Oh my, the last blog post was back in May and now
it’s December, the last day of 2019. I started writing this post in October,
but then got snowed in with other commitments. Now it’s December and it’s been ages,
seven months of time. It’s been quite some time! A lot has happened during that
time, which means this is going to be an extortionately long post. After writing it and coming back to this point, it's over 10,000 words...
What’s been happening? I had the solo show in
Copenhagen, which went well, and moved in with my partner, alongside continuing
to make work and doing curating things. I had two duo shows, one in New York
and one in London. I’m currently preparing for a solo show in February, and
will be a part of a museum show in June in Seattle. I still work at GAO, and as
a freelance art technician at Crown, both of which are going fairly well,
sustaining me and my work. It’s (hopefully) not long term, but for now it’s
okay. I’m starting to sell more of my work, which is of course fantastic, and I
hope this continues growing so that eventually it will allow me to function as
a full time artist/curator. We can all dream.
Let’s go back to May and see what’s
been going on with my practice since then. I published my book, State of
Affairs, through isthisit?, which seems so long ago now. It’s sold well since
then, and was also a part of my show in Copenhagen. I feel happy with it, and
it works as a nice companion piece to the video piece that I produced for Daata
Editions. Link to view and buy the book is here - https://www.isthisitisthisit.com/state-of-affairs
I had the show with the Kennel
Chaos artwork in New York at Galerie Manqué, which went super well, the artwork
was sold. So that was great to hear. I wanted to make more of those, aluminium
prints utilising the aluminium modular extrusion system, but the paintings have
kind of taken over since then (as you will start to see).
Art Night happened, with all the
works I commissioned through Daata Editions going live and being launched on
the evening. A lot of people came throughout the evening, which felt really
great, although it was a slightly different crowd of people that I’m used to.
Due to it being a festival of sorts, lots of non-art people came, which was new
to me. Either way, the works and press release for the online show are now
online and can be viewed here - https://daata.art/play/playlist/bob-bicknellknight_2
My new video piece State of
Affairs went live then too. Here’s the little text: Bob Bicknell-Knight’s State
of Affairs compiles footage from the YouTube channel News Direct, in which
daily news stories, from self-driving buses to social media bots, are
transcribed into 3D rendered animations. Non-linear in presentation, the
re-appropriated video work illustrates current and future modes of
technological interface, from facial recognition software to drone
surveillance. Executed in a dated Y2K aesthetic, the work is dystopic and
utopic all at once. Akin to the unconscious rituals implemented while existing
on the internet, opening tab after tab, clickbait after clickbait, State of
Affairs mirrors the inconclusive narrative of our digital lives. The visual
content is accompanied by a soothing, melodic soundtrack and augmented
voiceover, forewarning of the future of gamified spaces and digital death. Link
is here to watch and buy - https://daata.art/art/state-of-affairs
I also curated an online show for
isthisit? in June, titled Please don't stand in the middle of the road waiting
for me to get you on camera and featuring work from Aram Bartholl, Petra
Cortright, Ben Grosser, Joe Hamilton and Pilvi Takala. Here’s the text:
The heat of a shining sun warms my
face, slow cars and fast-moving bodies pass by as I make another journey
through the city. It’s easy to zone out during these moments of heavy traffic,
travelling down from Finsbury Park to Croydon during rush hour. Always a new
route, a new side street, a new area to be unearthed and discovered.
People always stare, or attempt to
pose nonchalantly as I pass by, some even attempt to chase me down. It’s rare, and
always ends soon after it begins. Some people will do anything for their 15
seconds of fame.
It’s almost been three years since
I first started, a total of 452 trips, blending into one another to become one
long, ongoing expedition. Each day is a new journey, another series of high
definition videos, GPS stamped and ready to be stitched together back at base.
I take pride in my work, enabling
others to experience the streets of the city from thousands of miles away,
relying on my due diligence when planning a trip to the capital. I like telling
people about my work, my career. At first it felt like adopting an identity
that wasn’t my own, but in reality I just had to be a more confident version of
myself, becoming the Google Maps Driver I am today…
Please don't stand in the middle
of the road waiting for me to get you on camera is an online exhibition
featuring works by five international artists, including Aram Bartholl, Petra
Cortright, Benjamin Grosser, Joe Hamilton and Pilvi Takala, curated by Bob
Bicknell-Knight. The works presented consider how human beings are increasingly
reliant on digital technologies, from navigating through offline environments
utilising Google Maps to having a job as a micro-tasker, working for an online
service where users pay to have a pretend girlfriend or boyfriend text them.
The crafting of digital, online identities, to be monetised and utilised when
traversing offline space has become increasingly prevalent due to the rise of
social media sites, allowing everybody to be anybody in a world of
hypercapitalism.
The exhibition takes its name from
a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) with a Google Maps Driver. Throughout the thread
the driver details their exploits, from sticking to the speed limit to being
harassed at rest stops.
Here’s the link to the show if you’d
like to see - https://www.isthisitisthisit.com/please-dont-stand
I also had State of Affairs shown
in Times Square in New York, which was very cool. Pics are below. That was also
in June.
The Venice Biennale was in June, which
was a fantastic trip that hopefully (if I’ve kept the press releases) I will be
documenting later.
I also went to Finland and Helsinki,
going to a few shows there, so that was fun. More on that later.
Then in July another video piece
commissioned by Daata Editions and The Bass Museum in Miami, titled Sleep Made
Simple, was debuted in Miami as part of an online exhibition titled Joyous
Dystopia with Jeremy Couillard, Keren Cytter, Elliot Dodd, Anaïs Duplan, Rosie
McGinn, Eva Papamargariti and Scott Reeder. So it launched in Miami in July, and
then it was subsequently shown in a duo show in New York in November. After that
the piece, along with the other commissioned works, was shown on the wall of
the New World Symphony in Miami during Miami Art Week earlier this month. Here’s
a link to the trailer of that - https://vimeo.com/375653085
Then here’s a text on Sleep Made
Simple, the new video piece: Bob Bicknell-Knight’s Sleep Made Simple is a
series of seven individual videos, functioning as a succession of adverts for a
fictitious unnamed company that promotes wellness and meditation, forewarning
of the future of capitalism, digital healthcare and surveillance. The videos
utilize iconography from Instagram and live news feeds, referencing how
companies and corporations produce targeted ads for social media users based on
complex data analytics crafted from likes, shares and machine-learning
algorithms whilst the simple animation style alludes to stripped down
advertising techniques and corporate training videos. Link to video here - https://daata.art/art/sleep-made-simple-i-vii
In August I had my solo show in
Copenhagen, which went really well. The artists who run the space were incredibly
lovely and supportive, introducing me to artists/spaces/curators in the city,
alongside giving me their time and energy to put together the show. They made
the experience truly great. Here’s the link to all the pics and the press release
- https://www.bobbicknell-knight.com/state-of-affairs-exhibition
- I think generally it went really well, if a bit stripped down, although
without a real budget and it being in a different country it would have been
quite hard to bring larger work. It felt consistent and I was generally very
happy with the outcome. Plus in Copenhagen they have electric scooters which
you can rent via an app, so that was pretty much the highlight for me of the
entire trip.
