Friday, 4 November 2011

Rebuilding History

Newspaper clipping kindly sent to me by Doug and Jane Eck from 'The Island Packet', Hilton Head Island.

The text below the picture reads, "Alan Frye of The Tradesmen Group uses a small saw Monday morning to remove the mortar between bricks on one of the historic walls surrounding original sections of the Beaufort National Cemetry. The work is part of the 850,000 Dollar project that will include rebuilding damaged wall sections and mortar joint and foundation repairs. the job will take about four months to complete."
Photo credits: Jonathan Dyer

Thursday, 20 October 2011

What is sculpture?

Art Monthly 34, p45
October 2011, no. 350
Henry Lydiat

" Guidelines as to the legal meaning of 'sculpture' were handed down by the High Court Judge in the first trial, which were endorsed by the Court of Appeal, and were therefore subjected to argument and judicial review by the UK Supreme Court. They were approved and are summarised as follows:
- 'sculpture' can be things going beyond what one would normally expect to be art in the sense of the sort of things that one would expect to find in art galleries.
- no judgement is to be made on artistic merit
- not every three-dimensional representation of a concept can be regarded as sculpture
- the essence of a sculpture is that it should have, as part of its purpose, a visual appeal in the sense that it might be enjoyed for that purpose alone, whether or not it might have another purpose as well; the purpose of the creator, who may fail, but that does not matter (no judgements are to be made about artistic merit) because it is the underlying purpose that is important
- for example, a pile of bricks, temporarily on display at Tate Modern for two weeks, is plainly capable of being a sculpture; the identical pile of bricks dumped at the end of a driveway for two weeks of preparatory to a building project is equally plainly not; one asks why there is that difference, and the answer lies in having regard to its intention - one is created by the hand of an artist, for artistic purposes, and the other is created by a builder, for building purposes. "

From the Tate Archives...http://www.tate.org.uk/archivejourneys/historyhtml/people_public.htm

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Wall Text

From Issue 141 Frieze Magazine: September 2011


WEEKEND SPECIAL: The brick as metaphor in South African art and writing

I arrive early for a press briefing and sit outside Berlin’s Martin-Gropius-Bau. Flipping through a magazine, I pause on Vladimir Nabokov’s account of his 1942 lecture tour of South Carolina. ‘The photograph has not been sent here,’ he writes to his wife Vera, ‘so it’s no surprise that the college was expecting a gentlemen with Dostoyevsky’s beard, Stalin’s moustache, Chekhov’s pince-nez and a Tolstoyan blouse.’ I look up and see workmen busy installing a wall-sized canvas print of the Berlin Wall, more or less on the spot where the wall once stood. A wall resembling and remembering a wall: weird, I think to myself, and return to Nabokov.

The press briefing for André Kertész’s retrospective is in French and German; his photographs, however, need no translation. One work in particular intrigues: made in 1933, the black and white image shows a neatly stacked pile of bricks. The arrangement, which predates Carl Andre’s famous exercise in equivalence by three decades, and speaks across time to a landscape study with bricks made in suburban Tangier by Yto Barrada in 2003, which I will see later in the day, fills almost the entire picture plane; the only marker of place is the Eiffel Tower in the corner. The bricks make me think of Ivan Vladislavic. (No, he isn’t Hungarian, nor does he have a Stalin moustache.) ‘The name is Croatian,’ explained the Johannesburg-based novelist and essayist in a 1999 interview. ‘My grandparents on my father’s side were Croatian immigrants.’ Vladislavic is one of contemporary South Africa’s most distinguished literary figures. His 2001 novel, The Restless Supermarket, a story about cosmopolitan entropy and the travails of proofreading, won the Sunday Times Fiction Prize. His most recent novel, Double Negative (2010), has been similarly fêted. The outcome of a collaboration with photographer David Goldblatt, the novel tells the story of Neville Lister, a morose youth whose encounter with a taciturn documentarian, Saul Auerbach, prompts him to become a photographer. Like much of Vladislavic’s writing, Double Negative immerses its reader in the idiosyncratic physical and psychic geography of Johannesburg. Here’s Lister, a late-blooming artist – and participant in Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin’s recent exercise in artistic subterfuge for the Krakow Photobiennial, ‘Alias’ – on his interest in photographing the city’s over-abundant walls: ‘As the walls go on rising, the character of the place grows more and more obscure [...] you think there is life behind one guarded façade or another, a mind behind the blank stare, but you cannot be sure.’

