What’s on this month – Art Monthly newsletter

March 2021 art events and opportunities

Magazine Calendar Maps Podcasts Opportunities

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Contents

Issue 444, March 2021

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Phil Collins, Bring Down The Walls, 2020

Feature

Doing Time

Phil Collins interviewed by Chris Clarke

To live with prisons is to live in a prison, so the abolitionist perspective was crucial to the project, especially since reform is but a modality of upholding the system, of reproducing the existing order.

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Forrest Bess, Untitled (No 5), 1949

Feature

Mistaken Identity

Mark Prince questions whether the conflation of an artists’ identity with their work might ultimately misrepresent both

As with Jutta Koether’s wonky triangles, or Forrest Bess’s ultimately uncrackable code, it is abstraction which allows David Hammons to absolve himself of the identity in which his art casts him, and have it be conferred on, and limited to, the art itself, in contradistinction to the rules of contemporary identity politics.

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Forced Entertainment, Out of Order, 2018

Feature

Anti-work work

Bob Dickinson asks can we ever free ourselves from the capitalist pressures to keep working

Deferral, time-wasting, and taking your time are all tried and tested ways of escaping from the temporal clutches of work, but imagination has also been invaded and made to do work. This is what the Italian Autonomist movement calls ‘immaterial’ work, where we create value through our imaginative involvement in cultural production.

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Joy Division, Manchester, 1979, photo by Kevin Cummins

Feature

Curator as Zelig

Andrew Hunt argues that it is time to abandon hierarchies of culture and allow the marginalised, the self-taught and overlooked to enter the picture

It is important to consider the background to recent curatorial tropes in which the prevalent narrative is not to do with the ‘selfie’ but with a trend towards identifying with pivotal moments, as if to say: ‘that’s me in the picture’.

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Jade Montserrat and Webb-Ellis, Chronicle ai, 2020

Profile

Jade Montserrat

Lauren Velvick on the notion of care in the artist’s quest for an ethical art practice

Jade Montserrat’s generative and non-extractive modes of operation are deeply informed by her dedication to anti-racism, often at great personal cost, which has involved confronting the explicit and implicit ways that racism, imperialist attitudes and specifically anti-blackness are enacted and encountered in cultural spaces.

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Editorial

Dante’s Peak

The 700th anniversary of the death of Dante has given many commentators the chance to repurpose his Inferno for their own visions of Hell, but the real-life tale of the nationalistic squabbling over his bones for co-option and commemoration is the more relevant tale for our times.

One of the reasons Dante’s Divine Comedy has continued to inspire generations is the portrait, often satirical, that Dante draws of society, which has resonated down the centuries. For one thing, he placed bankers, many of whose names would have been recognisable to his readers, in a lower circle of Hell than murderers.

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Letters

Boxed In

Sonya Dyer takes issue with last month’s feature by Morgan Quaintance

My impetus in writing the report was to give voice to the concerns of many of my Black peers about the types of diversity initiatives being undertaken at the time, not the concept of ‘diversity’ (a term rightfully contested now) itself.

Looking Back in Anger

JJ Charlesworth also takes issue with last month’s feature by Morgan Quaintance

If it’s so easy for progressive politics to be recuperated, it might be worth asking whether those politics were ever so radical in the first place.

Reply

Morgan Quaintance responds to Sonya Dyer and JJ Charlesworth

There is a small problem with this unwitting participant narrative, however, and that is the right-positive libertarianism of ‘Boxed In’ and its overall emphasis on individual responsibility as the solution to structural inequality.


Art Monthly cover  

From the Back Catalogue
Things Done Change – The Cultural Politics of Recent Black Artists in Britain
Richard Hylton on Eddie Chambers’s book
First published 2012 – now free online



Artnotes

MoMA on Board

The issue of toxic philanthropy is raised by artists over MoMA’s support for board member Leon Black; the Guerrilla Girls reveal that they cancelled their publishing contract with Phaidon when they discovered it was owned by Black; Cuban artists begin legal action to remove the country’s controversial culture minister; a new safety guide is published for artists under threat; hundreds of artists in Moscow face eviction; Goldsmiths staff carry out industrial action; the Netherlands government adopts the most progressive restitution laws in Europe; Coventry plans a central art storage hub for the ACE Collection; plus the latest on galleries, people, prizes and more.

Obituaries

David Medalla 1942–2020
Peter Fillingham

Barry Le Va 1941–2021
Alexis Lowry

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Laura Cemin, 4 minute warm up, 2020
‘Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies)’

Exhibitions

Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies)

Agnieszka Gratza

At the heart of an exhibition that explores how the internet and social media have altered and, in some ways, trivialised our experience of love and intimacy is a nostalgic longing for closeness, physical presence and romance which harks back to a more analogue era.