After that I was in another group
show at Galerie Manqué that was all about Mark Zuckerberg, showing a new
painting of him in the wild. That was fun, alongside some great people
including Sandra Araujo, Marion Balac, Carlos Carbonell, Ryan Garvey, Ben
Grosser, Claire Jervert and Lane Twitchell.
From July to August I was also an
online artist in residence with Digital Artist Residency, after winning an open
call. I was awarded a small amount of money, alongside an opportunity to
exhibit my work in a group exhibition alongside fellow residents Marc Blazel,
Isabel Bonafé, Fionn Duffy, Alif Ibrahim and Sid Smith. I used the project to
continue creating my digital/physical paintings. Link to my final outcomes in
the group exhibition here, which was at OVADA gallery in Oxford in September/October
- https://www.bobbicknell-knight.com/humachine-flux
In October I was invited by
Harlesden High Street to select some works for their viewing room, from artists
that they had worked with before and would work with in the future. It was
okay, incredibly rushed, but ultimately visually it looked good, conceptually
maybe not that great. However, I literally had two weeks to organise it, from being
asked to ‘curate’ it to the show opening, so it was incredibly, almost comically,
rushed. Pics and press release are here - https://www.isthisitisthisit.com/viewing-room
Also in October I was asked by It’s
Nice That to write an opinion piece for their website, on digital art and how
to monetise your digital practice. It was fairly short, a little under 2000
words, and very simple, only a beginners guide to the medium, but it was super
fun to do and I was paid to do it, so a very positive experience over all. Link
is here if you’d like to read - https://www.itsnicethat.com/articles/how-to-deal-with-digital-art-bob-bicknell-knight-digital-opinion-141019
Another thing that happened in
October, I was interviewed by the Tate for an upcoming mini documentary, commissioned
by Tate Research and their project Reshaping the Collectible, speaking about
how I work with the internet, both curatorially and in my artistic practice,
alongside issues of ownership and commodification of the digital space. They
came to my flat with various cameras and lights, filmed a bunch of my work and interviewed
me about my relationship to the internet. It was fun, if not slightly daunting.
It was supposed to be released last month in November, but it’s yet to be
released. I’m really looking forward to it coming out. Here’s some pics.
In November I had my artwork Mark’s
First published on the front cover of an amazing magazine called Revista ARTA,
with the issue concerning art and digitiality. The issue features so many
fantastic artists and writers including Josephine Bosma and Natalya Serkova,
alongside reviews of exhibitions by Kate Cooper, Hito Steyerl and Jesse Darling.
You can order a copy here - http://revistaarta.ro/en/shop/
Again, something I was paid for and it was a pleasure to be the face of.
During this time I’ve been making
more paintings, working within the video game Horizon Zero Dawn to document
various apocalyptic scenes, alongside making more Mark Zuckerberg trophy hunter
works. So that’s just been moving forwards fairly slowly, perfecting my technique
and how I make the work. A few photographs from recent work below.
I was also invited to write two
press releases for different shows, one was for Salomé Chatriot and Samuel
Fasse’s duo show at Nicoletti Contemporary. It was an okay experience, writing
the press release went well and my name was on it, alongside a small bio, which
I appreciated. However, the gallery took like 4/5 months to pay me, which is
really not okay, especially when it was such a small sum, £200. Link here to
read - http://nicoletticontemporary.com/2019/09/w-s/
The other press release was for
Mathew Zefeldt and his show Vistas at Celaya Brothers Gallery. That was a fun
one to do. Link here to read - https://90cce1e0-970c-4bca-a00a-ae7f338a3406.filesusr.com/ugd/25d9ea_6e06fe22f69e4c7384b3005f3a995c08.pdf
Also in November I had two duo
shows, one at Galerie Manqué in New York with Erin Mitchell, featuring my video
work Sleep Made Simple. It was nice to have another show there, although I
would love to be able to actually go and see the space and meet the director if
I’m in another show there at some point. Perhaps if I got invited to have a
solo show there or something similar, then it would be worth the money/time
invested to make the trip. Who knows, either way it would be nice, at some point
- https://galeriemanque.tumblr.com/
The other duo show that’s still happening
is with my partner, Rosa-Maria Nuutinen, is called The Big Four and is at
Harlesden High Street. I’m really happy with how it turned out, mixing her
drawing based practice with my paintings and sculptures. It’s on until the 15th
January, so do go if you’re in London. Here’s the press release:
Harlesden High Street is pleased
to present The Big Four, a collaborative exhibition that considers the technological
impact that humans have on the planet, concerning the Big Four tech companies
(Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple) and how humans and new forms of
technology continue to assist in major environmental change. The exhibition consists
of new drawings, paintings and sculptural installations from Bob
Bicknell-Knight and Rosa-Maria Nuutinen.
Within the show Bicknell-Knight
exhibits a new series of sculptures, displayed on a large floor installation
made from limestone rocks and ethernet cables, shaped like symbol for the world
wide web. Developed to resemble a large battle like diorama, over 30 unique
ceramic sculptures utilising the Big Four company logos are engaged in a number
of small skirmishes atop the rocks, imagining a not so distant future where
companies have created autonomous household pets, that play your favourite
song, speak to you about your day and help you cook your dinner. These devices
have now evolved, becoming hybrids of themselves, fighting one another on the
battlefield. The installation functions as a battleground between the different
tech companies, with each corporation having its own small army of sculptures.
Alongside the sculptures a series of new paintings are also included,
positioning the autonomous beings within various environmental spaces,
juxtaposing their mechanical bodies with the natural countryside, having
escaped from their homes to journey out into the unknown.
Nuutinen is exhibiting a new
series of drawings, responding to Bicknell-Knight’s sculptures, imagining
future scenarios whereby the pets have become fully autonomous, pulling
themselves apart, forming gangs and ravaging the earth. Within the drawings,
the autonomous beings become relics of our current world, where humans no
longer exist but their technological creations continue to have an ongoing
impact on the earth. Life is seen to continue forwards, with or without the
presence of human beings. In one work, Member to wear your shower cap after
Doom’s day, the Facebook logo is depicted relaxing in a Japanese hot spring,
whilst in another, Bounty Hunter, the Apple logo is collecting body parts of
other devices to hang on IKEA kitchen hooks. Link to all the pics and full press
release here - https://www.bobbicknell-knight.com/the-big-four
I think that is almost everything.
At the moment I’m planning for an upcoming solo show in February, which will be
at Broadway Studio and Gallery in Letchworth Garden City, about half an hour outside
of London. It’s going to be called Bit Rot. As it’s fairly big, is a lot closer
than Copenhagen and has a budget, I had a bunch of installation like ideas, my
first idea being to fill the gallery with sand, creating a Dune like experience
within the gallery, with various objects embedded in the sand. Sadly that wasn’t
feasible, so I’m now going to do a fairly simple exhibition, a number of paintings
on the walls alongside various floor based sculptures on the floor, plus two
videos shown on TVs hung on the aluminium modular extrusion system. Simple but
hopefully elegant. Here’s a few Sketchup models, and a photograph of one of the
floor based sculptures. It opens on the 27th February and continues
until April.
Also in April I’ll be curating a
show at [Senne] in Brussels to coincide with Art Brussels. It’s an independent,
non-commercial space that intends to present, once or twice a year projects of
design and art characterized by their innovative aspects. The show will be
titled Algorithmic Bias, and is still a work in progress. Link to their website
here - https://senne19.com/ I went their for
a meeting a month or so ago, which was very fun.
