Ctrl-N/ journal: repository of texts, research and documents on cities, mapping, networks, psychogeography and the experience of places; Written and maintained by Olivier Ruellet.

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Holding Time – an exhibition of time-based artistic practices · April 6th, 2010

‘Holding Time’ is a survey of still, object-based works derived out of ‘Time-based’ practices by artists. An opportunity to dialogue, debate and share how artists extend their practice from Performance, Moving Image and Time-based concerns into recording, documenting, interventions and object-making. The exhibition has been curated by Darshana Vora from an open call.

Participating Artists:
Arantxa Echarte, Beatrice Jarvis, Bettina John, Bill Leslie, Cinzia Cremona, Cos Ahmet, Daniel Somerville, Darshana Vora, David Theobald, Elaina Arkeooll &Tim Flitcroft, Ella Golt, Helena Eflerová, Herve Constant, Laura Davidson, Mat Chivers, Nicola Mccartney, Peter Nutley, Rachel Gomme, Sam Holden, Sebastian Edge, Daniel Belasco Rogers & Sophia New, Teresa Paiva, Tory Smith, Wiracha Daochai and Yaron Lapid.

Opening Preview: Thursday,  April 8, 2010. 6pm-8pm
Exhibition Dates: April 8-14, 11am-7pm.
Special Events: Sat & Sun, April 10 & 11, 3pm-5pm: Performances and artist’s talks

Online catalogue

Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, UK Centre
4a Castletown Road
London W14 9HE
United Kingdom

Tel: +44 207 381 3086/4608

http://www.bhavan.net


Hybrid Territories Joan Ayrton / Grégory Chatonsky / Bas Zoontjens · March 20th, 2010

HYBRID TERRITORIES JOAN AYRTON / GRÉGORY CHATONSKY / BAS ZOONTJENS
20.03.2010 > 01.05.2010
VERNISSAGE 20.03.10 >16H

Galerie Kamchatka
23, rue charles V
75008 Paris

Hybrid Territories posterLa galerie Kamchatka est heureuse d’annoncer l’exposition HYBRID TERRITORIES qui regroupe les travaux de Joan Ayrton (artiste de la galerie) et de deux artistes invités : Grégory Chatonsky (galerie Poller, Frankfurt – New York) et Bas Zoontjens (galerie Cokkie Snoei, Rotterdam) autour d’une intention d’invention du paysage.

Tous trois créent à travers les oeuvres présentées des paysages et territoires fictifs. Le paysage s’oppose à la nature en cela qu’il est un point de vue, un point précis d’où part le regard, un simple pas de côté modifie et altère notre perception d’un espace, donnant à voir tout autre chose. A l’heure où l’homme est décidé à sauver la nature et la terre, rejetant deux degrés supplémentaires au thermomètre, nous pouvons nous interroger sur la manière choisie ou non d’agencer les territoires et paysages. Aux frontières des zones rurales et urbaines, on trouve des espaces étranges et difficiles à définir. On y ronge le sauvage pour y planter ce qui ne passe plus en ville : zones commerciales et industrielles, échangeurs routiers, parkings, etc…
Ces espaces hybrides s’étendent depuis longtemps, le paysage agencé et maîtrisé dans un but fonctionnel et utilitariste. L’anthropisation – transformation d’espaces ou de milieux naturels sous l’action de l’homme – est inhérente à notre présence, l’idée de Wilderness, un espace naturel préservé à tout prix, interdit à l’activité humaine, est une utopie réalisée – tous les pays ont créés des concepts de réserves et parcs naturels – mais incomplète puisqu’elle ne peut être que temporaire. L’idée romantique d’une nature vierge et primaire ne fait pas le poids face à l’utilisation pragmatique de ses ressources et le risque constant de destruction volontaire ou accidentelle.
Deux notions s’affrontent : contrôler et régenter tel le démiurge conscient de son pouvoir et sûr de son droit ou, être le strict gardien de ce qui peut être préserver, le conservateur des vestiges naturels encore intacts, John Muir face à la vallée de Yosemite.
Le terme hybride nous renvoit également à l’altération humaine de la nature ; hybrida, en latin, définit simplement le croisement d’un cochon et d’un sanglier. C’est à travers son étymologie grecque que l’on retrouve le sens moral du mot : L’hybris étant considérée dans la mythologie comme la faute humaine ou divine de démesure, de dépassement de la limite. Dans le code moral antique, prémice de la morale chrétienne, elle est punie par la Némesis, vengeance divine destinée à rétablir l’équilibre naturel des choses.
On retrouve cette dualité dans les oeuvres de Joan Ayrton, Grégory Chatonsky et Bas Zoontjens, elles révèlent une nature et des paysages altérés, transformés d’où poignent un malaise, un sentiment étrange de désolation. Ils nous montrent des territoires hybrides, à portée de Nemesis.

