Top 10 UK art websites (2011/Week 5)

Here are the most visited UK art websites for the week ending 6 February 2011. This list encompasses all art orientated websites, including art forums, art news sites,  art blogs, online presence of physical gallery etc

  1. www.tate.org.uk
  2. www.guardian.co.uk/culture
  3. www.vam.ac.uk
  4. www.barbican.org.uk
  5. www.easyart.com
  6. www.nationalgallery.org.uk
  7. www.culture24.org.uk
  8. www.npg.org.uk
  9. www.royalacademy.org.uk
  10. www.worldgallery.co.uk

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Des Hughes at the Saatchi Gallery

Des Hughes’ Endless Endless 2010 intriguingly  defies visual definition. And that is what draws you to it!

Des Hughes' Endless Endless 2010

Is it a mummy?

Des Hughes' Endless Endless 2010

Is it a reptile?

Des Hughes' Endless Endless 2010

Is it a samurai?

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Norwich UCA Graduate Show

I stumbled upon the Norwich University College of Art Degree Show 2010. It was in my search for a previous incarnation of  what is now the university’s gallery and where this graduate show was set.

The art world tends to go through an ever-continuous metamorphosis. Logically the smaller the art entity the more this is the case. This is also more prevalent and apparent (to those in the art world) in certain sectors of the arts than others. Mainly due to commercial market forces, which the arts seems to insist on remaining oblivious to, the field tends to get tossed around like a lone boat at sea in a tempest. Alas I digress, however this is a subject area that warrants further discussion and attention. Needless to say I ended up at the show while following the tracks of one demised gallery, which caused it incarnate into another.

Spread over various buildings on the banks of the River Wensum, on both sides of an idyllic looking and tranquil St Georges Street, it seemed that the show on one side of the street focused on the darkness of adulthood while the other side engaged in child’s play. Neither side,  however, did less than the other on being challenging, self-deprecating or questioning, they both maintained the edge.

One of the leading advocates in the show for the dark burrows that the adult consciousness goes down was Fiona Davies. Davies’ Astrocytoma, seem to enthrall visitors. Physically this piece was unobtrusive, as an idea, concept or story it was challenging. As a story it was your story because it questioned you into giving it a story. Try as you may to avoid it you could not help but be drawn to it. Her imagination was the precursor of your imagination as you stood and observed or even engaged in (as opposed to engaged with) this piece.

I spoke to Davies, who told me that Astrocytoma was dedicated to her father who had recently passed away. Davies’ father was Richard Davies, a highly regarded Cromer (North Norfolk) retired lifeboat coxswain. Her story lies in the title of the piece, Astrocytoma. With this very intimate information I had to take another look at the piece and this added another layer of understanding on what I saw and perceived.

In the buildings on the other side of the street, which I would dub the Playhouse I was struck by the works of Jade Gordon and Maxine Turner.

Jade Gordon produced a mural in the fashion of comic strips/modern cartoons. Using animals as subjects she was telling the story of another world. Effectively you were looking at all the familiar trappings of your own world, a mirror of western values or modern civilization yet it was somewhat alien and disconcerting. It looked like child’s play but there was a slight subversion about it.

Maxine Turner seemed to be inspired by the concepts of galaxies, the Milky Way or heavenly figures to produce a mobile entitled Boundless. It was painstakingly constructed to mimic a sphere. It was effective and took the art of using found objects one step further to the point where you did not find them objectionable but wanted to come closer and admire and investigate them. Boundless looked and came across metaphorical and beautiful.

Also worth mentioning, in the show although not necessarily under the umbrella of contemporary art was Scott Grummett’s photography. Grummetts images are ripe with drama, dynamism and expression. The palette in the mainly colour photography have been cleverly controlled in such a way that it is just one element in the mix that creates the successful images.

In the show, there was strongly contending art and the pieces were mostly well executed. The artists I spoke to seemed confident about the future, Outpost Norwich seems to be a popular destination for some I spoke to. So the word is look to the Outpost for signs of the next big thing rising on the horizon of the Norfolk coast.

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RCA Show Two Battersea: Fertile futures

It’s the graduate show season of course and there is much to see, take in and ponder upon. The eye candy and delight for the brain cells to feast on is not limited to London. I travelled as far as the Norfolk coast and was duly rewarded (more on my sojourn to North Norfolk later).

I shall begin with the Royal College of Art graduate show. I managed to see what the RCA dubbed Show Two Battersea, which was the show of the postgraduate students in painting and sculpture. Usually partial to painting, I broke my own rules and started off with the sculpture (there where two buildings, one for painting and the other for sculpture). Intending to rush through the exhibits and then go on to bask in the two-dimensional world and take my time with my beloved paintings, I entered the sculpture room building and immediately I was trapped.

The principle is simple but the practise is usually difficult. The simplicity is this, produce challenging work and you sow the seed of intrigue in your audience and they would simply want to find out more. This show managed to trap this usually elusive principle and in so doing managed to trap me in a room full of sculpture. I will dub this show Entrapment. As a result of  the situation I found myself in I was unable to see Show Two Battersea Painting, as I wanted to take my time and savour the offerings of Show Two Battersea Sculpture. Hey, we will not cry over split milk.

