ANYWHERE GOES IN DECEMBER
Installation shot with Jacqueline Hassink
And now for something completely different… Not the Monty Python reunion, but a chance to see contemporary photography in the super-plush setting of the palace built as the London residence of the Bishop of Ely in 1772 and unaltered since. It’s resplendent with Mallett’s antiques and high end modern design, installed as if in a dwelling, and now with the bonus of a substantial room-each showing from seven of the Jules Wright / Wapping Bankside’s photographers. Three suit the 18th century setting especially well: Peter Marlow’s full set of 42 Anglican cathedrals by echo; Edgar Martins’ Cosmonaut Training shots by counterpoint; and Dutch photographer Jacqueline Hassink’s measured views out of windows into Japanese gardens by parallel escape from the modern world.
Meekyoung Shin: Unfixed @ Korean Cultural Centre, Grand Buildings, 1 – 3 The Strand – Trafalgar Square
Bodily functions are all over contemporary art, but how many shows do you go to at which visiting the loo is a major part of the art experience? All three toilets in Meekyoung Shin’s all-soap retrospective contain Buddhas made of soap on which you’re invited to wash your hands. The main space has examples which have been exposed to such treatment in various museums for a few months each, to varying age-evocative effects, the most severe citizens being the Brummies who rubbed away the whole head. Interesting, and part of a large and impressive – though rather shoddily-installed – retrospective.
To 18 Jan: www.michaelwerner.com
Installation shot of Bricks: 1966-1975
The Smile, or Thirty Years, Ha, Ha, Ha -1974 More pep in your pop with this revelatory show of the little-known Jerzy ‘Jurry’ ZieliÅ„ski (1943-1980). His sharply delineated combinations of Communist, graphic and Pop iconographies include, for example, plenty of full lips, but differ from American treatments: the colours are darker, the presentation not quite sleek (partly the effect of what materials were available in 70’s Poland) and political ambiguity is always close, potentially critical but with a sense of anticipating future nostalgia. Does ‘Hot’ show an abstracted pattern of flames, or a protester who set himself on fire? Is the ‘XXX’ on those lips a celebration of the regime’s 30th birthday, or a stitching over of free speech?
To 14 Jan 2014: www.largeglass.co.uk
Installation view: Jean-Luc Moulène ‘Model for Diving’ (2007), TREVOR SHEARER ‘Mental Exercises’ (2002) Plaster casts, and ‘Yellow Painting’ (2011). What’s this? We’re fairly used to the humble’s homages to the famous, but here such luminaries as Miroslaw Balka, Jean-Luc Moulène and Tonico Lemos Auad put forward their own works as tributes designed to resonate with those of an artist of whom you may know nothing: Trevor Shearer (1958-2013) was an influential teacher but chose to show his own work very little. Yet it fully justifies his company: whether casting a basin from graph paper filming the hop, skip and vanish of a water drop on a hot plate; or pulling off the sculptural trick of seeming to hide behind the wall, his work is subtle, grounded and precise.
To 21 Dec: www.frithstreetgallery.com
Night Window 1, 2013
Comrades of Time | Comrades of Time @ Cell Project Space,
258 Cambridge Heath Road
To 22 Dec: www.cellprojects.org
Boris Groys’ eponymous essay claims the video loop as prime exemplar of how the only contemporary infinity, after God, lies in the repetition through which art can be ‘with time’ – its comrade – rather than ‘in time’. I couldn’t readily connect that to this film-free show, but there does seem to be an interesting double deconstruction of the media of art (made abject) and of the self (made elusive) in such works as Nikolas Gambaroff’s latex casts of his own paintings; Wade Guyton’s cross (the self as voter in a digital print pushed so hard it breaks into the painterly); and Magali Reus’ use of three ceramic bus seats, one flesh coloured, the other two newly wrapped in plastic, to say something about the self and something about colourfield abstraction.
The Piper Gallery’s refreshing USP has been that it features only artists who’ve had a 40+ year career and are still active, which makes them all at least twice as old as Megan Piper herself. Here curator Tess Jaray qualifies, but her inventive choice of work which relates to painting without fitting its traditional definitions includes such whippersnappers as Martin Creed and Rana Begum as well as rule-compliant John Stezaker and Tim Head. I like Support, in which young Onya McCausland polishes away the wall to make a fake shadow which, as I read her title, could be holding up an off-kilter chalk-covered McCrackenesque plank just as that form could be holding up the wall.
Nostalgic for the Future @ the Lisson Gallery, 27 Bell St – Edgware Rd
To 11 Jan: www.lissongallery.com
2012 The Lisson Gallery is already looking back from the vantage point of its 50th anniversary in 2017. Some high quality (notably Cragg, Floyer, Wentworth) and the pairing of early and late works from each artist lift ‘Nostalgic For the Future’ well above a routine group show of gallery artists, but the main reason to visit is the basement, turned over in full to Haroon Mirza’s composition ‘Preoccupied Waveforms’: electro-percussion; TV as instrument; acoustic barriers as sculpture; and an abstract light-work, fan-blown through a smashed-through wall. These merge to make a mesmerising cyclic environment suggesting how, just as systems are broken down, they can come together afresh.
Images courtesy of the relevant galleries + artists + Mats Nordman (Fischer) + Alex Delfanne (Shearer)






