Tomorrow – Everything must go !

I’ve just finished preparing the work for the closing down auction. It’s a proper credit crunch special, with guide prices starting at £4.99

I hope you can be there, here’s the details :

Monday 5 December 2011 : Colchester Minories art gallery Essex CO1 1UE.

Viewing starts at 6.30pm.

It will all be over by 8.00pm

I’ve also been playing with a new toy, a tag cloud which looks though text and finds patterns – here’s what it made of the writing I did about this show :

Such Stuff at the Minories : Everything must go on Monday !

This will be the final event of Such Stuff, after Monday the show will be struck and will ‘Leave not a wrack behind’.

This is your chance to pick up a bargain. The guide prices range between £4.99 and £285, and will perhaps be even less on the night.

But if you are not buying you are equally welcome to be part of this unique event. We are especially thrilled that the auctioneer is to be none other than Frinsley Baggage, the renowned art opinionista and critic. He really enjoyed his book signing on the opening night and is excited to be leading this closing down sale. Catalogues and guide prices will be available when you arrive on the night. However, you may wish to place bids by telephone if you cannot attned in person. To reserve your copy of the catalogue guide prices or arrange a telephone bidding assistant please email Frinsley through the Signapse site. We look forward to hearing from you.

Monday 5 December 2011 : Colchester Minories art gallery Essex CO1 1UE.

Viewing starts at 6.30pm.

It will all be over by 8.00pm

Visit :www.signapse.co.uk

Follow : @signapse

See the film : www.youtube.com/user/signapse

Everything must go !

 I’m looking forward to two events next week, one in London and the other in Colchester.

Such Stuff : Everything must go !

Next Monday at the Minories Colchester is the last chance to view the static show and also to go home with a bargain at this closing down auction. We are proud to have Frinsley Baggage, A-list art opionista and autioneer, with us again. Everything must go, I hope you can come. Guide prices between £4.99 and £285. You will be welcomed with a drink, this will be another unique event and I hope to see you there.

Final viewing at 6.30pm – event starts at 7.00pm. Monday 5 December 2011. It will all be over by 8.00pm.

Venue : Colchester Minories art gallery Essex CO1 1UE.

Highgate Contemporary art : 12PM Twelve Printmakers

This is the second year we are showing here, this time with Alan Woods our new member. I’m showing some new box installations with intaglio embossed prints, as well as some of the early redundant media prints.

PV : 6 – 9.00pm Wednesday 7 December 2011. Show runs until 4 Jan 2012.

Venue : 26 Highgate High St. N6 5SJ. Open Tuesday – Saturday 10am – 6pm and Sunday and Monday by appointment.

 

I’ll be regularly tweeting through the week. If you would like to put in a tweet bid at the Everything must go auction please follow @signapse, or you can be a proper oligarch and phone in your bid. I have assistants standing by ready to receive your calls ;-) so email me and I’l give you the number to call.

Silence and the sticky stick.

Some people have names that are perfect descriptors of their lives – William Whitelaw, Bob Diamond, Dan Quayle.

John Cage is the exact opposite. He opened the doors and the windows so the rest of us could hear properly. His work was properly, rigorously conceptual at a time when that word really meant something. The trouble is that the descriptions of conceptual work nearly always sound much sillier than the work itself. His 4′33″ sounded daft when I read about it, but was completely magical when I performed it for myself a couple of days ago.

I found a really beautiful interview he did in 1992 :

“When I hear what we call music it seems to me that someone is talking. Talking about his feelings, his ideas, his relationships. But when I hear this traffic here on 6th. Avenue I don’t have the feeling that someone is talking. I have the feeling that sound is acting. And I love the activity of sound.

… People expect listening to be more than listening … Sometimes they speak of the meaning of sounds. .. They think that for something to be just a sound is to be useless. Wheras I love sounds, just as they are. I have no need for them to be anything more. I don’t want them to be psychological. I don’t want a sound to pretend it’s a bucket, or that it’s president, or that it’s in love with another sound. I just want it to be a sound.”

For me it’s important to make space for silences, especially after working so hard for a show. Thinking about John Cage also reminded me that paint is just paint and I love it for that, it doesn’t have to pretend to be a bucket or the president. Maybe it’s time to get the sticky stick out again.

Such Stuff at the Minories : shots of the show by Matthew Bowman

Matthew Bowman curated the Such Stuff exhibition, and took these rather fine shots of the static show. The Garden room at the Minories is screening the film, a 10 minute animation :

The Front room houses the static show including 6 large charcoal drawings on scrim, a room set, box installations of the props used in the film and some embossed prints :

Matthew works at Essex University and Colchester institute, we had many really interesting discussions as the project was developed, but he had a really good knack of trusting me when I needed him to. This meant that a lot of the working methods for this show were worked out as we went along. This made it a really exciting show to make.

Would you like that Cool, Contemporary or Retro ?

Surely, like supermarket chicken wings, the word “contemporary” should have a use-by date. If we think about the term contemporary at all, we probably mean stuff made in the last 60 – 100 months. You can see the word used in this way right back to the 1940′s and beyond. I think it’s time to move on and start thinking for ourselves a bit more.

