Arno Kramer at The Model, Sligo and Ballina Arts Centre by info greenonredgallery.com

Arno Kramer–Current Exhibitions

Arno Kramer & Henk Visch | High Winds Slowly Move
The Model, Sligo 19 August–29 October 2017
 

Human Chain | Dutch contemporary drawings
Ballina Arts Centre, Ballina, Co. Mayo
Thursday 7th September–28 October 2017

arnokramer.jpg

Arno Kramer & Henk Visch | High Winds Slowly Move

The Model, Sligo 19 August–29 October 2017

 

The Model is delighted to present High Winds Move Slowly, a very special two-person exhibition with Dutch artists Arno Kramer and Henk Visch. This show, which is curated and toured by the Museum De Buitenplaats in the Netherlands, marks the first time that these two artists have been brought together in one exhibition. 

The opening reception will be marked by a gallery conversation between Arno Kramer, Henk Visch, and the exhibition curater Patty Wageman. 


The exhibition focuses on the similarities and differences in the work of both artists who have known each other for a long time. Arno Kramer mainly makes drawings and so-called drawing installations, while Henk Visch focuses more on drawings and sculptures. Where Arno Kramer works in Overijssel and Sligo (Ireland), Henk Visch is alternately employed in Eindhoven and Beijing (China). Both due to the mutual relationship and the fact that sculpture and drawing art are well-connected, these aspects to the museum are the reason to present their work together. The work of Arno Kramer and Henk Visch is represented in various museum and private collections.

 

Both artists experiment with the possibilities of the figurative and the abstract and they explore how this affects the visual area. This will be seen in the coming exhibition. Now the line or a grid plays an important role, then the figure again takes over. At Henk Visch, humans are often image-determining, with Arno Kramer that is often an animal. Sometimes, the image and the more intuitive abstractions clash in an image.

 

The focus of this exhibition will be on a broad presentation of both work. Visch focuses on sculptures, with Kramer some very large drawings will be image-determining. For the exhibition of Museum De Buitenplaats, new and existing work will be shown. It will be very interesting how Visch's sculptures and drawings will relate to Kramer's work in the exhibition space.

 

Arno Kramer

Besides the artistry Kramer writes about visual arts. He published, for example, seven poems and a novel. From his last Dutch poetry edition, in 2017, a translation translated from Salmon Poetry Ireland. In addition, he has taught as a guest lecturer at the Academy of Arts and Industry (AKI) in Enschede, and in countries such as England, Scotland and the United States. Since 1995, Kramer has been living in Ireland annually to work on remote locations for new drawings. In Ireland he exhibited in many museums, lectured and lectured and organized Into Irish Drawing. An exhibition also seen in Paris, Northern Ireland and the Netherlands.

Arno Kramer designed the Drawing Center Diepenheim, where he is a curator from 2008. With All About Drawing, which he started and performed with Diana Wind, he put 50 years of Dutch drawings on the map.

 

Henk Visch

Henk Visch followed a curriculum from 1968 to 1972 at the Academy of Arts and Design St. Joost in 's-Hertogenbosch. After his studies, he initially made drawings and etching. In 1982, Visch spent a year in Atelier PS I in New York, where he became known for his figurative sculptures. From 1984, the artist has taught at the Amsterdam Rijksacademie van Beeldende Kunsten and the Jan van Eyck Academy in Maastricht. The work of Henk Visch is located in many major national and international museum collections. Visch has also exhibited at international exhibitions, such as the Documenta in Kassel and the Venice Biennale. In addition, the artist has recently been asked to be the Dutch representative at the Kathmandu Biënnale.

 

This exhibition is a first presentation in a pilot that focuses on the drawing and in which the museum will work closely with Academie Minerva and the University of Groningen. In this project, presentation, research, practice and training come together.

The Model,
The Mall, Sligo
info@themodel.ie

Human Chain: Dutch contemporary drawings

An exhibition in Ballina Arts Centre, Ballina, Co. Mayo

September 17th–28 October
 

Human ChainDutch contemporary drawings is an exhibition of drawings and works on paper by seven Dutch artists who at one point have been resident artists at the Ballinglen Arts Foundation in Ballycastle. Selected by Arno Kramer, the artists in the exhibition are: Arno Kramer, Hanneke Francken, Caren van Herwaarden, Anita Groener, Tjibbe Hooghiemstra, Erik Mattijssen and Jacobien de Rooij. The presentation of Human Chain in Ballina Arts Centre in September 2017 will show that there is a huge variety in content and also in technique and sizes of the drawings of these seven Dutch artists.

