Cristine Brache

Blindspots @ Xspace, Jul 20

20 July 2016

Toronto artist-run centre Xspace will host Blindspots, a screening curated by Dainesha Nugent-Palache on July 20.

The six films have been selected to highlight some of the themes and discussion generated by the exhibition of the same name, which is currently on view at Xspace. The videos are created by queer diasporic artists, or artists that explore the LGBTQ experience through a diasporic lens. It features the work of Piotr Bockowski and Cristine Brache, Qila Gill, Sarah Hill, Benjamin Hunter, Kristin Li, Maximilian Suillerot and TeeJay Hayche.

Blindspots examines how LGBTQ is often “synonymous with gay-white-able-bodied-male” and instead puts the focus on “those who exist under the queer umbrella, but don’t fit under this category”.

The screening will be followed by a discussion and Q&A with Fan Wu, Dainesha Nugent-Palache and some of the artists in attendance.

See the Xspace website for more details.**

Cristine Brache and Piotr Bockowski, ‘Nekama’ (2014). Video. Courtesy the artists.

  share news item

aqnb x Video in Common @ Club Pro LA, Jul 17

6 July 2016

aqnb and Video in Common (ViC) are presenting screening, performance and discussion event, ‘Accessing Economies: Engagement & Withdrawal’ at Los Angeles’ Club Pro LA on July 17.

As discourse develops beyond ideas of visibility and representation to notions of assimilation into existing cultural paradigms, aqnb editor Jean Kay will be presenting a selection of artists’ works that considers the consequences of structural affiliations and institutionalisation as both inspiring and influencing critical art practice.

‘Accessing Economies’ follows similar events organised by the art editorial platform and video production partner ViC in London and Berlin two key cultural centres in the aqnb network. Titled ‘The Future Is Here, It’s Just Not Evenly Distributed’ and ‘At the Backend’, together these programmes interrogated the systems and infrastructures embedded in networked communication, and how this affects distribution, flows of information and power, as well as language, community-building and identity formation.

Artists and works featured in this edition include an aqnb/ViC editorial video commission with Evan Ifekoya, video works from Vika Kirchenbauer, Imran Perretta, Ann Hirsch, Cristine Brache and Maria Gorodeckaya, as well as a live Skype poetry reading from Sarah Boulton

See the FB event page for further details.**

Imran Perretta '5 per cent'(2015). Detail. Sixty Eight, Copenhagen.
Imran Perretta ‘5 per cent'(2015). Detail. Sixty Eight, Copenhagen.

Header image: Vika Kirchenbauer, ‘COOL FOR YOU – GIVEN YOUR CONVENIENT ABSENCE’ (2016). Video still. Courtesy the artist.

  share news item

Apprehension poetry readings @ Slade School, Jun 16

15 June 2016

An evening of poetry, ‘Apprehension: come back for another look’ is on at London’s Slade School of Art on June 16.

Performing are a group of artists and writers whose work could be said to deal with subjectivity, poetry, voices, being online and representation, including Cassandre GreenbergCristine Brache —organisers of recent ICA event No Screening —Ulijona Odišarija and Christopher Kirubi, all of whom are current Slade students.

The evening coincides with the MA degree show that runs until June 19.

Reading via Skype and on a smartphone from New York will be writer and editor Steph Kretowicz whose forthcoming book, Somewhere I’ve Never Been will publish later this year via Pool.

Artist and poet Penny Goring and Aurelia Guo whose PDF, ‘black mUJI notebook‘ was recently shared online and contains Guo’s eloquent musings and stark thoughts, will also both feature in this evening of ‘Apprehension’.

See the FB event page for more details.**

Aurelia Guo, t-shirt for Interstate Projects 5 Year Anniversary Benefit (2016). Courtesy the artist
Aurelia Guo, ‘t-shirt for Interstate Projects 5 Year Anniversary Benefit’ (2016). Courtesy the artist.
  share news item

Listening back to No Screening

26 May 2016

There’s something illicit about sitting in the dark with a group of strangers; something anticipatory. It allows a fantasy of privacy, of intimacy, even as the person who speaks remains behind the curtain that will not open. I think, at first, that I’m imagining this effect; that the performers at No Screening at London’s ICA on May 13 —co-curated by Cristine Brache, Cassandre Greenberg and Harry Bix —must have been in another room backstage. Eventually I spot shadows moving behind the curtain. I’m not imagining. There’s a bare shard of light, almost imperceptible.

