Graffiti Research Lab digital art projection courtesy the artist |
Someone has suggested that a laser tracking light should be attached to his finger so that we can find out exactly where he is pointing. Sounds like disco and a job for Graffiti Research Lab (GRL), a New York-based art group dedicated to outfitting graffiti writers, artists and protesters with open source technologies for urban communication. They will be giving a masterclass and doing public art interventions all over Adelaide March 5-16. GRL often use LED Throwies to make statements. A Throwie consists of a lithium battery, a 10mm diffused LED and a rare-earth magnet taped together. You spell out your graffiti in light on metal (ie magnetic) surfaces thus saving both paint and muscle power.
Enlightenment is the twin theme of the festival and The Speed of Light, the set of five exhibitions and a keynote address involve a certain amount of what might be called an enlightened return to the 70s. This could be the wheel of fashion or, as in the worldwide tendency to re-enactment of past performance art, a reflection of the voracious need for copy in a web-based world.
Doug Aitken, LA-based artist and maker of music videos and ads as his day-job, recently showed very large image projections on the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He will not be making a work in Adelaide but is the keynote speaker for Artists’ Week and will set the stage for thinking about different kinds of light and ways of working with it. Outdoor large scale projections will be present in the work of the Australian-based mob The Electric Canvas who will be projecting an Australian World Premier Free Spectacle from dusk til 2am every festival night on buildings up and down the cultural boulevard of North Terrace.
As part of The Speed of Light at Greenaway Art Gallery, New York-based Chilean artist Iván Navarro will show videos as well as light sculptures made with neon tubes that look like remakes of Dan Flavin’s art and build on some of the unresolved aspects of minimalism. Argentinean artist Felix Larreta’s Spherescent, a geodesic dome that you can walk inside and is covered with op art patterns responding to music and sound patterns, will be located on the 70s timewarp zone of the Adelaide Festival Centre Plaza by Greenaway Art Gallery’s offshoot, GAG Projects, Berlin. At Flinders University City Gallery Italian artist Elisa Sighicelli will show lightboxes and videos. She selectively paints the backs of her photos before illuminating them thus combining the softness of oil-painted surfaces with the sharpness of photography. Düsseldorf-based Mischa Kuball has been working with light for 20 years. He makes political and social statements with projections, and twists our capacity to make sense from fragments of language projected onto sculptural elements designed from his digitized brain waves. Finally at the Jam Factory The Speed of Light comes to rest with The AES (+F) Group from Russia which consists of graphic designer Evgeny Svyatsky and conceptual architects Tatiana Arzamasova and Lev Evzovich who work together regularly with fashion photographer Vladimir Fridke; on those occasions his F is added to the other initials. Their work, a three-screen video installation and a five metre photographic panorama, depicts a tableau vivant of international youth in battle [RT81, p2]. Of all The Speed of Light program this work has the most political dimension as it makes palpable the youth of the world who sit in front of illuminated screens and play computer games, thus battling each other (and older people) day after day, night after night, on the internet.
Wang Ya-hai, Visitor, 2007 video stills, from the Penumbra exhibition courtesy the artist |
The Gloves Come Off session wonders if people in the visual art community are too polite to one another. Speakers are writer Ashley Crawford, ABC content creator Courtney Gibson and Marcus Westbury, writer and presenter of the ABC TV’s series Not Quite Art. The NAVA (National Association for the Visual Art) session will focus on regulation of the visual art industry. Forums on Light will have an art/science twist. Speakers range from serial portraitist Robert Hannaford to actual scientists(!), and more artists—Chris Henschke who has done a recent residency at the Australian Synchroton and the famous holographer Paula Dawson.
Wang Ya-hai, Visitor, 2007 video stills, from the Penumbra exhibition ourtesy the artist |
Chicks on Speed, the headline act for the Artists’ Week party, are an electropop and Fluxus-inspired group of grrrls who started running a bar with a techno surge in Munich when they were at art school in the early 90s. They make art, music, fashion, graphic design and mayhem, yet are amateurish in all these fields and proud of it. Like the Guerilla Girls who were at the 1992 Adelaide Festival, they make some tough comments about the ‘art world’ machine and male dominance of it.
The Australian member of the Chicks, Alex Murray-Leslie, recently said: “I really believe that art is over in a sense, the whole thing is mostly just a commercial system now. So we try to reinvent it from our perspective, a feminist perspective…” There are distinct echoes of 90s art stars VNS Matrix’s practice in Chicks on Speed’s ambience. Who doesn’t remember at least a few words from VNS’s cyberfeminist manifesto of art for the 21st century: “we are the virus of the world disorder…the clitoris is a direct line to the matrix.”
Adelaide Festival of Arts, Speed of Light, Feb 29-March 16, http://adelaidefestival.com.au
RealTime issue #83 Feb-March 2008 pg. 54
© Stephanie Radok; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]