Shoufay Derz

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Shoufay Derz College of Fine Arts Masters of Fine Arts Research documentation 2011 Depart Without Return Shoufay Derz For my Father Peter Derz 15.02.1940-27.12.2009 When a candle is extinguished, the light from surrounding candles remains. For the light and the dark, in the presence and the absence, I wish you well. 3 Contents Abstract 1. Abstract 5 2. Acknowledgements 6 3. Introduction 7 3. Depart Without Return: project description 9 3. Absence and unknowing 18 4. The fugitive moment, arising and disappearing 41 5. The boat as body, death and the sea 59 6. Erasure: Influence of text and poetry 69 7. Conclusion Illustrations Appendix 1. List of works 100 2. Professional achievement during MFA 102 3. Poems 106 Bibliography 110 Disk 1. Depart Without Return DVD Disk 2. Depart Without Return DVD Disk 3. Transportation Love Song (QuickTime movie) Images from of Depart Without Return (PDF file) 4 Abstract The visual artist uses the known to depict the unknown just as the writer uses words to express the ineffable. From this paradox the premise of my research arises: an exploration of how we conceive of absence through marks or masks of presence. In attempting to apprehend the unknown, I consider the notion of negative thought. This acknowledges the futility of describing the unknown, and approaches it by speaking of it by what it is not. The paper presents several ideas concerning the themes of emptiness, impermanence and unknowing. The unknown is principally beyond knowledge; yet its significance and meaning is apparent across cultures as evidenced through diverse artistic and literary investigations. My art practice is experimental and process driven, culminating in the thematically interconnected installation Depart Without Return. Through the varied mediums of photography, video and sculpture, I have explored death, the desert, the ephemeral, written language and erasure. Death is one unknown that I believe most worthy of creative reflection; it is the only certainty and holds the ultimate potential to make us aware of the sublime wonder of life. I conclude that absence and presence are not as separate as they may appear; similarly the concepts of death and life are an inseparable continuum of each other. To explore absence one must do so through presence, similarly nothing and something are inextricable linked. By visually representing absence as presence, I aspire to draw attention to this essential paradox. Through its presence, Depart Without Return is a personal reflection on death and the meaning of emptiness. It is both a lament on the transience of life and a celebration of its mystery. 5 Acknowledgements My deepest gratitude to all who ‘got’ the premise of this research and recognized the value of its creative exploration. I wish to thank all my friends who encouraged, contributed, listened and supported me through the many unknowns that led to the realization of this long-term work. I’m grateful for all the obstacles and challenges I met alone the way. We become who we are as we wrestle with others and ourselves. From the earliest steps on the stony Ladakh desert, to the sublime edge of Ambrym volcano, I did not accomplish this project alone. 6 Introduction There are many things We could have said, But words never wanted To name them; And perhaps a world That is quietly sensed Across the air In another’s heart Becomes the inner companion To one’s own unknown.1 This work is about my observations and experiences towards the unknown, influenced by philosophical treatises on the ineffable, the infinite, and absence. The work explores two central ideas; first, I link the unknown to the infinite as endless and beyond comprehension. I concede that the ‘unknown’ is inconceivable and beyond articulation, for any attempt to describe it reifies and binds what is boundless and formless. Consequently, I offer no fixed definition nor clear questions. The artworks are simply lures or signposts towards the unknown, and reflect my attempt to penetrate the possibilities of what the signs stand in for. Secondly, I then contradict this by asserting the unknown and the known are not independent notions, but contingent upon each other. I believe that the ‘unknown’ is not simply a remote concept existing externally to the self, but also a deeply personal position within oneself in relationship to the ‘other’. This tension between the unknown and the known is where I place Depart without Return. In this paper I interweave discussion of my earlier works dreamboat and Transportation 1 John O’Donohue, To Bless the Space Between Us (New York: Doubleday, 2008), 91. 