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Closed Down Clubs & Monochromes, 2018Installation view: Hopkinson Mossman, Wellington

Closed Down Clubs & Monochromes, 2018
Installation view: Hopkinson Mossman, Wellington

Fiona Connor: Hopkinson Mossman, Wellington

Brian Butler March 9, 2018

Fiona Connor: Closed Down Clubs & Monochromes

9 March - 14 April, 2018

Hopkinson Mossman, Wellington, New Zealand

Contemplating the different times suspended in the object opens up a connection between the sculpture, a thing in the world, and an awareness of myself as a thing in the world, something that’s been used and worn, something that holds many different stories. Time may be the deep link that connects us to the things of our world, and reading and re-reading the material signs of time passing allows these fictions and histories to resonate and echo within them.*

Hopkinson Mossman is pleased to present Closed Down Clubs & Monochromes, a solo exhibition of new work by Fiona Connor, and the inaugural exhibition in the Wellington gallery program.

Fiona Connor uses strategies of repetition to produce objects that interrogate their own form and the contexts in which they are encountered. Reconstructing a public drinking fountain, a kitchen wall, a notice board from the local café or brick production plant, her work engages different vernacular architectural histories embedded within our built environment. Closed Down Clubs & Monochromes comprises two distinct bodies of work that, while materially divergent, both interrogate the material and temporal course of an object’s ontological existence.

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Video still, VVVEBCA

Video still, VVVEBCA

Rhizome: Petra Cortright: The Ephemera Mine

Brian Butler March 1, 2018

The Ephemera Mine by Bruce Sterling

This article accompanies the inclusion of Petra Cortright’s VVEBCAM in the online exhibition Net Art Anthology. The vintage punctuation of “net.art” here reflects the preferences of the author. For more about spelling and punctuation, see Rhizome’s style guide. – Ed.

How did one know that Petra Cortright was a “net.artist”? It was because YouTube was expelling her.

This particular Cortright video, VVEBCAM, looks inoffensive on the face of it. The face is Petra Cortright’s, and she’s examining the screen with much the same bemused expression as the online viewer.

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Performance documentation

Performance documentation

Ana Prvacki: In Residence, de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA

Brian Butler March 1, 2018

March 1, 2018 – August 26, 2018

The Fine Arts Museums are rethinking how we engage contemporary artists across both museums, experimenting with ways that their contributions can resonate even more strongly among museum audiences, in more immediate dialogue with the architecture, operations, and collections. Rather than presenting traditional exhibitions of artworks, we are inviting some artists to think about the museums more experientially, beginning with artist Ana Prvački, who has been visiting the de Young since summer 2017 to research all areas of its activities and imagine new ways of seeing and experiencing the museum. Still in development, Prvacki’s project will result in multiple components in the spring and summer of 2018, including performance, an alternative tour of the facilities, and interventions into the building and collections.

Prvački is a cross-disciplinary artist whose works take the form of diverse projects that draw on performance, daily practices, consumer aesthetics, and popular concerns. Most often her projects are participatory, using humor as a means for disarming traditional museum activities and behaviors, and ephemeral elements as a nod to an environmentally conscious artistic practice. She has realized solo exhibitions and projects at the UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston; and the Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Turin. Her work has also been included in many international exhibitions, including the 14th Istanbul Biennial and dOCUMENTA 13. Her performances have been commissioned by the LA Philharmonic and the Chicago Architecture Biennial, among others.

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Bora Bora Roses, 2014, webcam video, 36 seconds

Bora Bora Roses, 2014, webcam video, 36 seconds

Petra Cortright: CAM WORLS, UTA Artist Space, Los Angeles, CA

Brian Butler February 24, 2018

FEBRUARY 24 - APRIL 7, 2018

UTA Artist Space is pleased to present CAM WORLS, the first large-scale survey of Petra Cortright’s video work. Fifty of the artist’s videos, made between 2007 and 2017, will be on display, including eighteen never-before-exhibited artworks. The gallery will celebrate with an opening reception on Saturday, February 24, 2018, from 5-7PM.

