28/02/16
Death on the Nile: Uncovering the Afterlife of ancient Egypt
Fitzwilliam Museum
23 February - 22 May 2016
Published in The Mail on Sunday, 28/02/16
cor·pus /'kôrpəs/ n. pl. cor·po·ra (-pr-) 1. A large collection of writings of a specific kind or on a specific subject. 2. A collection of writings or recorded remarks used for linguistic analysis. 3. The main part of a bodily structure or organ. //Reviews of art. Art and language. Art and the body.
Sunday, 28 February 2016
Saturday, 27 February 2016
Interview with Chantal Joffe
27/02/16
Interview: Chantal
Joffe
Chantal Joffe
Victoria Miro, Mayfair
22 January - 24 March 2016
The walls of Victoria
Miro Mayfair are lined with faces: some overtly familiar, some less so,
although they all have something recognisable about them, as if they could belong to your circle of family
and friends. This is perhaps a reflection of how the artist, Chantal Joffe
(b1969), feels about the assorted subjects – including Sylvia Plath and Ted
Hughes, Anne Sexton, Elizabeth Hardwick – who crop up in her paintings, and
whom, after reading their confessional writings, she feels she knows. Indeed,
mixed in among these “celebrities” are portraits of Joffe’s own family – herself,
her daughter Esme – capturing the spontaneity of a summer snapshot, as the
paint drips down the canvas, or is dragged horizontally in ripples and stripes.
There is a tenderness, an intimacy and a liveliness to the pictures, both
familial and historic.
Known for her often large-scale oil paintings, Joffe
more recently began working in pastels, experimenting outdoors, and enjoying
the vivid colour palette. She spoke to Studio International about her
techniques, inspirations and recent directions.
Read this interview here
Thursday, 25 February 2016
Review of 12 @ MENIER at Menier Gallery
25/02/16
12 @ MENIER
Menier Gallery
22 - 27 February
2016
Artist Sarah Jane Moon describes her role in 12@Menier, an
exhibition featuring works by 12 contemporary women artists, as ‘organiser’,
not ‘curator’. In tandem with Elizabeth Shields, she selected a further 10
artists, whose work she likes, and invited them to take part in the show. What
works would be submitted was not known until the day of the hang. Somehow,
however, it has worked – and worked well. The walls of the basement gallery –
including some temporary partitions – are filled with familiar faces (if you
know any of the artists involved, you are bound to know some of the models
too!) and the odd landscape in between. No one work dominates and you can
therefore take your time conversing with each subject and exploring the
variously absorbing scenes.
Two of the artists are sculptors and so one aisle is
bisected by a series of metal legs, Uta Brouet’s ‘One and Three’ (2016), the identical shapes seeming to
kick rhythmically, dance, move, and create images in the imagination. On the
ground, two aluminium wire dogs vie for attention, while, in the far aisle, Laurence
Perratzi’s bronze ‘Circles’ hold dancers and acrobats, beautifully navigating
the challenges of a confined, yet infinite space – a metaphor, no doubt, for
life itself.
Moon’s own contributions include a detailed triple portrait,
‘In the Studio’ (2015), which she describes as “not just a self-portrait, but a
portrait of relationships both lateral and triangulated”. A meditation on
female sexuality, the body, nature, violence and nurturing, Moon represents herself
as the artist, with paintbrushes in hand. The wall behind is decorated with pictures
key to her identity, including Courbet’s ‘L’Origine du monde’ (1866) – an explicit painting of that
place between a woman’s legs – and Marlene Dumas’ ‘The Painter’ (1994), which
shows her young daughter, naked, hands covered in red paint, perhaps a reminder,
throughout our adult upheavals, of the inner artist child.
Roxana Halls’ quirky portraits include ‘Sushi’ (2014), taken
from her Appetite series of paintings of women eating, set on a sliding scale,
with some scarcely daring to indulge and others displaying a voracious
appetite: food, Halls explains, is a metaphor for life. Her reclining nude,
‘Liza’ (2011) appears simultaneously confronting, seductive and yet plaintive.
The rich drapery, the make-up and the choker convey a sense of theatricality,
inherent to all of Halls’ work.
Camilla Cannon, who appears as the subject in a couple
of Susanne du Toit’s portraits, is showing a vibrant, abstracted oil of a woman
in a yellow bathing suit, arms above head, unshaven pits bared to the world.
The artist also famously painted the writer Emer O’Toole, after she caused something
of an uproar by speaking out in favour of female body hair on ITV’s This
Morning in 2012.
“The whole thing's been a really interesting
experience,” reflects Moon. “A mixture of west end and east end, straight and
gay, different classes, but all women. I felt like a kid in a sweet shop being
able to put together a list of the painters and sculptors I admired most – and,
happily, they all agreed.” Moon chose artists whose work she recognised as “very
good formally” and whose manner of conducting themselves in the world as
artists “suggested a kinship”. She sought artists who prioritise their practice
and treat it as a vocation rather than an occupation. Also important was that
they should be working within the figurative and representational genre with
traditional materials.
