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Art Monthly Newsletter

March 2010


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Art Monthly #334 March 2010

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Newsletter Contents

In the new Art Monthly
Upcoming events: Talking Art at Tate Modern - Tatsuo Miyajima
Art Monthly audio: On the radio and online
Opportunities: Jobs, competitions, commissions etc
Free sample copy and subscriptions

Art Monthly March Issue

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Sturtevant Gonzalez-Torres Untitled (America) 2004

Interview

The Power of Repetition

Sturtevant interviewed by Coline Milliard

Sturtevant began her career in New York in the 1960s, remaking paintings by Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns, and rose to prominence during the 1980s when appropriation artists came to the fore. In advance of her forthcoming shows in Paris, Berlin and London, she talks about 'triggering thinking', tactics for changing viewers' perceptions, and repetition in the cybernetic age.

'The initial work was about the extreme power of repetition. People began to realise what I was talking about even though they didn't really understand the dynamics of repetition - we still have people who call my works "copies", but I suppose that will forever be the case.'

 

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Simon Faithfull Escape Vehicle no.6 2004

Feature

Ad Men

Anna Dezeuze on the appropriation of art by advertising

Another day, another example of an ad agency ripping off an artist; this time it is Simon Faithfull who has seen his work remade by the ad men. But what is it about conceptual art that makes it so appealing to advertisers?

'It is because their works are reducible to simple ideas, it has been suggested, that conceptual artists are so easy to "rip off" - indeed, by protecting "expression" rather than "ideas", copyright laws seem to privilege visual appearance over concept.'

 

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Studio Olafur Eliasson 2006

Feature

Designart

A symptom of noughties excess or a model of dynamic interdisciplinary practice asks Alex Coles

In the bullish pre-crash market, the term designart was co-opted to bring art-world prices to fantastical design objects. As the backlash against designart gets into full swing, is it possible to rescue the critical aspects of the design-art interface, as exemplified by Olafur Eliasson?

'Designers now feel that there is a suitable alternative to working purely with industrial clients. In the wrong hands, this new freedom for designers can lead to a dead end of fetish objects that appear like so many mangled and morphed chairs and tables whose true home is either a penthouse suite in Mayfair or a trimmed lawn in Cap Ferrat.'

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Comment

Editorial

In Advance of a Broken Arm

The insistence that public art institutions bring in funding from the private sector is looking less clever now. Post crash, sponsorship has evaporated, threatening the survival of those, like the Institute of Contemporary Arts, that came to rely on it. Even the most powerful institutions, such as Tate Modern, are now so timid when it comes to their sponsors that it affects their programming. What, then, might another model of funding look like?

'The pity of it is that the UK's flagship museum of modern and contemporary art should feel so exposed and vulnerable to the vagaries of sponsors that it engages in this form of self-censorship - in advance of a broken arm, so to speak.'

Artnotes

Arts Council England ends its Sustain initiative, handing out almost £40m in emergency grants - find out who received funds and who didn't; National Gallery staff strike because they are paid less than the London Mayor's recommended minimum wage; speculative commercial development threatens proposals for a new Centre for Contemporary Arts in Aberdeen and the historic Union Terrace Gardens that it would be situated in; galleries close, open, move and rebuild; big art is outside and live art is online; and all the latest news on art world appointments, events, commissions and more.

Submissions: Send Artnotes info to artnotes@artmonthly.co.uk

 

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Edwina Ashton They Travelled the World ... Rome 2008

Profile

Edwina Ashton

Marcus Verhagen profiles the young British animator

Edwina Ashton uses film and animation to bring a number of dreamlike creatures to life in Kafkaesque scenarios of longing and unreciprocated desire.

'Ashton's work wears its pessimism lightly. In fact, the alienation of her creatures is the very basis of her humour, which draws on the doubts and compulsions of beings who are divided from one another.'