Cortright’s computer-based practice pioneered a new kind of internet art. The videos in the show will trace the gradual evolution of her online presence, and a practice of perpetual modulation of over ten year of internet ephemera that mines decorative motifs from flowers to the female body. The archival impulse behind her work stresses the visual catchiness and mutability of the digital image, as well as the delicate and self-conscious act of putting oneself “online.” As an artist who “grew up on the internet,” Cortright carefully erects and investigates online trends of personhood as they appear in the culture, from the front-facing camera antics of solipsistic young girls on social media to virtual strippers.

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Video still from Standardized Patient.

Video still from Standardized Patient.

KQED: Video Installation of Medical Training Breaks Down Art and Science Divide

Brian Butler February 19, 2018

Among its many characters, Los Angeles-based artist Kerry Tribe’s sharp and riveting video at SFMOMA, Standardized Patient, features a woman in a doctor’s office who isn’t quite sure why she’s there.

Standardized Patient tracks doctors-in-training interacting with “standardized patients”: actors portraying characters with specific motivations, family backgrounds, personalities, and sets of symptoms. The camera follows the doctors as they discern the actor-patients’ ailments and communicate a treatment plan.

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View of Guadalajara

View of Guadalajara

Jorge Mendez Blake: All Eyes Are Suddenly on Guadalajara's Thriving Art Scene

Brian Butler February 9, 2018

All Eyes Are Suddenly on Guadalajara's Thriving Art Scene by Michael Slenske


Here's our guide to Mexico's newest creative hotbed and a look at its ever-more-popular PreMaco festivities

Nowadays, whenever you travel to a destination with an emerging art scene, you are almost always told that the city is the Los Angeles of whichever nation you are visiting. It’s a phenomenon you might call Second City Syndrome, which suggests the locale is on an upward cultural trajectory. Such was the spirit this past weekend in Guadalajara, Mexico, during the fourth edition of the city’s PreMaco festivities—filled with openings, studio visits, and parties that offered a precursor to this week’s blockbuster Zona Maco fair in Mexico City, now in its 15th year. As I discovered, this second city’s charms were best expressed by its distinctions from, not mimicry of, the CDMX scene.

That such a scene exists at all is a tribute to the reach of Dávila and his lifelong pals Gonzalo Lebrija and Jorge Méndez Blake. By establishing such formidable studio practices in Guadalajara they have become the real drivers behind PreMaco. All three artists show locally at Travesia Cuatro, the Madrid/Guadalajara gallery which sits next to Demetria in Casa Franco, a 1929 Luis Barragán home. Prior to joining the gallery, the trio ran its own exhibition space, Oficina para Proyectos de Arte (OPA), which gave early shows to international stars like Friedrich Kunath, Anri Sala, Liz Craft, and Pipilotti Rist. Another international star, Martin Creed, touched down in GDL to install one of his balloon installations at the top of Vía Libertad tower, a mixed-use complex redesigned by GDL firm SPRB that draws a hip crowd to its Mercado Mexico (filled with boutiques and cafés) in the plaza at its base. Also of note was an elegant archival show of multimedia works related to The Aesthetic Machine, a libidinous 1975 sculpture by Mexican abstract icon Manuel Felguérez at Páramo Galeria, which just opened a secondary space on the Upper East Side (and a Mexico City residence). Páramo also showed a suite of paintings and performance works by rising GDL talent Emanuel Tovar, who unveiled a transcendent new performance, Ritos estructurales, on the island of Mezcala on Sunday.

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Exhibition view of Philippe Parreno: La levadura y el anfitrión, Museo Jumex, Mexico City, 2017. ©Philippe Parreno. Photo by Andrea Rossetti.

Exhibition view of Philippe Parreno: La levadura y el anfitrión, Museo Jumex, Mexico City, 2017. ©Philippe Parreno. Photo by Andrea Rossetti.

