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Originally presented as the keynote lecture at STRP Festival March 2015.

Watch This Space
Text Francesca Gavin

This is an examination about our relationship to screens. How that association is changing our daily experience, our ways of thinking, our ways of looking. Lets start small – with the phone. It is the most intimate example of our relationship to technology. The screen-object we carry with us everyday.

If you search “looking at phone” what comes up is a YouTube clip of people staring at their phones. It is described as “an epidemic of texting while walking” and positioned as something seriously dangerous. Illustrated by funny amateur phone footage, this humorous news excerpt is a perfect example of our relationship with our phones. How we fall into our focus on the screen – forgetting the physical space around us. Forgetting our own physicality. I love the phrase “inattention blindness”. But in fact, it is the opposite. The people featured are consumed with attention – they are just looking down at the object in their hands not at their ‘real’ surroundings.

Where is the screen?

Where is the screen in contemporary life? We wake up and check our screens for messages. If we travel to work on public transport, more than half of us are on our phones. We stare at screens for work, communication, play and diversion throughout the day. Travel home, and watch a screen again for entertainment. Sometimes with a second screen on our lap. Then we go to sleep with our screens next to our beds. We experience screens in advertising – moving alongside us on the escalator, blown up in public space. At music gigs or exhibitions or cultural experiences, everyone is watching things through their screens, capturing the moment in some form. Amateur mobile screen footage is now normal on the news. As James Bridle in his essay ‘The New Aesthetic and Its Politics” writes, “protest, repression, revolt and schism are framed not through the lens of critique, but the lens of iPhones and iPads held aloft.”

In recent years, there has been a wave of literature deconstructing our relationship to technology – often criticising it even from within. Jaron Lanier, an American computer scientist and pioneer of virtual reality, in his book ‘You Are Not A Gadget’ from 2010 criticised the limitations of the structure of programming and how it restricts human expression and communication. Devices, he notes, are “inert tools and are only useful because people have the magical ability to communicate meaning through them… The most important thing to ask about any technology is how it changes people.”

For me the most influential text to sum up our experience with technology and what it means to exist now is Jonathan Crary’s ‘24/7’ that appeared last year. Subtitled ‘Late Capitalism and the Ends of Sleep’, the book is deeply critical of the political and commercial interests that oversee our relationship to technology. If you’re checking your emails or feeds in the middle of the night on the tablet next to your pillow, this book will make you feel very uncomfortable. In particular much of the focus of the book is on the speed of consumption – the current accelerated formats of image and information absorption. Nothing is ever really off – just resting, waiting to be activated at a single gesture, touch or glance. Here the screen becomes a device that is limitingnot increasing our activity. To quote Crary, “Devices are introduced (and no doubt labelled as revolutionary), they will simply be facilitating the perpetuation of the same banal exercise of non-stop consumption, social isolation, and political powerlessness.”

Crary points out how the myths of open source egalitarianism and the empowerment of technology have been cultivated. “The idea of technological change as quasi-autonomous, driven by some process of auto-poesis or self-organisation, allows many aspects of contemporary social reality to be accepted as necessary, unalterable circumstances, akin to facts of nature. In the false placement of today’s most visible products and devices within an explanatory lineage that include the wheel, the pointed arch, movable type and so forth, there is a concealment of the most important techniques invented in the last 150 years: the various systems for the management and control of human beings.” To paraphrase, we voluntarily kettle ourselves in cyberspace.

The screen as interface


My aim here is not to join the choir of criticism. Though my feelings are ambivalent – a midpoint between horror and fascination, admiration and addiction. Rather than the wider discussion around technology, I want to focus on the interface – the screen itself. Many theorists have focused on the content of the screen – the ideas around the network and the effect of technology on our psychology, actions and thinking. Yet there is very little discussion about the black void-like rectangles we stare into so much. To begin with, what is a screen?

When I first started thinking about this topic it was such an easy thing. It was something that grew directly out of the construction and composition of painting – referencing the dimensions and constructions of the canvas. The modern screen was an extension of the cinema screen and the television, which became the monitor, the laptop screen, the phone screen and the flatscreen. Yet, as the academic and writer Peter Lunenfeld pointed out to me, my conception was perhaps limited. “The newest screens really are sort of only pseudo screens.” The screen today is no longer necessarily a black rectangle or square. It is also an a oculus rift headset or a projected surface with moving imagery like the blank tunnels on the London tube system which are transformed into screens between trains. The screen has moved beyond the confines of the screen.

Scale is something Peter also discussed with me - the emergence of the ‘phablet’. A phone with a bigger screen space to watch things on. In the 21stcentury we are seeing a move away from mid ‘human’ size towards the tiny or the supersized. The same applies to narrative itself. “The classic Aristotelian dramatic unity of the 90 to the 120 minute theatrical presentation, which moves from Greek theatre into medieval passion plays, into narrative length films - that just disappears in favour of the Vine at six seconds and Game of Thrones at 28 hours.” There is a strong connection between how and what we watch and the changes in our devices.

The New Intimacy
  
I think one of the most interesting changes in our relationship to the screen is a new sense of intimacy. Screens live in our pockets, our bags. We often touch them or check them for reassurance. Sometimes numerous times per hour. The content of the screen is life. As Baudrillard the postmodern French sociologist and philosopher wrote in his essay ‘Screened Out’ in 1996: “Distance is abolished…. between stage and auditorium, between subject and object, between the real and its double.” He goes on, “There is no separation any longer, no empty space, no absence: you enter the screen and the visual image unhindered… The video image – and the computer screen – induce a kind of immersion, a sort of umbilical relation, of ‘tactile’ interaction as McLuhan in his day said of television…” Here our addiction and relationship to the screen is fuelled partly by a desire for self-immolation. As Baudrillard states, “from the desire to disappear, and the possibility of dissolving oneself into a phantom of conviviality.”

Screens have a bad reputation. They are blamed for eye ache, sleep damage, rewired brains, and social isolation. A recent Norwegian study observed teens slept less when they used computer screens more. The artificial light activated wakefulness and suppressed melatonin. Charles Arthur, in his 2008 article in The Guardian ‘It's the screens, not the internet, that are making us stupid’ wrote, “Low resolution monitors (including all computer screens until now) have poor readability: people read about 25% slower from computer screens that from printed paper.” A study from Manchester University found reading on paper 10-30% faster than on screens. (Interestingly the screen is always being positioned in contrast to the book page – again a throw back to the work of Marshall McLuhan.)

In McLuhan’s ‘The Medium is the Massage’ the focus was the television, yet his ideas could easily be applied to the modern screen. He writes, “In television there occurs an extension of the sense of active, exploratory touch which involves all the senses simultaneously, rather than that of sight phenomena, the visual is only one component in a complex interplay… Television demands participation... It will not work as background. It engages you. Perhaps this is why so many people feel their identity has been threatened.” Its amusing to think anyone would feel this way about TV after so much more invasive technology has been developed.


The screen has increasingly become a space for human psychological expression or dissolution or distrust.Andre Nusselder’s inInterface Fantasy: A Lacanian Cyborg Onotology’ argues that the computer functions in cyberspace as a psychological space – as the screen of fantasy. At one point she mentions the work of MIT professor Jozeph Weizenbaum, who wrote the first computer psychotherapy program ELIZA in 1966 – which Lacan was fascinated by. She explains, “Lacan acknowledged that ELIZA appears to produce some sort of transference relation. People find something (of themselves) in the machine; they unconsciously transfer (fantasmically) the object of their desire onto it. Computers may appear as fellow “humans”: you can talk to them, they can ask you questions, you can play and cooperate with them.” We see our screens as sentient.

Psychologist Sherry Turkle has been strongly critical of the changing emotional fallout from technological developments. In ‘Life on Screen’ (1995) she writes, “We have learned to take things at interface value. We are moving towards a culture of simulation in which people are increasingly uncomfortable with substituting representations of reality for the real”. More recently in her 2012 Ted Talk ‘Connected, but alone?’ she laments the opportunity for self-editing and distance that technology allows us.Texting, emailing, posting lets us present the self as we want it to be. We get to retouch. Human relationships are messy. We clean them up with technology. We sacrifice conversation for connection.” She notes that the phone presents the fantasy that we are never alone, will always be heard. “Being alone feels like a problem that needs to be solved. I share therefore I am.”

