Sotirakis Charalambou ‘Untitled’ at RAUMX 6.07 – 20.07.2018 Preview 5.07.2018

 painting right:  Untitled'; 2017, 130 x 42 x6 cm paper particles and fibres Painting left: 'Untitled'; 2014-15 152 x 121 cm, Acrylic and oil paint.

Sotirakis Charalambou,
studio view 2018 painting right: Untitled’; 2017, 130 x 42 x6 cm paper particles and fibres Painting left: ‘Untitled’; 2014-15 152 x 121 cm, Acrylic and oil paint.

Detail

‘The wall piece is made entirely of paper. The work is constructed from coloured paper particles, collecting to form an uneven layered surface of differing densities.

A transparent nylon thread is suspended from the ceiling on which mohair fibres and paper particles coalesce to Form an airy three-dimensional structure. ……. the inclusion of fibres allows for greater variation in density and transparency thus a different growth occurs.

 In Sotirakis Charalambou’s works the process of making is not separated from the product. The choice of material and process are integral; they bridge the gap between how the thing is made and what it is.

An analogy with music can be made. It can indeed be posited as an identity but not as a thing. It is no more a thing than a sound which appears as identical in changes of intensity.’

James Geccelli

Sotirakis Charalambou,
Untitled 2014-2015                                                                                                                                                                 Born in London Sotirakis Charalambou lived for most of his life in the East End, he studied painting at St Martin’s School of Art. Charalambou has taught extensively as a lecturer.

In the last thirty years Charalambou has mostly exhibited in Holland and Germany.

Charalambou has chosen to name the exhibition ‘Untitled’, as his works exclude an objective subject; they have no literal or obvious symbolic meaning. Charalambou likes the viewer to rely on a ‘visual’ experience.

In March 2016 Sotirakis Charalambou showed several works in Berlin, in an exhibition called Double Movement. Below are extracts from the catalogue describing the works, written by the curator artist James Geccelli. 

Studio View

The exhibition ‘Double Movement’ was held in the gallery Schaufenster, Raum fur Kunst, in Berlin, Germany. In March 2016.

Several of Charalambou’s works are included in the collections of:                                                 The Osthaus-Museum, Hagen Germany.                                                                                         Werner Richard, Dr. Carl Dorken Stiftung. Germany.

Works have been exhibited in, England, Germany, The Netherlands, U.S.A, Cyprus and Hungary.          For more information on exhibitions, C.V, Publications, etc:  charalambou.wordpress.com

 

 

NIcole Vinokur at RAUMX 8 – 23 June 2018

                                                                                                                                              

Pot O’ Gold
11:35 minute durational performance
Video
2018

Pot O’ Gold                                                                                                                                               Choice Grade                                                                                                                                       Medium White Asparagus Spears                                                                                             Ingredients: Asparagus, water, salt, acidity regulator (E330)                                                       Product of China

I never knew asparagus was green. On very special occasions we ate tinned white asparagus; often baked into a quiche-like pie my mother made. Economic sanctions effecting food imports during apartheid resulted in fierce support for homegrown brands. However, luxury canned goods were available from China.

 

Minted
Hand pressed earthenware tiles,silkscreened Delft tulip design (c. 1650), cobalt; 2015

Analysts have compared the behaviour of the crypto currency Bitcoin to Tulip mania; a moment when tulips gripped the Dutch economy and imagination. Being highly coveted, the Dutch would cultivate a single bloom and place it the centre of a garden surrounded with mirrors. They went to great alchemical lengths to encourage a ‘break’ in the flowers which produced flairs of strikingly vivid colours in their petals to increase their value. In the 1920’s, plant pathologists discovered that a virus was responsible for this deviation.

“Blue and white pottery;” literally meaning, “Blue Flowers” developed from 14th century “bluish white ware” in China. Chinese export porcelain produced in the 17th century for European markets depicted Chinese and European scenes. Dutch Delftware became a competitor with imitation motifs on earthenware which reached the East where potters made porcelain versions for export back.

Set of Six
Silkscreen print
2018

Manet sold Charles Ephrussi ‘Bunch of Asparagus’ (1880) for 800 francs. When Ephrussi sent him 1000, Manet painted a single asparagus spear and sent it to Ephrussi with a note saying,   “There was one missing from your bunch.”

