Fine Arts 2011-12 - The British School at Rome
Transcript
Fine Arts 2011-12 - The British School at Rome
fine ARTS T HE 2011-2012 B RITISH S CHOOL AT R OME fine ARTS 2011-2012 Rashid Ali Angela Catlin Charles Cooper Colin Darke Domenico de Clario Kimathi Donkor George Egerton-Warburton Nicholas Hatfull Jessica Kirkpatrick David Lock Fiona MacDonald Duarte Natário dos Santos Laure Prouvost Luke Roberts Felix Schwimmer Heather B. Swann Covadonga Valdés T HE B RITISH S CHOOL AT R OME 1 The projects realised by D OMENICO DE C LARIO , G EORGE EGERTON -WARBURTON , L UKE ROBERTS, H EATHER B. S WANN have been assisted by the Commonwealth Government through the Australia Council, its Arts funding and advisory body. The Derek Hill Foundation Giles Worsley Fund IFLA The Incorporated Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Scholarships INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS Acknowledgements All works © the artists and architects Prof. Mihai Barbulescu, Eleonora Farina, The Romanian Academy, Rome Roberto Casiraghi, Ginevra Pucci, Roma Contemporary Claudia Conforti, Giuseppe Bonaccorso, Tor Vergata University, Rome Inge Lyse Hansen, Antonella Salvatore, John Cabot University, Rome Daniela Bigi, Roberto Lambarelli, Arte e Critica / Arte e Roma Mary Wilsey, Wanted in Rome Edited by Jacopo Benci Celia Yang, Anna Prosvetova, Giorgia Tamburi, Clara Giannini Graphic design Silvia Stucky Photography courtesy of the artists and architects, except Claudio Abate (pp. 6-7, 8-9, 10, 16-17, 18, 20, 27, 32-33, 43, 4445, 46); Celia Yang (pp. 8, 9) via Stucky (p. 32); Translations Jacopo Benci Published by T HE B RITISH S CHOOL AT R OME at The British Academy, 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH Donatella Astolfi, Fulvio Astolfi, Alice Bygraves, Alba Coratti, Marina Engel, Lara Johnson-Wheeler, Joanna Kostylo, Maria Pia Malvezzi, Eleanor Murkett, Antonio Palmieri, Renato Parente, Giuseppe Pellegrino, Marisa Scarsella, Valerie Scott, Magdalena Sygidus The British School at Rome Via Gramsci, 61 00197 Roma Registered Charity No. 314176 ISSN 1475-8733 2 Fine Arts 2011-2012 ISBN 978-0-904152-64-7 C O N T E N T S 04 Preface 06 Introduction 12 Rashid Ali 14 Angela Catlin 16 Charles Cooper 18 Colin Darke 20 Domenico de Clario 22 Kimathi Donkor 24 George Egerton-Warburton 26 Nicholas Hatfull 28 Jessica Kirkpatrick 30 David Lock 32 Fiona MacDonald 34 Duarte Natário dos Santos 36 Laure Prouvost 38 Luke Roberts 40 Felix Schwimmer 42 Heather B. Swann 44 Covadonga Valdés 47 Biographies Christopher Smith Jacopo Benci 3 P R E FA C E The 2011-12 Fine Arts programme has been another success, a combination of startlingly original work and huge diversity. After the great uncertainties of recent years, my colleagues in the Faculty of the Fine Arts have worked tirelessly to create new funding opportunities and new awards, and I am as grateful to them as I am delighted to see new artists coming to the BSR. As we rebuild, slowly, from the past, we also have the opportunity to bring new ideas and new projects to Rome. I am particularly pleased that from this year, for the first time, all members of the BSR will receive the Fine Arts catalogue. One of our ambitions was to re-establish links with the whole BSR community, and by so doing, to encourage old friends to reconnect with us, and recent award-holders to sustain their connection. We hope all of those who are reading this review will be inspired to come back to the BSR, and it is tremendous that this summer, in July, August and September, all our studios will be occupied by former or current award-holders. For many of our supporters, this has been a difficult period too, and to them, both long-standing friends and new sponsors, we are truly grateful. This year, we have received support from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland; the Australia Council for the Arts; the Conseil des Arts et des Lettres, Québec; Creative Scotland; the Derek Hill Foundation; the Giles Worsley Fund (in collaboration with the RIBA); the Incorporated Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Scholarships; the International Federation of Landscape Architects; the Linbury Trust; the Max Mara Art Prize for Women (in collaboration with Whitechapel Gallery), and the National Art School, Sydney. Beyond doubt the most significant achievement was the contribution by a group of former award-holders to revive the Rome Prize in Architecture for 2012-13. We are also beginning to broaden the number and nature of arts related events at the BSR; we began the year with a lecture by the Otolith Group, who were showing at the MAXXI. It is our determination to continue to work on this area of our activity and to provide a stronger programme to support arts and architecture. We see no distinction between the intellectual value and challenge of the various areas of the BSR’s activity. What makes the BSR so unusual as a British research institute is the range and quality of activity; the very best artists from across the Commonwealth and the very best scholars live and work together, and their interactions illuminate our shared experience. We are always open to new ideas and new projects. The fascinating overlaps between the work of portraitist Kimathi Donkor, architect Rashid Ali, and our two BSR / Society for Libyan Studies fellows Mattia Toaldo and Barbara Spadaro in exploring the relationships between northern Africa and Italy from the later 19th century to the contemporary period is simply one example of the uniquely international and interdisciplinary nature of BSR work. I hope you will enjoy this review, and I hope you will encourage others to become part of this unique and wonderful institution. With your support, we will continue to stand for the lasting value of creativity and the arts. Professor Christopher Smith Director 4 Fine Arts 2011-2012 P R E FA Z I O N E Il programma Fine Arts nel 2011-12 è stato nuovamente un successo, una combinazione di opere sorprendentemente originali e grande diversità. Dopo le forti incertezze degli ultimi anni, i miei colleghi della Faculty of the Fine Arts hanno lavorato instancabilmente per procurare nuovi finanziamenti e nuove borse residenziali, e sono riconoscente a loro quanto sono felice di vedere nuovi artisti giungere all’Accademia Britannica. Mentre lentamente recuperiamo rispetto al passato, abbiamo anche l’opportunità di portare a Roma nuove idee e nuovi progetti. Sono particolarmente lieto del fatto che da quest’anno, per la prima volta, tutti i sottoscrittori della BSR riceveranno il catalogo Fine Arts. Una delle nostre ambizioni era di ristabilire i legami con l’intera comunità BSR, incoraggiando in questo modo i vecchi amici a riconnettersi con noi, e i borsisti recenti a mantenere il contatto. Ci auguriamo che tutti coloro che leggono questa pubblicazione ne traggano desiderio di tornare alla BSR, ed è eccellente che quest’estate, in luglio, agosto e settembre, tutti i nostri studi saranno occupati da borsisti passati o attuali. Anche per molti dei nostri sostenitori questo è stato un periodo difficile, e siamo veramente grati sia agli amici di lunga data che ai nuovi sponsor. Quest’anno abbiamo ricevuto il sostegno di Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Australia Council for the Arts, Conseil des Arts et des Lettres del Québec, Creative Scotland, Derek Hill Foundation, Giles Worsley Fund (in collaborazione con il RIBA), Incorporated Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Scholarships, International Federation of Landscape Architects, Linbury Trust, Max Mara Art Prize for Women (in collaborazione con la Whitechapel Gallery), e National Art School, Sydney. Senza dubbio il risultato più significativo è stato il contributo di un gruppo di ex borsisti, che consentirà di far rivivere il Rome Prize in Architecture nel 2012-13. Stiamo anche ampliando il numero e la natura degli eventi artistici alla BSR, e abbiamo iniziato l’anno con una conferenza di The Otolith Group in occasione della loro mostra al MAXXI. È nostra ferma intenzione continuare a lavorare in questo settore della nostra attività e offrire un più forte programma a sostegno delle arti e l’architettura. Riteniamo non ci siano differenze di valore e impegno intellettuale tra le varie aree di attività della BSR. Ciò che rende l’Accademia unica fra gli istituti di ricerca britannici è la gamma e la qualità delle sue attività; i migliori artisti e i migliori studiosi provenienti da tutto il Commonwealth vivono e lavorano insieme, e le loro interazioni illuminano la nostra esperienza condivisa. Siamo sempre aperti a nuove idee e nuovi progetti. Le affascinanti tangenze tra i lavori del pittore ritrattista Kimathi Donkor, dell’architetto Ali Rashid, e dei nostri due borsisti BSR / Society for Libyan Studies, Mattia Toaldo e Barbara Spadaro nell’esplorare le relazioni tra Nord Africa e Italia dalla seconda metà del XIX secolo a oggi, sono solo un esempio dell’unicità del carattere internazionale e interdisciplinare del lavoro dell’Accademia Britannica. Spero che apprezzerete questa pubblicazione, e suggerirete ad altre persone di diventar parte di questa istituzione unica e meravigliosa. Con il vostro aiuto, continueremo a sostenere il duraturo valore della creatività e delle arti. Professor Christopher Smith Direttore 5 INTRODUCTION The academic year 2011-12 brought two new Fine Arts residential awards, the Creative Scotland Document Fellowship, whose first recipient was Scottish photojournalist Angela Catlin, and the Max Mara Art Prize for Women, awarded to French artist Laure Prouvost; and the resumption of the Rome Scholarship in Landscape Architecture, awarded to the Portuguese architect Duarte Natário dos Santos and supported by the International Federation of Landscape Architects. We are grateful to our sponsors for the welcome addition of these scholarships. Their recipients demonstrate once again that the British School is increasingly multinational as well as multidisciplinary. This year we had the pleasure to have as our residents – in addition to six artists from England, Scotland, Northern Ireland – five artists from Australia; three from France, Spain, the United States; and three architects from Somalia, Québec, and Portugal. On 22 September 2011, Domenico De Clario, Australia Council Resident over the summer months, staged a one-night public performance/installation entitled Forestories, in collaboration with fellow Australian performance artist Sam Burke. Simultaneously Richard Gasper (Sainsbury Scholar in Painting and Sculpture 2010-11) presented works he had made in Rome during the last part of his twelve-month residency. The first Fine Arts group exhibition of 2011-12, Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, held between 12 and 21 December, featured new works by artists Richard Gasper, Nicholas Hatfull (Sainsbury Scholar in