Archive for the ‘Uncategorised’ Category

Stanley Picker Fellow Nicole Wermers Nominated for Turner Prize 2015

Artist Nicole Wermers has been shortlisted for the Turner Prize 2015. Her nomination follows the solo presentation Infrastruktur at Herald St Gallery in London and the completion of Wermers’s recent Stanley Picker Fellowship with her exhibition  The London Shape  in Spring 2014. Wermers is due to produce a Stanley Picker Gallery Edition to conclude her Fellowship, the details of which will be available over the coming weeks.

Stanley Picker Fellow Elizabeth Price was awarded the prestigious Turner Prize in 2012.

The Turner Prize is awarded to a British artist under 50 for an outstanding exhibition or other presentation of their work in the preceding year. The 2015 exhibition will be presented at the Tramway in Glasgow, an international art-space renowned for commissioning, producing and presenting contemporary arts projects.

The members of the Turner Prize 2015 Jury are:
Mr Alistair Hudson, Director, Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art
Jan Verwoert, Critic and Curator
Ms Joanna Mytkowska, Director, Warsaw Museum of Modern Art
Ms Kyla McDonald, Artistic Director, Glasgow Sculpture Studios
The jury is chaired by Dr Penelope Curtis, Director of Tate Britain.

The winner of the prize will be announced on 7 December 2015.

 

Nicole Wermers: Tate Britain Commission

Editioned Work for Refurbished Café

Stanley Picker Fellow Nicole Wermers has completed a commissioned work for Tate Britain consisting of a ‘double-fronted’ teaspoon designed for public use within their newly refurbished Café, Members Room and Whistler Restaurant, reopening in November 2013. The spoon will be used alongside an otherwise regular cutlery in the manner of an endless edition.

Entitled Manners the unusual spoon has two bowls, one at each end of the handle, subtly different in size and design to reflect the shape of spoons at different periods of modernity. 20th Century art has a strong connection with cafés and the associated bohemian culture and its rituals. The spoon is at the centre of that ritual, being the tool to mix together its ingredients. Manners is a conceptual and sculptural intervention within the transitional spaces of Tate Britain which play host to the intimate, everyday ritual of preparing and drinking tea and coffee.

The transformation of the oldest parts of Tate Britain by architects Caruso St John will combine striking new architectural elements and the revealing of beautiful original features throughout the building. With this in mind, Manners is a deliberately subtle intervention, which plays on the idea of “Kunst am Bau” ad absurdum and questions the nature of an artist commission in a museum’s café. In deliberate contrast to the Rex Whistler mural, which wraps around the room and envelops the visitor, Manners is almost invisible upon entering the spaces and yet most diners will come into physical contact with the work.

Wermers’ ongoing interest in the transitional public spaces of cities, such as museums and department stores, lately focused on cafés informed by a period of residency in Rome, that resulted in an exhibition Il Dehors(2012) at the Villa Massimo/German Academy in Rome. An installation of borrowed and rented outdoor furniture and table accessories of various Roman bars and restaurants, the identically set-up units, complete with sugar and napkin dispensers, table cloths and ashtrays, crowded the gallery space as if were a public piazza while reflecting on the way public space is structured and commodified.

For her current Stanley Picker Fellowship at Kingston University, Wermers is developing a body of new work, furthering her research interests around issues of design and public space, towards a solo exhibition at the Gallery in Spring 2014.

The new spoon will be unveiled at the re-opening of Tate Britain on 19 November 2013.

Stanley Picker Fellow Elizabeth Price wins the Turner Prize

Artist Elizabeth Price (Stanley Picker Fellow 2005) has been awarded the Turner Prize  2012 for her solo exhibition earlier this year at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, including the video installation The Woolworths Choir of 1979. Currently showing at Tate Britain, the work deftly juxtaposes a study of ecclesiastical architecture with an archive of pop performances and footage of the real life story of a devastating fire in a Manchester branch of Woolworths that killed 10 people.

