Installation view with (left to right top to bottom); Anastasia Shin, Daniel Swan, Cecilé Emmanualle Borra, Matthew Johnstone (through scaffolding) Tim Steer, Kathryn Ferguson on Laptops.
Kadeem Oak, Tobias Zehntner.
Kathryn Ferguson, Clifford Sage, Tim Steer.
Kadeem Oak; Building Better Worlds, Achieving. Background Sophie Michael.
Artists; Cecile Emmanuelle Borra, Kathryn Ferguson, Daniel David Freeman, Matthew Johnstone, Sophie Michael, Kadeem Oak, Clifford Sage, Anastasia Shin, Daniel Swan, Tim Steer, Amalia Ulman & Tobias Zehntner.
Curated by Ché Zara Blomfield (The Composing Rooms)
In order of appearance: Tim Steer, Tobias Zehntner, Cecile Emmanuelle Borra, Daniel Swan, Matthew Johnstone, Anastasia Shin, Sophie Michael, Clifford Sage’s interactive video game!
A favela of images made by you, to be part of Ron Arad’s Curtain Call at the Roundhouse
Come down with your laptops and projectors – and sound too, if you like – and we’ll provide the plug sockets. We’ve got space for forty images at least, and there’s a few hours to fill, so we want a hundred video artists to come along and take up the opportunity to show your work in the Main Space at the Roundhouse.
Ron invites anyone with a laptop and projector to come to the Roundhouse and we will provide power for you to project your films onto the 60 metre by 8 metre high circular screen that he has designed. The installation is a world first and we want to see hundreds of images projected onto it.
Artists who show their work will be sharing a platform with Ron, one of the worlds foremost designers, and alongside a month of programming top artists like Christian Marclay (winner Golden Lion, Venice Biennale 2011), David Shrigley, Alison Jackson, and Mat Collishaw.
The Woodmill Neckinger Depot, Neckinger, London, SE16 3QN
To coincide with the launch of the South London Art Map, the Woodmill hosts BYOB.
An acronym for ‘Bring Your Own Beamer’, BYOB is a series of one-night exhibitions where artists are invited to bring their own “beamers” and explore the medium of projection. BYOB has already taken place in different cities throughout Europe and the US, involving artists of an extended and dispersed ‘Internet art community’.
Hosted by the Woodmill, BYOB London will bring together more than 30 London-based and international artists to create a collaborative happening of moving light, sound and performance.This dynamic structure will be enhanced by a series of ad hoc installations, performances and special projects, creating an immersive environment of DIY spontaneity and experimentation.
LuckyPDF will be hosting a live internet TV stream covering the events and content of BYOB London from a television studio within The Woodmill hangar.
BYOB London will be also hosting a launch of Post Internet Survival Guide 2010, an art-book about redistribution of social energy in contemporary world and a book about the future of contemporary art. Initiated and put together by Estonian artist Katja Novitskova, PISG features contributions and art works by more than forty young artists from around the world, some of whom will also be participating in BYOB London. For more information go to http://katjanovi.net/postinternetsurvivalguide.html
The event will be followed by an after party at the Woodmill.
Participating artists: Amalia Ulman, Anne de Vries, Aristide Antonas, Arran Ridley, Ben Vickers, Carl Burgess, Daniel Swan, Emily Jones, Harry Sanderson, Helen Marten & Fran Edgerley, Hyo Myoung Kim, Iain Ball, Jeremy Bailey & Kristen Schaffer, Jimmy Merris, Katja Novitskova, KERNEL (Pegy Zali, Petros Moris, Theodoros Giannakis), L_A_N, LuckyPDF (James Early, John Hill, Oliver Hogan, Yuri Pattison), Luke Barcelona Cano, Marc Kremers, Martin Cole, Matthew Stone, Theo Michael & George Tsioutsias, Mike Ruiz, Nicolas Roope, No New Info (Lauren Elder, Andre and Evan Lenox, Arend deGruyter-Helfer, Micah Schippa, Brian Khek), Paul B Davis, Poka-Yio, Rafaël Rozendaal, Richard Sides, Sascha Pohflepp, Tim Steer, Yuri Pattison