Bunch of Asparagus (After Manet), 2017,
Giclee print
30cm x23cm

I wish I believed in destiny
Vinyl
2018

Perennial Foe I
Pencil on paper
2017

Perennial Foe II
Pencil on paper
2017

Installation at RAUMX
2018                                                                                                                                                                                               Nicole Vinokur ( b. 1978) is a South African artist living and working in London. Her work has been shown internationally, including Camden Arts Centre, London; Modern Art Projects, Cape Town; Godart Gallery, Johannesburg; SHELF, London; Tintype Gallery, London; Bosse & Baum, London; Caustic Coastal, Manchester, The Hostry, Norwich; and The 50th Venice Biennale, Venice. She is the recipient of the Queen’s Park Commission, Blackpool (2016/17), Red Mansion Prize (2015) Artist/Curator Fellowship with Grizedale Arts (2014) and Young Vision award (2005). Vinokur graduated from the Royal College of Art, MA Sculpture (2015) and Pretoria Technikon, BTech Fine Art (2014)

 

Alan Johnston and Sebastian Dannenberg 4.05.2018 – 24.05.2018 – Preview Thursday 3rd. of May

For the  first show of 2018  RAUMX  is presenting Scottish Painter Alan Johnston and                German painter Sebastian Dannenberg. In their work both artists are  directly working with found spatial conditions .

Sebastian Dannenberg,
Auto-reverse; 2014
Wall paint, plasterboard, wood, KOAXIAL

Alan Johnston, Untitled (Bury 14), 2007
Acrylic paint, pencil, charcoal and beeswax on plywood Artist’s frame, sandblasted perspex and glass, 24.2 x 18.2 cm

Alan Johnston, Diptych, Untitled (Sesshu’s Dance), 1993
Acrylic paint, charcoal and beeswax on linen, 72.4 x 193 cm

Alan Johnston “My work explores spatial contexts and relations through drawing and architectural construction, reflecting on the spatial and tactual implications in architecture where perceptual notions are rendered as common factors in sight and touch. This field is closely related to the work of Patrick Geddes, ‘Philosophical Generalism’, and ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’. This is a comparative context which has its roots in the practice of art, architecture and visual thinking in the West and the East, and relates to concepts and practices such as Wabi Sabi.  I engage in collaborative initiatives in art and architecture with Professor Shinichi Ogawa, Tokyo, and Neil Gillespie, Edinburgh.”  http://www.barthacontemporary.com/exhibitions/alan-johnston-4/

Sebastian Dannenberg
Roomservice;2015
Lacquer on wall, paint, MDF, screws , found architecture 4+8+2

Sebastian Dannenberg’s work combines architectural, sculptural and painted interventions.Most of his work is site specific and made in situ. His investigations result in contemporary responses to spatial and painterly aspects. Hereby his attention is rather set on the making of an artwork in comparison to its production.

Dannenberg draws his inspiration from journeys through the urban landscape, recording the ever-changing aspects of a city, it’s gentrification or it’s decline into despair. His main interest lies in the painting and it’s position in a space. Hereby he reflects on structural conditions of a painting, such as layers, construction and the painted he colour. In combining them in a different order, he simultaneously lays open those important elements. Dannenberg’s paintings are often situated where one would not expect a painting to be placed, such as corner; edges; lowered near the floor or high near the ceiling; sometimes hidden behind panels; under roofs and boxes. At other times a work could be standing tall upright in the middle of a wall, dominating the space. http://sebastiandannenberg.com/

Sebastian Dannenberg

Alan Johnston
Untitled , 2015

Programme for 2018

Nicole Vinokur ( South Africa – GB) Installation

Sotis Charalambou (GB) Painting

Alan Johnston (Scotland)  Sebastian Dannenberg (Germany) Painting -Installation

Shawn Stipling ( GB) -Martina Geccelli (Germany/GB) Painting, Photography- Sculpture

Lee Hassall (GB) Performance- Installation

 

 

Mary Maclean and Jo McGonigal – September 2017

Mary Maclean, Campus #7

Mary Maclean 

Mary Maclean’s work in photography explores the intersections of spatial thought and the flux of things that are always on the move, even if captured in the apparently implacable, static, objecthood of the image. She is founder member of the curating group Outside Architecture and was a member of the collaborative artists project Five Years 2010 -2015. She is currently Senior Lecturer at the Royal Academy Schools.

