Wednesday 31 January 2007

Rachel Whiteread Embankment - Installation Tate Modern 2005




Although the inspiration for EMBANKMENT came from the single box she found in her mother's house, Whiteread selected a number of differently-shaped old boxes to construct the installation for the Turbine Hall. She filled them with plaster, peeled away the exteriors and was left with perfect casts, each recording and preserving all the bumps and indentations on the inside. They are ghosts of interior spaces or, if you like, positive impressions of negative spaces. Yet Whiteread wanted to retain their quality as containers, so she had them re-fabricated in a translucent polyethylene which reveals a sense of an interior. And rather than make precious objects of them, she constructed thousands.

Around the time Whiteread began to work on this project she was preoccupied by the final scene of Steven Spielberg's Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), in which the fabled Ark of the Covenant is stored away. After being gently lowered into a crate and the top nailed down, it is wheeled off on a trolley. As the camera pans away we see that when it takes its place it will be just one in a gargantuan warehouse full of crates filled with heaven knows what. Whiteread has spoken of wanting to make the Turbine Hall into a kind of warehouse, and this is an intriguing response to a space which was once industrial but is now a museum. For what is a museum, after all, but a storage depot for art?

Whiteread's work, EMBANKMENT also makes reference to the legacy of American Minimalism. Artists like Donald Judd were drawn to the look of pristine, industrially fabricated cubes, and they used them to explore issues of repetition, the impersonality of mass production, and the relationship of the viewer's body to the space occupied by objects. However, the cubes that make up Whiteread's EMBANKMENT depart radically from these themes. Rather than impersonality, they maintain the imprints of human use; they are stacked up in both ordered and disordered piles; and whilst they encourage us to think about the space they inhabit, en masse they are also a spectacle, an unforgettable image that reveals itself slowly as the viewer approaches.

At one stage, Whiteread had considered making a single vast monumental sculpture for the Turbine Hall. Ironically, what she finally came up with is an anti-monument, a form collapsed back into a landscape. The title refers not only to its riverside location, close to the Thames embankment, but to the nature of its construction with the piles of individual boxes forming a series of barriers.

Friday 26 January 2007

Carsten Holler - Helter Skelter Sculpture




























For Carsten Höller, the experience of sliding is best summed up in a phrase by the French writer Roger Caillois as a 'voluptuous panic upon an otherwise lucid mind'. The slides are impressive sculptures in their own right, and you don't have to hurtle down them to appreciate this artwork. What interests Höller, however, is both the visual spectacle of watching people sliding and the 'inner spectacle' experienced by the sliders themselves, the state of simultaneous delight and anxiety that you enter as you descend.

To date Höller has installed six smaller slides in other galleries and museums, but the cavernous space of the Turbine Hall offers a unique setting in which to extend his vision. Yet, as the title implies, he sees it as a prototype for an even larger enterprise, in which slides could be introduced across London, or indeed, in any city. How might a daily dose of sliding affect the way we perceive the world? Can slides become part of our experiential and architectural life?
Höller has undertaken many projects that invite visitor interaction, such as Flying Machine (1996) that hoists the user through the air,Upside-Down Goggles (1994/2001) that modify vision, and Frisbee House (2000) - a room full of Frisbees. The slides, like these earlier works, question human behaviour, perception and logic, offering the possibility for self-exploration in the process.

Thursday 25 January 2007

Wednesday 24 January 2007

Gaudi Architecture


Look at the way the stairs wraps around the inside of the tower

Tuesday 23 January 2007

MC Escher face wrap and repeating images





MC Escher Graphical Artist whose work looked at maths in Art. He used repeating images. here a head is suggested with negative space by the form of the skin 'wrapping' around the outside.

Bridget Riley Paintings that look like wrapped fabric

Superb UK Abstract painter, creates paintings that actually look like they move

website: http://www.mishabittleston.com/artists/bridget_riley/

website: http://faculty.indy.cc.ks.us/jnull/linerileyweb.htm

website: http://nadav.harel.org.il/Bridget_Riley/

Sunday 21 January 2007

Andy Warhol



http://www.rockrags.us/img/andy-warhol.jpg
http://www.albrightknox.org/ArtStart/art/Warhol.jpg

Friday 19 January 2007

Celtic Art - Knotwork and repeating pattern designs


(above) Early example of spirals carved into a rock that guarded or filled the entrance to a Celtic burial mound at Newgrange in Southern Ireland. The Stone is approximately 1.5 metres high and the mound was constructed in approximately 3,000 BC which means it is over 5,000 years old

William R. Stolpin 1998, Woodcut


Celtic Art traditionally deals with repeating patterns that symbolise the rythmns of nature and life represented through an intricate patterns. Early examples show spirals and swirls carved into rocks for ceremonial purposes, later examples are more decorative.


Information on Newgrange: http://www.yourirish.com/newgrange.htm

Book of Kells famous illustrated Celtic Manuscript, uses similar repeating pattern and wrapping knot work




Link to website with other pages: http://www.snake.net/people/paul/kells/

Thursday 18 January 2007

Japanese Tattoo Art - Images that wrap around the body




good history of the tradition of Tattooing within Japan

weblink: http://www.japanprints.com/misc/JapaneseTattoo.htm

Andy Goldsworthy Wrapped Boulder

Andy Goldsworthy (above) photo from DVD of structure made from found driftwood



A Photograph of a Boulder at the side of a river. Andy Goldsworthy has used the water as glue, sticking a thin layer of locally collected leaves over the boulder.


Andy Goldsworthy uses found materials, leaves, twigs, branches, stones etc to construct or add to land features, exhibiting the photographs and in some cases natural form sculptures.

Link to gallery with interesting photos of his work: http://www.hainesgallery.com/Main_Pages/Artist_Pages/AGOL.bio.html


Link to article on Andy Goldsworthy DVD: http://www.filmforum.org/archivedfilms/rivers.html
website with information on other work by Andy Goldsworthy
Goggle image search on Andy Goldsworthy


Vladimir Tatlin "Monument to tthe Third International



black and white photo to give sense of scale

1919 sculpture made from wood iron and glass
look at the way the sculpture wraps around itself, reminds me of a helter skelter
weblink that explains the origins of this sculpture or model

http://max.mmlc.northwestern.edu/~mdenner/Drama/visualarts/Constructivism/24thirdinternational.html


Wednesday 17 January 2007

Tadeusz Kantor


Artist Tadeusz Kantor Sculpture "Edgar Walpol" 1967-1968 Textile & Metal
Link to a web page describing his work (no pictures though)

Friday 12 January 2007

Henry Moore Air Raid Shelter Sketches










Here are some drawings by Henry Moore (English Sculptor) Look at how he has drawn the sheet 'wrapping' around the sleeping figures


Henry Moore Foundation website - http://www.henry-moore-fdn.co.uk

More (or should that be Moore) of his Air Raid Shelter sketches - http://www.henry-moore-fdn.co.uk/matrix_engine/content.php?page_id=3145

Christo

Christo and Jeanne Claude who wrap up buildings, islands and other unusual objects to create their art



http://christojeanneclaude.net


This is a 'wrapped' Roman Wall in Italy