Tag: private view

Substance ‘TALK’ At Guilford Lane Thursday 15th from 6pm

Talk on thursday evening , 6pm, in the gallery space.


Substance is a group that explores materiality in 21st century art. Material works produced since the 1970s carry deeper intentions that are inevitably read into the time it was produced, or

the context in which it the object is placed. One can no longer view a minimalist sculpture, and consider it purely for its formal qualities. The postmodern agenda almost demands that substantial meaning be applied to material objects. It is difficult to consider a formal artwork in post-modern art, and not engender conceptual or narrative concerns. The exhibiting artists are concerned with materiality and abstraction and apply a deeper substance to their work, either through their process or by implying a reading onto the work.

Each artwork carries within it its own formal aesthetic. In modernist thought it could be viewed as a purely formal work. However on further consideration, one could argue that the materiality of these works in Substance is linked through context. By placing them together we question the nature of their formality, and the bearing that each work has on the others in the space. Substance proposes that when we observe these substances together, the postmodern condition, born of an age of digital and artificial ambiguity, is programmed to read these artworks as more than merely formal. Substance is beyond mere materiality, it is an exploration of today’s insistence for concept and narrative. This show aims to provoke questions in the viewer – are these works purely material, or is there substance to them?

Goldsmiths Private View

Dear all

Here are the details for the Goldsmiths Art Writing MFA degree show – the opening night is Thursday July 8th 6-9pm.

Would be lovely to see you if you can make it.

On the opening night we will be producing some free limited edition artworks and texts to take away.

And – on Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 1pm I’ll be doing a short performance – an evolving reading of Nightjar in three parts.

We are also running a series of events from Friday to Monday 2pm-4pm with invited speakers, readings, presentations and discussions:

Friday How to Publish
Saturday How to Art Writing
Sunday How to Diagram
Monday TBC

Phyllida Barlow: Swamp

10-16 Ashwin Street
London
E8 3DL

+44 (0) 207 923 2950
contact@v22collection.com
www.v22collection.com

Phyllida Barlow

Swamp

Private view: 19 June 6 – 9pm

Exhibition runs from 20 June – 22 August
Thurs-Sat 12noon-6pm, Sun 12noon-4pm
or by appointment

V22 is pleased to invite you to the second in its series of installation solo shows at V22 Ashwin Street.

Phyllida Barlow: Swamp

Some of Phyllida Barlow’s larger sculptures can’t leave the room without being dismantled beyond a point where they could be faithfully reconstructed elsewhere. This means that their current venue is their only habitat – in these specific identities. That’s how they begin their business as room-peculiar installation: the conditions of transferability have been stacked in advance. The precarious materials and construction of the smallest (and most mobile) of them tell of their relation to a similar set of contingencies. All of which is a particular response that can be made to an invitation: the oracular, warning of folly – the folly of course being any investment in absolutes.

Because Barlow’s works are exempt from any persuasively usable reference, their scale is unknowable. This insight is worked through a comparable range of proofs: any apparent instability is illusory – they all occur at the same point in relation to a (non-existent) absolute stability. Same with any appearance of verticality or horizontality, monumentality or ruination, temporariness or permanence. They hog the whole dial. They might therefore have been made from pretty much anything, to any standard of durability, and have invested in them any level of sincerity, authenticity or irreplaceability, but of course they’re not, and the range they do occupy is our (very enjoyable) lesson in precision.

ALL SYSTEMS GO

departure gallery flyerDeparture Gallery. A nomadic platform for contemporary art
Monday 21st June – Sunday 4th July 2010.
6 Trident Way, The International Trading Estate, Southall, UB2 5LF.

A group exhibition of artwork by:

David Angus, Louise Ashcroft, Aglae Bassens, Nathan Birchenough, Claire Blundell-Jones, Helen Collett and Lois Macdonald, Lawrence Daley, Danielle Drainey, Sandra Erbacher, Rita Evans, Rafael Farias,Doug Jones, Helene Kazan, Jonathan Kipps, Paul Lewthwaite, Jo Lathwood, Ben Lloyd, William Mackrell, Nicola McCartney, Savvas Papasavva, Rob Pugh, Ilona Sagar, Tracy Sarroff, Steve Smith, Jackson Sprague, Andrew Sunderland, Unidentified Art Group: Robert Hunt, James Pepper, Rosanne Robertson, Imogen Welch, Rich White, Sarah Tew, Sam Zealey.

Private View: Friday 25th June 2010, 6.30pm- 9.30pm. Refreshments will be served. Free taxi shuttles from Southall Station (12mins from Paddington). Free haircuts from a professional stylist will be available as part of an installation by Unidentified Art Group.

Exhibition: Monday 21st June – Sunday 4th July 2010. Open 7 days a week, 10am-5pm.

All Systems Go brings together a diverse group of artists who work in relation to physical and conceptual systems, which they have created or adapted as frameworks for artistic experimentation. Patterns, rules, collaborative techniques, interventions, mechanical systems and improvisation provide structured starting points which open up a multitude of possibilities for exciting artistic outcomes.

This show is the latest in Departure Gallery’s acclaimed series of exhibitions and residencies on The International Trading Estate, Southall. The exhibition explores the contradictions and parallels between systematic experimentation in contemporary art and the industrial systems used in the factories and distribution units surrounding our vast warehouse space.

Address: Departure Gallery, 7 Trident Way, The International Trading Estate, Southall, UB2 5LF.

Tilsandede, 25 – 29 May 2010

Tilsandede

25 – 29 May 2010
Private View Monday 24 May 6 – 8pm

Sol Archer
Kieran Drury
Sarah McNulty
Alaena Turner

The Reading Room
1st floor Bethnal Green Library
Cambridge Heath Road

London E2 0LH
02089803902
tilsandede@gmail.com

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 9 – 8pm
Friday 9 – 6pm
Saturday 9 – 5pm

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