7 Love Song: Inseperable as they offer some insight into how subsequent interests have developed. I use the words unknown, absence, nothing and mystery interchangeably in referring to the terra incognita of this paper. I begin with a general description of the installation Depart without Return, which represents the synthesis of my research and studio practice over the period of the MFA. I then follow this with a deeper examination the themes on absence, the ephemeral, boats, poetry, language and memory. Throughout the paper I discuss philosophy, cultural history, literature and my personal experiences that directly influenced the making of this work, and later, my evaluation of the work as a spectator. I also examine the work of specific artists that I believe contribute significantly to the field exploring the unknown and the expression of the ineffable. Lastly, I appraise the resulting body of research in relation to my personal insight the connections between death, emptiness, absence and presence. 8 Depart Without Return: project description - Lay with me - Field of diamonds - Field of stone Depart without Return begins with three images of a desert landscape. Importantly the work is grounded within experience of an actual place, denoting that the unknown is within this world rather than a realm beyond. The images Lay with me and Field of diamonds were photographed in the remote desert area near Leh on the border of northern India and western China. These images speak of the sense of wonder and awe inspired from direct engagement with vast open landscape. The landscape can be envisioned as both a physical thing and a mental image, thus it can be considered both real and imaginary, present and absent. This ambiguity is explored in the desert imagery representing a space absent of anything but the self. At the time and from that position I had wondered what was beyond the mountainous ranges, and consequently discovered on the other side is the desert from which this project garners it name. The title is a translation of the Taklamakan desert, which in Turkic literally means place from which no living thing returns.’ The Chinese refer to the desert as the ‘Death Sea’, which symbolises within the cultural imagination a formidable obstacle that one cannot traverse. Although an inhospitable wasteland it is the ideal habitat for the dead — and also for creative imagining into the unknown. While my research into the theme of death begun as an academic pursuit it later became a deeply personal experience when my father unexpectedly passed away. - Umbra Blumen Umbra Blumen (shadow flower) is the sculpture piece at the center of the installation; a casket shaped box made from recycled hardwood timber, with two blue glass panels 9 along each length. Text has been etched into the inside face of each glass panel and is only revealed when the light is powered. Umbra Blumen links the sea, sky, death and boats. The casket-shaped sculpture is, of all the pieces, the most literal allusion to the unknown. Like a death boat it is a vessel for carrying the body into absence and beyond sight. I envision the vessel as a small boat, as a metonym for the individual out at sea, which guides us to the view of the line that demarcates the visually known world from beyond. Throughout Depart without Return the colour blue alludes to this separation between the known and unknown and symbolises the infinite void. The text ‘negative’ takes inspiration from a book of poetry by Charles Wright called “Negative blue”. In the poem NEGATIVES II he writes, ‘One erases only in order to write again,’ an idea explored in this piece. Negotiating the paradox of creating through erasing, the text ‘negative’ fades in and out and is punctuated on either side by the color blue. Wright’s themes interconnecting landscape, language, mortality and God in the context of the everyday were a great inspiration at the time of grieving the loss of my father. Through its presence the sculpture is a positive representation of an absent body, and as such refers to what is not there. It is also a symbol of the enduring aspects of the dead - just as the past informs the present the language written today originates from bygone words. The text inscription has multifaceted meanings; referencing cultural memory but originating as a personal homage to my father whose handwriting has been recreated post-mortem. Discovering old hand written love letters dating back to 1973 that my father had addressed to my mother, I scoured through his words under detailed magnification in order to trace and visually translate individual letters into the new words Depart without Return that now appear etched in blue glass. This forged text invokes his presence, which emphasises that words have great potential to weave meaning. Yet when translated and reconceptualised such meaning can be entirely lost or transfigured. As a death vessel this artwork poetically links the process of translating—in latin translatus originally meaning ‘carried across’—with the passage after death from this place or condition to another.
