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05 July 2006 by nathaniel

Angus Taylor @ U of J Gallery, Joburg

The Press Release:

Angus Taylor, well known South African sculptor, will exhibit a body of new work in various media, entitled “DEDUCT” at the UJ Art Gallery from 5 to 26 July 2006.
 
Taylor works from the premise that deduction gathers a valid conclusion from a more general premise to a more specific.   The process of induction involves drawing general conclusions based on a limited and specific inference. Thus, in a technocratic culture that favours simulation and speed over real-time relationships, people and things are reduced to quick-time taxonomies.
 
Deduction implies the opposite. To deduce involves reasoning from the general to the particular, underscoring the need to engage with culture in terms of its flexible morphology. In this body of work, Taylor attempts to peel away the surface of his art to explore its innards, forcing the viewer to engage with the process of art making.
 
He says in this regard:  “Information overload causes the domination of inductive reasoning. I am presenting the sculpture or an idea in aspects, perspectives or in different mediums. By showing a sculpture in repetition but a variant with different defined parts or perspectives I am forcing the viewer to assemble the whole from different aspects. One gains access to the part in considering the whole. The collective defines the individual. For, in the words of Meyer Vaisman, ‘…there is nothing more meaningful than taking meaning apart’”.
 
In this way, the induction / deduction binary is conflated in Taylor’s work which, as a collection is both scopic and expansive. Together, his use of a traditional medium like bronze with the plastic form of LED lights pokes fun at old and new canons. This exhibition, in other words, plays with the cultural and art-historical tropes of meaning making in contemporary Africa.
Angus van Zyl Taylor was born in Hillbrow to a journalist father and mother trained in painting in 1970 and grew up in Johannesburg and the Vaal Triangle – Gauteng, South Africa.
He completed his BA in Fine Arts with honours at the University of Pretoria in 1996.  After tutoring in drawing and sculpture at the UP, he ran the Ashanti art foundry from 1996 – 1997
Taylor started his own business and foundry, Dionysus Sculpture Works in 1998, and he still teaches part time at the University of Pretoria and the Open Window Art Academy
He acts as advisor to the Tshwane University of Technology and is predominantly involved in government, local government as well as private sector large scale commissions to fund and support the infrastructure of his own fine art sculpture
His work is included in collections of the Rand Merchant Bank, Sasol, the Universities of the Free State and Pretoria, Saronsberg and Spier wine estates as well as many other national and international private collections.
 
LECTURE/WALKABOUT: Saturday 15 July 2006:  10 00 – 12 00
You are invited to interact with the artist at this lecture and walkabout.

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

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04 July 2006 by nathaniel

I Consume

Another hot re-mix of my slam poem, eat, this time entitled I Consume, and by mcjackinthebox. Check it out.

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, music, news and politics, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

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04 July 2006 by nathaniel

JAN NEETHLING AND ROBERT HODGINS: YOUNG MEN IN GARAGE TROUSERS

Robert Hodgins. Gentlemen conversing quietly. 2006. Monotype. 320X515mm
Robert Hodgins. Gentlemen conversing quietly. 2006. Monotype. 320X515mm

35 years of printmaking @ Art on Paper gallery in Johannesburg, opening this Saturday, 8 July @ 15h00
44 Stanley Avenue  Braamfontein Werf  (Milpark) 2092

From press release by Wilhelm van Rensburg:

Robert Hodgins and Jan Neethling first met as lecturer and student at the School of Art of the Pretoria Technical College in 1958. Robert’s first tongue-in-cheek, sly ironic comment about Jan was to enquire what a young man was doing at the Tech wearing ‘garage trousers’ or denim jeans where the dress code was strictly ‘suit and tie’ for both lecturers and students. This irreverent and defiant attitude towards convention has become the hallmark of both artists throughout their artistic careers.