Other upcoming things include a
small group exhibition in January called Depictions of Living, curated by Roshanak Khakban and Samuel Ivan Robert at Art Pavilion in Mile End Park. That
opens on the 23rd, link to Facebook event here - https://www.facebook.com/events/442044310048650/
I’ll be showing two paintings.
I’m also going to be in a museum
show in June – August 2020 in Seattle at the Museum of Museums. The show is
titled In Crystalized Time and is curated by Anthony White. I’m not sure what I’ll
be showing for that, but one or two paintings from the solo show I think.
I think that might be it for now?
I’m continuing to work with Zuckerberg trophy hunter works, and expanding the
series to other tech billionaires, Mark’s friends and acquaintances. We’ll see
how that goes.
Let’s move on to the larger
portion of this blog post, documenting all the exhibitions I have seen. I have
a huge pile of press releases to go through, and I know a few shows I went to
didn’t have press releases, so unfortunately, I will never remember those. Anyway,
in no particular order, here we go, beginning with Modern Nature at Drawing
Room, featuring work by Alberto Baraya, Mark Dion, Simryn Gill, Derek Jarman,
Hilma af Klint, Margaret Mee, Christine Ödlund, David Thorpe, Viktor Timofeev.
Very plant based work, with my favourite being a beautiful mural by Timofeev of
plant like creatures growing out of a labyrinth.
The Red Mansion Art Prize at the
RA was good, featuring work by Ibrahim Cisse, Paula Morison, Alistair Debling, Rachel
Cheung, Joe Richardson, Ant Hamlyn and Debora Delmar. I’m a big fan of Debora’s
work, with printed fabric towels draped on seats.
Patricia Domínguez’s Green Irises
at Gasworks was really great, lots of drone themed work, laser projections and
lovely drawings. Thoroughly enjoyed.
We Sing The Body Electric at
Gallery 46 was well curated, featuring work from Ingrid Berthmoine, Stine Deja,
Enam Gbewonyo, Bex Ilsley, Laila Majid, Alix Marie, Juliette Mahieux Bartoli, Stacie
McCormick, Marie Munk, Katarzyna Perlak, Cherelle Sappleton, Karolina Stellaki
and Rebecca Wallis.
Gray Wielebinski at Seager was
fun, with the whole gallery being filled with one sculptural work. It was good.
Tabita Rezaire’s Satellite
Devotion at arebyte was well presented.
Mike Nelson’s The Asset Strippers
at Tate Britain was visceral and weighty.
Going, Gone with work by
Webb-Ellis and Richard Whitby at Jerwood. The Lost Ones, a 35 minute film by Richard
Whitby, was fantastic. A number of people are trapped in a seemingly locked
room, trapped in a bureaucratic hell. It was both hilarious and deeply distressing,
as being trapped in a random waiting room is very familiar for most of us.
Nam June Paik at Tate Modern was good,
although very institution like. Showing old posters of performance works that happened
in 1980 is never very fun.
I, I, I, I, I, I, I, Kathy Acker
at ICA was fine.
Benedict Drew at IMT gallery was
fun, if a little mad.
Felix Bahret at GAO gallery was
great, although I am bias as I work there.
Willem Weismann’s Down to Earth at
Daniel Benjamin Gallery was great, I love Willem’s work and his beautifully
crafted scenes portraying apocalyptic futures.
Hamish Pearch’s Nights at Soft
Opening was beautiful, including crafted mushrooms and shipping containers.
The Underlying at arebyte by Ami
Clarke was fun, although very complicated and technology layered, which I do
appreciate.
Zombies at Peter von Kant was
fine, featuring work from Dow Jones Architects, Alasdair Duncan, Machiko
Edmondson, Dan Hays, Jane Hayes Greenwood, Realf Heygate and Daniel Shanken. I’m
a big fan of Greenwood’s flower paintings.
Lydia Blakeley’s Hellhole at Plaza
Plaza was good, featuring mini paintings of Ronnie O'Sullivan.
Swayze effect, featuring work from
Hazel Brill, James Irwin and Tamara Kametani at Platform Southwark was good.
Sofia Mitsola’s Banistiri at Pilar
Corrias was fine. I kind of like the work.
Cui Jie’s The Peak Tower at Pilar
Corrias was more interesting, architectural utopian buildings painted on canvas.
Liz Calvi’s Shadow Screens at
Seager wasn’t to my taste.
Michele Gabriele at Gossamer Fog
was fun, sculptures of dinosaurs.
Maria Pinińska-Bereś’ Living Pink at
The approach wasn’t my thing.
Mike Silva’s New Paintings, also
at The approach, was surprisingly great, beautifully crafted paintings in a
style I’m definitely a fan of.
Michael Andrew Page’s FYSSHYNGE at
GAO Gallery featured some beautifully crafted and incredibly detailed drawings.
Mona Hatoum’s Remain to be Seen at
White Cube was nothing I hadn’t seen before.
Puck Verkade at the Zabludowicz Collection
was good, a new film featuring a live action housewife and a fly.
Foam Talent at Beaconsfield
Gallery was fun, young artists and a lot of photographs. Featuring work from Sushant
Chhabria, David De Beyter, Mark Dorf, Alinka Echeverría, Weronika Gęsicka, Wang
Juyan, Thomas Kuijpers, Quentin Lacombe, Clément Lambelet, Namsa Leuba, Erik
Madigan Heck, Alix Marie, Martin Errichiello & Filippo Menichetti, Wang Nan,
Kai Oh, Viacheslav Poliakov, Ben Schonberger, Sadegh Souri, Harit Srikhao and
Vasanth.
Debra Welch’s All Things Are Yours
at Chelsea Space was very well presented. Office curtains being used as some
sort of sculptural and installation like structure.
Pedro Neves Marques at Gasworks
with an exhibition titled It Bites Back was quite fantastic, about viruses and
reactionary politics.
Memory Palace at White Cube was
fun.
Stuart Semple’s solo show at Bermondsey
Project Space was fun, quite light and humorous.
Fay Zmija Nicolson at Zabludowicz
Collection was a little too subtle for me.
Everything Must Go! At Assembly
Point was fun, low cost works made by a nice community of artists. I bought a
few prints by Tony Brooks and David Bassadone. It’s a shame, as Assembly Point
has now closed.
The Real: Three Propositions at
White Cube was good, with work from Peter Dreher, Konrad Klapheck and Des
Lawrence. I love Lawrence’s work.
Soul of Calypso at Gossamer Fog,
featuring work from core.pan, was good, 3D printed relic like sculptures.
Another Funny Turn by Sarah
Cockings & Harriet Fleuriot at Block 336 was fun, more like a theme park
than an exhibition, which is fun but busy.
The EY Exhibition: Van Gogh and
Britain at Tate Britain was fine, utilising incredibly thick paint.
When Species Meet by Lydia
Blakeley and Lucy Evetts was a nice pairing at Transition Two.
Steve Mcqueen’s Year 3 at Tate
Britain was nice.
I wasn’t that into Amanda Moström’s
Participating in a chair at Castor, it felt a little off.
The Resistance Island from Rosana
Antolí at The RYDER Projects was a little too neon-y.
Olafur Eliasson at Tate Modern was
too clickbait-y for me.