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Reviews

Exhibitions

Art & Language

Peter Suchin

Afro Modern

Jonathan Harris

Dexter Dalwood

Cherry Smyth

KwieKulik

Klara Kemp-Welch

Gabriel Orozco

Anna Dezeuze

Film & Video

Sally O'Reilly

Uriel Orlow

Richard Thomas

Richard Grayson

Pryle Behrman

Bernard Frize

David Barrett

Reviews

Artists' Books

Heath Bunting

Colin Perry on the net artist's new book

'For those unfamiliar with Heath Bunting's work, it is not immediately obvious what he intends by The System. Its pages, consisting of stark black-and-white spider diagrams, give the impression of an austere post-conceptual practice, but technocratic as this aesthetic may seem, it camouflages a more wayward disposition.'

Reviews

Books

Art and the End of Apartheid

Kristian Romare on John Peffer's new history of South African art

'Apartheid meant geographical segregation into white and black zones. As part of a tactical retreat in the 1980s, Pretoria coined the term "grey areas". Peffer reinterprets this term symbolically and makes it the comprehensive argument of his study, suggesting that artistic practice during the time of apartheid constituted the grey areas where black and white could meet and collaborate and where a more progressive black South African art could be produced in anticipation of a post-apartheid society.'

Lucky Kunst

Peter Suchin on Gregor Muir's personal history of young British art

'Muir's sense of achievement, like that of the yBa phenomenon itself, is completely tied to marketing and economic gain; no different, then, to that of those institutions against which the artists supposedly rebelled. This parity of interests militates against the idea that the yBas were genuinely disruptive of capitalist culture.'

Reviews

Film

Kutlug Ataman: Journey to the Moon

Rachel Garfield on the Turkish artist's recent feature-length film

'The 20th century is now a historical moment, and gone with it are the claims of modernity, which have been seen by many as a resource for unpicking the contemporary. This film is part of the trend of epochal soul searching through mock documentary, and like many of the best works in this mode it brings with it a reflexivity to time as well as place.'

Reviews

Video

Rewind + Play: An Anthology of Early British Video Art

Colin Perry on Lux's three-DVD box set

'In the context of the decade this box set spans, 1971-82, Lenny's Documentary by Ian Bourn reveals how far British video art had evolved since the structuralist film and video of the early 1970s. By the end of that decade, structuralist filmmaking's methods of deconstructing spectacle had given way to the intimacy of do-it-yourself video making, and modernist formalism had highballed into postmodern narrative impurity and mock-confessional storytelling.'

Polemic

Censorship

On refusing to pretend to do politics in a museum

John Jordan on what happened when Tate programmed a workshop on disobedience

'What is it about the word "disobedience" that the institutional art world doesn't understand? Last autumn the Nikolaj Contemporary Art Centre in Copenhagen dropped the Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination's Bike Bloc project when it realised that the "tools of civil disobedience" that we were going to build were not gestures but actual tools and tactics for the protest actions around the UN's COP15 Climate Change Conference. The curator told us that she feared that the museum's funders, the City of Copenhagen, would not support any "illegal" activity. It seemed that she had assumed we would pretend to do politics.'

Report

Letter from New Zealand

Aotearoa

Michael Wilson on artistic developments in New Zealand

'Dane Mitchell garnered a wearisomely predictable trashing from local mainstream media in September by winning the $15,000 Trust Waikato Contemporary Art Award with Collateral, a work made from the collected packing materials of all the other artists' entries.'

Artlaw

Attribution of Authorship

Warhol

Henry Lydiate on legal action being taken against the Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board

'A significant feature of the case is Susan Shaer's allegation that the Board is unlawfully conspiring and colluding with other key players to control the marketplace for Warhol's works: the Andy Warhol Foundation, the Estate of Andy Warhol and Vincent Fremont, who is the current executor and exclusive sales agent for the Foundation - all of whom have been cited as co-defendants.'

Listings

Exhibitions

Exhibition listings

Art Monthly's exhibition listings can also be viewed online.

Submissions: Send Listings info to listings@artmonthly.co.uk

Events

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Tatsuo Miyajima Counter Coal 2008

Talking Art

Tatsuo Miyajima interviewed by Marcus Verhagen

Tate Modern Starr Auditorium
Saturday 24 April 2pm

Japanese artist Tatsuo Miyajima rose to prominence in the late 1980s with his distinctive use of glowing LED numerical counters. In later works these counters were attached to moving devices or embedded in natural materials, such as piles of coal or submerged underwater. Miyajima describes his practice as addressing humanist ideas within a Buddhist philosophy: 'keep changing, connect with everything, continue forever'. He has work in the Tate Collection, has twice exhibited in the Venice Biennale and earlier this year he presented a solo show at London's Lisson Gallery.

