Showing posts with label Museum project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museum project. Show all posts

Saturday, June 12, 2010

webs of connection...

This week if you visited you will have perhaps seen my 4 posts on Maps. Compelled along over several days I was! I happened to visit things magazine - a weblog from the V and A Museum and found they had mentioned Mappa Mundi which I'd put together on their post titled Cities in 3D. Their posts always contain a series of links in many directions... making it a valuable research and browse tool.

things magazine, an occasional weblog (and even more occasional magazine) devoted to curatorial tendencies, random collections, objects old and new, contemplations and discoveries. We also have tumblr,flickr and photography archives, as well as an RSS feed

Text from post:

I love sheds, the work of Philip Cooper (via NDG) / artist Sophie Munns has put together a post on the Mappa Mundi, ‘sheet of the world’ / Destroying the Laboratory for the sake of the experiment, a photographic and poetic journey through the ‘England of the Now’, withMark Power and Daniel Cockrill.

They have a brilliant series of weblinks and blogs to investigate. Here's a few!

things


One blog on their lists I also visit is Moon River and this morning I was drawn to a post in a series she also did referring to Maps over a month or so ago.
This April 28 post is titled Psalm 151 and the text gives an excellent description of the artist Michael Gedalyovich's intention behind the works.I was really drawn to the manner in which these are painted first up .The brush-strokes so evident, the colour such a particular palette - fresco-like, somehow archaic and yet contemporary in feel.





Psalm 151

by Michael Gedalyovich (details views), is a large scale painting (The entire painting is 230x140 cm, oil on plywood). The painting originally is relating to two maps of Jerusalem from the 19th century. one from Austria and one is Turkish, both had their interests in the city. so the maps functioned as a "scientific"' "accurate' depiction but also as a narrative like painting, each empire depicted in the map it's own interests. The artist used both maps simultaneously while creating over the painted space many small scenarios that creates by themselves new stories, new connections, new layers of interpretation, some of them are taken from Sufi paintings, comic books, erotic drawing, war albums etc...  quoted from post.













Michael Gedalyovich, Psalm 151 (detail) oil on plywood, 230x140 cm
"Jerusalem as an object of aspiration, of utopia, the Jerusalem as described in Psalms, is recreated here as a fantastic, imaginative, fictional zone filled with fantastic creatures, Heroes and futuristic yet naïve like spacecrafts, some kind of animated kingdom. The book of Psalm in the Old Testamony holds 150 chapters, the painting represent the 151 one##Although for many years scholars believed that Psalm 151 might have been an original Greek composition and that “there is no evidence that Psalm 151 ever existed in Hebrew”, now from the Dead Sea scrolls that is considered that this psalm did in fact exist in Hebrew and was a part of the psalter used by the Qumran community".

TEXT: at Moon River. This blog covers a brilliant range of artists. She is based in Tel Aviv, Israel.



Thursday, November 19, 2009

Concealed, Discovered, Revealed

archive for june, 2008 - post titled Australia - weblog of Sue Lawty

In May I posted on this artist from the UK who had a residency at the Victoria and Albert Museum with an excellent blog which is ongoing. Recent posts refer to a trip to Australia. Below are a series of articles about the World Beach Project which has been a wonderful off-shoot from her former residency that engaged people around the world to join in and post back their images. In the last 10 minutes I have had trouble linking to her blog site...so if that is not corrected you can enter the web site as below or click on May above and hopefully that will facilitate the connection. Her writing is a delight to read - intelligent but very accessible, thoughtful and very rich in ideas to leave you pondering. Click on the images with text to enlarge for reading! her other work is exquisite so do take a look if you can spare a few minutes!



