Showing posts with label michael landy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label michael landy. Show all posts

Saturday, 29 May 2010

Rachel Whiteread Drawings: studies in negative spaces, places for play - Tate Britain 8 September 2010 - 16 January 2011

















Photo: Rachel Whiteread video on display in main foyer, Tate Britain, to accompany her exhibition. Photo copyright Margaret Sharrow, 2010; video copyright Tate

It's always interesting to see artists' preparatory work (see Francis Alÿs, 'A Story of Deception'), and this selection of drawings, photographs, maquettes and items from the studio of former Turner Prize winner Rachel Whiteread makes a nice complement to the current year's contenders' exhibition. There are many drawings made on graph paper, and I began to wonder what benefits this might offer her (scaling up? guidance against a tendency to stray from the straight line?), and why I hadn't tried drawing on graph paper myself. She is also fond of using whiteout as a drawing tool, something Michael Landy has used to great effect in some of his drawings of Tinguely's Homage to New York.

As a photographer it is always interesting for me to see what use non-photographer artists make of this medium. There was one photograph of an urban landscape, a study for her water tower piece I think, that she had painted over, giving a very atmospheric result. Other photographs were daubed with whiteout to indicate the negative spaces that are the hallmark of her sculptural work. (The idea of highlighting the negative space, the invisible thing in preference to the apparently existing things, is one that appeals to me greatly.) There is the famous house, blotted out while its neighbours remain. There is another photograph of the field, after the standing guts of the house that was Whiteread's seminal work had been demolished by an anxious council. An absence of an absence. Perhaps we should be visiting this ghost of a work that was a ghost of a house.

I also liked her plans for the fourth plinth in London's Trafalgar Square - to have the mirror image of the plinth stood on top of itself, made of some translucent material. 'Do it! DO IT!!!' I shouted to her, though she wasn't there. Fortunately I did all this shouting in my head, or they would have thrown me out before I could have seen some of the most interesting work: studies on modified postcards (one filled with negative spaces through the aegis of a range of differently sized hole punches), and a vast array of handholdable (but sadly safe behind glass) treasures she keeps in her studio: glass globes and crystal balls, a mould of Peter Sellers' nose that was a sample from a sculptural materials company, single shoes, toys, stones, resin moulds of bowls, mirrors and other delightfully reflective surfaces. Such is the stuff we need to have about us, for reference, for inspiration, for play. For it is play that allows us to connect with the unfettered, uncluttered self that can create with clarity.

A bonus exhibition that can be seen on a combination ticket with Eadweard Muybridge and the Turner Prize.

Rachel Whiteread Drawings continues at Tate Britain, London, until 16 January 2011

Posted 9 November 2010

Review: Kyle Bean's windows at Selfridges, London
















An exploded motorcycle, each piston, gear and lever separate, hangs in balance with its assembled twin. The cardboard box for an office chair is hung against an office chair constructed from the same box. Artist Kyle Bean created a series of shop window displays each featuring a giant balance scales with pairs of objects in transformation. The concept behind the work was to illustrate the third law of thermodynamics, which states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, but changes from one form to another. I encountered these interesting works, not at Selfridges in London where they were on show from July until 1 September 2010, but on the Creative Review website, where I left the comment that follows:

I wonder if the commission of these new artist-designed windows is in part a response to Louis Vuitton's new shop on New Bond Street, which with its gold peek-a-boo mesh, animated shoes and glass globe-encased fantasy animals composed of leather handbags etc. has set a new standard for shop windows. Bean's disassembled motorcycle bears a superficial resemblance to the assemblage of cogs, wheels and scrap metal in Michael Landy's 'Credit Card Destroying Machine', partially visible through the LV window - but without the functionality and complexity of references seen in Landy's work. I do like the idea and careful execution of Bean's work, and am always happy to see integration of scientific ideas into art. But as others have said, it would have been nice to see the works balanced on a hair, perhaps moving gently, alarmingly, with a current of air. And what are these pairs of things equivalents of? Transformations of themselves? On first glance I thought perhaps they represented something like carbon footprint equivalents of themselves - the work might have had more weight (excuse the pun) if they had. Yes, I know that would have destroyed the thermodynamics theme. However, to be really picky, the pairs as displayed can't be absolute equivalents as energy must have been contributed to make the transformations, and the law of entropy says that energy gets used up within a closed system, and that over time there is greater disorder (as with the motorcycle) not more order (as with the castle). Perhaps this is reading too much into what is, in the end, a shop window display... but the publicising of the presence of the artist inevitably invites a higher level of scrutiny than the work of an anonymous window dresser, however innovative.

