Liverpool to Liverpool tells the story of an epic journey by Simon Faithfull from Liverpool, UK, to Liverpool, Novia Scotia. Faithfull made about six drawings a day throughout his journey, documenting the minutiae of daily life on land and sea, from Liverpool to Liverpool, with his Palm Pilot. This book includes 181 digital drawings, and Faithfull’s often wry, imagist commentary on the landscapes he was passing through and the humans he encountered – from English Liverpudlians crouched under umbrellas to Canadian Liverpudlians with moustachioed lips and pick-up trucks – as he drew them. The book serves as a reminder of Liverpool’s maritime past, its historical dependence on the shipbuilding industry and transatlantic trade, and the survival of these global connections today. Both the words and images in this fascinating book attest to the survival of the texture and detail of individual everyday lives even in our restlessly mobile world.
Posts Tagged ‘art’
Field Broadcast 8 – 16 May 2010
9 DAYS – 33 FIELDS – 33 ARTISTS
Thirty-three artists will send live broadcasts from fields direct to your desktop. All works, whether video, animation, performance, sculpture or live data will be created in the field with no editing or post-production. Each broadcast will be viewed by a dispersed international audience, at office desks, in cafes, on trains and at kitchen tables.
To receive the field broadcasts go to www.fieldbroadcast.org and follow the instructions. Once you have installed the viewer application each broadcast will arrive directly to your desktop, through your internet connection, opening in a pop-up window.
Field Broadcast will be live for 24 hours a day from May 8th to May 16th. Times of individual broadcasts will not be published in advance. All broadcasts are live and will not be repeated.
Artists: Bram Thomas Arnold, Ed Atkins, Dave Ball, Christopher Bassford and Jonathan Ryall, Richard Bevan, Sara Bjarland, Martin John Callanan, Susan Collins, Dan Coopey, Alexander Costello, David Cotterrell, Michael Cousin, Juan Cruz, Sean Edwards, Simon Faithfull, Florencia Guillen, Hamilton, Southern and St Armand, Toby Huddlestone, Fritha Jenkins, David Kefford, Olivier Leger, Pernille Leggat Ramfelt, Neil Luck, Revati Mann, Elizabeth McTernan, Alex Pearl, Eric Rosoman, Jennie Savage, Rob Smith, Dan Walwin, Ian Whittlesea, Luke Williams, Laura Wilson.
Curated by Rebecca Birch and Rob Smith for PROJECKT in conjunction with Wysing Arts Contemporary Presents
Tim Head: Raw Material
Laughing Cavalier (still), Tim Head 2002
21 November 2009 to 9 January 2010
A major solo exhibition by Tim Head at Huddersfield Art Gallery.
The exhibition will showcase a selection of digital works, drawings and prints and will include a dramatic outdoor digital projection on the Library and Art Gallery building to coincide with the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (until 29 November).
Admission free
Monday – Friday 10am–5pm
Saturday 10am–4pm
Sunday 22 and 29 November 10am–4pm
Closed all other Sundays and Bank Holidays
Huddersfield Art Gallery
Princess Alexandra Walk
Huddersfield
HD1 2SU
The exhibition will tour to Kettles Yard in Spring 2010
Seascape book
Charting the span of Susan Collins’ Seascape, from its earliest online manifestations to its gallery exhibition at the De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill, a publication on the Seascape project has been produced by Film and Video Umbrella. The book features newly commissioned essays by Sean Cubitt and Nicholas Alfrey and includes an extensive colour plate section of archive seascape images.
The book is now available from the De La Warr Pavilion shop and other art bookshops. To order a copy online email books@fvu.co.uk
ISBN 978-1-904270-30-0
visit www.fvu.co.uk for further details
Komm, wir gehen in den Wald!
Westwerk e.V.
Admiralitatsrasse 74 · D-20459 Hamburg, Germany
18 – 26 April 2009
Susan Collins, Bertolt Hering, Heilwig Jacob,
Ralf Jurszo, Thomas Kabelitz, Stefan Prehn,
Carsten Rabe und Sabina Simons
Seascape
2009
A solo show presenting a new body of work by Susan Collins
opens on Saturday 4th April at the
De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea
and continues until 14 June 2009
SEASCAPE consists of a series of gradually unfolding digital seascapes created using imagery captured by webcams installed at five key coastal vantage points between Margate and Portsmouth. Sited at each location for up to a year before the start of the show, the webcams record the endless fluctuations in the light that are a characteristic feature of the English coastline and whose ever-changing nature has attracted painters for generations.
Read more
SPRING UPDATE 2008 / THOMSON & CRAIGHEAD
Hello, here are details of two exhibitions we are in this spring.
Remember also to check out http://www.thomson-craighead.net
++ The New Normal. Artists Space, New York
Works by: Sophie Calle, Mohamed Camara, Hasan Elahi, Eyebeam R & D/Jonah Peretti & Michael Frumin, Kota Ezawa, Miranda July & Harrell Fletcher, Guthrie Lonergan, Jill Magid, Jennifer & Kevin McCoy, Trevor Paglen, Corinna Schnitt, Thomson & Craighead, Sharif Waked
April 26 – June 21, 2008.
