'THE TOURIST' - SPACEX - EXETER - 2011 - Solo Exhibition
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Press Release - 01.03.2011
Spacex is proud to present the first UK solo show by London based artist Tim Ellis. The Tourist will include a series of new paintings and sculptures that respond to each main space within the gallery.
The exhibition was conceived as a journeyman’s view over three gallery spaces. The first room features a figure as a prompt or signifier for the show leading into an installation housing a variety of shelving structures, screens and tables to juxtapose symbolic objects and artefacts.
The final space will contain monuments displayed next to large draped banners. These draw inspiration from graphic tourist posters from the 1930’s, and will act as landscapes for sculptures to sit in. This space will be seen as a construct of the second manifesting itself in a mixture of totemic assemblages.
The exhibition was conceived as a journeyman’s view over three gallery spaces. The first room features a figure as a prompt or signifier for the show leading into an installation housing a variety of shelving structures, screens and tables to juxtapose symbolic objects and artefacts.
The final space will contain monuments displayed next to large draped banners. These draw inspiration from graphic tourist posters from the 1930’s, and will act as landscapes for sculptures to sit in. This space will be seen as a construct of the second manifesting itself in a mixture of totemic assemblages.
Ellis continually explores the idea that every object, whether in isolation or as a collection is dependent on a creator, mediator and audience, and as a consequence inherits their aspirations, values and intentions.
The Tourist seeks to explore the way cultural objects and symbols can be consumed. The title refers to a way of positioning the viewer when navigating the work. This position being one of a tourist, exploring a wide variety of opposing objects and ideas in such a way that removes their original intention or what they commonly represent. This shift in value offers the opportunity to question their purpose and meaning within a new or altered context.
With perceptions of cultural sentiment and social significance addressed, the viewer will be invited to engage with notions of symbolism, artefact and artifice.
The Tourist seeks to explore the way cultural objects and symbols can be consumed. The title refers to a way of positioning the viewer when navigating the work. This position being one of a tourist, exploring a wide variety of opposing objects and ideas in such a way that removes their original intention or what they commonly represent. This shift in value offers the opportunity to question their purpose and meaning within a new or altered context.
With perceptions of cultural sentiment and social significance addressed, the viewer will be invited to engage with notions of symbolism, artefact and artifice.
Introductory Text 01.11.10
This spring Spacex will present The Tourist, the first UK solo exhibition by London based artist Tim Ellis. A new body of work will be produced for the exhibition, including painting and sculptural work.
Working primarily with found materials, Ellis reconfigures the original intention of various objects giving them new value. This shift in value offers the opportunity to question their purpose, authorship and meaning within a new or altered context. Weaving together historical fact and invention, the viewer is invited to engage with notions of symbolism, artifact and artifice.
Examining the process where by art and craft objects from one culture come into close contact with that of another, the work centres around the idea of each being wanting to belong to something greater than their original intention.
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Exhibited Works
Gallery 1 - Installation View
From Left: 'The Tourist' 2011, 'United in Different Guises' LVI 2010
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Exhibited Works
Gallery 2 - Installation View
From Left: 'Through Authority We Serve' 2011, 'Growing Old Together 2011, Founding Fathers 2011.
From Left 'Growing Old Together' 2011, 'Towards a Common Understanding' 2011.
From Left: Founding Fathers 2011, 'For Their Eyes' 2011.
From Left: 'Through Form Becomes Meaning' 2011, Founding Fathers 2011.
Exhibited Works
Gallery 3 - Installation View
From Left: 'All Seeing 2011, 'Backdrop I/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'Willing Servant' 2011, 'Lectern' 2011.
From Left: 'Lectern' 2011, 'Willing Servant' 2011, 'Backdrop II/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011.
From Left: 'All Seeing 2011, 'Backdrop I/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'The Arrival' 2011, 'Willing Servant' 2011, 'Lectern' 2011, 'Backdrop II/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'The Fearful' 2011.
From Left: 'Backdrop II/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'The Fearful' 2011, 'Interloper' 2011, 'The Subordinate' 2011, 'Wellwisher' 2011.
