We visited the
BALTIC in Gateshead, Newcastle - the current exhibition highlights the
Turner Prize Nominees for 2011. I've blogged previously about Sarah Lowndes
great discussion about the amount of Scottish artists nominated/winners of the
Turner Prize but it was lovely to be able to see the work in the
flesh.
The stand out piece for me was
Carla Black's installation.
Hilary Llyod
I definitly found her first
video piece very comical, it was a bit like buildings playing jack in the box
with the viewer. She combines still and moving images, sound and the three
dimensional forms of AV playback equipment to portray the urban
environment.
Mike Kelley and
Michael Smith.
Not in the Turner Prize but pretty jaw dropping, there was a
huge immersive installation on the top floor,
"...a collaborative
installation between renowned American artists Mike Kelley and Michael Smith. A
Voyage of Growth and Discovery sees the man-child Baby IKKI, a character
developed by Smith for over thirty years, navigate the infamous Burning Man
festival in the Nevada desert. Alone in his journey amongst thousands of
revellers, IKKI negotiates the primal elements of fire, water, earth and wind. A
six-channel video installation replaying IKKI’s 'voyage' is enveloped by a
fantasy environment evoking that of the festival. At its centre stands a 30ft
incarnation of IKKI himself." Discussed
by the gallery.Created to look like a child's playground (from
a nightmare), the build up and clashing of sound, moving video, dominating
sculpture/statue and eery lighting, it was very uncomfortable and unsettling,
especially the burnt out van with a sculptured throne of old teddies and toys,
which was the most effective.
George Shaw
Previously shown in the
GOMA as part of the British Art Show (2011). He paints hyper-realistic landscape
portraits of desolate areas from his hometown. They interviewed Shaw and
broadcasted it in the cafe and I thought he was a very interesting guy with a
very honest approach to his work, he said that he, "...wanted to make art
that my mum could be able to discuss with my art tutor," and I admire that
rejection of eliticism assosiated with contemporary art.
However, I do not feel the work is not successfu and I think partly this lies
with the fact he is quite vague about his intentions. One aspect that is
highlighted is that he uses modelling paint and he hasn't really been probed on
this issue, however it is extensively emphasised as significant to the work. I
feel like he is using non-traditional materials to create very traditional oil
paintings - I don't think this subverts the historic tradition assosiated with
either.
Another issue was the fact that they weren't
hyper-realistic, again this made it feel very traditional, like a piece of art
you could buy in any commericial gallery. It could be a scale issue as his
paintings dominated GOMA at the British Art Show, purely in terms of size and
they were immersive.
As the face of contemporary painting
(and the only painter nominated for the Turner Prize) it's a little bit
disconcerting.