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07 April 2007 by nathaniel

london joling

My title for this blog not as clever as I think it is, but I did have a great time in London over the last few days. I’ll leave out the bits about how great my family is, and just illuminate some art highlights:

Wednesday. That was the art highlight.

It began by meeting up with Michael Szpakowski of DVblog and Scenes of Provincial Life (I did a great interview with Michael on Rhizome a while back) at the Tate, where we oooh-ed and aaah-ed at their permanent collection whilst getting to know each other more in person – we can both talk up a storm, mind you. Of course, there were pauses in front of many works, including (but not limited to) some by Beuys, Giacometti, Rothko and Bacon. Yum. We were thoroughly unimpressed by the Gilbert & George exhibition; we instead threw a few compliments at each other, and talked about upcoming and exciting work. He is one of my new Favorite People Ever. That’s him below.

michael szpakowski
Michael Szpakowski

We then hit up BFI Southbank (not sure what that stands for, but it used to be the National Film Theatre) to see the McCoys’ new exhibition, Tiny, Funny Big and Sad. The commission on the outside of the gallery, a piece called The Constant World, uses

a giant plasma screen and 36 live video cameras. A miniature film set on a many-armed mobile is suspended from the ceiling. It depicts a film noir-style story set in an imaginary city based on New Babylon, the unrealised brainchild of Dutch artist Constant Nieuwenhuys.

So you have all these mini sets in a mobile, and lots of cameras giving live feeds of them to the screen, which show the sets in a randomized sequence. This piece was admittedly more than a little disappointing – the sculptures were beautiful, but you could not see the mini sets because they were suspended too far away / high up; the video was lame because nothing was moving in it (might as well have had some beautiful stills of the film sets instead, maybe in a grid, than waste that plasma screen), and the text that they put in between each image added nothing. I almost left at this point, not realizing there was another room until Michael pointed it out, and we were both really glad he did.

The Traffic series (2004), installed in the Gallery, recreates the artists’ personal memories, each telling the story of a particular time, place or event that has become linked to the memory of viewing a specific film. One work in the series depicts the McCoys’ second date, when they went to see Godard’s film Week End at a cinema in Paris. Another recreates a more sombre evening spent in the cardiac ward, watching American Graffiti on a standard-issue hospital TV set.

Odd that their newer work felt like a step backwards, but The Traffic series was stunning, and did everything that The Constant World didn’t. We spent a good hour chatting about it, walking around it, feeling the relationship between the kinetic sculptures, the videos, and the live feeds in the kinetic sculptures that showed portions of the video. We then spent a good deal of time talking to the security guard, an actor named Matt, about how great it was that BFI’s gallery was starting off with work that engaged the space between Big Film and Fine Art, rather than just propping up their ongoing movie programs. Matt was impressed that, even before we realized these were actual films being depicted on each screen, Michael figured out the Godard; OK, so was I. He also said Kevin McCoy seemed nice when he came in, a major plus. I think, unless performing something, artist niceness should be mandatory.

mccoys: tiny funny big and sad

jennifer and kevin mccoy at BFI: tiny funny, big and sad. Top left corner shows The Constant World sculptures (I spared a pic of the video), and the rest are stills of The Traffic series video and moving parts, taken on my crappy mobile.

After this, we stopped in to the Courtauld Institute of Art for more ohs and ahs, this mostly over Manet and Cezanne.

Then we walked around London a bit, shared more thoughts, and head on over to HTTP gallery (House of Technologically Termed Praxis), the Furtherfield project space. Like my buddies at turbulence, these guys (Ruth Catlow and Marc Garrett) are doing, and have been not so quietly doing, amazing stuff for a very very long time – supporting edgy and odd networked art and performance. Their gallery is a great experimental space on the edge of London, where they’ll be starting offline residencies soon (they’ve been doing online ones for years). Joburgers may remember the VisitorsStudio performance we did between London, Derby and the Premises. They are very clevah and fun. Marc and Ruth are also on my New Favorite People list.

http gallery and projects

Other than my New Friends, who I hope to be working with and hanging with soon again, I also saw the Surreal Things exhibit at the Victoria and Albert the next day. Oh, I love the Surrealists. They make me so happy….

Pics of family will be up on Sid’s site soon. That’s all I got for now.

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, me, reviews, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

Archives

07 April 2007 by nathaniel

spier contemporary

This is how it’s done. Very excited, y’all… Check out all the info you need on the new spier bi-annual exhibition, here. Click on the image below for larger version.
spier contemporary

Posted in art, art and tech, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

07 April 2007 by nathaniel

New Media Commercial Spaces in New York

via AFC:

Over the last couple of months a number of New Media artists seeking representation in New York have asked for my feedback on possible gallery matches for their art. Given the fact that there appears to be a budding market for this kind of work, these inquires make sense, though generally speaking as a net artist your options are still limited at best. I’ve compiled a list in no particular order below of the commercial galleries I usually mention to people, explaining what I see as their pluses and minuses. If I’ve missed a gallery, let me know in the comments section….

