Press-Release ALICE ANDERSON ‘Itinéraires D’Un Corps’ | Spiritual Machines 12.01.18 > 17.03.18

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Press-Release ALICE ANDERSON ‘Itinéraires D’Un Corps’ | Spiritual Machines 12.01.18 > 17.03.18 ALICE ANDERSON ‘Itinéraires d’un corps’, 2017 Performative sculptures series following Anderson’s research on repetitive movement and the spiritual act of weaving in the Sierra Nevada, Colombia 150 x 150 cm, metallic thread Press-release ALICE ANDERSON ‘Itinéraires d’un corps’ | Spiritual Machines 12.01.18 > 17.03.18 Opening Thursday 11 January 5 pm - 8 pm La Patinoire Royale / Galerie Valérie Bach [email protected] / Tel: +32 (0)2 533 03 90 www.lapatinoireroyale.com - www.galerievaleriebach.com Anglo-French sculptor and performer Alice Anderson lives and works in London. Born in 1972, she studied at Goldsmiths College of Art in London and at Beaux-Arts Paris. Her practice is above all performative. Her performances and sculptures have been presented at Whitechapel Gallery in 2012, at the 55th Venice Biennial in 2013, at the Wellcome Collection in London in 2014, at Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton Paris in 2015, at the Saatchi Gallery in 2016 and Centre Pompidou in 2017. Since childhood, Alice has had an extreme sensitivity to her environment: to light, certain colours, sound, vibratory movement and waves transmitted by different materials. She relates to the other through objects and exists in total visual, auditory, olfactory and corporeal relation to objects that surround her. In her experience, objects not only have practical uses, but intervene in Anderson’s learning processes and relationship to the world. ‘Spiritual Machines’, 2017 Totems and statuettes series made out of different type of machines and objects. Wall programmer, multi USB plugs, Blackberry. 20 x 10 cm metallic thread The great questions that the digitalisation of man’s relationship with the world and parallel advances in artificial intelligence bring about, lead us to consider essential questions about our primitive interactions within the physical world. Anderson’s research has directed her to certain ancestral cultures where primal senses are clearly evoked and celebrated. Such is the case amongst the Arhuacos tribe and its relationship to nature and the universe around us. Alice Anderson has the privilege of having established a relationship of reflection and exchange with natives of the Arhuacos community on their ancestral rites, in particular, on the spiritual act of weaving. It is during rites and dances in the heart of nature in the Sierra Nevada, the sacred mountain of Colombia, that one is able to assess and evaluate all dimensions of the great upheavals of our civilisation. Alice Anderson’s ritual performances generate pastel and thread drawings, corten steel sculptures and wire sculptures. Several of these bodies of work will be presented in the various spaces of the exhibition. Presentation of the exhibition ITINERAIRES D’UN CORPS Presented in the great nave of the Patinoire, the sculptural installation ‘Bodily Itineraries’ proposes an ‘abstraction in space’: a temple composed of square elements of variable dimensions formed through performance using different speeds, movements and postures of the body. These performative sculptures were commissioned for the venue and will be presented for the first time, in line with site specific inter- ventions that Anderson performed at the Freud Museum in London, in the Eiffel Historic building or at Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton in Paris. It is around neutral shapes, here the square, and through perfor- mances in the spaces of La Patinoire Royale / Galerie Valérie Bach, ‘Itinéraires d’un corps’, 2017 Performative sculptures series following Ander- that Anderson’s repetitive actions generate a science of space and son’s research on repetitive movement and the the body. These geometric forms create an « alphabet of move- spiritual act of weaving in the Sierra Nevada, Colombia. 