Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Jo Coupe: 'Fade Away and Radiate' Solo Exhibition, Workplace Gallery, UK


Fade Away and Radiate
Jo Coupe 

Preview: Thursday 28th May 2009 6 – 9pm 
29th May – 27th June 2009
Tues - Sat, 11am -5pm (or by appointment)

Workplace Gallery, The Old Post Office, 19-21 West Street, Gateshead, UK, NE8 1AD


Workplace Gallery is delighted to present Fade Away And Radiate a solo exhibition of new work by Jo Coupe. 

Exploiting the aesthetics and methodologies of Science, the recent work of Jo Coupe adapts simple experiments and subverts half-understood scientific ideas, plundering iconic imagery for its metaphorical significance. In her work, the school science experiment, alchemy, and a fascination with decay unite to reveal the world as a mysteriously rational place. 

Continuing her investigations into the objects and symbols of ritual, magic and the everyday. Coupe’s fascination with paranormal occurrences has led to extended periods of research into the powerful electromagnetic forces of the smelting rooms at one of the world's largest producers of aluminium and bauxite. In this unique environment coins levitate upwards, keys stick rigidly to walls, cameras produce ghosted and partially blacked out images, and video cameras distort unpredictably; all commonly documented symptoms of ‘haunting’ or psychic activity. 

By investigating the symbolic power of the object through a holistic knowledge of the natural world and its scientific, ritualistic, and poetic usage; Coupe’s work takes on a political significance via the employment of the anti-rational and ‘magic’ - traditionally the domain of witchcraft. The setting of her practice within the macho environment of heavy industry, and her use of commonplace and domestic objects conflate two stereotypically gendered positions to move towards an analysis of objects, and the cultural and social forces at play that pervade the meanings we commonly ascribe to them.

Fade Away and Radiate consists of a new ambitious body of work including sculpture, installation, video, photography, and works on paper drawn from Coupe’s ongoing research into how specific environments can alter both the meaning of objects and their physical behaviour. 

The installation 'Supernature' recreates electromagnetic and paranormal effects observed by Coupe through the combination of jewelry, gold and silver plated steel chain, furniture, and electromagnetic fields. 'Phenomena' is a series of short, looped films on separate monitors each depicting the physical effect of powerful magnets on everyday implements such as scissors, keys, and pocket knives. 'Atmospheric Disturbance' is an ongoing collection of photographs of rainbows captured by the artist during the normal course of her day: whilst traveling in her car, reflected on a dinner plate, or in the far distance. The backs of each photographic mount have been coated with fluorescent paint to create a halo of coloured light on the wall around each image. 'Infester' takes over the space with over a hundred and twenty patinated bronze casts of exotic fungi carefully mounted on brass pins, drawing attention to overlooked and undesignated areas of the historic gallery building. 'In The Field' is an object that presents us with evidence of active forces. In this case Coupe has poured resin into a Tupperware bowl in close proximity to a strong magnetic field and then mixed iron filings into the resin. The resulting work suspends the filings as they are pulled from the resin towards the magnetic source. Slab captures a more sober moment presenting a bronze cast of a tiny dead baby bird immaculately mounted on a shallow steel plinth. 'Ultraviolet' is the latest and most ambitious of Coupe’s series of works using cut out original botanical prints, in this instance 13 images of Violets are stripped of their surrounding page and meticulously joined to create a delicate web. 

Jo Coupe was born in 1975 and studied Fine Art at Newcastle University and at Goldsmiths College, London. She lives and works in Gateshead, UK. Exhibitions include An Archaeology at 176 in London, Tatton Park Biennial, Give and Take at Firstsite, Colchester, and You Shall Know Our Velocity at BALTIC, Gateshead.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Jo Coupe: "The Late Shows" Workplace Gallery, Gateshead, UK


Jo Coupe

The Late Shows

Saturday 16th May 2009

7pm – 11pm

For The Late Shows Workplace Gallery presents a unique interactive installation by Jo Coupe.

The recent work of Jo Coupe exploits the aesthetics and methodologies of Science by adapting simple experiments and subverting half-understood scientific ideas, or by re-appropriating iconic imagery for its metaphorical significance. In her work, the school science experiment, alchemy and a fascination with decay unite, revealing the world as a mysteriously rational place.

 Throughout The Late Shows evening Coupe will cook a selection of mushrooms that she is currently cultivating in the lead up to her solo exhibition Fade Away and Radiate here at Workplace Gallery opening on 28th May. Coupe has been developing artworks that incorporate mushrooms and funghi for a number of years. This event unifies key conceptual elements of Coupe’s practice including her fascination with unusual material not normally associated with Art, and her ability to give significance to the natural and synthetic transformative processes that she finds in the world around us.

http://www.thelateshows.org.uk

image:

Jo Coupe

Femmerism

2008
Bracket fungus, gold leaf, synthetic gem stones, brass rod
10 x 15 cms 
3.94 x 5.91 inches
JCP0022
Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, UK


Thursday, May 14, 2009

Ant Macari. 'Rank': picturing the social order 1516 - 2009

‘Rank’: picturing the social order 1516 – 2009.

Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art
Preview Thursday 14th May 6 - 8pm
Exhibition dates 15th May - 11th July 2009

Who do we think ‘we’ are? ‘Rank’ asks: how have we imagined the shape of our society? It brings together nearly 100 contributors, putting masterpieces from almost all England’s national collections – the British Library, Tate, British Museum, V&A and the Arts Council Collection – next to images from the Working Class Movement Library, and those from numerous libraries and archives.
It places works by some of the greatest names in British art with new research from academic experts and public agencies, so that pictures of our myths and stereotypes our national life sit alongside those based on hard fact. All, though, seek to visualise the ways in which our societies is, and has been ordered and classified.