Mary Maclean, Left of Place, A photographic installation exploring the space of borders and thresholds in the everyday structures within architectural environments.

Mary Maclean, Non-Coincidence

 

Mary Maclean, Outcomes may Vary # 1

 

 

 

Jo McGonigal

Jo McGonigal
Side (cadmium yellow deep) 2016

Jo McGonigal, Dirty Gold, 2016
(Lycra, pigment,wood)

Jo McGonigal  makes spatial paintings out of physical things in real space. The work begins with a visual analysis of historical Baroque painting (e.g. Poussin, Vermeer, etc.) as a basis for understanding painting, not as a fixed identity but as a specific spatial construction with a pictorial and spatial vocabulary. These observations became translated through the construction of three-dimensional spatial paintings as pictorial compositions that reconfigure the space and its architecture, using specific physical things. The exhibition space evolves the work through its spatial characteristics.  In using materials to imply formal and conceptual qualities of transparency, light, opacity, verticality, proximity, distance, McGonigal is dealing with in how they are used a vernacular of painting.

Jo McGonigal,
Close Looking (2015)
Oil on Lycra and Wood
35 x 10 x 7 cm

Jo McGonigal, Rectangles (2015)
Edge of a Silk Scarf / Perspex

Off the Wall – installation views

View into the studio space with left S. Callery -K. Finklea-S.Dannenberg (right)

H.Ardila ( left) -Kevin Finklea (right)

RAUMX-Letftpartly seen Deb Covell-Simon Callery (middle)-Katrin Bremermann

Katrin Bremermann, 2017(left- Sebastian Dannenberg, Ellis Portable ,2017 (right)

Sebastian Dannenberg, Ellis Portable, 2017

S.Dannenberg, Volume Up, 2017

Hernan Ardila, Untitled, 2016 (left) -Deb Covell, Tightfit, 2016

Deb Covell, Tightfit.2016 ( (wall), partly seen Deb Covell Shroud, 2017

Deb Covell, Shroud, 2017- Simon Callery, Three Piece Leaning Wallpit Painting, 2014

Off the Wall – painting and object – 07.07 until 22.7.2017 , Preview Thursday 6.07.2017 from 6pm

Off the Wall came about as a response to problems or questions I have about my own work. Issues around the edge, the relationship between the surface, form, the support and the question, when does a painting become an object?

Although I have not completely let go of the image or frame in my own work, there has been a move towards physicality and this was something I wanted to explore.

Simon Callery
Orange-WallPit Painting, 2016

Marcia Tucker wrote about Richard Tuttle for his exhibition at the Whitney in 1975… .So much of Tuttle’s work is a result of body activity that is partly caused by the fact that physical activity is the most direct and common means we have of translating interior states into external expression; in a very direct way, frowning, smiling, closed or open body positions, etc., are our primary means of communication, because they are experientially rather than analytically comprehensible. Our own experience of our bodies is “pre-­‐scientific,” primitive and immediate.

Katrin Bremermann
Twin Talk, 2016,
oil on canvas, 42 x 32 x 7 cm + 42 x 29 x 7 cm

In the late sixties, The ‘Supports and Surfaces’ movement focused on processes in painting essentially involved in the materiality and objecthood of the painting surface itself. They prioritised the importance of site and the reduction of painting to bare essentials, foregrounding the structural support of the stretcher for instance or leaving canvases bare or un-stretched, folded or suspended, tied off or draped. Obvious comparisons can be drawn to some of the work here today.

With shows at Cherry & Martin in Los Angeles followed by another at the Canada gallery in New York, both in 2014, the short lived movement has had somewhat of a resurgence although some might say, for many artists it never went away. Maybe for someone like Richard Tuttle this is true.

