Amelia’s Magazine | Space to Draw

Figurines_cr%20Simon%20Birk.jpg

Using the most sweeping of musical stereotypes, viagra physician musicians can be divided into two camps. The first group of artists use albums as points on a map documenting their journey through music. Radiohead have never made an album with any distinct reference to the one before it apart from Thom Yorke’s whining baritone. The second group meanwhile pour everything into creating a first album, order then spend the rest of a five album record deal trying to emulate the success of the first (see The Black Keys). The Figurines, more about before their release of When The Deer Wore Blue (WTDWB), fell into the latter category. But thankfully, their latest LP sees the Danish quintet turn their back on the frenetic, three-chord indie pop seen on previous albums Skeleton and Shake A Mountain in favour of something more accomplished and varied.

Taken from a lyric on album track Good Old Friends, WTDWB has been packed with a whole host of different styles – garage psychedelia, pastoral blues, blues rock – almost as an apology for churning out so many songs that sound the same.

But don’t be fooled into thinking they’ve completely gutted what they originally sounded like. Christian Hjelm’s reedy vocals are still very much the focal point of the songs. But instead of compensating for the lack of imagination from lead guitarist Claus Johansen, Hjelm’s yelping is enhanced by more complex, and takes-more-than-one-listen-to-like sounds. Which is no bad thing. The sound is more mature, rounded, and dare I say it, grown up.

OK, these criticisms are aimed squarely at what came before. In isolation, the album has the ability to captivate in places and please in others. The harmony led The Air We Breath and The Shins-esque Hey, Girl are a case in point. Some see the Figurines as a bad attempt at sounding like Built to Spill and Modest Mouse. But WTDWB doesn’t have anywhere near the same sense of self-importance or indulgence. Instead, this album is an honest attempt from a band moving through a period of transition. But without the lofty label of being ‘experimental.’

Jelly Belly Beans have gone global. ‘The Original Gourmet Jelly Bean’ has now branched out into the bathroom and make-up bag. The creators of the most delicious jellybeans EVER have launched a new beauty product range; I’m talking bath soaks, price shower gels, information pills lip-glosses and balms. The balms, in a range of flavours including the incredibly Barbie-pink cotton candy, mirror little pots of glistening jam and smell like colour-crayoned rainbows; what a combination.

The sickening sweet aroma, as you would only expect of Jelly Belly, is enough to transform the most ‘mature’ of the Amelia team, into a 6-year old drowning in sugary goodness. The candy shop style packaging with its signature jellybean print would appeal to any sweet-toothed child, and it seems to even make the older generation go a little gaga. However, after much hasty sniffing and prodding of the gooey products, ranging from cherry flavour to liquorice, we were starting to feel like the greedy kid who’d eaten way too many tutti-frutti jelly belly beans and needed to relieve the stomach of such gluttony. As excited as our eyes were when the new products pawed their way into our grubby hands, (the lip balms were claimed in seconds) a giant tin of very cherry bath soak becomes a little dangerous for one’s nostrils if inhaled irresponsibly. But if you’re a lover of all things sugared, this range will instantly whisk you away from your grotty lime-scale shower straight to the Copacabana.

The little but explosive delights are the perfect potion when in need of a sugar boost in your work fuelled life. But as an experienced jelly belly beauty product abuser, I warn you to use them with caution.

jellybellyphoto.jpg
A short transcript will begin this blog –

Me: (after being offered a canapé by a waiter) Ooh. Is that a blackberry on top of the smoked salmon?

Waiter: (with derision) No Miss. That’s caviar.

And thus began the evenings events. After this tentative step into the world of canapés, advice the night could only get better. And thankfully it did. This has got to be the first launch I’ve been to where everyone genuinely seemed to be having a good time. This revelry was to celebrate the unveiling of Modern Menswear by Hywel Davies. I had a quick look at this latest bookshelf essential, sick and found it to be a definitive guide to designers who are dedicated to pushing forward boundaries of menswear. Both established names and new designers were profiled (ranging from Vivienne Westwood to Yohji Yamamoto), and the image heavy layout succeeded in holding my attention in a packed room.

