Cerith Wyn Evans

Cerith Wyn Evans (born 1958, Llanelli) is a Welsh conceptual artist, sculptor and film-maker.

Early life and education

Cerith is the son of Sulwyn and Myfanwy Evans and was educated at Ysgol Dewi Sant Llanelli and at Llanelli Boys Grammar School. Sulwyn his father was a noted photographer and painter. Cerith is a fluent Welsh speaker. Wyn Evans completed a foundation course at Dyfed College of Art (1976–77), and later studied at Saint Martin's School of Art (1977–80) and the Royal College of Art (1981–84). Among his teachers at Saint Martin's was conceptual artist John Stezaker.[1] Wyn Evans then served as an assistant to Derek Jarman, with whom he worked on The Angelic Conversation (1985), Caravaggio (1986), and The Last of England (1987). His early experimental film work in the 1980s often concentrated on dancers including collaborations with Michael Clark. In 1988, his short film Degrees of Blindness, starring Tilda Swinton, was shown at the Chicago International Film Festival. He also collaborated on noted pop videos with bands including The Smiths and Throbbing Gristle.[2]

Work

Although Wyn Evans moved to sculpture and installation in the early 1990s, the influence of film remained strong on his work.[3] Most of the artist's work stems from his strong interest in language and communication, often using found or remembered texts from film, philosophy or literature combined with a clean aesthetic.[4] Writing in Frieze, in 1999, Jennifer Higgie said: "Wyn Evans’ use of repetition and elliptical meaning indicates endless possible readings his choice of a quote replete with both classical and personal implications placed at the junction of earth and sea nods to Platonic ideas about renewal, while the decaying beach reflects a more negative image of repetition as a kind of dead end, a form of stasis."[5]

Wyn Evans' firework pieces, for example, are wooden structures that spell out open-ended texts that burn over a designated period of time. His transparent, crystal chandelier sculptures, such as the multi-coloured Italian Murano glass chandelier‚ Astrophotography... (2006) are programmed to evoke an otherworldly language from sections of text translated into the flashing light signals of Morse Code. The texts rendered in code are sometimes visible simultaneously on adjacent computer screens embedded in the gallery walls[6] and represent a personal canon of literature and include letters, poems, philosophical extracts and short stories by writers ranging from Theodor Adorno, William Blake and Judith Butler to Brion Gysin, James Merrill and the Marquis de Sade.[7] For the Venice Biennale in 2003, he created Cleave 03, an installation which consisted of a World War II searchlight sending a seven-mile beam of light into the night sky over the Giudecca flashing intermittently in a morse code version of Ellis Wynne's 1703 Welsh text Gweledigaethau y Bardd Cwsc.[8] In his earlier Cleave installations, he refracted the light signals of Morse code off a rotating mirror ball to create dazzling and intense sensory environments.[9] The artist is also interested in the way that soundtracks form a parallel 'text' for a film or photograph and in the slippage created when these sounds are dislodged, changed or removed.[10]

From 1984, in an homage to artist and writer Brion Gysin, Wyn Evans reconstructed Gysin's Dreamachines – cylindrical light-shades spinning on wooden platforms at 75 rpm, invented as a way to tap into dream states and the unconscious of the 'viewer'.[11] When looked at with closed eyes, the rotating, flickering light is meant to provoke an altered state of consciousness.[12] For S=U=P=E=R=S=T=R=U=C=T=U=R=E ('Trace me back to some loud, shallow, chill, underlying motives overspill') (2010), Wyn Evans created a wall of glowing columns, each one made from thousands of tubular lights[13] that warm the exhibition space unbearably.[14]

From 1989 to 1995 he taught at the Architectural Association, London.[15]

Collaborations

In 2007, Wyn Evans contributed to Visionaire 53: Sound, a compilation by Visionaire magazine featuring contributions from over 100 artists including Michael Stipe, Malcolm McLaren, Yoko Ono, and Christian Marclay, among others. In 2009 he collaborated with fellow artist-musician Florian Hecker and Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary on the opera project No night No day at the 53rd Venice Biennale. A collaboration with English band Throbbing Gristle titled A=P=P=A=R=I=T=I=O=N was displayed at Tramway, Glasgow in 2009; with the title taken from a poem by the radical 19th-century French writer Stéphane Mallarmé,[16] Throbbing Gristle contributed a multi-channel soundtrack that was played through sixteen hanging Audio Spotlight sound panels that Evans had incorporated into his chandelier sculpture.[17] In 2011, Wyn Evans was featured in Juergen Teller's ad campaign for fashion label Marc Jacobs.[18]