The exhibition will tour to the Grundy Art Gallery,
Blackpool, from 24 July - 12 September 2009.

The exhibition is accompanied by a 144 page fully illustrated catalogue with essays by the journalist Polly Toynbee, historian rofessor Keith Wrightson, geographer Professor Daniel Dorling, and sociologist Gordon Fyfe. Co-published with Art Editions North
and distributed by Cornerhouse Publications.

List of contributors in chronological order: (historical artists)
Fra. Didacus Valades (active 1570s)
Thomas More (1478 - 1535)
Ambrosius Holbein (c.1494 - c.1519)
Clement Walker (1595 - 1651)
Thomas Hobbes (1588 -1679)
with Abraham Bosse (c1602/4-1676)
John Overton (active 1630s)
John Goddard with Richard Dey (active 1650s)
John Lecester with John Hancock (c.1602 /4 - 1676)
Gillis van Tilborch (c.1625 -1678)
Gregory King (1648 - 1712)
Hubert-François Gravelot (1699 - 1773)
James Gillray (1756 - 1815)
Charles Williams (1793 - 1830)
William Hogarth (1697 - 1764)
Charles Jameson Grant (active 1820s)
George Cruikshank (1792 -1878)
Ernest Jones (1819 -1869)
John Moore (active 1830s)
Thomas Rowlandson (1756 - 1827)
J Dickinson (active 1830s)
Fred Ellis (1885 -1965)
R.J. Hamerton (1822 -1875)
John Leech (1817 - 1864)
Henry Mayhew (1812 -1887)
William Powell Frith (1819 -1909)
Sir John Tenniel (1820 -1914)
George Bernard O'Neill (1828 -1917)
General William Booth (1829 -1912)
Charles Booth (1840 -1916)
Gustave Doré (1832 -1883)
Walter Crane (1845 -1915)
Théophile Steinlen (1859 -1923)
'Cynicus' / Martin Anderson (1854 -1932)
Will Dyson (1880 -1938)
Eric Gill (1882 -1940)



List of contributors in chronological order continued (living artists):
Gerhard Richter (1932 -)
Alasdair Gray (1934 -)
Victor Burgin (1941 -)
Jenny Holzer (1950 -)
Dexter Dalwood (1960 -)
Simon Bedwell (1963 -)
Heath Bunting (1966 -)
Chad McCail (1961 -)
Evan Holloway (1967 -)
Misteraitch (1967 -)
Rory Macbeth (1968 -)
Markus Vater (1970 -)
Mustafa Hulusi (1971 - )
AOC Architecture (Tom Coward, Daisy Froud, Vincent Lacovara, Geoff Shearcroft) (b.1971 - 1974)
Josh On (1972 -)
Benrik (Ben Carey, b. 1973, Henrik Delehag, b.1973)
Mark Titchner (1973 -)
Daniela Rossell (1973 -)
Nina Beier (1976 -)
and Marie Lund (1975 -)
Eva Stenram (1976 -)
Ben Branagan (b.1978)
and Gareth Holt (b.1978)
Ant Macari (1976 -)
Darren Cullen (1983 -)
Adam Latham (1981 -)
Victoria Kochowski (1984 -)
Ruth Ewan (1980 -)
I Love Capitalism (active 2000s)





Monday, May 11, 2009

Eric Bainbridge & Miles Thurlow: "Research '09" Reg Vardy Gallery, Sunderland



Art & Design Research '09
Reg Vardy Gallery,  Sunderland, UK

Craig Ames

Eric Bainbridge

Tim Brennan

Ralf Broeg

Ewan Clayton

Sarah Cook 

Peter Davies

Jack Dawson

Lothar Goetz

Sheila Graber

Beryl Graham 

James Hutchinson

John Kippin

Manny Ling

Andrew Livingstone

Alex Moschovi

Inge Panneels

Kevin Petrie

Sylva Petrova

Mike Pickard           

Arabella Plouviez

Colin Rennie

Andrew Richardson

Marjolaine Ryley

Jeff Sarmiento

Gurpreet Singh 

Brian Thompson

Miles Thurlow

Sylvie Vandenhoucke

Catherine Watkinson

Shirley Wheeler


Images:


Eric Bainbridge

Untitled

2008

Melamine, Sausage

246.4 x 38.1 x 1 cms

EB0094

Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, UK


Miles Thurlow

Lauf

2009

Bronze

MT0056

Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, UK

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Eric Bainbridge "Tales of Everyday Madness" cover and feature article, Frieze Magazine issue 123


MONOGRAPH

Tales of Everyday Madness

For three decades, the influential British artistEric Bainbridge has been fascinated by surfaces and disguises, the exotic and the mundane by Jonathan Griffin

http://www.frieze.com/issue/article/tales_of_everyday_madness/

images

'Eight Bronzes', detail (Bum) 2003, Bronze, chipboard

'Untitled', 2009, collage, 24 x 19cm

Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, Gateshead

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Cecilia Stenbom: "13th Media Art BIennale" Wroclaw, Poland



13th Media Art BIennale
WRO 09 Expanded City, Wroclaw, Poland
5 - 10 May 2009
Exhibitions open till 7th July 2009

wro09.wrocenter.pl

The thirteenth WRO Biennale, held on the twentieth anniversary of the first Sound Basis visual Art festival issue, is the event’s first edition to be held at the WRO Art center – our new permanent exhibition space.

The projects’ development functioning within WRO structure enables invited artists to create new works during artists-in-residence program. The biennale shows effects of cooperation be-tween the regions of Alsace and the Lower Silesia, in the framework of which artists’ and curators’ residencies take place. We show also an innovative extension of Wartopia, the project by Alek- sandra polisiewicz, being an installation to which we have added up a potentiality of interactive dimension.