The Brooklyn Rail: PHILIPPE PARRENO with Charles Eppley

Brian Butler February 7, 2018

PHILIPPE PARRENO with Charles Eppley by Charles Eppley

MUSEO JUMEX | OCTOBER 26, 2017 – FEBRUARY 11, 2018

I initially encountered the enigmatic artworks of Philippe Parreno (b. 1964) as a first-year graduate student of contemporary art history at Stony Brook University. His video piece Anywhere Out of the World (2000)—part of a collaboration with Pierre Huyghe (b. 1962), wherein the artists together purchased, distributed, and enlivened a stock manga character, Annlee, through digital, cinematic, and other means—was emblematic of a contemporary moving-image practice situated between formats and ideologies, as well as divergent modes of analog and digital representation and spectatorship. Parreno’s work is often contextualized in the frames of cinema and theater, and a convergence of the “black box” with the “white cube” through large-scale video environments and architectural installations. As a burgeoning scholar of sound and new media art, I was drawn to his hybridized media forms, particularly as they challenged and expanded visual regimes of museum spectatorship.

Parreno’s conceptual works, at some times playful and wryly imaginative, at others, deeply personal or carefully detached, are infamously distributed across formal and institutional boundaries. His stylistically inclusive and structurally permutational mode of art-making is based on a repurposing of forms and an acute sense of self-awareness. Representative of the diffuse, likely impossible-to-define, paradigm of “contemporary practice,” Parreno’s work has come to symbolize a broader transformation of the artist into something—anything—other than a maker of objects. In the past, Parreno has referred to himself as less an object maker than an exhibition producer, a view from which this interview begins, but which is set aside to explore other topics such as yeast colonies, puppeteers, music, disease, recuperation, automatons, and cephalopods. Our discussion was initiated around two of Parreno's most recent exhibitions—The Yeast and the Host at the Museo Jumex in Mexico City, and The Marquis and the Sisters at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis—and conducted on a brisk December morning in New York City.

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Installation view of ‘Jorge Pardo’ at Victoria Miro.

Installation view of ‘Jorge Pardo’ at Victoria Miro.

Wallpaper: Jorge Pardo on the ‘rustic’ digital technique behind his laser-cut chandeliers

Brian Butler February 6, 2018

Jorge Pardo on the ‘rustic’ digital technique behind his laser-cut chandeliers by Ali Morris

Floating through the upper level of Victoria Miro gallery like a shoal of serene deep sea creatures are the latest works by renowned Mexico-based Cuban-American sculptor, Jorge Pardo. ‘I don’t do chandeliers very often, and I wanted to see what came of making some,’ states Pardo, surveying the colourful laser-cut plastic lamps that are set at different levels around the space.

Pardo, who is showing for the first time with the London gallery, has a refreshing matter-of-fact approach to his work. ‘Shows generally do not really have a conceptual organising principle,’ he explains. ‘Sometimes they do, but most of the time they really don’t. I don’t like anecdotes – artists are not that smart,’ he adds with a laugh.

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Shelter overlooking Margate Sands. Image: Thanet District Council

Shelter overlooking Margate Sands. Image: Thanet District Council

Fiona Banner: Turner Contemporary, Margate, UK

Brian Butler February 3, 2018

Fiona Banner: Journeys with "The Waste Land"

Turner Contemporary

Rendezvous
Margate CT9 1HG, UK

3 February - 7 May, 2018

Presenting over 60 artists, and almost 100 objects, the exhibition includes works by Fiona Banner, Cecil Collins, Tacita Dean, Elisabeth Frink, Patrick Heron, Edward Hopper, Barbara Kruger, Helen Marten, Henry Moore, Paul Nash, Paula Rego, John Smith and JMW Turner. The exhibition explores how contemporary and historical art can enable us to reflect on the poem’s shifting flow of diverse voices, references, characters and places.

