The 'Art Scene' is good for the economy and image of a city. It stems from people being plugged into and engaged with all aspects of people and places within a specific cultural sphere. The origins of the scene and its organisation was the topic of our lecture today, given by Pil, artist, curator and one half of the Pil and Galia Kollectiv.
Due to a shift from material labor to immaterial labor (working through conversation, verbally and mentally) work does not stop at the office anymore. It is carried always, at home, in the pub and on our phones. The contemporary art scene moves in parallel to the world of work and therefore there are no boundaries to curatorial practice, ideas and projects emerge from conversation, always in flux.
The scene is an extremely functional part of contemporary networking, generating relationships based on a shard identity. Having the ability to liaise, discuss and communicate with others upon the discourse within the scene is vital to a persons integration within it.
Try this for a tongue twister:
'Whoever is not seen 'on the scene' does not belong to the scene, and the scene which is not seen is a non-scene.' Pascal Gielen writes in The Art scene (2009: Pg15).
View from Bold Tendencies, Peckham |
Benedict Drew, Now That's What I Call Feedback (2013) |
For three months in the summer Bold Tendencies takes over the upper levels of an unused multi-storey car park. Artists are commissioned by curators to show in this vast and unusual venue. A space such as this allows for artists to realise large scale sculptural pieces that comment upon the current developments of sculpture today, along with having a mutually impactful relationship with the direct surroundings of Peckham, the skyline of London and the urban, concrete architecture of the car park.
Approaching Benedict Drew's piece on a slope reaffirms this connection. The dark, low ceilings create an almost cave like space in which Drews video acts a futuristic, moving cave painting. The sketchy animation continually revolves and pokes itself in the eye, playfully drawing attention to ways of looking, liking and commenting in the social media and online driven culture of today.
Bold Tendencies 2013 is on show until the 30th of September.
Ruth Proctor, I see You Liking Everything (2013) |
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