Recommended publications
  • Download Curriculum
    CORNELIA PARKER 1956 Nace en Cheshire / Neix a Cheshire / Born in Cheshire 1974-1975 Gloucestershire College of Art & Design 1975-1978 Wolverhampton Polytechnic - B.A. Hons 1980-1982 Reading University - M.F.A. Vive y trabaja en Londres / Viu i treballa a Londres / Lives and works in London Exposiciones Indiviaduales (selección) / Exposicions individuals (sel·lecció) / Selected solo shows 2011 D’Amelio Terras, (front room) New York Thirty Pieces of Silver York St Mary’s, York (in association with Tate) 2010 Doubtful Sound, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead D’Amelio Terras, (front room) New York No Mans Land, Two Rooms, Auckland, New Zealand (as part of International Artists Residency) 2009 Nocturne: A Moon Landing, Firework display and installation to open Jupiter Artland, Edinburgh 2008 *Guy Bartschi, Geneva *Carles Taché, Barcelona Never Endings Museo De Arte de Lima, Peru (Touring from IKON) Latent News Frith Street Gallery, London Chomskian Abstract, Whitechapel Laboratory, Whitechapel Gallery, London (touring: Ballroom Marfa, Texas; Galleria d’Arte Moderna Contemporanea, Bergamo: Fundacion PRO, Buenos Aires; Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo; The Institute for the Re-adjustment of Clocks, Istanbul; Kunsthaus, Zurich; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; The Ullens Centre for Contemporary Artm Beijing) 2007 * Never Endings IKON, Birmingham 2006 * Brontean Abstracts, Brontë Parsonage Museum, Haworth, West Yorkshire 2005 Focus: Cornelia Parker, The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Texas New Work by Cornelia Parker, Yerba Buena
    [Show full text]
  • 20TH ANNIVERSARY LIMITED EDITIONS SHOWCASE Launching Special Editions by Cornelia Parker & John Stezaker 2
    20TH ANNIVERSARY LIMITED EDITIONS SHOWCASE Launching special editions by Cornelia Parker & John Stezaker 2 – 10 November 2018 To mark and celebrate twenty years of Ingrid Swenson’s tenure as director of PEER and her recent MBE Award for Services to the Arts in East London, artists Cornelia Parker and John Stezaker have very generously produced prints in limited editions of 50 each to support PEER’s programme, which will be launched to the public on 2 November. We are using this as an opportunity to highlight some of PEER’s achievements over the past two decades with a display of previous artists’ editions and publications from Mike Nelson, Fiona Banner, Anthony McCall, Kathy Prendergast, John Smith, Bridget Smith and many others. November marks twenty years to the month since Ingrid began working at PEER, which was then known as The Pier Trust. Over this period, Ingrid has developed a curatorial strategy that acknowledges how art can and should have a meaningful and powerful place in the lives of people across the whole spectrum of our diverse society. Ingrid’s work has been far-reaching nationally and internationally, but always rooted in an embrace of the community. Over these two decades, it has been a great privilege for PEER to have been able to work with more than 150 emerging, mid- career and established artists; ranging from the one-off event to more ambitious and complex commissions. To set us on our way towards the next twenty years, we are delighted that both Cornelia Parker and John Stezaker have so generously agreed to make limited edition prints to be sold to support our artistic and local programmes.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018/2019
    Annual Report 2018/2019 Section name 1 Section name 2 Section name 1 Annual Report 2018/2019 Royal Academy of Arts Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BD Telephone 020 7300 8000 royalacademy.org.uk The Royal Academy of Arts is a registered charity under Registered Charity Number 1125383 Registered as a company limited by a guarantee in England and Wales under Company Number 6298947 Registered Office: Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BD © Royal Academy of Arts, 2020 Covering the period Coordinated by Olivia Harrison Designed by Constanza Gaggero 1 September 2018 – Printed by Geoff Neal Group 31 August 2019 Contents 6 President’s Foreword 8 Secretary and Chief Executive’s Introduction 10 The year in figures 12 Public 28 Academic 42 Spaces 48 People 56 Finance and sustainability 66 Appendices 4 Section name President’s On 10 December 2019 I will step down as President of the Foreword Royal Academy after eight years. By the time you read this foreword there will be a new President elected by secret ballot in the General Assembly room of Burlington House. So, it seems appropriate now to reflect more widely beyond the normal hori- zon of the Annual Report. Our founders in 1768 comprised some of the greatest figures of the British Enlightenment, King George III, Reynolds, West and Chambers, supported and advised by a wider circle of thinkers and intellectuals such as Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson. It is no exaggeration to suggest that their original inten- tions for what the Academy should be are closer to realisation than ever before. They proposed a school, an exhibition and a membership.