This is only a hunch, but it feels like human beings of the ‘post-internet’ are less primed to be skeptical of aural information, of the ancient feeling of being told a story. Maybe it’s a primeval instinct, where the most important thing is how the story is told.

I wonder whether the performers feel the backstage feeling of childhood before a concert, it emanates suddenly a kind of sleepover feeling, like an allowance, outside of normal time. The room is comfortably expansive, not cavernous, and just the right temperature. Without other distractions, these things matter.

Harry Bix opens the performances with ‘Liquid Luther Vandross’. I think, that’s a magician’s impeccable timing. The darkness lasts just a few moments too long before his voice cuts in. He sings the post-disco soul singer’s ‘Never Too Much’ in a voice oscillating between tender and cheeky, Oh my love, a thousand kisses from you are never too much.

Mary Vettise’s ‘So it was the same for me as everybody else’ walks the audience through the house of an ex-boyfriend. It has some of the affect of a dream where you keep discovering rooms in a place you thought you knew by heart. Giving less information feels more confident, to trust the listener to build the story in their mind unhindered by specifics of time and place.

No Screening was organised as a response to ICA’s current exhibition, Martine Syms’ Fact & Trouble. Some performers seem to interact more with the US artist’s focus on gesture and the media, particularly Shenece Oretha’s ‘Sounding the Margin: (Inter)mission to James Brown’s Bridge’ and Ana Maria Soubhia & Rhoda Boateng’s ‘It’s Ahead’. Both use the voice in a way that feels research-based or archival, communal maybe, as opposed to the personal narrative mode of other works. Stripped of all identity markers, the performers or their proxies step in and out of accent, song, rhyme and tone.

Unlike a sound piece in a gallery, which the viewer can move through at will, the No Screening performance capitalizes on its sense of movie-time: not an individual choice but a collective agreement to time spent. The accompanying compilation album, available for free download from East Anglia Records, declines to reproduce the event, but rather contains some variations of works performed on the night, and other new or parallel ones.

As the program progresses, certain recordings blend into one another; with layers of different voices, music and echo, loops and pauses. I lose track of who’s speaking the dark. Sarah Boulton’s contribution, however, is unmistakeable: a single clear voice, reading without embellishment. It makes her small poems into objects that could almost be held in the mouth: a bird wing, a pearl, a bruise.

Ulijona Odišarija’s ‘End of Summer International’ appears the same in both the performance and on the album —a melancholy track of crows and overheard pop songs —apart from the presence of the artist at the back of the room. She is dancing slowly behind the audience, lit by a single small spotlight. It is almost too romantic, save for being seen by almost nobody.

Deprived of all other visual stimulus, I become obsessed with the glowing green icon of the exit sign. In the dark, the remaining senses become hyper-aware: my friend’s cardigan sleeve brushing against my bare arm makes me jump. On the hour, a few peoples’ watches go beep, beep. I’m aware of every gesture, hush, and shuffle. What darkness allows for is a moving through of space in the mind, an awareness of distance and proximity. Certain things, un-visible, become hard to prove.

Being told stories in this way feels childlike. It cuts through the sophisticated visual classification system necessary to build up as armour against an environment oversaturated with imagery. In short, a tale feels true when it’s told. When I got outside onto The Mall, near London’s Trafalgar Square, it is still just barely light and I’m surprised at the faces of the people around me. Echoing the earlier words of Mary Vetisse, “The world looked just the same except it didn’t and it wasn’t.”**

The No Screening sound and performance event was on at London’s ICA on May 13, 2016.

Header image: No Screening compilation cover art (2016). Courtesy East Anglia Records, London.

  share news item

Announcing 5everdankly

15 February 2016

5everdankly is a new online publishing community and project space.

