Anna Barham, Arena, 2011. Installation at CCA Glasgow, image courtesy the artist and Arcade, London.
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Graham Gussin, Lens, 2012. Image courtesy the artist.
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Tai Shani, Headless/Senseless, Image courtesy the artist.
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Anna Barham, Arena, 2011
Arena is a modular amphitheatre structure made from MDF and wood that houses a recording of the artist reading her bookReturn To Leptis Magna
(45 minutes). The book is written entirely from anagrams of its title,
exploring the sculptural correspondence between the fragmented
architecture of the ruined Roman city and letters as the basic units of
written language, each capable of constructing multiplicities of new
forms. The resulting text reveals streams and webs of words,
associations and meanings embedded within the phrase. The physical
structure of Arena acts as sculpture, seating, plinth and stage
– its shifting status highlighting the position that 'meaning' is
neither singular nor fixed, but operates as a field of potential with
the viewer being an active participant within its construction.
Anna Barham is represented by Arcade, London.
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Graham Gussin, Lens, 2012
Consisting of 22 sepia toned photographs taken on location at a hotel on the Atlantic coast in Portugal.
The hotel is set close to the furthest western point of Europe, a one time geographic end of the world.
The hotel was used as the main location by Wim Wenders in 1982 when
he shot 'The State of Things'. At that time it was run down and in ill
repair. The first ten minutes of the film is shot in sepia tone and
depicts an end of the world scenario set in an undesignated future. What
we see is supposedly a remaking of Roger Corman's 1955 film 'Day The
World Ended'.
The series of photographs revisit the hotel and its surroundings.
Shot on 35mm film and printed in sepia, they extend and play on the
temporal aspects of the subject. The past and the future, prophecy and
reality become confused through a kind of distorting lens, the
photographs acting as a time machine which looks back and forward
simultaneously. The deserted images have an apocalyptic nature to them,
the hotel and environs becoming ruins in a projected time.
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Tai Shani, Headless/Senseless, 2011
Fantastical and cinematic, Shani's performances and films contain
multilayered and self-reflexive narratives that are abstracted
adaptations of films, plays and books or fictional historical
dramatisations.
Deploying diverse fictional strategies, and operating in multiple
temporal structures both in the real and the mediated, Shani's work
revolves around scripts and texts which alternate between familiar
narrative styles and structures and theoretical prose that research the
agency of the simulated self and the "real" self; the immaterial lives
of fictional characters beyond spectatorship, over-identification and
death in the fictional space. These intricate narratives are played out
by elaborately costumed large casts of archetypal and pseudo-historical
characters drawn from diverse cultural mythologies in Neo-Baroque
settings that reference early science fiction, Greek tragedy and various
traditions of theatrical spectacle.
Headless/Senseless is a sound-tracked
installation of 13 lenticular prints, the lives and fictions of two
actresses Annie Paradise and Jean Heller overflow and haemorrhage into
each other creating a spiralling narrative told through fractured
recollections, dreams and desires.
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