Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 July 2025

'We Grown-Ups Can Also Be Afraid', At Attenborough Arts Centre, Leicester

 


(L.): Francisca Aninat, 'Interior/Exterior Field', Canvas, Cardboard, Newspaper & Thread, 2007
(R.): Mona Hartoum, 'Hot Spot', Stainless Steel & Neon, 2006
(All Images: 'We Grown-Ups Can Also Be Afraid', Attenborough Arts Centre, Leicester, July 2025)


I managed to catch up with my friend Andrew Smith, a few days ago, and we took the time to visit the 'We Grown-Ups Can also Be Afraid' exhibition at Leicester's Attenborough Arts Centre. It proved well worth the effort. Although modest in scale, the show features a well curated selection of stimulating contemporary work from the private collection of David and IndrĂ© Roberts. I won't claim any prior knowledge of them, or of the Roberts Institute of Art, but a modicum of research suggests the latter is a non-profit organisation with considerable outreach and heft. The Attenborough exhibition itself aims to showcase work that engages with a range of the crises and insecurities that haunt our world, without descending to the level of mere sloganeering or shallow didacticism - something which sometimes feels like a limiting factor in so much of the current work littering contemporary galleries across the globe. 

Don't get me wrong, I have no objection to the arts being engaged with socio-political issues. Indeed, I'd even argue that it is a duty of any creative endeavour to acknowledge and critique the times in which it emerges, if it is to claim any relevance beyond being 'mere' decor/escapism. Ultimately though, I suppose I do have a basic requirement for a bit of 'Art' to remain in there too. If I want simplistic solutions, ideologically-driven polemic, or direct calls to action, I'll read a book, attend a protest rally (or some other variety of intervention), watch a documentary, sign a petition, or even sully myself with social media. The aesthetic of the protest placard or campaigning graffiti feels far more vivid on the street than in the art gallery. 


Mona Hartoum, 'Hot Spot' (Detail) With Gallery View


Nina Beier & Marie Lund, 'We Grown-Ups Can Also Be Afraid', Video, 2007


See Above


There, a slower burn or more reflective approach may often have a greater effect, I would argue. Without engaging with any debates over privately accumulated collections, or the nature of the art object as status symbol/luxury indulgence, I prefer to believe that there is still an, admittedly modest, arena in which made/visual artefacts can engage us through aesthetic stimulation - first, philosophic reflection - second, and perhaps morally - third. 

Direct action, the taking of sides, the pursuit of conflicts (be they ideological or military) - these activities all tend to work within traditional, entrenched thought patterns. One side pretends to 'win' while the other stores up grievance. We pick a side and embrace the associated echo chamber of opinion, or else - turn off the news and feel grateful that stuff doesn't (usually) happen here. We go round and round the mulberry bush as cities are bombed, populations are displaced, children starve, chemical plants explode and eco-systems go up in flames. (Your turn today - our turn tomorrow). Alternatively, might it be that through observation, calm reflection, engagement with the absurdity/tragic poetry of catastrophe, or even just through creative endeavour as a gesture of positivity in itself, that more flexible or adaptive solutions might one day emerge? Clearly, no single artwork could ever have prevented Auschwitz, Hiroshima, Chernobyl, Gaza, etc. but could it perhaps eventually stimulate enough critical thinking to persuade us it really wasn't a great idea last time - and still won't be the next time some idiots try it? If I'm simply deluding myself here, at least, in a show like this, I get to distract myself or virtue-signal with something a little more stimulating than a lot of what gets dished-up these days.



