Lions Tigers and Bears
Wednesday, 2 February 2011
Victoria Miro Gallery
In the christmas holidays I visited the Vitoria Miro gallery, I was so amazed by the huge space with wild rooms and the fact that right next door was another gallery connected to the Victoria Miro gallery. But what amazed me the most was the art inside. I loved Fracessca Woodman's work because I haven't seen photography like that before. Woodman's dark photography really made me intregged into what was going through her mind as she was planning and taking the photographs, I came to some shakey conclusions that she was trying to portray the deep emotions and thoughts which were running around in her mind and ultimately led to her suicide. Woodmans photography also reminded me of the play write Sarah Kane's work because they both create unexplainable art in different forms and both clearly have complicated and different thoughts. I am deffinetly going to take onboard Woodman's work and think outside the box, get in touch with my own thoughts (not the examiners) and my own emotions.
The other artist I found inspirering was Tom Lubbock, I loved his use of comedy, politics and artistic tallent which he put in one. He uses words and collages together to create something you want to look into and understand. All of his work is witty and some obvious in what he is trying to portray... or is it? The simplicity of some of his work might be the diversion for the hiden meaning he is trying to express. In 2008 Lubbock developed a fatal brain tumour which gradually affected his speaking, so I wonder if his art was a way to not let nature and sickness get the better of him.
Speech?
Quiet but still something?
Noises?
Nothing?
My body. My tree.
After that it becomes simply the world.
• Thomas Nevile Lubbock, critic and illustrator, born 28 December 1957; died 9 January 2011
Tom lubbock wrote about living with a brain tumour called- When words failed me.
Tuesday, 2 November 2010
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Mona Hatoum
Over the past few years I have always done paintings and drawings but over the summer I realised that i no longer want to stay in my safety net but expand from it and be dangerous with my work. I started collecting images of cool lighting and came to notice I regularly chose lighting as my main priority in my photographs, I also found myself drawn to sculptures and installations. Mona Hatoum is the first artist I have come across that uses lighting and sculptures and i really admire her work, from her i could possibly take aspects of her work (like enlarging objects and lighting) into my final piece.
Favorite art book at the moment.
This is my favorite art book at the moment because i love the wide range of different artists put into one book. As i look through the book i get inspiration from artists like Richard Billingham to Rachel Whiteread, 'Sensation' is full of individual artists who have a variety of things to express in very original ways. I must thank Charles Saatchi for finding and presenting these artists to a world always in need for more inspiration.
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