Monday, April 16, 2007

‘Listening to Adam de la Cour’s Harem’

The swirls, lines and marks become sounds: fingers run over guitar strings producing an audible cord, the visual trace of the conductors baton as it beats out time. Adam de la Cour’s drawings are, in part, the depiction of choreographed movements in space that make a noise, even if it is silence bordered on each side by an audible presence. In De la Cour’s work I stop seeing an arrangement of marks on a page but envisage what these marks and gestures will, or could be, and sound like. They are sounds in my consciousness. Serge Tisseron states in ‘The Spatial Development of the Manuscript’ that “the earliest drawings are not guided by a visual exploration of space but by an exploration of movement.”i The drawings in Harem are not visual but an exploration of gestures, a score of unfixed choreographed movements that make sounds.

Recently I met someone who only listened to music live which caused me to reflect on my own appreciation of music, one that is mediated through a storage device, an object. My Ipod contains an expansive space, and this space never escapes its container, even when it is played, because when I plug in my headphones I go inside the sound box and noise happens around me in its own generated landscape; I exist within the sound-scape, within the objects space. This internalisation and immersion of listening is in opposition to drawing and live music in which the movement is inseparable from the sound/mark. When looking at a trace I recreates its making. Tisseron states that “[i]n writing as in drawing, the “thrown-out” gesture conjures a trace, a line. This “line,” which seems tied to his movement, is used by the inscriber to pull back that thought that has been cast out in the act of inscription.”ii In drawing, the casting out of thoughts allows for the creator/thinker to think another thought, it allows for time (the succession of thoughts) itself to progress.iii Seeing drawing enables a belief that the past thoughts/moments can be recaptured.

Adam de la Cour’s paper based works contain parts of Manga comics removed from their original narrative. Reading them I see onomatopoeia, a crash, a smack. De la Cour says that “Manga are noisy” iv he listens to them through seeing. In Japan they read from right to left. I raise my hand and move it across an imaginary page in order to comprehend that way of reading. De la Cour states (in reference to the performance of his drawings) that “the narrative […] was originally designed for right to left/top to bottom reading (as in traditional Manga) it can be approached in any way the performer wishes, even in page order.”v When we fragment frames of a comic and re-contextualise them, they still have a narrative quality attached to them. They are part of a great whole. They have a next and a before. The re-contextualised frame causes the other drawings around it into part of the progression.

How the musician/conductor interpret the musical score changes, fashions and trends occur in this subjective annunciation of signs and shared codes on the page. The performance is a one off, not truly replicatable. When the drawings/scores are performed (another author producing their own response to what they see/read) the mark/sound is again cast out onto the space/page. The making and the mark/sound are reunited.


P. 33 Tisseron, Serge, ‘All Writing Is Drawing: The Spatial Development of the Manuscript.’ In Boundaries: Writing and Drawing, Yale French Studies No. 84, (Yale University, New Haven, 1994,) p. 33
Op cit p. 36
In reference to discussion with D. Gamez on his book What We Can Never Know: Blind spots in Philosophy and Science, (London, Continuum 2007)
Adam de la Cour, ‘Harem: The Object as Score’ supporting text accompanying exhibition Harem, (C4RD, London 2007)
Adam de la Cour, supporting text

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Adam King: Distant Echo Wilderness

After popping into the White Cube I wandered up to Dalston to see Adam King’s show, ‘Distant Echo Wilderness’. It was refreshing to see the playful, colourful work, and a contrast to the sombre paintings by Eberhard Havekost. The Lounge Gallery was overgrown with cut out floral patterns, balloons, organic floral textile blob like sculptures with kitsch ornaments and records. As self proclaimed stationary addict, I immediately identified with the proliferation of paper clips, rubber bands and the odd bulldog clip. Though I felt that I would have focused more on the works if there had been less of it, perhaps one less wall piece. It was a riotous sensitive show, and apparently Charles likes his work enough to have got out of cheque book for it! I wish the number of people who trail through the White Cube would go to ‘Distant Echo Wilderness’ but I doubt that will happen.

On until 14 Apr
Lounge 28 Shackelwell Lane, E8 2EZ

Drawing Exhibitions: London

Annie Whiles: CUCKOO Danielle Arnaud contemporary art
9 Mar - 15 Apr http://www.daniellearnaud.com/ 123 Kennington Rd. SE11 6SF

You Are Here New Works bu Jill Baroff Gallery N. von Bartha,
2 Mar - 28 Apr http://www.jillbaroff.net/ 136b Lancaster Road, W11 1QU

Charlotte Posenenske Between the Bridges
15 Apr - 24 Jun http://www.betweenbridges.net/Posenenske.html
223 Cambridge Heath Road, (corner of Three Colts Lane) E2 0EL

Stefan Bruggemann Obliteration Series Blow de la Barra
22 Mar - 12 May http://www.blowdelabarra.com/07bruggemann.php 35 Heddon Street, W1B 4BP

The Drawing Factory The Crypt, St Pancras Church, Euston Road, NW1 2BA
14 - 27 Apr http://www.thedrawingfactory.com/ PRIVATE VIEW FRI 13 APR

Leonor Antunes Dick Smith Gallery
30 Mar - 29 Apr http://www.dicksmithgallery.co.uk/ 74 Buttesland Street, N1 6BY

Ailbhe Ni Bhriain: Aftermath Domobaal
30 Mar - 5 May http://www.domobaal.com/exhibitions/40-07-ailbhe-ni-bhriain-01.html 3 John Street, WC1N 2ES

Drawing 2007 - Biennial Fundraiser The Drawing Room
19 Apr - 9 May http://www.drawingroom.org.uk/intro.htm 55 Laburnum Street, E2 8BD

'It was the best of Time Outs, it was the worst of Time Outs' Peter Davies, David Ersser, Graham Hudson
SEVENTEEN 18 Apr - 19 May PRIVATE VIEW 19 Apr 17 Kingsland Rd, E2 8AA

Adam Dant -Menageries and Monuments Hales Gallery
16 Mar - 21 Apr http://www.halesgallery.com/exhibitions/ex_07_dant.php Tea Building, 7 Bethnal Green Rd, E1 6LA

Cary Kwok Herald Street
23 Mar - 29 Apr http://www.heraldst.com/ 2 Herald Street, E2 6JT

Torsten Slama Illustrated Visions Of The Future
14 Apr - 28 May Hotel http://www.generalhotel.org/302 53 Old Bethnal Green Road, E2 6QA

Construction Time Again Lisson Gallery
22 Mar - 4 May http://www.lisson.co.uk/exhibitionDisplay.asp?ExhibitionID=62 29 Bell Street, NW1 5BY

Paul Senior A History of Things A Nifty Fine Gallery
5 Apr - 6 May http://www.aniftyfinegallery.co.uk/ 59A High Street, South Norwood, London, SE25 6EF

Momentory Momentum: Animated Drawings Parasol Unit
3 Mar - 12 May http://www.parasol-unit.org/ 14 Wharf Road, N1 7RW

Lost, Found and Imagined Salt Projects
http://www.saltprojects.com/lostfoundimagined.html 28 David's Road, Forest Hill, SE23 3EX (see web site for opening times)

DIrty Nature Standpoint Gallery
20 Apr - 19 May http://www.standpointlondon.co.uk/spgallery.html 45 Coronet Street, N1 6HD

Marcel Dzama Timothy Taylor Gallery
8 Mar - 13 Apr http://www.timothytaylorgallery.com/index_1024.html 24 Dering St. W1S 1TT