Wednesday 19 November 2008

Abstract Expressionism

Robert Motherwell Beside the Sea # 42, 1966




Abstract Expressionism


A term first used in connection with Kandinsky in 1919, but more commonly associated with post-war American art. Robert Coates, an American critic, coined it in 1946, referring to Gorky, Pollock and de Kooning. By the 1951 Museum of Modern Art exhibition 'Abstract Painting and Sculpture in America', the term was used to refer to all types of non-geometric abstraction. There are two distinct groups within the movement: Colour Field artists (Rothko, Newman, Still) worked with simple, unified blocks of colour; and gestural painters like Pollock, De Kooning and Hofmann who made use of Surrealist techniques of automatic art. Not all the artists associated with the term produced either purely abstract, or purely Expressionist work: Harold Rosenburg preferred the phrase Action Painting, whilst Greenberg used the less specific 'American Type Painting', and because of the concentration of artists in New York, they are also known as the New York School. The only real connection between Abstract Expressionists was in their artistic philosophy, and publications like Tiger's Eye, an avant-garde magazine that helped spread their ideas. All were influenced by Existentialist ideas, which emphasized the importance of the act of creating, not of the finished object. Most had a Surrealist background, inspired by the presence of Breton, Masson and Matta in New York in the 1940s and by retrospectives on Miró (1941) and Kandinsky (1945), and the Abstract Expressionists sought to express their subconscious through their art. They also shared an interest in Jung's ideas on myth, ritual and memory (inspired by exhibitions of African and American Indian art in 1935 and 1941 respectively) and conceived an almost Romantic view of the artist, seeing their painting as a way of life and themselves as disillusioned commentators on contemporary society after the Depression and the Second World War. Other American artists associated with the movement were Motherwell, Tobey, Kline and Philip Guston.

Sunday 16 November 2008

Surrealism and Design

Oscar Dominguez, "wheelbarrow", 1936


The Surrealists explored unique ways of interpreting the world, turning to dreams and the unconscious as inspiration for a new vision. Their innovative thinking challenged convention, changing perceptions of the world in which they lived and transforming the language of art and design. Surrealist imagery and ideas were absorbed into the worlds of fashion, commercial design, graphics and film and many Surrealist artists were actively engaged with these activities throughout their careers.

During the 1930s Surrealism escaped the bounds of a radical avant-garde art movement and transformed the wider worlds of theatre, design, fashion and advertising. For some, Surrealism's assimilation into the commercial world was to be celebrated and embraced, while for others it went against the political principles of the movement.

The journey from art movement to commercial phenomenon was not merely a matter of artists and designers outside the movement borrowing Surrealist imagery and techniques. It was also precipitated from within.

Surrealism's thematic preoccupations and visual strategies often lent themselves to commercial appropriation, while Surrealist artists themselves frequently worked as designers.

Protest: The Ballet

The patronage of the Ballets Russes provided an opportunity for many avant-garde artists to engage with the world of design. It presented exciting new possibilities for the realisation of an illusory world and, unsurprisingly, attracted some of the leading artists of the early phase of Surrealism - Max Ernst, Jean Miró and André Masson.

The ballet was also one of the first spheres to reveal the wider influence of Surrealism. In 1926 Serge Diaghilev, the artistic director of the Ballets Russes, commissioned Ernst and Miró to design sets for 'Romeo and Juliet'.

The event crystallised debates on the morality of artistic engagement with the commercial world. The Paris premiére was disrupted by a gang blowing whistles, shouting and distributing leaflets. Orchestrated by André Breton and Louis Aragon, who were perhaps goaded into action by Pablo Picasso's suggestion that these artists had sold out, the leaflet or 'Protestation' stated, 'It is inadmissable that ideas should be at the behest of money.'
Surrealism and the Object

Surrealist practise during the 1920s was largely focused on the exploration of automatic processes in writing, drawing, collage and painting. The early 1930s saw the emergence of new debates and a new type of practice - the Surrealist object.

The shift away from text and image towards the constructed object was driven by the need to engage directly with the material world - the world of objects and commerce. The Surrealist object could, it was felt, represent the complexities and contradictions of modern life.

At the instigation of Salvador Dali, several artists began to create Surrealist objects. A basic opposition lay in the creation of integrated sculptural works versus new objects constructed out of pre-existing and often outmoded commodities. These constructions forced new meanings through bizarre juxtapositions that alluded to subjective dreams or desires.

Though intended as a critique of consumer culture, the advent of the Surrealist object allowed for the wider assimilation of Surrealist ideas. The use of commodities pointed to the commercial possibilities of using a Surrealist language for applied and decorative arts, while the juxtaposition of diverse elements opened up new formal solutions in design.

The Illusory Interior


The domestic interior became a staple theme of Surrealism. In Freudian dream analysis, the home no longer signified domesticity and security, but carried a range of disturbing and sexualised meanings that preoccupied the Surrealists. It provided a series of interconnected structures - from cellar and stair to door and attic - symbolic of both psychic and physical scenarios.

For instance, in dream analysis climbing the stair was interpreted as copulation. Refuting rationalist and technologically driven visions of the home, the Surrealists explored a variety of subjective approaches. They celebrated its capacity to convey the historical trace of previous events, contents and inhabitants, and invested old objects with new meanings. By combining the antique, the new and the bizarre, they created a multi-referential environment that offered a stark contrast to the prevailing views in modern design.

Displaying the Body


The representation of the body, and particularly the female body, provides a common thread through the public displays, exhibitions and commercial activities of the Surrealists.

The body became the subject of intense scrutiny - dismembered, fragmented, desecrated, eroticised and eulogised in the pursuit of a range of psychological, sociological and sexual concerns.

The body was a universal. It united the spheres of the physical and psychological, and allowed for an exploration of sexuality as an aspect of modernity. Importantly, the body also proved the primary agent in the commercialisation of Surrealism.

