Showing posts with label Dundee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dundee. Show all posts

That was Degree Show Time... in Dundee

BRENDAN COLLINS puts finishing touches to his Degree Show work

THIS PREVIEW/REVIEW OF THE DJCAD Degree Show 2013 APPEARED IN THE HERALD ARTS SUPPLEMENT ON MAY 18TH

Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design
University of Dundee, 13 Perth Road, Dundee
01382 385330
www.dundee.ac.uk/djcad/degreeshow/


If you have studied for a degree, you will vividly remember the build-up to the moment when you found out what grading you’d been given.
So when I walked into the splendid new entrance of Dundee’s Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design (DJCAD) a few days ago, and found myself pitched into a gaggle of Fine Art undergraduates receiving their marks, I felt for every one of them.
Later, in one of the college’s many studios pressed into service as temporary exhibition spaces, I met one of their number, Ross Weryk, tweaking his installation, Hospital. This powerful work uses sound, video and sculpture to make a visceral statement about the way in which hospital patients become helpless in the face of medical intervention and pain.
A slightly flushed looking Ross had just heard he’d been gained a first class degree. As we talked and I looked at his work, which even shows film of him having his own blood extracted (talk about a metaphor), I learned that his mother died last year from cancer.
This spurred him on him, he told me, to go deeper than ever into his work and follow up an existing interest in cosmetic surgery.
I can see why he was awarded a first. As the late George Wyllie once said, ‘When you’re genuine with your art, you strike a chord and everything is all right.’
Putting together a degree show is a double-edged sword, and this being a degree show, let me tell you there are at least two swords on display here. One of them, presented by brothers Fraser and Calum Brownlee is deep fried and sitting in a bath of oil, and the other, presented by Dorian Braun and Jack Paton, has a large sign beside declaring, ‘Danger do not touch’.
These artists-in-waiting have all reached the end of four years of working towards an honours degree, and putting on what for many of them, is their first major exhibition in a public space. 
Art careers are often made at degree shows. 
Traditionally, they are edgy affairs. Taboo subjects are tackled with youthful gusto (nope, still can’t get the sight of that green member jiggling about in Jacqueline Chua’s video out of my mind, try as I might...) and many have still to learn how to put the old adage of ‘less is more’ into practice.
Dundee’s DJCAD, currently celebrating its 125th anniversary, is traditionally the first degree show to take place each year out of Scotland’s five art schools.
This year, the degree show is called 290°, a nod to the fact Dundee’s largest annual exhibition of art and design will feature the work of 290 final-year students, while an additional exhibition of alumni artwork will be held for the duration of the show.
Students from DJCAD’s 11 undergraduate programmes are all represented here.
It’s tempting to root out themes in a degree show and if there is one, it appears to be about searching for a bridge between tradition and the making of solid things.
Digital technology is used to augment hand-crafted, drawn or painted work, although there is some fine ‘pure painting’ from Allan Davies and Brendan Collins. I also enjoyed the freshness of Jaynie Topping’s landscapes, prints and sculptures, which mix up geology, geography, issues of land ownership and a sense of poetry connected to the land.
Cathy O’Brien’s Minotaur work is a fusion of craft meets sculpture meets video work and shows exceptional attention to detail. 
Jonny Lyons takes a boy’s own view of weaponry by making and displaying quite beautifully crafted sculptural versions of weapons and then documenting their use through photography in a touchingly boyish way. A black and white picture of a graveyard needs no artist statement.
Calum Crotch from Time Based Art and Digital Film dances to his own drum beat in a carefully constructed tented festival venue. There is purpose here, and he has already been accepted onto Creative Scotland's Starter For Six programme to further develop his ideas into a working business.
In Art Philosophy Contemporary Practices, Dan Shay gained a first for his thoughtful examination of how we blur the boundaries between the real and the virtual. This is intelligent work which can also be taken at face value.
Next door to his ‘shed’, I found Morgan Cahn putting the finishing touches to her shiny ‘reflective space’. Sporting one of her famous-around-the-campus handprinted t-shirts bearing the legend, ‘there is life after degree show’, Cahn plays with many disciplines, including; performance, film, textiles, printmaking and text. She is the living embodiment of the fact that it is almost impossible to pin down any degree show.
All human life is here. And more. Just watch out for double-edged swords.

Steven Camley
Smithy Gallery 74 Glasgow Road, Blanefield
01360 770551
Until June 9


One of Steve Camley's watercolours - love this!

In the daily hubbub of the rolling news machine which is the background to all our lives, it’s easy to take for granted the creative spark which goes into producing a cartoon every week day.
But day in, day out, come rain or shine, as news stories flare up, politicians come and go and public figures drift in and out of our collective consciousness, cartoonists across the world sit down at a blank page, and turn out little nuggets of genius. 
I am sure there are many people reading this now who turn to Steve Camley’s cartoon on the comment pages of The Herald every Monday to Friday before they look at anything else.
Since 2003, Camley has been this newspaper’s resident cartoonist. He has been named Cartoonist of the Year in the Scottish Press Awards six times in that period. Prior to this, with sister paper, The Sunday Herald, and Scotland on Sunday, he picked up three further awards.
It’s not often cartoonists make the leap from newsprint to gallery wall, but thanks to an intervention from his friend, author and artist, Alasdair Gray, 65 original watercolours by Camley will be adorning the walls of The Smithy Gallery in Blanefield for the next three weeks. 
According to gallery owner, Natalie Harrison, Gray – who exhibited with the gallery last year – suggested to her that she consider an exhibition of his friend’s work.
“Alasdair is a big fan of Steven's work,” she explains. “He went through hundreds of paintings with me to choose the final 65. 
“I’ve never held an exhibition of this kind. We see these cartoons every day in print, and I am delighted to be dedicating an exhibition to celebrate the talent behind them. The original watercolour paintings are full of high-quality draughtsmanship, wit and energy. They are also quite beautiful.”
Gray adds: “Newspaper cartoons are sold cheaply in such large quantities that hardly anyone thinks the original pictures from which they are scanned have value untill after the cartoonist dies. 
“This exhibition is a chance to acquire an original work to enjoy before posterity catches up with you.’

