london

‘Moving Image London’ running Oct 17 – 20

15 October 2013

Returning to the Southbank’s Bargehouse during  Frieze London, running October 17 to 20, contemporary art fair Moving Image London will be showcasing work by artists and film makers including Heta Kuchka, Karim Al Husseini, Constant Dullaart and Milica Tomić.

Conceived as a forum for engaging in “a unique viewing experience with the excitement and vitality of a fair, while allowing moving image-based artworks to be understood and appreciated on their own terms”. The event will feature a selection of single-channel videos, single-channel projections, video sculptures, and other larger video installations from across the globe.

See the Moving Image London website for more details. **

Karim Al Husseini, 'Dew Not' (2012).
Karim Al Husseini, ‘Dew Not’ (2012).
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‘Sunset’ @ The Sunday Painter, Oct 11

11 October 2013

The Sunday Painter in South London will be seeing out the day with the Sunset group exhibition on Friday, October 11.

Featuring Jan Kiefer, Max Ruf and Yves Scherer there’s not much to go off except that it’ll be a London/Basel collective of artists that have been concerned with the image within conceptual directness in the past. How that will translate into this exhibition, you’ll have to see for yourself.

See the The Sunday Painter website for more details. **

Yves Scherer

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UBERMORGEN @ Carroll/Fletcher, Oct 11

7 October 2013

Swiss-Austrian-American duo UBERMORGEN will be presenting their first solo exhibition, u s e r u n f r i e n d l y, at London’s Carroll / Fletcher, running October 11 to November 16. Featuring work across installations, videos, websites, actions, pixellated prints and digital-oil paintings, it promises a “hyper-active, super-enhanced exploration of censorship, surveillance, torture, democracy, e-commerce, and newspeak”.

Keeping things topical will be two new installations ‘Do You Think That’s Funny? – The Edward Snowden Files’ (2013) and ‘CCTV – A Parallel Universe’ (2013), as well  as a section of UBERMORGEN’s Net.Art works curated by Berlin artist Aram Bartholl and presented across an offline wireless router system, in a similar fashion as his recent OFFLINE ART: HARDCORE in Germany, to which the duo also contributed and is still running until October 13.

u s e r u n f r i e n d l y also comes accompanied by a publication including an essay by curator Magda Tyżlik-Carver and conversations between UBERMORGEN and Austrian quantum physicist Dr. Tobias Noebauer, as well as NSA intelligence leaker and fugitive Edward Snowden.

See the Carroll / Fletcher website for more details. **

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Simon Whybray @ Credit Card Curation

2 October 2013

“I MET A GIRL”.

“Liking on Tumblr isn’t meeting.”

London-based artist, hacker and all round funny guy Simon Whybray is next up on the online display of Anthony Antonellis Credit Card curation. After we were so tickled by Faith Holland‘s Zeros + Ones -inspired number porn card, building on Sadie Plant’s book on the gendered tech world, Whybray represents for the other end of the stereotyped sexual divide with his iPhone-inspired credit card. Because there are two things that are essential when it comes to the dating game: a phone and some cash.

See Anthony Antonellis’ website for more curated credit cards. **

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LUGUS @ Coby Dock, Sep 28

25 September 2013

As part of the Lighting up the Lea festival, a collaboration between sculptor Rob Olins and Lee Berwick will be launching at London’s Cody Dock, during a night of performance, sonic and experimental art for Lugus presents- ‘The long arm of the light’ on September 28.

An audio-visual installation, ‘Sound Reflector’ will demonstrate  the dual reflective possibilities of these “acoustic mirrors” as light and sound is beamed across the dock from these movable mirrors, made by Olins and accompanied by compositions of field recordings, taken from the dock itself, by Berwick.

See the Lighting up the Lea website for more details. **

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‘Young London’ @ V22 Studios reviewed

19 September 2013

An annual celebration of artists in the city, exhibitors at V22 StudiosYoung London, were this year selected by a panel including Space studio’s Paul Peroni, V22 director Tara Cranswick, as well as a host of art school teachers and previous Young Londoners nominating their peers. Now in its third edition, the event has built its reputation by acting on this shortlist only after seeing each and every one of the graduates’ shows in person, be it tracking round final year projects or stealthily checking out group shows. Once selected the artists have only a short four weeks to create site-specific works, two to install them in the enormous Bermondsey warehouse space.

