воскресенье, 17 февраля 2013 г.

Rendering #1 Art

The article named Rosemarie Trockel: A Cosmos – review  Serpentine Gallery, London and was published on Sunday 17 February 2013. The article is written by Laura Cumming.


The article gives the reader information about Trockel and his exhibition at Serpentine Gallery. Rosemarie Trockel is an influential German artist in her 60s, probably best known for those knitted blankets which incorporated controversial logos – the Playboy bunny, the nuclear symbol – to make political art out of women's work. At the exhibition we could see a giant crab a metre from claw to claw, two beetles performing a ballet on film, a petrified hand...It feels like the little shop of horrors.
There are exquisite glass sea creatures and marvellous birds assembled out of soot, string and cardboard. There are miniature books densely inked with drawings of camels and dogs, and a huge print of a flamingo bent double like some freakish hairpin. There are many marvels in Trockel's Cosmos, to be sure, but none are actually by her.
Also there are the work of Judith Scott, an artist born stone deaf with Down's syndrome, whose wool-wrapped objects – nameless forms heavily bound in worsted and twist – speak of a powerful inner world.
Trockel has always avoided anything so conventional as a style, so she can match her own work to many other media.
The exhibition named 'A Cosmos review' and I think it isn't accidentally. This cosmos is very much her own. the Cosmos for her is the way she feels and realizes our complicated world. Most of the art by Trockel takes the form of late-flowering surrealism. She has a palm tree hanging upside down from the ceiling and a coffee table on which another severed leg is laid like an objet d'art and a filthy bluebottle landing on the cheek of a newborn in its pristine cot. (it impressed me greatly!)


Trockel is not attempting to elaborate any particular idea. In general I liked her way in art, her view on our changeable world. Her works impressed me mostly because of its singularity. I may compare her works of art with the Dali's works. there are some unusualness in it which attracts me.

2 комментария:

  1. Good!
    You are to use more useful words and word expressions from a LIST

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  2. well, THE list for there is one.
    A very good attempt
    Slips:
    Articles are HEADLINED
    I think it isn't accidental (an adjective not an adverb)
    Tutor

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