Friday, 5 December 2008
Thursday, 4 December 2008
Friday, 28 November 2008
New London Talent: Future Map 08
Suki Chan, Tomorrow is our Permanent Address
I was really excited about The David Roberts Art Foundation's Future Map 08 show - a handpicked selection of new talents from the University of the Arts London postgraduate courses. However it all felt a little... safe. Great work, good quality and all very slick, but nothing got my heart racing (as Saatchi's Four New Sensations did).
A few works stood out for me though: Suki Chan's Tomorrow is our Permanent Address featured a huge video screen with broken glasses laid out on the floor in front of it, creating a cityscape-like silhouette on the screen, which also showed giant images of broken glasses - resulting in a disconcerting 3-D effect. Jera May's huge pile of furniture featured a hidden projector which made silhouette images of seagulls flying across a kitsch oil painting hanging on the wall behind.
Friday, 21 November 2008
The Double Club, Carsten Höller
It's art.. but not as we know it. Carston Holler (of the Tate slides fame) brings a bit of Congolese vibrancy and colour to a North London warehouse with The Double Club. This "art installation" fuses African and Western influences, as a club, bar, restaurant in one - where a traditional Congolese copper bar stands next to a swish restaurant (serving up Congolese dishes and pricier European fayre) ... and decorative tiles contrast with cobbled stone floors. The revolving dance floor is tiny, but there's a huge window into the bar area... I'm sure most of the punters wont even realise its supposed to be art - but that's the point, isn't it?
Its only here for six months before being dismantled and sent to the Prada Foundation in Milan. Enjoy it while it lasts..
Thursday, 13 November 2008
Stolenspace
Chloe Early
Brick Lane's StolenSpace gallery can always be relied upon for great contemporary urban art, but tonight's show surprised in for its lack of graffiti and focus on purely beautiful painting in bold, bright brushstrokes.
In Chloe Early's large canvases at her solo show, it looked like the animals had escaped from the circus and joined a fashion shoot - complete with trippy lighting, plunging swimsuits and urban backdrops.
Chloe Early
Vilma Gold
Charles Atlas' large-scale video projections are hypnotic - it's worth spending some time to absorb the endless stream of black-and-white grid lines and swirling op-art patterns, fused with found images from old films and the internet, dancing silhouettes and everyday objects that appear to fly around the room.
Friday, 24 October 2008
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