Jamian Juliano-Villani exhibition
Let's Kill Nicole at Massimo De Carlo was fun, although seeing the paintings in
the flesh was a bit of a shame, lots of flat surface that felt a bit too
mechanical for me.
Liam Gillick at Maureen Paley wasn’t
so great, it felt like a show that demanded too much of your time and energy.
Jerwood Collaborate! at Jerwood,
featuring work from Array, Keiken + George Jasper Stone, Languid Hands and Shy
Bairns, was fun. I’m always a fan of Keiken and what they’re doing with regards
to artificial intelligence and digital based work.
Corey Hayman at Goldsmiths Centre
for Contemporary Art was great.
Larry Achiampong and David Blandy’s
The Grid at Copperfield Gallery was fun, although lots of work that I had
already seen at previous shows of theirs. A fun grid like structure within the
gallery space though.
Nevine Mahmoud at Soft Opening was
quite brilliant, luscious sculptures that were beautifully crafted.
Amalia Pica at Herald St wasn’t to
my taste.
Max Ruf at Herald St was a bit too
paint filled for me.
Sarah Morris at White Cube was
dull.
Zhou Li at White Cube was also a
bit dull, but not as dull as Morris.
Sidsel Meineche Hansen at
Chisenhale was a show I thought I would love, but in reality it felt a little tired
and treading concepts that I had seen before, but done better. AI and human/robot
labour, surveillance and gaming tropes. The title, Welcome to End-Used City,
was a good one.
William Blake at Tate Britain was fine.
Hana Miletić at The approach was a
little too fabric focused for me.
Ubiquitous Surfaces at Seager
featured work from Ara Güler, Artıkişler Collective, Berkay Tuncay, Kerem Ozan
Bayraktar, Lara Ögel, Larissa Fassler, Oddviz Collective, Serkan Taycan, Sevgi
Ortaç and Erdal İnci. A favourite work of mine was from Erdal Inci, titled Centipedes.
Derek Mainella's Comfort Zone was fun,
some very well painted pieces.
Alice Morey at The Ryder was a
good use of the space, but the work wasn’t really for me.
Michael Simpson’s New Paintings at
Blain Southern was surprisingly great. I’m not usually into ‘paintings hung on
the wall in a white cube space’ but the scale of these works, alongside the
conceit being directly tied to the scale, worked very well. Here’s a snippet
from the press release speaking about the content of the work; A ‘leper squint’ is a feature built into the
walls of medieval churches which allowed sufferers of leprosy and other
‘undesirables’ to view sermons while remaining outside. In Simpson’s paintings
the squint appears as a rectangular aperture placed high up on outer walls with
various architectural means to reach it. They invite the viewer to approach yet
their structure frustrates the desire to see what might lie beyond. Just
really great, and works made to scale.
Henning Strassburger at Blain
Southern was dull.
Bill Viola was also at Blain
Southern, in a viewing room like space with no press release. The works,
however, were fantastic. Various people, filmed from above, with their entire
bodies floating under water. Not quite drowning, but just lying there and living.
They were truly wonderful works, that I could definitely see in my house if I
were rich.
Senesi Contemporanea’s the form
springs featured work from Oliver Durcan, Lucas Dupuy, Stevie Dix, Valerian
Goalec, Realf Heygate and Mimi Hope. I’m a fan of Oly and Realf’s work, but
otherwise it wasn’t too exciting of a show.
Bloomberg New Contempoaries at
South London Gallery was fine, with my favourite work being Xiuching Tsay.
Emii Alrai at Vitrine used the
gallery’s window space well. I was a fan.
Tim Brawner at Union Pacific included
some really nice paintings, inspired by fairytales.
Blair Whiteford at Union Pacific, however,
was less fun and more boring.
Jonathan Baldock at Stephen
Friedman Gallery was fine, I like his work, although the Maske series has
become slightly tiresome, especially in this show where there were over 40 or 50
displayed. A bit of an overload.
Dayanita Singh at Frith Street
Gallery was nice, actually.
Rhys Coren’s Shape of Story at
Seventeen was okay, a little too spotlight-y for me.
Mark Handforth at Modern Art was
fun, with the main focus being candles slowly burning on a trash can.
Richard Ayodeji Ikhide at
Zabludowicz Collection felt a little too institutional like for me.
ULTRA: Art for the Women's World
Cup at J Hammond Projects, featuring work from Lydia Blakeley, Juno Calypso,
Emma Cousin, Emmely Elgersma, Georgia Lucas-Going, Rosie McGinn, Rhiannon
Rebecca Salisbury and Gray Wielebinski, was a solid, football themed exhibition.
Not for me, really, but I appreciated what it was doing.
Wandsworth Artists’ Open House
Youth Showcase at RCA was fun, with work from Kelly Mosquera, Salma Nassef, Anna
Woodward, Pietra Galli and Sam Cottington. I’m a fan of Pietra’s work, ceramic
based objects with embedded speakers.
Serena Korda at Bosse & Baum
was great, ceramic sculptures that echoed a sound piece from within. Fun work.
Melike Kara at Arcadia Missa was fine.
Victoria Adam's confidences at
Seventeen was surprisingly beautiful, and incredibly subtle.
Larry Achiampong & David
Blandy’s The Grid at Seventeen, the companion show to Copperfield’s similar
show, was also grid focused. It was good, but, again, nothing I hadn’t seen
before.
Sarah Derat at Castor was good,
rubber carved and cut into, like Egyptian mythology and typology.
Realf Heygate at Peter von Kant
was good, beautifully crafted paintings.
Wong Ping’s Heart Digger at Camden
Arts Centre was one of my favourites of the year, with amazing animated video
works that are incredibly weird and politically moving. I would highly recommend
heading to his vimeo channel to check out his work - https://vimeo.com/mrwongping
Borna Sammak at Sadie Coles was a little
too much.
Dracula's Wedding at Rodeo was
fun, featuring work from Antonakis, Alex Bag, Matt Copson, Alex da Corte,
Rachel Harrison, Richard Hawkins, Karen Kilimnik, Takeshi Murata, Stefan
Tcherepnin, John Waters and Jason Yates.
My Head is a Haunted House at
Sadie Coles, the companion show to Rodeo’s, was featuring work from Ed Atkins, Sue
de Beer, Larry Clark, Matt Copson, Alex Da Corte, Tom Friedman, Robert Gober, Richard
Hawkins, Lonnie Holley, Cameron Jamie, Mike Kelley, Tetsumi Kudo, Daniel
Lopatin and Nate Boyce, Mary Ellen Mark, Megan Marrin, Sam McKinniss, Marianna
Simnett, Haim Steinbach and Claude Wampler. Alex Da Corte’s work continues to
interest me, alongside Marianna Simnett and the wolf and swan.
Dora Maar at Tate Modern was fine,
with her documentary photography being my favourite.
The AI: more than human exhibition
at Barbican was sadly a little too clickbait esque for me.
Jef Cornelis at Goldsmiths CCA was
fine, a bit too TV-y for me, although I did appreciate being given free tea to
watch TV with.
Issy Wood’s All The Rage also at
Goldsmiths CCA was great, been a fan of her paintings for some time.
Tenant of Culture at Nicoletti was
good, although I prefer their previous, shoe based work.