On the 5everdankly site is already a project called irl pantie$, an international undies-burning video and animation show with contributions from artists and writers Cristine Brache, Penny Goring, Aurorae Parker, Dan Sanders, Hela Trol Pis (aka Max Trevor Thomas Edmond), Rachel Benson who is currently showing work on The White Pube‘s website, and other members from the collaborative 5everdankly dank play space.

5everdankly have also recently released new books, hatefuck the reader, by artist Penny Goring and RECEIVES THE MARKS OF EVERY THING, UNDERSTANDS AND INCLUDES EVERYTHING — EXCEPT ITSELF by Hela Trol Pis.

The space positions itself in the midst of online community, collectivism and self-organisation.

Look out for further projects and publication releases.**

Penny Goring, Falling Apart Doll (2016). Courtesy the artist
Penny Goring, ‘Falling Apart Doll’ (2016). Courtesy the artist

  share news item

Announcing Screen_

19 January 2016

Screen_ (read: “Screenspace”) is a new email-based art space presenting monthly shows which you can now subscribe to.

Looking back to the mail art work of Ray Johnson and those part of the FLUXUS movement, Screen_ takes pleasure in the fact that emails can be artworks in their own right and in their own form, existing in a private, one-t0-one space and intimately experienced. Subscribing to Screen_ means that an engaged audience can opt-in to receive the artworks, each made specifically for the space and each considering that the method of their dissemination is via MailChimp.

Screen_ is organised by New York-based artist Ada Wright Potter. The first show will be sent out on the last Friday of January and will include artists Jeffrey Scudder, Dina KelbermanCecilia SalamaCristine BracheVanessa ThillWill RahillyLizzy de Vita.

To subscribe go here**

Cristine Brache, ‘PLEASE, ETC’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell.
Cristine Brache, ‘PLEASE, ETC’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell, New York.

  share news item

The Christmas Show @ Guccivuitton, Dec 1 – Jan 9

14 December 2015

The Christmas Show group exhibition is on at Miami’s Guccivuitton, opening December 1 and running to January 9, 2016.

Featuring the likes of Cristine Brache, Autumn Casey, Phillip Estlund and Hugo Montoya among others, the press release consists solely of lyrics from WHAM!’s famous hit ‘Last Christmas’. The work is installed to make one feel as if they were walking through a Christmas display at a shopping mall, only the usual items one would expect to see have been disrupted in some form, such as with Paul McCarthy’s infamous ‘Santa with Butt Plug.

Other artists in the exhibition include Henning Fehr und Philipp Rühr, Elizabeth Ferry, Ash Ferlito, Kathryn Marks, Jonathan Peck, Teresa Sanchez, Richard Spit, Michael Swaney and Matt Taber, which will also be marked by a Holiday Party on December 25, with performances by Waterfront (Patricia Margarita Hernandez & Craig Poor Monteith),  Jan & Dave,  and Kayla de la Cerda.

See the Guccivuitton website for details. **

  share news item

How to Sleep Faster #6 @ Arcadia Missa, Aug 27 – 29

27 August 2015

Arcadia Missa‘s How to Sleep Faster exhibition and book series launches its sixth edition, running at their London location from August 27 to August 29.

The ongoing publication and exhibition series published its first edition in 2011 and has featured some aqnb favourites throughout its five previous editions, including Jesse Darling, Paul Kneale, Huw Lemmey and Ann Hirsch in issue #4.

For its sixth edition, How to Sleep Faster asks: “How can we fuck in a way that doesn’t support a patriarchal prism and standard for sex to reflect capitalist relations? Can sex be a site for identity politics, after we are imbued with the lore and failure of the sexual ‘revolution’?” Amongst the dozens of participating artists are Amalia UlmanJaakko PallasvuoHannah Quinlan Anderson & Rosie Hastings, and Cristine Brache.

See the event page for details. **

  share news item

Low Impact, Issue 2: ‘Shallow Waters’ launch, Aug 5

4 August 2015

The artist-run, independent publication Low Impact is releasing its second issue, ‘Shallow Waters’, launching at 152 Wilmot Street in London on August 5.

