Friday 24 April 2009

Objectophilia in Contested Ground - Dominic Rich and Gareth Bell Jones

Contested Ground is described as a curatorial investigation. Just under 30 curating students from Goldsmith’s College and the Royal Collage of Art are working with and against each other in order to satisfy their own interests. The sheer number of curators working with the restrictions of time and space offers the possibility of miscommunication, friction and a warren of aims posited in a multitude of mediums. As suggested by the title Contested Ground, the result of such healthy negotiation may allow for the production of the unforeseen. Here, disorder from order is being celebrated. However, this activity cannot avoid centring importance on the curatorial manoeuvrings. This may allow something more interesting to be overshadowed- the exhibition contents - the things and their own contest.

Gareth Bell-Jones (RCA) and Dominic Rich (Goldsmiths) find this aspect more interesting. Therefore they have proposed Objectophilia, an exhibition integrated amongst others and within another that invites those reading to consider the forces that play between the chosen artworks. Further, the reader is asked to contemplate the artworks’ resistance to framing and speculate to what they may irrespectively, hold and emit. After all the artworks will always offer excess to the numerous framings in which they are placed.

This exhibition is made visible only to those who read this text. For those who are not reading there is no reason to assume that an exhibition has been dispersed into and as part of Contested Ground. Although it could be argued that the most objectophilic thing to do would be to stay mute and allow the artworks to speak for themselves and to argue amongst each other. The answer to this begins simply with the fact that artworks literally cannot speak of their opinions. A true objectophile however, has to say something even if it is as brief and hidden as this. It is beyond obvious to say that artworks do not give birth to other works. Rather a person produces them, say an artist who grapples with material, circumstances, ideas and intentions. To stay mute would be to ignore these factors.

Accordingly, we have chosen work by artists who are model objectophiles; artists who make art to lead their thinking rather than illustrate it. Below are some brief statements developed in conversations with the artists. Hopefully they offer practical information about the individual artworks and the artists’ aims. As for their relation to each other, those reading should decide.
Forth Worth by Simona Brinkman consists of a culminating number of black ‘leather sandbags’. Every time they are exhibited they gain in number and change formation in response to their new environment. The use of sandbags denotes a desire to protect from wars or floods. It also suggests a level of preparation against such possibilities. Yet it was created with no such preparation in mind. Its black leather coverings testify to where it is destined - a gallery. It has been distanced from its original associations. So what is Forth Worth defending? What boundaries have been demarcated? And what are the implications of this ever-growing structure. This will be the 5th exhibition of Forth Worth and includes 51 sand bags.

Mirror 5 support and Mirror 6 support, by George Charman. George Charman wishes to blur imagined space with real structure. Mirror 5 support and Mirror 6 support, are both studies on perceptual disruption of the whole or image/object in space. The presence they convey through light, shadow and reflection, denotes both the essence of their falsehood and the solidity of their existence. These polarities are reflected in the void space that both supports and is framed by the arrangements.

This Sense of Togetherness (Without you I am nothing) by David Raymond Conroy explores the conundrum that art objects might be “… either more than they appear to be, or maybe more accurately more than they are because of how they appear”. Situated in this distance between material ephemera and mythical absolute, Conroy’s work presses upon the fragility of how a set of events, objects or positions can potentially transform into a political gesture, a spiritual presence or a romantic fragment.

Cthonic Harmonic by Andrew Hewish is a white, wooden sculpture/ornament inspired by architectural folly, observations of Venice's encrusted architectural aspect and that city's historical fascination with Capriccio form. Hewish sees it as a ‘koan’; a nonsensical or paradoxical question that demands an answer, the stress of its contemplation offering alternative illuminations. Hewish sees this koan quality as the bastion of stability that enables the form's generation and continuity. Cthonic Harmonic is part of Hewish’s ongoing enquiry into the nature of sculpture as stage object; how far do its formal qualities assure its presence, and how do these qualities intersect with the object's theatrical framing?

Rail, by Benjamin Jenner is a peculiar wooden gate-like structure on wheels. Like Forth Worth it performs the division of space. Like a gate, it marks a puncture in a boundary, sitting on a line between included and excluded. It indicates power tensions without disclosing cause. The wheels playfully suggest the gates ability to shift, in space where included and excluded has not been defined.

Affair at Styles (pink & blue) and High Steel by Kate Owens deals directly with materials and their properties. Affair at Styles (pink and blue) uses soft drink staining as tie-dye and the polythene of High Steel is held on the wall with its own pure static. Owens uses these two processes – staining and the static of bin liners – associated with the material yet normally minor irritants, to transform the materials themselves. As such, by making as few alterations to the original material as possible the beauty of these natural phenomena are revealed.

Untitled (Third Cut), by James Porter can be described as part of his ongoing examination into the duration and production of practice in which there lays a compulsion to make but avoid certainty. His artworks are often evidence of their own making, a culmination of unintended residue. Untitled (Third Cut) barely stands as a broken plinth accompanied with economically poetic texts that hint at the demise of practice.