Opening Reception: Friday, April 25, 6-8PM
Curated by Michael Connor & Co-organized with iCI (Independent Curators International)
http://www.artistsspace.org/exhibitions/future.html
Cocktails generously provided by CAMPARI
Artists Space,
38 Greene St.
3rd Fl, NY NY 10013
+ Social Networking Unplugged. Cube Gallery, Manchester and Citywide
New artworks by Thomson & Craighead, plan b, Grennan & Sperandio, Simon Yuill, Aram Bartholl, Rajni Shah, Last.fm & Futuresonic, Improv Everywhere, picidae (Christoph Wachter & Mathias Jud), David Merrit and Julian Priest, and You And Me featuring Cybersonica.
May 1st – May 17th, 2008.
Opening reception, Wednesday 30th April.
Curated by Drew Hemment and Futuresonic.
http://www.futuresonic.com/08/2008art.html
Cube
113-115 Portland St
Manchester, M1 6FB
0161 237 5525
THOMSON & CRAIGHEAD / UPDATE WINTER 2008
Hello. Here’s a brief update on what we’re doing just now:
+ Our desktop documentary, ‘FLAT EARTH’ will be at AV 08 Festival in Newcastle next weekend as part of the screening, ‘Works for Television’ / http://www.avfestival.co.uk/programme/events/works-for-television
+ We have made a new artwork called, ‘FLIPPED CLOCK’ available at http://www.flippedclock.com and hosted courtesy of GIMA Gallery for Media Art in Berlin
+ Finally, A new large-scale permanent outdoor version of, ‘DECORATIVE NEWS’ has been switched on at The Junction in Cambridge. We’re still tweaking the software and an official launch will come later, but it’s there to be seen right now if you are passing by / http://www.thomson-craighead.net/docs/decncam.html
best wishes,
Jon & Alison
http://www.thomson-craighead.net
One Thing and Another in 2007, a top ten from Steve Dietz
I asked Steve Dietz, Artistic Director of ZERO1 and former Walker New Media Curator if he would prepare a top ten list for our roundup. Steve is busy these days, but he managed to indulge and put together a list, if a little late. Thanks, Steve. — Ed.
I’ve never really understood Top Ten or “Best of” lists. Can’t we all just get along? Probably it’s just some kind of Walter Mondale self-loathing gene, but really, who cares if yet another person does – or doesn’t – think Matthew Barney is the greatest living vaseline artist of his generation…..>
Original post by Justin Heideman at 11:45 am 2008-01-17
The rest of the post is here… http://blogs.walkerart.org/offcenter/2008/01/17/2007-top-ten-steve-dietz/
Multiplicities at ARC Projects, Sofia, Bulgaria
15 December 2007 – 26 January 2008
Multiplicities is the first group exhibition at ARC Projects featuring half the current roster of sixteen artists – four based in the UK and four in Bulgaria. This is the first exhibition in a Sofia gallery for mid-career international artists Susan Collins, Alec Finlay, Thomson & Craighead and Mare Tralla. This is also the first occasion their work will be seen alongside that of their Bulgarian peers Luchezar Boyadjiev, Alla Georgieva, Ivan Moudov and Kamen Stoyanov.
“Multiplicities” is a term borrowed from mathematics, which speaks of the condition of being multiple, the relation between a number of identical objects or entities; It has also been used by theorists Gilles Deleuze and Manuel DeLanda to describe how our perceptions of reality change through time, in a constant flow of variety and heterogeneity at a single point in space. Multiplicities can encompass the relationship between original artwork and copy, but also how artists transform supposedly fixed meanings during the process of viewing the work.
Multiplicities showcases new and recent works, all multiples and limited editions, including prints, objects, Internet transmissions, and photographs. The exhibition captures the multifaceted approaches of contemporary artists to traditional genres such as the treatment of landscape, the self-portrait and the still life, or abstraction. Multiplicities also reveals the artists’ commentaries on the historical legacy of movements including Dada, Pop, and Socialist Realism. Works include a re-enactment of Vera Mukhina’s iconic sculpture from 1937; Self-portraits as Lenin; Fortune teller readings from cups of Turkish coffee; A hybrid of carnation and electric fan; Sexually suggestive cushions; Decorative live Internet newsfeeds; The visual cacophony of contemporary Moscow; Colonies designed for different species of bird; Webcam images of the quintessential Scottish landscape.
ARC Projects, 4th Floor, Boulevard Vitosha 90, 1463 Sofia, Bulgaria
www.arcprojects.org
Multiplicities is from 15 December 2007 – 26 January 2008
Exhibition open Wednesday – Saturday, 3 – 8 pm
Seasonal closure from 23 December, open again 3 January