Coinciding with Saatchi’s Champagne Life exhibition,
showcasing the work of 14 women artists, Moon adds: “It's a well-known fact
that women are hugely under-represented in the professional arts world and I
wanted, in a small way, to do something to address this fact. Women are
incredibly powerful when we work together. Together we hung the exhibition
with a brilliantly collaborative spirit – there was very little ego to
negotiate.” And that shows. If this were curated, one would say it had been
well done; since it was not, then even better! Well worth a visit.
Artists included: Sophie Bayntun, Alice Boggis-Rolfe,
Uta Brouet, Camilla Cannon, Susanne du Toit, Roxana Halls, Sarah Jane
Moon, Laurence Perratzi, Olha Pryymak, Ilaria Rosselli del Turco, Elizabeth
Shields, Adele Wagstaff.
Image:
Camilla Cannon
Mansplaining
oil on canvas
100x100cm
Labels:
12@Menier,
Camilla Cannon,
Champagne Life,
Elizabeth Shields,
Emer O'Toole,
figurative,
Laurence Perratzi,
Menier Gallery,
Roxana Halls,
Saatchi,
Sarah Jane Moon,
sculpture,
Uta Brouet,
Women Artists
Interview with Conrad Shawcross re Paradigm at the Francis Crick Institute
In the final throes of putting
together a new sculpture, Paradigm,
to stand outside the Francis Crick Institute, near King’s Cross, London, Conrad
Shawcross (b1977) is fulfilling the role of director – as well as creator – as
his teams in both his studio and the fabricator Benson and Sedgwick endeavour
to get everything ready in time.
Studio International was lucky
enough to accompany Shawcross on a visit to Benson and Sedgwick, where he saw
the sculpture, for the first time, in a nearly complete state. “It’s like being
seven years old again and it being Christmas Eve!” he said, looking around
excitedly with his camera phone out and a big grin on his face. The work, made
of weathered steel, stands 14 metres high and is 5 metres at its widest point,
but balances (albeit with some serious underground bolting, deeper than the
height of the sculpture itself) on a base of less than one metre wide. The
precariousness and audacity of the tetrahedral forms is breathtaking, even
seeing the piece as it lay on its side.
We were also able to watch and film
as the sculpture was installed at its new location, outside the Francis Crick
Institute at King’s Cross.
Watch the interview here
Friday, 19 February 2016
Portfolio: Maya Chowdhry
19/02/16
Portfolio: Maya Chowdhry
“I’m
an activist and an artist,” explains Maya Chowdhry. “Both are equally important
to me: art is one way I’m an activist.” Integral to all her work – be it
written or visual, installation or digital – is that the audience becomes
involved in some way. “Through this interaction people become activated to do
something, an action that contributes to changing the world for the better.”
Her
recent work, Ripple, produced for
GFEST in collaboration with Sarah Hymas, comprises three sculptures, made from
paper collage, that link with an app, allowing the audience to hear poems in
English, Urdu and Bengali. The piece explores the impact of climate change,
provoking questions, while simultaneously giving the audience an aesthetically
pleasing lyrical experience. It was recently short-listed for a 2015 Dot Award, given to a writer of fiction, creative non-fiction or poetry to develop a new work using the web and digital technology in imaginative and collaborative ways.
While much of
Chowdhry’s work centres on her identity as an Asian lesbian, it reaches much
further, speaking of themes that touch us all. “My sexuality can’t be
extricated from who I am. My sister always says: ‘Oh, here’s another piece
about identity,’ even when the work appears, to me, to not be about my
identity! I once got feedback on a short film I wrote about reincarnation
saying it had too many issues in it, ie. the central character was an Asian
lesbian. I argued that it was a film about love transcending life and death,
but to no avail. Now I make the work I want to make, it’s a platform to
communicate to the world what I need to say. It’s still a problem if producers
and funders pigeonhole me and my work, but I carry on regardless.”
See the full portfolio in the March 2016 print issue of DIVA magazine
Thursday, 18 February 2016
Interview with Maha Malluh
18/02/16
Interview: Maha
Malluh
Maha
Malluh (b1959) lives and works in Saudi Arabia and her art is infused with the
culture that surrounds her. Her assemblages of discarded items, found in junk
shops and flea markets, present objects imbued with cultural meaning and
embedded histories. “My inspiration,” she says, “comes from my country, a land
of contrasting images and ideas. Good art forces you to pause, to contemplate
and think harder about your surroundings.”
Currently one of the 14
artists in the Saatchi Gallery’s first all-women exhibition, Champagne
Life, Malluh has covered one of the gallery’s
walls with an assortment of burnt aluminium cooking pots, traditionally used
throughout the Arab world. The title of the series to which the work belongs – Food
for Thought – Al-Muallaqat – makes reference to the pre-Islamic, sixth-century
Suspended Odes or Hanging Poems, traditionally hung in Mecca.
Malluh
spoke to Studio International about the potency of such objects as transmitters
of cultural meaning, her views on gender, and the significance of women-only
exhibitions.
Read the interview here
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