The Greatest! Greatest Exhibition
at APT Gallery, curated by Jake Major and Daisy Latham with Lowri Heckler, Stanley
Tilyard-French, Alastair McClymont and Dr John Fass, Simon Handy, Beth Mellet, Idle
Institute, Scott Kibblewhite, Ahmad Salahat, Gwenllian Spink, Neil Zakiewicz
and Julijonas Urbonas. It was a fun, albeit slightly oddly conceited, show.
Ceel Mogami de Haas at Seager was
fun, marble based works. I enjoy Seager's program, another space that I would like to show at, at some point in the future. Who knows.
Little Dark Fantasy by Felix Treadwell
at Union was nice works, but a little sparse and simple.
Caspar Sawyer at Gossamer Fog wasn’t
for me. A little too techy.
Our Way[s] of Life at Austrian
Cultural Forum London, featuring work from Albin Bergström, Alexandra Wanderer,
Ann Muller, Calvin Z. Laing, Catharina Bond, Gašper Kunšič, Julien Segarra, LA
GEORGETTA, Lukas Janitsch and Rosie McGinn, curated by Elliott Burns and Pita
Arreola Burns.
Ripe Beings at White Crypt with Olivia
Brazier, Charlotte Edey, Magdalena Kita, Shana Moulton, Hannah Regel, Amy Steel,
Lise Stoufflet and Alicia Tsigarides. A great group show of female artists exploring
organic bodies and femininity.
David Kowalski’s Die Farben &
The Last Pictures from Earth at bo.lee gallery was nice, lots of mini paintings
that were quite lovely and soft, subtle.
Young Monsters at Lychee One,
featuring work from Neil Haas, Irvin Pascal, Glen Pudvine and Gray Wielebinski,
was fine. Pudvine’s work I do like, but had already seen at the degree show.
Fleas in my Scales by Giovanni
Vetere at Union was a solid show, nice ceramics in a red sand coral reef like environment.
Wolfgang Tillmans at Maureen Paley
was dull.
Ze Aya at Seager was okay, I’m not
so into the paintings, but the ashtray works were nice, and surprisingly cheap
too. If I was a smoker I would probably buy one.
Radouan Zeghidour at Yamamoto
Keiko Rochaix was good, although super messy and full of a range of liminal materials.
Sable Elyse Smith at
Carlos/Ishikawa was a solid, incredibly simple show. I was kind of half into it.
Shana Moulton at The Zabludowicz Collection
was fun and pink filled. The videos on display felt painfully honest with one
of those ‘I could totally do that’ aesthetic that’s much harder to create than
one would originally assume. It was generally a fun, very nice exhibition that
I returned to a few times.
Ma Jianfeng at GAO Gallery was
fine, a bit too cardboard heavy for me.
A Good Crisis, an exhibition by
DIS at Project Native Informant was good, simple but well executed and well produced
videos.
Joanna Piotrowska at Tate Britain
was nice, blue carpeted floor and old projector reels.
Hal Fischer’s The Gay Seventies at
Project Native Informant was fun, the documentation of a bench over a 24 hour
period in San Francisco. Very good, very beautiful, stories.
Four Walls 003 with Rosie Grace
Ward, Alexander Carey Morgan, George Stuart and Heyse Ip, was fine, although it
had one of those press releases that apologises for being a press release and questions
the idea of a press release. The type of press release that’s more about the
curator than about the artists, which I kind of disdain. The work, though, was
nice.
Salomé Chatriot and Samuel Fasse’s
duo show at Nicoletti Contemporary was good, although it felt very quiet and a
little muted.
Donna Huddleston’s The Exhausted
Student at the Drawing Room felt a little like a group show in a solo show,
with the artist having multiple different styles crammed into one space. A
little odd.
Florian Meisenberg at Zabludowicz
Collection was fun, in their VR focused room, where you manipulated a shape and
added textures to it. Kind of fun, but kind of like a VR demo or tutorial. Fun,
as someone who doesn’t have a VR device to play around with, but in an art
context I was disappointed.
Roseanne Watt’s Raaga at Broadway
Gallery was fun, costume based video works.
Transformer: A Rebirth of Wonder
at 180 The Strand, featured work from Doug Aitken, Sophia Al-Maria &
Victoria Sin, Korakrit Arunanondchai, Donna Huanca, Juliana Huxtable, Evan
Ifekoya, Dozie Kanu, Quentin Lacombe, Lawrence Lek, Jenn Nkiru, Chen Wei and
Harley Weir & George Rouy. It was good, with a high budget, but it felt a
little reduced, a little tuned down.
I also went to a few degree shows
over the summer, Goldsmiths, both MA and BA being one. A few of my favourites
include Lydia Blakeley with more lovely paintings, Axel Balazsi with IKEA
inspired sculptures that were fantastic, Perce Jerrom with a installation based,
toxic masculinity influenced artwork and beautiful Disney like drawings by Xavier
Robles de Medina.
I went to the Slade MA show, but
don’t remember much from it aside from Johnny Izatt-Lowry and his amazing
paintings, seen through a dreamlike blur of a filter. They were super lovely
and very well priced. I would definitely have one.
I also visited the BA show at Chelsea,
which had one or two good works involved. One of my favourites was Sebastian
Chaumeton with some nice ceramic based sculptures.
The CSM degree show also happened,
which was fine, I don’t think I fell in love with anything in particular, which
is a shame.
I also went to RCA Battersea, with
some favourites being Grace Woodcock, Samuel Capps and Xiuching Tsay.
Alongside this I went to the Royal
Academy, favourites being Débora Delmar (of course) and Daniel Burley, who has
an upcoming show at GAO.
So, moving away from London and to
Copenhagen. I went to a few shows, including Zoom with your feet (make friends)
at Overgaden, featuring work from Ditte Johanne Bertelsen, Pia Angela Rasmussen
& Louise Lyngh Bjerregaard, Carl Johan Jacobsen, Theodor Præst Nymark
Jensen, Ida Blichfeld & Emma Gram Heegaard, Mads Hilbert and Rikke
Winterbottom.
Nour Fog, also at Overgaden, was
great. Ceramic based artworks with smoke machines embedded. Very fun.
Arken had a fantastic solo show on
by Patricia Piccinini, an artist who I’ve admired for a while but never seen up
close. They’re – mostly – silicon sculptures of future, speculative science fiction
like creatures, half human, half pig, etc. It’s very cool work, with incredible
craftmanship and heavily embedded in biotech.
Time Matters at Gether
Contemporary, featured work from Yves Klein, Haroon Mirza, Claudia Comte, Paul
Gadegaard, Amalie Jakobsen, Nat Bloch Gregersen and Lea Guldditte Hestelund.
Mirza had a nice piece included.
Kunsthal Charlottenborg has a
fantastic program, with two great shows occurring whilst I was there, one was Europa
Endlos with work from Monica Bonvicini, Jeremy Deller, Daniil Galkin, Sara
Jordenö, Šejla Kamerić, Bouchra Khalili, Jimmie Durham, Fischli Weiss with
Peter Fischli and David Weiss, Olafur Eliasson and Wolfgang Tillmans. Lots of
EU based artworks that were very topical.
There was also an overwhelming installation
by Jesper Just, a piece that I had unfortunately already seen a few years ago
at the Palais de Tokyo, although still very cool.
