Monday, July 26, 2010

Week 2 - Hussein Chalayan


Hussein Chalayan is an artist and designer, working in film, dress and installation art. Research Chalayan’s work, and then consider these questions in some thoughtful reflective writing.

1. Chalayan’s works in clothing, like Afterwords (2000) and Burka (1996) , are often challenging to both the viewer and the wearer. What are your personal responses to these works? Are Afterwords and Burka fashion, or are they art? What is the difference?

Not all clothing is fashion, so what makes fashion fashion?


Hussein Chalayan, Burka, 1996


Hussein Chalayan, Afterwords, 2000

2. Chalayan has strong links to industry. Pieces like The Level Tunnel (2006) and Repose (2006) are made in collaboration with, and paid for by, commercial business; in these cases, a vodka company and a crystal manufacturer. How does this impact on the nature of Chalayan’s work? Does the meaning of art change when it is used to sell products? Is it still art?

3. Chalayan’s film Absent Presence screened at the 2005 Venice Biennale. It features the process of caring for worn clothes, and retrieving and analysing the traces of the wearer, in the form of DNA. This work has been influenced by many different art movements; can you think of some, and in what ways they might have inspired Chalayan’s approach?


Hussein Chalayan, still from Absent Presence, 2005 (motion picture)


4. Many of Chalayan’s pieces are physically designed and constructed by someone else; for example, sculptor Lone Sigurdsson made some works from Chalayan’s Echoform (1999) and Before Minus Now (2000) fashion ranges. In fashion design this is standard practice, but in art it remains unexpected. Work by artists such as Jackson Pollock hold their value in the fact that he personally made the painting. Contrastingly, Andy Warhol’s pop art was largely produced in a New York collective called The Factory, and many of his silk-screened works were produced by assistants. Contemporarily, Damien Hirst doesn’t personally build his vitrines or preserve the sharks himself. So when and why is it important that the artist personally made the piece?

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Semester 2- Week One

Nathalie Djurberg's 'Claymations'.

Swedish artist Nathalie Djurberg's intricately constructed claymation films are both terrifyingly
disturbing and artlessly sweet.

The new works created for the Venice Biennale explore a surrealistic Garden of Eden in which all that is natural goes awry.

She exposes the innate fear of what is not understood and confronts viewers with the complexity of emotions.

Nathalie Djurberg was awarded the silver lion for a promising young artist at the Venice
Art Biennale 09.
(http://www.designboom.com/weblog/cat/10/view/6886/nathalie-djurberg)

Research Djurberg's work in order to answer the following questions;

1. What do you understand by the word 'claymation'?

2. What is meant by the term 'surrealistic Garden of Eden'? and 'all that is natural goes awry'?

3. What are the 'complexity of emotions' that Djurberg confronts us with?

4. How does Djurberg play with the ideas of children's stories, and innocence in some of her work?

5. There is a current fascination by some designers with turning the innocent and sweet into something disturbing. Why do you think this has come about?

6. In your opinion, why do you think Djurberg's work is so interesting that it was chosen for the Venice Biennale?

7. Add some of your own personal comments on her work.


'Experiment' 2009 Venice Biennale
'Turn into Me' 2008

SEMESTER 2 BLOG Questions

Assignment 1 Blog

For assignment 1 you will

1. Continue writing on your existing blog.

2. Provide your tutor with your blogspot address.

3. Write postings for your blog every week, for 6 weeks.

4. Provide comments on the blogs of your ALVC co-students every week.

Assessment details

Details regarding what to write each week will be posted on the cadiblog. The

address is: http://cadiblog2010.blogspot.com/ You will need to read the

cadiblog each week.

Each week you will post your writing and images on your blog. This should be at least 250 words on your blog, and 100 word comments on at least 2 other blogs. Comments should be on student blogs from your ALVC group.

250 words on your blog

100 words on at least 2 other student blogs

You will need to do this work weekly as a blog is a form of a conversation

that needs to be dynamic and current.


Please note that the University has a large number of computers that are

available for student use. You should all know where to locate these.

All blogs must be complete by the week ending Friday 3 September, 5pm.

Blogs will be assessed after this date.



Cai Gou-Qiang Inopportune: Stage One (detail) 2004