Wednesday, June 24, 2009
London Times Reviews Hayward Gallery Show
Walking in My Mind at the Hayward Gallery, London SE1
Joanna Pitman
The final room in the Hayward’s summer show, Walking in My Mind, contains an installation by a young Japanese artist, Chiharu Shiota. She is one of ten international artists invited to construct installations depicting the contents of their minds, and Shiota’s visualisation of her mental landscape is troubling.
She has filled a large room with a tangled web of black woollen threads, woven around a central group of five white dresses. The threads are densely spun, knotted in and out of one another in a spreading tangle, sticking arbitrarily to the floor and ceiling and quivering like the work of a giant malevolent spider. A narrow tunnel is left unfilled, allowing the visitor to creep around and view her thought processes, her networks of neurons and synapses from the inside.
Shiota has been creating these black webs since 1994 to exorcise her fears. She tells me that she grapples daily with powerful fears of the dark and of death, with childhood fears and anxieties about her identity and her future, and finally, with worries about losing her insecurities, which are what fire her artistic imagination. It is shocking being confronted with such tangible terror.
The curators Mami Kataoka and Stephanie Rosenthal’s concept for this exhibition came from their visualisation of the gallery as a giant head that invites visitors to wander around in the recesses of its mind. Their chosen artists — Yayoi Kusama, Charles Avery, Thomas Hirschhorn, Bo Christian Larsson, Mark Manders, Yoshitomo Nara, Jason Rhoades, Pipilotti Rist, Keith Tyson and Shiota — have constructed some intimately revealing works that allow us the privilege of creeping around inside the privacy of these creative heads.
Hirschhorn has built a giant fantasy brain, Cavemanman, out of curving tunnels and a series of chambers lined with adhesive tape in which you can explore, while physically and mentally losing your way. Inside, there is a wealth of data from Hirschhorn’s mind, philosophical books, girly pin-ups, clocks, piles of detritus in overflowing bins; and throughout there are groups of mannequins wrapped in silver foil, their brains connected with foil arteries.
Kusama, a leading figure in Japanese postwar avant-garde art, has made an installation of mirrors and balloons decorated with red and white polka dots. In this strange, hallucinatory chamber, the visitor quickly loses orientation and perhaps experiences some of the dizzying qualities of Kusama’s singular life.
This show is fascinating and illuminating, and as you emerge, you cannot help wondering how your own mind might be visualised in 3-D.
Hayward Gallery (southbankcentre.co.uk/walking), from today to Sept 6
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Goff + Rosenthal Summer Exhibition
featuring works on paper by
Ain Cocke | Simon English | Scott Hunt | Isca Greenfield-Sanders | Faris McReynolds
June 17 - July 24, 2009
Opening Reception
June 17, 5-7 pm
Please note new summer hours:
Monday - Friday, 11am - 6pm
Isca Greenfield-Sanders, A Walk With Daddy, 2008
Direct to plate photogravure and aquatint, 23.5 x 22 inches, 59.7 x 55.9 cms, Edition of 50, $ 1500.00.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
In the Studio with Titus Kaphar
"In the Studio with Titus Kaphar"
Steven Psyllos
GIANT magazine
April 17, 2009
For the past year, 32-year-old artist Titus Kaphar has been prepping for “History in the Making,” his solo exhibit at the Seattle Art Museum, which opened April 3rd. The painter recently purchased a house in Connecticut, where he earned his M.F.A from Yale, and renovated his garage into a studio space. He and his wife also just welcomed their second son into the world. These days, keeping work close to home is a priority because Kaphar is a family man on a tight schedule.
The Setup
“This is my first solo show of this size. A year ago, they flew me out to see the space and we talked about the setup. Then I figured out what works best: Just make the work and stop thinking.”
Letting Go
Kaphar relied heavily on curator Sandra Jackson-Dumont. “You have to work with someone you trust. You have to have a good idea of their vision because then you can let them do that.”
Negotiation
“Four months ago, Sandra came to narrow down what would be included.” Some selections were obvious, while others were not. “There’s a nice piece that I had to pull out. I have conversations with it, like, ‘You figure out what you want yet?’ and it’s not saying. So I’m waiting. [I also ended up] including things I never intended on showing.”
Methodology
Kaphar’s work is more than painted canvases—he shreds them, crumples them into balls and stitches them together. “If I’m feeling hyped, then it’s time to deconstruct or do a drawing. If I’ve got that focused energy, then it’s time to paint.”
Time Management
With a small family and a budding career, Kaphar doesn’t play. “I get up at 5:30 A.M—my newborn doesn’t sleep—then I get my two-year-old up at 7:00 A.M., make breakfast. At 9: 30 A.M., I come into the studio and my here until 7:00 P.M. All that romantic ‘Ah, I gotta wait to be inspired’ kind of thing is gone.”