I apologise for the non functioning video on the previous post. It wasn’t a video anyway, merely music. Perhaps this is why You Tube could not cope with it, or more likely I use the wrong codec. I arrived today (after a long day) on the Artists Talking homepage to see myself described as a “long-term serial-blogger”. I can’t quite put my finger on it but this term worries me. www.a-n.co.uk/p/1266399
As if to confirm that there is no such thing as a reformed blogger. I am at it again, lurking in the shadows of the internet. You are never more that ten feet from a blogger. The new blog hasn’t anything much on it yet, except a very exciting picture but if you want to follow it please sign up.
I may just copy posts from old blogs at random.
My long day was spent in London setting up for “The Man Who Fell to Earth” info here
The opening is on the 9th June at 6, please come. Alex Gene Morrison’s painting smells lovely.
Here is the blurb
Jens Hills, Penthouse (Unit 40), SoDa Studios 0786 606 3663
open Saturdays 12-6pm or by appointment
Private view: Thursday 9 June 6-9pm
Monika Bobinska is pleased to present the first of two group exhibitons at Jens Hills London.
The shows will utilise the interior and exterior spaces of the distinctive 8th floor penthouse at SoDa Studios, with its panoramic views extending over the city.
The Man Who Fell to Earth explores the ‘otherworldly’, against a backdrop of new and post modernisms, the discourses of science fiction and the realities of global events.
Alex Gene Morrison’s nuanced paintings employ a highly personalised language to engage with a universal cosmology, whilst referencing retro-futuristic science fiction cinema and the lofty ideals of suprematism.
Adam King’s collages and assemblages compose new worlds which speak of cultural myth and invented narratives, and pastoral traditions in the context of an urban consumerist culture.
Jost Münster’s two and three dimensional works inhabit a fragile territory between abstraction and figuration, the observed and the imagined. A delicate use of colour, and a subtle ordering of forms and materials is combined with an ongoing engagement with the material world and its dynamics.
Alex Pearl’s humorous works typically convey a sense of the improvised, the accidental, eternally on the brink of failure or collapse. His recent sculptures, ‘DIY apocalypses’ created from expanding builders’ foam, seem to have an unruly, malevolent life of their own.
Karen Seapker’s figurative paintings combine dynamic brush strokes with a deft use of colour and black-and-white, her language of visual slippage suggesting both nostalgia and a sense of the unsettling distance between memory and fact.
For more information, please contact Monika Bobinska on 0786 606 3663 or [email protected]
NEXT EXHIBITION – Savernake: the spirit of the place 2-31 July 2011