I also went to Tranen, which was a
very cool space that I have wanted to visit for some time. It’s a small gallery
space embedded within a fantastic library. Each artist selects a book list for
their exhibition, alongside it being visited by multiple visitors due to it
being based within the unique library environment. So yeah, a very cool space
accompanied by a great show by Sif Itona Westerberg, featuring carvings of
hybrid animals. That's a space that I would aspire to have a show at, a very exciting space with a fantastic curator.
George Rouy at V1 Gallery was
nice, solid work. I’m kind of into the work, kind of.
Kingsley Ifill, also at V1 Gallery,
was fine, although I was more interested in the space, an old butcher shop.
SUPERFLEX at Cisternerne was quite
fantastic, with neon and abandoned, flooded toilets, in a former water reservoir.
Very cool, and you had to put on wellies to go in, as the place had been flooded.
Going to the Copenhagen
Contemporary Art Center was great, a huge building with three different shows occurring
within. Claudia Comte had a show on, featuring fallen trees and a lovely carpet.
Wu Tsang also had a show on, that
I was less into.
Donna Huanca also had one, which,
again, I was less into. I love the performances but the paintings aren’t really
my thing, a little too abstract.
I’m sure we went to others, but,
as it’s been many months and I may have lost press releases since then, I think
that might be it. Another trip was to Brussels, where I went to a few shows.
The first was at IMAL, a new digital focused museum like space, with a show –
kind of – inaugurating their new building. My favourite work was from Yann
Leguay, small stone sculptures turning technology into relic like artworks.
Very cool.
Harold Ancart’s solo show at
Clearing was amazing, simply due to the scale of the work, alongside the
building being quite awesome. It was a huge, converted barn like structure that
was an amazing space for a gallery. Also it had a furnace embedded in one wall
of the space.
Sean Landers at Rodolphe Janssen
was great. He has been painting a character in his works, called Plankboy, for
many years. I really loved them, influenced by religious tales and various
other political issues.
I recently went to Margate to see
the Turner Prize, which was fine, I was most into the work of Tai Shani,
although all the artists involved, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Helen Cammock and Oscar
Murillo, weren’t to my taste. Hamden’s work is well researched but asks a lot
from the audience, alongside Cammock’s work too, whilst Murillo is just 100%
dull and just not good.
The Reception Was Brilliant at
Open School East was fun, not on my list at all, but I saw a flyer at a
different gallery whilst in Margate and I decided to go. It had work from Rosie
Carr, Jemma Cullen, Emily Demetriou, Elouise Farley, Rhona Foster, Laurène
Gitton, Holly Hunter, George McGoldrick, Annie Nichols, Harilay Rabenjamina,
Bryony Rose, Connor Sansby and Jules Varnedoe. I really liked a lot of the work.
For a degree show like experience it was well presented and considered.
I visited Crate Space for their
Micro Residency exhibition, which was fine, featuring work from William Hughes,
James Mccoll & Sara Jackson.
Nearby was Limbo, with an odd series
of micro shows, featuring work from a number of artists. It was odd, with no
press release, so was kind of a lost cause and a bit of a shame. Printing out a
press release, even if it’s literally one to hand to individual visitors, does
not take that much time to do.
Going to Carl Freedman in Margate
was a very odd experience, simply because it was the only commercial space that
I visited whilst I was there. It had a group show, curated by Zoe Bedeaux featuring
work by Elmer Batters, Zoe Bedeaux, Marianne Berenhaut, Polly Borland, Louise
Bourgeois, Leigh Bowery – Fergus Greer, Martin Soto Climent, María Ezcurra, Shirin
Fakhim, Enam Gbewonyo, Gary Hume, Allen Jones, Sarah Lucas, Turiya Magadlela, Pierre
Molinier, Daido Moriyama, Senga Nengudi, Polly Penrose, Ma Qiusha, Man Ray, Roman
Stańczak and Ulay. The theme was artists that work with tights, and I did not
enjoy it, although the building and gallery space was quite beautiful.
A while ago over the summer I went
to Split in Croatia on a family holiday, and I was able to go to a few exhibitions
whilst I was there. I visited The Museum of Fine Arts, where they had a number
of exhibitions on, showing both contemporary work and pieces from their
collection. A show of work by Luka Kedžo was on display, which was kind of
interesting, featuring lots of floor based vinyl and subtle interventions
within the space. It felt modern and contemporary, something I wasn’t really
expecting when entering the museum.
Also in the museum was a show by Katarina
Ivanišin Kardum of mostly paintings concerning birds, alongside sculptures of
birds that had been covered in plastic sheets. They were kind of interesting
actually.
Next door at Galerija Kula,
basically one very tall room in one of the rooms of a castle, was Peter Halley
and Lauren Clay and their exhibition Qube. I wasn’t really into it.
The final space in Split was The Meštrović
Gallery, basically a huge house that’s dedicated to the work of Ivan Meštrović.
I’m not sure I’d call it a museum, more a mansion with art on the walls. The
space was slightly more interesting than the work.
I also visited The Meštrović’s
Crikvine, a ‘a sacral and artistic ensemble formed on a ruined farmed estate
with the remains of the building of the Capogrosso family from the 16th century’.
That was everything in Split. My
partner is from Finland, so whilst visiting her there I went to a few shows in Helsinki.
Marika Mäkelä at Galerie Forsblom, featuring very intricate wood based work
that I wasn’t that interested in.
TM Galleria had work by Andrew
Colbert, Taru Happonen and Santeri Lehto on show. I liked Lehto’s work,
consisting of offcuts of wood from the studio that had been made into various
wild flower wall based sculptures.
Jussi Niskanen at Sisak was uninteresting.
The Pro Artibus Foundation had a
solo show on by Nina Katchadourian, titled The Recarcassing Ceremony, featuring
Playmobil figures. Here’s some text from the press release; In the so-called
Recarcassing Ceremony the Playmobil figures Matti and Steven Båtsman, who have
drowned in the sea, are brought back to life through various rituals. The work
gives a nuanced view of the boundlessness of the children’s creativity, and
also of the fascination with catastrophes, while simultaneouly evoking a sense
of what rich, diverse and surprising things can be dealt with through play.
The final space was Kiasma, containing
a number of interesting shows. One of the less stimulating was a large
installation from Shoplifter, basically colourful artificial hair that was the essence
of ‘please take a picture in front of my art’, which is fine, but also not for
me.
Then there was a show from Iiu Susiraja,
self portraits of herself in various situations and outfits, full of humour and
warmth. They were fun. The older work was a lot more exciting than the new images.
The Stage Is Yours was a group
show with artists Christian Falsnaes, Lee Mingwei, Amalia Pica, Sasha Pirogova
and David Shrigley, displaying a number of works which the viewer would activate
in some way. I was not interested.
The final exhibition at Kiasma,
and the final part of my trip to Finland, was a small room from Alma Heikkilä,
focusing on bacteria, climate change and mass extinction. It was nice, very
earthy, like the work Tenderpixel used to exhibit, before it closed forever.
The final trip I made in the past
however many months was to Venice for the biennale. I loved the main exhibitions,
although I think someone who wasn’t already interested and highly invested in
that kind of work probably enjoyed it a lot more than I did, due to not knowing
about the work beforehand. An artist that has really stayed with me is Alex Da
Corte, creating neon filled video installations, with work in the biennale all
focused on Mister Rogers, the American TV show host.