Joan Ayrton, présente des oeuvres récentes de la série «Iridescant Landscape» (acrylique sur papier, 2009-2010). Dans cette série, l’utilisation de couleurs iridescantes révèle des paysages denses et complexes où la ligne d’horizon toujours présente apparaît selon l’angle de vue. «Graphite» (graphite sur bois, 2009) évoque un paysage de nuit dont la ligne d’horizon apparaît ou non selon les reflets du graphite.

«The road» (photographie, 2009), de Grégory Chatonsky dévoile des bords de route où des arbres calcinés s’entremêlent et surgissent d’une nuit d’encre. L’enchevêtrement des branches grises et mates ne nous permet pas réellement de distinguer s’il s’agit de bois ou de matériaux manufacturés détruits. Grégory Chatonsky présente également au sous sol de la galerie, une installation vidéo «The Forest» (2009), un long traveling à travers les cimes d’une forêt numérique. Il s’agit en réalité d’images en 3D créées automatiquement à partir de données récupérées sur internet.

Bas Zoontjens qui expose pour la première fois en France, présente une série de peintures sur bois de petits et moyens formats. Ses peintures fragiles inventent un monde d’architectures utopistes, évoquant un futur possible pour l’humanité. Avec très peu de moyens, il nous plonge dans un univers irréel et atemporel mêlant formes géométriques et constructions d’espaces en ruine.

http://kamchatka-artblog.blogspot.com/


Mythogeography: A Guide to Walking Sideways · January 7th, 2010

Mythogeography takes the form of a documentary-fictional collection of the internal documents, diary fragments, letters, emails, narratives, notebooks and handbooks of a loose coalition of artists, performers, ‘alternative’ walkers and pedestrian geographers. All Illustrated in full colour by Tony Weaver, who designed the Wrights & Sites’ Mis-Guide books.

The fragmentary and slippery format recognises the disparate, loosely interwoven and rapidly evolving uses of walking today: as performance, as exploration, as urban resistance, as activism, as an ambulatory practice of geography, as meditation, as post-tourism, as dissident mapping, as subversion of and rejoicing in the everyday. ‘Mythogeography’ celebrates that interweaving, its contradictions and complementarities, and is an attempt at a handbook for those who want to be part of it.


Mythogeography: A Guide to Walking Sideways by Phil Smith is out on 26th January 2010.
Paperback (244 x 170mm), 256 pages. ISBN: 978-0-9562631-3-1

Mythogeography: The Book at Triarchy Press

http://www.mythogeography.com


The Solitary Life of Cranes · December 21st, 2009

“Part city symphony and part visual poem, this award-winning film explores the invisible life of London, its patterns and its hidden secrets, through the eyes of crane drivers working high above its streets.

The result is a lyrical meditation about how our existence is shaped through the environment we inhabit, both for the drivers and the people they are watching far down on the ground below them.”

You will be slightly disappointed if you expect to see here a deep reflection on psychology and alter-urbanism, to go by the over-stated description above – the film monologues consists for the best part of mundane platitudes narrated by the crane drivers themselves, though this doesn’t remove any of the visual beauty of this peaceful string of panning shots featuring highly unusual sights of London. Overall, an enjoyably conemplative film I would highly recommend for lovers of the city skyline, its buildings and its cranes.

The Solitary Life of Cranes Dir. Eva Weber (UK), 2008, 28 min.

The Solitary Life of Cranes / City of Cranes [Director Eva Weber's website]

This documentary is available to watch on 4OD until the 8th of January.


Memories of Chamberlain Square – Birmingham timelapse 1963-1986 · October 29th, 2009

Birmingham timelapse from 7inch cinema on Vimeo.

Amateur photographer Derek Fairbrother has assembled photographs taken from the same spot in Birmingham’s Chamberlain square between 1963 and 1986, and compiled them into this intriguing timelapse sequence. The timelapses are displayed in an exhibition called Birmingham Seen which opens at BM&AG this weekend; other sequences include the Post Office tower and the Rotunda.


Battersea Power Station, photography by Michael Collins · September 10th, 2009

Stunning large-scale photographs of what was once the third largest energy generating site in the UK and the most thermally efficient power station in the world are currently on display at the Royal Institute of British Architects until 29 Sept.

The building’s exterior was designed by Giles Gilbert Scott (responsible amongst other things for the red letterbox, phonebox and Bankside Power Station  a.k.a. Tate Modern) and was built and opened in two phases, respectively in 1936 and 1956. It was decommissioned in 1983.