Making innovative projects one of the leading subjects of actions taken by the center, we have
preserved what through the existing practice proved to be a useful tool for setting phenomena in an order and enabling an afterthought thereon. Such a tool is offered by lead issues that appeared in previous editions of the WRO Biennale. complexity of relations against information society was the subject-matter of a symposium and exhibition geo/Info Territory in 1997, subsequently resumed in 2003 by the theme called globalica. Durability and transformations of cultural values was the subject of Mediation/Medialization conference in 2000. The liaisons between artistic out- put/creative work and its media vehicles were comprised by the topics: The power of Tape, 1999 – a peculiar farewell to the tape as an avant-garde art carrier in 20th century; and, Screens, 2001 and Another Book, 2005.

WRO 09 undertakes the theme of Expanded city, referring to the avant-garde tradition and
dwelling on issues of the city as a variable medium capable of coding and recoding, determining
the observation point for contemporary mediality. The symposium as much as the competition
and special presentations made by invited authors and curators attempt at determining the dynamism of this expanding space.

Contrary to most of large media art events, the WRO International Biennale of Media Art con-
sists in only one competition section with one main prize, in other words: the entries are not categorised after their presentation formats (of course at the stage of the Biennale programme’s composition individual types of work are aggregated into projections, exhibitions, and presentations). This approach, while breaking the line of art audiences’ habits, follows however from the very acknowledgement of the fact that many submitted works simply do not fit in any identifiable category, or – even more often – may be easily transferred between categories.

This somewhat traditional breakdown by screen works, installations (and objects), and perfor-
mances however – if nevertheless applied – would have worked out exceptionally well this time. A great majority of the contest entries belong first and foremost, or exclusively, to one of the aforementioned groups (this concerns also Internet-enabled works that typically assume the installation format). To a lesser than usual extent the competition works are open environments that might be explored in many various ways. Regardless of their subtlety and their content and formal wealth, the presentation formats are as defined as they are justified. The only exceptions from this rule consist, basically, in works that are very strongly technologically related to the electronic media dimension (generally the media art’s relations with its technology base have become so complex that presence – or absence – of reference to advanced technologies doesn’t anymore rule the work’s positioning within the media art domain) – which documents some particular features of such type of creation.

The 2009 WRO Biennale’s motto, Expanded city¸ has prominently imprinted on the competi-
tion programme content – the main themes of the Biennale’s each subsequent issues have so far prompted various measures of artists’ response- this time however the theme seems to resonate with genuine creative interest. It does not mean however that the submitted works feature a particularly strong programmatic approach, quite to the contrary – and this is indeed a noteworthy phenomenon – the contest entries seem to have resulted from a strong need for something opposite, i.e. re-programming and de-compilation – reduction of low energy threads and rhetorics. The contest programme is to a large extent deprived of such “fixtures” as components relative to creative processing of the technosphere, and the attitude that media artists have assumed upon entering the contemporary art mainstream and resigning of the role of cultural outsiders, in some aspects quite convenient.

In lieu of such understanding of a programmatic approach, an effort appears here to materialise and to specify spaces so far undefined. It is particularly evident in network and interactive
projects that try to compensate the abstract quality of technologically generated worlds with the physical merit of medialised objects, or with an expressive communication strategy. Since communication technologies have obviously rooted in the physical reality, capability of interfacing the both spheres seems particularly relevant.

Cecilia Stenbom
The Protocol
2008
HD Video
Film Duration 27 Minutes (looped)
Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, UK

The protocol is a re-staging of an American infomercial, which in turn is an imitation of a US talk show. An interviewee is selling a book about a weight loss cure; a set of guidelines explaining how to lose weight witho ut any deprivation or exercise, only occasionally interrupted in her relentless flow by an interviewer seemingly in on the act. Stenbom performs both characters in a mirror image that shifts the film away from straightforward re-enactment reflecting back the neurotic inner chitchat of the consumer, and the perpetual sales pitch cloaked beneath the guise of junk science and daytime Tv.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Matt Stokes: "Desiring Necessities", John Hansard Gallery, Southampton, UK


John Hansard Gallery
www.hansardgallery.org.uk

Desiring Necessities
2 May - 20 June 2009

For a generation growing up through the 1980s and 90s, do the ideals of previous eras hold special significance? And if a search for idealism characterises the decades just passed, where will we find the values to react in today’s global crisis?

Desiring Necessities presents twelve emerging international artists who explore past iconic moments in culture. The revolutionary spirit often attributed to historic events in art, film and music can attain near-heroic status, yet only exists
through second-hand experience. The artists within Desiring Necessities test the strength and relevance of this desire to ‘live the original’, exploring re-enactment, appropriation and irony, and blurring fact with fiction.

Works featured include Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard’s remake of an infamous video documenting The Cramps’ concert at Napa Mental Institute, California, 1979; Susanne Bürner’s 50,000,000 CAN'T BE WRONG, replaying slowed footage of Elvis Presley fans (while never revealing the man himself); and Mario Garcia Torres’ semi-fictitious chronology of cinematic dates, Monochronic Film on a Polychronic Story.

Elsewhere, Cyprien Gaillard allegorises the failure of postmodernity in his bleak film-work The Lake Arches; João Onofre galvanises young Lisbon models into words of conviction, quoting Rossellini’s 1949 film ‘Stromboli’; Matt Stokes explores the 1980s Cumbrian ‘cave-rave’ scene; Patrizio di Massimo examines the cycle of Libyan empires and dictatorships in Oae, a multi-layered three film installation; and Conrad Ventur re-stages Andy Warhol’s screen tests, forty years on.

Participating artists: Susanne Bürner (b. Germany, 1970), Marcelline Delbecq (b. France, 1977), Patrizio Di Massimo (b. Italy, 1983), Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard (b.. England, 1972 & 1973), Cyprien Gaillard (b. France, 1980), Ryan Gander (b. England, 1976), Mario Garcia Torres (b. Mexico, 1975), João Onofre (b. Portugal, 1976), Olivia Plender (b. England, 1977), Jamie Shovlin (b. England, 1978), Matt Stokes (b. England, 1973) and Conrad Ventur (b. USA, 1977).