    [Show full text]
  • Sculptors' Jewellery Offers an Experience of Sculpture at Quite the Opposite End of the Scale
    SCULPTORS’ JEWELLERY PANGOLIN LONDON FOREWORD The gift of a piece of jewellery seems to have taken a special role in human ritual since Man’s earliest existence. In the most ancient of tombs, archaeologists invariably excavate metal or stone objects which seem to have been designed to be worn on the body. Despite the tiny scale of these precious objects, their ubiquity in all cultures would indicate that jewellery has always held great significance.Gold, silver, bronze, precious stone, ceramic and natural objects have been fashioned for millennia to decorate, embellish and adorn the human body. Jewellery has been worn as a signifier of prowess, status and wealth as well as a symbol of belonging or allegiance. Perhaps its most enduring function is as a token of love and it is mostly in this vein that a sculptor’s jewellery is made: a symbol of affection for a spouse, loved one or close friend. Over a period of several years, through trying my own hand at making rings, I have become aware of and fascinated by the jewellery of sculptors. This in turn has opened my eyes to the huge diversity of what are in effect, wearable, miniature sculptures. The materials used are generally precious in nature and the intimacy of being worn on the body marries well with the miniaturisation of form. For this exhibition Pangolin London has been fortunate in being able to collate a very special selection of works, ranging from the historical to the contemporary. To complement this, we have also actively commissioned a series of exciting new pieces from a broad spectrum of artists working today.
    [Show full text]
  • The Midlands Essential Entertainment Guide
    Staffordshire Cover - July.qxp_Mids Cover - August 23/06/2014 16:43 Page 1 STAFFORDSHIRE WHAT’S ON WHAT’S STAFFORDSHIRE THE MIDLANDS ESSENTIAL ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE STAFFORDSHIRE ISSUE 343 JULY 2014 JULY ’ Whatwww.whatsonlive.co.uk sOnISSUE 343 JULY 2014 ROBBIE WILLIAMS SWINGS INTO BRUM RHYS DARBY return of the Kiwi comedian PART OF MIDLANDS WHAT’S ON MAGAZINE GROUP PUBLICATIONS GROUP MAGAZINE ON WHAT’S MIDLANDS OF PART THE GRUFFALO journey through the deep dark wood in Stafford... FUSE FESTIVAL showcasing the region’s @WHATSONSTAFFS WWW.WHATSONLIVE.CO.UK @WHATSONSTAFFS talent at Beacon Park Antiques For Everyone (FP-July).qxp_Layout 1 23/06/2014 14:00 Page 1 Contents- Region two - July.qxp_Layout 1 23/06/2014 12:42 Page 1 June 2014 Editor: Davina Evans INSIDE: [email protected] 01743 281708 Editorial Assistants: Ellie Goulding Brian O’Faolain [email protected] joins line-up for 01743 281701 Wireless Festival p45 Lauren Foster [email protected] 01743 281707 Adrian Parker [email protected] 01743 281714 Sales & Marketing: Jon Cartwright [email protected] 01743 281703 Chris Horton [email protected] 01743 281704 Subscriptions: Adrian Parker [email protected] 01743 281714 Scooby-Doo Managing Director: spooky things a-happening Paul Oliver [email protected] in Wolverhampton p27 01743 281711 Publisher and CEO: Martin Monahan [email protected] 01743 281710 Graphic Designers: Lisa Wassell Chris Atherton Accounts Administrator Julia Perry Wicked - the award-winning musical
    [Show full text]
  • Cornelia Parker 12 October – 14 November 2015 Private View Saturday 17 October, 10 Am - 12 Pm
