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Posts Tagged ‘Events’

2

Shadow Play: Peter & The Wolf

Thursday, December 15th, 2011
Posted in: Blog

I headed over to Tommy’s Bar in Cardiff last night to watch some wonderous shadow puppet shows by Year 1 & 2 Illustration Students from Cardiff School of Art & Design. The puppets were absolutely beautiful and all of the performances were totally spellbinding.

This performance of Peter and The Wolf by Layla Holzer was the first of the night and set the perfect tone for the rest of the evening. This was followed by Hans Christian-Andersen’s The Snow Queen which was told in seven parts. Clips of those tales will be available to view via the Illustration Cardiff blog in the next few days.

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0

Illustration & Writing Symsposium

Friday, December 2nd, 2011
Posted in: Blog

Earlier this month I head up to Manchester for the second international symposium organised by Illustration Research; Illustration and Writing: Visual Languages. Unfortunately I had to miss out on the first day of the event due to work commitments which is a shame as there were apparently some very heated debates about ‘style’.


Symposium Doodle by Martin Salisbury

Friday’s session was opened with presentations by James Walker and Clinton Cahill. Walker focussed upon the archival impulse and palimpsests; that is a document or manuscript from which the text has been erased to enable reuse of the parchment or paper. Walker was particularly interested in the obscure traces left behind by the process of erasing or deleting content on the surface of these documents.

Cahill’s area of focus and inspiration was Finnegan’s Wake by James Joyce. He gave an interesting introduction to the text which makes me think that I should definitely attempt to read it in the not too distant future. However, the thing that interested me most about hi presentation was the nature of his practice. Cahill never once referred to himself directly as an illustrator (maybe it was to be readily assumed at an illustration conference), but he did suggest that he did not consider his work to be a Fine Art practice.

The reason this interested me was because everything about his work and his practice would have suggested that he was a Fine Art practitioner to me otherwise. The drawings were fairly abstract and there was an obsessive dedication to the one text which I felt were more akin to a Fine Art practice rather than Illustration.

It certainly raised some interesting questions such as; What is illustration? How do we define Illustration? and ultimately are illustration and Fine Art mutually exclusive; can a work be both an illustrative work and a work of Fine Art? Discussion I had with others over coffee during the mid-morning break suggested that perhaps they had been a little apprehensive to raise these questions following the heated discussions about style during the first day which was something of a shame.

Yallery Brown from Mick Gowar on Vimeo.

The morning was concluded with lots of informal discussion around a display of academic posters one of which, by Mick Gowar, provided information about the European Storytelling Archive. The idea is to record storytellers. The aim of the project is to create a digital archive of oral storytelling drawn from a wide range of traditions and cultures – and to include new, emerging and ‘hybridised’ traditions.

Potentially this project, which is very much in its infancy, looks like it could extremely interesting. Mick was on hand to talk to us about the project and was extremely enthusiastic. I hope he gets the support and fundiunig he needs to really take this project forward. You can find out more at http://www.mickgowar.com/Storytelling_Archive/

The afternoon session was opened with an interesting presentation from Hena Ali about Lollywood advertising: hat is Pakistani film industry posters and hoardings in Lahore. Nanette Hoogslaag followed this up with a presentation about editorial illustration and Adrian Holme raised issues relating to hybridity in this digital age.

The three speakers formed a panel to facilitate a discussion to close this session which was dominated by a discussion about the impact of technology and new media upon illustration. It was interesting to listen in on the questions and concerns and questions raised by the delegates. For the most part, those who spoke up were educators and, as far as I could tell, a few years older than myself; by which I mean to suggest that they are of a generation that hasn’t grown up using new computing technologies in the same way that I have. The reason I mention this is because all of those who had something to say seemed to exude a fear of new technology. I’m not suggesting that new technologies should be embraced without question but the sense of fear that came across seemed to be born out of a lack of knowledge about such things.

There was quite a out of discussion about craft in relation to this discussion about new media. A number of educators talked of the ways in which their students are embracing crafts within their illustration practices and suggested that this returning to making was a result of stresses caused by new technology. There seemed to be no acknowledgement from the delegates that crafts are old technologies and that as a result of technological advancements students simply have more tools and methods of making available to them; new media won’t ever replace crafts because the two areas are mutually exclusive.

The day was rounded off with a keynote lecture from Polish artist and academic Ewa Satalecka on the role of typography in illustration. As someone on the outside of the fields of illustration and design I found this presentation fascinating. Satalecka was keen to encourage illustrators to acquire an understanding of the history of type from its beginnings in Hieratic systems of writing. She argued that illustrators need to understand the rules by which typography is bound in order to be able to break them.

All in all it was a great day out. I was disappointed to have not been able to make it to the first day of the symposium as it sounds like I missed out on some wonderful discussions. That said, there was plenty of interesting subjects put forward for discussion during my flying visit. You can view some doodles and sketches that were completed by delegates during the course of the symposium on the Illustration Research website here.