ModernMenswearHywelDavies.jpg

I had already heard a lot about Hywel (as two of Team Amelia are among his protégés), and in flesh he didn’t disappoint. He sported facial hair that would rival a Victorian dandy and tipped us off as to where the free bar was as soon as we arrived. He’s a prince among men.
The book launch was hosted in the surprisingly cavernous Paul Smith shop in Covent Garden, and the stacks of Modern Menswear books were displayed beside figurines of kissing rabbits. I don’t know why the rabbits were so amorous, or why they were there, but I liked their style.

PaulSmithKissingRabbits.jpg

Everyone had a great evening (you should see the pictures that were vetoed from being put up on the blog) and Modern Menswear went down a storm. Book launches are totally the new club nights.

Space to Draw is an exhibition that considers the relationship between sculpture and drawing. The exhibition presents the work of seven established artists Antony Gormley, erectile Heather Deedman, dosage Neville Gabie, Alison Gill, Paul McDevitt, Peter Randall-Page and Michael Shaw. Some of these artists are known for their sculptures (Gormley), whilst others are better known for their drawings (McDevitt).

Drawing is an essential part of a sculpture’s process; drawings can influence its concept, its development and its final design. The exhibition’s 2D ‘drawings’ (which include paintings, photography, applied arts and moving image) are represented three dimensionally by a wide range of media comprising of stone, steel, paper, porcelain, plastic and wicker- demonstrating how drawing can take place two dimensionally, as well as three dimensionally.

Gormley, probably the most eminent exhibitioner within the Space to Draw collective offered us Feeling Material V, a sculpture made from a continuous length of wire circling an imaginary body. The impressive Matrix-like figure was accompanied by a mirroring series of large-scale pencil on paper drawings, or as those unappreciative, un-arty, unacceptable folk would say- ‘scribbles‘.

McDevitt’s wicker lounger dominated the gallery’s third exhibition room. The sculpture, perhaps a pastiche to Henry Moore’s reclining figurative sculptures lay overlooking the drawings and paintings that held its form within, drawings, which it was devised from (below). A spread of incredibly intricate, linear pencil drawings were also predecessors of Gill’s sculpture- Trophy, a bizarre straw head on a stick with peeping eyeballs. Deedman’s wonderful paper cut outs of elaborate drawings of antique domestic objects were bought to life through an extensive set of porcelain pots. Shaw created virtual sculptures through computer aided design, as well as PVC inflatable forms suspended on the ceiling of the The Jerwood Space. And Gabie’s drawings were a film along side his sculpture.

The exhibition offered visitors all things arty, a bit of everything. A satisfying exhibition where drawings were conceived and sculptures were born.

Paul%20McDevitt.jpg

Categories ,Art Space Draw Exhibition Sculpture Drawing Artists Anthony Gormley HEather Deedman Peter Randell Neville Gabie Alison Gil PAul McDevitt Michael Shaw Paintings Photography Applied Art 3D Pencil Galler

Similar Posts:






Amelia’s Magazine | Black Dog Books Haunt Black Rat’s latest Projects

Pop

© Takeshi Katami photograohy from Kanye West website

Pop Life: Art in a Material World proves that good business is the best art. Spanning across 17 rooms, story Pop Life celebrates artists renowned for challenging the media and public with their extravagant, more about provocative and controversial attitudes towards their craft; often praised but when criticised, they are shown no mercy. Tracy Emin and Damien Hirst love / hate affair with the media and public are perfect examples, both of whom are featured in Pop life.

Pop2

© Photo: Rod Tidnam, Tate Michael Jackson on the front cover of Interview Magazine in October 1982.