Future Fantasies

The future looks even crazier. The TV series ‘Wild Palms’ is a great metaphor for the possibilities of what the screen can be. This mini series was released in 1990 – following the avant-garde approach of Twin Peaks. It was based on a comic strip by Bruce Wagner. It was partly created and produced by Oliver Stone with episodes directed by Kathryn Bigelow among others. The series focused on a future Hollywood in a fictionalised 2007 where an underground movement, the Friends, were in resistance to the right wing Fathers who owned the media and had political and religious control. The way the populace were manipulated and controlled was through a virtual reality holographic technique ‘Mimecom’. The protagonist’s son is set to star in a Channel 3 series “Church Windows” using this new media, which would project a holographic character into your domestic space. Here the screen literally broke out of the fourth wall and touched you. This was an exploration of the possibilities of virtual reality (sometimes exaggerated by an addictive drug mimezine).


Steven Spielberg’s ‘Minority Report’ provides another metaphor of the transformed screen – in the context of marketing, advertising and consumerism. You could literally feel capitalists get turned on the minute that film was released. Both of these examples highlight something central to what a lot of artists and writers are highlighting – the ownership and possible exploitation of technology. (Something Lunenfeld explores very well in his book ‘The Secret War Between Uploading and Downloading’).

There are rumours of Facebook’s messenger app recording people’s conversations and ruffled feathers over Samsung's amended Terms and Conditions warning users of their Smart TVs that [records?] conversations within earshot of their products. The screen is watching us as much as we are watching the screen. Television today is often a two-screen interaction – with phones and tablet interaction encouraged to revive traditional passive media. Sony have just patented methods, systems, and computer programs for converting television commercials into interactive network video games. In one method, a broadcast or streamed commercial is accompanied by an interactive segment. A media player would present users with an enhanced and interactive mini-game commercial that could be played with other ‘viewers’. It could be inserted within the television program, overlaid on frames or last the duration of a commercial spot. Interactive adverts already exist on services like Hulu.

Ageing Technology


Getting back to the present, it is also important to define what the modern screen’s appearance is. It has its own texture, colour and illumination. Many artists that are making work today reflect this – like Rafaël Rozendaal, who will be talking later today, the digital animations of Daniel Swan, the projections and print work by Travess Smalley. The way images disintegrate on the modern screen is also very important. Laura Marks writes in ‘Touch: Sensuous theory and multisensory media’: “The noise of a failed Internet connection Soundbite? is a declaration of electronic independence. It grabs us back from the virtual space and reminds us of the physicality of our machines.” She emphasises that digital media are in fact analogue. They are unpredictable, make errors, breakdown, connections cut out – these are all things that remind us of technology’s physicality rather than its transcendence. Failure is inbuilt into technology design. As Marks puts it “technologies age and die just as people do.” It is just manufacturers and techno evangelists with vested interest that make us want to dream it is superhuman.

Esther Leslie in her Slade Contemporary Lecture of 2010 questioned “Is there a liquid crystalaesthetic?” For Leslie, HD screens are the new contemporary media in themselves. The ability of LCD and plasma screens to be flicker free, still at any moment and negate the time progression of narrative is influencing creative content. Here art’s progress is bound up with the imitation of nature – depth, perspective etc. The definition of mimesis. Today’s photorealistic 3D animation attempts to do the same thing – to make fiction invisible. Yet at the same time digitization is a simulation. A computer transforms an image into pixels, code, a language – the result is a version of something.

We can conclude that the screen is complex. It is becoming the focus for all kinds of issues of modern life. Physical, psychological, cultural, political. We have never been more obsessed with looking at the moving or still image in screen space. Nathan Jeurgenson notes in ‘The IRL Fetish’ “the plain fact that our lived reality is the result of the constant interpenetration of the online and offline.”

Between the Passive and the Active 

So how are artists addressing this relationship? I think this can be positioned between the idea of the passive and active screen. The passive screen is one observed, a screen as object. In its most simple form, this is a screen we watch. CamilleHenrot ‘Grosse Fatigue’ (2013) is a beautiful example of a film, which documents our computer screen relationship. The piece examines the way we look and accumulate information. There is a strong sense of rhythm and editing in the work, which was developed during a residency fellowship at the Smithsonian.

She discussed the project with me in 2013. “I was doing a lot of Internet research on the Smithsonian database. I often had a lot of windows open on my desktop. When you look at a cluster of windows on a desktop and try to find reason, it results in a kind of primitive thinking – a sort of ultra rationality. You see the images together and then your mind makes these connections, not because there is a connection but because your brain needs to resolve the images.”

Here the screen becomes the subject of work itself. Shown as a projection, nonetheless our engagement is one of observer watching the film from the point of a relatively passive audience. Another contemporary example of this passive, observant screen relationship is Dis’ #Artselfie project, which was recently released as a book.


Part art project, part viral meme, the artselfie revealed the audience’s desire to capture themselves alongside the artwork, even inside the artwork. The subjects become temporary collectors who are able to have their experience intertwined with a digital ownership of the work in some form – even if only within the screenscape. The results feel like a prosaic take on performance documentation. In this way the art object becomes something communal, sharable and conceptual rather than physical.

Samara Scottis an artist better known for her work in 2D space – sculptures, paintings and installation pieces. However, she created a fascinating web project for Legion TV that I think is of note as an example of an artist drawing on ideas of the passive screen interaction. Scott is interested in how the screen perverts gaze – “shifts and melts and inverts natural legibility”. Her work was an attempt to make a narrative film but this emerged as a diary of snapchats and scenes she had casually collected placed together on the screen, which popped up over whatever was on the viewer’s desktop. Playing with the logic of collage, this moving image was largely footage of textures, soft things, hard things, woven objects. “Textual encounters” as she puts it. The result was a very visceral experience to watch – a digital creation of sensation. She is currently making a body of work photographing and filming sanitising hand gel on an iPad.

The Screen as Object

The next stage of the passive screen is one where the screen is embedded in the work – often within the sculptural or painting field. Ken Okiishi does this by making the screen into a canvas for paintings. Nate Boyce does this by making sculptural plinth part of a work holding a screen. The work of British based artist Adham Faramawy is a great example, placing screens within complex sculptural objects. Based in the UK, originally from Egypt and is a graduate of the RA schools. He was originally influenced by the arrival of flat screen TVs and how they were replacing cathode ray monitors and the way this changed how we receive and perceive an image.

His use of the embedded screen emerged after he began working with animators to produce sculptural computer programs and later particle animation. “I started to get familiar with the logics and the languages of the interfaces to the programs producing these moving images. They're inherited from analogue, physical traditions like film editing, clay modelling and masonry, but unlike the given conditions of these traditions, with computer modelling you can't make assumptions, you have to assign physical conditions and physics to an object.” contained within highly textured cases and plinth structures. Often the screen is upturned in his work. He explains, “Shifting the angles at which a viewer receives an image was, for me, intended to point at the physicality of the image, thinking about the substrata carrying that image as a sculptural body, a form within a composition.”

Another passive example of screen use is deconstructed and taken apart but still functions in some way as a screen. One example would be the work of Yuri Pattison, an artist who is currently in residence at the Chisenhale Gallery and was part of the collective Lucky PDF. He has used digital signage monitors, which present self shot iPhone footage – commenting on our consumption of screen based information. His current interest is in e-ink panels. Pattison often takes apart screens and displays their inner workings, revealing the mechanisms of display. As a result, we can see a small number of manufacturers are making these parts – Samsung panels are being used by numerous brands for example. He removes the façade of slick design and marketing. “The stripping of the screens cosmetic body and branding also highlights the mechanisms that support the display of the image – these mechanisms are normally invisible, deliberately hidden by the manufacturer to present a seamless experience.” Pattison notes. “We view screens as a window on to something, so in the way we don't think of the glass in the window we don't think of the processes behind the representation on the screen. There are numerous layers we don't perceive, or barely perceive, in the act of viewing something on a screen.”


