Wednesday 30 January 2008

Office of Subversive Architecture

Office of Subversive Architecture- All eight of the architects work for OSA on a part-time basis, as they all have other jobs, mainly teaching or working for another architectural agency
- Met each other at university and wanted to realise projects as a team and negotiate the costs and procedures themselves- less weakening of the original concept

'The Accumulator'- Leeds, Feb-March 2008:
- Were given a brief to design the space in the international swimming pool area inbetween when the pool was to be drained and when it was to be knocked down
- OSA liked the idea of giving the public space back to the public one last time- allow the users a chance to say goodbye
- The architects decided to do something abstract as they liked the idea of an empty big basin- chose to design a funnel-like installation, so it appears water would be collected through the ceiling
- Therefore working with the existing structure and character of the space to help transform the area with a minimal effort

'Intact'- Shoreditch, London- 2003:
- When walking through the East End of London- two of the OSA architects stumbled upon a disused signal box, which had had the bottom level taken away to prevent squatters using the premises
- Contacted Network Rail to ask permission- the company was interested but not committed to their suggestions for improvement as the signal box was situated in an area of controversy
- Climbed over before dawn, dressed as council workers (so to not attract attention) and did it anyway
- Before converting a space there are two main questions: what level of sensitivity is needed and shall we try to retain the initial structure?
- Re-painted the signal box, planted geraniums and a little front garden and installed a light, motor battery
- Idea was to draw attention and refurbish a derelict space- create a dream-like image in a decrepid area of London
- Also the OSA has to consider whether to change the public or urban area temporarily or permanently
- This 'subversion' was labelled Guerilla Architecture- though guerilla architecture usually refers to destruction rather than construction

'Hoegarden'- Liverpool Street, London- 2005:
- Used for advertising purposes, though all OSA had to do was incorporate a few logos
- Decided to really contrast the space with its urban surroundings- covered the area with blankets of grass and painted an architectural plan of the area onto the lawn
- Natural idea with a comic side; 'Please Keep On The Grass'
- Also displayed in Manchester between derelict buildings- OSA thought this venue was actually more fitting for the concept

'Launch'- Kassel, Germany- 2007
- 100year old casino- change the space into a lounge temporarily
- The room had a lot of windows so the area was easy to neutralise
- Brought cheap IKEA sofas, projected an video of a sitting cat, Julia, which looped every five minutes
- One half of each drink's table was reflected onto the other side using a variety of lights

'Kunstulle'- Liverpool Biennial- 2006
- Asked to create a new dynamic for the roof of these three art warehouses so it was clear that this was a venue during the Biennial
- To create a beacon and help draw people to this region- revitalise the area- 'Soho-isation'
- Focus on the character and the potential of the space- design was to follow the interesting roofline- minimal intervention as it was a temporary intervention
- Decided to not use doors or windows for the outside roof space- instead the OSA team hung drapes of translucent and red PVC from a metal scaffolding
- Depending on the sky's light- the colour in the room changed- very atmospheric- cosy and intimate.

Friday 25 January 2008

Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space

Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space, by Brian O'Doherty

Indeed tradition itself, as the spacecraft withdraws, looks like another piece of bric-a-brac on the coffee-table- no more than a kinetic assemblage glued together with reproductions, powered by little mythic motors and sporting tiny models of museums. And in its midst, one notices an evenly lighted "cell" that appears crucial to making the thing work: the gallery space.

The history of modernism is intimately framed by that space. Or rather the history of modern art can be correlated with changes in that space and in the way we see it. We have now reached a point where we see not the art but the space first. (A cIiche of the age is to ejaculate over the space on entering a gallery.)An image comes to mind of a white, ideal space that, more than any single picture, may be the archetypal image of 20th-century art. And it clarifies itself through a process of historical inevitability usually attached to the art it contains.

