Click to view this newsletter online: www.artmonthly.co.uk/newsletters/oct10

Art Monthly Newsletter

October 2010


Art Monthly cover

Out now

Art Monthly #340 October 2010

UK: £4.40
Europe: £5.50
Rest of World: £7.20

Buy online


Newsletter Contents

In the new Art Monthly
Upcoming Events: Marina Abramovic
Art Monthly audio: On the radio and online
Opportunities: Jobs, competitions, commissions etc
Free sample copy and subscriptions

Art Monthly October Issue

artwork image

Gregor Schneider 400 Metre Dead Black End 2006

Interview

Doubling

Gregor Schneider interviewed by Gilda Williams

Gregor Schneider's troubling environments displace familiar architectural elements, confounding viewers' expectations and scrambling their memory banks as they struggle to comprehend the space they find themselves in. Following a recent run of international exhibitions, here Schneider describes his working methods, his interest in the 'free-wheeling action' of public spaces, and how to induce psychological terror.

'I'll explain how I work - my work is easy to describe - I place a wall in front of a wall, a room inside a room. It's as if parts of rooms are replayed. While an unsuspecting visitor sits on a sofa before a coffee table, the whole ceiling slowly rises and falls by 5cm well above his head - so slowly as to be unnoticeable.'

 

artwork image

Aernout Mik Training Ground 2006

Feature

Watching v Looking

John Douglas Millar on the ethics and aesthetics of docu-art

In an age saturated with news footage of international disasters, artists are questioning the status of journalism that feeds the media machine. John Douglas Millar examines the techniques and implications of work by these artists, such as Renzo Martens, Harun Farocki and Aernout Mik, and asks: does art's subjectivity give it a unique angle on the exploitation of tragedy?

'Artists who critique how we consume images of atrocity pose questions about how we might step beyond the barrier of "looking", to an ethical position with regard to images described by the Israeli philosopher and photography theorist Ariella Azoulay as "watching".'

 

artwork image

Christian Jankowski Strip the auctioneer 2009

Feature

Humour v Irony

Andrew Hunt suggests that humour is an intelligent alternative to the cynicism of postmodern irony

Artists' use of irony is commonplace, but irony's reliance on a knowing viewer ensures that it cannot reach beyond a closed audience. Andrew Hunt wonders whether an open humour, as employed by Martin Kippenberger, Christian Jankowski and Wolfgang Tillmans, can reach out instead of in.

'One answer to Ludwig Seyfarth's question, "is there an alternative to Postmodern irony?", is "humour". While irony is a knowing critical instrument, humour, by contrast, can be described as a system that questions accepted values and patterns of experience.'

Comment

Editorial

Fire With Fire

With cuts looming, many commentators have been making the case for public funding of the arts. These arguments have, predictably, met opposition from free-market fundamentalists who imagine that corporate sponsors will step in, like latterday Medicis, to replace the state. What such free-marketeers fail to understand is that in their time, the Medici were the de facto state. At the same time, they wilfully ignore the vast government support the so-called 'private sector' receives.

'There is a whole other argument about the role of the arts in contributing to the quality of life, but at present the arts are forced to fight fire with fire, using the language of the market to make their case - hence references to "investment" rather than "subsidy" and discussion of audience figures rather than audience satisfaction.'

Artnotes

The art world mobilises in defence of public funding but is undermined by lazy journalism at the BBC; Ekow Eshun and Alan Yentob leave the good ship ICA; activists target Tate again; the French lead the way in both new fundraising techniques and absurd protests; galleries open, close and move; and all the latest news on art world appointments, events, commissions and more.

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

Advertisement

advertisement

Reviews

Exhibitions

Locky Morris: This Then

Gail Prentice

Robert Barry: Words and Music

Rosie Lesso

Richard Wright

James Clegg

Taking Place

Coline Milliard

Michael Fullerton: Columbia

Jennifer Thatcher

Claire Barclay: Flat Peach

Colin Perry

Polytechnic

Maxa Zoller

Unsettled Objects

Omar Kholeif

Cornered Rooms

Laura McLean-Ferris

Greater New York

Kathy Battista

Advertisement

advertisement

Reviews

Books

Speaking of Art

Mark Prince on William Furlong's collection of artist interviews

'As "anthropological field-worker", Furlong is also the eternal trainspotter with his ever-extended microphone instead of a notebook and camera. This model also appeals because it allows for the radical collision of a plodding actuarial process with the unpredictable face-off of egos and authorities which is the essence of the interview form.'

