M-City Goes 3-D

Been meaning to post this little video for a while. I’ve always wondered what a large scale three-dimensional version of an M-City factory would look like. Well, here it is! You can find out more about the Fabryka project, which opens on October 23rd, here.

Another very cool aspect of Fabryka is that you can literally watch it take shape before your eyes. A web cam has been set up in the Center of Contemporary Art in Torun to document every minute of the construction. Below are a couple progress pics – the first from a couple days ago and the second of how things were looking last time I checked. Now get onto M-City’s site and see what’s happened since!

M-City

M-City

Adam Neate: A New Understanding

Adam Neate

As far as I’m concerned, Adam Neate is one of the best painters of a generation. From what I’ve been hearing on and off the record, his recent solo show at Elms Lesters in London has been getting very mixed reviews. Many people are saying he is even more brilliant than before, others feel vindicated for criticizing his pricing now that the hype seems to have died down, some fans are just confused and disappointed.

I have the give the show a pretty average review myself. This was the show I was looking forward to most this year, as much as Banksy versus The Bristol Museum. And yet, in the end, it wasn’t at all what I was expecting or hoping for.

Like I said, Adam is an amazing painter, and I’d like to see anybody try and convince me that’s not true. But Adam likes to keep changing his work and challenging himself with his painting. Sounds like a good thing, but it means that this show lacks many of the element that I enjoyed so much in Adam’s older work. The ground floor of A New Understanding has paintings that, though recognizably Adam’s, progress in painterly skill but have lost the raw power of previous work.

Adam Downstairs

Now, those paintings are beautiful, they tell a story, they are well painted, but to me they are boring. Yes, in the painting on the right, Adam has stuck a real umbrella into the painting, and in both of those paintings there are very cool shadows, but that’s technically interesting and nothing else. I know people who would love to have these paintings in their homes: my contemporary art collector friends. They might be interested in these. And that’s what I thought about this entire floor. Good paintings for people who enjoy fine art and contemporary art. But not one of these paintings truly reached me and touched my soul like I expected. None of them gave me that feeling that a truly great painting is supposed to give you, and that much of Adam’s older work did give me.

But upstairs feels like a completely different show.

Adam

About half the work upstairs is something along these lines. Adam Neate is trying to create “4D” pieces that show the passage of time. Working with perspex, he has a unique way of creating lines of motion and showing blurs. It doesn’t work every time, but it does work sometimes and the development really brings his work forward.

Adam

Adam Neate

These two portraits are immediately identifiable as Adam Neate’s work, and are probably the sort of thing that people work expecting, but they also both use perspex in an innovative way to show motion. These are probably my favorite pieces in the show.

Pop Adam

And these are the lower price point paintings. These are interesting, because they are again pretty identifiable as Neate’s work, but they incorporate some of the motion elements of other pieces in A New Understanding and they use much bolder colors than most people would expect from Adam. The colors and repeated image in the paintings immediately reminded me of Warhol, not something I would have expected at this show at all, but cool nonetheless.

While A New Understanding isn’t what I had hoped for, I think the amazing thing about Neate is how quickly his work changes. It seems like every show, almost every piece, that he does is important because Adam might never do something like it again. Even within this show, there are at least 2 distinct periods of work. Also, Adam is such a talented painter that I know this is the kind of thing where even if this show doesn’t have much work to my taste, the next one might.

Just one more quick thought. It seems to me like Adam has officially crossed that invisible and ill-defined line between street/urban artist and “contemporary painter” or whatever. His old work always had a feel to it like the street was still on his mind, and the work appealed to street art collectors, but with this new show, there is no doubt that he can cross over into the more mainstream art world and gain a much more diverse collector base. This was not a street art show, it was an art show. And I don’t know if that’s a compliment, criticism or neither.

Photos by s.butterfly

Cityscape exhibition in London

cityspace

This seems like a cool line up for a group show. Especially looking forward to Skullphone, Neck Face and Taki 183 since I have never seen their work in the UK and I’m a big fan of Neck Face in particular.

Here’s the press release:

Lava Collective presents: Cityscape

Previews November 5th, 6pm – 9:30pm. Then open daily, 11am – 7pm.

The LAVA Collective has put together a group show of predominantly North American origin, focusing on street art and urban culture. Big names like Shepard Fairey, Swoon, Dalek and Skullphone vie for attention with an exciting selection of emerging artists.

The stars of the show are Brooklyn duo Peru Ana Ana Peru, who have been invited over especially to install a site-specific montage of their work. This couple have made a name for themselves in NYC with their vibrant and distinctive street pieces but they also produce video, sculpture, and fine art. They have got a big solo show coming up at the Brooklynite Gallery NYC before heading over here to oversee their first appearance in a London show.