Regardless, it's fantastic to see more art in shop windows!

Image from http://www.creativereview.co.uk/cr-blog/2010/july/kyle-bean, where the above comment originally posted.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

Shrouded car (bird) on BBC Mid Wales

Lampeter artist turns car into sculpture
Shrouded car
Margaret Sharrow won an University of Wales Geoffrey Crawshay Memorial Travel Scholarship in 2008

Lampeter artist Margaret Sharrow has given up her car for art's sake.

She has turned her vehicle into a sculpture to be exhibited at Lampeter Town Hall.

'Shrouded car (bird)' is being featured at a special exhibition at the venue on Saturday 10 April from 1100 GMT and 1500 GMT

It complements Margaret's exhibition 'Shrouded Forms', which also runs at the Town Hall Café-Deli until 30 April 2010.

 I'll be taking 'Shrouded car (bird)' on tour - look out for me photographing it at locations around Wales 
Margaret Sharrow

Margaret Sharrow said: "I began studying alternative ways of making photographs at Aberystwyth University, with my tutor Dr Christopher Webster.

"He really opened my mind to completely different ways of taking and making images, and provided a very supportive environment for experimentation."

Travel

While still an undergraduate, Margaret showed work at the School of Art's 'Imaging the Bible' exhibition in 2008.

Margaret Sharrow
Margaret intends to take the exhibition on tour

Since graduating in 2009 she has also had a solo show at the Erwood Station Gallery, contributed to Michael Landy's 'Art Bin', and plans to continue expanding her artistic career.

"I'm entering work from the Shrouded Forms series in shows in Wales and London and I'm also planning a large collaborative project involving travel," she added.

Margaret was the winner of a £2,000 University of Wales Geoffrey Crawshay Memorial Travel Scholarship in 2008, which allowed her to travel to Greenland.

She said: "l still have more work planned following on from that trip and I'll be taking 'Shrouded car (bird) on tour - look out for me photographing it at locations around Wales."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/midwales/hi/people_and_places/arts_and_culture/newsid_8609000/8609184.stm


Thursday, 18 March 2010

Michael Landy and Art Bin - an exhibition inside out


Closing of Michael Landy's Art Bin, photo copyright Margaret Sharrow 2010

The concept of Art Bin was deceptively simple. People were invited to bring to a gallery works of art that they felt had failed in some way. They then left the works in a bin, where they would remain for the duration of the exhibition, to be disposed of afterwards. 


So what? you might think. Modern art, load of rubbish anyway. Wait, isn't this that Michael Landy who destroyed all his worldly things a few years ago?


Yes, Art Bin is certainly a development from Landy's earlier Break Down, which posed all sorts of questions about consumerism, the meaning of wealth, the burden of the past, the value we invest in possessions and memory, and the curse and cure of senseless clutter. (Among the inventory of Landy's possessions was a single trainer [sneaker, for North Americans]. Hung onto, why? Because, I suppose, the other one was bound to turn up someday!) For me, Art Bin forces some fundamental questions (especially once I decided to offer work for disposal myself): What is art? What is an exhibition? And what, as a culture, do we ultimately want to preserve?


What is art?


Oh, why not start with a simple conundrum? People have been screaming 'That is NOT art!' since the Young British Artists showed beds and sheep, or since the performance art of the 1960s, no, since Marcel Duchamp exhibited a urinal in 1914, or since Picasso split up the faces of women - wait, it was when the Impressionists showed all those 'unfinished' paintings, or was it Turner in the early nineteenth century...? The point is, given enough time critical opinion, and sometimes mainstream public opinion, can change radically. You are of course free to decide whether or not you think Art Bin, as a whole, is art, or is something else, such as theatre. But here, from an artist's perspective, is why it is art, for me, anyway: it is a reflection of the usually hidden, but absolutely crucial process of making art: selection. When a visitor walks into a gallery, everything is a fait accompli: framed, presented, lit, but most importantly, selected. The process leading up to these finished products is usually completely hidden. Walking into the South London Gallery to see the Art Bin, I really had no idea what it would look like, even though I had seen a photograph online. The steel frame of the bin (I assume it was steel) filled a single massive gallery and reached up very close to the ceiling. It formed a sort of basket shape, with each of the square holes between the steel supports filled with a  perspex 'window'. So the whole thing was transparent, so that the disposed art could be seen (and metaphorically, the process of selection was made transparent). 



