19 juli 2016

Christian Boltanski #7




Christian Boltanski, atelier de Malakoff, 1983. (bron en foto's: David Boeno)


Christian Boltanski at work. (bron: Zest Today, foto: Sandro Capati)

> Christian Boltanski

Christian Boltanski #6



























French artist Christian Boltanski poses in his atelier on November 9, 2009 in Malakoff, south of Paris. (bron: Getty Images, foto's: Joel Saget)

> Christian Boltanski

Christian Boltanski #5










L'Atelier de Christian Boltanski, 2012. (bron: france inter)

> Christian Boltanski

08 juli 2016

Richard Deacon #4


Richard Deacon's ash and steel Slippery When Wet 2004 under construction.


Construction of Richard Deacon's Out of Order 2003, oak and stainless steel.




Wood being shaped following steaming in Matthew Perry's studio.




Works under construction inside Matthew Perry's studio.


Shaping wood encased in metal in Matthew Perry's studio.


Deacon's large-scale wooden sculpture Upper Strut 2011 under construction.


Wood encased in metal being shaped.

"....
Matthew Perry, long-term collaborator of British sculptor Richard Deacon, reveals the methods he's devised over their thirty-year relationship to manipulate materials.

'I go down to a place in the country for the wood, and a log is already cut several months before into rough dimensions that I want. I tend to select the pieces outside the studio and I look at them bit by bit for straight grain. At the studio I chop and mill it down. In the case of making twists, which are the heart of the works I Remember, and Strut, after I’ve selected them I bundle them together in groups with gaffer tape and shove them into the steamer. It’s in the steamer for no less than three hours and when it comes out I have five minutes to actually twist it. I can’t do more than four per day because they require at least two hours to dry to the point at which I can take them out of the steamer.

I use a twisting donkey which can take various heads. The maximum I can get is something like a 435° twist on any object; and that is the point to which everything starts breaking, including the machine. Wood tends to fracture when it’s allowed to expand, so the whole principle of steaming is that you compress - it’s very easy for a piece of wood to be compressed, especially once it’s steamed, but if you allow it to stretch, then it will just crack.



The reality of this work is that it’s always eccentric and it’s very hand-made, it’s not a process of mass production. Necessity is always what rules everything. You have very complex shapes that have to be joined, and they are routed together so that they are both strong, but elegant, rather than there being a kind of obtuseness about it. I don’t use computers to calculate things, I tend to just use my capacity to visualise things, and I still work like that. Every piece that I make, I try and leave something that’s lost, or is answered by the form or the structure, and that works for both me and Richard.

Authorship is difficult. But in a way, my life is about the practice rather than the processes. Richard has an idea; he wants to put things together in a certain way, and I go away and make a vocabulary for him to work with. That’s always how it’s always been.'" (bron: Tate, foto's: Martin Sherman en Christopher Perry)


Richard Deacon: Slippery When Wet, 2004.


Richard Deacon: Out of Order, 2003.


Richard Deacon: Upper Strut, 2011.

Richard Deacon #3


Richard Deacon in his Herne Hill studio, London, 2015.


Farmyard animal toys form part of Richard Deacon's studio collection.


One corner of the studio holds a collection of plants that he has grown from seed.

"....
CG
Can you outline a typical day in the studio?

RD
Because I travel quite a lot, it’s hard to have a typical day. I try to get here for 6 o-‘clock. Then I can have 2 or 3 hours working here at the computer or at the table over there. I wouldn’t really start physically making stuff until later in the day. In a way I wish I had an office that was separate from the studio because there is a compulsion to come here and deal with all of the emails and to get that out the way before you can start working. When you’re travelling a lot, that backlog of activities tends to build up a lot.
...." (bron: Plinth)

Richard Deacon #2










Richard deacon in his studio. (bron en foto's: Nick Ballon)

07 juli 2016

Fred Tomaselli #3


Fred Tomaselli at work in his studio. (bron: wnyc, foto: Julia Barton)

Wolfgang Tillmans


Wolfgang Tillmans inside his studio in Bethnal Green, East London. (bron: Link Photographers, foto: Jiri Rezac)

> Wolfgang Tillmans

Tracey Emin #5


Tracey Emin in her studio in Spitalfields. (bron: Shoot, foto: Jay Brooks)

> Tracy Emin

Chris Ofili #5




Chris Ofili in his studio, Trinidad. (bron en foto's: Ian Allen)

Chris Ofili #4










Chris Ofili painting a backdrop for Metamorphosis: Titian 2012. Stills van de video Chris Ofili: 'How I painted the Royal Ballet's set'. (bron video: BBC)

Zie ook de post van 4 februari 2013 (hk).