Of the 31 pieces across the massive floor space, Rhys Coren’s ‘If We Can Dance Together’ (2013) catches the eye first. A video installation that loops animations of different colours; going from crayon-yellow, blue and black, with occasional stampeding hooves, dots or lines of white. Across eight separate fat-monitor TVs on the floor, accompanied by a disco soundtrack on wireless headphones, it sets up a fun visual journey, viewed from around the centre-point of Room One, from which you can half-see Hannah Lees’  video projection ‘Eternal’ (2013).

The promising vegetable-dyed cloth and a prominently positioned projection is unfortunately lost in the refraction of lights beaming in on works nearby but, next door, large white box structures act as a solution; blacking out all distractions and showing works like ‘Mike Check’ (2013) by Alice Theobold. Filmed in HD but appearing quite grainy, the film nevertheless stands strong in terms of its content, which is made-up of rehearsal outtakes. The female lead is supposed to be a strong character, accusing her lover Mike of not telling the truth but in reality constantly asking the director, Hans Diernberger, to give her commands. It’s a great critique on the role of the spectator, Hollywood production, and post-feminist thinking: “Tell me to be me intimidating,” she says. “Be more intimidating!” he shouts back, in unending feedback that gradually fades away as a bouncing track from Ravioli Me Away takes over the speakers.

‘A Reading (Just In Case You Care)’ (2013) by Holly White next door also features music heavily, with snippets from Grimes’ Oblivion sound-tracking a mess of clips spliced together using software that can also be seen in action on White’s collaborative project with Gothtech or with super vloggers like PewDiePie. White says she likes to blast out Evanescence but “it has to be played on CD” in the manner of a confessional teenage video diary. It is a personal piece but also a timely one; when YouTube is investing in studio facilities for bloggers who have 1,000 subscribers and inviting them in to “chill”, in what is really a bid to push up the quality of video content and increase revenue. Back in Room One ‘How To Feel Better, A Display (Just In Case You Care) (2013), also by White, has homemade objects from the set of the video, such as a circle with dates of years and tiles with phrases like, “so I propose next week’s theme when you’re feeling down” in a move to address that disconnect between screen-based narrative and net-based interaction, so keenly felt overall. **

V22 Young London runs at V22 Workspace until the 3rd of November 3, 2013.

Header image: V22 Young London (2013). Photo by Ollie Hammick.

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‘The Country of the Blind’ @ The Sunday Painter, Sep 19

18 September 2013

As part of this year’s PAMI, running September 19 to 22, Peckham’s The Sunday Painter will be screening Mumbai-based collective CAMP‘s film The Country of the Blind and Other Stories, named after H.G. Wells’ 33 short science fiction and fantasy stories, starting on the Wednesday.

The group, concerned with infrastructures and mediation, spent a year working with volunteers of the National Coastwatch Institution at the coastal ‘blind spot’ of Kent’s Copt Point, investigating the shipping trade, local ecologies and fishing among other things.

See The Sunday Painter website for more details. **

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‘Mining the Image’ panel @ reSource006 reviewed

16 September 2013

Few of us have any illusions about where our material possessions come from, but when it comes to the immaterial, the digital realm of images and data, the labour costs remain largely hidden. Digital media tends to appear comparatively ethical — e-books are lauded for their low carbon footprint while much online content is seen as user-created, open and democratic. But in his recent research and work, artist Harry Sanderson aims to provide insight into the invisible economy of digital media production. He writes:

 “Relating a Google search return to an equivalent expenditure of fossil fuels, or the fluctuation of pixels across a screen with the exploited labour of rural migrant workers in Shenzhen, or topsoil loss in Inner Mongolia, is as remote and unattainable for the majority of users as is an understanding of the technical functionality of the devices themselves.”

— Excerpted from Human Resolution, published in Mute Magazine, April, 2013.

'Mining the Image' @ Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien.
‘Mining the Image’ @ Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien.