Desiring Necessities is a John Hansard Gallery exhibition curated by Ilaria Gianni. A special free publication is available in the Gallery throughout the exhibition, featuring a newly-commissioned essay by author Michael Bracewell, texts by curator Ilaria Gianni and Stephen Foster, John Hansard Gallery and contributions from each artist. The publication will also be free to download from www.hansardgallery.org.uk


John Hansard Gallery
University of Southampton
Highfield
Southampton
SO17 1BJ
Tel: 023 8059 7271
Fax: 023 8059 4192
Email: aph1@soton.ac.uk
www.hansardgallery.org.uk

Desiring Necessities
2 May - 20 June 2009

John Hansard Gallery Opening Hours:
Tuesday to Friday 11 - 5
Saturday 11 - 4
Free Admission

Image:
Matt Stokes
From:
Real Arcadia: Outhouse Promotions archive
2003 - ongoing
Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery, Gateshead

Monday, April 27, 2009

Matt Stokes: "Artist Talk", BALTIC Centre For Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK



ARTIST TALK: MATT STOKES

Monday 27 April 18.30-20.30

FREE In Conversation with Will Hodgkinson and Sam Lee

BALTIC Curator Robert Blackson leads a conversation between artist Matt Stokes and collaborators on The Gainsborough Packet. Sam Lee is the singer of the original music in The Gainsborough Packet, whilst writer Will Hodgkinson, (The Guardian) contributed an essay to the exhibition catalogue. Pay bar available in the gallery space.

Pre-booking essential. Please e-mail events@balticmill.com or call 0191 478 1810 to reserve your place.

image:

Matt Stokes
The Gainsborough Packet, 2009
16mm Film Transferred to Hard Drive
8:56 Minutes (excluding loop)
(MS0031)
Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery

Friday, April 24, 2009

Matt Stokes: "ARTPROJX", Prince Charles Cinema, London, UK



An ARTPROJX MATINEE PRESENTATION

Staged Events
films by Lynne Marsh and Matt Stokes

Monday 27 April screening 1-2pm
(doors open 12.45pm)
Introduced by David Gryn, Lynne Marsh and Matt Stokes
Artprojx at Prince Charles Cinema, 7 Leicester Place, London WC2

Tickets £8 (£5 concessions, Shooters, PCC members, artists, students, curators)
Box Office: 0870 811 2559 (open to telephone bookings from 1.30pm-8.30pm or in person)
www.princecharlescinema.com
www.artprojx.com

'Staged Events' is a screening of four films by artists Lynne Marsh and Matt Stokes, illustrating the similarities and differences between their approaches. Each of the films presented have been developed from carefully choreographed situations or unpredictable events the artists set-up in response to particular contexts and locations.

Artprojx Matinee Presentations are programmed and presented by David Gryn | Artprojx www.artprojx.com


Contact:
ARTPROJX
David Gryn, Director
www.artprojx.com
info@artprojx.com
07711127848
www.facebook.com

Programme:

Long After Tonight (2005) Matt Stokes
Original: Single-channel, Super 16mm film and audio transferred to Digibeta/DVD
Duration: 6'45"
Long After Tonight documents a specially-organised event staged in St Salvador's Church, Dundee. Parts of 'Sally's', as St Salvador's was fondly known, were used during the 1970's as a venue for the city's first Northern Soul nights. Although these sessions were held in an adjoining hall, for the purposes of the film permission was sought to use the church itself. By transposing the event to the unique interior of the nave, the dancers are surrounded by the beautifully gilded and ornate religious imagery of the building, thus creating a connection between the location and the activity as expressions of faith, commitment and shared purpose. The people that participated in the filming came together from across the UK, some having attended the original events held at Sally's. This link to the roots of the scene in Dundee, and the Northern Soul fraternity as a whole, is critical in establishing a heightened sense of unity and emotion evident in the film.

Camera Opera (2008) Lynne Marsh
Original: Two-channel, video and audio synced DVDs
Duration: 11'50"
Camera Opera is filmed on the set of a Das Duell, a German current affairs television program. Marsh reverses the role of the cameras in conventional news broadcasting: they become the subject and the performance of filming becomes the action. Marsh directs five camera operators through a series of choreographed movements around the silent figure of the anchorworman. The operators circle around the studio, focus on the anchorwoman and pan out to expose the set, equipment, lighting, audience seating and each-other. The performance is set to Strauss waltzes that were piped into the studio to guide the camera operators' movements and later edited in sync with the image to form the final two-screen film. What we see is how the space of the studio is organized through and by camera views, and how the set may become a performative space based on a series of codified relations. Engaging the Brechtian techniques of alienation, Marsh turns the cameras on themselves, denying their traditional role of relaying information and exposing their participation in the manipulation of what the viewer is presented with.

