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Cell Project Space
TRYING HARD TO COPE
WITH THINGS THAT AREN’T HUMAN
(PART ONE)
Ian Brown •
Marcus Coates • Alan Currall • Ryan Gander • Johanna Hällsten • Richard
Hughes • Francis McKee • Heather and Ivan Morison • Mariele Neudecker •
Alex Pearl • Paul Rooney • Annika Ström • Richard T. Walker
Private
View Friday 25th September 2009 open 6.30 - 9pm
from 26th September – 25th October
Opening 12 - 6pm Friday - Sunday
Open during Art fair week Weds.14th
Oct. & Thurs.18th Oct. 2009
Outdoor Film Screening
Thursday, 1st October 2009 7.30pm Marcus Coates, Richard T Walker, Alex
Pearl. Visit future at www.cellprojects.org/future/ for more info
This is the final in a series of
exhibitions, curated by artist Ian Brown, which started at David
Cunningham Projects, San Francisco in January 2009. The accompanying
publication, comprised of specially commissioned artworks by Paul Rooney,
Heather and Ivan Morison, Richard T. Walker, Annika Ström, Ian Brown, Ryan
Gander, Francis McKee and Alex Pearl, will be available at Cell Project
Space.
Trying To Cope With Things That Aren’t Human (Part One) places us
in a familiar position, one where we often struggle to deal with the
things around us, unable to completely understand how technology works but
simultaneously unable to truly understand the beauty of nature. We remain
confused but still standing - between the things that we have made and the
things that we have not, what could be called the invented world and the
natural world. To the extent that it discusses difference, this exhibition
also tries to find the common ground, or indeed the threshold, between our
ability to cope with the things that we have created, to make our lives
easier, and our struggle to relate to the wonders of the natural world. It
is maybe only right that both the invented world and the natural world
could also be equally and simultaneously called non-human. Often viewed as
a dichotomy, technology and nature have a fluid relationship, one which
judders and jerks all the time, rubbing up against one another.
Ian Brown will use the gallery space and the street outside. A car
is parked outside with a sun strip window sticker declaring the first part
of a statement ‘Eventually I will rust and die’. Inside the gallery a
scale replica of the same car continues the text, on its own miniature sun
strip. Ian Brown’s practice investigates advancements in technology and
tests the progression and optimism associated with these developments
against the problems of our everyday usage of them, taking into
consideration the relationship between the invented world and the natural
world. The work raises issues surrounding the automobile as a tool to
access the wilderness but also one which is capable of destroying parts of
it.
Ian Brown has had exhibitions in Iceland, Sweden, USA and throughout
the UK. Brown is also part of the collaborative artist’s group, ‘Common
Culture’, with David Campbell and Mark Durden. ‘Common Culture’ have had
recent shows at ‘Void’ in Derry, ‘The Photographers Gallery’, London and
have shown work as part of the ‘Liverpool European City of Culture’ events
in ‘Variable Capital’ at the ‘Bluecoat Gallery’. They exhibited in the
‘6th Shanghai Biennial’ and were also selected by curator Hou Hanru to be
part of ‘EV+A, Limerick 08’. Common Culture are represented by ‘Third
Space Gallery’, Belfast .
Richard T. Walker
offers us a never-ending cycle of photographic slides
bearing witness to the artist engaged with the landscape in front of him.
As if addressing an old friend in ‘It’s hard to find you because I
can’t quite see what you mean to me’ he waves his greeting and
farewell to the sunset and sunrise. Walker uses photography, collage,
text, video installation and performance as part of an evolving
investigation into the natural landscape and its use as a contextual tool
to mobilise thoughts and self reflection. With strong nods towards the
European and American romantic periods, Walker uses spoken dialogue, music
and performance to facilitate engagement and analysis that is both
contemplative and active. Walker’s work questions how we perceive nature
as well as how we imagine nature perceiving us. Walker’s other work for
this exhibition, ‘Everything goes as if it is always away’,
offers a letter discussing plans for a grand but unfulfilled adventure
accompanied by an image of a mountain from a book. The image has the
notation ‘What could have been’ written onto it, accompanied by a forlorn
and emotive musical refrain.