50 x 50 cm, wire. ment » which relates to the body, the world and weaving, a funda- mental spiritual act for the Arhuacos and Kogi communities who philosophise that to live is to « weave one’s life ». Anderson’s squares are like sacred surfaces in which time and space are inscribed through the meditative movements of her performances. They are a representation of a world whose perimeters correspond to cardinal points and the sculptures’ two faces refer to the opposing forces of the universe: light and shadow, feminine and masculine, high and low, positive and negative. Being at the same time maps but also calendars and mnemonic or analogic supports, these abstract forms confront us with a mental, spiritual and material reading, leading us to connect many levels: physical, symbolic, visible, invisible, enigmatic and infinitely big or infinitely small. SPIRITUAL MACHINES ‘Spiritual Machines’ is the title that brings together Alice Anderson’s object-sculptures (totems, masks and statuettes) to be exhibited in the glass-roofed space of Galerie Valerie Bach. ‘SPIRITUAL MACHINES’ refers to the work of scientist Ray Kurzweil’s text, ‘The Age of Spiritual Machines’, (2005) in which the author announced the future of artificial intelligence and of advanced technologies which are enabling humanity to transcend its biological limits. Through her practice, Anderson proposes to go back to primal and ritualistic gestures that, in a different way, give the power of life and spirituality to objects. Without nostalgia, Alice Anderson questions a time in which the very nature of what it is to be human is simul- taneously enriched and challenged. Through her practice, the artist creates new physical relationships to objects and spaces, using a weaving technique that she has developed over many years with copper coloured wire. Copper here symbolises the connectivity of the digital world and becomes the medium that allows Anderson to ‘memorise’ objects and architecture. The artist speaks of ‘memorisation’ because the process is a way of drawing memory circuits in a physical way around objects. This dance around objects transports her to a meditative state (which is generated by rhythm and repetition of movement) identical to true trance states. Anderson’s practice is a search for alternatives processes that contrast with the externalisation of memory induced by digital processes. Amongst other examples, one may think of the systematic act of photographing with a mobile phone, an act that often replaces an attempt to remember or to simply to live the experience or the event for oneself. When Anderson feels that an object is becoming obsolete or may disappear in the course of life, she memorises this with thread before it happens. Alice Anderson - Pulse Drawing, 2017 Alice Anderson - Pulse Painting, 2017 PULSE DRAWINGS / PULSE PAINTINGS In addition to sculptures, Alice Anderson’s performances also give rise to a series of drawings resulting from a repetitive action that the artist performs simultaneously on two horizontal surfaces by swinging her body from one surface to the other. Using pastel in a way that breaks with tradition, Anderson begins by dematerialising red pastel onto a wooden panel. She then transfers pastel from board to cloth using a fine tool to scrape pastel from panel onto fabric (bed-sheets, tea towels, tablecloths) according to repetitive binary rhythms. Two series result from this movement: ‘Pulse Drawings’ correspond to the panels from which material has been removed. ‘Pulse Paintings’ creates a visual representation of the energy generated by the sway of the body. This movement of instinctive balance between two surfaces plays on the vibratory properties of red pastel to which Anderson is particularly sensitive. Through the process, Anderson transcribes her internal rhythm, thus experiencing a sense of immediacy and transcendence. Performative drawings - Alice Anderson : ‘Pulse Drawings - ‘Pulse Paintings’, 2017 Performances views ‘Spiritual Machines’, 2017 Alice Anderson performing ‘Cable Tray Totem’ in her studio in London. 222 x 116 cm, wire Performance ‘Wire’, Bâtiment Historique Eiffel, 2016 ‘181 Kilomètres’, 2016 181 kilometers walk,Performance view during the weaving of a 2 meter sphere, Saatchi Gallery” Biography of the artist Born in 1972. Lives and works in London EDUCATION 1998-2001 École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris 2002-2005 Goldsmiths College of Arts, London SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2017 In Vivo, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France Between Surfaces, UNIT9 Contemporary Art Centre, London, GB Everything is connected, public sculpture, Howick Place, London, GB 2016 Post digital, Union Projects, London, GB Time Capsules, Glass Tank, Oxford, GB Insouciance, public sculpture, Place Saint Germain des Prés, Paris, France Share & Wires, sculptures permanentes, Eiffel Historical