Stadium (2008) Lynne Marsh
Original Single-channel, HD video and audio (this screening transferred to DVD)
Duration: 10'54"
The Olympiastadion in Berlin, the infamous site of Leni Riefenstahl's film on the 1936 Olympic Games, is both setting and protagonist in Stadium. Marsh employs techniques favoured by Riefenstahl, including the crane shot, long circular traveling shot and low-angle shot. The resulting footage exhibits the persistant legacy of representations of power and control in photography and cinema all the way up to contemporary imaging from video games to epic films. Faithful to this notion, the film opens with a 3D animation of the architect's model of the recent renovation of the stadium and transitions to the site itself with sweeping multiple camera perspectives that produce a feeling of vertigo and banal repetition. Here, a figure in white performs a careful choreography of gestures. In Stadium, Marsh creates an uncanny dialogue between the mechanistic, standardized and absolute uniformity of the architecture and the anonymity of the individual.

these are the days (2008) Matt Stokes
Original: Two-channel, Super 16mm and audio transferred to synced hard-drives
Duration: 6'26"

Austin, Texas has long been a centre for music and culture in the US. Since the late 1970s, punk has been an important counterpoint to the mainstream in the city. these are the days explores the efficacy and actuality of distinct waves of punk as a wide-spread subculture, and their manifestations in specific communities in Austin. Stokes made the work by staging two separate events. During the first, he filmed the audience at a free all-ages gig he organised - in collaboration with a local punk and hardcore music promoter - at Broken Neck, a skate and music venue. For the second part of the work, Stokes brought together five members of different Austin-based punk and hardcore bands and asked them to make a sound-track for the silent film shot during the gig. This track was filmed during a session at a recording studio. The result is a portrait of a musical subculture that challenges notions of causality, originality, tribute and circularity.

Artist Info:

LYNNE MARSH
Lynne Marsh's practice is located at the intersection of performance, cinema and the status of the image, at the convergence of cultural and social concerns that operate in speculative fiction, choreography, and staged events. Marsh's recent video works shot respectively in a sports stadium and a TV studio investigate the inscription of individual bodies in architectural environments built specifically for mass consumption and mass cultural expression. Using codified cinematographic techniques (extreme angles, sweeping, panning and zooming shots), her vocabulary draws on the languages of video games, sports coverage, television broadcasting, and the cinematography of the early twentieth century.

Lynne Marsh was born in Canada and has been living and working in London since completing her MA at Goldsmiths' College in 1998. Her video installations have been exhibited in solo exhibitions at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2007), Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2008) and the Musée d'art contemporain de Montreal (2008) with an accompanying catalogue. Her work can be seen in an upcoming group show entitled There is no audience, at Montehermoso, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain in May.

MATT STOKES
Matt Stokes's practice stems from a long-term inquiry into subcultures, particularly musical ones. He is interested in the way music provides a sense of collectivity, acting as a catalyst for particular groups to form, shaping and influencing people's lives and identities. Stokes's works are often context-specific; he immerses himself in a setting and area of interest, through which collaborations with informal communities arise. After a process of collecting stories, information and materials related to their histories and values, Stokes produces artworks that depart from his research and take on a conceptual and aesthetic life of their own through films, installations and events.

Matt Stokes was born in Penzance, Cornwall and has lived and worked in NewcastleGateshead since 1993. His recent solo exhibitions include these are the days (Arthouse, Austin), Real Arcadia (LüttgenMeijer, Berlin), Now is Early (VOID, Derry), Long After Tonight (Kavi Gupta, Chicago and Ziehersmith, New York), [un]promised land (Attitudes espace d'arts contemporains, Geneva), Lost in the Rhythm (Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin), and Pills to Purge Melancholy (Collective, Edinburgh). He is currently showing new works at 176, London and BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead. Forthcoming group exhibitions include See This Sound, Lentos Kunstmuseum, Linz and Desiring Necessities, John Hansard Gallery, Southampton.

Matt Stokes, The Gainsborough Packet is at 176 until 26 June 2009 www.projectspace176.com

Artprojx Matinee Presentations are in association with Shooting People:
Shooting People, the world's largest network of independent filmmakers, are proud supporters of Artprojx. Shooting People's 36,000+ members share tips, recommendations and news, and cast their films using the nine Shooting People daily bulletins. Over 300 films are cast and crewed each week using the services. The site maintains the UK Independent Film Calendar, hosts lots of interviews and free filmmaking resources, and members-only special offers. http://shootingpeople.org

Matt Stokes: "Club Ponderosa: antiDOTE" 176, London, UK



Club Ponderosa
presents
antiDOTE

A FREE alternative to the
Camden Crawl

Friday 24 April
6.30 – 11pm

Screening of Dan Graham’s
ROCK MY RELIGION
followed by DJs and MCs:

Mach1
Tom Richards
Dave Gamble

Saturday 25 April
2 – 11pm
Live music featuring:

Barrel
Beth Jeans Houghton
Sam Lee Trio
A.J. Holmes
Trombone Poetry
Hoofus
Laura J Martin
My Toys Like Me
Sculpture
...plus special guests to be announced!


176 Prince of Wales Road, NW5 3PT
www.myspace.com/clubponderosa

Club Ponderosa is an active social space for music, theatre,
festivals and events, which exists at 176 for the duration of
Matt Stokes’s exhibition, The Gainsborough Packet, &c.
All events at Club Ponderosa are free.
www.projectspace176.com

antiDOTE is part of Camden Voices, an initiative of the Cultural Olympiad
http://camden.gov.uk/ccm/navigation/leisure/olympics/camden-voices/

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Tanya Axford: "There Is Nothing Left Of The Sea But Its Sound" LOCWS, Swansea, UK



TANYA AXFORD

There Is Nothing Left Of The Sea But Its Sound

Unit 1a, National Waterfront Museum Square

Tanya Axford’s artwork stems from her discovery of Swansea’s rich maritime history and in particular the city’s relationship to the dramatic and powerful impact of the sea. She sees this within elements of Swansea’s regeneration and ‘reinvention’ and specifically with the redevelopment of the LC, the newly revamped Swansea Leisure Centre.

The LC, a multi-faceted water park, has taken the natural phenomenon of the sea that is unpredictable, wild and unmanageable, and created a compact version that is highly controllable making the ‘drama’ of the sea safe and entertaining.

Axford has created a video installation that plays with this relationship, giving an illusion of the sea as a storm emerges. Accompanied by a dramatic soundtrack, the waves reach a crescendo and, as the piece continues, the true landscape is revealed.