Interesting links:
Illustration Research: www.illustrationresearch.com
Writing Pad Network: www.writing-pad.ac.uk
The European Storytelling Archive: www.mickgowar.com/Storytelling_Archive/
Visual Correspondents: www.visualcorrespondents.com

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4

Kaunas Textile Biennial: Part 1

Thursday, October 6th, 2011
Posted in: Blog

Four of my works were recently selected for an exhibition entitled Experiments with Light that was scheduled as a part of the exhibition programme for the eighth international Kaunas Textile Biennial. It was the perfect excuse to take myself off to the beautiful city of Kaunas in Lithuania for three days to explore the city and the

The heart of Kaunas is populated with old buildings in varying states of disrepair that date back as far as the fourteenth century and there are more churches and other such religious buildings than I could count. It’s a beautiful place to retreat to and a wonderful setting for the textile art festival.

I must admit that I the Kaunas Biennial was only on the edge of my radar before I headed out there and I really wasn’t prepared for the scale of the festival. I was treated to a who’s who of international textile art and experienced some incredible work by both established and emerging artists alike. As a result of the volume of work I’m going to have to break this blog post into pieces to make it manageable.


*Yinka Shonibare: A Masked Ball (2004) Film Still

On the Friday night, not long after touching down in Lithuania, I headed to the Kaunas Picture Gallery for the grand opening of the Biennial and the launch of two exhibitions. The first of these exhibitions featured work by invited artists that included a beautiful film by Yinka Shonibare and the most incredible tapestry by Annika Ekdahl.

The exhibition provided an interesting exploration of what might constitute a work of textile art. Although Shonibare presented a time-based piece the costumes that had been created for the film were incredible and inspiring. They were cut in a manner that resembled period costumes but the fabrics that had been used were extremely vivid and beautifully patterned. The film was apparently inspired by the the 1792 assassination of the Swedish King Gustav III at a masked ball in Stockholm. The film explores frivolity, play and excess.


*Vita Geluniene: Hunt of the Unicorn

Vita Geluniene exhibited an intricate tapestry entitled, ‘Hunt of the Unicorn’, featuring a number of figurative elements that she brought to life in an accompanying video work. Actors/dancers were filmed in front of a blue screen against which an image of Geluniene’s tapestry, without the figurative elements, was superimposed whereby the actors replaced the figures in the tapestry that was exhibited. The work took three years to develop and was inspired by tapestries produced around the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.


*Swedish student’s work at The Kaunas Picture Gallery

The first floor of the Kaunas Picture Gallery housed an exhibition of work by Swedish textiles students at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. I saw a wide range of textile art by recent graduates during the degree shows this summer but I must admit that the work exhibited by these students in Kaunas surpassed anything I saw at home this year both technically and conceptually.

One of my favourite student pieces was the work pictured above. Apparently Swedes wastes approximately 25 kilograms of textiles each year and so the artist has created this jacket that weighs exactly that. Accompanying the work was a video of the artist struggling to wear the work buckling beneath its weight. (Embarrassingly I’ve lost my notes with the students name on it so I’ll have to do a little investigating and update you with that information a little later).

The students’ work really was strong and featured a hole range of textiles from some simple, yet really beautiful embroidery, to film and video works and larger installations with wire and thread.

Given that this was my first evening in Kaunas I was suitably impressed by the quality of the work on show at the Textile Biennial as well as the scale of ambition.

I’ll post articles about my other experiences at the Biennial later. In the meantime you can few a set of my photos on my Flickr pages here.

Relevant Links:
www.annikaekdahl.se
www.yinkashonibarembe.com
www.bienale.lt
www.etn-net.org

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0

Eksperimentai Kvietimas 2011

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011
Posted in: Blog, Exhibitions

These are a selection of the photographs I took at the launch of the Experiments with Light exhibition at the Zalgiris Arena in Kaunas, Lithuania, last weekend.

I must confess that I was expecting a small turn out for the opening of this exhibition which was a satellite to the Kaunas Textile Biennial. I was rather shocked, and slightly humbled, to see several hundred people passing through the doors on the opening night alone to experience my work along with that of nearly 40 other international artists in the ultravioletly illuminated exhibition space.

Click the thumbnails to view the images in all their glory.

I’ll be posting some blog posts about the other wonderful exhibitions I encountered ay the Kaunas Biennial in the following few days so watch this space for more updates soon.

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5

Experiments with Light

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011
Posted in: Blog, Exhibitions, News Feed

My work will be on display in Lithuania as a part of an exhibition hosted by The Textile Artists’ Guild in Kaunas this month. The exhibition, entitled Experiments with Light, has been curated by Jolanta Šmidtiene and Dovil? Vanagaite.

The brand new Kaunas arena’ media centre will be transformed for an international exhibition in which exhibits will be installed in the darkness and illuminated by ultraviolet light. This luminescent lighting will highlight details of the artworks enriching the aesthetic experiences of the visitors creating mystical effects and exhibiting unexpected approaches to textile art.

The exhibition will feature four of my luminescent sculptures including Wretched Rupture III (pictured above). There will be a launch event on Friday 23 September 2011 from 8.00 – 9.00pm and the exhibition will continue throughout the Textile festival. The Textile Guild will also be holding a number of workshops throughout the Kaunas Biennial.

Click here to download a pdf of the the Kaunas Textile Biennial programme or visit their webiste: www.biennial.lt

Location:
Zalgiris Arena
Karaliaus Mindaugo g. 50
LT-44287
Kaunas

You can find out more about Kaunas Textile Guild here: www.tdg.lt

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