Building, Paris, France 2015 Data Space, Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Paris, France Memory Movement Memory Objects, Wellcome Collection, London, GB 2014 Cutting, Folding, Assembling, Coastal Currents Festival, Hastings, GB 2013 Performing Life, Villa Bernasconi Cultural Center, Lancy, Switzerland In Movement, Print Room, London, GB 2012 Travelling Studio, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, GB From Dance to Sculpture, Riflaker, London, GB Timescale, Artopia, Milan, Italie 2011 Childhood Rituals, Freud Museum, London, GB Years after Years, CoExist Centre, Southend on Sea, GB 2008 Soft Sculptures, National Museum, Nice, France Spectres, National Museum Pablo Picasso, Vallauris, France La Traversée des apparences, Frac Paca, Marseille, France 2007 D.Day, Espace Croisé, Roubaix, France 2005 Anderson’s Journal, Jeu de Paume, Paris, France Dr Edwards’ House, Marnay Art Center, France 2003 Vertical, Frac Paca, Marseille, France GROUP EXHIBITIONS
Recommended publications
  • Communiqué De Presse ALICE ANDERSON
    ALICE ANDERSON ‘Itinéraires d’un corps’, 2017 Série de sculptures performatives créées dans le cadre des recherches d’Anderson sur les mouvements répétitifs et l’acte spirituel du tissage dans la Sierra Nevada en Colombie. 150 x 150 cm, fil métallique communiqué de presse ALICE ANDERSON Itinéraires d’un corps | Spiritual Machines 12.01.18 > 17.03.18 Vernissage le jeudi 11 janvier de 17h à 20h La Patinoire Royale / Galerie Valérie Bach [email protected] / Tel: +32 (0)2 533 03 90 www.lapatinoireroyale.com - www.galerievaleriebach.com Alice Anderson, sculpteur et performeur franco-britannique, vit et travaille à Londres. Née en 1972, elle a étudié au Goldsmiths College of Art à Londres et aux Beaux-Arts de Paris. Sa pratique est avant tout performative. Ses sculptures et performances ont été présentées à la Whitechapel Art Gallery en 2012, à la 55ème Biennale de Venise en 2013, à la Wellcome Collection à Londres en 2014, à l’Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton à Paris en 2015, à la Saatchi Gallery en 2016 et au Centre Pompidou en 2017. Depuis l’enfance, Alice Anderson a toujours eu une extrême sensibilité à son environne- ment, à la lumière, à certaines couleurs, aux sons, aux mouvements vibratoires et aux ondes transmises par divers matériaux. Son rapport à l’autre se fait essentiellement à tra- vers les objets. L’installation sculpturale est en totale relation visuelle, auditive, olfactive et corporelle avec les objets qui l’entourent ; ils ne sont pas seulement utiles, ils interviennent dans ses apprentissages, ils sont une repré- ‘Spiritual Machines’, 2017 Série de totems et statuettes faites de différentes machines et objets.
    [Show full text]
  • Exhibitions Alice Anderson Hyperlinks
    exhibitions AMALIA PICA Round Table (and other forms) St. Agnes I NAVE 27.03 – 25.04.2021 alice anderson KARL HORST HÖDICKE Kleine Bilder aus Küche und Klo hyperl ink s St. Agnes I CHAPEL 18.03 – 18.04.2021 13 APRIL – 22 MAY 2021 GROUP EXHIBITION KÖNIG LONDON The Artist is Online St. Agnes I SHOWROOM 18.03 – 18.04.2021 KÖNIG GALERIE is pleased to present Hyperlinks, a solo exhibition of the work by Anglo-French artist Alice Anderson. Alice Anderson’s oeuvre hybridises the worlds of technology and ancestral cultures. Her works include sculptures, paintings and drawings generated through dance-performances, each with ritual at their essence. For this exhibition, Alice Anderson presents performative works created through repetitive gestures, some coupled with rapid breathing (the technique of hyperventilation), which gives her access to a state of modified consciousness. This pairing puts forward the body as a vehicle of humanity within the contemporary world propelling scan to download the towards a technological-wholeness; and the ancestral culture of the Kogi people from Sierra Nevada KÖNIG GALERIE app in Colombia, who exist in cosmic harmony with their environment. Kogi concepts, rituals and ecologi- and visit our online cal combats have framed Alice Anderson’s reflections upon this change in civilization. saleroom and exhibitions James Bridle, in his book “New Dark Age: Technology and the end of the future”, speaks of the changes in civilisation that have been instigated by developments in artificial intelligence. He de- scribes a world with increasing technological complexity which diminishes human comprehension, where we, in turn, become lost in an ocean of information.