The exhibition is the culmination of a three year project designed to develop a pioneering approach to curating. Local residents, coming together as the Waste land Research Group, have developed the entire exhibition. Journeys with 'The Waste Land' is consequently the result of many months the group have spent discussing personal connections between art, poetry and life.

More information

The Times article

The Guardian article

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Untitled, 2017 (detail), 3 mm coloured PETG, aluminium and steel fixtures, various dimensions. © the artist

Untitled, 2017 (detail), 3 mm coloured PETG, aluminium and steel fixtures, various dimensions. © the artist

Jorge Pardo: Victoria Miro, London, UK

Brian Butler February 2, 2018

Jorge Pardo
2 February - 24 March 2018

Victoria Miro
16 Wharf Road
London N1 7RW

Comprising paintings and large-scale chandeliers, the exhibition will draw viewers into an environment of form, colour, illumination and shadow.

More information

Download Press Release

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Installation view,  Investment Bank Flowerpots

Installation view,  Investment Bank Flowerpots

SUPERFLEX: Centro de Creación Contemporánea de Andalucía, Spain

Brian Butler February 1, 2018

SUPERFLEX
Cuanto más sabes, mejor decides (The more you know, the better decisions you make)
01 February - 09 September  2018

C3 Centro de Creación Contemporánea de Andalucía

Carmen Olmedo Checa

 14009 Córdoba, Spain

The exhibition will be presided by the banners of the installation of Bankrupt Banks, a series of works that explore the effects of the international financial crisis since 2008. A critical view of financial institutions is also represented in two versions of Investment Bank Flowerpots. Models of the corporate head quarter buildings of the world's largest investment banks are transformed into flowerpots containing hallucinogenic plants. The suggestion that society’s greatest hallucination of all is money, is also materialised in the printed work Euphoria Now. The suggestive title is introduced on a bright background based on the colours of banknotes of the Swiss franc.
 
The film installation European Union Mayotte, reflecting upon migration, and the participative installation Corruption Contract are also part of the exhibition. The combination of these works pictures a critical background of discussion on some of the present political and economical issues in Spain, as well as in a global context. The title of the exhibition derives from a current marketing campaign of the bank BBVA and is intentionally speaking directly to each single visitor, as an invitation for active reflection.

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Stories of Almost Everyone, book cover, organized by Aram Moshayedi

Stories of Almost Everyone, book cover, organized by Aram Moshayedi

Fiona Connor: Stories of Almost Everyone, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles

Brian Butler January 28, 2018

Stories of Almost Everyone
28 January - 6 May 2018

Hammer Museum
10899 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90024

Stories of Almost Everyone is an exhibition about the willingness to believe the stories that are conveyed by works of contemporary art.

Artists: Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc (b. 1977); Lutz Bacher; Darren Bader (b. 1978); Fayçal Baghriche (b. 1972); Kasper Bosmans (b. 1990); Carol Bove (b. 1971); Andrea Büttner (b. 1972); Banu Cennetoğlu (b. 1970); Jay Chung and Q Takeki Maeda (b. 1976; 1977); Fiona Connor (b. 1981); Isabelle Cornaro (b. 1974); Martin Creed (b. 1968) ; Cian Dayrit (b. 1989); Jason Dodge (b. 1969); Latifa Echakhch (b. 1974); Haris Epaminonda (b. 1980); Geoffrey Farmer (b. 1967); Lara Favaretto (b. 1973); Ceal Floyer (b. 1968); Ryan Gander (b. 1976); Mario García Torres (b. 1975); gerlach en koop; Iman Issa (b. 1979); Hassan Khan (b. 1975); Kapwani Kiwanga (b. 1978); Mark Leckey (b. 1964); Klara Lidén (b. 1979); Jill Magid (b. 1973); Dave McKenzie (b. 1977); Shahryar Nashat (b. 1975); Henrik Olesen (b. 1967); Christodoulos Panayiotou (b. 1978); Amalia Pica (b. 1978); Michael Queenland (b. 1970); Willem de Rooij (b. 1969); Miljohn Ruperto (b. 1971); Tino Sehgal (b. 1976); Mungo Thomson (b. 1969); Antonio Vega Macotela (b. 1980); and Danh Vo (b. 1975).

