Archive for the ‘ News ’ Category

Kelly Richardson at Artpace (San Antonio, Texas) as IAIR, 11.1

Albright-Knox curator Heather Pesanti has invited Kelly Richardson to be the international artist in residence at Artpace, San Antonio, Texas during the months of January-March. The residency will support the production of new work to be exhibited at Artpace from March 24-May 22, 2011.

Each year Artpace invites 3 curators who in turn select 3 artists to do a residency and exhibition: 1 from Texas, 1 national and 1 international. As a result, they have worked with an impressive list of artists to date, including Chiho Aoshima, Alex Bag, Vanessa Beecroft, Catherine Opie, Candice Breitz, Maurizio Cattelan, Jeremy Deller, Thomas Demand, Marcel Dzama, Kendell Geers, Isaac Julien, etc. For a full list of artists and curators please visit their archive.

For further information please visit www.artpace.org

New video installation: The Erudition

Two new video installations are currently being produced entitled The Erudition and At War with the Mystics. Below is a mock-up image of The Erudition, along with a brief synopsis.

THE ERUDITION (mock-up image)
2010 | high definition, single/multi-channel, 16:9 widescreen video installation

IN PROGRESS
Completion date: August, 2010

Mining the aesthetics of cinema and science fiction, The Erudition presents a lunar-esque looking landscape with what appears to be an unlikely monument or proposal, consisting of holographic trees blowing in fictional wind. Is this slightly malfunctioning display a forgotten site for proposed colonization? Better yet, is this some kind of alien artwork?

More to follow upon completion.

Additional content posted on Kelly Richardson Facebook page

Kelly Richardson Facebook Page

Kelly Richardson Facebook Page

A ‘Kelly Richardson’ page on Facebook was created yesterday with the intention of including additional photographs and information not included on the website. If you’re interested in following along please click on the following link:

Kelly Richardson on Facebook

This View of Life: Evolutionary Art for the Year of Darwin

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Canadian Art Magazine feature – Kelly Richardson: The Radiant Real

Canadian Art 25th Anniversary Fall Issue

For this 25th anniversary issue, the feature section of Canadian Art doesn’t dwell on glories past; rather, it looks forward to the promise of the future. “Ten Artists to Watch” offers in-depth essays, interviews and profiles on top names in the next generation in Canadian art-making including Kelly Richardson.

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Kelly Richardson: The Radiant Real
KELLY RICHARSON BLURS THE LINE BETWEEN FANTASY AND REALITY IN HER CULTURE-SATURATED VIDEO LANDSCAPES

by David Jager

Kelly Richardson: The Radiant Real

The work of the Canadian artist Kelly Richardson is suffused with the radiant tension of the hyperreal. Richardson’s videos and still photography, which deal almost exclusively in landscape, have evolved over the last ten years from simple single-channel works into elaborate digitally enhanced environments that engulf her viewers in virtual worlds tinged with wonder and anxiety.

It’s work that is at once immersive and disorienting. In her meticulously constructed, CGI-assisted simulacra, it is impossible to know what is fabricated and what is real. Richardson, who has been based in the U.K. since 2003, has mastered computer-generated animation and the creation of composites, often generating elements that are painstaking digital reconstructions of real things and places. Looking at a video piece by Richardson we are in fact looking into a maze of representations and simulations: digitally enhanced landscapes that are more lusciously real than reality, and genre-based send-ups of cultural tropes replete with references that tug at our memories and senses in ways that are often difficult to identify. Even though Richardson presents her scenes in almost obsessive digital clarity, we never stop asking ourselves: “What am I looking at?”

Richardson is fascinated by how our immersion in the virtual has supplanted and altered our response to the world around us, what she refers to as the “fantasy/reality mix.” As she puts it,

I’m quite interested in the idea of multiple realities, particularly with regard to our current media culture, which acts as the interface through which we understand the world: TV, film, media, the Internet and so on. Within that, truth is difficult, if not impossible, to locate, it seems—the line between fantasy and reality becomes further and further obscured. In response to that, over the last few years I’ve been combining real and constructed elements, focusing on creating photographs and video installations that reflect that confusion in some way.

Her attitude is based less in critique than in fascinated awe. Richardson is not about exposing or subverting the media references through which we currently swim; instead, she is interested in exploring this new imaginary realm we’ve created. Rather than attempting to straighten out the boundaries between the actual and the virtual, she views our hybrid condition as a landscape in and of itself.