The new issue brings a dozen contributing artists, including works by Iain BallCristine BracheLauren WilsonGeorge Jacotey, Serra Tansel, and Motoko Ishibashi

Low Impact‘s first issue, titled ‘Transparentities’, featured works from Sarai KirshnerEiko Soga and Valinia Svoronou, a ‘Love letter’ from James Lowne, and contributions from Sarah Boulton, and Harriet Rickard, amongst others.

11802798_1622360827981654_4606208110110552474_o

  share news item

Stalking Mark II

3 June 2015

You’re standing in a small parking lot. You’re being handed a photocopied sheet of paper. Handwritten in black marker, it lists twelve artists and areas of a car that have been assigned to them to respond to with a work in the Mark II exhibition. Air vents. Car keys. Ashtray, Maintenance, Hubcaps, Glove compartment. Rear window wiper. Sunscreen. Back seat. Stereo. Bumper.

You read the words on the sheet of paper and you look at the car. The car is a silver Nissan Micra, its ignition is on and its doors are open. It looks as if something debauched has happened and the owner ran away leaving the car as a recently deceased person leaves their home: all things intact and in mid-use as if they could be coming back any second to re-engage with the space. It’s like you’re part of a forensics team at the scene of a crime trying to determine what’s happened, or a voyeur that has come across an abandoned unlocked car in a parking lot, deciding to satiate your desire by looking deeply and maybe getting close enough to smell. You are the memory of the car and you are flashing back, revisiting every possible thing the car has ever experienced at once.

Fred Duffield, 'Hubcaps' (2015).
Fred Duffield, ‘Hubcaps’ (2015). Install view.

You begin to look for the objects in the car listed on the paper that now functions as a map. You’re in search of distinction as the art work seamlessly integrates into the car’s natural domain. A closer look is required to gain more insight into the curious narrative you’ve just stepped into. Perhaps these are some of the things organiser Harry Bix, whose choice of artist in relation to component parts seems carefully considered, wants us to feel.

The stereo spews self help. People in the car park are being told to “try ritual purification with wet wipes.”  It’s speaking on behalf of Ulijona Odišarija who produces an eerie lo-fi mix tape called Revival 2015 that loops misshapen beats and chants, dedicated -isms that promise to change your life and make it better: “and if you need forgiveness in the present time just visualise that happening / do you want to party or cry? / Find that special place inside you where you feel no shame”.

Mary Vettise, assigned the car’s bumper, rebrands the Micra with her last name, “Vettise”, in cursive on its right side just above the silver “S” that denotes some special unknown attribute to the Micra. It’s a pun that doesn’t really make sense to most people; an inside joke as the artist says her last name is commonly misspelled “Vitesse”, which is french for ‘speed’ and often confused with the Rover make and model of the same name. The back seat of the car is full of cold medicine boxes and empty bottles of energy drinks left by James Lowne.  A love letter rests on top of this pile explaining why he couldn’t be there. He is ill and sorry because he only thinks of you. Cristine Brache occupies a masculine object with feminine material by cutting a house key out of mother of pearl with the words “nothing but violence” engraved on it. The key hangs from the keychain, attached to the car key that powers the ignition.

The evening is comprised of three performances by Lea Collet and Marios Stamatis (maintenance) who dedicatedly wash the car, Sarah Boulton (air vents) reads poetry inside the car alone, leaving her audience with a powerful silence outside.  They remain completely quiet, even though they can’t hear a thing. Boulton’s performance is, as she puts it, “fragrance-based”, challenging the audience’s expectations and desires by denying them access to her words, rendering herself mute. A few minutes into her reading people walk up to the car to put their ears near the window in an attempt to eavesdrop. Alex Carmichael concludes the evening by hotboxing the car in exaggerated form with a smoke bomb, fading it out of your voyeuristic gaze with the thick cloud. The stereo urges you to “say fast slowly”. You turn around and walk away but take this last mantra with you, whispering the word ‘fast’ very, very slowly. **

Exhibition photos, top-right.