Walls and bricks have preoccupied Vladislavic since the get go. His first book, Missing Persons (1989), includes an amusing story of suburban paranoia, ‘Journal of a Wall’. Written at the fag end of apartheid, the unnamed narrator records seeing bricks being hurled at township buses on television; however, it is the immediate proximity of the brick wall across the road that compels him. ‘I went over just after midnight, in an overcoat, in a balaclava,’ the narrator tells. ‘I brought back with me a brick.’ Confronted by its ‘stony silence’ and ‘impenetrable skin’, he soon returns the pilfered building block.

Despite their standardized rectangular form and obstinate appearance, bricks are adaptable conveniences for Vladislavic. They can ‘inflict metaphor’, to repurpose a description he used in an early story. More prosaically, as he observes
in Portrait with Keys (2006), a collage of essayistic sketches of contemporary Johannesburg, bricks can function as ‘a doorstop, a weapon or a purse’.

The brick’s potential for violence, both actual and symbolic, should not be underestimated. ‘A passer-by had flung a brick through the plate-glass window and snatched some goods from the display,’ offers Vladislavic in Portrait with Keys, of a theft from a shop near his home. ‘The brick was still lying there among the dusty satin drapes, chrome-plated pedestals and handwritten price-tags. It was a wonderful brick, a model brick, with three round holes through it the size of coins, filled with chips of broken glass.’ The passage reads likes a deadpan description of an early work by Kendell Geers, Title Withheld (Brick) (1994–6).

Once you begin to look for them, bricks recur everywhere in South African art and writing. ‘He had been involved in a fight,’ writes photographer Santu Mofokeng in his 2001 monograph. Currently the subject of a touring European survey show, Mofokeng is recalling an incident from the 1980s, involving a Soweto friend, Vusi. ‘He stopped a brick with his head, knocked out cold.’ Goldblatt’s interest in bricks is more ideological than actual: apartheid was physically constructed into being. Unsurprisingly, the octogenarian photographer’s opus is packed with bricks. Sometimes they form a uniform backdrop for his portraits, other times they function as his explicit subject, as in his 1990 photograph of Abraham Thipe’s almost Andre-esque display of used bricks on a Johannesburg pavement. The photo predates by two years the action in Vladislavic’s short story ‘Propaganda by Monuments’. Boniface Khumalo, a tavern owner who has received news from Russian authorities that his request for a ‘surplus’ statue of Lenin has been approved, is walking past a demolition site in Pretoria. An old man is salvaging bricks. ‘Do you sell these things?’ asks Boniface. He is anticipating building a large plinth for Lenin’s head. ‘This rubbish belongs to no-one,’ the old man replies. ‘It is just lying here. You can see it yourself.’ Often, however, we don’t.

Sean O’Toole

is a journalist and writer based in Cape Town, South Africa.

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Stretcher in Thatcham


A brick from the show 'Header Stretcher Soldier Sailor Shiner Rowlock' at Vitrine Gallery (Jan 2011), was incorporated into a newly built brick porch at the Field Family home in Thatcham.

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Monday, 1 August 2011

Thursday, 30 June 2011

Wednesday, 29 June 2011

The smallest Telegraph pole in the UK

Whilst up in Staffordshire gaining my helmsman certificate for the inland waterways we passed the smallest telegraph pole in Britain contained inside a brick arch.

Friday, 10 June 2011

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Richard Deacon's bricks outside IKON Gallery

Richard Deacon's resin bricks inserted into the pavement outside IKON Gallery on Brindley Place in Birmingham.