Richardson is unique in that she treats weighty matters with a light touch. Never didactic, she works with the conceptual tensions between the represented and the real in an almost comically offhand manner. The problems addressed in her work are as old as art, but she remains absolutely contemporary in her approach, especially in her wide-eyed, no-brow embrace of the entirety of pop-media culture. To look at a Richardson video is to be pulled in several directions at once, with genre references and special effects triggering a layered response that is part wonder and part apprehension. Her work feels acutely contemporary: a subtle blend of paranoid, postmodern selfrefl exivity and rich spectacle laced with loopy humour.

The unpeopled landscape, be it forest, housing development or suburban lot, remains the focus of Richardson’s practice. She is attracted to empty landscapes because she wants viewers to insert themselves into her works, to see where they fit. As she states, “There are no people in the works, so viewers can find themselves within a given piece, on a personal level. I want to offer a place for reflection—rather than it being about a character or person represented in the work.”

Landscape is compelling for Richardson because it conflates an idealization of nature’s otherness and our desire to inhabit and conquer it. The rich history of landscape painting has always been underscored by a subtle tug-of-war between nostalgia and desire. She also proposes that landscape can function as an oblique version of the self-portrait: a subtly deferred space in which the viewer (or artist) can reflect on themselves.

In one of her earliest video works, Camp (2001), she presents what appears to be a video still of a reddish full moon, accompanied by the sound of popping popcorn. It highlights her acuity for using materials at hand to create a shabby, lo-fisimulacrum that is also a vaguely uncomfortable joke, underscored by the piece’s double entendre of a title. Yet the piece contains all of the characteristic elements of Richardson’s work. There is the use of virtual media to represent nature, a whimsical attempt to draw on and toy with the viewer’s expectations. In fact, the feature that distinguishes Richardson’s videos from contemporary commercial media is their refusal to deliver the punchline or the pablum we crave, exposing our preprogrammed needs in the process. Our drive for action or some type of narrative movement goes flatly unfulfilled in the early video a car stopped at a stop sign in the middle of nowhere, in front of a landscape, which presents exactly that for 30 minutes while clouds teasingly scroll across the sky. Her later piece Wagons Roll features a car suspended in mid-air off a cliff in a classic Dukes of Hazzard moment. Its wheels continue to spin and smoke flows back into its exhaust pipe, as if it can’t decide whether to move forwards or backwards in time. In The Sequel, a car tire lying flat in the middle of the road suddenly rights itself, and with almost comic grace rolls backward off the screen.

Richardson is also able to pull the unexpected out of the various nooks and crannies of our increasingly diversified subcultures. In her Supernatural series, she presented painterly stills of landscapes found in horror movies that ranged from iconic (Friday the 13th and In the Company of Wolves) to Z-grade (Frogs 2). Horror movies may seem an odd place to go looking for romantic landscapes, yet Richardson manages to pull still after compelling still from these films. Yet we also can’t help but think that without knowing the identity of the source films, we would fail to bring to the work the anxious expectations that give each landscape its sense of eerie and foreboding calm.

Richardson’s means of flouting our expectations are anything but subtle. Sharing in the effects wizardry of today’s multiplex blockbusters, her videos function as huge, blatant visual conceits that force us, through a combination of dexterity and charm, to accept the improbable as actual. Her desire to use ever more involved technical means to create immersive visual spaces reached a saturation point in Forest Park, a room-sized video installation that focused on a suburban housing project located in a cleared area that was formerly a forest. It is near the town of New Hamburg, Ontario, but it could be anywhere. The work consists of two giant, wallsized screens that dominate a darkened room, and Richardson has heightened the tension in the scene by producing the glow of the street lights in post-production, making them flicker ever so slightly in time with the chirping of crickets on the soundtrack. It’s a fairly subtle idea, but combined with the project’s pristine aridity and their placement at the edge of nowhere, the flickering lights lend an ominous air of almost supernatural suspense. We are once again transported to a region of contemporary experience that is both deeply familiar and uncanny.