Having visited the derelict building a couple of years ago, I was already taken aback by its sheer scale (It is said that the boiler house could contain St Paul’s cathedral) and the poignant remains of heavy machinery scattered around the storeys. Michael Collins’ photographs succeeded particularly well in conveying the vastness of indoor spaces; He applied the technique of ‘record picture’ photography to capture the experience of the site, extensively used by the government and institutions for the purpose of official visual documentation, and used some traditional equipment to produce the shots, resulting in a somewhat bizarre timeless feel particularly visible in the shots of the control rooms.

The site now faces uncertain prospects after several failed attempts at re-development spanning over two decades, which only succeeded in removing the roof of this brick cathedral, now open to the elements.


The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA)

66 Portland Place
London, W1B 1AD
020 7580 5533

http://www.architecture.com

http://www.recordpictures.com Michael Collins Photography


Richard Long – Heaven and Earth · September 4th, 2009

Richard Long - Sahara

The retrospective of arguably the best-known contemporary British artist/walker concludes this weekend at the Tate Britain. Richard Long’s practice has consistently placed primitive mark-making at the centre of the work, exploring relationships between time, distance, geography and measurement in the simplest way: by instigating walking as a means of marking, sensing and measuring the vastness and eternity of the world. Long explains with disarming simplicity:

“my work really is just about being a human being living on this planet and using nature at its source. [...] It’s about the intellectual pleasure of original ideas and the physical pleasure of realising them. I enjoy the simple pleasures of wellbeing, independence, eating, dreaming, and sometimes leaving (memorable) traces.”

Long instituted walking as an act of mark-making on possibly the vastest scale possible, freeing sculpture from the constraints of exhibition: the only remains of the artist’s peregrinations in the land are those pictures and diagrams, strangely similar to strategy maps: photographs of deserted landscapes or plans printed with geometrical figures showing the whereabouts of the artist/walker. His trajectory and purpose are often driven by natural forces: gravity, wind, water flow, magnetism, geology – or by his interest in transference (physics) – the idea of a certain equivalence of places and events on different sides of the world.

Using his foot as instrument for art, expressive and perceptive, the footprint as a testimony of his journey and presence in time and space, Long’s walks become an act of inscription; a reminder that the verb “to write” originates from the practice of incising, as in the inscription of running letters in stone or the furrowing of a track.


Richard Long – Heaven And Earth at Tate Britain until 6th September 2009.


Mapumental: A ninja tool for helping you house or job hunt within Great Britain · August 20th, 2009

Today sees the public release of Mapumental, a ground-breaking map-generator tool that helps you to work out the optimal place to live or work in order to have an easy commute and an affordable home.

Through a highly intuitive interface, you can highlight parts of a map that match your ideal criteria of averaged commuting time, house prices and ’scenicness’ (whatever that might mean!).

After I generated my own little map and customised it, I came to three conclusions:

  • Public transport in London is a nightmare
  • You can’t be too demanding about where you want to live, according to that ’scenicness’ index…
  • You have to be bloody rich!

Mapumental is a project by Channel 4 and mySociety.

http://mapumental.channel4.com/


Halte aux casseurs du C!! · August 9th, 2009

Quelques photos témoins des derniers développements a la Résidence Universitaire d’Antony (92), le sort de laquelle semble hélas condamné…

Halte aux casseurs du C!!

soirée crêpes

réquisition des logements

Je ne vais pas quitter ma chambre

extérieur du pavillon C

intérieur du pavillon C

L'état investit


Un:Place at the Jerwood · May 30th, 2009

Un: Place – A curation by Beatrice Jarvis, exhibition opens 3 June – 20 July at the Jerwood café

Alys Williams / Benjamin Bailey / Seecum Cheung / Ilona Sagar / Dana Macpherson / Inzajeano Latif

An exhibition of personal cartographies and urban responses

Six artists have each created a piece of work that responds directly to the landscape of Jerwood Space, an iconic building situated in the heart of bustling Bankside. This reclaimed area between London Bridge and Waterloo is steeped in fragmented traces of lingering history, where passages of time are lost in hidden corners and marked histories are glimpsed on decaying facades.

The city has and will always remain a myriad of inspiration, This exhibition explores the creative relationship between the city and the individual to develop unique personal cartographies ; relearning mapping as an intricate interaction of the imagination in a diversity of forms and media.

Jerwood Space
171 Union Street
London
SE1 OLN

www.jerwoodspace.co.uk or www.jerwoodvisualarts.org