A flurry of festive gallery happenings


This is an unedited version of the Gallery Round-up I wrote for The Herald Arts section on 24/12/11

Queen Elizabeth II by Cecil Beaton: A Diamond Jubilee Celebration
The McManus
Albert Square, Meadowside, Dundee
www.themcmanus-dundee.gov.uk
01382 307200
Until January 8
Who's Queen? No, I'm just your mammie...

I was in Dundee city centre recently and, finding myself with an hour to spare after an appointment,  I dropped in to The McManus gallery. This was the first time I’d ever been in this beautiful building, recently sympathetically restored to its Victorian grandeur, and I had just enough time to take a quick look around the painting galleries before heading to the Cecil Beaton exhibition.
Dundee has been the first location to host the V&A’s exhibition of portraits of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II by photographer Cecil Beaton before it takes a Jubilee-style tour around her Maj’s realm.
It is the first in a series of partnership projects between The McManus and the V&A, as part of the pre-opening programme for the V&A at Dundee.
An expanded exhibition will be hosted at the V&A in London from February 8-to April 22 next year. The exhibition will then tour around the UK to Leeds City Museum, Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery, and Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle.
If you haven’t seen this beautiful and captivating exhibition, I urge you to pay a visit before it closes on January 8. Through the vehicle of Beaton’s photographs, contact sheets and film footage, this exhibition radiates a real sense of time, place, as well as glamour. 
One of the things which struck me most was the maturing process as the years moved on for both Beaton – and his subject. Clearly, as a young woman, Elizabeth enjoyed the process of being photographed – she was first shot by him in 1942, at the age of 16. 
As the decades pass, duty hoves into view and more than a little exasperation with the whole process of being photographed. 
Beaton was even at her Coronation, taking official and unofficial photographs and this really does give you a ring-side seat of the history of a key period in the middle of the 20th century.
The perceived wisdom that Elizabeth was the workhorse and her sister Margaret, the beauty, is also challenged here. In these photographs, Elizabeth radiates Holywood-style glamour, particularly in the late 1940s and into the 1950s.
A fascinating study into a life spent in the spotlight, it also reveals Beaton as one of the 20th century’s masters of photography.
Christmas exhibitions at scotlandart.com
2 St Stephen Place, Stockbridge, Edinburgh
0131 225 6257
193 Bath Street, Glasgow
0141 221 4502
www.scotlandart.com
Edinburgh exhibition runs until January 15
Glasgow exhibition runs until January 22

Alan King 'Secret Message' (oil on panel £620)

Scotlandart.com has been flying the flag for Scottish artists since its inception in 2000, putting talented home-grown painters and makers’ work out in the ether, and in the flesh at its two city-based galleries in Glasgow and Edinburgh.A huge number of hits on its website comes from outside Scotland and staff tell tales of packing off paintings to New Zealand sheep farmers – and other far-flung locations.This year, Scotlandart.com has Christmas exhibitions running in tandem at its galleries in Bath Street, Glasgow, and Edinburgh’s Stockbridge district until into the new year. If you are too time pressed to drop into the galleries in person, you can visit the online gallery to view the extensive online catalogue.You can also lose yourself for a while in reading lively artists’ profiles. Last Christmas, as the temperature dropped, sales at the online gallery soared, with art lovers in rural areas selecting paintings from the comfort of their snowbound homes, and this continued well into the New Year. Featured work in the real life galleries includes paintings by Glasgow artist Alan King who often develops his ideas by using manikins and miniature theatre which are positioned and photographed with different lights.“The Red Hat is a major theme running through my work,” explains Alan. “Storytelling and a love of early Italian Art are the roots of the development of my work. I try to create images which are visually compelling and form a bond with the spectator.”
Kelly Gallery
118 Douglas Street, Glasgow
0141 248 6386
www.royalglasgowinstitute.org
What's New In Your Neck of the Woods by Pamela Tait 


This Christmas marks not just the end of the 150th birthday celebrations for venerable Scottish art institution, The Royal Glasgow Institute for the Fine Arts (RGI), but also Lynne Mackenzie’s first anniversary as curator of the RGI Kelly Gallery in Douglas Street.
Mackenzie, together with assistant curator Amy Marletta, has injected much needed 21st century vim and vigour into the actual and virtual life of this little gallery just off Sauchiehall Street.
This year has seen a packed programme of exhibitions, talks and events and there have been several innovations to the gallery, including the Own Art scheme, as well as jewellery and prints for sale, both in the gallery and online via http://royalglasgow.culturelabel.com/
My eye was drawn to some lovely kitsch yet tender Pamela Tait originals, which can be yours to keep for just £45 a month for 10 months.
Keep an eye out on the RGI website and social media platforms, Facebook and Twitter, for more innovations and news of next year’s exhibitions and events.
Highlights for 2012 include exhibitions of paintings and drawings from uber-talented sisters Kim and Lara Scouller (April 17-28), paintings from members of The Glasgow Group (March 20-31) and mixed/glass/drawing from Alex Galloway (May 29-June 9), whose stunning Windows of Today were recently unveiled at the now refurbished Maryhill Burgh Halls in Glasgow.

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