STUDY #15 UNTITLED (THE NINTH RESORT) CHARLES AVERY

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "STUDY #15 UNTITLED (THE NINTH RESORT) CHARLES AVERY"

Transcription

1 STUDY #15 UNTITLED (THE NINTH RESORT) CHARLES AVERY

2 STUDY IS A SERIES of focused case-studies of works from the David Roberts Collection. ON DISPLAY to the public in DRAF Gallery, each presentation centres on a single work, either in isolation or accompanied by complementary works by the same artist. A NEW TEXT is commissioned studying the work in depth, from its material production, to its position in the artist s practice and contemporary debates. AN ARTWORK IS A SYSTEM. Beyond its trajectory as a object, it circulates as images, ideas and narratives. It contains both material and conceptual histories, and the potential for future narratives. TO STUDY IS TO DEVOTE TIME and attention to a subject, to acquire knowledge. It can also refer to a piece of work done as practice or experiment. Rather than a transmission of knowledge or an act of contemplation, the Study series is an invitation to act, and to enter into a dialogue with the work. THE STUDY IS NOT CONCLUSIVE, but asks the reader to take up multiple viewpoints and to engage with the artwork by, at least, spending some time with it.

3 INTRODUCTION UNTITLED (THE NINTH RESORT) is a pencil and ink drawing on paper made in 2010 by British artist Charles Avery (b. 1973, Oban, UK). Unframed the work measures 175 x 236 cm. It depicts a dock scene on the outskirts of Onomatopeia, the capital of the fictional world the Island to which Avery has devoted his practice since The Ninth Resort at the centre of the scene is a popular café, named after the ninth, local eels that are central to the Island s diet, economy and culture. THE WORK WAS ACQUIRED for the David Roberts Collection from Pilar Corrias (London, UK) on 27th July It went on loan to EX3 Centro per l Arte Contemporanea (Florence, Italy) for the exhibition Onomatopeia Part 1 (19 Nov Jan 2011) and on this occasion the work was framed, and its dimensions are 196 x 237 x 9cm. It was then borrowed by Folkestone Triennal (Folkestone, UK) which took place from 23 June until 25 September Most recently, the work was loaned to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (Edinburgh, UK) for the exhibition Generation: 25 Years of Contemporary Art in Scotland (26 June Jan 2015). Untitled (The Ninth Resort) is the first work by Charles Avery acquired for the David Roberts Collection, London. INSPIRED BY HIS OWN UPBRINGING on the Scottish island Mull, Avery has developed an entire geography, anthropology and cosmology for his fictional Island through different philosophical and mathematical systems. The project includes large-scale drawings, sculptures, installations, books, posters, moving images, furniture and jewellery. UNTITLED (THE NINTH RESORT) is displayed at DRAF alongside a selection of works by Charles Avery from the David Roberts Collection and works on loan. FOR STUDY #15, DRAF has commissioned a text by curator and writer Tom Morton.

4 FAIRLY IMMUTABLE CHARLES AVERY INTERVIEWED BY TOM MORTON TOM MORTON: LET S BEGIN WITH THE SPECIFIC WORK that is the subject of DRAF s Study #15, your drawing Untitled (The Ninth Resort) (2010). Here, we wash up at the twilit quayside of Onomatopoeia, capital city of your fictional Island, where a couple of boys are bringing in their day s catch of ninth (the word rhymes, I believe, with plinth ) eel-like or perhaps line-like creatures that are central to the Island s economy. Up on the quay, the patrons of a rather unsalubrious bar named The Ninth Resort are already getting stuck into the local firewater, while on hills above a drover guides his herd home. A few details feel particularly telling: the fact that the boys boat is named Subsistence, the transparent vessel (almost but not quite a Klein bottle) that bobs in the foreground, the beaky kepews that scavenge on the quayside like wingless gulls. Why choose Untitled (The Ninth Resort) as the focal point for your exhibition at DRAF? Do this work s themes of labour and a kind of threadbare survival echo elsewhere in the show? CHARLES AVERY: I THINK THIS DRAWING CONTAINS MANY KEY EMBLEMS of the Island, with several clues to the type of existence the inhabitants live out. That existence is bare-boned but not necessarily impoverished. I have been spending a great deal of time on my native island (Mull, off the west coast of Scotland) in recent years, becoming re-acquainted with a place that I left as a child, but which has a firm grip on my subconscious. In doing so I have enjoyed a much more direct relationship with the world, such as catching our supper, augmented by the very thin selection of groceries available at the local SPAR, and changing my own tyres rather than calling the AA. Being an island, with a small population (around 3000) the economies are simple, and quite internal. Trade with the outside world is mainly through the conduit of Caledonian MacBrayne, the ferry service. Monopolies are rife, and able to exist unregulated. Every death and birth is significant. The local school has fewer than 10 pupils, so if a family moves to the village, or leaves, it has a huge impact. This microcosm enables one to observe and understand very fundamental economic principles, because the cause to effect is so evident. I have to confess to being attracted to the simplicity of the transactions that occur in such a situation. A longing that is magnified by the perverse economy of the art-world. TM: So this drawing, in a sense, is a petri dish, where the basic forms of economic life might be isolated, and hence better observed?

5 CA: The depiction of a transparent, very tangible existence is echoed not only through the show, but also through the Islanders project as a whole. I think the whole Island, and certainly the work contained in this show, has a pared down, ascetic quality. Partly that s because I prefer not to draw what I don t understand, or that which is concealed. Take transport for example. Technologically, the Island is car-less, and its inhabitants mostly get about on bicycles. This form of transport is completely egalitarian, both affordable and transparent. Without any prior knowledge one could look at a bike, identify the function of its few mechanisms, and given a very simple toolbox take it apart and put it back together. TM: Rather than your signature and instantly recognisable pencil drawings, the first room of your DRAF exhibition features a pair of murky watercolours, and a couple of buckets containing glass eels. Was it important to you to kick off the show with a cluster of works that didn t immediately scream Charles Avery!? Were you attempting a kind a defamiliarisation? CA: I never prepare a show in the expectation that people know my work. TM: Sure, but even for somebody like me, who knows your work pretty well, this room was a bit of a surprise. CA: I think I m permanently trying to distance myself from myself. Spending so much time on my own and on my work, inevitably I tire of it. Given that the show is part of a series of Studies intended to provide a particular focus on an artist s practice, Vincent Honoré (the curator) and I felt that the first room should provide precisely that: focus. We chose two works, one on the wall, one on the floor, which encapsulate and embody the essence of the project (I hope that doesn t sound too wooly). The left hand panel of the two watercolours depicts the archetype of the Hunter (discoverer of the Island and namer of all things, or so he thinks) dragging his boat ashore the terra incognita. The right hand image represents the dark and foreboding interior of the Island, pregnant with possibility but revealing nothing. The eel work on the floor also establishes some fundamentals. Throughout, I have attempted to achieve a tension between the subjective space of the Island, and the real world of galleries and things; to assert the ossification that occurs when an idea is given substance. An eel is a most vital, primitive, and directional being. I used to catch them on the shore when I was a boy, simply by lifting a rock and

