Saturday 31 December 2016

Faig Ahmed and the magical carpets




Colossal    photograph courtesy of the artist

As a long-time and passionate admirer of woven carpets I was delighted to discover the work of Faig Admed, who stretches and distorts and manipulates the traditional carpets of Azerbaijan to recreate  them as contemporary works of art.  Here is an article by Paula Cocozza of the Guardian, published 14.11.16. which tells more about his life and work.


Helen Marten by Charlotte Higgins




Helen Marten, winner of the inaugural Hepworth prize for sculpture, with her work at The Hepworth Wakefield gallery in West Yorkshire. Photograph: Anthony Devlin/PA 

I enjoyed this recent article bby Charlotte Higgins about Helen Marten, this year's Turner Prize winner.

I particularly liked her description of how she works from reading and ideas. Here is a quotation from the article:


'Her starting point, she tells me, is reading. “Before I touch anything in the studio, before I do anything tangible or physical, I spend three or four months reading and researching, but not with a specific end goal in mind. It could be fiction, theory, news, philosophy. I read a lot of poetry. The primary impulse more often than not is linguistic.”
Recently she has been excited by Iconography and Electronics Upon a Generic Architecture, by postmodern architect Robert Venturi (“a vitriolic architectural postmodern thesis versus an amazing impulse for collecting and gathering weird archaeological facts”); and an essay by artist David Robbins on “the gaze in television, and the Lacanian idea of empathy”. Then, she says, “I store up phrases, a bank of words that are the starting point for thinking about an accumulation of physical stuff.”

The “physical stuff” comes next: first by a precise drawing and mapping of each of her works, for which a great deal of fabrication will be required. She works with ceramicists, metalworkers, carpenters, embroiderers and others to create the components of the sculptures, which she will assemble in the studio. Nothing is left to chance. “I don’t shop for things. I know what it is I am searching for,” she says. “Almost nothing is a readymade. If it looks like it is, it’s almost certainly a deliberate approximation.” '

Angela Carter

 

Angela Carter    Richard Mildenhall/ Camera Press



The real Angela Carter (1940-1992) as opposed to the "invention".  Edmund Gordon's new book
"The Invention of Angela Carter: a Biography" describes the real woman, as he sees her.  Not the rather fey magical intellectual I had always thought (being ignorant of Carter) but a highly intellelectual, highly sexual and completely driven individual overcoming an overprotected childhood.  Here is an article by Gordon published in Guardian Saturday Review  1st October, 2016.  I particularly like the story of how she met her second husband, Mark Pearce, when she sought help for domestic emergency while he was working on a building opposite.  "He came in, and never left", she said.

Thursday 29 December 2016

Japan holiday





A great holiday travelling in Japan this Christmas.  Here are some pictures from hill town Takayama in the snow.  More to come....

Hiroshima - surviving building

Hiroshima - surviving tree