Wednesday 12 November 2008

Little Art Book Group Show

Alphabet Bar
Beak St, London
11 Nov – 24 Dec 08



In a world straddled by the behemoths such as PoW, Souled Out Studios and BRP, comparatively un-sung boutique urban art print operations like Little Art Book come as a more personable and significantly less frantic tonic. For a start, consider the free-at-the-door limited edition show print; if BRP did that you’d have to close Shoreditch High Street and hire Madonna’s bouncers for the queue.


LAB Group Show – Event Print


Shout to The Krah who whether the wall is indoors or outside unfailingly pulls off an inventive, detailed and flowing piece of fantasy art. The main wall piece flows across a canvas, a practise which always strikes me as curious because if you buy the canvas you leave behind on the gallery wall a chunk of the composition many times the size of your painting. Anyway, the painting contains oodles of Krah signature surrealism, acid references, manic faces growing out of twisting organic limbs and a fluid looking being with hair on fire.


The Krah – The Arsonist


The canvas is entitled The Arsonist but check out the detail, psychotic grins and bulging eyes suggest much more powerful pyromaniac demons. The background has a very graphic tapered design which deliberately emphasises the counter flow to the slanting drift of the burning figure’s body.


The Krah – The Arsonist (detail)


Main attraction for buyers was the release of two prints, Minnie and Mickey by Rugman. The prints themselves are not un-pleasant, undeniably technically well done and the hand finished comic book collage provides satisfaction for uniqueness fetishists but, even allowing for a seasonal Halloween uptick, there is no way around the thought that it’s another damn cliché, in fact two clichés, done to death. See what I did there…skull…done to death…oh please yourselves.

Rugman - Minnie


Before looking at a couple other hot prints, an apology for the quality of the photos. They are even more shite than usual as using flash in the Soho drinking den gloom was un-avoidable and meant taking pics stage right.

A new name to this blog and artist responsible for stand-out print is Gabriel Moreno whose “Hard Woman”, a hand pulled two colour screen print rocks. Possibly literally, the prominent female looks a bit like Karen O (Yeah Yeah Yeahs) whose wacky and endearing fashion kookiness hadn’t hitherto brought GBH to mind. (to prove how that Id could be a million miles off target – what’s Jimi doing there?)


Gabriel Moreno – Hard Woman


Semi naked skinheads with bondage will undoubtedly grab the Old Compton Street crowd but Vilchez covers all bases by partnering the homo-erotic images with a tattoo’d babe in a bikini.



Vilchez – Tree Of Dreams (photo shamelessly stolen from LittleArtBook)


Special mention to Rourke Van Dal whose Not On Your Nelly print got a warm reception upon release and looks stunningly punk in the flesh, mild surprise to find that it is still available is appropriate. Perhaps it’s the un-forgivable pun in the name that put people off?


Rourke van Dal – Not On Your Nelly


Piss poor pics of most of the other prints from the show here

Attention Spam - Hong Kong Happenings

ATTENTION SPAM - 14 November - 10 December

Cyclops, D*Face, David Bray, Vesna Parchet & Word to Mother



Schonei Main Gallery
21-31 Old Bailey Street
Central Hong Kong
MON - SAT 10.30am - 6.30pm
http://www.adaptagallery.com/

A special blog post and props going out to our friend and fellow blogger Selph ESP http://espvisuals.blogspot.com/ for what looks like it will be an absoloutely amazing project.


D*Face

UK Adapta have just set up their satellite gallery project known as Adapta Gallery and the first show called "Attention Spam" will be in Hong Kong next week, Thursday NOV 13th. They have imported 5 British artists: D*Face, Cyclops, David Bray, Word To Mother & Vesna Parchet to HKG to go bombing the streets, as well as maybe attending the preview perhaps for a refreshing cold beer afterwards.

Cyclops

David Bray

Vesna Parchet


Selph has expressed his extreme joy at getting to go out and hit streets with some of his idols and contemporaries, we should receive exclusive film footage of their happenings upon his return to the UK all being well.