Nature Made Strange


Nature, as one of the key themes of Surrealism, offered a rich store of forms and motifs that were quickly adapted for use in design.

The Surrealists borrowed from disparate sources, including 19th-century natural science, Art Nouveau and new technologies such as microphotography and film. They invested nature with a range of psychological and subjective associations. In particular, nature represented the Surrealist concept of the 'Marvellous' and became a metaphor for the unconscious.

This new symbolism, coupled with the development of biomorphism as an aesthetic strand within Surrealism, led to the adoption of an organic form language by many artists and designers in the 1930s.

In America, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, biomorphism appeared in all fields of design and garnered a whole range of new meanings. 'Free-form', as it became known, clearly carried associations of the subjective, but also came to symbolise reassurance and nurture in the nuclear age.

Dream


In 1940 Dali summed up his desire to make objects: 'I try to create fantastic things, magical things, things like in a dream. The world needs more fantasy. Our civilisation is too mechanical. We can make the fantastic real, and then it is more real than that which actually exists.'

In rejecting the rational, mechanical world and celebrating dream and the fantastic, Dali reiterated a fundamental objective of Surrealism. But in making the 'fantastic real', Dali also acknowledged the necessity of a direct engagement with the material world and the world of materialism-the world of Surreal things.

Monday 3 November 2008

Surrealism

André Masson, Mannequin, 1938.


“The simplest Surrealist act consists of dashing down into the street, pistol in hand, and firing blindly, as fast as you can pull the trigger, into the crowd.”


André Breton


The Surrealist manifesto in 1924 defines Surrealism as:


“Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express - verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other manner - the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by the thought, in the absence of any control exercised by reason, exempt from any aesthetic or moral concern. This can be applied in any circumstance of life, and is not merely restricted to the artistic realm. The importance of the dream as a reservoir of Surrealist inspiration is also highlighted”.


The manifesto also refers to the numerous precursors of Surrealism that embodied the Surrealist spirit prior to his composing the manifesto, including such luminaries as Giorgio de Chirico, the Marquis de Sade, Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, the Comte de Lautréamont, Raymond Roussel, and even back as far as Dante.


The manifesto was written with a great deal of absurdist humour, demonstrating the influence of the Dada movement which immediately preceded it in France, and in which Breton was also a key player.


The group aimed to revolutionize human experience, including its personal, cultural, social, and political aspects, by freeing people from what they saw as false rationality, and restrictive customs and structures. Breton proclaimed, the true aim of Surrealism is "long live the social revolution, and it alone!" To this goal, at various times surrealists aligned with communism and anarchism.


Giorgio de Chirico, and his Metaphysical art, was one of the important joining figures between the philosophical and visual aspects of Surrealism. De Chirico was an influence on the two artists who would be even more closely associated with Surrealism in the public mind: Salvador Dalí and Rene Magritte. He would, however, leave the Surrealist group in 1928.


Metaphysical art (Italian: Pittura metafisica) is the name of an Italian art movement, created by Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà in 1917. Their dream-like paintings of squares typical of idealized Italian cities, as well as apparently casual juxtapositions of objects, represented a visionary world which engaged most immediately with the unconscious mind, beyond physical reality, hence the name. Pittura Metafisica provided significant impetus for the development of Surrealism.


André Masson was one of the most enthusiastic employers of automatic drawing, making a number of automatic works in pen and ink. Masson would often force himself to work under strict conditions, for example, after long periods of time without food or sleep, or under the influence of drugs. He believed forcing himself into a reduced state of consciousness would help his art be free from rational control, and hence get closer to the workings of his subconscious mind.


“How did I think up my drawings and my ideas for painting? Well I'd come home to my Paris studio in Rue Blomet at night, I'd go to bed, and sometimes I hadn't any supper. I saw things, and I jotted them down in a notebook. I saw shapes on the ceiling...”


Juan Miro’


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Surrealism as a visual movement had found a method: to expose psychological truth by stripping ordinary objects of their normal significance, in order to create a compelling image that was beyond ordinary formal organization, in order to evoke empathy from the viewer.


The characteristics of this style - a combination of the depictive, the abstract, and the psychological - came to stand for the alienation which many people felt in the modern period, combined with the sense of reaching more deeply into the psyche.


Another important surrealist artis was Meret Oppenheim. Many of Oppenheim’s pieces consisted of everyday objects arranged as such that they allude to female sexuality and feminine exploitation by the opposite sex. Her paintings focused on the same themes. Her originality and audacity established her as a leading figure in the movement.


Dalí was a versatile artist, not limiting himself only to painting in his artistic activities. Some of his more popular artistic works are sculptures and other objects, and he is also noted for his contributions to theatre, fashion, and photography, among other areas.


Two of the most popular objects of the surrealist movement were the Lobster Telephone and the Mae West Lips Sofa, completed by Dalí in 1936 and 1937 respectively, for the Surrealist artist and patron Edward James. Lobsters and telephones had strong sexual connotations for Dalí and he drew a close analogy between food and sex.


The wood and satin Mae West Lips Sofa was shaped after the lips of actress Mae West, whom Dalí found fascinating. West in fact was previously the subject of Dalí's 1935 painting The Face of Mae West.

Surrealism was a deeply revolutionary movement that developed in Paris, partly in response to the carnage and futility of the World War I. Calling for a revision of values, it was a reaction against positivism, realism, reason, logic, and the 19th-c. belief in progress.


For three years its activity and personnel coincided with those of the Paris branch of Dada, but the publication of André Breton's Manifeste du surréalisme in 1924 finally established its greater creative potential.


Surrealist artworks feature the element of surprise, irrationality and unexpected juxtapositions. Particularly important was Sigmund Freud's work with free association, dream analysis and the hidden unconscious to liberate imagination.


In the Surrealist Manifesto Breton advocates the idea that ordinary and depictive expressions are vital and important, but that the sense of their arrangement must be open to the full range of imagination.