While there have been some attempts to reveal at least the energy cost of the internet (the website Blackle comes to mind), the ephemeral nature of online media serves to alienate us from the human cost of its production. As part of transmediale’s reSource006, a three-day program of talks at Berlin’s Kunstraum Kreuzberg Bethanien, curator Rozsa Farkas initiated a discussion between Sanderson and cultural scientist Vera Tollmann. The talk centred around Sanderson’s up-coming project for Arcadia Missa gallery, Unified Fabric, which involves the display and use of a self-built render-farm. Using the cheapest materials he could find, Sanderson created a render-farm that performs the kind of image rendering usually only achieved by industrial super-computers. By showing the physical objects and the time needed to achieve image rendering, Sanderson re-inserts a labour-value into the digital images he creates.

As a way of approaching Sanderson’s work, Tollmann presented some topical examples she encountered while researching in China. To begin with, she showed a clip of a massive LED screen situated in Tiananmen Square, displaying a constant stream of alluring high-definition film shot in various Chinese provinces. Tollman speculated that this exercise in self-promotion must cost the State millions to run. Tollman then showed images from Chinese artist Li Liao’s performative work, Consumption, which involved him taking a job at Foxconn for forty-five days and using all of his earnings to buy a single iPad. In a sense, the high-production digital images displayed in Tiananmen Square are a screen for China’s underlying digital economy, where many workers migrate from the rural provinces to work in factories (some say sweatshops) that produce the world’s smart-phones and computers. While media exposure of factories like Foxconn has been prevalent in recent years, we still tend to divorce our physical devices (and the physical labour required to create them) from the immaterial digital world they provide access to.

Tollmann and Sanderson also discussed the phenomenon of gold farming. This practice involves labour forces, predominantly in China, playing games such as World of Warcraft and on-selling their virtual achievements to a largely Western gaming audience. An activity considered leisure in one context becomes labour in another, with the two fuelling one another. With everything from gaming to image re-touching to online journalism being out-sourced to developing nations, the virtual world increasingly reproduces the inequitable economic structures of the real world.

Sanderson will use his render-farm, made as cheaply as possible, to render the most expensive things possible (which in rendering terms, means the most computationally intense images). Anderson explained how, aesthetically speaking, the most difficult images to render are usually also the most ephemeral – light patterns, moving liquids, wisps of smoke – the kind of immaterial effects that add extra shine to a big-budget film production. While these kinds of images may evoke an instinctual association with high production values, they are also precisely the kind of images we are unlikely to interrogate too deeply – they are fleeting, inconsequential, digital fluff.  Towards the end of the discussion, Sanderson suggested that much art exploiting digital media fails to critically assess the medium itself. Ideally, Sanderson’s Unified Fabric when realized will engage not only with how digital images are produced, but in our wilful ignorance of their more material realities. **

Unified Fabric by Harry Sanderson will be exhibited at Arcadia Missa, from October 15, 2013, and feature work by Kade Ranger and I.U.Y, Clunie Reid, Hito Steyerl, Maja Cule and Takeshi Shiomitsu.

Header image: Harry Sanderson, ‘F_R (flexibledisplay)’ (2013.) Still from documentation. Video installation.

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PAMI running September 19 to 22

13 September 2013

The third annual Peckham Artist Moving Image, aka PAMI, is running exhibitions and events in South London, over four days, from September 19 to 22.

Previews start on Wednesday September 18, followed by a special screening at Peckham Multiplex coordinated by Bold Tendencies‘ Harriet Blaise Mitchell and Joe Balfour. Works featured have been selected by associates of Lucky PDF, Flat Time House, Arcadia Missa, SLG, The Sunday Painter and recent aqnb interviewee Attilia Fattori Franchini of bubblebyte.org, and include those by Cécile B Evans, Jon Rafman and Jesse Wine among others.

See the PAMI website for more details. **

Header image: Heather Phillipson, ‘Still from A Is to D What E Is to H’, (2011). Film Still.

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‘Tilt’ Goldsmiths MA Design Show, Sep 19 – 22

12 September 2013

Problem-solving is at the core of design and for Goldsmiths MA Design show Tilt at Hoxton Gallery at the Arch, running September 19 to 22, some of those problems include London food waste, the perpetual pursuit of more space and future landfill. Hence the fox diners, Japanese modular shelving and a design disposal manifesto being just some of the conundrums showing during London Design Festival.

Covering industrial, communication and spatial design, 40 projects from graduates who’ve already shown at Milan Salone, 100% Design and been recognised at the A’Design Awards, there’s little doubt of the world-class ideas generation no doubt on display.

