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01 August 2006 by nathaniel

promised land: ralph borland @ blank projects in cape town

promised land: ralph borland @ blank projects in cape town

His blurb:

‘Promised land’ is a body of work that plays on some of the ‘faultlines’ running through contemporary South Africa – disparities in wealth, contests of ownership over symbols and cultural objects, the threat to stability offered by the dispossessed, new struggles with their conflicted relationship to the old Struggle. Was it land that was promised; is this the land that was promised? The exhibition combines sampled and manipulated mass-produced objects with fictional artefacts to produce a wry commentary on South Africa now.

Posted in art, art and tech, pop culture, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

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30 July 2006 by nathaniel

ismail farouk and the parking gallery

JHB626GP, on the parking gallery roof. Photo by Christo Doherty
JHB626GP, on the parking gallery roof. Photo by Christo Doherty

JHB626GP, Ismail Farouk’s solo exhibition of a video produced for the Venice architectural biennale and photographs shot of a burning house in Ellis Park, was an amazing testament to the urbane provocations alive and well in downtown johannesburg.  Between a great SAarts article by Rat Western and Matthew Krouse’s interview in the M&G, a lot has already been said recently about this entertainer / artist – I highly recommend both of these pieces, and won’t repeat their content here. I will say that his evocative and emotive images resounded with a plea to look again and work at our country, while his stylistic video (I could admittedly have done without the Mendoza track in the sound, but rumour has it that the British producers insisted, believing it to be more ‘authentically’ South African) portrayed a sympathetic but vibrant rhythm to our city.

I am biased, without doubt, but I also think this show concretizes Simon Gush as one of SA’s rising gallerist stars. His experience as an exhibition hanger, dabbling with curatorship, and artistic sensibilities – as well as an innate fearlessness around risks and complex set-ups – helped to create the perfect spaces for Farouk’s cityworks.

Best show I’ve been to in a long while. Congratulations to Ismail, Simon, Rat and Max. (And to Lindsay Bremner, for a great opening speech – a textured and inviting mediation in under 5 minutes, as an opening text should be…. And that was the most unpretentious use of Deleuze I’ve ever heard…. She and Farouk are the leftmost peops in the pic below. Oh, and many thanks to Christo Doherty for the use of his beautiful photos.)

Lindsay Bremner and Ismail Farouk, left, in front of the latter's images at his solo exhibition. Parking Gallery, Johannesburg. Photo by Christo Doherty
Lindsay Bremner and Ismail Farouk, left, in front of the latter’s images at his solo exhibition.
Parking Gallery, Johannesburg. Photo by Christo Doherty

Posted in art, art and tech, news and politics, pop culture, reviews, simon gush, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

Archives

25 July 2006 by nathaniel

the Upgrade! Johannesburg and the Wits Digital Soiree present: Catherine Henegan

shooting gallery

the Upgrade! Johannesburg and the Wits Digital Soiree present: Catherine Henegan
Dada goes digital – Media Art in a Theatrical Space

Amsterdam-based multi-disciplinary artist, Catherine Henegan, is the director of The Shooting Gallery, the controversial performance/media art work currently showing at The Market Theatre. Aided by a computer and a projection screen, Catherine is also a performer in the work, editing live content from the Internet into the performance by Aryan Kaganof and against the sound design by James Webb.  In this way she tracks in real time the way media constructs and reconstructs news and fiction. She will talk about her approach to the design and direction of this challenging multimedia production.

Images available at:
http://www.the-shootinggallery.com
http://kaganof.com/kagablog/category/the-shooting-gallery/

Posted in art, art and tech, news and politics, poetry, re-blog tidbits, south african art, technology, uncategorical ·

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23 July 2006 by sean slemon

Thomas! We Demand something new.

With his own brand of printed wallpaper (the pattern extracted from one of his photographs), Thomas Demand darkened the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens in London this summer. Each room a busy dark hue of green interfering with your vision in the same way that a chain link fence does: making us struggle to see the actual artwork. His intention was supposedly to make us aware of the domestic scale of the Gallery.His show consisted of large scale, slickly produced Plexiglas laminated photographs of “Life size sculptures painstakingly made by him” (Shame!) .Using rudimentary materials like paper and cardboard, he constructs banal scenes like a window surrounded by ivy, A kitchen, a photocopy shop, you get the drift right?

He has been working in this way since he left Goldsmiths in the early 90’s and has yet to find something new, rather choosing to attempt to refine the way of working and his idea.
The scenes are of course devoid of human presence and are crafted as accurately as possible. An image of a dead plant looks life like from a distance, but is revealed to be fake and constructed upon closer inspection. This show, and his work is really just a refined version of a concept that was better and more impressively produced ( and allowed to run its course) by Fischli and Weiss. The pair produced woodcarvings and Styrofoam sculptures of similar scenes and human scenarios, having since moved onto other methods of production and so, other ideas.
Demand has just reduced the same concept first to cardboard, and then to a photograph. Beyond the initial surprise of realising that what your looking at is constructed and not real, there is not much else to hold your attention, when it is really just an idea we have seen before, reduced to a large reflective photographic surface. Maybe it is more designed for the contemporary kind of travelling show, along with the need to edition, sell and adapt to the commercial museum and exhibition culture and the public’s constant need for exhibits.

