Showing posts with label Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary. Show all posts

23/05/10

New British Painting, Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary, Helsinki - Emma Bennett, Nadine Feinson, Sam Jackson, Alex Gene Morrison, Dominic Shepherd, Gavin Tremlett

New British Painting
Emma Bennett, Nadine Feinson, Sam Jackson, Alex Gene Morrison, Dominic Shepherd, Gavin Tremlett 
Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary, Helsinki 
21 May - 8 August 2010 

Gallery Kalhama & Piippo presents the group exhibition “New British Painting” showcasing six painters for the first time to the Finnish public. The exhibition is curated by director of Charlie Smith London Zavier Ellis and Pilvi Kalhama. The exhibition is a continuum to the gallery’s thematic group shows and is arranged with the support of the British Council.

The YBA (Young British Artists) -school of the 1990s and the London art scene became the interest of high intensity by the entire art world, along with artists like Damien Hirst and Tracy Emin. At the same time art itself became deeply wrapped up in theoretical and conceptual explanations. Today, the art world is still following the London art scene but is the situation the same as before? In the past years both the art talk and the large scale spectrum of installations have been questioned by artists. What are the questions preoccupying the minds of today’s artists living in this metropolis of great ethnical diversity?
“Today’s British art is more an art of differences and divergence than of sameness. Many artists wish to separate themselves from their famous predecessors both stylistically and in their subject matter. They’d rather focus on individuality and personality. Even the viewers of today call for art to unfold on a personal level.

In the body of work of many British artists one can see a radical difference to large-scale painting. However, the contemporary artists working with miniature scale paintings still pose large-scale questions – of sexuality, personality, the self, affinity and strangeness. One thing in common with their predecessors is the glimpse of provocation. An essential concern is still a certain elegance, or a breeze of traditionality. The grand - but often personal and somehow queer - statement raised from the current time is concealed in aesthetical attire. This is typical London today and those tendencies are the ones we want to show in Finland.”

- Pilvi Kalhama, director of Gallery Kalhama&Piippo Contemporary
“In the post-YBA era there is an open acknowledgement of the historical canon of art, typified most directly in this exhibition by Emma Bennett (b.1974) and Gavin Tremlett (b. 1977) and to some extent Sam Jackson (b. 1977), where that history is embraced to a degree whereby the historical is assimilated into the contemporary without irony or cynicism. The historical is mined to the point where it can be appropriated or transcribed, and reconfigured into the personal. A subjective idiom is established that equates to the artist’s internal critical model to reveal constant preoccupations of the human psyche: beauty, loss, transience, alter-ego and alternative realities being some such examples.

Indeed, it has to be accepted that art must perform some kind of function other than visual indulgence and a fundamental purpose has to be an engagement with the other, both for the artist and audience, through which one can take flight from the everyday. Nadine Feinson’s (b. 1959) fascination with the monstrous; Dominic Shepherd’s (b. 1966) eerily populated landscapes; and Alex Gene Morrison’s (b. 1975) acidic figure, landscape and interior paintings become windows to other worlds. The magical and mythical entice and warn us to proceed but proceed with caution. Deathly dark powers are at work in these hinterlands as beauty and terror simultaneously seduce and threaten, as we are invited to engage with and decipher interior worlds by means of representations of the exterior.

My hope is that a certain sensibility will render manifest in order to reveal current preoccupations of today’s British painters, who in this case were all schooled in and mostly still work from London. There are recurring interests that underpin a section of rising British painters, some of which are expressed in the exhibition.”

- Zavier Ellis, curator and director of Charlie Smith London
GALLERY KALHAMA & PIIPO CONTEMPORARY
Mannerheimintie 3B, 00100 Helsinki
www.kalhamapiippo.com 

13/01/08

Villu Jaanisoo, Jussi Niva, Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary, Helsinki - Wave / Diffus

Villu Jaanisoo, Jussi Niva
Wave / Diffus
Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary, Helsinki
11 January - 10 February, 2008

Gallery Kalhama & Piippo Contemporary opens its first exhibition season with a dialogue between the solo exhibitions of Estonian sculptor Villu Jaanisoo (b. 1963) and Finnish painter Jussi Niva (b. 1966).

ARTIST VILLU JAANISOO

Villu Jaanisoo has demonstrated exceptional sense of materials and skill for opening up the traditional borders of sculpture in his oeuvre. Jaanisoo is the original exception of Estonian sculpture, who is known internationally as well as in Finland for his unprejudiced use of mundane materials. The original meaning and form of materials is broken in his hands. The process results in spatial installations and environmental art that challenge their own sculpture-ness, location and aesthetics. This allows Jaanisoo to cast a critical eye also on the contexts of exhibiting art and the social evaluation of art. Jaanisoo’s works play with surprising ideas and the transparency of meaning. Large, three-dimensional, unforeseen “objects” of things create a tension between the current place of installation and the symbolic meanings connected with the original material.

Villu Jaanisoo builds a massive sound installation titled Wave (2008) for his first exhibition in Kalhama & Piippo. This work challenges the dimensions of both physical and mental space and thinking. It consists of sound and loudspeakers of various sizes, and is a free continuation to his earlier work Human Talk (2006).

Villu Jaanisoo has attracted ample attention with his environmental sculptures carried out in Finland. Next summer he will realise his work Everything Is Possible in the Viikki campus of the University of Helsinki. Villu Jaanisoo graduated from the Department of Sculpture of the Estonian Academy of Arts in 1989 and lives and works in Pirkkala, Finland. He acts as the Professor of Sculpture in the Estonian Academy of Arts.

ARTIST JUSSI NIVA

Jussi Niva’s first solo exhibition in Kalhama & Piippo opens up yet another viewpoint to the artist’s recent expedition of the concepts of time and space. In his earlier works Twist and Fine Tuning Jussi Niva explored questions about time, duration and movement. Now in his new Diffus works Jussi Niva concentrates on the making up and braking down of a situation. At the same time, in an intriguing way, he moves more ambivalently in the middle ground between figurative and abstract: The subject of a painting is an extract of any earlier seen surroundings – a wall of a building, a glass surface or a view gliding past. The subject basis moves aside, however, as it disintegrates and spreads out as an abstract surface of paint. The subtly visible brush strokes catch the eye and function as a mark of the act of painting and the human imprint. The painting in itself is a kind of a performative event, and the work draws its existence from “following” that act. When the artist discusses his recent paintings, he refers to a kaleidoscopic reality that his avoidance of the frontal perspective and playing with the forms of the works intensify.

Jussi Niva graduated from the school of the Finnish Fine Arts Academy in 1988 and he represented Finland in the Venice Biennale in 1993. Jussi Niva lives and works in Helsinki and he acts as a lecturer of Painting in the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts. Jussi Niva’s paintings are currently shown in the Carnegie Art Award exhibition touring the Nordic countries

GALLERY KALHAMA & PIIPO CONTEMPORARY
Mannerheimintie 3B, 00100 Helsinki
www.kalhamapiippo.com