Archives for posts with tag: Johanna Love

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead curated by Maria Hinel opened at Hypha Gallery 1, Poultry.

The title of the exhibition references Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, the environmentalist and feminist eco-thriller by Olga Tokarczuk, who in turn draws this title from William Blake’s Proverbs of Hell. The story is narrated by Janina Duszejko, an ageing former engineer, amateur translator of Blake and passionate animal rights advocate, whose outcry against hunting is consistently met with bewilderment and contempt. Local authorities and neighbours attribute her pleas to eccentricity, old age, as well as a ‘women’s instinct for caring.’ Echoing William Blake’s dark and prophetic vision of justice – one in which moral reckoning springs from the unsettling return of what has been systematically oppressed and ignored – the exhibition considers the agency of beings beyond the parameters of the rational that constitute the human worldview.

I am very happy to have my two channel video Radical Pair included in this exhibition. The work asks us to consider the very different experiences of the world of other creatures. Monitor 1 imagines what it might be like to have the extra sensory powers of a bird where a protein in the eye is excited by polarised light making it possible to see the Earth’s magnetic field and follow a visual navigatory clue in an accelerated world on the wing. Monitor 2 sequences concentric circles which mimic the geological structure of the Earth to explore the relationship between Earth’s magnetic field and various methods of natural navigation including via magnetoreception and celestial observation used by birds, bees and even magnetotatic bacteria.

In chemistry a radical is an unpaired electron, this state can make it highly chemically reactive. In the radical pair mechanism a pair of electrons with opposite spins have a chemical bond. Light can cause the electrons to change spin direction which can break the bond giving the electron a chance to react with other molecules. In magnetoreception two cryptochrome molecules, found in the rod cells in the eyes of birds, each with unpaired electrons exist in states either with their spin axes in the same direction, or in opposite directions, oscillating rapidly between the two states. That oscillation is extremely sensitive to magnetic fields, even the weak magnetic field of the Earth. Birds move their head to detect the orientation of the magnetic field. The function of cryptochrome varies by species, but its mechanism is always the same: exposure to blue light excites an electron, which causes the formation of a radical-pair whose electrons are quantum entangled, enabling the precision needed for magnetoreception.

Radical Pair 2023 Two channel video 4:48 min

It was great to meet some of the other artists and to learn more about their work.

Exhibition images: Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir & Mark Wilson Feral Attraction A project exploring what happens when domestic animals transgress the invisible and unspoken boundaries that separate landscapes of domestication and wildness?, Kat Lyons Season of the Beetle, Oil on canvas, Odonchimeg Davaadorj After midnight love is free 2, Oil on canvas, Black Swans, Ink on paper, Jochen Lempert silver gelatin prints, Francis Alÿs El Gringo, 2003 created in collaboration with Rafael Ortega, the film documents a tense, close-up encounter with a pack of snarling, aggressive dogs, exploring themes of paranoia, surveillance, and the uncomfortable positioning of the outsider, Andy Holden Oologists Record, Mise-en-scene based on police photography of the illegal collection of wild bird eggs discovered under the bed of Matthew Gonshaw, Anne Marie Maes Lightboxes depicting apiary images plus Smell of the Hive, custommade metal laboratory stand, lab glass, glass funnel, rubber dispenser, essential oils, Tiziana Pers drawings of animals that either escaped confinement and were slaughtered or escaped slaughter by being purchased by the artist, Amalia Pica please open hurry (in memory of Washoe), Gypsum, Amalia Pica & Rafael Ortega Pan Troglodytes Ellioti and Cousins, multi-channel video installation – These surveys record members of the largest surviving population of the rarest type of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes ellioti). The jungle cameras sometimes malfunction, returning images as grainy as those from CCTV’s. In the installation of this wildlife clip, chimpanzees drift in and out of the camera’s eye. However, they are not the only ones being observed.

Some professional install shots here

I enjoyed the special event – novelist Chloe Aridjis in conversation with Maria Hinel. Reading her prose poem on the plight of the Pangolin, a short essay and an excerpt from her new book. Her writing centres around her own everyday experiences, including her pets and the stray dogs of Mexico, and a sensitivity to animals influenced by her activist parents that shaped her own passion for animal rights.

Chloe Aridjis is the author of Book of Clouds, which won the Prix du Premier Roman Étranger in France, Asunder, which tells the story of a museum guard at the National Gallery, and Sea Monsters, winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. She writes for various art journals and was a guest curator of the Leonora Carrington retrospective at Tate Liverpool, as well as previously contributing to the catalogue for ‘Paula Rego: Crivelli’s Garden’ in 2023. Her new book titled The Shadow of the Object comes out in April 2026.

Cosmos: the art of observing space curated by Ione Parkin in partnership with The Royal Astronomical Society at RWA Bristol has had a fantastic public response and some great reviews.