Painting and Sculpture), Kimathi Donkor (Derek Hill Foundation Scholar), David Lock (Abbey Scholar in Painting), Fiona Macdonald (Abbey Fellow in Painting), Heather B. Swann (Australia Council Resident), and architect Rashid Ali (Giles Worsley Travel Fellow). Kimathi Donkor and Rashid Ali both contributed to the development of a crossdisciplinary research theme on relations between Italy and North Africa. In December, the magazine Arte e Roma published a brief interview with Jacopo Benci where he illustrated the Fine Arts programme, including the forthcoming Creative Scotland Document Fellowship and Max Mara Art Prize for Women residency. The second Fine Arts group exhibition, I don’t know how a rock feels, held between 16 and 24 March, included works by artists Nicholas Hatfull, David Lock, Angela Catlin, Charles Cooper (National Art School Sydney Resident in Drawing), Colin Darke (Arts Council of Northern Ireland Fellow), George Egerton- 1-2. Domenico De Clario and Sam Burke, Forestories, 22 September 2011 1 6 Fine Arts 2011-2012 2 INTRODUZIONE L'anno accademico 2011-12 ha portato al programma Fine Arts due nuove residenze, la Creative Scotland Document Fellowship, la cui prima premiata è stata la fotogiornalista scozzese Angela Catlin, e il Max Mara Art Prize for Women, assegnato all’artista francese Laure Prouvost; e la ripresa della Rome Scholarship in Landscape Architecture, assegnata all’architetto portoghese Duarte Natário dos Santos e sostenuta dalla Federazione Internazionale degli Architetti di Paesaggio (IFLA). Siamo grati ai nostri sponsor per aver posto in essere queste borse. Gli artisti cui sono state assegnate mostrano ancora una volta che l’Accademia Britannica è sempre più multinazionale oltre che multidisciplinare. Quest’anno abbiamo avuto il piacere di avere fra i nostri residenti – oltre a sei artisti provenienti da Inghilterra, Scozia, Irlanda del Nord – cinque artisti provenienti dall’Australia, tre da Francia, Spagna, Stati Uniti, e tre architetti dalla Somalia, Québec, e Portogallo. Il 22 settembre 2011, Domenico De Clario, Australia Council Resident durante i mesi estivi, ha presentato per una sola sera la performance/installazione Forestories, in collaborazione con la performer australiana Sam Burke. Allo stesso tempo Richard Gasper (Sainsbury Scholar in Painting and Sculpture 2010-11) ha presentato le opere da lui realizzate a Roma durante l’ultima parte della sua residenza annuale. La prima mostra collettiva Fine Arts del 2011-12, Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, si è tenuta dal 12 al 21 dicembre e ha presentato nuove opere degli artisti Richard Gasper, Nicholas Hatfull (Sainsbury Scholar in Painting and Sculpture), Kimathi Donkor (Derek Hill Foundation Scholar), David Lock (Abbey Scholar in Painting), Fiona Macdonald (Abbey Fellow in Painting), Heather B. Swann (Australia Council Resident), e l’architetto Rashid Ali (Giles Worsley Travel Fellow). Kimathi Donkor e Rashid Ali hanno inoltre contribuito a sviluppare un programma di ricerca trans-disciplinare sulle relazioni tra Italia e Nord Africa. Nel mese di dicembre, la rivista Arte e Roma ha pubblicato una breve intervista con Jacopo Benci che ha illustrato il programma Fine Arts, tra cui le novità della Creative Scotland Document Fellowship e del Max Mara Art Prize for Women. La seconda collettiva dell’anno, I don’t know how a rock feels, si è tenuta dal 16 al 24 marzo ed ha incluso opere degli artisti Nicholas Hatfull, David Lock, Angela Catlin, Charles Cooper (National Art School Sydney Resident in Drawing), Colin Darke (Arts Council of Northern Ireland Fellow), George Egerton-Warburton (Australia Council 3-4. Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, 12-21 December 2011: works by Heather B. Swann, Kimathi Donkor, Nicholas Hatfull; David Lock, Richard Gasper, Fiona MacDonald 3 4 7 Warburton (Australia Council Resident), Covadonga Valdés (Abbey Fellow in Painting), and architects Duarte Natário dos Santos, and Felix Schwimmer (Québec Architecture Resident). On 20 April Duarte Natário dos Santos and Felix Schwimmer presented illustrated papers on their Rome projects at the annual international conference Grand Tour del Terzo Millennio held at the Tor Vergata University of Rome. Colin Darke, Nicholas Hatfull, and Laure Prouvost took part in the tenth edition of the Spazi Aperti exhibition, curated by critic Eleonora Farina at the Romanian Academy, which opened on 23 May and finished on 15 June in coincidence with the opening of the Fine Arts exhibition at the School. On 25 May, following a pattern inaugurated last year, the 2012 edition of the Roma Contemporary art fair brought collectors and gallery-goers to visit to the artists’ studios. On 15 June the final group exhibition of the academic year, entitled wher you live now, featured works by Colin Darke, Nicholas Hatfull, Jessica Kirkpatrick (Abbey Fellow in Painting), David Lock, Laure Prouvost, and Luke Roberts (Australia Council Resident). Through these activities, and thanks to the high standard and variety of the creative work of our award holders, the Fine Arts programme contributes substantially to the life and profile of the School, while at the same time it is recognized and praised by the Roman public for its quality and interest. Over the last year, several of our artists have been featured on the front cover of the capital’s leading English language magazine, Wanted in Rome. The Fine Arts programme could not provide a thorough service without the precious help of voluntary assistants. This year’s Fine Arts interns came from Rome based John Cabot University, consolidating a collaboration between the two institutions that proved to be of mutual satisfaction. Celia Yang worked from October 2011 to March 2012; Anna Prosvetova, from January to early May; Giorgia Tamburi, later joined by Clara Giannini, took over when Anna left. They all ably and reliably helped sourcing materials and suppliers for the residents’ works, and assisted with the preparation, communication, and invigilation of exhibitions, while working on the inventory of hundreds of scholars’ files in the Fine Arts archive, spanning over two decades. Jacopo Benci Assistant Director Fine Arts 5 5-6. Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, exhibition opening, 12 December 2011: works by Fiona MacDonald, David Lock 6 8 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Resident), Covadonga Valdés (Abbey Fellow in Painting), e degli architetti Duarte Natário dos Santos, e Felix Schwimmer (Québec Architecture Resident). Il 20 aprile Duarte Natário dos Santos e Felix Schwimmer hanno presentato relazioni sui loro progetti romani al convegno annuale internazionale Grand Tour del Terzo Millennio presso l’Università Tor Vergata di Roma. Colin Darke, Nicholas Hatfull e Laure Prouvost hanno partecipato alla decima edizione della mostra Spazi Aperti, curata dal critico Eleonora Farina presso l’Accademia di Romania, che ha aperto il 23 maggio e si è conclusa il 15 giugno in coincidenza con l’inaugurazione della mostra Fine Arts all’Accademia Britannica. Il 25 maggio, seguendo un modello inaugurato lo scorso anno, l’edizione 2012 della fiera Roma Contemporary ha portato collezionisti e pubblico dell’arte alla BSR per visitare gli studi degli artisti. Il 15 giugno la collettiva finale dell’anno, dal titolo wher you live now, ha presentato opere di Colin Darke, Nicholas Hatfull, Jessica Kirkpatrick (Abbey Fellow in Painting), David Lock, Laure Prouvost, e Luke Roberts (Australia Council Resident). Attraverso queste attività, e grazie all’alto standard e alla varietà del lavoro creativo dei nostri residenti, il programma Fine Arts dà un contributo essenziale alla vita e al profilo dell’Accademia Britannica, ed è riconosciuto e apprezzato per qualità e interesse dal pubblico romano. Nell’ultimo anno, opere di diversi nostri artisti sono state scelte come copertine della principale rivista in lingua inglese della capitale, Wanted in Rome. Il programma Fine Arts non potrebbe fornire un servizio adeguato senza il prezioso contributo di assistenti volontari. Le Fine Arts Interns quest’anno sono state studentesse della John Cabot University di Roma, consolidando tra le due istituzioni una collaborazione dimostratasi di mutua soddisfazione. Celia Yang ha lavorato alla BSR da ottobre 2011 a marzo 2012; Anna Prosvetova, da gennaio a inizio maggio; Giorgia Tamburi ha iniziato quando Anna è partita, venendo poi affiancata da Clara Giannini. Tutte hanno contribuito efficacemente alla ricerca di materiali per le opere dei residenti, e alla preparazione, comunicazione, guardiania delle mostre, lavorando inoltre all'inventario di centinaia di cartelle individuali di borsisti dell’archivio Fine Arts, che copre oltre due decenni. Jacopo Benci Assistant Director Fine Arts 7. I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, 16-24 March 2012: L-R, works by Nicholas Hatfull, Charles Cooper, Covadonga Valdés 8-9. I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, exhibition opening, 16 March 2012: L-R, works by Felix Schwimmer, David Lock, Charles Cooper, Angela Catlin; Duarte Natário dos Santos 7 8 9 9 EXHIBITIONS FORESTORIES 22 September 2011 Domenico de Clario with Sam Burke SEVEN THINGS TO DO IN AN EMERGENCY 12-21 December 2011 Rashid Ali, Kimathi Donkor, Richard Gasper, Nicholas Hatfull, David Lock, Fiona MacDonald, Heather B. Swann I DON’T KNOW HOW A ROCK FEELS 16-24 March 2012 Angela Catlin, Charles Cooper, Colin Darke, George Egerton-Warburton, Nicholas Hatfull, David Lock, Duarte Natário dos Santos, Felix Schwimmer, Covadonga Valdés WHER YOU LIVE NOW 15-23 June 2012 Colin Darke, Nicholas Hatfull, Jessica Kirkpatrick, David Lock, Laure Prouvost, Luke Roberts 11 Rashid Ali Mogadishu, View towards the native quarter 1924 Società Geografica Italiana Architecture and built form of Mogadishu, 1910-1936 Architettura e forma costruita di Mogadiscio, 1910-1936 To the popular imagination, the Somali capital Mogadishu has in recent years come to be characterized by death, destruction and displacement caused by infighting among the various groups of clans, militias, warlords, religious groups and its government, who all sought to subject their control over what remains of its population and built environment. However, only two decades or so ago Mogadishu was physically, politically, socially and culturally a very different place. In the course of its history Mogadishu has been influenced by the various cultures of its diverse inhabitants, traders and rulers, which came to strongly inform its pre civil war social, cultural and physical characteristics. Most significantly it began as an important pre-colonial port city for trading of goods with Arabian Peninsula and the spread of Islamic cultural influences along the East African coast. However, the city’s pre civil war architecture and urban environment owes