Press Coverage - Chisenhale Gallery
Transcription
Press Coverage - Chisenhale Gallery
11 September - 25 October 2009 Press Coverage Date 11 September 2009 17 September 2009 13 February 2010 13 February 2010 Publication Guardian.co.uk Time Out London Centre for the Aesthetic Revolution.com Style Reply.com April 2010 May 2010 Sculpture Frieze Magazine Reference Skye Sherwin, Exhibitionist: The best shows this week In the Studio pp50 http://centrefortheaestheticrevolution.blogspot.com/200 9/09/tariq-alvi-at-chisenhale-gallery.html http://www.stylereply.com/index.php?option=com_cont ent&view=article&id=178:tariq-alvi-atchisenhale&catid=60:style-blog&Itemid=161 Loose Ends, A conversation with; pp56-57 Cut it Out pp118-121 Press Reaction A vivid reflection of consumer wants and human needs. Guardian, September 2009 Atypical for art work based on personal archives, personalized research and reworking of found materials, the artist’s point is, perhaps, not to create new orders or new categories from existing ones but to attempt to dispense with the old ones altogether. frieze, May 2010 Chisenhale Gallery Registered charity no. 1026175 Registered company no. 2851794 Company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales Registered office 64 Chisenhale Road, London E3 5QZ Guardian Online, 11 Sept 2010 Exhibitionist: The best art shows to see this week Ryan McGinley and Tariq Alvi stage solo shows in London, a nightmare hunt is screened in Glasgow, and Southend makes parallels with Poland Skye Sherwin guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 September 2009 15.25 BST Reaching across political divides ... Erik Blinderman's Massenaufnahme (2009) on show in Southend. Photograph: Focal Point gallery In New York, photographer Ryan McGinley has been a golden child of art and fashion for a number of years. He had shows at New York's Whitney Museum and PS1 before he was 25, and seems almost as likely to appear in front of the camera as behind it on the pages of luxury magazines. It can seem hard to extricate the lifestyle from McGinley's photography, which initially (like the late Dash Snow's) took a point-andshoot approach to his scenester friends, but perhaps that's the point: from something close to the best-looking Facebook page ever, his work has evolved into more complicated, staged tableaux with models gambolling about like untouchable denizens of a chic Never Never Land. His first London solo exhibition, Moonmilk, at Alison Jacques Gallery, features photos created deep within American caves. Partly inspired by boyhood stories like those of Jules Verne or Mark Twain, his models now appear as tiny specks against the vast backdrop of an overwhelming, great adventure. For Tariq Alvi the baubles of mass visual culture are there to be chopped up and meticulously reordered in intricate, three-dimensional collages. Buzzing amid monochrome or rainbow-coloured arrangements, however, is material that can't so easily be flattened into pleasing patterns. Price tags, gay porn, fastfood menus and one horrific, haunting image of persecuted gay Muslims are some of the things Alvi has previously spliced from their original contexts and reconfigured. His current solo show, The Meaning, at London's Chisenhale Gallery includes a 3-metre sculptural collage of gay clubbers, a giant painting adapted from a collage of jewel-like designer doorknobs and an abundance of winking mirrors. Pitting commodities against emotions, it makes for a vivid reflection of consumer wants and human needs. Henry Coombes is not an artist you forget in a hurry. Take his visceral film Gralloch, a hit in Scotland's pavilion at the 2007 Venice Biennale, featuring a deer carcass being disemboweled, while all too human eyes roll inside its antlered skull. Tragicomic and macabre, it staged a kind of behind-the-scenes glimpse into the work of Sir Edwin Landseer, a painter favoured by Queen Victoria, who subjugated the Scottish wilds into an idyll of hunt scenes fit for privileged tastes. Gralloch confirmed Coombes's genius Guardian Online, 11 Sept 2010 for subversive imagery, attuned to a fine sense of the ridiculous. Premiering at Glasgow's Sorcha Dallas gallery, The Bedfords is more elaborate. Picking away at the social veneer that rarifies art and hunting, Coombes exposes something warped, deathly and absurd. Watch out for cult writer Alasdair Gray in a cameo role. Gray's own work is also on show at The Changing Room in Stirling. In literary circles the 70-something Glaswegian remains a legend for his experimental first novel Lanark, influenced by Joyce and Kafka. Among other things, he is a renowned painter and graphic artist, and this exhibition presents illustrations from his 1989 poetry collection, Old Negatives, alongside prints from Scots Hippo, a recent adaptation of the TS Eliot poem The Hippopotamus. Both tackle his driving obsession with "modern states of love, faith and language", as he puts it. Unexpected cultural connections between the Essex seaside and the Eastern Bloc come to the fore at Focalpoint in Southend, a place where Polish