Tanya Axford was born in Kent and lives and works in Newcastle upon Tyne.

Axford completed a BA Fine Art at Newcastle University and a MA Fine Art at Goldsmiths College, London and is currently represented by Workplace Gallery, Gateshead.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Cath Campbell: "50 Ways To Leave Your Lover", Open Space 2009 - Art Cologne





Workplace Gallery Presents:

Cath Campbell

50 Ways To Leave Your Lover

Open Space 2009 - Art Cologne

21st - 26th April 2009

Hall 11.3/A/30

Vernissage: Tuesday 21st April 2009, 5-9pm

For Open Space at Art Cologne 2009 Workplace Gallery presents a solo project
by Cath Campbell. 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover consists of fifty proposed
interventions into the designed exhibition architecture particular to Open
Space. By dismantling, manipulating and reconfiguring the fabric of the
existing Messe architecture, Campbell proposes a series of works that
directly disrupts and undermines the expected form of the exhibition booth.
Through a process of discussion with Workplace Gallery and Open Space,
proposal No. 48 (below) has been selected and realised. The remaining 49
proposals have been documented and presented alongside as a publication and
single channel video work. We will also be showing _Islands In The Stream_ a
new drawing made by Campbell for Art Cologne. Continuing her research into
imaginary architectures, Campbell’s delicate graphite drawing has been
meticulously constructed through a two - point perspective system and then
cut away with surgical precision leaving behind a fragile architectural
palimpsest that floats, part object, part drawing and part-empty space, in
its frame.

Cath Campbell’s practice is dominated by an ongoing enquiry into the status,
meaning and fabric of architecture. Taking Modernism as a point of departure
Campbell re-appropriates architectural imagery from memory or imagination to
create works that reinvent our associations with the built environment.
Drawing, sculpture and large-scale installations combine to create a world
of make-believe spaces inspired by encounters with plans for actual places
that are closed off or inaccessible. Campbell often works closely with
architects, engineers and fabricators to create large-scale interventions
that make use of the materials and forms intrinsic to a building. In this
sense, Campbell’s work often bears subversive implications, which subtly
jibe at the conventions of public art. Rather than adding a new object to a
given environment, she distorts or reorders existing structures in a way
that enables a shift of both meaning and space.

Cath Campbell was born in 1972 in Ilkeston, UK, she lives and works in
Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK.

For all enquiries please contact info@workplacegallery.co.uk or call
+44(0)191 4772200

Images

(Top): 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover - No 19. (Detail), Cath Campbell,
2009, Photograph, Dimensions Variable.
Middle: 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover - No 48. (Detail), Cath Campbell,
2009, Photograph, Dimensions Variable.
Bottom: All I Need Is The Air That You Breathe - Part 7 (Detail) Cath
Campbell, 2006, Graphite on Paper, 45 x 61 cm

All Images Copyright the artist, Courtesy of the artist and Workplace
Gallery, UK

Friday, April 17, 2009

Cecilia Stenbom: "Trickle-down Theory", Korjaamo Gallery, Helsinki, Finland




Trickle-down Theory
18.4.-10.5. 2009
Korjaamo Gallery, Korjaamo Hall

Welcome to the inauguration,
Friday April 17 th,
5-7 pm!

Trickle-down theory is a right-wing political term that refers to the policy of providing tax cuts to rich individuals in the belief that this will eventually benefit the larger population. The exhibition deals with the crash fall of capitalism and its theories, through the combined effect of works of almost 100 individual artists.

Open daily from 11 am until 5 pm.
Free entry.

Artists:
Ana Albuixech, Petri Ala-Maunus, Hanna Maria Anttila, Judas Arrieta, Sezgin Boynik, Simo Brotherus, Rita Castro Neves, Gokce Celikel, Mo C. Chan, Jackie Chen, Chen Fei, Luo Hui, Soyeon Cho, Thomas Chow, Michael Chuah, Daisy Delaney, Democracia, Suzanne Dery, Desert Planet, Siu Ding, Fahd El-Jaoudi, Filter017, Forever Tarkovsky Club, Jiri Geller, Graphicairlines, Kalle Hamm, Kea, Erika Harrsch, Hannaleena Heiska, Minna L. Henriksson, PhalanX Studio, Sami Hyrskylahti, Mikko Ijäs, Herman van Ingelgem, Jian, Chen Jie, Fermin Jimenez Landa, Yang Jing, Shen Jingdong, Dzamil Kamanger, Eemil Karila, Kaoru Katayama, Kea, Teemu Kivikangas, Zenita Komad, Heta Kuchka, Kalle Lampela, Honcheung Lee, Niina Lehtonen-Braun, Jani Leinonen, Ling Ling Ling, Liisa Lounila, Oscar Martinez, Ramon Mateos, Jacob Meehan, Mika Minetti, Rauha Mäkilä, Shunsuke Francois Nanjo, Julia Nekrasova, Erkka Nissinen, Hanna Ojamo, Pilar Pinchart, Panu Puolakka, Aurora Reinhard, Alex Rich, Angelica Rodriguez, Carlos Rodriguez-Mendez, Jaakko Rustanius, Adam Saks, Gregor Samsa, Carrie Schneider, Philippe Servent, Jari Silomäki, Kim Simonsson, Sauli Sirviö, Federico Solmi, Cecilia Stenbom, Sari Tervaniemi, Tobby HK, Katja Tukiainen, Juanjo Valencia, Erika Verzutti, Cowper Wang, Toto Wang, Kenny Wong, Gudrun F. Widlok, Raphael Woo, Nod Young, Anne Zhe, Markus Astrom

Curator: Riiko Sakkinen
Co-curators: Judas Arrieta & Aura Seikkula
Exhibition Coordinator: Ulla Jaakkola