As soon as you enter the exhibition you are greeted by the now legendary sight of a Jeff Koons’ stainless steal Bunny, a sculpture more impressive in person than on TV or in a magazine. Jeff Koons has a whole room to himself entitled ‘Made in Heaven’, which can only be described as an ‘orgy of erotic portraits’, featuring his then wife, former porn star and politician La Cicciolina and Koons himself. It is worth a look- as the centerpiece it is quite a remarkable piece of craftsmanship (I won’t ruin it for you).

Pop5© Sarah Lucas and Tracey Emin – The Shop

Young British Artists (YBA) alumni are represented well with Tracy Emin; the signature careless, warrior like attitude of her work are featured as well as the inexhaustible and controversial Damien Hirst, both keeping true to their reputations. Hirst keeps things interesting with his live installation featuring identical twins (if you are a set of identical twins the Tate are looking for people to participate in this installation). Both Emin and Hirst sit side by side like brother and sister representing British art proudly.

Pop6 copy© Damien Hirst’s Aurothioglucose 2008

Amongst the wonders on display is Japan’s own Warhol in the shape of Takashi Murakami who is showcasing his collaborations with artists such as Kanye West and Pharrell Williams as well as the fashion house Louis Vuitton. Murakami also collaborates with director McG for a Pop Life exclusive video installation featuring Hollywood starlet Kristen Dunst that delves into Japan’s obsession – Manga. It is an attention-grabbing watch and The Vapours ‘I Think I’m Turning Japanese’ as sung by Dunst will have your head bobbing and singing along. Keith Harrings’ infamous pop up store is in the centre of the exhibition and is worth mentioning; the selection of t-shirts, badges and posters is a good one, the perfect place to stock up on Keith Harring memorabilia.

Pop7Petshop © Estate of Keith Haring. Photo by Charles Dolfi-Michels

Andy Warhol’s words ‘good business is the best art’ fittingly describe what this exhibition is about; the man himself, the man behind the reason why the Hirsts, Emins and Koons grace us with their presence today – is I feel the main focus of the exhibition and deservingly so. He made art sexy and created a new demand in the art world that changed it forever. Warhol changed the definition of Pop Life.

Pop3

© Anton Perich, 1979, Jerry Hall, Andy Warhol, Debbie Harry, Truman Capote and Paloma Picasso at the tenth anniversary of

Pop Life: Art in a Material World exhibits at the Tate Modern till 17th January. How many more times will you get the chance to experience such influential and celebrated artists of a golden era under one roof? Get to the Tate before the 17th January. Tickets cost £12.50.

TeethLoaded © Sweet Tooth

The invite for Black Dog Books was intriguing and slightly misleading… a number of nice surprises beckon when I arrive at the venue to meet with the people involved in Black Rat Project. Finding the venue is a puzzle in itself and I find my way through the back of Cargo into this character full venue, visit an old railways arch dating back from the industrial revolution.

bookshop1Photographs © Black Rat Projects

A tin man sitting in front of a bookshop greets visitors to the show. He doesn’t have a name individually and is one of three robots called “The Drunkards” by artist Giles Walker. Walker must have a great sense of humour; he came up with the idea after being annoyed with city boys with a lot of money being able to buy into the art world. His robots now happen to be on display a stone throw from Liverpool Street and are the ideal anti-establishment statement. The robot I am looking at shouts at you and has a good rant about ‘them city rats’, information pills a good laugh in a time of recession like ours. And then it’s onto the bookshop itself, pills with quite an extensive array of books by people Black Rat Gallery represents.

bookshop3

Black Rat Projects is the new name for young East End gallery, The Black Rat Press. They specialise in installations and exhibitions by some of the world’s most exciting contemporary artists. In the last two years Black Rat Projects have put on over 20 projects that have gained widespread media attention including features in The Guardian, CNN news, CBS news, BBC London, The Sunday Times and The Telegraph amongst others. The gallery’s focus is on representing artists who undertake ambitious projects that other more traditional galleries might not facilitate. Works by artists represented by BRP – such as Nick Walker, d*face and Blek le Ratcan be found in many public collections including the Brooklyn Museum and the V&A.