Francesca Aninat, 'Interior/Exterior Field' (Detail)


Fiona Banner, 'Mirror Fin, Jaguar', Polished Aircraft Tail Fin, 2006



Anyway, enough with the ill-thought-out philosophising. I had originally planned to discuss, in some depth, the individual pieces from the exhibition that impressed me most. But the reality is that nearly everything affected me to some degree or another. Besides that, the musings above have already taken up both time and space. Here's a rather more superficial prĂ©cis, instead: 
 


Phyllida Barlow, 'Untitled: Disaster 5', Mixed Sculptural Media & Castors, 2010


Mona Hartoum's, 'Hot Spot' presides over the entire gallery, bathing everything else in its infernal glow and implied heat. It functions as one of those objects that combine elegant simplicity with lasting resonance. Whilst initially intended as a geo-political commentary, it now feels equally well adapted as a symbol of the environmental conflagration now enfolding us us all. It almost feels like it's accumulating disasters as it sits there and gently buzzes to itself.  Nearby, Francisca Aninat allows the accumulated detritus of her cultural origins to accrete in a new corner/location, even as it may have previously felt washed-away through displacement or migration on a similarly global scale. 

Nina Beier and Marie Lund lend the show its title with their video that combines a visual meditation on the mundane environs of a Danish primary school, and a soundtrack in which unseen children rehearse a song listing the potential catastrophic fears waiting to haunt their adult lives. There's something darkly enjoyable about the way the class degenerates into infantile chaos and petty squabbling, even as their teacher struggles to focus them on the nightmares ahead. Meanwhile, Jacco Olivier's video, 'Saeftinghe' approaches things in a different but equally intriguing manner by digitally manipulating his crudely-painted evocations of disaster, conflict and ultimate submersion, as they are visited upon a tract of Dutch landscape. In passing, it impresses me that both videos manage to pack a considerable punch whilst being pretty short in duration by normal art-video standards.



Jacco Olivier, 'Saeftinghe', Video, 2006


See Above



Fiona Banner provokes literal reflection by mirror-polishing the tail fin of a war plane ('Mirror Fin, Jaguar'), questioning the double-think that allows us to find such sleek beauty in the contours of a sophisticated killing machine. It's another of those simultaneously elegant and profound statements that seems to encapsulate something of humanity's gleeful  death-drive. Phyllida Barlow doesn't summon quite the same seductive beauty for her semi-abstract blob of mangled detritus, 'Untitled: Disaster 5', but it appeals to me, nonetheless. In execution, it might be little more than the kind of 'experimental' foamed-together crap pile one might once have found littering the studio floors of numerous art colleges, were it not for the simple, delightful expedient of attaching castors to its underside. A small portion of portable disaster - suddenly, that almost feels like the kind of thing Duchamp himself might have dreamt-up.



Doris Salcedo, 'Atrabiliaros', Shoes, Cow Bladder & Surgical Thread, 1996

 

More solemn are the shoes of the Latin American disappeared that Doris Salcedo obscures behind stitched viceral membranes, in her small 'Atrabiliaros' instillation. The context is different, but I find it impossible not to see echoes of the Nazi's 'final solution' here too, and ultimately, perhaps it all just boils down to a repudiation of humanity and the futile deletion of individuals in the end. Even more minimal and fleeting in their visual effects are Ayan Farah's stretched blanket pieces. Although resembling highly distilled abstract paintings, they are actually  composed of chemical stains or collected dust, seemingly encapsulating as much time as they do materiality. By applying the residual traces of some implied cataclysm or unwanted transformation, to what should be the fabric of domestic comfort, Farah implies the ultimate fragility of whatever stable life we might attempt to construct. I'm reminded to some extent of the domestic linen that often litters the bombed-out apartments of Gaza, Syria, Kiev, wherever... but also of the grubby bedding of Leicester's own rough sleepers, or the lines of washing in the steel town of Consett, that I once observed from a train window, collecting choking brown dust, even as it dried.


