Saturday 29 October 2016

Interview with Cecilia Brunson about Willys de Castro

29/10/16
Interview with Cecilia Brunson

Willys de Castro: From Paintings to Objects, 1950-65 
Cecilia Brunson Projects
8 October - 9 December 2016
  
Cecilia Brunson (b1972, Santiago de Chile) set up her gallery space in Bermondsey, south London, in September 2014, and focuses her exhibitions on Latin American artists who have been successful at home and in the US but remain little known in the UK and Europe. Willys de Castro (1926-88) is a perfect example, being pivotal in the neo-concrete movement of the 1950s and 60s, but never having had a solo show in London.


The exhibition is entitled From Paintings to Objects, 1950-65, and the works on show demonstrate de Castro’s transition between paintings and sketches and his so-called Objetos Ativos, or Active Objects series, through which he sought to create a participatory viewer, who would engage both physically and phenomenologically with his works, moving around them and experiencing them as objects.

The exhibition is part of a series, Perspectives of Modern and Contemporary Art from Brazil, by Cecilia Brunson Projects in collaboration with Almeida e Dale Gallery in São Paulo, which aims to highlight the contribution of Brazilian artists to 20th-century art. De Castro follows in the footsteps of Claudio Tozzi and Alfredo Volpi shown earlier this year.

Brunson spoke to Studio International about de Castro’s legacy, the significance of hosting a show of his works right now, and her hopes for the series and her gallery as a whole.


Watch this interview here







Thursday 27 October 2016

Interview with James Richards

27/10/16
Interview with James Richards

Requests and Antisongs
ICA, London
21 September - 13 November 2016

Combining fragments of film, music, vocals, erotica and medical documentary, James Richards (b1983, Cardiff) creates site-specific audiovisual installations and morphing exhibitions, which immerse the visitor in a kaleidoscopic and cinematic sensorial experience. Keeping a diaristic digital scrapbook, Richards draws from this to create his collages and assemblages, inspired by Dada.


Already having won the Jarman award for film and video in 2012, and the Ars Viva Prize for young artists two years later, Richards was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2014, and will be representing Wales in Venice (Cymru yn Fenis) at next year’s biennale. He spoke to Studio International during the installation of his exhibition Requests and Antisongs, at the ICA, London.


Read this interview here





Thursday 20 October 2016

Interview with Toby Ziegler at Simon Lee Gallery

20/10/16
Interview with Toby Ziegler
Toby Ziegler: Post-Human Paradise
Simon Lee Gallery
5 October - 12 November 2016

Having grown up with a postcard of Henri Matisse’s Large Reclining Nude (1935) on his parents’ bathroom wall, Toby Ziegler (b1972) was more than familiar with this seminal work, which blurs the lines between the figurative and the abstract. While a student at Central St Martin’s College of Art and Design, Ziegler found himself questioning the relevance of painting in today’s digitised society, and much of his work is an attempt to establish an answer to this. Taking inspiration from iconic paintings, he repaints the images painstakingly on to aluminium sheets, before spraying over them and then sanding them down with an electric sander, revealing both the painted image and the bare metal beneath. Describing his methods as “a perverse way of trying to make a mark”, Ziegler recognises his tussle with primarily painterly issues. 


But Ziegler also works using Google, searching for the paintings online, gradually reducing the resolution of the images he finds, and repeatedly feeding them back into the reverse image search, which returns increasingly curious, incongruous and diverse responses – in the case of the Matisse, many initially relating to babies and playthings, but latterly turning to cankerous sores and wounds. From these images, Ziegler has composed a slow-moving film, which plays alongside the series of images Matisse himself made as documentation of the progress of his painting and its evolution from illusionistic to two-dimensional space.

Ziegler spoke to Studio International about his interest in thinking about the body in relation to digital technology and the history of painting in relation to the way we circulate imagery today.