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Tom Bronk, 20 (A) 2, 2020

Exhibitions

New York Round-up

Saim Demircan

Five loosely themed exhibitions reshuffled several artists between them, designed, I suspect, to showcase artworks as one would see them at a booth rather than in a museum or gallery context.

Artists’ Books

Grace Ndiritu: Dissent Without Modification – The 1990s

Hettie Judah

Dissent Without Modification is a self-portrait through interlocution. No single interview could achieve as rich a profile of Grace Ndiritu as that generated by these seven conversations. In that, it is an exceptional document, one of which many artists might rightly feel jealous.

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Dream Away film still from the cover of Art and Activism

Books

Art and Activism in the Age of Systemic Crisis: Aesthetic Resilience

Francis Frascina

The essays include useful case studies of ‘aesthetic resilience’ as ways to nurture the survival of endangered radicalism – alternative and oppositional practices – in a rapacious corporate world that co-opts and markets critique and innovation even when under systemic crisis.

Sean Ashton: Sampler
Ariana Reines: A Sand Book

John Douglas Millar

Sean Ashton’s lyric voice comes through loud and clear, and so what the book presents us with is a question about where subjectivity resides in the poetic act, whether it can be renounced or fully abjured. Like all the most interesting conceptual practices, this is a book that nuances poetic subjectivity rather than negating it.

Seth Siegelaub: Better Read Than Dead – Writings and Interviews 1964–2013

Karen Di Franco

The book acknowledges not only the importance of the informational network Siegelaub constructed to locate his projects and the influence of these methodologies on contemporary curating, but also how his work emerged from discussion, collaboration and investigation, a messier and more contingent kind of experimentation that has often been streamlined to fit specific types of historicisation, the results of which were often contested by Siegelaub himself.

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Phoebe Davies, The Sprawl, 2020

Film

Monika Oechsler: Sometimes I Dream
Phoebe Davies: The Sprawl

Maria Walsh

Paradoxically, the drive towards bodily resilience exposes the body’s vulnerability, the building of muscle strength favouring some body parts and not others in the girls’ drive to win.

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Jordan Baseman, A Different Kind of Different, 2020

Film

Jordan Baseman: A Different Kind of Different

Sara Jaspan

Baseman’s work frequently addresses subjects outside his lived experience. He is acutely aware of the potentially problematic nature of this, but at no point does A Different Kind of Different feel exploitative. His interview-based practice and method of creative non-fiction are founded on consent and a deep respect for his participants/collaborators.

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Omid Asadi, Hansel and Gretel, 2021

Performance

LOITER

Natalie Bradbury

Covering a distance of just over a mile and a half – a walk that would usually take around half an hour – ‘LOITER’ elongated this journey to a period of two hours, slowing down the pace and turning a familiar and well-trodden route into an experience that felt disembodied and sometimes dreamlike.

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Mitra Tabrizian, Road to Nowhere, 2005
from the series ‘Borders’

Reports

Listening Back to the Archives

Mohammad Namazi considers the work of Mitra Tabrizian, John Akomfrah and Gurinder Chadha, amongst others, to question the ‘cultural memory’ of the archive and its colonial legacies

Although the recent drives for decolonisation in many UK institutions has seen an engagement with so-called minority groups, there is the possibility that problems can be disguised under new languages of coloniality.

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Titus Kaphar, Page 4 of Jefferson’s “Farm Book”, 2018
estimated at $250,000, sold for $854,900

Salerooms

A Pandemic Chronology
Part Two: From Frieze to the US election

Colin Gleadell

Hales Gallery had raised Frank Bowling’s price levels for the first time in his long career to such a point that sharks were bound to be circling. Next month Hauser & Wirth celebrates its catch, staging its first show for Bowling. At one level, this is great for black art generally, but it does have an uneasy echo of colonial land grabs – white businessmen looking to profit from black labour. But the revaluation is, of course, taking place within a much broader context.

Artlaw

Exhibition Relief Funding

Henry Lydiate

A key reform is to allow ‘live art’ events to qualify as exhibition content (performance art and other live components of museum and gallery exhibition and display are currently excluded from the scheme).

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Two Minutes!


Whether you read the magazine, listen to the radio show, find opportunities in the newsletter or scan the exhibition and event listings, please take two minutes to help Art Monthly with a reader survey.

All responses are appreciated – and 100% anonymous!

Art Monthly Events

The Producers Part II: New Positions on Curating

Thursday 25 February 5pm

Charlotte Cotton, artistic director of Tasweer Photo Festival
Shoair Mavlian, director of Photoworks
Chair: Uta Kogelsberger

This series of public discussions devised by Newcastle University and Art Monthly brings together curators, writers and artists to examine how current exhibition-making strategies have responded to significant changes in the art world. The talks will address issues such as: the fallout of an increasingly globalised art world; the growing significance of the role of collectors; the reshaping of public-sector art economies and the ways in which the development of new technologies has redefined how artworks are made, understood and disseminated.