 

There will also be a book launch. Salmon Poetry publishes a from Dutch in English translated poetry volume written by Arno Kramer called MORNINGRUSTLE.

Poet and writer John Brown (Belfast)will do the presentation of the book.

Salmon Poetry has published In the Chair from John Brown in 2002. An interview book including 22 interviews with poets from the North of Ireland.


Ballina Arts Centre
Barrett St.

Ballina
Co. Mayo

Tel: 096 73593
www.ballinaartscentre.com

Damien Flood Awarded The 2017 Hotron Éigse Prize by info greenonredgallery.com

DAMIEN FLOOD awarded
the Hotron Éigse Prize 2017

 

ART WORKS '17
VISUAL Carlow
7 June - 3rd September) 
11am-8pm daily

Damien Flood, Counter (2016) Oil on canvas 150 x 125cms

Damien Flood, Counter (2016) Oil on canvas 150 x 125cms

Green On Red Gallery is delighted to announce the award of the Hotron 2017 overall Art Prize to Damien Flood for a work of outstanding merit.  His single painting, Counter ( 2016, pictured ) in the current Éigse 2017 curated exhibition at VISUAL, Carlow, as part of the Carlow Arts Festival, was selected from a long list of contemporary Irish and international artists by Eoin Dara, Head of Exhibitions, Dundee Centre for Contemporary Art and Emma Lucy O'Brien, Curator and Galleries Coordinator at Visual Centre for Contemporary Art, Carlow. Counter was first exhibited in Damien's solo exhibition A Root that Turns as the Sun Turns in the Green On Red Gallery in 2016.

Damien's new work is also currently featured in Wouldn't it be nice if we could dream together ? group show in the Diana Rosenstein Gallery, LA, USA, finishing today, June 10.

His work will be centrally featured in the Green On Red Gallery exhibition at VOLTA, Basel, June 12-17, 2017.  Later this year he will have a solo show at Stephane Simoens Gallery, Belgium and will spend July 2017 at La Brea Artist residency, LA.  Damien has been offered a residency at Le Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris, in 2018.

Monograph publications include: Afterworlds, 2013, Spectral Gallery, 2011, Selected Works, 2010. 

Damien Flood Showcases In Diane Rosenstein, Los Angeles by info greenonredgallery.com

Damien Flood
Wouldn't it be nice if we could dream together?

April 27 - June 10, 2017 

Reception: Thursday, April 27, 6pm

Diane Rosenstein
831 North Highland Avenue 
Los Angeles

Reverie (2017), oil on canvas, 50 x 40 cm

Reverie (2017), oil on canvas, 50 x 40 cm

Green On Red Gallery is pleased to announce that artist, Damien Flood, will be exhibiting a series of new paintings in the Los Angeles based gallery Diane Rosenstein, opening Thursday, April 27th, 6-8pm. The exhibition will run until June 10th, 2017.

Wouldn't it be nice if we could dream together? is a group show of painting, sculpture, ceramics, and works on paper by eight contemporary artists who draw the viewer into alternate worlds. The title of the show is inspired by a memoir written by Bill Hayes, about his life with his lover, the writer and neurologist Oliver Sacks. Wouldn't it be nice if we could dream together? describes a yearning for shared experience, a non-Separate, transpersonal communion that transcends consciousness, such as the power of an artist to draw the viewer into his dream. 

Artists include: Damien Flood, Jose Alvarez (D.O.P.A.), Charles Fine, Daniel Gibson, Yassi Mazandi, Dan Miller, Shiri Mordechay, and Joe Ray. 

Further information available on the website: www.dianerosenstein.com 

TALK SHOW Alan Butler & Rachael Gilbourne (A transcript) by info greenonredgallery.com

Thursday, April 06, 7 - 8pm

TALK SHOW was held in the Green On Red Gallery, whereRachael Gilbourne participated in a public talk with Alan Butleron the occasion of his current exhibition HELIOSYNTH.

Green On Red Gallery
Park Lane
Spencer Dock ( Luas Stop 100m )
Dublin 1

heliosynth alan butler.jpg

[Zipping noise]
  
Alan Butler: Can you hear me? 

Rachael Gilbourne: Yes, [pause] I can. [pause

R: Hello? 

A: Hello? 

R: So ... can ... everyone ... hear ... me? 