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Japanese tea ceremony performance artist Mai Ueda looking out from a wooden tea house, part of a bamboo maze installation display by artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, on the roof of the National Gallery Singapore. PHOTO: AFP

Japanese tea ceremony performance artist Mai Ueda looking out from a wooden tea house, part of a bamboo maze installation display by artist Rirkrit Tiravanija, on the roof of the National Gallery Singapore. PHOTO: AFP

The Straits Times: Tea room in a bamboo maze on National Gallery rooftop

Brian Butler January 23, 2018

Tea room in a bamboo maze on National Gallery rooftop by Akshita Nanda

Dressed in a 100-year-old samurai outfit made of Japanese hemp, performance artist Mai Ueda serves organic tea mixed with iced watermelon juice to four visitors at a time in a tearoom on the roof of the National Gallery Singapore.

The small, air-conditioned bamboo enclosure - designed by Argentina-born Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija - on the Ng Teng Fong Roof Garden Gallery is the heart of a new art installation commissioned by the National Gallery.

The work, which is named untitled 2018 (the infinite dimensions of smallness), will show here until Oct 28. To reach the tearoom, viewers first walk through a 4m-high, 15m-wide and 19m-long maze made of bamboo poles lashed together.

It can take a minute or an hour to reach the centre. The twisting path made by browning bamboo poles invites visitors to interact with one another and take plenty of selfies on the rooftop space.

Tiravanija, who is 57 this year, said at a media preview on Tuesday (Jan 23): "I like to make work where I don't have to tell people what to do. I want people who come to just be themselves."

The artist blurs the lines between art and everyday activities in his practice. An early work in the 1990s saw him cook and serve curry to visitors. In 1992, he constructed a teahouse stocked with leaves, so viewers could brew their own tea.

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cfd5cd1d-25d7-47af-99bf-8d0a88d27866.jpg

Fiona Connor: Modern Art, Condo London 2018

Brian Butler January 12, 2018

Fiona Connor
Community Notice Board and Monochromes

Condo London 2018
(1301PE hosted by Modern Art)
13 January - 10 February 2018
Preview weekend: 13-14 January  12-6pm

Modern Art
50-58 Vyner St, London E2

1301PE is pleased to announce the opening of Fiona Connor’s exhibition, Community Notice Board and Monochromes, at Modern Art in London. The exhibition is part of Condo London 2018 and was co-produced by 1301PE and Modern Art. Condo is a collaborative exhibition by 46 galleries across 17 London spaces.

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IntoAction_ArtistFlyer__0077_featured artists - Ana Prvacki.jpg

Ana Pravcki: Into Action, Los Angeles

Brian Butler January 12, 2018

Into Action
January 13-21, 2018
1726 N. Spring St.
Los Angeles, CA 90012

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Petra Cortright, smallest soldier pics* on pennies during showfall, 2017. Digital painting on anodized aluminum, 48h x 94w inches.

Petra Cortright, smallest soldier pics* on pennies during showfall, 2017. Digital painting on anodized aluminum, 48h x 94w inches.

Petra Cortright: Ever Gold [Projects], San Francisco

Brian Butler January 10, 2018

Petra Cortright
lambergani lambirgini lamborghini lambourgini
January 10 - March 24

Ever Gold [Projects]
1275 Minnesota St.
Suite 105, SF, CA, 94107

Petra Cortright’s core practice is the creation and distribution of digital files, whether they be videos, GIFs, or JPEGs, using consumer or corporate software and platforms. She has become renowned for making self-portrait videos that use her computer’s webcam and default effects tools, which she then uploads to YouTube. Cortright’s paintings on aluminum, linen, paper, or acrylic are created in Photoshop using painting software and appropriated images, icons, and marks. The digital files are endlessly modifiable, but at a “decisive moment” they are translated into two-dimensional objects. They become finite, yet their range of motifs and marks, and their disorienting perspectives and dimensions suggest dynamic change.