Precious astronomical artefacts from institution archives sit alongside works by artists:
Kate Bernstein 🌖 Annie Cattrell 🌖 Ian Chamberlain 🌖 Richard Cox 🌖 Geraldine Cox 🌖 Susan Derges 🌖 Otto Dettmer 🌖 Sarah Duncan 🌔 Susan Eyre 🌕 Anna Gillespie 🌖 Tom Hammick 🌖 Alex Hartley 🌖 Simon Hitchens 🌖 Janette Kerr 🌖 Melanie King 🌖 Tania Kovats 🌖 Ulrike Kuchner 🌖 Lynda Laird 🌖 Christopher Le Brun 🌖 Johanna Love 🌖 Gillian McFarland 🌖 Rachael Nee 🌖 Pale Blue Dot Collective (Louise Beer and John Hooper) 🌖 Cornelia Parker 🌖 Ione Parkin 🌖 Michael Porter 🌖 Ben Rowe 🌖 Robin Sewell 🌖 Jane Sheppard 🌖 Yinka Shonibare 🌖 Karl Singporewala 🌖 Wolfgang Tillmans

It has also been confirmed that the exhibition will be travelling to Aberdeen Art Gallery later in the year for a 6 month run. It has been a great experience being part of this timely exhibition and I am so pleased it will reach new audiences. As we face many environmental challenges, as space both expands and contracts – in that we can see further than ever before in greater detail, but are in the process of building a metal cage around our planet obliterating our view of the stars from Earth, when space exploration prioritises space exploitation and extraction, conversations about our place in the universe in relation to others including the non-human, and the inorganic is vital. It is clear that artists and scientists question the world we share in very similar ways through experiment, analysis and imagination. Both perspectives can change our view of reality. Congratulations to Ione for bringing us together to have these conversations and engage with artworks that enable us to feel a personal connection to the cosmos rather than merely observe it as something distant and intangible. 

Studio International review Cosmos: The Art of Observing Space

Dr Katy Barrett  https://www.spoonsontrays.com/blog/cosmos-the-art-and-science-of-observing-space

The four works I have in Cosmos: the art of observing space are The Obelisk (of sedimentary knowledge), 92 Years Measured in Light, Orbital and Sun Factor.

The following selection of exhibition images are courtesy of Alastair Brookes, KoLab Studios.

In the studio I have been busy editing a new video work looking at the otherworlds inhabited by microscopic creatures of the gutter, to be shown in the upcoming exhibition Occupied: Strange Company curated by Julie Hoyle. This exhibition brings together contemporary artists whose works temporarily inhabit the rooms of the Safehouses in Peckham. Set within the remnants of domesticity, painting, sculpture, print, installation and moving image sit alongside each other in unexpected ways, shifting the atmosphere of the house and rendering the familiar strange.

Site visit to Safehouses. I plan to project onto bare brickwork in the exposed loftspace.

Out and About and Online

Inspiring public lecture at the Geological Society Exploring the extraterrestrial: from meteors to micrometeorites encouraging us to install meteor detector cameras on our homes and sift through the dust that collects on our roofs and in our gutters to hunt for micrometeorites. I would like to install a camera but am hampered by a lot of light pollution, surrounding rooftops and wayward trees. Having been fascinated by all the creatures that live in my gutters and making new work envisaging these as astronauts finding cosmic dust spheroids would be a fitting addition but I would need a much more powerful microscope to identify these objects that vary in size but are usually about a hair’s breadth across.

A display of photographs by Max Alexander has been installed by the Royal Astronomical Society in the courtyard of Burlington House highlighting the growing problem of space junk orbiting our planet.

Enjoyed this nourishment – Emergence magazine article Wrinkled Time: The Persistence of Past Worlds on Earth by Marcia Bjornerud and The Mater podcast on minerals.

This article in Future Observatory Journal – More than Human, on a re-reading of Thomas Nagel’s text ‘What is it like to be a bat?’, which was published in The Philosophical Review in October 1974, has some interesting points to think about when considering how more than human creatures experience the world.

More-than-human also means other-than-human imagination and conceptual apparatus. In non-human worlds based on different senses – olfactory, electrical, seismic, magnetic, auditory – things that are invisible to us, for example, might be concrete and tangible, and what is seemingly solid to another animal might be imperceptible to us. From a non-human perspective, objects that we give distinct identities to through language – teapot, steam, air – become unified in ways that fuse words into new, multi-layered object identities, beyond visual appearances.

absolute now II at Danielle Arnaud featuring Rieko Akatsuka, George Barber, Kaz, Guy Sherwin, Tereza Stehlikova. Drawing on the essay Time and Eternity by D.T.Suzuki the works in this exhibition curated by Kaz engage with moments of frozen time, frames looped in the video or animation that together suggest time moving forwards. Magical diorama and inventive video installations.

Suzuki also compares the human experience of reality to that of other animals, believing they do not have self awareness to question the concept of eternity, to criticise or desire beyond the life they know. That human consciousness enables us to imagine and to step out of reality, to dream. But we can never imagine what totally different reality a bat experiences.