Awarded the prize by actor Jude Law at a ceremony on Monday 3 December, in her acceptance speech Price commented  that her career as an artist would not have been possible without the ongoing support of public institutions who have supported her practice over the years. Price received the Stanley Picker Fellowship in 2005 and has recently said of the  experience that  it gave her “a really significant opportunity, early on in my video work, when I wasn’t an obvious suspect”.

The artist’s Stanley Picker Fellowship commission At The House of Mr X (2007), filmed entirely on location at the Picker House on Kingston Hill (pictured above) was exhibited again recently at the Gallery as part of the exhibition The Occupants: Contemporary Perspectives on the Picker House.

Stanley Picker Gallery Director David Falkner says of the news:
“Elizabeth’s Turner Prize win is fantastic news for the Stanley Picker Gallery here at Kingston University, and a clear message that we are selecting the right candidates to join our Fellowships programme. In a year that both Price and current Fellow Andy Holden were also granted the Paul Hamlyn Award, and previous Design Fellows El Ultimo Grito received the London Design Medal, Price’s Turner Prize win marks the end of a spectacular year for the Stanley Picker Fellowships, affirming the significance of our programme in supporting the very best art and design practitioners in developing their careers.”

The Turner Prize exhibition is open at Tate Britain until 6 January 2013, with Price  showing alongside fellow nominees Paul Noble, Luke Fowler and Spartacus Chetwynd.

 

Kingston Culture: Contemporary & Heritage

Kingston Upon Thames offers a wealth of cultural activities for students to engage with. Here are some of the heritage and contemporary points of interest and venues we recommend you visit.

Kingston Museum

Open on Tue, Fri and Sat 10am-5pm & Thurs 10am-7pm
Kingston Museum holds a unique collection of Victorian pioneer photographer Eadweard Muybridge (1830-1904). Muybridge experimented in synthesising motion from photography with his machine, the zoopraxiscope and is best known for Animal Locomotion. A series of photographic plates of running men and horses, animals and birds. Born in Kingston, he moved to the United States in 1852 and returned to the town in the 1890s where he bequeathed his own personal collection of equipment, ephemera and prints to Kingston Museum.

The Picker House

An impeccable late-modernist house in Kingston upon Thames, the Picker House was designed in 1968 by architect Kenneth Wood, for Stanley Picker to live amongst his growing collection of art and design objects. When he retired in 1976 he devoted more time to his interest in art, and built a private gallery in his garden dedicated to the more important items of his growing collection. In 1977 he established the Stanley Picker Trust to support the education and careers of young arts practitioners. Stanley died in 1982 leaving in the Trust, the House and its Collection, an enduring legacy that ensures his passion for the arts lives on to this day. The Picker House is open for a limited number of pre-arranged group visits on weekdays from April to October, with visiting parties no larger than 12 people at any one time. For further information please contact the Stanley Picker Trust Administrator on 020 8942 4542 (part time) or email lorraine@stanleypickertrust.org.

Dorich House Museum

Upcoming Open Days: Fri 7 Nov, Fri 28 Nov, Fri 5 Dec & Tue 16 Dec 2014.
Guided Tours 11.30am and 2.30pm
Price 4, 3 concessions, children under 16 free
Owned by Kingston University, Dorich House Museum was the studio home of sculptor Dora Gordine and her husband the Hon. Richard Hare. The Museum holds the most significant collection of Gordines bronzes, paintings and drawings, as well as an exquisite collection of Russian Imperial Art collected by Hare. Dorich House comprises of two studios, a gallery and top floor apartment designed entirely by Gordine in 1935/6.

Kingston Navigation Wheel

A free edition, designed by Paul Farrington/Studio Tonne, the Stanley Picker Gallerys Kingston Navigation Wheel maps five cultural walking trails around Kingston on the themes of Bridges, Death, Muybridge, 3 Fishes and Made Here.  Pick up your free Kingston Navigation Wheel at the Stanley Picker Gallery.

