Platform P – a new arts initiative in Plymouth

Platform P
Is an experimental curatorial and collaborative platform for art in Plymouth, set up by Edith Doove and Ray White.
It’s a framework for activities that intend to engage with all ages and backgrounds with the arts as common denominator.

Platform P challenges – collaborates – dialogues
Platform P partners – infiltrates – imagines – plays

P is for Plymouth, people, places, partners, play, performance…

Platform P can take all kinds of different shapes, can according to its projects temporarily occupy a space, restructure or reinvent existing venues, partner with individuals or organizations, travel and collaborate nationally or internationally.

We are presently preparing a project at the Duke of Cornwall Hotel during the weekend of 5 and 6 November 2011.

Follow us on facebook

Posted in Platform P | Leave a comment

Sara Bomans in Arts Festival Watou

Sara Bomans will not have herself limited to one sole medium. The idea prevails and that’s why her work consists both of paintings, knitted sculptures, drawings with human hair, text collages as well as conceptual network projects. Her work can be seen as so many attempts to deal with everyday life. Frustrations, uncertainties and desire are translated into images with a subtle humor.

Her work is currently on show at the Arts Festival of Watou where it seems to fit seamlessly in the attractive rooms of the small Parish Hall.

The festival runs untill 11.09.2011 at Watou in Belgium near the French border.

Opening hours:

Wednesday – Thursday – Friday open from 2 – 7pm

Saturday – Sunday and holidays open from 11am-7pm

Exceptionally open on Monday 11 July and Monday 15 August from 11am-7pm

View Watou 2011 (only in Dutch)

 

 

 

Posted in artists news | Leave a comment

Research news: article in [Plastik Art&Science] #2 In vivo The artist on display?

[Plastik Art&Science] #2 In vivo The artist on display? 


is now online with:


On the « Specimen of Secrecy about Marvelous Discoveries »
Erwan bout

Koen Vanmechelen – The chicken and its audience
Edith doove

Biotechnologie as Mediality
Jens hauser

Self-animality
Marion laval-jeantet

One by one : Brandon Ballengée’s malformed amphibian project
Lucy R. lippard

Immobile, Bleu… Remix!
Yann marussich

The artwork in the artist, an artistic flow-management?
Camille prunet

Pygmalion, the living and metamorphosis
Isabelle rieusset-lemarié

Acheiropoisis and his loops
Stéphane trois carres

INQUIRY: Art&science laboratoires
Interview with Olga Kisseleva
Interview with Dawid Edwards 

Alla chernetska

Art that is created out of the living world (bio-art, body-art, environmental art…) is today commonly directed by a desire that one could define using the prefix: “trans-”. One is of course immediately reminded of the transgenic, and Eduardo KAC’s research, for example, on the genetic marker Lucifrase which he transmits to mice, or his creation, Edunia, a petunia carrying fragments of his own DNA. One is also reminded of transmutation, and the doll’s clothes made out of animal skin cultures by the SymbioticA group. Or of transgression in relation to contemporary ethics, which could apply to the two preceding examples, but also to more performatives experiments, such as Blue by Yann Marussich, a performance in which, installed in an airtight box, he sweats blue methylene from every pore of his skin, when the substance is declared dangerous if ingested even by the manufacturer. The preoccupation with transmission is also omnipresent in artistic practices involving the living, as one can see in works such as The cosmopolitan chicken project by Koen Vanmechelen, in which the artist is attempting to produce a genetically universal hen by marrying hens of different origin each season in order to obtain, within a few decades, the absolute mixed race hen. And certainly, such considerations also remind us of the question of transversality and transdisciplinarity, processes which these artists inevitably touch upon as they work towards their goal: a comprehension that differs from the living world in its analysis that is jointly artistic and scientific. In fact, we are obliged to note that the artists who are interested in the living world are increasingly distancing themselves from the notion of the reproducibility of reality to experiment with the transformation of this world. This type of art seems to seek a way of going beyond the criteria of representation, and perhaps even of the design of the living world, through an almost necessarily experimental confrontation with reality, which is why we have decided to use the prefix “trans” here: “beyond”, “through”. The question almost immediately arises on the definition of the artist as auto-experimenter. Up to what point might he or she be ready to experiment on the living and on his or herself in particular in order to succeed in going beyond a new frontier of artistic representation? We would like to present a reflexion on the performative dimension of this type of art. In the search for a form of transformer art related to the living world, it seems indeed essential that we question the creator’s position, as he or she is perpetually obliged to reconsider his or her experience, in order to allow the spectator to apprehend a world living itself in the process of transformation. How does the artist therefore plan to address the spectator in an artwork on the living that he or she is the first living being to test? Is the spectator’s comprehension of an artwork increased or decreased by the experimentation? Does the spectator feel mobilized by such procedures? Many questions aimed at suggesting the state of the analysis of the contemporary living world by artists, whose experiments reach sometimes improbable dimensions, and can remain at the project stage. This is why we want to insist on the prospective dimension, which leaves enough room for fiction and research, in this call for projects.

http://art-science.univ-paris1.fr/ 

Rédaction [Plastik]

#2 coordinated by Marion Laval-Jeantet
CERAP – Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne
47 rue des Bergers 75015 Paris – France
plastik.art.science@gmail.com

editor : Olga Kisseleva 

olga.kisseleva@univ-paris1.fr

 

 


Posted in general | Leave a comment

Alexandra Dementieva in Venice


On the occassion of this year’s Venice Biennial, Alexandra Dementieva will take part in the group exhibition of Russian Artists ‘We Are Here’ at the University of Venice. Curator of this exhibition is Sylvia Burini.

Always interested in all kinds of communication, Dementieva will present a site-specific interactive installation that is an invitation to visiting aliens to start action. In order to do so she uses the internationally, and possibly also intergallactically, known pictogram ‘PLAY’ as invitation.

The exhibition opens Friday 3 June and runs until 2 July 2011, open Monday-Friday 10-6 and Saturday 10-2, at

Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Sede di San Sebastiano, Dorsoduro 1686, Venezia

Waterbus stop: San Basilio

Posted in artists news | Leave a comment

edprojects editions

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Peter Hulsmans, Point, 2011, edition of 5

For the first time presented at the Trajector Art Fair you can now order the edprojects editions through this website. The idea is to regularly present new editions the proceedings of which mainly support the artists and partly my research at the University of Plymouth.

Visit edprojects editions

Posted in edprojects editions | Leave a comment

Trajector Art Fair Thanks!

We had a wonderful weekend at the Trajector Art Fair. Thanks to Ken Pratt and of course also to my truly great ed.projects ‘family of friends’ that was almost continuously present, who were a great help and showed fantastic work: Sara Bomans, Alexandra Dementieva, Peter Hulsmans, Nathalie Hunter, Gorik Lindemans, Stefaan Quix and Remco Roes.

For those who missed it – here’s a link to one of Nathalie Hunter’s Mikrokosmos video’s.

Posted in trajector art fair | Leave a comment

Trajector Art Fair – last day

A sunny Sunday at the Trajector Art Fair with lots of inspiring presentations and conversations.

Yesterday we added the work of Peter Hulsmans and Nathalie Hunter.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Posted in trajector art fair | Leave a comment