REVIEW: Frieze week, London and White Cube, Bermondsey

By Sue Hubbard

Recession? What recession? The collapse of the Euro-zone? Who’d have guessed? One in ten Londoners unemployed; never? It’s Frieze art week in London and the glitterati are out on the town. My email in box is awash with invitations to private views, post opening parties, and champagne brunches. Everyone is hurrying somewhere, being terribly, terribly busy and in demand. Apart from Frieze itself there is the Pavilion of Art and Design in Berkely Square, a sophisticated boutique fair that brings modern design and the decorative arts together and Multiplied at Christies, the only fair devoted to art in editions, as well as Sunday – young, cutting edge and more alternative than the main event. Lisson Gallery held a magnificent party at 1 Mayfair, in a deconsecrated church filled with strobe lighting, while Blain Southern’s do after Rachel Howard’s opening show, Folie A Deux in Derring Street, was in a beautiful 18thcentury town house just down the road. (Howard, who used to paint Damien Hirst’s spots, is a fine painter in her own right). There are dinners and receptions for collectors, art historians, journalists and pretty much anyone who can blag their way in. Getting into Frieze itself is made as difficult as possible to keep the tension high. Being there and being seen is the name of the game. This is a parallel universe to the one most mortals inhabit and light years away from the life of the young woman, interviewed on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this week, who’d been made redundant, applied for 140 jobs without success, and was, now, with her daughter, living on job seekers allowance of £67.00 per week.

Whatever the private qualms of the art world movers and shakers about the future prospects of the art market really are, they’re not letting on. From all the parties, the flowing champagne and the PR babes in their short, short skirts and high, high heels arriving at yet another opening, you might be forgiven for thinking that the ‘90s had never ended; art is the new rock n’roll.

Rachel Howard’s Folie A Deux at Blain Southern until 22nd December
© The artist, courtesy of Blain Southern

Since its launch in 2003 by Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover, the publishers of Frieze magazine, the fair, held each autumn in Regents Park, has gone from strength to strength to become the byword for edgy contemporary art. In fact, it’s been so successful that it’s about to spawn two new versions, Frieze New York and Frieze Masters (which will deal with traditional works), giving it, as Matthew Slotover suggests, “a contemporary view on historical art.”

Contemporary art has a way of changing the socio-economic structure of a city. It’s happened in New York and Berlin, as well as in London. The previously rundown area of Shoreditch, off Old Street roundabout, found a new lease of life when infiltrated by artists looking for cheap studios, to be given the seal of approval by the opening of Jay Jopling’s de luxe White Cube in Hoxton Square, the gallery that represents artists such as Jake and Dinos Chapman, Damien Hirst and Anselm Kieffer.

Not content with venues in Hoxton and St. James, Piccadilly, White Cube has now opened up in Bermondsey, in the badlands south of the river known for its ancient antique market, but now awash with little bars and designer boutiques. The private view resembled a Cup Final, with queues snaking down the narrow street. Anyone who lives there must be rubbing their hands at the instant increase in the value of their property. This new palace to art is extremely beautiful, with highly polished concrete floors and yards of ubiquitous glass and white walls. And it is huge, more like a museum than a commercial gallery. I asked one of the directors, Tim Marlow, if they were trying to give the Tate a run for their money. “No,” he smiled with enigmatic charm, “all of us in London are working together to ensure this remains the best city in the world for art.”

Bermondsey will be the largest of White Cube’s three London sites. The building, which was primarily used as a warehouse before the current refurbishment by the architects Casper Mueller Kneer, now includes three principal exhibition spaces, substantial warehousing, private viewing rooms, an auditorium and a bookshop. The ‘South Galleries’ will provide the principal display area for significant exhibitions, while three smaller galleries, collectively known as the ‘North Galleries’, will feature an innovative new programme of exhibitions.

As a space it is perfect for strong conceptual work; work that is likely to be bought by blue chip businesses and collectors with private galleries. But it is not a place for the feint hearted artist; one who wants to explore the small, the poetic and the understated. Everything about the place says, ‘art is big business and don’t you forget it.’ The inaugural show ‘Structure & Absence’ is a group show that features the Chinese scholar’s rock as an organising device or motif and features work by, among others, Andreas Gursky, Damien Hirst, Gary Hume, Agnes Martin, Gabriel Orozco. While Kitty Krause’s work looks spectacular,some of the painting looks a bit lost.

Kitty Krause, Inside the White Cube, Bermondsey until 26th November
© The artists Photos: Ben Westby Courtesy White Cube

But back to Frieze. Frieze New York, scheduled for next May, will export the London model to the Big Apple. They already have an office in New York and 170 top flight international galleries will show contemporary work in a purpose built structure on Randall’s Island Park, overlooking the East River. With the downturn in the fortunes of the Armory Show, Frieze New York looks like an act of opportunistic artistic colonialism.