Deep Veins celebrating International Women’s Day, Brompton Cemetery Chapel sensitively curated by Catherine Li and supported by Friends of Brompton Cemetery. Images 1/2 Lisa Pettibone, 3 Alice Cunningham, 4 install shots 5 Sato Sugamoto, 6 Rachel Goodison. Works also include Philippa Beveridge and Helen Barff.

Gravity is Occult: Studies of the Cosmos at Farsight Gallery. The exhibition featured paintings by Kevin Quigley and Siobhán McAuley. Modern physics and occultism have a complex, intertwined history, especially during the Victorian era and the birth of quantum theory – where scientists studied psychic phenomena, alchemy, and spiritualism, seeking deeper realities beyond materialism.
 
As Artists and Thinkers we like to dream into and explore ‘hidden’ worlds
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I very much enjoyed the performance The Gravitician (Newtonian Performance) by Calum F Kerr with cosmic diagram film projection Continuum by Mary Yacoob. Having started reading Martin Rees book Just Six Numbers (on how the behaviour and origins of the universe can be explained by just six numbers) and grappling with the number that describes gravity I was entranced by the repetitive mantra of the Gravitician ‘I see f is equal to g’. In classical physics, (force) represents gravity, calculated as (Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation).

I am delighted to have work included in Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead showing at Hypha Studios, Gallery One, 1 Poultry, London.

Curated by Maria Hinel, the exhibition invites audiences to consider the lives of animals as sentient beings capable of communication, organisation and even vengeance. Dismantling the vision of non-human animals as voiceless and inert, the works in different ways grant them a space to act – to signal their unrest, seek freedom and express grievance. Drawing on the novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Olga Tokarczuk and the works of William Blake, the exhibition asks what forms of empathy might emerge when animals are recognised as ethical and political agents in their own right.

I have seen the 2017 film Spoor based on the book and the incredible Complicite production and read the brilliant book so it is wonderful to be in an exhibition drawing on this novel.

Artists include: Francis Alÿs | Sara Anstis | Odonchimeg Davaadorj | Susan Eyre | Andy Holden | Jochen Lempert | Kat Lyons | Anne Marie Maes | Tiziana Pers |Amalia Pica & Rafael Ortega | Bryndìs Snæbjörnsdóttir & Mark Wilson.

I will be showing the two channel video Radical Pair 2023 04:48 min.
Research has proven that many animals, including birds, bees and even bacteria use the Earth’s magnetic field to orientate themselves, sometimes in conjunction with the sun and the stars. 

In the context of this exhibition, Radical Pair highlights the very different and subtle ways animals experience the world that we share. Considering the perspectives of fellow creatures is a step towards building alliances between humans and non-humans in a damaged world, as expressed by Donna Haraway in Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (2016) where she urges humans to build a non-hierarchical, and interdependent world embracing all beings as part of complex, interconnected systems.

I had a wonderful day at the Royal Astronomical Society delivering my talk Revealing the Unseen as part of the symposium bringing together voices from art and science to celebrate the exhibition Cosmos: the art of observing space currently on show in Bristol at the Royal West of England Academy.

Alongside myself speakers included:
Professor Mike Lockwood, President Royal Astronomical Society who regaled us with some extraordinary astronomical facts such as the concept that light does not travel and experiences no time passing. | Ren Renwick, Director of the RWA who was happily able to promote Cosmos as one of the most successful exhibitions at the RWA | Ione Parkin RWA, curator of Cosmos: the art of observing space who expressed for all of us the human fascination for the mysteries of the universe as well as a look at the evocative planetary surfaces of her own work| Dr Sian Prosser, archivist at the RAS who shared her motivation for the library to be active in the production of knowledge and not just a repository for artefacts. | Kate Bernstein, book artist who gave an insight into her making process and collaboration with the RAS. | Lynda Laird, multidisciplinary photographic artist who explained the research behind her installation celebrating the astronomical discoveries of Caroline Herschel | Johanna Love, artist, academic and researcher who revealed a microscopic world of dust and mysterious asteroids explored through drawing. | Annie Cattrell RSA FRSS, interdisciplinary artist who shared her research and inspiration leading to the creation of many impressive large scale installations that explore ways of experiencing what is generally out of reach. | Christopher Le Brun PPRA Hon RWA, internationally renowned painter who spoke about how he uses the motif of the moon as a means to explore light and dark, a push and pull, through the medium of paint. |  Ian Chamberlain RWA RE, printmaker and researcher who delved into how time is relevant in his deeply observational etchings | Louise Beer, artist and curator who spoke from the heart on the importance of dark skies to feel a connection to the cosmos. | Gillian Adair McFarland, visual artist and researcher who shared her dynamic process of creating imagined planets from blown glass. | Amaury Triaud, Professor of Exoplanetology at the University of Birmingham, who talked about his passion for bringing art into the laboratory and science into the gallery.

I am very pleased to have been invited to contribute an article for the current issue of Interalia Magazine Cosmos and Visions of Light – An online magazine, edited by Richard Bright. This issue, explores, among other things, art and cosmological phenomena; light and pattern; geometrical shapes and mathematical laws; information and radio astronomy; topology and wormholes; colour and evolution.

