KAWS – YORKSHIRE SCULPTURE PARK

Posted on 2016-02-12

The exhibition, in the expansive Longside Gallery and open air, features over 20 works: commanding sculptures in bronze, fibreglass, aluminium and wood alongside large, bright canvases immaculately rendered in acrylic paint – some created especially for the exhibition. The Park’s historically designed landscape becomes home to a series of monumental and imposing sculptures, including a new six-metre-tall work, which take KAWS’s idiosyncratic form of almost-recognisable characters in the process of growing up.

Brooklyn-based KAWS is considered one of the most relevant artists of his generation. His influential work engages people across the generations with contemporary art and especially opens popular culture to young and diverse audiences. A dynamic cultural force across art, music and fashion, KAWS’s work possesses a wry humour with a singular vernacular marked by bold gestures and fastidious production.

In the 1990s, KAWS conceived the soft skull with crossbones and crossed-out eyes which would become his signature iconography, subverting and abstracting cartoon figures. He stands within an art historical trajectory that includes artists such as Claes Oldenburg and Jeff Koons, developing a practice that merges fine art and merchandising with a desire to communicate within the public realm. Initially through collaborations with global brands, and then in his own right, KAWS has moved beyond the sphere of the art market to occupy a unique position of international appeal.

Photography – Jonty Wilde

Exhibition runs through to June 12th, 2016

Yorkshire Sculpture Park
West Bretton
Wakefield
WF4 4LG

www.ysp.co.uk

  

ABSOLUT ART BAR

Posted on 2016-02-10

Inspired by the capital of the Mexican Empire in the 15th century – the Art Bar is the artists’ literal and conceptual representation of the ancient city. The island on which Tenochtitlan was built is recreated in the centre of the Art Bar, featuring large-scale columns in the style of ancient Aztec architecture. Strands of LED lighting winding across the platform represents the water that once flowed through the city’s canals, and reflective flooring around the structure gives the illusion that the island is floating.

SANGREE’s practice, which explores historical elements in a contemporary context, continues throughout the Art Bar, with assorted sculptures and relics presented as archaeological artefacts in displays and mounted on the walls. A canvas light-box featuring a relief mural of the Valley of Mexico – symbolising Tenochtitlan’s original location – spans the length of one wall. The lights behind the mural continuously rise and fade over time, giving the impression of the passing of time from dawn until dusk.

SANGREE have worked with an Absolut mixologist to create a series of unique Artist Cocktails, inspired by the fruits and spices historically used by the Aztecs and incorporating the tastes and smells of their culture, including hibiscus, chili, and cacao. The Artist Cocktails are also part of a larger game referencing the economic and social systems of ancient Tenochtitlan. Guests will be given tokens – mimicking cocoa beans, Tenochtitlan’s ancient currency – to trade for drinks. The four districts in Tenochtitlan, comprising ‘the religious’, ‘the warriors’, ‘the urban’, and ‘the agricultural ghettos’, are each represented by one side of the main bar, and each side serve different cocktails. Every hour, the ‘district’ which has the most popular Artist Cocktail wins.

The installation features a changing nightly program of live music, DJ sets, and performances curated by the artist duo including NAAFI, a DJ collective from Mexico City.

Photography – Omar Rood

Exhibition runs through February 4th-6th, 2016

Expo Reforma
Calle Morelos 67
Col. Juárez, Del. Cuauhtémoc
Mexico City, D.F. 06600
Mexico

www.halcyongallery.com

  

BERTRAND LAVIER – WALT DISNEY SERIES

Posted on 2016-02-08

Walt Disney Productions is but one of several distinct bodies of work that Lavier has developed over the years, and which he refers to as chantiers. The term means ‘building site’ in English: a reference to the fact that each corpus is a work in progress, and therefore a mechanism through which to deal with constantly evolving issues about the nature of art, and the way that it is both appreciated and exhibited. Another famous chantier encompasses threedimensional objects that have been covered in a thick layer of paint, one that is identical in colour to whatever lies beneath, right down to the smallest details. Except for the paint, Lavier’s objects look exactly like the original – which confuses the viewer’s visual perception. The cabinet in this exhibition is a typical example of this process. Lavier describes these works as being painted sur le motif, a 19th-century artistic term that means ‘the painting of objects’ or ‘what the eye actually sees’. In this chantier, the idea is taken to a literal extreme. Yet by playing with such ambiguous words and concepts, the artist is also inviting the viewer to consider the true nature of this cabinet: is it an ordinary object or an artwork? Thus Lavier questions our notions about the way in which works of art are perceived, valued and accepted.

