Saturday, 31 December 2011

End of 2011





Crow, balsa wood, 2011


I can't help thinking that Tracey Emin being appointed R.A. Professor of Drawing and 'the philanthropist' Paul Ruddock appearing on the New Year Honours List are characteristic events to conclude 2011.


I have just read "The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists" in which Tressell describes an extraordinary determination on the part of a majority of his Edwardian workers to support a system which offered them only impoverishment: it seems particularly relevant to contemporary times. More to my point, we seem to believe in the intrinsic virtue of the art world, as did Tressell's workers in the propriety of their 'charitable benefactors' who doled out meagre provisions when their families were literally starving, without considering that these benefactors were the very same people who reduced them to destitution. You can't help feeling that there is a parallel in the contemporary art world.


Of course, private patronage continues quietly in the background, not making a splash but keeping the diversity of art practice alive. The great service such patrons offer is never officially acknowledged, but perhaps future generations will be grateful. Such are our Owens, we just need a Barrington! This is my last rant of 2011! Hooray!

Saturday, 10 December 2011

Facing Hard Times


Alienation in the City, 2011

This watercolour is another of a series responding to the economic situation. The first image was included in the Out of the Box curated exhibition 'Facing Hard Times' in Kings Lynn earlier this year (see September blog). I wrote the following for the exhibition: "The banking crisis was sparked off by irresponsible financial operators, yet the sector seems more powerful than ever, profiting from the vulnerability that persists and dictating economic policy. Sometimes I wonder if the government's primary role now is to keep us acquiescent. International finance, symbolised in these works by the impersonal, inpenetrable facade of a city landscape, has no allegiance to place or population. The 'people' are anonymous to the financier, not citizens, but only consumers - just another resource to be milked or ditched. The alienation referred to is the cultural consequence of a single guiding principle: the generation of financial profit, regardless of consequences. But we roam the streets of this anonymous city landscape, guiltily complicit thanks to our mortgages, pensions, debts, investments, our benefits, our dependence on the bank for the everyday transactions of life."
The news yesterday that David Cameron walked away from EU negotiations because he could not get an agreement to protect the UK Finance Sector just confirms my fears. The cabinet says the government is protecting UK business, as if the only valid business in the UK is that of the finance sector. Agreed it has been allowed to grow out of all proportion in relation to other industries in this country, but isn't that exactly the problem? Surely what is required is unity amongst national governments in building up defences against the power that a rogue finance sector has accrued since deregulation?
I don't pretend to have any in-depth understanding of these matters, just the gut instincts of a non-comprehending outsider, to whom it looks like the Cabinet might be in the pocket of the City. And scanning up and down the street, it looks as if the elite of the art world might be quite comfortably at home here too.

Saturday, 24 September 2011

Mandell's Gallery, Norwich


Girl with Bird on Feet, painted terracotta, 2011

Some recent small works will be included in a show at Mandell's Gallery, Elm Street, Norwich, featuring paintings by John Kiki. The show runs from 2nd - 29th October, 2011, Tues - Sat 10.00-17.00 hrs. For more information: www.mandellsgallery.co.uk.




FACING HARD TIMES


Alienation in the City, 2, watercolour, 2011

My watercolour above is included in Facing Hard Times, an international exhibition presented by Out of the Box Independent Curators at Greyfriars Art Space, 43 St. James, Kings Lynn, Norfolk, PE30 5BZ from 3rd - 15th October, 2011, 10.00-17.00 hrs.
For more information about Out of the Box, go to http://www.facebook.com/OOTB.Curators.

Friday, 17 June 2011

Yarmouth Five


Secretary, card and wire construction, 55cm h, 2011

This and other constructions in card and wire, plus some drawings, are being shown at Wymondham Arts Centre from 28th June to 3rd July, 2011, with paintings and prints by John Kiki, Bruer Tidman, Katarzyna Coleman and Emrys Parry, all artists from Great Yarmouth.


Wymondham Ars Centre, Church Streeet, Wymondham, NR18 0PH
www.wymondhamarts.com

Littoral



Head, terracotta, 17x15x15.5cm, 2010


Chalk Hill Summer Show, 16th June - 3rd July, 2011

Chalk Hill Contemporary Art, 23 Chantry View Road, GU1 3XW


Thursday, 24 February 2011

Censorship of the naked body in the visual arts


Have I Got Nudes for You, A Celebration of the Naked Truth, is an exhibition curated by David Page as a riposte to an incident last year when there was a hoo-ha in the press about an exhibition of nudes by John Vestey in Council offices in N.Norfolk, taken down because of some complaints by council employees. I have contributed three small sculptures to this exhibition hosted at Harleston Gallery, 3 Old Market Place, Harleston, from 4th March - 1st April, Tuesday to Saturday, 10.00-16.00 hrs

It is odd, when you think how easily available pornography is these days, that censorship of representations of the naked body in the visual arts remains such a frequent occurance. My own work was considered unsuitable for showing at Norwich Theatre because it was felt that the depiction of naked forms would be likely to upset families, and I have had the image of a very innocent nude figure rejected from a website on the grounds of indecency. I was more amused than outraged with my experience of censorship: my figures aren't erotic, but neither are they idealised, nor monumentally abstracted, nor ironically post-modern, and that is perhaps pretty indecent of them. Their reference isn't back into art, in spite of many influences, but out towards the transience of life, represented often in the form of 'naked' body.




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'Summer', bronze

Inspirations 2011

Figure, 2011, card and wire construction, 70x40x48cm


Inspirations 2011, New Art from East Anglia, is presented by Jarrold & Sons Ltd., Norwich. Three of my card and wire constructions are included along with the work of 22 of other artists from the region. The exhibition will be open to the public weekdays 10-18th March, 12-14.00 hrs and 17-19.00 hrs. at 3 St. James Court, Whitefriars, Norwich, NR3 1RJ.