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| Archive for the University
of Brighton Gallery 2002 |
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| Click
here for pre 2002 University of Brighton Gallery archive |
| Gallery Archive pre
2002, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 , 2006, 2007, 2008 |
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| 9 January
- 9 February 2002 |
| Metaphors:
a portfolio of text and image by Ken Garland (South Gallery) |
| Metaphors
is text and images by Ken Garland, one of the UK's most respected
graphic designers. |
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Ken
Garland is one of the UKs most eminent and respected graphic
designers. He was instrumental in constructing the famous 1964 "First
things first" manifesto that set out a purposeful agenda for
design. The exhibition features panels with photographs with accompanying
text, both as important as each other. The fusion of the text and
image creates the metaphor.
Kinder Scout, Derbyshire:
Gritstone Monster 1982
These
photographs are not quite what they seem at first glance. When combined
with the text they become metaphors of the locations villages,
cities, countries even in which they were found. A few stones;
a scattering of coloured tissue; a rope end: all have been allocated
a significance beyond their immediate substance. Originating from
places as widely dispersed as Mexico, Ireland, Uzbekistan, Canada,
Germany and Bangladesh, they offer a coherent viewpoint on human
behaviour, viewed obliquely for the most part but ultimately with
concern for people, not things. |
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Sylhet, Bangladesh:
Squatting Woman 1995 |
Text to accompany
Sylhet, Bangladesh
Throughout the Indian sub-continent, women
squat and watch and wait, sometimes for hours on end. There seems
to be no limit to the reasons for this watching and waiting, nor to
the patience these women display. The one in the photograph is waiting
to collect her three grandchildren, who are studying at a charity-run
institution the Shumon Momen Memorial School Under the Sky.
As its name implies, it has no building of its own and all lessons
are conducted in the open air on a vacant lot. This woman squats on
a brick and watches as her grandchildren gain an education that was
denied to her and the vast majority of her generation. Will the young
peoples lives be transformed by this or will they find themselves,
in their turn, squatting, and watching, and waiting? |
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| Ken Garland associated
events: |
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Friday 18 January 4pm
Teatime Gallery Talk by Ken Garland
Ken will talk about the exhibition and
will be available to answer questions. |
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| 14 January - 9 February 2002 |
| Satoru Shoji - Dialogue
with Cloth (North Gallery) |
| Satoru Shoju
presents a Japanese spatial sculptural installation commissioned for
the gallery. |
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A
spatial sculptural installation by an inspiring Japanese artist
commissioned for the north gallery.
One can hesitate to call Shoji's works sculpture. For over thirty
years, his artistic activities have evolved around his continuing
dialogue with the material of cloth. This dramatic installation
will span the whole of the University of Brightons north gallery
and is constructed out of several large strips of cloth hanging
across the gallery with shapes strategically cut out.
The
theme is based around the ideas of space and gravity. Making use
of the suppleness, elasticity and at times the permeability of cloth,
as well as the invisible force of gravity, he has continued to give
visible form to these qualities in his works.
The
essence of his works can be found within the relationships among
the object itself, made using cloth, the intervening gaps, and the
space surrounding the object. Each work is made complete only when
viewers step into the space of the cloth and sense it with their
whole bodies. |
| Images from Satoru Shoji's installation,
Dialogue with Cloth and members of staff enjoying the traditional
Japanese tea ceremony in the installation. |
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| Satoru Shoji associated
events: |
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Tuesday 15 January 2002, 4pm, free
Teatime Gallery Talk by Satoru
Satoru will talk about his work in the
exhibition |
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Friday 25 January 2002, 4pm, free
Teatime Gallery Talk by George
Webster
George is a kite expert and will look
at how Japanese kites and simple aerodynamic principles have influenced
the work of Satoru Shoji. He will also give a brief introduction
to the history of Japanese kites. |
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Friday 8 February 2002, 4pm, free
Teatime Gallery Talk by Lesley Millar
(Free, but places are limited so please
book in advance on 01273 643728)
Lesley is a freelance curator and textile artist, she recently curated
the exhibition 'Textural Space: Contemporary Japanese Textile Art'
and is currently Daiwa/AHRB Research Fellow at The Surrey Institute
of Art and Design. The afternoon discussion will focus on Japanese
artists approach to architectonic spatial relationships with
special reference to fibre. |
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| 2nd year student shows |
| 14 - 20 February
2002, second year painting |
| 25 February -
5 March, second year Visual &
Performing Arts |
| 27 February -
5 March 2002 , second year Printmaking |
| 11 March - 15 March 2002,
second year Sculpture and Critical Fine Art Practice |
| An opportunity to see and appraise
the work of young emerging artists - full time BA undergraduate students
in the Fine Art and the Visual and Performing Arts programmes. These
students are roughly half way through their visual arts degree course
at the University and this, for them, is their first opportunity to
exhibit their work in fully professional gallery circumstances. The
exhibition is curated and organised by the students themselves. |
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| Mayo
Bucher: Open Sign 1992-2002 |
| 21 March 18 April |
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Born
in Zurich in 1963, Mayo Bucher trained as a graphic designer and
his work draws upon traditional and digital technologies. He is
one of the most accomplished artists in Europe today. This show
presents an overview of his abstract, geometrically inflected work
in painting and printmaking in a variety of scales. The exhibition
also includes documentation of some of his chief recent design and
architectural projects. He has collaborated on major projects with
some of the leading architectural partnerships in Switzerland.