Logo designed by Shunsuke Francois Nanjo

Image:
Cecilia Stenbom
'Money Worries' 2009
unlimited edition
Courtesy of the artist and Workplace Gallery

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Ginny Reed "Space-Time" NGC Sunderland 6/04/09 - 6/09/09

‘SPACE-TIME’
Artists: Heike Brachlow, William S Burroughs, Vaclav Cigler, Keith
Cummings, Bill Drummond, Tehching Hsieh, Dominick Labino,
Liliane Lijn, Steven Pippin, Ginny Reed and Kiki Smith

6 April – 6 September 2009
Private View - Tuesday 7th April

National Glass Centre
Sunderland

'Space-Time’ brings together artists’ work that reflects upon the relevance of astronomical observations and the role of time in our everyday lives, memory and future. The works, drawn from artists living in the North East of England, across the UK and internationally, provide a glimpse of the breadth and scope of the common interests between art and science. The exhibition offers a means through which we can think and explore the many aspects of cosmology and the celestial world.

The exhibition takes its cue from Wearmouth-Jarrow’s own most notable theologian, scholar and scientist, the Venerable Bede, and his eighth century treatise, On the Reckoning of Time. In its text this study starts with the smallest units of time, describing days, weeks and months moving on to lunar movements and the seasons; solar movements and years; the Six Ages of the world, ending with a discussion about eternity (the greatest unit of time). Bede’s computation of these astronomical principles informed his determination of the Anglo-Saxon calendar and the date of Easter – it remains the means by which we still calculate the date of Easter today.

For ancient civilizations the night sky was a source of religious, mythological wonder and scientific discovery and peoples from all corners of the world have created myths and cosmogonies in an attempt to explain their place within the universe.

Astronomers studied stars, planets, galaxies, and other celestial objects with the naked-eye, until techniques honed in the glass making centres of Europe, attracted the attention of scientists and led to the invention of the telescope. It was an Italian, Galileo Galilei who utilised this new technology and revolutionised our understanding of our place in the Universe when he used a telescope to study the night sky, and with his observations dawned a new era in scientific study and time-keeping. In 2009 the world celebrates the ‘International Year of Astronomy’ commemorating the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s use of a telescope and 40 years since man first landed on the moon.


Kiki Smith’s Constellation (1996), a room-sized installation approx 6m in diameter is a three- dimensional reordered ancient astrological star chart in which cut glass stars and mystic animals (of the zodiac) are scattered across the circular plane of a night-blue paper-carpet – a mysterious blueprint for the infinities of space. Ginny Reed’s photograph, Tiny Shiny (2005) mirrors the seemingly random arrangement of the asteroid-belt catching spot-lit stars of falling glitter through the aperture of a pinhole camera.

Eight thousand seven hundred and sixty hours are condensed into Tehching Hsieh’s six minute film One Year Performance (1980-81). His hourly, daily, weekly, monthly regime is compressed in real time, but tempered by the gradual growth of the artist’s hair. In Bill Drummond’s Score 326 (2008), we are encouraged to muse upon the past [year] to affect how we approach the year ahead. William S Burroughs brings into play the Space Time Continuum (c. 1965) of the Fourth Dimension. Splicing and reordering a reel-to-reel sound recording, Burroughs’ work dispenses with the gravital constraints of a linear narrative structure.

Heike Brachlow's Intersphere series (2004) and Vaclav Cigler’s Untitled (2008) explore virtual space through the optical effects of the refraction of light and glass, hinting at the hidden depths beyond which the eye can see. And, like with Keith Cumming’s Moon Pool (2007), one is caught up in romance, fantasy, folklore and legend.

The use of Aerogel in Liliane Lijn’s Heavenly Fragments (2008) stems from her residency at the Space Sciences Laboratory, Berkeley, California; in its intended use Aerogel is used in NASA’s space missions to capture both cometary samples and interstellar dust (star dust). This installation recently featured in Let There Be Light part of the BBC’s Imagine series presented by Alan Yentob. Lijn is also making a new work, Way out is way in, that will premiere in the exhibition and in Sunderland. This poemdrum will incorporate text from William S Burroughs’ Naked Lunch, one of the landmark publications in the history of American literature.

Artist, inventor and glass technologist Dominick Labino’s glass pyramid, Untitled # 402 (1976) refers in its design to the pyramids of Giza. It was by means of the reflections and shadows cast by the pyramids, that ancient Egyptians were able to measure not only the days and hours, but to forecast the Solar Astronomical Year – the Spring Equinox, the Summer Solstice and so on.

Steven Pippin exhibits UFO (2005) alongside 2B Space & Time Drawing (2007). In this work we are presented with a photograph purporting to be from March 8, 1988. An accompanying text remonstrates through the event, capturing every detail of the fleeting moment in which Pippin witnessed this scarcely explicable phenomenon of a UFO.

‘Space-Time’ at National Glass Centre, 6 April – 6 September 2009, with a complementary events programme April 2009-April 2010. This includes one-off film/video screenings and talks at National Glass Centre and in other locations throughout the North East region with artists, astronomers, scientists and theologians. Please look out for more details on www.nationalglasscentre.com, call 0191 515 5555 or register for email updates by sending your email address to info@nationalglasscentre.com and put ‘Space-Time Updates’ in the subject box.

Acknowledgements:
Kiki Smith courtesy Pace Wildenstein; Dominick Labino courtesy Scott Hudson; William S Burroughs courtesy Riflemaker and William S Burroughs Trust; Vaclav Cigler courtesy Caterina Tognon; Liliane Lijn courtesy Riflemaker.

Monday, April 06, 2009

Richard Rigg "Explum 09"

Solo show of Richard Rigg. As part of Explum 09, an arts and music festival, Rigg is exhibiting "Now That We are Apart, I Don't Know You Anymore".