    Press Contact: Gemma Colgan [email protected] +44 (0)20 7439 1866 EXHIBITION INFORMATION Cornelia Parker 12 October – 14 November 2015 Private view Saturday 17 October, 10 am - 12 pm Cornelia Parker is fascinated by the physical properties of objects and materials, and their histories. For her first solo exhibition at Alan Cristea Gallery, on public display from 12 October – 7 November 2015, Parker will present three new bodies of work that breathe new life into found objects, exploring ideas of the positive versus negative, and the compression of three-dimensional objects into the two- dimensional. Parker’s art is about destruction, resurrection and reconfiguration. Demonstrating the importance of process, she frequently transforms objects by using seemingly violent techniques such as shooting, exploding, squashing, cutting and burning. Through these actions she both physically alters the object and she herself becomes an active participant in the development of its story. For her first series of new work Parker uses the photogravure process. Inspired by Fox Talbots’ first photographic images, she placed ordinary objects directly on to a plate, exposing them to ultra violet light, so that they act as a photographic positive. A light bulb, a gun, a glass spilling ice cubes, a Halloween banner (pictured), become spectral still lifes captured on paper. Their volume is described by their ability to blot out or refract light; they become literal shadows of their former selves. Parker continues this exploration, in another series of new prints, using a group of found glass photographic negatives of silverware, originally produced for a 1960’s Spink auction catalogue.
    [Show full text]
  • Rose Wylie CV
    ! 蘿斯.薇莉Rose Wylie Born in 1934, Kent, UK Lives and works in Kent 1979 – 1981 Royal College of Art, London 1934䎃欰倴薊㕜肥暶龾խխխխխխխխ 植㹁㾀莅ⶾ⡲倴肥暶龾խ 1979 – 1981 英國皇家藝術學院 獎項Awards 2015 The Charles Wollaston Award 2014 John Moores Painting Prize - Shortlisted 2011 Paul Hamlyn Prize for Visual Arts 2009 Threadneedle Prize 2004 EAST international Print Commission 1999 The Dupree Award, Royal AcademyCharles Wollaston Award, Royal Academy shortlisted 1998 Paul Hamlyn Award, Nominated 1995-6 The British Art Show 4, considered 1993 Interiors, Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne, joint first prize 典藏Collection Tate Britain National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington DC Jerwood Foundation Arts Council of England Deal, Dallas, USA Norwich Gallery Railtrack, London Royal College of Art, London, Print Collection University College, Oxford, JCR Contemporary Art Society, London York City Art Gallery 精選個展Selected Solo Exhibitions 2016 《Horse, Bird, Cat. 》 David Zwirner, London. 2015 《The Islanders. 》 Galerie Mikael Andersen 《Granny Rose’s Utopia 》 Nunu Fine Art, Taipei ! ! 2014 《Rose Wylie》, Städtische Galerie, Wolfsburg 《Rose Wylie》, Vous Etez Ici, 《Rose Wylie》, Choi&Lager Gallerie 《Rose Wylie》, Thomas Erben, New York 2013 《Rose Wylie》, Tate Britain Focus, London 《Rose Wylie - Works on Paper》, Michael Janseen Gallery, Berlin 《Rose Wylie - Henry, Thomas, Keith & Jack》, UNION Gallery, London 《Woof-Woof》, Haugar Museum, Tonsberg, Norway (catalogue Skira, essay by Tone Lyngstad Nyaas, Jennifer Higgie: Rose Wylie interviewed by Jeff McMillan) 2012 《Rose Wylie, Big Boys Sit in the Front》, catalougue texts by Phoebe Hoban/Katie Kitamura, Jerwood Gallery, Hastings 《Rosemount》, catalogue texts by Jonathan Meese & Tom Morton, Regina Gallery, Moscow 《Rose Wylie》, Philadelphia University of the Arts Gallery (October – November 2012), Philadelphia 2011 《Rosemount》, catalogue texts by Jonathan Meese & Tom Morton, Regina Gallery, Moscow 2011 《Rose Wylie One Painting and Six Works on Paper》.