Advanced Military Layers, by Ben Washington is a proportionately accurate paper model of Mount Fuji that seemingly hovers above the table it was made on. The title refers to a NASA computer program that contains detailed information about the Earth’s terrain. Washington stated, “All of this satellite data technology was developed by the army to kill people, but then you’ve got Mt Fuji which is just a perfect mountain.” This piece addresses the ways in which a landscape transfers and takes on meaning when represented as an object and the consequent clashes of history, narrative and layers of “visual noise”. It aims to add to the confusion, appealing to mystery.

Tuesday 21 April 2009

Loose Associations Lecture / Ryan Gander - Robert Dingle

Loose Associations Lecture
Ryan Gander
Brighton University, 2004
Written by Robert Dingle

Image taken from the book Loose Associations by Ryan Gander

Loose Associations is the title given to a lecture series performed by the artist Ryan Gander. Accompanied by a series of slides the talk draws an intriguing line between seemingly disparate points on the cultural map. Reminiscent of a conversation among friends congregated around a table, the subject roams aimlessly, linked only by seemingly trivial facts. Gander weaves a subtle constellation between facts, semi-fictions and fictions.

The term loose associations principally refers to a derailment in schizophrenia where the phrase designates the manifestation of a thought HYPERLINK "http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Disorder"disorder whereby the HYPERLINK "http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Patients"patients HYPERLINK "http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Responses"responses do not correspond directly to the interviewer's questions or where one HYPERLINK "http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Paragraph"paragraph, sentence, or HYPERLINK "http://www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Phrase"phrase is not logically connected to those that occur before or after.

In September 2004 Gander delivered a version of his Loose Associations Lecture at Brighton University. Being typically digressive and in true anti-Sherlockian fashion, he guided the audience on a meandering journey. Beginning from point A - a discussion of desire paths in urban planning, to point B - trauma lines meant to direct traffic flow in hospitals, to point Z - a scene from Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later in which Cillian Murphy ambles a deserted London, while just off-screen, Gander points out, thousands of real-life drivers are irately honking their car horns. Along the way connections are made to everything from invented languages (Elvish and Klingon), the British TV show Inspector Morse, a historical fragment concerning British longbows, and a lawsuit the artist Gillian Wearing brought against Volkswagen.

Gander’s dialogic and conversational work offers us an alternative model through which to view the course of history. Allowing us the possibility to rethink a notion of the past under a new set of coordinates, his associative methodology maps divergent constellations that show us the fragility of our own dominant historical ideology. It permits for a consideration of an alternative possibility for viewing the course of history from a predominantly linear trajectory accompanied by a singular narrative towards a more associative form underpinned by the possibility of a process of cause and effect.

His development of narrative systems, often underlined by a dry sense of humor, are reliant on the gap in meaning produced within language. Gander treats this space as an opening of latent possibility, a site where storytelling writes and revises the course of history over and again. As the telling of a divergent and associative path of events unfolds accompanied by the slippage between fact and fiction, an oscillatory movement occurs, as temporarily we are able suspend our disbelief and imagine an alternative course to history.

If art has the possibility to reform dominant narratives, are we then able to forge new relations and retell an alternative history of art? It makes little difference in knowing Churchill’s famous quote that history is always written by the victory’s, as history is always rewritten by Ryan Gander.

Claire Nichols contributions (click to enlarge)




Fictions (I want to have evidence) - Tamarin Norwood

FICTIONS (I want to have evidence)
Tamarin Norwood

1.
I watch a man as reality hardens and bangs into him like a pane of glass.
It hurt and he laughs and goes round to the real doorway.


2.
The water is on the outside of the bath and a man rows it until it is submerged.
The man swims back.


3.
I stare at the eyes of a woman performing until a muscle in her neck contracts.
When I see her with her coat on upstairs later I pretend we haven’t met.


4.
A voice without an accent is piercingly sharp like an alarm clock.


5.
Many works are on loop, many works are on loop.
Loop is a sad thing to be on.


6.
A technician screws in the last two energy-saving light bulbs and the one at the end begins to flick on and off. He says it’s been synchronised to the interference on the video and I regret that because I thought one was causing the other.

Patrick Coyle contributions (click to enlarge)





The Dreams of Champions - Nick Brown


(click to enlarge)

Emotional Pie Chart - Davina and Daniel


(click to enlarge)

Virginia Phongsathorn: Chicken Soup (The Commune), 2007 - Gemma Sharpe

Drive to form, to play, to another body, to a certain end.

I wanted to write about Ginny’s work, so watched Chicken Soup (The Commune) a few times. On Wednesday we had spent a few hours in her studio, talking about her paintings. So to talk of her film today, is to refer to those hours, before those paintings.

As if looking from the navel-eye-view at a kitchen crowded with objects, the film watches the preparation of chicken soup. Music plays in the background of the kitchen, and text on the screen accompanies the movements of cooking. The text takes the tone of recollection, behaving like an absent soundtrack, or the rehearsal of a dialogue with a particular other. We see the action of hands: washing, breaking bay leaves, or wielding a short knife. At one point an image of comic violence is described in the text/soundtrack: a vulture is eating a fox, ‘the vulture stuck its head up the foxes arse, it started to move as it if it were alive.’ It is a perversion of the natural order, of birth, death, and desire for nourishment. Particularly interesting though, is the clash of word to image at this point. These feminine hands occupied with gentle domestic activity - wielding that short knife - become possible arbiters of violence. Directly, there is no such threat, but an alternative power is gifted upon these hands, and the potential for their diversion from a closed set of actions.

