Browsing Category: contemporary art

  • Nikolaj Bendix Skyum Larsen, Promised Land (2011)

    Paddling naked, save for a life jacket, through the dark waters of a harbour is so difficult it seems comic. Since the swimmer is in a video piece, one really hopes this is a performance. But this is a real life moment in the life of a would-be migrant to Britain. Art is the last …

    June 28, 2011
  • Found Objects 25/06/11

    Here are some links from the last seven days. Enjoy: The good news, at least to some degree, is that Ai Weiwei has been released on bail. This deserves a televisual breaking news report, as sourced by Leg of Lamb blog. Even more good news, yesterday a Picasso masterpiece went on show in the Palestinian …

    June 25, 2011
  • Pablo Bronstein: Sketches for Regency Living

    There’s an elephant in the room at the ICA. In fact, the elephant is the room. The spiritual home of the avant garde in London is a well-to-do Regency building on the capital’s grandest street. That alone could have been a reason for industrial band Einstürzende Neubauten taking pneumatic drills to the floor in 1984, …

    June 14, 2011
  • Found Objects 12/06/11

    Feel free to click through and enhance your day with one or more or all of the following: Winner of the Golden Lion at Venice is the 24-hr montage of real-time movie clips by Christian Marclay. Here’s a temperamental link to a video interview on the festival website and an old piece from BBC News. It’s …

    June 12, 2011
  • Tracey Emin: Love is What You Want

    In her much-talked about retrospective, the first piece of art is not by Tracey Emin. Nor does it seem much like a work of art. Despite the frame, it is clearly also a letter from her father. Halfway through the show is another work in which the art is hard to discern. This is a …

    June 9, 2011
  • Huang Yong Ping: One Man, Nine Animals (1999)

    Nine mythical beasts which presage disaster are on the march. A wagon used to measure time and direction lies broken on the ground. If you didn’t laugh, you might cry. The snake with two tails foretells drought (Currently in Europe, tick). The boar with a human head foretells floods (Singapore, tick). The eagle with one …

    June 7, 2011
  • Found Objects 04/06/11

    You don’t have to go to Venice to be overwhelmed by the Biennale. Festival-related tweets have surely outnumbered the pigeons in St Mark’s Square. Here are some links from the floating city and beyond: In the Guardian, Rachel Withers tells you more than most about Mike Nelson’s installation at the British Pavilion. Writing on artnet, …

    June 4, 2011
  • Mark Leckey, GreenScreenRefrigeratorAction (2010)

    The fridge looks nothing like my fridge. In truth it is more like a “dark mirror”, a “walled garden” or a “monstrous insect”, all comparisons made by an anguished, robotic first person voiceover. Manufacturers Samsung surely realise they are in the business of fabricating metaphors. How else could they justify a $1,799 price tag for …

    June 2, 2011
  • Found Objects 28/05/11

    Having been away for a few days, there seem to be some especially good reads this weekend: Art event of the week was neither an opening nor an auction sale, but surely a blog post and the 300 comments it generated. Suffice to say, Jonathan Jones doesn’t rate Mark Leckey. So much for the artistic …

    May 28, 2011