Browsing Category: contemporary art

  • Plastique Fantastique, Impossible Diagrams

    What to make of a flicker between a bandaged head and a face carved in a brieze block. Or an unshaven mouth which hi-jacks a news report. Or self-immolation illustrated as if for a kids’ book. Quite a bit happens in the Plastique Fantastique show at Grey Area. Not all is easy to describe and …

    May 27, 2011
  • Mike Nelson, The Coral Reef (2000)

    You are in the HEROIN ROOM. You can see: a painting, a broken chair, a lighter and some tin foil. There are exits: SE, SW. What do you want to do? _ That’s not meant to be the worst dropped intro ever written, but a faithful reproduction of the game-like dynamics of one of Mike …

    May 18, 2011
  • Maxime Angel, Let My Eyes Be Your Mirror

    From the pencil shavings and strewn magazines on the floor, it looks something like Maxime Angel has been living in the gallery. Indeed, there are reports she has slept on several works. She may even have slept inside the containerboard on the wall. The gallery assistant tells me the college-trained artist was also for a …

    May 17, 2011
  • Found Objects 15/05/2011

    We’ve had seven more days of neuron-firing stories on-line, including: Scientists told the media that art can boost dopamine levels. But can it also give you the munchies? (from The Telegraph) On artnet, Ben Davis considers the Vatican’s decision to put the Sistine Chapel online and asks how they can get their heads round Flash …

    May 15, 2011
  • KutluÄŸ Ataman, Mesopotamian Dramaturgies / Mayhem (2011)

    KutluÄŸ Ataman has got into the spirit of the Brighton Festival with a carnivalesque metaphor for the recent turmoil in the Arab world: a waterfall which defies gravity. (This reading of Mayhem needs its full context, a series named after a region encompassing Iraq, Iran and Syria. And nearby here is another piece (Su) in …

    May 13, 2011
  • Janet Cardiff, The Forty Part Motet (2001)

    When a gallery is a deconsecrated church and the artwork is a piece of religious music, walking in is a hair’s breadth from turning up for Sunday worship. It’s humbling, even humiliating. The early choral work, Spem in Alium by Thomas Tallis, is drawing people in off the street, nevertheless. This is one church that’s …

    May 11, 2011
  • Found Objects 08/05/2011

    Some favourited links from the last seven days: Big news of the week. Osama Bin Laden may have been a frustrated architect? Steve Rose builds a case in the Guardian. The Telegraph reports Art dealer Philip Mould was victim of a poison pen campaign. When it was alleged that he couldn’t afford a painting, that …

    May 8, 2011
  • Found Objects 30/04/2011

    Another week, another round-up of favourite links to the world wide web. Please enjoy: Apparently there was a big state occasion here in Britain yesterday. Well, I doubt it was anything like as good as this footage of the funeral of Nam June Paik in Korea (via @ubuweb). Better late than never, here’s a link …

    April 30, 2011
  • FOUND, Cybraphon (2009)

    By writing this I am making Cybraphon happy and by reading this you are making me happy. Here’s what criticismism has in common with an autonomous emotional robot. FOUND collective’s sculpture tracks hits to its own website and obsesses over its stats and indeed, like most bloggers, that is activity I can all too easily …

    April 28, 2011
  • Found Objects 23/04/2011

    Another interesting week in art online has yielded up the following: Oh my aching sides! Chinese spambots have turned the #AiWeiwei hashtag into a forum for risque jokes on Twitter. Hyperallergic translates for us. As if that wasn’t bad enough, hackers have targetted an online petition in support of the dissident artist. So sign now …

    April 23, 2011