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27 September 2006 by nathaniel

Kim Lieberman: Human Currents

Opening Thursday 5 October 2006 at 18h00
Exhibition catalogue available
44 Stanley Avenue  Braamfontein Werf (Milpark)  Johannesburg
+27 11 726-2234

the release:

The substratum for Kim Lieberman’s latest work is a blank, white puzzle, with no printed image on it. It is akin to Kasimir Malevich’s white painted square on a white canvas. To scramble the puzzle piece would be easy, but to put it together again, virtually impossible without some visual clue. The only pointer is the regularity of the way the pieces fit together, created when the puzzle was first marked by a standard puzzle cutter. These white puzzles can also be likened to Lieberman’s previous use of blank, perforated sheets of paper on which postage stamps are printed. Both white puzzle and blank postage stamp sheets are empty, yet connected, and consequently, ‘whole’ and ‘complete’, by a series of perfectly interlocking pieces or perforations.

These two strata form a conceptual framework, a ‘trellis for other media’, in Lieberman’s own words, ‘to hang, climb and intertwine on’. In the case of her earlier blank stamp sheets, Lieberman embroidered each rectangular piece, using the perforations as convenient holes to thread through the silk yarn while creating in the subtle and sophisticated hues and delicate textures, among other things, a virtual abstract landscape. In her next phase, Lieberman peopled her blank postage sheets with silhouetted figures, at times referencing family, friends and/or famous people, or sometimes the silhouettes are chance images of people she saw in National Geographic magazines.

In her latest work Lieberman is again concerned with the conceptual connectedness presupposed by the grid, albeit the blank postage stamp sheet, or the complete white puzzle. The sense of connectedness is reinforced by an intricate arabesque line that literally forms a wavy current that links all the important elements in the picture plane together in a completed whole. When talking about the origin of the arabesque line, Lieberman references motifs she first encountered in kitchen and bathroom tiles in condemned downtown Johannesburg buildings, due for implosion; she also refers to her studies of William Morris textile and wallpaper designs that sparked her interest in the organic, yet ordered line and mentions the delicate, curving engraving on the silver helmet of a Medieval suit of armor she has seen in a museum.

In some of  Kim Lieberman’s work, the arabesque line is very strong, conjoining all the seemingly disparate images of silhouetted figures in the picture plane, making currents, making waves, just like human beings do when they interact and connect with one another. ‘I am not only interested in the current, or ripple’ she says, ‘but in the human, humane element that comes with it’. In other works the ‘current’ is less obvious and explicit. It is also suggested by a flight of butterflies across the white puzzle. Currents or ‘clouds’ of tiny white butterflies are sometimes spotted fluttering diagonally across Johannesburg in a northeasterly direction. The butterfly has become a prominent image in Lieberman’s work because of its delicate, yet powerful, nature. Lieberman quotes the scientist Edward Lorenz theorizing as early as 1963 that “a butterfly’s wings might create tiny changes in the atmosphere that ultimately cause a tornado to appear”. For her the flapping wing represents a small change in the initial condition of the system, which could cause a chain of events leading to large-scale phenomena. Had a butterfly not flapped its wings, the trajectory of the system might have been vastly different. Her butterflies thus symbolize the influence of one on another.

Another way in which Lieberman suggests interconnectedness in her work is to fuse, or graft two puzzles into two different images. For example, she would paint a figure in red against a white background on the one empty puzzle, and the reverse on a second puzzle; the same figure, but in white, against a red background. She would then exchange every second piece of the two puzzles with each other, creating two new ‘woven’ works out of the exchange. The ritualized process of puzzle piece exchanging becomes a metaphor for human interaction. It echoes Lieberman’s previous work she created through a laborious stitching process in her stamp sheets. Once this powerful metaphor has lodged itself in the mind of the viewer, Lieberman then pushes the boundaries even farther but pulling out every sixth puzzle piece and assembling them in another grid, called Six Degrees of Separation, and symbolizing what she calls the fact, (or is it coincidence?) that everybody is connected to each other in some way or another by tracing the connection no farther back than six steps, degrees or levels.

Kim Lieberman lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa. She holds an MA (Fine Arts Degree) from the Witwatersrand University (2001). She has had solo exhibitions at Esso Gallery, New York City, NY (2004), the Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg (2003), Camouflage Art Culture Politics, Johannesburg (2000), the Mark Coetzee Fine Art Cabinet, Cape Town, South Africa (1997), the Civic Gallery, Johannesburg (1995) and has been included in numerous group exhibitions internationally. Four catalogues / monographs have been published on her work and her exhibitions have been widely reviewed.

