Archive for the ‘Uncategorised’ Category

Louder Than Bombs: Murder at the Wool Hall – Prick Your Finger

Week 6

Prick Your Finger is a yarn shop and textile gallery in Bethnal Green London that’s putting the rock ‘n’ roll back into textile and fashion production. Run by Rachael Matthews and Louise Harries, Prick Your Finger is concerned that British textile production has been lost to unethical manufacturing of disposable fashion.

For Louder Than Bombs, Prick Your Finger turned the gallery into a factory sweat-shop and constructed the world’s first bicycle powered wool mill, which was used to turn unwanted sheep fleeces from within the M25 into a range of seductive yarns. “We’re asking the world to listen to sensible ways of profiting from nature without exploitation.”

Visitors were given an opportunity to learn about the different stages of crafting yarn, assisting with carding and spinning different types of fleece in order to create knitwear of their own. The week at the Wool Hall included charting production line efficiency on the walls of the factory office, providing regular tea breaks to ensure worker satisfaction, and culminated in a chance for participants to clock-in some extra evening hours during Overtime at the Factory Disco.

www.prickyourfinger.blogspot.co.uk

Louder Than Bombs: When I Fell For You I Fell Like The Bomb / Sleeping With Your Enemy

Stacy Makishi & Yoshiko Shimada

Week 5

Hawaii-born artist Stacy Makishi and Japanese artist Yoshiko Shimada work independently across a wide variety of media, investigating perspectives on cultural identity, sexual politics, and personal and private memory.

Taking two previously instigated projects as their starting point, Makishi and Shimada collaborated for the very first time during Louder Than Bombs. Considering the legacies of Hiroshima and Pearl Harbour, the artists developed a live project reflecting their shared fascinations with the parallels, ironies and complex histories of political, cultural and sexual relations between Japan and the U.S.

When I Fell For You, I Fell Like the Bomb/Sleeping With Your Enemy comprised a series of participatory workshops and installations, including a sushi-rolling demonstration by Shimada exploring global perspectives on cultural hybridity and difference, and a creativity workshop by Makishi.

The residency concluded with a collaborative, ‘post-apocalyptical’ performance piece, entitled The Last Chance Cabaret, fusing music, installation and live performance.

Special thanks to Vick Ryder and Alex White

www.stacymakishi.com

Louder Than Bombs: Present

Ansuman Biswas

Week 4

“What is there left to give? What do we share now? My gift is the present.” Ansuman Biswas

Gifts can be powerful social binders, but today aid is big business and can be a balm for post-colonial guilt and a lubricant for a post-industrial economy, where poverty and luxury have shifting definitions. Charity can be highly performative; played out in Live Aid, Red Nose Day, Children in Need, and the adoption of third-world babies by Hollywood A-listers.

Dedicated to investigating the shifting social definitions of poverty and luxury in a post-industrial economy, for his residency, Ansuman Biswas entered the gallery with nothing – no food, no water, no clothing. He remained in the space for one week, throughout which audiences were welcome to bring to him whatever they thought he might need or want. A web camera was installed in the gallery, providing a 24-hour live view of Biswas’ activities on his website.

A steady stream of visitors throughout the course of the week gifted the artist with an array of both practical and novelty items, in addition to their time, conversation and company, engaging in lively dialogue with Biswas.

The week culminated with a performance piece in which visitors were given an opportunity to collaborate in the use of everything that had been gifted to the artist, after which he symbolically shed all his possessions and left the gallery, just as he had entered, with nothing.

www.ansuman.com

Sarah Kent:  Ansuman Biswas The Kindness of Strangers Phillips, de Pury Magazine (April 2010) pages 102-115

Louder Than Bombs: Napalm Perceptible – A Dictionary for the BNP

Sean Burns

Week 3

“Words are weapons. And I’m in a war!” Andrew Vachss

Racism is on the rise and made worse by the recession. We are all defined by language, yet too often our own voices are educated, socialised, classed, gendered, ethnicised, medicated or otherwise removed. Sean Burn – writer, performer and outsider artist actively involved in disability arts created a Dictionary for the BNP, by interrogating the roots of each entry of a standard English dictionary. Physically deleting all “non-indigenous” words, the artist used language as a “lightning-conductor to deconstruct the absurdities of extremist hate”.

For his residency, Sean Burn installed material throughout the gallery that dealt with issues of verbal abuse and the language of hate. Gallery visitors were invited to contribute to the exhibition by joining in conversations, and writing their reflections on identity, race and social stereotyping on the Gallery walls. The artist also conducted a live workshop and performance in collaboration with fellow artist-activists Ruby Sahota and Mike Layward.