Major Surrealist Artists:


Eileen Agar, (1899 - 1991)

Hans (Jean) Arp (1886-1966)

Hans Bellmer (1902-1975)

Luis Buñuel (1900 – 1983)

Salvador Dali (1904-1989)

Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978)

Max Ernst (1891-1976)

Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966)

Rene Magritte (1898-1967)

Andre Masson (1896-1987)

Joan Miro (1893-1983)

Meret Oppenheim (1913 - 1985)

Yves Tanguy (1900-1955)

Saturday 25 October 2008

If you need help with your essay.

If you need help with your essay you can contact Anna Gabryel-Morrison to arrange a one-to-one meeting. Her college telephone number is: 02075735224 or you can drop her an e-mail: a.gabryel-morrison@kcc.ac.uk

Saturday 18 October 2008

Example of a Contextual Studies Essay

Tiziano Vecellio Danae and the Shower of Gold, 1554. Museo del Prado, Madrid


A Look At Titian's Painting Danae
By John Smith.

Tiziano Vecellio, a Venetian Artist known as Titan, was commissioned in the years of 1544-1546 to paint a canvas, by a cardinal, Alessandro Farnese. The painting that Alessandro commissioned was the Danae. Danae is a painting that still to this day is very ambiguous. When Titian was commissioned, in order to oblige the cardinal, he gave Danae the features of Donna Olimpia, a famous courtesan with whom Alessandro was thought to have had a liaison (Huse and Wolters, 1996).

Through visual description, Titian's use of light and colour, as well as the many compositional elements that are displayed, Danae truly becomes recognized and understood.
When looking at Danae, the viewer is first drawn to the nude women reclining across the picture plane in a three-quarter frontal pose. Danae is reclining on a bed that is dressed with white linens, and rests her head atop a white pillow. Her right arm is bent at the elbow, and extends slightly outwards beside her. Danae's right leg is bent up at the knee, and her left leg is bent at the knee as well, however extending downwards. The only drapery she wears, keeping her from being naked, is a white linen bed sheet that drapes across her upper thigh. Titian was an artist known for his celebration of the human body.

Through painting a women nude, Titian aimed for a sense of calmness and serenity in the feminine body (Huse and Wolters, 1996); therefore, Danae's form is very distinct and has a sculptural quality. Danae gazes upwards, which then leads the viewer to the burst of golden showers and coins that appear high above her torso. In mythology, there are many different stories surrounding Danae; however, in the book the "Metamorphoses", it tells of Danae being imprisoned in a tower (however the reason is unknown) where Jupiter, in the form of golden rain, impregnates her (Nash 1985). Therefore, floating above the torso area of Danae is the shower of golden rain. The coins that are shown within this shower of golden rain have been given many different meanings by many different mythographers, aiding to the sense of Danae being so ambiguous. Some say the coins represent marriage and wealth; others say the coins represent Danae as a prostitute; therefore, if Danae is a prostitute, the coins in Jupiter's rain are his way of paying her for her services. From the golden rain, the viewer is drawn to the standing nude Cupid on the right hand side of the painting. As Jupiter arrives, Cupid turns to the side, away from the god's explosion. Cupid here is shown as a young boy. He has a small, plump body, and a very childlike face.

The distinguishing feature that makes the viewer aware that this is not just a boy, is the colourful wings that he wears on his back. Titian, being a Venetian Artist, was intrigued by colour, and fantastically used them within his work. Colorito, a term that describes the application of paint without line in bright colour, is displayed in the wings of Cupid as well as throughout the entire painting of Danae. In Titian's use of colorito, the painting lacks an emphasis on line, and brings forth a new style that is far from any of the Florentine Painters, such as Michelangelo. Titian's new style was disliked by many of the Renaissance painters up until this time; however, in Venice, Titian's style quickly became acknowledged, and he became recognized as a master (Vasari 1986).

The last element that completes the viewers leading eye is Cupid's right arm. As he turns away from Jupiter's rain, he begins to leave the room, leading with his arm, as his work for Danae is done. With his arm pushing outward off of the painting, the viewer gets an overall feeling for the work. In mythology, with so much of the story left untold, it is a wonder why Titian, for his first poesia, a mythological character created purely for pleasure in Venetian Art, chose such a minor subject matter in terms of textual importance.

The source of light deeply adds to the effect of this painting. Not only does it aid in the overall mood of the work, but it also adds to Titian's strong use of colour. The light displayed in this work is coming from the far left side. It casts significantly warm tones, which make the viewer believe the light source is that of candlelight; perhaps it is shining from the bedside table beside Danae. With the light coming from Danae's right side, there is a strong sense of shadows that are cast throughout the work. The heavy yellow curtain that hangs from the top left corner, casts a strong shadow across Danae's face. Within Titian's work, a shadow cast across a figures face became a sign of tragedy; this was also displayed through other pieces of his works, such as "The Rape of Europa" as well as the "Fall of Man" (Rosand 1997).

The lighting in the work also affects the overall mood. With the casting of the light being warm, the painting is given a calm, relaxing, and romantic feeling. To Titian, the only way to establish a mood, or to communicate a feeling to the viewer, was through the use of colour. All of the colour combinations that Titian uses within the Danae equally add to the overall mood. Titian, being a Venetian Artist, was very concerned with the use of colour in his works; in part, this was due to the richness of Venice being a colourful and cosmopolitan city due to trades with the East (Williams 1975). Titian was thought to have believed that to paint with only colours, without drawing on the canvas first, was what the true principles of art were (Williams 1975). Titian was the first artist to "make of colour an entity unto itself; and in so doing he opened a path to generations of painters have followed down to the present day" (Williams 1975, p.16).