Watch the video interview here


Monday 17 October 2016

Essay: Myth-Making and Myth-Breaking: Wendy Elia and the Constitutive Other

17/10/16
Myth-Making and Myth-Breaking: Wendy Elia and the Constitutive Other

Wendy Elia: Paintings 2004-2016
Thames-Side Studios Gallery
18 - 22 October 2016

One of the founding ideas on which theories of consciousness and identity tend to be built is the binary of the self and the other. Put simply, the existence of an other, a not-self, allows for the possibility or recognition of a self. This self/other binary is an accepted division of how the modern individual comprehends who s/he is, by recognising what s/he is not.[1] In the late 18th century, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) introduced the concept of the other as a constituent part of self-consciousness (preoccupation with the self). In phenomenology, the terms other and the constitutive other each identify a cumulative, constituting factor in the self-image of a person; his or her acknowledgement of being real. While the other is dissimilar to and the opposite of the self, the constitutive other is the relation between the essential nature (personality) and the outward manifestation of a human being; it is the relation between the self and the projection of the self. Advancing this one step further, Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) applied the concept of the other as a basis for intersubjectivity, the psychological relations among people.[2]


Throughout history, the artist has sought, through representational painting, to recreate an image of him/herself, or the other, capturing some element of likeness, be it visual or psychological. In the wake of photography, painting has often been placed in second rank, or artists have sought to emulate the ‘photorealism’ of the camera. Wendy Elia (b1953), however, is a painter who exhalts the illusory qualities of pigment. ‘The hyperreal is supposedly a simulation of reality,’ she says, ‘whereas the figures I’m dealing with are real. All painting, you could say, is a simulation. I draw attention to the fact that it’s a painting, rather than trying to create some simulation of reality.’

Elia stands in a tradition of women artists, who seek to invert and challenge the modes of self-portraiture and history painting, which reinforce the masculinity of the artist in both myth and history. As Marsha Meskimmon notes, in her exploration of women artists and self-portraiture: ‘This has been a necessary exercise for women who wished to represent themselves as “the artist”, since standard means by which this was signified were defined in ways exclusive of women. In some cases, it was enough merely to show yourself with the tools of the trade to subvert convention and declare yourself an independent woman. At other times, more active parodies and pastiches of the tropes associated with the artist myth were needed to find a place from which the woman as artist could speak. Whichever tack was taken, women’s representations of themselves which engaged with artist definitions altered those definitions and the very ways in which self-portraiture as a genre can be read.’[3]

Over the years, Elia has experimented with other ways of working – using photographs and film stills – but now she has come full circle and returned to painting people she knows, from life. ‘At art school,’ she remembers, ‘everybody was still bowing at the altar of Greenberg and the whole idea of modernism, minimalism and abstract expressionism. But I just wanted to paint figuratively, which was very unfashionable at the time. I was looking towards Velázquez and Courbet, Freud and Manet. I saw myself as a realist.’ In terms both of being a woman and pursuing her own will, Elia was, as well, ‘other’. Elia’s subjects – herself, her family and friends – mainly, albeit not quite exclusively, women – challenge the viewer with an uncomfortably direct gaze, they resemble their subject, but much more is revealed about them from the painting as a whole, filled with clues and objects that play a part in building the outward manifestation of the self; the objects that facilitate the constitutive other.

Referencing the literary autobiography, Meskimmon proposes that to analyse (or, frequently, psychoanalyse) the significant or formative events in an individual’s life has been assumed to explain his or her achievements. ‘There is proposed a transparent and immediate relationship between the subject of the work itself and the author. That is, it is assumed that the “I” of the autobiography is the writer, who stands objectively outside the text, “accurately” rendering the events of his life. […] It presumes the author to be able to understand and represent fully his or her “self”, that the author is not in flux, but a fully formed and independent subject who “knows” all about the self he represents. Thus the autobiography reveals to us as readers the psychology of the author without any lacunae or myth-making.’[4] While this might carry over to Elia’s painting to the extent that she is, both for her paintings of others and of herself, standing outside, analysing formative events and key moments, it is not true that she seeks to present a whole and accurate vision. Elia avers that painting is both an exercise in myth-making and a construct. The images she presents of others are the images she projects of them. In an almost Brechtian manner, she seeks to undo this idea of representing a complete illusion, by deliberately painting each individual aspect, ingredient, metaphor or concept, uncovering the workings of identity and interrogating the constitutive other.