Show Two Battersea Sculpture was the ultimate Alice’s rabbit hole; you look in and fall in. There was much to attract you and many layers to unfold; the more you unfolded the more you had to unfold. There was an array of styles from which artists created their own signatures, which were stamped all over their pieces.

Do not be fooled by the reference in the title of the show to sculpture. The contemporary art scene is slowly but surely getting comfortable with defining and distinguishing all those 3 dimensional creations that are not traditional sculpture and require a category of their own, for example installation. Forgive me, for I digress, but necessarily so, this show contained sculpture, yes, but there were also installations.

The installations were significant both in number and in distinctive presence. There were also pieces that fell in the bands of spectrum that might be said to exist between sculpture and installation, bands that the art establishment might be struggling to label and define at this juncture.

An example of an (as near as damn-it) installation was Stuart McCaffer’s The Older You Get The Less You Look Up. This piece took the (most) ordinary and not-worth-a-glance and made it intriguing and fun and (of course) extraordinary. The piece, if it could be called that as you are surrounded by it as opposed to standing and looking at it, has to be experienced to get a sense of it. Its execution is what captured my imagination, its concept was clear from the onset but in installing it for this show McCaffer went the extra mile in getting the detail right. You had to look and then look again and even then a second glance was not enough.

Marcus Foster was another artist whose work ran the gamut of the spectrum of sculpture to installation and probably beyond. Foster is clever. His pieces catch the eye. His practice is prolific, lending his hand and thinking to both big and small. There is enormous mileage in Fosters ideas and concepts and I look forward to seeing which roads he travels down and what twists and turns he makes. My favourite Foster piece was Fab Landing. Pieces based on found objects (a current favourite of contemporary artists) can often be poorly executed but this one did not suffer that demise.

Simply entitled Mountain, you need to see Rose Gibbs’ piece to believe it. This piece comes hot on the heels of Grayson Perry and Jake and Dino Chapman. It is what can be best described, without giving the plot away, as salaciously fruity.

John Neilsen takes modern materials and practices to create something that deceives the eye into thinking it taking in an ethnic piece. In this instance I am talking of his piece, Ladies and Gentlemen It Does Look Different. Picasso and his contemporaries who referenced art from the Dark Continent would be jealous. You need to walk around it to appreciate it. Part of the magic of this piece was the material used. Concrete! As well as concrete Neilsen likes other artistically unconventional, but everyday conventional, materials such as marble, plasterboard, steel and wood and we like what he does with them.

Then James Martin McCann said, “Let the room bring forth the intriguing creature according to its very own strange kind”. James Martin McCann’s “creations” are frighteningly and intriguingly organic. You are tempted to touch them while at the same time resisting the urge in case they came alive. Although I was tempted I resisted, but they still came alive for me.

If this show is anything to go by then we are set for exciting times ahead as far as contemporary is concerned. This show was fertile and showed good promise.The ones to watch are Stuart McCaffer, Marcus Foster, John Neilsen. As far as my eyes can see their pieces are entertainingly challenging and as artists starting out they are eager to kick against boundaries and make tracks in bushes where there are none. Not for any other reason other than that is where their thinking is taking them. But then may be I need to get out more.

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The GalleriaClic Manifesto

Let’s talk about art. What the eye clocked, locked on, clicked or saw. This is what GalleriaClic is all about. We are about having a dialogue with, a discussion on, an interaction with what is going on in the ocean that is contemporary art.

GalleriaClic knows art. GalleriaClic knows good art. We have to, there so much out there and obviously the challenge is to separate the wheat from the chaff. This is our manifesto however these are not set in stone, for now let’s call them our guiding principles.

We will be talking about artists featured on GalleriaClic. With the aid of the various social media tools available to you and us a lively dialogue will ensue.

We will be commenting on the proliferation of art out there. Strong opinions will be expressed. And why not, a lot of art and artist out there are making bold statements and taking a strong stance. If we don’t get it, we will say so. Not getting it might be one of two or more things. It might be one of two things we are missing the point or they are missing the point (or the artist does not have one).

We will be fun. Or at least we will give it our best shot. In a bid to be taken seriously artist sometimes forget to be fun. The down side of this is for example the lack of exciting decorative contemporary art. We are a fan of Rothko but returning the money for a commission to the Four Seasons Hotel NYC patron might be a step too far. Thinking that deeply we now know can play havoc with the mind. On the other hand flying into a rage because of the way your work is hung is permissible. As long as you have control by all means exert control. Like everyone else artists need to pick their battles.

We will stray. Creativity has no borders. Advancements, especially in the field of science and technology means things are fluid and lines get blurred. GalleriaClic recently went to see Michael Clark Company’s Come, Been and Gone. Here Michael Clark’s choreography fused with Peter Doig’s visual art.

We will compile hit-lists and shortlists. The world loves a list especially its Top Ten.

We will not get overwhelmed by blockbusters. We will seek out the obscure, the off-the-beaten track and those who lack the ability or funds to spin.

For now let’s sign off this piece by saying art like life is about collaboration. No matter how you choose to look at it no artist is an island. An artist might be one man or women holed up in make shift studio, but then comes along the gallery, the dealer, the collector and most important of all the audience. Then and only then is the art validated and complete. That is why we are asking you the artist, collector, critique, dealer or (just plain and humble) art lover (just like us), to collaborate with us by reading, commenting and passing the pieces along.

Read, comment and pass along.

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