Within the composition of Danae, there are certain elements that complete the overall unity of the work; without the incorporation of certain elements, the work would have been incomplete with a lack of understanding for the overall mood. Surface textures play a strong role in understanding the composition. With Danae positioned the way she is, the bed sheet around her realistically folds. With the warm glow that Danae's body gives off, the light, soft, delicate feel of the bed sheet helps project her mood. As the viewer looks into the background, texture is still projected, however in a very subtle yet realistic way. In reality, when looking at something with texture, the further away you are from it, the duller it appears; through surface texture, Titian gives the Danae a very realistic feel.

With the sense of texture being acknowledged, it lends a hand to the perspective of depth in the work. Titian definitely displays a sense of depth within the Danae. In the foreground, lit well by light is Danae. Slightly off to the side is Cupid; Cupid is lit by the light, however not as clearly as Danae, as he is father from the source of light. When looking deeper into the painting, strong shadows as well as darkness are shown due to the amount of light a single candle gives off. In the very background is a window, where the horizon is slightly shown. This window helps create a sense of depth within the work; without the window, the background would be nothing but black, and the sense of depth that eludes would be lost. With the display of light, as well as the view of the horizon through the window in the background, Titian successfully creates a sense of believable space within Danae.

The way the elements within the composition are arranged is an important aspect to the meaning of Danae; the way the viewer is taken through the painting by the arrangement helps tell the story of Danae from beginning to end. If the elements within the composition were arranged any differently, the poesia of Danae would be lost.

Danae was the first piece of commissioned work that Titian painted in his transition of style. However, in changing his ideal style, he was successful in satisfying both his own ideas as well as his patrons' wants. This was in part due to the similarities in Titian and his patrons; they both thought that the world should embody beauty and aesthetic pleasure (Williams 1975). Alessandro Farnese, the commissioner of Danae, wished to live in beauty and splendour, and within the painting, Titian satisfied both the wants of Alessandro as well as himself.

Bibliography:

Huse, N and Wolters, W. (1996) The Art of Renaissance Venice. New York: Phaidon
Jephcott. C. (1990) Art in Italy. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Nash, J. (1985) Veiled Images: Titian's Mythological Paintings for Philip II. Philadelphia: The Art Alliance Press
Rosand, D. (1997) Painting in Sixteenth-Century Venice. New York, NY:Cambridge University Press
Vasari, G. (1986) The Great Masters. London: Ed. Michael Sonino. Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, Inc., .
Williams, J. (1975) The World of Titian: c.1488-1576. New York: Time Life Books

N.B. This is just an example of a possible Contextual Studies essay. Of course you do not have to write like this, but it might help you to understand how to structure your writing and how to use your references.

Monday 13 October 2008

DADA


“We had lost confidence in our culture. Everything had to be demolished. We would begin again after the "tabula rasa". At the Cabaret Voltaire we began by shocking common sense, public opinion, education, institutions, museums, good taste, in short, the whole prevailing order”.

Marcel Janco


Dada: the abolition of logic, the dance of the impotents of creation;
Dada: abolition of all the social hierarchies and equations set up by our valets to preserve values;
Dada: every object, all objects, sentiments and obscurities, phantoms and the precise shock of parallel lines, are weapons in the fight;
Dada: abolition of memory;
Dada: abolition of archaeology;
Dada: abolition of the prophets;
Dada: abolition of the future;
Dada: absolute and unquestionable faith in every god that is the product of spontaneity.

(Tristan Tzara in “Dada Manifesto”, 1918)

Dada was a cultural movement that began in neutral Zürich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1920.

In 1916, Hugo Ball, Emmy Hennings, Tristan Tzara, Jean Arp, Marcel Janco, Richard Huelsenbeck, Sophie Täuber; along with others discussed art and put on performances in the Cabaret Voltaire expressing their disgust with the war and the interests that inspired it.

The movement primarily involved visual arts, literature (poetry, art manifestoes, art theory), theatre, and graphic design, and concentrated its anti war politic through a rejection of the prevailing norms in art.

Dada activities included public gatherings, demonstrations, and publication of art/literary journals. Passionate coverage of art, politics, and culture filled their publications.

The beginnings of Dada correspond to the outbreak of World War I. For many participants, the movement was a protest against the bourgeois nationalist and colonialist interests which many Dadaists believed were the root cause of the war, and against the cultural and intellectual conformity — in art but more broadly also in society — that led to the war.

According to its proponents, Dada was not art — it was "anti-art" in the sense that Dadaists protested against the contemporary academic and cultured values of art. For everything that art stood for, Dada was to represent the opposite. Where art was concerned with traditional aesthetics, Dada ignored aesthetics. If art was to appeal to sensibilities, Dada was intended to offend through their rejection of traditional culture and aesthetics.

After the cabaret Voltaire closed down, Tristan Tzara began a relentless campaign to spread Dada ideas. When World War I ended in 1918, most of the Zürich Dadaists returned to their home countries, and some began Dada activities in other cities.

DADA in Berlin:

The groups in Germany were not as strongly anti-art as other groups. Their activity and art was more political and social, with corrosive manifestos and propaganda, biting satire, large public demonstrations and overt political activities. It has been suggested that this is at least partially due to Berlin's proximity to the front, and that for an opposite effect, New York's geographic distance from the war produced its more theoretically-driven, less political nature.

DADA in New York:

New York was a refuge for writers and artists from World War I. Soon after arriving from France in 1915, Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia met American artist Man Ray. By 1916 the three of them became the centre of radical anti-art activities in the United States.

New York Dada lacked the political drive of European Dada and was instead driven by a sense of irony and humor. New York Dadaists would cheerfully avail themselves of the heavily industrialized United States' bounty of machines and other manufactured objects.

New York section of Dada concentrates on readymade objects, new technology (as with airbrushing) and graphic works reminiscent of mechanical drawing.

Picabia's travels tied New York, Zürich and Paris groups together during the Dadaist period. For seven years he also published the Dada periodical 391 in Barcelona, New York, Zürich, and Paris from 1917 through 1924.

The French avant-garde kept strong ties with Dada activities in Zürich with regular communications from Tristan Tzara.