Richardson has increasingly made use of animation techniques in post-production to amplify the dreamlike calm and giddy otherworldliness that pervade her recent work. Yet the highly polished, digitally buffed results belie the labour that goes into them: adding a single element can require days, if not weeks, of painstaking animation efforts and digital rendering. Her new mastery of digital technology has helped Richardson delve deeper into the mythological and away from the mundane. Correspondingly, her works have started to acquire elements of fantasy. In Exiles of the Shattered Star, a beautifully colour-saturated lake is the backdrop for a slow, majestic rain of fireballs, perhaps fragments of the star of the title. This piece also points to Richardson’s odd penchant for classic romanticism, pitting as it does the sublime beauty of the landscape against the terrifying, tragic certainty of mortality.

Still, it remains hard to know just how much she might be kidding. In probably her best-known work to date, Twilight Avenger, the diverse elements of Richardson’s practice cohere into something unclassifiable. A magnificent stag appears, preens and begins to graze in a forest at dusk. The stag, however, is phosphorescent green and wrapped in a writhing emerald vapour. The forest, a painterly composite of several different natural locations, has been digitally enhanced to a luxurious degree, and the scene is punctuated by a soundtrack replete with crickets’ chirps and animal rustlings.

What is most confounding about this eye-popping paean to pastoral kitsch is how it manages to be remotely believable at all. The piece communicates a dignified grandeur despite all of its attempts to fly in the direction of Harry Potter–style fantastical fluff; it is a landscape in which we feel quite at home. Watching Richardson’s videos, you get into the habit of chuckling in disbelief while feeling something approaching reverence.

Richardson deploys a formidable range of techniques and a broad palette of approaches in her creation of a new aesthetic, one that elicits a euphoric suspension of disbelief, allowing viewers to delve into the increasingly ambiguous and complex juncture between the real and the represented. She has transformed video, once a self-consciously minimal, anti-cinematic, bare-bones practice, into something much richer, and much stranger.

View more works by Kelly Richardson at canadianart.ca/richardson

Canadian Art Feature

Los Angeles Times | Arts | Ed Ruscha, Robert Redford among 2009 Americans for the Arts honorees

Ed Ruscha, Robert Redford among 2009 Americans for the Arts honorees
September 1, 2009

Painter Ed Ruscha has another award to put on his crowded mantel.

The Americans for the Arts has announced the recipients of its 2009 National Arts Awards, which will be handed out on Oct. 5 at a ceremony in New York. Ruscha, who is based in L.A., will receive the Artistic Excellence Award.

The 71-year-old artist was one of the pioneers of the pop art movement in the ’60s. His work frequently incorporates text into the image along with prominent beams of light. His most famous works depict various aspects of Southern California life, including the abundance of billboards and other text-based signage.

In past years, the organization has honored other visual artists such as Jeff Koons, Cindy Sherman and Chuck Close.

Ruscha will be joined by actor-director Robert Redford, who is receiving a lifetime achievement award, and author Salman Rushdie, who is being honored for his contribution to the arts.

Other award winners this year include entrepreneur and philanthropist Sidney Harman, actress Rosario Dawson and artist Kelly Richardson.

With an annual budget of close to $9 million, the Americans for the Arts is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to advance the arts and humanities on a national level.

– David Ng

Los Angeles Times | Arts

Americans for the Arts National Art Awards 2009

Every October, Americans for the Arts leads the country as we celebrate our cultural riches through National Arts and Humanities Month. The Americans for the Arts National Arts Awards serves as the focal point for these nationwide celebrations and stands out as the highlight of the year for Americans for the Arts. Board Member Maria Bell will once again serve as Chair of this extraordinary event.

The National Arts Awards represents a unique opportunity for 500 of America’s top artists and philanthropic and corporate leaders to come together once a year to recognize and celebrate the achievements of individuals who have exhibited outstanding leadership in the visual and performing arts, arts education, advocacy, and philanthropy.