    [Show full text]
  • 2 Image Caption Title –
    Image Caption Title – Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nas scetur ridiculus mus. 2 Sponsors & Colophon – First published in Great Britain in 2013 by London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London, 20 John Prince’s Street, London W1G 0BJ, United Kingdom ISBN 978-1-903455-29-6 © London College of Fashion Authors: James Putnam, Adriano Berengo, Suzanne Higgott, David Toop Design: Freytag Anderson All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the permission of the publishers. Contents Contents – – 7 — 8 23 — 28 Foreword White Light | White Heat Professor Frances Corner OBE James Putnam Pro Vice-Chancellor Co-Curator Glasstress: University of the Arts London & White Light | White Heat Head of London College of Fashion 31 — 40 9 — 1 4 Historic Venetian Glass The Quantum Leap of Glass Suzanne Higgott Adriano Berengo Curator of Glass, Limoges Painted Director Berengo Studio Murano, Enamels and Earthenwares Venice & Co-Curator Glasstress: The Wallace Collection White Light | White Heat 43 — 174 17 — 20 Artists Is Glass Silent? David Toop 175 UAL Alumni Foreword Frances Corner OBE – – Professor Frances Corner OBE Pro Vice-Chancellor University of the Arts London & Head of London College of Fashion White Light | White Heat is a development of exquisite glass collection and the cutting edge envi- Glasstress, conceived by Adriano Berengo, President ronment of London College of Fashion where tradi- of Berengo Glass Studio and Venice Projects, in 2009. tional notions of fashion are challenged every day. This new exhibition is a dramatic expansion of the The exhibition had its opening at the magnificent original Glasstress concept to include London Palazzo Franchetti as part of the 55th Venice College of Fashion (LCF), University of the Arts Biennale with a selection of work being restaged in London and t he Wallace Collection working in col- London at the Fashion Space Gallery at LCF as well laboration with Berengo Glass Studio.
    [Show full text]
  • ALICE ANDERSON at WELLCOME COLLECTION Memory Movement Memory Objects 22 July – 18 October
    Tim Morley 183 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE Senior Media Officer T +44 (0)20 7611 2222 T +44 (0) 207 611 8612 E [email protected] E [email protected] www.wellcomecollection.org ALICE ANDERSON AT WELLCOME COLLECTION Memory Movement Memory Objects 22 July – 18 October ‘Memory exists only when it is recalled. My performances and sculptures are Press Release strategies for remembering, creating an archive of movement and moments’ From July 2015 Wellcome Collection presents a major exhibition of works by acclaimed artist, Alice Anderson: ‘Memory Movement Memory Objects’. Anderson’s sculptures are entirely mummified in copper thread, creating glistening landscapes of beautiful, uncanny and transformed objects. Each piece is an exploration and act of memory. Both the making and display of works interrogate how we create, record, and transform the present and how we imagine the future. Over 100 works woven round with wire will be displayed and, uniquely, visitors will be invited to contribute to the creation of a new artwork during the run of the exhibition, as a car is mummified in the gallery. ‘Memory Movement Memory Objects’ will comprise five areas, the first of which, ‘the Studio’, will extend the creative process of the artist’s practice into the gallery. Visitors will be able to spend time mummifying a 1967 Ford Mustang and other smaller objects with copper wire, in a performance at once meditative and communal. The objects have significance to the artist but there is no nostalgia in their selection. The sounds of unspooling bobbins of wire and metal enclosing metal will provide a soundtrack to the space, where collaborative focus and repetitive movement elicit a reflection on consciousness and our mutable relationship to time.
