Browsing Category: contemporary art

  • Bob and Roberta Smith interview

    Written for Culture24. Bob and Roberta Smith have called their forthcoming show The Life of the Mind, and the last notable person who offered to demonstrate that burnt down a hotel. The title is a quote from the 1991 movie Barton Fink with the arsonist played by John Goodman. He is very annoyed to have …

    January 11, 2011
  • The Refrain, Judy Price, 2008

    It is quite something to come across an eye hospital in a gallery. Each one could be a metaphor for the other. In both you can expect some kind of operation on your field of vision. But to come across St John’s Eye Hospital in East Jerusalem is stranger still. In this two-channel video installation, …

    January 4, 2011
  • Top 5 art shows which I failed to see in 2010

    The season of list-making is upon us. But lists, according to US novelist Don Delillo, are a form of ‘cultural hysteria’. As if the impending winter festival wasn’t hysterical enough. This year, rather than try and minimise the anxiety, I thought I’d crank things up a notch or two by compiling a list of the …

    December 20, 2010
  • Gifted at Josh Lilley Gallery

    The artists on a gallery roster are invited to think of themselves as colleagues and take part in what we know as secret Santa. Instead of bottles of wine, DVDs and chocolates, they must give artworks. Secret Santa operates as a closed, rational system for regulating generosity at work. It brings teams together. It ensures …

    December 14, 2010
  • Rostan Tavasiev, Ghost (2008)

    There is a highlight of the current show at Grey Area. That word is used because the rest of the works are in darkness. Visitors are provided with torches. A lightbulb forms part of Tavasiev’s sculpture. So what it seems to illuminate is the arbitrary way we give a personality to the spirit of the …

    December 5, 2010
  • Tessa Farmer, Swarm (2004)

    No, your eyes do not deceive you. Those really are tiny winged skeletons riding on the back of a dragonfly. And there are a hundred or more spectacles like this in Swarm by Tessa Farmer. They give the impression of an airborne war, as if the skeletons are fighting for control of their glass cabinet. …

    December 2, 2010
  • Earth 350, Brighton

    Today I found myself clapping and cheering for a piece of art although I have little idea what the work might look like and am not at all sure if it is any good. Nevertheless, I was participating. 2,000 of us stood on the seafront in minus temperatures for an hour and a half. At …

    November 27, 2010
  • John Maeda is the Fortune Cookie, Riflemaker

    Despite better intentions, this blog post is all about me. And you can see none other than myself in this Polaroid taken by artist, academic, and sometime futurologist John Maeda. I met John earlier today in a sandpit where he is spending four days in performance as a sort of live interactive fortune cookie. That …

    November 17, 2010
  • Anna Parkina, Cockleshell Garage ‘Raskushka’ (2010)

    Interlocking plywood is not the stuff of classical sculpture. It is too rough and ready. It puts one in mind of model making kits or, here, a model of a stage set. You might use it to build a mock up or something provisional. But Anna Parkina confounds this expectation. Her components are cut, punched …

    November 13, 2010
  • Mohamed Bourouissa, Le Miroir/The Mirror (2006)

    This is not what you expect to see when you look in a mirror. Yet all visual art is surely a reflection of the artist and, if it resonates, the viewer. Mohamed Bourouissa works with young adults from beyond the periphique in Paris, les banlieues. And despite showing life in a culturally excluded zone, this …

    November 7, 2010