Join Americans for the Arts for the National Arts Awards on October 5, 2009 to honor:

Robert Redford
Lifetime Achievement Award

Salman Rushdie
Kitty Carlisle Hart Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Arts

Ed Ruscha
Artistic Excellence Award

Sidney Harman
Frederick R. Weisman Award for Philanthropy in the Arts

Anne Finucane, Bank of America
Corporate Citizenship in the Arts Award

Rosario Dawson
Young Artist Award

Kelly Richardson || Featured Artist

Americans for the Arts National Art Awards 2009

“The Man Who Fell to Earth”, Beijing 798 Biennale

Exiles of the Shattered Star at the Hirshhorn Museum

BEIJING 798 BIENNALE
CONSTELLATIONS
The Man Who Fell to Earth
August 15 – September 12, 2009
Curator: Raul Zamudio

Prosthetics, facelifts, sex changes, skin lighteners, tanning booths; these are just some of the myriad corporeal reconfigurations via technology at the disposal of humans today. As such, these ontological modifications of the body only make age-old questions of the self that much more obsolete or, on the other hand, more complicated? The Man Who Fell to Earth is an exhibition that explores the mutating corporeal self and the malleability of subjectivity in a futuristic present where life is exceedingly accelerated via technology subsequently exacerbating social alienation.

The exhibition tropes Walter Tevis’ similarly titled novel The Man Who Fell to Earth. Tevis’ science fiction tale concerns an interplanetary visitor who comes to earth looking for water for his water-depleted planet. In order to deflect attention from his extraterrestrial nature, the generically named Thomas Jerome Newton disguises himself as human; and this symbiotic morphing between homo sapiens and space alien is metaphorically articulated in the exhibition in numerous ways not limited to canine/anthropomorphic graphing, butterfly/pudenda interfacing, and transgender/racial shape-shifting.

The Man Who Fell to Earth explores the metamorphosis of race, gender, flora and fauna within the backdrop of the science fiction genre in diverse media including painting, photography, sculpture, works-on-paper, video, performance, installation, and sound works.
The Man Who Fell to Earth is a curatorial project that will be part of the Beijing 798 Biennial that will open on August 15 2009. The Beijing 798 Biennale is titled Constellations.

Kelly Richardson will be featured in the Beijing 798 Biennale as part of The Man Who Fell to Earth.

Forces of Nature, Art Gallery of Nova Scotia (April 11-May 31)

Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
Forces of Nature
April 11 – May 31, 2009

Twilight Avenger

Twilight Avenger

As I watched the water seeping through the concrete floor outside our main temporary exhibition space, it struck me- there is no controlling Nature. Water in an art gallery is a dangerous thing and as the spring thaw approached, a hard decision had to be made: as Nature couldn’t be trusted to stay out of our Gallery spaces, the exhibition of historical prints, paintings and decorative arts from the National Gallery, Lord Dalhousie: Patron and Collector had to be postponed. Well, if Nature was going to be so present in the Art Gallery, it became clear that it must be on display. In Forces of Nature, an exhibition designed to be waterproof, four video works, drawn primarily from the Gallery’s permanent collection, examine artists’ relationships to the natural world.

David Askevold, Katherine Knight, Emily Vey Duke and Cooper Battersby, along with Kelly Richardson have created works of art that explore mediation, danger, and seduction in both natural and constructed land and seascapes.

David Askevold’s meditative projection, Latrajarg (The Cliff), follows seagulls on a cliff, and provides an exploration of figure and ground. In this early video work Askevold creates a contemplative work of art, delighting in the sea, light and motion created by the birds against sea. In the same way, Katherine Knight layers sound and video in a hypnotic nautical portrait in her work Buoy. Beacons to sailors, the buoys of Knight’s work call to us, their mournful cries almost swallowed by the ever-present sound of the ocean. Knight photographed these buoys in Caribou Harbour, near Pictou, NS, but as the three channel video work bobs, dips and ebbs before your eyes, the scene transcends place and makes a mariner of any viewer.

Emily Vey Duke + Cooper Battersby delve the highs and lows of human of nature in their most recent work, Beauty Plus Pity. Their exploration of innocence, good and evil and the human relationship to the natural world is offered in compiled vignettes and animated stories told through a varied cast, including hunters, young children, and God. In Kelly Richardson’s Twilight Avenger, an eerie green glow engulfs a stag in a twinkling forest landscape… Or perhaps that glow is emanating from the stag. That constructed tension is part of the compelling mystery of Richardson’s work. Richardson has digitally manipulated this bucolic scene, adding twilight, mist, the hoot of owls to trees and grass from different forests. She blurs the real and the surreal, allowing an uneasy vision forest life.

Curated by Sarah Fillmore

2009 Sobey Art Award Longlist Announced

For Immediate Release March 10, 2009

2009 Sobey Art Award Longlist Announced

Organizers of the $70,000 Sobey Art Award, Canada’s pre-eminent prize for contemporary Canadian art, today announced the longlist of 25 artists selected by the Curatorial Panel.