its morphology and characteristics to its former colonial power, Italy, the last of the European powers to join the ‘scramble for Africa’. The city began to expand after Rome took over direct administration of the country from Italian trading companies. A small group of military and civil officials were entrusted with the task of providing the city with administrative organisation and the construction of infrastructure and public buildings began to be implemented from around 1910. Many of the buildings that defined the city’s appearance dated from 1920 onwards and tended to be of a mixture of colonial, Arabic and Modernist aesthetic, which continued to influence the subsequent built form until the 1980’s, before much of it was destroyed during the civil conflict from the early 1990’s onwards. Modernism, which continued to influence the architecture and built form after independence, was largely seen as a manifestation, with which the country could assert its new identity through new architectural forms. Nell’immaginazione popolare, la capitale somala Mogadiscio è stata negli ultimi anni caratterizzata da morte, distruzione e sfollamento causati da lotte intestine tra i vari gruppi di clan, milizie, signori della guerra, gruppi religiosi e il governo, che hanno tutti cercato di imporre il proprio controllo su ciò che resta della sua popolazione e dell’ambiente urbano. Peraltro, solo due decenni fa circa Mogadiscio era fisicamente, politicamente, socialmente e culturalmente un luogo molto diverso. Nel corso della sua storia Mogadiscio è stata influenzata dalle varie culture dei suoi diversi abitanti, commercianti e governanti, che giunsero a determinare le sue caratteristiche sociali, culturali e fisiche prima della guerra civile. Essenzialmente, Mogadiscio nacque come importante città portuale precoloniale per il commercio con la penisola arabica e la diffusione di influenze culturali islamiche lungo la costa orientale africana. Peraltro, l’architettura e l’ambiente urbano della città prima della guerra civile debbono morfologia e caratteristiche alla potenza coloniale che l’aveva dominata, l’Italia, ultima potenza europea a partecipare alla ‘corsa all’Africa’. Mogadiscio iniziò ad espandersi dopo che Roma rilevò la gestione del paese da imprese commerciali italiane. A partire dal 1910 circa, il compito di fornire alla città un’organizzazione amministrativa e di costruire infrastrutture e edifici pubblici venne affidato a un piccolo gruppo di funzionari militari e civili. Molti degli edifici che definirono l’aspetto della città datano dal 1920 in poi, e tendono a essere una miscela di estetica coloniale, araba e modernista che continuò a influenzare l’edilizia successiva fino agli anni Ottanta, prima di essere in gran parte distrutti durante la guerra civile dai primi anni Novanta in poi. Il modernismo, che continuò ad influenzare l’architettura e l’urbanistica dopo l’indipendenza, era per lo più visto come una manifestazione tramite cui il paese poteva affermare la sua nuova identità attraverso nuove forme architettoniche. 12 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Fiat garage 1934 Laboratorio di Ricerca Documentazione Storica Iconografica, Roma Tre University Radio Mogadishu building 1936 Laboratorio di Ricerca Documentazione Storica Iconografica, Roma Tre University 13 Angela Catlin Urban Landscapes, 1. Corviale 2012 inkjet print on paper, dimensions variable, height 60 cm 14 Fine Arts 2011-2012 City Portrait 5 2012 inkjet print on paper, dimensions variable, height 40 cm 15 Charles Cooper Excavation 2012 basalt, clay, acrylic paint on paper-covered timber base, 15 x 120 x 143 cm 16 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Oculus 2012 glass mirrors, clay, acrylic paint, acetate, paper, linen on timber base, 38 x 38 x 38 cm 17 Colin Darke For Courbet 2012 apples and stone, dimensions variable 18 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Sealed Lips 2012 correction fluid on ivy plant dimensions variable 19 Domenico de Clario Sam Burke and Domenico de Clario presented a sitespecific performance in the BSR Gallery in late September 2011. It was titled forestories and the following is an abridged version of the collaborative text/map they performed inside four installations made specifically for the BSR Gallery space: Sam Burke e Domenico de Clario hanno presentato una performance site-specific nella Galleria della BSR a fine settembre 2011. Si intitolava forestories e la seguente è una versione ridotta del testo/mappa collaborativo che hanno eseguito all’interno di quattro installazioni realizzate appositamente per lo spazio della Galleria BSR: 1. home (his story) last night like most nights she fell asleep as he was reading to her he reads to her every night the odyssey the poems of kabir sufi essays accounts of the strange lives of zen monks he watched her breathing become more regular as it aligned itself to the rhythm of his reading when they became as one he asked are you asleep? 1. home (la storia di lui) ieri sera come quasi tutte le sere lei si addormentò mentre lui leggeva a lei lui legge a lei ogni sera l’odissea le poesie di kabir saggi sufi racconti delle strane vite dei monaci zen lui guardava il respiro di lei diventare più regolare mentre si adeguava al ritmo della sua lettura quando essi divennero una cosa sola lui chiese dormi? 20 Fine Arts 2011-2012 2. aspettaci (their story) i sat down on one of the kitchen chairs on the footpath outside her house and she came to sit next to me what i remember is her hands they reminded me of plants of the stalks of a long-gone species of flowers that had once resembled human hands looking up at the grand eucalypt with its furtherest away leaves blinking in the morning sun i said to him ‘i don’t want to live in italy i want to live here this is where i live this is where my heart is this is my home’ the pearl hidden inside the shell is built from irritants from what isn’t wanted into the perfection of imperfection ‘aspettaci!’ she cried out from the platform as i negotiated my suitcase down the train aisle it rang in my ears and made my heart beat loudly and the train oblivious pulled slowly out 2. aspettaci (la loro storia) mi sedetti su una delle sedie da cucina sul vialetto davanti a casa di lei e lei venne a sedersi accanto a me quello che io ricordo sono le sue mani che mi ricordavano delle piante degli steli di una specie di fiori estinta da tempo che un tempo avevano assomigliato a mani umane guardando in alto al grande eucalipto con le sue foglie più distanti tremolanti nel sole del mattino gli dissi ‘non voglio vivere in Italia voglio vivere qui qui è dove vivo il mio cuore è qui questa è casa mia’ la perla celata nella conchiglia è formata da sostanze irritanti provenienti da ciò che non si vuole nella perfezione dell’imperfezione ‘aspettaci!’ ella gridò dalla banchina mentre io armeggiavo con la mia valigia lungo il corridoio del treno risuonava nelle mie orecchie e mi faceva battere il cuore forte e il treno ignaro partiva lentamente 3. love (everyone’s story) love is not eternity / nor is it the time of calendars and watches successive time / it is the perception of all times of all lives in a single instant / it does not free us from death but makes us see it face to face / what does the couple see in the space of an instant? the equation of appearance and disappearance the truth of the body and the non-body… octavio paz 3. love (la storia di tutti) l’amore non è l’eternità / non è nemmeno il tempo di calendari e orologi il tempo successivo / è la percezione di tutti i tempi di tutte le vite in un solo istante / non ci libera dalla morte ma ce la fa vedere faccia a faccia / cosa vede la coppia nello spazio di un istante? l’equazione di apparizione e scomparsa la verità del corpo e del non-corpo... octavio paz 4. only a weathercast warning (her story) on a street in the town of palermo an old man went about on his way when he stopped by a jewellery shop window for something took his breath away 4. only a weathercast warning (la storia di lei) su una strada nella città di palermo un vecchio andava per la sua strada quando si fermò vicino alla vetrina di una gioielleria perché qualcosa gli tolse il respiro on a shelf in between the gold watches a silver ring with a pearl its beauty was that of no other it was meant for only one girl su un ripiano tra gli orologi d’oro un anello d’argento con una perla la sua bellezza era senza eguali era stata concepita per una sola ragazza in his pocket it sat for the train ride to the fisherman’s town cefalù when that night in the dark of their bedroom by the light of a sicilian moon restò nella sua tasca durante il viaggio in treno fino al paese di pescatori cefalù quando quella notte nel buio della loro camera da letto alla luce di una luna siciliana she cried at its beauty they wept in each others’ arms fear is the anchor of duty love is a bird of winged charm ella gridò per la sua bellezza piansero tra le braccia l’uno dell’altra la paura è l’ancora del dovere l’amore è un uccello dal fascino alato it was only a weathercast warning but she took to the sea anyway did not hear artemis calling til she took the pearl ring away era solo un avvertimento meteorologico ma lei prese il mare in ogni caso non sentì artemide chiamare fino a che lei portò via l’anello con la perla 21 Kimathi Donkor St Matthew beset by six Rome skylines 2012 c-type print, 20 x 30 cm 22 Fine Arts 2011-2012 St Iphigenia (Laura, Mohamed, Njambi) 2011 oil on canvas, 120 x 150 cm 23 George Egerton-Warburton Why are you wearing athletic gear if you’re not playing any sport today? is an auto-reflexive film documenting the theft of a camera. Perché indossi abiti sportivi se oggi non hai intenzione di praticare dello sport? è un film autoriflessivo che documenta il furto di una macchina fotografica. In a single take, the footage escorts us past landmarks of Imperial Rome and sites rendered notorious in Italian cinema. In un’unica ripresa, il filmato attraversa gli antichi monumenti della Roma imperiale e i luoghi resi celebri dal cinema italiano. It conjures questions of an artist’s physical and fiscal endurance, and strips the film back to the acquisition of the camera used to shoot it. Perhaps it does little more than associate the production of experimental film with being an idiot. It provides a perambulating tour of Rome. Il film evoca riflessioni sulla resistenza fisica e fiscale di un artista e lo riporta al punto dell’acquisizione della macchina usata per fare la ripresa. Forse fa qualcosa in più che associare la produzione di un film sperimentale all’essere un idiota. Di certo offre un giro a piedi per Roma. 24 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Why are you wearing athletic gear if you’re not playing any sport today? 