Contributions include interviews with Louise Beer and Ben Rowe; articles by Ione Parkin, Chris Wood, Susan Eyre, Geraldine Cox, Steven Giovinco, Siobhan McDonald, Florian Neukart, John Etnyre, Enrique Gaztanaga, Jonathan Goldenberg, Csanád Horváth & Natasha Hurley-Walker.

Following an application to the ArtEO Earth Stories Open Call I have been invited to join the ArtEO R&D Community. ArtEO helps artists to work with environmental data and imagery, connecting them with tools and expertise to help tell Earth’s story. Although I wasn’t included in the funded programme, this online initiative sounds like it could offer some exciting opportunities. It has been designed for artists who want to work at the intersection of art and Earth Observation (EO) and aims to offer access to specialised tools, selected ArtEO and curated EO data, workshops and events alongside a network of peer artists and technical experts. Image credit ESA and NASA Earth Observatory.

In the studio

I have finished adding copper pieces and applying patination ink to the new tablet in the Instruments of the Anemoi series of concrete tablets. These sculptures reflect on early means of navigation. This one looks at wind rose origins and replaces one I made earlier.

Work in progress for upcoming exhibition Strange Company: at the Safehouses. Alluding to Oscar Wilde’s familiar quote We are all in the gutter but some of us are looking at the stars, this work considers the otherworlds inhabited by creatures of the gutter as exotic places of discovery. I am experimenting with making models based on the platonic solids that represent water and air as speculative modular living capsules for space exploration.

I have made some decisions and printed the text for The Book of Reversals – an artist’s book that offers a poetic interpretation of the creation of Earth’s turbulent magnetic field, its liability to flip poles and how the secrets of the inner core have been discovered through seismic tremors. I have printed the text in a vertical format to echo the lines of the magnetic stripes secreted in the minerals by spreading lava on ocean floor.

I have been experimenting with crystal spheres, iron half spheres and different sands. I’m not sure where these ideas might be going as yet. There is something planetary and spectrographic about these.

It was rather a surprise to realise I have been at Thames-side Studios for 10 years! Taking my first studio here after completing my MA. From labyrinthine depths with no natural light, to nearer the print studio with a half share, to my own space but no window and finally to where I am now with skylight and window. It’s brilliant to have Thames-side Print Studio just up the corridor from my studio and also The Gate Dark Room and London Sculpture Workshop on site, plus the amazing gallery that I’ve been lucky to show in. I love the community here.

Out and About and Online

Mapping the heliosphere, the huge bubble created by the Sun’s wind that encapsulates our entire solar system – IMAP spacecraft was launched September 2025 to measure interplanetary magnetic fields and solar wind particles.

I popped into Thames-side Gallery to see Disturbances a group show embracing interruption and disturbance as a catalyst to shift perspective. I was impressed by the large collaged work of Caroline Macdonald which is combination of digital print and monoprint, and Benjamin Deakin’s surreal super realist paintings.

I enjoyed the selection of films showing in Deep Focus: Terrains: Ecosystems at Goldsmiths Cinema. Looking at varied and personal approaches to landscape. I liked the idea of Tom Faber’s The Hiding Place as questioning whether the character was influencing the weather through their own emotional state or was being influenced by the weather. This didn’t come across to me in the film but I really liked the drama of the film where sequences of extreme weather were suddenly scrunched up as if on a painted canvas. This techno wizardry is done using Blender. It was also great to see Deborah Tchoudjinoff’s latest digital film, in her world building series, based on a future where certain minerals have become extinct. This one is The City of Coal and instead of a dark gritty place, it is full of light, set in the bowl of an inactive volcano where the last block of coal is enshrined in a baurtiful translucent block, like an ice cube. What once seemed ubiquitous, burnt without conscience is now held up as a marvellous relic. All the forests that went into making the seams of coal are gone, in their place are new forms of hybrid trees.

On the Other Earth at Stone Nest a 57-minute 3D, 360° installation places you at the heart of a virtual performance. Surrounded by a 3D panoramic LED environment, you can see every detail as hyperreal dancers from Company Wayne McGregor and the Hong Kong Ballet move around you. Right in the middle of the 3D action, it’s hard not to move out of the way a a dancer passes right up to and though you. I really like the section when the dancers were all upside down, like bats, but dressed in white and when they leaped it was like they flew momentarily. Wonderful.

Some beautiful and thoughtful experiences in Infinite Bodies examining how Wayne McGregor’s work responds to the evolving relationship between the human body and technology. Human still wins. Thankfully.