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

Archives

26 September 2006 by nathaniel

Invite – Waterpas – 28 Sept 2006 6pm

A Multi Media Exhibition by Cobi Labuscagne

28 September  2006
6pm
Point Blank at the Drill Hall

The exhibition – conceived as a a one-night event – represents the culmination of a two-year working process toward Labuscagne’s Masters in Fine Arts degree at the WITS School of Arts.   The show will include projected documentation of performances that  occurred in public spaces.  The artist engages with the distortions and contradictions around distinct institutional environments such as that of the University, questioning what kind of access they offer and represent.

"I think of the work as alternative surveillance footage"

All pieces are products of collaboration

Dr Jyoti Mistry will give an opening address

The exhibition-event should be seen in conjunction with a
one-day showcasing of paintings at the Parking Gallery on 6 Oct 2006 from 11:00am

contact: 082 598 4107 email: info@jpp.org.za (our new email addess)

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

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22 September 2006 by nathaniel

don’t believe the hype / believe the hype

So I went to the Ed Young / Christian Nerf ‘no problem in Africa’ DIVA talk at Wits yesterday and I have a secret to tell you: the bad boys of Cape Town aren’t that bad. In fact, they are charming, engaged, and extremely laid back. Now, truth be told, I already knew that about Christian – having briefly shared a studio with him downtown, we’d often have long chats about various, crit each other’s work and shoot the sh!t around ideas. He’s a fantastic guy, a great artist, and a generous thinker – I can’t say enough good things about him. But Christian, despite his work being funny and provocative and out of the norm, doesn’t really play into, out of, or care about, the public eye. He just ‘does’.

See, then there’s Ed.

Well, yeh. The guy has pissed off lots of people, said and done some stuff that gets people upset – and I do see why.

But to watch these two guys, I gotta say, you really have to like them… and by ‘them’ I mean their project. In isolation, some of the work may seem silly, and more than one commenter to me stated that they wished they could "get paid to party and tour Africa and drink beer" (me too). But hearing and seeing their discourse in near-entirety, internalizing their work methods and their continual questioning / disappointment, smiling through their lax attitudes vs the Spectacular art, it really starts to gel. Their performance is a kind of an inverted Wayne Barker – on so many levels – and if I have to explain this to you, I don’t think you’d get it (you’d have to spend some time with the guy). It’s a sociopolitical m9ndf@kc, where Ed probably says more about the egos of the art world than we are comfortable with, and Christian brings it up to the American-driven capitalist project – and the complicity or enactments of SA during and Post-Apartheid – on a macro scale.

I don’t make art like these guys, and I’ve never wanted to. But there is great value to what they are doing, and it is definitely going somewhere. We may not know where that is, and they don’t  seem to know where that is either, but since when – especially in the contemporary art world –  does ‘no product’ mean ‘unproductive’?

I realize I haven’t said much about the work itself, but we all know there’s more than enough info and press out there on these characters, and even more forthcoming with their current funded projects, so there’s not need for more. I’m just saying it’s worth paying attention.

PS And  yes, as per my above comment, I told them they should put together a catalogue or large show to contextualize in just such a way as I had the pleasure to experience… Ed says he’s working on a catalogue, and Nerf is working with Kathryn Smith on other texts for upcoming exhibitions. I recommend checking these out when they are on offer.

Posted in art, pop culture, reviews, south african art, stimulus, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

19 September 2006 by nathaniel

The Collision Project

the collision project - marx and loveday

The Collision Project is the result of a collaborative exchange between artist / director Gerhard Marx and composer Clare Loveday, lecturers at the Wits School of Arts. It combines the visual and theatrical skills of Marx with the compositional exploration of Loveday to create a haunting work that is both concert performance, theatrical experience and installation work.
 
The Collision Project plays with the principles on which both classical and traditional string instruments function; in this case however, the vibration of strings are transferred into the body of a car wreck through cello and violin fragments grafted onto the car.  The strings and musical intervention serves to animate through sound, and to explore in the manner that vibration and consequently hearing is used to ‘see’ that which the eye cannot; scientific vibration based practices to explore the geological structures buried in rock, the child not yet born (sonar), the tapping of train wheels to detect fractures, the car’s past embedded in the rusty folds of its current form. It is a collision between aesthetic disciplines, between makers and approaches. But it is the actual collision; the event in the body of the wreck itself, which Marx and Loveday aims to explore in this piece of ‘forensic music’, by drawing a voice from the hollow body of an abandoned car.
 
Performed by Vusi Ndebele, Sisekelo Pila and Barry Sherman.
 