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Bioart-Philippe-Parreno-Tate-Modern-Turbine-Hall-Anywhen-e1485440856926.jpg

Artsy: The Art World’s Strangest New Trend—Fermentation

Brian Butler January 3, 2018

The Art World’s Strangest New Trend—Fermentation by Siobhan Leddy

Philippe Parreno recently filled the vast Turbine Hall at London’s Tate with his work Anywhen (2016–17). It featured yeast colonies, which Parreno turned into the conductors of an ever-changing symphony, enabling them to control a shifting constellation of objects, sounds, and lights. Roof sensors registered climatic conditions—whether heavy rain or, less likely in London, blistering sun—and fed the data back to the yeast through a computer. This was then relayed to the wire-suspended objects, setting them into motion. Through his bio-choreography, Parreno illustrated the interconnectedness of all things.

These artists are thematically and stylistically distinct from one another. Yet their experiments in fermentation point to a consistent desire to embrace our biological complexity and entanglement. The world is sticky and messy, ripe with a musty funk. We humans do not sit at the center of it all; we are one part of a grubby assemblage. We are plural rather than singular—and sipping on sour kombucha, or placing fat chunks of kimchi between our teeth, is a delicious kind of surrender.

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Pae White considering Christopher Dresser's Soup Tureen and Ladle, c. 1877–78, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Council Fund

Pae White considering Christopher Dresser's Soup Tureen and Ladle, c. 1877–78, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Decorative Arts Council Fund

LACMA Unframed: Artists on Art - Pae White on Christopher Dresser

Brian Butler January 3, 2018

Artists on Art: Pae White on Christopher Dresser

Pae White wrestles in her work with the distinction between so-called high art and functional objects. At times she renders everyday objects in unexpected materials, like her larger-than-life marble popcorn sculptures, while also utilizing commercial materials, as with her chandeliers and mobiles made out of string, cut paper, and greeting cards. A Pasadena native, Pae White received her MFA from Art Center College of Design and now lives and works in Los Angeles.

For Artists on Art, LACMA’s online video series featuring contemporary artists speaking on objects of their choice from our permanent collection, White selected Christopher Dresser’s Soup Tureen and Ladle (c. 1877–78). Today, curator of modern art Carol S. Eliel speaks to White about her relationship to the object, a version of which she bought for herself many years ago at a thrift store (LACMA’s has ebonized wood fittings while her own has ivory).

You are an artist who also makes functional objects and really blurs, blends, and effaces the distinction between those two, so I’m curious what it is about this functional yet beautiful object yet sculpture that appeals to you. What made you choose this soup tureen and ladle to talk about?

I think this is an incredibly sexy object, and I think this object, designed by Christopher Dresser around 1880 in England, is a very practical idea of the soup tureen that has just slight moves that make that whole process incredibly rapturous and poetic. I’m one who believes that, depending on the quality of the glass or the lightness of something, you behave with an object differently if it has these special moments. In this case, the turn and thickness of the ladle deliver the soup in a very specific way. Everything has been carefully thought out: the termination points, the tapers—all are very well considered. And there is a hole [in the lid] that allows for the ladle to tuck in perfectly, so there's this beautiful consideration for the thickness of the ladle handle. I think all of this is worth noting: the fact that this is a pleasure in the hand, and all these points have a resolution that is extremely satisfying to actually hold, as well as this sort of seductive hardware.