Ayan Farah, Blanket Pieces, 2011


Ayan Farah, 'Nuuk', Sun-Bleached Copper & Dye on Stretched Blanket, 2011


Ayan Farah, 'Eldfell', Volcanic Ash & Dye on Stretched Blanket, 2011


In passing, I'll just mention that all the images here were collected with my smashing new mirrorless camera (its a Canon, for those that care). Such toys don't exactly come cheap and I suppose it might seem like a profligate indulgence, were it not for the fact that I've always regarded a 'grown-up' camera as one of life's essentials. The old DSLR responsible for nearly every image on this blog to date, has effectively reached the end of its working life (bits are literally dropping off), and goes into retirement after perhaps a million depressions of its shutter. Here's hoping this new one lasts as well in the coming years. The fact that the dense text below is legible, from what was boiled-down to a pretty small JPEG file, suggests there's nothing too shabby about it so far. I just need to decipher all those menus now...




'We Grown-Ups Can Also Be Afraid' continues until 19 October at: Attenborough Arts Centre, University of Leicester, Lancaster Road, Leicester, LE1 7HA



Written without A.I. [For better or worse]



Friday, 28 October 2022

'This S(c)eptic Isle': Notional Pride 18

 


All Images: West Leicester, June 2022


[Composite Video Transcript:]


"This whole affair is inexcusable... take a look at the rise and rapid fall of Zit Slurs who will be the shortest Prime Minister in British history... that's pretty mouldy isn't it?... it is just... it's almost the nicest thing you could say about her... I don't think I mean what she did... the shortest serving Prime Minister of a thing... that will be the shortest serving Prime Minister in UK history and she was dog shit... shit... this is an absolute disgrace... it would have been a huge disappointment if it hadn't been such a terrible idea in the first place... Zit Slurs being Prime Minister was like a 20-year old supply teacher in a rough comprehensive shitting themselves in the middle of a GCSE Geography lesson and then attempting to continue with the class... I'm livid... and you know this... did you see how she's unable to do the job?... she just said so... a bland talentless ferret with a lopsided grin and glassy eyed look of a person in Paris... asking for... directions to Nottingham... on the pavement... justification... 'get this done... and that job... which is much the same...' political instincts... the state of modern conservatism... a Prime Minister who was utterly delusional... breathtakingly arrogant... thick as mince and completely lacking the cognitive power to say something... anything... anything at all of any value whatsoever... ever... 'I'm saying I'm on my way to get the job done... the web designing and things like that...' and the party membership thought she was a good choice to run the country... the only real treatment was limbo... 'I dance to that...' going under the very low bar that Bjorn Soonish set for her just weeks ago... 'I've not been able to get the job done... this is what went wrong... and I've been trying... this is us...' you can panic and resign... gone... 'I am gone...' she was the inevitable bottom of the Brexit barrel... the political equivalent of a skid mark... a ghost poop that felt uncomfortable... but it's gone dog shit from start to finish... but I hope all those people that put Zit Slurs in Number 10... how many is it?... I hope it was worth it... if it was worth it for the ministerial red box... I hope it was worth it to sit around the cabinet table... because the damage they have done is extraordinary... how do the sensitised answer this chaos?... 'how are you Sweetheart?...' she can't deliver her manifesto she says... amazing... government not moving at all... how accustomed we British are to the self-serving lack of talent... our politics... our politics has been out of control because no one admits the truth... 'Uplands!... Uplands!...' 'I'm looking to get away from any details... to crash the economy...' no control except that of the asylum... as soon as they realise the reality... tell us... when was the last time the country was running well politically?... an actual country with human beings... with actual real humans... politically aligned with me... with confidence... with a model... and an ounce of intel... just look about seriously... I've had enough... I've had enough of people putting their dick in the right box... not because it's in the national interest... because it's in their own personal interests to achieve ministerial position... 'because over the summer we had an accident...' lies and excuses from the forest... and then... and then fucked off... and now... this time... this time next week I could too... again more turbulence... more like them... more infighting... dog shit leadership... so whistle... but don't worry... because there is nothing as ex as an ex-MP... and I know I speak for hundreds... yet to declare... right now... I could be sick..."




