Saturday 8 November 2008

Faile - Lost In Glimmering Shadows



Lilian Baylis Old School,
London SE11 6PY
7th – 16th Nov 2008

Photos: nolionsinengland and Wallkandy (where stated)

What we love, want and require of street art is that the artist applied some skill and sweat putting up work illegally on street walls. Faile qualifies, though perhaps there is a bit too much of the legacy is due to both paste ups (prepared in off street) and with permission (Tate Modern Street Art). Thankfully even far from their Brooklyn turf there still is enough evidence in London for Faile of spray paint stencilled on the wall.


Happens Everyday – Streets of London



Faile Girl


The Faile duo also made a big impact at the Cans Festival in the Summer.




....and have been papering the streets with Glimmering Shadows images around Shoreditch and Smithfield in the build up to this new show.




The location for this Lazarides originated show was a prefab mid last century school a million miles from the closest tube station. Past the greeters and bouncers (“You’ve come all this way? In you go”) the setting consisted of two spaces. A lobby area downstairs houses a collection of palettes (circular wooden discs, various sizes between about 2 and 4 feet in diameter), a marble (effect?) Faile Bunny Boy sculpture and a pyramid of Glimmering Shadows Faile boxes. Up the stairs a large hall with raised outer mezzanine level and sunken central floor, think of a large theatre-in-the-round room provides a cathedral-like setting for a collection of 18 epic Faile canvasses and an installation of 14 prayer wheels.


photo: Wallkandy


The lobby puts the viewer on immediate notice that the deft touch with the tense and dramatic pop art comic image hasn’t deserted Faile. Both the palletes and the boxes use details from the Faile images shown on the canvasses upstairs. Maybe it’s a trick of the lighting (and there’s no doubt Laz does good staging!) but the boxes look even more lush that their oversize canvas counterparts.


Bunny Boy and Palettes - photo: Wallkandy



Glimmering Shadows Boxes


The canvasses upstairs are huge, generally you are going to struggle to hang one over the fireplace. One particular canvass, The Great Leap however is huge plus added steroids, perhaps it might cover a pair of tennis court service boxes or cover your full size snooker table with plenty to spare


The Great Leap of Faile


The canvasses are done in a combination of acrylic, stencilled paint on collaged paper with the occasional addition of dirty wash effects (sealing?) and thin swishes of spray paint. They rock the classic Faile torn stripes effect though close inspection suggests that rather than multiple layers shredded to reveal graphic images in the substrata, the technique may involve a single layer of torn stencilled images placed mosaic style onto the canvas.


In Search Of Sacred Visions



Betrayal Story - detail


Update: artist Irony (see here but not the Ben Frost canvasses) has corrected this on a forum, his advice is:
"Although they might look like collaged paper on canvas - they are NOT.The collage effect is attained through a series of silk-screened layers on a single piece of canvas. This is then retouched - painted - by hand. ".

Another input from www.Wallkandy.net forum member onemandown72 is:

"Whilst there we were told that Faile made a small original with all the ripping / tearing etc, then projected said image onto the large canvas, and used this image to then paint a giant replica of the small original, so not screenprinting or collaging, but single layer of acrylic".

Wallkandy himself quotes the fecal face blog as saying:
"For years I thought that the FAILE rip was some sort of paste job. But after close examination touching and poking while nobody was looking I discovered that each layer is painted and then painted over again with strategic masking creating a simulated rip. This is canvas and layers of paint, labor intensive...That's what I am talking about!"

I had looked at other sources, including the Bonhams catalogue where the Faile canvasses are described as "acrylic and stencil spray paint on canvas". My point is the artifice is to look like torn strips but that is not what it is. We now need a smartarse to come along and advise either these are all the same thing or they all adequately described how Faile does work or has worked.
The Glimmering Shadows collection introduces new images which adhere to the tried and tested Faile themes – noble and heroic Indian chiefs, vulnerable scantily clad sylph like squaws, predatory animals and old Faile friends like the Challenger rocket and the rabid wolf. Tension within comic strip imagery is created though a threatening circumstance, a dramatic abbreviated sentence.