Mark II was a one-day group exhibition at Woburn Square Gardens Car Park on May 27, 2015.

Header image: Sarah Boulton, ‘Air vents’ (2015).  Performance view.

  share news item

The alternative art space of 57 Cell

27 March 2015

A publication but also a two-person exhibition, the Gregory Kalliche-curated 57 Cell features an artist’s work as consumed and produced across interfaces. Image is representation, whether on paper or in pixels, and constructions also exist off-screen. This is where 57 Cell’s fourth print issue, launched on January 23 at LA’s ROGERS gallery, aligns itself so comfortably with its two presentations –.dream without loneliness by London-based Cristine Brache and DEFEATURIZED SPECIMEN by LA-based Ian Page –as it blurs distinctions between platforms.

The artists take seven pages each in the 14-page publication of computer-generated images presented in print with two front covers and no back in an egalitarian exploration of bodies, reproduction and objects in circulation. Brache’s ‘EXIT WOUNDS’ features three pairs of women’s legs, cut off at the waist and lounging in a bright white showroom with laced and feminised furniture. Only the odd butterfly tattoo and wedged or heeled foot accessory is there to interrupt the untouched purity of a scene that’s lit by lights and plunged into pitch-black darkness. The work title references the electrified objectification of the ‘Erotic Doll‘ of online wholesaler aliexpress.com in an accompanying text that reads “…pleasure constantly, as long as the battery, giving her power of love…” and employs an aesthetic specific to the Chinese-owned factories selling simulated persons for sex through a website.

Cristine Brache, ‘PLEASE, ETC’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell.
Cristine Brache, ‘PLEASE, ETC’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell, New York.

Page, on the other hand, presents the objects used by humans to reproduce themselves in DEFEATURIZED SPECIMEN. Only the residue of their existence is present in the plastic vials of presumed semen, packed tightly in a makeshift cooling container that’s left open and exposed to the elements in stands made from polystyrene insulation with a picture of the Pink Panther and reading “ZERO OZONE DEPLETION”.  A zoom in on the detail of the installation, under a rusty corrugated roof with solar panels, shows a low plastic picnic table with empty acrylic test tubes and instructions on how to fertilise an egg in a picture of a pipette and diagram of a cervix. There’s an empty Quaker Quick Oats container with “$ to help with Electric Bill THX !” Sex here becomes either clinical or utilitarian reproductive process, as in the detail of a cubicle for presumed deposits resembling an outhouse and featuring a children’s drawing of a parental euphemism for procreation in ‘STORK DELIVERS BABY’.

Ian Page, ‘SILPHIUM COIN CALENDAR’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell.
Ian Page, ‘SILPHIUM COIN CALENDAR’ (2015). Courtesy 57 Cell, New York.

The materials listed under some of the works in Brache and Page’s respective catalogues present the animated images populating these computer-generated spaces as actual objects. They’re listed as “steel plastic lettering, LED lighting with power supply” for the depiction of the back of the chipboard backing of the well-lit facade of Brache’s ‘SIGNING THE BODY’.  A glowing pink and purple sign screams “HOW AWESOME” above “I was calling my own name”, that on closer inspection hangs near a “china paint on bone china” that looks like a dog bowl. The full installation view of Page’s ‘STRAW BALE SPERM BANK’ includes “stucco, cinder blocks, LED rope, freezer compressor kit, straw, wood, plastic, polystyrene, donated semen in acrylic vials” except that these are things presented only through an image. It’s here that 57 Cell blurs the distinction between what is considered real and ‘unreal’. Where -like in Brache’s recent series of advertisements for contemporary Holy Water brand ‘Hi Girls Sleep Outside™(images top right) –image begets life begets image begets art and so on. **

57 Cell is an alternative space directed, curated and digitally modelled by Gregory Kalliche. Issue #4 launched at LA’s Rogers gallery on January 23, 2015.

Header image: 57 Cell Issue #4 cover. Courtesy 57 Cell, New York.

  share news item