From Left: 'Wellwisher' 2011, 'Backdrop III/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'The Subordinate' 2011.
From Left: 'Interloper' 2011, 'The Fearful' 2011, 'The Subordinate' 2011, 'Wellwisher' 2011, 'Backdrop III/To Live Long and Maybe One Day Forever' 2011, 'The Arrival' 2011
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List of Works
Gallery 1
1.The Tourist
Wood, acrylic, felt, brass and metal fixings
160cm x 31cm x 31cm
2011
2.United in different Guises LVI
Acrylic, varnish, cotton and Bulldog clips
220cm x 220cm
2010
Gallery 2
1.For Their Eyes
Cane, wood, metal fixings
186cm x 73cm x 16cm
2011
2. Founding Fathers
Wood, cane, plastic, brass, ceramic, bronze, metal fixings and grass
180cm x 80cm x 30cm
2011
3. Through We Authority serve
Wood, metal fixings, plastic, card and linen
55cm x 30cm x 81cm
2011
4.Through Form Becomes Meaning
Plastic, brass, glass, cardboard, iron nail, acrylic and wood stain
28cm x 16cm
5. Towards a Common Understanding
Copper, iron nails, acrylic and wood stain
110cm x 98cm
2011
6. Growing Old together
Wood, felt, acrylic, plaster, brass and metal fixings
103cm x 38cm x 38cm
2011
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Articles
Gallery 3
1.Backdrop I / To Live Long and maybe one day forever
Acrylic, varnish, cotton and Bulldog clips
220cm x 220cm
2.Lectern
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
177cm x 39cm x 39cm
2011
3. Willing Servant
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
90cm x 34cm x 34cm
2011
4. Backdrop II /To Live Long and maybe one day forever
Acrylic, varnish, cotton and Bulldog clips
220cm x 220cm
5. Interloper
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
125cm x 46cm x 46cm
6. The Fearful
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
91cm x 27cm x 27cm
2011
7. The Subordinate
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
113cm x 27cm x 27cm
2011
8. Well-wisher
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
167cm x 58cm x 58cm
2011
9. Backdrop III /To Live Long and maybe one day forever
Acrylic, varnish, cotton and Bulldog clips
220cm x 220cm
10. The Arrival
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
170cm x 39cm x 39cm
2011
11. All Seeing
Acrylic, ply wood, metal fixings plastic and found objects
160cm x 33cm x 33cm
2011
Articles
Editor’s Pick – Top International Shows: March 14 – March 21, 2011
Carla Busuttil
18 March – 28 April 2011
Josh Lilley Gallery
London, UK
www.joshlilleygallery.com
Drawing on her own family histories – of both an escape from genocide, and an emigration to a society founded upon racial prejudice and exclusion, Carla Busuttil presents 20 new paintings in Rug & Gut & Gum which explore her investigation into abuses of power and violence, focusing on the individuals or groups of people responsible for such acts. The knowledge and experience of her Armenian relatives fleeing Turkey at the beginning of the 20th century, and her own birth and childhood in South Africa during the height of apartheid – have both enlightened and darkened her perceptions of humanity and its struggle for control. Through the rendering of these ambiguous characters – executed in her expressionistic brush-strokes, build up of paint, and boldness of colour – Busuttil seeks to place them and their actions up for account.
French Window: Looking at Contemporary Art through the Marcel Duchamp Prize
18 March – 3 July 2011
Mori Art Museum
Tokyo, Japan
www.mori.art.museum
For ten years, an elite association of contemporary art collectors known as ADIAF has hosted what has become one of France’s most prestigious art awards, the Marcel Duchamp Prize. To celebrate the award’s first decade, this exhibition presents the work of 28 artists, including all of the winners of the Grand Prix, selected finalists and also Duchamp himself. Among the winners of the prize, whose works are in the exhibition, are Thomas Hirschhorn, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Cyprien Gaillard. Saâdane Afif and Tatiana Trouvé.