How I wish for something new. The Serpentine Gallery is not one to give much away on their website.

Posted in art, art and tech, reviews, sean slemon ·

Archives

19 July 2006 by nathaniel

computer for sale (bumped)

Bumping this up, cuz I still have not sold the desktop. I thought these were good prices (and I thought the ten-minute-after-posting sale of the laptop proved it), but now I need cash to pay for my new laptop, so am willing to negotiate a bit on the desktop (also thowing in a thing or two now, see below). Please tell your friends…
If in the Gauteng area, I’m selling two one very well looked after Apple computer(s) (nothing wrong with them, but upgrading to the MacBook Pro).

Desktop: (still available)

  • 17" iMac G4, 1.0 GHz
  • 80GB hard drive
  • DVD-R
  • upgraded to 768 RAM
  • apple pro speakers
  • apple keyboard and mouse
  • still has box, latest OS X Tiger installed
  • 3 USB and 2 Firewire ports
  • audio line in, apple speakers out, headphone jack out
  • mini-dv port (can throw in mini-dv to VGA for use with projector)
  • built-in mic
  • R8000, OBCO (Or Best Cash Offer)

Laptop: SOLD SOLD SOLD!

  • 14" iBook G4, 1.2GHz
  • CD-RW
  • 60GB hard drive
  • 768 RAM
  • airport
  • 2 USB, 1 firewire
  • mini-dv port
  • headphone jack
  • built-in mic and speakers
  • charger
  • latest tiger installed
  • still under apple care warranty until June 07
  • will throw in bluetooth / USB adapter
  • R5800

Please contact me if you are interested!

Posted in art and tech, me, pop culture, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

19 July 2006 by nathaniel

ABSA (updated below)

Ruth Sacks
Ruth Sacks (image from joaoferreiragallery.com)

Photographic documentation of Don’t Panic, 21 March 2005, Skywrite, Cape Town CBD, approx. 2 X 18 km. Photo: Mario Todeschini

For those who haven’t heard, last night’s ABSA L’Atelier went to a deserving Ruth Sacks, who showed video documentation of her clever and beautiful piece, Don’t Panic. From joaoferreiragallery.com:

On Human Right’s Day, March 21 (2005), she paid a pilot to write the words ‘Don’t panic’ in the sky over the Cape Town city bowl. The ‘don’t’ blew away long before the ‘panic’ did.

A mostly strong and diverse show, where merit prize winners include Nathani Luneburg (video), Riason Naidoo (video), Anet Norval (mixed media), James Webb (print that doubles as documentation for a site-specific installation) and Nomusa Mary Makhubu (polyptych of four digital prints that took the Gerard Sekoto prize). On the one hand, I think the awards should be applauded for their recognition of conceptual and new media work – both Webb and Sacks exhibited minimalist art that coupled as documentation for (beautifully executed, IMNSHO) larger-scale interventions already accomplished, and there were several video pieces in the top ten finalists. On the other, it was a bit of a coup for the priveleged – ABSA does not provide equipment for its participants, as the Kebbles used to. (My art "career," for example, basically started thanks to the Kebbles’ recognition of work they had provided the necessary gadgets for, and I still only put prints in other competitions, given lack of such support – contrary to popular belief, I can’t afford to buy my own equipment most of the time, and certainly can’t afford to buy it then lose it for ages. Most media art producers are in the same boat.) This means that our video peops had to provide their own projectors, players and / or screens for about 6 months while decisions were being made – not to mention the site-specific pieces’ probable cost and support needed from the artists and/or third parties. From what I can tell, there were less than a dozen video entries in total, so the fact that so many were awarded makes a statement to both sides of this argument – both ABSA’s committment to recognize, and their lack of support for, new media and large-scale work.

I suppose that the awards have erred on the side of rewarding more "continental" (note intentional euphemism, denoted by quotation marks) art, historically (thus their reasoning behind the Gerard Sekoto prize – for a bit of balance). My own tastes are probably in line with theirs, so I won’t go off on destructive tangents, but given their proclamation of being "the oldest and biggest" competition in SA – with the absence of the Kebbles – perhaps it’s time to offer provisions to those working with advanced media?

Update: just had a glance at the catalogue, and they put my work in it upside down, and said I went to ‘Trisch’ School of the Arts for my Masters. I had a good laugh.

Posted in art, art and tech, news and politics, pop culture, reviews, technology, uncategorical ·
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Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
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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