Richard T. Walker currently lives and works in San Francisco. His work
has been presented in numerous exhibitions in Europe, Japan, China and the
USA. He was the recipient of the 2007 fellowship at Kala Art Institute in
Berkeley California and is currently and Affiliate Artist at Headlands
Centre for the Arts in Sausalito California. He is represented by Angels
Barcelona. .
Heather and Ivan Morison will also refer to the world outside by
placing an ambiguous text within the general announcements section of the
classifieds of the ‘Hackney Gazette’. Its sense and its absurd function
are established once the work is displayed both as a framed object and as
a stack of newspapers in the gallery. In ‘Earthwalker – Eugene’ ,
a three dimensional geometric form floats on the surface of an image of
the landscape, disrupting and bringing into focus our relationship with
our use of sciences and the natural world.
In 2007 Heather and Ivan Morison represented
Wales at the Venice Biennale and have worked with Milton Keynes Gallery,
Barbican and The Whitechapel Gallery in 2009. They live in Arthog, North
West Wales. They are represented by Danielle Arnaud Contemporary Art,
London. .
Alex Pearl
makes mini epic films, video installations, sculpture and books.
Throughout his work there is a sense of an acceptance of failure or
disappointment as important parts of the human condition. Using readily
available materials and software the films are made from: suddenly
apprehended ideas, discovered objects and impromptu processes. They are
comparable with the sketch or doodle, an initial throwaway idea made
visible. They make light with big issues and are in turn haunting and
funny. His sculpture is fragile, temporary and has the appearance of being
on the verge of collapse or already broken. The work displays playfulness
with its own limitations and a hopeless desire for greatness. For this
exhibition Alex created two Automatic Films (7 and 8), works
created by simple machines, which investigate and navigate the confines of
indoor spaces, and spaces outside of the gallery, creating and solving
problems as they feed back information via small remote cameras.
Alex Pearl has exhibited throughout Europe, UK and USA. His solo show
‘Goodbye to most of my daydreams’, will be shown at ICIA, Bath and began
at BCA Gallery, Bedford. He is currently working on newly commissioned
work for the next Whitstable Biennale. .
It is Mariele Neudecker’s attempt to take in the enormity of
environmental and technological advancement by highlighting the
relationship between ourselves and the natural landscape, where the
sculpture ‘400 Thousand Generations’, 2009 forms a context for
our romantic encounter with mountain ranges. This work was commissioned
for this show and exhibited at AirSpace Gallery, Staffordshire for the
first time. The work depicts a fabricated mountain-scape inverted through
eyeball like spheres emphasising the struggle for humans to really
understand or take in the scale and impact of the planet. The second
piece, ‘ ‘Final Fantasy (flight recorder)’ ’, in some ways
presents the antithesis of the monolith in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A
space odyssey. In Kubrick's adaptation the giant body of black
solidity represents optimism, here the dense resin rapid prototype model
of a flight box recorder sits quietly like another type of monument. This
feels more like the embodiment of silence, encapsulated forever. Placed on
a plinth it compels us to observe and contemplate an object which records
catastrophic technological failure and the resulting devastation.
Mariele Neudeker is represented by Galerie
Barbara Thumm, Berlin and will appear in ‘GSK Contemporary, Earth: Art of
a changing world’ at The Royal Academy in December this year. .
Marcus Coates
has constructed hand-rendered wooden shoe-like objects, which shift his
weight to match that of a stoat. His attempt to achieve equilibrium and
balance on this tottering and improbable footwear creates an incidental
symbiosis with the erratic physical movements of the animal. Much of his
work is based around the idea of inter-species behaviour and the evolution
of human/animal culture.
Marcus Coates’recent exhibitions include the Whitechapel, London,
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead and Altermodern at Tate
Modern. He is represented by Workplace Gallery, Gateshead. .
