26/03/15
Interview with Marcus Harvey
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
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.
Saturday, 26 March 2016
Friday, 25 March 2016
Editorial: News of the Art World
25/03/16
Editorial: News of the Art World
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Editorial: News of the Art World
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Eurostate: Basel and Stefan von Bartha profile
25/03/16
Eurostate: Basel and Stefan von Bartha profile
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Eurostate: Basel and Stefan von Bartha profile
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Watt's Gallery - Artists' Village
25/03/16
Watt's Gallery - Artists' Village
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Watt's Gallery - Artists' Village
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of State magazine
Wednesday, 23 March 2016
Aleksandra Karpowicz: Let's Talk About Sex
23/03/16
Aleksandra Karpowicz: Let's Talk About Sex
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of F22 magazine
Aleksandra Karpowicz: Let's Talk About Sex
Published in issue 20 (March/April 2016) of F22 magazine
Feature: Paul Huxley
23/03/16
Feature: Paul Huxley
See the full feature with images in the March 2016 issue of Modern Painters
Feature: Paul Huxley
See the full feature with images in the March 2016 issue of Modern Painters
Portfolio: Sidsel Meineche Hansen
23/03/16
Portfolio: Sidsel Meineche Hansen
Portfolio: Sidsel Meineche Hansen
Sidsel Meineche Hansen: SECOND SEX WAR
Gasworks, London
17 March – 29 May 2016
“I
would like to either abolish gender or multiply it beyond the binary, which
would equate to the same thing,” says Danish-born, London-based artist Sidsel
Meineche Hansen, whose current exhibition, SECOND SEX WAR, explores how this
concept might be (re)produced in virtual adult entertainment.
Among other things, a new animated
video, presented on Oculus Rift virtual reality headsets, considers the
question of what post-human sex and sexuality might be like. Visitors take on the role of
the avatar EVA v3.0 to
experience this firsthand. Meineche Hansen is, in part, motivated by the
feminist “sex wars” of the late 70s/early 80s, which politicised the concept
and representation of female sexuality and led to a split of the feminist
movement into anti-pornography and anti-censorship camps. Her own attitude
towards pornography is unresolved, but her work debatably falls into the
category of 3D porn. But is pornography art? “Sure, if you say it’s art, it’s
art,” Meineche Hansen replies nonchalantly.
Alongside the video, Meineche Hansen is displaying a series of polymer clay sculptures and reliefs. Her practice is research-led and a series of
seminars, planned for during SECOND
SEX WAR, will look at the overlap
between pornography and body horror. Although entrenched in academic discourse,
they will be open to all. As for the exhibition, however, parental discretion
is advised!
Published in the April print issue of DIVA magazine
Interview with Alison Watt
23/03/16
Between Your Eye and Your Mind
Interview with Alison Watt
in the catalogue to accompany
Alison Watt: The Sun Never Knew How Wonderful It Was
Parafin
17 March - 7 May 2016
Extract:
As someone depicting fabric with paint, how
important is the materiality of the paint itself to you? Do you work with
layers? Do you feel there is any analogy between the paint and the drapery
itself? In their trompe l’oeil nature, are your paintings seeking not just to
represent but to recreate or become?
I have an obsession with surface in my own work. I’m
really interested in how we read the surface of a painting and in how paint is
employed. Rubens created very different effects on the surface of his canvas.
If you look at the edge of the cloth that’s wrapped around Cupid’s shoulders,
for example, where it merges with and dissolves into the darkness, it almost
vibrates. There’s a kind of fizz, a kind of thrum on the surface of the canvas.
But that is in contrast with other areas of the painting, which are rounded and
bathed in light. The contrast of these two elements creates an incredible
pictorial drama. A tension and dynamism in relation to the weight and form.
That contrast had an effect on the way I used light and dark in my own
paintings. At the same time, however, there are passages of paint where the
shifts in tone are incredibly subtle. I wanted to make paintings that have an
almost marmoreal quality but, at the same time, possess a softness.