    [Show full text]
  • Alice Anderson
    Alice Anderson Born in 1972. Lives and works in London. 1998-2001 École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris 2002-2005 Goldsmiths College London SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2020 Alice Anderson : Sacred Gestures in data worlds, la Patinoire Royale – Galerie Valérie Bach, Brussels, Belgium 2019 National Center for Contemporary Arts, Moscow Lost Gestures’ Performances, Drawing Biennial 2019, Drawing Room, London Bozar, Brussels Atelier Calder, Saché National Centre for Contemporary Arts, Moscow Drawing Room, London Biennale d’Architecture, Orleans Waddington Custot, London 2018 Itinéraire d’un corps / Spirituals Machine, La Patinoire Royale – Galerie Valérie Bach Brussels, Belgique Nuhé Data , Art Brussels Solo, Brussels, Belgique Chart Special Project, DEN FRIE Contemporary Art Centre, Denmark Espace Vanderborgh, Brussels 2017 In Vivo , Centre Pompidou, Paris, France Between Surfaces , UNIT9 Contemporary Art Centre, London, UK Everything is connected , public sculpture, Howick Place, London, UK 2016 Post digital, Union Projects, London, UK Time Capsules , Glass Tank, Oxford, UK Insouciance , public sculpture, Place Saint Germain des Prés, Paris, France Share & Wires , permanent sculptures, Eiffel Historical Building, Paris, France 2015 Data Space , Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Paris, France Memory Movement Memory Objects , Wellcome Collection, London, UK 2014 Cutting, Folding, Assembling , Coastal Currents Festival, Hastings, UK 15 rue Veydt - 1060 brussels – belgium – t +32 (0)2 533 03 90 contact@ prvbgallery.com – www.prvbgallery.com 2013
    [Show full text]
  • Exhibition Catalogue
    AGATA INGARDEN Sweaty Hands, 2017 Steel, enamel, copper and caramel 2900 x 500 mm and 2750 x 600 mm Agata Ingarden’s artwork stems from a fascination with the industrial materials and machinery she encountered at construction sites, a place she frequently visited with her architect father as a child in post-communist Poland. Informed by these experiences, Ingarden’s installation, sculpture and video works both investigate the space where the systems surrounding us, both social and manufactured, collide with nature, and explore the relationship between humans and their inventions. Employing organic materials as a means to challenge this complex relationship, Ingarden’s work attempts to reconcile human and non-human elements, creating coherent environments where our inventions, technology and organic processes are interdependent. As part of MATERIAL, Cob Gallery presents Sweaty Hands from Ingarden’s Heat Pipes series. Formed of two hanging living sculptures, these works combine a metal piping structure which suspends a caramel mass. Cast from industrial carton moulds used to transport goods from electronical devices to food, these caramel forms are an imagining of all mass consumption goods- welded to become a “living mass of sugar”. Responsive to the conditions in which they are situated- solidifying when cold and liquifying when warmed, as the properties of the piece’s adapt they reveal an ironic parallel to plastic. The morphed caramel adopts a living quality, taking on an anthropomorphic sensibility. Displayed in a state of constant
    [Show full text]
  • Alice Anderson
    ALICE ANDERSON Born in 1972, London, England Lives and works in London, England SOLO AND GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2017 UNIT 9, Alice Anderson : Between Surfaces, London CENTRE POMPIDOU, in vivo, Paris PATINOIRE ROYALE, Summer show, Brussels MAIDSTONE MUSEUM, International Arts Festival, Maidstone MALBUISSONART, Sculptures en plein Air, Malbuisson DRAWING ROOM, Drawing Biennial, London THE ART PAVILION, Force of Nature, London HS PROJECT, Alice Anderson : Everything Is Connected, London FOUNDATION1, Beyond, London ARTSPACE 46, The House of Penelope, London ART GENEVE, Collectionair special exhibition, Geneva 2016 SAATCHI GALLERY, Champagne Life, London NAMUR CULTURAL CENTER, Tabous, Belgium GLASS TANK, Time Capsules, Oxford MINSHENG ART MUSEUM, Traces, Beijing, China PLACE ST GERMAIN DES PRES, Insouciance, public sculptures, Paris EIFFEL HISTORICAL BUILDING, Share & Wires, permanent sculptures, Paris ROYAL ACADEMY OF ARTS, Summer exhibition, London UNION PROJECT, Alice Anderson: post digital, London RYE ART FESTIVAL CREATIVE CENTRE, We work in the dark, Rye 2015 Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Alice Anderson: DATA, Paris Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Touch, Finland LAM museum, Un regard sur la collection d’Agnès b, Lille 2014 British Contemporary Art, Rizzordi Art Foundation, St Petersburg Interchange Junctions, works around Yinka Shonibare, Howick Place, London Light Mood, Public Sculpture Parc, Leopardi Parc, Bergamo Out of Our heads, Shoreditch Town Hall, London Between Reality, European House of Photography, Paris Forward, The Drawing Gallery,
    [Show full text]
  • Recording the Present / Alice Anderson
    RECORDING THE PRESENT Interview carried out by Annabelle Gugnon and Juliette de Gonet ESPACE: What exactly is your artistic agenda? And what was the idea behind the DATA space exhibition at Espace Louis Vuitton Paris? ALICE ANDERSON: The digital revolution is probably going to turn out as decisive for the mechanisms of human memory as the invention of writing was. This revolution is a fascinating process, and I keep tabs on it by recording its objects and crystallizing its phases. At a point in history when our planet is going virtual and memory is going digital, I feel a need to record space and objects in 3D. In artistic terms I'm particularly concerned with memorizing by creating a new physical relationship with things and space using copper wire. It's a paradox: the more my everyday existence fills up with digital data about the things around me, the greater my need to come to grips with their material, physical data. This kind of memorization is a necessity. It's my way of recording the present. I think we're living through a revolution whose extent we're not aware of yet. For the DATA space exhibition at Espace Louis Vuitton Paris, I wanted to record the data of the venue. I started out with the measurements of certain parts of the building. A number of wooden slats from the floor were reassembled into new geometrical figures—circles—representing the diagrams of the measurements after they had been recorded with the wire in 3D (“Floor Boards Diagrams” 2015). The skylights in the rotunda were recreated in steel then weaved with copper wire (“Skylights Data” 2015) and together they form a movement.