Saturday, 30 October 2021

Time Smears



All Images: October 2021


[Video Transcript]

"Illusion mean by the word time and I'm surprised you don't have a simple answer for that there is such a thing as time and it's also something that has it a tradition in philosophy going back about a century but say that one cent get a ridiculous come get a ridiculous idea how can you say time doesn't exist when we have such a profound experience of the first the wall and second walk we're talking about it constantly we couldn't get I can't through the sentence without referring to time I was going to say we couldn't get through the day without discussing time so obviously when a physicist questions the existence of time they are trying to say something specialised something technical in English another word for time wild fourth dimension in nature dimension this is one dimension this is one dimension and time is the fourth dimension/ get the TV bias pasta with Virgin Media TV 360 from Sky match the BT Sport and sky Cinema virgin media.com the ripple different universe compared to work with a bin.




"The earliest time measurements were observations of cycles of the Natural World using patterns of changes from day to night and season 2 season 2 build calendars timekeeping of course time exists it constantly unfolds all around us and it's hard to imagine the universe without it started getting complicated thanks to Einstein fertility told us that time pases for everyone but doesn't always pass at the same rate for people in different situations like those travelling close to the speed of light or a supermassive black hole the amount of time by combining it with space to define space-time which can bend but behaves inconsistent predictable ways to confirm the time is woven into the very Fabric of the Universe/ if that's the case could be part of your cash it records and cleaning of every emotion and every evant is sold in a meal tonight cos McLean of information connecting everything and everyone in the entire universe start to the concept of mental time travel also called a seizure imagination can allow us to predict or even manifest the concept of mental time travel in a very first course coming soon.



"Only the present moment exists so past Evans to not exist anyone know where in the universe singles for future events will be time travel and when we think about it that's something I came up with this morning sort of time travel machine back to the past things to on memories and travel to the Future thanks to our imagination of course it will be the physical pas or the physical feature but it was still be a glucides what is Sophia but what is could allow us to travel in time by just tapping on to this non-physical field of information that is time connection went to make a video your teacher on the power is a potential power of imagination but let's go back to the flow of time as an illusion of consciousness As Time exists all around this is the universe that we cannot perceive it directly many physicist support as it matches with other series like special relativity or the brain cosmology of the ATV model which other two theories related to the theory our physical world a theory of presentism would be more appropriate than the source of everything at the quantum level in my opinion/ Is sponsored by audible the special theory of relativity tells us that one person's past maybe another future when time is relative and paradoxes Streatham today deeper into Einstein's theory to find the the immutable ordering of cause and effect emerges when we discover the cause of geography of space-time talking about the weirdest of space-time in the vicinity of black holes event Horizon and time switch roles that truly understands that does a statement we do think a little bit more about how the flow of time is described in relativity.





"I'm joking every watching a movie arrival I started thinking about time linear time which is what we generally experience different concepts of time so I decided to talk to an expert on the topic/ the officer Catherine here we recognised time as unfolding backwards water not a universe where it collects together in physics this is described by the second law of thermodynamics which says that systems will pain disorder or entropy over time move from order to disorder and it is that property of the Universe that defined the direction of x error is such a fundamental property it should be in our most fundamental equations describing the universe/ according to the ancient Greeks clothes that you cannot step twice in the same visa as the water is not the same the second time around possible by stepping into temporal parts of it and there's so so many series of there on time but today I just wanted to focus on the more philosophical aspects of time even video sometime trouble which I would love to make please let me know by lighting this video or even commenting down below you can also subscribe to my channel to support a very grateful if you could do that now will see you very soon with a video thank you so much I love you."






Friday, 25 October 2019

Mark Bradford, 'Cerberus' At Hauser & Wirth, London



Mark Bradford, 'Gatekeeper' Mixed Media on Canvas, 2019


I found myself  in London again, the other day - with my good friend, Susie, for a bit more strategic gallery-going.  This time, the exhibition in question was Mark Bradford's 'Cerberus', currently on display in Hauser & Wirth's impressive Saville Row spaces [1.].  The visit proved well worth the train ticket, and - as with the Oscar Murillo show I viewed a few weeks back, 'Cerberus' both impressed and inspired.  Indeed, it provided a further reminder (were it needed) that abstract painting, albeit in distinctly hybridised forms, is not only still alive - but positively thriving.


