"INTELLIGENCE: NEW BRITISH ART 2000" THE BRITISH ART SHOW 5.TATE BRITAIN Tate Britain is a part of the Tate gallery network in Britain, along with Tate Modern, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives. It is housed in the Tate's original premises on Millbank on the site of Millbank Prison. The front part of the building was designed by Sidney R. J. , LONDON/VARIOUS VENUES "PEAS ARE THE NEW BEANS," declares a 1999 painting by Bob and Roberta Smith (aka Patrick Brill Patrick Brill, better known by his pseudonym Bob and Roberta Smith (born 1963) is a British contemporary artist. Life and work After studying at University of Reading Brill was awarded a scholarship at The British School at Rome, while still an undergraduate. . ) in "Intelligence," the first of Tate Tate , (John Orley) Allen 1899-1979. American writer and editor. A leading exponent of New Criticism, he edited the Sewanee Review (1944-1946) and is known especially for his poetry, including "Ode to the Confederate Dead" (1926). Britain's triennial tri·en·ni·al adj. 1. Occurring every third year. 2. Lasting three years. n. 1. A third anniversary. 2. A ceremony or celebration occurring every three years. New British Art exhibitions. Trendspotters please also note: BritCrit may be the new BritPop. Curatorial glosses on "Intelligence" and the fifth quinquennial quin·quen·ni·al adj. 1. Happening once every five years. 2. Lasting for five years. n. 1. A fifth anniversary. 2. A period of five years. British Art Show The British Art Show (BAS) is a major survey exhibition organised every five years to showcase contemporary British Art. The current exhibition in the series, referred to as BAS6, is touring a number of major cities within England in 2005 and 2006. (hereafter [BAS BAS abbr. 1. Bachelor of Agricultural Science 2. Bachelor of Applied Science .sub.5]) agree that commercialism, ephemerality, and spectacle are Out, and engagement with audiences and social issues is In. With twenty-two artists, "Intelligence" is the largest show of contemporary art in the history of the Tate; [BAS.sub.5] comprises fifty-five artists and will tour nationally into 2001. The spin attaching to these major surveys merits a little scrutiny--nor least because they won't coincide again until 2015. No one can miss the dig at "Sensation" flagged in the title of "Intelligence," but its organizers, Tate Britain senior curator Virginia Button and Edinburgh writer-curator Charles Esche, are vague about their show's precise character. "Intelligence is not only an intellectual activity," they suggest; "its emotional, spiritual, and aesthetic qualities can be discovered" in artists' work and viewers' responses. The big pitch is that "this notion of intelligence" requires visitors "to come to terms with the work... themselves"--but even Britpackery's worst excesses demanded that; gallery visitors are perfectly able to question, assess, and make connections without curators inviting them (as here) to play spy. Elsewhere, the curators propose that "corporate government and global capital will require us to think in different ways.... If not in art then where is the questioning going to begin?" Here, spin gives way to sheer amnesia, and some two decades of artistic and nonartistic questioning vanish into thin air. The exhibitors in [BAS.sub.5] were selected by artist Jacqui Poncelet, freelance curator Pippa Coles, and Matthew Higgs Matthew Higgs is a British artist, curator, writer and publisher, currently based in New York. His major contribution to UK contemporary art was the creation of Imprint 93 , cocurator at the London Institute of Contemporary Arts The Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) is a modern art centre on The Mall in London, England. It is located within Nash House, which is part of Carlton House Terrace, near the Duke of York Steps and Admiralty Arch and contains galleries, a theatre, two cinemas and a bar. . Interpreting UK art trends in [BAS.sub.5]'s catalogue, Higgs directly addresses the so-called Saatchi Effect and its aftermath, picturing a '905 scene awash with" orthodoxy and complacency" and shallow, market-led spectacle, followed by a "curious, but positive, moment" as artists reinvest in "issues": "gender, race, class, sexuality, politics, idealism, boredom, and pleasure." This subtly conflates BritArt, the media construction, with '90s UK art, an under-visited region where a great many artists and others worked to sustain, expand, and refine a wide range of critical practices and debates. Each of these accounts flatters (and perpetuates) the consumerist mentality that demands a constant flow of "new generations." Arguably, UK art's global reputation would gain more from a spot of revisionist history Revisionist history carries both positive and negative connotations. Each has its own entry.
But what of those curatorial claims: a new criticality, a new engagement with audiences? Though "Intelligence" visits a number of promising themes--naming and anonymity, fascination with the Other, the Uncanny, spectatorship, and collective identity--its offerings don't convince. Wearing's slow-motion film of an alcoholic woman, Lindsey, is accompanied by a sound track of her twin recollecting Lindsey's subsequent death and burial (Prelude, 2000). Jeremy Deller and Alan Kane's An Introduction to Folk Archive, 2000, documents, without qualification, "popular" cultural production as utterly different as Afro-European hairstyling, maypole dancing, and Northern Irish Loyalist propaganda. Bob and Roberta Smith's "collaboration" Stop It Write Now!, 2000, solicits written comments from visitors: Slogans include "TONY BLARE HELP POOR PEOPLE" and "CAPITALISM GETS MY VOTE." This project seems to reflect on individual powerlessness and the vacuity va·cu·i·ty n. pl. vac·u·i·ties 1. Total absence of matter; emptiness. 2. An empty space; a vacuum. 3. Total lack of ideas; emptiness of mind. 4. of the "vox pop" with an almost Baudrillardinn cynicism. Works like thes e, in which the artists organize or speak for their subjects, far outnumber those that explore the complexities of a politically aware self-representation. [BAS.sub.5] represents the latter tendency a little better: See Nothank, 1999, Graham Fagen's mock documentary about a housing estate in Glasgow (Fagen's hometown) or Lea Andrews's audiotape au·di·o·tape n. 1. A relatively narrow magnetic tape used to record sound for subsequent playback. 2. A tape recording of sound. tr.v. and slide presentation Made in Heaven, 1990/97, in which a "connoisseur" enthuses over massproduced souvenirs collected by Andrews's parents. But these pieces are labored in comparison with Donald Rodney's whisper of a work In the House of My Father, 1997: A photograph of the dying artist's hand cradling a minute house made with steel pins and his own skin, Rodney's work is another useful, if lonely, reminder of a longstanding UK-based art of resistance, about which there's nothing "new." Neither "Intelligence" nor [BAS.sub.5] is an out-and-out failure; each features a number of strong artists and effective works. But both shows are uninspiring uninspiring Adjective not likely to make people interested or excited Adj. 1. uninspiring - depressing to the spirit; "a villa of uninspiring design" inspiring - stimulating or exalting to the spirit , at a time when, many would argue, visual art in Britain has never been more diverse and exciting. To reflect this, such surveys would need to risk far more and to find innovative ways to present the full spectrum of forms that enrich UK cultural practice, including live art, site-specific installations, truly collaborative projects, and new-media work. Rumor has it that the British Art Show will undergo a major overhaul before resurfacing in 2005. The Tate would likewise do well to look very hard at what it wants its New British Art project to achieve. Rachel Withers withers the region over the backline where the neck joins the thorax and where the dorsal margins of the scapulae lie just below the skin. fistulous withers see fistulous withers. is a frequent contributor to Artforum. "Intelligence" completed its run at Tate Britain on Sept 24; The British Art Show 5 will be on view at various venues in Cardiff until Nov. 5 and in Birmingham from Nov. 25, 2000, to Jan. 28, 2001. |
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