    [Show full text]
  • Cure³ Exhibition Catalogue
    Contents Cubes 3 Words 9 Team 196 Thanks 197 2 Cubes 3 1. Alice Anderson 29. Nick Hornby 2. Ron Arad RA 30. Paul Huxley RA 3. Miranda Argyle 31. Alison Jackson 4. Barnaby Barford 32. Vanessa Jackson RA 5. Rana Begum 33. Tess Jaray RA 6. Tony Bevan RA 34. Ben Johnson 7. Sir Peter Blake 35. Sir Anish Kapoor RA 8. Rob and Nick Carter 36. Idris Khan 9. Daniel Chadwick 37. Phillip King PPRA 10. Jake & Dinos Chapman 38. Helen Kirwan-Taylor 11. Gordon Cheung 39. Tania Kovats 12. Mat Collishaw 40. Brigitte Kowanz 13. Adam Dant 41. Andrew Logan 14. Pablo de Laborde Lascaris 42. Susie MacMurray 15. Adeline de Monseignat 43. Elizabeth Magill 16. Bouke de Vries 44. John Maine RA 17. Edmund de Waal 45. Helen Marten 18. Diana Edmunds 46. Andrew McIntosh 19. Abigail Fallis 47. Harland Miller 20. Knopp Ferro 48. Claire Morgan 21. Laura Ford 49. Mariko Mori 22. Andy Goldsworthy 50. Annie Morris 23. Lothar Götz 51. Humphrey Ocean RA 24. Elpida Hadzi-Vasileva 52. Angela Palmer 25. Hassan Hajjaj 53. Florence Peake 26. Nigel Hall RA 54. Simon Periton 27. Alex Hartley 55. Julian Perry 28. Carmen Herrera 56. Thomas J Price 57. Stephanie Quayle 78. Alfred Munkenbeck 58. Saad Qureshi (Munkenbeck + Partners) 59. Danny Rolph 79. John Pawson 60. Andrew Sabin 80. Chris Wilkinson RA 61. Nina Saunders (Wilkinson Eyre Architects) 62. Conrad Shawcross RA 81. Chris Williamson 63. Anj Smith (Weston Williamson + Partners) 64. Dillwyn Smith 65. Amy Stephens 66. Sinta Tantra 67. Troika 68. Gavin Turk 69.
    [Show full text]
  • 'I Don't Refuse This World, I Just Need to Explore
    Alice Anderson: ‘I don’t refuse this world, I just need to explore alternatives to live with it today’ 05/02/2016 12:30 Published 05/02/2016 Alice Anderson: ‘I don’t refuse this world, I just need to explore alternatives to live with it today’ The artist talks about her unique method of “memorising” and “recording” objects in copper wire, and explains how this helps her to slow down and maintain an intimacy with the world around her by ANNA McNAY An oversized bobbin and needle, a two-metre wide resplendent sphere radiating a warm copper glow – these stunning, alluring and yet uncanny objects are the work of Alice Anderson (b1972), a French-English artist, whose hair gleams in the same coppery tones as the wire in which these objects are wrapped. Although “wrapped”, I learn, is the wrong term to use. For Anderson, this process of entwining an object, mummifying it, securing it for posterity, is just that: an act of “memorising” and a means of understanding the world around her, keeping hold of the physicality of objects, as more and more of our life becomes subsumed by digital technology. Currently one of the 14 artists in the Saatchi Gallery’s first all-women exhibition, Champagne Life, Anderson spoke to Studio International about her obsessive practice and her inner drive. Anna McNay: When did you first begin wrapping objects? Alice Anderson: I don’t really use the term “wrapping” because my purpose is different. I “record” objects with thread. It is my own method of “memorising” objects in 3D.
