Saturday, 26 September 2009

Aberystwyth University School of Art MA Show Opening


Chatting by Philippa Sibert's installation, 'Aloft: 300 Birds 300 Steps 6000 Miles'.
Photographs copyright Margaret Sharrow 2009

Last night's opening of the second Aberystwyth University School of Art MA show was both challenging and well-attended.

Quite frankly, I was overwhelmed by the crush just getting to the north room to see Philippa Sibert's excellent installation and Diane Heeks' latest developments in what I may have to, for the time being, call three dimensional abstract painting, hovering in a very interesting place somewhere between painting and sculpture.

As for getting into Ffion Nolwenn Roberts' installation of pinhole photography, I could only lift the black curtain on the door to be confronted by the woman attempting to enter ahead of me stepping back out, proclaiming, 'It's full.'

As Alice Farnworth, another student exhibiting pinhole photography (but not as we know it, Jim - on a massive scale!) said, 'I was afraid the crowd would be rather thin tonight, but I'm delighted by how many people have turned out.'

Here, here.

Note: all the photographs shown here were taken at the end of the evening, when, the wine having long since run out, there was finally room to swing a cat, or at least a compact digital camera.

Other work shown by Sebastian Gray, Chris Iliff, Colin John Leythorne, and Clare Rose, and will be described along with the others in due course, when I've had a chance to see the exhibition without all the people.

Exhibition continues until 9 October, Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm.




Thursday, 10 September 2009

John O'Rourke: Chambers of the Self on display in North Tyneside's Cobalt Business Park


John O'Rourke, 'Chambers of the Self', photographs copyright John O'Rourke 2009

As of yesterday, the Newcastle public is able to view one of artist John O'Rourke's enigmatic sculptures, Chambers of the Self.

Meticulously constructed of wooden sections, this larger-than-life head features an architectural interior of doorways, stairs and hidden rooms, typical of this artist's work.

John O'Rourke runs the Foundation Degree in Fine Art at Tyne Metropolitan College, North Tyneside, and is currently completing a fine art PhD at Aberystwyth University.

Chambers of the Self is on display at North Tyneside Council's Quadrant building, Silverlink North, Cobalt Business Park, North Tyneside, until December 2009.


Directions to visit 'Chambers of the Self'


Monday, 7 September 2009

London reviews: Per Kirkeby, Futurism and Richard Long at Tate, BP Portrait Competition and arctic photos at Canada House

For me, there were two reasons to go to the Per Kirkeby retrospective at Tate Modern. One was a chance to see the work of one of Denmark's most important artists, including some of his watercolour sketches of Greenland, where I travelled myself exactly a year ago. The other, pedestrian, penny-pinching reason, was to make more use of my Tate membership.

I wasn't prepared for the breadth of the work, from art school collages to pop art of his early career, to abstracts, sculptures, and a fascinating series of books he has published of both his own work, and monographs of artists who influenced him. The one of Michelangelo, in which his own work is juxtaposed with that of the master's, clearly shows the relationship between the two.

