Archive for the 'Art' Category

Cameraphone sur une courroie transporteuse

Un de les choses le plus drole que j’ai vu dupuis longtemps: quelqun a mis leur cameraphone sur le courroie d’un restaurant de sushi au Japon. Personne a fait rien sauf faire signe de la main. Ahh, une ville sans les voleurs! Le meilleure truc, je pense, est quand l’appareil va dans la cuisine. Chouette!

Turner Prize: Unfortunate Symbolism



Brian Haw, taken by Tommy Forbes.

The UK’s Turner Prize for modern art has a history or rather controvertial pieces and outspoken critics. This year one of the shortlisted artists combines these two aspects of the prize to produce a piece of installation art that refers to aspects of the UK’s current political climate as well as our conceptions of protest. Mark Wallinger has recreated many of the placards, posters and signs of the peace protestor Brian Haw who has maintained a daily protest opposite the Houses of Parliament since June 2001. The government, long embarassed by the protests tried, in 2005, to pass a law (widely seen as) specifically aimed at Mr Haw.

On a side note, Mr Haw can clearly be a prickly character. Here’s an exchange that accompanies the photo below, which I found on Flickr:

I went to Tate Britain yesterday to see Mark Wallinger’s recreation of Brian Haw’s Parliament Square protest. It’s incredible. Afterwards I thought I’d walk down to the square and see Brian for myself. He was making a cup of tea and when I asked him if I could please take a photo he didn’t seem to mind. . . . until that is I decided it might be a good time to make polite chit chat . . . here’s how it went . . . .

Tommy: “How are you today?”

Brian Haw: “Don’t ask me such fucking stupid questions!”

I apologised and then left. I didn’t think it was that much of a shit question.

mark wallinger PA photo

What’s interesting about Wallinger’s piece is that his nomination opens the Tate up to criticisms of again producing art that isn’t really art. He may be making a social commentary about the works of Haw, but does a subject become ‘art’ by simply moving from its usual environment? This is especially relevant when it is being moved only a couple of hundred metres from outside the Houses of Parliament to within the confines of the Tate Gallery. It’s hardly original work. Haw’s work is original, while Wallinger’s comes across as simply a pale representation others’s passion. The photo right displays this perfectly for me. While Haw’s face has elements of peace, hope, cheekiness, and determination, Wallinger’s look is that of utter boredom. You can’t be bored at a protest. While Haw has to daily live with the threat of police harassment and trouble-makers from the general public Wallinger can sit in safety and paint a line along the floor of his exhibition space demarkating the scope of the law barring ‘unauthorised protests’ within one mile of Parliament. [see ‘Make Peace Not War‘ on Flickr]

Christoph Grunenberg, the director of Tate Liverpool, where the prize will be presented, added that the jury, of which he is chair, said: “It was not our intention to set out a political message. It was just interesting that we discovered this pattern which seemed to emerge. Only after the jury had met and discussed the works did we realise there was a strong concentration of political work and work about religious beliefs and spirituality.

“It’s an obvious truth, but works of art are actually political acts and artists act as mediators. If you look at the artists this year, there is a spectrum of overtly political works such as Wallinger’s and pieces that are about the individual’s relationship to the world they live in.”
The Independent

The debate about the value of ‘conceptual art’ is openly acknowledged by the Tate, addressed on their Turner Prize website by [in part]:

‘Conceptual art’ is also used to label work which makes us think or challenges our assumptions about what art is or should be. So is the real problem that contemporary art does not fit neatly into people’s ideas of what art should look like (something based on craft and skill, that can be hung neatly in their living room perhaps?) and so is dismissed as conceptual, and by association not worth the effort? Rather than reacting against the conceptual and the contemporary with a knee-jerk reaction of ‘But is it art?’, we should celebrate the possibilities that have been opened up so that artists - and viewers - can tackle ideas and issues and engage in debate. Is it not better, and more exciting, to leave preconceptions behind and look with a fresh eye and an open mind? Turner Prize: Conceptual Art - ‘cold, mechanical, conceptual bullshit’

My preferred artist from the shortlist would be Zarina Bhimji whose work, for me, is evocative of political upheaval and strife and difficulty by maintains an interpretative element that seems to be lacking in Wallinger’s work.