Mark Bradford, 'Cerberus', Mixed Media on Canvas, 2018
(And Details Below)






I've been looking at Bradford's work for a while now - having encountered one of his large, heavily distressed canvases at Tate Modern, a few years ago.  On that occasion, I was instantly drawn to his intensive multi-media approach, involving sanded, carved and tattered layers of collaged material, references to a kind of notional urban landscape - implied maps and found text fragments.  The piece I saw that day, and the others I've seen on various screens since, spoke to certain works I had recently produced myself (not least my 'Maps') -  and have continued to influence others I have produced more recently.  I'm happy to acknowledge such correspondences, but can't claim to be operating with anything even faintly resembling the confidence, conviction monumentality (or, indeed - success) evident in Bradford's work,



Mark Bradford, 'Sapphire Blue', Mixed Media on Canvas, 2018
(And Details Below)






And monumentality is definitely the impression one gains on first entering the larger of two galleries at H&W.   The expansive space is dominated by two huge pictures, and another, truly immense, one.  The largest (which also lends the exhibition its title [2.]) encompasses a vast panorama - emphasising that these works might most usefully be regarded as pieces of terrain.  It's a sensation only magnified during the extended seconds it takes to pace its length at close quarters.  One could really 'get one's steps in' with this work.

And, as with much of Bradford's previous work there's often the suggestion of looking down upon an urban sprawl, as if from some 'eye in the sky', whilst being simultaneously being pressed up against the ragged, textures and urban grit of its ghettoised underbelly.  Predictably enough, I'm drawn to that vivid sense of an artist drawing directly from the streets, for visual stimulus, conceptual/emotional inspiration, and actual raw materials.  And the reality is that Bradford is hardly a painter at all, in the purely technical sense.  Some fluid, coloured media may be involved, but his works mostly coalesce from the accumulation of physical 'stuff' (much of it sourced in the field), and the varying degrees of violence he can bring to bear upon it.  


Mark Bradford, 'A Five Thousand Year Laugh',  Mixed Media on Canvas, 2019


And, it transpires, he knows plenty of what he speaks.  Bradford's studio, and the streets to which he most often returns, are located in South Central Los Angeles - a stereotypically forbidding zone of disenfranchised minorities, social deprivation and infamous race riots.  As a gay black man, raised during the Civil Rights era, but now embedded in such a gritty  environment, it can feel superficially counter-intuitive to discover he has maintained a genuinely refined and cultured demeanour - whilst never shying away from the daunting realities of an environment which must have consumed so many others.  In interviews, he has described the varieties of prejudice he encountered, growing up in the Liemert Park district, but is as quick to point out the strongly protective matriarchal context in which he was raised.  In fact, for much of his early life, Mark worked in his mother's beauty salon - seemingly a nexus of female mutual support - before seizing the opportunity of a formalised art education, previously unavailable to other creatively-inclined family members.




Mark Bradford, 'Cerberus', Hauser & Wirth, London, October 2019


Possibly, he resembles the Colombian, Murillo in this respect.  Both hail from the less entitled side of the social or ethnic tracks - yet now function at a high level within the elitist, top-dollar milieu of international 'High Art'.  Instead of feeling excluded from a field as once abstruse and ring-fenced as abstract painting, they cheerfully hybridise its purist pretensions, and revel in its positives.  Certainly, Bradford has turned it all to his own, far less exclusive, ends - re-energising a mode of expression once deemed a bastion of white privilege or entitled machismo, whilst remaining culturally grounded and politically engaged.  He deploys its visual vocabulary with unabashed verve, and yet consistently immerses political or sociological themes within it.  Further still, he has used his market leverage and increasingly elevated profile to instigate consciously inclusive art projects within his community and beyond. In reality, such a practice is all about confounding lazily entrenched stereotypes, both socially and artistically - and it's a pretty inspirational example.  Even without the admirable element of community outreach - It still might just constitute the equally-weighted, 'have cake - eat-cake, equilibrium between the visual and the thematic/theoretical that I've long been yearning for myself. 