Few people’s identities or senses of self are defined in relation to one sole other, however. For most of us, what makes us unique is the complex of different identities that we embody, comprising memories and experiences that are political, religious, national, local, linguistic, social and collective in nature. Western portrait painters since the Renaissance have often included objects or symbols in their prints, drawings and paintings, designed to add to our knowledge of the identity and character of the subject. Sir Joshua Reynolds’ Self-Portrait as DCL (Doctor of Civic Law awarded from Oxford 1773) (1773), for example, associates the artist with numerous great predecessors: the use of light and texture recalls Rembrandt; the pose is borrowed from Van Dyck; and he is leaning on a table on which sits a bust of Michelangelo.[5] Elia too includes such motifs and signifiers in her work. Like James Joyce’s compilation of stream of consciousness motifs in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), she accumulates diachronic motifs from her own and others’ lives, producing visual collages of the selves as ‘products of shifting social constructs’.[6] In his psychological study of narration and its contribution to self and identity, Michael Bamberg draws a distinction between the synchronic self and identity, describing the latter as the ‘diachronic, temporal self’. He suggests: ‘Self, as differentiated from other, developing the ability to account for itself (as agent or as undergoer), self-reflect and self-augment, can now begin to look for something like temporal continuity, unity, and coherence.’[7]

Set within her studio, Elia’s Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman (2015) is a case in point, abounding with references to her younger self; to hobbies; to interests; to her working class roots; and to other artists. The title itself references Rembrandt’s self-portrait, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1629-31), made at a time when the sense of self was defined by one’s place in the world, prior to the Romantic notion of subjectivity. By seating herself on a throne of concrete breezeblocks – a ‘poor girl’s throne’ – Elia alludes to her upbringing, as she also does by having a rabbit fur coat slung over its arm. The tower blocks, which have appeared in almost all of Elia’s other paintings for the past two decades, have disappeared here, being replaced by bulldozers and the foundations for luxury apartments. Elia, once a martial artist, is shown putting on red boxing wraps – also interpretable metaphorically as representing the struggling painter as a female warrior, taking on the (art) world. She traces the narrative of a fighting life through the use of smaller images and objects, which allude to both the personal and the cultural: a photo of Elia’s younger self; a figurine of a female fighter; the arrow head around her neck; a rubber bullet; a tube of paint crushed beneath her foot. The complex staging of the painting (the mirror, the frames within frames) remind us of the constructedness of the image and introduces further different time zones. Elia’s studio, on the other hand, represents a constant throughout her career. On the left of the mirror is a smaller picture of the artist (again her younger self) painting, her children in the frame. There is also a dustpan and brush in the image she is painting, a reminder perhaps of the struggle between domesticity and professional practice (‘the pram in the hall’ syndrome). Other images around the mirror include the painter as musician, recalling Angelica Kauffman’s Self-portrait of the Artist hesitating between the Arts of Music and Painting (1791), and Dürer’s Melancholia I (1514), appropriated and placed on the right, paralleling the main image, depicting, as it does, a women surrounded by tools. Elia has infiltrated the mysterious image with symbols that commonly appear in her own paintings – the ibis and the surveillance camera. As well as inserting herself into this classical work, she is alluding to her own temperament as an artist.

Another artist who presents diachronic imagery as a form of autobiographical chronology is the American photographer, Tee Corinne (1943-2006). A Self-portrait Dialogue with Time and Circumstance (1967-92), for example, is a photomontage comprising multiple images of the artist taken over a 25-year period. Since she has not dated any of the individual images, however, nor standardised the self-portrait format, the work plays on the instability of the ‘self’ of the title, revealing, much as Elia does with her painting, the multiple and disparate nature of a self in time, rather than a chronological progression or psychological portrait ‘without lacunae’. In My Grandparents, Parents and I (1936), Frida Kahlo similarly uses this sense of the personal passage of time, referring her own self to a sense of personal, genealogical chronology, through the integration of her own image with that of her family line. Meskimmon claims that, in its assertion of domestic time, this painting subverts ‘a masculinist progressive sense of chronology’.[8] Elia, in contrast, references both this domestic time (with the imagery of her children and the dustpan and brush), but also a wider society and, as discussed, the traditionally masculine comparisons with her predecessors in art history.