Berlin-based artist Simon Denny who is representing New Zealand in the next Venice Biennale is very interested in a deconstructed screen. His work has examined TV hacking, the thinning of monitor, how we receive information, the design, packaging and structure of the companies behind the consumption of technology, and conferences that promote and position devices in society. Here the screen is printed on panels. Analogue materials replicate the structure and format of the screen.The screen is ripped apart, reimagined and revealed.

Another way the passive screen is explored in artworks is when it is translated into something outside of the screen – the screen space in real space so to speak. Dutch artist Constant Dullaart does this well. “The screen is our contemporary landscape. We spend more time daydreaming and staring at screens then we look out of windows. The screen is a personal experience more and more, which brand, design or lifestyle you subscribe to. This fetishisation of the private experience seems to be a response to knowing most networked screen based communication is not private at all,” he points out. “How private can a screen get, can it get more private then the Oculus Rift, Microsoft Hololens, or Google Glass? If we have these private views, are we leaving our shared experiences to be mediated by commercial companies?”

The active screen

The next level artists are engaged with the screen as what I’m going to call the active screen. This is where artists are exploring ideas around interaction and space. I curated a show called ‘Responsive Eyes’ a couple of years ago that I want to bring up at this point. It was inspired by documentation of the opening of ‘The Responsive Eye’ an exhibition held at MOMA in New York in 1965. It brought together artworks by so-called ‘Op’ and minimalist artists such as Bridget Riley, Josef Albers and Viktor Vasarely. The curator William Seitz described the show an “exhibition that would indicate an activity, not a kind of art”. He argued in the exhibition’s catalogue this was “non-objective perceptual art”, art that “exists primarily for its impact on reception rather than for conceptual examination… Ideological focus has moved from the outside world, passed through the work as object, and entered the incompletely explored region area between the cornea and the brain.”

The reason I wanted to highlight this moment in art is because I think our interaction with the screen has decades of legacy of technological advancements that have played with human perception and physicality. I want to connect these ‘retinal’ works with gifs, digital paintings and 3D animation. How we relate and view the constant influx of movement, imagery, sound and informational content in modern screen life.


The exploration of screen interaction can be lo fi. Aram Bartholl’s show which closed earlier this month at Baby Castles in New York questioned the screen perspective. “Most of our reality today is taking place in that phone rectangle. The screen constantly moved closer to our eyes over the past decades (from cinema to phones). The screen will be attached to our eyes soon (glasses or lenses).” Playing on the exchange and selling of imagery though the screen, Bartholl’s exhibition was very much made for interaction and dispersion through social media. He created giant photo picture cut outs so people could pose as if within the phone screenspace for Instagram, Twitter or Facebook. The main aim was to get visitors to interact with each other.

Selfie sticks, head mounted cameras like GoPro or Google Glass played with the idea of the POV image (what is this?). He created head mounted phones during a workshop at the Atlantic Center of the Arts, experimenting with filming POV techniques. “In the end it appeared to me that the picture of someone wearing his/her phone on the forehead obviously filming is even more interesting than the actual clip shot with that head mounted phone.” He explains, “The whole thing is a bit cyborg but in a silly, lite [light?] way.”

The active or living screen can be seen in the work of Antoine Catala. In his video projection works and sculptural installations the screen appears to literally come to life. He uses membranes that appear to be breathing, moving in a techno organic way. He has streamed television into fluid blobs shapes – ‘alive’ in some form. He uses display technology and reflection to create screen-like space. Many of these pieces are a step beyond a mere passive screen as it is one alive, in flux – closer to the conceptual approach of someone like Bruce Nauman and his real time video experiments. Our engagement may still be as observers but the screen itself comes to life in some way.

The Human Touch

The next level of active screen is one that is activated by human touch or a click – such as in the online installation pieces by Brenna Murphy or the websites by Rafaël Rozendaal. Murphy makes immersive installation pieces in real space, often with sound elements and performance, but her interactive pieces are largely based online. The intimacy of the screen relationship is key. “I make art that is meant to be viewed on the Internet by people privately browsing from their own device. I think this is an intimate and powerful way of transmitting and experiencing media.” Here viewers click on audio files so they overlap with rhythmic gifs, video montage and scrolling images she makes from her own video footage. The results are very psychedelic. Clicking on images takes us through a maze of digital collage imagery. The aim of her web ‘Labyrinths’ is to make us conscious of the role of the screen.

Her work is so successful because it relates to how we are used to using our screens for input and interaction. The simple click and arrow (or in some examples touch). Other artists also create active screen works that replicate the interactive pathways and experience of exploring the Internet, such as the online questionnaires and page-to-page pathways of Cecile B Evans’ online project for Serpentine Gallery AGNES. A spambot that generates experiences beyond the virtual, and created a sense of connection and emotion query. Here the screen touches on those sensations of Lacanian transference

The active screen relationship is very clear in artworks that draw on gaming – increasingly a source of inspiration for a generation of artists including Lawrence Lek, Tabor Robak and the Dutch artist Rosa Menkman of whom we will also see work in the Vertical Cinema program tonight. Games give the illusion of interactive but in fact the audience is still largely controlled by the artist, the developer, the structure of the screen – something that metaphorical reflects our relationship to technology and screens as a whole. Devices that, for the majority of users, force us into a passive position.

There are also structural and aesthetic aspects of screen game interactivity that emerge. Jon Rafman and Rosa Aiello’s online film work “Beyond Carthage” was conceived of spaces from “Uncharted 3: Drake’s Deception” and “Second Life” to look at ideas around history and self through largely architectural spaces. As Aiello notes, “The decay and historical movement of a digital object occurs laterally, through pixellation and a loss of image quality, rather than by rusting or crumbling or scars.”

Ben Washingtonis an incredible British artist using the interactive screen in his exhibitions. He creates sculptural installations in galleries and then recreates these spaces, though often with strange failure and pathways, digital as an interactive game he places within the exhibition space. The viewer (standing behind the controls of an arcade machine) will, for example, find themselves in a virtual version of the exact same physical gallery space in which they are standing.

The result is an experience that contrasts seeing the real and the virtual version of something at the same time. They both become fused and influenced by each other. Washington explained to me, “the interest between screen space and real space arises at the point at which they converge and diverge. The focus in my work has been on these uncanny moments.”

The interactive nature of the screen is of particular note to Washington from a more social perspective. He points out, “How much we are going to let the screen encroach into real space and into our social norms? Already it is evident that socially it is now almost totally acceptable to wander around with your face in a smart phone. And you would expect newer technologies such as Google glass, and interactions such as augmented reality, but interestingly it feels that both these developments have stalled. I’m as interested as much by that which we decide to discard along the way as that which we finally decide to assimilate with.”


Washington was particularly excited by development kits being produced for Oculus Rift and the other contenders in the Virtual Reality market – Sony's ‘Morpheus’, ‘Steam VR’ and the ‘Sulon Cortex’. William Gibson’s version of cyberspace made flesh. Director David Mullett, who is currently working on a VR project and has been writing on the subject, describes the attraction of the VR screen. “VR has a frame in the sense that it is a screen tied to your face – but with a software coding sleight of hand and optics advancements alongside the accelerometers and gyroscopes built into smart phones, it appears as if there is no frame whatsoever. And our relationship to screens is so addictive and obsessive that we need to ramp up our stimulation to tug the emotions or get that dopamine hit we are so hungry for.”

Artists are beginning to experiment with VR itself in a more conceptual way rather than gaming context. The Sundance film festival had a whole VR exhibition project. Oscar Raby’s ‘Assent’ documented the artist’ cathartic exploration of his father’s traumatic memory of a mass execution in Chile in the seventies. Part interactive, part cinematic a physical and poetic journey into trauma. A hybrid between first person gaming and the protagonist in a film narrative. Perspective’ by Morris May and Rose Troche reveals an extremity of first-person filmmaking where the audience is put in the shoes of a teenage girl being date raped at a house party, then in the shoes of the guy doing to raping.