2012 HD video and text, 26.06 minutes 25 Nicholas Hatfull 26 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Raggi solari 2012 acrylic on insulation panel with enamel and plastic sign, 120 x 248 cm and 12.5 x 18.5 cm 27 Jessica Kirkpatrick The Crossing Jan 2012 oil on canvas, 122 x 183 cm 28 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Violet Crime December 2011 oil on card, 23 x 31 cm 29 David Lock Interior (Carousel) 2012 oil on board, 70 x 100 cm 30 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Misfits (Dark Train) 2011 oil and acrylic on board, 70 x 100 cm 31 Fiona MacDonald My research in Rome centred on how painting and sculpture inform each other within my practice. Seeing Carracci’s Perseus and Andromeda (Palazzo Farnese), something in the positioning of the dramatis personae held my attention. Andromeda, chained to a rock, dominates and divides the painting, her weeping parents to the right, and a tiny Perseus slaying the sea-monster to her left. Tied down, Andromeda is rendered on some level two dimensional. Perseus rescues and marries her, thus bringing her to (3D) freedom and fulfilment. He uses Medusa’s head to turn the sea monster to stone, whilst riding Pegasus, the steed that leapt from her severed neck. Petrification is an obvious metaphor for the sculptural, also death, but it is Andromeda’s transformation into painting that is described as liberating by Joanna Woodall’s illuminating essay on the subject (‘Wtewael’s Perseus and Andromeda, looking for love in seventeenth century Dutch painting’, in Manifestations of Venus. Art and Sexuality, ed. Arscott & Scott 2010). In Ovid, when Perseus first glimpses Andromeda, he assumes she is a statue. In rescuing her, he restores her ‘to the full flesh and blood beauty which is painting’. In Carracci’s version, Perseus rescues the ‘feminine’ only via the ‘monstrous (Medusan) feminine’, which Woodall aligns (‘horrific, uncontained matter’) with ‘the messy material debris of the painter’s studio’! That’s a state of matter I resonate with – full of uncertainty and superabundance. 32 Fine Arts 2011-2012 La mia ricerca a Roma si è incentrata su come pittura e scultura si informino reciprocamente nella mia pratica. Vedendo Perseo e Andromeda di Carracci (Palazzo Farnese), qualcosa nel posizionamento delle dramatis personae ha attirato la mia attenzione. Andromeda, incatenata ad una roccia, domina e divide il dipinto, i suoi genitori piangenti a destra, e un piccolo Perseo che uccide il mostro marino alla sua sinistra. Legata, Andromeda è resa in qualche modo bidimensionale. Perseo la salva e la sposa, portandola così alla libertà e realizzazione (in 3D). Egli usa la testa di Medusa per mutare il mostro marino in pietra, mentre cavalca Pegaso, il cavallo che scaturì dal collo meduseo reciso. La pietrificazione è una ovvia metafora della scultura, e della morte, ma è la trasformazione di Andromeda in pittura che è descritta come liberatrice nel saggio illuminante di Joanna Woodall sull’argomento (‘Wtewael’s Perseus and Andromeda, looking for love in seventeenth century Dutch painting’, in Manifestations of Venus. Art and Sexuality, a cura di Arscott & Scott 2010). In Ovidio, quando Perseo vede per la prima volta Andromeda ritiene sia una statua. Nel salvarla, la restituisce alla ‘bellezza di carne e sangue che è la pittura’. Nella versione di Carracci, Perseo salva il ‘femminile’ solo attraverso il ‘femminile mostruoso (meduseo)’, che Woodall allinea (‘orribile, incontenibile materia’) con ‘i caotici detriti materiali dello studio del pittore’! Questo è uno stato della materia con cui ho sintonia – pieno d’incertezza e sovrabbondanza. A liberation in three acts 2011 painting: oil and acrylic on linen, 120 x 85 cm wall mounted sculpture: wood, clay, pigmented silicone, brass, wire, 70 x 50 x 34 cm 33 Duarte Natário dos Santos Parco Centocelle is an archaeological park in the southeast of Rome. My work consists of a proposal for the requalification of Parco Centocelle into an agricultural and urban park. Sustainable demands ask for new approaches in landscape architecture. Capitalizing on the idea of urban allotment and community gardens, the new park will serve the people of Centocelle and its surroundings. There are numerous benefits of urban farming practices, with emphasis on the role they could play in the household economy and the quality of nutrition as well as numerous social and environmental benefits. At a time when the UN considers the promotion of urban agriculture as the most important urban planning of the XXI century, Italy and Rome should be able to conciliate the urban socio-economic development with their agricultural potential. My research and project allowed me to develop on this subject. My proposal consists in a study of the evolution of the agricultural landscape in Italy, with a more detailed approach on the Roman Agricultural Landscape, and how Italy and Rome can rescue and develop this values, in the modern landscape design. As a case study I propose the theme of urban vegetable gardens. As a more specific example of this kind of approach in Rome, my proposal is to develop a project for a new urban park located in the area that is now the Parco Centocelle, on the southeast of the city, now abandoned, that was 95 hectares of Agro Romano. With the creation of sustainable urban gardens, contributing for food and income for the local people, and also promoting the development of different activities and events, selling local products, organic weekly market, food fairs and exhibitions. 34 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Il Parco Centocelle è un parco archeologico nel sud-est di Roma. Il mio lavoro consiste in una proposta per la riqualificazione del Parco Centocelle in parco agricolo e urbano. Le esigenze della sostenibilità richiedono nuovi approcci nell’architettura di paesaggio. Sfruttando l'idea di orti urbani in concessione e giardini comunitari, il nuovo parco servirà gli abitanti di Centocelle e dintorni. Ci sono numerosi vantaggi nelle pratiche agricole urbane, in particolare il ruolo che esse possono svolgere per l'economia familiare e la qualità della nutrizione, oltre a numerosi benefici sociali e ambientali. Nel momento in cui le Nazioni Unite ritengono che la promozione dell'agricoltura urbana sia la pianificazione urbanistica più importante del XXI secolo, l'Italia e Roma dovrebbero essere in grado di conciliare lo sviluppo urbano socio-economico con il proprio potenziale agricolo. La mia ricerca e il mio progetto mi hanno permesso di approfondire questo argomento. La mia proposta consiste in uno studio dell'evoluzione del paesaggio agrario in Italia, con un approccio più dettagliato sul paesaggio agricolo romano, e su come l'Italia e Roma possano salvare e sviluppare questi valori nella progettazione del paesaggio moderno. Come caso di studio propongo il tema degli orti urbani. Per un esempio più specifico di questo tipo di approccio a Roma, la mia proposta è quello di sviluppare un progetto per un nuovo parco urbano situato nella zona che ora è il Parco Centocelle, a sud-est della città, 95 ettari di Agro Romano attualmente abbandonato. La creazione di orti urbani sostenibili, che danno un apporto alimentare e di reddito alla popolazione locale, ma promuovono anche lo sviluppo di diverse attività ed eventi, la vendita di prodotti locali, un mercato biologico settimanale, fiere gastronomiche e mostre. 35 Laure Prouvost Ideally here 2011 sign before, before 2011 installation, mot international it, heat, hit 2010 video, 6 minutes Burrow me 2009 video, 13 minutes 36 Fine Arts 2011-2012 The artist 2010 installation 37 Luke Roberts In Mob We Trust (Richard Bell) 2012 acrylic on canvas and wood, 120 x 120 cm courtesy Milani Gallery, Brisbane Luke Roberts has developed an intricate personal mythology that interpolates local and cosmological, and past and future to offer a unique view on themes of religion, sexuality, and human history. In the 1970s, inspired in part by Chariots of the Gods and Fellini’s Roma, he created the extraterrestrial alternative pontiff persona, Pope Alice, to contest the Catholicism and Western paradigm in which he was raised. He creates works in many different media, especially photography. His Wunderkammern installations are concerned with concealed human history and gullibility and attempt a fuller understanding of our world and each other. 38 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Luke Roberts ha sviluppato una complessa mitologia personale che interpola locale e cosmologico, e passato e futuro, per offrire un punto di vista unico sui temi della religione, la sessualità, e la storia umana. Negli anni Settanta, parzialmente ispirato da Gli extraterrestri torneranno e da Roma di Fellini, ha creato il pontefice alternativo extraterrestre, Papa Alice, per contestare il cattolicesimo e il paradigma occidentale in cui egli si è formato. Roberts crea opere in diversi media, soprattutto fotografia. Le sue installazioni Wunderkammern trattano della storia umana occulta e della credulità, e tentano di comprendere più pienamente il nostro mondo e noi stessi. Pope Alice (Aton salute) 2009 photographic performance, Lake Galilee, Western Queensland, Australia, June 2009, camera: John Elliott courtesy Milani Gallery, Brisbane 39 Felix Schwimmer Archaeology of the Future: Dystopian Tourism in Rome Archeologia del futuro: turismo distopico a Roma A speculative project of architecture that presents a fictional narrative based in Rome is devoted to the prescient subject of ecological change and adaptations caused by artificial interventions into existing ecosystems. The plot is set in a future conditioned by recurring floods more devastating than historical ones, by a ‘technocratic world government’ owning political power and where technologies mutate as they are transferred from one field to another. Compelling underwater vedutas explore architecture through a dystopian eye, where the focus of the project is less in the form of a final object than as a script that it inserts into the city. A series of inventions enables coexistence with the underwater city: firstly a colossal inhabitable porous self-supporting structure floats above the city; second a mechanical fish was designed to travel inside the marvelous ruins. Against this backdrop, one reflects upon the major contemporary processes that capture, power and govern the changes and challenges we are facing today, questioning what architecture could generate when faced with extreme scientific, cultural and political scenarios. Un progetto speculativo di architettura che presenta un racconto di finzione ambientato a Roma, dedicato al tema preveggente del cambiamento ecologico e degli adattamenti causati da interventi artificiali negli ecosistemi esistenti. La storia è ambientata in un futuro condizionato da ricorrenti inondazioni più devastanti di quelle storiche, da un ‘governo tecnocratico mondiale’ che detiene il