Arts: Musa Re-launch
July 8, 2010
Monday 12 July | Musa (Exchange Street) | 6pm | Free
Woah, does this sound good or what? Monday 12 July sees the re-launch of Musa; you know the place, that restaurant/café in Exchange Street, the old banana warehouse. Big deal you say. Well, erm, it is actually…
Here’s why: It’s now under the guidance of James Watt from maverick local brewers/feather-rufflers BrewDog who promises to transform the place ‘from a shrinking violet into a cultural blunderbuss – offering food, art and entertainment that change the face of Aberdeen’s art scene.’
He’s off to a good start anyway; Monday’s event has various different strands which should tie together quite nicely and make for a very interesting evening indeed. Here’s what’s going down:
The launch of an exhibition by local artists Rachel Yates, Adeline Scott and Emma Hamilton
Another exhibition curated by superb online-portal-for-creatives Central Station
Live music
Tastes from the new menu
Special-edition BrewDog beers
and
The first-ever Aberdeen event from Twitter meet-up types #themeet140
Cool. Let’s hope it’s how they mean to go on…
Links:
Arts: Aberdeen Art Gallery 125th Birthday
July 6, 2010
Wednesday 7 July | Aberdeen Art Gallery | 10am-4pm | Free
If you’re free during the day on Wednesday 7 July, Aberdeen Art Gallery are celebrating their 125th birthday with a party. All sorts of activities and stuff are promised… and free cake. Boom! There’s the clincher…
Arts: New Peacock Exhibitions
June 28, 2010
Friday 2 July-Saturday 14 August | Peacock Visual Arts | Free
Two new exhibitions, which means double the usual opening night shenanigans on Friday 2 July at 6pm. You’ve got until mid-August to check them out otherwise though…
Plein Air : The Ethical Aesthetic Impulse
Reiko Goto and Tim Collins‘ tree-based project featuring ‘a box easel for the 21st Century’ (image below left)
and…
Insight
A new series of prints by Agata Dymus-Kazmierczak produced during a one-year residency in the printmaking department at Gray’s School of Art (image below right)
More info is available on the Peacock website
Arts/Film: Mobile Cinema
June 21, 2010
Wednesday 23 June | Peacock Visual Arts | 6pm | Free
Romana Schmalisch presents a lecture/screening using a reconstruction of a film prop from Alexander Medvedkin’s film “The New Moscow” (1938).
The performance reflects on change in urban space using a film archive developed for the machine and has previously been shown in Zurich, Moscow, Rome, Bucharest, Kaliningrad, Vilnius, Kaunas, Warsaw, Berlin, Kiev, London, Paris and Yerevan. Looks cool:
Arts: Gray’s School of Art Degree Show
June 16, 2010
Friday 18 June-Saturday 26 June | Gray’s School of Art | Free
It’s that time of year again; time for the culmination of years of work, time for proud parents and friends, time for the curious and critical visitor and, come opening night, time for the art-loving bevvy-merchant to get their swerve on.
It goes without saying that it’s always worth a visit. Let’s just hope that sponsors BP can still afford to hand out their prizes in light of recent events…
Arts: Sensing Place, Belonging and Wonderment
June 10, 2010
Limousine Bull Artists’ Collective (South Esplanade East) | Until Sunday 20 June | Free
This opens tonight (Thursday 10 June)
More info on the poster below and here
Arts: Miscellany
May 23, 2010
Friday 28 May | Limousine Bull Artists’ Collective (South Esplanade East) 7pm | Free
Really, really wanted to use the heading ‘The Pre-Degrees’ for this but sense got the better of me…
Good pun though.
It is though.
F**k you then.
Anyway, ahead of the Gray’s degree show this year (see?) Limousine Bull present a selection of works by Masters of Fine Art & Design students. The exhibition runs until the 5th of June but heading down this Friday ensures you’ll be able to have a glass of wine while you look round. Yas.
Arts: High Society?
May 16, 2010
Fraser Denholm’s blog on the Union Terrace Gardens debacle (check it out if you haven’t already) has been incredibly important in uncovering some of the downright lies, nay shite, surrounding the ‘project’. Aye, shooting from the hip is what he does best. As a bit of a departure, here’s his take on the ongoing Aberdeen Artists Society exhibition. Hud on to yer chapeaux folks…
The Aberdeen Artists Society Annual Exhibition is now in its 76th year and since 1934 there has been a fast, varied and diverse series of seismic shifts in the process of making art, showing art, thinking about art and the perception of the actual function of art. The role of the artist has changed significantly, as has the notion of what art is, however in this time the Aberdeen Artist Society Annual Exhibition has remained largely the same.
This exhibition is not one which is hung, it is simply filled. There is no theme, no brief for submissions, no curatorial message, no critical standpoint in the selection. The works are chosen by being marched, in a style more akin to the X-Factor than serious artistic critique, before a selection panel (not unlike that of Messrs. Cowell, Walsh and Co.) and judged according to an unrealistic and outdated series of subjective criteria based on the self-imposed authority of the panel.
Photo: Pammy May
The result is a mostly incoherent collection of works of varying critical value and aesthetic quality. Careful, considered works are shown alongside tired harbour scenes, naive portraiture and obscenely-glazed ceramic animals to the detriment of any coherent voice an individual piece may have. Gallery Two resembles a seaside bric-a-brac shop, with paintings often hung three-high in order to cram as much stuff in as possible. A large desk occupies the centre of the room selling catalogues, the only way of attributing an artist to their work. Even on the broadest level, as an exposition of the nature of work produced by the “Aberdeen Artist”, this exhibition is a spectacular failure.
Each year, the exhibition manages to overlook the diverse and exciting range of contemporary practice utilised by Aberdeen’s growing population of 21st Century Artists, both at grassroots and more established levels, in favour of producing an exhibition which aspires to be almost identical, if not less inspired, to the previous show. Contemporary artists working in Aberdeen are no less critically aware and culturally attuned to their counterparts across the world, working in a wide range of current media such as installation, performance, interactive work, social engagement, video, sound and much more, none of which are represented in the exhibition.
Even the title and its apparent mandate to suggest “We Are Aberdeen Artists” is contentious to say the least due to its extremely limited scope in its attempt to highlight the range of practice in Aberdeen. With the exhibition commanding a similar prestige to the RSA Annual in Edinburgh, there is little wonder that there’s a negative perception of artistic and cultural endeavour in the Granite City, which does nothing to ease the struggle for recognition that Aberdeen is a vibrant place for new and exciting Artists to live and work.
Ouch.