Audience: Yes. 

R: And Alan? 

Alan & Audience: Yes. 

R: So, welcome everyone to TALK SHOW. This is Alan’s first show in Dublin, since his show in 2010 at Temple Bar Gallery. So, this evening we’re going to talk about Alan’s practice, the work’s he’s made before the show and then the works within the show itself. Oh, Alan, there was one question I wanted to ask you, just before I forget it, which may be a simple one, but I feel it may be important. I noticed that when looking at your work, you use capital letters in a lot of the titles of your works, as well as in the title of the show. Obviously this is a deliberate effect, but, I would just like to know the reasons behind it? 

A: Well, I don’t have a straight rationale towards the use of capital letters. Sometimes it just happens out of sheer laziness and by saving the file name on the computer when caps lock is left on. 

R: Really?! 

A: Yeah. There is actually nothing clever behind it; it’s more laziness and carelessness. 

R: Can you say that again – someone was moving and I couldn’t hear it? 

A: [Repeats above]. I like when things like that happen along the way. I suppose, the whole aim of it is to work rationally and not make any mistakes and we have this idea that when we use the computer that everything should be perfect. But, when I make mistakes like that, I often leave them in and sometimes I don’t correct them at all and that’s how it all comes about. 

R: Ok, cool. I was trying to interpret it myself, I was thinking you may have been trying to shout all the titles really loudly, or somehow trying to explain that they were really profound. 

A: Well, maybe there is a bit of that, because there is that whole thing of using capital letters on the internet for shouting or for placing emphasis on something. 

R: I know you had been talking to me about the change between your show in theTemple Bar Gallery and now in the Green On Red Gallery, and you especially mentioned that you had taken a year away from exhibiting. Within that year, there were massive shifts politically around the world. Then, you came back to exhibiting your work, and from an observers outlook, you can notice a kind of different tone then what you had being doing previously. 

A: So, yeah, for anyone who generally doesn’t know my work – my work has been quite ‘CAPS LOCK’ and clicky. I guess, I’ve always been interested in doing some work with the internet, where I would be producing work in physical space – making images and art objects real, that should normally only exist in the fantasy realm of MEME and internet culture and how the way people act online is completely different to the way they act in real life. I suppose, I found myself doing that, because, it was just fantasy and play. I think it wasn’t on purpose, that my work changed, but, I think the more the internet became a part of our lives, the less I could actually be as flip-pant and say “the internet is a fantasy realm”. The final nail in the coffin was rather, on the night in November, when Donald Trump became the President of the United States. When Donald Trump became president, well that’s kind of one of the stupid things that would have happened on a GIF I would have made, that’s not actually something that should happen in reality. I felt at that point the internet ceased to exist and that it just became the world we live in. If I then continue to produce internet-art about that shouty, fantasy world, I find it would be quite redundant - it would just be a documentary. 

R: And the tweets that you made in relation to Donald Trump, did you start those in 2015 or was it 2016? 

A: Ah, 2016, yeah. I thought it was just going to annoy everybody and it probably did (or still does), but I continued it anyway. Every morning at 9 o’ clock, my Twitter account tweets ‘Oh my god Donald Trump, what a crazy guy!’. Actually, the really interesting thing I have observed from this is, the mornings when I get a huge amount of likes from the people who are following me, it means that Donald Trump is after doing something. I was just doing it as a way of making fun of people on Twitter, and then, some-one wrote an article about it, claiming it was ‘art’ - I don’t know. 

R: Well, then, it seems your practice is slightly more sombre in tone? 

A: Yeah, well, just to finish that point on what happens on the internet, etc. For me, I was in this mindset that the world functioned in a particular way, then when Donald Trump became president, it was this smack in the face, that ‘oh I always thought Donal Trump lived in our world, but actually I live in his world’. But, I honestly think that didn't just happen over night. There have been things happening all along the way, like the Hilary Clinton ‘Pizzagate’ theory, with the guy who went in with an AR-15-style rifle into Comet Restaurant, planning to 'self-investigate' the conspiracy, that underage children were being harbored in the restaurant. After all of this, I felt the need to work in a more poetic world, because all that stupid GIF world has now become a reality. 

R: Yeah, it feels like you’ve stepped back slightly and taken the longer view. And I think before your work felt like it was stepping into this realm and being surrounded or being within the internet or within that ambient, but whereas now I think it’s more like taking a step back and using that language but not being completely embedded in it. 