READ MORE

Nice post for outsiders to get a feel for the scene, insiders to think about approaching them. Thanks Paddy.

Me? Just got back from London, spent some time with the Furtherfield crew and Michael Szpakowski, looking at art. Was rad, and will post more soon…

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, uncategorical ·

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15 March 2007 by nathaniel

The Upgrade! Johannesburg and WSOA Digital Arts present: James Webb

via atjoburg:

Upgrade! Johannesburg is proud to present:

The Art of Sound – James Webb presents his major gallery installations and
radio projects

James Webb is a leading South African sound artist with a growing
international reputation. He will discuss the challenges of his large-scale
sound installations including Prayer (2002); The Black Passage (2006) and
Autohagiography (2007); his collaborative radio projects including A
Compendium of Imaginary Wavelengths (2004) and works in progress such as
Beau Diable (2007).

The Digital Soiree
Friday 16 March 15:00 – 17:00
Convent Seminar Room
University of the Witswatersrand
Johannesburg
All Welcome!

Read the profile of James Webb by Carinne Zaayman on Artthrob.

Posted in art, art and tech, carine zaayman, re-blog tidbits, south african art, technology, uncategorical ·

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05 March 2007 by nathaniel

the art, she is throbbing

Nice issue of artthrob this month (feeling homesick). I’m not even going to get into it with Cape ’07 (formerly TransCape, and now it’s DEFINITELY “not a biennale” in South Africa), but some other great stuff to report…

First, a little self-promo, Michael Smith engages with my work at Art on Paper. A snippet:

The work proves, if any proof were needed, that Stern’s performative interests expand to include ‘performing’ a relationship to history, a quietly anarchic deconstruction of the creative person’s position in relation to history. This work, and much of the rest on show, reveal that Stern’s is a position of productive paradox, of signalling his debt to the historical archive of creativity yet resisting the impulse to politely replicate its terms.

It’s a very engaged and generous reading – an artist couldn’t ask for more from a critic. Thanks, Michael. Read more.

Minette Vari – a great video artist with Gothic stylings – also gets a nice review for her Goodman show. And, this side, fellow South African grad student in Ireland does this month’s ArtDiary. A bit closer to my heart – given my time in Joburg, and my initiating (with Bronwyn Lace and Simon Gush) of SAartsEmerging last year – Michael also responds to Rat Western in the feedback section (a fair and funny and well-informed response all considered, tho he does leave out that his review of Brendan Grey’s work is also a review of a friend he seems to work with frequently; please note that I do not think this a problem at all, but he might have done himself more service had he addressed that, given the first point he makes about insularity) and he also gives Dave Andrew and Rat a space for more discussion.

Emma Bedford, former curator at SANG (South African National Gallery, Cape Town) and Director of the new Cape-based Goodman Gallery (also a small article on that – if you didn’t know, we love Storm, her co-director), is the ArtBio this month. Also some interesting listings, including a Cape anti-avant-garde show curated by Kathryn Smith.

The biggest news, from where I stand, is the announcement of a Spier Exhibition replacement for the old Brett Kebble Art Awards. I think they’d be a little upset by the comparison, but it has the same chief curator, and is, like the Kebbles, the only large-scale exhibition in SA that offers both emerging and established artists any equipment they might need to see their visions through. HOWEVER, as several added bonuses, they are also giving fees to their artists, they are open to more interesting interdisciplinarity (shown by their selection of Jay Pather as co-curator), and they are committed to at least six years of the exhibition. I should also stress how much I appreciate that altho it is also a competition, the main focus is on the exhibition itself, more like the Whitney Biennial, I gather. Spier is building a museum on their wine farm to house the exhibition, which is just plain smart: they will have it permanently, so won’t have to pay heaps for rental, and they already have one of the most interesting art collections in South Africa, so why not have some place to house it the rest of the year?

update: Almost forgot! The most outstanding bonus of Spier vs Kebble is that there’s no Brett Kebble! That guy, despite his later committment to the arts, was a mining mogul with fraud allegations and questionable intentions (and a great PR firm). Spier, on the other hand, just makes nice wine, good money, and has always been committed to the arts. We like that.

Posted in art, art and tech, Links, me, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, theory ·

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05 March 2007 by nathaniel

performative traces

“The words were treated as a kind of incantation, as if they enveloped something of the desired event, contained its trace. Their repetition deposited a trace of the event in each of the contexts, gradually coloring the everyday world. Conversely, each context left its own trace in the words. It is as if the words were absorbing the relative perspectives, absorbing traces of the movements accomplished within them, as well as the movement from one to the other, blending the motion of acting the exemplary event with ordinary circulation through the world. The accumulation immobilizes [him] under its weight. He enters a state of passivity marked by heightened excitability.”

– Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual, page 56

Posted in art, art and tech, research, stimulus ·
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Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

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