Sunday, January 18, 2009

Context for the current work, Jan. 2009.





"Tower" 1974
An early sculpture from my foundation year at Epsom. 1974. I had spent the previous summer working on a motorway, the A3. We used to construct road markers out of waste materials to warn of hazards, to the trucks and other users of the as yet unopened road. I think something of my attitude to positioning work in the public space, and then the gallery space originated here.


"Two Bombs Kiss", Neem wood carving, 1990.
A prayer to avert nuclear war in the sub-c0ntitnet. It's based on a story I'd read of Brancusi, his ambition to place a version of "The Kiss" between the trenches of the Germans and the allies in the first world war.


"Heart Mahal" 1996,
Collaborative work. Iftikhar and Elizabeth Dadi, Durriya Kazi and David Alesworth.

"Fukuoka 2000"
A residency undertaken with Durriya Kazi and Pakistani truck decorators. Intended to interface with Japanese truck decorators. (Image right.)


Collaborative works with Durriya Kazi, 1997-2000





"Chamak Patti disks" David Alesworth, 2001. Icons of modernity such as washing powder adverts, emblems of arab culture, early nuclear weapons and mushroom clouds. The "Chammak Patti" is glass impregnated tape (3M reflector tape) used to decorate trucks in Pakistan.


"Event Horizon" 2002.
six-foot satellite Dish, chamak patti, enamel paint, steel stand. An anti-globalization, ad-busting work. It's first incarnation was on a thela (hand-cart). David Alesworth, 2002.





"War Against Terror" 2002
Aluminum trays, nan roti's, toy American soldiers, chamak Patti tape.




"Teddy Bear Rug" 2002.

Second hand soft toys on sale at Itwaar Bazaar, Karachi. A rug made of Teddy Bear skins.





The first of the "Teddy's Bear's". Toys for the war child. 2003.





"Probes" 2003, Karachi, out in the city of Karachi.




"Probes" in Karachi, the phalwala, murgheewala and doodhwala. 2003.





"Trays" 2003.
International brands, hacked, based upon fake items found in Karachi's markets. Stensil cut aluminium.


"Record Room"
Series, 2008-2009. Monochrome photographs. These will be shown in combination with "Fermi's Pile". The photographs will also be framed in grey, passivated zinc-plated steel. I will probably use a phosphate passivation on all the metal items.




"Record Room" series monochrome.
Probably around 20 x 30 inch, full-bleed images, in grey metal frames. 2008-2009.




"12.2.42"
Part-progress to Fermi's Pile, to be shown with the monochrome, "Record Room" images.
This will be constructed from 180 units, around 30 are present here. I'm now looking at a dark grey phosphate finish, same on the photographic frames. The work will probably be titled "12.2.42" the American date for when this first went critical and so beginning the atomic era.

Chicago Pile-1, a massive "atomic pile" of graphite bricks and uranium fuel, which went critical on December 2, 1942, built in a hard racquets court under Stagg Field, the football stadium at the University of Chicago. Due to a mistranslation, Soviet reports on Enrico Fermi claimed that his work was performed in a converted "pumpkin field" instead of a "squash court".



The NCA gallery space where the works will be shown, Jan. 2009.




NCA Gallery, Jan. 2009. This is probably the space I will be using. There are three potential rooms.






"Botanical Garden" or perhaps, "Role Call" or "All the Names", "Looking for Eden"?
2008-2009 currrent work.

I may also show a few of the botanical label works, these are in progress. They began in Linz, in the summer of 2008, at the Transart residency. I'm thinking of God telling man all the names (to settle the argument with the angels). I'm thinking of Eden and a taxonomy for Eden. I'm gradually working my way towards that, reseraching Quaranic and Biblical texts and refernces.

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