Sebastian Dannenberg

With shows such as  ENANTIODROMIA, also featuring Simon Callery, at the Fold gallery in 2014 and REAL PAINTING in 2015 at the Castlefield Gallery which was co-curated by Deb Covell and Jo McGonigal, it is plain to see that the ethos behind the Support/Surface movement is still very much alive.

Hernan Ardila
2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The list of artists showing here today has developed over time and with discussions between Martina and myself I feel it has evolved into a cohesive group that bounce playfully off one another whilst still asserting their own individuality. From the beginning we were keen for the exhibition to represent both UK and international artists and although they are from far afield there is a tangible collective consciousness.

Some you could say are more painterly and others more sculptural, though all consider themselves to be painters and continuing in the tradition of painting. Saying this, there is a will to break out of the conventions and free painting from the reigns of the canvas and frame, Off The Wall and into the space of the gallery.

Deb Covell,
red-submerged-forms

By removing the frame and therefore the image, painting is allowed to be matter and material. This move towards objectness raises the question of, what is the stuff that makes a painting, what is it made of and in turn this leads to decisions about the making and the process of construction. Whether it be the wood of the support, the canvas or the paint itself, each are treated equally and the emphasis is put on the materiality and physical nature of each component.

Jai Llewellyn, 2017

Kevin Finklea

Liadin Cooke – New Work Exhibition Views

Before me floats an Image 2017
plywood, gloss paint
Installation dimensions vary

                                                                                                                                                                      This body of work comes out of my current inquiry into tools, not merely as articles of utility but as implements that serve the human need to alter, adapt, create and destroy. Tools are both contrived and used for extending the force of man onto something, much like language, and the resulting marks of action that they can leave behind imply a residue of possession.

For most people the outcome of an action is what is important. However, this work is about constructing something that articulates the indication of a mark. In so doing, the significance of the action becomes disrupted, its intended outcome secondary, and its suggested implementation forces one into positing the question, ‘what made that and why?’

Based on drawings from an old photograph of a turf cutting with marks of the slane (a spade for cutting turf) clearly visible on the walls of the ditch, the elements of ‘Before me Floats an Image’ are the results of something pushed forward into being. They indicate a boundary, define a limit and are an absolute statement of fact and existence, they are a combination of the scars of removal, definition and intention – however much they hint at the unintelligible. The top layer pushes down and the bottom layers push upward creating a site of something that is neither recollection nor history, but that other place that mimics the act that it is based, in part, on. They are the objects of an act of thought or disappearance.

A spade is used to dig a hole and to thrust your way into the earth. A shovel moves something from one place to another. It used to be that every region in Ireland had its own shovel and spade makers, and each design was used for a particular place at a specific time of year. Some regions had as much as 250 different types of spades. This is a fascinating image of affinity with land and the considered craftsmanship of the tools people used to work it.

The wooden shapes of ‘Husbandmen’ made from walnut, are cut to the actual size of 6 different spades made in a small factory in County Tyrone, which closed down in the 1950’s. The rings in the wood mimic contours of the land they were made to work – with a sort of yearning nostalgia. The forms have the purity of modernism when art and architecture were together seen as one essential necessity in life, just at the time when the way people worked the land was undergoing its final transformation through to mechanisation.

The Untitled 1-8 watercolours show and fix that instant a missile is fired, when the ground turns to dust and light, and that formidable tool of destruction moves out of our sightline leaving a vacuum filled with anticipatory violence. ‘Like a Laughing String’ oscillates between the two opposite conditions of thought or action – in suspense, undecided and wavering.

These thoughts on tools and the link they have with language as a method of articulating intention, led to my making things that imply a demanding and purposeful activity. And in fact all this new work asks, ‘Why do we need and make things and how do we say this?

Liadin Cooke 2017                                                                                   www.liadincooke.com

Husbandmen
2014 – 2017, walnut
160 x 50 cm

Husbandmen

Like a Laughing String, 2017
lime wood, string, concrete
dimensions vary

Like a Laughing String, 2017

Like a Laughing String 2017

Before me floats an Image-study no 2 2017 Gouache on paper 102 x 72 cm

Untitled 1 – 8, 2017
watercolours
50 x 35 cm