Hilary Murray's blog


A lively start to the year (Thursday 28 January 2010)

There appears to be a dichotomy in the Dublin art scene. Mark Garry's Another place at Kerlin, and Gallery 126's Video killed the radio star, shown alongside Nevan Lahart's A lively start to a dead end at the RHA all serve to demonstrate this divide. It opens one's eyes to the current gallery-artist predicament. The gallery in straitened times wants to show the piece that they know is a winner - in Garry's case this is his string piece, recently and similarly shown at the Hugh Lane Gallery. Whether this situation is initiated by the gallery or the artist is hard to tell; either way, it does nothing for either party. By backing artists into this corner, it leaves them exposed. Many artists and young curators are now moving away from the visual arts for more freedom; in a telling move, Garry has recently channelled his creativity into the musical collaboration Sending letters to the sea, which is receiving great reviews.

By contrast, the RHA have thrown caution to the wind. Gallery 126's Video killed the radio star examined the idea of false nostalgia and parody. A Warholesque treatment was applied to a Glenn Beck America. I enjoyed the show; some imagery appeared a bit too close to obvious, with evocations of torture and projections of the White House, but for the most part it was inventive and exciting. Wonderful, no safety-net here, no agonised trajectory. Then I moved into Gallery I and suddenly what I had been looking at appeared very safe indeed. What can only be described as a riotous art-orgy made up Nevan Lahart's A lively start to a dead end. What a splendid juxtaposition of situation and artwork. The raucousness seen in the gallery permeated everything, including the RHA ladies, normally donors or Ballsbridge locals. Arriving at 7.30pm I met one of these dames on the way out; looking at me regretfully and smelling like a wine cartel she announced "you've missed it all!" What she meant was that the booze had expired and a quick look into the toilets revealed that many the lady had followed suit; the bathroom reeked of sick.

My favourite piece was the giant cheesy-puff man giving the thumbs-up. One quick aside - the new 'point' is to use one's thumb; apparently this started with Bill Clinton...who knew? Topical and unfathomable, what more can one ask? I imagined this piece in my home, placed there for no other reason but to justify my parent's unswerving misunderstanding of contemporary art. I can just hear myself: "it's a Nevan Lahart, mother, this piece was recently shown at the Royal Hibernian Academy, it cost a fortune; it may look like a giant cheesy-puff man but its so much more than that; it's a statement on pop-culture!"

I have recently been concerned that the Irish art industry might be scared into showing the sellable and sedate in an effort to ride out the recession, and for the most part this unfortunately has been the case. On the other hand, museums play to a different tune and funding already agreed allows them much freedom. If the RHA is anything to go by, their adventurous programme has paid dividends. I returned two days later and there was still a good crowd. The squishy hearse, the freakishly accurate depiction of Joseph Beuys, the moss paper-mache globe, the artist's shed with the garotted dolly; I'd love to have been at the donor committee meeting to hear them reason through it all.


Comment 1 on 2010-01-29 13:23:46
Haven't seen Lahart's show yet, but I agree - we need the gutsy stuff.


Comment 2 on 2010-02-01 21:31:05
I'm a bit perturbed by the term "art industry". Mark Garry's string installation is a new piece - he generally has does a variation on the same kind of string installation in every show he does. Though it says a lot about his work that you've taken it for the same piece.


Comment 3 on 2010-02-02 13:43:50
Lahart's show is the business. Everyone should see it. He's ready to go global.





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Recent Hilary Murray blogs

The boys are back in town (Tuesday 11 May 2010)
A lively start to the year (Thursday 28 January 2010)
Escapology (Thursday 7 January 2010)
The Burden of proof (Thursday 3 December 2009)
It was a great affair, but now it's over! (Monday 9 November 2009)
A turn to stardom (Monday 19 October 2009)
Ad nation (Tuesday 29 September 2009)
Eye games (Thursday 17 September 2009)
Modernist mania (Tuesday 8 September 2009)
Wherein lies the talisman? (28 August 2009)


Editor's blogs

Yesterday in Marienbad (Friday 27 August 2010)
The John and Hazel show (Tuesday 17 August 2010)
Not genius, work (Tuesday 3 August 2010)
Ah, feck it (Wednesday 14 July 2010)
Sweet home Alabama vs Alabama (Wednesday 16 June 2010)
Pacific junk (Tuesday 8 June 2010)
Wiggle room (Tuesday 1 June 2010)
Meet Mr Chen (Monday 31 May 2010)
Quacked (Friday 28 May 2010)
Nationalism, anyone? (Thursday 27 May 2010)


Gemma Tipton blogs

Feeding back (Monday 9 August 2010)
On mediocrity (Friday 9 July 2010)
Protecting the private (Monday 21 June 2010)
Celebrity relationships and contemporary aesthetics (Thursday 10 June 2010)
Killing the love (Tuesday 8 December 2009)
Would different make a difference? (Wednesday 5 November 2009)
Out on the streets (Thursday 1 October 2009)
When will I be famous? (Tuesday 18 August 2009)
Winners and losers (Tuesday 30 June 2009)
Not the only one ranting (or so it seems) (Monday 8 June 2009)


Rayne Booth blogs

Towards the other side (Wednesday 9 December 2009)
Venetian translations (Wednesday 24 June 2009)
The Venice shuffle (Monday 8 June 2009)
Print on demand (Tuesday 12 May 2009)
The year of the exchange (Friday 1 May 2009)
Going free (Friday 24 April 2009)
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