And this year’s Frieze in London? Well everyone is biting their nails to see what the sales figures will be like. This year’s fair is bigger than ever with 33 different countries participating and 173 galleries. And what is there to see? Well just about anything that you ever dreamt that art might be, including a pair of caged live Toucan birds at the Max Wigram Gallery to Ewan Gibbs subtle pencil drawings on paper of San Francisco at the Timothy Taylor Gallery. Gió Marconi have devoted a whole booth to Nathalie Djurberg, who currently has a show at Camden Arts Centre. Here she has a new video The Woods (2011)which is surrounded by her surreal puppets: goats and hippopotami, writhing crocodiles and beasts with large bollocks, all guaranteed to haunt your dreams. And in case you’re confused about the relationship between money and art, as part of Frieze Projects – a series of special commissions – the artist Christian Jankowski (of the Lisson Gallery) has joined forces with CRN and Riva, two luxury yachting brands of the Ferretti Group, to create The Finest Art on Water, a limited edition boat The Aquiriva Cento, a sort of floating penthouse with every luxury imaginable.

The fair is, as usual, full of the mad, the bad, as well as some extremely good work but, as always, it has to be searched for. Richard Ingleby’s stand from Edinburgh with works by Calum Innes and Ian Hamilton Finlay is a rare model of restraint and good taste amid the brouhaha, as is the elegant Frith Street stand that includes Tacita Dean (currently showing her new work at the Tate Turbine Hall) and Cornelia Parker’s 30 Pieces of Silver (With Reflection), 2003, where pairs of silver objects, one flattened, the other complete and whole, hover above the floor like yogic flyers. Pensive and reflective they encourage the viewer to consider notions of mortality and permanence.

But perhaps the last word should go to Michael Landy’s absurd Heath Robinson Credit Card Destroying Machine, 2010, which as its name implies chews up and spits out credit cards. Now presumably that is ironic. For what would the art world be without those all important little bits of plastic?

Sue Hubbard is author of Adventures in Art, a publication by Other Criteria  which draws together 70 essays on contemporary and modern art over the last 20 years of Hubbard’s career.

An award-winning poet, short story writer and novelist, as well as an experienced critic, Hubbard’s collected essays are part biographical, part lyrical reviews of today’s programme of modern art in Britain and provide an honest account of the diversities, originalities, and disappointments found there.

REVIEW: The Sea Wall: Haegue Yang with an inclusion by Felix Gonzalez-Torres

Below is a review written by Colin Glen on The Sea Wall: Haegue Yang with an inclusion by Felix Gonzalez-Torres. This exhibition is at Arnolfini until 14th September 2011.

Other Criteria are working on an exciting project with Colin Glen which will be revealed in the future. Sign up to our mailing list to get more information when the project is launched.

A curious sense of loss suffuses the delicate and intangible beauty of the installation works in the first room of Sea Wall – Arnolfini’s survey of Haegue Yang’s formative work as catalysed by Felix Gonzalez-Torres – a sense of loss which calls to mind Roland Barthes’ phrase ‘every pleasurable experience is haunted by the spectre of loss.’  Indeed, on passing through the glittering blue, silver and clear hanging beads of Torres’ curtain, Untitled (Water), 1995, which cuts across the entire space [a new embodiment of  the work originally shown as a doorway piece at the gallery in 2002] you find yourself visually grasping for a determinable sense of space from that made illusory by the combination of Haegue Yang’s 186.16m³, 2000-2011, thin red string stretching horizontally at 10cm intervals from ceiling to floor, echoed beyond by 49.46m², 2002-2011,  red chalk snap lines dusted onto the wall in the same form only shifted slightly by dint of a disconcertingly gentle slant of 1 degree.

The loss of determinacy in the collapse of visual space suggested a feeling of one’s own absence by refusing to allow the embodied experience to gain a foothold on its location – in frustrating the desire to be on the other side of the string division. In the manner that Michael Fried designated for the behaviour of minimalist sculpture in the late 1960s there was a refusal to be immersed in the installations of Sea Wall in an absorptive experience but instead an awareness of the social, historical and subjective contexts that generated and framed the works was induced stimulated by the curatorial decision to place walled-based documentation of examples of Yang’s institutional critique and performance work within the same gallery space as the experiential installation pieces. Certificates, 1996-2011, constituting contracts between the artist and the buyer in which the former agreed to trade personal details such as pin numbers and internet passwords was aligned alongside the glistening blue wave patterns of Torres’ Water whilst Practicing Profession, Minus, 2002, which displayed documentation of the artist wearing a custom-made suit while performing ‘self-challenging actions’ during the exhibition marking forty years of the effect of the Fluxus movement was secreted among the columns within the string and chalk pieces’ environment.  These works broke the spell of the playful and physically-engaged experience of the divided space encouraging you to relate cerebrally Yang’s formative early work and the influence by Torres on that work.  The shift to a more research-based way of thinking signalled the ambitious curatorial approach of combining the apparently incongruous approaches of the phenomenological and the epistemological – a project aimed at enriching the viewer’s experience by combining the function of the gallery as museum – the contemplation of objects as historical documents – with the more embodied experience of installation work.  In this sense Arnolfini becomes a viewing frame, a liminal space, not a repository or simply a shop front , but a pointing out device, like a ‘repoussoir’ figure in traditional painting, giving access to current research interests.  There was a sense that the liminal works of the show hinted at the potential that all space could be seen as transitional and all experience liminal – hence a loss of the determinate. More