further reading
Guardian Turner Prize 2007 Photo Gallery
Independent: Art takes back seat as politics and religion dominate Turner shortlist
Brian Haw online: parliament-square.org.uk
Indymedia - Parliament Sq. Protest Trashed by Police 8-23/05-06

J’ai vomi dans mes cornflakes

Si tous les enfants veulent devenir astronautes, c’est pour se barrer de cette Terre où ils devront vivre toute leur vie…

Seriously amazing video. The voiceover is a bit odd, but the visuals (especially if you don’t understand french) are amazing! I especially like the bit with the pigeon. If that’s not an incentive to watch, I don’t know what is!

//If this video disappears from YouTube, email me.

Waiting for you…

from thib0's blog

Saw this on the blog of a guy I ‘ran into’ online a couple weeks ago. He’s a big fan of Shakira and so forth, that whole genre of music. I don’t know why I mention it other than the fact that I’m really not interested in the Oral Fixation thing. But he went to a Nelly Furtado concert here in Bruxelles not long ago (she was playing for a couple nights in the Forest concert hall), so he must be doing something right. This image though: too cute to not pass on!

Cards [Updated]

I ordered some Moo Flickr MiniCards yesterday. I can’t wait to get them. (in other news - I’d never really thought about how strange the name really is until I had to type it. Really, very strange! Moo?! Why not just MooCards or something? Are they planning on doing some ‘Moo Flickr MaxiCards’ or something?)

Below, see a selection of my cards, spread out and messy on my desk. I shared them with my friends during our lectures today and they all, unanimously, adored them. They’re small and cute and would make a perfect gift at the end of the year. I can’t wait. So many events and only 100 mini cards!

flickr mini cards

Parrot fashion

Flamingos and Helicopters

‘Mimic’

Photograph by Crea.tive.

Copying Seurat

Residents in Deloit, Wisconsin came together to recreate George Seurat’s ‘Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte’

george seurat recreated in wisconsin

Flickr photoset
Deloit Daily News: Art is Alive Along River

Seattlites: Coolest People EVER!

“This past summer I did lots of face painting, several magic shows, and I did good business at the Monroe Fair, and at Puyallup. I have been the featured speaker and entertainer at several events. This past Halloween, I set up my airbrushes on the porch of my home and instead of giving away candy, we gave away neon names to the delight of all the local children.”

Seattle’s Alternative Weekly: The Stranger’s Fashion Annual

The Trust Museum, Singapore

Paolo Princi - Fabrica, Treviso

An incredibly powerful gallery of images from artists around the world that associate with the concept of trust.

We hope through the diversity of their works and approaches we can learn more about the theme and inspire viewers to make their own decisions about what ‘Trust’ means to them.

Trust Museum

Yoko Ono Performance Derobing

In 1965 Yoko Ono ‘performed’ in Carnegie Hall. Her work was a piece where members of the watching audience came up on-stage and one by one cut off a single piece of clothing from her torso. She sits on the floor of the stage with her legs tucked under her body and these audience members begin to timidly remove the items of her wardrobe. Watching the performance, now hosted on the Bedazzled blog, elicits a cross between intrigue and horror because there is a degree to which one wants to see her reaction, but at the same time a guilt because the performance feels like a protracted sexual attack. She does nothing to deter these individuals who pick up a single pair of silver scissors from the floor and one after another cut away at her, apart from the smallest timid looking glances, becoming more aggravated when a young man cuts off much of her slip and the straps of her bra.

And as a performance piece it is clearly a success because when we see individuals coming to take part in this invited act, we the viewer judge them, considering their intentions, their perspective on what they’re doing. Naturally we suspect those women involved are interested in the act while the men are more destructively intent. Ono appears vulnerable to the men, and ambivalent even conceited toward the women. In the course of the recording she is cut down from what appears to be a well heeled young woman to become a bedraggled and washed out looking girl. The transformation is odd and compelling and certainly worth watching.

Bedazzled ‘Cut Piece’
Media Art Net: Cut Piece
ArtForum Magazine article on Yoko Ono Exhibition 2001