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venerdì 31 ottobre 2008

Interview with Colin Raff





q) What is your name?


a) Colin Raff


q) Where do you live and work?


a) I’m currently based in Berlin, but smell American.


q) What is your creative process like?


a) Ideally, it should proceed like a Prussian magpie building a solid and sturdy nest out of oneiric jetsam.


q) What is your favorite medium?


a) Image manipulation. I begin by selecting elements as for a collage, but today’s exciting appliances further allow one to scale, skew, fondle and otherwise perturb the source material so that the result is alien to the ingredients.

I should mention that I am actually a writer (by trade, temperament, and grander intent), and view this visual work simply as ornament, subordinate to the text. When a piece of mine is purely graphic, I see it as assuming the condition of text, and when it operates completely outside of narrative, then to me it has adopted a complementary role by performing some extra-literary function. These relations are always present, if not apparent. Anyway, synthesizing an original image out of found sources is not unlike composing a sentence out of extant words.


q) What is your current favorite subject?


a) It seems clear to me that the choice of subject is important only in how it accommodates or challenges the artist. I personally favor the variety of a rotating, steadily replenished buffet service o’ subjects, with repeat helpings of certain high-yield motifs — like masks, for example, or speculative invertebrates. I keep the cutlery sharp, the plate at arm’s length and abstain from autobiographical confections of any kind.


q) How long does it take for you to finish a piece?


a) Usually too long, except when a time constraint warps the fabric of necessity.


q) What has been your biggest accomplishment so far?


a) Probably a few still-unpublished texts. I believe the visual work is improving as it goes along.


q) Are there any contemporary artists that you love?


a) They tend to die whenever I namecheck them.


q) Can we buy your art anywhere?


a)I haven’t exhibited in a while, but things have been appearing in magazines and I did print a small booklet last year, many copies of which are still floating around. I can’t escape the idea of the book-format as being the ultimate goal. I focus hermetically on my work and am bad about promotion.


q) Anything that people should know about that we don’t?


a) Yes. The Calabrian setabaretta or silk-finger centipede (S. digitalis) is a midsized example of the Scolopendra family, reaching up to 6 cm in length, with 51 to 55 pairs of legs on most specimens. It prefers to lie dormant in a dark, narrow and dry space until it achieves adulthood, when it bursts out of its torpor with a great urge to mate and feed. It is notorious for loitering inside the fingers of gloves, which can lead to painful bites for the unwary. In the port city of Catanzaro (historically important as a center of silk manufacture), the abundant setabarettas are known to inhabit and literally run away with certain lightweight, very fine weave ladies’ gloves known as guantillini. As a mature centipede’s legs and mandibles can easily perforate and protrude from the fabric, a glove of this type with occupied fingers is likely (once agitated) to scuttle across a flat surface in a pseudo-autonomous manner for several meters at a time. This has naturally led to glove races, most notably the world-famous “Running of the Gloves” held annually in Catanzaro, sponsored exclusively since 1974 by Pinozzani Silks Ltd. S.p.A. The bite of a silk-finger centipede is usually not lethal, but can lead to complications in small children and the infirm. However, since 1910 there have only been 7 recorded fatalities (see the Catanzaro official website for details).


q) What is your best piece of advice for those who would like to rise in their level of artistry?


a) Decide who the masters are of whatever you want to do. Select what you consider exemplary works by them to examine, thoroughly and ruthlessly. Vivisect that shit in your mind in order to isolate those vital elements of technique which pertain to your own process. Don’t worry about spoiling your appreciation: Genuine beauty endures scrutiny. (If the initial merit of something dissipates on closer inspection, then what you admired actually came from you, and now belongs to you.) Some artists will frown on the idea of being critical like this. Yet it’s the only way I’ve advanced.