See the Hoxton Gallery website for more details. **

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Factory Floor’s self-titled LP reviewed

11 September 2013

It’s been a long, long wait. Since their emergence in 2009, Factory Floor never ceased to be perceived as the ‘next big thing’; their famously thrilling live performances and subsequent releases, marking a shift from a Joy Division-influenced, typically post-punk act into a ruthless, noise-dance machine, while making a long-overdue debut album one of the most anticipated releases of 2013. Now, as it finally drops, the self-titled collection seems, paradoxically, both satisfying and sub-standard in equal measure.

Nik Colk Void’s collaboration with Chris Carter and Cosey Fanni Tutti, which resulted in the long, dense, primal industrialism of Transverse, certainly had a strong, beneficial influence on the shaping of Factory Floor: the shift from average-but-hyped indie post-punk to a more singular sound now complete. First impressions place the LP alongside the dancefloor-as-ritual tendencies of the 1980s: Psychic TV, Liquid Liquid, 23 Skidoo – where machine trance chants meet a contagious funk nerve, or even echo the disorientating, malign disco of 20 Jazz Funk Greats. Nearly all the songs unite repetitive, condensed rhythms with pushed-back, detached, mantra-like vocals, instantly bringing to mind Cosey’s mannerisms. Another factor, which seems to have moulded the band’s current shape is their label; the mark of manic punk-funk, DFA‘s early signature sound, is clearly audible here – but it’s a new, modernised version, in which the New York hip-ness of The Juan Maclean or LCD Soundsystem is replaced with mechanical, Ballardian cyberfunk. ‘How You Say’, or album opener ‘Turn It Up’ are updated versions of the DFA template circa-2004, but with all traces of rock provenance surgically removed.

These aspects make Factory Floor an interesting, albeit derivative, production. Instead of establishing a new quality, the LP serves as a concluding chapter, dotting the ‘i’s and crossing the ‘t’s of contemporary dance-punk history. It’s also likely that it’s still the best record of the entire genre – the most definitive, well-considered example. Yet, what Factory Floor have lost on the way is a more daring mode of expression. They’re by no means a characterless formation, and have proved that they can develop their own unique language – most distinctly in the ‘Second Way’ version of Two Different Ways (2011), across which they refreshingly incorporated elements of acid house and obscure, late-80s New Beat. Sadly, this route wasn’t the one the band elected to follow; instead, as in ‘Work Out’ or ‘Fall Back’, they edge dangerously close to electroclash, thankfully putting the genre’s parodist tendencies aside.

While their LP was eagerly awaited, it’s worth remembering that Factory Floor are just one of the bands merging a post-punk edge with abrasive synths that have appeared in recent years. This is a more adventurous, less fashion-conscious incarnation of new wave influences than its guitar-led predecessors (helmed by Interpol). If the new-new wave of the mid-2000s was driven by a love for Joy Division, then the next one definitely prefers New Order. The unabashed electro-Goth fascinations of Light Asylum, the experimental weirdness of S.C.U.M., the dejected minimal wave of Led Er Est or the claustrophobic, swooning sound of HTRK heralded the intriguing sub-genre of ‘new severity’, serious music to dance and feel depressed to.

When faced with the task of creating a whole album, most of the above (with the exception of HTRK), simply didn’t deliver. Perhaps it’s a sign of the times: thriving in short forms, astonishing on EPs and singles, bands tend to lose it across the increasingly outmoded format of the LP. Light Asylum, who developed a promising chimera of New York-meets-Wave Gotik Treffen on their smaller releases, revealed a disappointingly mild, conservative face on their full-length debut. Led Er Est remain a stylistically undecided band: they’re capable of producing tracks filled with splendid resignation (such as the unmatched ‘Port Isabel’), but each of them disappears among a crowd of generic post-punk/minimal wave fare.

In this sense, Factory Floor remain a noble exception – a band who have proven that they can determinedly follow their chosen course and create a stylistically coherent LP without incidental tracks. As a predictable guitar sound seems to prevail again in 2013, whether in the form of the Siouxsie-esque Savages or the gloomy, overly prolix The Cure heirs Tropic of Cancer, ‘Factory Floor’, with its rigidity and earnestness, serves as an icy, angular counterweight. **

Factory Floor’s self-titled album was released on DFA, September 6, 2013. 

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