A: Yeah, it’s not as explicit in a way, like you know, I’m not using Hilary Clinton’s face in the exhibition - which I have in the passed. It’s not exactly quoting pop culture, but however there is pop culture in the show. 

R: It feels like Deskscapes are symbolic of this shift into this peaceful poetic place. This is the first time I’ve seen your worked framed, and as well as the cyanotypes - they’re distinct works. Do you maybe want to talk about the making of them and what they reference? 

A: They're abstractions of places; of the forms that are in the desktop wallpapers on MAC OSX operated system, and they're turned sideways, so if you just turn your head usually anti-clockwise, you’ll make out that these are actually land-scape shapes that make up the work. I was interested in using these in relation to the metaphor of the world we experience; the landscapes we experience; the landscapes which are mediated by screen based technology. But the other thing is, that the ambiguity of these which have formed part of our visual culture. If you own a MAC laptop, then you own these images. It’s just interesting because they probably are the most well known photographs of this century, or probably the most distributed photographs of maybe ever, next to Windows XP - that one had a background called Bliss, which were these fields in California. What I really like about the Mac OSX ones, is that they are from the Yosemite in California. Yosemite has been this place of pilgrimage for artists, I guess for a couple of hundred years now. One of the first black and white American landscape photographs was by Carlton Watkins, in the mid 19th century. Around the same time or a few years before, a painter, called Albert Bierstadt, began to loosely work around this idea of creating these big landscapes which were kind of romanticised, and what I find this interesting because the advent of photography was simultaneously beginning to suck up portraiture work around New York. 

R: So this is kind of about freedom in a way - and a particular ideology.

A: Yeah, and I suppose it was always kind of represented as a place that wasn’t inhabited by people before, so it seemed very glam, and appealed to the rich. Also, the scale of these paintings, like Yosemite and El Captain, gave the first virtual reality experiences. I think they even ended up travelling as far as Hungary, for people to pay to see them, as for them it was the equivalent of travelling to West America. It’s a bit like the holiday on Star Trek - like that alternative space. Going to Star Trek 5, the film, I think it opens with Captain Kirk, climbing El Capitan and Spock comes along in his rocket boots and asks him about the climate, creating the metaphor that this was once the unknown exploration. 

R: These landscapes, you know are primarily American, and the politics you seem to reference are American, so there seems to be a lot of American culture, politics, society, landscape, within your work. I think of that, and remember that you made your MA in Singapore. I’m wondering if that had a big influence? 

A: Oh definitely, because Singapore is, and has been for a very long time, the way that America is going. It looks and feels like California, everything is in English. I have Singaporean friends who speak English in a Californian accent. 

R: And it’s particularly Californian landscapes you're looking at as well in theseDeskscapes

A: Yeah, but then that has a lot to do with the proximity to Hollywood and to the proximity to Silicon Valley. But, basically, Singapore is a benign fascist state, and it feels like that is the future of capitalism; like this hyper efficient business that people live in; a place for people to be contained; to be farmed; to work within the capitalist system. Also, Singapore’s role model would be Western, they would not be influenced by their oriental roots.

R: So, in a way its mimicking Western American culture, just as Deskscapes is mimicking landscape painting. This brings us to look at your new work in the Irish Museum of Modern Art As Above, So Below: Portals, Visions, Spirits & Mystics, that opens next week, ON EXACTITUDE IN SCIENCE. Do you want to tell us a bit about that? 