Dr. Susan Pyne gave a talk at the Royal Astronomical Society Celebrating Women Astronomers. For centuries, women astronomers made discoveries that were often overlooked or credited to men. Focusing on five of the many women who transformed our understanding of the Universe she reminded us how very difficult it was for women to advance in the field of astronomy, firstly being denied education and admittance to university, but even once admitted, not being awarded a degree despite studying for it, having to leave employment on marriage, not being allowed to use the instruments at an observatory. It was a long slow road to the first woman Astronomer Royal, Prof. Michele Dougherty, being appointed just last year. Caroline Herschel (1750-1848), famous for her discovery of comets was the first woman to be paid a salary as an astronomer; Annie Maunder (1868-1947) who persevered as a human computer at Greenwich, recorded the first evidence of the movement of the sunspot emergence from the poles toward the equator over the 11-year solar cycle and published The Heavens and Their Story in 1908; Cecilia Payne (1900-1979) determined that stars were composed primarily of hydrogen and helium.

Illuminating tour of Brompton Cemetery Catacombs. These subterranean tunnels offered the Victorians – status, security and sentimentality when body snatchers were rife. The lead lined coffins were supposed to be airtight, preserving the body within, but many it seems were not.

I also had a chance for another quick look at the majestic octagonal Cemetery Chapel where I will be having a solo show later in the year.

Listening to the Inside Science podcast Should we rethink navigating by GPS? I was fascinated to hear that a report from the Royal Institute of Navigation recommends teaching sailors to navigate by the stars again as a top priority.

Reliance on satellite GPS is no longer viable in a world of conflict where jamming and spoofing of GPS is putting maritime and aviation safety and security in jeopardy. All countries have their own GPS systems but all are vulnerable to interference. The satellites are 20km away, twice the diameter of the earth, but are basically a 5okw lightbulb in space which is very easy to drown out with more local noise. It is now also easy to spoof a position with software readily available online. As well as ships these jamming and spoofing signals are effecting1500 planes a day which have to reset and counter spoof signals, also trains, mobile phones and anything that accesses GPS can be effected. There are technological solutions that can be put in place to determine where the signal is coming from but it looks like there will forever be a need to read the stars.

The program goes on to look at satellites under fire from solar weather which can also effect navigation systems. Predicting space weather is difficult but Imperial College London have developed some magnetic field detector instruments which are on the Solar Orbiter probe, speeding through space, to give us more warning about solar activity which could affect us here on earth and be valuable info for the safety of the next launch to the moon.

I have also been enjoying the first series of For All Mankind which was originally aired in 2019. The series dramatizes an alternate history depicting “what would have happened if the global space race had never ended” after the Soviet Union succeeds in the first crewed Moon landing ahead of the United States. It is entertaining TV, some nice 60’s/70’s sets and what if scenarios.

A packed and buzzing opening at The Royal West of England Academy for Cosmos: the art of observing space, curated by Ione Parkin. There was so much to take in, I will need to go back another time to be sure of seeing everything. I feel so lucky to be a part of this exhibition that includes so many wonderful artists as well as precious artifacts from the Royal Astronomical Society.

The following Private View images are courtesy of Alastair Brookes, KoLab Studios

There is a fabulous exhibition catalogue to accompany the exhibition with foreword by astrophysicist, author and broadcaster, Chris Lintott and contributions from Ione Parkin RWA, visiting Honorary Fellow of the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Leicester; Sian Prosser, library and archives manager at the Royal Astronomical Society; and Amaury Triaud, Professor of Exoplanetology at the University of Birmingham. Image Alastair Brookes, KoLab Studios.

The following installation images of my four works in Cosmos are courtesy of Alastair Brookes, KoLab Studios

Sun Factor, 2015, comes from a period in my practice when I was looking at the human disconnect with the natural world and impending climate change. I was focusing on concepts of paradise as a state of being at one with a natural order. During this period we took a family holiday to Sardinia and one day we were offered a boat trip to an island that was described by the sales tout as ‘paradise’ – so we had to go. It turned out to be the opposite of what one might expect of paradise and this work is a direct translation of our experience. Bizarrely there was a concrete obelisk at the beach, –  a signifier of an ancient totem to the power of the sun. The figures are printed in high saturation colours, a reminder of the early days of package holidays and glossy postcards. It also speaks of skin damage and the ritual behaviour of tourists flocking to the sun –  perhaps without acknowledging its true power and the vulnerability of human biology.

92 Years Measured in Light, 2021, is a very personal work made just after the pandemic, reflecting on the human experience of time in relation to the vastness of the Cosmos. There is a star, similar to our sun, with planets orbiting in a motion comparable to how the planets orbit here in our solar system. This star, in the constellation of Puppis, is about 92 light years away. The time it has taken the first radio and television signals travelling at the speed of light to reach this prospective home-from-home is roughly the same time as the lifespan of my mother who was born around the time of these early broadcasts. The folded sections in this work emulate the raster pattern of early TV signals which were sent in segments and must be reassembled on arrival to make sense of the message. The artwork includes fragmented images from this historical period viewed from one direction, and a chart depicting the star from the other. It is an interesting thought to consider what alien life forms might make of these messages travelling across the universe, should they be able to interact with them.

