Exhibitions
Unreliable Sightings Of… (blue space) in Stereo
Entreentre Presents Works by Nat Chard and Perry Kulper, and Teis Draiby
A few snaps of a current exhibition in Copenhagen during set-up. The gallery is the front room of an architecture practice – Leth and Gori in Vesterbro – Absalonsgade 21B, 1658 Copenhagen V. It is on until April the 10th. It is the first of a series of exhibitions set up by Entreentre who will also publish a series of booklets on the work. Entreentre’s website will go online on April the 10th.
These were taken just as we installed the instruments – I will post some others of the thing completed when I get them.
Interstitial Shadows
Mobility of the Line Exhibition
A few more images from the exhibition at Grand Parade in Brighton, showing some collaborative work with Perry Kulper (that features in our edition of Pamphlet Architecture – Fathoming the Unfathomable). I will post some pictures of the other work in the exhibition when I have time.
Brighton Exhibition in Stereo
Another View of the Brighton Exhibition
Exhibition
There is an exhibition called Mobility of the line that opens on Friday evening (7th of March) and runs until the 9th of April at Grand Parade, Brighton. I will post some more pictures another day, but here is the section with Perry Kulper’s and my work. A couple of drawing instruments, photographs of each in action and a couple of earlier pieces by each of us – a print of Perry’s Fast Twitch plan and a print of Instrument five in action.
iCP Exhibition in 2005
Art in the Streets
From and exhibition a couple of summers ago at MOCA Los Angeles. I have to admit I am not too excited by graffiti. It usually appears so conformist, quite strange for a medium that is depressingly obsessed with authorship. There is a book of photographs by Jean Baudrillard (which I do not own, so the quotation is not exact) where he discusses graffiti artists as people who want to be heard but have nothing to say. I am also afraid I cannot remember the attribution for this piece, a set of exquisitely painted model railway cars (I imagine somewhere between 1:30 to 1:50 scale) that seems to touch on many of the difficulties of graffiti work.