Mark Bradford, 'The Path To The River Belongs To Animals',
Mixed Media on Canvas, 2019


Anyway, to return to specifics, it seems that these new 'Cerberus' paintings also represent something of a departure in Bradford's overall oeuvre.  As has often previously happened, The starting point  was a map of both socio-historical, as well as geographical significance.  In this case, it was made by the authorities, to chart the Watts riots, that brought violence and devastation to the L.A streets, in 1965.  An important element of this was a series of colour-coded dots (referred to, by Bradford as 'hotspots'), plotting looted buildings, burnt-out buildings, and those where fatalities had occurred.  But this time, as the work evolved, he allowed his subsequent additions, incursions and excavations to occur more organically than was previously the case.  Many of those hotspots were removed - surviving as phantom memories of the events they once signified.  The blocks and street grids that still remain (generally as relief delineations in some form of extruded mastic), rise only intermittently through far-more clotted and congested landscapes than ever before.  In places, they suggest mere vestigial foundations (the remnants of some conflict or disaster, perhaps); elsewhere - the still just-visible roofs of inundated neighbourhoods.


Mark Bradford, 'Frostbite', Mixed Media on Canvas, 2019


If the pieces in the neighbouring room are generally smaller in scale - they are no less vivid.  If anything, they feel less topographical, and even more visceral (in the biological sense).  To locate oneself in these territories, is to wade, knee deep, through the very guts of a place.  Any fragments of a community, that might remain, are merely glimpsed through an avalanche of overgrown detritus and shattered building materials.  In a piece like 'Frostbite' one can imagine the city becoming submerged beneath the scummy surface of some freezing lake (I actually read this a something altogether more tropical, but I guess the clue's in the title).  In other instances, it might be that its remains are obscured by a dense tangle of forest vegetation [3.]These may then be the most apocalyptic examples of Bradford's work, to date.  Certainly, they are the most organic - suggesting ruin on a more cataclysmic scale than ever before, it seems.  But we should remember that Mark Bradford came up thinking about 'beauty', from an early age, and that he appears incapable of making anything without a certain degree of elegance about it.  This work may presage apocalypse - but it's also possessed of a profound and terrible beauty.







Mark Bradford, Stills From: 'Dancing In The Street', Video, (2:50), 2019


Which makes it all the more appropriate to conclude by discussing Mark's accompanying video 'Dancing In The Street'.  Interestingly, what initially appears to be the result of tricksy multi-layered video editing, was actually produced by a far more direct expedient.  Archive footage of Martha and The Vandellas, singing their classic song [4.] was simultaneously projected and re-recorded from the open door of a moving van, as it drove around the streets of South Central (I really like the lower-tech simplicity of that).  There's a definite historical resonance here, for many regarded that song's lyric as a call to arms during the racially-charged unrest of the mid 1960s.  In Mark's footage, Martha's face shimmers across the facades of tawdry buildings which might so easily have been torched or looted in '65 - and which now bear the scars from subsequent decades of social deprivation and predatory economics.  But there's a fragile and ghostly beauty at work there, too.  We shouldn't forget that, for many, 'Dancing In The Street' was mostly just a perfect slice of Pop heaven - even in the most pressured of times.  Cerberus may snarl like a hell-hound - but Martha sings like an angel.






Mark Bradford, 'Cerberus' continues until 21 December, at Hauser & Wirth, 23 Saville Row, London, W1S 2ET.  I suspect that, as art experiences go, it may be pretty hard to top, for quite a while.  