Net Works

James Coupe: Today, too, I experienced something I hope to understand in a few days

Maria Walsh on the artist's Facebook/YouTube generative film project

'The project is disturbing in the sense that, unlike disciplinary societies in which authority and responsibility are relegated to state bodies such as the school and the prison, in societies of control the place of authority and responsibility is abdicated in favour of the superficially benign democratic "cool" of the corporation, which deludes us into thinking that we make our own choices rather than being subject to the fluctuating modulations of its systems.'

Film

Tacita Dean: Craneway Event

David Ryan on the artist's film of Merce Cunningham at work

'What Dean enables here is for us to pay attention to the multiple occurrences that, as witnesses, allow us to construct the event for ourselves.'

Reports

MAXXI

Letter from Rome

Mike Watson on Rome's National Museum of the XXIst Century Arts

'In London such a space would be impressive, in Rome - where contemporary architectural projects are often stalled by protest - it signals incendiary change that could yet be fanned or extinguished.'

Fluxus Ministry

Letter from Vilnius

Larne Abse Gogarty on a politician's grand art initiative

'Arturas Zuokas declared that he has "no doubt that Vilnius will succeed in its mission of becoming the global centre of Fluxus for the 21st century".'

Artlaw

Copyright

Credit Where It's Due?

Henry Lydiate on the question of where plagiarism meets copyright

'Copyright laws do not apply to the protection of an artist's ideas or concepts; they apply only to their expression in some tangible manifestation or form. There is an inevitable proximity between legal notions of originality or substantial derivation, and moral or academic or artistic notions of plagiarism - and they are often erroneously used as synonyms.'

Listings

Exhibitions

Exhibition listings

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

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

Art Monthly Events

artwork image

Marina Abramovic Art Must Be Beautiful, Artist Must Be Beautiful 1975

Talking Art

Marina Abramovic interviewed by Iwona Blazwick

Tate Modern Starr Auditorium
Saturday 16 October 2pm

Arguably contemporary art's most significant performance artist, the Belgrade-born, New York-based Marina Abramovic has produced provocative and compelling live work for almost 40 years. Her unrelenting focus on the body and the limits of the performer has resulted in some of the canon's seminal works, from Rhythm 10, 1973, in which the artist duplicated a recording of herself stabbing knives between her fingers, through to her three-month endurance work The Artist is Present, 2010, which was part of her solo exhibition at New York MoMA - the museum's largest ever exhibition of performance art. Abramovic won the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale in 1997, has been included in Documenta three times, and has exhibited in numerous museums internationally. In 2012 she will open the Marina Abramovic Institute, dedicated to the preservation of performance art.

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 8 October
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

Opportunities

Jobs

Senior Lecturer in Curating

Goldsmiths University, London | 10 Oct
www.gold.ac.uk

Residencies Coordinator

Gasworks, London | 4 Oct
www.gasworks.org.uk

Creative Learning Curator for Visual Arts

Barbican, London | 11 Oct
www.barbican.org.uk

Assistant Curator

Nottingham Contemporary | 18 Oct
www.nottinghamcontemporary.org

Exhibitions & Displays Assistant

National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh | 15 Oct
http://vacancies.nms.ac.uk

Curator of Paintings, Prints & Drawings

Museum of London | 6 Oct
http://powered.jobsgopublic.com/museumoflondon

Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in Fine Arts

York St John University | 8 Oct
http://w3.yorksj.ac.uk

Senior Lecturer/Lecturer in Fine Art

Northumbria University | 14 Oct
www.workfornorthumbria.co.uk

Lecturer in Fine Art

University of Wales Institute Cardiff | 7 Oct
www3.uwic.ac.uk

Grants/Scholarships

Grants for Exhibitions Abroad

The British Council | 1 Nov
www.britishcouncil.org

Bursary & Award for Disabled Artist

The Adam Reynolds Memorial Bursary | 18 Oct
www.shapearts.org.uk

£1,000 Drawing Bursary

Discerning Eye/Mall Galleries | 4 Oct
www.parkerharris.co.uk

The Wellcome Trust's Arts Award

The Wellcome Collection, London | 29 Oct
www.wellcome.ac.uk

Grant to Artists

The Oppenheim-John Downes Memorial Trust, London | 15 Oct
www.oppenheimdownestrust.org

