Jennifer West


Vilma Gold is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by American artist Jennifer West. This will be West’s first solo exhibition in London.

Ever heard that green M&M’s and mezcal worms are aphrodisiacs or that Kurt Cobain used to dye his hair with red Kool-Aid? Urban myth or ’absolute truth’ the backdrop to these apocryphal stories is contemporary American culture. In using the products that provoked these stories in the development process of her films and referencing the stories that have heightened their appeal in the film titles, Jennifer West’s new work explores how the cultural framing of such myths have entered the common consciousness. The permutations that are referenced in this dual process are sensually explored through the textual layers that make up her films.

‘Electric Kool-Aid and the Mezcal Worm’ brings together four new films by West that continue her exploration of the “psychosensual”, a sensual investigation of the psyche through visual means. With film captions that read like experiments in alchemy, West lists everyday solvents, alcohol, energy drinks, make-up and perfume as ingredients in the development process. The film stock, negative and leader used by West have been subjected to multiple physical manipulations, the celluloid sometimes set alight, cooked, skateboarded over and scribbled on. The resulting films depict mesmerizing streams of colour bound together with footage taken by West of autobiographical events or recreations of found material.  Installed together in the gallery West’s films play off each other, both in content and in their physical presence, within the gallery. This physical quality is accentuated through the use of a mirrored prism that shifts the projected frame of the work so that the projection appears as if it has ‘lost its corner’.

The exhibition is centered upon West’s new 35mm film, ‘Electric Kool-Aid Fountain Swimming Film’ (35mm movie negative submerged in LA’s Mulhulland Fountain, dripped with Kool-aid and liquid LSD…*).  In this film, the hallucinogenic brightly coloured drips of Kool-Aid and liquid LSD run over filmed images of West and her friends swimming at night in the red and orange glowing fountain, an iconic image of Los Angeles.  The narrative suggested by the title evokes the urban mythologies surrounding Kool-Aid whilst the images recall cultish ritual, libertine activities, laser shows, raves and the film, Spinal Tap. This is the first film that West has shot using 35mm film and will be the third film in a trilogy of films evoking libertine American west coast culture with the backdrops of hippie nudist hot springs and skinnydipping in the ocean. The final three films in the exhibition were made using 70mm, allowing a greater command of detail and a much faster speed with frames running through the film gate at 398 perforations per second. ‘Jam Licking & Sledgehammered Film’ (70MM film leader covered in strawberry jam, grape jelly..) references the “performative” remnant of the iconic Kaprow piece ‘Household’, ‘Seriously Film’ (70MM film leader soaked in Viagra and MSG..) and ‘Green M&M’s & Mezcal Worm Film’ (70MM film leader with a mezcal worm..).

West was born in Topanga Canyon, California, USA and lives and works in Los Angeles. She has exhibited widely, including solo exhibitions at Transmission Gallery, Glasgow (2008) and White Columns, New York (2007) Museum exhibitions include Tate St Ives (2007) touring to CAPC Musee d’Art Contemporain, Bordeaux; Henry Art Gallery, Seattle (2008); The Drawing Centre, New York (2008); MOCAD, Detroit (2007) and ZKM Museum for New Media, Karlsruhe (2007). West has an upcoming solo show at MARC FOXX (2009) and will also be participating in: Now You See It, Aspen Art Museum, Aspen (2008), Angles of America, Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago, Illinois (2008) and an exhibition on the influence of Nirvana’s music in art at the Seattle Art Museum, Seattle (2010).

Vilma Gold

Reality Check


Unreal reality?
Reality has turned out to be something relative. We see reality TV, documentary films and photos from the world’s trouble spots, aware that the reality presented to us in these media may not be the truth or give adequate information.

Artists’ examination of reality
Reality may be turned and twisted, and its reproduction depends on the angling of the story, who tells it, what is given first priority and what is left out. This concept of reality as relative or as a construction has interested pictorial artists for a long time. The exhibition will show works investigating reality and the conditions determining our concept of reality – works which may even change or colour the way we experience reality.

Everything from painting to video
The works in the exhibition are executed in the materials used in today’s pictorial art, ranging from painting and sculpture to installation, photography and video – combined in every possible way. The public will be shown exact copies of existing rooms, candid self portraits, installations which make one doubt what is up and down in the world, strange retellings of everyday stories, harsh documentarism and much, much more.

SMK

Andreas Vesterlund


Andreas Vesterlund’s artwork focuses on borders and limits, areas where something gradually or suddenly turns into something else. This includes spaces between physical places as well as less tangible borderlines, such as the space between life and death or gaps between different ways of perceiving the world.
Vesterlund graduated from The School of Photography at Gothenburg University in the spring of 2008, with a Master’s degree in Fine Arts. Before that, he attended Gothenburg Art College. He works in various media, such as photography, painting, sculpture and installation.

Signe Vad
Galleri Signe Vad

GREEK DADDY


Javier Peres is pleased to announce the limited release of GREEK DADDY, a tribute to all things Greek, past, present and future.