Cityscape will also showcase the photography of Ricky Powell. The man they call the ‘Fourth Beastie Boy’ was on hand to witness the birth of hip hop culture in NYC. For this show he has submitted a selection of his classic portraits, including Run DMC, KRS One, Easy E, Eric B and Rakim. These extraordinary photos depict iconic musicians in intimate surroundings; Easy E is tuning a radio, Jam master Jay is all smiles at the airport. This is a rare opportunity to see Powell’s work in London.

For the full artist line up, go to www.lavacollective.com

Just Taking Pictures

Just - Taking Pictures

Graffiti and street artists would not have the same global community they are fortunate to have today if it weren’t for all the great photographers out there documenting their every move and sharing what they snap with the rest of the world. I think we sometimes take for granted how important a good photo is in commemorating a great mural, wheat paste or installation.

German photographer Just has given us ten years worth of amazing photos of some of the best in the scene. It’s nice to see his hard work recognized. If you’re in Berlin tonight, make sure to check out the opening of his exhibit of artist portraits and street art photos at ATM Gallery. And take lots of pictures!

Just Taking Pictures

Shepard Fairey retrospective hits Warhol Museum

If you missed the Shepard Fairey retrospective Supply and Demand while it was in Boston recently, you can still catch it at the Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh starting October 18th (17th if you want to pay $35 to get into the opening party).

Almost makes me wish I wasn’t on a gap year right now because I almost decided to go to university in Pittsburgh.

And if you have already seen the show in Boston, you can still check out all the pieces Fairey has been placing in the city streets. One way to do that is wander around central Pittsburgh until you see something. A quicker way to to use this Google Map with all the locations already marked for you (some with pictures).

MuTate Britain: One Foot in the Grove

Giles Walker_Baby Head

MuTate Britain: One Foot in the Grove is now open. It might not match last year‘s event, but it’s still a great party with cool art and something for everybody.

Put simply: MuTate has sculptures shooting fire into the air. ‘Nuf said.

In all seriousness though, the sculptures and paintings are very cool. Best Ever, Busk, Mode2, Sickboy and many many many others have contributed to make something special and unique.

Sickboy
Sickboy

I could say that I liked this painting or that painting, but half the time I didn’t know who painted my favorite pieces, they were just good, regardless of the name behind them.

Bleach, Busk and Zadok
Bleach, Busk and Zadok

But is it the absolute best art in the world? Not always. It’s just fun to see. Even a poorly painted stencil contributes to the atmosphere and makes MuTate a nice place to grab a beer or two.

Best Ever
Best Ever

This is the art show you can bring your friends to who would rather just go to the pub (see: my comment about fire).

Part2ism
Part2ism

MuTate Britain is located underneath Westway in London near Ladbroke Grove station. Who knows how long this party is going to continue (even the artists I spoke with said anywhere from a few weeks to indefinitely), so go check it out now.

Metropolis

Metropolis

Campbarbossa says:

Metropolis: Peter Michael & Holly Thoburn
22 October – 19 November 2009
Opening Reception: Thursday 22 October 6-8pm

Campbarbossa in association with the Sesame Gallery is pleased to announce Metropolis, an exhibition exploring London in the Facebook era – a time of virtual relationships and neglected physical environments – portrayed through the work of two artists: Peter Michael and Holly Thoburn.

Holly Thoburn’s paintings focus on the walls and surfaces that make up the spaces the virtual world has left behind. Focusing exclusively on the walls of N1 for this show, her works depict the worn and neglected physical environment left to rack and ruin, bearing silent witness to the million-and-one stories that have passed their way in the past. One of her paintings, “The Earl and the Duke”, focuses on one Islington street
where a fashionable organic gastro-pub, The Duke of Cambridge, exists cheek-by-jowl with an old-school Islington boozer, the Earl of Essex. The marks, scratches, grit and erosion of the surfaces exude the myriad of stories that have taken place in both places, and the tension between their different clientele. Holly’s paintings treat the city’s walls like a storybook into its past, and a poetic metaphor for its present.

In contrast, Peter Michael paints portraits of online acquaintances – the anonymous people we walk past daily in the street, and yet only interact with over the internet. His portraits remove the characters from any trace of visual context, setting them in a vacuum that emphasizes only their own physical qualities in an almost sculptural way – isolated and cut off from any other reference points, his characters stand defiant, poignantly full of personality, and carnally human. His central subject, Mhya, has an almost piercingly crystalline gaze that shows both resilience and vulnerability that characterizes the experience of disconnected communities of 21st century London.

Bringing these two painters together, Metropolis tells the story of how our fascination with virtual life has an inevitable impact of our physical world and relationships, and of the strange, alienating, and yet somehow character-building effects this has on its people.

Metropolis opens on Thursday 22 October and runs until Thursday 19 November.

Represent: a portraiture show

represent

A really solid line up for Represent which opens November 5th at Blackall Studios in London. The show highlights portraiture and includes some of my favorite artists like Matt Small and Swoon. Should be good.