While broad, the movement was unstable. By 1924 in Paris, Dada was melding into surrealism, and artists had gone on to other ideas and movements.

By the dawn of World War II, many of the European Dadaists had fled or emigrated to the United States. Some died in death camps under Hitler, who persecuted the kind of "Degenerate art" that Dada represented. The movement became less active as post-World War II optimism led to new movements in art and literature.

There was no predominant medium in Dadaist art. All things from geometric tapestries to glass to plaster and wooden reliefs were fair game. It's worth noting, though, that assemblage, collage, photomontage and the use of readymade objects all gained wide acceptance due to their use in Dada art.

For something that supposedly meant nothing, Dada certainly created a lot of offshoots. In addition to spawning numerous literary journals, Dada influenced many concurrent trends in the visual arts (especially in the case of Constructivism).

The best-known movement Dada was directly responsible for is Surrealism but also various anti-art and political, artistic and cultural movements like Nouveau Realism, New Dada and Conceptual Art.

Main protagonists of the Dada movement:

Marcel Duchamp (1887 – 1968)
George Grosz (1893 – 1959)
John Heartfield (1891-1968)
Hannah Höch (1889 - 1978)
Francis Picabia (1879 - 1953)
Man Ray (1890 - 1976)
Kurt Schwitters (1887 - 1948)
Tristan Tzara (1896 - 1963)
Hans Arp (1886-1966)
Baroness Elsa von Golyscheff (1874-1927)
Marcel Janco (1886-1966)

Tuesday 7 October 2008

The BEST galleries in London.

Frieze Art Fair
16-19 October 2008
Regent’s Park, London

ZOO ART FAIR
17-20 October 2008
Royal Academy of Arts, Burlington Gardens, W1S 3EX
12.00 - 20.00 Daily; Monday 12.00 - 17.00.
Green Park / Bond Street

GAGOSIAN GALLERY
6-24 Britannia Street, WC1X
Tue-Sat 10-6 or by appointment
King’s Cross St. Pancras
RICHARD SERRA : SCULPTURE
Oct 4 - Dec 20, 2008

WHITE CUBE
48 Hoxton Square, N1 6PB
Tue-Sat 10-6
Old Street
JOSIAH MCELHENY : ISLANDUNIVERSE Oct 14 - Nov 15, 2008

WHITE CUBE
25-26 Mason's Yard, SW1Y 6BU
Tue-Sat 10-6
Piccadily Circus / Green Park
ROBERT IRWIN : LIGHT AND
SPACE Sep 17 - Oct 19, 2008

PARASOL UNIT FOUNDATION FOR CONTEMPORARY ART
14 Wharf Rd, N1 7RW
Tue-Sat 10-6, Sun 12-5
Old Street / Angel
CHARLES AVERY :THE ISLANDERS Sep 10 - Nov 8, 2008

VICTORIA MIRO GALLERY
16 Wharf Rd, N1 7RW
Tue-Sat 10-6
Old Street (Exit 8)
ELMGREEN & DRAGSET Oct 14 - Nov 15

BLOOMBERG
50 Finsbury Square, EC2A 1HD
Tue-Sat 11-6
Liverpool Street / Moorgate
FADE IN FADE OUT Oct 15 - Nov 29, 2008 Philippe Decrauzat, Cerith Wyn Evans, Kris Martin, Philippe Parreno

GIMPEL FILS
30 Davies St, W1K 4NB
Mon-Fri 10-5.30, Sat 11-4
Bond Street
ARAYA RASDJARMREARNSOOK :THE TWO PLANETS SERIES
Oct 10 - Nov 15, 2008 New film and photography from Thailand

ALISON JACQUES GALLERY
16-18 Berners St, W1T 3LN
Tue-Sat 10-6
Oxford Circus / Tottenham Ct Road
THOMAS ZIPP : WHITE DADA
Oct 17 - Nov 15, 2008

STEPHEN FRIEDMAN
25-28 Old Burlington St, W1S 3AN
Tue-Fri 10-6, Sat 11-5
Piccadilly Circus / Green Park
CATHERINE OPIE :THE BLUE OF DISTANCE
Oct 15 - Nov 15, 2008 New landscape photographs of Alaska

FRITH STREET
17-18 Golden Square, W1F 9JJ
Tue-Fri 10-6, Sat 11-5
Piccadilly Circus GIUSEPPE PENONE
Sep 12 - Oct 30, 2008 Sculptural and wall based works

HAUNCH OF VENISON LONDON
6 Haunch of Venison Yard, (off Brook St), W1K 5ES
Mon-Fri 10-6, Thur 10-7, Sat 10-5
Bond Street / Oxford Street
RAFAEL LOZANO-HEMMER
Oct 14 - Nov 16, 2008

HAUSER & WIRTH
196a Piccadilly, W1J 9DY
Tue-Sat 10-6
Piccadilly Circus / Green Park
GUILLERMO KUITCA Sep 24 - Nov 8

SADIE COLES HQ
35 Heddon St, W1B 4BP
Tue-Sat 10-6
Piccadilly Circus / Oxford Circus
FLORIAN HECKER Oct 14 - Nov 22, 2008 Sound installation

SIMON LEE
12 Berkeley St, W1J 8DT
Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 11-4
Green Park / Bond Street
TOBY ZIEGLER Oct 15 - Nov 23, 2008

ALBION
8 Hester Rd, SW11 4AX
Mon-Fri 9.30-5.30, Sat 10-3
Sloane Square / Bus 49,345
AI WEIWEI Oct 14 - Nov 17, 2008
KATIE PATERSON Oct 14 - Nov 17, 2008

LISSON GALLERY
29 & 52-54 Bell St, NW1 5DA
Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 11-5
Marylebone / Edgware Road
JULIAN OPIE Oct 15 - Nov 15, 2008

ICA (INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ARTS)
Nash House, The Mall, SW1Y 5AH
Daily 12-7.30
Charing Cross / Piccadilly Circus
ROBERTO CUOGHI : Oct 14 - Nov 23, 2008

MORETTI FINE ARTS
43-44 New Bond Street, W1S 4RL
Mon-Fri 10-6
Bond Street / Green Park
SHERRIE LEVINE Oct 13 - 31, 2008

176
176 Prince of Wales Rd, NW5 3PT
Thur & Fri 11-3, Sat & Sun 11-6
Chalk Farm / Kentish Town West Overgound
MATERIAL PRESENCE Sep 11 - Dec 14, Sculpture and installation from the Zabludowicz Collection.