Their first endeavors at printmaking in the early 1970s exhibit an assuredly classic figurative style, drawing on figurative studies of the nude that has been an integral part of the visual repertoire of many such British Pop artists as Allen Jones, R. B. Kitaj, Anthony Donaldson, Peter Blake and New York Pop artists such as Tom Wesselmann, Larry Rivers and Mel Ramos. Jan Neethling’s Bikini and Stockings screenprint series are perfect foils for the iconic nudes of these artists.

Equally innovative was the printmaking technique of clichés-verre that Robert and Jan employed as early as 1971, resulting in a two person exhibition at the Lidchi Gallery, Johannesburg. At the time, screen printing was favoured in South Africa, probably as a reflection of the growing status of printmaking internationally, following in particular the high profile screen printing had assumed during the 1960s with Pop artists such as Andy Warhol in America and etching with David Hockney and Joe Tilson in England.

In 1980 Robert and Jan mounted the fourth of their two-man exhibitions, this time at the Market Theatre Gallery. Their printmaking experiments centred on a series of one-off screenprints using as subject matter one very notorious 1930s Depression era robber, Pretty Boy Floyd. They found a newspaper photo of this villain and used his image over the Easter weekend of that year, as basis for numerous explorations of visual possibilities. The Pretty Boy Floyd exhibition subtly referenced the controversial 1964 Andy Warhol exhibition, Thirteen Most Wanted Men momentarily installed on the façade of the State Pavilion at the World’s fair in New York. In some tangential way, Hodgins and Neethling also ‘valorize the villain’ by the forthright gaze of their Pretty Boy Floyd portraits.

Twenty-one years later they recreated this collaborative experience, again over Easter, this time using photographs of each other. These collaborative works culminated in the One-off exhibition at Art on Paper Gallery in 2001. The result was not unlike that of the collaboration between Gilbert and George, but unlike these two ‘living sculptures’ Hodgins and Neethling rejected the formality and respectability of ‘the suits of art’, Gilbert and George’s pseudonym, and donned the more daring attire of the urban hip hop cowboy.

Their sixth two-man exhibition, also at Art on Paper-gallery, in 2005, was entitled, Two weeks in the country. For this exhibition Hodgins used his favourite medium on paper, monotype, and Neethling worked in polymer photogravure which he handcoloured. Looking at such Hodgins titles as Generals, Toff, A little tiff, and Fat mama sings, and such Neethling titles as Baldy, Ol’con, and Prof, a veritable Rogue’s Gallery – one is taken through an intimate portrait gallery. Neither Hodgins nor Neethling is interested in portraying any ‘likeliness’ of the sitter, if there was any model at all. Both are artists of the imagination, both paint/print attitude, not interior angst. But the emphasis in the prints of both artists is not only on the sheer joy of art making; it is also on moving the boundaries of the medium, battling familiarity and challenging convention.

Their latest exhibition at Art on Paper Gallery gives a good overview of Robert and Jan’s working relationship over the past 35 years. It includes Hodgins’ series of nine digital prints Officers and Gentlemen, his famous Ubu series of prints and a series of new etchings, which include a very new subject matter, that of the crucifixion. Neethling, in turn, adds to his Rogue’s Gallery series of prints, depicting outcasts and eccentrics, started in the 2005 exhibition at Art on Paper Gallery.

Hodgins and Neethling’s printmaking partnership ceaselessly extends and augments their visual repertoire and their technical virtuosity as artists. Of their working relationship and of the prints that are produced Robert once said “Jan’s are very pop and jubilant. Mine are more Dr Jekyll and Mr Hodgins”.

Shortened version of exhibition brochure essay by Wilhelm van Rensburg for Art on Paper Gallery, 2006
© Art on Paper Gallery

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

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02 July 2006 by franci

A job well done

Gordon Froud has just completed installation on his ‘mobile’ in the new Department of Science and Technology building in Pretoria. The mobile (it still needs to be named) comprises the product of technology in general, objects ranging from kitchen utensils to scientific tools used in experimentation. Twelve metres in height, the installation was no mean feat. The climax will be tomorrow when the scaffolding is dismantled. Before then, one has to use imagination to picture the separate ‘arms’ hanging in perfect balance.