THE SUBSTATION, Wits East Campus, Braamfontein
Thursday 21 to Friday 29 September 2006 at 19h00
Book at Computicket
Enquiries 011.717.1376
pisantic@theatre.wits.ac.za

 
Limited Seating Available

Posted in art, art and tech, music, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

Archives

18 September 2006 by nathaniel

Young Nerf at Wits

Posted in art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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17 September 2006 by nathaniel

Andre SC @ Upgrade! Joburg

Christo Doherty writes lyrical about Andre’s performance (via atjoburg):

The featured artist at this month’s Upgrade! at Wits Digital Arts was Andre SC (André S Clements), a new media manipulator and self-confessed “pixel maniac” who has recently begun exploring an approach to image processing which he calls “post-digital abstraction”.

Andre Clements ACAndré - Self Portrait
André Clements at the Digital Soiree/Upgrade . . . . and, “Andre SC”- self-portrait as post digital abstraction.

Andre studied design at Pretoria University and graduated with a BA degree in 1995. Since then he has worked as a designer, corporate consultant, and experimental artist. Over this period he has managed to find time for further studies in Computer Science and Psychology, and indeed several psychological concepts inform his thinking about art and technology. Most recently he has been lecturing in Media Design Technology at a local commercial college and also acts as web-editor/developer for David Krut the fine art publishers. He keeps his own blog at www.pixelplexus.co.za.

A love of abstraction runs through all his works. The different phases of his work are characterised by the different technical approaches he has developed towards his subject matter. “Being is not an exact thing” for André; and abstraction is a way of exploring the fluid and incomplete nature of visual experience, Most of his raw images are harvested from the web, using different search techniques; but his most recent works are based on more focused samples, frequently drawing on images created by other South African artists. “Untitled Kentridge ” started with fifty Kentridge prints superimposed and then mathematically averaged. Taking the process further, André ended up with an image created from 192 Kentridge prints. (Below). It is typical of André’s ethical approach towards image appropriation that after he had completed the series he phoned up the artist himself to ask his permission to make the images public. Kentridge kindly agreed but requested an artist’s proof of the print for his own collection.

kentridge abstracted

André also revealed that he lost all his pre-prepared material the previous evening when his laptop crashed, and had worked through the night to put another presentation together. As he started his presentation, his qualities of rigour/obsessiveness and playfulness/control became apparent. As suggested by the title of his presentation, “drawing the pixel curtain”, André’s aesthetic is founded on the smallest subdivision of the digital image. Many of the algorithms that he has constructed for his imaging processes engage at the pixel level.

André had gone to great lengths to prepare the venue for his presentation. Assisted by one of his MDT students, he rigged display lines along the walls of the room and hung a temporary exhibition of his lamda prints around the room. After publishing to the web, printing, specifically lambda printing, is his major output. Most of his digital processing concludes with a series of lambda prints, several of which were displayed at the soiree. André describes his relationship with the lamda technology as a “love affair” because of the brilliant colours and edge-to-edge precision which is possible with the laser technology.

Some of the earliest work which André discussed was inspired by his interest in the relationship between the human form (specifically the naked female form) and automated techniques of representation. For him, these works seek to create “a bridge between the very abstract and the very intimate”. The difficulty of finding live models led him to use the web as a source of raw images. Typical works from this period begin with a Google image search and then use algorithms to process the collected images into a single composite abstraction such as in “Porn Princess” (below).

porn princess

A chance encounter with curator Gordon Froud let to an invitation to participate in the “Porn Again” group exhibition at Merely Mortal gallery in Craighall. Froud’s 2005 exhibition gathered together a range of works by artists examining the presence of the erotic and the pornographic in contemporary fine art in South Africa. The experience of the exhibition stimulated AC’s curiosity about the dynamics of the local art scene and pushed his tendency towards abstraction even further. His next phase of work made use of algorithms that upsized web images to 400 dpi and further. By now, AC’s style of production was taking characteristic form. Images are collected and subjected to various pre-processing. The actual abstraction is a process that can take between 5 – 6 hours. A “continuous dance”, as André describes it, between himself, the images and the computer.

More recently, André has encountered Nathaniel Stern’s Compressionism and was excited by the American artist’s “hacking of conventional recording technology “, such as scanners, in order to create new kinds of imagery. André simply used this desktop scanner and experimented with his own “compressionist” images, moving objects across the plate in synchronisation with the progress of the scanner. Still life reminiscent of synthetic cubism and even lighter fluid fires on the scanner plate were all grist for his experiments with the form.

Finally, André briefly introduced his most recent work, a generative web-based project entitled “netVerse”.
A simple interface allows users to play with a stream of falling words which can be clicked and arranged into poetic arrangements much like fridge magnet poetry. The distinctive aspect of the interface is that it records each decision made by the user and then displays the additions for the next user. At this stage over 3500 words have been placed on the system and André plans to add more computational intelligence to the application to control the fall of words.

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

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Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

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

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