SAATCHI GALLERY
Duke of York's Headquarters, King's Rd, SW3 4SQ
Monday - Sunday 10-6
Sloane Square
NEW ART FROM CHINA Oct 9, - Jan 18,

SOUTH LONDON GALLERY
65 Peckham Rd, SE5 8UH
Tue-Sun 12-6
Oval / Vauxhall then bus 36 or 436
RIVANE NEUENSCHWANDER :
SUSPENSION POINT Oct 3 - Nov 30,

THOMAS DANE GALLERY
11 Duke Street St James's, SW1Y 6BN
Tue-Fri 11-6, Sat 11-4
Green Park / Piccadilly Circus
MICHAEL LANDY Oct 14 - Nov 15, 2008

YVON LAMBERT
20 Hoxton Square, N1 6NT
Old Street
CARLOS AMORALES Oct 16 - Nov 15

The Louise T Blouin Institute
3 Olaf Street
W11 4BE
WANG GUANGYICOLD
17 October 2008 - 17 March 2009

MATT'S GALLERY
42-44 Copperfield Rd, E3 4RR
Sat & Sun 12-6
Mile End
ROY VOSS : PINE Sep 10 - Nov 2, 2008

CHISENHALE
64 Chisenhale Rd, E3 5QZ
Wed-Sun 1-6
Mile End / Bethnal Green
DAVID NOONAN Sep 12 - Oct 26, 2008

KARSTEN SCHUBERT
5-8 Lower John St, Golden Square, W1F 9DR
Mon-Fri 10-6
Piccadilly Circus
MATT MULLICAN :
Oct 8 - Nov 14, 2008

MODERN ART
23-25 Eastcastle Street, W1W 8DF
Tues-Sat 11-6
Oxford Circus
DAVID ALTMEJD Oct 17 - Nov 15, 2008

WHITECHAPEL
Angel Alley Entrance, 80-82 Whitechapel High Street, E1 7QX
Wed-Sun 11-6
Aldgate East / Aldgate
JENS HAANING : THE STREET Sep 11 - Nov 2, 2008
SHARYAR NASHAT &
RYAN TRECARTIN Oct 1 - Nov 7, 2008

WILKINSON GALLERY
50-58 Vyner Street, E2 9DQ
Wed-Sat 11-6, Sun 12-6 & by appt
Bethnal Green / Bethnal Green
CLEGG & GUTTMANN Oct 15 - Nov 16, 2008 Installation

Websites about Marcel Duchamp

“The creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus adds his contribution to the creative act.”

Marcel Duchamp

If you want to know more about Duchamp please visit the following websites:

www.toutfait.com
www.marcelduchamp.net
www.understandingduchamp.com

Monday 29 September 2008

Marcel Duchamp

THE LOO THAT SHOOK THE WORLD: MARCEL DUCHAMP.

In 1917, nobody imagined that an act of rebellion by a young French painter would change the face of art. As Marcel Duchamp’s notorious ‘Fountain’ takes centre stage at Tate Modern, Philip Hensher stands up for the power of the porcelain.

from The Independent, Wednesday, 20 February 2008

It seemed like a good idea at the time. What New York clearly needed was a Society of Independent Artists. It would hold an annual exhibition, to which any painter or sculptor could submit work, and somehow it would be displayed. There wouldn't be any jury or judges; the artist would simply have to pay a fee of $6, and their work would be displayed in the exhibition hall of the society.

Except, that is, for one unforeseen development. One day in spring 1917, the organisers of the forthcoming exhibition stood and gazed in consternation at one of the submissions. The sculpture – is that what it was? – was accompanied by a letter from one Mr Richard Mutt, who enclosed his six dollars. The object bore the signature of the artist – R Mutt – and it had a title, Fountain. But the "artist" obviously hadn't sculpted the object himself. It was an industrially produced object. Not a fountain, but, well, a urinal.

In fact, it was a urinal of the most common variety, in white porcelain, lying on its back. You can see it, from tomorrow, at Tate Modern's exhibition Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia – and it's fair to say that the response to it in 1917 in New York may well be replicated by some visitors, in 2008, in London.

Ninety-one years ago some discussion took place and, by a small majority, it was decided that the object should be returned to Mr Mutt with the comment that whatever incarnation his object was, it had no darn place in an exhibition of art. In a very short period, it then emerged that there was no Richard Mutt. The man behind the bizarre and incredible submission proved to be one of the directors of the society itself, an amusing and audacious French artist, recently arrived in America, called Marcel Duchamp. He resigned from the society; and art was never the same again.

Were they complete fools to turn down a great classic of modern art? In fairness, the directors could never (in 1917) have been asked to pass judgement on anything that remotely resembled Fountain. While almost every artist since the beginning of time has adapted, refined and developed art as it was handed down to him, it is not given to very many artists, without resource to the changing means of technology, to invent an entirely new art. In fact, it might be that, in the long centuries since the invention of easel painting, only Duchamp has carried out the sort of revolution represented by that urinal.

Such is the importance of Fountain that, in December 2004, it was voted the most influential work of modern art by 500 art-world professionals. In contemplation, that seems something of an understatement: with this single "readymade" work, Duchamp invented conceptual art and severed for ever the traditional link between the artist's labour and the merit of the work.