The Greenland sketches did not disappoint, either, coming as they did after my impromptu visit to 'The Accessible Arctic', Canada House's fine exhibit of Canadian Geographic photographs of the Canadian arctic, mostly in colour (and there's a great arctic film season coming up there in September/October!) Here I went through airport-style security (when trying to switch on my digital camera I had to confess to the attendant that my batteries had run down. After that he didn't look too concerned about me, correctly assuming that I was far to disorganised to be plotting some kind of a heist.) Even better was the display deep in the bowels of the ground floor, a magnificent room with columns and ornate furnishings and a full wall mirror (possibly two way, I mused, as two small girls pulled faces and showed off their dresses in front of it), which contained glorious colour enlargements of Robert VanWaarden's documentation of the the British Council's 2008 Cape Farewell project. This involved a group of high school students chosen from many countries, journeying by Soviet cruiser MV Academik Shokalskiy from Iceland to East Greenland, passing me in West Greenland when I was in Narsarssuaq / Nanortalik (could they have been the 'scientists' who were spending a couple of days up the fjord? according to Nils at the tourist office?) and on to Baffin Island in northeast Canada. Anyway it looked a tremendous experience, as the youth dashing bare chested into Baffin Bay seemed to symbolise. The photographs brought my own Greenland trip back to me, so my imagination was able to finish Per Kirkeby's wonderfully unfinished sketches, the wall of rock and water that move so far across the page and then stop, leaving a white void. The detail with which he renders mountains and morraines bely his early career as a geology PhD. He has been going to Greenland since the late 1950's when he was completing this postgraduate studies, and says that he doesn't feel right in himself if once a year he doesn't make a trip to Greenland, Iceland or the Faroe Islands. The north Atlantic / Arctic regions certainly have that pull. And the colours show up in his abstract or semi abstract work: the jewel blues and emerald greens that have a tawny, mossy quality; the swirl of grey-green like a fog descending on a fjord, the brilliant mustard yellows and hot pinks of the summer bloom. All these are in the wonderful abstracts with titles such as 'The Northernmost House', and even in one of the large abstracts which I must find the title of, which has obvious points of comparison in the palette and overall effect, if not the linear quality of the markmaking, to Monet's famous waterlilies at Giverny (which I had recently seen some of at the National Gallery).

It was an eventful couple of days, gallery-wise, for me, Emerging from the Per Kirkeby exhibition, Tate membership card in hand, it was inevitable, after browsing samples of his publishing oeuvre in the cafe area, that I should go straight into the Futurism exhibition. Now I must say that fans of Futurism will be delighted to see so many works from so many countries assembled in one place. That said, I must confess myself not to be a particular fan of Futurism, nor did this exhibition change my mind. It is hard to say whether my reaction would have been different if it hadn't been towards the end of two and a half days of intense art digestion. But given my more positive reaction to the National Portrait Gallery later the same evening, I suspect not.

Not to say that individual works did not delight, for examples Marcel Duchamp's chess players, and his tiny painting on panel of a coffee grinder in assembly-sheet form, made for a present for his brother to hang in the kitchen. Or Picasso's Head of a Woman (Fernande), vaunted as the first Cubist sculpture, from 1909. And here, in admiring the chunky simplification of the head, I came to one fundamental problem I have with Futurism: I just don't like cubism. I think I've always had a problem with cubism - I think there are a lot of examples of it, poorly done, and more importantly, I think the premise of breaking the subject into different planes never quite achieves the sense of looking at the thing simultaneously form/from different views. Instead of showing a unity of simultaneous viewpoints, to me the results usually look cluttered. There are exceptions of course, some of the better Piassos, or Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase (not in this exhibition), but that is my general opinion. However, it must be said that the sense of motion conveyed by Umberto Boccioni's two series of three paintings, States of Mind (1911) about emotions of people on a rail platform / those who are going/ those who are staying, was fantastic, perhaps more so in the loose studies than in the more finished versions, with their increased angularity (shades of cubism again?) and incorporation of greater detail such as numbers in that futurist font.

For this exhibition it was extremely important to read the eight foot high manifesto panels at the start, and again in the room with books, photos and ephemera (n.b.: content of this last link may be blocked by zealous web-watchers). Here another detail was well observed: the glass cases displaying books etc. were set at a forty-five degree angle to the walls, and the exhibits were at a forty-five degree angle to the cases, which were arranged in a zig zag - a very futurist layout for an exhibition!

I mentioned about the National Portrait Gallery. Thanks to late opening Thursdays, I managed to pop in to see the BP Portrait Award 2009 and BP Travel Award 2008. The latter was, as last year, the most exciting thing for me in the exhibition. Emmanouil Bitsakis has travelled to the Uigar region in the far North West of China, taking with him his ubiquitous small notebooks, in which he incessantly records his thoughts, which generally take the form of meticulously drawings of people, scenes, buildings, and animals, in immaculate biro. Sometimes a portrait is juxtaposed with a Maoist monument, or tiny illustrations of animals flank the endless list of Uigar phrases, pronunciations and English or Greek translations he made. I wondered how long he was over there to learn so much of the complex grammar. I suppose that even for a short visit, it would be essential to learn as much as possible. It also made me wonder how long it would take, to produce a page of this kind of dense material. A book on Emmanouil Bitsakis accompanying the exhibition states that he is quietly observant, almost invisible as he unobtrusively sketches the people round him. Invisible perhaps in his native Greece, but how invisible in a place where foreigners stand out like a sore thumb, where children run chanting, 'Farang! Gaijin!' or the local equivalent, to strangers? But perhaps I am making assumptions; Bitsakis shaves his head, from his self portraits, and if wearing local attire, or a dark Mao suit, he might well be invisible, at least from the back.