REVIEW: Johnnie Shand-Kydd on Artfix

Johnnie Shand Kydd, "Father, daughter and dog, Via dei Tribunali, 2000." Silver gelatin print 50 x 40 cm.

We recently posted about Johnnie Shand-Kydd’s exhibition at The Estorick Collection here. Read Artfix’s enlivened review of it here.

Response: Eloise Fornieles and John Isaacs

We travelled to Berlin late last week to see the last in the trilogy of Eloise Fornieles‘ installation performances, Carrion, at Haunch of Venison Berlin. On the same night, just a few doors down on Heidestrasse, we dropped in at John Isaacs‘ private view of Tears Welling Up Inside at Wendt + Friedmann Galerie. The contrast between the rituals of Eloise’s moody, contemplative installation and the talkative, crowded rooms of John’s opening night was striking. Below are some snapshots. For more information on Fornieles’ trilogy of performances, see the Other Criteria publication.

The room is strewn with a ton of clothes, across and around which the audience are invited to walk, carrying with them a note of apology or thanks to deliver to Eloise. On receiving the note from within her scaffolded house, she reads it, removes her clothes and walks to the carcass hanging from the rafters. She cuts an incision with a knife and tucks the note into the body of the animal. She steps back across the floor and tugs at the clothing about her feet, seeking out a new set of garments which she slowly dresses herself with again. She returns to the table and waits for another note or offering. Above and around her, militia dressed cameramen record her actions on video camera. She is on hunger strike. The performance lasts 72 hours.

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

 xbf

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

Carrion, Eloise Fornieles, Haunch of Venison Berlin, 2010

To read the Art Slant review and interview between Eloise Fornieles and Ana Finel Honigman on hunger strikes and performance body art, click here.

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Tears Welling Up Inside, John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

John Isaacs, Wendt + Friedmann Berlin, 2010

Find out more: Fred Tomaselli

The magical, detailed, laborious work of Fred Tomaselli comes under the spotlight in this interview between Curator of the Aspen Art Museum, Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson and Flavorwire’s Sara Distin. Also includes information on forthcoming shows and a link to The Daily Beast’s article on his work.

Read it here and view Fred’s t-shirt, available through OC, here.

tomaselli3

Impressions of Kiev

Thanks to Shaun Davin for sending us his thoughts on Damien’s recent exhibition, Requiem, at the Pinchuk Art Centre in Kiev:

St michaels Monastery with requeim poster

Before I got there I tried to do some research but I was limited to what little information I could find on the net as there were no books in any bookshops in Dublin. Nevertheless, I was hell bent on getting over there to see Damien’s show so I ploughed ahead and booked flights and accommodation, going in blind. No expectations good or bad!

IMG_0192

IMG_0195

More

If Your Dreams Are Not Your Own

If Your Dreams Are Not Your Own, How Can You Claim to Own Them?
A thought on the 21st century’s imagination.

JI-Horn-3D-angle3-If your Dreams

John Isaacs’ sculpture representing a unicorn horn but in fact having been cast from a narwhal tusk has always made me think about imagination and dreams. The title, in true Isaacs style, dragged out a chain of assumptions that made me reach the following conclusion: new media dominates my imagination at the moment. The computer.
Let’s put it simply and briefly: our imagination is led by images, and the images we are bombarded with come mostly from television and cinema. Though charmed by today’s digital effects in film, I must admit I miss old films whose magic seemed somehow more real, especially because my own imagination has been affected in losing them. Imagining now riding a flying horse, for example, would be completely different from twenty years ago as a child: at that time, the horse and I would have been motionless in front of a moving landscape, or clumsily going from one point of the screen to the other. Now it is a crazy ride, up and down in the clouds with precise, pixelated movements that let the viewer ‘really’ experience it, even though it all seems a little bit crystallized.
I have been trying to imagine this simple scene without using my ‘visual experience’, just starting from scratch. Inventing it. But I can’t.
My dreams are not my own indeed. They are someone else’s vision, or worse, the vision of a machine, a calculator, and created for us. But, if contemporary art can make you understand that, I am sure creating your very own dreams is just a matter of training.

Susanna Bianchini, Other Criteria