The Azimuth Obelisk (of sedimentary knowledge) 2023 is a reimagining of a concrete obelisk, erected in 1955 at Hartland Magnetic Observatory, as a permanent azimuth mark from which to monitor the drift of the magnetic north pole. Measurements are taken via a theodolite through a north facing window in what is known as the Absolute Hut. My sculpture echoes the hidden history of Earth’s wandering magnetic field, which has been secreted by magnetic minerals in the strata of sedimentary rock over millennia. To make the piece, hundreds of works on paper were painstakingly hand-torn, layered and stacked, expressing the passage of time at both geological and human scales.

Orbital, 2024, reflects on the interaction between space weather and Earth’s magnetic field and its impact on human infrastructure. The Earth’s magnetic field is quite a weak force requiring sensitive equipment to detect it, yet it provides valuable protection to life on Earth. It’s interaction with the solar wind has been very visible recently as the sun reaches peak activity in its 11 year cycle, lighting up skies with the aurora borealis much further south than is usual. Auroras may be beautiful to witness but belie the potential damage to satellites and electric grids from a violent solar storm. Our daily lives have become increasingly reliant on satellite technology for communication and data gathering and disruption to these systems would have wide reaching global effects. There is also research that suggests the number of satellites orbiting Earth and the growing space junk graveyard forming a metal cage could weaken Earth’s protective magnetic field, making us even more vulnerable to space weather and cosmic radiation. Space pollution and over use of low orbit space is not only gambling with disaster but it’s also disrupting the view of the night sky and will make it increasingly difficult for us to exit the Earth for space exploration.  

Out, About and Online

Michael Taylor Dog eats Lion at Standpoint Gallery. I was lucky to be in the audience for his ‘in conversation’ with Johanna Love and his following introduction to the workings of Paupers Press, with lots of juicy insider knowledge about the artists, such as Grayson Parry, Damian Hurst and Paula Rego, who go to Michael for editioning their works. There was lots of show and tell and also his own solo show to see. Three hours well spent. Down to earth and entertaining, it was refreshing to hear such honesty about the creative process. The not knowing. His press release is basically a list of disturbing incidents that have stayed in his mind. Maybe sometime, the dog will have his day.

In his own words: Michael Taylor is the founder of the Paupers Press and co-founder of Standpoint Studios and Mark Tanner Sculpture Award. He has had a few shows but won no prizes. His work is held in a collection. He has taught at several art schools, a few of which are still open, some have closed. He has travelled extensively within the EU and considers himself a man for warm seasons.

A little disappointed with Ryoji Ikeda’s new site-specific audio-visual installation data-cosm [n°1] at 180 Strand. Visitors are invited to lie down on the floor and look up at the large LED screen set on the ceiling above them, their bodies surrounded by Ikeda’s soundscapes – a total sensory experience. The set up is impressive and the experience is immersive, at times blinding and at times has the thrill of a fairground ride but overall I felt the imagery could have been more engaging.

Paradigm Shift at 180 Strand spans moving image works from the 1970s to today, drawing on avant-garde cinema, television, music video, performance, fashion, gaming, and internet culture. Featuring works by artists: Sophia Al-Maria, Meriem Bennani, Dara Birnbaum, Foday Dumbuya, Cao Fei, Tremaine Emory, Nan Goldin, Arthur Jafa, Derek Jarman, JulianKnxx, Mark Leckey, Josèfa Ntjam, Pipilotti Rist, Martine Syms, TELFAR, Ryan Trecartin, Gillian Wearing and Andy Warhol. Many, many videos. Exit feeling like it’s been a long night in the underworld.

I joined a webinar in connection with Earth, a Cosmic Spectacle exhibition at Everybody Arts Together. Presented by exhibiting artist Louise Beer, with speakers Dr Anik Halder, postdoctoral research associate at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge and Jesus College Cambridge. and Miranda Lowe CBE, principal curator, natural historian and marine invertebrate specialist at the Natural History Museum, London. The importance of establishing connections to the cosmos through stargazing and learning more about astronomy and other life that shares our planet was emphasised as vital to building hope for the future.

Robert Good Tower No 1a (Looks Like A Good Trajectory So Far) at Saturation Point. The tower is inspired by the iconic launch gantry at Kennedy Space Center’s Launch Complex 39A from which Apollo 11 blasted off to the moon. The title quote is taken from the CBS News commentary at about 1:05 minutes into the flight, and reflects the optimism and excitement of the launch, whilst also perhaps inviting the viewer to consider whether we are still on such a good trajectory today.

I enjoyed the poignancy of the structure as something that no longer has purpose, but also in the context of it being built inside a room, reaching to the ceiling in quite an optimistic defiance.

Also opening at the RWA was Elemental Curated by Malcolm Ashman RWA and Stephen Jacobson RWA. This exhibition brings together works by four RWA Academicians that trace deep and individual responses to the natural world. Each work holds fragments of place that move beyond representation to connect with elements that are both intimate and universal. Great to catch up with Sara Dudman who I met during the Lizard Point Residency in 2019. Her dynamic paintings are vibrant evocations of “what it is to be a volcano. Feeling the sulphurous breath of the earth, watching her move; these paintings adopt the animist view of the volcano as a living being. Trekking the winding paths to the craters, we can never surmount a volcano but feel the awe of her role in reshaping the land”. Sara Dudman RWA 

Emma Talbot Everything is Energy at The Arnolfini, Bristol in which the artist leads us through a rich eco-system of works – including silk painting installations, intimate drawings, sculptural forms (Talbot calls them ‘intangible things’) and animation – each exploring the complexity of our relationship with nature, technology and the world around us.