Here’s a recent example: To get an understanding of how to use color, I’ve been anatomizing several paintings by Delacroix, because he’s the best. Now, from reading his journals, it turns out that he was engaged in just the sort of conduct that I’m flogging: He would probe selected surfaces by Rubens, Rembrandt and others, determine how they juxtaposed hues, rendered shading, etc., and apply the findings to his own violent but consummate color arrangements. In this way, Delacroix honed his talent throughout his life. He’s not someone I would presume to argue with.


q) What inspires you to keep going when the work gets frustrating or tough?


a) The awareness that this frustration is a fixed juncture on a familiar circuit, and will eventually give way to the next stage.

(Pragmatic answer: I take a DVD break and watch Lee Van Cleef shoot people, then go back to what I was doing.)


q) How do you describe your work to those who are unfamiliar with it?


a) I’d rather not, but if they’re armed, I might tell them it’s grotesque (a term which, if they looked it up, gets its name from the grottoes unearthed in Rome in the 15th century (which turned out to be rooms in Nero’s villa (with murals depicting hybrid animals, torsional shrubs, and mythological crime scenes (corralled neatly into harmonious partitions)))). That might explain things. Or I could just say that it’s artificial and imaginary without being “fantasy” as that word is currently understood (i.e. wish fulfilment, escapism, boilerplate allegory, etc.). I just think of it as fiction, straight up.


q) Do you think that leaving a plaquean of rohumbabisque on the stump of a marble column can provoke more zudith than just placing it on a table somewhere?


a) You’re the first person to ask me that! And I’m so glad you did. I agree about the column, but its shaft should have flutes (Tuscan won’t cut it). And if you really want to bring the funk, the rohumbabisque should be lightly früned, then buldered with a trusque of ventch.


q) What kind of training did you have which helped you achieve your current level of artistry?


a) None formally; only the methods mentioned above.


q) Is there a tool or material that you can’t imagine living without?


a) No, but my present work requires a camera, a scanner and naturally a Macintosh – even if this wheezing pre-Intel beast will have to be put out to pasture in not too long.


q) Who are your influences?


a) A concise answer would be impossible. I live amid untidy ziggurats of tomes. The impulse is to simply vomit out a pantheon that would suffer from criminal omissions regardless of size. Bruegel made the first lasting impression (visually speaking), and his sense of space and composition has stayed with me. My first grown-up reading was Poe. Ovid is central, as is Roussel, Mallarmé, George Eliot, Gibbon, Petronius, De Quincey, Gautier — and at this moment, I could add Goya, Ernst, Buñuel, Manet, Bava, Fritz Lang, European exploitation cinema in general, Klinger, (here the floodgates open) Klee, Hogarth, Robbe-Grillet, Jess, Hamlet, Himes, Piranesi, Gourmont, Botticelli, Dix, Duchamp, Blake, etc. etc. etc. etc. already. While some of these names are constants, this maddeningly truncated and grocerilistic inventory would be different if rattled off a month from now. It could also be even shorter, or twenty times as long. This has been a frustrating question.


q) What inspires you to create?


a) Being not dead yet. There are no spare raisons d'être in my gondola’s glove compartment. Only gloves, and maybe a few centipedes.


q) …your contacts…


a) http://www.colinraff.com/


http://perturbatorium.blogspot.com/


martedì 21 ottobre 2008

Interview with Hayley Lock







q) What is your name and what do you do?


a)My name is Hayley Lock and I am an artist.


q)When did you really get into art?


a)I have always drawn for as long as I can remember..


q)How did you come to the realization that you should try your luck at art on a more serious level?


a)I guess it started on my foundation course aged 18 when creating ideas for work became more of an obsession rather than a chosen serious career route..


q)How did you discover the particular style that you have?


a)I don’t like to think that I have a particular style as this would be too limiting for me emotionally instead I respond to different things every day in a variety of ways from drawing to collage, painting to making objects to listing and procuring moments from life itself.


q)How would you describe your style?


a)Constantly evolving


q)Who or what influences your art?


a)I have a deep - rooted passion for the figurative elements of portraiture from Velasquez to Philip Gurry.