Public Art

David Mach Out of Order 1989 the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames (Pictured above)
The Rose Theatre is situated close to Kingstons historic Market Square, offering a comprehensive programme of live theatre and music.

Music

Banquet Records
Our Friends Records
The Fighting Cocks: Live Music Venue

Opportunities: Proposals, Professional Practice & Volunteering

Stanley Picker Gallery Lobby

The Gallery Lobby is available to students to hold events, present ideas and showcase their work. We accept proposals for one-off events or displays lasting up to three days (Thurs-Sat). All activities must take place when Stanley Picker Gallery is open to the public and must adhere to the health and safety guidelines provided.

Volunteering

The Gallery welcomes volunteers from all backgrounds and we invite those interested to complete and return a Volunteer Enquiry Form to picker@kingston.ac.uk For legal reasons we can only accept those over the age of 18.

For more information more please contact Natalie Kay on 020 8417 4074 or email Natalie Kay .

El Ultimo Grito & POI: London Design Festival at the V&A

For the London Design Festival 2014, Stanley Picker Gallery is launching pilotschannel.org a new web-resource promoting experimental models of design education across the globe.

The Internet has an insatiable capacity to disseminate new knowledge far beyond the realms of traditional academia, making a previously unimaginable wealth of expertise readily available to all. Group-based learning, making through physical interaction and practical collaboration play fundamental roles within design development, but such activity is threatened within a formal education sector affected by social, technological, geographic, economic and cultural changes impacting its future. Pilots seeks to identify the questions that are to be addressed in order to adapt and respond to this radically changing environment and to provide the next models of design education.

Pilots: Navigating Next Models of Design Education  was a programme of experimental participatory workshops, curated with El Ultimo Grito, addressing the impact of the internet on studio-based design education. Involving a host of participating education experts, designers, artists, academics and students, the initial Pilots sessions took place at the Stanley Picker Gallery throughout May 2013 and were led by El Ultimo Grito with Daniel Charny, Ronen Kadushin and Matt Ward.

The new website will be launched at an event at the Victoria & Albert Museum on Monday 15 September as part of London Design Festival 2014.

Andy Holden & Elizabeth Price Win Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award 2012

Our congratulations to current Stanley Picker Fellow Andy Holden and 2005 Fellowship recipient Elizabeth Price, also nominated for this year’s Turner Prize, who have both received the Paul Hamlyn Foundation Awards for Artists 2012. The announcements were made during a recent ceremony at the organization’s new headquarters in London King’s Cross. The artists are showing together at the Stanley Picker Gallery until 24 November 2012 as part of the exhibition The Occupants: Contemporary Perspectives on the Picker House.

Holden and Price join visual artists Ed Atkins, Pavel Bchler and Lis Rhodes, as well as composers Steve Beresford, Eliza Carthy and Edmund Finnis, to each receive 50,000 over three years to spend as they wish.

“Since 1994, PHF has given nearly 4m to artists and composers to buy some time, pay some bills, dream some dreams. Its one of the best investments weve made,” commented PHF chair Jane Hamlyn, Paul Hamlyn’s daughter and the founding director of Frith Street Gallery.

Previous beneficiaries of the grant include, for the visual arts, Mark Leckey, Tomma Abts, Jeremy Deller, Ben Rivers, and Rose Wylie.

Accolades for Previous Stanley Picker Fellows Elizabeth Price & El Ultimo Grito

Two previous Stanley Picker Fellows have been given prestigious accolades this year, confirming their individual contributions to the worlds of fine art and design and bringing prominence to the Gallery’s Fellowship programme through their developing career trajectories.

Stanley Picker Fellow (2005) Elizabeth Price has been nominated forthe Turner Prize 2012for her solo exhibition earlierthisyear at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead.

