Thursday, November 13, 2014

on accidental art

this is a piece located on the ceiling of an elevator in an industrial plant. it has probably been in operation for 40 years or more. the marks were made by objects such as ladders, bits of metal, whatever. it is part of a job that was being done, somebody transporting something to or from a job. the marks were not made purposefully by hand.
i like it because it tells a story of time and peoples lives, and has a random energetic quality about it. it has a rhythm not unlike that of a strong wind stirring up a forest. yet it comes from an environment the complete opposite to that. it is anti-nature managing to become nature.

It reminds me of Anselm Kiefer- see below.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

on accidental installation #9

the great thing about these two pieces is it looks as though somebody is in the shoes but they are invisible. go ahead, draw your own character into them - its easy! one could be a crack-head, the other a lost golfer. they are both melancholic ghosts traversing the subtle real back roads of dimension.
the story is open ended and quiet. one has stepped from the shadows, the other from a murky dam. who are they? 

second hand shoes occupy a strange place in the world - someone has been in them, they are rarely washed, they often stink of another life. only the poor or penny pinching buy shoes that are heavily worn, otherwise they end up in garbage dumps or get recycled in the 3rd world.

canvas and concrete, leather and mud. i like the aesthetics of these 2 installations. contrasting materials, similar tones.

on Cai Guo-Giang

i went and saw the Cai Guo-Giang show recently and was highly disappointed. in fact i hated it. not only were the animals poorly made, but the whole concept of the thing reeked of an obviousness that made me think it was Art for spectaculars sake and nothing else. a kind of cheap wow factor that was great if you took the kids - in fact it was in a weird way Art for kids, that would look more at home somewhere else - like Disneyland or a theme park. i wanted to jump in the pond that would've worked better if only one animal was drinking from it.
The wolf piece was marginally more successful but still irritated me due to its poor construction and bland ideas. this environmental art bandwagon can be interesting if its treated with more heart and less shoving down the throat. if it makes non-Art goers go along and see Art and make them aware of whats happening in the world then great, but please do it with a little more integrity, subtlety, and treat people with respect.
The other pieces were 2 trees that were taken from a housing development site - and saved! for people to go and see in a gallery for 15 bucks.  "i'd rather look at a 10x10cm Goya in an empty room", the person i was with said. Indeed - gimme some quiet Art...