6 wrestling the eel that would generally be beneath, into a bucket. Often they would wriggle free and glide off between the rocks into the muddy shallows of the Loch. In doing so, there is apparently a form of decision-making going on, but this seems to be on the cusp of what me might regard as will. Does the eel take the easiest path, and if so is this apparent will no more than that of water? TM: A formal question, which might glean a philosophical answer. Looking across your drawings from the last decade or so, their depth of field is strikingly consistent. After your pre-islanders series The Life and Lineage of Nancy Haselswon (1999), there isn t a single mug shot, and cropping only really reemerges (beyond the odd lopped-off foot) as a pictorial strategy in very recent works such as Untitled (Fishermen Returning from the Memory of Consciousness) (2016). Were you consciously avoiding photographic conventions? Is the penumbra of white space (complete with scribbled notes to self) that surrounds many of your drawings a way of insisting on their drawing-ness? CA: I have often insisted on the incomplete status of the drawings, and their diagrammatic nature. I have asserted that they may never be finished, there just comes a point at which I will stop doing them, and that this point often comes when it is time to show them, or some other equally quotidian event puts an end to it. By diagrammatic I mean to say that the drawings are not about themselves: they are not asserting their object-hood or Artness, but refer to another realm: the Island. Over recent years I have sought to obscure the philosophical paradigm of the Island by trying to enhance the texture and substance of the place. I can t say why this has been my inclination. I have recently been seeking to emancipate the inhabitants from their society, from the structural confines of the Island. I guess I felt that structure was becoming too overbearing and it has been leading to too many questions (What form does education take on the Island? What happens in that building? What s the Islanders favourite sport? Does Mr. Impossible have only one hat?) TM: Unusually, the DRAF show features a partial (is this the right term?) mock-up your studio. Your work, here, is displayed alongside the various objects and images that you surround yourself with in daily life, with no curatorial privileging of any single element, whether it s a preliminary sketch, or a heavy hole punch, or photographs of your wife and daughters. Unlike, say, the Mary Celeste like reconstruction of Francis Bacon s studio at The Hugh Lane, Dublin, the mock-up at DRAF is a clearly an approximation it doesn t encourage us to imagine that you ve just put down your pencil to pop out for a coffee! Can you tell me a bit more about this element of the show? What exactly are we being asked to engage with, here?

7 CA: I wouldn t go as far as to describe it as a mock-up of the studio, but more as a research room, in which residues of my process have been brought into the show for the enjoyment of the viewer, and to make the point that the separation of exhibition and studio is not so defined. I think I m for a certain amount of openness I m not putting on a magic show, and I don t uphold the idea that some artists have that it destroys the mystique, quite the opposite. It was in fact the curator s idea to have this element, and I thought Why Not? and so went along with it! I think its appropriate it symbolises the intended honesty and earnestness of the project. It was done in quite a light way: we just went around the studio hoovering up bits and bobs and arranging them decorously in the allotted space. TM: A perhaps related question, or set of questions. Something that s always interested me is the status of the object within your work. While drawings such as Untitled (Place de la Révolution) (2011) give us access to a fictional world through the proscenium arch of its frame, a bronze sculpture such as Untitled (Duculi) (2013) inhabits the same space as the viewer, although in the DRAF exhibition this is the notional nowhere of the white-walled gallery. Another layer of complexity is added by your presentation of found objects at DRAF, such as the whorl of rope sitting atop a wooden palette, which also reappears in a drawing elsewhere in the show (one of the few you have made, I gather, by sketching from still life rather than your imagination). This is not to mention your public sculptures such as Tree no.5 (from the Jadindagadendar) (2015), which was sited on Platform 2 of Edinburgh Waverley Station, or the fact that specific objects from our world sometimes appear on the Island, such as the Arne Jacobsen Egg chairs we can glimpse through the windows of the Universal University in Untitled (Place de la Révolution). Is the (art) object an essentially unstable category, as far as you re concerned? CA: There is quite a fundamental distinction between these very opposite terms of the work, but when you write it down is can look a bit crassly obvious! The objects are precisely that, and their physicality is very tangible, particularly the ones I choose/ design / make: a old iron hole punch, its raison d être industrially obvious and obsolete, the muscular Duculi with its binary (at most) meaning, a tetrahedron (the simplest Euclidean form), a pile of rope, or eels (most physical embodiments of the line). They are all fairly immutable, not likely to change their nature, and what you see is what you get. We can make clever accounts of them, but of and unto themselves they are robustly platonic. The objects tend to be underwritten by some mathematical principle or idea, and mathematics is after all an attempt to provide an objective account of the world, an attempt that many of the Islanders themselves deride. But we are not on the Island. We are in Triangland, planning our trip there.

8 The drawings provide an insight into the subjective realm. They have none of the certitude of that class of things we are referring to as objects. They are, to repeat, diagrammatic, which means there is no pretension to them being the thing-in-itself. They are unreliable, unfinished, taught by their striving and scarred by their failure to adequately describe the people and places of the Island. For all that they re not bad (I don t want to sound like I m slagging them off!). They come with a sense of continuation: the sense that they are a frame of a larger event, but also that sense of incompletion, that I might at some point take up the pencil and have another crack at them. This redolence of possibility keeps them alive. My relationship with the objects is what I would call healthy. I don t agonise over them, probably because they are mostly fabricated by others, and so I have a much more stable opinion of them. My drawings cause me great anxiety. TM: The DRAF show also contains a table and chairs of your own design, where visitors might sit and leaf through a copy of the journal Drawing Room Confessions, devoted to your work. Where do your furniture designs (which also featured in your 2015 solo at Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh) fit into the Islanders project? What distinctions do you see if any between making an artwork, and the functional stuff of chairs, tables and lamps? CA: The gallery represents a space between the mind (that of the artist) and the world. As a territory it is always in dispute. Of course, the (commercial) gallery is ultimately a bourgeois institution that exists with the purpose of purveying material goods. Museums have striven to occupy a different role and to distance themselves from petty materialism, establishing themselves as churches of Artness, and nothing is more telling of this than the scale at which they manifest. Whatever the pretensions however, the inescapable fact is that the major museums are quite in the hold of this new class, the globally operative super-rich, and increasingly a function of the art-market. Where museum goers may think they are, in good faith, genuflecting at the alter of Artness (I don t think they would understand it in those terms, but for the benefit of analogy let s allow it), they are in fact worshipping the God of Shopping, even though the experience may feel physically and mentally far removed from the sphere of consumerism. TM: And you see this as inescapable?

9 CA: I m far for being a Trotskyite, but philosophically I believe that every artist is implicated and is a variable in the market, however much they may deny it, protest it, or disguise it. Take the extreme example of artist whose work amounts to the declaration I will never make another work again. As soon as they, or anybody else does a lecture in which they allude to this gesture, that artist is implicated in the market. If nobody talks of it they are not relevant to the discussion. This is an (my) understanding of the market as a place of exchange you re wondering what this has to do with chairs, and I will come back to that rather than a place where profit is garnered. The problem arises a) from the confusion of the terms Artwork and Art. In imagining the artwork simply as the physical evidence of the artist s pursuit of the art-ghost in the subjective, unshared (it is only truly subjective in its un-sharedness), immaterial realm, rather than the totality of objects and events and other emissions hitherto regarded as art, we give ourselves a freedom. We put to bed the tiresome objective argument as to the art status of such and such an object or action, and we understand the art-object not as a fragment of the true cross, but as something which exists primarily for the market, a bounty that the artist has wrought from the metaphysical world, in order to sell to fund their existence so that they may return to that realm, go further and make greater discoveries. Such is the relationship between artists and their collectors, as with the terrestrial metaphor of old-world explorer and patron. Putting furniture in the shows is an attempt to take back the gallery space for the humanist cause. To think of the work on the scale of the human is to domesticate it, to offer it as a seat to the weary arttraveller, or as a collectible for the amateur. TM: There s a poster in the DRAF show for a bar/restaurant/salon inviting one to JOIN THE SQUARE CIRCLE. For the 2016 Kochi-Muziris Biennale, you fly-posted a very real Indian city with hundreds of copies of this and other posters, advertising different philosophical positions in your fictional Island s ongoing dialectic, and the various pubs, eateries and other spots in Onomatopoeia where they re given voice. I m reminded of the clergyman George Macleod s description of Iona (which neighbours your childhood home of Mull) as a thin place, where only tissue paper separates the physical and metaphysical realms. How do you conceptualise the incursion of your fictional world into Kochi? Could you imagine reprising this project in other real-world locales? CA: Indeed. The Eternal Dialectic, the beginning-less festival of philosophy on The Island, will find expression in a poster campaign this summer around the East End of London as part of Art Nights.

10 I see this as being an ongoing project. As I add to the diversity and depth of the Dialectic with the addition of new schools, factions, salons and positions each publicised by a new poster the project gains more depth and texture. I wouldn t want to go as far as to conceptualise something that intuitively feels quite right for fear that the rational might forbid it. In a world that is so replete with marketing and advertising, where merchants are trying to flog you things at every moment through every medium, there is something I find delightfully free about this endeavour: an illusory clamouring for mental profit, where every chuckle that is raised, every person s day that is even momentarily enlivened, does not result in a corresponding debit from somebody else s account, through the most egalitarian and modest of means. I never try to bring the Island to life, rather find those areas of life that are shared with the Island, those zones where the subjective and objective realm meets, like an encounter with a ghost. TM: Recently, you ve told me that you want to spend more of your working life writing. To what degree is text the driver of the Islanders project? Who are the writers literary, philosophical who you feel at your elbow when you put pen to paper? CA: That resolution starts here, now. I feel like I have the clarity of vision now to be able to compose the written part freely, after this lengthy period of research. I have always had a literary destination in mind for the project, although the magnitude of that book is still undecided. I have always seen words as simply another term of the work. Those aspects of the Island that require clarity (the facts, the structure) need to be written. I hope the writing will be cohesive but not didactic. It s easier said that done, though, especially in terms of discovering and retaining one s voice, when there are so many writers one might defer to, in order to have a way of writing. Maybe it will be to my advantage that I haven t read so much in some respects. Not trying too hard will be key. Trying not to compose a work of literature but simply writing it down. (Again, this is perversely difficult). I would invoke Herman Melville or Ernest Hemmingway in terms of style, with a dash of PG Wodehouse, of course. TM: You ve been working on the Islanders since at least 2005 (and, without naming the project as such, perhaps for many years before then). The Islanders is many things, but one of these, surely, is a path to knowledge not only of the Island, but also of the real world you inhabit. What have you learned during this period of exploration? What remains to be found out? I seem to recall you mentioning to

11 me recently that invention and discovery, in this project, are becoming increasingly difficult to tell apart. CA: The comment that invention and discovery are one and the same has a couple of ends. There is the fact that, having once established the axioms of any system and following through logically on the corollaries, it will have its own trajectory, so one is simply discovering the consequences of that which has been put in motion. However the logical beginnings of the fiction have become obscured under the layers of complexity, and the texture with which I have imbued the scene, so it would be hard to distinguish a posteriori its first terms: hence the feeling of discovering, rather than inventing. On the other end I have the definite sense that all new ideas are mutations of old ones. This is again a deterministic argument, and one that I adhere to. Speaking as a true Islander I do not hold that new ideas are generated by the mind, but simply sprout from the rents of the old.

12 SELECTED IMAGES

13 Charles Avery, Untitled (The Ninth Resort), Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London.

14 Charles Avery, Untitled (The Ninth Resort), 2010 (detail). Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London.

15 Charles Avery, Untitled (View of the Jetty), Courtesy the artist and Matteo Ghisalberti Collection, Rome.

16 Charles Avery, Untitled (Eel Bucket 4), Courtesy the artist. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

17 Charles Avery, Untitled (Phenomenon of Sense / Hunter Dragging Boat), 2012 (detail). Courtesy the artist. Photo: Tim Bowditch

18 Charles Avery, Untitled (Bathers among shoal of eels), Courtesy the artist and GRIMM, Amsterdam. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

19 Charles Avery, Untitled (Boogie-Woogie), Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch

20 Materials and documents from the artist s studio on display in Study #15. Untitled (The Ninth Resort), Charles Avery at DRAF, Courtesy the artist and DRAF. Photo: Tim Bowditch

21 Charles Avery, Untitled (Architectural Model Notre Dame), Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

22 Charles Avery, Untitled (Duculi), Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

23 Above: Charles Avery, Untitled (Rope on Pallet), Courtesy the artist. Photo: Tim Bowditch. Below: Charles Avery, Rope. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

24 Charles Avery, Untitled (Place de la Révolution), Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

25 Charles Avery, Untitled (Place de la Révolution), 2011 (detail). Courtesy the artist and David Roberts Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

26 Charles Avery, Untitled (Square Circle), Courtesy the artist. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

27 Charles Avery, Untitled (L Escargot al Quadrato), Courtesy the artist and GRIMM, Amsterdam.

28 Charles Avery, Untitled (Bookends), and Untitled (Atomist), 2014 (wallpaper). Courtesy the artist and Private Collection, London. Photo: Tim Bowditch.

29 CONDITION REPORT

30 Condition report of Charles Avery, Untitled (The Ninth Resort), 2010 made by National Galleries Scotland for the loan of the work in occasion of the exhibition Generation: 25 Years of Contemporary Art in Scotland (26 June Jan 2015).

31 ABOUT DRAF (David Roberts Art Foundation) is an independent, non-profit space for contemporary art in London founded in It is directed and curated by Vincent Honoré. DRAF presents an international programme of exhibitions, commissions, live events, discussions and projects. DRAF is located at Symes Mews, 37 Camden High Street, Mornington Crescent, London NW1 7JE. The David Roberts Art Foundation Limited is a registered charity in England and Wales (No ). It is proudly supported by the Edinburgh House Estates group of companies. For more information see ADDRESS DRAF Symes Mews London NW1 7JE +44 (0) The nearest tube stations are Mornington Crescent and Camden Town. DRAF is a 15 minute walk from Kings Cross St. Pancras. Buses: 24, 27, 29, 88, 134, 168, 214, 253 OPENING TIMES Thu - Sat, 12-6 pm Tue - Wed by appointment FREE ADMISSION

32

Charles Avery among the Islanders

Charles Avery among the Islanders INTERVIEWS Charles Avery among the Islanders Laura Allsop 2 FEBRUARY 2017 Materials and documents from the artist s studio on display in 'Study #15. Untitled (The Ninth Resort), Charles Avery at DRAF,

More information

STUDY #9 UNTITLED ETEL ADNAN

STUDY #9 UNTITLED ETEL ADNAN STUDY #9 UNTITLED ETEL ADNAN STUDY IS THE GENERIC NAME for a series of focused case-studies of works from the David Roberts Collection. It involves a single work, displayed in a gallery. The work is studied

More information

Hugh Dubberly: What do you guys think design is?

Hugh Dubberly: What do you guys think design is? Hugh Dubberly Interview 1 Transcription Hugh Dubberly: What do you guys think design is? Interviewer 1: Things get made, but no one knows how it gets made. Hugh: And so what do you think design is? Interviewer

More information

Supermarket Self-Care in the Age of Anxiety

Supermarket Self-Care in the Age of Anxiety Supermarket Self-Care in the Age of Anxiety By Bridget A. Purcell An Essay on New Works by Chelsea Tinklenberg Cabbages on wheels and suspended from cables, vegetables unearthed from a white pedestal,

More information

STUDENT NAME: Kelly Lew. Thinking Frame:

STUDENT NAME: Kelly Lew. Thinking Frame: Learning Places Fall 2018 SITE REPORT #2A name of site report NAMING PROTOCOL. When saving and posting your site reports on OpenLab, please follow the following format: SiteReport#Letter.LastnameFirstname.

More information

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro MAILINGLIST Art February 1st, 2017 WEBEXCLUSIVE INCONVERSATION JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro by Laila Pedro Jaume Plensa s sculptures and installations create serene, communal, or spiritual disruptions

More information

Full-Contact Ceramics: Sculptor Brie Ruais on Wrestling Conceptual Statements From Mountains of Clay

Full-Contact Ceramics: Sculptor Brie Ruais on Wrestling Conceptual Statements From Mountains of Clay Full-Contact Ceramics: Sculptor Brie Ruais on Wrestling Conceptual Statements From Mountains of Clay By Dylan Kerr Aug. 27, 2015 SIGN UP FOR OUR EMAIL & GET 10% OFF YOUR FIRST ORDER CONTACT US SIGN IN

More information

Reflections on the digital television future

Reflections on the digital television future Reflections on the digital television future Stefan Agamanolis, Principal Research Scientist, Media Lab Europe Authors note: This is a transcription of a keynote presentation delivered at Prix Italia in

More information

Sculpture Park. Judith Shea, who completed a piece here at the ranch, introduced us.

Sculpture Park. Judith Shea, who completed a piece here at the ranch, introduced us. aulson Press is proud to announce the release of two new prints by sculptor Martin Puryear. Both prints were created during his many visits to the studio beginning in 2001. Puryear uses the flexibility

More information

The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom

The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom Lebbeus Woods in his studio, New York City, January 2004. Photo: Tracy Myers In July 2004, the Heinz Architectural

More information

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership? dialogue kwodrent x FARMWORK with chee chee [phd], assistant professor, department of architecture, national university of singapore tan, principal, kwodrent sim, director, FARMWORK, associate, FARMWORK

More information

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro The Brooklyn Rail February 1, 2017 by Laila Pedro Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro Jaume Plensa s sculptures and installations create serene, communal, or spiritual disruptions in public spaces around the

More information

Accreditation Guidelines. How to acknowledge support from Creative Scotland and the National Lottery.

Accreditation Guidelines. How to acknowledge support from Creative Scotland and the National Lottery. Accreditation Guidelines How to acknowledge support from Creative Scotland and the National Lottery. Creative Scotland is the national leader for Scotland s arts, screen and creative industries. Creative

More information

Isaac Julien on the Changing Nature of Creative Work By Cole Rachel June 23, 2017

Isaac Julien on the Changing Nature of Creative Work By Cole Rachel June 23, 2017 Isaac Julien on the Changing Nature of Creative Work By Cole Rachel June 23, 2017 Isaac Julien Artist Isaac Julien is a British installation artist and filmmaker. Though he's been creating and showing

More information

acca education P R I M A R Y K I T Nathan Coley Appearances

acca education P R I M A R Y K I T Nathan Coley Appearances P R I M A R Y K I T Nathan Coley Appearances Nathan Coley Appearances Who? Nathan Coley was born in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1967 where he lives and works. The artist graduated from Glasgow School of Art

More information

For the following resource view the trailer for Touching the Void at

For the following resource view the trailer for Touching the Void at For the following resource view the trailer for Touching the Void at www.filmeducation.org/secondary/ttv Marketing a film When a new film is made, it has to be advertised like any other new product, to

More information

EDUCATION KIT ARTIST FOLIOS KENTARO HIROKI THAILAND / JAPAN. Rubbish, 2016

EDUCATION KIT ARTIST FOLIOS KENTARO HIROKI THAILAND / JAPAN. Rubbish, 2016 KENTARO HIROKI THAILAND / JAPAN KENTARO HIROKI THE ARTIST THE IDEA Kentaro Hiroki (b. 1976, Osaka, Japan) has methodologically hand-copied receipts, tickets, rubbish and other everyday objects as a process

More information

JULIA DAULT'S MARK BY SAVANNAH O'LEARY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRISTOPHER GABELLO

JULIA DAULT'S MARK BY SAVANNAH O'LEARY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRISTOPHER GABELLO Interview Magazie February 2015 Savannah O Leary JULIA DAULT'S MARK BY SAVANNAH O'LEARY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRISTOPHER GABELLO Last Friday, the exhibition "Maker's Mark" opened at Marianne Boesky Gallery, in

More information

The White Cube of the Virtual World Art Space, part one By Lythe Witte/Christy Dena

The White Cube of the Virtual World Art Space, part one By Lythe Witte/Christy Dena Some love the smell of the interior of a new car and some don t. The journalistic engine made up of writers, subjects, readers and publishers seems to be addicted to that smell. Dust is so ugly. ipods

More information

Object Oriented Learning in Art Museums Patterson Williams Roundtable Reports, Vol. 7, No. 2 (1982),

Object Oriented Learning in Art Museums Patterson Williams Roundtable Reports, Vol. 7, No. 2 (1982), Object Oriented Learning in Art Museums Patterson Williams Roundtable Reports, Vol. 7, No. 2 (1982), 12 15. When one thinks about the kinds of learning that can go on in museums, two characteristics unique

More information

Rubric: Cambridge English, Preliminary English Test for Schools - Listening.

Rubric: Cambridge English, Preliminary English Test for Schools - Listening. 1 Cambridge English, Preliminary English Test for Schools - Listening. There are four parts to the test. You will hear each part twice. For each part of the test there will be time for you to look through

More information

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the Ivory and Boxwood Carvings 1450-1800 Medieval Art Ivory and boxwood carvings 1450 to 1800 have been one of the most prized medieval artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very

More information

Spatial Formations. Installation Art between Image and Stage.

Spatial Formations. Installation Art between Image and Stage. Spatial Formations. Installation Art between Image and Stage. An English Summary Anne Ring Petersen Although much has been written about the origins and diversity of installation art as well as its individual

More information

Interviews with the Authors

Interviews with the Authors Interviews with the Authors Ryan McKittrick of the A.R.T. talks with Stephen Greenblatt and Charles Mee about the play. Ryan McKittrick: How did this collaboration begin? SG: It began on the shores of

More information

When Methods Meet: Visual Methods and Comics

When Methods Meet: Visual Methods and Comics When Methods Meet: Visual Methods and Comics Eric Laurier (School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh) and Shari Sabeti (School of Education, University of Edinburgh) in conversation, June 2016. In

More information

New Media and the Gallery. Paul Slocum

New Media and the Gallery. Paul Slocum New Media and the Gallery Paul Slocum Galleries understandably dwell on the romance of the unique object. My house is filled with items that demonstrate my sympathy, but as I read about first-graders carrying

More information

LENNON, WEINBERG, INC.

LENNON, WEINBERG, INC. LENNON, WEINBERG, INC. 514 West 25 th Street, New York, NY 10001 Tel. 212 941 0012 Fax. 212 929 3265 info@lennonweinberg.com www.lennonweinberg.com Mary Lucier Paulsen, Kris. The Renegade Video Artist.

More information

How to make brilliant stuff that people love and make big money out of it

How to make brilliant stuff that people love and make big money out of it 1 How to make brilliant stuff that people love and make big money out of it Introduction As its title suggests, this book is about how to make brilliant stuff that people love and make big money out of

More information

How to Use Music and Sound for Healing. by Krylyn Peters, MC, LPC, CLC, The Fear Whisperer Author Speaker Coach Singer/Songwriter.

How to Use Music and Sound for Healing. by Krylyn Peters, MC, LPC, CLC, The Fear Whisperer Author Speaker Coach Singer/Songwriter. How to Use Music and Sound for Healing by Krylyn Peters, MC, LPC, CLC, The Fear Whisperer Author Speaker Coach Singer/Songwriter www.krylyn.com Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.

More information

Student Learning Assessment for ART 100 Katie Frank

Student Learning Assessment for ART 100 Katie Frank Student Learning Assessment for ART 100 Katie Frank 1. Number and name of the course being assessed: ART 100 2. List all the Course SLOs from the Course Outline of Record: 1. Discuss and review knowledge

More information

The Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art 11 west 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 956-6100 Cable: Modernart ITALY: THE NEW DOMESTIC LANDSCAPE Director: Emilio Ambasz May 26, 1972 - September 11, 1972 RELEASE NO. 35

More information

Honesty is the highest form of intimacy."

Honesty is the highest form of intimacy. WEEK 30 DAY 1 - MORNING CONTEMPLATION SUGGESTIONS FOR GETTING THE MOST OUT OF THIS PROCESS: 1. LISTEN TO THE AUDIO FOR WEEK 30 2. FOLLOW THE LESSON INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE MORNING CONTEMPLATION TIME 3. END

More information

What is to be considered as ART: by George Dickie, Philosophy of Art, Aesthetics

What is to be considered as ART: by George Dickie, Philosophy of Art, Aesthetics What is to be considered as ART: by George Dickie, Philosophy of Art, Aesthetics 1. An artist is a person who participates with understanding in the making of a work of art. 2. A work of art is an artifact

More information

Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement

Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement By Dylan Kerr, Nov. 10, 2015 The artist Rashid Johnson. Photo: Eric Vogel It may come as a surprise that Rashid Johnson

More information

Plato s work in the philosophy of mathematics contains a variety of influential claims and arguments.

Plato s work in the philosophy of mathematics contains a variety of influential claims and arguments. Philosophy 405: Knowledge, Truth and Mathematics Spring 2014 Hamilton College Russell Marcus Class #3 - Plato s Platonism Sample Introductory Material from Marcus and McEvoy, An Historical Introduction

More information

I guess I m greedy! Robert Ayers in conversation with Trenton Doyle Hancock.

I guess I m greedy! Robert Ayers in conversation with Trenton Doyle Hancock. I guess I m greedy! Robert Ayers in conversation with Trenton Doyle Hancock. I was delighted to learn that Trenton Doyle Hancock s work was included at the First Kiev International Biennale of Contemporary

More information

ESOL Skills for Life Entry 2 Reading

ESOL Skills for Life Entry 2 Reading ESOL Skills for Life Entry 2 Reading Sample paper 1 Time allowed: 60 minutes w Please answer all questions. w Circle your answers in pen, not pencil, on the separate answer sheet. w You may not use dictionaries.

More information

Preliminary English Test for Schools

Preliminary English Test for Schools Preliminary English Test for Schools PAPER 1 Reading and Writing Time: 1 hour 30 minutes INFORMATION READING Questions 1 35 carry one mark. WRITING Questions 1 5 carry one mark. Part 2 (Question 6) carries

More information

The Senses at first let in particular Ideas. (Essay Concerning Human Understanding I.II.15)

The Senses at first let in particular Ideas. (Essay Concerning Human Understanding I.II.15) Michael Lacewing Kant on conceptual schemes INTRODUCTION Try to imagine what it would be like to have sensory experience but with no ability to think about it. Thinking about sensory experience requires

More information

Jonah and the Big Fish

Jonah and the Big Fish CREATIVE DRAMA LEADER GUIDE Jonah and the Big Fish (Jonah 1 4) Age-Level Overview Age-Level Overview Open the Bible Activate Faith Lower Elementary Workshop Focus: God gives us second chances. The Road

More information

81 of 172 DOCUMENTS UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE PRE-GRANT PUBLICATION (Note: This is a Patent Application only.

81 of 172 DOCUMENTS UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE PRE-GRANT PUBLICATION (Note: This is a Patent Application only. Page 510 81 of 172 DOCUMENTS UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE PRE-GRANT PUBLICATION 20060232582 (Note: This is a Patent Application only.) Link to Claims Section October 19, 2006 VIRTUAL REALITY

More information

88 INTERVIEW MICHAEL ANASTASSIADES POETRY IN MOTION

88 INTERVIEW MICHAEL ANASTASSIADES POETRY IN MOTION 88 INTERVIEW 89 I N T E R V I E W POETRY IN MOTION Stelios Kallinikou Michael Anastassiades has elevated simplicity to an art form in his finely engineered luminaires. He reveals the inspiration behind

More information

0510 ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE

0510 ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2015 series 0510 ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE 0510/31 Paper

More information

Objective vs. Subjective

Objective vs. Subjective AESTHETICS WEEK 2 Ancient Greek Philosophy & Objective Beauty Objective vs. Subjective Objective: something that can be known, which exists as part of reality, independent of thought or an observer. Subjective:

More information

2 Unified Reality Theory

2 Unified Reality Theory INTRODUCTION In 1859, Charles Darwin published a book titled On the Origin of Species. In that book, Darwin proposed a theory of natural selection or survival of the fittest to explain how organisms evolve

More information

The Creative Writer s Luggage. Graeme Harper. Transnational Literature Vol. 2 no. 2, May

The Creative Writer s Luggage. Graeme Harper. Transnational Literature Vol. 2 no. 2, May The Creative Writer s Luggage: Journeying from Where to Here Keynote Address to Eight Generations of Experience: a Symposium held by the Poetry and Poetics Centre, University of South Australia, in May

More information

AB: In a place like Bushwick, the bind is making work. I think with the arts community here, its bind is partying.

AB: In a place like Bushwick, the bind is making work. I think with the arts community here, its bind is partying. DD: There s not the culture here, like there is in Bushwick, of buildings full of studios. There s all these young kids coming out of art school, they re all in a building together, making work, and that

More information

Information about Visiting The Customs House

Information about Visiting The Customs House Information about Visiting The Customs House This document may be useful for new visitors to The Customs House including groups and people with access needs who are planning a visit. Throughout this document

More information

Studio Visit: Erin O Keefe

Studio Visit: Erin O Keefe Studio Visit: Erin O Keefe Erin O Keefe is a studio artist who has taken 800 pictures of a corner in her studio since last year. It s not that she finds the corner itself particularly beautiful, it s just

More information

AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RINUS VAN DE VELDE // EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PAINTINGS

AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RINUS VAN DE VELDE // EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PAINTINGS Marx, Cécile. An Exclusive Interview With Rinus Van de Velde // Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Paintings. Motel Magazine. 14 September 2014. AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RINUS VAN DE VELDE //

More information

Central Social Districts: more details and discussion

Central Social Districts: more details and discussion Central Social Districts: more details and discussion N. David Milder 718-805-9507 www.ndavidmilder.com dmilder@gmail.co Presented to The IIRA 28th Annual Rural Community and Economic Development Conference

More information

Hearing on digitisation of books and copyright: does one trump the other? Tuesday 23 March p.m p.m. ASP 1G3

Hearing on digitisation of books and copyright: does one trump the other? Tuesday 23 March p.m p.m. ASP 1G3 Hearing on digitisation of books and copyright: does one trump the other? Tuesday 23 March 2010 3.00 p.m. - 6.30 p.m. ASP 1G3 Dr Piotr Marciszuk, Polish Chamber of Books The main cultural challenges arising

More information

My work comes out of being frustrated about the human condition. And about how people refuse to understand other people

My work comes out of being frustrated about the human condition. And about how people refuse to understand other people Bruce Nauman My work comes out of being frustrated about the human condition. And about how people refuse to understand other people Born in 1941, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Lives in Galisteo, New Mexico Bruce

More information

Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE 0510/32 Paper 3 Listening (Core) November 2017 TRANSCRIPT Approx.

More information

The Construction of Graphic Design Aesthetic Elements

The Construction of Graphic Design Aesthetic Elements 2016 3 rd International Symposium on Engineering Technology, Education and Management (ISETEM 2016) ISBN: 978-1-60595-382-3 The Construction of Graphic Design Aesthetic Elements Jian Liu 1 Abstract The

More information

Access Statement for An Lanntair

Access Statement for An Lanntair This access statement does not contain personal opinions as to our suitability for those with access needs, but aims to accurately describe the facilities and services that we offer all our guests/visitors.

More information

Adel Abdessemed L âge d or

Adel Abdessemed L âge d or Adel Abdessemed L âge d or 6th October 2013 to 5th January 2014 Pre-visit and post-visit materials for teachers of students aged 12-18 Developed by Rasha Al Sarraj and Maral Bedoyan, Education Department

More information

Sculpting Stage Fright a conversation with Lisa Robertson Excerpt from Kairos Time 2015 published by the Piet Zwart Institute ISBN:

Sculpting Stage Fright a conversation with Lisa Robertson Excerpt from Kairos Time 2015 published by the Piet Zwart Institute ISBN: Sculpting Stage Fright a conversation with Lisa Robertson Excerpt from Kairos Time 2015 published by the Piet Zwart Institute ISBN: 978-90-813325-3-8 Kairos Time Micha Zweifel I know you hate the talk.

More information

ADAM By Krista Boehnert

ADAM By Krista Boehnert ADAM By Krista Boehnert Copyright 2016 by Krista Boehnert, All rights reserved. ISBN: 978-1-60003-860-0 Caution: Professionals and amateurs are hereby warned that this Work is subject to a royalty. This

More information

Illustration. An exploratory talk by. Professional illustrator, designer and creative consultant

Illustration. An exploratory talk by. Professional illustrator, designer and creative consultant Illustration An exploratory talk by Professional illustrator, designer and creative consultant What is illustration? It is art with a purpose: to inform to record to explain to illuminate But

More information

conversation_v WW1_v 22/10/08 13:08 Page 59 conversation IMAGE: MAJA FLINK icon December

conversation_v WW1_v 22/10/08 13:08 Page 59 conversation IMAGE: MAJA FLINK icon December conversation_v WW1_v 22/10/08 13:08 Page 59 conversation IMAGE: MAJA FLINK icon December 2008 059 conversation_v WW1_v 22/10/08 13:08 Page 60 conversation Hecht Creed Conversation between Sam Hecht, co-founder

More information

nellie castan gallery Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow 27 August 19 September 2009 Opening drinks Thursday 27 August 6pm - 8pm

nellie castan gallery Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow 27 August 19 September 2009 Opening drinks Thursday 27 August 6pm - 8pm Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow 27 August 19 September 2009 Opening drinks Thursday 27 August 6pm - 8pm Artists: James and Eleanor Avery, Laresa Kosloff, Sanné Mestrom, Dorota Mytych, Izabela Pluta,

More information

ARCHITECTURE AND EDUCATION: THE QUESTION OF EXPERTISE AND THE CHALLENGE OF ART

ARCHITECTURE AND EDUCATION: THE QUESTION OF EXPERTISE AND THE CHALLENGE OF ART 1 Pauline von Bonsdorff ARCHITECTURE AND EDUCATION: THE QUESTION OF EXPERTISE AND THE CHALLENGE OF ART In so far as architecture is considered as an art an established approach emphasises the artistic

More information

The Complete Guide to Music Technology using Cubase Sample Chapter

The Complete Guide to Music Technology using Cubase Sample Chapter The Complete Guide to Music Technology using Cubase Sample Chapter This is a sample of part of a chapter from 'The Complete Guide to Music Technology', ISBN 978-0-244-05314-7, available from lulu.com.

More information

VOCABULARY. Working with animals / A solitary child / I have not seen him for ages

VOCABULARY. Working with animals / A solitary child / I have not seen him for ages VOCABULARY Acting school Agent Bedsit Behaviour Bustling By the way Capital Career Ceremony Commuter Couple Course Crossword Crowd Department store District Entertainment Estate agent's Housing estate

More information

Efrem Angela, Nathan Azhderian, Vanessa Disler, Jacob Dwyer, Jeroen Eisinga, Melissa Gordon, Robertas Narkus & Lisa Oppenheim

Efrem Angela, Nathan Azhderian, Vanessa Disler, Jacob Dwyer, Jeroen Eisinga, Melissa Gordon, Robertas Narkus & Lisa Oppenheim Making Sense Group exhibition Efrem Angela, Nathan Azhderian, Vanessa Disler, Jacob Dwyer, Jeroen Eisinga, Melissa Gordon, Robertas Narkus & Lisa Oppenheim 14 March - 18 April Making Sense 14 March

More information

Museum Theory Final Examination

Museum Theory Final Examination Museum Theory Final Examination One thing that is (almost) universally true of what most people call museums is that they display objects of some sort or another. This becomes, for many, the defining factor

More information

CHAPTER SIX. Habitation, structure, meaning

CHAPTER SIX. Habitation, structure, meaning CHAPTER SIX Habitation, structure, meaning In the last chapter of the book three fundamental terms, habitation, structure, and meaning, become the focus of the investigation. The way that the three terms

More information

Notes on Gadamer, The Relevance of the Beautiful

Notes on Gadamer, The Relevance of the Beautiful Notes on Gadamer, The Relevance of the Beautiful The Unity of Art 3ff G. sets out to argue for the historical continuity of (the justification for) art. 5 Hegel new legitimation based on the anthropological

More information

Excerpt: Karl Marx's Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts

Excerpt: Karl Marx's Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts Excerpt: Karl Marx's Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/epm/1st.htm We shall start out from a present-day economic fact. The worker becomes poorer the

More information

Marx & Primitive Accumulation. Week Two Lectures

Marx & Primitive Accumulation. Week Two Lectures Marx & Primitive Accumulation Week Two Lectures Labour Power and the Circulation Process Before we get into Marxist Historiography (as well as who Marx even was), we are going to spend some time understanding

More information

THE HEART OF HOLLYWOOD WORLD TOUR LONDON The Must See Spectacular Showcase of the Magic and Mystique of HOLLYWOOD

THE HEART OF HOLLYWOOD WORLD TOUR LONDON The Must See Spectacular Showcase of the Magic and Mystique of HOLLYWOOD THE HEART OF HOLLYWOOD WORLD TOUR LONDON 2018 The Must See Spectacular Showcase of the Magic and Mystique of HOLLYWOOD FEATURING ONE OF AMERICA S GREATEST ICONS The Heart Of Hollywood World Tour featuring

More information

Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel

Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel Conti, Riccardo. Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel. Mousse Magazine (June 2017) [ill.] [online] CONVERSATIONS Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel Wolfgang Tillmans in conversation

More information

John Waters. Rear Projection

John Waters. Rear Projection EYEMAZING MEETING WITH John Waters Rear Projection John Waters, Baltimore s Pope of Trash and the filmmaker behind cult classics like Hairspray and Pink Flamingos, makes more than movies. His contemporary

More information

María Tello s artistic career traces a journey from thought to image. Homemade, by. Manuel Andrade*

María Tello s artistic career traces a journey from thought to image. Homemade, by. Manuel Andrade* 48 Eye. María Homemade, by Tello Manuel Andrade* María Tello s artistic career traces a journey from thought to image that, for the moment, has ended in poetry. A philosopher by training and a self-taught

More information

There is an activity based around book production available for children on the Gothic for England website which you may find useful.

There is an activity based around book production available for children on the Gothic for England website which you may find useful. WRITING AND PRINTING Resource Box NOTES FOR TEACHERS These notes are intended primarily for KS2 teachers and for teachers of History (Britain 1066-1500) at KS3. The notes are divided into three sections

More information

CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH EMPOWER B1 Pre-intermediate Video Extra Teacher s notes

CAMBRIDGE ENGLISH EMPOWER B1 Pre-intermediate Video Extra Teacher s notes Video Extra Teacher s notes Background information Viewing for pleasure In addition to the video material for Lesson C of each unit aimed at developing students speaking skills the Cambridge English Empower

More information

Whaplode (Church of England) Primary School Mill Lane, Whaplode, Spalding, Lincolnshire PE12 6TS. Phone:/Fax:

Whaplode (Church of England) Primary School Mill Lane, Whaplode, Spalding, Lincolnshire PE12 6TS. Phone:/Fax: Whaplode (Church of England) Primary School Mill Lane, Whaplode, Spalding, Lincolnshire PE12 6TS Phone:/Fax: 01406 370447 Executive Head Teacher: Mrs A Flack http://www.whaplodeprimary.co.uk Spirituality

More information

How to Cure World Blindness: An Interview with Joel Ross and Jason Creps June 23rd, 2013 CAROLINE KOEBEL

How to Cure World Blindness: An Interview with Joel Ross and Jason Creps June 23rd, 2013 CAROLINE KOEBEL How to Cure World Blindness: An Interview with Joel Ross and Jason Creps June 23rd, 2013 CAROLINE KOEBEL In conjunction with their Austin exhibition Not How It Happened at Tiny Park gallery (through June

More information

workbook Listening scripts

workbook Listening scripts workbook Listening scripts 42 43 UNIT 1 Page 9, Exercise 2 Narrator: Do you do any sports? Student 1: Yes! Horse riding! I m crazy about horses, you see. Being out in the countryside on a horse really

More information

Imagining Negative-Dimensional Space

Imagining Negative-Dimensional Space Bridges 2011: Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture Imagining Negative-Dimensional Space Luke Wolcott Mathematics Department University of Washington lwolcott@uw.edu Elizabeth McTernan artist

More information

News Art & Culture Science Politics Innovation Support Us. ARTIST 19TH/JUL/2018 Doug Aitken 'The way I see life is very non-linear'

News Art & Culture Science Politics Innovation Support Us. ARTIST 19TH/JUL/2018 Doug Aitken 'The way I see life is very non-linear' 5 2 I N S I G H T S News Art & Culture Science Politics Innovation Support Us ARTIST 19TH/JUL/2018 Doug Aitken 'The way I see life is very non-linear' Through his own unique work American visual artist

More information

The Theatrics of Games: Craig Drennen on Basketball and The Bard

The Theatrics of Games: Craig Drennen on Basketball and The Bard The Theatrics of Games: Craig Drennen on Basketball and The Bard Sarah Walko Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better. Samuel Beckett Out of Tune Beckett s quote on failure,

More information

Extra 1 Listening Test B1

Extra 1 Listening Test B1 Extra 1 Listening Test B1 Name: Points: / 25 (15) Time: 35 Minutes Mark: Part 1 / 7 (4) There are seven questions in this part. For each question there are three pictures and a short recording. Choose

More information

Judith Hopf on the Importance of (Occasionally) Being Stupid

Judith Hopf on the Importance of (Occasionally) Being Stupid Meet the Artist Judith Hopf on the Importance of (Occasionally) Being Stupid By Dylan Kerr Feb. 13, 2015 Artist Judith Hopf, production still from Zählen, 2008 16 mm transferred to video, 3:38 min Judith

More information

GAGOSIAN. Ann Binlot So you started this series three years ago? Dan Colen I started the series four or five years ago.

GAGOSIAN. Ann Binlot So you started this series three years ago? Dan Colen I started the series four or five years ago. GAGOSIAN Document Journal November 16, 2018 Studio visit: Dan Colen draws the connection between Wile E. Coyote and the never-ending chase Dan Colen's latest exhibition at Gagosian Beverly Hills, High

More information

A Boyhood home. British Council - Language Assistant - Essential UK Task 1 Famous Places. Look at these places.

A Boyhood home. British Council - Language Assistant - Essential UK Task 1 Famous Places. Look at these places. A Boyhood home Task 1 Famous Places Look at these places. Buckingham Palace Windsor castle Chatsworth House Stonehenge Brighton beach The Cornish coast The Lake District What have they got in common? Why

More information

Abstract of Graff: Taking Cover in Coverage. Graff, Gerald. "Taking Cover in Coverage." The Norton Anthology of Theory and

Abstract of Graff: Taking Cover in Coverage. Graff, Gerald. Taking Cover in Coverage. The Norton Anthology of Theory and 1 Marissa Kleckner Dr. Pennington Engl 305 - A Literary Theory & Writing Five Interrelated Documents Microsoft Word Track Changes 10/11/14 Abstract of Graff: Taking Cover in Coverage Graff, Gerald. "Taking

More information

Volume 1, Issue 2, June Special Symposium on the Law and Music, Downloading and Filesharing - A Gig with a Difference

Volume 1, Issue 2, June Special Symposium on the Law and Music, Downloading and Filesharing - A Gig with a Difference Volume 1, Issue 2, June 2004 Special Symposium on the Law and Music, Downloading and Filesharing - A Gig with a Difference Playfair Library, University of Edinburgh held on the 29 th April 2004 Alex Kapranos

More information

And then, if we have an adequate theory of the rhetorical situation, what would that then allow (in Bitzer s view)?

And then, if we have an adequate theory of the rhetorical situation, what would that then allow (in Bitzer s view)? 1 Bitzer & the Rhetorical Situation Bitzer argues that rhetorical situation is the aspect which controls, and is directly related to, rhetorical theory and demonstrates this through political examples.

More information

BBC Trust Changes to HD channels Assessment of significance

BBC Trust Changes to HD channels Assessment of significance BBC Trust Changes to HD channels Assessment of significance May 2012 Getting the best out of the BBC for licence fee payers Contents BBC Trust / Assessment of significance The Trust s decision 1 Background

More information

[Sur] face: The Subjectivity of Space

[Sur] face: The Subjectivity of Space COL FAY [Sur] face: The Subjectivity of Space Figure 1. col Fay, [Sur] face (2011). Interior view of exhibition capturing the atmospheric condition of light, space and form. Photograph: Emily Hlavac-Green.

More information

Metaphors we live by. Structural metaphors. Orientational metaphors. A personal summary

Metaphors we live by. Structural metaphors. Orientational metaphors. A personal summary Metaphors we live by George Lakoff, Mark Johnson 1980. London, University of Chicago Press A personal summary This highly influential book was written after the two authors met, in 1979, with a joint interest

More information

The artists' artist: Children's illustrators

The artists' artist: Children's illustrators Printing sponsored by: The artists' artist: Children's illustrators Five children's illustrators nominate their favourite living artist in their field Interviews by Emine Saner guardian.co.uk, Wednesday

More information

SALE TODAY All toys half price

SALE TODAY All toys half price Name: Class: Date: Questions 1 5 Which notice (A H) says this (1 5)? Part 1 For Questions 1 5 mark the correct letter A H on your answer sheet. Answer 0 Young children should go here with a parent F 1

More information

Time-Based Media Art Working Group Interview

Time-Based Media Art Working Group Interview 1 Time-Based Media Art Working Group Interview Alex Cooper, Exhibits Designer, National Portrait Gallery Interviewed by Olivia Fagon, Time-Based Media Art Intern August 16, 2012 26 min, 42 sec Olivia Fagon:

More information

Polly Apfelbaum by Stephen Westfall

Polly Apfelbaum by Stephen Westfall BOMB 27 Spring 1989 Polly Apfelbaum by Stephen Westfall Polly Apfelbaum. Gilles Donzé. What unites the work of Polly Apfelbaum, Bill Barrette, and Nancy Shaver is their incorporation of objects and images

More information

EYFS Curriculum Months. Personal, Social and Emotional Development Physical Development Communication and Language

EYFS Curriculum Months. Personal, Social and Emotional Development Physical Development Communication and Language Personal, Social and Emotional Development Physical Development Communication and Language Making relationships I like to talk with my friends and grown ups and tell them what I know about the things they

More information

Extra 1 Listening Test B1

Extra 1 Listening Test B1 Extra 1 Listening Test B1 Name: Points: / 25 (15) Time: 35 Minutes Mark: / 7 (4) There are seven questions in this part. For each question there are three pictures and a short recording. Choose the correct

More information

Teacher s. guide. the big rusty nail

Teacher s. guide. the big rusty nail Teacher s guide the big rusty nail The Big Rusty Nail By Lily Burgess Illustrated by Kate Hawthorne ISBN: 9780987391087 Teachers Notes Prepared and written by a teacher with experience in both whole class

More information