrity magazine format, with close up airbrushed photo shoot portraits, posed, refined and painstakingly selected; nor are they paparazzi snapshots, happenstance, hasty and intrusive. They capture their subjects at work, on their way to work, on their coffee breaks. They capture the people and places and objects which inspire their all important ideas.

They capture moments of inspiration and contemplation; aspects of character, every bit as much a signature of the artist as a sweep of the pen (or brush).





To read the rest of this review, please go to: http://www.photomonitor.co.uk/2014/05/our-time-2/