Notes from my reading:
- An evenly lighted cell
- History of Modernism is intimately framed by that space
- History of Modern art- correlated with changes in that space
- Reached a point where we can see the space first before the art
- White, ideal space displaying the archetypal image of twentieth century art
- Ideal gallery subtracts from the artwork all cues that interfere with the fact that it is 'art'
- Work is isolated from anything that would detract from its own evaluation of itself
- Connotations of the white: sanctity of the church/ formality of a courtroom/ the mystique of the experimental laboratory- all joining chic design to create a unique chamber
- The object to be the medium through which these ideas are manifested and proffered for discussion
- Post-Modernism- context becomes content
- Peculiar reversal- object introduced into the gallery 'frames' the gallery
- Modernist- wooden polished floor, painted white walls and evenly light ceiling, as the main light source
- Art is free 'to take its own life'
- Unshadowed, white, clean, artificial
- Works- mounted/ hung/ scattered for study
- Limbolike status- presence of your own body seems superfluous, an intrusion

My group and I seem pretty adamant that we would like to display our work within this Modernist white cube... it begs the question as to why. Amanda's favourite exhibition was an exhibition she saw in Edinburgh showing only craft work. I absolutely loved the V&A's craft exhibition. Perhaps the reason why we are so determined to keep our work within this twentieth century tradition is because mixed media and craft never really had a chance to be displayed in this sanctimonious, fake atmosphere. By forcing our work to be accepted within the art world's most accredited environment may be we will help craft and mixed media gain the recognition it deserves...

Wednesday 23 January 2008

'Clay Today: Contemporary Ceramists and Their Work'

'Clay Today: Contemporary Ceramists and Their Work':

- Conceptual art exists largely as an idea and largely in the moment
- Clay handled conceptually- not shaped or glazed or fired- against the traditional ceramic vocab
- Exhibitions devoted to unfired clay art
- Conceptual artists have worked with the ephemeral dust or dissolved wet mud
- Much claywork is a 'happening' but even happenings can be- must be- controlled
- The definition of Michelangelo- 'sculpture bisects, or in some way changes, space'

Glazing:
- Glazing adds another dimension of colour and yields a hard, dense, smooth surface that is easy to clean
- Fired glazes run the gamut from clear transparent, translucent or opaque glossy surfaces to stony, dull- surfaced matts- matt glazes tend to stay in one place whilst melting in the kiln
- Poured/ dipped/ brushed/ sponged/ sprayed- each application technique leaves its own mark- brush marks/ pour marks/ sponge marks etc.

Normal consistency:
- Run off fingernails as a long droll
- Some skin should be visible through the glaze coating on your hand
- Even coating of glaze best achieved by pouring and dipping
- Brush in several alternating coats- will blend more evenly
- Spraying= even coat
- Air bubbles can develop
- Metal oxides and stains can be mixed with water and applied by any means under or over unfired glaze resulting in underglaze and overglaze (majolica) decoration

- Clay is an art material that changes- never stays the same until after the final firing- not reveal itself until the final cooling
- Clay sculpture- stable/ mobile/ unfired/ fired
- Adjectives to attain- exciting/ dramatic/powerful
- 3D form- movement/ repetition/ contrast/ variety/ proportion
- Perceptions to communicate- soft/ hard/ light/ heavy/ fragile/ strong
- Might use clay as it does what other materials can not
- Maybe develop a patina- usually associated with wood firing

- Black/ dark brown matt glaze might get the effect I am after...

Subtle Mechanisms by Harvey Blume

'Subtle Mechanisms' by Harvey Blume, Critical Eye, August 13, 1998- An Article on Arthur Ganson

http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/criticaleye/ce980813.htm

For Arthur Ganson, an artist whose ingenious contraptions tell stories, meaning and motion are all but inseparable.

Arthur Ganson works, as very few artists do, with machines. He builds subtle mechanisms that magnify and reflect on aspects of existence. Given his medium it's at first tempting to think of his work as a throwback to the eighteenth century, with its belief in a clockwork universe activated at the beginning of time by a divine being -- a clockmaker -- then left to run in accordance with the laws of Newtonian mechanics. It was an age with a passion for automatons -- Jacques de Vaucanson's duck, for example, which was rigged to swim, swallow, and produce excrement. According to one contemporary account, this duck "performed all the quick motions of the head and throat which are peculiar to the living animal, and ... also the sound of quacking." In the eighteenth century, quacking and crapping mechanical ducks were in philosophical earnest, intended, as the French philosopher Jean Baudrillard put it in Simulations (1983), to be the "analogy of man and ... his interlocutor." Ducks and other automatons pushed the clockwork metaphor to its limit, embodying viewers' questions about the real difference, if any, between mechanism and organism. Might the latter be merely a highly refined version of the former? Were living things God's finest clocks, built for swallowing, defecating, and, in the case of humans, talking, too?

