| CONRAD ATKINSON: CONSTANTLY CONTESTING
1 March - 3 April 2003
Curated by Miranda McClintic
Art and politics mix in recent work by internationally renowned
British artist Conrad Atkinson, presented here in the context of
two decades of paintings, drawings, ceramics, textiles, and prints.
Atkinson creates visually compelling interpretations of 9/11, violence,
AIDS, West Nile virus, immigration, art world politics, control
and manipulation of information, third world labor, ENRON, the proliferation
of landmines, and beauty. Through his work he transforms his strongly
held beliefs into art with humor and with formal training from The
Royal Academy Schools London.
Many works in this exhibition come directly from London s
Courtauld Institute of Art Gallery where Atkinson was the first
contemporary artist to respond to the collection and install his
own art among the masterpieces that inspired them. He depicted wounds
and scars from Renaissance crucifixions that created "a disconcerting
dialogue between present and past," according to the Times
of London, which cited the show as one of the three best of the
year nationwide.
As well as newspaper works from the 1980s, clothing embroidered
with viruses and epigrams, there will be two series of paintings
about the events of 9/11. Atkinson will also create a new wall installation
based on wounds found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's collection.
Ceramic sculptures of landmines will be prominently displayed in
the windows of White Box and of Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, SoHo,
in honor of the fifth anniversary of the Landmine Treaty that went
into effect March 1, 1998. He was the Official Artist of the U.S.
Landmines Campaign in 1997-98. Personalizing the political, Atkinson
extends the conceptual premises of his art into action.
Included in the exhibition are newspapers, basins, landmines, wounds,
and men's suits that reflect the complex meanings and multiple associations
of the information and images conveyed through mass communications
media and through art. Re-presenting emblems, headlines, advertisements,
popular music, stereotypes, and cultural icons, Atkinson's pieces
demonstrate that our understanding of the world is determined by
conflicting information differing in source, format and content.
Born in Cumbria in the north of England in 1940, from a family of
coal miners, Conrad Atkinson earned degrees from Carlisle College
of Art, Liverpool College of Art and the Royal Academy Schools.
In 2002, he became the first practicing artist to be appointed Distinguished
Visiting Professor to the Courtauld Institute of Art, while on sabbatical
from the University of California at Davis. Recently, his films
from 1970, "Industrial Relations Bill" and "X Film" have been acquired
for Tate Britain's permanent collection. An acknowledged influence
on younger generations of artists in Britain and the United States,
he has exhibited internationally since the 1970's. Conrad Atkinson's
works are in the permanent collections at the Tate, the Victoria
and Albert Museum, The British Museum, the Australian National Gallery,
the Pushkin Museum, Moscow, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
SPECIAL EVENTS AT WHITE BOX LANDMINE RAFFLE Throughout the Conrad
Atkinson exhibition White Box is offering raffle tickets at $50
each giving collectors and White Box members and visitors the opportunity
to win an original Conrad Atkinson work of art valued at $3,000.
Tickets to participate in the raffle of original Conrad Atkinson
land mines are available at White Box, either in person or by telephone
on 212-714-2347 or via the White Box website www.whiteboxny.org.
Four landmine sculptures will be raffled. All tax deductable raffle
proceeds will benefit Adopt-A-Minefield and White Box. Winning tickets
will be drawn on Friday, March 28th at 8 pm at White Box. Land mine
sculptures courtesy of the artist and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.
TWO CONVERSATIONS WITH CONRAD ATKINSON Two American artists, Alfredo
Jaar and Tim Rollins will, on two separate evenings will dicuss
art, politics and social change with Conrad Atkinson. Both Rollins
and Jaar's work was influenced by an Atkinson exhibition titled
Material at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts in 1979 which suggested the
name Group Material adopted by the political art collective established
in New York that same year by Tim Rollins, Julie Ault, Mundy Ellis,
and Douglas Ashford.
Saturday, March 1, 2003 at 5:00 pm
In conversation with Alfredo Jaar, introduced by Miranda McClintic
Friday, March 28, 2003 at 7:00 pm
In conversation with Tim Rollins, introduced by Eleanor Heartney
Conrad Atkinson shows courtesy Ronald Feldman Fine Art, New York.
This exhibition has been made possible through generous support
of the British Council and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.
Event: Conrad Atkinson: Constantly Contesting
WHITE BOX AND ADOPT-A-MINE FIELD TO RAFFLE
LANDMINE SCULPTURES
In honor of the 5th anniversary of the International Landmine Treaty
and as part of the Conrad Atkinson: Constantly Contesting exhibition
at White Box, four unique ceramic landmine sculptures created by
Conrad Atkinson will be raffled in a drawing to take place at White
Box on March 28th, 2003. Raffle tickets are $50 and may be purchased
in person at White Box or by telephone 212-714-2347. Each unique
landmine is valued at $3,000. All proceeds from the raffle will
benefit Adopt-A-Minefield and White Box. Landmine sculptures courtesy
of the artist and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.
Conrad Atkinson has been working with landmine imagery throughout
his artistic career. In 1997 he was invited to be the official artist
of the US Campaign to Ban Landmines (Vietnam Veterans of America).
The landmine sculptures are covered in images both from popular
culture, such as the late Princess Diana and Gone With The Wind
references (Atlanta is the home of the landmine), as well as decorative
patterns and historical, often religious, works of art. By having
the decorated landmines manufactured to his specifications, Atkinson
imbues these horrific objects with a "kitsch factor" that
calls attention to the ease with which these weapons are manufactured,
distributed and integrated into the global village.
The Artist
Born in Cumbria in the north of England in 1940, from a family of
coal miners, Conrad Atkinson earned degrees from Carlisle College
of Art, Liverpool College of Art and the Royal Academy Schools.
He has exhibited internationally since the 1970s and his works are
in the permanent collections of the Tate, the Victoria and Albert
Museum, the British Museum, the Australian National Gallery, the
Pushkin Museum, Moscow, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Atkinson shows courtesy Ronald Feldman Fine Art, New York.
Artists Statement
Landmines are not only functional weapons of destruction that cost
three dollars to make and three hundred to deactivate, but will
continue to kill children at random for the next thousand years
at the current cleanup rate. They are also objects of political,
economic and cultural significance, serving as metaphors for a variety
of contemporary issues and ideologies. Landmines represent the globalization
of culture as much as the Golden Arches of McDonald s. We
love our beautiful bombs: they defend our way of life. By bringing
these symbolic values into focus, I have tried to offer a different
and more productive perspective on our propensity for creatively
destroying each other. From Goya to Guernica, from Roger Fenton
to Don McCullin, artists have sought new, more effective ways to
picture war and horror. But the image of children with bandaged
limbs and missing legs - like all images of human tragedy - produces
only compassion fatigue when repeated several hundred times. Rather
than seeking to represent this horror literally, I have focused
on its source. We are imbricated with these weapons, ideologically
economically and imaginatively. In this sense, imagination has itself
become a source of death and destruction. Like Bob Dylan wrote on
his guitar, this weapon kills .
ADOPT-A-MINEFIELD
Adopt-A-Minefield? is a public-private partnership among the United
Nations Association of the USA, the United Nations, Ted Turner s
Better World Fund, and the U.S. State Department, to clear minefields,
provide assistance to landmine survivors, and raise awareness of
the global landmine crisis. Since its launch in 1999, the Campaign
has raised over $6.74 million for mine clearance and survivor assistance
and cleared over 3 million square meters of land with an equal amount
currently under clearance. Adopt-A-Minefield is the only non-governmental
organization that is in the top funder list in its six program countries:
Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cambodia, Croatia, Mozambique,
and Vietnam. In addition to its Goodwill Ambassadors and Patrons
Heather Mills McCartney and Paul McCartney, Adopt-A-Minefield has
a broad range of supporters from school children to community leaders,
educators, corporate leaders and celebrities such as Michael Douglas
and Catherine Zeta Jones, Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert Redford, Susan
Sarandon, Harrison Ford, Norah Jones, and Lucy Liu among others.
With partner campaigns in Canada, the United Kingdom, and Sweden,
Adopt-A-Minefield is engaging hundreds of thousands of individuals
around the world in resolving one of the most serious humanitarian
problems of our time.
This exhibition has been made possible through generous support
of the British Council and Ronald Feldman Fine Arts.
PRESS
Show: Conrad Atkinson: Constantly
Contesting
Publication: Art In America, October 2003
Article/Writer: Jonathan Gilmore

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