Preview of warmstruggle show by Andrew Cattanach in The Skinny: http://www.theskinny.co.uk/article/102121-warm-struggle-studio-41
Exhibition Preview: Friday 20 May, 6 – 8pm at Studio 41.
Open: 21 – 24 May, 12 – 6pm.
More info here.
Preview of warmstruggle show by Andrew Cattanach in The Skinny: http://www.theskinny.co.uk/article/102121-warm-struggle-studio-41
Exhibition Preview: Friday 20 May, 6 – 8pm at Studio 41.
Open: 21 – 24 May, 12 – 6pm.
More info here.
warmstruggle, a group show that I have co-curated with my friend Emma Forbes, opens next Friday at Studio 41, Glasgow.
It features new work by Sumin Bak, Karen Grant and Lingbo Liu, three painters who also work in other media, including sculpture, mono print and film. The Preview is Friday 20th May 6-8pm, everyone welcome. And there is talk of mojitos…
warmstruggle brings together three artists who seek to locate an authentic personal consciousness amid the pressures of modern day living. Works in paint, sculpture and film explore the importance of maintaining an independent identity within an all-consuming culture.
Using metaphors from the natural world, Chinese culture and the game of pinball, the artists wrestle with art’s potential for individual expression, and each embrace this struggle.
http://thestudio41.wordpress.com/2011/05/10/warmstruggle/
Go to Karen’s blog
Go to Sumin’s blog
This article was first published in The Skinny on 23 March 2011.
After hosting Ironbbratz artists for its first few shows, Studio 41 has launched right into in its mission of re-invigorating Glasgow’s curating scene. Will nothing be understood by the totems of today? unites photographers Hallgerdur Hallgrimsdottir and Fabien Marques and curator Magdalen Chua to present a short and sweet but focused look at themes of ritual, tradition, and the sacred and profane.
The show’s title references Tacita Dean writing about J. G. Ballard’s dystopian vision of a future ‘when everything will be out of context; when our descendants will read votive meaning into our sports stadiums and race courses.’ The quote seems particularly pertinent to Marques’ photographs of pilgrims at the Lourdes grotto, wherein the whole gamut of human life is captured in all its gaudy tee-shirted glory. Like an L. S. Lowry street scene in reverse, the almost holy beauty of the basilica redeems the eyesore of the masses.
Marques isn’t passing judgement on his subjects, though – the show is more expansive than that. Hallgrimsdottir’s Island mixes her own images with found ones, considering our relationship to incidents and natural phenomena through the presentation of the image itself. Juxtaposing high-end production with photocopies and grainy images is nothing new, but in this case it provokes questions about our relationship to the subject, distancing us from one, then drawing us closer to the next.
But what marks the show out is the care that has gone into its accompanying leaflet. A contemporary fable by Chua draws upon the giant blue sequins in one of Marques’ works, in a story of a town mouse and a city mouse. Saccharine-sweet, yes, but to encounter Art Writing which is neither oblique nor wilfully obscure, which actually adds considerably to the art – well, it makes an awful nice change. ⎔
Will nothing be understood by the totems of today? ran 4-7 March 2011.
Tagged Art Writing, curating, Photography, ritual, studio 41
I have recently been participating in a collaborative project based at Studio 41, a new space in Glasgow for contemporary curating and art. The aim of Project 41 is to develop a ‘curatorial training programme’ – as it was initially termed – or more probably, following our respective interests and discussions, a new platform for curatorial experiment and discourse. I’m honoured to be collaborating with Mag Chua, Noam Darom, Kate Martin, and Louisa Preston, practitioners with a diverse range of backgrounds and curating interests, which I think will make for a fascinating project.
We have so far held two of three workshops, shared links and reading material, and formed our thoughts into written reflections. All of these resources are collected on Studio 41’s blog, on the Contemporary Curating page, but I thought I’d use my own blog to share my subjective impressions on the workshops and to go off on digressions they provoked. All thoughts my own, etc. For concise, coherent blogging, see the Studio 41 blog – what follows here will diverge from my usual considered offerings.