Thursday, 5 May 2011

Edition for Vitrine Gallery

The edition I produced as part of the exhibition 'Header Stretcher Soldier Sailor Shiner Rowlock' at the Vitrine Gallery in January 2011. You can purchase these from the Vitrine Gallery website, for more information click here.

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Historic postcards from Ieper

During World War I Ieper was reduced to rubble from direct impact of German artillery and its inhabitants had to be evacuated in 1915. After the war the whole town was rebuilt by its' people. All new buildings, but made to look as it did before the war without any sign of damage.
Here are some historic postcards which depict Ieper during the war years, the notes below each postcard are from the reverse side.

These "Tommies" are clearing the road through Contalmaison after its terrible bombardment by our guns.
Ypres - La Rue au Beurre, The Butter Street

Ypres - Les Derniers fugitifs, The last fugitives

The Ruins of Ypres

Ypres - The Saint-James Church

Ypres - The Cattle Market

Captain Bruce Bairnsfarther (1873-1959) Royal Warwickshire Regiment, creater of the character 'Old Bill' and WWI-cartoons. Produced by Andre de Bruin


Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Day 8: In Flanders Fields

It was an early start on Tuesday morning with a tour around the Salient, the first stop was to the site where John Macrae wrote the poem 'In Flanders Fields'.

by John McCrae, May 1915

In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short day ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders Fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch' be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, through poppies grow
In Flanders Fields.

What once was the battle ground.



Langemark, the German cemetery

The Canadian Monument, built in honour of those who endured the first German chlorine gas attacks in April 1915.



Tyne Cot Cemetry: The largest British Commonwealth war cemetery in the world containing 11,956 graces and the Memorial to the Missing, a semicircular wall inscribed with the names of a further 34,000 men whose bodies were never recovered.



Memorial Museum Passchendaele, this had a lot of information about the battles and also a reconstructed trench.

Monday, 28 March 2011

Menin Gate: "He is not missing, he is here"


"I should like to acquire the whole of the ruins of Ypres...a more sacred place for the British race does not exist in the world" - Sir Winston Churchill, January 1919

The Menin Gate, built on the site of the old Menenpoort, which served as the main route for British soldiers heading to the front, is the memorial to the unknown soldier. Engraved with thousands of British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in the Ypres Salient but have no grave. Everyday at 8pm the Last Post is sounded beneath the gate by volunteers from the local fire brigade.

More information here


Ieper

Cemetery by the City walls

Wall plants live on limy soil. In Flanders they only survive on old brick walls built with lime mortar, like the original Ieper Fortress Walls. Before the restorations, the wall vegetation was very abundant here. Only wall pellitory, wall rue and common whitlowgrass survived in large numbers. The other 16 species have become rate. Expansion is still possible because these walls (Eastern side of the fortress) were restored with limy mortar.


Day 7: Turnhout to Ieper

Sunday, 27 March 2011

Day 6: Turnhout

I spent Sunday exploring the countryside of Turnhout with Chris and Senna.

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Day 5: Amsterdam - Antwerp - Mechelen - Turnhout

An 8am train Amsterdam Central to Antwerp, then to the Cathedral town, Mechelen to visit the exhibition opening at De Garage. I was involved in an exhibition in Mechelen last year in the Museum Hof can Busleyden, which is a great brick building.

Friday, 25 March 2011

Day 4: The Hague


On Friday I went to The Hague to see the Museum Mauritshuis which has a huge collection of Dutch art works, including the famous Girl with a Pearl Earring by Vermeer and The Goldfinch by Carel Fabritius.


Brick painting at the Panorama Mesdag Museum.

In the evening I went to the opening of a great new project space in West Amsterdam near Sloterdijk train station, WAAR Projects which was showing 'Sand' by Naheed Raza.

Thursday, 24 March 2011

Day 3: Amsterdam

The Dageraad Complex designed by Michel de Klerk in 1921/23.