Tim Ellis: The Tourist
12 March – 30 April 2011
Spacex
Exeter, UK
www.spacex.co.uk
‘The Tourist’ is the first UK solo show by London-based artist Tim Ellis. The exhibition includes a series of new paintings and sculptures that respond to each main space within the gallery. The exhibition seeks to explore the way cultural objects and symbols can be consumed, the title encouraging the viewer to reflect on his or her navigation of the works. Ellis’s work raises questions about the idea that every object, whether in isolation or as a collection, is dependent on a creator, mediator and audience, and as a consequence inherits their aspirations, values and intentions.
Sterling Ruby: Paintings
24 February–9 April 2011
Xavier Hufkens
Brussels, Belgium
www.xavierhufkens.com
Sterling Ruby’s interdisciplinary practice incorporates sculptures, collages, ceramics, paintings and videos, which act as markers and metaphors for the burdens that plague contemporary existence. Of the disparate forms in Ruby’s practice, the paintings are the most formally abstract. His large color-field canvases, made entirely with spray paint, contain hallucinogenic and elusive visions, hinting at images, which never quite come into focus. Ruby’s paintings translate acts of defacing and demarcation into a kind of painterly transcendence. The paintings included in this exhibition have a darker palette; Ruby’s garish colors are covered with layers of black paint, as if the artist were now engaged in defacing his own works. The shroud-like darkness of these canvases and the white paint drips in the foreground suggest crying or mourning. They seem to push the artist’s own level of masking and obfuscation into an outward and emotional manifestation of a very contemporary sadness.
Andro Wekua
12 March – 5 June 2011
Kunsthalle Fridericianum
Kassel, Germany
www.fridericianum-kassel.de
In his installations, sculptures, collages, paintings and films, Andro Wekua links collective and personal memories to create haunting, disturbing representations. He combines motifs he finds in magazines or photo albums with paint to create complex, kaleidoscope-like collages. This is Andro Wekua’s largest exhibition to date, showing many new sculptures including a group that conjures up the heavily destroyed and abandoned buildings of Sochumi, the city in Georgia where he was born. He also presents a new film in which he blends science fiction and horror elements.
19 Shows about Painting
12 March – 31 May 2011
Platform China Contemporary Art Institute
Beijing, China
www.platformchina.org
If you have any interest in contemporary Chinese painting this show is a must-see. Platform China Contemporary Art Institute are launching an annual exhibition with 19 solo shows of painters in the same venue. Every artist has been given their own space in which to display their work, and each of the 19 shows has its own title, theme as well as the artist’s curatorial and personal individual statement. The artists in the exhibition are: Bi Jianye, Huang Liang, Jia Aili, Jin Shan, Liao Guohe, Li Qing, Liu Weijian, Lin Yen Wei, Ma Ke, Qin QI, Qi Wenzhang, Sun Xun, Sun Wen, Song Yuanyuan, Wu Guangyu, Xiao Bo, Xiao Jiang, Xu Ruotao, and Zhou Yilun.
Lise Sarfati
17 March – 30 April 2011
Magnum Gallery
Paris
www.magnumgallery.fr
The New Life is a major series of photographs by Lise Sarfati which draws a portrait of the young American people she encountered on a long journey through the United States, taking in the cities of Berkeley, Austin, Portland, Oakland, Berkeley, New Orleans and Los Angeles. Everyday places – a bedroom, a house or a garden – become the stage for a suspended time where dreams can be formed.
Aernout Mik: Communitas
1 March – 8 May 2011
Jeu de Paume
Paris, France
www.jeudepaume.org
This retrospective exhibition conceived in close collaboration with Aernout Mik brings together a selection of his works from the last ten years, with an emphasis on the most recent, including his new video installation, Shifting Sitting, produced specially for the occasion. Eight installations are presented in a setting designed specially by the artist, which treats these architectural constructions as an integral part of the work. “My pieces are about political or social events, but they are not direct images of those events. They act a bit like flashes which you can recognise but not precisely locate.”