[1.]:  It's only natural to be pretty cynical about the international art market, and the interests of power and wealth it so clearly serves.  It is then, only fair to note that, even in a top-end gaff like this - Joe and Josephine Punter can still wander in off the street, and view such high-quality gear, absolutely free of charge.[2.]:  That quasi-mythological title suggests a potentially infernal region - and some clear sentinel presence also.  If we are to detect some socio-political context here (as we must - where Bradford is concerned), we should query the real function of such a border guard.  Is it to seal the perimeter against alien incursion - or really to contain the Hell within?

[3.]:  There's something distinctly Ballardian about this - I'm inevitably reminded of 'The Drowned World', for all its London-centricity.

[4.]:  Martha and The Vandellas, 'Dancing In The Street' (M. Gaye, W. Stevenson, I. J. Hunter), Gordy, 1964





Friday, 9 August 2019

'Oscar Murillo: Manifestation' At David Zwirner, London




Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation',  Oil, Spray Paint & Oil Stick On Canvas, Linen & Velvet, 2018-19


For the second time in a few posts, I find myself apologising for writing a report of an Oscar Murillo exhibition, too late for anyone to actually see it.  This time, it's mostly due to my having visited 'Manifestation' at David Zwirner's swanky Mayfair outpost, just prior to it closing - although, admittedly, it's still taken two further weeks to actually file this.  What can I say (excuses, apologies, etc.)? 



 Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation', David Zwirner Gallery, London, July 2019








We'll just have to fall back on the fact of art production being far more of a continuum, than just a series of finite public events.  And, we're lucky in that respect, where Murillo is concerned.  The individual artefacts may linger, but the seemingly ever-morphing, context-responsive nature of his practice, means they are likely to reappear with freshness and renewed vigour, at another time and place.  Also, Murillo currently seems so prolific that the enthusiast can safely assume that, if they've missed this batch - there'll be a load more new work following along shortly.  Finally, his inclusion on this year's Turner Prize short list, means he's unlikely to fall out of the spotlight any time soon.  In reality, anyone keen to encounter his work for real (and I'd definitely recommend it), can actually do so at the accompanying exhibition - opening soon at Margate's Turner Contemporary.



Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation', Oil, Spray Paint & Oil Stick On Canvas, Linen & Velvet, 2019,
(Detail Below)






Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation',  Oil, Spray Paint & Oil Stick On Canvas, Linen & Velvet, 2019,
(Detail Below)





As far as this post goes, there feels little need to write another lengthy diatribe, further extolling Murillo's virtues, given that 'Manifestation' mostly cemented many of the opinions already expressed here after his recent 'Violent Amnesia' showcase at Kettle's Yard, Cambridge.  Of the two, the London show was possibly even more satisfying, purely from a painterly perspective - being largely comprised of a series of ambitious (and often  impressively large), recent paintings.  As I discussed in that earlier post, Murillo feels to me, like an exciting and confident painter - who is also unafraid to branch out in other directions (including various installation, collaborative, and time-based enterprises).  I really do admire and commend him, for that ambition, not least because it slightly mirrors my own recent aspirations (without the 'exciting and confident' part).  However, in Murillo's case, I have to accept that it really is the paintings, or painting-related works, that thrill me most.



Oscar Murillo, 'Chocolate Master After Hans Haake', Wood, Canvas, Fabric, Oil, Oil Stick,
Corn & Clay, 2019, (Detail Below






Oscar Murillo, 'When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday',  Pen, Pencil, Graphite & Carbon
On paper, With Wood, Perspex & Oil, 2019



