Jean Wainwright participates in ‘Photography Conference: Consumerism/Capital/Culture’

Jean Wainwright participates in ‘Photography Conference: Consumerism/Capital/Culture’

National Museum of Cardiff
24 January 2020

Professor Jean Wainwright will present the paper Andy Warhol and the political ‘Fifteen Minutes of Fame’

This paper examines Andy Warhol relationship with politics, celebrity and consumerism. As an artist he appeared to be full of political contradiction, drawing and screening many works that could be considered provocatively political in their subject matter. His series of screen-prints of Jackie Kennedy, Race Riots, Electric Chair’s, Hammer and Sickle’s, Vote McGovern and Mao, are all loaded imagery. Warhol’s images embraced Cold War politics, turbulent social upheavals and spanned several American presidential premierships, yet he often publicly denied any critical engagement with his imagery. He claimed to have screen-printed Still life (Hammer and Sickle) because as a symbol it had become as ‘pop’ as a popular graffiti symbol. He liked to fantasize about how he would use his TV time, if he were President.  He was thrilled to go to the White House whoever the President, and would report back on the décor or food served, yet who conversely has left us enduring political images from the decades of the sixties, seventies and eighties. This paper asks, was he attracted to the ‘open sores of America’ as Thomas Crow has suggested, or was what he was screening just a ‘surface’ reason, his repetitions emptying out the content. Using some of my archival interviews with Warhol’s brothers (John and Paul Warhola) I examine Warhol’s relationship between his childhood poverty in a ‘working class’ area of Pittsburgh and the escapism of celebrity to examine the way that this impacted on his political works.

Jean Wainwright to participate in 2020 Art Historians Conference

Professor Jean Wainwright will participate in the session ‘Hybrid Marines’ with the paper ‘Sea Trading, in the Age of Simulacra’.

In our age of simulacra, the physical power of the sea to inspire artists remains undiminished; its trade routes, edges and invisible geographical boundaries exciting myriad artistic responses in many different media. This paper juxtaposes the voices of artists interviewed by Jean Wainwright linking disparate contemporary art practices together in a hybrid dialogue of sea ‘trading’. Isaac Julian speaks about his film The Leopard (Western Union: small boats) (2007) and his images evoking the journey of migrants traversing the Mediterranean Sea from Libya, to escape war and famine. His voice is juxtaposed with Langlands & Bell discussing their multi-channel digital animation,

Into the Blue (2014), with its focus on the structures that we inhabit and the networks that permeate and connect them. They reflect on how ships and their registered names become encoded as social, political and economic phenomena and how these become entwined in their installation with the complex networks that link liners cargo ships and trade routes. Finally, I discuss Forensic Architecture’s Liquid Traces – The Left-To-Die Boat Case (2014) and its hybrid mapping. Seventy-two migrants were left to drift for 14 days in NATO’s maritime surveillance area in 2011 during the war on Libya, resulting in the evasion of responsibly, allowed by complex and overlapping jurisdictions. As the words and images unfold, my paper reminds us how the sea is a vast territory, that both has the power to entice us and destroy us with its seductive vitality.

Show and Tell: Women’s Voices in Audio Arts, Professor Jean Wainwright in conversation with Lucia Farinati at Tate Britain

Tate Britain
Library & Archive Reading Rooms
7 June 2019, 12-2pm

From the volume Feminist Issues in Contemporary Art (1979) to the publications of several interviews with artists including Laurie Anderson, Tracey Emin, Rose Garrard, Susan Hiller, Mary Kelly, Tina Keane, Georgina Starr, Mona Hatoum, Runa Islam, Silvia C. Ziranek (to mention just a few) Audio Arts Magazine featured a significant and diverse spectrum of women’s voices.

Through a guided presentation of recordings selected and presented with Jean Wainwright, a former interviewer of Audio Arts, this sound seminar will invite participants to engage with the voices and the sound works of women artists who featured in Audio Arts Magazine. A temporary display of archive material, including letters, tape cassettes, photos and ephemera from the Audio Arts collection (1973-2007) will introduce the audience to the cultural context in which the dialogue with women artists was developed across different generations, backgrounds and artistic pract

Link and booking below:
https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/talk/show-and-tell-womens-voices-audio-arts