Previously in Critical Eye:"Truth and Consequences" (May 1998)The films of Luis Buñuel, argues Lee Siegel, reveal a vision of human violence that is complicated, unsentimental, and always honest."Posing for Egon Schiele" (February 1998)Lee Siegel on the artist, the critics, and the importance of being jaded.Discuss this column in the Arts & Literature forum of Post & Riposte.

Ganson's work isn't ruled by a clockwork philosophy; it is open to whatever truths about life and motion his wires, motors, oil, and chains will lend themselves to. His pieces are not, like de Vaucanson's duck, scrupulous mechanical copies of living things, but are instead suggestive -- or, as Ganson puts it, "gestural," frequently grounded in biological and bodily processes but never limited to them. And Ganson proves just as resistant to today's dominant metaphor machine, the computer, as he is indifferent to the Newtonian metaphor of the clock. This summer represented Ganson's breakthrough into the New York art world; an exhibit of his work, on view from May 30 to July 18 at the Ricco/Maresca Gallery, was praised by The New Yorker as including "miraculous whirligig sculptures." I met up with the forty-three-year-old artist at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, where his work remains on display, and where I first encountered it. The MIT Museum specializes in exhibits about science and its history -- as in a current installation on the history of the slide rule -- and devotes a room to MIT students' most memorable hacks. (How did they get that car to the roof the administration building overnight, anyway?) To go from such displays into a gallery of Ganson's work is to experience a sudden shift from documentation, however informative or amusing, to the more complex claims and rewards of art.

Cory's ChairIn "Cory's Chair," a small yellow plastic chair is torn apart by four mechanical arms, which then reverse the motion and reassemble it. The violent action of the mechanism reminded me of a spider's mouth fastening on prey. Ganson's initial thought, though, pertained to time. "The exploding chair is like the current moment," he told me. "It's around long enough for you to see what it is, and suddenly it's gone." The idea of the exploding moment led Ganson to considerations of the Big Bang, which joins the Big Contraction among the multiple meanings arising from this piece. For Ganson it's crucial that it be a chair endlessly torn apart and put back together rather than, say, an anonymous car part or lawn-mower gizmo. An exploding gizmo might say something about factory work and the assembly line, but an exploding chair sets off a broader range of feelings, according to Ganson. "It's a well-understood object in a strange situation. We fill in the blanks. Why is it doing that?" "Cory's Chair" points both to the instant and eternity, and Ganson toys with the dimension of time in many of his works, which often repeat themselves at fixed intervals -- though in the case of "Machine with Concrete" you'll just have to take the artist's word for it: the sculpture features fast gears acting on a system of slower gears that will drive a steel bit into a waiting concrete slab some 2.191 trillion years from now. (One has to assume this machine has never been adequately tested.) Ganson's time play is usually on a more human scale, and surrounds his work with an implicit music, a sense of dance. The dance is made explicit in a piece like "Machine with African Porcupine Quills," whose arms do a high-speed flamenco with sword-like objects. The mobile nature of Ganson's work appeals to children, who are not yet inculcated with the belief that art and motion can't be combined. Ganson is one of the few contemporary artists whose work charms almost immediately rather than luring viewers into a series of staring contests with ominous objects. And some of the pieces are interactive, driven by human beings rather than electricity. "Brownian Motion," when pulled along, communicates the motion of its wheels to a tray of rice pellets that swarm over themselves like larvae, or, from a distance, appear to undulate like a single wave-like living thing.

Ganson's accessibility does not come at the expense of complexity or depth. "Requiem for a Lost Uncle" consists of twenty-three small scraps of paper positioned at the end of rods that lift and fold them so that they appear to be birds flying off in a serene token of a soul's release. "Machine with Ball Chain" evokes an opposite sense: of weight, density, gravity, effort -- of forced labor, perhaps, or peristalsis (enter the bowels of de Vaucanson's duck). As the chain is tugged slowly down through an opening, it defies Ganson's usual repetitive motions, huddling into different patterns of resistance every time. Ganson's work can be compared to that of Rebecca Horn, the German artist who also employs motion but who buries her apparatus in feathers and cloth and subsumes it in symbolism pertaining to sex or violence and, in many cases, both. Ganson's works are lighter and more forthcoming about their own composition; the mechanism is always a good part of the message. When I alluded to the fragility and delicacy of some of his wire constructs, he responded, "Those are all human qualities. Fragility, sadness, joy, fear, and also wonderment -- those are the feelings that caused me to make them in the first place." Ganson has been fascinated with motion since devoting his sixth-grade doodles to studies of a race car ramming into a rock. When I asked why he hasn't used computers to carry out simulations of the motions and collisions that intrigue him, he said, "In the digital realm, you can do anything, draw anything. You don't have to obey the laws of physics. So when you see something digital, it's less surprising than when you see a physical object doing it; there's less mystery." Ganson isn't ready to abandon atoms for the easy malleability of bits. "Part of the reason for me spending my time, my limited time on earth, in this pursuit," he says, "is to work with the physical world and see what I can say with it."