Simone de Beauvoir applied the other in her description of a male-dominated culture, arguing that woman is treated subordinately as the other in relation to man. Man represents both the positive and the neutral, as indicated by the use of the term to designate human beings in general, while woman represents only the negative, defined by limiting criteria.[9] She proposed that women can only free themselves by ‘thinking, taking action, working, creating, on the same terms as men’[10]. Through her adoption of both gendered approaches to representing the diachronic self, Elia firmly asserts the woman as the self – albeit incorporating, as well as rejecting, the other.


It is not just in this way that Elia incorporates the other into the self – and, indeed, vice versa – for her signifying motifs recur across the board, in both self-portraits and paintings of others. The recent work, Carmen and Luisa (2016), for example, reprises much of the composition of Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman. Elia terms both ‘history paintings’, since, as discussed, they bring in images and references from the past, creating a diachronic overview of the subject(s). Here, the two women – performance artists, originally from Spain (and other in terms of sexuality, nationality and class) – are surrounded by photographs or their younger selves and families (including their grandparents), significant childhood objects, and pictures of the Spanish Civil War (in which their grandfathers were on opposing sides). Once again, they are sitting on a concrete throne, on a rabbit fur coat, set against the backdrop of a London building site with the ubiquitous surveillance camera peering through the window. Religious references appear in the photo of Carmen at her Holy Communion, and with the picture of the Virgin Mary at her feet, implying, as for Elia, the rejection of this faith.

Another painting with a similar internal frame, comprising old photographs around a mirror is Made In Britain (2011-12), which portrays six young women – Elia’s own daughter and daughters of friends – questioning what it means to be British in the modern day multicultural society. What defines a Brit? What defines someone who is other?


Further paintings in the exhibition employ a repeating lexicon of motifs, including the ibis, a rubber bullet canister (picked up in Ireland at the time of the Troubles and a signifier for the ever present power of the state), a laminate floor (another nod to Elia’s Brechtian bent for highlighting the construct and artifice, using a flooring that is made to look like wood flooring but isn’t, standing as a metaphor for painting that’s supposed to look like the real world but equally is not) and masking tape. Both of the latter are present throughout The Visit series  (2006-2011), where sitters are exposed to the gaze of the viewer, as they lie naked, vulnerable and yet, as is especially suggested in The Visit III (2009), with the sharpened finger nails and background painting of Samson and Delilah, still strong. In Elia’s paintings of her one time muse, the transgender artist Maxime (other in terms of non-binary sexual identity), the symbolism becomes even more overt. In Maxime (2010), for example, the masking tape under the chair marks the foot positions of previous sitters and accumulates in a layering of past presences. Maxime’s contorted and constrained body sits uncomfortably on an upright seat, her feet shoved into pointed shoes, pushing forward, straining beyond the tape, which marks her position – becoming something still other than the other already embodied.


Breaking with the standard thesis, feminist scholar Sami Schalk proposes an approach to the self/other binary, which opens up the possibilities for relations between individuals by including a third term, the other-self, permitting a fluid, contextualised understanding of the self in a spectrum of triangulating relatedness to others at any given moment.[11] The idea of double consciousness, of the existence of both/and within the psychology and identity of an individual – as exemplified in Elia’s paintings, in which the artist sees aspects of herself in her other subjects, and aspects of her other subjects in herself – complicates the stark boundaries of the self/other binary. The argument for a third possibility, namely Schalk’s other-self, is supported further by psychological research in which ‘the self is often viewed as fundamentally interpersonal, composed of a repertoire of relational selves’.[12] The basic self/other binary makes sense in as far as when one sees another person and recognises that that individual is separate physically and mentally, then one understands that the separate person is not the self. In a survey of psychological research on the self, however, David A Kenny and Tessa V West conclude that ‘the relationship between self-perception and perception of others is bidirectional’, so although the basic theoretical division may be clear, the psychological influence is not.[13]

