Wednesday, 17 November 2010
Open Day and MFA Auction 2010
Please check the GSA website for further details on the Open Day and follow the link from this blog to the MFA Auction website.
More details will follow soon on this blog soon......
Saturday, 18 September 2010
Anna Tanner at Transmission
RONNIE BASS
VULPECULA
21.09.10 – 16.10.10
PREVIEW: SAT 18.09.10, 7 - 9
OPEN TUE – SAT*, 11 – 5*
Transmission, King Street, Glasgow
Anna Tanner’s recent work has found focus in the conflation of the image of mythological wild men (Sasquatch, The Yeti, Nookta) and their modern equivalents (vigilantes, explorers) with settings and objects taken from mundane, contemporary, urban, domestic and cultivated environments. Working with small, panoramic dioramas and painting, Tanner conjures mutations in space, time and scale which investigate the ways in which man can prove and exhibit bravery in a world in which so little of the natural landscape is left undiscovered, cultivated or urbanised.
Anna Tanner (b. Arkansas, 1979) lives and works in Glasgow. She completed her MFA at Glasgow School of Art in 2008. Her recent exhibitions include: New Work Scotland, Collective Gallery, Edinburgh; Zoo Art Fair, London; Set It Up And Go, APS Artnews Projects, Berlin; and Last Tango In Partick, Lowsalt/Now Museum, Glasgow. Tanner recently completed a residency project in France titled Walden Revisited.
Theo Stamatogiannis - New Contemporaries 2010
http://www.newcontemporaries.org.uk/
Corin Sworn - The Lens Prism
Recent MFA graduate Corin Sworn has a solo exhibition at Tramway, Glasgow. For her project at Tramway, she will present a new film commission shot in the vast main theatre of Tramway. Utilizing the theatrical spot lights to create a pattern of seen and not seen, a single narrator will weave together a series of narratives, each one connected to the last through association. One might begin with the description of a deteriorating museum of fossils and skeletons, paint peeling from the walls and the enormous antlers of a Stone Age deer described as thick with collected dust, this narrative becomes the story of a Chris Marker film that was once set here. Later we hear of the author Raymond Roussel who commissioned an illustrator to produce drawings for one of his books as much to mislead the reader as to situate them. This structure, of stories that unfold one from another, stems from the process by which the scripts are written. They are partially made from appropriated texts put in conversation with each other. Thereby creating a script that is a sort of museum itself.
Artist Talk : Sat 25 September, 3pm
Tuesday, 17 August 2010
Monday, 16 August 2010
MAstars 2010
MAstars is an annual online selection of the most promising artists from the UK's leading MA courses. Each year a team of curators, academics and arts professionals choose different MA degree shows across the UK to visit and from these select artists to be featured on the MAstars website. One of the artists is then chosen to receive a 12 month residency at the Florence Trust, London (beginning in August 2011).
You can see Emily's page at www.axisweb.org/mastars/emilydonnini, or for more information about MAstars, visit: www.axisweb.org/mastarsaward.
Emily was selected by Katie Bruce from the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow.
Image: Emily Donnini, Collection: A Cosmic Pavilion (2010)
Photo credit: Darren Tesar
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
HET NIEUW FRIES MUSEUM PRESENTEERT: MATA HARIS HOOFD
23 June 2010 - 03 August 2010
Visual artists Sybren Renema and Timmy van Zoelen will establish the The New Frisian Museum in SYB during the summer weeks: a mark of honour to the solitary individual in the cultural inheritance. According to the artists, collections in small regional museums, such as the Ruurd Wiersma Hûs and the catacombs in Wieuwerd, often appeal more to one’s imagination than the standard collections in a national museum. Moreover, it seems as if there is no hierarchy between objects in these kind of collections. In the same way, in Ald Slot in Warga, part of the collection of treacle waffle tin boxes is equated with the rest of the collection.