Warriors Forgotten


Three canvasses are devoid of the comic strip imagery, in one case commenting on the American psyche with a graphic corruption of the American flag and another couple favouring collages text forms to probe at the dichotomy between the cliches of the American freedom and the prohibitions and controls to preserve those freedoms


Land Of The Free


The prayer wheels are made up from a great collection of fragments of pop graphics, hooker calling card style Faile slogans and classic Faile heritage images, they are stunning to look at and collectively made a great installation, individually they are unusual but awkward novelty sculptures. What photos can’t convey is the texture and mechanics of the prayer wheels. The images are cut like wood blocks that could be used for printing, and the idea of a prayer wheel is that they turn in a spindle, in Tibet monks turn them while humming a mantra and the wheels act like a reservoir of prayer, growing more potent the more they are turned and errrrr..mantra’d over





Prayer Wheel - detail


It is unlikely that Faile could ever make a dull image, they can however make original art on a scale and to a budget which is going to place it way beyond the means of most street art fans, but then isn’t most decent original work. To see such a coherent collection of work on this scale is a rare treat, it is immediately comparable to the hanging of the Seagrams Rothko’s in the Tate at the moment and probably even more epic in presentation. Definitely worth making the trip there, so long as you haven’t given your personal security guard the day off.


99c Paradise


Wallkandy certainly knows which part of a camera to point at a painting and you can view his pics here, Nolionsinengland isn’t fit to tie Wallkandy’s shoelaces together but his pics are here.

Monday 3 November 2008

Faile Today, Gone Tomorrow











Buffed/Stolen by this time tomorrow....now which bookmakers will take that bet on? ?








Friday 31 October 2008

Craig Cooper

Pure Evil Gallery, London
29th Oct – … Nov 2008



Craig Cooper? Nope – I’ve not heard of him before either but any excuse for a trip to Pure Evil’s basement will do. The thing that immediately catches the eye, mainly due to the penetrating brightness shattering the drizzle-hanging post clock wind-back gloom is an awesome film clip installation.




A 20 minute looping film show is projected through a quartet of reflective glass mirrors arranged in a truncated prism to produce a mesmeric globe shaped kaleidoscope effect, and it's not to its' disadvantage that the video show includes Kate Moss in her White Stripes "Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself" waifish and partially clothed pole dancing routine (“semi-naked” would only be written by page-view whores).



Who Craig Cooper is is unclear and whether he has any street pedigree apart from being known, obviously, to Pure Evil is not evident either but what we will say is if you are near Leonard Street, spare less time than it takes to have a half pint of beer to see this exceptional installation.




Craig Cooper also showed a sequence of small(ish) painted canvasses of an après la deluge post apocalyptic flood destroyed London. The orange skies speak of a recent or possibly on going armageddon while the dark destroyed landmark buildings with their absence of humanity relate to a doom destined world before Noah found his mission.




One hybrid eagle-girl haunts this landscape though her cut and paste bird head is a bit of slap dash collagery. The day after the show opened the pestilential elements that pour though the open sky of the Evil dungeon meant this landscape had to be relocated to an under cover part of the gallery, which is just a tad ironic for a vision of life after the downpour. The paintings are forgettable but check out the video installation, this is hugely WOW.




If you have your raincoat on and umbrella to hand, more pics of dampness and video fluidity here

Wednesday 29 October 2008

Cept Vs. Mike Ballard - Where You End, I Begin


Am really looking forward to this one, a long wait for a solo show from Cept and hopefully gonna be well worth the wait!

It's been seriously quiet from Cept on the streets, so thats got me really excited for what he has been tucked away and creating.


He'll be releasing a print of the piece that sold at Bonhams last week, 6 colours, gold leaf and hand finished print, price TBC.


Anyone interested in going to the preview should email Stella D on stella@stelladore.co.uk

Sunday 19 October 2008

FRIEZE ART FAIR 2008

Regents Park, London
16 - 10 Oct 2008


With most of the leading contemporary galleries present there's bound to be some stuff that will intrugue, impress, mystify, bamboozle or delight any one prepared to pay to go in.

Stuff I liked included Perpetual Void by Petrov Sesti, the trippy colours come from Ian Lavender's Riley-esque poured Lines: Big Puddle" behind.




Jake and Dinos Chapman's model scene Das Kaiptal Is Kaput (ya, Nein Dumpkoff) was stunning. This picture, apart from being shite is really a small fragment, not even enough to be dignified with the term "detail".




This Chinese artist, whose name was presented in Mandarin script so don't ask me who, did a nice set of photos with contradictory slogans




Another cool piece by Thomas Locher




I became momentarily a part of Norma Jean's smoking installation but actually looked like I was having a crap.



Just a few other piccies (huge cheer!) here