Gordon and his team

Gordon does a Kentridge drawing..

Posted in art, franci cronje, south african art, technology, uncategorical ·

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25 June 2006 by nathaniel

more songs for the

Yes, Colin, maybe I have caught the ccMixter bug. Just uploaded another poetry slam styled vocal track, this time from a video art piece specifically produced for the Netherlands Film Festival, at Aryan Kaganof’s request. a song for the now available for re-mix. Now I wish I had my saxophone with….

Description: a video art / slam poetry piece about the complexities of listening, paternalism and being, framed in a father/son relationship.
Tags: acappella, media, non_commercial, audio, mp3, 44k, mono, CBR, father, patriarchy, singin, spoken_word, poetry_slam, male_volcals, hamlet, to_be, poetry, rap, melody, bassline, bass

Posted in art, art and tech, creative commons, me, music, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory, uncategorical ·

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25 June 2006 by nathaniel

iCommons iSummit Artist in Residence update/review (so far)

Sorry for the delay on posting art, etc – internet was down at the hotel for ages. The conference has been amazing thus far. The generosity of spirit, the sharing, the intellectual rigor, the commitment to the arts and knowledge – even when I disagree with some of the things being said, I understand that what’s behind the argument being made is a passion for this movement, the essence of "making things, and making things happen."

I like that. Nice tagline.
iCommons: make things; then make things happen.

As far as my work goes, there’s been a fair amount of production, then re-blogging and re-production already. [odys] elicit’s re-release under a CC / GPL license has been re-blogged by turbulence / networked_performance, and a minor software adjustment has been requested by South African choreographer Jeanette Ginslov, for an upcoming dance piece she wants to use it in, entitled Writing with Stones.

My eat spoken word on CCmixter has been rated as 5 star (!) and already used for this rockin piece by teru, of the same name. Very cool! w00+!  As mentioned below, Andre SC has re-mixed some images I’ve produced at the iSummit as well. The Gilberto’s Beer beat re-mix of video is also online on Revver now – a very cool project, mentioned below – as well as on the free-beer site that inspired the original footage. Some of the festival-goers have promised its usage in the work they are planning to do in upcoming weeks (Justin Hall has already started editing).

I’ve got some fab ideas for how the AIR can grow before the next conference, turning into a longer project, involving many countries, and exploring the two areas that seem to interest artists most (around CC): revenue generation and production modes. The former has obviously always been a problem for artists (pre-dating CC for about as long as human existence), but there are already some amazingly smart people on the job (such as Jenny Toomey and Steven Starr of revver) – if you build it, we will come. The latter has always been part of the CC ethos, and there are more and more re-mix tools available, but I’d like to see working, conceptual artists who are more involved with hands-on collaboration (not just re-mixing) enter into the iCommons fold now – beyond the geeks like me. The ideas I have are geared towards production, workshops and lectures (all led by working artists) that promote and encourage some of the possibilities that CC has to offer which we may not yet be aware of. Art Work.

This morning saw some ‘dead air’ time of no internet access, but the first panel featured the likes of Glenn Otis Brown, Products Counsel, Google. Nhlanhla Mabaso, Manager, Open Source Centre, CSIR, South Africa, Jimmy Wales from Wikipedia and Cory Doctorow, Journalist, author and activist (of boingboing!). Funny, provocative, interesting. Money Quote from Jimmy with regards to the principles Wikipedia was founded on (paraphrase): "in restaurants, we serve steak; so we give out steak knives; this means people might stab each other; so we have to lock up our diners. WE REJECT THIS METHOD OF RESTAURANT DESIGN."

And, most importantly, I (arguably) learned to samba last night….

@ Rio iSummit

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, creative commons, flickr, me, music, poetry, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, south african art, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·
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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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