Johanna Hällsten’s sound piece produces animal and mechanical alarm
calls which compete or converse as the sounds are emitted from speakers
placed amongst the greenery outside in the gallery yard. The audience
becomes embroiled in what could be perceived as a dispute. Through a
cacophony of sirens and animal shrieks. ‘The onlookers doubt’
explores how humans and animals occupy territory and how they lay claim,
inhabit and police spaces through dialogues and warning systems.
Hällsten’s practice is often location-specific and she is interested in
notions of translation and mediation occurring through duration within our
relationship with the environment we inhabit.
Johanna Hällsten has shown in London, Stockholm, Kunming, and
Princeton amongst others. Alongside her art practice she presents papers
and writes (IAPL, Wuhan University, US, IIAA, Finland etc), she is
included in several books and journals. .
Alan Currall’s newly commissioned work, a wooden head, carved in
such a way as to keep all of it’s tree-ness, engages in a teleological
argument delivered by an erratic computer generated voice. In this work it
is the conflict between nature and machine, which is brought to question.
In its broadest terms Corral’s art practice is an investigation into human
nature. It deals with questions of belief and identity, and the
limitations of our capacity to understand these concepts. He is best known
for his performance to camera single channel video works. These are often
simple actions or monologues, such as ‘Word Processing’, included
in this exhibition, where a close-up of the artist's fingers issue
instructions to a bug-like microchip, teaching it how to do its job.
Alan Currall has had solo exhibitions at GOMA, Glasgow, Millais
Gallery, Southampton and The Jerwood Gallery, London. He has exhibited in
Melbourne, Australia, Malmo, Sweden and New York. He was selected as
Critics! Choice at FACT, Liverpool in 2004 and was part of the touring
show "Reality Check; Recent Developments in British Photography and Video'
in 2003/4. He is now an Academic Researcher at Glasgow School of Art where
he has lectured since 1997, currently in the department of Sculpture and
Environmental Art. .
Ryan Gander’s
‘Substance’ takes its starting point from a formalist experiment
in typography; where language and communication as invention are disrupted
by another type of creativity; design. ‘New Alphabet’, designed by Wim
Crouwel in 1967 was a radical attempt to alter the recognisable characters
of a language through the filter of a design structure. The New New
Alphabet is Ganders typeface of additional marks, which when imposed on
Crowell’s original, creates a more accessible and readable typeface. This
subversion of utopian design creates a tension between the possibilities
of invention and the functional and democratic nature of language. The
work was created in conjunction with typographer Rasmus Spanggaard
Troelsen. ‘Substance’ highlights how communication and language, which is
imbedded into the human psyche and is key to how we function effectively
is a human fabrication in itself. The characters and fonts of typographic
design are an additional layer to this human intervention.
Ryan Gander is represented by Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York and
Lisson Gallery, London. Gander’s recent solo exhibitions include the
Stedelijk Museum Bureau, Amsterdam in 2003 and 2007, MUMOK, Vienna, and
CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco in 2007. In
January 2008 Gander's solo show, 'Heralded as the new black', curated by
Nigel Prince, premiered at the Ikon Gallery, Birmingham. The exhibition
traveled to the South London Gallery, London, 2008, and to the Boijmans
Museum, Rotterdam, 2009 .
In ‘Dark Side’, a meticulous breezeblock garden wall is reconstructed by
Richard Hughes, demonstrating another level of design, although
completely upstaged by trapped tennis balls and a discarded banana skin,
to form an image alluding to a human face. A disruption of another kind
where suburban decorative architecture has been customised by the flotsam
and jetsam of urban waste. Hughes makes meticulously crafted resin
replicas of the objects of our everyday life, man-made discarded objects
that find a new relationship with the effects that nature has on them,
outside of the safety of our homes. Hughes replays the cultural meaning of
familiar ephemera with a new and altered significance. For his second
piece in this exhibition, an upturned shoe with a dappled sole offers the
words ‘Slow Death’ where a logo or patterned tread would occur.