Taking place in Puerto Lumbreras. Murcia. Spain.
3rd April - 21 April 2009

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Joe Clark "Transfixed Motion / Transitory Still" Shefield Hallam University




Private view: Thursday 2 April
6pm–9pm

Exhibition dates: Friday 3 April–Saturday 18 April
Monday–Saturday 10am–4pm
Closed Good Friday 10 April and Easter Monday 13 April

Address: Sheffield Institute of Art and Design Gallery
Furnival Building
Sheffield Hallam University
153 Arundel Street
Sheffield S1 2NU

Gallery contact: 0114 225 6777
Website: http://www.shu.ac.uk/art/gallery/
Campus map: http://www.shu.ac.uk/visit/plancity.html


TRANSFIXED MOTION | TRANSITORY STILL
In closing his contribution to the essay collection, Stillness and Time: Photography and the Moving Image, David Campany postulates: ‘Photography has all but given up the ‘decisive moment’ in order to explore what a moment is; video art has all but given up movement, the better to think what movement is … But must the speedy always be sacrificed in all this? Need slowness be the only way? At this key point in the histories of art and media, I think it is a question worth posing. And a pose worth questioning’. – ‘Posing, Acting, Photography’

The two notions of stillness and movement, and how these can powerfully conflict, contradict or compliment each other, are the premise of Transfixed Motion | Transitory Still. This exhibition, curated by Esther Johnson and David Williams, brings together a diverse group of 22 UK-based artists whose work reflects the above quote and who incorporate moving image, photographyand/or sound into their practice.

The show runs from Friday 3 to Saturday 18 April, from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm Monday - Saturday, at Sheffield Institute of Art and Design Gallery. Please note, the Gallery will be closed on Good Friday 10 April and Easter Monday 13 April.

ADDRESS, CONTACT AND DIRECTIONS
Curators: Esther Johnson esther.johnson@shu.ac.uk
David Williams d.williams3@shu.ac.uk

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Marcus Coates"Trying To Cope With Things That Aren't Human(Part One)" AirSpace Gallery, Stoke On Trent

28th March - 2nd May 2009
Open Tuesday- Saturday 11am - 5 pm

This is the first in a series of exhibitions, which will tour to AirSpace Gallery in the UK in March and continue to develop as it moves on from there. The accompanying publication comprised of specially commissioned artworks by Paul Rooney, Heather and Ivan Morison, Richard T. Walker, Annika Ström, Ian Brown, Ryan Gander, Francis McKee and Alex Pearl will be also available at DCP.

Trying To Cope With Things That Aren't Human (Part One) places us in a familiar position, one where we struggle to deal wit the things around us, unable to completely understand how technology works but simultaneously unable to truly understand the beauty of nature. We remain confused but still standing - between the things that we have made and the things that w have not, what could be called the invented world and the natural world. We struggle to understand the natural world without ourselves in it. So we turn away to the security of the invented world, the one that we have created. As much as enduring a wilderness, the most minor of domestic tasks can become a difficult exercise in personal maintenance survival.

To the extent that it discusses difference, this exhibition also tries to find the common ground, or indeed the threshold, between out inability to cope with the things that we have created, to make our lives easier, and our struggle to relate to the wonders of the natural world. We find it equally as difficult to comprehend the beauty of a vast landscape as we do the best way to use our computer, or indeed how it works. It is maybe only right that both the invented world and the natural world could also be equally and simultaneously called non-human. Often viewed as a dichotomy, technology and nature actually have a fluid relationship, one which judders and jerks all the time, rubbing them up against one another. In many ways technology has allowed us to have access to the natural world but our own obsessions with out ability to invent often distracts us and allow us to ignore it.

Equally, natural sciences provide us with with clear ways in which we can develop out technological tools. The production of art in itself has been affected by these opposites, allowing a relationship to from. This can be seen in recent examples of artists producing work during residencies in local such as the Antarctic. Is this how we see/define ourselves - Between the two? Or do we indeed define ourselves by the struggle to deal with them? Is it this struggle - the trying and the coping - That makes us Human?

Monday, March 30, 2009

Rachel Lancaster, Ant Macari, Richard Rigg - "Morphic Resonance"' PSL


Morphic Resonance*
Rachel Lancaster / Ant Macari / No Fixed Abode / Nous Vous / David Steans and
Hardeep Pandhal / Rebecca Chesney, Robina Llewellyn and Elaine Speight (Pest
Publications) / Richard Rigg / Silver Mawson / Daniel Simpkins and Penny
Whitehead (The Royal Standard)

25 March – 27 June 2009
Wed-Sat 12-5pm or by appointment
Private view 12 May 2009, 6-8pm

at PSL [Project Space Leeds]
Whitehall Waterfront, 2 Riverside Way, Leeds LS1 4EH
+44 (0)7930 236383
www.projectspaceleeds.org.uk

Monday, March 16, 2009

E Bainbridge, D Banks, C Campbell, C Bertola, J Clark, M Coates, J Coupe, P Evans, L Lancaster, P Merrick: "Business Collectors Network Exhibition" UK



Business Network Collectors Exhibition

16-27 March 2009
Coopers Building
Westgate Road
Newcastle upon Tyne
UK

including work by:
Eric Bainbridge, Darren Banks, Cath Campbell, Catherine Bertola, Joe Clark,
Marcus Coates, Jo Coupe, Peter J. Evans, Laura Lancaster, Paul Merrick

The network and the collection celebrates and supports contemporary art created by emerging
artists living and working in the North East and the galleries that represent them.
The exhibition will also feature additional works by the artists and limited edition prints of works
for sale from regional galleries.

Members of the Business Collectors Network
Arup, The Banks Group, Blue River, The Express Group,
NewcastleGateshead Initiative, Ryder, Sage PLC,
Ward Hadaway, xsite architecture