Tuesday, May 26, 2009

fat cat


this cat got into my garden

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Clod Ensemble UNDER GLASS at the Village Underground.

I am back in the dark, another cavernous, high-ceilinged Victorian brick storage space, a former warehouse this time. Guided by ushers, we sit or stand or move as they tell us, following the rhythm of the light. All the performers (although specimen might be a better term) are encased in glass: rectanglar cages; an oversized jam jar; a giant test tube.

The superb lighting design introduce us to various characters:

a narrator, grey and faded but still elegant, a gossip, talking and talking away into her phone (who is on the end? Is there anyone listening?);

a pretty young woman in brightly coloured 50s clothes, but she is nervous and on edge and one thinks of Edward Hopper and Dennis Hopper and David Lynch;

a voluptuous woman, her naked belly oozing out over the top of her trousers, then pressed against the glass, water ripples at the bottom of her cage, is it rising?

a young woman, who we realise as the lighting changes is lying on patch of grass inside her cabinet;

a woman trapped inside a jam jar, insect like, she balances on her hands like they were the legs of a stalk, and flashes a scream; a Francis Bacon harpy made flesh;

an office worker, trapped in his office, battling the anglepoise and the routines of drudgery Sisyphus rolling his boulder up the hill;

a vamp on a pedestal in cocktail dress, lonely and forlorn; and

twins, or possible lovers, locked head to toe, like yin and yang, in a circular box, viewed by us from a circle of stools up above.

The text told by the narrator down the phone is by Alice Oswald and is really good – thankfully you get a copy on the way out. She talks of a village, but there is something strange about it, presumably rural, the village seems to be disintegrating, mired in death, as the woman reports what she sees and hears. The text has traces of Beckett and Alan Bennett, but also reminded me of Robert Ashley, it had a kind of symphonic quality.

We gather fragments of each person’s story, a sense of their idiosyncrasies and their pain, no mere ciphers or metaphors these.

This really is a superb performance piece, moving and profound, with real gravitas.

Lovers of Victorian freak shows and cabinets of curiosities, 1940s-1950s settings, steam/cyber punk etc will love this.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Regardless of History

Here's are some very odd pics I took at Cass on my mobile - its a Bill Woodrow piece called 'regardless of history'



Tunnel 228 - Punchdrunk

I had no idea what to expect as I gingerly made way down the (officially sanctioned) graffiti lined open tunnel that is Leake Street, the fresh air from the Yorkshire Sculpture Park and the Cass Foundation at Goodwood still in my system and more importantly as it would turn out, the images of the sculptures still pulsing around my head.
I headed down into the arches.

Having donned my anti-Swine Flu surgical mask, and swept through the black curtains into a dimly lit room with the familiar, almost welcoming, ominous drones that tell you that you have crossed the portal into a Punchdrunk world, I was face to face with, no doubt about it, a sculpture, a very fine piece as it happens by Luke Montgomery called Heaven on Earth, an altar form perhaps, or a Neolithic slab for human sacrifices, winged by wire, backlit, with something spooky, like umbilical chord preserved in formaldehyde at its heart.

So I was in a kind of sculpture park, albeit the dark, evil twin of YPS and Cass. This was post-apocalyptic world and I was witnessing either the death of advanced capitalism or its ultimate success. The fat controller was seen being pleasured by a lapdancer in the ladies toilet (seen through slats in the door before they were slammed shut), and appeared as a mannequin overseeing the workers toiling below. And what toil. Running on a giant hamster wheel to generate electricity, or endlessly pushing trolleys along a bleak, and really long railway track.

The workers were dressed in identical uniforms, and moved lifelessly. They collapsed on the ground, and would then twitch into life as though being charged up by electricity. There was a touch of the Planet of the Ouds from Doctor Who.

Up above us, a row of books would collapse like dominos, triggering a system of swinging barrels and cogs and pulleys which in turn released a silver ball which ran along a track before dropping into a bucket near the giant wheel. The ball would be polished and replaced and then the whole thing would crank up again.

I found a room where, on knocking, a door was opened by a pale, thin, Victorian butler who told me “he’s not here. He’s gone to see Yoshuwaaaah” over and over again. By “he” did he mean the fat controller?

