Jean Wainwright presents, Sea Trading, in the Age of Simulacra, at The Association for Art History 2021 Conference

The Association for Art History Conference 2021

Wednesday 14 – Saturday 17 April 2021

Sea Trading, in the Age of Simulacra

Jean Wainwright (University for the Creative Arts)

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 responsibility, 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.

For more information please visit the link here.

Noé Sendas: Vanishing Acts – with interview by Jean Wainwright

Noé Sendas: Vanishing Acts – with interview by Jean Wainwright

Read interview here

Copyright Jean Wainwright not to be reproduced without permission.

Noé Sendas: Vanishing Acts
Edited by João Silverio with an interview by Jean Wainwright (pg 26-34) and a text by Stephan Klee

 comprehensive edition of the artist’s work of the last ten years, with a special focus on assemblage works, namely the Crystal Girls series. 

Noé Sendas is a multidisciplinary creative mind working with photography, collage, video, sculpture. His very unique style creates a mystical aura in which one, the spectator, has the freedom to interpret. 

João Silverio, writer and curator, holds a Master’s Degree in Curatorial Studies from the Fine Arts Faculty of Universidade de Lisbon. Jean Wainwright is an art historian, critic, curator and Andy Warhol scholar. Stephan Klee is an art curator and manager for art associations. 

www.skira.net/en/books/noe-sendas 

BEG STEAL AND BORROW opens at Bermondsey Project Space, Curated by Jean Wainwright

BEG STEAL AND BORROW opens at Bermondsey Project Space, Curated by Jean Wainwright

Bermondsey Project Space

Bermondsey Street,
London SE1 3UW

Private View: Tuesday 25 February, 6-9pm
Exhibition opening: 26 February – 7 March 2020

Philip Colbert
Haley Morris-Cafiero
Yinka Shonibare CBE
Ori Gersht
Melinda Gibson
Stuart Hilton
Birgitta Hosea
Steffi Klenz
Simon Patterson
Andreas Schmidt
John Stezaker
Gavin Turk
Jessica Voorsanger

Curated by Jean Wainwright 

Beg, Steal, Borrow Exhibition Catalogue

Recycling, borrowing, stealing, shamelessly ripping off… artists scavenge. They remix. They find new pathways, links and meanings. They plunder from past or present to create debate. In ‘steal this essay’ Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson poses the question: ‘What imagery is so pervasive that claims of ownership seem facile? And are artists in their ability and need to comment on contemporary culture, thereby somehow entitled to universal usage?’ Art is timeless, but art is also provisional, one iteration of an idea giving way to another: Raphael and Diego Velázquez to Édouard Manet, Andy Warhol to Sturtevant, Walker Evans to Sherrie Levine, in our digital age, these iterations are becoming far speedier. This is putting the laws that relate to copyright under huge pressure. While these laws protect the rights of an artwork’s creator for seventy years, online work can be copied, parodied and memed a thousand times in our age of digital acceleration. We are exposed to so many often fleeting, visual influences. For many artists appropriation is about addition or reinterpretation, so that the new creation is unique, yet contains within it copies or traces of the original.

The artists in Beg, Steal and Borrow, scavenge, remix, recreate, find new pathways, links and meanings. They are using what is already there to fashion new work and create pressing debates. Interconnected in their dynamic engagement their work is multilayered, yet bearing a trace or reference to the other art works or contemporary issues, from art history to archival material, colonial history to online bullying. There are collages and sculptures, large canvases, photographs, appropriated collections and videos. Each work is unique yet bears pertinent traces to its artistic coded pathway.

project-space.london/beg-steal-and-borrow