Royal College of Art Galleries
London
Kensington Gore
020 75904494 FAX 020 75904495
WEB
Various Small Fires
dal 15/3/2007 al 9/4/2007
10am-6pm daily

Segnalato da

Claudia Pestana



 
calendario eventi  :: 




15/3/2007

Various Small Fires

Royal College of Art Galleries, London

Group show. Instead of relating to a central theme, the artworks display a mixture of associated concerns and productive incompatibilities. Organised by MA Curating Contemporary Art graduating students.


comunicato stampa

Group show

Ei Arakawa, Tony Chakar, Kajsa Dahlberg, Carmen Gheorghe, Knut Henrik Henriksen, Ian Kiaer, Koo Jeong-A, Laurent Montaron, Dominique Petitgand, Josephine Pryde, Florian Pumhesl

Organised by MA Curating Contemporary Art graduating students

Most of the artists in Various Small Fires were commissioned to produce works reflecting on physical and psychological space in response to the Royal College of Art galleries. These galleries exist in a perpetual state of flux, witnessing the constant making and un-making of exhibitions, but also function as a daily thoroughfare for staff and students. Various Small Fires uses the exhibition space as the material and the environment for a number of dialogues between ideas, architecture, artworks and visitors. Within this environment the works function individually and can also be clustered into constellations of small fires.

Carmen Gheorghe Vaterland IX (2007), a floor-based work made from sand quartz, appropriates motifs from Frank Stella, Ellsworth Kelly, and Michel Majerus. These patterns are altered and the sand is dispersed as visitors interact with the piece.

Florian Pumhesl Programm (2006) is a film that reflects on the Casa Modernista, an icon of Brazilian Modernism, while also attempting to explore how images can be reconstructed and memorised.

Kajsa Dahlberg Ett Etget Rum/Tusen Bibliotek (A Room of One’s Own/A Thousand Libraries) (2006) is a series of drawings of the marginal notes made by readers onto library copies of Virgina Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own (1929).

Ei Arakawa 1979 Pink Floyd as Reconstruction Mood (2007) is a performance involving a high-speed transformation that disrupts the gallery space and includes the production of an on-site magazine.

Laurent Montaron Craignez celle qui suit (1998/2007) is a film projected inside an inaccessible room filled with dust that causes the image to gradually deteriorate, highlighting the ephemeral nature of things.

Dominique Petitgand Proportions (1997/2007) plays with the ability of sound to permeate space, thereby influencing the path the viewer takes through the exhibition.

Tony Chakar Martyrs’ Square Revisited (2007) is an adaptation of earlier texts in which the written word conveys inhabited space and reflects on recent events in Beirut.

Josephine Pryde How Does It Feel to Play the Piano? (2007) is a series of photographs that attempts to provide a visual answer to the title’s question. The piano is an instrument that can offer uninhibited expression to a player but is also associated with a controlled and accomplished education.

Ian Kiaer Bruegel Project/Pink Bird (2007) consists of different objects including a monochrome painting, a crumpled tissue and a plastic bottle arranged into a composition, that draws the surrounding space into an open-ended landscape.

Koo Jeong-A Dreams & Thoughts (2007) discreetly introduces 30,000 sticks of unwrapped chewing gum into the gallery space. This everyday mass-produced material is used to investigate ignored spatial qualities and create a subtle perceptual readjustment.

Knut Henrik Henriksen Untitled (2007) is a wooden wall that runs the length of the gallery, following the soft curves of the banisters and the central window in a 40 metre-long wave.

Opening: 16 march 2007

Royal College of Art Galleries
Kensington Gore - London
Hours: 10am-6pm daily
Free Admission

IN ARCHIVIO [21]
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dal 14/10/2014 al 15/10/2014

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