The sketches were presented with a couple of the notebooks laid open, in the inevitable glass case, Bitsakis insists, according to the book, that his drawings are never removed from the notebooks for any reason. A key ring with detachable card fobs (such as I had recently seen for sale at Heaton Cooper Studios in Grasmere) did not suffer this restriction, so an array of tiny drawings on card were fanned out and spread round. These depicted musical instruments and other suitably oblong subject matter. Each was meticulously labelled and numbered in a tiny hand. In order to display more of the two notebooks, a slide show was playing on a small screen. Enlarged, each page was only around A5 (half US letter paper size), the original size being more like B6. While watching the pages on a five minute loop (and one might well want to watch all the way through more than once), the visitor was invited to listen on (only one set of!) headphones to delightful excerpts from Uigar traditional music.

The outcome of the notebooks was a series of appropriately tiny portraits painted in oil on tiny tiles / patchwork squares of canvas, the detailed heads nearly filling the frame, with background details crammed not just into the remaining space but into the same perspective plane as the main subject, giving a flattened effect more reminiscent of the Russian Orthodox icon than the telephoto lens. I found these unfailingly delightful: while others in the exhibition may have painted perspective more accurately, or given the glossy surfaces mimicking liquid digital colour, these simple flattened colours, with their flattened bu exquisite detail, spoke something of a culture, and the imagery of a culture, unimaginably removed form our own and set (partly), it seems, in another era. And yet the familiar and the modern are both there: the small child juxtaposed against the industrial progress of a city: the Old Man (my favourite) shoved off centre by a collection of clucking chickens bursting over one another, one tiny perfectly rendered beak curving round the side of the panel; the young man confronting us head on, wearing modern clothes but not completely blocking out the past, represented by a temple oozing up to the sides of the frame, an exaggeration of an idea of a head juxtaposed onto the lower part of a temple, seen in the notebooks. (These works have a similar feeling to the tiny portraits on copper by Eloiza Mills.)

For me this was the highlight of the BP exhibition, and it got my vote for People's Choice (even though not voting for the 2009 portraits may have disqualified me from the competition to win Daler-Rowney materials). My second and third choices, by the way, were
Broken Heart by Donald Macdonald, the heart surgery scar on his future father-in-law's chest echoed by occasional patches of rough overworking to the oil? surface, including a blue line bleeding into the lower left edge of the canvas, and Black Mirror by the Israeli artist David Nipo, a moody sfumato study that is the oils equivalent of a mezzotint, the merest highlights of cheeks and chin emerging from an all-enveloping blackness.

Again this year I was looking for departures from the photorealist style that seems to dominate portraiture; this year, when I found it, it often seemed to signal a drop in quality, with a few other exceptions than those cited above.