Thursday, 1 July 2010
BP Portrait Award 2010
Elizabeth McDonald painted her portrait of her friend and fellow artist, Camillo Paravicini, in his studio in her home city of Glasgow. While they worked in the same building, in neighbouring studios, the two artists hardly knew each other. She says while the clothing Camillo wears in the portrait - a black jacket and tie and black rimmed glasses - is similar to that which he would normally wear, his posture was staged to accentuate the tension between youth and maturity. ‘Through the sittings, and getting to know Camillo,' she says, ‘I not only found myself examining his personal style but looking closer at other aspects of his personality. Perhaps most intriguingly, I began to see simultaneously the boy in the young man and the older professional gentleman the young man could become.'
Wednesday, 16 June 2010
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Glasgow Sculpture Studios Graduate Fellowship
Sarah will begin her Fellowship in November 2010. As part of her MFA at the Glasgow School of Art Sarah spent one term at the Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam. Recent exhibitions include Hands Across the Fire (GANGHUT) DCA Dundee, L.P. Hendriks Rotterdam, The Space We Made La Vitrine Quebec, Don’t Cry It’s Only a Rhythm, Generator Projects Dundee.
Since June 2005, selection panels made up of a diverse range of arts professionals have selected one graduate from MFA to be awarded the Glasgow Sculpture Studios Graduate Fellowship.
Saturday, 5 June 2010
MFA graduates in The British Art Show
Several ex MFA students are involved in the upcoming British Art Show - these include Mick Peter (work pictured), Karla Black, Duncan Campbell and Michael Fullerton. The British Art Show is widely recognised as one of the most ambitious and influential exhibition of contemporary British art. Organised by Hayward Touring, it takes place every five years and tours to four different cities across the UK. Now in its seventh incarnation the British Art Show opens in Nottingham, and tours for the first time in 20 years to the Hayward Gallery, followed by venues in Glasgow and Plymouth. It is curated by Lisa Le Feuvre and Tom Morton.
Article on the MFA in The Herald newspaper
Art erupts out of a fine mess
Kitty Finer with her installation of cabinets.
Pictures: Martin Shields.
Phil Miller
What a mess.
One of the things often forgotten when artists rescue former industrial spaces to use as galleries is the sheer hard work involved in clearing these before a single picture is hung. The Glue Factory in Glasgow, the new venue for the Glasgow School of Arts MFA show (along with the more fragrant CCA) is a prime example.
The Glue Factory is in the Spiers Locks area of north Glasgow. In the same industrial estate, large buildings hold technical, office and practice space for Scottish Opera and the National Theatre of Scotland. The Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama is redeveloping another set of sheds for their new state-of-the-art dance facility.
The Glue Factory was less salubrious when we visited two weeks ago. Downstairs, it looked like what it was: an abandoned factory. Dust gathered on the bare brick walls, windowless coldrooms were dark with mould, huge boilers lay silent and the floor was a mess of debris and dirt.
Upstairs, conditions were better: the walls were painted white, the floor was clear and it resembled a gallery. What attracted the staff of the Master of Fine Art course (MFA) at the GSA was its sheer size and mixture of atmospheres: the rough-and-ready ground floor, the loft-like space of the upper floors. It will be the home to the MFA show for at least two years, after 10 years of being staged at the Tramway, and all 25 young artists completing the course will show work there from June 11.
The eyes of curators, gallery owners, collectors and journalists will be on them. Not only is the course, established in 1988, lauded in itself, it has a habit of producing award-winning artists: Richard Wright of Glasgow, this year’s Turner Prize winner, is a graduate, as were Douglas Gordon, Louise Hopkins and Simon Starling. The Glue Factory could be the start of some very special careers.
One of the graduates this year is Ellie Harrison. Much of her work entails appearing in the media – primarily newspapers – although she is also into arranging parties.
One of her ideas, a syndicate of artists who will collaborate to try to win various National Lottery draws, has already received media coverage, not only because it seems a good way for artists, in these hard-pressed times, to get money, but also because she has organised the whole plan, enlisting the help of 40 artists across the UK and figured out the best way of maximising their chances.
Looking around the Glue Factory, hints of other work are already in place. Tom Harrup has left orders on a sign that his patch of mouldy, depressing brick wall is to be left as is and not repainted.