Price: Free
Venue: Online
Request link and password: chris@artmonthly.co.uk

Art Monthly Calendar

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Monika Oeschler, Sometimes I Dream, 2021
Beacon_Transitions

Selected Digital Resources

Many venues are focusing on digital programming during the Covid-19 pandemic. So instead of the usual list of events, here are links to some of these online artworks and resources.

Synesthesia 14 Feb – 31 March 2021

An experimental project that facilitates collaboration between curators/writers and artists. Showcasing artists from Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.
PSynesthesia is a Cultivator Showcase, led by The Bridge team at the University of Plymouth, in partnership with Creative Kernow.
synesthesia.online

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Beacon_Transitions online from 9 July 2020

Responding to the uncertain future of exhibition culture, Beaconsfield invites artists to hold the space between physical and virtual sites in a new series of experimental commissions. With: Shahin Entezami, Andrew Pierre Hart, Monika Oechsler, Simon Tyszko & A.D. Crawforth
Beaconsfield
beaconsfield.ltd.uk

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Gallery Maps

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London and UK Gallery maps

Shows may be closed, but you can still noodle around the Art Monthly gallery maps!


Podcasts

Art Monthly Talk Show

 

Art Monthly on the Radio

Art Monthly hosts a show to discuss the current issue at 8pm on the second Monday every month on Resonance 104.4 FM

On iTunes

The Art Monthly Talk Show is available as a podcast on iTunes – subscribe for free automatic downloads

Online

Audio recordings are available in the Events section of the Art Monthly website: www.artmonthly.co.uk/events

Opportunities

Jobs

Research Coordinator

British Film Institute, London | 1 Mar
www.bfi.org.uk

Relationship Manager, Engagement and Audiences

Arts Council England, Cambridge | 2 Mar
artsjobs.org.uk

Senior Archive and Library Manager

National Portrait Gallery, London | 5 Mar
www.npg.org.uk

Workshop Artist

City Arts, Nottingham | 7 Mar
city-arts.org.uk

BFI Player Archive Assistant Curator

British Film Institute, London | 8 Mar
bfi.org.uk

Director

Liverpool Biennial | 17 Mar
biennial.com

Gallery Intern

Departure Lounge, Luton | 21 Mar
departure-lounge.org.uk

Communications Trainee

Hauser & Wirth, London | 31 Mar
hauserwirth.com

Trustees

Artsadmin, London | Rolling
artsadmin.co.uk


Competitions/Commissions

Mark Tanner Sculpture Award

Standpoint, London | 31 Mar
standpointlondon.co.uk

YICCA 2021: International Contest of Contemporary Art

Yicca | 16 Apr
yicca.org

ArtGemini Prize

ArtGemini | 25 Apr
artgeminiprize.com

The Hopper Prize

The Hopper Prize | 18 May
hopperprize.org


Residencies/Fellowships

Solo Residency

Unit 1 Gallery, London | 27 Feb
www.unit1gallery-workshop.com

Emerging Artist Residency

Rame Projects, Cornwall & The Box, Plymouth | 31 Mar
rameprojects.com

Nomadic Island Project: Artist in Residence Camp

Nomadic Island, Luxembourg | 15 Apr
www.nomadic-island.com

Inverlonan Artists’ Retreats

Inverlonan | Rolling
www.inverlonan.com

ARC Getaways

Stockton Arts Centre | Rolling
www.arconline.co.uk


Scholarships/Grants

Re:Create 2021

Creative United, London | 28 Feb
www.creativeunited.org.uk

National Lottery Project Grants

Arts Council England | 30 Apr
artscouncil.org.uk

Cement Fields: Development Support for Visual Artists

Cement Fields, University of Kent | 1 Oct
cementfields.org

The Weston Jerwood Creative Bursaries Programme

Jerwood Arts | 1 Mar 2022
jerwoodarts.org

Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grants

Pollock-Krasner Foundation | Rolling
www.pkf.org

Black Artists Grant

Creative Debuts | Rolling
creativedebuts.co.uk


Exhibiting

Call for Submissions

New Contemporaries invites emerging and early career artists who are final year students, recent graduates & postgraduate students from UK art schools & alternative learning programmes. Selectors Hew Locke, Tai Shani and Michelle Williams Gamaker
New Contemporaries | 1 Mar, 2pm
www.newcontemporaries.org.uk

promoted

Process

apexart, New York | 1 Mar
apexart.org

Open Submission

Belfast Photo Festival | 5 Mar
belfastphotofestival.com

Open Call: Image Behaviour

ICA, London | 30 Mar
ica.art


Submissions: Send opportunities to opportunities@artmonthly.co.uk

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