It couldn't have happened anywhere but America. Duchamp, at the height of the furore, declared that "the only works of art America has given are her plumbing and her bridges". America, too, was the land of the huckster and the charlatan – one of the meanings of Duchamp's pseudonym refers to the gambler Mutt in Bud Fisher's famous Mutt and Jeff cartoon strip. It would be wrong to neglect the element of the huge practical joke in Fountain and its general air of disconcertingly ridiculing the art world as well as, with complete seriousness, reconfiguring everything it thought it believed about art.

The objections to Fountain began immediately, and have never gone away. Duchamp, in a brief response in the avant-garde journal The Blind Man in 1917, summarised them: "Some contended it was immoral, vulgar. Others, it was plagiarism, a plain piece of plumbing." These objections seek to pin down the object and its meanings to the purely functional. There can be no meaning beyond that, and no artistic merit.

But it's quite extraordinary how, once the urinal is removed from its customary setting, laid on its back like a turtle and given a signature, its meanings immediately multiply. For some reason, it hasn't been much remarked on that the object must have been an unfamiliar and exotic sight for half the audience.

Although Duchamp defends it against indecency by saying that it is a common sight in plumbers' show windows, it would only be really familiar to his male audience. Public lavatories were, indeed, a very recent development in the modern world, and there was little provision for women at all. It will be remembered that the "furmity woman" in Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) is arrested for "committing a public nuisance" in a large market town. There were, simply, no private alternatives. So what did women do? We have the witness of the English sexologist Havelock Ellis that in the 19th-century fashions of crinolines, ladies simply paused, ideally over a gravel path, and micturated while gazing into the middle distance. The display of a urinal, then, was not commonplace at all, but extraordinarily modern, and one designed to be highly exotic and unfamiliar to half the audience.

Duchamp had started thinking of the idea of the "readymade" a year or two earlier. His first was a mounted bicycle-wheel on a stool, which he said he simply liked looking at. But many of the others contain some element of the exotic alongside their commonplace, manufactured element. A snow shovel enchanted Duchamp, who had never seen such a thing until he came to America from France. A bottle-dryer, conversely, must have been an unfamiliar and peculiar sight for his American circle.

Fountain divides its audience immediately along the lines of sex, who will in turn find it banal and familiar, or exotic and forbidden. Sexual attraction and sexual difference was one of the most enduring obsessions of Duchamp, and often the peculiar conventions of the erotic furnish him with his most dazzling inventions. His early painting Nude Descending a Staircase gets all its outrageous fun from the convention that a nude is decent and respectably aesthetic if seated or standing. What nudes can't do without vulgarity is walk down a staircase. They would pretty soon be walking from the landing to the hallway, from the drawing room to the kitchen; and there is nothing more convincingly obscene than a cold burst of the everyday, as the "readymades" extensively show.

The work known as The Large Glass, or The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, made between 1915 and 1923, similarly divides according to sexual difference. The bride, in the upper panel, is all fluidity and biomorphous shapes. The bachelors inhabit a world of arid, mechanical self-gratification, including sexual imagery drawn from an earlier Duchamp painting of a chocolate grinder.

And his last great work, Etant Donnés, an extraordinary peep-show tableau in Philadelphia, throws the viewer back on his own voyeurism in a mysterious display of withdrawn pornographic femininity. Duchamp liked to move fluidly from one sex's viewpoint to another, creating some of his best work in the persona of Rrose Sélavy (there is a hilarious photograph of Duchamp in Rrose drag by Man Ray). But he never confused them with each other.

Fountain, in a way, condenses all those sexual meanings with great concision. It is a masculine property, but clearly one which has the feminine properties of receiving a man's fluids. That doesn't sound much like a fountain, however; and one rather comes to the conclusion that the source of the fountain's jets, the bouche as it is called in French, are the parts of a speculative masculine observer. Just as the aesthetics are solidly based in, and rather rely on, the viewer's reactions, so its meaning depends on his reconstructing the object's use in his head. Anyone who thought it obscene would have to supply quite a train of thought to the object's faux-innocence.

Not everyone has been satisfied to think only of the object's use. In recent years, one "artist" has succeeded in urinating into Fountain, and more have claimed to have done so. Some of Duchamp's works positively invite ad hoc collaboration with the eager, playful observer, such as the toybox versions of his greatest hits made to fit in a single suitcase. One early admirer picked up the curiously heavy cage filled with marble sugar-cubes entitled Why Not Sneeze Rrose Sélavy and was told by a bored guard: "Don't you know, you ain't supposed to touch that crap?"

But the great Fountain doesn't invite intervention. We are just supposed to look at it and marvel. It is, oddly enough, an extraordinarily beautiful object. Its lovely curves have the warmly shifting shape of many of Duchamp's renderings of femininity. In a famous photograph of 1917 by Alfred Stieglitz, Fountain has reminded many people of a grossly oversimplified erect penis and testicles. In other representations, under bright light and with its shadows clearly outlined, it has been likened to the shape of a modest woman with head covered.

It is difficult to understand why those Americans who delight in discovering likenesses of the Virgin Mary in the most unlikely objects have never turned their attention to Duchamp's Fountain. In many photographs, that is exactly what it looks like, and I guess Duchamp turns it on its back to exacerbate this iconic, blasphemous resemblance.

Fountain, as full of meaning as an egg is full of meat, changed art for ever. It had always been clear to thoughtful observers that the link between an artist's skill and the merit of his work was a false one. Some of the greatest painters in the world, such as Watteau or Goya, possess a limited technique, and many of the most brilliantly virtuosic and intricate produce art of no ultimate value.

There has never been any value in the proposal that the harder an artist works, or the more skilfully detailed his craft, the better the work of art in the end. The link between labour and product was not decisively broken until Duchamp, however.

