hi Folks,

Just wanted to share an inner beam.

On Friday night the Harris Museum and Art Gallery in Preston opened an
exhibition called Current (produced in partnership with Folly).
http://www.current-experiment.org.uk/
The first piece of digital art to be collected as part of the Harris
Museum permanent collection was also announced as Thomson & Craighead’s
piece 'The distance travelled through our solar system this year and all
the barrels of oil remaining' (2011)

I spent a long time with Michael Szpakowski's piece of gif cinema 'House
and Garden'. I already knew and liked the work well but something about
the spacious gallery setting and sitting on a bench in front of it with
other visitors gave this quivering eulogy to the everyday an additional
beauty and poignancy that I can't really explain. The Thomson and
Craighead piece is audaciously simple and wonderful and pinned me to the
spot as I contemplated what and how these scrolling figures were
mapping. James Coupe's reconstruction of a Pinter play 'using' the
visitors to the museum is clever and intriguing (especially his cheeky
play on unwilling/unwitting participation). Boredomresearch's 'Lost
Calls of Cloud Mountain Whirligigs' are enchanting and strange and
Harwood, Wright and Yokokoji's Tantalum Memorial- Reconstruction
combines physical presence and mystique with crooked social critique and
is just awesome.

I was on selection panel for this exhibition so I would think it was
good wouldn't I? : ) But... hats off and high in the air for the Harris
Museum. They are rightly proud to have made such a good job of
exhibiting and collecting the kind of work that is still often ignored
here in the UK. It's mystifying to me why more art galleries and museums
aren't fighting to show more of this kind of work. There is something
particular about artists who work with technology in this reflexive way
that focuses our attention on how humans simultaneously reflect and
shape the world. It looks and sounds fantastic, it is conceptually
complex, ranges from playful to mischievous, involves the viewer in a
complex reflection of everyday experience. 

You can find out more about the artists and the work here.
http://www.current-experiment.org.uk/exhibition

Go and see it. It's nearly in the middle of England- only 2 hours on the
train from London - well worth it.

: )
Ruth

www.furtherfield.org
art, technology and social change


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