Other favourite works in the main
show include Jon Rafman and Dream Journal, which continues to interest me,
alongside Ed Atkins (of course), Antoine Catala, Ian Cheng, Jesse Darling,
Shilpa Gupta, Anthea Hamilton, Ryoji Ikeda, Arthur Jafa, Christian Marclay,
Avery Singer, Hito Steyerl, Sun Yuan and Peng Yu and Anicka Yi.
As for the pavilions, obviously
the Lithuanian Pavilion was fantastic, performance and capitalism, with artists
Lina Lapelyte, Vaiva Grainyte and Rugile Barzdziukaite.
Other favourites include Angelica
Mesiti at the Australian pavilion, with a red carpeted floor and hand movements.
The Nordic pavilion was also very
solid, including biological inspired artworks, with work from Ane Graff, Ingela
Ihrman and nabbteeri.
The final pavilion I’ll speak
about, although I’m sure I enjoyed many others, is Laure Prouvost for the
French pavilion, featuring a nice carpet and a film that (I felt) was a little
too much focused on the Venice Biennale, rather than making a work that will be
current in other exhibition spaces. Also, it was very much not a disability friendly
exhibition, making you enter the pavilion by walking down a narrow, rocky path,
and then going up through a series of stairs. It was a fun experience, but if
you’re physically disabled you’re fucked.
Aside from the biennale, I went to
a number of other galleries and spaces, the first being the Future Generation
Art Prize, including work from Emilija Škarnulytė, Gabrielle Goliath and
Cooking Sections, Monira Al Qadiri, Yu Araki, Korakrit Arunanondchai, Kasper
Bosmans, Madison Bycroft, Alia Farid, Rodrigo Hernández, Laura Huertas Millán,
Marguerite Humeau, Eli Lundgaard, Taus Makhacheva, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Sondra
Perry, Gala Porras-Kim, Jakob Steensen, Daniel Turner, Anna Zvyagintseva and Basel
Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme.
I know that I went to a bunch of
others, but there was either no press releases, or they have been lost/forgotten
after continually delaying writing this blog post. The final space I’ll write
about is the Punta della Dogana, with
works from Etel Adnan, Berenice Abbott, Giovanni Anselmo, Lucas Arruda, Hicham
Berrada, Louise Bourgeois, Charbel-joseph H. Boutros, Constantin Brancusi, Nina
Canell, Vija Celmins, Tacita Dean, Edith Dekyndt, Liz Deschenes, Trisha
Donnelly, Simone Fattal, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Felix Gonzalez-Torres,
Roni Horn, Ann Veronica Janssens, Lee Lozano, Agnes Martin, Julie Mehretu, Ari
Benjamin Meyers, Philippe Parreno, Alessandro Piangiamore, R. H. Quaytman,
Carol Rama, Lala Rukh, Stéphanie Saadé, Anri Sala, Rudolf Stingel, Sturtevant,
Tatiana Trouvé, Wu Tsang, Robert Wilson and Cerith Wyn Evans. My favourite was a
collaborative piece between Philippe Parreno and Etel Adnan. Here’s a link to a
video piece of the installation/video work - https://vimeo.com/332256362 - A film by
Parreno plays, and once it ends the lights go up and you see paintings by Adnan.
So, after 159 photographs of exhibitions,
lets move on to films, TV and maybe a video game or two. I have over 130 to get
through, so I’m going to be running through them all very quickly. Let’s begin
with Louis Theroux: Mothers on the Edge, which was terrifyingly bleak.
Victor & Valentino was good, a
fun TV show about two brothers exploring legends of Latin America.
Us, by Jordan Peele, was fantastic,
although I preferred Get Out.
See You Yesterday was fun, but not
so great. It felt a little weak.
It's Bruno! was a surprisingly
funny TV show about a man and his dog.
Fighting with My Family was great,
featuring the Rock and a fantastic, real, plot about wrestling.
Lunatics by Chris Lilley was okay,
although I prefer his older work.
What We Do in the Shadows (the TV
show) was fun, like the film but with famous actors.
Captain Marvel was a solid film.
Greta was fun, creepy and very
well acted.
Ken Jeong: You Complete Me, Ho was
fine, a stand up Netflix film.
Rilakkuma to Kaorusan is a
beautiful Japanese animation about a woman working in an office, who lives with
2 stuffed bears and a chicken. It’s so wonderful and highly recommended.
The Perfection was a solid film,
with twists and turns. Yeah, a solid film.
Mary Poppins Returns was fun.
I Am Mother was fun, about a robot
mother figure raising a child in an apocalyptic world. It was solid sci-fi.
Booksmart was beautiful.
The Chef Show is a lovely TV show,
hosted by Jon Favreau and Roy Choi, basically just cooking and chatting with celebrities.
It was super nice and relaxed.
Murder Mystery was quite crap.
Years and Years was fantastic TV, about
a – very – near future UK that sees a fascist government and prime minister
come into power (literally what is currently happening in this fucking country),
accompanied by the banks dying, tech improving and everything else slowly being
more and more disastrous. It reminded me of early Black Mirror, though even
better slightly as it was part of an overarching series, rather than just singular
individual episodes.
Aggretsuko is a slightly odd
animation about an accountant who has anger issues, preferring to bottle up her
rage, letting it out by singing at a karaoke bar.
Good Omens was a surprisingly fun,
very PG tv show about an angel and a demon, trying to influence a young boy.
The remake of Shaft was a little
weak, although Samuel L. Jackson is always fun.
Shazam! was fun, a comedy superhero
film that worked.
Tau was fine, AI house, etc. You
kind of know the plot already.
Anima was a solid short directed
by Paul Thomas Anderson. If you have 15 minutes to spare please do take a watch.
Legends of Chamberlain Heights was
a crappy animated TV show that I’m unsure why I watched.
The Happytime Murders was pretty
trashy.
Missing Link was a beautiful handmade
animation about bigfoot. Very good.
Rocketman was fun. Thoroughly
enjoyed its positivity.
Aziz Ansari: Right Now was okay.
Departures was a lovely little
film, featuring Asa Butterfield and Maisie Williams. Very teen but very lovely.
If Beale Street Could Talk was
quite beautiful, and terribly sad.
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar
Children was not good.
Long Shot was actually quite great.
Politics, etc with Charlize Theron and Seth Rogen.
The Great Hack was slightly eye
opening, although if you have followed the Cambridge Analytica scandal you kind
of know everything already.
Avengers: Endgame was solid.
Twelve Forever was a beautiful
animation about a young girl who wants to be 12 forever. Very lovely and well
built world.
Otherhood was not so good.
Lion was fantastic, google maps as
detective tool.
A Simple Favour was pretty crap.
At this point in the blog, with 80 or so more films to write about, I am slowly
reverting to one word reviews. It is now simply becoming an archive of
everything that I have seen, rather than me reviewing them in any capacity.
Infinity Train, yet another lovely
animation about a young girl exploring an endless train. Very good.
Rocko's Modern Life: Static Cling
was fine.
John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum was,
of course, amazing.
The Secret Life of Pets 2 was
okay, I preferred the first one. The world building in that was good, but the plot
of this second was just felt a bit basic. Cat scenes were fun though.
Invader ZIM: Enter the Florpus was
fine.
