Category Archives: London

Streets: Banksy in London

Banksy - London 2016

A new stencil by Banksy highlighting the use of teargas in the “Jungle” refugee camp in Calais has appeared on a building opposite the French Embassy in London.

The stencil on board features a CS can on the floor spreading a teargas cloud. With the French flag waving in the background, the infamous character Cosette from Les Miserables emerges with tears in her eyes.

The work is the latest in a series of pieces by the graffiti artist criticising Europe’s handling of the ongoing refugees crisis, after earlier his stencils in Calais (featured) . It is a direct comment on the recent actions by French authorities to destroy part of the Jungle and evict around 1,500 refugees.

Banksy - London 2016Banksy - London 2016
Banksy - London 2016    Banksy - London 2016

In a first for the elusive graffiti artist, the artwork is interactive and includes a stencilled QR code beneath. If viewers hold their phone over the code, it links them to an online video of a police raid on the camps on 5 January.

 

View the full set of pics here

London: Lumiere Festival

Lumiere London - Westminster Abbey / Patrice Warrener

During four evenings from the 14th-17th of January, visitors could experience installations from the world’s most exciting artists working with light at across 30 locations in the UK capital for the Lumiere London Festival.

Architectural landmarks are being coloured with 3D projections like Westminster Abbey by Patrice Warrener, the Kings Cross Granada Building by Ocudo, or Piccadilly by NOVAK.

Lumiere London - Westminster Abbey / Patrice Warrener    Lumiere London - Westminster Abbey / Patrice Warrener
Lumiere London - Circus of Light / Ocubo Lumiere London - Novak    Lumiere London - Novak Lumiere London - Novak

While Center Points lights have been temporarily moved to the National Portrait Gallery, Trafalgar Square fountains are transformed into Plastic Islands’ by activist group  Luzinterruptus .

Lumiere London - Centre Point LightsLumiere London Plastic Islands Luzinterruptus

In  shop windows, shimmering dresses by Tae gon KIM change colours with their fibre-optic LEDs, giving them a Cinderella-esque touch.

Lumiere London - Tae Kon Kim     Lumiere London - Tae Kon Kim
Lumiere London - Tae Kon Kim

Within the famous pedestrian Carnaby Street, passers-by can enjoy the newly permanent installation Shaida Walking by Julian Opie.

Lumiere London - Julian Opie

Drawing massive crowds, the iconic phone box is turned into an aquarium by Benedetto Bufalino and Benoit Deseille.

Lumiere London - Aquarium /  Benedetto Buffalino & Benoit Deseille
Lumiere London - Aquarium /  Benedetto Buffalino & Benoit Deseille    Lumiere London - Aquarium /  Benedetto Buffalino & Benoit Deseille

Gigantic  fishes Lumineoles are flying above Piccadilly, while Travellers figures by Cedric Le Borgne adorn rooftops of nearby buildings. Neon birdhouses by Sarah Blood are nestled within Brown Hart Gardens.

Lumiere London - Lumineoles / Porte par le vent    Lumiere London - Sarah Blood Lumiere London - Lumineoles / Porte par le ventLumiere London - Cedric Le Borgne    Lumiere London - Lumineoles / Porte par le vent   Lumiere London - Sarah Blood    Lumiere London - Cedric Le Borgne

The French collective TILT (not the graffiti artist from Toulouse) have created a giant luminous tropical garden in the centre of Leicester Square.

Lumiere London - Gardent of Lights / Tilt    Lumiere London - Gardent of Lights / TiltLumiere London - Gardent of Lights / TiltLumiere London - Gardent of Lights / Tilt    Lumiere London - Gardent of Lights / Tilt

Janet Echelman used the data of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami from 2011, to create a 3D representation called 1.8 London. 

Lumiere London - 1.8 / Studio Echelman

Further pictures from the Lumiere London Festival in Mayfair and King’s Cross below:

Lumiere London Lumiere London - Elephantastic / Catherine Garret    Lumiere London - Ron Haselden    Lumiere London - Lightbenches / Bernard Spiecker    Lumiere London - Elaine Buckholz Lumiere London - LAB (AU)
Lumiere London - Litre of Light    Lumiere London - Litre of Light
Lumiere London - Diver / Ron Haselden    Lumiere London - Jacques Rival
Lumiere London - Jacques Rival    Lumiere London - Cleary ConnollyLumiere London

Check the full programme here.