Max Rheiner’s ‘Birdly’ is a flying-simulation installation where your entire body is used to fly like in a dream. As Mullet notes, “With VR immersion, your unconscious brain actually thinks that it is doing these things, indicating that the technology will rewire our brains in critical ways with extent of use and intensity of experience.” He imagines flipping through immersive channels like TV surfing.

As the boundaries of the screen transform the future is looking pretty crazy – though I admit the excitement and fantasy of tech literature over the past twenty or so years always sees wild changes on the near horizon. Writer, curator and artist Sam Hart sees the post screen future for art as something more to do with the structure of the internet itself. In fact a new decentralised Internet. Artwork coming out of the blockchain space.

As Hart explains, “the blockchain is nothing more than a publicly visible, distributed database whose entries are immutable once instantiated. The “blocks,” or records, comprising the database are uniquely addressed and have a cryptographic key which entails ownership.” Hart suggests this space could become a novel medium for digital art by encoding line and colour values, sequences and relationships. The yet to be launched platform for decentralized applications Ethereum (www.ethereum.org), for example, embeds an entire programming language for design. As Hart explains, “I think it represents a significant progression in digital artistry: a uniquely relational medium that circulates through body and network by way of the screen.” The results are unknowable at this time but these new languages point to new screen based structures to create work within and upon. As Lanier points out, the structure of programming has a huge influence on the results we experience. Rethink our entire approach to that and you have a different future in formation.

So where does this leave us and our little black screens? Sam Hart sees the screen as “a hopeful object, representing possibility better than most anything.” Despite the anxiety around them, they are the site of a lot of creativity. It is impossible to be comprehensive in the many ways artists are using the screen in their work – what is so interesting is how varied approaches are. Interactive, passive, three dimensional, flattened, virtual, literal – the screen has a lot more conceptual depth than a void. In fact the void-like nature of the screen can be seen as what makes it so exciting. It is waiting to be filled with imagery, information 
and ideas.

(c) Francesca Gavin 2015













My Best of Venice 2015

Nazafarin Lotfi: Indexical Realness

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Nazafarin Lotfi: Indexical Realness
May 29-July 12015, ClubMonaco, 58 Main St, South Hampton, NY
Curated by Francesca Gavin

Nazafarin Lotfi is an artist with a nuanced approach to abstraction, texture and tone. Born in Iran, Lotfi is based in Chicago where she completed her MFA in Fine Arts. Her work has been exhibited in Milan, Chicago, Seoul, Budapest and New York.

Lofti began working on this series ofsmall-scale paintings in 2010 alongside larger works, increasingly attracted to their intimacy. Part of what makes them so interesting is their focus on texture. “References of time passing on the surfaces of things always intrigued me,” the artist explains. “It was a reward to find the layers of dust in the corners of my bedroom or kitchen, all the places that I didn’t reach. When I rented a studio the marks left from the previous artists or the rubbed and worn floors were always fascinating. They are so much about a lived experience that is not present at the moment and these residues focus your attention to their thing-ness. I wanted to create that in my paintings.”


Her reduced color palette to a spectrum of monochrome tones is part of what makes the results so interesting and surprisingly broad. “I needed to focus and pay attention to what was in front of me. Then all the possibilities of different grays opened up and it became about all the colors between black and white.” When making the work, Lotfi covers her canvases in black and paints over this white, layering and sanding each layer when dried for weeks. Some pieces included found elements from her studio – old drawings, cut papers. Here the image itself reflects the process of addition and removal. As she notes, “I wanted to spend time with the work and do an activity- the traces of my presence and touch is left on the surfaces.”

The presentation of the work was something conceived by the artist. “I like how the paintings coexist together. They are all part of a larger entity but can also function on their own.” Sculpture is the serious focus of Lotfi’s work outside of these paintings – influenced by vessels, ritualistic objects and the work of artists like Franz West and Jessica Jackson Hutchins. Recent piece include paper molds of everyday objects with a surface relating to her textured 2D pieces. Her practice as a whole reflects an intelligent take on the abstract. “Abstraction came to me as a world of possibility, in some ways liberating and opening. We usually tend to go for the narrative, that is how we understood the world at the first place but I think we should move forward and learn to live without it.” This is work about experience itself.

nazafarinlotfi.com; text and curation Francesca Gavin roughversion.blogspot.com

For enquiries contact fgavin@gmail.com



Images from top: All courtesy ofthe artist
Untitled (2012) Mixed media on canvas


SPECTRUM at CHART Art Fair

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SPECTRUM at CHART 

The performance programme is at the year’s edition of CHART works with demonstrating the vitality of colour and showing how it can be relevant, engaging and complex in a series of conceptual performance art works.

The diverse variety of performance artists is curated by the English curator, writer and editor Francesca Gavin. Gavin has primarily invited Nordic artists who work with different elements such as, architecture, sound, lighting and textile. The artists will create individual performances but are asked to work within the shared thematic of colour in creating their works.

Colour has a bad reputation. From the Grecian concepts of aesthetics though 20th century modernism to contemporary conceptual art, colour is often described as something about spectacle, emotion, expression, the irrational. The responses and experience colour creates in a viewer is often downplayed as simple sensationalism. This programme of performances aims to resist this redundant argument.

The performance programme of CHART draws on David Batchelor’s concept of ‘chromophobia’. He argues, “colour is made out to be the property of some ’foreign’ body – usually the feminine, the oriental, the primitive, the infantile, the vulgar, the queer or the pathological. Colour is relegated to the realm of the superficial, the supplementary, the inessential or the cosmetic… Colour is routinely excluded from the higher concerns of the Mind.”

The aim of these works is to reposition colour as something equally important as line, idea, and form in the creation of art. Show that colour is something important outside of the expected mediums of painting or graphics. That colour can be an intelligent way to engage with politics and meaning, and has an important role in contemporary cultural production and communication.
The artists in this programme will invited to draw on the idea of the spectrum or create a performance around a specific colour (so there could be an excitement amongst viewers to ‘collect’ the experience of different coloured performances).

PERFORMANCES
FRIDAY the 21st of August

Norwegian artist Wrånes creates dramatic aural audio works. Featured in the Sydney biennial and the last Performa, her space-specific performance works that often use hanging elements, props, costume and architecture. For CHART, she will perform a “vision for the future”.

SATURDAY the 22nd of August

Sigurðardóttir’s work focuses on interactive spaces and projects that investigate the idea of the spectrum, space and movement. For CHART, the Icelandic artist will create a Prism performance-installation working with colour as visual information gained from scans of viewers invisible radiant energy.

David Mullett & Duncan Ransom
Director David Mullett is unveiling his first abstract psychedelic virtual reality work as part of the performance programme of CHART. Trained at the Royal College of Art, Mullett is founder of VR agency Virtualize and has written about innovations in Virtual Reality for Dazed, Sleek and Blackbook.
Duncan Ransom is the founder of The Endless, a high-end Virtual Reality content creation studio. With over 10 years experience working for major VFX studios in the feature film industry, he is currently focused on the development of delicious augmented and virtual reality based environments, interactions and applications.

SUNDAY the 23rd of August

Swedish artist Nadine Bryne creates works that reflect an interest in ritual, nature and femininity. Alongside a practise that includes sculpture and film, her performance works have incorporated textiles, dance and fabric elements. For CHART, she will create audio-visual work inspired by the projection and contrast of colour.

Verhoeven’s chaotic performative installation works include objects, sound, sculpture, moving image and painting. She has also created collaborative real time performances at the ICA, London and moving image performance with Jimmy Merris at the Hordaland Arts Centre, Norway. She is creating a new performance inspired by the colour spectrum for CHART.

Peter Jensen was born in Denmark and educated at Central Saint Martins in London. He established his brand in 1999 and is known for a mastery of colour and print, with work that crosses between fashion, art and graphic image. He has collaborated in the past with Tim Walker, Dover Street Market and Topshop, and a retrospective of his work was exhibited at the Copenhagen Arts Museum in 2011. 