A: So, Koyaanisqatsi was a film made in 1983, by Godfrey Reggio. It’s a film that isn’t driven by a screenplay but it’s driven by a pictorial mode, its almost like a poetic documentary film. It’s just images of the planet earth at the end of the 20th century, with music by Philip Glass. Glass has created this incredible sound-track, which has been produced specifically for the film. It became this archetype of cinema in the late 20th century which didn’t have actors in it, but is still rather a very cinematic experience. The few times I have seen it in the cinema, the scale of it alone is breathtaking. There is a particular scene with a Boeing 747 going really close to the camera - the nose of the airplane - it’s like seeing an airplane on real scale. It’s almost referencing those first films with the trains coming towards the camera. But, I’m also interested that it has this kind of experience of the cinema - it’s something that happens to you. It’s a really visceral movie. It oscillates from being something very intense, to something much more slow. At a certain point there’s a layer of synthesisers orchestrated by real instruments, then the film culminates hyper capitalism and the automobile production industry in particular space travel. I’m really interested in how it represents, still I feel, where we are in terms of lifestyles and how we haven’t changed that significantly since 1983. I wanted to reuse this material and remake the film in all its entirety, the full 86 minutes, within the video gameGrand Theft Auto V. GTA V is not really aware of what it is; these are games that are re-immersive and that go anywhere and do anything; where you create your own narrative, that is not completely bound to this violence driven attitude of killing somebody and progressing to the next level. I have been making another series of work called Down and Out in Los Santos, a work where I use my characters and give them a phone camera, so that they can photograph the homeless population through the city in GTA V. These people seem to have no function in the game’s narrative. But, I find this really interesting, that, these homeless people, these kind of primitive artificial intelligence, who have been neglected and don’t serve any function to the game, can then bring these corporate reality spaces to produce work autonomously. I feel that Los Santos where Grand Theft Auto V is based, has those Singaporean characters in a way, like what we mentioned before. My thesis was, that if I could reproduce anything in the world, the greatest challenge for me was to make Koyaanisqatsi, shot for shot, frame for frame. Godfrey Reggio has been really nice and has us given the film to show side by side. 

R: What did he say when you told him what you wanted to do? 

A: Ah, he didn’t seem that surprised. I think that a lot of people have ripped off the style over the years, so I think he was happy that I asked for permission and that I had personally contacted him. But he seemed very suspicious that I wouldn’t be able to do it. 

R: Yeah, well it did sound like a very grand ambition. 

A: Yeah, I was terrified that I wouldn’t be able to do it - that was a constant thought up until about last week, and this was about seventeen months into it. But right now, it’s done - and it works, so I’m pretty happy with it. I sent it to Reggio when I finished it, but he’s on holiday’s right now, hopefully when he get’s back I’ll have a chance to talk to him about it. 

R: You mentioned a work called Down and Out in Los Santos, that’s a piece that exists on a website, and is then specifically disseminated through Instagram.

A: Yeah, at the moment there is about 1,200 photographs online. I upload two photo-graphs a day onto the website, and then I transfer those photographs onto Instagram. Again, my initial idea, was something very simple: is it possible for an autonomous and artistic experience to be brought into reality simulation? Then, when I began to put them up online, I started using these hashtags, that made me aware that most people on Instagram who like my account are not actually humans, but actually ‘bots’ attached to their Instagram accounts, which basically wait for you to put something with ‘#photography’ in it, and then their bot will come and ‘like’ your image automatically, in the hope that you’ll be flattered and like their account back. But actually the amount of these bots is incredible - it’s amazing! I was taking photographs of these homeless people, which were actually virtual bot-people themselves, and the first audience for this project were also bots! So when I had basically zero followers on Instagram, I think that’s when the project was most successful, and then humans started following me and ruined the project. 

R: You were saying an influence for that work was Walker Evans, who was an American photographer of the Great Depression. And I was reading a little about him, and he was saying that his hope was to make images that were literative, authoritative and transcendent. I’m looking at your images, and you know you talked about wanting to make an authentic artistic image from them, but at the same time, within that, obviously it’s really dark material, like really depressing. But, when you’re on Instagram, it’s always really nice, you see all these images of flowers, and then out of nowhere you see thoseDown and Out in Los Santos images of prostitutes. Are you deliberatively trying to have something thats a bit more of a motive. 

A: Yeah, well I guess what would have made Walker Evans photographs of coal miners very powerful, was the empathy. Initially, people made images in an attempt to capture beauty, but what I found with Walker Evans is that, he was trying to capture the banality of the everyday. So for me, even though these homeless people are banal, they are a necessary part of the game. So it’s exactly that when I use #photography, #artphotography, #portraits, #documentary, I’m treating this as reality; I’m treating this as that unfortunate place where Donald Trump has taken over. One of my initial aims was to hopefully annoy photographers, but it didn’t really annoy photographers in the end - I actually think photographers are quite interested that I am trying to penetrate the Instagram feed. A lot of the time people will do a double-take and ask me questions like, ‘Oh that person is really upset, why would you photograph them?’, hinting at the idea of exploitation - and then to retract the comment when they realise its just an image from a video game, but that’s when I think its more interesting, when it’s not the art educated audience who connect with the work. 