Afterwards there was time for a brief foray into the main collection (my first!). Up the grand escalator I went, seeing no similar conveyance to bring me back down, I was trusting that I wasn't on a one-way journey into an eternity surrounded by Tudor miniatures, not exactly what I had planned for myself. I just had time to wander through the eighteenth century, and said hello again to Hogarth, at his easel, wigless, bald, and by the relaxed outstretching of a stockinged leg, clearly enjoying himself while painting the comic muse (having only that morning seen him, and his dog, strapped to a cart loaded with DIY goodies that I assume were conservation/restoration materials, and unceremoniously wheeled away through Tate Britain, much to the consternation of the tall white-haired lady guide: 'Oh, they're taking him away! I do so like to show him to people!') Without pausing to detail the National Portrait Gallery room currently devoted to engravings of Samuel Johnson and his circle, I must pursue this easy link back to the first visit I made that day, to Tate Britain, to see a little of Bacon, Auerbach, Bloomsbury and Blake, before walking the line into the Richard Long exhibition. This retrospective features so many walks, recorded in photographs and enormous text panels enlarged on the wall, that I began to wonder if he had ever been home since the 1970s. It would certainly have taken me that long to have gone distances of hundreds of miles that he trips through in a few days, sometimes walking continuously for twenty-four hours. The large room with seven or eight of his stone sculptures on the floor was striking, with sun pouring in through the skylights. (Incidentally, there is another less spectacularly displayed Richard Long floor stone sculpture on show at Haunch of Venison.) Two walls were also painted with natural materials from specific geographic location; these were quite striking but are presumably about to be destroyed when the exhibition is taken down. And the photographs, as always, are as much documents as works of art, sometimes more so as the grain of colour films he used in the 1980s do not enlarge particularly well, certainly not to the large sizes currently favoured by galleries displaying art photography at the moment. There were also some maps. In the whole, I felt like most of the experience of the walks is being missed. Perhaps that is part of the point; perhaps we are supposed to fill in the blanks ourselves. Perhaps we are being spared the kind of 'my boots hurt' narrative that tends to dominate autobiographical travel writing. Perhaps the texts on the wall work better as poems than as works of art. Perhaps it would have been more interesting to see a series of photographs representing a single walk, rather than one photograph representing each walk. Of course each photograph was representing one of Long's site-specific, impermanent works of art, the traces of footprints across sand or snow, arrangements of stones or sticks. Long began his work long before constant documentation of digital photography and blogging. What, then, did he think he was doing by making circular walks or cycle rides, that would be largely unrecorded and unobserved, represented by lines drawn on a map, hung on a wall? Was he actually able to keep to these shapes, or did the terrain dictate changes? I found the idea of so many walks appealing, but couldn't help thinking that my own pace and means of documentation would have been very different. I did, however, draw inspiration from the room at the side (free entry, as opposed to the main exhibition), which displayed dozens of his publications: books, posters, and postcards advertising exhibitions since the 1960s, accompanied by a video. Here, I thought, might be another way to respond to a walk, one which Long has himself so studiously ignored.

Richard Long has just closed at Tate Britain, but continues at Haunch of Venison, London.

Per Kirkeby has just closed at Tate Britain, but the Futurism continues there until 20 September.

The BP Portrait Award 2009 and the BP Travel Award 2008 continue at the National Portrait Gallery until 20 September, and Samuel Johnson & friends continue there until a date I cannot specify at this time...

'The Accessible Arctic' exhibition continues at Canada House near Trafalgar Square until 30 October 2009, and the films continue there on Tuesdays until 20 October. A related exhibition, 'The Northwest Passage – an Arctic Obsession', runs at the National Maritime Museum until 3 January 2010. Read about the Cape Farewell project at http://www.capefarewellcanada.ca/.

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Saturday, 5 September 2009

Review: Obama's People by Nadav Kander at Birmingham


Eugene Kang by Nadav Kander, courtesy of
http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/magazine/2009-inauguration-gallery/index.html

I must confess I had always had a certain, completely unfounded, prejudice against Birmingham. It lacked the centrality and culture of London; the hip style of Manchester; the artistic excitement of Glasgow; the architecture of Edinburgh. Although years ago I had been assured that Birmingham has more miles of canals than Venice, and I was willing to believe it to be true, the comparison seemed almost obscene. My acquaintanceship with the city, limited heretofore to inevitable forays at the Digbeth Street Coach Station, had hardly provided me with any basis for analysis. So having occasion to purchase a day return to Brum to escort my father partway on his return to Gatwick, I found myself with the prospect of spending at least two hours in the city while waiting for the return train. It seemed churlish not to go for a walk.

