Doris Salcedo’s Shibboleth

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Art for crack addicts.

Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall is so vast and empty it’s quite a challenge for an artist to do anything interesting with it. One option is to try and fill the space which is what Anish Kapoor did with his enormous Marsyas, the first of the Turbine works I saw there in 2002.

Colombian artist Doris Salcedo has caused a stir this week by unveiling her own offering which seems to ruin the concrete floor with a succession of cracks that run the length of the building. I say “seem” because it looks from photos like she’s installed a series of large concrete slabs over the original floor (she won’t say how it’s been made), something that the structure of the cracks in close-up would seem to confirm. The rationale for this—that the work is “addressing a long legacy of racism and colonialism that underlies the modern world”—isn’t remotely obvious, a perennial problem with contemporary art; a crack in the floor can mean any number of things, after all, and it’s difficult to see how an unbriefed visitor would arrive at that conclusion. However, I’d still like to see this in situ even if it doesn’t match the splendour of Olafur Eliasson’s Weather Project from 2003.

Shibboleth can be seen from October 9th 2007–April 6th 2008.

Update: Builders and an architect ponder the mystery of the crack’s creation.

Shibboleth at Tate Modern
A video at The Guardian

Previously on { feuilleton }
Olafur Eliasson’s Serpentine Pavilion
Cloud Gate by Anish Kapoor

Custom creatures

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If Polly Morgan’s animal corpse art seems macabre, it looks positively mundane next to Serina Brewer’s creations. Her Custom Creatures include many multi-headed inventions like the cat thing shown here. She also does a fine line in carcass art, pickled pets and jewellery made from various extremities, should you be searching for those elusive alligator feet earrings.

Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
The fantastic art archive

Previously on { feuilleton }
Polly Morgan, fine art taxidermist
Cryptozoology
Insect Lab
The art of Jessica Joslin
The Museum of Fantastic Specimens

Polly Morgan, fine art taxidermist

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Still Life After Death (fox) (2006).

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Rest a Little in the Lap of Life (2005).

Polly Morgan‘s work is on display at The Exquisite Corpse exhibition, Trinity Church, Marylebone Road, London, until October 19th. (No exhibition website.)

Previously on { feuilleton }
Cryptozoology
Insect Lab
The art of Jessica Joslin
The Museum of Fantastic Specimens

AVAF at Mao Mag

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New York-based Mao Mag seems to have a predilection for a particular brand of psychedelic imagery if recent issues are anything to go by. Peter Max was on the cover of #8 earlier this year and appeared inside together with a feature on the equally eye-popping work of Kenny Scharf.

For #9 it’s the turn of AVAF aka Assume Vivid Astro Focus, a Brazilian artist also based in NYC whose paintings and installations combine a psychedelic vibrancy with frequent gay themes. The work in the magazine looks considerably more interesting than the show I saw at Tate Liverpool in 2005 which seemed to suffer from bad lighting and being separated from the Summer of Love exhibition it was intended to complement.

Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
The gay artists archive

Previously on { feuilleton }
Heinz Edelmann
Verner Panton’s Visiona II