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Showing posts with label forbes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forbes. Show all posts

Friday, 21 October 2022

Church Times - Art review: Michael Forbes, Blk this & Blk that . . . a state of urgency, at the Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham

My latest review for Church Times is Michael Forbes, Blk this & Blk that . . . a state of urgency, at the Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham:

'ON ENTERING Gallery 1A at the Djanogly Gallery, one sees a series of dismembered torsos — the arms of all the figures being absent — of the crucified Christ in cast Jesmonite, primarily white, but with gold and pink also used, and hung upside down from ropes the ends of which trail across the floor. In this, the largest sculptural installation here, some of the torsos wear life jackets, pointing to recent political and humanitarian events.

Untitled I highlights “how the white European male has dominated the image of Christ” and challenges white viewers with the question how they “reconcile exemplifying Christ whilst reaping unjust benefits from being white”. Forbes has, for many years, questioned this aspect of religion, “believing that it is morally and theologically incumbent upon Christians to realise how whiteness confers privileges that have an impact on the lives of black people and people of colour”. The installation (through the inclusion of life jackets) raises these questions in relation to the legacies of the slave trade and also the current refugee crisis.'

Click here for my Artlyst diary for October which also includes this exhibition.

Other of my pieces for Church Times can be found here. My writing for ArtWay can be found here. My pieces for Artlyst are here and those for Art+Christianity are here. See also Modern religious art: airbrushed from art history?

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Ben Harper - With My Own Two Hands.

Sunday, 9 October 2022

Artlyst - Alexander de Cadenet And Michael Forbes October 2022 Diary

My October diary for Artlyst has mention of Alexander De Cadenet's Medici Family Skull Portraits, Michael Forbes: BLK THIS & BLK THAT … A STATE OF URGENCY and a range of Bible/book-based installations:

‘While discussing church commissions with Neil Walker, Head of Visual Arts Programming at Djanogly Gallery (part of the University of Nottingham’s Lakeside Arts), mention was made of John Newling’s ‘Sing Uncertainty’ project for St Mary’s Nottingham in 2010. ‘Singing Uncertainty’ was an a cappella choral work where questions from hymns found in the hymn book used at Newling’s school were individually sung in the order that the questions appeared in the hymn book. Newling’s aspiration for this project was that when performed in St Mary’s Church, the space would be filled with the fragility of a longed-for certainty. The project drew on earlier initiatives involving the same hymn book including ‘Skeleton’ (1994) for All Saints Church, Newcastle Upon Tyne where the hymn book was edited to show only the questions that were written in the hymns and ‘Stamping Uncertainty’ (2004) where each questioning phrase was stamped each individually and each was displayed on 152 lecterns arranged in rows throughout the Chapter House of Canterbury Cathedral.

Another recent conversation also led to the discovery of a church exhibited book project exploring aspects of Christianity. Bernd Goering works sculpturally with old Bibles to create Bible objects – for example, a Bible with acupuncture needles stuck in it, a Bible as a lego brick, a cut Bible whose pieces form a cross – that make visible the different effects that the Bible had and still has. Goering’s Bible sculptures were most recently exhibited at Peterskirche Basel in 2019. The Revd Dr Chris Szejnmann shared the catalogue from this exhibition with me, as well as the conversations he has subsequently had with the artist.Seeing these works reminded me of other book-based projects exploring aspects of religion.'

See also my Artlyst interview with Alexander de Cadenet, a review of an exhibition of his work I organised at St Stephen Walbrook, plus a report of the Art Awakening Humanity conference I organised together with him. 

My other pieces for Artlyst are:

Interviews -
Monthly diary articles -
Articles/Reviews -
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Curtis Mayfield - New World Order.

Thursday, 30 September 2021

The migration of David Reincarnated

Louis Carreon's latest major work is an 8 ft high, 4,000 lb. contemporary reworking of Bernini’s David in marble, with David dressed for the streets of LA.

This sculpture was created in Mexico and will shortly be brought across the border into the US to find it's initial resting place; a journey also made by many migrants. Carreon's David Reincarnated, through its journey to the US,D will highlight the experiences and issues faced by contemporary migrants while also reminding of the extent to which David experienced banishment, exile and migration.

The journey of David Reincarnated will be documented and can be followed on the instagram accounts of Carreon and his manager Benjamin Greenfield. Their posts will also be "accompanied by an unconventional armament of academic, curatorial and theological expertise and insights from: Dr Ori Soltes, Professor Georgetown University, Professor Bryan Keene, Manuscript Curator Getty Museum" and myself, "all of whom have written essays about Louis' David Reincarnated".

To read more about Carreon's work and David Reincarnated see my interview with the artist for Artlyst and the recent Forbes article on his work.

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Jerry Garcia Band - Señor (Tales of Yankee Power).

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Aldborough Hatch: The village in the suburbs




This evening I led a service of Holy Communion at St Peter's Aldborough Hatch where I took the photos above. Ron Jeffries, a local community activist and historian, is a member of St Peter's and has written a book about the history of Aldborough Hatch:

"This book is the culmination of many years of delving into the life and lives of a unique community on the edge of the Green Belt in the London Borough of Redbridge. Born here, the author is one of many who have campaigned locally to keep the countryside of Aldborough Hatch open for all to enjoy.

This is not an official nor is it an unofficial history of Aldborough Hatch. Rather it is a lively, often amusing and sometimes revealing journey across the centuries – from the time when the forest of Essex covered much of Fairlop Plain to the present day when the traffic on the A12 on its southern boundary roars past on its way into mainland Europe and far beyond. If St. Peter’s Church features large in this book, this is because it has been at the very heart of Aldborough Hatch for the past 150 years and much local history is tied up within its walls.

But this is no dull catalogue of the past, for the pages bring to life little-known facts such as that Aldborough Hatch had its own “Lover’s-walk”, that the Dick Turpin has its roots in a Beer House in a cottage, that diarist Samuel Pepys visited, and poet John Donne and politician George Lansbury lived here, that Lulu’s Boom Bang-a-Bang started life here, that in 1862 villagers hereabouts spent the evening engaged in “rustic sports”, that the first lady Churchwarden at St. Peter’s was elected in 1915 (three years before women had the vote) and that actor, producer, director and author Bryan Forbes lived here and Hollywood superstar Rock Hudson visited a home here.

Published in 2012 to coincide with the 150th Anniversary of the Consecration on 6th March 1862 of St. Peter’s Aldborough Hatch, the book includes maps dating back to 1777 and in addition to the history of Aldborough Hatch Chapel, St. Peter’s and St. James, the stories behind Cuckoo Hall, St. Chad’s Well, the farms in Aldborough Hatch, Fairlop Airfield, Fairlop Waters, Newbury Park Station and the Ilford War Memorial Gardens."

Aldborough Hatch
The Village in the Suburbs – A History
120pp in full colour with 143 photographs, 13 illustrations and 10 maps
Publication March 2012 ISBN 978-0-9561877-2-7
£14.99 plus £2.50 postage and packing in UK
Pre-Publication Offer £12 (plus £2.50 postage if sent by mail in UK)
Please make cheques payable to Ron Jeffries
Available direct from the Publisher: Ron Jeffries - Tel: 020 8599 7250; Email: ronjeffries@live.co.uk

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The Members - Sound Of The Suburbs.