Fahrenheit 11/9 was a very good
documentary about Donald Trump, gun violence and a water epidemic. Very good.
I then watched Michael Moore’s
other film in the series, Fahrenheit 9/11, which was equally exciting.
And then I watched Bowling for
Columbine. I got a little obsessed with his documentaries.
The Meg was trash, trashy fun.
Steven Universe: The Movie was
beautiful, of course.
Late Night was a solid Mindy
Kaling film, with Emma Thompson, who is equally great.
Archibald's Next Big Thing was
fun, although kind of annoying as a character.
Yesterday was very lovely and just
generally quite heartwarming.
Donut County was a lovely video
game about controlling holes in the floor, swallowing up various objects and
people.
Spider-Man: Far from Home was very
fun.
Tall Girl was pretty bland entertainment.
Plus One was not so great,
incredibly painfully predictable.
I really did not like The Beach
Bum at all. Very boring and just painful to watch. Matthew McConaughey in a
terrible film.
I finally watched Garth Marenghi's
Darkplace, which was of course hilarious and highly recommended. A tv show
about the filming of a tv show within a tv show.
Nathan Barley was ultimately
painful to watch, obviously that was the point, but still.
Unbelievable was truly depressing,
amazing, but depressing. Never doubt anyone.
Toy Story 4 was good, although
really not needed for the series. It was the perfect trilogy until this arrived.
The Last Kids on Earth was, fine?
I don’t really remember it, which means I wasn’t so into it.
Between Two Ferns: The Movie wasn’t
as good as I wanted it to be.
Fast & Furious: Hobbs &
Shaw was okay, I do enjoy Jason Statham, and of course The Rock, but it still
is ultimately crap.
The Politician was actually quite a
cutting show. Very funny and recommended, even if it was being advertised on
the side of a bus.
In the Tall Grass was fine.
My So-Called Life was a very
enjoyable 90s tv show. Very good, very teen and very enjoyable.
Strange Hill High was an odd
animation.
I of course enjoyed Once Upon a
Time... in Hollywood, although not my favourite Tarantino film. Also quite
nicely slotted into history.
The House That Jack Built was
super bleak, with a weird ending.
Stuber was fine, Kumail Nanjiani
is enjoyable.
Plebs was a vaguely funny program
about 3 men living in ancient Rome. Kind of funny, kind of crap, very BBC.
Midsommar was amazing.
El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie
didn’t need to be made, I was happy with Better Call Saul.
Both seasons of Succession were
amazing. One of my favourite tv shows of the year.
I'm Still Here was painful to
watch.
Absolute Power was very well put
together, like W1A but for PR firm.
Living with Yourself was very
enjoyable, Paul Rudd is great, as always.
I actually really enjoyed The
Angry Birds Movie 2, it was as good as the first one, which I thought wasn’t
going to be very good either.
Bigfoot is a sometimes very sad,
comedy animation about bigfoot, although after he has been discovered and has
been famous. Now he just lives in the woods, in a caravan, getting drunk and thoroughly
depressed. It’s odd, dramatic and quite good.
Parasite was an amazing. I would highly
recommend just watching it, without reading anything about it or watching a
trailer. Just jump in and enjoy. Super tense.
Dolemite Is My Name felt like
Eddie Murphy was returning to his previous, very good acting, self. Solid, enjoyable
film.
You're Not a Monster was a nice
IMDB mini series about a therapist who only had monster clients. Literal monsters.
Fun, quick ten minute episodes that worked well.
The Morning Show was magnificent,
truly cutting and just so bleak at times. Really good.
The Peanut Butter Falcon was super
heart warming and lovely. Zack Gottsagen and Shia LaBeouf had fantastic
chemistry.
The Last Black Man in San
Francisco, again, was so lovely and sad. Some wonderful scenes, especially the skateboarding.
I really loved Modern Love, the
first episode made me cry. Just wonderful, really well written, fantastic
acting and just so fantastic. I want more.
Green Eggs and Ham was a fun riff
on a simple story. Enjoyable for sure.
I watched the entirety of Peaky
Blinders, which I did enjoy a fair amount. Not quite Boardwalk Empire, but
still a fair watch.
The Mandalorian was solid, Star
Wars themed action. It felt gritty, and it also brought us baby Yoda.
Joker was well done, a solid Joker
origin story, exploring mental illness and the Batman origin story too.
Another origin story I enjoyed, Klaus,
the story of how father Christmas came to being. Really good animated film that
took me by surprise.
Gemini Man was trash. Utter trash.
Horrible Histories: The Movie -
Rotten Romans was fun, but a little too PG for me. I was not the target
audience.
The live action remake of Lady and
the Tramp was just bad and too weird. Dogs mouths moving.
The Day Shall Come just made me
sad. It was a comedy, but just too real and too depressing, even if it was farcical.
Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil
and Vile was fine.
I really enjoyed Hustlers, good
acting with a strong true story. Constance Wu is really good.
Downton Abbey was fine, although I
was less connected to it as I have never watched the series.
Let It Snow wasn’t that great, a
crap christmas film that I didn’t really enjoy.
I felt that The Laundromat was fine,
I expected more from Meryl Streep.
Oh my The Irishman was the dullest
film I have ever seen. So boring and so long.
Bikram: Yogi, Guru, Predator was
eye opening, even though I don’t do yoga it was still really interesting to
both learn his method and to find out about how much sexual harassment has been
enacted by him.
Ad Astra had an obvious story with
a fantastic soundtrack and visuals. Very much Apocalypse Now in space, which is
not to say I didn’t thoroughly enjoy it, but the plot just wasn’t up there. The
space buggy scene was my favourite.
I felt that Doctor Sleep was a
worth sequel to The Shining, and I do love Ewan McGregor.
American Factory was an
interesting dive into American factories being revitalised and taken advantage
of by Chinese business.
Demon Seed was a very weird,
incredibly sexist 70s film about AI. Very odd, very unpleasant.
I enjoyed Barry, a tv show about a
hitman who discovers acting. Very funny and enjoyable.
Jingle All The Way was a solid Christmas film.
Dora and the Lost City of Gold was
very funny and a solid film, if I was young I would have loved it.
Zombieland: Double Tap was
unenjoyable.
Ready or Not was dumb fun.
I really liked Uncut Gems, Adam Sandler
being amazing accompanied by the best soundtrack by Oneohtrix Point Never. Such
a good film.
Big City Greens was an okay
animation, although I have seen so much better.
I thought Jojo Rabbit was well
done. Taika Waititi is always good.
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
was an enjoyable end to the saga. I want more films and tv from the star wars
universe.
A Beautiful Day in the Neighbourhood was a fantastic, lovely film, that I really enjoyed, even though I'm very much not American and had no idea who Mr Rogers was until I watched the Alex Da Corte video in Venice. Tom Hanks was fantastic.
And my final film was Knives Out,
a really great detective film by Rian Johnson. It felt incredibly consistent
and very well made. It was funny, it was serious, and it was packed full of fantastic
people.
Sooo that’s the blog post, super
long coming in at 10,000 words. I don’t do resolutions, but if I did one of my
main ones would be to update my blog more, so that I don’t end up having a
literal pile of press releases when I get around to writing it. I’m looking
forward to what 2020 will be for me, and am really thankful to all the artists that
have worked with me, as well as the collectors, curators and other people who
have supported me in my practice this year.