    [Show full text]
  • Cornelia Parker
    CORNELIA PARKER Born in Cheshire, UK (1956) Lives and works in London, UK 1980-1982 M.A in Fine Arts, Reading University, UK 1975-1978 B.A. Wolverhampton Polytechnic, UK 1974-1975 Gloucestershire College of Art & Design, UK SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2021 Being & Un-being, Wilde, Basel, Switzerland 2020 Cornelia Parker: Through a Glass Darkly, Cristea Roberts Gallery, London, UK 2019 Cornelia Parker, MCA – Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney, Australia 2018 Transitional Object (PsychoBarn), The Annenberg Courtyard, Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK No Man’s Land, Art Bärtschi & Cie, Geneva, Switzerland 2017 General Election Artworks, Westminster Hall, Palace of Westminster, London, UK 2017 Golden Square & Soho Square, Frith Street Gallery, London, UK One Day this Glass Will Break, organized by Hayward Touring, London, UK Verso, The Whitworth, Manchester, UK Cornelia Parker, Frith Street Gallery, London, UK 2016 The Roof Garden Commission: Transitional Object (PsychoBarn), The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA Found, curated by Cornelia Parker, Foundling Museum, London, UK Genève Basel Zurich www.wildegallery.ch Rue du Vieux-Billard 24 Angensteinerstr. 37 Wilde Private CH — 1205 Genève CH — 4052 Basel Waldmannstr. 6 + 41 22 310 00 13 + 41 61 311 70 51 CH — 8001 Zurich [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 2015 One More Time, Terrace Wires Commission, St Pancras International Station, London, UK Magna Carta (An Embroidery), British Library, London; The Whitworth, The Bodleian Library, University of Oxford,
    [Show full text]
  • Fall in Love Again
    FALL I N L O V E AGAIN Fall in love again Welcome back to the Whitworth. As you are about to discover, a £15 million development has transformed the gallery, fully integrating it into the park we call home. An art garden by Sarah Price, sculpture terrace and orchard garden, alongside new spaces that embrace the park - such as our landscape gallery and a café in the trees - all reflect our beautiful setting. With double the room, the Whitworth launches with ten new exhibitions. From a major solo show by Cornelia Parker to a stunning installation by Cai Guo-Qiang, plus exhibitions by Sarah Lucas, Thomas Schütte, and the photographer Johnnie Shand Kydd, we open our new gallery spaces in spectacular fashion. Alongside sit selections of some of the best pieces from our wonderful collections – from the explosive art of the 1960s to historic watercolours and textiles – plus two exhibitions of works recently and generously donated to us by the Karpidas Foundation. But it’s not all about art at the new Whitworth. Ever since we first opened, in 1889, we have been a gallery in a park – a space to learn and to try new things, a place to bring friends and family, and a gallery where, for a while at least, you can escape the busy city on our doorstep. So while our reopening this spring is indeed a moment to savour, it also allows us to get back to what we have always done best: being the gallery in the park – and one of the most remarkable galleries in the north.