The central rail station seems to automatically spit you out onto a walkway that goes past McDonald's (free, clean toilets! unlike the station, which charges 20p to spend a penny), and there, ahead of you just to the left, is a funky little glass building that hands out free maps and other tourist info. Turn left here and an easy walk past a couple blocks of pedestrianised shopping (including Habitat on your left) brings you to an open square with a sort of concrete amphitheatre that is a pleasant place to people watch on a hot summer's day, while munching a sandwich. A classically columned portico announces some sort of municipal government offices; around the corner from this is the city museum and art gallery. On the way I encountered a giant poster advertising an exhibition called 'Obama's People', featuring the photographs of Nadav Kander, normally a fashion rather than portrait photographer.

And the portraits did certainly echo shots for the cover of Vogue, a plain white background and ring flash giving a very even brightness to the subjects, who were nonetheless rendered in rich saturation and detail, so important when photographing people of a range of races and skin tones. (One of my pet peeves has always been that the emulsions and standard developing settings of films, especially colour films like Kodak but more dramatically perhaps in black and white, have traditionally been set to flatter the skin tones of Caucasians, leaving Afro-Carribeans, South Asians, etc. unflatteringly underexposed, and thus almost invisible in group portraits.)

But Kander's work renders the skin tones beautifully, and is about group portraiture only in its totality: what he has done is to record the members of Obama's cabinet and staff, as they were known at the time of his inauguration in January 2009. Each portrait confronts the viewer with a single member of staff; it is apparent immediately the range of age, gender and ethnic diversity that characterise the support team chosen by America's first black president. In addition, although the forty-odd less central people are presented in rows of head and shoulder shots, 16"x20" approximately, the twenty-five or so key advisors are presented in fabulous head-to-toe nearly life size enlargements, or in some cases, in larger-than-life waist shots. This is the case with Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, who is presented in a pose reminiscent of portraits in oils, with the exception of the animation of her mouth, in mid-speech. Facial lines and age spots, that are considered 'characterful' in men, but are airbrushed and botoxed away in women, are allowed to remain, giving her dignity and authority - after all, it is hard to forget that she also had a very real chance of becoming president, despite remarks about her weight and appearance that would never have been an issue with a male candidate of similar age and stature.

With many of the other portraits, too, the interest is more in the analysis of who is represented, and how, rather than in the technicalities of the production. Kander claims to have allowed the subjects to dress as they wished, and to bring their own props, if desired: these ranged from pencils to a basketball to chocolate chip cookies. In the absence of any setting, the clothes, props, and particularly the postures, gestures, and facial expressions define the characters of these people. Reggie Love, Personal Aide to the President, featured on the promotional materials, upon closer inspection reveals his name stitched into the lining of his tailored jacket, and even the cuffs of his shirt. Ostentatious, or relaxed, confident and proud? The much-discussed Eugene Kang could not form a more complete contrast: retiring behind the little black book of contact numbers that helps him to be Obama's living personal organiser, only 24, this former student politician sports a collegiate wool scarf that, while slightly eccentric, is as self-effacing worn over a dark coat as Love's peacock-blue satin shirt is eye-catching and extrovert.

As a total exhibition, it makes manifest, in a purely visual and immediate way, the revolution of inclusiveness at the highest level of government that Obama has instigated before his first day in the Oval Office. And yet, clearly some of the old guard remain, and continuity is not necessarily a bad thing. Particularly striking is Mark W. Lippert, National Security Council Chief of Staff, whose deep shadows under the eyes and premature aged looks at 35 speak perhaps of the burden of intolerable knowledge.

Obama himself is presented differently. Secreted in a sort of shrine, facing night time portraits of the Capitol buildings, his print is the smallest of all, a mere 12 by 14 inches (approximately, as I remember). It is black and white, with a large predominance of grey tones, and is lit by a single miniscule bulb. From the night of the dark enclosure, he seems to look up to the dawn he hopes for his country and the world.

AS I WRITE IT, THAT IS SO CLICHE! But in the exhibition, it didn't seem so.

The remainder of the museum and gallery took a while to explore. Of particular interest, and relevant as both contrast and parallel, is the room devoted to Olaudah Equiano. The story of his life, from beginnings as a slave to free man, writer and thinker, is an inspiring antecedent to Obama's. And both have published influential books: Equiano's is titled The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano (1789) and helped to forward the anti-slavery campaign.

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