Oscar Murillo, 'Perpetual State Of Being', Video, 2018


At David Zwirner, the accompanying works comprised an (admittedly paint-daubed) site-specific installation, ('Chocolate Master After Hans Haake'), a modest, wall-based assemblage (again, featuring a painterly element, and entitled, 'When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday'), and a video.  Of the three, it was the last, 'Perpetual State Of Being' which captured my imagination most effectively, as a camera wandered at random across a seemingly interminable landscape of abstract marks.  It's a simple enough an idea, and fairly low-tech in its execution (as is most of Murillo's oeuvre) - but an effective one nonetheless.  One of the features of Murillo's nominally static painting that excites me most is its demonstration of how many exuberant ways one might get across a canvas surface.  In the case of 'PSOB' the visual terrain traversed by the camera, and projected at immersive scale - directly onto the wall, makes that sense of restless movement, and of distance travelled explicit.  The title alone, seems to amplify the idea of Murillo's work as something in constant, energetic motion.


Oscar Murillo, '(Untitled) Catalyst', Oil & Graphite On Canvas, 2018



Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation', Oil, Spray Paint & Oil Stick On Canvas, Linen & Velvet, 2018-19



Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation', Oil, Spray Paint & Oil Stick On Canvas, Linen & Velvet, 2019,
(Detail Below)




But, as I say, it's those paintings that do it best for me.  All the pleasure I took in Cambridge, from Murillo's arsenal of mark-making devices, his painterly exuberance and celebration of paint's plastic materiality, was once more on display in London, juxtaposed with the more mechanical reconstruction of separate canvas sections and inclusion of printed motifs.  And the inclusion of another 'Catalyst' (of the kind that pleased me so much in Cambridge), demonstrated how the more complex 'Manifestation' works shown here, may well have grown out of their process (as the titling system might suggest).  In fact, the slightly ambiguous dating does allow for the possibility it could equally be the other way round (making the 'Catalysts' some kind of distillation - perhaps?).  Regardless of what order things arrive in, what really seems to matter most, is that sense of Murillo's ideas and forms perpetually evolving and morphing out of each other with a kind of self-generating dynamism.

But, if this most recent bunch are effectively just further milestones along the way - it still doesn't preclude them becoming somewhat stately, at the same time.  The results actually settle into a more contemplative, immersive mode when grouped together in a gallery.  On reflection, my lasting, take-home impression of this exhibition, probably was that very negotiation between that restless churn of each painting - when viewed at close quarters, and the paradoxical sense of repose apparent in each room as a whole.



Oscar Murillo, '(Untitled) Surge', Oil, Oil Stick & Graphite, On Canvas, Linen & Velvet,
2017-19, (Detail Below)





There were also also two more 'Surge' canvases here, to compare with the one shown in Cambridge.  All seem to evoke a sense of inundation on an oceanic scale, threatening to submerge any underlying imagery beneath the waves.  It's tempting to claim that Murillo is another artist with a penchant for working in self-contained series - but, in his case, it feels more organic, and less compartmentalised than that.  Perhaps it would be more accurate to describe these title or motif-connected works as 'families'.  Those familial ties seem to become stretched across both time and territory in his work, with individual motifs constantly  cross-fertilising as they reaching out for fresh soil.  Given his previously acknowledged themes of migration, community, and the stresses on social connectedness exerted by global economics, that sense of a fluid diaspora feels all the more appropriate.



Oscar Murillo, 'Untitled', Oil & Oil Stick On Canvas With Steel Pole, 2016-18



Oscar Murillo, '(Untitled) Surge', Oil & Oil Stick On Canvas & Linen, 2017-19



Oscar Murillo, 'Manifestation', David Zwirner Gallery, London, July 2019, (And Below)


Anyhow - enough waffle.  If Murillo's best work isn't about the sheer thrill of visual encounter, I don't know what is, these days.  Let the pictures tell the real story, then...







'Oscar Murillo: Manifestation' ran between 8 June - 26 July 2019, at: David Zwirner, 24 Grafton Street, London W1S 4EZ

'Turner Prize 2019' (Including Oscar Murillo) will run between 28 September 2019 - 12 January 2020, at: Turner Contemporary, Rendezvous, Margate, Kent CT9 1HG