Deniz Uster is doing something with potatoes in a dark room which is being filled with soil and compost. The use of the brickwork, and some of the exposed beams, is also a deliberate, silent nod to another vast industrial space: the Arsenale in Venice, a venerable shipbuilding dock which is now the centre for the art and architectural Biennales.
John Calcutt, the director of the course, is excited by the new space. He thinks it will teach the students, as well as showcasing their work. He says: “I think the Glue Factory offers something in relation to their future professional practice, particularly in the challenges that the space offers.
“We want to produce students who are capable of being individual, independent artists. There’s been a history of finding spaces to work in in contemporary art, certainly in Glasgow where there hasn’t been much of a commercial gallery sector.
“So, practically, what they are learning will be very important. It’s a very raw space. And where Tramway was one big space, this is four.”
Graham Ramsay, artist and lecturer on the course, adds: “It is obvious what it is: it’s an early 20th-century industrial facility. But it offers a lot of flexibility. It offers very contrasting conditions. Downstairs is very rough, upstairs is light and cleaner. Because of its flexibility, there have been no problems adjusting to it. And there’s plenty of space: 20,000 sq ft of it.”
By the time you read this, of course, the Glue Factory’s interior will have changed almost beyond recognition. And the MFA itself has changed in recent years. Students used to be judged as “pass” or “fail”, albeit with merits and distinctions. Now, to fit in with the higher education standards of the University of Glasgow, the first year leads to postgraduate certificates and a postgraduate diploma, followed by the full MFA in the second year.
Each stage of this has a credit rating, which technically means students could transfer to other institutes of higher learning in Europe, although 99% of them do not.
Also, as the postgraduate population grows at the GSA, the more room for shared courses there are. So there is the chance to meet students from different courses in the shared ones such as core research skills, as well as on elective courses taken from different degrees. Calcutt says: “It has become standard now that the student experience is far more fluid than perhaps it used to be.”
Ramsay adds: “We are still committed to the process of developing the artists’ practice. That is an organic process, and we try to allow as much freedom as possible.
“ This year has been an incredibly hard working year. What is really important to the culture of the course is how the internal dynamic of the year works. What they have learned from each other is amazing. You want to leave the course with genuine friends, and I think that is what has happened here.”
More meaningful change is also built into the course. In two years, the change in the students’ lives and work can be dramatic. An interim show, recently staged by the course’s first year, can be very different from the final one. “Sometimes there are radical changes, and that is often the reason why people come here, to have the space to do that,” Ramsay says.
“You might come here with a particular thing in mind, or have a problem that you want to work on, and sometimes the course is for clarifying and developing those issues.”
As we leave the Glue Factory, I ask a question which makes both teachers slightly uncomfortable: Which of these artists is really going to make it commercially?
Calcutt says: “I can only say for myself. It is very hard to say. To predict commercial success is very hard: will a curator pick you up? There’s absolutely no way of predicting that.”
Ramsay adds: “The fact is that most artists have to have some other form of income. The art is not their entire livelihood. And the idea of some kind of instant commercial success: well, in this day and age – it is quite an old-fashioned one now.”
Exhibitions run from June 12-26 at the Glue Factory and the CCA
Thursday, 3 June 2010
Wednesday, 2 June 2010
Shelly Nadashi
Nicolas Party
Friday, 28 May 2010
MFA Degree Show 2010
Preview:
Friday 11th June
Glue Factory 5pm - 7pm
CCA 7pm - 10pm
Exhibition Opening Times:
Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA)
Glue Factory
Open 11am – 6pm, Tuesday – Saturday
Exhibition Runs from Saturday 12th – Saturday 26th June
Admission Free
If you require advice or assistance with access please call 0845 330 3501 or visit http://www.gsa.ac.uk/
Glue Factory
15 Burns Street
Speirs Locks
Glasgow G4THIS
Centre For Contemporary Arts (CCA)
350 Sauchiehall Street
Glasgow G2 3JD
http://www.cca-glasgow.com/
Image: Rosemary Scanlon, Macro Garden, digital wallpaper
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
2010 MFA INTERIM SHOW
15th - 22nd May 2010
Preview Fri 14 May, 6-8pm
The annual exhibition of new work by students in the 1st year of the Master of Fine Art Programme.