Currently showing at Tate Britain alongside fellow nominees Paul Noble, Luke Fowler and Spartacus Chetwynd is Price’s filmThe Woolworths Choir of 1979, a work partly based upon the real story of a fire in a Manchester branch of Woolworths more than twenty years ago. In 2007 the artist presented At the House of Mr X for her Fellowship exhibition at the Stanley Picker Gallery. Inspired by the Picker House, the film is currently being shown as part of The Occupants exhibition dedicated to arts patron Stanley Picker on the thirtieth anniversary of his death.

The Turner Prize 2012 is open at Tate Britain until 6 January 2013. Elizabeth Price will be discussing her video installations at Tate Britain on Tuesday 13 November at 6.30pm. The winner will be announced on Monday 3 December 2012duringa live broadcast by Channel4.

The very first Stanley Picker Fellows in Design in 2004, El Ultimo Grito have now been awarded the London Design Medal 2012, given each year to an individual/s who have made a significant contribution to design and to London. Previous recipients include Marc Newson, Paul Smith, Zaha Hadid, and Thomas Heatherwick.

El Ultimo Grito’s Roberto Feo, Senior Research Fellow in the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, and Rosario Hurtado, herself a Kingston University alumna, were both presented with the award at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office as part of the London Design Festival 2012, now in its sixth year.The 2012 panel included Alexander Payne, Head of Design at Phillips de Pury, gallery owner and curator Libby Sellers, Martin Roth, Director of V&A, Gwyn Miles, Director of Somerset House and Ron Arad, winner in 2011.

El Ultimo Grito are also currently showing at Derwent Gallery London as part ofa programme of exhibitionsentitled Exchanges Around Construction curated by Andrew Bick. Their exhibition Designing An Echo runs until 24 November 2012.

Gallery Collection: New Acquisitions

Stanley Picker Gallery Collection

The Stanley Picker Gallery has now acquired new works from some of its recent Fellows, including artists Elizabeth Price (Fellow 2005) and David Austen (2008), the design-collective public works (2006) and the illustrator Sara Fanelli (2007), to add to its growing collection of works on paper. All works in the collection have been generously donated by Stanley Picker Fellows as well as other artists and designers associated with the Gallerys programme.

Many of these works are now on public display across Kingston University. The Universitys River House headquarters, at 53-57 High Street, has an extensive selection of pieces reflecting the Fellowships 34 year history, including a painting by Jeremy Henderson (the first Stanley Picker Fellow in 1977) and the above new acquisition by Sara Fanelli, based upon her exhibition 6 Characters in Search of an Author. Two vibrant collages by the Spanish design-duo El Ultimo Grito (2005) are also currently exhibited in the Faculty of Art, Design & Architectures main Faculty office entrance.

Images of many of the works in the Stanley Picker Gallery Collection can be seen in the Fellowship archive section of this website.

Louder Than Bombs: What Difference Does It Make?

Week 7

Fighting consumer culture, climate change, authority and injustice (“wherever it hides its filthy face”) are the vacuum cleaner’s bread and butter causes; Creative Resistance, Civil Disobedience, Corporate Interventions, Pranks, Hacktivism and Subvertising, the tools of choice. But with crisis dictating the agenda there has been little time to ask “What Difference Does It Make?”

For Louder Than Bombs, the semi-notorious artist-activist presented a variety of projects, actions and battles never clearly presented or documented before for the first time. This included a gallery installation of anecdotal wall-based texts, and a series of new public interventions including a participatory workshop Work is a 4 Letter Word conducted with students and artist-activists.

For the roundtable discussion What Difference Does It Make? the vacuum cleaner invited fellow artists and activists to present and discuss work created in direct response to the 2009 UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. The event, chaired by Olivia Chissel, included contributions from The Gluts and The Institute for the Art and Practice of Dissent at Home who, in place of increasing their carbon-footprint, sent instructions for their contribution to be performed by the vacuum cleaner instead.

The week’s residency culminated in the performance This Civilization. Staged in collaboration with artist Franko B, the vacuum cleaner’s body was marked with the words “This Civilisation is Fucked”, the action serving as both sweeping political statement and intensely personal testimony.

www.thevacuumcleaner.co.uk/whatdifferencedoesitmake