He is well known for his album covers for the outstanding independent
record company ECM. For many years now he has pursued a full-time
career as a painter and has shown his work in solo and group shows
in Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Majorca, Canada and France.
Mayo Bucher exhibited his paintings in the major 1999 University
of Brighton group show ECM: Selected Signs. This is his first solo
show in Britain and will tour in autumn 2002 to the Kunstakademie,
Leipzig. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated publication
with essays by Professor Michael Tucker of the University of Brighton
and Professor Ruedi Baur of the Kunstakademie, Leipzig.
Thursday 18 April: A
Celebration of Swiss Culture
4pm Teatime Gallery Talkby
Mayo Bucher and Professor Ruedi Baur
(Hochschule Fur Grafik und Buchkunst, leipzig)
8pm Concert by world-renowned ECM recording
artists Patrick and Thomas Demenga
(cello)
Both events on 18 April are free and in the
gallery. Advance booking is advisable
for the concert and gallery talk. Please contact Katie Chugg on
01273 643728 to reserve a place. |
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| Grace
Robertson - A Sympathetic Eye |
| 24 April-29 May 2002 |
An
exhibition of the work of the pioneering British photojournalist Grace
Robertson who began working in the 1940s and in 1998 was awarded an
OBE for her services to photography. Her work is in national and private
collections worldwide.
Among the images in this wide-ranging exhibition will be her highly
regarded documentation of a London women's pub outing, which she photographed
first for Picture Post and then for Life Magazine. Some of her classic
pictures will be on show such as the timeless world of the Welsh hill
farmer and his sheep taken in 1951. Recent work includes photographs
of younger women who have grown up with very different expectations
form those most women faced in the 50s. Grace Robertson's attention
to, and sympathy with, extremes of age are also a constant in her
work. Images of childhood remind us that innocence still exists and
portraits of those who have lived through a large part of this century
are intense and powerful studies of old age. |
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| Other events associated with the exhibition: |
| Saturday 11 May 8pm, free, Grace Robertson's
Book Launch |
Launch of the book Grace Robertson;
A Sympathetic Eye
Grace Robertson will give a talk about her work and sign copies of
her new book. The pictures in this exhibition and book form a personal,
and largely optimistic account of 50 years in documentary photojournalism
by the pioneering Scottish photographer, Grace Robertson. The text
for the book is written by the eminent art and photographic historian
Ian Jeffrey. |
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| Grace Robertson's book, A Sympathetic
Eye is available from the University of Brighton. Please see 'publications'
for further details. |
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| Teatime Gallery
Talks |
| Friday 10 May,
4pm - Val Williams |
| Val is a photographic historian
and author. She will talk about Graces pioneering work. In particular,
her early photographs for Picture Post, with reference to the other
women photographers at the magazine. |
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Friday 17 May, 4pm Grace Robertson |
| Grace will talk informally about
her work, her career and why she selected these particular works for
this major retrospective exhibition. (Fully Booked) |
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| Friday 24th May,
4pm Magali Nougarede |
| Magali is a Brighton based photographer
who has been leading a project with older people in partnership with
the South East Film & Video Archive as part of the national celebrations
for Museums and Galleries Month. Magali will talk about the project
(which is in progress), and how it connects with her own practice. |
| Exhibitions are free and open to
the public Mon - Sat 10am - 5pm and Sunday 2-5pm. Closed bank holidays |
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| Burt Brill and Cardens' Graduate Show 2002 |
| Saturday 15 June to Thursday
20 June 2002 |
| Annual show of graduating student's
work |
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| MA Fine Art Final
Year Show |
| 6 July - 11 July 2002 |
| Annual exhibition
of University of Brighton Fine Art MA students' work |
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| Sara Gadd - Navigators II: HOME |
| 15 July - 9 August 2002 |
Awaiting
discovery in the Lava fields of Savai'i, Samoa are the Methodist Mission
buildings, buried and destroyed in the volcanic eruptions of 1905.