is apparently now the second language. Southend's relationship to its coastal-resort twin town of Sopot in Poland, frames young artist Erik Blinderman's first UK solo show, Sounds of the Sea and Shops. Through film, slides, soundworks and a printing project, he draws on various parallels and forgotten histories between the two towns. Meanwhile, consumer culture, now mirrored in Eastern Europe, is explored through sound recordings made in Sopot shopping centres. As Blinderman allows experiences across political and geographic divides to ricochet back on one another, he manages to travel further and wider than the twin-town concept might ordinarily imply. Ads by Google The Art Fund Join the Art Fund today. See here for Art Fund benefits. www.ArtFund.org London Photography Course Beginners & professional courses Wedding, portrait & intro. classes www.unshaken-photography.co.uk The Creative Photographer Contemporary & Reportage Wedding Photography: Based in London+Oxford thecreativeweddingphotographer.com guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2011 Time Out London, 17 Sept 2010 Center for the Aesthetic Revolution (blog), 13 Feb 2010 Share Report Abuse Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In CENTRE FOR THE AESTHETIC REVOLUTION FRI DA Y , 1 1 S E P TE MB E R 2 0 0 9 TARIQ ALVI AT CHISENHALE GALLERY E X HI B I TI O NS , P RO J E CTS A ND TE X TS B Y PLB * EXHIBITIONS AND PROJECTS BY PLB * TEXTS BY PLB A B O UT ME PABLO LEON DE LA BARRA PABLOLEONDELABARRA@GMAIL.COM, LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM "At the end of the fifteenth of his 'Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Mankind' Schiller states a paradox and makes a promise. He declares that ‘Man is only completely human when he plays’, and assures us that this paradox is capable ‘of bearing the whole edifice of the art of the beautiful and of the still more difficult art of living’. We could reformulate this thought as follows: there exists a specific sensory experience—the aesthetic—that holds the promise of both a new world of Art and a new life for individuals and the community. There are different ways of coming to terms with this statement and this promise. You can say that they virtually define the ‘aesthetic illusion’ as a device which merely serves to mask the reality that aesthetic judgement is structured by class domination. In my view that is not the most productive approach..." Jacques Rancier, 'The Aesthetic Revolution and its Outcomes', New Left Review 14, April-March 2002 VIEW MY COMPLETE PROFILE S O ME RE CE NT P RO J E CTS , S O ME NO T S O RE CE NT 'Diagrama Tropical' an attempt to construct a tropical history Center for the Aesthetic Revolution (blog), 13 Feb 2010 'Paisaje Inutil: A Notebook on Cities and Places', a special edition of Pablo Magazine Mies Cruising Pavilion Montjuic, an unauthorised exhibition in the Barcelona Pavilion Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, Yucatan and Elsewhere... at CCE, Guatemala Cerith Wyn Evans at Casa Barragan, Mexico City The Next Documenta Should be in Brasilia Tristes Tropiques at The Barber Shop in Lisboa Novo Museo Tropical in Madrid Somewhere Over the Rainbow, CircaLabs, San Juan, Puerto Rico Selfportraits at Airports Abstract Reality, Cooperativa Internacional Tropical in Bogota Novo Museo Tropical Manifesto This Is Not America, San Juan, Puerto Rico El Noa Noa, Bogota, Colombia Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and Pablo Leon de la Barra, conversation at Tate Modern Rotterdam Dialogues: The Curators at Witte de With Lessons on Psicotronica Tropical, Rio de Janeiro Case Study Houses: Pablo Magazine Special Issue Sueño de Casa Propia, Mexico City Sueño de Casa Propia, Cordoba, Spain Sueño de Casa Propia, Madrid Sueño de Casa Propia, Geneva Glory Hole, an exhibition Guia do Copan/CopaCopan Day, Sao Paulo Jogging Tour, Mexico City Olympic Village, Puerto Rico Biennale 2004 To Be Political It Has To Look Nice, apexart, Center for the Aesthetic Revolution (blog), 13 Feb 2010 New York The Artist as Ethnographer, Museo del Cerro, Puerto Rico L I NK S cooperativa internacional tropical / coming soon pablo internacional magazine white cubicle toilet gallery cheverismo B L O G A RCHI V E ! 2011 (17) ! 2010 (222) " 2009 (233) Yesterday I went to Tariq's opening at Chisenhale. I was excited as I'm a big fan and hadn't seen his work since his great show at Whitechapel Gallery in 2001. It seems like London's art scene is renovating with great non commercial art spaces that don't act as franchises of commercial gallery's as other London spaces do. Tariq's press release below: Tariq Alvi 11 September – 25 October 2009 Preview Thursday 10 September, 6.30 – 8.30pm Chisenhale Gallery presents The Meaning, a major solo exhibition by British artist Tariq Alvi. Working intuitively, recycling and re-contextualizing found printed matter from newspapers and magazine advertising, Alvi’s labour-intensive works present us with both disarmingly simple and complex aesthetic forms that reflect upon contemporary society. Alvi presents