R: Looking at your work, and considering the process that you go into to make theseDeskscapes and similarly, with the works that went before them, and then following withON EXACTITUDE IN SCIENCE; they are all really laborious and solitary. I think in particular, there is a connection to video games and this stereotypical young guy who’s spending hours and hours playing video games alone in his room - it’s like the process of making your work becomes this type of activity. From my perspective, it must be an important part to how you make the work, as it seems to reoccur even in different mediums you use. 

A: Definitely. 

R: Is it that those sort of repetitive things bring you to a meditative state or is that even part of it or what’s your thinking behind it? 

A: Yeah, I guess the word process is key, as I think of these as more procedural works rather than paintings. They’re almost like an equation in a way but, I don’t know how the answer is going to turn out. When these Deskscapes were finished, people would come to my studio and see them and ask me where I got them printed, and I would have to tell them every time, ‘No, these are done by hand’, even though they are manually ‘painted’ in the same way a printer would work, as the process is continually going from left to right, line by line. Some of them take 70 hours, some of them take 150 hours and it’s a solitary process. But it’s this procedural approach to producing the work that I like. I like to think of that in the same way that how can everything else in the digital mediated reality exist - it’s like tweets on your timeline, each one is just followed by another, so the conversation mutates as it goes on. 

R: And does it not drive you mental - this image of you completely isolated? 

A: No, no, no. 

R: But you must enjoy it, right?

A: Yeah, I love it - in terms of the repetition I really love it. I’ve seen Koyaanisqatsi about 1,000 times now - well, not in full sittings, but more so repeating individual shots again and again, trying to find a cross over location in Grand Theft Auto V that matches it. And, I think, how can I see this film so many times and still absolutely love it? This is very similar for the technique of creating these Deskscapes, a particular way in which I’ve been working for the last decade now - and I’m not bored of it. But, it is time to think about other things in the show as well, as people often say to me that I must have a lot of time, while making these works, to think.

R: Speaking of time and time to think, Who Built the Moon, which is sitting in front of you now, and which also is the title of a book. 

A: The work I’m sitting in right now is called Moonlighting, which insinuates, that ‘other job’. So, if you look for me online, it looks like I have this ‘other job’, as you’ll see that there is a book called Who Built the Moon, written also by an Alan Butler, and its about how the moon is actually a manmade object; that its not a natural occurrence of nature. Basically, he thinks that because the ratio between the moon and the sun is so perfect, that there is no possibility that it could be a total random event of nature. 

R: So this kind of conspiracy theory, and belief and truth, and what you see and what you hear, is really important in your work. This just brings me to think about what someone said while we were setting up, that we could have pre-recorded this talk, and just played it for the audience. I think this is kind of funny right now, because who can say if this is recorded or if this is live? 

A: Yeah, well, it could be recorded. I could be in the gallery right now. 

R: Mind you, I could tell you what time it is right now - it’s coming up to 8. Have you still got oxygen in your tent? 

A: Yeah, but it’s hot. 

R: Do you think you need some fresh air? 

A: I think so. 

R: Okay, cool - it’s times to let ourselves out. 

[Un-zipping noise]

TALK SHOW | Alan Butler & Rachael Gilbourne by info greenonredgallery.com

TALK SHOW
Alan Butler & Rachael Gilbourne


Thursday, April 06, 7 - 8pm

Rachael Gilbourne will participate in a public talk with Alan Butler on the occasion of his current exhibition HELIOSYNTH at Green On Red Gallery. 

Green On Red Gallery
Park Lane
Spencer Dock ( Luas Stop 100m )
Dublin 1

NXG_IM_BRANCHES_35, Unique cyanotype print on Fabriano No.5, 90.4 x 61 cm, 2017.

NXG_IM_BRANCHES_35, Unique cyanotype print on Fabriano No.5, 90.4 x 61 cm, 2017.

Rachael Gilbourne is a curator based in Dublin. Currently Assistant Curator of Exhibitions: Projects & Partnerships at IMMA–Irish Museum of Modern Art, Gilbourne also works as an independent curator, often in collaboration with Kate Strain under the aegis of RGKSKSRG. She is co-founder and co-ordinator of Visual Arts Workers Forum, and a member of the Board of Directors of Black Church Print Studio and the Royal Hibernian Academy School. Previously, Gilbourne has worked within contemporary visual arts organisations such as Kerlin Gallery, Projects Arts Centre, and Black Church Print Studio, Dublin. She is a Fine Art graduate from NCAD and has an MA in Visual Arts Practices from IADT, Co. Dublin.