Given Ganson's respect for the expressive possibilities of matter in motion, one piece in particular seemed to serve as his self-portrait. In "Child Watching Ball," a doll's face swivels in perfect accord with a ball's gyrations. No matter how fast the ball moves -- the speed is determined by how fast you turn a handle -- the doll's eyes refuse to break contact, as though permanently hypnotized. Ganson disagreed with me that "Child Watching Ball" says any more about him than his other pieces; he regards them all as telling part of his story. Not surprisingly, Ganson did warm to a statement the novelist Umberto Eco made about his own work -- namely that its focus was "to transform machines into narrative, to show how much narrative power they have inside them, how they can tell stories." For Ganson, as for Eco, motion and meaning are close to inseparable.Ganson's work is at home in a place like the MIT Museum because his small machines are so exquisitely engineered, and in a New York gallery because they are created to accomplish nothing else than art. For Ganson, the clockwork universe, with its strictly mimetic mechanical forms, has long since run down, and the digital universe, the world of virtual reality, where anything goes, has not yet been booted up. It's in that space -- where objects have real weight, real motion, and real implications -- that Ganson as an artist thrives.

Arthur Ganson's Machines

Arthur Ganson is an American sculptor, inventor and award-winning toy designer. His exhibition at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Museum presented sculpture works embodying clattering contraptions of wires, gears and pulleys. However Ganson's machines are a lot more than just clever gadgets. The art part comes in the way his mechanical gestures so intuitively and eloquently convey human feelings. Wriggling inchworms, mincing feather dusters, Kabuki-dancing miniature plastic swords. Ganson's work celebrates life with a sense of wonderment and humour that's rare in mechanical scultpure. His 'Machine with Oil' spurts grease on itself at four minute intervals adding an erotic and suggestive dimension to his work. Nicholas Capasso, the curator of Ganson's first one-person museum show in 1993 at the DeCordova Museum & Sculpture Park in Lincoln, stated that he was 'astounded that someone could make a machine with such nuanced and complex emotional resonances. Anyone can make a machine that waves, but only Arthur can make a machine that waves good-bye. There's a big difference.'

Wednesday 16 January 2008

Leeds Fine Artists

I offered to help Heather Jones, a third year, with her performance piece at Trinity Church yesterday. The exhibition was put on by fifteen of the third years, all of whom displayed their work. The exhibition was to explore the human condition, however the context of the previous Church of England space automatically gave all the work a religious connotation. For some peoples' work, I think this added an extra dimension, as Kimbal Bumstead's performance piece explored ideas of dehumanisation, which linked well to religious connotations. However for other people, such as Eloise Kerr and Lucy Huddart, I could not help but think the religious connotations drowned their work or made their pieces almost unnoticeable, which they do not deserve to be.

The central location of the exhibition space was good and I am sure that accounted for some of the vast numbers of visitors. Also Lorraine's publicity was obviously well executed and Kimbal even had his performance written about in the Leeds' Metro! Richard Bell wants our year to get into groups and put on an exhibition, so this has shown me how important well directed advertising and a good location are if we want to attract a big audience.

Saturday 12 January 2008

Out of the Ordinary: Spectacular Craft

I went to see the Out of the Ordinary; Spectacular Craft Exhibition at the V&A a few days ago. I can't state how impressed I was at the level of skill within this exhibition. Furthermore all eight of the artists seemed to offer a different area of expertise; carving, welding, sewing, animation, even modern technologies such as laser etching, which first came to my attention after the October 2007 issue of Creative Review, which had laser etched the structure of a crystal into the black, glossy cover. Another reason why I believe the exhibition struck such a chord was because the artists had mostly used cheap materials, such as nails, paper, thread, dust- all very accessible to the average artist. The artists were also all highly imaginative, which in this modern art industy and artist-as-businessman role can sometimes can be lost. For instance, Susan Collis' work played with the idea of the mundane and familiar with paint-like splatters sewn onto a dust sheet and Yoshihiro Suda's hyper-realistic wooden flowers and weeds.