Spectrum Risograph Print Project
This commissioned project is a series of six limited risograph prints each inspired by a different colour in the spectrum, which will be given away free. The project aims to rethink ideas of value and consumption within the context of the fair with works that explore wider ideas about the colour spectrum. The contributing artists are Alex da Corte, Clare Woods, James Hoff, John Korner, Peter Linde Busk and Richard Coleman.

Francesca Gavin
Gavin is a curator, writer and editor based in London. She has curated international exhibitions including E-Vapor-8 (319 Scholes and Site Sheffield), The Dark Cube (Palais de Tokyo), and The New Psychedelia (Mu). She is also the Visual Arts Editor of Dazed & Confused, Art Editor of Twin and contributing editor at Artsy.net, Sleek, Le Pan and AnOther. She has written five books including ‘The Book of Hearts’, ‘100 New Artists’ and ‘Hell Bound: New Gothic Art’ and is the curator of the Soho House group collection.

Hot off the press

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Here is some of the latest work out at the moment

- the cover feature of the Financial Times How To Spend it Magazine

- a six page feature on artists working with poetry and text in Sleek magazine with profiles on David Raymond Conroy, Quinn Latimer, Megan Rooney, Harry Burke and Agnieszka Polska

- lots of top tens for Dazed Digital coming - Art Licks weekend, and pre and post Frieze and Fiac to come


Freezing

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My recommendations leading up to Frieze are up.

Also if you're there Friday, head to the reading room at 530pm to hear me talk with Celia Hempton and Julie Verhoeven for Kaleidoscope. I'll also be posting a VIDEOCLUB project to coincide next week. News to come!



CocksandCunts for Kaleidoscope Videoclub

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I was honoured to curated a video project for Kaleidoscopemagazine to coincide with their Art and Sex issue (I've interviewed Celia Hempton in the mag itself and I'm also doing a talk at Frieze Art Fair Reading Room Friday 530pm with her and Julie Verhoeven)

It's called Cocksandcunts Here are more details!

The selected works by The ARKA group, Adham Faramawy, Richard Kern, Reija Merlainen, Julie Verhoeven, John Walter and Zoe Williams explore the representation of sexuality and the naked body, veering from fetishism to playful humour, from choreographed performance to an almost abstract approach. Here, ideas of feminism, movement, power and the structure of art manifest into a deeply human form, emphasizing the human sex as something layered with meaning.

PS Longlyst also printed my Top Ten London galleries


A bit Berlin and little of London

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I've got some curation things underway. The prints I curated for absolutart.com have launched online - and a selection are on display in the Absolut Art Apartment at Moritzplatz in Berlin Until Dec 6. (and for those who like liquid there is free coffee in the day from 11 and free cocktails between 5 an 7pm daily). Top Floor, Prinzenstrasse 84, Berlin. Artists include Gregor Hilderbrant, Hanna Schwarz, Thomas Helbig, Juliette Bonneviot, Matthias Bitzer and Ei Cortinas.

Londoners save the date -December 17 for #officeparty
7pm-midnight
The last party with a DJ set by Dave MacLean (Django Django), dance class by Joelle D'Fontaine, and free photocopy artworks by Aaron Angell, Alexandre da Cunha, Jeremy Deller, Benedict Drew, Celia Hempton, Allison Katz, Oscar Murillo, David Noonan, Athena Papadopolos, Peles Empire, Prem Sahib, Daniel Silver, Marianne Spurr, Julie Verhoeven, Jesse Wine, Bedwyr Williams and more...
#officeparty GIF by Ben Sansbury, 2015. Courtesy the artist

Best in Show: 2015

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Stuck this up on Dazed Digital but wanted to archive here too. My best of 2015! 
Apart from my own shows of course...

December is the ideal time to round up an abundance of exhibitions in a tidy top ten – to compare and contrast what we saw, missed, liked and hated. There is no way anyone can be comprehensive. We still mourn missing shows in Paris, NYC, Istanbul, LA and all the rest that aren’t included below. Nonetheless, these are some of the best exhibitions you could see in 2015. Work that made us cry, tingle, laugh, spin out and look at the world in a different way.
WOLFGANG TILLMANS AT DAVID ZWIRNER, NEW YORK
Tillmans first major solo exhibition with David Zwirner in New York was jaw-droppingly good. The huge exhibition felt as thorough and expansive as a museum solo show and highlighted how Wolfgang is often at his best when he focuses on the everyday. Some of the show-stoppers were a simple weed in a pavement, a pile of dirty washing and oddly formed tomatoes.
LYNETTE YIADOM-BOAKYE AT THE SERPENTINE GALLERY, LONDON
This British painter’s major solo show at The Serpentine proved she is arguably one of the best painters of her generation. Black figures were presented in heroic, hypnotic portraits. This work in particular reinvented the representation of the figure as well as an approach to blackness in one of its most nuanced forms.
HAROON MIRZA AT MUSEE TINGUELY
Mirza’s show at the Musee Tinguely in Basel was the best exhibition that you probably haven’t seen. The artist layered his work – in the form of his studio Hrm199 – over the museum’s own collection of kinetic art. The British artist presented incredible audio, light and sculptural installation works, including collaborative pieces with artists including Jeremy Deller and Channa Horwitz. If you missed it, at least get the catalogue.
SAMARA GOLDEN AT CANADA GALLERY, NEW YORK
Walking into this space was the most disorientating experience. The floors mirrored with projected clouds floating across them while tables were on the walls. A heavy noise drone played throughout the space – making things even more upside down. One of the most refreshingly odd experiences of the year.
CYPRIEN GAILLARD AT SPRUETH MAGERS, BERLIN
This 3D film work was so well made that thousands came through the doors of Sprüeth Magers Berlin space. The piece focused on weird swaying trees, grown from seed presents (to American Olympic winner Jesse Owens) by the Nazis, and fireworks above the 1936 Olympic Stadium against a looped perfect sample from Alton Ellis’ Blackman’s Word. The work of Gaillard’s career.
HIPPIE MODERNISM AT THE WALKER ART CENTER, MINNEAPOLIS
The Walker Art Center programming is so good you know why Minneapolis' local Prince stays in the area. The latest show explores the counter-cultural experiments in art, architecture and design – from geodesic domes to the graphic work of Emory Douglas, the show demonstrates how radical creativity in the late 60s really was and what we can learn from it.
SOFTWARE, HARD PROBLEM AT CUBITT, LONDON
Morgan Quaintance is a curator (writer and broadcaster too) with a brilliant take on creating exhibitions. He has now been appointed curator of artist run Cubitt in Islington and his first show with Cecile B Evans, Dazed Emerging Artist Award Winner Lawrence Lek and older artist Manfred Mohr was a great take on the role of software in art.
JON RAFMAN AT ZABLUDOWICZ, LONDON
Rafman’s solo show at London’s Zabludowicz collection, which followed a solo in Montreal, was filled with video installations that were watched lying down on waterbed mattress, sitting on a massage chair, in a pool of floating plastic balls, in hot tight metal cabinets, in the set of a stained teenagers bedroom and in a 3D fake garden maze. The perfection mix of computer nerd tropes and contemporary art dialogues.
MARK LECKEY AT CABINET, LONDON
Who doesn’t love Mark Leckey? Leckey has created a new film work that debuted at Cabinet gallery that will floor fans of Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore. An incredible cut and paste narrative that brings together the artist’s own biography and themes about changing media interfaces and our relationship to the space race alongside the music and moods of popular culture.
TETSUMI KUDO AT HAUSER & WIRTH, LONDON
Dazed was ahead of the game when we profiled the late Japanese auteur Tetsumi Kudo, who this year got a deservedly exciting solo show at Hauser & Wirth in London and Zurich. In both spaces, the interior of the gallery was covered with bright green Astroturf to provide a plus setting for Kudo’s straight electro penis cage, acid terrarium sculptures and UV tech-organic installations. Hard to forget.