Navigators II:HOME is a virtual rebuilding of the Mission House, home
to Reverend George Furlong, Great Grandfather of the artist and reverend
to the village of Sale'aula.
Sara Gadd presents a digitally constructed exhibition, which explores
the transience of home, the passing of time and rebuilding of histories. |
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| Douglas Gordon - What you want me to say |
| 13 August - 10 September 2002 |
The University's new Centre for
Contemporary Visual Arts opens on August 12. The centre will be presenting
an exhibition of the work of Douglas Gordon in the University Gallery.
It will feature one work, a sound and installation piece, titled "
What you want me to say" 1999. This work comes out of Gordons
interest in film, fiction and memory, which he manipulates to provide
a context for the spectator to bring his or her own experience to
the work. In research terms the idea of showing this piece in Brighton
came about because the work was made in response to Gordon viewing
of the film "Brighton Rock". The work is like a fragment,
which the spectator can place within a wider context, once they recall
the film and the significance of the title of the work.
Douglas Gordon was born in Glasgow in 1966 and studied at Glasgow
School of Art (1984-1988) and at the Slade School of Art, London (1988-1990).
Since then he has exhibited internationally with major solo exhibitions
at the Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum Eindhoven 1995, Museum fur Gegenwartskunst
Zurich 1996, Kunstverein Hanover 1998, (+ info to come bb) He now
lives and works in Glasgow and New York.
Gordon uses a variety of media in his work including video, film,
text and photography. His work 24 Hour Psycho 1993 in which he projects
Hitchcocks film over a period of 24 hours has created a lasting
memory for those who have seen it.
Thanks go to the Migros Museum Zurich for the loan of the work in
the exhibition. |
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| MA Sequential Design/Illustration MA Design
by Independent Project |
| 21 - 28 September 2002 (see web site
www.ma-shed.co.uk) |
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| Ugo
Rondinone - Our Magic Hour |
| 7 October - Sun 2 November 2002 (A visions
festival exhibition) |
Everybody
loves a clown ... or do they? In Ugo Rondinone's extraordinary installation,
clowns are stripped of their power to entertain, or even to menace.
Life-sized clowns sculptures, cast in fibreglass from live models,
are painted and costumed by the artist. The clowns sleep as they lounge
around the gallery floor, reflected by huge shattered mirrors. The
environment created by these scattered figures and mirrored walls
poses questions about leisure, vanity, alienation and observation.
Swiss Artist Ugo Rondinone has lived and worked in New York since
1998. he has exhibited world-wide and his rainbow coloured fluorescent
signs have been installed outside the Centre Pompidou in Paris and
the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. |
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| Tony Wilson - Melodist to Requiem, Paintings
and Prints 1979 - 2002 |
| 7 - 29 November 2002 |
Tony
Wilsons work is strongly individual and independent. His paintings
respond directly to events, people and places that have touched his
life. He often takes on complex themes and subject matter by the use
of a language that might draw upon the figurative, the abstract, the
emblematic and the allegorical, a pictorial language that speaks in
its own terms of all that cannot be put into words.
A painter whose quest to marry making and meaning, the personal and
the transpersonal, the existential and the archetypal, has resulted
in some of the most ambitious and intriguing images in recent British
art.
The exhibition is a survey of painting and prints which places emphasis
on the most recent series of works, Iron Ladder, Remembered Figures
and Requiem, with related key earlier paintings, acting
as reference markers, mapping the overall development of ideas and
how work learns lessons from its own past.
Tony Wilson is presently principal lecturer and subject leader of
painting and printmaking at the University of Brighton.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated publication
with essays by Professor Michael Tucker, Mel Good and an interview
with Barry Barker. |
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