GREEK DADDY includes in-depth coverage of 2007’s Peres Projects, Athens, the mysterious events surrounding 07-07-07, and more…

GREEK DADDY is available for purchase now from Printed Matter, Inc. (New York), Peres Projects, Berlin Los Angeles.

Your favorite regular DADDY vendor may also carry this special off-calendar issue, subject to local customs and content restrictions.

Daddy The Magazine
Peres Projects

DUNK! / TOTES MEER


DUNK! / TOTES MEER
A solo exhibition by Dan Miller (U.K.)

DUNK! is back from holidays in the sun.
DUNK! is proud to present the exhibition Totes Meer.
TOTES MEER is a journey into fields of appropriated imagery and objects.
TOTES MEER is supreme poetical and cool elaborations in sculpture, paintings & drawings.
TOTES MEER is Dan Millers first solo show in Denmark.

DAN MILLER Graduated from The Glasgow School of Art in 2002 and has since shown widely in both the U.K and Europe.
Through drawing, painting and sculpture Miller discusses ideas of reproductive process and failure, drawing from a range of appropriated imagery and objects. Historical fascination and rigorous process underpin an investigation into the underlying surface tensions of material.
Adopting a detailed mechanical approach, two-dimensional works are interceded with a variety of collaged references questioning appropriation and authorship. These assemblages are continuously re-configured, blurring the line between original and facsimile. Floating without anchor, they mimic mythical figures and intangible monuments.

Dunk

Uprock


Mon 7 Apr 2008 10:25:50 +0200
Curator: Dear Shane and Thomas,
I’m really looking forward to your exhibition here in August. Your opening is set for the 15 of August. I will leave it up to you to decide on how you want to split/ co-operate the show, but would be happy to help out, play a long in any way you want me to.

On 08/04/2008 at 12.32, Shane Bradford wrote
Shane: To me it’s sounds like a good old fashioned UPROCK! Have you come across this expression before? It’s an 80’s thing…when two rivals met in the street instead of fighting they would have a spontaneous uprock, in other words a break-dance competition. I’m not suggesting we do that! But maybe take the idea and transfer it – I propose that I will send you an image of a piece of work of mine so that you can respond to it with one of your own that will match or better it. Then you send me one of yours and I will respond etc…until the show is full. And we call the show UPROCK….

Fri, 18 Apr 2008 14:43:42 +0200
Thomas: Hey Jerkface
The first publication of our show holds the title…..
DADADADAAAA

Uprock

V1 Gallery presents
UPROCK

Opening day: Friday August 15 2008. From 17.00-22.00
Exhibition period: August 15 2008 –September 06 2008

V1 Gallery proudly presents Uprock, an exhibition duelled by Shane Bradford (UK) and Thomas Øvlisen (DK).

Shane Bradford from London is best known for his ’drip works’, that have made several art critics and collectors look for big superlatives. He dips various objects (latest chicken skeletons, fashion magazines and tricycles among others) in multicoloured emulsions – a process that can take up to a year – until they look like amorphous abnormalities. But his humoristic wanderlust and socio political eye for the ironic paradoxes in modern society also extends to media such as film and large scale installations. He has exhibited all over Europe, and in 2007 he won the distinguished Celeste Art Prize.

Thomas Øvlisen is a well known name on the Danish art scene. His abstract play with material, shape and motif is submerged in absurd humour and a consistent fascination with the toll of the time. Where Shane Bradford constructs his works and covers them in gloss Thomas erodes and deconstructs his in a process that reminds the viewer of the relentless effect time has on earthly objects (including human beings) as he simultaneously comments on the industrial evolution of the past century.

The differences and similarities between the two artists have created a horn of plenty of thoughts, ideas and materials. And in the middle of all the confusion something suddenly makes sense. Or in the words of two artists:

Sat, 3 May 2008 09:11:53 +0200
Thomas: First of all I think one of the problems with being an artist is that one spends too much time working alone in ones studio thinking about the work being done – and subsequently I am always scared that my thoughts are hermit-like exaggerations and the work itself only actually represents half of what I claim it does. I read more stuff into my work than anybody could possible ever extract through any and all forms of analysis.

On 08/05/2008, at 10.49, Shane Bradford wrote:
Shane: I’m not sure I have anything of worth to add to what you have written. I admire your bravery at not putting a filter on what you say, you are right of course. Perhaps it’s a nice tidy summary of this show; to say that your unguarded approach, mirrored in your practice by the use of erosion as a metaphor for getting under the skin of societies polished surface constructs (deep breath) sits well in opposition to my recoating process, putting a gloss on a dysfunctional illusion that we call civilisation. (Or maybe this neat conclusion is exemplary of my urge for unified finishes!) In the words of someone famous: I DON’T KNOW.

I must admit that with you taking away layers and me adding them on I can’t see how we will ever make an artwork together! Talk about Sisyphus…

V1 Gallery

Sneak View







Shane?s works looks very cool @ V1 Gallery::::::