Manifesta11 The Historical Exhibition

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So been quite busy at the moment. I'm officially the co-curator of The Historical Exhibition of Manifesta11 which opens in Zurich this June. The artist list for my contextual show, which I have been curating with the main curator Christian Jankowski, gets announced April 5 and will take place across the city at the Kunsthalle Zurich, Migros Museum, Luma Foundation and Helmhaus. The theme of the biennial is What People Do For Money. Sneak peaks in the coming months.

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The artist list for The Historical Exhibition of Manifesta11, that I am co curating has been announced - go see (a few missing names still being added including the amazing archive of Aaron Moulton) 

Too many to list here but here are some personal highlights include: Evelyne Axell, James Son Thomas, Giovanna Olmos, Paulina Olowska, Susan Hiller, Bhakti Baxter, Chris Burden, Aleksandra Domanovic, Michael Smith, Steven Claydon, Mark Leckey, Thomas Ruff, Frances Stark, Trisha Baga, Sophie Calle, Coco Fusco, Martine Syms, Jeremy Shaw amongst many other (around 100 artists in total...)

It's gonna be a busy couple of months...

(Image Anne Collier, Women With Cameras, 2014, Sixty-one 35 mm slides, 35mm slide projector, pedestal stand, and base, Edition of 3 + 1 AP, Courtesy of the artist and The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow, Lender Name: The Modern Institute/Toby Webster Ltd, Glasgow)


Summer Love

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So I've been avoiding the word work this summer, yet have still managed to edge out a few little nods into the cultural ocean...

I interview Scorpion Dagger for Dazed (the author of the gif above which could be a portrait of me this summer....)

I did a top ten Instagram round up also for Dazed

I reviewed three shows on Monocle24 - Energy Flash at MUHKA in Antwerp, Making and Unmaking at Camden Arts Centre, London and Dada Afrika at the Berlinische Galerie, Berlin

and I'm off to DJ at the Manifesta Night in Zurich on August 26 - RSVP here

Salon Hanging

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Winding up my work with Soho House, this was the last house I installed in the Lower East Side in New York. Thought I'd collect some images together of the other hangs over the years around the world!








Ten Really Reasonable Art Editions to Buy Now

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I've always been obsessed with buying editions - it is the perfect way for people to experiment with collecting and support artists and spaces. I've seen so many good ones recently I had to share some of my recommendations - many are recent, some are gems that are still available. Prices start at super bargain £50 (though if you want to go ever cheaper check Jake and Dinos Chapman's online shop)

Declan Clarke for Farbvision 75 Euros (pictured above). Also check the other Risographs in the series and the great offshoot vinyl projects

Kate Cooper for Sunday Art Fair £120




Erica Eyres and Garnet McCulloch for Glasgow International £300




Celia Hempton for Studio Voltaire £200




Jonathan Monk for Camden Arts Centre £250




Mat Jenner for Grand Union £60
(And i cant believe you can still buy this Paulina Olowska 'Chanel' fro £120)




Kirsten Pieroth for MOREpublishers #SUNDAY series 70 Euros



Seana Gavin risograph printed by Ditto Press £50




Peter Sutherland for Printed Matter $300



Andrew Lanyon for Peer UK £175



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Tout Pres Art Interview

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I did quite a personal little interview for Tout Pres Art - thought i'd post it up here too

LONDON-BASED CURATOR FRANCESCA GAVIN EXPLAINS WHY SHE IS A NERD AT HEART
September 13, 2016
Francesca Gavin is prolific when it comes to her work as a curator, writer and editor. As the Visual Arts Editor at Dazed & Confused, she also writes for other publications including Another and Kaleidoscope. This comes on top of a bevy of influential publications that she contributes for, plus a significant art collection she cultivated for Soho House Group when she worked as their curator. But what lies underneath the professional aura is someone who has experienced a vibrant and effervescent life. She talks with Daniel Kong about inheriting her mother’s postcard collection at age nine, what experiencing sexism has taught her and why she considers herself a nerd.

You’ve established yourself as one of London’s most influential art editors. Were you the sort of person who always excelled in school?

I was obviously a nerd – completely and utterly a nerd! But a very unusual one. I always did very well in school, I was always very academic, and I got scholarships to really good schools when I was younger. However at the same time, I wouldn’t say that I’m the most diligent person on earth. What drives me is my enthusiasm for culture. I’ve always been obsessed with books, magazines, music… I even learned to read music before I even learned to read! So I’ve always been really culturally interested. This is probably because of my parents – my mother was a writer who went to art school and my father was an actor and a singer.

What was it like to live in a very cultural and creative household?

Growing up, I didn’t have anything to rebel against! Music was always very present in my relationship with my dad. And I’ve always lived with a piano, whenever I can. I would sing with my father, and I’ve been playing piano since I was three.
But with both my parents, the things that connected us were politics and their love of books. So we always had an overwhelming number of books about everything in the house. From the occult, to cookbooks, to art books, I definitely think growing up and wandering around my parents’ bookshelves was a huge influence.
What would a typical dinner at the family table look like?

I’m a child of the 80s, so we didn’t really sit down for dinner that much. Me and three sisters, we’re all Scorpios. We were probably a handful and it was always a little chaotic. But also, I always felt like I was treated as an engaged adult. I was always treated as someone with an intelligent point of view since I was a child.

To be honest, my family are the most interesting people. I still adore my mother and my sisters, and am constantly interested in their heads. They have very unusual reference points. One of my sisters is an artist and the other one is in the film industry. I’m a bit obsessed with my family’s brains, so we all connect really nicely. It’s a very unusual and bohemian family.

How did you learned to read music before you learned to read?

We were living in Los Angeles at the time between the ages of three and five, and my mum suggested I go to a Suzuki school on the weekends. So I learned chord structure and how to read music before I was even at kindergarten at five years old. So I’m really good at sight reading. Even as a teenager at school, I would always be at the music rooms to practise in. I would often sneak off on our lunch hour break and play Mozart!

Music continued on from there, as I also sang for a long period of time when I was older. I would sing jazz and blues. I would do this just to earn a living when I was a teenager, playing at Harrods, hotels, restaurants or underneath the Everyman Cinema.

How would you describe your experience growing up – in high school and primary school? I can’t speak about your experience. But when I went to high school, we had to act a certain way.

In Woodstock Elementary School, it didn’t really apply. Everyone was a bit weird, to be honest. Most of the parents were either drug dealers or worked for computer companies. So it was kind of a strange set-up. When I came to London with an American accent, I was enrolled at a girls school because I got a scholarship. At that time I was getting straight As and wearing awful hand-me-down clothes from my cousins. So for the first three years, it was really tough. I found it difficult and was very isolated.

But because of that experience, I became very fashion-conscious and saw how our fashion choices communicate with people – particularly in a girls’ school. Fashion was often connected to popularity – more than sex, more than being attractive. It was much more about how you connect with other people. I learned a lot from that process. That’s probably why I still like writing for fashion magazines. I’m very particular about nice things.

Growing up, did you have someone that you look up to or respected in the art field that also influenced your life’s path?

Not really. I’m a bit of a hustler in a sense that I’ve always felt that opportunities come to me. I’ve always been very lucky. I’ve always kept my fingers in different things, partly because I always think that you can’t be reliant on one. So no, I never had any one person. I also never got offered the right editorial job, nor any contacts when I began at all. I was just enthusiastic, friendly and smart. I had to create my own roles and it worked from there.
Even still, I look at people’s careers in the world that I’m in. There are some women I really respect like Emily King, Alice Rawthorne and Jennifer Higgie. But I can’t really see anyone’s career path and immediately identify that with mine.

At age nine, your mother gave you a collection of postcards. Did that influence you or spark an interest in art as well?

Yes, it’s where my knowledge of history of art began. I have a really solid knowledge of history of art because of it. And I still collect art postcards and make little Muji photo albums out of them. I probably have around 3,000 to 4,000 now!

The reason why my mother gave them to us is because one day my sister and I were playing with stickers. My mum told us that stickers were ridiculous, and let us use her art postcards instead in the hopes that we’d learn something. And to be honest, I think it was enormously influential. It totally changed everything.

As someone who is passionate about working in the art world, you obviously love what you do. But what frustrates you the most about the work environment?