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Untitled, 2017, by Pae White. Photography: Shaughn and John

Untitled, 2017, by Pae White. Photography: Shaughn and John

Wallpaper: NGV’s new blockbuster Triennial brings together over 100 artists and designers

Brian Butler January 2, 2018

NGV’s new blockbuster Triennial brings together over 100 artists and designers by Dimity Noble

Recognising the dissolution of boundaries between artistic and commercial design practices, the inaugural Triennial at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) surveys the work of over 100 participants from 32 countries. Beyond its tactile, interactive and technologically impressive veneer lies an epically immersive exhibition. ‘We wanted to evoke a journey of discovery and encourage participation from our audiences with a range of awe-inspiring and confronting pieces,’ asserts NGV director Tony Ellwood.

Registering a world where resources are depleting and old power structures and borders are falling, it also acknowledges emerging alternatives. Featuring tapestry, sculpture, fashion design, painting and drawing in addition to virtual realities, architecture, animation, performance and film, the Triennial examines the consequences of globalisation on a cultural, scientific, political and psychological basis. ‘The artists, designers and innovators are at the forefront of their practices ... working with a range of cutting edge technologies including robotics and 3D scanning and printing,’ adds Ellwood.  

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rikrit-tiravanija-surface-1-2000x1569 2.jpg

Surface: Rirkrit Tiravanija and the Politics of Cooking

Brian Butler December 19, 2017

Rirkrit Tiravanija and the Politics of Cooking
Interview by William Hanley

Rirkrit Tiravanija bends over his potter’s wheel with the concentration of an ambitous amatuer. As he carefully forms a spinning wad of clay into a bowl, he seems oblivious to the visitors who have just arrived at Greenwich House Pottery in New York City, where he finished a two-month residency in November. His French bulldog, Harry, eyes the guests briefly before going back to snoozing on the floor next to the wheel. When he’s finished, Tiravanija holds up his latest ceramic creation, one of a few hundred bowls he’s crafted since he began working with clay, earlier this year. Taking a break to talk about the work, he has an assured nonchalance, like someone with a generally strong sense of purpose and direction but no particular place to be right now. “It’s kind of like a meditative activity,” he says of making pottery, though he’s not one to clear his head. “It gives you time to think about everything else you have to do, or could be doing, or dealing with. It’s like cooking that way.”

Tiravanija knows a thing or two about cooking. He rose to prominence as one of a group of artists working within a strain of participatory art now often gathered under the broad umbrella of social practice. At its core, Tiravanija’s work tees up situations that invite participants to interact with one another. This has taken the shape of everything from a 2002 re-creation of his New York apartment at the 2002 Biennial in Liverpool to a pirate television station broadcasting from the Guggenheim Museum in 2005. But Tiravanija is best known for cooking and serving meals in spaces typically reserved for more traditional exhibitions.

Some of the pottery Tiravanija produced was shipped to Frankfurt in October, where he and Tobias Rehberger sold them, along with a varying menu of dishes, at a temporary stall in the city’s historic market. Other pieces may travel to Singapore, Tiravanija says, to be used in a temporary tea house he is building at the National Gallery for a January exhibition there. His ceramics residency coincided with an exhibition at his friend and longtime dealer Gavin Brown’s galleries in New York. It featured his archive of Super 8 films, studies of people he has observed over decades, as well as screenings of his remake of Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1974 film “Ali: Fear Eats the Soul.” Wearing a clay-spattered apron, with Harry dutifully dozing in his lap, Tiravanija spoke about how he started cooking and why gathering people for a meal can be a defiant act.


It’s novel to see you sitting at the wheel rather than standing over the stove. Why did you start making ceramics?

Well, I’ve been making tea rooms here and there, and I was interested in the medicinal side of coffee and tea, so looking at how to serve it seemed natural. At the same time, it’s kind of interesting because I teach, and I’ve noticed the kiln in the department has become very active in the last three years. I think it has to do with people discovering the material and a getting-back-to-the-earth kind of thing. If we weren’t in the city, you could take the clay out of the ground and make everything literally from scratch. And it can also go the other way: You can use the object and return it to the ground. One of the things I’m interested in doing in the future is to make a project where you use the object and then you kind of return it—after you drink the tea, then you smash the cups.

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