potere politico, e da tecnologie che mutano quando vengono trasferite da un campo a un altro. Avvincenti vedute sottomarine esplorano l’architettura con occhio distopico, in cui il punto focale del progetto non è tanto un oggetto finito quanto il copione che inserisce nella città. Una serie di invenzioni consente la convivenza con la città sommersa: in primo luogo una colossale struttura abitabile porosa autoportante fluttua sopra la città, in secondo luogo un pesce meccanico è stato progettato per viaggiare all’interno delle meravigliose rovine. Su questo sfondo, si riflette sui principali processi contemporanei che conquistano, alimentano e governano i cambiamenti e le sfide che ci troviamo ad affrontare oggi, mettendo in discussione ciò che l'architettura potrebbe generare di fronte a scenari scientifici, culturali e politici estremi. more information at: www.schwimmer.ca/bsr-blog Per ulteriori informazioni: www.schwimmer.ca/bsr-blog Flooding in Portico di Ottavia 2012 digital composition printed on photographic paper, 42 x 59.4 cm Mapping tourism in Rome 2012 map printed on tracing paper framed on a light box, 59.4 x 42 cm Detail of: Satellite Image capturing Rome in floods 2012 digital composition printed on photographic paper, 59.4 x 42 cm Flooding in Piazza della Minerva 2012 digital composition printed on photographic paper, 29 x 42 cm Detail of Hydrometric wall on Basilica di Santa Maria sopra Minerva 2012 digital composition printed on photographic paper, 34 x 22 cm Heather B. Swann In Rome I was looking at animals in architecture. A Roma ho guardato gli animali nell’architettura. I went to St Peter’s on the two-tone green number 19 tram, with its white laminex seats. It was sunny and warm and golden. As I walked towards the church a small white feather fell from the sky into my hand. I tucked it under my wedding ring. In the basilica there are marble doves at the bases of the central columns. I thought that if they all stood together they would make a forest. As we were evicted the moon was rising over Rome, full and enormous. Everyone caught their breath. On the tram home, the feather tickled my finger in the late summer breeze. Sono andata a San Pietro sul tram verde bicolore 19, con i suoi sedili bianchi di laminex. Era soleggiato e caldo e dorato. Mentre camminavo verso la chiesa una piccola piuma bianca cadde dal cielo nella mia mano. L'ho nascosta sotto il mio anello nuziale. Nella basilica ci sono colombe di marmo alle basi delle colonne centrali. Ho pensato che se fossero state tutte insieme avrebbero fatto una foresta. Quando siamo stati fatti uscire la luna stava sorgendo su Roma, piena ed enorme. Tutti hanno trattenuto il fiato. Sul tram del ritorno, la piuma solleticava il mio dito nella brezza di fine estate. The dove with the olive branch is easily overlooked in its ubiquity, its message old and faded. La colomba col ramoscello d’ulivo viene facilmente trascurata per la sua ubiquità, il suo messaggio vecchio e sbiadito. There are no real animals in Rome except domestic dogs and cats. Many pigeons. This is the story of cities. I sat in the Piazza Farnese and drew the pigeons. I went back to count the St Peter’s doves. There are 52 panels, with a dove at the bottom and top of each. I made 12 birds, to resonate with the calendar number of the basilica and of the apostles; I am not religious but it is the stuff that one breathes in here. Non ci sono veri animali a Roma ad eccezione di cani e gatti domestici. Molti piccioni. Questa è la storia delle città. Mi sono seduta a Piazza Farnese e ho disegnato i piccioni. Sono tornata a contare le colombe di San Pietro. Ci sono 52 pannelli, ognuno ha una colomba alla base e una in cima. Ho fatto 12 uccelli, per echeggiare il numero calendariale della basilica e degli apostoli; non sono religiosa, ma queste sono le cose che si respirano qui. The doves were made in the unseasonal warmth of Roman October 2011. Sweet. White. Pure. Too much so – by this time I was stumbling over the sinister. Walking dirtier streets. Seeing through stories. Working the underhand economy. Running up against power. The olive branches are mere bunches of sticks. Le colombe sono state fatte nel tepore fuori stagione dell’ottobre 2011 a Roma. Dolci. Bianche. Pure. Troppo – a questo punto stavo inciampando in cose sinistre. Camminavo per strade più sporche. Capivo meglio le storie. Lavoravo sottobanco. Mi scontravo con il potere. I rami di ulivo non sono altro che fasci di bastoni. The fasces is also everywhere and unnoticed. Since ancient Rome it has symbolised power and authority. The rods bound together represent strength in unity. The bundle is tied with a ribbon and includes an axe, signifying the legal authority to kill. I had made these sticks; I decided to make the axe. As I made the handle it metamorphosed into a goat leg. The devil’s leg. Anche il fascio è ovunque e passa inosservato. Fin dall’antica Roma è simbolo di potere e autorità. Le verghe legate insieme rappresentano la forza nell’unione. Il fastello è legato con un nastro e contiene una scure, a significare l’autorità legale di uccidere. Avevo fatto questi bastoni, ho deciso di fare l’ascia. Mentre facevo il manico, questo si trasformò in una zampa di capra. La gamba del diavolo. Doves, olive branches, faggots, fasces, axe, devil’s leg, hoary old goat. Colombe, rami di ulivo, fascine, fasci, ascia, gamba del diavolo, canuto caprone. Rome. Roma. Too many meanings to make sense. Troppi significati per avere senso. 42 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Fasces 2011 mixed media, installation variable 43 Covadonga Valdés Strada romana 2012 gouache on paper, 64 x 70 cm 44 Fine Arts 2011-2012 Piramide 2012 gouache and pastel on paper, 64 x 70 cm 45 BIOGRAPHIES 47 R ASHID A LI 2006-10 University of Nottingham, Institute of Architecture, 2nd Giles Worsley Travel Fellow, October-December 2011 Year BA design studio tutor 2006-07 Manchester School of Architecture, Manchester, 2nd Lives and works in London Year Studio design tutor http://www.rashidali.eu P UBLICATIONS E DUCATION 2012 ‘Medellín – Social forms of Urbanism’, P.E.A.R. 2011 ‘Young Architect of the Year’, Building Design 2010 ‘Istanbul – Inside and Out’, P.E.A.R. Magazine (April) 2009 ‘Jouberton Nursery’, Blueprint Magazine (August) 2011-09 MSc City Design and Social Science, London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 Magazine (June) Advanced Diploma in Professional Practice, Royal Institute of British Architects (October) 2000-02 Post Graduate Diploma in Architecture, Bartlett School, University College London ‘In the void and in emptiness’, Scarf magazine (June) 1996-99 BA (Hons) Architecture, University of Greenwich ‘Jouberton Nursery’, Building Design (June) ‘Copy and Duplication’, P.E.A.R. Magazine (June) O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS 2012 2008 Mogadishu – Forgotten Pasts and Distant Futures, London Festival of Architecture ‘Young Architect of the Year long list’, Building Design (October) 2006 Vladislav and Liudmila Kirpichev, EDAS – Design Kommunalka. Non Functional Space, Vienna & New S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS 2011 York: Springer Publishers Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British School at Rome Young Architect of the Year Shortlist, Architecture A NGELA C ATLIN Foundation, London Creative Scotland Document Fellow, January-March 2012 ‘Sample and Synthesis’, P.E.A.R. Magazine issue 3, 2009 2008 Architectural Association Lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland. ‘Copy and Duplication’, P.E.A.R. Magazine issue 1, Between 1990 and 2006 she was news photographer for The New London Architecture Centre Herald newspaper, Glasgow. During this time she won several Young Architect of the Year Longlist, New London Scottish and UK photojournalism awards, including Scottish Architecture Centre, London Photographer of the Year (twice) and Scottish/UK Feature Photo of the Year (four times). Since 2006 she has worked as a C OMPETITIONS free-lance photographer, specialising in the coverage of AWARDS AND 2011 Young Architect of the Year award (finalist) humanitarian and social issues. International trouble spots that Giles Worsley Travel Fellowship, British School at she has covered include Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Gaza, Rwanda, Rome (awarded) Russia, Cambodia, Indonesia, Colombia, Guatemala, Haiti, Home at MUDE, Lisbon (shortlisted) Somalia and Burkina Faso. New UK_Portugal Architects (selected) www.angelacatlin.com 2010 2008 Young Architect of the Year award (nominated) 2004 Arab Cultural Centre, Washington (commended) E XHIBITIONS 2012 B OOKS I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at Rome T EACHING 2010-11 Oxford Brookes University School of Architecture, 2nd/3rd Year studio leader 2011 Victims of Torture, Platform Gallery, Glasgow 2010 Pictures from the Middle East, Edinburgh Film House, 2009-10 Bartlett School, University College London, Summer School design tutor and continuing guest critic of the Edinburgh 2009 BSc in Architecture 2008-09 Welsh University School of Architecture, Cardiff University, 2 Year design studio leader nd 48 AND Fine Arts 2010-2011 The Peacemakers, The Scottish Parliament, Edinburgh, and Scotland tour 2008 Life after Iraq, St. Mungo’s Museum and Galleries, Glasgow, and UK tour 1985 Natural Light, a book of portraits of Scottish authors; 2005 exhibition opened Edinburgh Book Festival, and Wet River Dry Lake, Canberra School of Art, Scotland tour Australian National University 2004 AWARDS 2012 Out There, Ivan Dougherty Gallery, Sydney Works on Paper, Robert Steele Gallery, New York Sulman Prize, Art Gallery NSW Creative Scotland Document Fellowship, The British 2003 School at Rome 2011 Winner, Red Cross Scotland Award for Photography 2010 Winner, Oxfam Scotland Award for Photography 2008 Shortlisted, Amnesty International Awards, London Significant Tilt, Macquarie University Gallery, Sydney 2001 Geometry of the Earth, Orange Regional Gallery Harmonic Visions, Tamworth City Gallery, NSW 2000 Works on Paper at the Armory, Adam Baumgold Fine Art, New York P UBLICATIONS Scotland on Sunday, Spectrum Magazine, Sunday Herald, Herald S ELECTED AWARDS Magazine, Mail on Sunday ‘Live Magazine’, The Guardian, 2012 AND R ESIDENCIES National Art School Studio Residency in Drawing, The British School at Rome Sunday Times Scotland, The New York Times, New Zealand 2007 Residency, Penrith Regional Gallery, NSW 2006 National Art School Studio Residency, Cité 2005 Residency, Canberra School of Art, Australian January-March 2012 1998 Trustees’ Watercolour Prize, Art Gallery of New South Lives and works in Sydney 1996 Australia Council CEAD Grant Herald, The Age (Australia), Irish Examiner, Al Jazeera, BBC Internationale des Arts, Paris C HARLES C OOPER National Art School Sydney Resident in Drawing, National