    [Show full text]
  • Alice Anderson Sacred Gestures in Data Worlds
    ALICE ANDERSON SACRED GESTURES IN DATA WORLDS 09.01.20 > 07.03.20 Exposition présentée par / Exhibition presented by La Patinoire Royale | Galerie Valérie Bach, Bruxelles SOMMAIRE 6 SACRED GESTURES IN DATA WORLDS 58 par Marie Maertens 58 8 ENGLISH VERSION 58 10 VIRTUAL PRESENCES 58 5824 FREE COMPOSITIONS 55 55 36 THE RITUAL OF THE SHAPES PERFORMANCE 58 55 44 GRAPHS 58 55 51 RÉSUMÉ 58 52 ENGLISH VERSION 58 55 LOST GESTURES, 2019 Dessins performatifs, Drawing Room London, Angleterre SACRED GESTURES IN DATA WORLDS par Marie Maertens Marie Maertens est journaliste, critique d’art et commissaire d’exposition indépendante, basée à Paris et résidant souvent à New York. Elle construit de nombreux dialogues entre les scènes américaines et françaises et s’était déjà intéressée à l’évolution des genres et du féminisme pour l’exposition Le Quatrième sexe, qui avait eu lieu à l’espace Le Coeur, à Paris, en 2017. Pour sa deuxième exposition à La Patinoire Royale, Alice Anderson propose un nouveau corpus de peintures constituées d’un mélange de cuivre (Empirical Sounds et Free Compositions), qui réinterroge le médium tout en se jouant de certaines contradictions. Le premier antagonisme étant que la peinture est un support qui tend à l’idée de la contemplation et du silence, quand pour Alice Anderson il évoque, de manière sous-jacente, le bruit, le dynamisme et les vibrations. Dans sa pratique, qui est totalement liée à la performance, l’artiste peut soit dessiner, tandis que ses danseurs se mettent en mouvement en suivant le rythme qu’elle produit, soit se laisser happer par un ensemble de sons.
    [Show full text]
  • AMERICAN WOMEN the Infinite Journey
    AMERICAN WOMEN The Infinite Journey Vernissage 08.01.20, de 17h00 à 20h00 09.01.20 > 21.03.20 Une proposition de Marie Maertens AMERICAN WOMEN, THE INFINITE JOURNEY Dès la fin des années 1960, aux Etats-Unis et au cœur de la seconde vague féministe, la journaliste Gloria Steinem se distingue de ses consœurs et confrères travaillant sur la cause des femmes par l’intersectionnalité de ses recherches. Elle place ainsi, au même niveau, différentes minorités et strates de discriminations, qu’elles soient d’ordre sexuelle, raciale ou de classe, avant que la question des genres n’apparaisse la décennie suivante. Tandis que la guerre du Vietnam s’essouffle, les consciences se libèrent et les citoyens foulent le pavé. La parution de sa biographieMy Life on the road en 2015, disponible en français sous le titre Ma vie sur la route depuis 2019, accompagne, fortuitement ou non, une recrudescence de ces mêmes thématiques chez une génération émergente de plasticiennes. Dans le champ de l’art, Martha Rosler, Nancy Spero ou Annette Lemieux s’interrogent depuis plusieurs décennies sur les interactions entre sphère publique ou politique et domaine privé, notamment celui de la femme au foyer. Mais aujourd’hui, les réflexions sur la construction d’une mémoire collective passionnent à nouveau, tel que le montrent Leslie Hewitt ou Iman Issa. Ces dernières nous donnent à réfléchir sur la porosité entre l’intime et le sociopolitique, particulièrement à l’ère de la mondialisation galopante. Comment analyse-t-on et interprète-t-on le langage, l’art ou l’histoire en fonction de son héritage familial, culturel ou de son sexe ? Comment forge-t-on son identité ou son genre ? Là-encore, la passation se construit de Carolee Schneemann et Mary Kelly à Macon Reed, Sara Cwynar et Chloe Wise.
    [Show full text]