Mackintosh Gallery & Newbery Gallery
The Glasgow School of Art
167 Renfrew Street
Glasgow G3 6RQ
Opening Hours
Mon–Fri: 10:30am–4:30pm
Saturday: 10:00am–2:00pm
Sunday: Closed
T: 0141 353 4500
E: exhibitions@gsa.ac.uk
www.gsa.ac.uk/exhibitions
www.gsaevents.com
Image: Sofia Silva 'Brain Damage', 2010. From the series 'On The Impossibility of Pleasing You', a project in collaboration with Palácios.
Friday, 23 April 2010
Vestiges Park
Fri 16th Apr 10 — Mon 3rd May 10
Daily noon-5pm; Thurs noon-8pm
Featuring the work of MFA graduates Jim Colquhoun (2009), Ben Dembroski (2004), Alex Gross (2006), Jonathan Scott (2005) and Clara Ursitti (1995)
Vestiges Park is an outdoor exhibition featuring sculptural life forms by 16 Glasgow-based artists, inspired by ‘Vestiges Of The Natural History Of Creation’- a sensational publication by an anonymous Scottish journalist that predated Darwin’s Origin Of The Species by 15 years.
Lowsalt outdoors at Glasgow Sculpture Studios
145 Kelvinhaugh Street, Glasgow, G3 8PX
For more information visit: www.lowsalt.org.uk
Official event of The Glasgow International Festival
Modern Terra
Fri 16th Apr 10 — Mon 3rd May
Thu 2pm-8pm; Fri-Sun noon-6pm
Modern Terra presents new post-industrial narratives and canal-side site specific works at Speirs Locks Wasteland by Glasgow based artists Allison Gibbs, and Alexis Dirks and Christian Newby (both 2009 MFA graduates).
A rolling programme of weekend events, film screenings and barbeques will take place throughout the festival.
Location: Speirs Locks Wasteland, Farnell Street, Glasgow.
Ground level entrance at Farnell Street beyond the Glue Factory. Overhead Vantage Point from Speirs Wharf Canal Path (take the stairs from Sawmillfield Street)
For more information visit: www.modernterra.blogspot.com
Official event of The Glasgow International Festival
Image: Alexis Dirks, Mountain Fold (2009)
The Chalet Invitational
Featuring work by current MFA students Jason Mathis, Elizabeth McDonald, Carla Novi, Anne Patsch and Shelton Walker
Opening on April 23rd 8pm
Exhibition runs April 23rd - May 7th, 2010
1-6pm Mon-Sat & Sun May 1st, or by appointment
Open Late on Friday the 30th for Streetland's Opening
The Chalet, 18 Dixon Ave. Glasgow, G42 8ED
(just across from Queen's Park station)
For more information visit: www.aesthetiac.com/chalet
Official event of The Glasgow International Festival
Image: Anne Patsch, rust on tin cans (2007)
AS WE SPEAK (Artist Cinema Night)
Featuring the work of current MFA students Carla Easton and Deniz Uster
As We Speak is a night dedicated to screening new experimental videos. Conceived as an open platform for moving image artworks, different types of work are shown alongside each other as part of the same screening. There is never a theme, we just like to show what people are making.
Stereo, 20-28 Renfield Lane, Glasgow, G2 6PH
Official event of The Glasgow International Festival
Thursday, 22 April 2010
Atypical Root
16 April - 3 May 2010
Featuring the works of current MFA students and past graduates
Atypical Root is a curated public art trail along the Clyde riverbank, stretching from Glasgow's East End through the Financial district and City Centre, to the Pacific Quay and Govan. It presents new public artworks, interventions, and performances while encouraging 'Atypical viewers' to discover alternate routes through Glasgow. The trail links these new public artworks with pre-existing public works and other parts of The GI Festival.
For more information (and a map) visit: www.atypicalroot.com
Official event of The Glasgow International Festival
Image: Shelton Walker, ringolevio
Location: Glasgow Green