‘What is life. A container for magic. A conductor for nameless frissons & frictions. Electricities & energies that sustain endless expansion.’ (Emma Talbot)

I thought the aminations were beautifully made. I found the text a bit intrusive and prescriptive but it does get her points across I suppose and it is very much a part of how she works.

Peter Doig: House of Music at the Serpentine. The exhibition features two sets of rare, restored analogue speakers, originally designed for cinemas and large auditoriums. Music selected by the artist – from his substantial archive of vinyl records and cassette tapes accumulated over decades – plays through a set of ‘high fidelity’ 1950s wooden Klangfilm Euronor speakers. At the centre of the exhibition is an original Western Electric / Bell Labs sound system, produced in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Developed to respond to the demands of modern movie sound, this extremely rare ‘loud speaking telephone’ consists of valve amplifiers and mains-energised field-coil loudspeakers, which were designed specifically to herald in the new era of ‘talking movies’. These speakers were salvaged from derelict cinemas across the UK by Laurence Passera, with whom Doig has collaborated closely on this project. Laurence Passera is a London-based expert and devoted enthusiast of cinematic sound systems. The speakers offer a unique listening experience due to the technical mastery achieved in their construction that places them as the great grandfathers of modern ‘hi-end’ audio.

Settling down to listen to the music meant lingering longer than would be usual when just looking at paintings.

The terrific Kelly James Marshall: The Histories at the Royal Academy. These powerful paintings are full of references which span art history, civil rights, comics, science fiction, his own memories and more. He uses these to comment on the past, celebrate everyday life and imagine more optimistic futures. Full of vibrant energy, fabulous use of glitter and text, truly stunning.

Beatriz Milhazes ‘Além do Horizonte’ (‘Beyond the Horizon’) at White Cube Mason’s Yard. A dose of grey day medicine.

Amazing News Update – Laboratory of Dark Matters has been awarded a month long residency at Guest Projects for April 2017. Exciting times ahead.

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Laboratory of Dark Matters is a response by artists to scientific investigations into the unknown nature of the Universe; opening a dialogue between scientists and artists who are each driven by curiosity and seek answers to fundamental questions about matter and consciousness.

“All visible matter in the entire Universe, including all the stars, cosmic objects, black holes and intergalactic gases, amounts to less than 5% of the mass we know to be present.”  

The search for dark matter is a scientific endeavour but also requires a large degree of faith in both the existence of these elusive particles and in the scientists’ ability to eventually detect and identify them. For artists, creating work is often about searching for some unknown and embracing an unexpected outcome.

The participating artists will be Amy Gear, Daniel Clark, Elizabeth Murton, Kate Fahey, Luci Eldridge, Melanie King, Peter Glasgow, Sarah Gillett, Susan Eyre.

Unexpectedly found myself trailing Game of Thrones fans location hunting.

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Visiting Northern Ireland’s dramatic coast and spiritual heartlands. Brooding ruins and primeval earthworks, geological anomalies and wide windswept bays. I was on the lookout for saints and sacred wells.

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breathing it in

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The walls of Dunluce Castle – struck through with the local geometric formations

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mossy glade – moss prohibition

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‘The Armagh Astropark – where Heaven comes down to Earth…’

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faith and ritual

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At Cranfield Holy Well there was no evidence of fine spring water and amber coloured crystals, it looked dank and more pestilent than healing. Still it is festooned with personal items tied to the overhanging branches, each one a little prayer. According to  custom, one must bathe the infected part of the body with a rag dipped in the well, pray and then tie the rag to a large overhanging tree, as the rag decays the affliction is supposed to disappear. Judging from the preservation of these items, for some, the cure is a long way off.

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County Antrim wears its heart on its sleeve.

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Settlements past and present – Downhill House a recent ruin and the grassy banks of Lissenden Earthworks

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The enigmatic nun, dark Julia’s grave stone at the ancient Bonamargy Friary

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The bronze age Tandragee Man brandishing  his legendary silver prosthetic limb

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The even more ancient belly of the earth at Marble Arch caves

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Containment slotted nicely into the Plastic Propaganda curated exhibition Sugar and Spice at St. Katherine’s Dock.

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Made in response to the trade of exotic objects by merchants who journeyed across the globe five hundred years ago when navigation was reliant on the stars.

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Shaped plates, etched using a sugar lift technique, are filled with inks made from ground spices and copperplate oils wafting traces of their origins in to the gallery space –  turmeric, coriander, cumin, paprika…

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These operate as markers plotting the spice route from India around Africa to Europe according to the latitude and longitude lines taken from C16th maps of Mercator and Ortelius. The patterns combine ideologies of origins with destinations reflecting the breadth and mix of cultures that came together. I like how viewing becomes a ritual.