Susan Collis- 'Craft in my mind, has that 'good' label and that's what draws me to it. To make something look bad, dirty or stained using these processes that are usually deemed to be good and worthy, to jumble up the two.'
Better days (2006)
Dust sheet, embroidery thread
The oyster’s our world (2004)
81.3 x 38 x 58 cm
Wooden stepladder, mother of pearl, shell, coral, fresh water pearl, cultured pearls, white opal, diamond
Untitled, (Rawl plugs), (2007)
Jasper, black onyx, red carnelian, garnet, brown goldstone

Paint job (2004) 160 x 45 cm
Boiler suit, embroidery thread

'Paint Job' is typical of Collis' deceptive work, as the boiler suit initially looks like it has a collection of careless splashes and stains upon the fabric of the worker's overall. However, in fact, these splashes and stains have been meticulously stitched onto the material, replicating the typical accidental and spontaneous marks. Collis, similarly to Suda, also enjoys playfully positioning the works in overlooked areas of an exhibition space, which heightens the likelihood of the viewer misreading the works. The deception within her artworks constantly forces the viewer to recalculate and reconsider the work, which is something the modern day, 'culture vulture' doesn't do.

Yoshihiro Suda- 'Simply, I want to know how detailed I can make it, how real I can make it. This is an old-fashioned way of thinking, to make something so naturalistic that it looks like the original. It is not the fashion now, to observe something and make it very skilfully, the idea itself is very deep. To make this kind of copy, the technique is very important. There are no goals as such, just that I can make it better next time.'

Suda's work was incredible. I often work with a variety of different woods so I can only appreciate and envy the painstaking detail in the work. What I also liked about the Japanese artist is that he chooses native plants commonly found in the city where his work will be exhibited, so his webpage showed a great variety of plants! The idea seems so simple and almost unconsidered yet by placing the plants in unexpected areas of the gallery space, the viewer automatically reads more into the skilful work.

YOSHIHIRO SUDA, Palais de Tokyo, Paris 2004

It is such a shame that craft seems to be so dismissed within the art community and it is for this reason why I try to focus craft elements into my work. I absolutely love the Jerwood Metal and Wood exhibitions, as the artists seem to have such a connection with their materials, which I believe is necessary if the work is going to really promote the concept.

Friday 4 January 2008

Jazz Green

Jazz Green is an artist who seems to share my fascination with decay and erosion: the intricacies of colour, fragile structures, the delicate processes of gradual deterioration. He utilises a range of salvaged and reclaimed materials in his work, and maximises on the forensic capacity of macro photography to provide him with a range of initial visual references and appropriated compositions.

Many of his mixed media artworks are characterised by earth colours and multi-layered, textural qualities: deliberately intricate reinventions and subtle explorations of surface and patina. What I love about her work is that when each piece is looked at individually and detached from their original visual source, the artwork becomes more abstract and multi-sensory. All the work has a strong metaphorical pictorial language: quiet, gentle, with symbolic renderings on broader perceptions of abandonment, loss, transience or impermanence.

Her photographs:
Shed 2004. Digital Photograph 30cm x 30cm
Plywood 2004. Digital Photograph 30cm x 30cm

Fence 2005. Digital Photograph 30 x 30cm
Floor 2004. Digital Photograph 30cm x 30cm
Wall 2005. Digital Photograph 30cm x 30cm


Jazz Green's paintings also have a beautiful textural quality. This is a close-up of Rubel, which was begun in late 2004 and has been through many stages, adding successive layers of pigment (mostly red oxides), ink and diluted white paint, then finally burnishing with carnuba wax to give a subtle lustre to the surface. Rubel is merely an old English spelling of rubble.

Here is a detailed close-up image of Sylte 2006. This work merges from a textured, crumbled brown, bronze black into a more mellow and eroded surface. Many of the markings are not directly applied paint, but a myriad of negative traces, made by a process of layering and then revealing colours beneath. Silt, when separated from mud, is quite exquisite to look at, a mix of tiny, almost shimmering fragments of sand and other mineral traces. The marsh river valley in which Green lives is very windswept and the roads flood frequently, and so mud and silt in all its forms is a daily encounter.