In these situations, the psychological term ‘metaperception’ is significant. Metaperception might be understood as ‘what people think others think of them’ and it ‘plays a key role in the formation of the self-concept… more so than other perceptions’.[14] It is metaperception that makes the self think about how the other perceives it, thus integrating aspects of the other into its constitutive other, creating an other-self, much like the self-aware subjects in Elia’s The Visit series, being gazed upon, but holding that gaze firmly, as both sets of eyes contemplate what they see. As Schalk notes, this definition of metaperception almost explicitly replicates WEB Du Bois’ explanation of double consciousness as ‘the sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others’.[15] Elia, however, is trying to look at herself (and others) through her own eyes – and to make us, the viewers, look at herself and others through her eyes as well. As such, she turns the concept of double consciousness on its head. Yet, at the same time, the motifs and signifiers that she uses are external objects, as seen by others, or external representations of events and memories. So whose eyes is it all really being seen through? Maybe it is always a conjunction of Elia’s eyes, the eyes of those who are looking and have looked at her, and our eyes now, as we look at the paintings?


In Being and Nothingness, Jean-Paul Sartre applied the Husserlian dialectic of intersubjectivity to describe how the world is altered upon the appearance of an other person, of how it then appears oriented towards this other person and no longer towards the self.[16] Put another way, an encounter with the other puts new experiences in our life, which irrevocably alter the self and the constitutive other. Friedrich Nietzsche, in On Truth and Lying in a Non-Moral Sense notes: ‘Truth is a mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, anthropomorphisms, in short a sum of human relations which have been subjected to poetic and rhetorical intensification, translation and decoration […]; truths are illusions of which we have forgotten that they are illusions, metaphors which have become worn by frequent use and have lost all sensuous vigour.’[17] It might be said then, that when Elia’s stack of metaphors and motifs for the self (herself or another self), as near to hackneyed as they become, start to resemble a truth, it is the other that steps in and confounds this illusion, lifting the stage curtain and revealing the tropes.

‘All painting,’ maintains Elia, ‘is a lie. By the very nature of taking three-dimensional space and putting it on to a two-dimensional plane, all painting is a construct. Once you accept that it’s all a lie, it liberates you, you’re free to do what you want. There are artists in history who have been trying to get to the truth. Even cubism was about trying to show the world as we really experience it, rather than from a one-dimensional viewpoint. There is no truth. You’re always asking questions.’ Likewise, there is no stable self, rather just an ever-fluctuating other-self, a myth-making constitutive other, which can be interrogated through the medium of painting, itself a form of encipherment – actively encrypting and decrypting as it tells its tale.








[1] Sami Schalk (2011) ‘Self, other and other-self: going beyond the self/other binary in contemporary consciousness’ in Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology, volume 2, number 1, spring 2011
[2] See the Wikipedia entry on ‘Other’: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Other [accessed 02/10/16]
[3] Marsha Meskimmon (1966) The Art of Reflection. Women Artists’ Self-Portraiture in the Twentieth Century (London: Scarlet Press) pp62-63
[4] ibid, p67
[5] British Museum. Art and Design: Identity. Guide for Teachers. https://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/Art_guide_07Identityb_KS2-4.pdf  [accessed 02/10/16]
[6] Meskimmon (1966), p73
[7] Michael Bamberg (2011) ‘Who am I? Narration and its contribution to self and identity’ in Theory of Psychology, 21 (1) pp3-24, p12
[8] Meskimmon (1966), p74
[9] Carole McCann & Kim, Seung-Kyung (2003) Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives (New York: Routledge) p33
[10] Simone de Beauvoir (1952/1993) The Second Sex (New York: Knopf) p752
[11] Schalk (2011)
[12] David A Kenny & Tessa V West (2008) ‘Self-Perception as Interpersonal Perception’ in Joanne V Wood et al (ed) The Self and Social Relationships (New York: Psychology Press) p120, cited in Schalk (2011)
[13] ibid, p134
[14] ibid, p125
[15] WEB Du Bois (2003) The Souls of Black Folk (New York: Barnes and Noble Classics)
[16] Jean-Paul Sartre (1943/2003) Being and Nothingness: An Essay on Phenomenological Ontology (London: Routledge)
[17] Friedrich Nietzsche (1873/2015) On Truth and Lying in a Non-Moral Sense (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform)


Images:

All © the artist

Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman (2015) 

The Visit II (2009)

Carmen and Luisa (2016)

Made In Britain (2011-12)

Maxime (2010)

The Visit III (2009)



Full catalogue available from Amazon for the price of £15 with further essay by Dr Marie-Anne Mancio and many colour reproductions.