Commissions

Along with other artists, including Liam Gillick and Thomas Demand, Wyn Evans was commissioned in 2007 to contribute a work of art to the newly opened Lufthansa Aviation Center in Frankfurt.[19] In 2010, he created five Light Columns for the illuminated entry portal of the K&L Gates Center in Pittsburgh, complemented by the neon wall sculpture Mobius Strip at the entry reception desk.[20] Commissioned by the Great North Run Cultural Programme in 2011, he unveiled Permit yourself.., a large-scale kinetic sculpture installation composed of double-sided glass panel mirrors, with an excerpt of text cut out of each mobile panels. That same year, the artist was commissioned to design a large scale picture (176 m2) for the season 2011/2012 in the Vienna State Opera as part of the exhibition series "Safety Curtain", conceived by museum in progress.

Exhibitions

In 2003, Wyn Evans represented Wales in the first Wales Pavilion at the Venice Biennale.[21][22] In 2004, on the occasion of his two-part exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the List Visual Arts Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, he combined work by himself and his father, a gifted amateur photographer, with objects from the Museum of Fine Arts and M.I.T. collections.[23] Recent solo exhibitions include the Serpentine Galleries (2014),[24] De La Warr Pavilion (2012),[25] Kunsthall Bergen (2011), Tramway, Glasgow (2009), Inverleith House, Edinburgh (2009), MUSAC, Leon (2008), Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (2006), Kunsthaus Graz (2005), and Camden Arts Centre (2004). He has also participated in the Moscow Biennial (2011), Aichi Triennale (2010), the Yokohama Triennale (2008), the Istanbul Biennial (2005), documenta 11 (2002), and the Venice Biennale (1995, 2003).[26]

Wyn Evans is represented by Yvon Lambert Gallery, Paris, White Cube, London, and São Paulo, Galeria Fortes Vilaça

Recognition

Literature

Notes

  1. Innocence and Experience – frieze talks to Cerith Wyn Evans Archived 14 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine., Frieze, Issue 71, November–December 2002.
  2. "Cerith Wyn Evans". SHOWstudio. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  3. Cerith Wyn Evans Tate.
  4. Cerith Wyn Evans Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh.
  5. Jennifer Higgie "Cerith Wyn Evans Archived 17 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine." Frieze, June–August 1999. Retrieved 18-07-12.
  6. Look at that picture How does it appear to you now? Does is seem to be Persisting?, 31 October – 6 December 2003 White Cube, London.
  7. Cerith Wyn Evans, 9 May – 5 July 2009 Archive copy at the Wayback Machine Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.
  8. Gibbons, Fiachra (11 June 2003). "Welsh artist beams verse into Venice sky". The Guardian.
  9. Look at that picture How does it appear to you now? Does is seem to be Persisting?, 31 October – 6 December 2003 White Cube, London.
  10. Cerith Wyn Evans: The Curves of the Needle, 20 April – 19 May 2006 White Cube, London.
  11. Look at that picture How does it appear to you now? Does is seem to be Persisting?, 31 October – 6 December 2003 White Cube, London.
  12. Vivian Rehberg, Cerith Wyn Evans, ARC/Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris Archived 4 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine., Frieze, Issue 101, September 2006.
  13. Ben Luke (19 April 2010), Trip the light fantastic with Cerith Wyn Evans Evening Standard.
  14. Jonathan Jones (13 May 2010), Artist Cerith Wyn Evans fires up the White Cube The Guardian.
  15. Cerith Wyn Evans Tate.
  16. Robert Clark (29 August 2009), Exhibitions preview: Cerith Wyn Evans And Throbbing Gristle: A=P=P=A=R=I=T=I=O=N, Glasgow The Guardian.
  17. "Throbbing Gristle: • TG COLLABORATION with CERITH WYN EVANS •". Throbbing--gristle.blogspot.com. 7 February 2010. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  18. Deborah Arthurs (26 July 2011), Cheeky new Marc Jacobs ad campaign leaves little to the imagination... and where are all the clothes? Daily Mail.
  19. Cerith Wyn Evans Archived 21 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Lufthansa, Frankfurt.
  20. http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ae/s_676787.html# Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 18 April 2010, "K&L Gates brings new art to new home"
  21. Arts Council of Wales
  22. Further: Artists from Wales at the 50th International Art Exhibition, Venice
  23. Roberta Smith (31 December 2004), Wherever They Go, There They Are: Itinerant Artists Seize on Locale New York Times.
  24. Cerith Wyn Evans, 17 Sep – 9 Nov 2014
  25. Cerith Wyn Evans, 17 March – 10 June 2012
  26. Cerith Wyn Evans White Cube, London.

External links

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