bookshop4

The idea of creating the bookshop came when the Black Rat owners slept in the gallery one evening many years ago and were woken by the toilet flushing and books falling from the office bookshelves. Thinking they were being burgled, they turned the lights on only to find the gallery empty. Asking around, a local landlord mentioned that the gallery had been used to store the stock of legendary Victorian book dealer F. J. Williams who disappeared in 1903 and is rumored to haunt various pubs and houses around the East End.

ShepardRevolutionary Woman © Shepard Fairey

The bookshop feels like the creation of an eccentric and well-read individual; all the books in the bookshop are on sale and a few of the selection come from Black Rat owner Mike; second-hand books, fanzines by Swoon, Burning Candy and Brian Adam Douglas. The bookshop is fully functional and complete with customer assistant, working antique till and books available to buy. It has been designed by Will Randall and Giles Walker and can accommodate up to 10 people at a time. And then a plant shakes in the corner and it’s Poltergeist all of a sudden…

SwoonIrena © Swoon

Two original collages by Shepard Fairey (he of the Obama campaign fame) dominate the wall. “Hand Painted Multiples” is a limited edition of 20 prints but each one is slightly different. Swoon is on the wall opposite; from Brooklyn, she is the only one of a generation of street artists to have been embraced by the traditional art world and she is already in the Tate and MOMA.  Swoon uses interesting techniques such as screen-print pasted onto wood and life-size woodcuts, which she makes in the street. Other artists taking part are Cyclops (Lucas Price) who is part of London’s most prolific graffiti collective Burning Candy and über-talented cross-dresser extraordinaire Grayson Perry.

Matt-SmallTimms © Matt Small

A striking triptych of what appears to be a young tormented black face stares intensely at me. Matt Small’s work is breathtaking. Trained at The Royal College of Art and winner of a BP Portrait award, he uses a mixture of oils and water-based paints to create random thick textures. Small works a lot with found objects and builds up his canvases with pieces of metals bolt together to create interesting shapes and symmetry. Painting transcends the 2D flat image to become wood art and sculpture object. The frenzied strokes of paint are pulled from the center of the face and converge outwards in a heady sense of movement. Matt Small is an incredibly brave painter. This is a picture that the viewer could regard as aggressive but I thought I saw sadness in the Somalian model’s eyes. Small tries to give a platform through his painting to anonymous faces that are rarely portrayed in the art world. Young people are constantly undervalued and looked down upon. Everyone has got something valuable to give.

bookshop2

Photographs © Black Rat Projects

This gallery tries to explore all sorts of artistic voices from painting to graphic work and art with substance; but it’s all pulled together in a thrilling and successful way. Consumer culture has no place here. The displays are a throwback to conventional ideas with a human interactive connection. But traditions can be modernised; the old materials, the subject matters, everything is given a modern makeover. A must see!

Exhibition runs from Monday – Saturday 10am – 6pm, through Cargo Garden, Arch 461, Kingsland Viaduct, 83 Rivington Street, London. EC2A 3AY. Nearest tube– Liverpool St / Old St. Entry is free. Information: 020 7613 7200.

Categories ,art, ,Art Space Draw Exhibition Sculpture Drawing Artists Anthony Gormley HEather Deedman Peter Randell Neville Gabie Alison Gil PAul McDevitt Michael Shaw Paintings Photography Applied Art 3D Pencil Galler, ,Black rat projects, ,books, ,bookshop, ,BP Portrait award, ,contemporary art, ,Exhibition Review, ,Exhibtion, ,Gallery, ,MOMA, ,Obama, ,painting, ,review, ,seventeengallery, ,Shepard Fairey

Similar Posts: