MUSE ROOM - Sculptural and Stereoscopic Video works by Wayne Barker & Don Searll

Page 1

Presents

An exhibition of works by Wayne Barker & Don Searll 29.10 - 21.11.2011 ROOM is a new independent multi-disciplinary exhibition and project based space focused on collaboration, dialogue and exchange.


ROOM is pleased to present as its inaugural exhibition a collaborative show of works by WAYNE BARKER & DON SEARLL. MUSE ROOM is an exhibition about juxtapositions, subversion and playfulness in all its contexts. It celebrates beauty and light, melancholy, the role of the MUSE and/or model, as well as the performance involved in the act of making art. MUSE ROOM makes reference to the artist’s studio as an allegory of the most intimate, yet presented in the most public of frameworks. The exhibition features new and unseen sculptural and video-based works by Wayne Barker and recent Autostereoscopic compositions by internationally recognized 3D filmmaker and video artist, Don Searll. “ Blue on Black” & “ Don Wayne“ are the featured works part of the collaborative process between both artists. The exhibition poses questions - related to artist at easel and the interaction of artist & model - technically and aesthetically as those asked by artists generations ago to date, but now interrogating these topics by bringing in the element of technology.


Wayne Barker ARTIST AT EASEL 2011 One Chanel Video, Easel & Frame 5’ 58” Edition 1/3

Wayne Barker,Video Stills, Artist at Easle, One Chanel Video, 5 min 58 sec, 2011

R 99 995.00


Wayne Barker AWKWARD, WHISKEY & KERRY 2010 33 x 27 cm Oil on Canvas

Framed

R 25 000.00


Wayne Barker MUSE 2011 Play with Anaglyph Video 6’21”

Edition 1/9

R 35 000.00


Wayne Barker & Don Searll BLUE ON BLACK 2011 Play with Anaglyph Video 5’58”

Edition 1/9

R 50 000.00


Wayne Barker & Don Searll DON WAYNE 2011 95 x 95 cm Anaglyphic Poster & Glasses Edition 1/9 Framed

R 25 000.00

Unframed

R 20 000.00

Also available in the following dimensions 41 x 41 cm Anaglyphic Poster & Glasses Edition 1/9 Framed

R 3 500.00

Unframed

R 1 750.00


Wayne Barker SELF PORTRAIT DON WAYNE 2011 12 x 30 x 24 cm Bronze & Mild Steel Edition 1/9

R 25 000.00


Autostereoscopic Video Works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

Don Searll AUTOSTEREO MUSE Venus’ Mirror

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2011 Autostereoscopic Video Art 1 x Video & Equipment

R 90 000.00

4 x Videos & Equipment

R 180 000.00

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Don Searll AUTOSTEREO MUSE Bound to be Liberated 2011 Autostereoscopic Video Art 1 x Video & Equipment

R 90 000.00

4 x Videos & Equipment

R 180 000.00


Don Searll AUTOSTEREO MUSE Painted Venus 2011 Autostereoscopic Video Art 1 x Video & Equipment

R 90 000.00

4 x Videos & Equipment

R 180 000.00


Don Searll AUTOSTEREO MUSE Ella Umbrella 2011 Autostereoscopic Video Art 1 x Video & Equipment

R 90 000.00

4 x Videos & Equipment

R 180 000.00


Don Searll A TITT LANDSCAPE 2011 28,5 x 43 cm Digital Print on Cotton Rag Paper Edition 1/9

R 1 800.00


Holographics are the most advanced form of 3D imaging in the world and require powerful pulse laser in order to capture the human form. The subject needs to be in a holographic studio with an extremely powerful laser, the beam is about ½ mm in size and needs to be split into two and expanded with one beam striking the film as a reference beam and the other expanded to illuminate and reflect off the subject and then strike the film. Two wave fronts of light are recorded on the photographic film at 50 millionths’ of a second, in order to make the exposure. “ The Mona Laser was a portrait of my niece that I based on, what I believe is the most famous portrait in the world, The Mona Lisa. So I attempted to replicate this with the most advanced 3D technology available. In fact when this portrait was made, there were less than 40 known holographic portraits ever made in the world and therefore I believe it has additional historical value. Holography as an art form is extremely scientific and costly to produce and I feel privileged to have had the opportunity to work in this medium and look forward to producing more going forward. And I would be honored to see this great piece in some museum or private collection. “

Don Searll MONA LAZER 1991 Holographic Portrait 83 x 74 cm

R 540 000.00


Wayne Barker & Don Searll would like to thank: The Artworks would not have been possible without the special contribution from: Andrew L. Wessels Neil Nieuwoudt Guy du Toit Warwick Soar Clive Shirlaw Arno Durandt Victoria Hughes Sandy Hughes Adam Broomberg Sharleen Vinokur Rommany Allen Bree Kenyan Jen Brown