The space of the film’s display was once a Methodist Hall, and the film is shown at the upper level of the main hall, on one of three tiers that would have separated an audience – allowing optimum view for the optimum number of people. The wooden surface solicits you to procure a splinter, if only to demonstrate its age and texture. There are remnants of fluff between the boards, and a penny (Queen side-up) has been dropped on the tier below Ginny’s film. It reminds me of her paintings.

Along the course of a drive – to form, to another body, to a certain end – the paintings demonstrate a fixation with peripheral items accumulated on the way. Think of ‘pervert the course of justice’, a perversion is misdirection. To interrupt the drive is to deviate, to become too interested in peripheral items – the objects of the drive over its object. But there is beauty in the protracted linger upon those objects, in what might be found along the journey of the diversion.

Untitled - Julia Calver


(click to enlarge)

Contingent Ground: Post Foundational Politics, Violence and the Art Object - Robert Dingle + Dominic Rich


(click to enlarge image)

Untitled Sketch - Dominic Rich (click to enlarge)



Monday 20 April 2009

Contested Ground Artist Disco Mix-Tape

songs selected by the dj's from the contested ground artist disco

Robert Alex Rush

The Flirtations – ‘Nothing But A Heartache’
Leeroy Stibbles – ‘Express Yourself’
Yo Majesty & Enya – ‘Fuck That Shit / Sail Away’

Antony Faroux
Don Cherry – ‘Symphony For Improvisers’

Gay Faze
Animal Collective – ‘My Girls’Maurice Fulton – ‘Let’s Get Sick’
Jona Lewis – ‘In The Kitchen At Parties’

Gareth Bell-Jones
Mike Mareen – ‘Double Trouble (Zeppelin Remix)’
Love Club – ‘Hot Summer Nights’
Glass Candy – ‘Beatific’

Put Out The Bin

Pat Benatar – ‘Love Is A Battlefield’
Queen & Montserrat Caballe – ‘Barcelona’
Amii Stewart – ‘Knock On Wood’

Tom Trevatt
Cinematic Orchestra – ‘To Build A Home’
Georgie James – ‘Grizzly Jive’
The Cure – ‘Fire In Cairo (Digitalism Mix)’

* compiled by Alexandra Terry

Sunday 19 April 2009

Room 11






Room 11, installation shots

Vanessa Billy, Robert Holyhead and Sam Porritt

Curated by Gemma Lloyd


Addressing the viewer from both entry points are two components of Sam Porritt’s No Problem, Everyone’s Invited!, 2009 (a). Screwed into the floor, these aluminium carpet cover strips invoke a certain familiarity in their proximity to the doorways. Straying into the space however and going against the grain of the dark seasoned floorboards they start to suggest positions for the viewer to stand. Two further strips by the radiator are laid closely next to each other but begin to scissor away at one end. They are committed to this position and will never be parallel or aligned with each other; generating an uncomfortable stance that gives weight to this side of the room.


Horizontally demarcating one third of the room, Waist Line, 2009 by Vanessa Billy (c) plots out a stretched rectangular circuit in a continuous strip of punctured metal. The chain-like quality of the material sits uneasily at waist height and challenges or interrogates the possibility of looking closely at the painting behind it. Examining the two lines in parallel creates an optical experience asking the eyes to re-register and make sense of the illusionary depth. Like Porritt, Billy’s work elevates the viewer’s awareness of his or her own presence in the room. The tension, width and distance lend themselves to playground skipping games, which lead to an inviting experience in contradiction with its other more hostile qualities.


Wiped out edges interrupt the horizontal movement of the lightly painted surface in Robert Holyhead’s Untitled (Yellow), 2008 (b). They have in fact been removed with the artist’s thumb – and therefore introduce a third intimation of human presence into the installation. The painting works confidently in the room with a single command of sandy yellow. Much like the daylight coming through the window, this work picks out elements in the room, bringing out the faded sea green in a floor panel below and the luminescence of the doorway to its left. Poised at the bottom two corners of the canvas sits an accumulation of paint; the weightiest part of the work. The edges, of which we can only see one (unless we cross Billy’s work) hold a slight bleed of paint – there is deft negotiation in the painting and hung next to the window the natural light emphasises the light, fast paced yet measured surface.


Where Billy and Porritt introduce discrete household materials, Holyhead offers concrete forms in the composition that perhaps suggest the physical foundations of a space. Selected specifically in response to the room, the linear forms in all three of the works are in dialogue with the existing bands, stripes, panels and lengths in the space. Simultaneously, the installation frames and is framed by the wall, floor and space inside the room. The works carve out space and extend beyond the physicality of themselves, affecting the experience and behaviour of the viewer.


Gemma Lloyd, 2009