Art Bin staircase. Image copyright Margaret Sharrow 2010


At one end there was a staircase leading up to a platform, where artists or gallery assistants would stand to drop or throw the work into the bin. It seemed very obvious... and yet there were many other ways it could have been built. Initially I had imagined a kind of mulcher like the one used in Break Down, that would destroy everything on the spot. Yet Landy decided to have the work continuously visible for six weeks, to build up layers of work, in a sort of archaelogical way, so that the newly chucked in works would begin to destroy the earlier ones, and they would all begin to meld together. Hence the perspex, and not glass (luckily, or a couple of my overenthusiastically thrown wooden pieces could have spelled disaster when they bounced off the sides). And the staircase, again, a deliberate choice, evoking New York fire escapes and Olympic diving boards, creating a spectacle and emphasising a sacrifice as the works plunged to ignominy. What was a surprise was how much fun it was to climb up, see the full range of works smashed and scattered below, and then gleefully release, whether barely observed or watched by a throng including eager children. 



Another participant casts off work of the past. Image copyright Margaret Sharrow 2010


Most importantly for the participating artist, Art Bin suggested that it is important to admit when something hasn't worked, and not to hang onto it, wasting energy on the possibility for reworking or perfecting the unperfectable. Selection, I knew all about that, making loads of things and exhibiting the best, and making careful choices about what to make, and how, and why, and with what possible meanings. Oddly, I had forgotten about rejection. It had never occurred to me to go back and get rid of all the horrible small paintings on wood offcuts that I had made in the second year of my degree. But now they are gone, and I have more space to make new things! 


Art Bin says that art is as much a process as a finished product. Ideally both should be enjoyable. And when it doesn't work, ideally the artist knows when to let go and move on to something better. 


What is an exhibition? 


Ah, yes. While walking through Peckham it occurred to me that Landy has produced a perfect inversion of what an art exhibition normally is. To wit: 


ORDINARY EXHIBITION                          ART BIN


art preserved                                               art destroyed


artist, work and medium clearly labelled   nothing labelled


items well spaced                          items disappear under others


arrangement in a sequence                         no order; anarchy


separation of professionals from amateurs   everyone equal


white walls                                                   perspex windows


artist absent                                                artist present


visitor separated from work                       visitor contributes to work


work criticised by professionals      work also implicitly criticised 

exterior to the work                        by participants 

                                                         who have judged their own 

                                                         pieces as failures


artists' selection process hidden      artists' selection process on view


Going back to the idea of selection, although Landy courteously refrained from passing any comments on the quality of works that went into the bin, he did generally refuse works that in some way were contrary to the spirit of the process of artistic selection - including people who wanted to throw themselves in the bin as failures. During the closing festivities, when some of the Art Bin 'rules' went out the window (e.g. non-contributors allowed up the stairs to observe the splendor of the finished chaos), someone was making a collage specifically to throw in the bin. It was nice that he wanted to participate, but predestining the failure of a work of art did seem contrary to the spirit of selection. (It turned out to be Adam Ant.) 


What, as a culture, do we want to preserve?



All over Peckham, it was Bin Day! Image copyright Margaret Sharrow 2010


Must we save everything? On a personal level, Break Down forced us to confront that it is possible to survive without an accumulation of possessions from a person's past. As a society, do we need to hang onto everything from our culture? Wooooh, I can feel myself stepping into ideological quicksand here. Before a barrage of angry comments about my philistinism are launched, I'd just like to say that I've done quite a bit of work unearthing, preserving and promoting culture, have worked in a museum and a rare books library, and am most certainly not advocating any destruction of property in our public cultural institutions. But it is interesting to note that it would have been impossible for Landy to create Art Bin in many other European countries or the United States (home of freedom of speech), for legal reasons. It seems there are places where an artist cannot agree to give a finished work to another artist for destruction, no matter how poor they judge their own work to be. Would we be better off if Francis Bacon hadn't destroyed all of his paintings that didn't work? Or do we wish that he hadn't destroyed them primarily because his touch, as it were, conveys a kind of hagiographic value to everything, and now, years after his death, an increasing monetary value? I can hear him laughing... and no doubt he would have loved Art Bin, although perhaps he would have been loathe to make his failures public. (Congratulations, then, to everyone else who showed the courage to admit that they, and their work, is not perfect.) 


Of course, the problem with destroying things from the past is that we never know what value might be placed on them in the future. (Ruskin in fact privately and posthumously 'art binned' many of Turner's paintings because he considered them morally repugnant; we will never know what we lost.) But an artist should always be free to select and destroy their own work - so credit is due to Landy for encouraging better work through allowing the destruction of the failures. 


And for giving us plenty to think about. 



Read the Times review of Art Bin



Practicing my throw for the ignominious flight of my first contribution

(photo by Simon of South London Gallery)