Ajit Chauhan
11 March – 2 April 2011
Jack Hanley Gallery
New York, US
www.jackhanley.com
Through abstract construction, repetition and (flattened) movement Ajit Chauhan’s erased LP’s have materialized into something like “a plaid, hypnotized into a rhythm.” In previous series, the sanded flat works deconstructed the figure to experiment with a mass produced anonymity. Hair, eyes and limbs, the figurative was rendered abstract. This new body of work, however, imposes new forms onto the static LP’s through erasure. The title From the Pencil Area is taken from the writer Robert Walser, who wrote in a condensed form called “micrograms” or “the pencil method.” He wrote poems and prose in this diminutive hand, the letters measuring a millimeter in height. Like Walser’s tendency to favor the micro over the macro, Chauhan has similarly moved on to a higher form of abstraction.
The Royal Family
12 March – 2 May 2011
Hayward Gallery
London, UK
www.southbankcentre.co.uk
The curators at the Hayward Gallery have decided to devote their Project space to an exhibition of contemporary artists’ representations of the House of Windsor ahead of the royal wedding in April 2011. The show presents works in a range of media that examine the individual family members, as well as the signs and signifiers, of the celebrated and peculiar institution of the British royal family. Artists featured include Adam Dant, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Alan Kane and Tony Oursler, among others.
18 March – 28 April 2011
Josh Lilley Gallery
London, UK
www.joshlilleygallery.com
Drawing on her own family histories – of both an escape from genocide, and an emigration to a society founded upon racial prejudice and exclusion, Carla Busuttil presents 20 new paintings in Rug & Gut & Gum which explore her investigation into abuses of power and violence, focusing on the individuals or groups of people responsible for such acts. The knowledge and experience of her Armenian relatives fleeing Turkey at the beginning of the 20th century, and her own birth and childhood in South Africa during the height of apartheid – have both enlightened and darkened her perceptions of humanity and its struggle for control. Through the rendering of these ambiguous characters – executed in her expressionistic brush-strokes, build up of paint, and boldness of colour – Busuttil seeks to place them and their actions up for account.
French Window: Looking at Contemporary Art through the Marcel Duchamp Prize
18 March – 3 July 2011
Mori Art Museum
Tokyo, Japan
www.mori.art.museum
For ten years, an elite association of contemporary art collectors known as ADIAF has hosted what has become one of France’s most prestigious art awards, the Marcel Duchamp Prize. To celebrate the award’s first decade, this exhibition presents the work of 28 artists, including all of the winners of the Grand Prix, selected finalists and also Duchamp himself. Among the winners of the prize, whose works are in the exhibition, are Thomas Hirschhorn, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Cyprien Gaillard. Saâdane Afif and Tatiana Trouvé.
Tim Ellis: The Tourist
12 March – 30 April 2011
Spacex
Exeter, UK
www.spacex.co.uk
‘The Tourist’ is the first UK solo show by London-based artist Tim Ellis. The exhibition includes a series of new paintings and sculptures that respond to each main space within the gallery. The exhibition seeks to explore the way cultural objects and symbols can be consumed, the title encouraging the viewer to reflect on his or her navigation of the works. Ellis’s work raises questions about the idea that every object, whether in isolation or as a collection, is dependent on a creator, mediator and audience, and as a consequence inherits their aspirations, values and intentions.
Sterling Ruby: Paintings
24 February–9 April 2011
Xavier Hufkens
Brussels, Belgium
www.xavierhufkens.com
Sterling Ruby’s interdisciplinary practice incorporates sculptures, collages, ceramics, paintings and videos, which act as markers and metaphors for the burdens that plague contemporary existence. Of the disparate forms in Ruby’s practice, the paintings are the most formally abstract. His large color-field canvases, made entirely with spray paint, contain hallucinogenic and elusive visions, hinting at images, which never quite come into focus. Ruby’s paintings translate acts of defacing and demarcation into a kind of painterly transcendence. The paintings included in this exhibition have a darker palette; Ruby’s garish colors are covered with layers of black paint, as if the artist were now engaged in defacing his own works. The shroud-like darkness of these canvases and the white paint drips in the foreground suggest crying or mourning. They seem to push the artist’s own level of masking and obfuscation into an outward and emotional manifestation of a very contemporary sadness.