Prices: £9 (£5 concessions), booking recommended
Book online: https://tickets.tate.org.uk

Art Monthly audio

Art Monthly on the radio

Art Monthly has its own show on Resonance 104.4 FM. Tune in at 5pm on the second Friday of each month to hear news and views from Art Monthly contributors.

Next broadcast: 5pm Friday 12 March
More info: resonancefm.com


Art Monthly audio online

Audio recordings of many of Art Monthly's events, from the regular Resonance FM radio show and Talking Art artist interviews at Tate Modern to the special panel debates, are available free in the Events section of the Art Monthly website.

Listen now: www.artmonthly.co.uk/events.htm

Opportunities

Jobs

Head of Workshop - RA Schools

Managing the wood workshop and sculpture areas you will provide support and work with students and artists in the making of works of art.
Royal Academy of Arts | Deadline: 8 March 2010
www.royalacademy.org.uk/careers

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Research Assistant for EASTinternational

Norwich University College of the Arts | 8 Mar
www.nuca.ac.uk

Lecturer & Teaching Fellow in Fine Art Sculpture

Slade School of Fine Art | 11 Mar
www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/jobs

Director

Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery | 5 Mar
www.glasgow.ac.uk/jobs

Artists' Studios Research Associate

Acme Studios & University of the Arts London | 17 Mar
http://jobs.arts.ac.uk

Lecturership in Contemporary Art History & Theory

Ruskin School of Art, Oxford | 5 Mar
http://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/fp

Evaluator

Beacon Art Project Ltd | 8 Mar
http://www.beaconartproject.org

Application to organise the Rennes Biennial

Les Ateliers de Rennes Contemporary Art Biennial, France | 31 Mar
www.artnorac.fr

Grants/Scholarships

The Clore Leadership Fellowships

Clore Duffield Foundation | 12 Mar
www.cloreleadership.org

Eight Art & Research grants

M K Cultural Centre, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain | 31 Mar
www.montehermoso.net

Postgraduate Studentships (MA)

University of the Arts London | 19 Mar
www.arts.ac.uk/ma-grants-awards.htm

Competitions/Commissions

Free to Air - £20,000 commissioning opportunity

Film and Video Umbrella welcomes artists' submissions for Free to Air - a programme of exhibitions, screenings and events exploring the multiple meanings of freedom in contemporary society.
Film and Video Umbrella | Deadline: 11 March 2010
www.fvu.co.uk/submissions

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Future Generation Art Prize

Pinchuk Art Centre, Kiev, Ukraine | 18 Apr
www.futuregenerationartprize.org

Design of a Freedom & Unity Memorial

Berlin, Germany | 26 Mar
www.wettbewerb-denkmal.de

Residencies/Fellowships

Studio Residency

The Florence Trust, London | 28 May
www.florencetrust.org

Micro Residencies 2010

Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop | 5 Mar
www.edinburghsculpture.org

Workspace Studio Residency

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, New York | 25 Mar
www.lmcc.net/residencies

Exhibiting

New Prints Exhibition

International Print Center, New York | 5 Mar
www.ipcny.org

Örebro International Videoart Festival

Art Video Screening, Örebro, Sweden | 5 Mar
www.artvideoscreening.se

IMAGINE: Towards an eco-aesthetic - open call for artists and curators

CCA, Aarhus, Denmark | 15 Mar
www.aarhuskunstbygning.dk

The Open Screening

Whitechapel Gallery | 25 Mar
www.whitechapelgallery.org

Call for applications to exhibit

Pallas Contemporary Projects, Dublin | 12 Mar
www.pallasprojects.org

You say tomato, I say tomato - call for submissions

North by North Western Arts Festival, Wigan | 3 May
www.nxnwfestival.co.uk

Submissions: Send Opportunities info to opportunities@artmonthly.co.uk

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