STEP Beyond Travel Grant

The European Cultural Foundation | Rolling Deadline
www.eurocult.org

Competitions/Commissions

Artwork Commision for Arts Centre

The Crescent Arts Centre, Belfast | 8 Oct
www.crescentarts.org

Large Public Commissions

Arts Council, Edmonton Canada | 7 Oct
http://publicart.edmontonarts.ca

Residencies/Fellowships

Dora Maar House Fellowships in France

Museum of Fine Art, Houston/Menerbes, France | 15 Oct
www.mfah.org

Foundation/Research Forum Postdoctoral Fellowship

Courtauld Institute of Art, London | 7 Oct
www.courtauld.ac.uk

The Christensen Fellowship in Chinese Painting

Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford | 8 Oct
www.ox.ac.uk

Wooda Arts Award Residency

Wooda Farm, Crackington Haven | 16 Oct
www.woodafarm.co.uk

Residency Fellowship in Germany

Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart | 31 Oct
www.akademie-solitude.de

Residency for Disabled Artist

Prism Arts, Cumbria | 1 Nov
www.folly.co.uk

FRAME, Curatorial Residencies

HIAP, Helsinki Finland | 1 Nov
www.hiap.fi

SAIR, Artist in Residency

Solyst Artist in Residence Centre, Jyderup Denmark | 1 Nov
www.sair.dk

Andrew W Mellon Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship

Institute of Fine Arts, New York, USA | 1 Nov
www.nyu.edu

Exhibiting

CUBEOpen

CUBE Gallery, Manchester | 4 Oct
www.box.net

Taking Part: Interactive Exhibition Opportunity

ATHICA, Athens | 6 Oct
www.athica.org

We've Never Had It So Good - selected by Noemi Lakmaier

The Pigeon Wing, London | 11 Oct
www.noemilakmaier.co.uk

FutureEverything 2011 Festival

FutureEverything, Manchester | 24 Oct
http://award.futureeverything.org

The open West 2011

Gardens Gallery, Cheltenham | 26 Oct
www.theopenwest.org.uk

Salon Show

South Square Gallery, Bradford | 26 Oct
www.southsquarecentre.co.uk

Crash Open: Salon Show

Charlie Dutton Gallery | 29 Oct
www.charlieduttongallery.com

'Commercial' Art Video Submission

apexart, New York | 31 Oct
www.apexart.org/videocall.htm

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

Get Art – Get Art Monthly

Free Sample Issue

For a free sample issue, email: subs@artmonthly.co.uk

Subscribe Now

Subscription rates for individuals:
UK: £44 / Europe: £55 / North America: $74 / Rest of World: £72
Institutional rates: £53 / £68 / $79 / £86
Student rates: £30 / £41 / $48 / £53

Subscribe online: www.artmonthly.co.uk/buy
By email: subs@artmonthly.co.uk
Call: +44 (0)20 7240 0389

Digital Edition

Art Monthly is also available as a digital edition. The annual subscription price is £30. Digital subscribers also get access to some back issues online. See Exact Editions for more information.

Reach Art Monthly's Audience

Advertise

You can now advertise in this newsletter as well as in the magazine. Rates start at only £150.

More info: www.artmonthly.co.uk/advertise

Contact Matt Hale: ads@artmonthly.co.uk
T: +44 (0)20 7240 0418 / F: +44 (0)20 7497 0726


Art Monthly
4th Floor
28 Charing Cross Road
London WC2H 0DB

T:+44 207 240 0389
F: +44 207 497 0726
E: info@artmonthly.co.uk
W: www.artmonthly.co.uk

This is a free monthly newsletter detailing the contents of the new issue of Art Monthly magazine and other related information. You have been sent this email because you have subscribed to our newsletter – thanks for reading! We do not pass your details to third parties.

If you want to change the email address that you have subscribed with, simply send an email to newsletter@artmonthly.co.uk with 'EDIT EMAIL ADDRESS' written in the subject bar. Please state clearly in the body of the email which address you wish to unsubscribe and the new email address that you wish to subscribe with.

To unsubscribe, please send an email to newsletter@artmonthly.co.uk with 'UNSUBSCRIBE' written clearly in the subject bar. Please send the unsubscribe email from the address you wish to remove from the mailing list, or state clearly in the body of the email which address you wish to unsubscribe.

  Advertisement

advertisement

 

Advertisement

advertisement

 

Advertisement

advertisement