Opposite – Walt Disney Productions 1947-2015 N°7, 2015

Exhibition runs through till February 20th, 2016

Xavier Hufkens
St-Jorisstraat 6 Rue Saint-George
B – 1050 Brussels
Belgium

www.xavierhufkens.com

  

RUSSELL YOUNG – SUPERSTAR

Posted on 2016-02-08

This brand new body of work is part of an ongoing exploration into the visual nature of fame and celebrity, as Young attempts to define the essence of what truly makes a ‘superstar’. With his trademark vividly-coloured, larger-than-life canvases, Young reinterprets iconic imagery featuring two of popular cultures most famous faces: contemporary catwalk heroine, Kate Moss and modern screen siren, Marilyn Monroe.

The exhibition features a controversial photograph of Kate Moss, first published in British Vogue in early 1990, capturing the Croydon-born supermodel aged just sixteen. Taken by British photographer Kate Garner at the cusp of the nineties, this photograph reflects the very beginning of Moss’s stellar career. By embellishing and expanding upon the outtakes, Young weaves the image into his continuing exploration of the fragile nature of celebrity and its impact on both society at large and our shared internal psyche. Whilst the original image presents a natural innocence and beauty, it is through Young’s manipulation that these paintings are elevated, transcending the restrictions of their original source material and providing a unique and very personal body of work which pays a powerful homage to one of our generation’s most celebrated icons.

Alongside the images of Kate Moss is Marilyn Monroe, whose instantly-recognisable features are rendered in both opulent platinum and dazzling gold and imbued with a sense of nostalgia and celebration. Following a decade of austerity in the United States, emerging from the Wall Street Crash and the ensuing Great Depression, Monroe’s rise to fame came to represent a new era of optimism that helped revive the spirits of a nation with her much publicised and often tumultuous love life, reflecting the cultural appetite of the age. Presidents, sporting heroes and writers all fell under her spell, but it was her inherent vulnerability and untimely death that maintains Monroe’s status as the first true superstar. These works set out to serve as both a celebration and an epitaph to the Great American Dream.

Exhibition runs through till February 15th, 2016

Halcyon Gallery
144-146 New Bond Street
London
W1S 2PF

www.halcyongallery.com

  

150 YEARS OF ALICE IN WONDERLAND

Posted on 2016-02-08

Although the story has been adapted, appropriated, re-imagined and re-illustrated since its conception, we are still enchanted by Carroll’s original, much loved story, which continues to inspire new generations of writers and illustrators.

Come and see Lewis Carroll’s original manuscript with hand-drawn illustrations, alongside stunning editions by Mervyn Peake, Ralph Steadman, Leonard Weisgard, Arthur Rackham, Salvador Dali and others.

Discover how Lewis Carroll’s story has been re-imagined, re-interpreted and re-illustrated over the last 150 years with newly commissioned articles, a selection of manuscripts, reviews and literature relating to Alice in Wonderland.

Exhibition runs through to April 17th, 2016

St Pancras
The British Library
96 Euston Road
London
NW1 2DB

www.bl.uk

  

3D – MASSIVE ATTACK, RITUAL SPIRIT

Posted on 2016-02-01

Coinciding with the band’s three sell-out shows at London’s Brixton Academy from 3rd to 5th February, the artist will take over the South Bank gallery with the release of a hand-finished special edition EP, presented alongside a new boxset of limited edition prints and a selection of works by the artist that document the visual history of the band.

Ritual Spirit marks the band’s first release since Heligoland in 2010. Each of the 300 limited edition 12″ EP sleeves are artfully hand-finished by Del Naja in Lazarides’ own print studio on Greenwich Peninsula. 200 will be available for purchase for £30 at Sea Container House at 22 Upper Ground, SE1.

Celebrating the launch of Ritual Spirit, the artist has collaborated with Lazarides Editions studio to create 25 clothbound portfolios containing seven hand-crafted screenprints, each individually signed and numbered, and featuring the artist’s iconic symbol prints. Splashed across their album artwork, Del Naja’s imagery featured in the boxset has become instantly recognizable to fans globally as universal symbols and iconography for the band.

Exhibition runs from February 3rd to March 5th, 2016

Lazarides Editions
22 Upper Ground
London
SE1 9PD

www.lazinc.com