Richard Hughes has had recent solo exhibitions
at Anton Kern Gallery, New York, Michael Benevento, Los Angeles, Sadie
Coles HQ, London and The Modern Institute Glasgow and exhibited in Life on
Mars - 55th Carnegie International, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh. He
is represented by The Modern Institute, Glasgow and Anton Kern Gallery,
New York .
Annika Ström's
songs, text pieces and films all touch on the question of inadequacy – if
not miserable failure. The content and aesthetics repeatedly play with the
notion of imperfection. Ström's text pieces are clearly hand painted, the
videos include shaky, blurred images, and her rhythm-box compositions
flirt with an amateurish Eurovision aesthetic. Her relationship with the
means of production is calculated to form an inherent problem between
technologies or tools and her own manufacture. For this exhibition Ström
presents two works. The video piece ‘Min Mobil (My Mobile)’
investigates the everyday usage of cell phones in relation to the promises
that technologies such as this are imbued with. During the video the
artist’s mother discusses where she keeps her cell phone safe in the house
when she goes out and why she rarely turns it on. The second work is a
text painting, ‘Remove Please Me From Your Mailing List’ ,
addressing the frustration of Internet communication from outside of a
digital format.
Ström's first major monograph "Annika Ström Live" has been recently
released, published by Onestar press and Fälth & Hässler. She is working
on her first feature film and its new soundtrack. She is represented by
c/o Atle Gerhardsen, Berlin, Galleria Sonia Rosso, Turin and Galleri
Charlotte Lund, Stockholm. .
Both Francis McKee and Paul Rooney have contributed to the
accompanying publication
Francis McKee is a lecturer and research fellow at Glasgow School
of Art, working on the development of open source ideologies. From 2005 –
2008 he was also curator of Glasgow International, a festival of
contemporary visual art. He is now the director of CCA, the Centre for
Contemporary Arts.
Francis McKee has curated many exhibitions
including ‘This Peaceful War’, ‘The Jumex Collection’ for the first’
Glasgow International in 2005’; ‘Zenomap’ (together with Kay Pallister),
the presentation of new work from Scotland for the Venice Biennale in
2003;’ Words and Things’ for the relaunch of CCA in 2001. For the past ten
years he has written extensively on the work of artists such as Christine
Borland, Willie Doherty, Ross Sinclair, Douglas Gordon, Matthew Barney,
Simon Starling, Catherine Yass, Joao Penalva, Kathy Prendergast and
Pipilotti Rist. Previously, Francis McKee worked as an historian of
medicine for the Wellcome Trust and as Head of Programme at CCA. A recent
collection of essays has been published in Lithuania. .
Paul Rooney
practice focused from 1997 to 2000 on the music of the
"Rooney! CD's and performances. Rooney achieved an appearance in John
Peel’s Festive Fifty in 1998, and a "Peel session! in 1999. Paul now
primarily works with text, sound and video, focusing on the "voices! of
semi-fictional individuals, voices that often reveal the difficulties of
representing historical memory. The works use or reference narrative forms
such as short stories, songs, audio guides and sermons.
Paul Rooney has had residencies at Dundee
Contemporary Arts/University of Dundee VRC and Proyecto Batiscafo, Cuba,
and was the Tate Liverpool MOMART Fellow for 2002- 2003, the ACE
Oxford-Melbourne Artist Fellow for 2004 and the United Artist’s Fellow at
the University of Wolverhampton for 2004-2007. Paul has shown recently at
Tate Britain, London; Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid; Kunst-Werke, Berlin; the
‘Shanghai Biennial, and in British Art Show 6 which toured around the UK
in 2005- 2006. Other recent projects include a 12” red vinyl record
broadcast on Radio Lancashire, Radio 1 and BBC 6 Music, a video for Film
and Video Umbrella touring to fourteen cities around Europe, and a short
story published by ‘Serpent's Tail’. Paul has had solo shows at Matts
Gallery, London, and Collective Gallery, Edinburgh, in 2008.
For further information and to request a copy of the publication please contact:
info@cell.projects.org
Cell Project Space
258 Cambridge Heath Road, London E2 9DA
info@cellprojects.org
www.cellprojects.org
+44(0)20 7241 3600
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