Perhaps the larger context helps us to understand why this happened in 1917, and not before. Tristan Tzara, the founder of Dada and a thinker in tune with Duchamp, said in his 1918 "Dada Manifesto" that "a work of art should not be beautiful in itself, for beauty is dead. A work of art is never beautiful by decree, objectively and for all. After the carnage we still retain the hope of a purified mankind."

Duchamp came from a small town near Rouen, very close to the battlefields of the Great War. The war was a massive discrediting of the powers of authority, and what men like Tzara and Duchamp were doing was dismantling the shaman-like powers of the virtuoso artist, the powers of judgement of critics and the juries that turned out to rule even the New York Society of Independent Artists. As the century went on, the power and enchantment of the "readymade", in the hands of men like Joseph Beuys, would turn out to be precisely its democratic, unambitious scale.

Many German artists, after the Second World War in particular, were uncomfortable with virtuoso artists commanding a mesmerised following. Beuys's response, always, to the philistine response of "I could do that – I could find something and put it in an art gallery; anyone could" was always: "Of course you could; why on earth do you believe the creation of art to be something beyond your capacities? Who taught you that?"

The liberation of art within Duchamp's Fountain and the other "readymades" took a long time to appreciate. The version displayed at Tate Modern from this week is one of half a dozen replicas certified by Duchamp, 50 years after the original was first exhibited, and much of Duchamp has had to be reconstructed in this way. Most of the original "readymades" were thrown away or misplaced, or perhaps, as in the case of the hatrack, it just started being used for its original purpose.

Duchamp was a paradoxical master; somebody who made both a complex theoretical contribution, and the most lovable and forgivable of charlatans – anyone who thinks there is no element of the charlatan in Duchamp has understood, frankly, nothing. He was somebody who opened the way for the slacker, the anti-authoritarian, the Zen contemplator of emptiness and small moments of anonymous poetry, while remaining the most charismatic, disciplined and powerfully individual of artists.

Some people will always maintain that Duchamp's gesture is not art, perhaps mistaking a statement of factual category for a critical judgement of excellence. Others go on maintaining that it only needed to be done once, and nothing afterwards would ever have the shock or the fascination of that initial display of 1917.

That misses the point. Duchamp knew perfectly well that, with the public display of Fountain, he was taking off a lid that was screwed down tightly, with immediate and explosive effect. There was never going to be the slightest possibility that it could be screwed down again afterwards. Art had escaped, and was enveloping the world.

Saturday 27 September 2008

FIRST ESSAY BRIEF

FIRST CONTEXTUAL & HISTORICAL STUDIES ESSAY BRIEF:

1500 words. Deadline Monday, 17th November 2008

Essay brief given on Monday, 29th September 2008

“Analysis of an Object”.

Discuss art & design themes and ideas in relation to one specific work. In this essay you will explore ways of interpreting your chosen object and learning how to analyze it in relation to its cultural, historical, social and aesthetic contexts.

Choose any object: (like a photograph, a painting, a sculpture, a building, a monument, a film, a video, an installation, a piece of furniture/jewellery/clothing etc.) and read about it.

Some questions are more relevant to art, craft or design objects so try and decide for yourself what questions are important to your object.

Introduction – what questions your essay asks and what you intend to conclude?

Introduce your chosen object: (Materials, function, condition, location, surrounding objects and artworks, provenance etc.)

Historically/socially: dates of work or manufacture, what time frame belongs to?

Culturally: What art/design movement belongs to? Why?

How much literature did you find on the subject? Do you think what you found deals with the subject adequately?

What other art/design objects is your subject compared to and what would you like to compare it to?

What makes your object visually or conceptually distinctive or relevant?

Was it commissioned? Mass produced or handmade?

Is there an influence, pattern or design you could trace it back to?

How is it presented/bought/sold/marketed?

Is cost important?

Does it achieve what it sets out to?

How is it used and understood?

Who is the consumer? Who is it aimed at? Is the consumer different to the customer/buyer?

If these questions are not relevant to your object, why? And what questions might be more appropriate?

Conclusion – Summarising the questions and results arising from your research.

Bibliography – Websites/books/journals/documentaries/films. All sources you have consulted/quoted should include: Author, Title, Date, Publisher or Broadcaster (Harvard referencing).

N.B. Un-referenced quotes or extracts from the Internet or other sources will be considered plagiarism. If you quote other authors you must always acknowledge it.

Thursday 4 September 2008

Welcome!

Hello everyone! This is your Contextual Studies blog.

As you already know your Contextual Studies classes begin on Monday 29th September. As written in your timetable the classes will take place every Monday from 2:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M. in Room 208.

PLEASE BE ON TIME!

The series of Contextual Studies seminars aims to introduce the concepts and the ideas behind the most important artistic movements of the 20th and 21st Centuries through the presentation and analysis of a selection of artworks by the most significant artists from each period/movement. The focus will be on bringing you out from your “comfort zone”, exploring unconventional and unfamiliar ideas and works mainly within the Fine Arts but with references also to Design, Fashion and Architecture. Because of the often controversial nature of Modern and Contemporary Art you are obviously required to keep an open attitude, free form prejudices and assumptions.
Moreover, the seminars should give you a wide range of possible source of inspirations for your own art practices in relation to the various projects you will undertake during the year.
For the Contextual Studies programme you will have to complete two essays: one 1500 words essay before Christmas and one 2000 words essay around March.

In this blog I will post every week the relevant texts, communications and assignments in relation to the Contextual Studies seminars, so you will have a sort of archive to get information and further reference. Obviously you are invited to visit the blog regularly and contribute to it as well with your comments, feedback and your own relevant material about the discussed subjects.
Unfortunately I am not able to post here my PowerPoint lessons but if you want I can email those to you.
Finally, as already said, you are invited to visit as many exhibitions as possible and collect their memorabilia (like press releases, articles, images and so on) in your Contextual Studies diary.
For any queries please do not hesitate to send me a message: gianluca@cosci.fsnet.co.uk

I hope you will enjoy the course and good luck for your studies!

Gianluca