Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Trevor Kiernander
I was recently overcome by acquisitiveness at this year's Goldsmiths MA Show, and bought a drawing by Trevor Kiernander (in the picture above, from left to right, the third one along the top). I am pleased to hear he is now going to be showing in the Xmas show at Bearspace, and will have his own show there in January.
See his website here.
Labels:
artists
More Frieze
Again, apologies to artists for lack of credits, except Cornelia Parker's flattened silverware at the top, which this photo doesn't do justice to...
Labels:
artists
Frieze Art Fair
Some naff pix taken on my camera phone at Frieze of some of the things I liked. Unfortunately I am unable to credit the artists...except for the plates which is Richard Wentworth (Goldsmiths lecturer, class of 79)...
Labels:
artists
Cai Guo Qiang
During Open Studios at Deptford X I had a visit from Amanda Francis (one of the DX committee) who told me of her trip to the Guggenheim in Bilbao earlier in the year where she had seen the work of an artist whose name she couldn't remember. She described it as a giant shipwreck spilling lots of broken china...
So I looked it up. Another fantastic Chinese artist, Cai Guo Qiang. I found a review here. The reviewer (Beth S. Gersh-Nesic) says of the piece: "Reflection-A Gift from Iwaki (2004), is the most sublime work of twenty-first century art, to date. An enormous excavated wooden boat, found in Iwaki, Japan, the hull is filled with and spills out buckets and buckets of mostly white (some light blue) Chinese porcelain figurines, dishes and other common vessels. Its gargantuan scale feels vaguely mythic, as if it came from the bowels of Davy Jones' locker or a Spielbergian movie set. Surely, the most indelible image of the entire show."
Cai Guo Qiang is best known for his pyrotechnics however, and was the Director of Visual and Special Effects for the opening and closing ceremonies in Beijing's 2008 Olympic Games, which of course were so impressive that British viewers twittered that it was all done with CGI.
Cai Guo Qiang's own site: www.caiguoqiang.com
See a video (and others) made of the Guggenheim show here.
Labels:
artists,
Cai Guo Qiang
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