Alan Butler often conceptually reflects and refracts the inner-workings of the internet, the implications of new media technology, and the politics of appropriation. His work is such that you are made to question your grasp of the world around you, itself in the grip of systems of knowledge and coding that is never far away from the override or delete button. He is an artist concerned at the most fundamental level with the art of mimesis and representation holding a poignant mirror up to humanity and its hurtle forward powerfully captured in “ON EXACTITUDE IN SCIENCE”, in which the artist has produced a shot-for-shot remake of the 1983 motion picture ‘KOYAANISQATSI’, commissioned by the Irish Museum of Modern Art for its forthcoming curated exhibition As Above, so Below: Portals, Visions, Spirits & Mystics, opening April 13, 2017. Alan received his MFA from LaSalle College of the Arts, Singapore in 2009. HELIOSYNTH is the artist's first exhibition in Green On Red Gallery.

Alan Butler's First Solo Show In Green On Red Gallery by info greenonredgallery.com

Alan Butler
HELIOSYNTH 
March 09 - April 29, 2017

Reception:  Thursday, March 09, 6-8:00pm

Green On Red Gallery
Park Lane
Spencer Dock ( Luas Stop 100m )
Dublin 1

Sierra.jpg (v1) 2016 Lightfast pigment paint on archival 100% cotton portfolio rag, cold mounted to dibond 176cm x 126.5cm

Sierra.jpg (v1) 2016 Lightfast pigment paint on archival 100% cotton portfolio rag, cold mounted to dibond 176cm x 126.5cm

Green On Red Gallery is delighted to announce the opening of HELIOSYNTH, an exhibition of new work by Alan Butler on Thursday, March 9, 2017, 6-8pm.  The exhibition runs until Saturday, April 29, 2017. 
 
HELIOSYNTH is the artist’s first exhibition in a commercial gallery and comes at the end of a plethora of exhibitions and curated online shows in Ireland and internationally from Belgrade to Skibereen. Butler has garnered a reputation for being one of the most insightful and inventive artists whose “raw material” is the virtual. His use of digital simulacra has unexpected, ravishing and perplexing philosophic results and is as close to the pioneering technologies of the early 19th century daguerreotype and cyanotype as it is to the silicon technology in your pocket and on your desk.
 
The exhibition will include new, unique monumental works on paper, digital photograms, new sculpture and video works. He has released a small preview of a feline walk through the history of art on Mars to Beethoven’s ‘Piano Sonata no. 14 in C#m’ as follows: https://youtu.be/fcOsKj_P0FI.This work itself is the first outing of a custom video game simulation, which will be further developed over the next year.

A feature of this show are the large-scale wall works which fall under two categories, painting and print. The former, a number of works from a series called Deskscapes are light-fast pigment paint on archival cotton, and re-imagine popular desktop wallpapers as psychedelic abstractions. The latter are from a series of deep-matte lambda prints ( a hybrid digital/analog photographic process ) which use forensic analysation software to remove the photographic components from smartphone wallpaper imagery, leaving behind only the digital scarring of the jpeg-saving process.
 
HELIOSYNTH is a fake word. A construct combining two extremes of interest to the artist and perfectly captured in his own cyanotypes. Using this 19th century photographic technique, light-sensitive Fabriano paper is exposed to the writing effects of the sun to “ grow “ stunning plant forms which have been extracted from video games files. These works formally reference seminal works by Anna Atkins from the mid-1800s. However, instead of the legend in Latin, each boasts its own digital filename in bold script below. 
 
Butler’s work is such that you are made to question your grasp of the world around you, itself in the grip of systems of knowledge and coding that is never far away from the override or delete button. He is an artist concerned at the most fundamental level with the art of mimesis and representation holding a poignant mirror up to humanity and its hurtle forward powerfully captured in “ON EXACTITUDE IN SCIENCE”, in which the artist has produced a shot-for-shot remake of the 1983 motion picture ‘KOYAANISQATSI’, commissioned by the Irish Museum of Modern Art for its forthcoming curated exhibition As Above, so Below: Portals, Visions, Spirits & Mystics, also in April.
 
Public events running during the exhibition at Green On Red Gallery will be announced.
 

Ronan McCrea & Valerie Connor In Conversation by info greenonredgallery.com

Ronan McCrea & Valerie Connor
In Conversation


Today, Thursday, 12th January 2017, 7:00pm.

Valerie Connor will participate in a public conversation with Ronan McCrea on the occasion of his current exhibition MATERIAL(s) at Green on Red Gallery.