Well, you’re catching me in a really interesting moment, because I experienced sexism this summer. I co-curated a massive biennial called Manifesta and barely got credit for it. So that’s been a massive learning curve.

I’m actually in a bit of shock, because it’s something that I’ve never really experienced before. I’ve always felt women can do whatever they want, and you’re going to get credit for what you do. But then you realise it doesn’t really work that way, and that shocked me. I don’t want to dwell on it because I still really enjoyed the work and I’m proud of the work that I did.

But the experience of the event – resulting in people editing me out of the process, which has multiple reasons as to why it happened – it has made me very conscious as a writer and curator about crediting and making sure that everyone involved in a project gets attention in some way for what they do.

And before this happened, you never experienced sexism?

No, not really. I’m very straightforward. I’ve always gotten good work. I’ve always been credited for my work. I’m quite good at getting my own name out. But often, it’s been me publicising myself. Maybe it’s because I have a low voice and am strongly opinionated.

What advice would you give to someone else who might be going through a similar situation?

Definitely speak to your contemporaries. I have a lot of respect for the women in my industry for getting it out there. I did a great interview with AQNB about the incident, and I really felt there was support from other individuals in the art world.

As a self-proclaimed nerd, did you have a favourite teacher at all?

When I went to school for A-levels, I had an amazing history of art teacher called Kate Evans who was super feminist and really political. We studied 19th century French Art, and she was brilliant – definitely the best teacher I’ve had. I mean, to be honest, probably better than most of the teachers I’ve had at university. She was just a really great, engaged and smart woman. And so as a result of doing A-levels with her, there was no question about what interested me.

When you’re looking at artwork, I’ve learned through her that there are so many different ways to understand it. You can expand on it, whether it is through the artist’s biography, or the political context or the social context or technique. Art for me is part of the wider world.
Outside of art, I’ve noticed on Instagram that dance plays a big role in your life.

Yes, I love my hobby! I started dancing three years ago. And it probably took about two years before I even put a video online. It’s quite common when you’re studying commercial dance for music videos to film yourself. That’s how you learn to get better at what you do. I remember the first time when I decided that I was finally going to share my secret hobby to people. And now whenever anyone sees me at art openings, they are like: “I love your dance videos!”

It’s also really nice that I have things outside of the art world. I think that’s really important. And the great thing about moving your body is you use your brain less. I have a very cerebral work life, so it’s really wonderful to do something that uses my body.

Can you describe what happens when you’re listening to your favourite song?

It’s such a nice feeling. There’s such a sense of satisfaction. And also, the actual dancing is hilarious! Because you’re like… kind of doing the baby-Beyoncé-semi-Rihanna-slight-slut-drop. I mean, it’s ridiculous. It’s such a hyper-feminised way of being. It’s totally unlike my life in the art world. Plus the persona or role of what I do when I’m dancing – it’s just great!

And if you had to pick an element that best represents you and your personality, what would it be?

Can it be something effervescent? Probably. What fizzes? I would think of myself as something fizzy.

Like champagne?

Yes, but maybe something more mineral than that. In my mind, when I think of my personality, it makes me think of effervescent powder in a glass of water. Not as glamorous, clean or tidy as champagne. Something a little bit more grounded. A mineral that you put into water that fizzes, bubbles and gets excited.

And that represents you because of your energetic nature?

Yes, I see myself as someone friendly and excited about things. I don’t know if it’s true, but that’s how I see myself. It’s not necessarily about how I look, because that would be a Cockapoo, a Cavapoo or even a Beagle-Spaniel breed. But as a personality and who I actually am, it’s fizzy.

Photo Credit: Profile (Niall O’Brien), family portrait (Henry Diltz) and postcards (Francesca Gavin @roughversion)


Click Here

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The sound of a computer mouse has become so familiar we are barely aware of it. The tap of this hand size, ergonomic button-box or track pad as it is pressed and released echoes our mental engagement. We think therefore we touch. The invitation this presents to enter or activate something is a beautiful thing for an artist. There is almost something of a fairy tale about this interaction. Like cake to Hansel and Gretel.

Artists have been disseminating and creating work for computers and the internet for decades now but I want to focus on how artists are using the internet at this particular moment and the growing issues around these spaces. There are obvious pros presented by the Internet – a space to exhibit, to experiment and to distribute art, that is cheaper, faster and looked at by a huge portion of the population everyday.

The most immediate example of how to do this is the website as artwork. Margot Bowman’s piece Heaven is for Quitters(heavenisforquitters.com), which also functions as a very abstract music video for Faltydl, is a great example. As the viewer clicks around the screen, various animations of people and furry characters are depicted having sex. A scrolling text links these different couplings stating, “You are sad, You are so alone, You are very lonely”. The viewer can download their unique version from the page to save. Here the artwork lives online, where is has a sense of completeness and access, and lives in another form offline.

Another well established form of online dissemination is the website as gallery or institution. There are numerous online sites dedicated to showing online work. Such as Opening Times (otdac.org), a British non-profit that commissions work and creates online residencies. Opening Times also integrate their work into third party websites with temporary digital takeovers of the Goethe Institute or Philips auction house’s home pages. They have commissioned work like Ruth Proctor’s Always (always.otdac.org), a standalone website that displays a clock, continuously counting from the launch of the Opening Times website. Every time the viewer visits you can press a button and download the time of your interaction.

Cosmos Carl(cosmoscarl.co.uk) is another online space but one that uses existing platforms. Their upcoming shows are advertised via their Facebook page and each project is simply a new weblink presented on their home page. This consists of the name of each different artist and a fresh URL. These temporary shows – which are not archived – lead through to projects on sites such as Ebay, Pinterest, YouTube, Vimeo, Google Maps, Soundcloud, Google Earth, Facebook, Kickstarter and even the dark web. A recent piece was Hannah Anbert’s 'Sacred Work (Karaoke version)', a karaoke video of a euphoric pop song on Youtube, with lyrics about capitalism and economic structures. These works live outside of Cosmos Carl as things people can accidentally discover outside of a web art context. This sliding into the internet’s infrastructures is both critical and accessible, detached and integrated.


This approach of using well-known sites or apps in art projects is thriving. Artist Maya Livio is currently doing a residency in a very interesting “digital guest room” created by Rachel Stuckey, which is laid out like a line drawing of a domestic space that people can click on. (http://homepageguestroom.wixsite.com/guest-room-maya-jp) Livio’s project includes links to Google docs, Youtube and Twitter. Of particular note are the care packages space on the room’s coffee table that links to videos of dogs, naïve drawings of severed arms and apt texts on immaterial labour and data harvesting.

Faith Holland (faithholland.com) has made interventions into the porn hub Redtube, with a series of videos that are tagged with pornographic clickbait like “amateur” and “solo girl” and touch on ideas of sex or fetishes but are much more weird. One video for example depicts the artist shaving her legs. The results are detached and almost uncomfortable – which perhaps is a very appropriate comment on the videos uploaded to the porn site in a wider sense.

Angela Washko makes computer game and video projects that examine and rework console-based role playing games such as World of Warcraft. Her latest exhibition The Game: The Game at Transfer Gallery is a dating simulator game where the player in the body of a female protagonist tries to avoid pick up artists in a crowded New York bar. Washko’s work is very much about looking at how games, which are now often online, reinforce and exaggerate cultural and gender stereotypes and violence.





Kari Altaman often uses Tumblr in works that explore ideas around evolving tags, images and videos. For example in sites such as gardenclub.tumblr.com and softmobility.tumblr.com, she explores ideas around feminism, posthumanism, survivalism and alternative currency. Her chosen images and ideas are linked by social media tags such as #jailbreakgesture, #softmobility or  #vitalcontent.

Yet Altmann has had serious issues with Tumblr. In Kari’s words, “At some point Tumblr got bought out and went super corporate. At that point a lot of my accounts got shut down without warning, either for having a name like pier1, which Pier One Imports decided they had a right to, or they were shut down for url camping, if they had only one post or no posts. It was considered “hoarding” – part of the problematic way that these platforms eventually try to whittle your identity options down into a very small consumer unit, so they can monitise and wrap information around you via a single algorithm.”

