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Follow on Google News | West Meets West art exhibitionNew eciting exhibition showcasing work by Jann Haworth, Kent Christensen, Kelly Jenkins and The Dada Factory
WEST MEETS WEST AT THE BRISTOL GALLERY The works brought together for this exhibition owe their origins to the legacies of Pop but have transformed it for a new era. Jann Haworth Jann Haworth, an American-born artist and sculptor, was raised in Hollywood and trained in England. She became a leading member of the British Pop Art Movement in the 1960s, and one of its few visibly successful female members. She participated in the exhibition Young Contemporaries in 1963 and as a result the ICA London selected her to exhibit as one of their Four Young Painters for that year. This early exposure led to a spate of high profile solo exhibitions at the Robert Fraser Gallery (1966 and 1969), Gallerie 20 in Amsterdam (1966), Studio Marconi in Milan (1968), and Sidney Janis in New York (1971). In 1967 she co-designed the iconic Sergeant Pepper album cover for The Beatles with her then-husband, Peter Blake, for which she was awarded a Grammy. In the 1970s she and Blake were members of the artists’ group, the Brotherhood of Ruralists, until their separation in 1979. In 1997 she returned to the USA with her second husband, the writer Richard Severy, where they continue to live and work today. Haworth is not afraid to experiment with techniques, materials, content and form to produce her quirky sewn cloth soft sculptures and comic book storyboard-inspired artworks. Fast food, film stars, cheerleaders, cartoons, cowboys and comics are entwined with histories of modern art in unique textile-based objects that become an address to time. The passing of time is etched onto the faces of her elderly ‘cast in cloth’ sculptures and time is the sub-text of her use of double layers in a brand new series of works entitled CUTZ, made especially for The Bristol Gallery. The works from the CUTZ series are a POP counterpoint to the conventional medium of the fine art canvas. The frames are wrapped in vinyl, a mass produced material of the everyday and both canvas and vinyl interact creating a delicate surface tension when sewn or painted. The works, including Lightman, are constituted from a dialogue and tension between canvas and vinyl. This manipulation of different materials allows for double or sequential imaging, under-painting and over-painting and shifts in what the viewers see as they pass the work. The stretching of vinyl over separate frames is used to suggest the sequential narrative of the comic or graphic novel, combined with elements of patchwork quilt made from scraps of material gathered and reused over time. The vinyl also recalls Animation acetate cells and the celluloid film of Hollywood movies, key overall concerns in Haworth’s oeuvre. Kent Christensen Los Angeles born Kent Christensen currently divides his time between New York City and Sundance, Utah. He grew up in the orange groves of California, where he acquired a fondness for orange crate labels, popular culture and local fast food. Raised in Mormon culture, with its strict prohibitions against vices such as smoking and drinking, he gained an appreciation for the substitute vice of sugar — an indulgence so zealous that he refers to sugar as 'Mormon Heroin.' His work functions as both celebration and satire of this 'Mormon folly' for sweets. He is quick to point out that it also operates in the larger context of America's corresponding insatiable appetite for ‘just about everything; with its greed, materialism, rising obesity levels and contradictory obsessions with fast food, over-indulgence, fitness and body image.’ In Christensen’ Christensen’ Kelly Jenkins Kelly Jenkins was awarded an MA in Constructed Textiles from the Royal College of Art in 2004. Since then she has contributed to numerous international group exhibitions including Sugar and Spice (2007) at the Vegas Gallery, London, Strikk 7 (2008) at West Norway Museum of Decorative Art, Norway and Knitting Worlds (2009) at the Audax Textiel Museum, Tilberg in the Netherlands, amongst others. For Jenkins, it is the stereotypes that heavily shroud knitting and those who practice it that are the main sources of inspiration in her work. The darker side of her knits touch on feminist issues, sexuality and the fashionability of the craft but these are expressed through satire and humour to deliver her powerful political messages. Jenkins’ work operates in a dialogue with our social norms and expectations. Foregrounding the stigmas that have attached themselves to knitting such as gender, age and use, we are asked to question the social perception of this 'taboo' craft for the general working-age population. Jenkins’ knits play on the standard trope of using sex to sell to an audience, not just of women but also of men. She transforms knitting from a domestic hobby into a naughty but thrilling ‘must have’ and above all laughs with and not at knitting, appreciating its status and its potential for subversion. The Dada Factory The Dada Factory was founded in January 2007 by Alexander H. Johnstone and David E. Davis. The factory is an independent production studio located in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. The factory is a fully equipped HD production and post-production facility specializing in Documentary production, Narrative film production and TV advertising. With advances in modern technology, it is no longer necessary to have large, unwieldy and obtrusive crews so over the last year the Dada Factory have been mastering the two- man shoot - a style of filmmaking where the required quality is successfully achieved whilst retaining the simplicity and honesty needed for good documentary production. Using Sennheiser and Audio Technica sound equipment high fidelity sound is achieved and with the Panasonic HVX-200 stunning HD footage is captured with minimum setup time. With such small equipment needs The Dada Factory can travel easily anywhere in the world with minimal costs. A number of short films by The Dada Factory are available online at vimeo (Everyday Apocalypse and The Myth of Iris ) and You Tube (Smog Lake City) and their film The Deep was selected for the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. More information about all of The Dada Factory’s projects can be found at: www.thedadafactory.com. WEST MEETS WEST Saturday 19 June 2010 to Sunday 25 July 2010 at The Bristol Gallery, Building 8, Unit 2, Millennium Promenade, Harbourside Bristol BS1 5TY. Telephone: 0117 930 0005 # # # The Bristol Gallery is a contemporary art gallery representing international, national and regional artists working in a wide range of media, making their work available to new public audiences in Bristol and the South West End
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