Green On Red Gallery
Park Lane,
Spencer Dock,
Dublin 1.
(Spencer Dock Luas stop 100m).

ronan mccrea 1.jpg

Valerie Connor is a freelance project curator and educator currently undertaking postgraduate studies in online learning practices. She is one of the programme team teaching photography at DIT and an external examiner at LSAD. Recent writing includes essays for ACA Public and Pallas Projects / Onamatopee.
  
Ronan McCrea’s current exhibition MATERIAL(s) which runs through 21 January 2017, marks a significant development in the artist’s practice.  The installation of three new projected 16mm film-works brings together recurrent concerns in McCrea’s diverse artistic practice. These include investigations into the appropriated and found image, celluloid materiality, reproduction and indexicality, artistic and personal genealogies and the institutions and processes of pedagogy.
 
The starting point for this body of work is a collection of instructional 16mm films on mechanical engineering produced by the BBC in 1972.  Its scope covers educational documentaries on other topics, including a film about the sculptor Henry Moore.  All were salvaged by the artist from a college engineering department in the wake of film's obsolesce as a didactic tool.
 
Through a laborious process of cutting and splicing of this found material, McCrea draws on tropes taken from avant-garde Structural film - also from the 1970s - from the Cut-Up and from the procedures of early Conceptual art, re-constituting the fragments into new formations, with new affinities.  The resultant works, which are material objects as much as images, stage the apparatus of projection, looping and spectatorship in response to the scale and raw interior of the gallery’s architecture.  

Talking In Brackets: Research And Reaction In Painting - Damien Flood And James Merrigan by info greenonredgallery.com

Damien Flood and James Merrigan

Talking in Brackets: Research and Reaction in Painting

Saturday, November 26 at 1.15pm


Green On Red Gallery
Park Lane
Spencer Dock ( Luas Stop to Rear of Apartments )
Dublin 1

Parting, 2016, Oil on canvas, 180 x 140 cm

Parting, 2016, Oil on canvas, 180 x 140 cm

On the penultimate day of Damien Flood's current exhibition at Green on Red Gallery, and almost three years on from their legendary discussion 'Painting in Parentheses (In Brackets!)', Damien Flood and James Merrigan return to the gallery to critically discuss Flood's current work and critically explore painting practice in general. 

The hook for the last discussion was: painting can no longer be just painting anymore, it also has to be an Idea, or at the very least, dress itself in an Idea. The hook for this discussion is: what is the difference between a painting born of research and a painting born of instinct? 

In this discussion we want to explore how research affects painting and the painter, from its compulsory adoption in art college to its necessary adaptation in the studio after art college. In the case of Flood's emotionally and physically reactive painting process, is research a lie, a mask, a case of painting fitting into a conceptual context that is "no longer its own"? Is painting's context instinctual rather than intellectual? Or does reactionary painting stem from research? When it comes to being a painter, are intellect and instinct two sides of a tossed coin? 

What complicates things further is, research and reaction also come into play in the verbal reception of painting, whether casually in spoken word or carefully in the written review. How do 'you' talk and think about painting? Do you embrace painting at the base level of the medium or the elevated stage of the message? Is painting just for painters, and for painters to discuss alone? If so, how do painters deal with the inadequate response, and in most cases, the silent reaction?

Like last time around we ask you to come armed with your own opinions and questions, because like you, we are looking for answers to the questions posed, and in some ideal cases, solutions. 

James Merrigan is an artist turned art critic. He has written for many art periodicals, art institutions and artist catalogues, but his role as art critic at billionjournal.com is where he has found the freedom to play with a more visceral, confessional, fun and sometimes polemical art criticism. Merrigan was selected for EVA International Biennale of Visual Art (2014) as a fugitive art critic; he was co-editor of the printed quarterly on Irish art, Fugitive Papers; and was Guest Editor of two issues of Visual Artists’ News Sheet in 2016. Current projects include DEEP-SEATED which takes as its starting point the psychoanalytic promotion of the ‘talking cure’; and All or Nothing, a film that looks at the current landscape of Irish painting told through his eyes as a lapsed painter. Most recently he was invited to curate PERIPHERIES 2017 at Gorey School of Art. He is co-ordinator and lecturer for the MPhil module Psychoanalysis and Art at Trinity College Dublin, and a tutor at Gorey School of Art. A collection of his art criticism was published in 2013 entitled Agents of Subjectivism.