Sugar and Spice explored ideas of trade, hybridization and inter-cultural exchange and the legacy of the rich mercantile history of the docks. Looking back informs, educates and gives us the platform for continuous debate…

 …all more poignant post referendum.

Sarah Gillet’s magical show Quarry at Brocket Gallery was in itself a process of quarrying – exhuming material from a forensic analysis of Paolo Uccello’s painting   ‘The Hunt in the Forest (1470). The pursuit of quarry. This inversion of meanings repeats itself in the work as do the shapes and shadows of a forest that extends beyond the boundaries of any canvas into the dark depths of dream spaces where strange creatures abound.

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In such a space where would you turn to escape.

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It’s how I imagine the labyrinths of Venice should be during the carnival. Full of intriguing theatrical creatures appearing out of the void; playful menace.

I have long enjoyed the work of Raqib Shaw and the dazzling paintings he creates with intricate enamelled surfaces glistening with gemstones and gold; the chaos of  battle played out to the personal beat of shamanic drums; the quest for unattainable perfection.  His obsession with self, pitted against the world, seems to have reached a melancholic peak with Self-Portraits at White Cube. This reimagining of old masters heavily laden with references to his own worlds of Peckham and Kashmir appear as premature reliquaries to a life saturated in self immolation.

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Hidden undercurrents of surface beauty are exposed in Victoria Ahrens thoughtful presentation of her PhD research ABSORB. A meditation on the history of the Paranà River in Argentina. From a mystical place of leisure for her Grandfather to the brutal grave of those who ‘disappeared’ during the military junta, thrown to their deaths to be slowly and anonymously absorbed into the landscape.

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By allowing the waters of the river to wash over the plates and images that she creates the alchemical processes continue and those lost into the waters imbue the work with a gentle pathos.

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From shards of shattered time an image is built that hovers between past and present.

Alex Simpson’s exploration of material in Through Viscera at Barbican Arts Group Trust was fresh and almost vibrating with energy.

Like a virus spreading across all surfaces, into the core of matter that lay extruded across the floor, eaten into and vein like, globular and thick with fungal felt, drying and dropping, leaving prints as scars.

 

In Lichtlose Luft, at PARCspace the LCC’s photographic archive resource centre,  Johanna Love’s lithographic prints and drawings on digital prints of tiny specks of matter magnified to reveal the sublime contours reminiscent of a mountain landscape were a very successful exploration of finding the human relationship in a scientifically generated image.

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The technical image is a starting point for the work, either obtained through the electron microscope or the digital scanner. Through the process of drawing and digital manipulation, there is an attempt to bring the image back into the physical, material world of the living and imagination, for as Merleau Ponty (1964) states, ‘science manipulates things and gives up living in them.’

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Isolated like meteorites falling through a grey space that vibrates with the blurred colours we see on the back surface of the eyelid; these drawings capture the imagination.

Super/collider once again brought us a mind blowing yet entertaining talk at Second Home.  Dr. Andrew O’Bannon has been studying Holography for 15 years. He proposes a bold idea that all the information in our 3D universe may be contained in a mysterious 2D image, like a hologram. Promising not only to unite Einstein’s relativity with quantum physics, holography also has the potential to provide us with cleaner energy, faster computers, and novel electronics. Using ideas from string theory he studies holography and strongly interacting systems.

In everyday life, a hologram is a two-dimensional image containing enough information to reconstruct a three-dimensional object. In theoretical physics, holography proposes that some strongly-interacting systems are equivalent to Einstein’s theory of gravity in one higher dimension.

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“Many experiments to detect proposed dark matter particles through non-gravitational means are under way. On 25 August 2016, astronomers reported that Dragonfly 44, an ultra diffuse galaxy (UDG) with the mass of the Milky Way galaxy, but with nearly no discernible stars or galactic structure, may be made almost entirely of dark matter.” From BBC science

There were two talks at New Scientist Live that I found particularly interesting. The first was from Dr Andrew Pontzen a theoretical cosmologist explaining the evidence that dark matter exists and why it is proving so hard to detect. He spends his time working through theories that are then passed on to someone like Cham Ghag, an astrophysicist who will devise strategies to test theories in direct detection projects such as ZEPLIN and LUX.

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It’s not only the calculations from gravitational lensing that suggests way more mass is present than can be seen but also large computer modelling samples of how galaxies form and rotate. Removing a few stars from the model galaxy ends in a chaotic breakdown, but making a few stars ‘dark’ so that the mass remains but we cannot see them does not change the rotation of the remaining stars we can still see. The distribution of dark matter across the universe appears like a fibrous net, imaged from the cosmic microwave background, an echo still reverberating from the first few seconds at the birth of the universe. The second talk ‘Beyond the Higgs’ was from particle physicist Professor Tara Shears who inspects the data produced from the experiments colliding proton beams to create fundamental particles at CERN, for anomalies that might turn out to be evidence of an interaction with a new particle. The search goes on.

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