Claiming language as a primary battlefield, the artists challenged terms of hate and abuse by employing various written, visual and performance techniques to overcome and reclaim such words, culminating in the creation of new work spanning theatre, film, spoken word, music and video.

www.gobscure.info

Louder Than Bombs: The Lost Runway

 

Ãine Phillips

Week 2

Ãine Phillips’ The Lost Runway is a collection of specially created sculptural costumes, each dedicated to a ‘lost girl’ as a living personal monument embodying the story of her life.

The Lost Runway is an ideological space invested with beauty, desire, loss and longing. The work is a sensitive, poetic and challenging testimonial to missing persons, and the lifelong searches of their friends and families, giving public form to private memory in the service of human freedom and the right to the protection of life.

The project memorialised ‘lost girls’ from around the world in a series of specially designed costumes developed and created together with BA and MA Fashion students from the Faculty of Art, Design & Architecture at the University.

Using the conventions of the fashion show format, the garments were modeled by the students and invited performance artists in a final catwalk event, that aimed to be both a fitting tribute and a public celebration of the women and girls whose personal stories were being narrated through the show.

Special thanks to Jane Talbot, Stacy Grant, Manuel Vason and all of the students and artists who generously participated in the project.

www.ainephillips.com

Louder Than Bombs: Honey Trap

Steven Levon Ounanian & Thomas Thwaites

Week 1

The black-market operates alongside an open economy of security products and theft insurance. It benefits the open market to hype the risks, as goods that are stolen will need to be replaced. Honey Trap is a bicycle designed to be stolen and able to record its own surroundings: relaying sound, images and other information about its subsequent whereabouts.

Making a spectacle of the crime, this sensational ‘gaze’ is certainly uncomfortable, but allows an examination of rights to surveillance and the treatment of crime in the media. Raising these fundamental concerns through the Honey Trap project, the artists posed the question: “Is our use of someone else’s misfortune, or opportunism, in our art project justified because they stole our bike?”

After customising the bicycle with mobile phone technologies, that could monitor its existence once stolen by relaying images and data back to their project headquarters at the Gallery, it was then left at various locations around the town in the hope it would attract an unsuspecting thief.

Over the course of the residency the artists held informal meetings, public presentations and open debates to consider the technical logistics and legal complexities relating to the project. Participating audiences viewed surveillance footage and photographs taken from the bicycle’s on-board camera, and discussed issues of theft, art and social ethics addressed and raised by the planting of their Honey Trap.

Despite earnest attempts throughout the week to get it stolen – and a playful ‘false-alarm’ by a fellow artist – the bicycle is still currently in the artists’ own possession.

www.stevenlevon.com                 www.thomasthwaites.com

Lines of Investigation

Lines of Investigation
08 June – 25 June 2005

A dynamic interdisciplinary exhibition of process-based drawings, Lines of Investigation highlighted the varied role of drawing in the research and development of ideas for finished designs and artworks.

Specially selected by current Stanley Picker Design Fellows El Ultimo Grito to coincide with the 2005 Faculty Degree Shows, the exhibition gave gallery visitors a chance to appreciate the development of drawn ideas – from doodles to finished drafts – that informed the production of works by a diversity of students graduating in Fashion and Fine Art, Graphics and Illustration, Film & Television, Product Design, Interior Design, Architecture and Landscape. This display of original drawings demonstrated how drawing remains a vital part of the creative process and provided a fascinating insight into the differing styles and working methods of individual artists and designers from a wide variety of disciplines.

The Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture at Kingston University has become internationally recognised for its interdisciplinary research into Drawing as Process that investigates the medium as a diverse yet fundamental process for a whole range artists and designers. Whilst transcending the boundaries of traditional disciplines, the application of new technologies and traditional techniques have created a constantly evolving panorama for the development of drawing practice. As part of Lines of Investigation, the gallery hosted the Drawing Research Network symposium where over thirty delegates, whose main practice is drawing, presented and discussed their current research projects.

A series of new drawings by the Japanese sculptor Mototaka Nakamura were exhibited alongside Lines of Investigation. With a long established career exhibiting throughout the Far East and Europe and as a Professor at Bunsai Art College in Tokyo, Mototaka has been commissioned to produce site-specific sculptural work for a range of prestigious public sites throughout Japan. In these drawings his focus turned to a more private domain. Landscape in a Kitchen, Departure and Arrival presented a series of still-life drawings of an apparently mundane domestic scene. Through the dynamic scale and energy of the drawings, and their repeated formal shifts, the artist invested these utilitarian objects with a sculptural monumentality that belies their casual composition and humble origins.