But the workers were few in number. What happened to the rest of humanity. Evidence seemed scattered about. Patches of grass marked by stones suggested graves. There was video of humans living in pods, a la alien, enslaved or waiting for salvation. The last few survivors of what? War, disease, or political enslavement?

Much of the art followed a cyberpunk/steampunk theme, with touches of Alien and Doctor Who thrown in. Vessels glowing with lights. A sinister dentist chair turned into a mechanical killing machine . A body was slumped over a table. Tiny shrunken buildings were dotted about the place.


So what exactly was going on here?

This was a collaboration between Punchdrunk, the Old and New Vics and various invited artists. The intention was to combine art and theatre, and give it a sinister, uniquely Punchdrunk theme. What I liked most about the art was how tonally consistent it was, so that you could at least start to patch together a sense of some narrative from these fragment. But it was difficult to really get so excited about the art pieces in the same way as I did say with Lynn Chadwick’s piece up at Cass, or the St Ives Room at Pallant House. And there was a kind of familiarity with much of it, as though the makers had seen a lot of what I have seen over recent years, from the spectral multi-artist show at Belsay a few years back to the weirder outreaches of Mimefest (various mad Russians at the ICA.)

I liked the Punchdrunk element, especially the workers. There was something of Gormley about them, like living sculptures. And if the purpose of the exercise was to explore how art and theatre can work together, then this suggested that the route through is to to do just that, not to have the artwork as a backdrop, set dressing, but an equal, kinetic part of the proceedings.

If much of the art did not or was not allowed to stand out on its own, it certainly contributed to the atmosphere and other worldy feel of the event. But I missed some kind of dramatic impetus, a sense of things building up.

On the way out, I was given a very good brochure about the event. I’m not sure if it would have been helpful to have known more before I went in.

Being in Chichester, I missed the whole London Paper controversy. Apparently there was a big feature in the LP, explaining what was what, and as a result the rest of the 15,000 tickets sold out in a couple of hours. Foul, cried the Guardian. London Paper readers do not deserve to go to Punchdrunk events, ranted the Guardian (now do you believe me about how awful the leftwing media is?!). It might return in the Autumn, as with all Punchdrunk stuff, it’s worth a second viewing. But in the meantime, the Punchdrunk team move to Manchester and I can’t wait.

PS apparently Metropolis was a big part of the inspiration for the event; not a film I’ve seen somehow, but a quick google talks of a “vision of a horrific future with a favoured elite living on the surface of the earth enjoying a life of luxury, and a vast army of nameless workers living in a grim underground city toiling ten hour shifts”.
Here are some "official" pics taken from the Guardian website.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Things to do in Chichester Part II

After Cass, I headed into town, to the Pallant House Gallery. A fusion of a Grade One listed Queen Anne townhouse and a neat clean modern building, Pallant House boasts one of the finest collections of modern British Art outside the capital.

One of the highlights for me was a St Ives room which matched some fine Bernard Leach (and other) pots with a Barbara Hepworth sculpture, a Ben Nicholson drawing, and a classic Alfred Wallis ship painting; so simple yet so rare to see these artists together.

Elsewhere two very good Lucie Rie pots were matched with a Henry Moore figure. It was all just so right.

They had a big Patrick Caulfield exhibition on, which I kind of whizzed through, finding nothing much to detain me.

The prints room too was good with an exhibition of pre WWII landscapes by Paul Nash, Ethelbert White and others.

Then it was off to the Oxmarket Centre of Arts for a selling exhibition of good work, most done by local artists and very reasonably priced. By this time, the Mrs had sauntered through her 25 miles and I was summoned to Goodwood racetrack to greet her as she jumped the final fence.

We ate like kings in Chichester by the way. Really good fish at the peculiarly named Dining Room at Purchase’s, a lovely open top mackerel sandwich on onion bread at the Field & Fork restaurant at Pallant House, and quite simply one of the best Indian meals I have ever had at Masala Gate. The fish pakora was sensational. My main course came in the kind of traditional meets modern style London restaurants often aim for and fail: a well cooked and flavoured piece of sea bass atop a tower of aloo sag, with a crispy pakora perched on top, and a drizzle of tomato chutney reduction. Marvellous.