WEST COAST AND YUKON
Rhonda Weppler & Trevor Mahovsky; Luanne Martineau; Keith Langergraber; Evan Lee; Julie York

PRAIRIES AND THE NORTH
Paul Butler; Marcel Dzama; Sarah Anne Johnson; Jon Pylypchuk; Althea Thauberger

ONTARIO
Shary Boyle; Christian Giroux & Daniel Young; Luis Jacob; Kelly Richardson; Derek Sullivan

QUÉBEC
David Altmejd; Raphaëlle de Groot; Manon De Pauw; Pascal Grandmaison; Adad Hannah

ATLANTIC
Alexandra Flood; Tara K. Wells; Ilan Sandler; Graham Patterson; Joe McKay

The shortlist for the 2009 Sobey Art Award will be announced on May 1, 2009. Selected work from the shortlisted artists will be featured in an exhibition at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia running September 5 to November 5, 2009. The winner will be announced during a gala event at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia on October 15, 2009.

The 2009 Sobey Art Award Curatorial Panel comprises: Liz Wylie, Curator, Kelowna Art Gallery; Kitty Scott, Director, Visual Arts, The Banff Centre; Ivan Jurakic, Curator, Cambridge Galleries; Louise Déry, Director/Curator, Galerie de l’Université du Québec à Montréal; Terry Graff, Curator and Deputy Director, Beaverbrook Art Gallery.

BACKGROUND
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia is responsible for accepting nominations for the 2009 Sobey Art Award from recognized agents and institutions. A panel of curatorial advisors, consisting of a representative from a noted gallery in each of five regions (Atlantic, Québec, Ontario, Prairies and The North and West Coast and Yukon), develops the shortlist for the Award. The curatorial panel creates a list of five artists from each region; these are selected from the list of nominated artists, and based on the panel’s professional knowledge of their regions and of the national art scene. The curatorial panel then meets and chooses one representative from each region to be included on the national shortlist. The panel will choose the winner in October 2009.

ABOUT THE AWARD
The Sobey Art Award, Canada’s preeminent award for contemporary Canadian art, was created in 2002 by the Sobey Art Foundation. It is an annual prize given to an artist under 40 who has exhibited in a public or commercial art gallery within 18 months of being nominated. A total of $70,000 in prize money is awarded annually; $50,000 to the winner and $5,000 to the other four finalists. Since its inception the Sobey Art Award and accompanying exhibition have been organized and administered by the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia.

Previous winners:
2002 – Brian Jungen (West Coast and Yukon)
2004 – Jean-Pierre Gauthier (Québec)
2006 – Annie Pootoogook (Prairies and The North)
2007 – Michel de Broin (Québec)
2008 – Tim Lee (West Coast and Yukon)

SOBEY ART FOUNDATION
The Sobey Art Foundation was established in 1981 with a mandate to carry on the work of entrepreneur and business leader, the late Frank H. Sobey, of collecting and preserving representative examples of 19th and 20th century Canadian art. One of the finest private collections of its kind, the Sobey Art Foundation has assembled exemplary examples from Canadian Masters like Cornelius Krieghoff, Tom Thomson and J.E.H. MacDonald. The collection is housed in an intimate setting at Crombie House, the former home of Frank Sobey and his wife Irene in Pictou County, Nova Scotia. Tours are regularly scheduled throughout the summer months and by appointment year round.

ART GALLERY OF NOVA SCOTIA
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia strives to act as a gateway for the visual arts in Atlantic Canada by bringing the art of the world to Nova Scotia and the art of Nova Scotia to the world. It is an agency of the Province of Nova Scotia responsible for the preservation, exhibition and education of art through its branches in Halifax and Yarmouth.

For more information please contact:

Sarah Fillmore,
Acting Chief Curator / Curator of Exhibitions
902-424-5169, fillmose@gov.ns.ca

Robert Zingone,
Assistant Curator, Contemporary Art
902-424-3001, zingonrj@gov.ns.ca

Sobey Art Award
C/O Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
1723 Hollis St, Box 2262
Halifax NS B3J 3C8
902 424 7359 fax
artgalleryofnovascotia.ca