“Contemporary” is a lazy term because it appears to absolve the viewer from deciding for themselves if the work is any good or not. It’s a quick way to count work in or out  when we don’t have the courage to say if we like it or not.  This infatuation with the last 60 – 100 months is nearly as unhelpful as the infatuation with the previous 60 – 100 years, which is known as “retro”. But even less helpful is “cool”, meaning stuff made in the last 60 – 100 hours.

Computers couldn’t function without a completely regular timeline. This timeline has to be rigidly followed and unflinchingly shared with other computers. But humans can be much more promiscuous with time, which is why we are more interesting to talk to. So instead of asking “Is it cool, contemporary or retro ?” I’ve been trying to think of different questions that could be asked of the art we see and make :

  • Does it feel authentic ?
  • Does it connect to me, here, now ?
  • Does it disrupt the assumptions I am making here and now and does it leave me looking at things slightly differently ?
  • Does it leave me asking interesting questions, or does it merely present me with another answer ?
  • Am I slightly less complascent after looking at it ?

For me, Hogarth is a contemporary. William Blake’s books are contemporary. Charlotte Salomons gouache sketchbooks are contemporary because they are all role models for me in the studio and signposts when I am looking at other peoples work.

For me Goya’s Pinturas Negras are contemporary –  they feel closer to Frank Auerbach than Auerbach ever feels to Chris Ofili.

And don’t try telling me that Caravaggio isn’t nearer to Francis Ford Coppola than Coppola is to Guy Richie.

I feel we need to stop being frightened by the ticking of the clock and start trusting our own reactions. Try to feel braver about making judgements for ourselves about what connects work together and even more important, what connects it to us.

This is largely from a conversation I had with my philosophical best friend Hugh Aitken last night over a bottle of Highland Park. Having friends who are smarter than me is treasure beyond measure especially when as in his case they are also wondrously earthy and emotionally wise.  Safe journey North dear Shug, and come back soon.

Such Stuff at the Minories : show open 21 October – Monday 5 December 2011..

The show has just started so we thought it might be a good time to share some links in case you are unable to make it to the live event tonight.

You are also invited to the closing event on 5 December, which is called “Everything must go”.

You can see the web version of the film through this link : Such Stuff : a requiem for all that redundant media and all those forgotten messages.  

We worked hard on the sound, and there is a projection copy available where you will get the full version, rather than the phone or laptop experience.

We will also put up some stills from the show in my blog, and will be tweeting.

There is a special set of 8 catalogue cards. You can buy signed versions of these at either of the events on 21 October or 5 December, or by getting in touch with me through the site. I think of them as a breadcrumb trail you could  follow in whatever direction you like and in whatever order you choose.

This show was challenging and exciting to make, most of it well outside my comfort zone.  If I hadn’t had the middle bit working on the large charcoal drawings I could have easily lost my bottle. That seems to be the trick for me, to have enough new stuff to keep me on my toes, and enough familiar stuff to stop me hiding under the duvet. Making this show felt like hitting a bend too fast on the motorcycle. You can’t brake. You mustn’t wobble. Just lean over a bit more and hang on.

Autumn shows

Brighton Art fair : 12 PM Twelve Printmakers 

Dates : Thursday 22nd September 6.00pm – 8.30pm (ticket only)
Friday, 23rd September 11.00am – 7.30pm
Saturday, 24th September 10.00am – 6.00pm
Sunday, 25th September 10.00am – 5.00pm Venue : Corn Exchange, Church Street Brighton, BN1 1UG

It’s great to be back again this year. I’m showing the lithograph/monoprints from my Changeling series Bestarios de ensueño as well as reviving some of my CD engravings based on song titles. Come and snap up your copy of Trout mask replica.

CATOS 2011 : Open studio

Dates : Saturday 1 October 2011. 11.00 – 6.00pm.
Venue : My studio.

The annual CATOS safari where you can observe me in my natural habitat. I’ll be working on the box works for the Minories show so it’s a chance to see how they are progressing and also to see the prints from Brighton.

Such Stuff : an event of film, performance and drawing

Dates :

Launch event : Friday 21 October 2011. 7.30 – 9.00pm. Includes a performance and the first screening of the film. There is also a preview for press/networking on the same day, so please get in touch if you’d like a personal invitation to that.

Static show : Saturday 22nd October to Tuesday 6th December 2011

Closing event : “Everything must go.” Monday 5 December 2011 6.00 – 8.00pm
Performance and public auction of work.

Venue : The Minories 74 High St. Colchester, Essex CO1 1UE.

This show brings together several parts of my working life and has been really exciting to make. It combines film, performance, drawing and box installation and has become my requiem for all that redundant media and all those forgotten messages.

I hope you can come to the launch event, which is the only time you will be able to experience all the work in it’s entirety. At the end of the static show we will be pulling the show apart in an event called “Everything must go”. Such Stuff will then only exist in our memories, leaving “not a wrack behind” so I hope to see you before it goes.

Such Stuff at The Minories coincides with the opening of Firstsite at the same location. This beautiful building is designed by Rafael Viñoly as an internationally important arts centre.