Things to do in Chichester when your…

girlfriend is doing a 25 mile walk

Joy oh joy. Less than a week after my trip to the YSP I found myself in another superb sculpture park, this time the Cass Sculpture Foundation at Goodwood. This park is strictly contemporary, many pieces specially commissioned, so pieces do come and go.

The stand out work for me was Lynn Chadwick’s enchanting ‘ace of diamonds’, consisting of a diamond shape and a square with a triangle cut out, made of heavy stainless steel, which revolved in the breeze. One of the great joys of sculpture is a sense of the work unfolding before you eyes, as you wander around it, different angles revealing different aspects, and different applications of concentration giving rise to new insights. This piece inverses the process; it moves, and a seemingly never ending succession of new shapes emerge.





I also loved Rob Ward’s enchanting glass ‘gate’ a piece that is there and not there.




Another favourite was Manfred Kielhofer’s ‘timeguards’, a scary piece, part religious icon, part Doctor Who, and strangely reminiscent of a carved candle I picked up in on a road trip many years ago now, from a weird Celtic folklore / new age museum somewhere between Inverness and Edinburgh.


The other piece that got me was Jonathan Loxley’s ‘portal’, a piece very much of two halves, one side whirling and scratchy, the other smooth and sensuous.




Against better inclinations, I was fascinated by Thomas Heatherwick’s ‘pavilion’. I’m a bit dubious when sculpture strays into architecture, but walking around the piece with its ever changing angles and reflections, I was convinced.


I also liked Keir Smith’s ‘stefano’, Wendy Taylor’s giant 'sycamore’, Helaine Blumenfeld's vaginalatrous 'spirit of life', and the wonderful Peter Doig like presence of David Worthington’s ‘yo reina’, a tiny white alien ship landed in the forest.

Animal Magic

Even if I say so myself, I've taken some pretty darn good photos of animals on my travels...


























Return to the Yorkshire Sculpture Park II

With time to kill, and energy to burn after a mighty vegetable soup and huge baked potato in the cafĂ©, I wondered the grounds of the YSP. Almost all the Henry Moore’s had changed since I was last here.

As I wondered about looking at the sculptures, the sheep wandered about looking at me.


In the lower field, Sophie Ryder was exhibiting a collection of disturbing rabbit/women.


I loved a sound installation in a nearby gazebo where odd noises were generated as you sat down or shuffled on benches.

It’s a magical place. As you wander about, you stumble upon, not fields of daffodils, but fields of sculptures. Each step reveals something new, or a different angle, or a different feeling.

Return to the Yorkshire Sculpture Park 1 - Isamu Noguchi





I knew I would kick myself if I missed the Isamu Noguchi exhibition at YSP. The closing date had already been put back once, and with the new end date fast approaching, I took a detour across the Penines on the way back from Old Trafford after the first leg of the Arsenal game.

Noguchi, feted in American and Japan, is little known here, even though anyone who was ever a student probably had a piece derived from his famous Akari lamps in their bedsits; remember those folding paper lampshades you’d hang over any going harsh lone lighbulb?

His work straddled many fields: as well as sculpture he worked in design, furnishings, stage sets and delicate drawings through to giant conceptual theme parks. This partly explains his obscurity in the West, where there is too strong a tendency to dichotomise art and craft. Because so much of his best work was functional, he couldn’t possibly be a serious artist, so the argument went!

This was a wonderful as well as major exhibition, the first ever in Europe, with pieces taken from every era allowing you to follow Noguchi's journey.

For me, the best pieces were the coffee tables. One in particular, in the corridor of the indoor exhibition, totally captivated me. It was a jet black L shaped slab, balanced on a soft coloured stone. The top of the slab was highly polished and two oval pools, one larger than the other, had been cut into the surface and filled to the top with purified water, so that the meniscus traced lines along the edge of the pool. Sublime.

The final and best room indoors was also breathtaking. Here was another coffee table, with part of the slab left unpolished, so that a rough raised crater grew up out of one corner. At the far end, flanked my monumental stones split and put back together again, was a raised wooden bench suggestive of Tori gates, supporting three small torsos. And in the corner, a lovely curvaceous stones, bold, yet carved so delicately.

The exhibition continued outside varying from seemingly barely worked chunks of rocks to a lovely Tori gate shape and a delicate spire.

All in all, marvellous.