For Altmann, the increasing corporatisation of social media is leaving no space for conceptual approaches, privacy filters and different kinds of content. (She has been starting to write about these issues using a new tag #metaimage.) The writer Dennis Cooper had a more high profile recent case of shutdown by Google. His blog the DCs, which contained over a decade’s worth of work and research as well as gif novels in the style of this collage-like Zacs Haunted House (http://www.kiddiepunk.com/zacshauntedhouse) were deleted entirely without notice - as was his gmail account. Cooper is a writer whose work is notably controversial – often inhabiting the intersection between horror and homoeroticism. His blog inhabited the same space, for example showing profiles of Russian rent boys. He hadn’t backed up his blog and for three months was given no explanation to why his work has been removed entirely. He was exceptionally lucky that due to very high profile interviews and online campaigns, he was given his archive back and is working on reposting it to a dedicated site slowly over time. However, this is something that is not available to many less well-connected artists.


These examples highlight the innate problems around the dissemination of art online. Corporate ownership, corporate censorship, and the commodification of social media and the individual. Instagram has been lauded as a space for artists to show work and reach an exceptionally wide audience outside of the limits of the art world. Yet in its heart, it is a form of marketing where someone’s body and creativity are positioned into a structure predetermined by branded desires. Instagram, now owned by Facebook, own our pictures. We don’t.

Advertising is being increasingly inserted into apps and sites. There are ads in between posts on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram – even between prospective dates on apps like Tinder and Happn. There are ads popping up inside Google searches, even within our own email feeds. In the same way that street art once occupied ignored spaces within urban architecture before they were aggressively taken over and commodified by ad sales companies, so the wild west utopian possibilities that accompanied the early days of the Internet are clearly over.

The design of a smart phone or tablet – and increasingly of computers, especially Macs – do not enable people to amend, change and develop their modes of creation. We are essentially locked out of the white box and not even a screwdriver will get us in. The open source movement is an attempt to combat this yet perhaps reaching a limited code-literate audience. The artwork that will hopefully rise out of the Block Chain is still in its infancy.

Peter Lunenfeld in his book The Secret War Between Uploading and Downloading, writes, “The computer is a rational device par excellence, driven by the exigencies of the Enlightenment, but it is also a desiring machine of the new economic order… Revolution has been co-opted by the marketers… Technologies certainly open up spaces, but they also close them down.” Perhaps this is also part of the legacy of modernism and the entire concept of cultural progress. Lunenfeld quotes Susan Sontag, “Stripped of its heroic stature, of its claims as an adversary sensibility, modernism has proved acutely compatible with the ethos of an advanced consumer society.” It is impossible to make work using social media or the Internet without being strongly aware and critical of its relationship to global capitalism. To put it simply, shopping isn’t going to change the world.


(c) Francesca Gavin

Trolls, Social Media and Extreme Politics

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Trolls, social media and extreme politics

Every one thought trolls were harmless. Maybe it’s in the nickname. Half way between a garden gnome and a creature in Lord of the Rings. Comment threads and social media feeds were their lairs. Spaces to vent anger, racism, sexism, terrorism. Where any extreme view and violent fantasy could run rampant. No one was policing trolls comments. Like plucking grey hairs, if someone did slam one account down, three more would grow in its place. The anonymity of the Internet revealed humanity’s hidden frustration and foulness.

Rather than view the troll as a real valid thinking individual, we dehumanised them. We could imagine the troll as a spotty teenager who couldn't get laid or an angry office worker taking their anger and boredom and lack of autonomy out on the screen. Yet in the wake of Brexit and the election of Trump, trolls don't look harmless anymore. Social media may not be the cause of extremist thinking but it has fed it. Negativity has flourished first on blogs and then disseminated via news feeds on Facebook and Twitter.

Trump is President of the Trolls. His political speeches became an extension of his Twitter feed. Unedited. Unrepressed. Short, fast, retweetable, immediate thoughts shared with the public in seconds. Out of his mind and onto the screen. Would Trump have become president if his fans didn't feel he represented the every man? He was just like us, wasn't he? He even tweeted at 4 in the morning when he couldn't sleep, like the rest of us.

I first noticed the relationship between social media and extreme political views it in August 2014. My Facebook news feed was filled with a wave of hatred and anti-Semitism in the wake of the Israeli invasion into Palestine. It started with some comparisons to the Holocaust. The next thing liberal open minded people - artists, fashion stylists, photographers, musicians who were my acquaintances and friends - were posting strange blog posts with increasingly violent content. I saw images of Jews being lynched. I saw people quoting 1930s fascist speeches. I was so upset by the content hitting me like an algorithmic wave, I couldn't sleep. I decided to get off Facebook and deleted 1500 ‘friends’.

Yet I stayed on Twitter. I grew to love Instagram. I slowly began to dabble with Facebook again. I was choosy with who I followed. Whose feed I wanted to glimpse. I increasingly created a bubble of my own interests - an echo of my view of the world. After Brexit I realised I was not the only person to create a buffer of like-minded virtual souls around me. What became clear is people with opposing views - the slight majority - were also doing the same thing. We were all living in an echo chamber of our own politics. There was none of the even-handed political detachment that journalism and the law was said to uphold. Newspapers increasingly began to echo the extreme anger of the troll. Headlines (largely from Rupert Murdoch’s empire) were written in troll speak. The world became binary - us versus them, good versus bad, right versus wrong. The whole concept of a referendum was made for this atmosphere. There was no nuance. We lived in world where there was only a yes or no without any discussion of the in between. ‘You’re wrong and here’s a death threat to go with it.’

In contrast, a wave of petitions became to emerge online - a social media version of good fairies. I signed numerous online petitions - against war, protect the NHS, stop Monsanto, save the bees. I would receive passionate emails from 38 degrees and Change.org. They felt like positive ways to have a little say and reminded me of the Amnesty International letters I would copy and sign and send off as a teenager to save someone lingering in a foreign jail. I imagined children who wanted to change the world presenting these heart felt petitions on the steps of Downing Street. Yet nothing seemed to quite come from these notes sent into the ether. No serious political change. When over 4 million people signed a petition for a second Brexit referendum, people were calmly sent a transcription of the discussion between 20 people in a closed doors meeting in a back room ignoring the request. If 4 million digital signatures have no effect, that online click form of resistance isn’t working.

Meanwhile, social media companies have said nothing. In fact, it was in their favour to keep quiet. They want our shock, our outrage. They want us to post lists from Buzzfeed and blog responses to media stories. These all increase advertising revenue. Youths in Macedonia began to create fake pro-Trump websites in order to entice Facebook thread clicks which earned them pocket money. As Adam Curtis recently in an interview with the Evening Standard. “The fact is that angry people click more and clicks are gold dust, clicks are the measure of success for all corporations and media platforms. So the more angry you get, the more you actually keep everything stable. Your anger fuels those systems.”

So where does that leave us and what can we do? Leap off of social media like lemmings of a cliff? In ‘Fuck Off, Google’, a chapter in the The Invisible Committee’s last book ‘To Our Friends’ they present an alternative.  “Understanding how the devices around us work, brings an immediate increase in power, giving us a purchase on what will then no longer appear as an environment, but as a world arranged in a certain way and one that we can shape. This is the hacker’s perspective on the world.” We have to shape and change and take control of the virtual structures of the internet. We need to pull ourselves away from private companies with strong financial stakes. We need to create a brave new virtual world.


(c) Francesca Gavin 2016

Word Machine

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Have had four features our this week so thought I should get them out in the big wide world (and this is the tip of the iceberg - i've been a word machine for the past six weeks)

1) Me on Robert Rauschenberg and Captiva Island for Newsweek to coincide with the massive Tate Retrospective opening Dec 1

2) A profile of Gunther Uecker for Bonhams magazine (pictured above)

3) An interview with Goshka Macuga for AnOther online

4) An interview with Michelangelo Pistoletto in the new issue of Sleek magazine
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