The Models: Kerry Manini Karabo Chesnay Ndumie Emilie Aurelie


ABOUT THE ARTISTS: WAYNE BARKER A colorful, playful and subversive, internationally renowned artist and curator Barker was born in 1963 in Pretoria. He studied art at Pretoria Tech and in ‘76 he became an apprentice woodcarver. In 1984 Wayne Barker finished his BA in Fine Arts at the Michaelis School of Art, University of Cape Town and in 1998 attained a Postgraduate degree in Fine Art from the Ecole des Beaux Art, Luminy Marseilles, France. Barker uses his art to interrogate and confront orthodox South African perceptions and beliefs. By subverting popular imagery and iconography and thus creating new meaning Wayne does not cease to comment on social, political, economic, race and gender issues affecting the South African context and the art world. His artistic career spans over 25 years and is rich with anecdotes, controversy and successes. In 1989 Barker alongside Gunther Herbst and Morris La Mantia, initiated the Famous International Gallery (Fig) as a platform for young and emerging artists, thus challenging the role and domination of commercial galleries thus playing the center off the periphery. From ‘Images on Metal’, which marked his first solo show at the Market Theatre Gallery, Johannesburg, in 1987 to date, Wayne Barker’s list of achievements is endless. In 1990, also stood out for his open commentary on the fear of marginalization of white artists during the transitional years in South Africa. Barker submitted artworks to the Standard Bank National Drawing Competition, under his own name and that of a fictitious Andrew Moletse, and it was the latter’s work that was accepted. In 1995 through his curatorial project, Laage, presented at the 1st Johannesburg Biennale, Barker again stood out by reflecting on South Africa’s traumatic history by deconstructing the image through the eyes of the participating artists. The fringe event involved the use of 14, 12 meter shipping containers in a circular structure to represent the laagers of the Voortrekkers, each ‘encamped’ by mainly white artists. Having gained major accolades for the installation, Laager was later shown at the Santiago Museum of Contemporary Art in Chile, with the support of the United Nations. He won the Volkskas Atelier, Merit award winner, 1998 and in 1992 With pivotal shows and works interrogating the role of popular culture and imagery, South African Identity, gender and race, reconciliation, Ubuntu, and the plight of the poor he has also acknowledged the role of historical and contemporary figures such as Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Miriam Makeba, Jackson Hlungwane, Enoch Sontonga, CJ Langenhoven and JM Coetzee. Seen as a shameless self-promoter by some and an honest commentator by others, today Barker is at the epi-center of art making in the country. His most recent exhibitions include his 2010 Mid Career retrospective titled ” Super Boring” at SMAC Gallery in Stellenbosch its presentation in 2011 at the Polokwane Art Museum & at the Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa. As Adrew Lamprecht comments on his latest exhibition “The show is typical Barker fare, carrying all his trademarks – the abstract painterly gesture, the boundless energy, the digital manipulation of modern South African art, the incorporation of traditional craft, subtle Expressionist gestures beside neatly outlined Afro-Pop imagery, and the ever present neon signage. In May 2011, Barker also participated in the group exhibition “ Alias” in Krakow, Poland and has just returned from his Berlin where he holds a studio and will exhibit in 2012. Wayne Barker’s energy and unapologetic commentary is infectious while his art does not seize to challenge convention.


DON MAXWELL SEARLL A Johannesburg based artist who uses technology as his preferred medium. According to the artist technology is a natural evolution of the art medium. He is known for having introduced five technologies of art into South Africa: Laser graphics, Holographics, computer graphics, virtual reality and stereoscopic movies. Inspired by his father’s early 3d technical approach towards photography and his mother’s interest in the arts, by age 12 Searll was already shooting 3D stills. And by age 16, he had shot his first short film on 16mm film stock. Don has collaborated and exhibited with some of the top South African contemporary artists including Norman Catherine, William Boshoff, Richard Smith, Dylan Lewis among others and now with Wayne Barker. Internationally, Don has developed a reputation as a world leader in 3D technology, Searll has received numerous international awards and accolades including: •

BMI Best Video of the Year 1992, for Seal’s “Killer”,. This video is now featured at the Museum of Rock Video in Piccadilly as one of the top ten music videos of the decade.

BMI Best for technical excellence in 1992 for Seal’s “Killer”,.

ITVA Mobie Award Australia.

Created the Taung Skull hologram for the cover of National Geographic Magazine.

In 1985 and in 1991 Don was commissioned by De Beers to create the “Mona Laser”, one of the first holographic portraits in the world.

Most Recently he was commissioned to conceptualize and produce a 3D film for the 2006 & 2010 Fifa World Cup Trophy Tour by Coca Cola. was shown at the Stereoscopic Displays & Applications Conference in California and rated the Best of Show.

He continues to innovate at the cutting edge particularly in his use of auto stereoscopic displays. He has always believed that integrating the medium and the message makes for powerful communication. Don utilizes technology as part of the art itself, exposing the fallibility of the perception and the means of communication.


ABOUT ROOM ROOM has been many years in the making, the dream child of Maria Fidel Regueros who has in the last decade been involved in the visual arts sector in various capacities. ROOM aims to be a part of an interrogative and constructive urban culture, which draws its references from its surrounding environment and by doing so, informs its visual sensibility, creative programming and values. ROOM hopes to be a context, which increases awareness of the multitude of creative production, through the projects it engages with (be they poetry, music, performance or visual art based) and to take full advantage of the ever-increasing number of platforms in the public domain. ROOM is a platform for young, emerging and established artists, collaborative projects, inter-disciplinary dialogue and exchange. ROOM will function as an independent visual arts exhibitions and project based space, with monthly artistic programming. ROOM Opening Hours: Mon – Fri

10h00 – 17h00

Saturday

10h00 - 15h00


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