View the full set of pics here

London: Champagne Life @ Saatchi

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Coinciding with its thirtieth birthday, Saatchi Gallery is opening on 13th January an all female show ‘Champagne Life’ featuring a cast of emerging international artists: Julia Wachtel, Mequitta Ahuja, Virgile Ittah, Marie Angeletti, Julia Dault, Alice Anderson, Jelena Bulajic, Mia Feuer, Sigrid Holmwood, Seung Ah Paik, Maha Malluh, Suzanne McClelland, Stephanie Quayle and Soheila Sokhanvari.

The exhibition title is based on one of the artwork from participating artist, Julia Wachtel. Her canvas represents an inverted image of Kanye West and Kim Kardashian with a poorly copied plastic sculpture of Minnie Mouse, convergence between the fantastical with the real world. Epitome of the current culture driven by the lust for celebrity, champagne is a relatively affordable signification of luxury life, the highest aspiration and emptiest cipher.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery
Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Food for Thought – Al-Muallaqat‘ installation by Saudi Arabian artist Maha Mallu highlights the impact of globalisation and consumer culture within her nation. Suspended used aluminium pots refer to The pre-Islamic 6th century Suspended Odes or Hanging Poems traditionally hung in Mecca.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

A blue papier mache donkey lays down attached with rope. ‘Jerusalem Donkey’ is a collaborative work by Mia Feuer and Palestinian children, a tribute to the animal used during roadblocks in the region as it was forbidden for Palestinians to drive motor vehicles.

The taxidermy horse sculpture ‘Moje Sabz’ by Iranian artist Soheila Sokhanvari is a visual metaphor of the ‘Green Movement’ uprising of 2009, in which violent protesters’ demonstrations led to the annulment of a fraudulent election result.

Champagne Life - Saatchi GalleryChampagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Extracting text, colour and forms from various political and cultural sources, the abstract paintings by US artist Suzanne McClelland focus on the omnipresence of data and code and illustrate evasive domestic terrorists in the US.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Marie Angeletti juxtaposes a series of images, photographies, canvases, watercolors a bit like a quick Google image search, providing different interpretations to the meaning or the associative links.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Cultivating plants and making her own hand made dye and pigments, Sigrid Holmwood‘s peasants paintings have fluorescent and psychedelic colours and reminiscent of the Impressionism era.

Champagne Life - Saatchi GalleryChampagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Pale and frail life-size bodies made of wax and marble powder by Virgile Ittah are laying on iron beds, looking mortified. In the same room, intricate charcoal portraits of the older generation by Jelena Bulajic play with scale, whether miniature or monumental. ‘I am attracted to the human ‘map’ contained within a face, and the layers of its skin – a bodily margin that bridges the distance between the inner and the outer.’

Champagne Life - Saatchi GalleryChampagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Ossifying objects using copper thread, symbol of neural transmitter of information and communication, Alice Anderson explores the transition of the physical world to the digital one. Her large bobbin sculpture ‘Bound’ is a reference to the game Freud used to play with his grandson to calm him down.

Inspired by ancient textile printing and stamping techniques, Mequitta Ahuja‘s work depicts cobalt blue female figures and self portraits in a fantastic universe.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Korean artist Seung Ah Paik explores the relationship with her own skin through monumental flesh coloured raw canvases zooming on human details like hands, limbs, nipples.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Large clay sculptures by Stephanie Quayle depict animals and the force of nature inherent within. ‘Two Cows’ are gazing at the viewers while Lion Man ‘s muscular figure radiates strongly with its presence.

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery    Champagne Life - Saatchi GalleryChampagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

Using plexi materials, individually contorted and controlled by strings and boxing glove strapping, Julia Dault‘s sculptures are ready to spring open at any moment. The title of the artworks also indicates the length of time that the artist has wrestled with the materials).

Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery Champagne Life - Saatchi Gallery

View the full set of pics here

Champagne Life – Saatchi Gallery
Until 6 March 2016
Duke of York’s HQ
King’s Rd
London SW3 4RY

London: Michael Craig-Martin – Transience

Michael Craig-Martin

To kick start 2016 with colourful artworks, the Serpentine Gallery is currently hosting  the first solo show of British artist Michael Craig-Martin in a London public institution since 1989.

Entitled ‘Transience‘, the exhibition gathers  works from 1981 to 2015, including his era-defining colourful representations of once familiar yet obsolete technology; laptops, games consoles, black-and-white televisions and incandescent lightbulbs that highlight the increasing transience of technological innovation.

From the earliest work in the show, a wall drawing first produced in 1981 (the same year that the first personal computer was made available), to a painting from 2014 that depicts the minimal lines of an iPhone, Craig-Martin’s work has recorded the profound impact that electronic technology has had on the way we consume and communicate.

The exhibition explores the seismic shift from analogue processes to digital technologies that informed the production and distribution of new kinds of objects in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Michael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-Martin  Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin
Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin  Michael Craig-Martin  Michael Craig-Martin      Michael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-MartinMichael Craig-Martin    Michael Craig-Martin

View the full set of pics here

Michael Craig-Martin
Transience
Until 14 Feb 2016
Serpentine Gallery
London

2015 Highlights

As 2015 comes to an end, we look back at the highlights of this incredible artistic year across Europe. Click on the pics to view more info.

Solo Shows: Dran, Mark Jenkins, Antony Micallef, Cranio, Daniel Arsham, David Shillinglaw, Julian Opie, Brusk, Angela Lizon, Pixel Pancho, Lisa Wright, Vhils, Anj Smith, Remi Rough, 100Taur, Hisham Echafaki.


Dr an - Public Execution Show
Mark Jenkins - Moment of Impact    Antony Micallef - Self      Cranio - Amore$    Daniel Arsham - Future Relic 3 Cannes David Shillinglaw    Julian Opie - Alan Cristea Gallery    Brusk - Ad vitam Eternam
Angela Lizon - Menagerie    Pixel Pancho - Memory of Our Life Lisa Wright - The Unversed    Vhils - DissonanceAnj Smith - Hauser & Wirth    Remi Rough - Home   Lusus Naturae - 100Taur & Hisham Echafaki

Murals and Festivals:  Artists for Je suis Charlie in Paris, El Seed, Ron English and Meetings of Style in London, Urban Nation M7 in Berlin, Open Summer Festival in Toulouse, Bom.K for Moniker,  MAUS Festival in Malaga.

Tribute - Je suis Charlie    El Seed - London Ron English @ Boxpark LondonUrban Nation PM7 - Icy & Sot100TAUR - SAINT DOMINIQUEOpen Summer Festival - ToulouseGreen House Effect     Moniker Art Fair 2015MAUS - Malaga 2015

Museum Exhibitions: Jeff Koons at Pompidou Paris, D*Face & Shepard Fairey at the CAC Malaga

Jeff Koons Retrospective - Pompidou    D*Face - Wasted Youth @ CAC MalagaShepard Fairey - Your Eyes Here Malaga

Studio Visits: Borondo, Reso, Nick Walker.

Borondo - Studio Visit 'Animal'Reso Studio Visit (Toulouse)    Reso Studio Visit (Toulouse)Nick Walker - Studio Visit 2015

Group Exhibitions: Mapping the City,  Endangered Species, The London Project, LAX/LHR, Painting Guide, Empowered Printworks, Creve Hivernale

Mapping the City - Somerset HouseMagda Danysz - London Project    Paintguide - Audrey KawasakiLAX / LHR - Stolenspace    Endangered Species — MYA Gallery
Magda Gallery - London Project22424528223_45b54e104423051131104_ccfa22d824

Last but not least Banksy’s Bemusement Park Dismaland

DISMALAND NIGHT_edited-1.jpg

THANK YOU to all the artists, organisers, publications and art enthusiasts for your actions in 2015.

Best wishes of Peace, Love and Happiness surrounded by amazing Art !