Andro Wekua
12 March – 5 June 2011
Kunsthalle Fridericianum
Kassel, Germany
www.fridericianum-kassel.de
In his installations, sculptures, collages, paintings and films, Andro Wekua links collective and personal memories to create haunting, disturbing representations. He combines motifs he finds in magazines or photo albums with paint to create complex, kaleidoscope-like collages. This is Andro Wekua’s largest exhibition to date, showing many new sculptures including a group that conjures up the heavily destroyed and abandoned buildings of Sochumi, the city in Georgia where he was born. He also presents a new film in which he blends science fiction and horror elements.
19 Shows about Painting
12 March – 31 May 2011
Platform China Contemporary Art Institute
Beijing, China
www.platformchina.org
If you have any interest in contemporary Chinese painting this show is a must-see. Platform China Contemporary Art Institute are launching an annual exhibition with 19 solo shows of painters in the same venue. Every artist has been given their own space in which to display their work, and each of the 19 shows has its own title, theme as well as the artist’s curatorial and personal individual statement. The artists in the exhibition are: Bi Jianye, Huang Liang, Jia Aili, Jin Shan, Liao Guohe, Li Qing, Liu Weijian, Lin Yen Wei, Ma Ke, Qin QI, Qi Wenzhang, Sun Xun, Sun Wen, Song Yuanyuan, Wu Guangyu, Xiao Bo, Xiao Jiang, Xu Ruotao, and Zhou Yilun.
Lise Sarfati
17 March – 30 April 2011
Magnum Gallery
Paris
www.magnumgallery.fr
The New Life is a major series of photographs by Lise Sarfati which draws a portrait of the young American people she encountered on a long journey through the United States, taking in the cities of Berkeley, Austin, Portland, Oakland, Berkeley, New Orleans and Los Angeles. Everyday places – a bedroom, a house or a garden – become the stage for a suspended time where dreams can be formed.
Aernout Mik: Communitas
1 March – 8 May 2011
Jeu de Paume
Paris, France
www.jeudepaume.org
This retrospective exhibition conceived in close collaboration with Aernout Mik brings together a selection of his works from the last ten years, with an emphasis on the most recent, including his new video installation, Shifting Sitting, produced specially for the occasion. Eight installations are presented in a setting designed specially by the artist, which treats these architectural constructions as an integral part of the work. “My pieces are about political or social events, but they are not direct images of those events. They act a bit like flashes which you can recognise but not precisely locate.”
Ajit Chauhan
11 March – 2 April 2011
Jack Hanley Gallery
New York, US
www.jackhanley.com
Through abstract construction, repetition and (flattened) movement Ajit Chauhan’s erased LP’s have materialized into something like “a plaid, hypnotized into a rhythm.” In previous series, the sanded flat works deconstructed the figure to experiment with a mass produced anonymity. Hair, eyes and limbs, the figurative was rendered abstract. This new body of work, however, imposes new forms onto the static LP’s through erasure. The title From the Pencil Area is taken from the writer Robert Walser, who wrote in a condensed form called “micrograms” or “the pencil method.” He wrote poems and prose in this diminutive hand, the letters measuring a millimeter in height. Like Walser’s tendency to favor the micro over the macro, Chauhan has similarly moved on to a higher form of abstraction.
The Royal Family
12 March – 2 May 2011
Hayward Gallery
London, UK
www.southbankcentre.co.uk
The curators at the Hayward Gallery have decided to devote their Project space to an exhibition of contemporary artists’ representations of the House of Windsor ahead of the royal wedding in April 2011. The show presents works in a range of media that examine the individual family members, as well as the signs and signifiers, of the celebrated and peculiar institution of the British royal family. Artists featured include Adam Dant, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Alan Kane and Tony Oursler, among others.