University Wales Represented by Annandale Galleries, Sydney C OLLECTIONS E DUCATION Wollongong City Gallery, Albury Regional Art Centre, La Trobe 1988 University, Orange Regional Gallery, Mildura Art Centre, MA (Visual Arts), City Art Institute, Sydney Gippsland Arts Centre, Swan Hill Regional Gallery, Hamilton R ECENT O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS City Art Gallery, Warrnambool Art Gallery, Commonwealth 2010 Peak Oil Paintings, Annandale Galleries, Sydney Artbank, Australian Stock Exchange; private collections in Circling the Block, Slot, Sydney Australia, New Zealand, USA, Europe Rivers and Roads, Hawkesbury and Orange Regional Galleries, NSW 2006 Crossroads, Annandale Galleries, Sydney C OLIN D ARKE 2004 Approaching the Block, Tin Sheds, Sydney University Arts Council of Northern Ireland Fellow, January-June 2012 2003 Traffic, Annandale Galleries, Sydney Lives in Belfast S ELECTED R ECENT G ROUP E XHIBITIONS 2012 2011 I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at E DUCATION Rome 2007-10 PhD, University of Ulster, Belfast William Dobell Prize for Drawing, Art Gallery of New 1977-80 BA (Hons) Fine Art, Goldsmiths’ College, University of London South Wales 2009 2008 Group Show feat. Cooper, Dumbrell, Bartlett, Bass & Buzacott, Annandale Galleries, Sydney S ELECTED O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS Pairs, Opposites, Dualities, Mildura Arts Centre, 2010 Ireland Victoria 2006 Mungo Place Willandra Time (Canberra School of Art), Mildura Arts Centre, Victoria Parodos GTG, Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast, 2009 The Capital Paintings, Droichead Arts Centre, Drogheda, Ireland 49 2008 The Capital Paintings, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin, 1998 MA (Performance Studies), Victoria University, 1976 Diploma of Art, PIT Ireland Melbourne 2005 Capital, Context Gallery, Derry, Ireland 1999 Labour In Irish History, Oakville Galleries, Oakville, 1995 Toronto, Canada SELECTED ONE PERSON EXHIBITIONS/PERFORMANCES SINCE 2010 A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, 2012 duet for two voices (the listened world), performance/installation, Room No 7, Appin Motel, Orchard Gallery, Derry Appin, New South Wales S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS duet for two voices (the listened world), drawing 2012 Interplanetary Revolution, Golden Thread Gallery, installation and four keyboard performances, John Belfast Buckley Gallery, Melbourne 2009 2008 2004 Commodity Form, The Bluecoat, Liverpool (two- 2011 Artisti Italiani nel Mondo, Italian Pavilion, 54th person show with David Mabb) Biennale di Venezia, Venice God and Goods, Villa Manin Centro d’Arte 2047 (the immortal), painting installation and Contemporanea, Passariano, Codroipo, Italy performance, John Buckley Gallery, Melbourne Drawing a Line – A Contemporary Survey of Art from conversazione con les estrellas, installation and Northern Ireland, Heilongjiang, China performance, Latrobe University Gallery, Bendigo, Victoria Art in the Age of Terrorism, Millais Gallery, Southampton, England 2010 cathedral, blindfold piano performance, Clemenger Busan Biennale, Busan Metropolitan Art Museum, Prize, National Gallery of Victoria (Ian Potter), South Korea Melbourne Clandestini, Forte Spagnolo, L’Aquila, Italy settevoltecieco, lithographs and monotypes, Art Vault 2003 Venice Biennale 50, Arsenale, Venice Gallery, Mildura 2002 Something Else, Turku/Helsinki, Finland lardethac (wendloeht = dloweneht), two-week 2000 Manifesta 3, Ljubljana, Slovenia installation/performance, 20 Westbury Street, Better Society, Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast Hackney, Adelaide (three-person show with Phil Collins and Daniel who says words with my mouth, all-night solstice Jewesbury) performance/installation, Heide Museum of Modern Ambiguous Authority, Beacon Street Galley, Chicago Art, Melbourne 1999 A Measured Quietude, Drawing Center, New York triestement (more-is-u-thrill-o), painting installation and 1998 Tracings, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast (four-person performance, John Buckley Gallery, Melbourne show with Sol LeWitt, Simon Patterson, Leo de (machine-for-contacting-the –dead, installation and Goede) performance, Cottee’s Factory, Murray-Darling Palimpsest Festival, Mildura, Victoria S ELECTED C OLLECTIONS Arts Council of Northern Ireland; National Self-Portrait S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS /P ERFORMANCES Collection of Ireland; Oakville Galleries, Toronto; David Roberts 2012 Art Foundation, London SINCE 2010 Contemporary Australian Drawing 2, University of the Arts, London Small Room with Animals and Humans, Mars Gallery, Melbourne D OMENICO DE C LARIO In the Doghouse, performance/installation, MARS Australia Council Resident Artist, July-September 2011 Gallery, Melbourne, with Sam Burke, Lotte & Toots 2011 Born 5 June 1947, lives in Melbourne. Forever Young: 30 Years of the Heide Collection, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne ‘forestories’, Sight Lines, installation/performance, with E DUCATION Sam Burke, Langford@120 Gallery, Melbourne 2001 PhD (Performance Studies), Victoria University, samadifference; Generations, installation/performance, Melbourne with Sam Burke, Wollongong Art Gallery, Wollongong 50 Fine Arts 2010-2011 ‘forestories’, with Sam Burke, Melaka Arts Festival, K IMATHI D ONKOR Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Derek Hill Foundation Scholar, October-December 2011 from the opaque 3, installation/performance, Federation Square, Melbourne, for the Light in Born in Bournemouth, 1965. Lives and works in London Winter Festival www.kimathidonkor.net National Biennale, Artists’ Self Portrait Prize, 2010 University of Queensland Museum (by invitation) E DUCATION Freehand. Recent Australian Drawing, Heide Museum 2010 MA, Fine Art, Camberwell College of Arts, London of Modern Art, Melbourne 1992 Post-graduate Certificate in Education, Art & Design, 1987 BA Hons, Fine Art, Goldsmiths’ College, London Goldsmiths’ College, London Global Mind, sound performance, Federation Square, Melbourne (with Stelarc, Jill Orr and Karen Casey) Journey to the Surface of the Earth (collaborative sound performance with Stephen Whittington, Tony Yap and S ELECTED O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS Janette Hoe), Madley Studios, University of Adelaide 2008 R ESIDENCIES AWARDS AND 2011 University of Queensland Museum, National Artists’ Hawkins & Co, Market Theatre Gallery, Armagh, Northern Ireland futbol, Bianca Hester Project, ACCA, Melbourne 2005 Fall/Uprising, Bettie Morton Gallery, London 2004-5 Caribbean Passion: Haiti 1804, Bettie Morton Gallery, London; Art Exchange Gallery, Nottingham Self-Portrait Award, Winner 2010 2009 Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council for the Arts: S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS Studio Residency, The British School at Rome 2012 Invisible Forces, Furtherfield, London Invited Finalist, Clemenger Art Prize, National 2011 Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British Gallery of Victoria School at Rome 1999 Axé Foundation, Salvador de Bahia, Brazil Precious little, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London 1998 ASIALINK Residency, Silpakorn University, Bangkok Multiple authors & previous owners, Chelsea Triangle Space, London Artist Residency, Govett-Brewster Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand 1997 2010 Artist Residency, Penny McCall Foundation Grant 29th Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil (New York, USA) Askew in the Garden of Desire, The Castle, London be careful what you wish for, Space Station Sixty Five, 1996-98 Australia Council, Visual Arts/Crafts Board London Fellowship 1996 Artist Residency, Sabbathday Lake, Maine, USA; The 2009 Kréyol Day, Conway Hall, London Quiet In the Land: Everyday Life, Contemporary Art 2008 Hawkins & Co, Contemporary Urban Centre, Liverpool and the Shakers 1995 Ha sempre um copo de mar para um homem navegar, Artist Residency, Threadwaxing Space, New York 2007 Torture Care Auction, The Building Centre, London Hawkins & Co, Elspeth Kyle Gallery, London Since 2011 Domenico de Clario has been collaborating with 2006 Telltale, Elspeth Kyle Gallery, London Australian performer, musician and multidisciplinary artist Sam 2005 Orature, Stephen Lawrence Gallery, London Burke. After graduating from the University of Melbourne’s 2004 Historicism, 198 Gallery, London Music Conservatorium in 2000, majoring in voice, Burke went 2003 The Jamaican Influence, The Fridge Gallery, London on to further her training in Vienna. Since then she has 1987 Creation for Liberation, Brixton Library, London performed throughout Australia, New Zealand, USA and Europe 1986 Young Black & Here, People’s Gallery, London Monti Wa Marumo, Brixton Art Gallery, London and in 2012 she released her second solo album Your Name is Safe in My Mouth. Sam Burke is a dedicated yogini whose discipline informs all aspects of her practice. 1985 Creation for Liberation, Brixton Recreation Centre, London Black Artists for Azania, Upper Street Gallery, London Artists Against Apartheid, Royal Festival Hall, London 51 AWARDS AND 2011 Derek Hill Foundation Scholarship, The British RBS Art Award, Sydney (finalist) School at Rome Rounds, Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts Shortlisted for the Bar-Tur award, University of the Arts Chicken Stampede, public performance & exhibition, London Next Wave Festival, Melbourne (solo) 2010 R ESIDENCIES Joya Residency, Cortijada Los Gázquez, Almeria, Friends (curated by Charlie Sofo), TCB Melbourne 2009 Spain Yellow vest syndrome (curated by Jasmin Stephens), Fremantle Arts Centre 2009-10 Arts and Humanies Research Council, professional Burnie Print Award, Tasmania masters scheme full award Hatched National Graduate Show, PICA PICA Studio Residency Fremantle Print Award, Fremantle Art Centre G EORGE E GERTON -WARBURTON Australia Council Resident Artist, January-March 2012 Summer, Goddard De Fiddes gallery, Perth 2008 Public Improvisations, Fabbrica del Vapore/CareOf, Milan Born 1988, Kojonup, Western Australia Corso Aperto, San Francesco, Lake Como, Italy Represented by Goddard de Fiddes Gallery, Perth, Western Fremantle Print Award, Fremantle Arts Centre Australia Print Association of Western Australia Awards, Moores Building Frematle E DUCATION 2009 BA with Honours, Curtin University, Perth AWARDS , G RANTS 2008 Public Improvisations with Yona Friedman, Advanced 2012-14 Gertrude Contemporary Studio residency, Melbourne, AND R ESIDENCIES Australia Course in Visual Arts, Fondazione Ratti, Como, Italy 2012 DCA Development grant S ELECTED E XHIBITIONS Australia Council Rome Studio residency, The British 2012 School at Rome Living with living, Sutton Gallery Project Space, Next Wave Festival, Melbourne (solo) 2011 Artspace residency, Sydney, NSW Australia Techno Park, Melbourne (solo) 2010 Fremantle Art Centre residency, WA Australia I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at 2009 DCA Development grant Rome Australia Council Development grant No reasonable offer refused (curated by Liang PICA studio residency Luscombe and Patrice Sharkey), Westspace, Kick Start Development program, Melbourne Melbourne 2011 2008 Advanced course in the Visual Arts: Public The Stalactite love review, ‘Dialogues with landscape’, Improvisations with Yona Friedman, Fondazione Ratti, Perth International Arts Festival, University of Western Como, Italy Australia Country Grammar, TCB, Melbourne (solo) C OLLECTIONS Post project (curated by Hannah Matthews and Artbank, John Curtin Gallery, Curtin University Library, private Caterina Riva as part of Power to the people), ACCA, collections Australia-wide Melbourne High and Lofty, the ecclesiastical banner project P UBLICATIONS (curated by David Capra), Parramatta Artist Studios, 2010 Rounds, PICA publication Sydney PRE MIX (curated by Daniel Bourke and Clare 2010 2009 Yellow Vest Syndrome (catalogue essay), Fremantle Arts Wohlnick), Galleria, Perth Centre Press, 2009 Life, Fraser Studios, Sydney Hatched, PICA publication Joondalup Art Award ‘Metamorphapportioning’ (essay), Runway magazine Goddard De Fiddes Gallery, Perth (solo) Joondalup Art Award (minor prize winner) 52 Chicken Stampede, self-directed Fine Arts 2010-2011 N ICHOLAS H ATFULL AWARDS Sainsbury Scholar in Painting and Sculpture, 2011-12 Sainsbury Scholarship in Painting and Sculpture, The October 2011-September 2012 AND R ESIDENCIES British School at Rome 2011 Dover Arts Club Prize for Printmaking Born 1984, Tokyo www.nicholashatfull.com C OLLECTIONS Saatchi Gallery, Franks-Suss Collection, 1:1 Projects Archive E DUCATION 2008-11 Postgraduate Diploma, Royal Academy Schools, London J ESSICA K IRKPATRICK 2003-06 Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, Oxford Abbey Fellow in Painting, April-June 2012 S OLO E XHIBITIONS Born 1980. Lives and works in Edinburgh, Scotland 2011 Il Bagno, Peles Empire, London www.jessicakirkpatrick.com 2009 Ignorant with the Suncream (Seafroot Delivery), Karsten Schubert, London E DUCATION 2010 MFA, Painting and Drawing, Edinburgh College of 2004 BFA, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA Art P ERFORMANCES 2011 Hallo Bagno Hallo Sommelier, Royal Academy Schools exhibition, London 2010 Fusilli Jerry takes a Mysterious Bath, Fold Gallery, S ELECTED E XHIBITIONS London 2012 Lynn Painter Stainer Prize, Mall Galleries, London Visual Arts Scotland Annual, Royal Scottish Academy, S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS Edinburgh 2012 Recent Work, The Parlour, Edinburgh, UK (solo) The world is bound in secret knots (curated by Jennifer Teets), various locations 2011 D’après Giorgio (curated by Luca lo Pinto), Fondazione Giorgio e Isa de Chirico, Rome 2011 Recrea(c)tion, Art’s Complex, Edinburgh 2010 Return to Source, Art’s Complex, Edinburgh (three I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at person show) Rome The Inexorable, MFA Degree Show, Edinburgh Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British College of Art School at Rome Post-Graduate Show, Atkinson Gallery, Somerset, The Call, Peles Empire, Cluj, Romania England Egocentric Space Lines (curated by Shama Khanna), Brief Habits Programme, Event Gallery, London Inexorable I, Total Kunst Gallery, Edinburgh (solo) 2009 Open Studios, Takt Kunstprojektraum, Berlin Royal Academy Schools Show, London Third Wheel, Embassy Gallery, Edinburgh Drawing 2011, The Drawing Room, London Maquette, Big Red Door, Edinburgh Ready Meal, The Sunday Painter, London 2010 Studio 5.18, Art’s Complex, Edinburgh 2008 Newspeak – British Art Now, Saatchi Gallery, London 3032 Miles, John David Mooney Foundation, Chicago A Shoulder Bears Its Edge, Pirate Gallery, Denver (solo) Premiums, Sackler Galleries, Royal Academy, R ESIDENCIES London AWARDS AND 2006 The Heat is Rising, Modern Art Oxford 2012 Leith School of Art Prize, Visual Arts Scotland Annual 2005 Montana Butch, Great Eastern Hotel, London Show 2004 Atomic Art Bomb, Modern Art Oxford Open Eye Gallery Prize, Visual Arts Scotland Annual Show P UBLICATIONS Abbey Fellowship in Painting, The British School at Briefly Noted (serviette-ish evil eye), available at www.xym.no Rome 2011 Cove Park Centre, Scotland 53 2010 John David Moonie Foundation, Chicago 2009 Takt Kunstprojektraum, Berlin TemporaryContemporary Gallery, London 2002 Us and Them, The Great Eastern Hotel, London The Most Dangerous Game, Rhodes and Mann P RIVATE C OLLECTIONS Susie Leiper, Edinburgh; Jane and Ian Murray, Edinburgh; Gallery, London 2001 High Kickin’ – High Falutin’, VTO Gallery, London Douglas May, Edinburgh; Antje and Bernd Gürner, Berlin; Tim Glamourhammer (curated by David Lock), Thomas À Woods, Superior, CO; Hank Ridless, Boulder, CO; Robert Becket Boxing Gym, London Preston, Boulder; Kimberly Dellaca-Badgett, Boulder; Keith 2000 Treyball, New York NY; Bridget Sivanich, Dallas TX Assembly, Stepney City, London Juicy (curated by Michael Stubbs), Goldsmiths, London D AVID L OCK AWARDS Abbey Scholar in Painting, October 2011-June 2012 2011-12 Abbey Scholarship in Painting, The British School at Born 1970, lives and works in London 2006 John Jones Work on Paper Prize, Zoo Art Fair, London 2000 Arts and Humanities Research Board Award AND R ESIDENCIES Rome E DUCATION 2000-01 MA Fine Art, Goldsmiths, University of London 1999-00 PG (Dip) Fine Art, Goldsmiths, University of London F IONA M AC D ONALD 1995-99 BA (Hons) Fine Art, University of Reading Abbey Fellow in Painting, October-December 2011 1994-95 Art Foundation, De Montfort University, Leicester Lives and works in London O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS 2007 http://www.fionamacdonald.co.uk John Jones Work on Paper Prize, Zoo Art Fair, London Misfits & Maladies, Fred, London/Leipzig E DUCATION 1995-97 MA History and Theory of Modern Art, Chelsea S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS 2012 I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at College of Art, London 1989-92 BA Hons Fine Art, Leeds Metropolitan University Rome 2011 2010 Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS School at Rome 2011 Works from the mirrored series, 10 Gresham Street, London Misfits, DS Contemporary, Belgium Au-delà de l’horizon, TemporaryContemporary @ 2009 Morphology, Maddox Arts, London Trajector Art Fair, Belgium 2007 Anthropoflora, Long and Ryle, London 2008 Import/Export, Fred, Leipzig 2006 Habitat, Phoenix Gallery, Brighton 2007 Kate Davis, Mark Fairnington, David Lock & Matthew 2004 On the Verge, Vertigo, London Usmar Lauder, Binz & Cramer Gallery, Cologne 2006 The Juddykes (curated by Ben Judd and Howard Dyke), T WO P ERSON E XHIBITIONS John Jones Project space, London 2010 Metropolis Rise: New Art from London (curated by Southend Anthony Gross and Jen Wu), Dashanzi 798 Art A Point in the Field, with Anne Gathmann, Exeter Phoenix, Exeter District, Beijing and travelling to CDQ Design Centre, Shanghai, China 2005 Phyllida Barlow and Fiona MacDonald, Coexist, 2007 Dirty Nature, with John Holland, Standpoint Gallery, London The Drawing show (curated by Denise Kum), Shangrila Tattoo, London Uneven Surfaces: Painting Now, S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS TemporaryContemporary, London 2011 Mesmer: Scrutiny, Seduction and slight of hand, 54 Fine Arts 2010-2011 Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British School at Rome Salonaise, Centrifugal Projects at Trajector Art Fair, 2010 Brussels 2008-09 Frequency in the Erasmus mobility program in the 5th Trainee in the company LAND srl, Milan, Italy How the Light Gets In, with Mermaid & Monster, Hay year of Architettura del Paesaggio, Facoltà Ludovico on Wye Quaroni, Sapienza University, Rome Lights Are On But Nobody’s Home, Standpoint 2010 2009 2008 2007 Gallery, London P ROJECTS Doris, Stedefreund, Berlin AND Manchester Contemporary, with Mermaid and Monster 2011 AND A CCOMPLISHMENTS AS A UTHOR C O - AUTHOR Garden for Family House Antonio Lobo, Maia, Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy, London Portugal 3 Water Tower Artfest, Sofia, Bulgaria Landscaping for the square in front of the City’s Who is Telling the Story?, curated by Basement Art Casino, for the Office of Public Constructions of the Projects, Galata Perform and the Ist International City of Póvoa de Varzim, Portugal Artists Initiative, Istanbul Participation as Project Coordinator in the contest Salon 09, Matt Roberts Arts, London (selected by Ceri ‘Development Project for Rehabilitation and Hand) Improvement of Pateira de Fermentelos’, under the The Damned and the Saved, Studio 1.1, London intervention of Polis (3rd place) 00 Nature, Contemporary Art Projects, London Article ‘Sustainable Urban Planning and Urban Hairport (performance), Late at Tate, Tate Britain Environment’, published in the Journal of Amarante, Beauty (performance) Beaconsfield Gallery Portugal, 25 July 2011 Irrational Exuberance, Maddox Arts, London Participation as Project Coordinator in the contest Celeste Art Prize, Truman Brewery, London and Competition for the City Alcobaça Green Park, held Edinburgh with landscape architects Isabel Castro Freitas and Intervention, Fieldgate Gallery, London Marilia Conceição rd Creekside Open 2, APT, London 2010-11 Collaboration in the Design Competition for the Project of the Urban Park of the Palace of Giela - R ESIDENCIES Arcos de Valdevez, in the company X-scapes, Porto AWARDS AND 2011 Abbey Fellowship in Painting, The British School at Rome Plans for the Recovery of Abandoned Quarries / 2010 EKWC Inactive in the North’, inserted in the Action Plan for 2007 Braziers International Artists Workshop Qualification of the Environment in Northern 2006 Arts Council England, Grants for the Arts Portugal, held with the landscape architect Sara Ratola D UARTE N ATÁRIO DOS S ANTOS IFLA Rome Scholar in Landscape Architecture, 2010 Collaboration and co-author on the project ‘Programs / L AURE P ROUVOST Winner, Max Mara Art Prize for Women 2011, April-June 2012 January-March 2012 Born 1978 Lille, France. Lives and works in London. Born 3 June 1987, Porto, Portugal http://laureprouvost.com/ E DUCATION E DUCATION 2010 Master in Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Science, 2007-10 Goldsmiths’ College, University of London University of Porto 1999-02 Central St Martins, London 2007-08 Degree in Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Science, University of Porto S ELECTED O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS 2012 MOTinternational, London and Bruxelles (October) G ENERAL T RAINING Laure Prouvost at Treasurer’s House, York, residency in 2011 Frequency in the course of Environmental Educator partnership