a group of sculptures, paintings and collages that meditate on the relationships between economy, sexuality, desire and materiality. One key work in the exhibition incorporates Alvi’s characteristic formal motif of hundreds of cut-out prices from magazines and trade fliers, here arranged around the imposing form of a three-metre long tree trunk. Dyslexic Dancer maps out an abstract depiction of sexuality and desire, its plate glass surface, splicing a mirrored cube, is adorned with nebulous colourful forms constructed out of torn up pages from gay club magazines; the visceral grubbiness of these figures butts up against mannered references to the tasteful formality of minimalist forms. Mirrors also feature in a large wall-based work, a version of which Alvi first made in Club Oase in Maastricht in 1997, onto which are collaged cut-outs of male and female models, which both articulate and disrupt the potential for self-reflection. The works in The Meaning all shift restlessly between surface and subject matter and Alvi consciously plays with a disjuncture between the two in the way he appropriates and juxtaposes images and information. The exhibition’s title work comprises a painting produced by a professional painter, copied and dramatically enlarged from a collage made by Alvi incorporating pages torn from an interiors magazine depicting glass doorknobs piled on plates like sweets; this exaggerated image of consumer culture’s economy of luxury goods becomes even more excessive and strange in its painted manifestation. An accompanying print work, also based on one of Alvi’s collages and further ornamented with more cut-out magazine prices, implicates the body in the machinations of economic exchange and the hierarchies of value – of appropriation and hand craftsmanship – engendered in the processes of production. Tariq Alvi is a British artist based in London. Solo exhibitions include Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe (2009); 2nd Floor Projects, San Francisco (2008); Cabinet, London (2007); CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco (2005) and the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (2001). http://www.chisenhale.org.uk POSTED BY PABLO LEON DE LA BARRA AT 10:26 LABELS: POLLY STAPLE, TARIQ ALVI ! December (15) ! November (20) ! October (28) " September (26) LESS POP, MORE FIZZ PLEASE. LIFE IT AIN'T REAL FUN... LONG LIVE LEON. AGUSTIN PEREZ RUBIO APPOINTED NEW ... PUBLISH AND BE DAMNED 2009! CURATOR MARIA INES RODRIGUEZ VISITS LONDON ARTISTS SPACE NY RE-OPENS TODAY WITH STEFAN KALMAR... CATHERINE DAVID GETS HER EMAIL HACKED 'CHRONOTOPES & DIORAMAS', DOMINIQUE GONZALEZ-FOERS... 'MODERNOLOGIES' AT MACBA, BARCELONA JULIE VERHOEVEN DOES WHITE CUBICLE'S FASHION WEEK ... BISTROTHEQUE'S TEMPORARY CAFE AND BAR DURING LONDO... FANTASTIC 'FANTASTIC MAN' PARTY IN LONDON MARGO AND MEL'S FIFTEEN ANNIVERSARY DINNER! 'AFTER THE FINAL SIMPLIFICATION OF THE RUINS' CURA... ANTON AND JULIETA'S 'PAWNSHOP' AT THE SHOP IN BEIJ... ZURICH REPORT: TEXT MESSAGE FROM A FRIEND! PABLO JOGGING TOUR MEXICO CITY 'AS CIDADES E SUAS MARGENS' Sunday, 30 January 2011 HOME Privacy Policy OUR SERVICES About Us StyleReply (blog), 13 Feb 2010 FASHION EXTRA STYLE BLOG STYLE SOCIETY STYLEBOOK (Beta Release) Where fashion is for everyone, but style is just for you. Welcome to Dionne's Diary, where the Editor/Head Stylist, Dionne Goldson, is allowed to ramble on. It's a chance for you to get to know her and find out what she's up to...p.s don't wanna be a kill joy, but unless you attribute us, all photographs on this page, stays on this page, if you catch our drift xx The slideshow to your left is a few outfit combos I have virtually styled, using a site called Polyvore, they are for my own amusement really, however, sometimes-just sometimes, I can get inspiration..... Tariq Alvi at Chisenhale So Lora gets in touch, welcomes me home and says come to the opening night of Tariq Alvi exhibition at the Chisenhale. Feeling weird and Agrophobic, I go anyway. I haven't seen my friends in ages and the booze is always cheap at private views/openings, so I drag my tired a**e out to Bethnal green and am pleasantly surprised. I loved the space, but more importantly the work itself was impressive.The magazine, flyers, newspapers cuttings (and I think even a Argos catalogue was used), to me seemed mocking and probably somehow pointing to the current economic situation and consumerism on the whole. I particularly liked the mirrored pieces (of which you can see in My Fav Vids below) even if the spray mount could be seen on the glass-no one's perfect. I also met my one of my bestest friends new girlfriend, who is ab fab and reminds me of my teacher in primary school called Ms. Bridge (I loved her too). Anyways check out my videos and check out the exhibition by clicking here and click here for the map. StyleReply (blog), 13 Feb 2010 My Fav Vids This is a clip of Jem and The Mifits - one of my favourite cartoons as a child. I still love it now. The costumes are ruly outragoues- love it!! Some Rights Reserved StyleReply.com 2009