Buy the book here
Friday, 18 March 2016
Interview with Mark Wallinger
18/03/16
Interview: Mark Wallinger
Mark Wallinger: ID
Hauser & Wirth
26 February - 7 May 2016
Interview: Mark Wallinger
Mark Wallinger: ID
Hauser & Wirth
26 February - 7 May 2016
The walls of Hauser & Wirth’s North Gallery are
hung with huge canvases, dominated by looming black shapes, smeared on, with vast
hand gestures, mirroring themselves and each other, demanding interpretation in
the same way as a Rorschach test. The paintings – Vitruvian in measure, at twice
a man’s height tall and an arm-span wide – are from a series of id Paintings by
the Turner Prize-winning artist, Mark Wallinger (b1959). They form part of his
new exhibition, ID, his debut solo show at the gallery, focusing on Freud’s
interrogation of the psyche, the self and the subject. Easy to miss, beside
these towering inky smears, is a much smaller work, Ego (2016), comprising two
iPhone photographs of Wallinger’s hands, posing as a playful recreation of Michelangelo’s
The Creation of Adam.
Next door, in the South Gallery, Wallinger has
installed a life-size, mirrored, revolving replica of the New Scotland Yard
sign, here signifying the superego, with its all-seeing, controlling eye – a
nod to some of his more political works of the past. The back rooms house the
smaller video pieces: Orrery (2016), Shadow Walker (2011) and Ever Since
(2012), each one taking the viewer on a journey, much as they did Wallinger
during the creative process.
After giving a guided tour of the exhibition,
Wallinger spoke to Studio International about his own journey and the – sometimes
subconscious – messages and significations implied.
Read this interview here
Friday, 4 March 2016
Review of Through a Queer Lens: Portraits of LGBTQ Jews at the Jewish Museum London
Through a Queer Lens:
Portraits of LGBTQ Jews
Jewish Museum London
11 February – 17
April 2016
LGBT History Month might be over, but there's still time to visit the Jewish Museum in Camden to see a vibrant celebration of LGBTQ Jewish life in the UK.
Through a Queer Lens is a photographic project co-ordinated by trans
activist Surat-Shaan Knan and shot by black queer artist Ajamu on his camera,
which he affectionately calls Bessie, after the bisexual African-American jazz
and blues singer, Bessie Smith. Hanging in the entrance hall, on bright red
walls, the 20 striking large format black and white portraits greet everyone,
for free, as they queue to buy their tickets.
The individuals featured all identify, in one way or
another, as Jewish and LGBTQ. There are activists, artists, rabbis and
journalists. Lisa Gornick is there, the writer and director of three feature
films, including ‘Do I Love You?’, ‘Tick Tock Lullaby’ and the forthcoming ‘The
Book of Gabrielle’; Benjamin Cohen, chief executive of PinkNews and co-founder
of the cross-party Out4Marriage campaign group is too; so is Rabbi Elli Tikvah
Sarah, a longstanding campaigner for equal marriage.
Alongside each portrait is a brief statement about who the
person is and, in some instances, how they identify and what being LGBTQ and
Jewish means to them. Performer Rachel Mars, for example, describes having
Judaism “written on her face” without her consent: “I have Jewish face #4 – you
might know it. Your cousin/sister/aunt/old school friend is probably rocking it
right now too”. She chooses to celebrate her grandmother for her acceptance and
support – in her 90s – when she would even help Rachel with partner decisions.
“[She] was about fairness, joy, kindness and a bit of muscle when necessary.”
Sharing this and so many other anecdotes will hopefully make visitors question
their own reactions and responses to family members and friends, when their
sexuality perhaps doesn’t fall within the accepted mainstream.
As an accompaniment to the main exhibition, an iPad contains
many further photographs (not by Ajamu) and stories from LGBTQ individuals of
all different faiths. “If we all had the opportunity to live how we want to
live, be who we want to be, have the freedom to express ourselves and follow
religion or faith as we are meant to without delving into the negative
aspects,” writes Khakan Qureshi, “what would we do? We would LOVE.” It sounds
simple – and, really, it is. This exhibition includes just a small
cross-section of LGBTQ Jews, but, even so, it is apparent how each individual
is just that: an individual. No two subjects identify in the same way. But by
accepting this, and loving one another anyway, we can celebrate this diversity
and be proud of it. As the voices on these walls cry out: “We're here, we’re queer
– and we’re visible!”
Image:
Lisa Gornick by Ajamu
Also publish at DIVA online