with The Barbara Hepworth Wakefield Training, Porto (July) 55 2011 Frieze Projects, Frieze Art Fair, London 2009 EAST award, East International, Norwich 2008 Lighthouse, new commission, Brighton Laure Prouvost, IPS, Birmingham Time Machine, Bookworks, Spike Island, Bristol AAP, artist placement associate LUX, London before, before. before it was, the title sequence, spinning before next, a squid, MOTinternational, London 2010 All These Things Think Link, Flat Time House, L UKE R OBERTS London Australia Council Resident Artist, April-June 2012 Art Now Lightbox, Tate Britain, London 2009 Frieze Frame, Frieze Art Fair, London Luke is a director of the Pope Alice Xorporation managing the Present Future, Artissima Art Fair, Turin earthly affairs of Her Divine Holiness Pope Alice. Storeybored, After the Butcher, Berlin www.popealice.com S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS E DUCATION 2012 Be With Me, Peter Bergman, Stockholm 2001 Reflexion und Einfühlung, KAI 10 Arthena 1972-74 Queensland College of Art MFA, Queensland University of Technology Foundation, Düsseldorf 2011 P ERSON E XHIBITIONS The Starry Rubric Set, Wysing Arts Centre, Wysing S ELECTED Painting Show, Eastside Projects, Birmingham, UK 2011, ‘10 AlphaStation/Alphaville, Australian Centre for ONE Photography, Sydney and Institute of Modern Art, Fracas, Portikus, Frankfurt, Germany Brisbane Subjective Projections, Bielefelder Kunstverein, Bielefeld, Germany 2006 You Are Not Alone, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane Time Again, Sculpture Center, New York 2000 Ecce Homo, Artspace, Sydney Department Of Wrong Answers, Wysing Arts Centre, 1996 Clutch, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane Cambridge 1994-95 Wunderkammer/Kunstkamera, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane Bedtime Stories, Supportico Lopez, Berlin Avec Excoffon, IFF, Marseille, France 2010 Museum of Speech, Extra City-Kunsthal Antwerpen, S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS Belgium 2011-12 Sourris Collection, Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane More Pricks Than Kicks, David Roberts Art 2002 Australian Representative at Museum of Contemporary Art, 13th Biennale of Sydney Foundation, London Kryptonim Matrioszka, Bunkier Sztuki, Krakow, 1997 PS1 Studio Artists, the Clocktower, New York Poland 1996 2nd Asia-Pacific Triennial, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane R ESIDENCIES AWARDS AND 2012 Winner, Max Mara Art Prize for Women 2011 1995, ‘91 Australian Perspecta, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney 2011-12 Treasurer’s House, York, residency in partnership with 2011 R ESIDENCIES The National Media Museum, Bradford (September- AWARDS AND January) 2012 Australia Council Rome Studio residency, The British School at Rome Artist in residence, Inheritance Projects, UK 57 Oberhausen Short Film Festival, Principal Prize th 2010- winner Artist-in-residence, Central Queensland University, Rockhampton Winner of Film London Artist’s Moving Image 1997 Network Grant, 2011 1996-97 Fellowship, PS1 Studio, ICA, New York Sala Diaz, San Antonio, Texas Wysing Arts Center, The Department of Wrong 2010 Answers Residency, Cambridge P UBLIC A RT C OMMISSIONS CCA Residency, Glasgow 2003 UFO, Fiveways, West End, Brisbane 56th Oberhausen Short Film Festival, Principal Prize 2000 SPQR, Roma Street Parklands, Brisbane winner for Monologue 56 Fine Arts 2010-2011 G RANTS S ELECTED R ECENT G ROUP E XHIBITIONS 2008 Professional Development, Arts Queensland 1998 Professional Development, Arts Queensland 2012 I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at Rome 1996 Fellowship, PS1 New York, Australia Council Migrating Landscapes, Parisian Laundry, Montréal, Canada P UBLICATIONS 2010 Bartlett Master Show, Wates Building, London 2012 AlphaStation/Alphaville (monograph), Institute of 2001 Biennale de St-Etienne, Beaux-Arts de Saint-Etienne, 2011 Video document, interviewed by Doug Hall for the Modern Art, with text by Daniel Mudie Cunningham France Sourris Collection, State Library of Queensland S ELECTED AWARDS Archive 2012 AND R ESIDENCIES Shortlisted for Migrating Landscapes Organisation, 1999 Vanitas (monograph), Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane Venice Architecture Biennale 2012 1996 Luke Roberts: A Black Swan of Trespass, Institute of Winner of Rome Architecture Residency, Conseil des Modern Art, Brisbane Arts et des Lettres du Québec, The British School at Rome C OLLECTIONS 2010 National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Museo Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Scholarship, Ministère de l’Éducation, du Loisir et du Sport, Québec 2008 Madrid Finalist for Lorenz, 75 ore: watch design competition, Italy 2006 Winner of Invitation competition for Shanghai Media Group office interior design, China F ELIX S CHWIMMER 2003 Québec Architecture Resident, January-March 2012 Study Abroad Scholarship, Ministère de l’Éducation, du Loisir et du Sport, Québec Born 1977. Lives and works in L’Aquila, Italy and Montréal, P UBLIC TALKS Canada 2011 Transgression as a creative tactic, invited group conference, The Bartlett, University College Guest critic in several schools of design and architecture. Co- London founder of E.A.T. collective: www.eat-collective.com 2010 E.A.T. an international research group, invited group E DUCATION conference, Digital Studio Architecture, Greenwich 2010 M.Arch. Architectural Design, The Bartlett, University University 2003 Bachelor of Interior Design, Université de Montréal, College London 2008 Pecha Kucha Night, conference paper on ‘Projects in China’, Udine, Italy Canada S ELECTED P ROFESSIONAL P ROJECTS H EATHER B. S WANN 2011 Australia Council Resident Artist, October-December 2011 Sassa 137, new housing complex, eight villas with communal park, Officina ScH Architettura, L’Aquila Camarda 3in1, new residence for three family, Born 10 December 1961. Lives and works in Melbourne, Officina ScH architettura, L’Aquila Australia 2007-08 Shenzhen Stock Exchange interiors, new headquarters 2006 for the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, Office for E DUCATION Metropolitan Architecture, Shenzhen, China 2003 MFA, University of Tasmania Shanghai Television, television editing office floor, 1993 BFA with Honours, University of Tasmania SMG, Shanghai, China 2004-06 Il Ponticello, refurbishment, tourist and recreational R ECENT O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS multi-use complex, Construction Boca inc, Old Port of 2011 Bone, Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne Montréal, Canada 2009 Troublemaker, Kristian Pithie Gallery, Melbourne 57 2008 Sweet, Helen Maxwell Gallery, Canberra 2005 Dog Eat Dog, Helen Maxwell Gallery, Canberra 2004 Animal Behaviour, Bett Gallery Hobart 2003 Night Creatures, Plimsoll Gallery, Hobart Invited artist, Summer Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London 2011 Torrance Art Museum, California Contemporary Art Fair, Oviedo, Spain Charlie Smith Gallery, London S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS Garboushian Gallery, Los Angeles 2012 Queer Urban Tales, The Substation, Melbourne Disputatio, Gooden Gallery, London 2011 Seven Things To Do In An Emergency, The British School at Rome 2007 The Collection and Usher Gallery, Lincoln, UK 2010 Galeria Mada Primavesi, Madrid Text (as) Image, Level 17 Artspace, Melbourne Carter Presents, London A Room Inside, Ian Potter Museum of Art, University KIAF 2010 International Art Fair, Seoul, Korea of Melbourne 2009 Turps Banana Show, Galleria Marabini, Bologna Waterhouse & Dodd Gallery, London S ELECTED AWARDS AND C OMMISSIONS 2008 Scope Art Fair, London 2011 Australia Council Studio, The British School at Rome 2010 Fender Katsalidis Architects, NewActon, Canberra 2007 Laneways Commissions, City of Melbourne 2005 Goddard Sapin-Jaloustre Scholarship, France 2005 The Hunting Art Prize, Royal College of Art, London 1998 Rosamund McCulloch Scholarship, University of 2004 John Moores 23, Liverpool Museums, Liverpool The Wharf Road Project, V22 Collection, London 2006 BP Portrait Award, National Portrait Gallery, London John Moores 24, Liverpool Museums, Liverpool Tasmania, Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris S ELECTED AWARDS 2011 C OVADONGA VALDÉS Abbey Fellow in Painting, January-March 2012 AND R ESIDENCIES Abbey Fellowship in Painting, The British School at Rome 2009 Ricklungarden Museum Residency, Sweden 2007 Art Grant, Spanish Embassy, London Lives and works in London 1999 Florence Trust Residency, London http://www.covadongavaldes.com 1985 First Drawing Award, Principado de Asturias, Spain Residency, University of Cabuenes, Spain E DUCATION 1992-94 MA Fine Art, Slade School of Fine Art, University College, London 1988-92 BA (Hons) Fine Art, Chelsea College of Art, London O NE P ERSON E XHIBITIONS 2012 Angulo Gallery, Asturias, Spain 2007 Hideaway, Contemporary Art Projects, London Touring Exhibition, Cajastur, Spain 2000 Gallery Trazos Tres, Santander, Spain 1999 Pump House Gallery, London 1998 Council of Cangas de Onis, Asturias, Spain 1997 Gallery Trazos Tres, Santander, Spain 1996 Council of Oviedo, Spain 1995 City Art Gallery, London 1994 The Slade, University College, London S ELECTED G ROUP E XHIBITIONS 2012 I Don’t Know How A Rock Feels, The British School at Rome 58 Fine Arts 2010-2011 T H E B RITISH S CHOOL AT R OME Director Christopher Smith Assistant Director Joanna Kostylo Research Professor in Archaeology Simon Keay Cary Fellow Robert Coates-Stephens Rome Fellow in Architecture Marina Engel Assistant Director (Fine Arts) Jacopo Benci Librarian Valerie Scott Deputy Librarian Beatrice Gelosia Library Assistants Francesca De Riso, Francesca Deli Archivist Alessandra Giovenco Registrar & Publications Manager (London Office) Gill Clark Development Officer Mary Ellen Mathewson Director’s Assistant Eleanor Murkett Administrative Assistant Alice Bygraves Systems Consultant Susan Rothwell Smith School Secretary Maria Pia Malvezzi Receptionist Magdalena Sygidus Bursar Alvise Di Giulio Accounts Clerk Isabella Gelosia Domestic Bursar Renato Parente Maintenance Fulvio Astolfi Technical Assistant & Waiter Giuseppe Pellegrino Cleaners Donatella Astolfi, Alba Coratti, Marisa Scarsella Cooks Giuseppe Parente, Dharma Wijesiriwardana Waiter/Porter Antonio Palmieri via Gramsci, 61 00197 Roma tel. +39 06 3264939 fax +39 06 3221201 www.bsr.ac.uk 59 Printed in Italy by STR Press, Rome May 2012 Published by T HE ISSN 1475-8733 B RITISH S CHOOL AT R OME London ISBN 978-0-904152-64-7
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Fine Arts 2012-13 - The British School at Rome
Photography courtesy of the artists and architects, except
Claudio Abate (pp. 6-10, 14-15, 18-19, 22-23, 26, 34-35, 38-39,
44-45, 48, 49 bottom); Jacopo Benci (pp. 9 right, 50); courtesy of
Brenda ...