    [Show full text]
  • Dissertation (Einreichen)
    DISSERTATION Titel der Dissertation Towards an Encyclopaedia as a Web of Knowledge. A Systematic Analysis of Paradigmatic Classes, Continuities, and Unifying Forces in the Work of Peter Greenaway Verfasser Mag. phil. Marc Orel angestrebter akademischer Grad Doktor der Philosophie (Dr. phil.) Wien, 2011 Studienkennzahl lt. Studienblatt: A 343 Studienrichtung lt. Studienblatt: Anglistik und Amerikanistik Betreuerin: Ao. Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Monika Seidl To my parents… TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements __________________________________________________ VI List of Abbreviations and Short Titles _____________________________________ VII Preface _________________________________________________________ VIII 1. PROLOGUE ________________________________________________ 1 1.1. Peter Greenaway: A Brief Retrospective _______________________________ 1 1.2. Classifying Greenaway’s Work _____________________________________ 17 1.3. Introducing an Encyclopaedic Approach ______________________________ 25 2. THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA ______________________________________ 62 A 62 Literature 214 Air 62 M 214 Alphabet 70 Maps 214 Anatomy 81 Mathematics 225 Animals 92 Medicine 225 Architecture 92 Myth/ology 225 B 105 N 235 Biography 105 Nudity 235 Birds 112 Numbers 246 Body 112 O 258 Books 122 Ornithology 258 C 134 P 266 Cartography 134 Plants 266 Characters 134 Pornography 266 Conspiracy 147 R 267 D 158 Religion 267 Death 158 S 279 Dissection 168 Science 279 Drowning 168 Sex/uality 279 F 169 Stories 289 Flight 169 T 290 Food 169 Taboo 290 G 181 Theology 299 Games
    [Show full text]
  • Key to London Map of Days
    A London Map of Days This is the key to the daily details that feature on my etching A London Map of Days. I posted these every day on both Facebook and Twitter from the 9 February 2015 through to 8 February 2016. As the project continued, I began to enjoy myself and treat it more like a blog and so there is a marked difference between the amount of detail I have included at the beginning and the end of that year. 1 January 1660 Samuel Pepys begins writing his famous diary. He started the diary when he was only 26 years old and kept it for 10 years. He was a naval administrator and even though he had no maritime experience, he rose by a combination of hard work, patronage and talent for administration to be the Chief Secretary to the Admiralty under King Charles II and King James II. His diary, which was not published until the 19th century was written in a cryptic, personal shorthand and the first person to fully transcribe it, did so without the benefit of the key. It was not until 1970 that an unabridged version was published as previous editions had omitted passages deemed too obscene to print, usually involving Pepys sexual exploits. The diary combines personal anecdotes (often centred around drinking) with eyewitness accounts of great events such as the Great Plague of London, the Second Dutch War and the Great Fire of London. It is a glorious work and was a constant source of inspiration for my map. Daily detail from A London Map of Days.
    [Show full text]
  • Conceptual Art & Minimalism
    CONCEPTUAL ART AND MINIMALISM IN BRITAIN 1 QUESTIONS FROM LAST WEEK • Sarah Lucas lives with her partner, the artist, musician and poet Julian Simmons Artists Sarah Lucas (C) and Tracey Emin (R) attend The ICA Fundraising Gala held at the Institute of Contemporary Arts on March 29, 2011 in London, England. • Sarah Lucas now lives principally near Aldeburgh in Suffolk with her partner, the artist, musician and poet Julian Simmons, in the former bolthole of the composer Benjamin Britten and the tenor Peter Pears. She bought it as a weekend place with Sadie Coles in 2002. ‘I moved out there six years ago – it’s nice, impressive,’ she says curtly, before clamming up. ‘I don’t want people coming and snooping on me.’ (The Telegraph, 10 September 2013) • Benjamin Britain’s first house in Aldeburgh was Crag House on Crabbe Street overlooking the sea. He later moved to the Red House, Golf Lane, Aldeburgh which is now a Britten museum. 2 BRITISH ART SINCE 1950 1. British Art Since 1950 2. Pop Art 3. Figurative Art since 1950 4. David Hockney 5. Feminist Art 6. Conceptual Art & Minimalism 7. The Young British Artists 8. Video and Performance Art 9. Outsider Art & Grayson Perry 10.Summary 3 CONCEPTUAL ART • Conceptual Art. In the 1960s artists began to abandon traditional approaches and made ideas the essence of their work. These artists became known as Conceptual artists. Many of the YBA can be considered, and consider themselves, conceptual artists. That is, they regard the idea behind the work as important or more important than the work itself.
    [Show full text]