archive july 2007 - Sue Lawty




archive august 2007



Saturday, October 17, 2009

art interventions by nuria mora

This morning I came across Nuira Mora's work through Poppytalk  - listed under decayed - in a  post featuring work from the artists's website of paintings carried out to cover graffittied walls. The characteristic geometric signature that is Nuria Mora's at once enlivens and calms the eye. Her website comes across as distinctive, novel and charming, yet somehow gutsy. Do have a look at www.nuriamora.com  - more art interventions like this I would love to see. Nuira's visual language appears quite sparse and abstracted but there is a richness to her ideas that became apparent as I investigated further. The watercolour I included hints at an interesting vision for living environments in urban settings. I'd like to read more on this artist!





























watercolour work






at the Tate Modern 
NB Nuria's exhibitions that I viewed form the Tate and Berlin were collaborative projects. 



from planetprozess in Berlin 







cosmopoetica  in Cordoba

Monday, September 28, 2009

(what is this?)





I've posted before on (what is this?) a.k.a. parenthetically // an undisciplined record of passing fancies. That's because Angela has a way with words that I find compelling, and when she's not up to her ears in her other amazing projects and actually finds a moment for this blog, then one is generally in for a treat! Today I find she has hunted down some US war-time Govt posters following on from her previous post on such posters from war-time UK. Rather than elaborate here I urge you to click over to "Do with less" posted 27.9.09 and also the previous post "Note to self: Eat Greens, Defend Freedom" posted 25.9.09.
I was fascinated with how topical these poster themes are now...even if the agendas behind the issues are distinctly different. Cheap flights and get-away offers bombard us daily...this temptation for those with time/cash collides with critical global consequences of increased travel. The poster below is a classic...so not of this time! Now a poster might read "get off that plane and when you're at home switch of all those damn lights will you, and the air-conditioning, 3 fridges and 2 freezers, 5 TV's, and clothes-dryer! Well no...that's a bit too cheeky for a Govt poster!

Thanks for the fascinating look at these signs from a very critical time not so long ago Angela!


Sunday, July 5, 2009

between solitude and unbridled communication...

Researching a particularly  interesting blog this evening by the Manchester Hermit- artist Ansuman Biswas, currently living confined in a Gothic Tower at the Manchester Museum for 40 days and 40 nights, took me on quite a journey. Really, to do justice to the story take time if possible to read it for yourself. In the artist's own words:
"i feel a deep dismay at the ecological crisis facing humanity, which I experience as a loss of beauty. And I feel challenged to respond using the full weight of my training as a contemplative and an artist. But along with this strong agenda I am also interested in an art which is abstract or open-ended.  
The tension between purpose and play is also an essential condition of the hermit, who is introverted but has a social role. i am interested in exploring precisely this ambiguity...    ...the hermit sees right through himself by fully appreciating the immense variety of phenomena, without either coveting or rejecting any of those phenomena. "     The title of this post comes from the artist writing about the space in which the hermit exists. 

Ansuman
Ansuman Biswas
header reduced
images from the Tower

The Tower08

The Tower05
The Tower06
diatoms
Diatom-  posted July 2

About Alchemy
an image of The Beloved and Forsaken exhibition, showing many pill boxes in the foreground and some biological spirit specimens in the background.
Also happening in conjunction with The Manchester Museum is  a research programme called Alchemy, a project initiating and facilitating artists access to The Manchester Museum and The University of Manchester. Artist fellowships, curating opportunities, research and access to collections for contemporary art projects are made possible with Arts Council England Funding.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

A great find: Sue Lawty's blog.

I need to find out more about this...but these images do make me very curious about the World Beach Project  Sue Lawty carried out in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum. If you look to a much earlier May 09 post on my blog you will see the extraordinary work of Jim Denevan which is using the beach as his canvas.
Sue Lawty is an artist and weaver and keeps a weblog called  Concealed, Discovered, Revealed  with the V and A where she is an artist-in-residence. Click here to read her excellent blog.
Stones




Puerto Naos, La Palma










Moo cards made from World Beach Project patterns
Moo cards made from World Beach Project patterns
Moo cards made from World Beach Project patterns
www.vam.ac.uk/worldbeach  will tell you much more about this amazing project.