I adore ornament, the baroque and the distortion of the truth. My practice has a tendency to be figurative within its subject of reworking old works, suggesting a darker side to the seductiveness of beauty whilst disrupting the real.


q)How often do you create a new piece?


a)I work every day to keep me sane. It depends on what I am working on as regards to new work, if it is collage new work is created daily or every other day, drawings tend to be daily if small in scale, paintings take a little longer..


q)What kind of success have you had with your art?


a)I have been successful on many levels throughout my career, some I have avoided out of shyness or choice with the conscious decision recently to meet ‘success’ face on..(however success is measured..)


q)What would be the ultimate goal for you and your art?


a)Tricky question…I believe that as long as I am hungry for life itself then I will continue to make new work that is exciting for me. I have no belief in the ‘ultimate goal’ as if that were achievable then there would be nowhere else to turn and nothing new to try out.


q)What do you see as an accomplishment in the way of art?


a)Accomplishment for me is more to do with self – satisfaction.

I take work to a place that is good for me on a personal level and of course some work is more successful than others. Regarding my accomplishment from the perspective of finding an attentive audience, I cannot deny that I am as much curious as I am terrified at who these people could possibly be!


q)What kind of message, if any, do you try to convey through your art?


a)I am not attempting on any level to try to convey any kind of message to the masses. My work is literally a reflection on what and whom I see out there in the world I live in today. I reflect the state of society as it stands in the beginning of the 21st century, the good and the bad, the truth and the elaboration of the truth.


q)Sum up your art in one word.


a)Dark


q)Any additional comments?


a)My practice is focused towards hierarchical and fantastical subjects of monarchy and noble folk, dwarfism, bearded ladies, the obese, the anorexic and the deformed. My work allows for the surface to be manipulated in many ways by adding conscious elements of frivolity such as stickers, souvenirs, artificial flowers, foliage, glitter, birds and sequins. I enjoy putting quality together with the cheap, the good with the bad, which one is which is your decision.


q)…your contacts…


a)www.hayleylock.com

Tel: 0044 7892 905016 (mobile)

Email: hayleylock@tiscali.co.uk


lunedì 13 ottobre 2008

Interview with FAMOUS WHEN DEAD






q) What is your name?


a)FAMOUS WHEN DEAD.

q) Where do you live and work?

a)Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, England.

q) What is your creative process like?

a)Slightly chaotic.

q) What is your favourite medium?

a)At the moment, Ink.

q) What is your current favourite subject?

a)Society.

q) How long does it take for you to finish a piece?

a)Anything from 1 day to several months.

q) What has been your biggest accomplishment so far?

a)This is a bit of a cliché, but I would have to say my kids.

q) Are there any contemporary artists that you love?

a)Yes, I don’t know if it’s love though… there are too many to list.

q) Can we buy your art anywhere?

a)Yes,
You can purchase my art direct from me…

muckingfagicajt@aol.com

q) Anything that people should know about that we don’t??

a)Yes, I have this small monster, creature thing that lives behind the radiator in the down stairs back room, every night at 13 minutes past midnight it scurries across the floor to the kitchen to fix a snack… I don’t know what to do… our biscuit and cheese bill as gone through the roof.

q) What is your best piece of advice for those who would like to rise in their level of artistry?

a)Work hard and be inspired.

q)What inspires you to keep going when the work gets frustrating or tough?

a)White paint…

q) How do you describe your work to those who are unfamiliar with it?

a)I would say, “you wouldn’t like it” then they’d be intriged.

q) What kind of training did you have which helped you achieve your current level of artistry?

a)I went to collage and university but am self trained when it comes to painting.

q) Is there a tool or material that you can’t imagine living without?

a)Not really, unless air and water count.

q)Who are your influences?

a)Hard to say really, life, people and the strange things that they do…

q)What inspires you to create?

a)The thought of not being creative is enough to make me want to get up off my arse and do something.

q)…your contacts…

a)FAMOUS WHEN DEAD…