John Davies photo-documents Rachel Whitereads HOUSE

17 01 2009

In January (13.01.09 – 31.01.09), Michael Hoppen Contemporary, London, shows photographs by John Davies, an English photographer known for his narrative shots of British landscape. “His black and white photographs show the vast, complex and majestic scenery of industrial and post industrial Britain. He establishes classical geometries within his unique vision that take on a mystical appeal. His works are coolly detached and seductive, showing moments of calm and quiet amidst the inevitable change of the modern landscape.” (quote by MH Contemporary)

House 1 1993 © John Davies courtesy of Michael Hoppen Gallery  Silver Gelatin Print  30 x 42 inches

House 1 1993 © John Davies courtesy of Michael Hoppen Gallery Silver Gelatin Print 30 x 42 inches

In 1993, Davies made a series of 9 photographs which portray “House”, a public scultpure by Rachel Whiteread, winner of the renowned Turner Prize in 1993 and the first woman to be awarded.

Whiteread is best known for her sculptures  which are actually casts: “In the late 1980s, Rachel Whiteread began casting the ‘negative spaces’ inside and underneath domestic objects and soon moved on to architectural features and entire rooms.” (quote by MH Contemporary)

House 8 1993 © John Davies courtesy of Michael Hoppen Contemporary  Silver Gelatin Print  30 x 42 inches

John Davies: House 8 1993 © John Davies courtesy of Michael Hoppen Contemporary Silver Gelatin Print 30 x 42 inches

House (1993), perhaps Whiteread’s best known work (according to wikipedia.com), was a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993, exhibited at the location of the original house — 193 Grove Road — in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council).

“Whiteread created the work by spraying liquid concrete into the building’s empty shell before its walls were removed. The work became a temporary monument to lost communities and a focus for public debate before it was demolished in January 1994. It stood alone as a symbol of survival, as all the other houses in Grove Road had already been knocked down to make way for redevelopment.”

“The House project was commissioned by the public works organisation Artangel. Whiteread asked Artangel to commission Davies to make some pictures for a limited edition book to record what was her largest and most ambitious work to date.” (quote by MH Contemporary)

Davies photographs are all that remains of house, site and sculpture. His photographs document the site of the condemned building, documenting the scaffolding going up, the cement ‘ghost’ of the building, and finally, the empty space the structure occupied.

John Davies Rachel Whiteread HOUSE

13.01.09 – 31.01.09

Michael Hoppen Gallery
3 Jubilee Place,
London SW3 3TD




Architecture + Art

16 02 2008

List of artists introduced / portrayed (as you might observe there’s a “slight” domination of photographers – obviously it’s the photographers in particular that are fascinated by architecture):

Vito Acconci

Johanna Ahlert | Silke Schmidt (Photography)

Ivan Andersen

Michael Bach

Bernd und Hilla Becher (Photography)

Laurenz Berges (Photography)

Isabella Berr (Photography)

Beate Bilkenroth (Painting)

Julio Bittencourt (Photography)

Patrick Blanc

Karl-Heinz Bogner

Wigald Boning (Photography)

Laurence Bonvin

Loic Bréard (Photography)

Stefan Canham | Rufina Wu (Photography)

John Davies

Mirko Stefan Elfert (Sculpture)

Andreas Feininger (Photography)

Philipp Geist (Multimedia)

Klaus Graubner (Photography)

Tim Griffith (Photography)

Michael á Grømma (Painting)

Andreas Gursky (Photography)

Beate Gütschow (Photography)

Matthias Hagemann

Sven Hamann (Painting | Photography)

Matthias Haun (Photography)

Rober Häusser (Photography)

Isabelle Hayeur (Photography)

Jörg Heieck

Christian Hellmich (Painting)

Stefan Heyne

Todd Hido (Photography)

Stefan Hoenerloh (Painting)

Brad Howe (Sculpture)

Sun Ji

Jacky Longstaff (Photography)

Jay Mark Johnson (Photography)

Lu Jun

Li Jun

Meng Jin & Fang Er

Petra Karadimas (Photography)

Alec MacLean (Photography)

Fredrik Marsh (Photography)

Wolfgang Lüttgens (Photography)

Nicola Meitzner

Ralf Meyer

Birgit Neiser (Photography)

Simone Nieweg (Photography)

Nils Norman

Loan Ngyuen (Photography)

Inês d’Orey (Photography)

June Bum Park (Video)

Bas Princen (Photography)

Marc Räder

Soavina Ramaroson (Photography)

Mies van der Rohe

Lukas Roth

Stephan Sahm (Photography)

Silke Schmidt | Johanna Ahlert (Photography)

Philipp Schaerer

Robert Schleder (Photography)

Jörg Schmiedekind (Photography)

Kerstin J. Schorer (Photography)

Alexandra Schraepler

Kai-Uwe Schulte-Bunert (Photography)

Josef Schulz (Photography)

Joachim Seinfeld (Photography)

s.h.e. (Stefan Heinrich Ebner)

Julius Shulman (Photography)

Timo Stammberger (Street Art | Photography)

Jörg Steck (Photography)

Benedikt Steinmetz (Photography)

Thomas Strogalski (Photography)

Jutta Strohmaier

Christoph Studinka

Hiroshi Sugimoto

Kristian Vodder Svensson

Kurt Laurenz Theinert

Nina Todorovic (Painting, Mixed Media)

Vicki Topaz (Photography)

Levi van Veluw

Tuca Vieira (Photography)

Gordon Watkinson (Photography)

Tobias Weber (Painting)

Sabine Wild (Photography)

Ben Willikens (Painting)

Rachel Whiteread

Maik Wolf

Michael Wolf

Gabriele Worgitzki

Rolf Wicker (Installation)

Rufina Wu | Stefan Canham (Photography)

Yang Yi

Martin Zeller

Annett Zinsmeister

(Status March 2010)

Unter der Kategorie Architektur + Kunst möchte ich Künstler vorstellen, die sich an der Schnittstelle zwischen Architektur und Kunst bewegen. Dabei geht es mir hier um die “entgegengesetzte” Richtung als vorher – also Arbeiten, die sich mit Architektur auf künstlerische Weise auseinandersetzen, sei es in Fotografie, Film, Malerei, Skulptur…

Den Anspruch, den ich an Arbeiten stelle – das gilt für moderne/zeitgenössische Kunst grundsätzlich – ist, dass sie einerseits inhaltlich vielschichtig sind und sich neben ihrem jeweiligen zentralen Thema weitere Anknüpfungspunkte finden lassen; andererseits interessiert mich die formale Umsetzung – wurde das Thema in einer intelligenten Weise umgesetzt?
Die Übersicht hat natürlich keinen Anspruch auf Vollständigkeit, sondern ist mehr als fortlaufendes Projekt gedacht. Was mir auffällt, wird ergänzt :)

Also einfach ab und zu in der Kategorie Architektur + Kunst stöbern.

Über Kommentare, Hinweise, Tipps, … freue ich mich!!

In category Architektur + Kunst I want to present you artists whose work happens where arts and architecture meet. Here I’m interested in the “opposite” thing than before – works of art that are approaching architecture in an artistic way, using photography, film, painting, sculpture…

I expect works of art – and this applies fundamentally to modern/contemporary art – to be 1) multifaceted in contens and offering more possibilities of interpretation apart from their main topic; and 2) I am interested in the formal presentation – was the topic realized in an intelligent fashion?

Of course, this summary can’t claim being complete, but it’s more a continuous project. Whatever is attracting my attention will be added :-)

So – just browse the category every now and then!

Comments, advice, hints,… are welcome!!